I knew bits and pieces of this information, but this video provided filling, glue, primer, finish and paint. Thank you to the amazing people that produced this.
Very good way of putting it. I knew the names of the parts of firearms and what they do but I've never actually had it demonstrated and explained in a coherent manner that's not just throwing around jargon expecting you to be able to piece it all together..
Crystal lesson ! The traditional model played step by step is easier to understand than CG or PPT. It’s like a teacher stand infront of me and show me the keypoint, make thoughts in order.
I m just starting in "handmadecraftgun" so im just a nooby, i live in france and those video are fucking great to visualise the process and the type of mechanisme, great 👌👍
@@Sabi1234567890Asdf i know you are exaggerating obviously. I have never worked on a car with a what i would call difficult to service oil filter. Yes some are inconvenient, like tacoma/tundra cartridge filters, ford f150 filters due to the cleanup, ram v8s same reason, many nissans same, honda v6 same. This is working at a shop with a lift mind you. There are much more brutal "battles" in auto repair. Btw im in the northeast, toyota alignments involve an oxy ace torch 75% of the time. Many cars over 5 yrs, some newer, cant be properly aligned due to adjustment seizure from rust. I would argue the oil fill cap alone is much worse engineered on many cars, like the newer vag ones that wont take a funnel, or gm v8s that are at an angle making a funnel need to be held so it wont fall off. You should see whats involved in simply changing a headlight bulb in some newer cars. A coworker did headlights on a bmw once, had to replace both complete units, was thousands for the customer, dont buy bmws folks!
I am sure this isn't used still but the simplicity with which the information is displayed and the way in which it is like honestly top notch material. no nonsense concise effective.
Awesome video, i like the serenity, or rather the understated childish enthusiasm in the voice of the narrator explaining how devices to end lives work. I would like to see a similar video explaining the difference between the original stoner gun piston design and the AK-47, i know there was a difference that used to make the stoner gun less reliable because of debris in the blow back gas.
Your just hearing propper pronunciation and clear speaking. Mostly because they had to borderline shout into the very first microphones. That's why old westerns sound that way. It just seems serene or foreign to you because we got idiots that eat tide pods setting trends. Instead of young men wanting to be stoic grown men.
Always a treat to be educated in the ways of how the terminology of the manner in the ways of the language is with results in the practice of the procedure for the classification. Small arms.
Blowbacks often have a bolt with fixed firing pin, so there is no need of hammer, bolt does all the job. And gas operated arms never have return spring in the gas tube.
Blowback usually refers to the cycling that doesn't have a chamber locking mechanism, but any inertial or recoiling type, including blow back can re-cock the firearm.
edilberto jr gerna recoil style has a locking mechanism (look at the M1911) while blowback is more locked by the mass and spring pressure of the action (see a similar weapon to the M1911, the m1903 hammerless)
Blowback has no locking mechanism, as it relies only on the weight of the bolt and pressure of the return spring, and is intended for low pressure cartridges only. Recoil has a locking mechanism, similar to a gas system. Only instead of using gas to push a piston, the recoil itself pushes the barrel, extension and bolt back into the receiver together, (keeping the high pressure cartridge inside the chambre), till it reaches the point of unlocking the bolt from the barrel. Basically, gas/piston and recoil/locking are the two different approaches handling both low and high pressure cartridges, while blowback can only handle low pressure cartridges.
Hmmm, it depends. Gas operated weapons tend to be more reliable for larger weapons, like rifles and high calibre pistols. Blowback tends to be reliable in low calibre weapons like pistols and submachine guns
we could theoretically use a servo motor to push the bolt back xD but that wont make any sense I guess... maybe it would make the gun lighter but then you would have to recharge your gun xD
I learned that guns simply need Spring to do the whole fuckin Operation. Its literally the Spring that makes it possible. THANKS SPRING NOW WE GOT FULL AUTO WEAPONS!
By this point in the 1940s, delayed blowback wasn’t really a thing yet. The most common delayed blowback design was a product of the Spanish and later German designs of the 1950s, being the ‘roller delayed” blowback. That said, recoil operation could be considered a type of delayed blowback, as the locking mechanism delayed the bolt opening, and the entire mechanism recoils from the blowback. But that’s if we want to play fast and loose with the technicalities.
Amir Some do, yes! Some larger more complicated weapons use electricity for cycle of operations, some tanks and aircraft weapons in fact use electric motors to drive cycle of operations. They would use a motor because typically you cannot have to direct contact to some weapons while on certain platforms, so you need a way to cycle the weapon automatically (Heavier Ordinance has a slightly different cycle of operation than this video). Typically, man portable weapons (Rifles, pistols, machine guns ect) do not use electric motors for operation due to weight and reliability.
LizardLick Crowing So even the reliability is lessened? Hmm, and if we would’ve resolved those two factors, do you think it would worth the cause? Would it be worth the extra cash? Because trying to use the throttle energy of a bullet for recoil seems inefficient, performance wise, like how snipers need manual recoil for a better performance, so I was wondering if any big company out there would think of making them in the future or they would stick to the old ways Edit: I did a search and came across a couple of these companies but do you think this new field of technology would spread out to other suppliers and markets?
@@Born2Losenot2win Thing is,, having electric systems in an infantry weapons means that the infantryman needs to carry a power supply. It also means a higher degree of complexity that might not necessarily make weapons more reliable or effective. I don't necessarily think that more electronics in rifles would be bad, but I think there are some difficulties to overcome.
@@censorduck ah yes, the power supply, silly old me, he didn’t thought about that, an EMP could also destroy the entire circuit, so we’re not there yet
@@Born2Losenot2win well I'm sure you could make a rifle that is isolated from such attacks. But even if that wasn't an issue, having a seperate power supply would be an issue unto itself. There are also environmental concerns to the reliability of an electronic system.
dutch hi, it's a blow back action. There are no locking lugs just a heavy bolt mass that allows the bullet to be gone and the gas pressure dropped safely but the initial energy starts the bolt back and cycles the action. NOTE: only for low pressure rounds like 9mm or 45 ACP for example.
@@14goldmedals in the video the bolt only blows back once the bullet has left the barrel. it doesn't make sense to me, shouldn't the bolt move back at the same time that the bullet gets fired? or is the bolt weighted to make it move slower then the time it takes for the bullet to leave the barrel?
Simple physics: the explosion in the cardridge exerts the same energy backwards and forwards. But the bolt is heavier than the bullet so it moves less fast than the bullet which gives enough time that the pressure in the barrel is on a safe level.
Yeah, AKs are gas operated. The barrel is a bit lower in relation to the sights because Kalashnikov decided to put the gas port on top of the barrel rather than under it, just like the STG-44 built mere years earlier and unlike the M1 Garand. This is due to better heat management necessary for full auto fire since the gas tube won't have to contact the handguard, another reason being so as to not get in the way of a magazine. AR style rifles also have their gas tube on the top, though it is not exposed as it is on the Kalashnikov, but concealed in the handguard.
it isn't, the weight of the bolt is enough to keep the case in the chamber while the bullet is fired, the momentum of the bolt then cycles the gun. this is only pistol rounds use blowback, larger bullets would require a super heavy bolt to operate safely
Not unless it violates a patent, most of these old designs have already expired and are copied all over the firearms industry. It is not my intent with these videos to show people how to build a firearm, I don't recommend it to any amateur. If you do want to build your own firearm make sure you follow your local laws, and have a licensed gunsmith check out your firearm before you fire it.
@@MadMaxTrac oh..okay thanks so which mean if I copy all of it will resulting law suit? So which I have to redesign the bolt and entire part? No I didn't intent to build firearm yet,i was intent design one and see if I could get Gorvement interested,I form malaysia so I not permitted to do as well but design,I geuss it can...so anyway thanks for remind and knowledge sharing wish could see more and learn more form your channel..thanks again 🙏🙏🙏
Certainly it might sound corny but it is a well paced and clearly delivered, designed to communicate rather than impress with speed and special video/audio effects. Much to learn here for many other would be instructional video makers.
I refuse. Gas operation is the best. There's a reason why the Advanced Combat Rifle uses a gas-piston system rather than direct impingement like "normal" AR-platform firearms. Plus, you don't need to worry about having a tube at the back to store your spring (and I'm better-versed at the fundamentals of gas operation than of direct impingement and other strange firing systems if you couldn't tell).
@@commanderfoxtrot that's the definition of gas-operated firearm. Long stroke, short stroke, direct impingement, whatever - if it uses gunpowder gases, it's gas-operated.
I knew bits and pieces of this information, but this video provided filling, glue, primer, finish and paint. Thank you to the amazing people that produced this.
Very good way of putting it. I knew the names of the parts of firearms and what they do but I've never actually had it demonstrated and explained in a coherent manner that's not just throwing around jargon expecting you to be able to piece it all together..
@@snowgeese7292 exactly!
Poi
A great tool series for aspiring gunsmiths of all levels.
25
Fr
These re-uploaded training videos are a GEM
Crystal lesson ! The traditional model played step by step is easier to understand than CG or PPT.
It’s like a teacher stand infront of me and show me the keypoint, make thoughts in order.
Poi
Poi
I m just starting in "handmadecraftgun" so im just a nooby, i live in france and those video are fucking great to visualise the process and the type of mechanisme, great 👌👍
Maiki Lin
This is basically ASMR for nutty gun nerds, and I do enjoy it very much.
lol me too.
yep, im obsessed with guns and i wanna be a gunsmith.
Poi
nnnnnnneeeeeeeeerrrrrrrd!!
glad you could join us 😌
Poi
It's amazing Engineering taking into account the muddy wet outdoor conditions that these are required to operate in
Except for car engineers they dont account for shit. "Oh you want to change that oil filter too bad you have to remove the engine to get to it"
@@Sabi1234567890Asdf i know you are exaggerating obviously. I have never worked on a car with a what i would call difficult to service oil filter. Yes some are inconvenient, like tacoma/tundra cartridge filters, ford f150 filters due to the cleanup, ram v8s same reason, many nissans same, honda v6 same. This is working at a shop with a lift mind you. There are much more brutal "battles" in auto repair. Btw im in the northeast, toyota alignments involve an oxy ace torch 75% of the time. Many cars over 5 yrs, some newer, cant be properly aligned due to adjustment seizure from rust. I would argue the oil fill cap alone is much worse engineered on many cars, like the newer vag ones that wont take a funnel, or gm v8s that are at an angle making a funnel need to be held so it wont fall off. You should see whats involved in simply changing a headlight bulb in some newer cars. A coworker did headlights on a bmw once, had to replace both complete units, was thousands for the customer, dont buy bmws folks!
Poi
Poi
Poi
I am sure this isn't used still but the simplicity with which the information is displayed and the way in which it is like honestly top notch material. no nonsense concise effective.
This film is an excellent listening exercise. Thanks a lot.
Salve from Brasil.
Fala irmão
Fora o treino é uma baita aula né?
Quem dera fosse assim que ensinassem hj.....
AAEEEEE MAIS UM BR
Oou
Awesome video, i like the serenity, or rather the understated childish enthusiasm in the voice of the narrator explaining how devices to end lives work. I would like to see a similar video explaining the difference between the original stoner gun piston design and the AK-47, i know there was a difference that used to make the stoner gun less reliable because of debris in the blow back gas.
Denes makilin
Your just hearing propper pronunciation and clear speaking. Mostly because they had to borderline shout into the very first microphones. That's why old westerns sound that way. It just seems serene or foreign to you because we got idiots that eat tide pods setting trends. Instead of young men wanting to be stoic grown men.
Always a treat to be educated in the ways of how the terminology of the manner in the ways of the language is with results in the practice of the procedure for the classification. Small arms.
I cant get enough of these videos
With the trigger mechanism in motion with the receiver on the recoil version, it would seem to operate in a "bump stock" mode.
Poi
I dont think any other source could explain this as well as this video did. Thank you for posting it.
I love watching this stuff.
@ esfano cancino
The gas is from the explosion that happens inside the round.
This is pure gold.
Отличный фильм и великолепная модель! 👍👋.Жаль что сейчас таких больше не снимают 😒
God,i love these videos.Thank you so much for uploading them!
Poi
Fascinating. I love watching these videos.🌻
great explanation of types of operation. Thank you very much for sharing these videos.
Imagine if someone made a modular rifle out of theese 3 videos.
you can interchange the parts too
You can make it
Nope
Love this. “Will do the job.” Twice! 😅
Good job Man !
Thanks for the video.
Show de bola ... Ótima explicação.
Poi
Good job
Yes ,That is good idea.Before I don't think how to do work. So ,Thankyou for this knowledge.
Blowbacks often have a bolt with fixed firing pin, so there is no need of hammer, bolt does all the job. And gas operated arms never have return spring in the gas tube.
Guys wher I can get more videos like this ples?!
You tube Reddit 4chan etc
Thanks for sharing
I learned nothing new about Firearms with this video. I did, however, learn something about myself...
That model is poggers
isn't the blowback and recoil style of self cocking the same?
Blowback usually refers to the cycling that doesn't have a chamber locking mechanism, but any inertial or recoiling type, including blow back can re-cock the firearm.
Well yes, bur actually no
We don't do that in here
edilberto jr gerna recoil style has a locking mechanism (look at the M1911) while blowback is more locked by the mass and spring pressure of the action (see a similar weapon to the M1911, the m1903 hammerless)
Blowback has no locking mechanism, as it relies only on the weight of the bolt and pressure of the return spring, and is intended for low pressure cartridges only.
Recoil has a locking mechanism, similar to a gas system.
Only instead of using gas to push a piston, the recoil itself pushes the barrel, extension and bolt back into the receiver together, (keeping the high pressure cartridge inside the chambre), till it reaches the point of unlocking the bolt from the barrel.
Basically, gas/piston and recoil/locking are the two different approaches handling both low and high pressure cartridges, while blowback can only handle low pressure cartridges.
Which is the most reliable?
Hmmm, it depends. Gas operated weapons tend to be more reliable for larger weapons, like rifles and high calibre pistols.
Blowback tends to be reliable in low calibre weapons like pistols and submachine guns
we could theoretically use a servo motor to push the bolt back xD but that wont make any sense I guess... maybe it would make the gun lighter but then you would have to recharge your gun xD
Wow amazing
Gas powered looks so dope
You rock!
Today
Design changed but principle's are same
Hats off to those engineer's🍾
I learned that guns simply need Spring to do the whole fuckin Operation. Its literally the Spring that makes it possible. THANKS SPRING NOW WE GOT FULL AUTO WEAPONS!
Following along at home with my Kalashnikov
this shows how similar an AK is to the M1 Garand
It only explains simple blowback, but not delayed blowback. Still a good video, though. Just a bit lacking.
By this point in the 1940s, delayed blowback wasn’t really a thing yet. The most common delayed blowback design was a product of the Spanish and later German designs of the 1950s, being the ‘roller delayed” blowback.
That said, recoil operation could be considered a type of delayed blowback, as the locking mechanism delayed the bolt opening, and the entire mechanism recoils from the blowback. But that’s if we want to play fast and loose with the technicalities.
Thank you very much 😑🙏🏼
Can we do recoil electronically these days?
Amir
Some do, yes! Some larger more complicated weapons use electricity for cycle of operations, some tanks and aircraft weapons in fact use electric motors to drive cycle of operations. They would use a motor because typically you cannot have to direct contact to some weapons while on certain platforms, so you need a way to cycle the weapon automatically (Heavier Ordinance has a slightly different cycle of operation than this video). Typically, man portable weapons (Rifles, pistols, machine guns ect) do not use electric motors for operation due to weight and reliability.
LizardLick Crowing
So even the reliability is lessened?
Hmm, and if we would’ve resolved those two factors, do you think it would worth the cause? Would it be worth the extra cash? Because trying to use the throttle energy of a bullet for recoil seems inefficient, performance wise, like how snipers need manual recoil for a better performance, so I was wondering if any big company out there would think of making them in the future or they would stick to the old ways
Edit: I did a search and came across a couple of these companies but do you think this new field of technology would spread out to other suppliers and markets?
@@Born2Losenot2win Thing is,, having electric systems in an infantry weapons means that the infantryman needs to carry a power supply. It also means a higher degree of complexity that might not necessarily make weapons more reliable or effective. I don't necessarily think that more electronics in rifles would be bad, but I think there are some difficulties to overcome.
@@censorduck ah yes, the power supply, silly old me, he didn’t thought about that, an EMP could also destroy the entire circuit, so we’re not there yet
@@Born2Losenot2win well I'm sure you could make a rifle that is isolated from such attacks. But even if that wasn't an issue, having a seperate power supply would be an issue unto itself. There are also environmental concerns to the reliability of an electronic system.
I like this channel, please review 12 gauge shotgun
I'm confused,
what is stopping the bolt from going backwards before the bullet has left the barrel 5:55
yes, strange, no one word about it in all 3 films:-/
dutch hi, it's a blow back action. There are no locking lugs just a heavy bolt mass that allows the bullet to be gone and the gas pressure dropped safely but the initial energy starts the bolt back and cycles the action. NOTE: only for low pressure rounds like 9mm or 45 ACP for example.
@@14goldmedals in the video the bolt only blows back once the bullet has left the barrel. it doesn't make sense to me, shouldn't the bolt move back at the same time that the bullet gets fired? or is the bolt weighted to make it move slower then the time it takes for the bullet to leave the barrel?
*Inertia.* The bolt is much more massive than the bullet so it accelerates much slower.
Simple physics: the explosion in the cardridge exerts the same energy backwards and forwards. But the bolt is heavier than the bullet so it moves less fast than the bullet which gives enough time that the pressure in the barrel is on a safe level.
I built an ak at home thanks to this video
Lol nice
The AK: th-cam.com/video/1nQzFGe1yMk/w-d-xo.html
bravo
thanks
Trying not to be nitpicky here, but there is a typo in the title.
Fixed, thanks :)
the video talks about gas, what kind of gas we are talking about? and where does it come from
From the cartridge the same case that pushes the round out the weapon
Gunpowder exploded gas. Need I say more.
when the bullets is fired the gunpowder burns and creates gas that gas is enough to push the bolt back.
Очень полезное кино. Фрезерно токарные станки из китая, и вперед.
So thats how the top spring on the ak is for.
Yeah, AKs are gas operated. The barrel is a bit lower in relation to the sights because Kalashnikov decided to put the gas port on top of the barrel rather than under it, just like the STG-44 built mere years earlier and unlike the M1 Garand. This is due to better heat management necessary for full auto fire since the gas tube won't have to contact the handguard, another reason being so as to not get in the way of a magazine.
AR style rifles also have their gas tube on the top, though it is not exposed as it is on the Kalashnikov, but concealed in the handguard.
like the time they use bow n sword..hi2
So.. I don't understand how a blowback-operated is ever in battery.
it isn't, the weight of the bolt is enough to keep the case in the chamber while the bullet is fired, the momentum of the bolt then cycles the gun. this is only pistol rounds use blowback, larger bullets would require a super heavy bolt to operate safely
art of weapon to defence
Wow..... Wow.... Wow
It was at 8:08 in the second part when the guy finally mentioned the receiver
🖤
So if I take those operation design and build one of my very own firearm...would I get law suit for that?
Not unless it violates a patent, most of these old designs have already expired and are copied all over the firearms industry. It is not my intent with these videos to show people how to build a firearm, I don't recommend it to any amateur. If you do want to build your own firearm make sure you follow your local laws, and have a licensed gunsmith check out your firearm before you fire it.
@@MadMaxTrac oh..okay thanks so which mean if I copy all of it will resulting law suit? So which I have to redesign the bolt and entire part?
No I didn't intent to build firearm yet,i was intent design one and see if I could get Gorvement interested,I form malaysia so I not permitted to do as well but design,I geuss it can...so anyway thanks for remind and knowledge sharing wish could see more and learn more form your channel..thanks again 🙏🙏🙏
Cnice program
The ole grease gun
👏
Biggest gun wins.
👍
Much better than thise 3d animations
Im scholl in ☝🏻😅👍🏼👍🏼👍🏼👍🏼👍🏼👍🏼👍🏼
Very thorough videos , but so corny sounding you would expect bugs bunny or elmer j fudd to be doing the demonstration .
Certainly it might sound corny but it is a well paced and clearly delivered, designed to communicate rather than impress with speed and special video/audio effects. Much to learn here for many other would be instructional video makers.
Gas operated guns are best, fight me.
I refuse. Gas operation is the best. There's a reason why the Advanced Combat Rifle uses a gas-piston system rather than direct impingement like "normal" AR-platform firearms. Plus, you don't need to worry about having a tube at the back to store your spring (and I'm better-versed at the fundamentals of gas operation than of direct impingement and other strange firing systems if you couldn't tell).
@@commanderfoxtrot direct impingement is also gas-operaged, though 🤔
@@cheekibreeki904 it uses gas, sure, but not a piston system.
@@commanderfoxtrot that's the definition of gas-operated firearm. Long stroke, short stroke, direct impingement, whatever - if it uses gunpowder gases, it's gas-operated.
@@cheekibreeki904 yeah, but nobody thinks of impingement as gas operation since it’s cursed and less-effective than gas-piston.
Scholl, gun's
Col
Yes bos🍉🍉🍉🍉🍉
better than sex
😂 Meget tydelig forklaret
Nothing like good ol tapes of gun nerd propaganda!
arigato osaimas blyat!