How To Make A Tomahawk Handle From Scratch

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  • Опубликовано: 12 янв 2025

Комментарии • 93

  • @Charlielizard
    @Charlielizard 5 лет назад +3

    Great job while under pressure. That scientifically designed balance and rotation testing center is phenomenal. Keep up the great work and thanks for posting!

  • @yobentley7274
    @yobentley7274 5 лет назад +3

    you seem like a really good dude. I am glad I found your channel.

  • @bdh3949
    @bdh3949 5 лет назад

    Truest words you ever spoke Bryan 6:23 , thank you.

  • @PreparedWolf34
    @PreparedWolf34 5 лет назад +1

    Job well done 👍🏼 Great demo. I bet a little Elmer’s Glue right where that wedge is well keep it from sliding.

  • @jonnyboat2
    @jonnyboat2 5 лет назад

    A person can surely see the benefit of such a versatile tool. Thank you for sharing your knowledge.

    • @SurvivalOnPurpose
      @SurvivalOnPurpose  5 лет назад

      Thanks for watching.

    • @jonnyboat2
      @jonnyboat2 5 лет назад

      Survival On Purpose Camp axes are so expensive. I was on Amazon after your vid looking at 26” camp axes. Who makes a good wood handled one?

  • @coldsteelrails9855
    @coldsteelrails9855 5 лет назад +6

    …..your objective was to make a handle using only the thawk head I say mission accomplished !

  • @stevelucier8346
    @stevelucier8346 5 лет назад

    Best new cartoon scene of the year Bryan! I know what you mean by hard wood carving and shaping as I like to restore hatchets, sickles of all kinds and axes. lol Although the old bench grinder and Dremel are my cheats before the wood files are brought in to use. I haven't ever carved like you did here however as I watched it seemed a course flat rock - or sidewalk - would be used to smooth and shape the wood especially the ends. This was a fun video! Thanks

    • @SurvivalOnPurpose
      @SurvivalOnPurpose  5 лет назад

      It was a challenge but it turned out functional. And balanced.

  • @coldsteelrails9855
    @coldsteelrails9855 5 лет назад

    Great job for a first try and that solid thunk on the balance test says it all ! I'm sure your second handle came out perfect !

  • @donaldrutter1738
    @donaldrutter1738 5 лет назад

    Good Job . Was Fun to watch .

  • @Denman500.
    @Denman500. 3 года назад

    Very cool as always.

  • @WoodKnock01
    @WoodKnock01 5 лет назад

    Awesome vid Bryan!!!

  • @mitchalgreen7244
    @mitchalgreen7244 5 лет назад +2

    You should have been on Johnny Carson too. 🤣. Yes, hurry, we can't miss church.👍

  • @yobentley7274
    @yobentley7274 5 лет назад

    I did buy one from your buddy at North Point Ax and it is awesome. Thanks for the review. It lead to a sale and maybe more.

    • @SurvivalOnPurpose
      @SurvivalOnPurpose  5 лет назад

      Cool

    • @Latinos4Trump
      @Latinos4Trump 5 лет назад

      I bought a Roman "back up" dagger from them, one of a kind.

    • @yobentley7274
      @yobentley7274 5 лет назад

      @@Latinos4Trump I did not see that knife name on the North Point website. Was it the Sudden Death Dagger? I just ordered my 2nd ax from Adam. The Danish Battle Axe this time. Looks awesome. I am sure I will build a collection of his stuff over the next few years. Thanks to Brian for showing us this company and another great guy in Adam at North Point Ax.

  • @kevinschmith9379
    @kevinschmith9379 5 лет назад

    Good job,entertaining and informative,thanks

  • @royphelps8084
    @royphelps8084 2 года назад

    Grandpa tought me if I didn't have proper tools , use broken glass to dress the handle down to size . When I was younger with to patents , grandpa,measured my arms and made me a handle for my full sized double bit axe .

  • @lesny414
    @lesny414 5 лет назад

    nice little tomahawk👍👍👍💪

  • @pkbaker100
    @pkbaker100 5 лет назад

    What you do is get a very rough handle that you just break off and wedge into the eye and that way you have a very rough but functional handle to chop your new handle out of. That’s what I do at least. Great vid though👍

  • @tedz.
    @tedz. 5 лет назад

    A+++ for the effort!

  • @charlie4130
    @charlie4130 5 лет назад

    Mingo was the coolest !

  • @robbevington1754
    @robbevington1754 5 лет назад

    fun stuff, let see one you take your time on

    • @SurvivalOnPurpose
      @SurvivalOnPurpose  5 лет назад

      I would like to say sure but the reality is I probably won’t make time for that for a while.

    • @robbevington1754
      @robbevington1754 5 лет назад

      @@SurvivalOnPurpose i understand about make'n time believe me i get it

  • @derickmiller4176
    @derickmiller4176 4 года назад

    Awesome!

  • @wadel6
    @wadel6 5 лет назад

    Pretty stinking cool 😎👍!

  • @terryw.milburn8565
    @terryw.milburn8565 5 лет назад

    Great Finished Project Bryan ! Umm Hmm Balanced ! Have A swell Harvest Moon Weekend ATB T God Bless

  • @nutheadvr5194
    @nutheadvr5194 3 года назад

    lol bob ross if he was a survivor in the middle of nowhere

  • @BushcraftRidge
    @BushcraftRidge 5 лет назад

    Love watching your process! I might have found a smaller temporary handle for the hawk to help with the work on the permanent handle. ;-)

    • @SurvivalOnPurpose
      @SurvivalOnPurpose  5 лет назад +1

      I just used what I had on hand. I had no idea it was gonna be so tough

    • @BushcraftRidge
      @BushcraftRidge 5 лет назад

      @@SurvivalOnPurpose But did you make it to church on time?

  • @brianvannorman1465
    @brianvannorman1465 11 месяцев назад

    Sooo you don't think that those old timers would have a ferrier 's rasp?

  • @becauseitscurrentyear8397
    @becauseitscurrentyear8397 5 лет назад

    I wonder if you could just drill through a smaller piece of wood or pick on with a knot or Y , shim from the bottom and then use the handled Tomahawk to make a better handle later in down time. would probably leave the very top of handle untouched

  • @redsorgum
    @redsorgum 5 лет назад

    That was great! Of course, if you had an uncle Henry Boy Scout style pocket knife, it would have been easier...😉

  • @MichaelR58
    @MichaelR58 5 лет назад

    Bryan, thanks for sharing ,atb brother 👍

  • @millbankbagsusa2037
    @millbankbagsusa2037 5 лет назад

    Brian, enjoy your guitar pickin. What kind of acoustic guitar do you play? ray, Oklahoma

    • @SurvivalOnPurpose
      @SurvivalOnPurpose  5 лет назад +1

      Mostly a Taylor. I have an old Fender I take camping and a really old (1939 or so) Regal archtop that was my Daddy's. It isn't worth much money but it is priceless to me. He passed away this last June and I am almost finished with a song about him. It will be on my other music channel eventually.

  • @benstolen2060
    @benstolen2060 4 года назад

    There’s a challenge! You went hardcore without running to the garage. I own a crap ton of tomahawks but had never tried to make a replacement handle. Today, might be the day. 🤔😁

    • @SurvivalOnPurpose
      @SurvivalOnPurpose  4 года назад

      But it ultimately failed

    • @benstolen2060
      @benstolen2060 4 года назад

      It was a success because it motivated me to get out there and try. Praise the Lord. ❤️

  • @chuckcorris2392
    @chuckcorris2392 3 года назад

    Nice

  • @sasquatch885
    @sasquatch885 5 лет назад

    My first thought was that’s a pretty ambitious project. Then you said you had to leave for church in an hour!😂

  • @rnwillis75
    @rnwillis75 5 лет назад

    I thought you were supposed to soak the head end in water to make the wood swell up, making it tighter. Not sure

    • @SurvivalOnPurpose
      @SurvivalOnPurpose  5 лет назад

      Me either. Mine seemed to work fine the way I did it.

    • @rnwillis75
      @rnwillis75 5 лет назад

      👍Good video.@@SurvivalOnPurpose

    • @myckakoger3309
      @myckakoger3309 5 лет назад

      - I dont mean to insult, only tell you what ive learned. What happens when you soak wood in water is yes, the wood swells due to the cells of the wood becoming saturated, however when it dries out due to heat or evaporation, it actually shrinks smaller than it was before. At that point it can become very dangerous because the head of whatever you are hanging is liable to slip off and hit somebody or something. That is why whenever i hang an axe or a hammer, i let the head side soak in boiled linseed oil for a couple of days. It does the same thing, swelling the wood, however the oil doesnt evaporate, leaving it swollen and a very tight fit.

  • @mlsknnr
    @mlsknnr 5 лет назад

    Good job for being rushed. Just think of what you would have done with time on your side.

  • @michaelmorris1802
    @michaelmorris1802 5 лет назад

    Did they tell you where it came from... I might be interested in picking one up. When I carve my handle, I'm going to use a saw, and a knife... just saying. Yes, you have proven it can me done, but if I have my pack, I'm going to have a saw and a knife, and I'm going to use them.

    • @SurvivalOnPurpose
      @SurvivalOnPurpose  5 лет назад

      I Think I mentioned the in the video. I can't remember.

  • @thefamily_ak1863
    @thefamily_ak1863 5 лет назад

    Thunk!!!! Gby ❤

  • @cmoore7780
    @cmoore7780 3 года назад

    Looks like crape myrtle

  • @tom_olofsson
    @tom_olofsson 5 лет назад

    Do you pay royalties to the composer and performer of your theme music? 😎

    • @SurvivalOnPurpose
      @SurvivalOnPurpose  5 лет назад +2

      That guy keeps asking me where's his money and I keep telling him "there ain't none" ;-)

  • @Robert31352
    @Robert31352 5 лет назад

    Your tongue and cheek statement about being in the woods fifty years without batoning may be funny to all of the youtube movie stars, but I never even thought about it until the incest spewed by youtube movie stars on how to ruin a knife came along. I was taught by men who used proper tools for a job. In my neck of the east Texas woods, if you could not carry an axe or hatchet and a saw along with your belt knife while doing whatever it was you were doing, you did not go to the woods. Saying all of that. if there was such a thing as a one tool option, for me it would be the tomahawk, just for the reason you are showing all of us inexperience woodsmen now.

    • @SurvivalOnPurpose
      @SurvivalOnPurpose  5 лет назад

      Well, times have changed. More and more knives are made with robust full tang construction and sturdy handles that are not only capable of performing more tasks but even designed with harder duty like batoning in mind. Why insult those who choose to practice what is often a very useful technique? Nobody says you "have to" baton with your knife, or even that you should. But to pretend it is not often safer, easier and more precise than swinging a sharpened hunk of steel on the end of a handle is just being obstinate and close-minded. I too spent decades camping and playing in the woods without ever once hitting my knife with a stick. But when I learned about the technique I immediately saw the potential usefulness and it has become another "tool in my toolbox".

    • @Robert31352
      @Robert31352 5 лет назад

      @@SurvivalOnPurpose I surely was not trying to be obstinate or obsolete. As an engineer, I know that banging on the back spine of a knife causes all kinds physics problems that can show up when you least expect it. Batoning an axe, hatchet, or tomahawk is safer and potentially less damage to the tool than batoning a knife made from any kind of super tool steel. If I had one reason alone for not banging on my knife, it would be because of the price that had to be paid for that "high quality" tool. I personally choose the knives made by William Collins and have five of his knives. I really do not want to bang on them because of the price I paid for them. At the same time, I have an assortment of buck knives that have never been batoned as well. Our difference of opinion will not change the price of a cup of coffee anywhere, and you would be welcome at my fire anytime.

    • @SurvivalOnPurpose
      @SurvivalOnPurpose  5 лет назад

      Same here Robert. Stay safe

  • @robertcornelius3514
    @robertcornelius3514 9 месяцев назад

    FAIL. Young viewers, never and I mean never beat on the eye of an axe.

  • @kaizoebara
    @kaizoebara 5 лет назад

    Have a look at Cold Steel tomahawks. Much more attractive than this potato of a hawk. ;)
    PS: I'm talking about the head. The handle you made was alright, considering time constraints and tools used.

    • @SurvivalOnPurpose
      @SurvivalOnPurpose  5 лет назад

      This one is hand-forged and probably a lot closer to traditional. But I like the Cold Steel ones too.

    • @kaizoebara
      @kaizoebara 5 лет назад

      @@SurvivalOnPurpose Have a look at originals at www.furtradetomahawks.com (great historical resource with lots of close-ups). You'll see that Cold Steel's hawks are actually not that far off the mark, apart from being drop-forged.
      This one, however, does look neither authentic nor very well made. Fine for throwing, though, I reckon.

  • @binnsbrian
    @binnsbrian 5 лет назад

    Not your best work. If only you new someone with a knife.

    • @SurvivalOnPurpose
      @SurvivalOnPurpose  5 лет назад +1

      I am actually pretty pleased with the results. My goal was to test one potential advantage of a tomahawk as a "one tool option" by using only the head itself to make a more capable tool. And I was ably to do that in about 30-45 minutes. It wasn't pretty but it worked.