I tested the idea that some viewers suggested to make the blower hand cranked so that it spun in one direction only and to shape the housing to take advantage of this. It was suggested that even with the hand crank ratio of 1:1, the advantage would be apparent over the original intermittent high rpm blower powered with a string. This blower prototype produced a high volume but low pressure air flow due to the sacrifice of rpm due to the 1:1 ratio. I did some rough calculations after making it and think that if the fan were scaled up to 1m as opposed to the 50 cm fan in the video, it might start to compete with the original blower design for the current rpm. I made a 1 m diameter fan but was unwieldy though it might have worked with more testing, time constraints prevented using it in this project. For now I'll stick to the previous blower design till I can increase the continuous rotation rpm with a durable mechanism. Or test positive displacement bellows and natural draft modes of air supply in up coming projects.
Perhaps if you could power it with wind or water, it might be a viable design, but as long as it’s muscle-powered the old version seems to be significantly more efficient, not to mention less tiring.
일단 여러가지 조건이 좋은 환경이다..덥지도 않고 습하지도 않고 비도 많이 오지 않고 벌래도 적고 마른땅이고 조용하고 나무가지도 많아 불피우기 좋고, 이런 조건이라면 서바이벌이나 원시기술 하기 좋은 조건이다..그렇지 않으면 당신은 일주일도 못버틴다..식량은 재배안하기로 한걸보니 서바이벌은 아닌듯하다. 식량구하기가 제일 어려운 과제이다. 그는 오로지 원시기술로 만드는것만 한다. 벌써 5년동안.
What I realise from watching all your videos is this 1. You have way more energy than I do lol 2. It really does take a village. The amount of labour required for 'simple' tasks is such that you need the wood cutter and clay digger, the dozen other occupations to make it sustainable. Either that or just one guy with unlimited energy and patience
It takes a bit to get up and running like making a stone chisel / axe and cords from grass blades. Once u get the technique for fire making w sticks things get easier as u keep doing it. He's finding shortcuts to preserve his energy and get better results. Some work some don't it's trial and error we learn from his actions. Every time I see his videos I think of those reality shows where they have to survive in the wild like "survivor" etc and think these tricks would make u top dog in the group if u learn them. All the chicks would want to be in ur team 🤣🔥
Looking at our modern diets. I often ponder having to grow, and harvest and grind all the grain by hand. Imagine how much work it would take to make a bowl of cornflakes lol. It's really no wonder modern humans have modern problems like insulin resistance.. We're very clever monkeys, but I don't know if we're winning the game with our fancy machines sometimes.
@@M3rVsT4HI remember reading an article where they asked a hunter gatherer if he would move to a farm life he said no he works for 2 hours a day to get enough food then does what ever he wants.
Using that split segment attached to the shaft as an eccentric weight is *really* clever. You’re achieving relatively high rpm’s with very little effort and the construction and operation are extremely simple. Excellent.
I can't imagine it was easier for him to sustain its motion compared to the string-powered version. The added weight, using one arm vs two, and which muscles each motion uses probably added up to the overall less effective result. That said, I'm only speculating.
@@Aaron-ne4kr The string-powered version also reverses direction on every other pull. With the old symmetrical blower that's fine, since the efficiency is the same in both directions, but this volute blower is most efficient when the blades are moving the same direction as the outlet.
Thank you for showing failures and not just scrapping ideas that didn't work out. To quote one of the masters: "Failure is ALWAYS an option." The only important part of a failure is what you do after, learning from them and trying again is critical. Good ideas don't always pan out and just because something doesn't work doesn't mean it was a bad idea. We should always keep trying new things and learning all we can along the way, be it a failure or a resounding success. Showing projects like these that didn't work out like you hoped is one of the things that makes this channel so great. So, again, thank you.
@@W4iteFlame A failure is just a learning experience. If you don't learn from it though then you're actually failing. It's kind of like ignorance. There's nothing wrong with not knowing something, but once you know that you don't know something then it's time to learn. I try to never think of anybody as dumb, especially for just not knowing something. But when they have the opportunity to learn and they don't take it that's when I think they're actually dumb. Everybody gets a pass, once.
i love that you post your successes and failures both. it really helps get across that real life experimentation isn't just moving from great idea to great idea, you have to sift through the bad ones to get to the best ones.
Honestly so real for saying "yeah I got tired after a while", like that's the thing that sets these so far above other similar videos - it's clearly trial and error and John is super transparent about it
I think the next thing to look into, as long as you're using centrifugal blowers, is the feasibility of some sort of belt and pulley system to generate a mechanical advantage. RPMs are critical to performance on this type of blower, so anything you can do to increase that will give you the biggest boost in performance.
I immediately thought about how a creek/river could be used similar to his water hammer video from a while ago to generate constant, high RPMs and zero fatigue
I was thinking he could make a really long rope with loops for the gear teeth, then you connect the ends into a circle and endlessly pull to power the drive.
I love this sort of "applying modern knowledge to older technology" stuff, it's so cool. And to think, some people probably figured out some of this stuff without knowing how or why it works!
Watching you work and hearing how long it took, you have some amazing patience. Even if this didn't work out, your pyrotechnology videos are something I never miss. Thanks for what you create!
You should make it powered by the creek could be a stepping stone from primitive to mid evil technology as you already have valuables and tools like iron
I thoght the same thing, but he's not using the exhaust of the fire to feed into the blower. I wondered if there's a way to use the exhaust and some bernouli effect to pull fresh air into the cycle. Then it'd really be a turbo.
@@sithlordzach8418 What I was suggesting did have the problem that it was cycling some gas. The bernoulli effect to pull new air in would still mix in some exhaust, so that's not ideal. With a true turbocharger, the exhaust is routed through a turbine, which compresses fresh air intake and pumps the fresh air into the engine. The exhaust is only used for its kinetic energy to drive the turbine. In a simple application, he could route all of the exhaust past a fan (a simple turbine) that drives a secondary intake blower.
I believe if you make that fire pit tube taller, you can get a hotter temperature. It Hass to do with the air pressure inside of a taller to being forced out unless you don’t necessarily want the temperature to be hotter than what it is already. I haven’t read what your goals were for this one.
Absolutely incredible use of physics. The fact that we know enough about the laws of the universe that we can translate a simple wobble of the hand into such a forceful release of energy is incredible.
@@Gribbo9999more like the Renaissance! Turbo pumps weren’t a thing until the end of the 14th century and even then this would qualify as an advanced design not seen until the 15th or 16th century. They did have quasi mechanic blower that weren’t vacuum blowers(Bellow), but they didn’t work this way, they were just a system of tubs you blew into that would amplify the pressure and keep it from coming back up!
Under what subject study? Teaching kids growing up in a city how people can make small amounts of metal alone in the forest to appreciate the history of our species?
Its cool that you're at such an stable and built-up point now that you're able to use your resources to freely and dynamicly explore experimental designs such as this. I hope you've learned a lot and will continue to experiment and pioneer your technique!
@@iamvee87 it is especially with my generation I started doing it when I was 18 years old my family had a plot of land in the the wilderness about 25 km from where I live in the short time I've managed to build a a cab in there a sauna hot bathtub I also managed to build in hot water a stove and other things I'm currently 25 years old i love it
@@iamvee87 To be fair.. owning the land to do it on is also more and more rare, which probably plays a role. I would love to try my hand at things shown in these videos, but I own a grand total of 60 feet by 60 feet of "land" and struggle to afford even that :P
I think you should preheat the air that goes into the kiln. E.g. make a ceramic heat cross flow exchanger by layering straws with clay at 90deg and making a cube. One direction = exhaust of fire 1. The 90deg direction - input of the fire 2. That way you can shift your starting point up and essentially recreate a marten's furnace.
Its a nice approach, but hot air carries less oxygen, that’s why the incoming air isn’t used even to refrigerate the ovens’ carcasses. What is pre heated in marten’s oven is the gaseous fuel, no the air.
@@MarceloRodrigues-ff6vc i'm quite certain it is air preheated in marten's furnaces cause there's about 15 times more of it required than fuel. and it is going to less dense when heated but amount of oxygen stays the same 20%
A Recuperator should be Way simpler than an Exchanger. Industrial Iron Smelting uses three Stacks that get switched around, but two could be good enough. Ceramic Tiles as the thermal Mass and two Valves to change them between the Intake after the Blower and the Exhaust in Front of the Chimney. Otherwise a big Stack of Tiles that are being fired anyway might work too. If the Chamber for the Firing of the Pottery comes after a Blower and ends in a Chimney you could fill the Chimney with the smelting Mix after the Ceramic is done. (I don’t know how problematic it is to cool it quickly, but simple Balls of low Quality Clay could yield Grog for other Products at least.) Blower -> Burn Chamber -> Pottery Chamber -> Chimney Connect the Blower after the Pottery is done with natural Draft or stock the Burn Chamber trough the Blower. Throw the Charcoal and Iron Oxide in the Chimney. - Mixing the "Ore" Powder with Charcoal Dust for the initial roasting shouldn’t hurt afterwards.
@@primitivetechnology9550 Absolutely love the content --- the time and effort 🥇 I was thinking instead of building a skyscraper for the fire kilns always, the tediousness of getting clay and casting thick deep moulds for kilns, Why not build a groundscraper, build it upside-down. I mean if it's possible to dig an equivalent hole, maybe 50/60cm deep × 20/30cm wide and spare just little effort to add thin lining of clay to it and create 2 side holes, 1 for air intake from the tuyere blower, and the other for exhaust gas. You could mould a lid to yet retain more heat. I believe this system would greatly increase thermal efficiency and heat up better and hotter, as the ground acts as a good insulator to retain heat.
@@wawatchdog89 that's the secret of the man, man. He had spent millions of years gathering knowledge from broken civilizations, and the fact that his short RUclips existence showing him literally staying the same said a lot of things about this immortal man known to us as John Plant :>
I plan to stay subscribed forever even if you stop making videos. To me, you're one of the greatest contributors of internet content. One just can't put a price on the videos you've created.
I am a new subscriber after watching many of the fake channels of people, apparently building these amazing huts with swimming pools attached. It's an absolute breath of fresh air to watch a genuine guy make these awesome videos. You deserve all the success you have achieved, and I intend to binge watch your videos. Much respect, and please keep making this amazing content.
He is the true genuine primitive technology one... In an AMA they asked him if his videos were fake or not His response? Try what i do for yourself, if you get the same or better results, then you have your answer All he learned, he learned by primitive technology books and many trial and errors
I have been so obsessed with this channel since the first video and ive learnt so much. I live in nz and i am surrounded by dense forests and bush, so whenever i watch these i always try to do it myself. Im currently progressing through the stone age. Just finished my first hut and ive been looking for clay for ages lol now im back home chillin after all day in the bush lol, love u primitive technology
Make sure the step down pipe in your blower has a smooth gradual step down. During the inside view, it looked like it was filled in flat, then the hole in the middle. Those flat surfaces will decrease efficiency by causing the air to turn 90 degrees.
Using centrifugal force with just a heavier stick to get steady fan rotation is both at once so simple and brilliant at the same time! It looks like less work to get more air flow? I wonder if this is leading to video's for making higher quality steel, this is the kind of thing that really hits the spot for me with this channel.
Read his pinned comment. The volume of air increases abut the pressure is lower due to lower rpm, canceling the positive effect out on this practical size.
You should Watch his videos with subtitles on, he explain that It took double the work to melt the same Amount of iron, It was lower quality and he stopped early because It was unconfortable to use
Not really, it shows the result somewhat underwhelming, perhaps making it foot pedal like pottery wheel or spindle would help steady and efficient power input
Im remembering back to the primitive lathe the Townsdends channel made not to long ago, and I wonder if it'd be possible to set up a fan with the same mechanism, using a foot peddle and a live branch as a spring. If so, it'd be much less tiring to operate I'd imagine
@@TheSethhunt he definitely needs to incorporate leg power. Im more than positive his shoulders and arms are aching to painfull levels and this is hindering his iron smelting attempts. Man did not master the iron age without significant mechanical help as well as that from others. like someone operating bellows while another fed the furnace with charges of charcoal/coal and ore.
I've been wanting him to make a primitive lathe for some time. It would be a good use for the metal blade he made. It won't work as a good knife but would work as a cutting tool on a lathe.
Another great video John. I hope people appreciate how quickly you can make fire from a drill stick, you get fire quicker than most people could with matches. For the people that don’t know John has a book out of which I have owned a copy for sometime now, it is a fantastic read and I highly recommend it to all viewers of this channel. Keep up the great work John and look forward to whatever you tackle next.
I saw an interesting design for double action bellows from a vid about Indonesian blacksmithing, it consisted of two vertical wooden tubes (bamboo I think) with basically a large feather duster in each one. The bunches of feathers acted like a valve, allowing air to pass as they were lifted and forcing it ahead of them as they were pushed down. With two in operation, being worked alternately, the smith managed to get a pretty steady stream of air .
I also seen a double action bellows design from historical African smelting that worked well, which was two pillows that were kneaded like dough with each hand alternating. Ultimately we know bellows were a winning technology, the catch is bellows would kinda need some sort of animal hide to be practical at this stage right? I'm not sure John could easily introduce those materials to the channel in the same way he has been with other materials.
@@Fe7Ace that’s why I thought the ‘feather duster’ design might work here, you could probably get a similar effect with leaves or plant fibres, well within the scope of his available materials.
Doubt he would ever involve animal or introduce external element, you know hoe stingy youtube enforcing their rule when it comes to animal treatment (sometimes)
I think there's major room for improvement in the leaf impeller material. Not only was it flimsy to begin with, but it will crease and weaken further. If supported with a vine frame, maybe it will be the most lightweight sturdy impeller. I still favor thin wood though, as it will definitely last the longest and can match the concavity of the blower. Awesome video
I think the primary drawback for this impeller and why leaves are required is the rotation with a counterweight will be unstable. The blade will be making contact with the top and bottom, so a blade material as you describe wont work. It also means the wear on the impeller is much higher then his previous design. So either way he'll need new blades frequently. Easy enough to add new leaves, but still less durable then his last design.
I think wooden blades are only practical on a continuous rotation fan like this one; for the oscillating version having very little mass is more important than perfect aerodynamics.
Interesting idea on improving your blower. Have you considered making a box bellows? Maybe the case could be made with clay, and use bark for the piston and the flaps for each intake. Your videos are really enjoyable, and educational.
Yes, it's on my list. I made a prototype bellows from clay and the valves do work. But the piston broke after some use. However, some design changes should fix this. I'll attempt another and if it's successful I'll post the video. Much appreciated.
@@呵呵-n8d Shockingly I think there's merit to approaching this from a non-violent perspective. This is just a hobby thing, and taking the lives of animals purely for sport isn't really the goal of the channel.
@@primitivetechnology9550 I don't know if this would be moving too far outside your normal wheelhouse, but aside from not showing primitive hunting (for RUclips reasons) could you showing something like the tanning/leathering process as a step towards a better bellows material? Obviously a big ask as far as research, labor, and time, but it was the first thing that came to mind when @trailerparkpimp mentioned the box bellows
@@rafferdx Tanning used to be done using urine and feces/dung, more modern solutions mostly use toxic substances. Also I and apparently a lot of others judging by actualyhyenas comments, would not like to see violent content or a piece of bloody fur. This content is almost meditative to me and hunting doesn't really fit.
What I love so much from your channel is the usage of modern knowledge applied to primitive tooling. This may not be a success, but a great learning experience nonetheless!
@@bigsiege7684 well for bronze age you need copper and tin. And while copper can be reasonably found it is a lot harder to get tin. that fact was also one of mainreasons of bronze age collapse
I think this is the best episode of Primitive Technology yet. I love the science in that mechanical fan, the foresight of making it collapsible, and to top it off the episode has clay, woodcraft, and fire!
I like the fact it was so much labour for essentially a failed experiment. Just the perfect balance of ingenuity, experimentation, labour and honesty that makes this channel so great.
I expected it to be more tiring, but I still think it's worth it, both as a learning experience and as a step towards something like a treadle-powered blower.
Okay but, how would one do it, if they are using primitive tech? You need sturdier materials, and these things while good would break down more constantly. Even if all you're using is wood (Basically like a spinning wheel construction) you need metal tools I think to make the needed shapes. You need a way to transfer that treadle energy out.
I suppose he’s onto something regarding the offset log as a flywheel. A flywheel and a string winder that doesnt switch directions, giving you stable speed at low effort imput.
@@mariawhite7337 You can use the springyness of an overhead branch to power a basic treadle. A "spinning wheel" can just be a cord wrapped round another branch.
Heya, I noticed in your design you're using leaves to act as fan blades. However you use only a single stick with the leaves stuck between them. Now when you reach a high enough RPM, wouldn't this result in the leaves eventually bending over the singular stick during use which would result in less surface area picking up wind and thus less airflow? I was thinking of a double fan with two sticks holding the leaves at the top and bottom of each leaf/fan, which would reduce the problem
With a round shaped inner bottom edge you ll avoid turbulences hence a faster blow. adding a weight at the end of "flywheel"will allow you to use a kind of thin board for the impeller. And as always, Thank You!
I was so happy to see the new design. This could have been such a nice progression arc with it beeing easier to produce the iron. Sad to see that it's not only worse to operate, takes more time and even has lower output. Glad you still showed it to us. You cannot win every time. Keep on!
That is actually very smart, using an unbalanced weight to use as momentum is great, the fan now provides a consistent supply of air instead of in intervals
I was thinking about how you would need a single direction or rotation for this design, and I had not thought of using momentum from an offset counterweight to keep up rotational momentum. Kudos!
Definitely not what I was expecting for the log use that acted as a counter weight, funnily enough I saw something a little similar in my mechanics class recently
While a continous stream of air is surely beneficial, isn't it harder in terms of coordination and stamina to run the new fan for a prolonged time? or does the improved efficiancy mean that you also cut down on the time needed to finish and therefore lower the requirement in terms of stamina/coordination again? edit: nvm the points were adressed at the very end^^ I wrote my comment in the middle of the vid
Our man and legend is one smart cookie so I never click "reply" until I've watched everything and read all the captions, for precisely the reason you just discovered :P
As soon as you started spinning it, I thought about how this design would be more work to use in the long run. I'm surprised by how much less efficient it is, but the other design also seems much more comfortable to use, especially for the long time it takes to smelt
With so many documented experimental recreations of primitive smelting methods and the depth of immersion. it seems like John is a leading expert in them!
it might help to more closely match the inner diameter the the width of the fan arms the less space between the blades and the wall the more efficient the blower becomes. Also if possible a funnel shape around the air intake would help create a venturi effect and force more air in but it might be kinda hard to get a smooth funnel shape that is durable out of clay without it weighing a ton and making it harder to get the spindle into the housing
None of that really matter if your shoulder turns to jello after a couple of hours though. The original design looks MUCH more physically sustainable than this one.
I was thinking if he had a rock or clay bowl it would be more comfortable to spin the crank since the shaft wouldn't be against his skin, but I agree, I feel like the rapid rocking is gonna be hell in his arm.
I would also add, put a rock at the bottom of the fan, to not dig into the ground and add more gears to change the motion from spinning to moving front and back (like rowing) to use your bicep too so that it's easier on the shoulder (maybe?). What a fun project, great job! :)
This is probably my favourite of your videos, showing the absolute laborious dedication to this craft, in that you spent all this time on a *hypothesis* that didn't even pan out. Many of your videos in sequence give an ever-improving sense of progression, always getting a little bit better as you become more familiar with the methods, and perhaps even research new ones to refine the process, etc., so it's nice to see the other side of the coin where things aren't necessarily an improvement, but still got the full effort.
Yeah, I agree! Human tenacity is just amazing. Watching Jon's videos you really get a sense of how every development in our history has been making processes easier more efficient. You can just imagine our ancestors thinking "Bloody hell this is tiring work, there must be an easier way to do this." I guess while doing laborious repetitive tasks you have a lot time to think 🤣
@@dankings5326 This video very much had the "Dr. Stone" kind of gag where develop new production method, then the characters are like "oh no, this is going to take a lot of repetitive labor to use and produce the next thing, is it...."
"Hey, John, why is your right arm so much more muscular than the left one?" "I made a contraption where I have to spin a log for hours on end" "... sure"
Please post a full-length video of one of these smelts so we can fully understand how many hours it takes to do one. I don't think folks realize how much long-term mind-numbing effort you put into these videos. :) Thank you!
Primitive technology was my first and longest fascination. People think we are advanced, but none of us can make the simplest things from scratch without using things that are already made by our modern industry. You can't make a metal container from material from the wilderness, much less a car or airplane. But you believe you are so advanced. I've lived off grid with just basic hand tools and no man made material. It's a whole other world completely. But I have never done it completely from scratch like this guy. This is one of the most incredible things I've ever seen anyone do, and I have more respect for this guy than all of the intellectual, social, and technological heroes that I have ever known about. He is truly a great man who is doing an amazing thing. This is truly a unique undertaking. I know he doesn't live like this all of the time, but what an interesting thing to actually get up and go out and do. I wish it was me. When I lived off the land, and provided my own food, shelter, and fuel from only what the land provides, it was like being born as a new creature into a new world. Deeply satisfying and fulfilling. No electric and no technology, just me and the seasons and every moment feeling life and the natural world flowing through me. Your whole mind is transformed into something that you could never imagine unless you lived it. It's amazing how strange you see other people after that. Everything is given to you, and you are helpless as a baby and completely dependent on being absorbed into this world that becomes like the blood in your body. You are unable to separate yourself from all of the framework around you, but at the same time you are nothing without it. But the world that exists in this video is truly like nothing you can ever imagine. It's a real trip if you ever get a chance to experience the difference. Watching it on the Internet is just entertainment. But the person who actually goes out and does it will find that it's a very special experience. I have the utmost respect for this creator.
Glad to see you still out here with us. I know these projects are not easy, and you always had the copycats frustrations, but verry happy with all these. Thank you.
One thing i like about this channel is it isn't just showing how things were done in the past, but it's actually showing the progression of technology from scratch using the power of foresight. It's almost like the channel is in the middle of the stone age and iron age. Granted we appeared to have skipped past the bronze age, yet you work with what you got. The blower was definitely an improvement to the last one, yet when it comes to forging iron it definitely needs to be bigger with a more stable hand crank, well as whatever else used to forge iron. Other than that, this was great.
The issue with Bronze is that Copper and Tin are never found near each other, so it is not possible for one person to make Bronze by themselves; the Bronze Age only existed because of the massive trading that happens between peoples that sent the copper and tin ingots to the right buyers across large distances. Compare to Bronze, iron is actually inferior in many ways, but the advantage is that you CAN make iron without needing to buy ingredients from another country. So basically we skip Bronze because he is just one man on his plot of land.
Those last two lines broke my heart. There were so many ingenious pieces that came together so beautifully that I'm saddened it's not as efficient as the previous blower and furnace.
Your content is outstanding! Gives me an idea of empowerment and the background sound is calming. I started to appreciate things like mud, charcoal and ash and understand more of the stone age- fantastique! Thanks for that!
Always amazing to watch you work these things out. I think twin leather or other animal tissue (like bladder) bellows, each with a simple one-way flap valve, joined at a Y to create a single output flow is probably where the simplest of forges historically all end up going.
I had an unbelievably shit day today and sitting down to see you'd uploaded lifted my spirits, I love watchign your processes and how you build things it's fascinating
A beautiful experiement! Multiple ways you can smelt but I love seeing the slow progression towards modernity. I always like to keep in mind that you are one man, imagine 6 people really trying to make a fan get hot.
Watching these get more and more sophisticated over the years has been so fascinating. I fully expect to see "Primitive Thermonuclear Ballistic Missile" uploaded within the next 20 years.
With the previous design you were able to use both legs and both arms to continually stoke the fire. I wonder if there's a way to convert this method to use larger muscle groups. This would prevent the fatigue from setting in so quickly. Don't give up on this design, I can see it out performing the previous design! Great video as always!
The most efficient high endurance muscles on the body (besides the heart and diaphragm) are the leg muscles. So you really have look at a bicycle, leg press, or rowing type system. Which would generally necessitate more precision drive mechanisms or counterweights. The hard part is can you design such a system without violating the primitive spirit everything. Sectioning large wooden rounds for drive systems are much too modern for such 5000-3000 BC technology.
@@SolarWebsite you can absolutely make a gear out of lashed sticks. Just don't expect it to be able to handle anything stronger than a person turning it by hand for a while.
Hey. Thanks for the new upload! Are there any plans in the future for more water powered tech? I loved the "Water Powered Hammer (monjolo)" video. It's like primitive robotics!
I thoroughly enjoy your channel. While watching this video, an idea came to mind: How about turning the blower on it's side, and using the foot-powered pole lathe concept to drive the rotor? I imagine it'd be fairly simple to make, and quite comfortable to operate.
yeah, it would be good if it could be leg powered. i was thinking of one of those potter's spinning turntables that's foot powered with the horizontal flywheel with a shaft that's connected to a fan, something like that.
Interesting as the volute is, I feel like the continous spin mechanism is the most fascinating part here. I wonder if this would be good for some other applications, like a fire drill? Would probably make it less taxing than the typical method, though I suppose probably it'd take longer overall to start a fire with even if it might be less exertion. Would depend I guess on if you value your time or sweat more I guess. XP
I might be wrong but I feel like the base wouldn't be stable enough on wood to stay still. The base in dirt digs a small hole for stabilization but with wood you'd need to make a deep enough hole to start. Again I might be wrong tho 😅
It could probably work but in the form of a heafty staff, since this is pretty low RPM, you need plenty of downforce to compensate and keep the friction high. You can't deliver this downforce yourself and spin it at the same time so it has to be heavy by itself.
its a waste of energy That heavy wooden block is just used for balance and doesnt really contribute to the overall power that you put into spinning it. this idea would work well if its like a flywheel so it can store energy, but the experimental spin setup is not useful in the long run. waste of energy
I think the real game changger will be when you are able to leverage water power from flowing water to run your blower. This may get very complex though, as it will doubtless require some gearing mechanisms from low rpm to high, as well as changing the rotational axis from horizontal to vertical
The main problem with that is the lack of flowing water in this region. Surface water is probably only seasonal, and I doubt he's got flowing water close enough to his camp.
Try making the fan bigger and more rigid,the leaves reinforced clear air intake and curved Like a funnel for the air , ground point of the axis (where the fan touches the ground) Also try having an inertia wheel, like the fire drill. And if you can't reach high rpm, try reaching high volume of air moved, Big air chamber and big fan. then funnel it down to high velocity.
Some ideas for next videos : • Making pitch ? • Making glass out of silica sand ? • Wooden gears ? • Methanizer ? Thank you for what you are doing, I’ve already bought your book 😁
I think something quite important in the efficiency of designs like this is the fan blade tip clearance from the housing, which I know with your setup is not easy to control too precisely, but may be worth looking into if you revisit the idea
I tought the same!!! Then it'd would be not taxing on arms, continuos Air flow without manpower maybe would be better than original, as It would be able to generate heat as Will if you have on/off mecanical switch. It'd would be good for heating water for Bath even!!
That would be interesting. I'm imagining a horizontal axle going straight from a water wheel to the center axis of the blower. Maintaining a high speed might be difficult, though, due to the friction losses.
i though of that the first time he made the water powered stuff.. i was always wondering why he never utilized it, maybe its outside of the time period that he is focusing?
@@marekprazak Is there a time period? Anything is fair if it can be made using the naturally occurring materials and only using tools produced from same.
I always watch your videos at least twice - once sans subtitles and with them right after. There's so much to learn, but it's nice trying to work out the processes on my own the first time. Very rewarding.
oh, you are missing out without subtitles. Then again, you can now go back and rewatch the whole series with them. It is a whole new experience. @@qwertixi
Lovely to see you work, naturally calm in nature, love it! What comes to mind is a rocket stove. Not sure if you have heard of them but they are super efficient, maybe something to incorporate in. Awesome work there. 👍
Not sure if I've ever commented on one of your videos before, and I've been watching since... who knows when, very early days at least, but that removable portion to get the turbine in... that's genius. I am very, very impressed. I enjoy all of your videos, but that little piece of ingenuity was next level. Thank you for sharing what you do.
Any chance of setting this up with a water wheel or maybe even hand cranked so it's more ergonomic? A belt of cordage might work to transfer energy from the wheel/crank to the fans and different sized logs on either end of the belt could do better than 1:1 ratio. More complex and might not be viable with wear on the cordage, but more ergonomic. Possibly too slow moving though.
No belt drives are needed. Everything should be on one shaft, the fan and the water wheel, the rotation speed will depend on the pressure of the water hitting the water wheel.
Such a great idea of using the counter weight for continuous movement. Though I wonder if there is a way to change the action so that you aren't using small and quick movements to keep it spinning.
I love how you just threw off the mud top to the charcoal mound like it took no work at all. Great job! I love seeing you implement your ideas into survival!
Long time fan of your channel, I was really impressed by the counterweight + acorn idea. Maybe you could find some sort of glassy stone like silex, agate or obsidian to make low friction bearings for your spinning contraptions. They might be very hard to chip and shape into the desired forms though.
This is why I’ve stayed subbed, as your videos are always something to indulge with. Very intruiging and insightful, w/ or w/o captions we can grasp a basic understanding of what it is you’re doing. Plus the descriptions and your tagged comments help 😅. Hope you always find happiness. ❤❤❤
If you get the top and bottom fixed in place and have a looped rope which goes at least a single loop around the axel, you can just continuously pull on one end of the rope. Due to the loops around the axel, it should have grip and you'll only have to pull a pretty slow speed. A possible flaw that might occur would be the rope having to go over itself as the loop travels up and down the stick, but this should give you continuous motion
Whoa, that's genius. I'm guessing you could run the rope loop around another fixed axle, kinda like a belt on two pulleys, with the multiple loops around the drive axle acting as a gearbox. This might actually work ...
Would probably need to be pretty sturdy. With the lack of ball bearings its gonna be hard to make the axle fixed in place and still able to spin And youd also really need to pull hard on the rope. Since the stick is so thin. If it was bigger it would also be heavier which would weaken RPM which is what needs to be maximized here
The tuyere might be improved by adding secondary air inlets, using the bernoulli effect to draw in more air with the air that is already moving. Generally, improve the interface between rectangular blower and round tuyere. Any sharp corners cause a "jam" in the air trying to converge into the tuyere, making it turbulent. Maybe make the nozzle rectangular and build it as an integral part of the blower? I loved this video, here we have a new idea that underperforms relative to the original blower but there are a few things to try before giving up on it.
How's the arm feeling after doing that? Any thoughts for swapping it to leg power? Bodgers use foot powered devices with a bendy stick for the return, not sure how you'd go about rigging it to single direction... that weighted stick, bodgers foot pedal going horizonal and a pulley of some sort? Awesome content as always, thanks for all the effort :)
@@toddalexander5015 That was where my thoughts were headed, too, yeah. But I don't think that would work out. A spinning wheel has a pretty low RPM compared to what he's trying for here, and it experiences much less resistance than one of these impellers does. The treadle would have to have an enormous range of motion, and at that point engineering the wheel becomes a problem, as does leg fatigue. Plus, building a high-speed drive belt with his materials would be a challenge. Not an impossible one, I'm sure, but it would take a long, long time to put it together.
Hey I just wanted to let you know that the makers of the show Scavengers Reign recently did a reddit AMA where they said that YOU were one of the inspirations for their worldbuilding, which by the way is the richest and most organic world I've ever come across in a series. Keep up the good work inspiring people!
I tested the idea that some viewers suggested to make the blower hand cranked so that it spun in one direction only and to shape the housing to take advantage of this. It was suggested that even with the hand crank ratio of 1:1, the advantage would be apparent over the original intermittent high rpm blower powered with a string. This blower prototype produced a high volume but low pressure air flow due to the sacrifice of rpm due to the 1:1 ratio. I did some rough calculations after making it and think that if the fan were scaled up to 1m as opposed to the 50 cm fan in the video, it might start to compete with the original blower design for the current rpm. I made a 1 m diameter fan but was unwieldy though it might have worked with more testing, time constraints prevented using it in this project. For now I'll stick to the previous blower design till I can increase the continuous rotation rpm with a durable mechanism. Or test positive displacement bellows and natural draft modes of air supply in up coming projects.
Might not have been a success, but it still blew my mind.
I'm particularly excited to see if a draft furnace design is able to achieve the air flow you need
Perhaps if you could power it with wind or water, it might be a viable design, but as long as it’s muscle-powered the old version seems to be significantly more efficient, not to mention less tiring.
@@BackingTrackStation It may still work if scaled up as a greater fan diameter for the same rpm gives twice the pressure I think. Thanks.
can i ask iff u live in there
Just passing on the message that he has closed captions that explain each step in detail. A true craftsman to the core
Thanks man, this was super helpful. I flipped it on as soon as I read your comment and it was nice to see each step and such.
🙏
Thank you so much!!!
Oh thanks for this. Turned it on the moment I read this
Maybe now I'll actually understand the video earlier instead of right at the end 😅
일단 여러가지 조건이 좋은 환경이다..덥지도 않고 습하지도 않고 비도 많이 오지 않고 벌래도 적고 마른땅이고 조용하고 나무가지도 많아 불피우기 좋고, 이런 조건이라면 서바이벌이나 원시기술 하기 좋은 조건이다..그렇지 않으면 당신은 일주일도 못버틴다..식량은 재배안하기로 한걸보니 서바이벌은 아닌듯하다. 식량구하기가 제일 어려운 과제이다. 그는 오로지 원시기술로 만드는것만 한다. 벌써 5년동안.
What I realise from watching all your videos is this
1. You have way more energy than I do lol
2. It really does take a village.
The amount of labour required for 'simple' tasks is such that you need the wood cutter and clay digger, the dozen other occupations to make it sustainable. Either that or just one guy with unlimited energy and patience
It takes a bit to get up and running like making a stone chisel / axe and cords from grass blades. Once u get the technique for fire making w sticks things get easier as u keep doing it. He's finding shortcuts to preserve his energy and get better results. Some work some don't it's trial and error we learn from his actions.
Every time I see his videos I think of those reality shows where they have to survive in the wild like "survivor" etc and think these tricks would make u top dog in the group if u learn them. All the chicks would want to be in ur team 🤣🔥
Looking at our modern diets. I often ponder having to grow, and harvest and grind all the grain by hand. Imagine how much work it would take to make a bowl of cornflakes lol. It's really no wonder modern humans have modern problems like insulin resistance.. We're very clever monkeys, but I don't know if we're winning the game with our fancy machines sometimes.
@@M3rVsT4H insulin resistance is a small price to pay for guaranteed food security imo though
@@M3rVsT4HI remember reading an article where they asked a hunter gatherer if he would move to a farm life he said no he works for 2 hours a day to get enough food then does what ever he wants.
no
@@andrewlalis
Using that split segment attached to the shaft as an eccentric weight is *really* clever. You’re achieving relatively high rpm’s with very little effort and the construction and operation are extremely simple. Excellent.
Simple tools yield complex results. My guy gets it
Simplicity is sign of a genious brain
🤓🤓🤓🤓🤓
Bro, this isnt even primitive anymore. This is modern but using primitive material. But nevertheless, I like it even more
@@xalovaid3693 it shows what would be possible with our current knowledge in a scenario in which we need to get around with what nature provides us
My jaw dropped when you first demonstrated that off-center slung counterweight for spinning in one direction. So simple, but effective
I can't imagine it was easier for him to sustain its motion compared to the string-powered version. The added weight, using one arm vs two, and which muscles each motion uses probably added up to the overall less effective result. That said, I'm only speculating.
I think technically it's a flywheel, not a counterweight 🤔
@@Aaron-ne4krHe can just switch arms when he gets tired
Would you say that... it blew your mind?
@@Aaron-ne4kr The string-powered version also reverses direction on every other pull. With the old symmetrical blower that's fine, since the efficiency is the same in both directions, but this volute blower is most efficient when the blades are moving the same direction as the outlet.
Thank you for showing failures and not just scrapping ideas that didn't work out. To quote one of the masters: "Failure is ALWAYS an option."
The only important part of a failure is what you do after, learning from them and trying again is critical. Good ideas don't always pan out and just because something doesn't work doesn't mean it was a bad idea. We should always keep trying new things and learning all we can along the way, be it a failure or a resounding success. Showing projects like these that didn't work out like you hoped is one of the things that makes this channel so great. So, again, thank you.
“I have not failed. I've just found 10,000 ways that won't work.” - Thomas Edison
Even failures can teach you a lot...and sometimes failures can not be failures at all, just different ways to achieve different goals
@@W4iteFlame A failure is just a learning experience. If you don't learn from it though then you're actually failing.
It's kind of like ignorance. There's nothing wrong with not knowing something, but once you know that you don't know something then it's time to learn. I try to never think of anybody as dumb, especially for just not knowing something. But when they have the opportunity to learn and they don't take it that's when I think they're actually dumb.
Everybody gets a pass, once.
@@TiborRoussou To be fair, he probably stole that quote.
maybe so, but I'm sure the light bulb wasn't created on the first try!@@Aedalas
i love that you post your successes and failures both. it really helps get across that real life experimentation isn't just moving from great idea to great idea, you have to sift through the bad ones to get to the best ones.
While most people struggle making fire in the wild, John goes ahead and makes a supercharged furnace. Bravo.
Fake Video
@@jackyo3214 Why? Are you Chinese?
@@jackyo3214 Get out of here, Chinese
@@jackyo3214 Don't get us dirty
@@__03492 lmao care to elaborate?
This is absolutely brilliant. Using an acorn as a socket is really ingenious.
I'm sad that it turned out less efficient than the original blower.
probably cause the original was made off screen with more modern tools lol
@@mrbushi1062 ruclips.net/video/fR9u2oLHFN8/видео.html
This Man shows literally every single thing he makes on camera and how he does it.
@mrbushi1062 : "MuH hE pRoBaBlY uSeD a MoDeRn tOol"
grow up man.
@@mrbushi1062 He made it in a previous video... PT doesn't fake his videos like almost all of the others that followed him.
@@mrbushi1062 are you dense?
Honestly so real for saying "yeah I got tired after a while", like that's the thing that sets these so far above other similar videos - it's clearly trial and error and John is super transparent about it
I think the next thing to look into, as long as you're using centrifugal blowers, is the feasibility of some sort of belt and pulley system to generate a mechanical advantage. RPMs are critical to performance on this type of blower, so anything you can do to increase that will give you the biggest boost in performance.
I immediately thought about how a creek/river could be used similar to his water hammer video from a while ago to generate constant, high RPMs and zero fatigue
Careful, or it won't be long before he creates a primative motor and finds himself back in the industrial revolution.
@@unibrowsheepZ With his current charcoal consumption, it would be a "green" transition 😁
I feel like I'm listening to a stone age computer nerd. In a good way!
I was thinking he could make a really long rope with loops for the gear teeth, then you connect the ends into a circle and endlessly pull to power the drive.
I love this sort of "applying modern knowledge to older technology" stuff, it's so cool.
And to think, some people probably figured out some of this stuff without knowing how or why it works!
Watching you work and hearing how long it took, you have some amazing patience. Even if this didn't work out, your pyrotechnology videos are something I never miss. Thanks for what you create!
Thanks, I'll keep more projects coming with your support, stay tunned and much appreciated.
You should make it powered by the creek could be a stepping stone from primitive to mid evil technology as you already have valuables and tools like iron
will you go buy some wood and stones from home depot?@@primitivetechnology9550
No one is saying how this man is essentially making a turbocharger out of sticks and mud lol this is brilliant! Love your stuff man!
I thoght the same thing, but he's not using the exhaust of the fire to feed into the blower. I wondered if there's a way to use the exhaust and some bernouli effect to pull fresh air into the cycle. Then it'd really be a turbo.
+5 hp to flintstones car
@@Joe-nb3fs Would that smother the flames with all the CO2 from the fire exhaust?
@@Joe-nb3fs yeah he did that already, its named down draft kiln.
@@sithlordzach8418 What I was suggesting did have the problem that it was cycling some gas. The bernoulli effect to pull new air in would still mix in some exhaust, so that's not ideal. With a true turbocharger, the exhaust is routed through a turbine, which compresses fresh air intake and pumps the fresh air into the engine. The exhaust is only used for its kinetic energy to drive the turbine. In a simple application, he could route all of the exhaust past a fan (a simple turbine) that drives a secondary intake blower.
The legend returns to satisfy his audience once more
He's been back a while
For sure. And whenever there is an easy-going brick-making episode or blower episode, you know that soon he is about to jump into the Iron Age.
Hi i'm HoloAdvent's little fan who often ask comparison and/or timeline about Nerissa Ravencroft and/or sometimes Shiori Novella.
I believe if you make that fire pit tube taller, you can get a hotter temperature. It Hass to do with the air pressure inside of a taller to being forced out unless you don’t necessarily want the temperature to be hotter than what it is already. I haven’t read what your goals were for this one.
This guy always pulls an audience.
Absolutely incredible use of physics. The fact that we know enough about the laws of the universe that we can translate a simple wobble of the hand into such a forceful release of energy is incredible.
The fact he does the Stone Age thing so well is impressive all on its own. The work ethic required for it is off the charts insane.
Iron age in this case.
@@Gribbo9999more like the Renaissance! Turbo pumps weren’t a thing until the end of the 14th century and even then this would qualify as an advanced design not seen until the 15th or 16th century.
They did have quasi mechanic blower that weren’t vacuum blowers(Bellow), but they didn’t work this way, they were just a system of tubs you blew into that would amplify the pressure and keep it from coming back up!
Primitive heavy industry
Have you noticed he uploads to youtube in Full HD? THAT'S some impressive stone age wizardry 😂
Would be interested in seeing what sort of footprint he is made on his patch of jungle
Incredible video, so much work put into this, I'm in awe. Your entire channel should be a curriculum in schools.
If this stuff were taught in school, I’d look forward to every lesson
same@@silentcartoonist
Much appreciated, I'll keep them coming,
Under what subject study? Teaching kids growing up in a city how people can make small amounts of metal alone in the forest to appreciate the history of our species?
Applied engineering, chemistry, and physics. @@gastonmarian7261
this guy alone has almost built an entire stone age village, this is just amazing!
He’s nearly in the Iron Age
And now he’s well into the Iron Age… The man, the shorts, the legend.
He's going to reach for the stars sooner or later
I've seen some Vietnamese guy basically do that. I forgot what his channel was but seemed like an actually legit one.
@@JigglesMcRibsFake news
Its cool that you're at such an stable and built-up point now that you're able to use your resources to freely and dynamicly explore experimental designs such as this. I hope you've learned a lot and will continue to experiment and pioneer your technique!
This guy is the reason I started doing bushcrafting and I love it
Bushcrafting is a dying art, and it's very unfortunate.
@@iamvee87 it is especially with my generation I started doing it when I was 18 years old my family had a plot of land in the the wilderness about 25 km from where I live in the short time I've managed to build a a cab in there a sauna hot bathtub I also managed to build in hot water a stove and other things I'm currently 25 years old i love it
@@iamvee87 it's amazing for the mind and the soul to just disconnect from everyone and just enjoy the peace and quiet
@@iamvee87 To be fair.. owning the land to do it on is also more and more rare, which probably plays a role.
I would love to try my hand at things shown in these videos, but I own a grand total of 60 feet by 60 feet of "land" and struggle to afford even that :P
I do bushcraft every night. My girl loves it.
I think you should preheat the air that goes into the kiln.
E.g. make a ceramic heat cross flow exchanger by layering straws with clay at 90deg and making a cube.
One direction = exhaust of fire 1. The 90deg direction - input of the fire 2.
That way you can shift your starting point up and essentially recreate a marten's furnace.
Thanks I'll research it. A preheat was important in the industrial revolution for reducing fuel and increasing yield of smelters. Much appreciated.
Its a nice approach, but hot air carries less oxygen, that’s why the incoming air isn’t used even to refrigerate the ovens’ carcasses. What is pre heated in marten’s oven is the gaseous fuel, no the air.
@@MarceloRodrigues-ff6vc i'm quite certain it is air preheated in marten's furnaces cause there's about 15 times more of it required than fuel. and it is going to less dense when heated but amount of oxygen stays the same 20%
A Recuperator should be Way simpler than an Exchanger.
Industrial Iron Smelting uses three Stacks that get switched around, but two could be good enough.
Ceramic Tiles as the thermal Mass and two Valves to change them between the Intake after the Blower and the Exhaust in Front of the Chimney.
Otherwise a big Stack of Tiles that are being fired anyway might work too.
If the Chamber for the Firing of the Pottery comes after a Blower and ends in a Chimney you could fill the Chimney with the smelting Mix after the Ceramic is done. (I don’t know how problematic it is to cool it quickly, but simple Balls of low Quality Clay could yield Grog for other Products at least.)
Blower -> Burn Chamber -> Pottery Chamber -> Chimney
Connect the Blower after the Pottery is done with natural Draft or stock the Burn Chamber trough the Blower.
Throw the Charcoal and Iron Oxide in the Chimney.
-
Mixing the "Ore" Powder with Charcoal Dust for the initial roasting shouldn’t hurt afterwards.
@@primitivetechnology9550
Absolutely love the content --- the time and effort 🥇
I was thinking instead of building a skyscraper for the fire kilns always, the tediousness of getting clay and casting thick deep moulds for kilns,
Why not build a groundscraper, build it upside-down. I mean if it's possible to dig an equivalent hole, maybe 50/60cm deep × 20/30cm wide and spare just little effort to add thin lining of clay to it and create 2 side holes, 1 for air intake from the tuyere blower, and the other for exhaust gas.
You could mould a lid to yet retain more heat.
I believe this system would greatly increase thermal efficiency and heat up better and hotter, as the ground acts as a good insulator to retain heat.
Watch Europa the Last Battle!
Really 8 years? And it doesn't look like he's aged a day.
@@wawatchdog89 he even wrote a book about all this!
@@wawatchdog89 that's the secret of the man, man. He had spent millions of years gathering knowledge from broken civilizations, and the fact that his short RUclips existence showing him literally staying the same said a lot of things about this immortal man known to us as John Plant :>
@@awli8861and i have it 😁
few more years and hes splitting the atom and landing on moon
I plan to stay subscribed forever even if you stop making videos. To me, you're one of the greatest contributors of internet content. One just can't put a price on the videos you've created.
I also REALLY like how he showed ALL steps...even the 'simple ones'; like splitting the short poles. Wow!
I am a new subscriber after watching many of the fake channels of people, apparently building these amazing huts with swimming pools attached. It's an absolute breath of fresh air to watch a genuine guy make these awesome videos. You deserve all the success you have achieved, and I intend to binge watch your videos. Much respect, and please keep making this amazing content.
He is the true genuine primitive technology one...
In an AMA they asked him if his videos were fake or not
His response? Try what i do for yourself, if you get the same or better results, then you have your answer
All he learned, he learned by primitive technology books and many trial and errors
@lordfriedrick7911 yeah even in all the call out videos on fake primitive building channels this one is always cited as the genuine article.
He is the og.
He's the OG of primitive technology, most of the other channels have tens of people working in their projects, their more like "reality" shows
In sense, he's the reason those fake channels exists in the first place, but they never understand what they're trying to fake,
I have been so obsessed with this channel since the first video and ive learnt so much. I live in nz and i am surrounded by dense forests and bush, so whenever i watch these i always try to do it myself. Im currently progressing through the stone age. Just finished my first hut and ive been looking for clay for ages lol now im back home chillin after all day in the bush lol, love u primitive technology
you can find clay by digging the soil deep enough. river erode soil so the clay be expose too
@@mandalamarcho7997yeah research where riverbeds were in the past
Can't be in the Manawatu, 30cm under the soil is solid clay where ever I go.
Ah man that’s the dream
Watching you slowly perfect your skills and improve techniques over time is such a satisfying journey. I'm so glad you're taking us with you on it.
Make sure the step down pipe in your blower has a smooth gradual step down. During the inside view, it looked like it was filled in flat, then the hole in the middle. Those flat surfaces will decrease efficiency by causing the air to turn 90 degrees.
@@normanberg6502 Huh?
@@selensewar sorry, RUclips added my comment to the video as a reply to your comment
@@normanberg6502 ah :D A happy accident! That happens.
Using centrifugal force with just a heavier stick to get steady fan rotation is both at once so simple and brilliant at the same time! It looks like less work to get more air flow?
I wonder if this is leading to video's for making higher quality steel, this is the kind of thing that really hits the spot for me with this channel.
Read his pinned comment. The volume of air increases abut the pressure is lower due to lower rpm, canceling the positive effect out on this practical size.
You should Watch his videos with subtitles on, he explain that It took double the work to melt the same Amount of iron, It was lower quality and he stopped early because It was unconfortable to use
Not really, it shows the result somewhat underwhelming, perhaps making it foot pedal like pottery wheel or spindle would help steady and efficient power input
Im remembering back to the primitive lathe the Townsdends channel made not to long ago, and I wonder if it'd be possible to set up a fan with the same mechanism, using a foot peddle and a live branch as a spring. If so, it'd be much less tiring to operate I'd imagine
I had the same thought its so weird to see a comment with the same thought process
@@TheSethhunt he definitely needs to incorporate leg power. Im more than positive his shoulders and arms are aching to painfull levels and this is hindering his iron smelting attempts. Man did not master the iron age without significant mechanical help as well as that from others. like someone operating bellows while another fed the furnace with charges of charcoal/coal and ore.
Yes! A spring-pole lathe. Treadle would probably be ideal, but this can be made easier without metal parts.
"Townsdends" or Townsend? 🤔
I've been wanting him to make a primitive lathe for some time. It would be a good use for the metal blade he made. It won't work as a good knife but would work as a cutting tool on a lathe.
Another great video John. I hope people appreciate how quickly you can make fire from a drill stick, you get fire quicker than most people could with matches. For the people that don’t know John has a book out of which I have owned a copy for sometime now, it is a fantastic read and I highly recommend it to all viewers of this channel. Keep up the great work John and look forward to whatever you tackle next.
Please name the book! Amazon?
Yeah! It was mega impressive.
Ive been watcing these videos since i was seven years old. Im 15 now and im so happy to see youre still making great videos.
I saw an interesting design for double action bellows from a vid about Indonesian blacksmithing, it consisted of two vertical wooden tubes (bamboo I think) with basically a large feather duster in each one. The bunches of feathers acted like a valve, allowing air to pass as they were lifted and forcing it ahead of them as they were pushed down. With two in operation, being worked alternately, the smith managed to get a pretty steady stream of air .
I also seen a double action bellows design from historical African smelting that worked well, which was two pillows that were kneaded like dough with each hand alternating. Ultimately we know bellows were a winning technology, the catch is bellows would kinda need some sort of animal hide to be practical at this stage right? I'm not sure John could easily introduce those materials to the channel in the same way he has been with other materials.
@@Fe7Ace that’s why I thought the ‘feather duster’ design might work here, you could probably get a similar effect with leaves or plant fibres, well within the scope of his available materials.
@@Oldtanktapper Oh you mean the air chamber was JUST the wood? Yes that is interesting. I would have thought it would leak like a sieve.
Doubt he would ever involve animal or introduce external element, you know hoe stingy youtube enforcing their rule when it comes to animal treatment (sometimes)
@@Fe7AceIt was in a Clay housing, wooden piston and feathers to prevent leaking on the piston side
I think there's major room for improvement in the leaf impeller material. Not only was it flimsy to begin with, but it will crease and weaken further. If supported with a vine frame, maybe it will be the most lightweight sturdy impeller. I still favor thin wood though, as it will definitely last the longest and can match the concavity of the blower. Awesome video
Peeled bark maybe? If it's spinning one way a slight curve would only help
I think the primary drawback for this impeller and why leaves are required is the rotation with a counterweight will be unstable. The blade will be making contact with the top and bottom, so a blade material as you describe wont work.
It also means the wear on the impeller is much higher then his previous design. So either way he'll need new blades frequently. Easy enough to add new leaves, but still less durable then his last design.
Maybe he could even shape the wood pannels on the impeller like a centrifugal fan
Maybe some kind of porous clay slats? Lightweight and sturdy
I think wooden blades are only practical on a continuous rotation fan like this one; for the oscillating version having very little mass is more important than perfect aerodynamics.
Interesting idea on improving your blower. Have you considered making a box bellows? Maybe the case could be made with clay, and use bark for the piston and the flaps for each intake. Your videos are really enjoyable, and educational.
Yes, it's on my list. I made a prototype bellows from clay and the valves do work. But the piston broke after some use. However, some design changes should fix this. I'll attempt another and if it's successful I'll post the video. Much appreciated.
@@primitivetechnology9550 Bellows are usually made of animal skins.
Why don’t you use animal materials in your videos?
@@呵呵-n8d Shockingly I think there's merit to approaching this from a non-violent perspective. This is just a hobby thing, and taking the lives of animals purely for sport isn't really the goal of the channel.
@@primitivetechnology9550 I don't know if this would be moving too far outside your normal wheelhouse, but aside from not showing primitive hunting (for RUclips reasons) could you showing something like the tanning/leathering process as a step towards a better bellows material? Obviously a big ask as far as research, labor, and time, but it was the first thing that came to mind when @trailerparkpimp mentioned the box bellows
@@rafferdx Tanning used to be done using urine and feces/dung, more modern solutions mostly use toxic substances. Also I and apparently a lot of others judging by actualyhyenas comments, would not like to see violent content or a piece of bloody fur. This content is almost meditative to me and hunting doesn't really fit.
What I love so much from your channel is the usage of modern knowledge applied to primitive tooling. This may not be a success, but a great learning experience nonetheless!
What you do is awesome, keep improving the smelting technique, I want to see what you can do with decent metal tools!
Will do, am looking at making tools with the iron I've made already. Much appreciated.
@@primitivetechnology9550 You skip the Bronze Age?
@@bigsiege7684 well for bronze age you need copper and tin. And while copper can be reasonably found it is a lot harder to get tin. that fact was also one of mainreasons of bronze age collapse
I think this is the best episode of Primitive Technology yet. I love the science in that mechanical fan, the foresight of making it collapsible, and to top it off the episode has clay, woodcraft, and fire!
I like the fact it was so much labour for essentially a failed experiment. Just the perfect balance of ingenuity, experimentation, labour and honesty that makes this channel so great.
He’s the best
I expected it to be more tiring, but I still think it's worth it, both as a learning experience and as a step towards something like a treadle-powered blower.
Jup, using the muscles in one arm or two makes a big difference.
Okay but, how would one do it, if they are using primitive tech? You need sturdier materials, and these things while good would break down more constantly. Even if all you're using is wood (Basically like a spinning wheel construction) you need metal tools I think to make the needed shapes. You need a way to transfer that treadle energy out.
I suppose he’s onto something regarding the offset log as a flywheel. A flywheel and a string winder that doesnt switch directions, giving you stable speed at low effort imput.
Hardware for a few key components in a treadle-powered blower would be a worthy use of any metal produced thus-far.
@@mariawhite7337 You can use the springyness of an overhead branch to power a basic treadle. A "spinning wheel" can just be a cord wrapped round another branch.
I look forward to your videos dropping and it's always a great day when there's a new one. Thank you for sharing!
Thanks for the support and I'll keep them coming. Much appreciated.
Heya, I noticed in your design you're using leaves to act as fan blades. However you use only a single stick with the leaves stuck between them. Now when you reach a high enough RPM, wouldn't this result in the leaves eventually bending over the singular stick during use which would result in less surface area picking up wind and thus less airflow?
I was thinking of a double fan with two sticks holding the leaves at the top and bottom of each leaf/fan, which would reduce the problem
i was thinking of something like that. the fan blades need to be beefed up a bit
unlike the previous blower, since it only moves in one direction, the leaves also don't get reset the rotation in opposite direction
Also instead or leaves, u could use tree buck?
He can avoid that added complexity altogether by either using stronger leaves or limiting the rotational velocity of the fan.
Or use a small twig placed vertically on the end of each arm where the leaf is to brace the leaf when under acceleration
With a round shaped inner bottom edge you ll avoid turbulences hence a faster blow. adding a weight at the end of "flywheel"will allow you to use a kind of thin board for the impeller. And as always, Thank You!
I was so happy to see the new design. This could have been such a nice progression arc with it beeing easier to produce the iron. Sad to see that it's not only worse to operate, takes more time and even has lower output. Glad you still showed it to us. You cannot win every time. Keep on!
That is actually very smart, using an unbalanced weight to use as momentum is great, the fan now provides a consistent supply of air instead of in intervals
I was thinking about how you would need a single direction or rotation for this design, and I had not thought of using momentum from an offset counterweight to keep up rotational momentum. Kudos!
Definitely not what I was expecting for the log use that acted as a counter weight, funnily enough I saw something a little similar in my mechanics class recently
While a continous stream of air is surely beneficial, isn't it harder in terms of coordination and stamina to run the new fan for a prolonged time? or does the improved efficiancy mean that you also cut down on the time needed to finish and therefore lower the requirement in terms of stamina/coordination again?
edit: nvm the points were adressed at the very end^^ I wrote my comment in the middle of the vid
Our man and legend is one smart cookie so I never click "reply" until I've watched everything and read all the captions, for precisely the reason you just discovered :P
7:50, invert flow of input, add more water along Creek and there's a ball valve gen, once the materials withstand each
As soon as you started spinning it, I thought about how this design would be more work to use in the long run. I'm surprised by how much less efficient it is, but the other design also seems much more comfortable to use, especially for the long time it takes to smelt
With so many documented experimental recreations of primitive smelting methods and the depth of immersion. it seems like John is a leading expert in them!
it might help to more closely match the inner diameter the the width of the fan arms the less space between the blades and the wall the more efficient the blower becomes. Also if possible a funnel shape around the air intake would help create a venturi effect and force more air in but it might be kinda hard to get a smooth funnel shape that is durable out of clay without it weighing a ton and making it harder to get the spindle into the housing
None of that really matter if your shoulder turns to jello after a couple of hours though. The original design looks MUCH more physically sustainable than this one.
I was thinking if he had a rock or clay bowl it would be more comfortable to spin the crank since the shaft wouldn't be against his skin, but I agree, I feel like the rapid rocking is gonna be hell in his arm.
@@ammonke6324 true, but this one seems more fun
I would also add, put a rock at the bottom of the fan, to not dig into the ground and add more gears to change the motion from spinning to moving front and back (like rowing) to use your bicep too so that it's easier on the shoulder (maybe?). What a fun project, great job! :)
@@CommunalToast That's what the nut shell @2:36 is for.
thanks for searching old technique ❤
This is probably my favourite of your videos, showing the absolute laborious dedication to this craft, in that you spent all this time on a *hypothesis* that didn't even pan out.
Many of your videos in sequence give an ever-improving sense of progression, always getting a little bit better as you become more familiar with the methods, and perhaps even research new ones to refine the process, etc., so it's nice to see the other side of the coin where things aren't necessarily an improvement, but still got the full effort.
Yeah, I agree! Human tenacity is just amazing. Watching Jon's videos you really get a sense of how every development in our history has been making processes easier more efficient. You can just imagine our ancestors thinking "Bloody hell this is tiring work, there must be an easier way to do this." I guess while doing laborious repetitive tasks you have a lot time to think 🤣
@@dankings5326 This video very much had the "Dr. Stone" kind of gag where develop new production method, then the characters are like "oh no, this is going to take a lot of repetitive labor to use and produce the next thing, is it...."
"Hey, John, why is your right arm so much more muscular than the left one?"
"I made a contraption where I have to spin a log for hours on end"
"... sure"
Hey… is this a dick joke?
Please post a full-length video of one of these smelts so we can fully understand how many hours it takes to do one. I don't think folks realize how much long-term mind-numbing effort you put into these videos. :) Thank you!
The time it takes would be nice to know, for each longer process, but there is no need for a long video.
He can easily write it.
@@zugihe actually did write it in the comments of one of his previous videos. It's many hours
Primitive technology was my first and longest fascination. People think we are advanced, but none of us can make the simplest things from scratch without using things that are already made by our modern industry.
You can't make a metal container from material from the wilderness, much less a car or airplane.
But you believe you are so advanced.
I've lived off grid with just basic hand tools and no man made material.
It's a whole other world completely.
But I have never done it completely from scratch like this guy.
This is one of the most incredible things I've ever seen anyone do, and I have more respect for this guy than all of the intellectual, social, and technological heroes that I have ever known about.
He is truly a great man who is doing an amazing thing.
This is truly a unique undertaking.
I know he doesn't live like this all of the time, but what an interesting thing to actually get up and go out and do.
I wish it was me.
When I lived off the land, and provided my own food, shelter, and fuel from only what the land provides, it was like being born as a new creature into a new world. Deeply satisfying and fulfilling.
No electric and no technology, just me and the seasons and every moment feeling life and the natural world flowing through me.
Your whole mind is transformed into something that you could never imagine unless you lived it.
It's amazing how strange you see other people after that.
Everything is given to you, and you are helpless as a baby and completely dependent on being absorbed into this world that becomes like the blood in your body. You are unable to separate yourself from all of the framework around you, but at the same time you are nothing without it.
But the world that exists in this video is truly like nothing you can ever imagine.
It's a real trip if you ever get a chance to experience the difference.
Watching it on the Internet is just entertainment.
But the person who actually goes out and does it will find that it's a very special experience.
I have the utmost respect for this creator.
stop typing like that i cant read
@@christianvillarreal4389 for short. He live in off grid. And he have respect for john cause he live in wildernes
well, now people have time to study other things.
Glad to see you still out here with us. I know these projects are not easy, and you always had the copycats frustrations, but verry happy with all these. Thank you.
One thing i like about this channel is it isn't just showing how things were done in the past, but it's actually showing the progression of technology from scratch using the power of foresight. It's almost like the channel is in the middle of the stone age and iron age. Granted we appeared to have skipped past the bronze age, yet you work with what you got.
The blower was definitely an improvement to the last one, yet when it comes to forging iron it definitely needs to be bigger with a more stable hand crank, well as whatever else used to forge iron. Other than that, this was great.
The issue with Bronze is that Copper and Tin are never found near each other, so it is not possible for one person to make Bronze by themselves; the Bronze Age only existed because of the massive trading that happens between peoples that sent the copper and tin ingots to the right buyers across large distances. Compare to Bronze, iron is actually inferior in many ways, but the advantage is that you CAN make iron without needing to buy ingredients from another country.
So basically we skip Bronze because he is just one man on his plot of land.
What Vallen said; bronze is complicated. Now, given a copper deposit, that can be found and worked easily. But good copper deposits are rare.
@@WyvernYT and good deposit are likely government mines anyway...
Those last two lines broke my heart. There were so many ingenious pieces that came together so beautifully that I'm saddened it's not as efficient as the previous blower and furnace.
Your content is outstanding! Gives me an idea of empowerment and the background sound is calming. I started to appreciate things like mud, charcoal and ash and understand more of the stone age- fantastique! Thanks for that!
Much appreciated! Thanks for the feedback too.
Even though a lot of his videos now are similar, I still cannot get enough of them.
Wait until he hits the Bronze age!
I think he's testing out with melting and burning. So he's doing a lot of experimenting and research before coming up with metal.
@@cartoonhead9222 He won't copper is hard to get "in the wild" and tin is practically impossible
He literaly use only mud, sticks and stones. No wonder it seems similar, but honestly, his craftmanship is admirable.
People underestimate the difficulty that comes with smelting metal. It really goes to show how far we have come in terms technology advancement.
Always amazing to watch you work these things out. I think twin leather or other animal tissue (like bladder) bellows, each with a simple one-way flap valve, joined at a Y to create a single output flow is probably where the simplest of forges historically all end up going.
Yes - to push air 1-way through the furnace.
The hell with that, use a human bladder! As long as we don't give a shit about killing, let's go nuts with it. @@lazygardens
I had an unbelievably shit day today and sitting down to see you'd uploaded lifted my spirits, I love watchign your processes and how you build things it's fascinating
This has to be one of the most therapeutic hobbies imaginable. You're living the dream out there my guy and gods bless you for it
A beautiful experiement! Multiple ways you can smelt but I love seeing the slow progression towards modernity. I always like to keep in mind that you are one man, imagine 6 people really trying to make a fan get hot.
The legend 🙌 is back
Watching these get more and more sophisticated over the years has been so fascinating. I fully expect to see "Primitive Thermonuclear Ballistic Missile" uploaded within the next 20 years.
With the previous design you were able to use both legs and both arms to continually stoke the fire. I wonder if there's a way to convert this method to use larger muscle groups. This would prevent the fatigue from setting in so quickly. Don't give up on this design, I can see it out performing the previous design! Great video as always!
gear ratios =P
@@ThulgoreYeah, I was also thinking about gears. I dont know if he's already that far in the tech tree though 😊
@@SolarWebsite, clay and fiber gears? It's hard to make it precisely though.
The most efficient high endurance muscles on the body (besides the heart and diaphragm) are the leg muscles. So you really have look at a bicycle, leg press, or rowing type system. Which would generally necessitate more precision drive mechanisms or counterweights. The hard part is can you design such a system without violating the primitive spirit everything. Sectioning large wooden rounds for drive systems are much too modern for such 5000-3000 BC technology.
@@SolarWebsite you can absolutely make a gear out of lashed sticks. Just don't expect it to be able to handle anything stronger than a person turning it by hand for a while.
Hey. Thanks for the new upload! Are there any plans in the future for more water powered tech? I loved the "Water Powered Hammer (monjolo)" video. It's like primitive robotics!
I thoroughly enjoy your channel. While watching this video, an idea came to mind:
How about turning the blower on it's side, and using the foot-powered pole lathe concept to drive the rotor? I imagine it'd be fairly simple to make, and quite comfortable to operate.
yeah, it would be good if it could be leg powered. i was thinking of one of those potter's spinning turntables that's foot powered with the horizontal flywheel with a shaft that's connected to a fan, something like that.
Только собрался написать про вертикальное положение вентилятора, но вы меня опередили.
Legendary pillar of the Internet. Created a whole genre.
Interesting as the volute is, I feel like the continous spin mechanism is the most fascinating part here. I wonder if this would be good for some other applications, like a fire drill? Would probably make it less taxing than the typical method, though I suppose probably it'd take longer overall to start a fire with even if it might be less exertion. Would depend I guess on if you value your time or sweat more I guess. XP
I might be wrong but I feel like the base wouldn't be stable enough on wood to stay still. The base in dirt digs a small hole for stabilization but with wood you'd need to make a deep enough hole to start. Again I might be wrong tho 😅
Too low speed for a fire drill likely. You need that high speed friction vs the continuous low speed rotation to create the heat needed.
It could probably work but in the form of a heafty staff, since this is pretty low RPM, you need plenty of downforce to compensate and keep the friction high. You can't deliver this downforce yourself and spin it at the same time so it has to be heavy by itself.
its a waste of energy That heavy wooden block is just used for balance and doesnt really contribute to the overall power that you put into spinning it. this idea would work well if its like a flywheel so it can store energy, but the experimental spin setup is not useful in the long run. waste of energy
I think the real game changger will be when you are able to leverage water power from flowing water to run your blower. This may get very complex though, as it will doubtless require some gearing mechanisms from low rpm to high, as well as changing the rotational axis from horizontal to vertical
He has a video where he uses water power to (I think) Crack nuts. I think he could combine that tech with a bow lathe system to power his turbine.
no reason a blower couldn't run on a horizontal axis
The main problem with that is the lack of flowing water in this region. Surface water is probably only seasonal, and I doubt he's got flowing water close enough to his camp.
The man that started a whole new trend of videos on YT and ... years later, still nobody quite doing the same quality - passion.
i've been following your journey for quite a while now. i'm so excited that you're finally approaching metal age. keep up the good work.
Still waiting for him to make a sword.
When civilization falls, he will be Conan.
Try making the fan bigger and more rigid,the leaves reinforced
clear air intake and curved
Like a funnel for the air
, ground point of the axis (where the fan touches the ground)
Also try having an inertia wheel, like the fire drill.
And if you can't reach high rpm, try reaching high volume of air moved,
Big air chamber and big fan.
then funnel it down to high velocity.
Who else would watch a 10 hour cut of each of these episodes?
omg I would totally.
Ye
Same tbh
I've got a playlist made of this channel plus Torbjörn Åhman's that I watch to help me sleep. It's very relaxing :)
Yeah, he should go the route of other creators and have some "raw" material on like a second channel or something
Some ideas for next videos :
• Making pitch ?
• Making glass out of silica sand ?
• Wooden gears ?
• Methanizer ?
Thank you for what you are doing, I’ve already bought your book 😁
Eight years and I'm still impressed with each video, the acorn socket was a great idea! Hope to see you make it to iron tools soon.
Looked like a macadam nut, there's no acorns in North Queensland.
@@christopherlee627 isn't he in NZ?
@@GhstTwnzFnstNo, Queensland, Australia.
Спасибо Вам. Смотрю уже много лет, старею вместе с Вами)
nje panimaju po-okupantski
@@pahaahv это не иврит
@@zakr2 vso esho ne ponimaju po-okupantski
@@deonex4993 nje panimaju etot okupantski jasõkk
This channel always teaches us that there are a lot of small improvements before the big development.
I think something quite important in the efficiency of designs like this is the fan blade tip clearance from the housing, which I know with your setup is not easy to control too precisely, but may be worth looking into if you revisit the idea
Have you considered pairing this with a water mill? I'm fascinated by the progress in the contraptions you make 😁
I tought the same!!! Then it'd would be not taxing on arms, continuos Air flow without manpower maybe would be better than original, as It would be able to generate heat as Will if you have on/off mecanical switch. It'd would be good for heating water for Bath even!!
That would be interesting. I'm imagining a horizontal axle going straight from a water wheel to the center axis of the blower. Maintaining a high speed might be difficult, though, due to the friction losses.
you could increase the speed of water by making it come in wide and then tightening the flow progressive before hitting the mill blades
i though of that the first time he made the water powered stuff.. i was always wondering why he never utilized it, maybe its outside of the time period that he is focusing?
@@marekprazak Is there a time period? Anything is fair if it can be made using the naturally occurring materials and only using tools produced from same.
I always watch your videos at least twice - once sans subtitles and with them right after. There's so much to learn, but it's nice trying to work out the processes on my own the first time. Very rewarding.
There are subtitles?
oh, you are missing out without subtitles. Then again, you can now go back and rewatch the whole series with them. It is a whole new experience. @@qwertixi
It IS kinda fun to try and guess what hes doing and why@@jasongoodrich9055
Ich liebe es deine Videos zu sehen. Sie sind entspannend, informativ und teilweise erstaunlich zugleich
Lovely to see you work, naturally calm in nature, love it!
What comes to mind is a rocket stove. Not sure if you have heard of them but they are super efficient, maybe something to incorporate in.
Awesome work there. 👍
Not sure if I've ever commented on one of your videos before, and I've been watching since... who knows when, very early days at least, but that removable portion to get the turbine in... that's genius. I am very, very impressed. I enjoy all of your videos, but that little piece of ingenuity was next level. Thank you for sharing what you do.
Any chance of setting this up with a water wheel or maybe even hand cranked so it's more ergonomic? A belt of cordage might work to transfer energy from the wheel/crank to the fans and different sized logs on either end of the belt could do better than 1:1 ratio. More complex and might not be viable with wear on the cordage, but more ergonomic. Possibly too slow moving though.
Not sure how efficient it would be, especially since we havent seen him built construction near riverbank
No belt drives are needed. Everything should be on one shaft, the fan and the water wheel, the rotation speed will depend on the pressure of the water hitting the water wheel.
@@HowToChangeName he has a video where he makes a water powered hammer!
he could set this up
although the water flow really isn't high
Such a great idea of using the counter weight for continuous movement. Though I wonder if there is a way to change the action so that you aren't using small and quick movements to keep it spinning.
I love how you just threw off the mud top to the charcoal mound like it took no work at all. Great job! I love seeing you implement your ideas into survival!
Long time fan of your channel, I was really impressed by the counterweight + acorn idea. Maybe you could find some sort of glassy stone like silex, agate or obsidian to make low friction bearings for your spinning contraptions. They might be very hard to chip and shape into the desired forms though.
There are no acorns growing in tropical Queensland, my guess is that it’s a Macadamia shell, Macadamias are native to northern Queensland.
Best would be the quartz rock in western queensland
This is why I’ve stayed subbed, as your videos are always something to indulge with. Very intruiging and insightful, w/ or w/o captions we can grasp a basic understanding of what it is you’re doing. Plus the descriptions and your tagged comments help 😅. Hope you always find happiness. ❤❤❤
If you get the top and bottom fixed in place and have a looped rope which goes at least a single loop around the axel, you can just continuously pull on one end of the rope. Due to the loops around the axel, it should have grip and you'll only have to pull a pretty slow speed. A possible flaw that might occur would be the rope having to go over itself as the loop travels up and down the stick, but this should give you continuous motion
I really like this idea
Whoa, that's genius. I'm guessing you could run the rope loop around another fixed axle, kinda like a belt on two pulleys, with the multiple loops around the drive axle acting as a gearbox. This might actually work ...
Would probably need to be pretty sturdy. With the lack of ball bearings its gonna be hard to make the axle fixed in place and still able to spin
And youd also really need to pull hard on the rope. Since the stick is so thin. If it was bigger it would also be heavier which would weaken RPM which is what needs to be maximized here
Would Love to see this!!
nice idea, that should do it
The only primitive channel I’ll ever watch..
The tuyere might be improved by adding secondary air inlets, using the bernoulli effect to draw in more air with the air that is already moving. Generally, improve the interface between rectangular blower and round tuyere. Any sharp corners cause a "jam" in the air trying to converge into the tuyere, making it turbulent. Maybe make the nozzle rectangular and build it as an integral part of the blower?
I loved this video, here we have a new idea that underperforms relative to the original blower but there are a few things to try before giving up on it.
Not even a second since I saw the notification and started to play.
That means how much I like this channel.
How's the arm feeling after doing that? Any thoughts for swapping it to leg power? Bodgers use foot powered devices with a bendy stick for the return, not sure how you'd go about rigging it to single direction... that weighted stick, bodgers foot pedal going horizonal and a pulley of some sort?
Awesome content as always, thanks for all the effort :)
Maybe if he flipped the fan 90°so it's vertical? Cut a flagstone into a flywheel and pedal a treadle like a spinning wheel?
@@toddalexander5015 That was where my thoughts were headed, too, yeah. But I don't think that would work out. A spinning wheel has a pretty low RPM compared to what he's trying for here, and it experiences much less resistance than one of these impellers does. The treadle would have to have an enormous range of motion, and at that point engineering the wheel becomes a problem, as does leg fatigue. Plus, building a high-speed drive belt with his materials would be a challenge. Not an impossible one, I'm sure, but it would take a long, long time to put it together.
Simple: a ratcheting gear system obviously
Don't tell me anything about the material properties of clay
Oi fellow, thanks for using the word
'Bodgers". Just went down that old rabbit hole n the whole subject. nice one.
I suggest pedal with a lever and a wheel like in old Singer sewing machine.
Hey I just wanted to let you know that the makers of the show Scavengers Reign recently did a reddit AMA where they said that YOU were one of the inspirations for their worldbuilding, which by the way is the richest and most organic world I've ever come across in a series. Keep up the good work inspiring people!
Vai fazer meu dia feliz, melhor canal!!
Nie mogłem się doczekać nowego filmu z twojego kanału. Pozdrowienia z Polski!