Congratulations!!!! My son is a journeyman in HVAC!! Very long process and hard testing! Also, I was amazed to hear you are in vet school! What an awesome career choice. God Bless!
I’m not sure that many other jobs combine such hard work with health care. I mean, imagine if a surgeon had to make their own hip replacement implants. 😮
The nails are. Little forward and the fullering is a bit racked but but the medial and lateral branches are prominent which is goon ,a lot of good in the shoe and time management is great
S&S Horseshoeing hehe I think all of us would love to know who you are but always remember: if you don‘t feel comfortable infront of the camera or you just want your privacy, that‘s totally fine!! It‘s your decision to make, not ours 🙏🏻
Why face backwards when shoeing a horse and why put a horse's hoof between your legs? Isn't there a risk of being injured if the horse decides to jerk/pull the hoof from your hands?
@@vilhelmsauers1734 in another video, he mentioned he does this so the horse doesn't have to do as much work holding up it's leg. It's more comfortable for the animal.
Someone with experience can hopefully answer this, but why does he bounce the hammer on the anvil? Is it to keep a rhythm, use the bounce for momentum to swing the hammer up, knock off slag of some sort? I know nothing about blacksmith or farrier work.
There are a variety of reasons, regripping the hammer, a moment’s rumination, a habit learned by tradition from their mentor, or resting. Bringing the hammer down on the anvil means less distance to bring it back to swinging height. For those that continually bounce the hammer I find it’s easier on the elbow. An anvil being immobile and solid will rebound the hammer when struck ( Newton’s 3rd law. Every action has an equal and opposite reaction). This means at any given time the hammer is either going up or coming back down so when it needs to be raised back up one won’t need to overcome the inertia of it being at rest if they match the timing. Kind of like jumping on a pogo stick. One usually brushes off scale
I can't figure out why we beat the shoe cold or hot, as a lazy person, I would beat it blazing hot, I do not know when atomic structure could be critical in the process. because I assume that beating the steel while cold bend and stretch, and at blazing hot temperature, it might be possible that the atomic structure can somehow realign itself.
Yeah I was thinking about that. the next step would be magneticaly activated 3D printing, a magnetic pattern within the structure of the printed tools.
Just imagine it! Lol. Customer: yeah, the ole boy needs a new set of shoes! 🐴 3D Printing Farrier: OK sir. That'll be 400$ for the design and cam costs, materials, and I'll be back in 4 days to shoe him up! Also I'll have to add an extra 50$ for the trim and alignment. Blacksmithing Farrier: OK sir, I'll give him a clip, level the hoof, and bang out 4 shoes in a few hours. That'll be $160
Chris Bieber I get why ur worried but no need, the shoes help with their feet so the pressure on their foot is released. I’m no expert at horses but look it up, if helps the horse and doesn’t hurt them.
he never misses his aim 🥺🥺🥺
That’s amazing work! The final product is incredible. Are there any kind of farrier competitions that can be witnessed in the U.S.?
Congratulations!!!! My son is a journeyman in HVAC!! Very long process and hard testing! Also, I was amazed to hear you are in vet school! What an awesome career choice. God Bless!
Gets 35 minutes, smashes out a quality shoe in 18. Legend.
Congratulations to Peaden. Incredible focus and energy. Nice work.
I’m not sure that many other jobs combine such hard work with health care. I mean, imagine if a surgeon had to make their own hip replacement implants. 😮
Well to be fair making a custom hip is a million times more complex than a horseshoe
Hard work.
He is very talented!
What concentration and skill this young man has. Excellent work
I have never seen someone do this before. Fascinating
Is that a Scott anvil? Can you tell me are there advantages with the tapered anvil vs the square heel anvil? Thanks. Great vids.
The nails are. Little forward and the fullering is a bit racked but but the medial and lateral branches are prominent which is goon ,a lot of good in the shoe and time management is great
Great biceps from that work!
haha
S&S Horseshoeing, is that you?
Dan Shepherd no it‘s not him I assume because he was talking about that person in a reply to another comment ☺️
Lea is correct. It is not me, he is a friend of mine that I watched complet his CJF. I need to get brave and get in front of the camera
S&S Horseshoeing hehe I think all of us would love to know who you are but always remember: if you don‘t feel comfortable infront of the camera or you just want your privacy, that‘s totally fine!! It‘s your decision to make, not ours 🙏🏻
Wow!! Great skill!
Damn i remember that... 😂 My elbows hurt watching.
Sheldon. Do Farriers in Training have any fake horses to practice on?
some do. I never have
Why face backwards when shoeing a horse and why put a horse's hoof between your legs? Isn't there a risk of being injured if the horse decides to jerk/pull the hoof from your hands?
@@vilhelmsauers1734 in another video, he mentioned he does this so the horse doesn't have to do as much work holding up it's leg. It's more comfortable for the animal.
Should be on world's best workers vine and a quick question can u do a vid explaining all of your equipment and what they do
Wow…very impressive
Someone with experience can hopefully answer this, but why does he bounce the hammer on the anvil? Is it to keep a rhythm, use the bounce for momentum to swing the hammer up, knock off slag of some sort? I know nothing about blacksmith or farrier work.
It helps with the reposition on the hammer while holding the hammer
There are a variety of reasons, regripping the hammer, a moment’s rumination, a habit learned by tradition from their mentor, or resting. Bringing the hammer down on the anvil means less distance to bring it back to swinging height. For those that continually bounce the hammer I find it’s easier on the elbow. An anvil being immobile and solid will rebound the hammer when struck ( Newton’s 3rd law. Every action has an equal and opposite reaction). This means at any given time the hammer is either going up or coming back down so when it needs to be raised back up one won’t need to overcome the inertia of it being at rest if they match the timing. Kind of like jumping on a pogo stick.
One usually brushes off scale
Do Farriers ever use hearing protection? Years and years of that repetitive sound can really damage one's hearing.
I wonder if his right arm/shoulder/back are significantly bigger/stronger than his left arm/shoulder/back.
I want to appreciate his skills. But i keep getting distracted by his biceps 😍
Great!:-)
I can't figure out why we beat the shoe cold or hot, as a lazy person, I would beat it blazing hot, I do not know when atomic structure could be critical in the process. because I assume that beating the steel while cold bend and stretch, and at blazing hot temperature, it might be possible that the atomic structure can somehow realign itself.
Here is what I know steel work hardens, and it also becomes brittle when heated up and not cooled slowly enough.
Yeah I was thinking about that. the next step would be magneticaly activated 3D printing, a magnetic pattern within the structure of the printed tools.
Just imagine it! Lol.
Customer: yeah, the ole boy needs a new set of shoes! 🐴
3D Printing Farrier: OK sir. That'll be 400$ for the design and cam costs, materials, and I'll be back in 4 days to shoe him up! Also I'll have to add an extra 50$ for the trim and alignment.
Blacksmithing Farrier: OK sir, I'll give him a clip, level the hoof, and bang out 4 shoes in a few hours. That'll be $160
@@Thatz_Dustin ahahha I agree, but I hope that 3d printing could be cheaper later, like the radio or tv when they cost big money back then
Tie your anvil down. Bouncing all over
How much is that shoe worth? I say $200
We all wanna know what u look like @ SS Horseshoeing
Bet your arm is tired. Nice looking shoes, do wish the person doing the video got closer.
That would have been better for sure! but it was at a Certified Journeyman Farrier Certification so I had to give him his space.
Horses literally don't ever need horseshoes...It's a cruel practice. Nice to see some blacksmithing though.
Chris Bieber I get why ur worried but no need, the shoes help with their feet so the pressure on their foot is released. I’m no expert at horses but look it up, if helps the horse and doesn’t hurt them.