These craftsmen are just so skilled ……i just cannot stop watching these guys making such superb products using the skills we in the west have all but lost . Thanks for sharing ……Abe ( uk )
I saw message - We reply to all comments. That is best marketing! Well done and love your work. Thank you and God bless you and your families and wish you all the best! I hope God will provide you enough so every worker will have job till end of life. Bless you and your families.
These men are specialists who matter-of-factly create masterpieces using mostly ancestor's techniques and primitive equipment or knee-made hand tools. Thanks for the video!
@@stewcountrysongsstew4980 I just found them on Amazon. Looks like $49.99 from JNR Traders in Michigan. I doubt they're paying anything near that to the factory.
Truly artistic.. often seeing somebody making an axe sord or a knife with a skilled way.. but for the very first time have watched a mass production of versatile Damascus axes made with care .. treat to watch honestly ❤️..
I wish mine had been made this way I ordered one of eBay and paid top dollar for it and when I got it the ax head had been cast in a mold and polished up to look like good metal.
Грамотно и толково сделано. На выходе - прекрасные топоры. Сразу видно опытные руки настоящих мастеров! Кузнечная сварка "пирога" из низкоуглеродистой и углеродистой стали. Ковка, скручивание и опять ковка. Красивый рисунок. Кто здесь пишет что-то отрицательное, тот тяжелее стакана ничего не поднимал.
Большое спасибо за высокую оценку и положительный отзыв. Нам очень нужны такие люди, как вы, которые могут мотивировать нас делать больше хорошей работы. Большое уважение вам из Пакистана.
@@SkillSpotter Не по ГОСТу сделано, опасная игрушка. Возьмите советский ГОСТ и сделайте как там написано, тогда это будет инструмент а не декорация на стенку. Советский ГОСТ - опыт десятков миллионов ГУЛАГа.
Топор хлам он не для работы он для красоты сама форма топора там чисто декоративная ручка очень быстро износится площадь крепления в большинстве тех топоров слишком мала для хорошего контакта ручки и рабочей части будет постоянно расшатываться и вылетать. Да повесить на стене это можно для красоты но для работы или туризма я бы такое некогда не купил.
@@leofrum4909 При чем тут гост любой кто работал с деревом или срубами скажет тебе что это кусок хавна по крайне мере большинство из показанного там только один более менее нормальный. Площадь рабочей части и ручки слишком мала ручка будет быстро изнашиваться и расшатываться да и по технологии производства масса вопросов в плане закалки и отпуска. Ни один нормальный столяр не купит себе такое для работы.
I’m far from a professional blade maker but I’ve never heard of quenching Damascus in water. I’d love to see the temper process and see a hardness test. Beautiful tools they are making. All unique and I’d love to have one. Edit: I looked them up and are about a 58 HRC. Pretty hard but with 1095 and 15N20 it should hold up well.
This is beautiful craftsmanship! It is very impressive to know that they actually are hand made and fun to see they are mastering that specific Norse mythology style that spot on !
Water quenching can render the steel to be brittle compared to oil quenching. Even oil quenching will render heat treated steel to be brittle. It would require reheating and left to cool gradually to release the tension in the steel. If ever you try it yourself, you can audibly hear the difference between quenching / heating periods. After the first quench, it sounds like tapping glass. After the second heat period it once again regains its metallic qualities. I made a “Huntsman” machete with my son and the whole process was quite rewarding, especially the heat treatment process.
Jesus of Nazareth, The Messiah, died for the remission of sin, including yours, was buried and rose from the dead on the third day, and whoever believes on him has everlasting life in heaven. Jesus himself said in John 6:47 "Verily, verily, I say unto you, He that believeth on me hath everlasting life."
It just amazes me how they can do all that squatting on the floor. If I did that I will find it difficult walking for a few days. Anyway these guys are masters of their art.
Sorry but I live in Viking land and that is Sweden and these axes are not viking axes. They are only pale copies that have nothing in common with real Viking axes.
I like how these guys are working with red hot steel and showers of sparks while wearing crocs or sandals the whole time! Def no OSHA regulations here!
a viking axe was found in ireland the axe head was folded over a solid shape for handle and hammered shut no way of drilling hole for handle in viking times. this is just as good .
I would be afraid to use an axe like that as they are so beautiful they look like they should be hung up on a wall as art. Great job guys!!! Well done!!
These can be used for any hard work but you are right these are beautiful and can be kept as a piece of art. Thank you so much for your valuable feedback.
Truly a well oiled production team machine. I see your products on ebay/Amazon quite often, tell me, do you make private label lines for distributors who want an exclusive style all their own?
Seeing them all wear sandals is just so absurd to me. It makes me grateful that I am able to live in America. These guys probably make next to nothing and grind from sun up to sundown with no safety equipment and it's a guarantee that if they get hurt and can't work they will just be replaced that day and will be screwed. I really feel bad for them
@@SpAgHeTtIssAuCe first, if you agree that their way of doing things is absurd and now you label it as stupid. Gotta love the discriminant minds of people, no not really!
And doesn't the cutting edge have to be heated again a little (tempered) so that the structure relaxes? Otherwise the cutting edge would be hard but brittle.
@@andlem Yes, it's called "tempering". You are correct. After the blades are heated to the proper temperature (which these aren't) the blades is quenched (dunking the mega hot blade in either oil or water). Then after that the blade is heated up again, but not as hot as when the blade was quenched. After a blade is dunked for the quench, the metal becomes extremely hard, but it also becomes extremely brittle. Just like glass. So the tempering allows the metal to soften ever so slightly to relieve that brittleness.
The color has little to do with it overall as we each see color different..the metal has to be heated to a non magnetic state then quenched in 120° to 130° F oil / water..heated to a point the metal is no longer magnetic regardless of color..then heated for 2 cycles to temper at 350° to 400° F each 2 hours long to lower the hardness some..
You can see the complete forging process in other video. It can be used as decoration as self defence and also for butchering. Thank you so much for your comment.
These look fare better than the 2 hatchets I bought some years back. the ones i got were beautiful burly handled walnut but after about 8 strikes the handled shattered the nice grain wood is just to weak so I re handled both of them and they have been great the steel is stainless and will out last me . Also on mine the hole for the handle is coked about to one side about 3/16 that was an issue making the new handle. But these look great nice job.
2:58 You know it s crude shop in india when theyre wearing sandals at factory that produces iron tools from start to finish This guy here wearing one sandal, was somehow lucky to at least get wear one boot since it was from his fellow worker that now didnt need it after having his leg amputated by the machinery there.
ONLY ever purchase from a reputable smith, find yourself one in your own country, or if you can't check England, Germany, the Netherlands, etc. those smiths are famous for their skill. Especially with blades and weaponry. When it's too hot in summer for me to fire up the forge here in Australia I literally bespoke order tools I need from England and it works out about the same price as buying a middle range tool from a shop here. In fact, if you're a novice, your first attempt at making something will probably be superior quality than the cheap to mid range versions of said tool in a store. Try it and see!
Great to see true art being made from the most basic equipment, and the end product is really eye catching. My compliments.
I bet these guys can arm a small army in a week. Very skilled and detailed craftsmanship, I love it
Thank you very much for your comment and very sorry for the late reply.
These craftsmen are just so skilled ……i just cannot stop watching these guys making such superb products using the skills we in the west have all but lost .
Thanks for sharing ……Abe ( uk )
Glad you like them!
And very sorry for the very late reply.
Keep supporting please.
I saw message - We reply to all comments. That is best marketing! Well done and love your work. Thank you and God bless you and your families and wish you all the best! I hope God will provide you enough so every worker will have job till end of life. Bless you and your families.
Thank you very much for your valuable comment and best wishes.
Welcome to our channel.
These men are specialists who matter-of-factly create masterpieces using mostly ancestor's techniques and primitive equipment or knee-made hand tools. Thanks for the video!
Thank you so much for your valuable feedback.
I had an axe throwing show for over 30 years and love to throw the Viking axe made by cold steel.
Prachtig werk leuk om het te zien.
I like some of those handles though a flare to help the grip when you choke up to carve is nice.
Wow, all that makes me wanna buy em all just so i could help support those guys. Great job everyone.
Kindly check the description of the video for more details.
Thank you so much for your valuable comment.
@@SkillSpotter where may these be purchased?
@@stewcountrysongsstew4980 I'd like to know that, too.
@@stewcountrysongsstew4980 I just found them on Amazon. Looks like $49.99 from JNR Traders in Michigan. I doubt they're paying anything near that to the factory.
Truly artistic.. often seeing somebody making an axe sord or a knife with a skilled way.. but for the very first time have watched a mass production of versatile Damascus axes made with care .. treat to watch honestly ❤️..
Thank you so much for your precious words.
Keep giving us your valuable feedback.
I wish mine had been made this way I ordered one of eBay and paid top dollar for it and when I got it the ax head had been cast in a mold and polished up to look like good metal.
Bro how to contact you@@SkillSpotter
OUTSTANDING CRAFTSMANSHIP. I LOVE THE WAY THE BLADES CAME OUT
Thank you very much for your valuable comment.
Beautiful axes for a mass produced model - each person has their specific skill in the production of them.
Грамотно и толково сделано. На выходе - прекрасные топоры.
Сразу видно опытные руки настоящих мастеров!
Кузнечная сварка "пирога" из низкоуглеродистой и углеродистой стали. Ковка, скручивание и опять ковка.
Красивый рисунок.
Кто здесь пишет что-то отрицательное, тот тяжелее стакана ничего не поднимал.
Большое спасибо за высокую оценку и положительный отзыв. Нам очень нужны такие люди, как вы, которые могут мотивировать нас делать больше хорошей работы. Большое уважение вам из Пакистана.
@@SkillSpotter Не по ГОСТу сделано, опасная игрушка. Возьмите советский ГОСТ и сделайте как там написано, тогда это будет инструмент а не декорация на стенку. Советский ГОСТ - опыт десятков миллионов ГУЛАГа.
@@scizlt И рядом хвалёный советский ГОСТ не стоял с этими топорами. А "опасной игрушкой" любой топор является. Хоть по ГОСТу хоть без.))
Априори.
Топор хлам он не для работы он для красоты сама форма топора там чисто декоративная ручка очень быстро износится площадь крепления в большинстве тех топоров слишком мала для хорошего контакта ручки и рабочей части будет постоянно расшатываться и вылетать. Да повесить на стене это можно для красоты но для работы или туризма я бы такое некогда не купил.
@@leofrum4909 При чем тут гост любой кто работал с деревом или срубами скажет тебе что это кусок хавна по крайне мере большинство из показанного там только один более менее нормальный. Площадь рабочей части и ручки слишком мала ручка будет быстро изнашиваться и расшатываться да и по технологии производства масса вопросов в плане закалки и отпуска. Ни один нормальный столяр не купит себе такое для работы.
Nice work with a lot of people involved .Imagine the production with modern machinery.
Thank you very much for your comment.
You all make very beautiful axes. Beautiful craftsmanship.
Thank you very much for your valuable comment.
Beautiful axes, some of the handles were gorgeous !
Thank you very much for your beautiful comment.
Some of the handles had proper grain orientation, not many, but some.
I’m far from a professional blade maker but I’ve never heard of quenching Damascus in water. I’d love to see the temper process and see a hardness test. Beautiful tools they are making. All unique and I’d love to have one.
Edit: I looked them up and are about a 58 HRC. Pretty hard but with 1095 and 15N20 it should hold up well.
Thank you so much for your valuable comment and appreciation.
We will make more videos of your interest and also try to do some tests in the video.
It should be just an imitation of Damascus, the price of the two should be different, commercial...
58 ... 60 HRC is best Stahl ( 60C² . . )
This is beautiful craftsmanship! It is very impressive to know that they actually are hand made and fun to see they are mastering that specific Norse mythology style that spot on !
Water quenching can render the steel to be brittle compared to oil quenching.
Even oil quenching will render heat treated steel to be brittle. It would require reheating and left to cool gradually to release the tension in the steel.
If ever you try it yourself, you can audibly hear the difference between quenching / heating periods. After the first quench, it sounds like tapping glass. After the second heat period it once again regains its metallic qualities.
I made a “Huntsman” machete with my son and the whole process was quite rewarding, especially the heat treatment process.
Some great skills on display producing a very beautiful and practical axe.
Thank you very much!
Thank you for the visit. I appreciate your craftsmanship. Thanks for sharing your time and talent! KANSAS USA
Thank you very much for your appreciation.
Thanks again from Gujrat city Pakistan.
These Are Beautiful Pieces Guys , GOOOOD JOB ; )
Thank you so much for your appreciation.
PIECES .
Настолько замечательный и крепкий метал, что сверлится и обрабатывается просто прекрасно))) .....
.... и называется он люминий.
Those Vikings axes are just awesome. Great job!
Thank you so much.
Not Viking ,Indian
Wow what an amazing hand-crated axe, I would love to review one. Cheers!
Kindly check the description of the video for more details.
Thank you so much for your comment.
Мастер Золотые руки , спасибо дорогой !
I thought it was normally axe who know that f....king Damascus absolutely beautiful
Thank you very much for your comment.
Indeed, skilled work right there, beautiful product.
Jesus of Nazareth, The Messiah, died for the remission of sin, including yours, was buried and rose from the dead on the third day, and whoever believes on him has everlasting life in heaven. Jesus himself said in John 6:47 "Verily, verily, I say unto you, He that believeth on me hath everlasting life."
Thank you so much.
It just amazes me how they can do all that squatting on the floor. If I did that I will find it difficult walking for a few days. Anyway these guys are masters of their art.
Thank you so much for your appreciation.
Keep giving your valuable feedback.
No kidding maybe a couple of them should go into making chairs. My knees hurt just from watching them.
If this is a Factory ,
Then my back alley is a Freeway !
Yes your back alley is mini freeway and this is a mini factory.
Sorry but I live in Viking land and that is Sweden and these axes are not viking axes. They are only pale copies that have nothing in common with real Viking axes.
Respect your opinion.
Actually this axe's design is inspired by the movie series of the vikings.
@@SkillSpotter kaise kharid kar sakte hai Bangladesh se?
I feel like if they cut you with it will hurt like if it was a viking axe js
These are the best craftsmen ever,very talented
Thank you very much for your valuable comment.
what a bunch of artits really impresive
Thank you so much for your valuable comment.
I like how these guys are working with red hot steel and showers of sparks while wearing crocs or sandals the whole time! Def no OSHA regulations here!
Thank you so much for your deep observation.
Beautiful video regarding axe making. 🙏🙏🙏
Thank you so much for your appreciation.
a viking axe was found in ireland the axe head was folded over a solid shape for handle and hammered shut no way of drilling hole for handle in viking times. this is just as good .
Respect your opinion.
Thank you so much for your comment.
Sorry for the very late reply.
Yo les felicito x su buen trabajo desde España
I would be afraid to use an axe like that as they are so beautiful they look like they should be hung up on a wall as art. Great job guys!!! Well done!!
These can be used for any hard work but you are right these are beautiful and can be kept as a piece of art.
Thank you so much for your valuable feedback.
Buy ten, not just one.
بہترین جناب ۔ بہت خوب 🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉
Thank you so much.
Very nice job. Looks beautiful.
Thank you very much!
beautiful axes and patterns
Thank you so much for your appreciation.
Espectacular Work , greetings from Ecuador my friends
Thank you so much for your appreciation.
Nice product. Hope it's durable too.
Yes dear it's durable you can check the forging process in linked video.
Thank you so much for your valuable comment.
Truly a well oiled production team machine.
I see your products on ebay/Amazon quite often, tell me, do you make private label lines for distributors who want an exclusive style all their own?
Great work
Thank you so much 😀
You do great work those are good quality axe’s you’ve got it down to a science. 👍👍👍
Thank you so much for your appreciation.
This is an excelent work, and video
Glad you enjoyed it!
Thank you so much for your comment.
blessed hands. really stunning.
Thank you so much! 😊
Seeing them all wear sandals is just so absurd to me. It makes me grateful that I am able to live in America. These guys probably make next to nothing and grind from sun up to sundown with no safety equipment and it's a guarantee that if they get hurt and can't work they will just be replaced that day and will be screwed. I really feel bad for them
I respect your opinion.
You are very right.
Why should something be absurd just because it's not what you are used to or how you would do something.
@@theodorerobert6579 because its not safe and its stupid, like trying to milk a bull
@@SpAgHeTtIssAuCe first, if you agree that their way of doing things is absurd and now you label it as stupid. Gotta love the discriminant minds of people, no not really!
@@theodorerobert6579 but stupid is a synonym of absurd
Nice work guys!!
Thank you so much for your appreciation.
I know for certain that the Vikings had such tools - electric mills, drills, lathe, sander and power hammer
Should use the facilities whatever in hand.
Thank you so much for your comment.
Nice work guys
Thank you so much 😀
You should start exporting them to Australia They look great
I think you can get it.
Kindly check the description of the video for more details.
Thank you so much for your comment.
Very nice axe
fantastic indeed
Glad you think so!
Luar biasa pembuat kapak yang keren bagus
Terima kasih banyak selamat datang di channel saya
Top Work
Is it Art or Axe? Great skills
Yes it is.
Thank you so much for your comment.
I have and axe and machete I want to rework. Is there a way to harden the sharpen edge ( after fine sanding) by firing?
Good Work 🎃🎃
Thank you very much.
that is very Cool Axe
Thank you so much.
好精美且特殊的紋路,真好看
非常感謝您的讚賞。
excellent !
Maravilloso trabajo
Those did not look at all like they got up to temperature for quench. I want to see a file test.
We will bring more videos of your interest & according to your points.
Not even close to a quenching temp... you should be able to see the orange color even in broad daylight
And doesn't the cutting edge have to be heated again a little (tempered) so that the structure relaxes? Otherwise the cutting edge would be hard but brittle.
@@andlem Yes, it's called "tempering". You are correct. After the blades are heated to the proper temperature (which these aren't) the blades is quenched (dunking the mega hot blade in either oil or water). Then after that the blade is heated up again, but not as hot as when the blade was quenched. After a blade is dunked for the quench, the metal becomes extremely hard, but it also becomes extremely brittle. Just like glass. So the tempering allows the metal to soften ever so slightly to relieve that brittleness.
The color has little to do with it overall as we each see color different..the metal has to be heated to a non magnetic state then quenched in 120° to 130° F oil / water..heated to a point the metal is no longer magnetic regardless of color..then heated for 2 cycles to temper at 350° to 400° F each 2 hours long to lower the hardness some..
Beautiful work. Put leather wraps on the handles and they would be perfect (if you're using quality carbon steel)
They use leather wraps also on the handles and also make sheaths for axes.
Kindly check the description of the video for more details.
This is a wall hanger folks or a weapon, it's not for chopping wood it could be a butchers ax
You can see the complete forging process in other video.
It can be used as decoration as self defence and also for butchering.
Thank you so much for your comment.
Great video, i want one.
Thank you for your comment.
Kindly check the description of the video for more details.
Hard to duplicate this process by machine only. That's the human touch in action.
Beautiful
Thank you very much dear.
good job this axe is beatiful.
Thank you so much.
tudo padronizado e o processo é executado com toda a segurança :D
Very impressive indeed.
Thank you so much.
Nice work. Damascus edge? I dont think the sharpness would last,Also not sure about the water quench.
You must try this and then share your opinion about these.
Thank you so much for your comment.
A useable ax would have a piece of carbon steel forged into the edge. These will separate and not hold up well if ever used.
Very nice production.
Much appreciated!
These look fare better than the 2 hatchets I bought some years back. the ones i got were beautiful burly handled walnut but after about 8 strikes the handled shattered the nice grain wood is just to weak so I re handled both of them and they have been great the steel is stainless and will out last me . Also on mine the hole for the handle is coked about to one side about 3/16 that was an issue making the new handle. But these look great nice job.
Thank you very much for your appreciation and valuable comment.
Magnifique !!!! super travail!!!
Merci beaucoup.
영하 20ㅡ50도 정도 추운 지방의 단단한 나무, 옹이부분 과연 괜찮을까 궁금..
They're so ingenuitive in India. I don't understand why they haven't figured out tables and work benches yet. Everything is done on the floor.
2:58 You know it s crude shop in india when theyre wearing sandals at factory that produces iron tools from start to finish
This guy here wearing one sandal, was somehow lucky to at least get wear one boot since it was from his fellow worker that now didnt need it after having his leg amputated by the machinery there.
Thank you so much for your opinion.
very well mad. in end revealed dimastic metal. super surprised.
Thank you so much for your valuable comment.
I sure could have used a matching pair of left and right offset bearded hatchets when I was a carpenter.
Thank you so much for your valuable comment.
Very nice, would love to have one!
Thank you so much.
Kindly check the description of the video for more details about these axes.
Beautiful work
Thank you very much!
Good job
Thanks
Bellezas de metales bien trabajados.Excelente.
Gracias desde Pakistán, bienvenido a mi canal.
ТБ на высшем уровне! Но топоры крутые
Спасибо большое добро пожаловать на мой канал
Your product looks awesome how much are each one I live in USA so price with shipping and how long to receive the item
Thanks a lot for your appreciation and interest.
You can check the link in the description of the video for more details about this product.
They look great but after seeing the water quench I question the durability
Good point!
That scene is not a quality test but only showed the usage of these gasket rings and that ring was an old one.
Would raid a village with one of these any day 10/10
Thank you very much for your comment.
Just don't hit anything with it. Or bring a spare.
Very nice job
Thank you so much.
These dudes work at a literal AXE FACTORY and choose to wear rubber sandals. Blows me away lol
Excellent workmanship. Beautiful handmade axes. How can I place order?
Thanks a lot for your comment.
Kindly check the description of the video for more details.
Wont to buy one...😊..where can i get one ...i am in Germany..???!!!!
Great team work and are they available online?
Thanks a lot.
Kindly check the description of the video for more details.
good job
best artwork
Thank you so much for your appreciation.
ONLY ever purchase from a reputable smith, find yourself one in your own country, or if you can't check England, Germany, the Netherlands, etc. those smiths are famous for their skill. Especially with blades and weaponry. When it's too hot in summer for me to fire up the forge here in Australia I literally bespoke order tools I need from England and it works out about the same price as buying a middle range tool from a shop here. In fact, if you're a novice, your first attempt at making something will probably be superior quality than the cheap to mid range versions of said tool in a store. Try it and see!
Thank you very much for your informative comment.
Damascus steel awesome patterns .
Thanks a lot.
Wow nice 👌👌
Thank you so much.
Klasse Meister !
Ich danke Ihnen sehr.
Parabéns pelo lindo trabalho quanto custa uma machadinha dessas
Beautiful work!🔥
Thank you! Cheers!