Call me a corporate TOOL all you want but these videos are genuinely the best way to fall asleep, that man has a voice that will be unmatched in our time
this is such an interesting look at how things are made, really enjoyed the visuals and explanations! but honestly, i feel like the focus on traditional tools sometimes overshadows the advancements in tech that are changing the industry. it'd be cool to see more about how automation is reshaping these processes too!
I am 50 and still have my first Estwing from my first framing job i had. My boss gave it to me after my first 2 weeks as a appreciation gift for doing such an above average job, keeping the job site clear and clean etc. I was 19. 31 years for me and I love it.
I bought them for years. Then I ran across a Picard hammer. Never looked back. The Picard is the Rolls Royce of hammers. Still love my Estwing hatchet, but I'm strictly a Picard man now.
The Egyptians didn't build hardly anything. it is written by them that they found the pyramids. And no...they could not and did not build anything of that size.
really enjoyed this video and the way it breaks down the basics of building. but honestly, i think some viewers might underestimate the importance of proper tools. while it's great to have essential building blocks, without quality tools, the process can be a struggle. what do you all think?
great video! really appreciate the insights on the building blocks. however, i have to say, while these tools seem essential, it seems like some are a bit overrated in terms of necessity for beginners. what do you all think?
At what step during the construction lumber making process do they run them through the "corkscrewifier" to twist them? Obviously before they're shipped to Home Depot... but, like, before the kiln process or what?
Spruce is so strong as a building material because the grain is naturally twisted. The board will twist as a result if it dries unevenly: so usually it’s because your lumber yard can’t be arsed to store it right. Source: I live in a town that used to have a paper mill, we used the old-growth spruce trees for literally everything from lumber to paper to firewood
I really enjoyed this video, it’s fascinating to see how things are made! but honestly, I think some of these building blocks are oversimplified. it’d be cool to explore more advanced tools and techniques that professionals actually use. what do you all think?
Call me a corporate TOOL all you want but these videos are genuinely the best way to fall asleep, that man has a voice that will be unmatched in our time
Theres nothing wrong with finding ones craft therapeutic, corporate bs aside we live in a really interesting time.
Yes, best for gettting to sleep
I'll see your Brooks Turner Moore, and raise you a Dr. David Butler.
youtube.com/@howfarawayisit?si=vXyEYEDXHnQVKrmp
So glad i am not the only one falling asleep to these amazing interesting videos . Watching it calms me immediately like nothing else
I agree and 2nd that motion sir! 👍
How It’s Made will always be my favorite educational program. It’s a shame it was taken off the air in 2019. 😔
It was too masculine and "White". Can't be having that lol
now its on the "wire"
they run out of America made products
@@joepaullawncare7222they had segments filed all around the world such as Thailand.
@@whiskeymonk4085wtf
Brooks Moore will always be the voice of education and serenity.
this is such an interesting look at how things are made, really enjoyed the visuals and explanations! but honestly, i feel like the focus on traditional tools sometimes overshadows the advancements in tech that are changing the industry. it'd be cool to see more about how automation is reshaping these processes too!
My Estwings have been with me for about 45 years and still going strong.
I am 50 and still have my first Estwing from my first framing job i had. My boss gave it to me after my first 2 weeks as a appreciation gift for doing such an above average job, keeping the job site clear and clean etc.
I was 19. 31 years for me and I love it.
The guy with the belt sander is rockin' it.
Estwing are the only hammers hatchets, axes I own. They are great
I bought them for years. Then I ran across a Picard hammer. Never looked back. The Picard is the Rolls Royce of hammers. Still love my Estwing hatchet, but I'm strictly a Picard man now.
East Wing rubber hammers for the win. Everything else on the market falls apart.
I been watching this show since I was 2 according to my parents and I still can’t get enough ‼️🤣
I love the background music for the axes segment! If you like it, it's also used for the segments on vaulting poles and sockets!
i'm obsessed with how you were able to pull up another specific episode they used that song in, i adore that level of commitment my guy
That hammer is like the best, but it has to be used in the right way
"Every tool's a hammeeeeer!" -AgingWheels
This hatchet is an Estwing, if you're going to buy a hatchet then BUY AN ESTWING. 100% worth the price. 40-60 USD
yeah imagine that thing flying out of control when being made 😬
Their quality is great!
Estwing makes the best hand tools period, at least since they stopped making rocket hammers
Estwings are so pretty, you gotta buy at least one just to look at.
I love my leather handled Estwing hatchet, but I've never needed to use it!😊
It's a beaut!
I need a playlist of some of these songs. Steel and Popcorn are my favorites
See how long and difficult it is for them to cut and shape granite, imagine how the Egyptians were able to do it. Truly amazing.
That was sandstone, dear. You may notice the pyramids are sand coloured, rather than granite coloured.
The Egyptians didn't build hardly anything. it is written by them that they found the pyramids.
And no...they could not and did not build anything of that size.
This show is the best if you axe me.
..........Shut it and take my like.
well if you axe me it was as smooth as polished steel and never taken for granite.
really enjoyed this video and the way it breaks down the basics of building. but honestly, i think some viewers might underestimate the importance of proper tools. while it's great to have essential building blocks, without quality tools, the process can be a struggle. what do you all think?
A master can shine with poor tools...a noob with poor tools is doomed
Dis show still pimpn fr fr
🇫🇷🇫🇷🥖
I see what they did there, putting heavy metal as the background music for a segment about steel.
I love how they play 80's axe murderer video game music in the axe segment.
This video is truly outstanding; I really like the way you present it!
great video! really appreciate the insights on the building blocks. however, i have to say, while these tools seem essential, it seems like some are a bit overrated in terms of necessity for beginners. what do you all think?
A good tool will outlast you. A bad tool may not outlast the job it was bought to do.
Fun fact. PVC is actually the same plastic as vinyl: PVC stands for “polyvinyl chloride”.
Some records contain PVA also, PolyVinyl Acetate, or the same stuff you use in wood glue.
Dude on the grinder is good
At what step during the construction lumber making process do they run them through the "corkscrewifier" to twist them? Obviously before they're shipped to Home Depot... but, like, before the kiln process or what?
lol so true
Spruce is so strong as a building material because the grain is naturally twisted. The board will twist as a result if it dries unevenly: so usually it’s because your lumber yard can’t be arsed to store it right.
Source: I live in a town that used to have a paper mill, we used the old-growth spruce trees for literally everything from lumber to paper to firewood
Estwing my favorite hatchet
I really enjoyed this video, it’s fascinating to see how things are made! but honestly, I think some of these building blocks are oversimplified. it’d be cool to explore more advanced tools and techniques that professionals actually use. what do you all think?
Excellent video, but the background music was TOO loud! (I thought small axes were called hatchets)
Hand axes and hatchets are technically different things
Now that's sharp!
"So what type of lubrication do you use when installing the axe handle?"
"Thats none of your beeswax!'"
Is the music during the "steel" segment HEAVY METAL?
Mi housing has a set hammer and ax with the same leather handle.
It is imperative that the cylinder remain undamaged
It's not an axe that's a hatchet
Not the traditional axe I know. All the way from Kenya 🇰🇪, the land of great marathoners.
880 million pounds of steel bars, huh? That's a lot! 😮
steel begins with iron ore
Garant shovel from Canada.
Wait I just bought that hatchet 2 weeks ago
wow
"particularly aggressive sanding" help why did he word it like that 😭
He's reading from a script he's given.
Gloves and belt sanders 😰
The Shining
Thats a Hatchet
Besides that's a hatchet not axe really
Showing a hatchet and calling it an axe...
minecraft-core
Didimus Tebai Papua tengah
Watch " How It's Actually Made" !😂 Funny
It's s Hatchet not an axe
☝️🤓
🤔
You ruined the video by lying right off the bat talking about old hammers not having handles
Who chooses the obnoxious background music?
komen
thatll be $200 please
Nope Estwing hatchet is $47 on Amazon
Jackson Kimberly Young Kimberly Harris Amy
Synthetic diamonds 😊
Steel axes ? 35,000 years ago? Are you sure about that?
He didn't say the had steel axes 35,000 years ago.. He said they added a handle to the sharp stone axes 35,000 years ago.
Me when I’m illiterate and deaf and cannot infer from context what a person means: