That was nothing short of amazing. The carbide lamp, the stable, I can imagine your disbelief when coming across them. What a treat. Seeing footprints left 90ish years ago...amazing. Running this one out must bring s sense of satisfaction. 12 plus hours underground would gas anyone. I suspect you all slept well that night. This one I will watch several times. Thank you, Justin.
Once again thank you for an absolutely great adventure. Your detailed information on the history is very appreciated. You have gained to new viewers who you have sitting on the edge of their seats. I introduced your channel to my 8 and 6 year old nephews. They can't wait for your next videos. They now have a sparked interest in geology and adventure. Your videos also are now being used to teach these two young gentlemen what life was like over a hundred years ago in an understanding of how hard it was for people to earn a living. Thank you again for another great video and please be safe in all of your adventures.
Out of all of the mining channels that I've watched over the years not once has any of them ever shown a horse pen area inside of one nor would I have ever expected there to be one that deep within a mine. An awesome find! Thank you for sharing this exploration with us. Such a wonderful mine.
That's probably because they're beyond rare; this may be one of the very first ever filmed in the Western US hardrock underground. Most of the mines that retained their livery infrastructure have long since caved.
I have watched thousands of mine exploring videos. This is the first one where an actual stable for the mules has been found. Amazing! Great find guys!
I've been waiting literal years to know what's down in the Anti-Union Chamber. It's amazing you guys got it on video before it's gone forever given the condition of the mine. Thank you, guys. Yes yes, the other mine intersecting this one, the newspaper and candles in the lunch break cave, and the cool mule stable and all, but the most important thing is the Anti-Union Chamber!
As always, huge kudos to the intrepid explorers! Justin, Jeremy and Graham....what a crew! Thanks for many hours of tagging along, seeing stuff that Is way beyond my ability to access at my age. On this one, the most incredible part (to me anyway) was the stable. Never before seen, most likely never see one again.
Carbide in water emits acetylene gas. The tube allows the gas to travel up to the opening in the reflector. Move too fast and flame goes out, which is why there was usually a striker right in the reflector.
Not exactly. I'm a spelunking from the 70's. The carbide rocks did sit in the lower camber. Above that was a water tank (chamber) of several ounces. On top of the water tank was a lever, which in fact was a valve, which controlled the amount of water dropped into the carbide. This allowed the flame to be adjusted - more water, more acetylene gas - shorter burn time.
Hi Justin, Graham & Jeremy, wow that mine just kept on giving but the best part for me was the huge cave and the stable area with the leather and old trough, that is such a rare find because I watch a few abandoned mine channels and have never seen an underground stable. This has to be your best explore to date. Dang what Jeremy did to get across that scary pit and back again, falling along the way was so ballsy, respect Jeremy, RESPECT my man. Jeez you guys all deserve big respect for the amount of effort you put into this mine. Thank you all so much for going above and beyond in this mine, it has been one fascinating adventure as you said over many years, much love to all of you. xxx🥰🙏🙏❤
Hey Justin: Just a minor nit pick to start the vid. The carbide lamp doesn't burn the carbide. The carbide is in the bottom. The top half of the lamp is a water container. There is a dial or other mechanism on the top that drips the water into the carbide, which make acetylene gas, which is burned for light (just like a small acetylene torch). Many of them also had a serrated wheel and flint (much like a Zippo lighter) to fire them. In the 50's when I was a kid, these were around and we played with them. The bigger issue was finding the carbide. Anyway, I love your work.....carry on my brother!
Jeremy providing perspective at around 11:45 was astounding. Initially, I thought that the cave was simply an excavation about the size of walk in closet. As he made his way forth, an arena-sized cave swallowed him up, he became smaller and more distant. Amazing! The camera's view, though impressive, doesn't do these places justice.
All my respect! For considering safety and life matters first. There is no cowardice in doing that. No sensation, or cool clip, or scoop is worth a life, be it own life or an other person's one. Not everyone seems to understand this.
Thank you very much for this mine serial, lots of hard work shooting it, then trying to edit all the footage and finally uploading it. That looks like a huge mine, thanks again
Amazing old mine. CUDOS to you guys, for sticking with it, and showing, what would have to be, one othe best ever abandoned mines, left in America.That stable find? The find of a lifetime. Congrats gents.
F. P. Cutting Company was one of the earliest canners in California. Started in 1859 by Francis Cutting, the cannery on Main Street in San Francisco packed fruit, jams, jellies, tomatoes, and other products. Cutting was canning pears, peaches, and apricots by 1863. Others had been canning in California previously - D. Provost repacked pickles and jams shipped from the east coast, and Erzgarber and Gotzen packed jams and jellies. However, Cutting was the first canning local fruit[. By 1872, Cutting could pack 22,000 cans in a single day - wikipedia 😎
The black powder/cartridge paper at 59:22 was possibly "Bobbinite" or similar. This was compressed black powder pressed into the shape of a bobbin & with a tapered hole through the center. The hole allowed a fuse to be threaded through and the end doubled back, which trapped & secured itself against the taper. Wrapped in wax paper for protection, it was a common mining explosive in the UK from the late 1800's and into the 20th C. & no doubt used world wide.
You spoiled us with so many rare finds on this episode. 🤯 The only problem is you've set the bar so high now for the future. 😅😝 Keep up the great work, bro.
Awesome explore! Thank you! I would have said Nope long before and never seen that awesomeness! That is exactly why you go where everyone else said Nope! Well Done!
Liked the stable. The leather piece hanging on nail was most likely a tug or trace. The spare chain you found would be a heal chain. Runs from the end of tug to a single tree which would be connected to ore car(s). The other leather strap hanging by its snap is probably a lead. The mules probably had minimal harness since the work would be flat. Rivits were used to repair, however they degrade the leather, but are fast to fix. Probably in the early 1900s. Looked like a massive operation, great explore!
Absolutely spectacular! That Stable was incredible .. closest I've seen (on video) is the remains of a horse powered winch from the guys in the UK ... but an actual stable with feed and tack is almost mythical. Thanks for sharing 🇨🇦
Never mind the bullshit cave, this is a tremendous document. The mule stable was so unexpected. Love your narrative and determination of your team. Great stuff ❤
Carbide lights work by dripping water into the carbide rocks. acetylene gas is released and exits the nozzle and is burning using the flint striker to start the fire. Used carbide looks like what you showed in the video (white ash), Flame is adjusted by the lever on top that increased flow of water into the carbide. I used one back in the 70s while exploring mines and caves.
"Carbide lamp - none of you have ever seen one? No!" OMG, am I really that old? Carbide lamps were the light source of choice for mine and cave exploring during my younger years (70's, 80's and 90's) only being replaced when cheap and reliable LED headlamps became available. BTW - there is water in the upper part and calcium carbide in the lower. The tube drips water into the carbide to produce acetylene gas which you light with the flint striker near the outlet nozzle in the center of a polished stainless steel reflector. One load of water and carbide is good for 1-2 hours depending on how bright of a flame you need.
While living on GuLangYu, XiaMen, Fujian Province, PROC in the early 1980’s, we used carbide lamps as our emergency backup light. Believe it or not, candles and batteries cost much more money. My Father used carbide lamps while mining Uranium around Tomsich Butte, in Emery County, in The San Rafael Swell of Utah, USA in the 1950’s. Been trying to wrack my memory for the name of the mine. But, there were so many mines in that area.
Awesome Jeremy, slamming into stuff Forgot Whiskey in there. I'm seeing the Buckingham and Velvet tobacco is still made today. They had mules in the mine? Poor mule I hope they rolled him a smoke
A very nice big natural cave wow, and a big collapse, a nice mine with everything you wanna see including a stable wow that is a first, great explore Justin, that sliding rock can become Russian roulette, no fun. Still one too remember.
There was a big brick house in town that had carbide generater out back in a shed. Had lights on the walls with plumbing to them. I dont think the acetylene makes makes much pressure. But it obviously worked. Indoor crappers were just getting started in early 50s. I was in 3rd grade before we lived with indoor plumbing. First TV in town was at the switch board operators house. Crank telephones until mid 50s. She had plug in patch cords on the switch board panel.. nice lady, us kids would sit on floor and watch little TV after school.
Hello Justin and and the rest of the explorers after watching this and seeing Jeremy going into BIG CAVE and sliding down and seeing him way out the far side i had to go back and marvel how big that cave really is 😟. And going back to what i call the barn donkey stable and seeing what was found and the list goes onnnn thank you and the rest of the explores for fliming .and top safey to all ⛏️🏆
Calcium carbide is interesting stuff if you're into the chemistry. It "steals" the oxygen atom from water and replaces it with carbon, which makes the acetylene gas that's used in lamps. But the other part is CaO (quicklime), and since there's water present it hydrolyzes to Ca(OH)2, or slaked lime. Yes, same stuff for construction or the garden, that's ALMOST the fluffy white powder you're seeing in the containers. Why almost? Because it USED to be slaked lime... over time it actually absorbs CO2 and turns into calcium carbonate, so the waste from the lamp will actually scrub a little CO2 out of the air. Plus, as it's making gas the chemical process is exothermic... the mixing container will get warm, so if it's cold you can just hold it and give your fingers a treat.
My dad smoked half and half pipe tobacco (half burley and half bright leaf) This was after they merged with the American Tobacco Co. I had no idea how big the cave was till Jeremy went into it. Y'all showed your big brass ones on this video more than usual.
Wow! When you see underground stables, you're approaching something on the scale of the Copper Queen in Bisbee. Big-Time Professional Mining! Ahhhh! [Rips shirt off.]
"checking that out" is TVR code for "taking a piss". 27:15 - is it possible they skirted the cave and the side of it collapsed at some point? Looking at the color of the rock it looks a little like there was a drift along the wall, which might explain the direction it was mined.
i’ve used carbide lamps for caving, bout 30 yrs ago. water+ Carbide = acetylene gas + Ca(OH)2 the white powder you see is the calcium hydroxide, acetylene gas is burned (to provide a durable intense flame) or dissipated over time
i knew that slide with jeremy was coming and still thought oh shit when it did happen glad no injurys,that man as admantium balls....the can you found it had the city name but was rusted up top was cut open in small triangles, i have done this to use the can as a pan and kettle holder for a small fuel burner in the past so maybe that was its use..epic journey all told..
When you guys first dropped down, at 4:33 there was some miner's graphitti on the lower part of the junction that read "518A" "...MW" "to" "...900C" "om" or "on". What was that?
Commenting early...its gonna take a pretty big cave to beat that one silver mine yall got into! That was actually the first time I'd heard you cuss on camera 😂 "Holy shit!!"
The carbide doesn't burn, in the top of the lamp there a reservoir of water which via a control valve is slowly dripping into the carbide chamber, this then produces acetylene gas which is then burnt at the nozzle to provide the light, that's why you see piles of spent carbide scattered around the mines, once it's done producing the gas it is basically useless.
Gob - The term applied to that part of the mine from which the ore has been removed and the space more or less filled up with waste. Also, the loose waste in a mine. Also called goaf.
Being safe = more mine explore videos... So even if we are just being selfish a-holes, we're all glad that yall are safe... :) And the foreshadowing with the rocks sliding down into the openings about 5-10 min earlier in the video definitely showed what you were dealing with. I was beginning to think the same after that clip (and given your other passage down had caved since your last visit). Excellent choice to let it go... Such a hard decision when you are so close. I recall at least one mine where you showed a horse / mule operated "hoist" (i guess) - but to actually stumble across a stable. Wow. What a fantastic mine with so many artifacts. Thanks! With some clickbaity titles, you could create quite a few shorts from this explore (if that is ever something you would want to do.) :)
That was nothing short of amazing. The carbide lamp, the stable, I can imagine your disbelief when coming across them. What a treat. Seeing footprints left 90ish years ago...amazing. Running this one out must bring s sense of satisfaction. 12 plus hours underground would gas anyone. I suspect you all slept well that night. This one I will watch several times. Thank you, Justin.
Thanks!
Thank you very much, Bryan. Looking forward to seeing you this weekend!
Once again thank you for an absolutely great adventure. Your detailed information on the history is very appreciated. You have gained to new viewers who you have sitting on the edge of their seats. I introduced your channel to my 8 and 6 year old nephews. They can't wait for your next videos. They now have a sparked interest in geology and adventure. Your videos also are now being used to teach these two young gentlemen what life was like over a hundred years ago in an understanding of how hard it was for people to earn a living. Thank you again for another great video and please be safe in all of your adventures.
Out of all of the mining channels that I've watched over the years not once has any of them ever shown a horse pen area inside of one nor would I have ever expected there to be one that deep within a mine. An awesome find!
Thank you for sharing this exploration with us. Such a wonderful mine.
I couldn't even imagine having a horse or mule down there. I can't imagine it enjoying it much either.
That's probably because they're beyond rare; this may be one of the very first ever filmed in the Western US hardrock underground. Most of the mines that retained their livery infrastructure have long since caved.
this. and they also played it safe.
Holy smokes, that chamber was huge! I really couldn’t get the scale until your buddy went down there. 👍👍👍
I have watched thousands of mine exploring videos. This is the first one where an actual stable for the mules has been found. Amazing! Great find guys!
Yea! A full length MOVIE!
(I knew there had to be a part 5!!)
That was definitely spectacular!
THANKS!!!🎉
I've been waiting literal years to know what's down in the Anti-Union Chamber. It's amazing you guys got it on video before it's gone forever given the condition of the mine. Thank you, guys. Yes yes, the other mine intersecting this one, the newspaper and candles in the lunch break cave, and the cool mule stable and all, but the most important thing is the Anti-Union Chamber!
Another great adventure. Thanks for the trip. You guys are crazy for going in some of those areas. Stay safe.
Tenacious exploring. Amazing mine(s) and artefacts. Thank you all for taking us along!
As always, huge kudos to the intrepid explorers! Justin, Jeremy and Graham....what a crew! Thanks for many hours of tagging along, seeing stuff that Is way beyond my ability to access at my age. On this one, the most incredible part (to me anyway) was the stable. Never before seen, most likely never see one again.
Carbide in water emits acetylene gas. The tube allows the gas to travel up to the opening in the reflector. Move too fast and flame goes out, which is why there was usually a striker right in the reflector.
Not exactly. I'm a spelunking from the 70's. The carbide rocks did sit in the lower camber. Above that was a water tank (chamber) of several ounces. On top of the water tank was a lever, which in fact was a valve, which controlled the amount of water dropped into the carbide. This allowed the flame to be adjusted - more water, more acetylene gas - shorter burn time.
@@mikep9032, thank you for drawing a picture on that. 👍👍👍
Hi Justin, Graham & Jeremy, wow that mine just kept on giving but the best part for me was the huge cave and the stable area with the leather and old trough, that is such a rare find because I watch a few abandoned mine channels and have never seen an underground stable. This has to be your best explore to date. Dang what Jeremy did to get across that scary pit and back again, falling along the way was so ballsy, respect Jeremy, RESPECT my man. Jeez you guys all deserve big respect for the amount of effort you put into this mine. Thank you all so much for going above and beyond in this mine, it has been one fascinating adventure as you said over many years, much love to all of you. xxx🥰🙏🙏❤
Simply your best upload yet. What an incredible mine. The stable blew my mind. Thanks for uploading!
Hey Justin: Just a minor nit pick to start the vid. The carbide lamp doesn't burn the carbide. The carbide is in the bottom. The top half of the lamp is a water container. There is a dial or other mechanism on the top that drips the water into the carbide, which make acetylene gas, which is burned for light (just like a small acetylene torch). Many of them also had a serrated wheel and flint (much like a Zippo lighter) to fire them. In the 50's when I was a kid, these were around and we played with them. The bigger issue was finding the carbide. Anyway, I love your work.....carry on my brother!
Jeremy providing perspective at around 11:45 was astounding. Initially, I thought that the cave was simply an excavation about the size of walk in closet. As he made his way forth, an arena-sized cave swallowed him up, he became smaller and more distant. Amazing! The camera's view, though impressive, doesn't do these places justice.
You guys are amazing at what you do. Thank you for sharing it with us!!!
All my respect!
For considering safety and life matters first. There is no cowardice in doing that.
No sensation, or cool clip, or scoop is worth a life, be it own life or an other person's one.
Not everyone seems to understand this.
Thank you very much for this mine serial, lots of hard work shooting it, then trying to edit all the footage and finally uploading it.
That looks like a huge mine, thanks again
Fantastic finale! Fantastic job Guys!
I've watched this channel almost since you started. its better every video. well done and as always thanks for the effort.
Amazing old mine. CUDOS to you guys, for sticking with it, and showing, what would have to be, one othe best ever abandoned mines, left in America.That stable find? The find of a lifetime. Congrats gents.
Thank you all three for these wonderfull Video and the dangerous work you all do to get the pictures.
Greetings from Germany
Yours Frank Galetzka
That stable was Awesome! Hay, water and oats? What a great explore. Thanks, Justin!
Amazing find. Thank you for reveling such ancient history for us your viewers
Man you guys are fearless ‼️
Awesome explore. That stable was quite a find, probably not too many of those documented recently. Thanks for taking us along!
if you take a drink every time he say's "mineralized" , by the end you REALLY enjoy the video!!! love his stuff. nothing left out.
Awesome, over an hour of TVR.
It took a long time to get through it all. But it was definitely worth every moment.
Thanks for enduring this one to the very end. Great explore.
F. P. Cutting Company was one of the earliest canners in California. Started in 1859 by Francis Cutting, the cannery on Main Street in San Francisco packed fruit, jams, jellies, tomatoes, and other products. Cutting was canning pears, peaches, and apricots by 1863. Others had been canning in California previously - D. Provost repacked pickles and jams shipped from the east coast, and Erzgarber and Gotzen packed jams and jellies. However, Cutting was the first canning local fruit[. By 1872, Cutting could pack 22,000 cans in a single day - wikipedia 😎
Great Video, Jeremy should get a raise !👍
The black powder/cartridge paper at 59:22 was possibly "Bobbinite" or similar. This was compressed black powder pressed into the shape of a bobbin & with a tapered hole through the center. The hole allowed a fuse to be threaded through and the end doubled back, which trapped & secured itself against the taper. Wrapped in wax paper for protection, it was a common mining explosive in the UK from the late 1800's and into the 20th C. & no doubt used world wide.
Fantastic series and documentation, thanks. 44:03 - head of a golem.
Every time I say one of your videos is just amazing and one of the best, you find a way to top it. Great work.
That was a great day underground! Nice job with the video Justin.
Justin Jeremy grr.. Gram... Boys love you.. love the views always 🤩
That mine is huge, never ending great explore.
Amazing work. Glad you noped those super sketch descents so everyone stayed safe and made it out :)
You spoiled us with so many rare finds on this episode. 🤯 The only problem is you've set the bar so high now for the future. 😅😝 Keep up the great work, bro.
I've watched almost every video there is of you guys exploring and others, and I've never seen where horses were kept, like a stable, that's awsome.
A perfect orb at 29:03, an old miner maybe? Great to see an over 1 hour video, thanks guys.
Awesome video guys. Thats a interesting mine. I love the stable. How cool is that.
That stable was amazing!
Awesome explore! Thank you! I would have said Nope long before and never seen that awesomeness! That is exactly why you go where everyone else said Nope! Well Done!
You guys are great. Thank you
Unreal mine thanks for sharing .
Great mine. Awesome adventure. Stay safe.
Awesome Episode! Good work!
Very nice explore!
Thanks very much 🙏
Omg ..that was amazing vision of the explore..just fabulous ..well done !!!
From Australia 🦘 🦘 🦘
There's all kinds of things to check out in that mine. Damn.
Part 42 🤗thought it was over that was a cool mine top 5 you done good job sir
Love the perspective views.
Liked the stable. The leather piece hanging on nail was most likely a tug or trace. The spare chain you found would be a heal chain. Runs from the end of tug to a single tree which would be connected to ore car(s). The other leather strap hanging by its snap is probably a lead. The mules probably had minimal harness since the work would be flat. Rivits were used to repair, however they degrade the leather, but are fast to fix. Probably in the early 1900s. Looked like a massive operation, great explore!
Absolutely spectacular!
That Stable was incredible .. closest I've seen (on video) is the remains of a horse powered winch from the guys in the UK ... but an actual stable with feed and tack is almost mythical.
Thanks for sharing 🇨🇦
That was quite the Ride Gentlemen Well Played!!!; )
This is incredible
Incredible series!
Fantastic video. . . . one of the best😎
Never mind the bullshit cave, this is a tremendous document. The mule stable was so unexpected. Love your narrative and determination of your team. Great stuff ❤
amazing hidden stuff fromthe old world
Carbide lights work by dripping water into the carbide rocks. acetylene gas is released and exits the nozzle and is burning using the flint striker to start the fire. Used carbide looks like what you showed in the video (white ash), Flame is adjusted by the lever on top that increased flow of water into the carbide. I used one back in the 70s while exploring mines and caves.
"Carbide lamp - none of you have ever seen one? No!" OMG, am I really that old? Carbide lamps were the light source of choice for mine and cave exploring during my younger years (70's, 80's and 90's) only being replaced when cheap and reliable LED headlamps became available.
BTW - there is water in the upper part and calcium carbide in the lower. The tube drips water into the carbide to produce acetylene gas which you light with the flint striker near the outlet nozzle in the center of a polished stainless steel reflector. One load of water and carbide is good for 1-2 hours depending on how bright of a flame you need.
HOLY SHIT BATMAN ITS UNDERGROUND!!!
just wow, and thank you!
I am glad to see you're all still adit
Ace job guys. It's not very often when you all say nope, so that must have been real dodgy.👍👍👍👍👍👍👍
AWESOME Video!! ❤
Do find it incredible how much work must have been put into digging out all the ores.
While living on GuLangYu, XiaMen, Fujian Province, PROC in the early 1980’s, we used carbide lamps as our emergency backup light. Believe it or not, candles and batteries cost much more money. My Father used carbide lamps while mining Uranium around Tomsich Butte, in Emery County, in The San Rafael Swell of Utah, USA in the 1950’s. Been trying to wrack my memory for the name of the mine. But, there were so many mines in that area.
Awesome Jeremy, slamming into stuff
Forgot Whiskey in there.
I'm seeing the Buckingham and Velvet tobacco is still made today.
They had mules in the mine? Poor mule I hope they rolled him a smoke
A very nice big natural cave wow, and a big collapse, a nice mine with everything you wanna see including a stable wow that is a first, great explore Justin, that sliding rock can become Russian roulette, no fun. Still one too remember.
There was a big brick house in town that had carbide generater out back in a shed. Had lights on the walls with plumbing to them. I dont think the acetylene makes makes much pressure. But it obviously worked.
Indoor crappers were just getting started in early 50s.
I was in 3rd grade before we lived with indoor plumbing. First TV in town was at the switch board operators house. Crank telephones until mid 50s. She had plug in patch cords on the switch board panel.. nice lady, us kids would sit on floor and watch little TV after school.
Amazing!
Hello Justin and and the rest of the explorers after watching this and seeing Jeremy going into BIG CAVE and sliding down and seeing him way out the far side i had to go back and marvel how big that cave really is 😟. And going back to what i call the barn donkey stable and seeing what was found and the list goes onnnn thank you and the rest of the explores for fliming .and top safey to all ⛏️🏆
The star on that persons name and the swaztika really show the influence of that time
what a find the Stable, very rare.
Calcium carbide is interesting stuff if you're into the chemistry. It "steals" the oxygen atom from water and replaces it with carbon, which makes the acetylene gas that's used in lamps. But the other part is CaO (quicklime), and since there's water present it hydrolyzes to Ca(OH)2, or slaked lime. Yes, same stuff for construction or the garden, that's ALMOST the fluffy white powder you're seeing in the containers. Why almost? Because it USED to be slaked lime... over time it actually absorbs CO2 and turns into calcium carbonate, so the waste from the lamp will actually scrub a little CO2 out of the air. Plus, as it's making gas the chemical process is exothermic... the mixing container will get warm, so if it's cold you can just hold it and give your fingers a treat.
Wow kick ass that’s awesome
We used carbide lamps in my early teens till the late 1980`s early 1990`s hunting at night.
My dad smoked half and half pipe tobacco (half burley and half bright leaf) This was after they merged with the American Tobacco Co. I had no idea how big the cave was till Jeremy went into it. Y'all showed your big brass ones on this video more than usual.
Wow! When you see underground stables, you're approaching something on the scale of the Copper Queen in Bisbee. Big-Time Professional Mining! Ahhhh! [Rips shirt off.]
Could that black powder be a decomposed battery? I have seen them in mines look like that before
Cool explore. Wow the stables was beyond cool
"checking that out" is TVR code for "taking a piss".
27:15 - is it possible they skirted the cave and the side of it collapsed at some point? Looking at the color of the rock it looks a little like there was a drift along the wall, which might explain the direction it was mined.
Going to miss you’ll but I understand it’s time to get back to normal life again 😊
This particular mine is complete, not the channel. I have posted numerous videos since this one and will continue to do so...
You guys have to go back and try to find some other way to get into the other mine...just think what could be in there!
Safety first ! But awesome finds
i’ve used carbide lamps for caving, bout 30 yrs ago. water+ Carbide = acetylene gas + Ca(OH)2 the white powder you see is the calcium hydroxide, acetylene gas is burned (to provide a durable intense flame) or dissipated over time
i knew that slide with jeremy was coming and still thought oh shit when it did happen glad no injurys,that man as admantium balls....the can you found it had the city name but was rusted up top was cut open in small triangles, i have done this to use the can as a pan and kettle holder for a small fuel burner in the past so maybe that was its use..epic journey all told..
Awesome 😊
What a crazy mine! If you guys are calling some passages too "sporty", it means they are bloody dangerous! 😉
When you guys first dropped down, at 4:33 there was some miner's graphitti on the lower part of the junction that read "518A" "...MW" "to" "...900C" "om" or "on". What was that?
Holy Shit! If you say something is too sporty, it must be terrifying! I've watched you go into places that i wouldn't attempt on a bet!
Commenting early...its gonna take a pretty big cave to beat that one silver mine yall got into! That was actually the first time I'd heard you cuss on camera 😂
"Holy shit!!"
Pretty wild that passages you took once had since collapsed, and that in other places rock was presently on the move.
The carbide doesn't burn, in the top of the lamp there a reservoir of water which via a control valve is slowly dripping into the carbide chamber, this then produces acetylene gas which is then burnt at the nozzle to provide the light, that's why you see piles of spent carbide scattered around the mines, once it's done producing the gas it is basically useless.
Gob - The term applied to that part of the mine from which the ore has been removed and the space more or less filled up with waste. Also, the loose waste in a mine. Also called goaf.
The pointy thing is the water dropper , controlled by the lever on the top .
Being safe = more mine explore videos... So even if we are just being selfish a-holes, we're all glad that yall are safe... :) And the foreshadowing with the rocks sliding down into the openings about 5-10 min earlier in the video definitely showed what you were dealing with. I was beginning to think the same after that clip (and given your other passage down had caved since your last visit). Excellent choice to let it go... Such a hard decision when you are so close.
I recall at least one mine where you showed a horse / mule operated "hoist" (i guess) - but to actually stumble across a stable. Wow. What a fantastic mine with so many artifacts. Thanks!
With some clickbaity titles, you could create quite a few shorts from this explore (if that is ever something you would want to do.) :)