For all the glove comments it's actually safer to not wear gloves as you get a quicker hotter burn but it doesn't last for long. If you get burned with a glove the glove gets hot and burns you and it's really hard to take off a burning glove fast so you get more burn. And you can catch gloves in angle grinders, drills and drill presses so its safer to not wear gloves when forging
I remeber working on rebuilding a control electronics for C02 welders. And in return I learned to weld. I was told I had talent for it.. A guy working there got one of these little balls of molten weæding metal in his glove. He yanked it off fast but yes. You don't want any open holes in your clothes.
That was actually one of the prettiest "modern" style blades I've ever seen. Beautiful pattern, and a very appealing shape (love the shape of the tip). Cleaning it could be a bit fiddly, but if you made a one sided plastic mold of the knife,, one could just place the knife in the mold to pop out any bits that got stuck...
Beautiful work Brother, I’m not a forger, but I’m an aircraft structural supindent retired from The USAF & Cal Fire aviation. 47 years as a metal worker. You Sir are a master craftsman thank you 😎
My first thought was wow, I can't believe the flux is holding all that together. Then, when you started punching out the pins - I thought wow... I'm really glad that the flux isn't holding all that together. It's beautiful.
@@brandondirocco9816 right. I think there was a joke on forged in fire, a sarcastic "flux makes it stick better, right?" That may be cause for confusion. It blocks oxygen preventing scale and increasing chances for a good weld, with no inclusions, if i understand correctly.
@@ebreshea1337 essentially, it's not so much that it increases the chance of a good weld as it's required for a good weld. Mill scale doesn't weld, neither does rust.
He protec He attack But most importantly, He has holes to be more aerodynamic and add five extra horse power to the swing so it has a new pneumonic pressure of 15000 PSI with a carbide innard to make it tougher than it looks
I love it, he wacks away skillfully at a sick ass blade and then just puts the kettle on and is like "yo, check this out this tea ball flower, alrighty back to it"
Shurap is the best, no nonsense, no “gab”, no dumb music bed, no goofy hair style and stupid eye glasses, just quality work, natural sounds, perfect editing, and an end product that makes you say “Wow”! I always place a bet on will there be “the Shurap wipe” of the anvil.
I learned some metalurgy and did a bit of forging some decades ago, when I was studying. Your work shows a deep understanding of all the fundamental principles and the steps you do are very well though through, so you know exactly at every moment of the working process what is happening and what will happen next and why. This is more than art. You need a lot of practice and skill to go through this precise and complicated crafting process and be successfull. A true master.
@@atlys258 I'm also waiting for him to bite the metal to test it's hardness. I can imagine that: *breaks teeth* "yeah that might be too hardened, it is at risk of breaking during use"
Love watching Damascus get forged, but particularly enjoyed the surgical planning, to forge a billet with a solid cutting edge, topped by, expertly forge welded, chain Damascus, into the basic final blade shape ...only to see the chain links located, and deftly punched out of the body of the new blade, before the boss-level finishing job! Dude truly is a BAMF.
Not exactly. For cheese, minimizing the cutting surface area is the key, and cleaning cheese out of perforations sounds like a headache. For vegetables, a hammered dimpled texture does well to release surface tension, and not be another headache to clean. Not to say it's not a cool knife, but slicing cheese and vegetables would not be an ideal usage of it.
@@gregandy4277 I have, but going to that much trouble to clean a knife that isn't designed to do the job of cutting cheese easily seems counterproductive. I'm not often a fan of single use kitchen tools, but cheese knives are worth it. And that knife shares very few characteristics with a cheese knife.
I parked my bike by the Shurap shop to visit a friend. When I returned, the bike was gone and a stack of pattern welded cutlery and fishing lures was sitting where I parked it. They were worth more than the motorcycle so I didn’t complain.
I know it's strange from the outside, but wearing gloves is much more dangerous than not. They aren't able to protect you from that amount of heat, and they not only impede your movements, but they give you a false sense of security. ~ VA Institute of Blacksmithing grad
I mean this is something I've just started watching and understanding. But it's quite surprising about the gloves... But I can understand it. Thanks for the info!
@@carlosgabriel7948 yeah I definitely feel you on that comment. People feel like they know it all when really they should listen before speaking; and try to understand
100 years from now, this blade will find its way to an auction and with it will be the images of how it was born. Together they will fetch an incredible price. Make sure these images travel through time with this blade. Imagine if the ancient blade makers had such a vivid record of their steel being born.
Ain't gonna last 100 years. More than just a few of those perforations are likely to be hiding potential fracture points. I wouldn't trust it for more than cutting cheese and bread. It sure would make a pretty wall decoration though!
Amazing work as always. I'm really impressed that you still make your blades the same way. The little tea break always fascinates me too. What impresses me most is that you still have all of the same equipment. You must really look after your tools my friend
When dealing with mental that hot it's more dangerous to use gloves because the it would heat the glove really fast then melt and catch fire all while you are trying to get your hand out. Your bare hands will feel the heat before you touch it. If you do touch it you can pull you hand away quickly.
What a beautiful blade. The perforations will work great when slicing as they will reduce the chances of the food from sticking. Love the fact that one must take a break for a cup of tea!
@@LEXA_CBR Не применялся кузнечный пресс - значит, цель стояла соединить звенья, но после выбить втулки. Мыть - возможно, да. Как чеснокодавилку. И на обухе выемки тоже не эстетичны. Но какова идея! )
Honestly, I've never posted a single commented on a knife before today.. I have to say this is the nicest blade I've even seen in my life, it's truly hard to put into words how I felt seeing the creation of it, a piece of art and pure genius ! ! !
Unlike other things such as sports where raw athleticism can’t be coached, everything he did here can and is thought regularly. He doesn’t possess anything that you don’t OTHER than many years of practice and learning the tiny things. It can be taught and your statement contradicts itself heavily. So amazing 👍🏻👍🏻
For those wondering using gloves can often be more dangerous than not. When using tools that spin like this you run a greater chance of getting a glove caught and it destroying your whole hand than you getting a small scratch or burn. Also gotta know exactly where those digits are at all times
Dragon Scale Damascus is one of my top favorites. Canister Damascus takes a little longer but many of the patterns are extremely beautiful when done right, easily worth the extra time
Rick Solid you just have to be brave enough to mess up an insane amount of times and learn from them to get this good, also sounds easier than it is but perseverance is the way
You guys are both right. Most knife makers on TV or social media have very little idea of metallurgy. As a metals tech in the airforce I got a pretty decent education in steel and aluminum alloys and I often cringe when knife makers talk about hardening steel. But sharup is quite on point in this regard. He's a master because he has true knowledge and good methods and not just the persistence to polish something that had a flawed start. That said I think anyone can learn to eventually get a decent final result but it has to be a labor of love because without the right equipment and a plan and practice and the ability to see things going wrong before it's too late you will get overwhelmed in the straightening process and detail work.
The thought and the fore thought to make this design is just astounding! You have an amazing artistic eye that compliments your Blacksmithing skills. Hope you are doing well in this crisis.
Wow, that looks amazing! Great pattern on the blade, I was shocked when you punched out the rivets hahah I thought it was going to be a solid piece! Great work!
If your talking about him not wearing gloves theres a very good reason why wearing gloves could be more dangerous than just using your hand in the blacksmithing trade.
The love of a work of art doesn't have to make sense, but this knife is my favorite of all your magnificent creations. You are a truly skilled and wonderfully eccentric artist. Bravo!
This is the second ever video I’ve seen of this guy (thank you TH-cam algorithms), and the smithing is fantastic, but this guy’s tea collection deserves respect.
@@simonlukic951 only idiots who don't know how to Make Tea use boiling water, but sure suit yourself as The Tea Will undoubtably taste like bad coffee and i quess that's a personal preference.
I love this guys work, he does the most extraordinary pattern welded pieces....I know he doesn't black smith a lot per say, as I make pattern welded steel billets myself but I forge many of my knives in their entirety and he cuts the nose off to make forming the tip easier, etc, etc...but if I could give him one piece of advice, the hammer is just supposed to be guided, when he puts his thumb up as you see on the handle of the hammer, to help his control, he is going to cause himself big wrist issues over time....it is not the way to forge or at least from what I have been taught or have read from documents and books on smithing, as I am a member of an artist blacksmith association and I am also a blade smith. I use a forging press and a much larger power hammer and many of the same tools as he uses, but the hammer grip is a no no in how I train anybody when controlling a hammer
A couple of years after watching this it's popped up again, and I'm still perplexed about why the links forge welded together but the pins could still be knocked out!
I'm reading a lot about the risk he brings to his hands. Yet, after many, many blades his process is established and remarkably he also has all his digits.
Как произведение - изделие просто бомба. А практично - наверное возникнут неудобства. В отверсвиях будут накапливаться продукты резания, их нужно будет выковыривать, дабы содержать нож в чистоте. Ну... такое..
Для вскрытия конвертов самое то , НО если червивый глаз попадётся - можно и хамон срезать и консервы ему вскрыть без проблем. Дима , так держать, гни свою линию.
Another amazing piece! It must be incredibly light. I watch a lot of bladesmith videos on TH-cam and I can't believe nobody has copied your hand-sanding machine. That must save an incredible amount of time.
Almost nothing/ Look at 5:19 - left square device (temp gauge). Written on it "Made in the USSR". And all equipment we can see at Shurap's facility is old, but very simple and therefore reliable. In the late 90s, plants often sold it for next to nothing.
Também acho espetacular o trabalho do cara, mas o problema que é ele nunca faz uma porra de um teste de corte no final do vídeo, por isso não tem 100% graça
How does that differ to when bicycle chain, motorbike chain or chainsaw chain is forge welded together? Is it just that the pins get riveted over or are they made of a different, more weldable steel?
For all the glove comments it's actually safer to not wear gloves as you get a quicker hotter burn but it doesn't last for long. If you get burned with a glove the glove gets hot and burns you and it's really hard to take off a burning glove fast so you get more burn. And you can catch gloves in angle grinders, drills and drill presses so its safer to not wear gloves when forging
Just noticed he isnt wearing gloves!
Yep. Burning hot gloves are a nightmare
Gloves also tend to get sweaty. His hands are iron.
I remeber working on rebuilding a control electronics for C02 welders. And in return I learned to weld. I was told I had talent for it.. A guy working there got one of these little balls of molten weæding metal in his glove. He yanked it off fast but yes. You don't want any open holes in your clothes.
Shut it up
That was actually one of the prettiest "modern" style blades I've ever seen. Beautiful pattern, and a very appealing shape (love the shape of the tip). Cleaning it could be a bit fiddly, but if you made a one sided plastic mold of the knife,, one could just place the knife in the mold to pop out any bits that got stuck...
That's a show peice knife not a stabbing knife. And certainly not a cutting knife.
A rifle bore brush would clean it just fine
Beautiful work Brother, I’m not a forger, but I’m an aircraft structural supindent retired from The USAF & Cal Fire aviation. 47 years as a metal worker. You Sir are a master craftsman thank you 😎
My first thought was wow, I can't believe the flux is holding all that together. Then, when you started punching out the pins - I thought wow... I'm really glad that the flux isn't holding all that together. It's beautiful.
Flux doesn't hold anything. It is only there to block oxygen from the metal. Thats it.
@@brandondirocco9816 right. I think there was a joke on forged in fire, a sarcastic "flux makes it stick better, right?" That may be cause for confusion. It blocks oxygen preventing scale and increasing chances for a good weld, with no inclusions, if i understand correctly.
@@ebreshea1337 essentially, it's not so much that it increases the chance of a good weld as it's required for a good weld. Mill scale doesn't weld, neither does rust.
Double on the Flux comments. But I believe those are stainless steel pins that needs a much higher temp than was used to forge weld anyways.
@@darketernal3, thanks for an explanation of why the pins didn't weld, I actually was asking about that in my other comment a minute ago.
So it’s Damascus steel, Void salts and the Skyforge got it
I’ve only played Skyrim once when my little brother felt sick and I wanted to cheer him up, but I’m glad I did so I got to laugh at this
Joseph Young wholesome. Thank you
Pattern welded. Damascus steel is a different beast all together.
Flux
@@GiskardRevenlov that would be the Void Salts 😁😁
He protec
He attack
But most importantly,
He has holes to be more aerodynamic and add five extra horse power to the swing so it has a new pneumonic pressure of 15000 PSI with a carbide innard to make it tougher than it looks
Amen to that
Something somewhat original!
Usually I see “He protecc , he attacc, but most importantly, he eat snacc” or some shit.
@@Anonymouso283 i did my best 😂 i dont stay on track, i de rail
@@Anonymouso283 but then afterward he do the snaccy snacc
@@NethanMontgomery I think you mean "I don't stay on tracc"
I love it, he wacks away skillfully at a sick ass blade and then just puts the kettle on and is like "yo, check this out this tea ball flower, alrighty back to it"
Tea ball flower lmfao
Underrated comment
I read this before I watched it happen and then I was like waiting for it. And I was not disappointed
He has to give the blade time to temper in the oven, so during that, tea ball flower. What else would ya do?
@@VampyricDoge14 what does he do for the other 1 hour and 55 minutes of tempering :^)
Shurap is the best, no nonsense, no “gab”, no dumb music bed, no goofy hair style and stupid eye glasses, just quality work, natural sounds, perfect editing, and an end product that makes you say “Wow”! I always place a bet on will there be “the Shurap wipe” of the anvil.
I feel like this is slightly directed at Alec Steeple....
Why do I get the feeling you're shitting on Alec Steele lmao
He probably speaks Russian. It would be limiting to his audience and totally unnecessary to speak.
@@MegaKencam oh no...he reads English very well and answered my question when I posted asking what he puts on his blades from that bowl....
I feel like you just tried to burn Alec Steele on someone else's channel
I learned some metalurgy and did a bit of forging some decades ago, when I was studying. Your work shows a deep understanding of all the fundamental principles and the steps you do are very well though through, so you know exactly at every moment of the working process what is happening and what will happen next and why. This is more than art. You need a lot of practice and skill to go through this precise and complicated crafting process and be successfull. A true master.
All that and he wears no gloves stikl
Mous Edits if you wear gloves you’re more likely to lose fingers to machinery than fire!
@@THESLlCK yes, but usually not while you're forging.
Guarantee that thing has many problems ,first .mistake dipping it before going into the fire ? You want it to be clean as possible
@@drabmeraz7827 he dips all welded steel to help in the forge welding. He is always successful in his efforts.
This be the dude that touches the red metal and be like "yup, that's the right temp"
Yeah, the next step is licking it after throwing on some flux to make sure you put enough on it haha
Just right when you hear the flesh sizzle perfect
Yea, right after he puts his hand in the power hammer to make sure it's hitting hard enough.
@@atlys258 I'm also waiting for him to bite the metal to test it's hardness. I can imagine that: *breaks teeth* "yeah that might be too hardened, it is at risk of breaking during use"
@@k17060 Right! And then he forges himself an new tooth and plants it while it's still red-hot and thinks to himself "Hmm, little warm."
The true question here is “will it keal?”
fr that’s what i wanna know😭
I bet it will Keal and Kut
@Dmytro Pavlov Keal*
But will it also thwust?
@@potatofish7730 ohh it will chwap, slwice,stwab and cwut!
Love watching Damascus get forged, but particularly enjoyed the surgical planning, to forge a billet with a solid cutting edge, topped by, expertly forge welded, chain Damascus, into the basic final blade shape
...only to see the chain links located, and deftly punched out of the body of the new blade, before the boss-level finishing job! Dude truly is a BAMF.
right. genius idea.
His hand gets uncomfortably close to the metal when applying the powder
YOOOOO LIKE WHY IS HE LIKE THAT...
Thought I was the only one
*Anxiety 100*
What is the powder?
@@robertneculau9565 idk maybe it heats it up faster?
Wow.
You just made the best knife to cut vegetables or cheese with.
No, really.
The perforations will allow the slices to fall off instead of cling.
Not exactly. For cheese, minimizing the cutting surface area is the key, and cleaning cheese out of perforations sounds like a headache.
For vegetables, a hammered dimpled texture does well to release surface tension, and not be another headache to clean.
Not to say it's not a cool knife, but slicing cheese and vegetables would not be an ideal usage of it.
@@stevewebber707 have you hear of a nylon nail brush, hot water and soap?
@@gregandy4277 I have, but going to that much trouble to clean a knife that isn't designed to do the job of cutting cheese easily seems counterproductive.
I'm not often a fan of single use kitchen tools, but cheese knives are worth it. And that knife shares very few characteristics with a cheese knife.
More like a grater and knife in one
That's what I was thinking....cheese knife. Perfect for attacking one of those giant wheels of cheese.
I parked my bike by the Shurap shop to visit a friend. When I returned, the bike was gone and a stack of pattern welded cutlery and fishing lures was sitting where I parked it. They were worth more than the motorcycle so I didn’t complain.
bruh
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤘
Lmao
For whatever reason I got this video in my feed today. Hoping the best for you and your family.
6:34 im pretty sure we just found out where another type of machine comes from...
Nice
Hmmmmmm does it has a name like probe or something?idk I forgot what it’s called all i remember is something probe
Facts lol
Yea! Can crushing machine! :D
I think its a sewing machine
It usually has a strap that connects to the tip of your penis and you can have full control of the pace and the roughness
Just an idea for you this Christmas... Gift One: Gloves
Gift Two: Repeat Gift One
I know it's strange from the outside, but wearing gloves is much more dangerous than not. They aren't able to protect you from that amount of heat, and they not only impede your movements, but they give you a false sense of security. ~ VA Institute of Blacksmithing grad
I mean this is something I've just started watching and understanding. But it's quite surprising about the gloves... But I can understand it. Thanks for the info!
BigAntTalks i like how you can take new info and be thankful instead or going full Karen and being a dick
He’s actually wearing a glove at 0:50 he just doesn’t give a shit.
@@carlosgabriel7948 yeah I definitely feel you on that comment. People feel like they know it all when really they should listen before speaking; and try to understand
100 years from now, this blade will find its way to an auction and with it will be the images of how it was born. Together they will fetch an incredible price. Make sure these images travel through time with this blade. Imagine if the ancient blade makers had such a vivid record of their steel being born.
Ain't gonna last 100 years. More than just a few of those perforations are likely to be hiding potential fracture points. I wouldn't trust it for more than cutting cheese and bread. It sure would make a pretty wall decoration though!
If we had videos of the ancients in the early days of metal forging, or really anything, a lot of the mystery and interest wouldn't exist.
*Infomercial voice
“Are you tired of your knives being easy to wash? Do your Crocs not match any of your kitchen utensils? Hi, Billy Mays here...”
Honestly want to see this infomercial now. Lol
you definitely made me giggle at the "do your crocs not match any of your utensils", that was pretty damn funny
That’s some A plus comedy👌🏼
This what TH-cam is all about. Great talent doing great stuff that we would never normally see.
3:14 US soldier when the trees begin to speak in Vietnamese
i can see where you're going with this joke, but i didn't find it funny :\
Meh... I laughed
Lmfao I’m both viet and a US troop this is hilarious 😂😂
Lmao didnt expect that 😅😂
Хахахахха
A verdade é que vc não estava buscando por esse vídeo! Seja bem vindo!
Tmj kkkk
Hope!!
Pprt
Não é mesmo haha.
Eu ri
I love how he slowly and methodically sets his welds.
Amazing work as always. I'm really impressed that you still make your blades the same way. The little tea break always fascinates me too.
What impresses me most is that you still have all of the same equipment. You must really look after your tools my friend
The fact he almost never wears gloves fuels my anxiety
When dealing with mental that hot it's more dangerous to use gloves because the it would heat the glove really fast then melt and catch fire all while you are trying to get your hand out. Your bare hands will feel the heat before you touch it. If you do touch it you can pull you hand away quickly.
@@dustinthewind357 I think he's more talking about the sanding and stuff
Probably russian
As my mentor once said, "usually, only clumsy smiths wear gloves"
Look up degloving you’ll understand why
Man what a skill set , I couldn’t imagine the years of practice that goes into that . Cheers
Уеан,2.20 п1се ми$!с
He watched that tv show for two seasons
What a beautiful blade. The perforations will work great when slicing as they will reduce the chances of the food from sticking. Love the fact that one must take a break for a cup of tea!
Square Enix saw this blade and instantly got their next Final Fantasy protagonists weapon.
You can’t forget the extra 4 ft of length it needs to be a final fantasy weapon
The holey blade
Going to be another weird big ass blade on Nier
5:21 is most important part for a durable and fancy blade!!
Нож и тёрка, два в одном. А ещё можно вермишель отбрасывать )
А серьёзно - замечательно, как и всегда.
Раз выбил, значит сварка плохая? И я думаю не очень рабочий нож, мыть устанешь, продукты будут застревать.
@@LEXA_CBR Не применялся кузнечный пресс - значит, цель стояла соединить звенья, но после выбить втулки. Мыть - возможно, да. Как чеснокодавилку. И на обухе выемки тоже не эстетичны. Но какова идея! )
@@gardiel5401 не, так то я не спорю, красиво, но не практично.
@@LEXA_CBR в посудомойке все дырки промоет.
@@СчастливыйЧеловек-у1и ты что, стебли самый аромат дают. Повара их не выкидывают.
Вроде достаточно простое видео, но так залипаешь и видос смотришь на одном дыхании👍
Автор молодец, профи своего дела
🤝 это точно, сколько раз было, налил себе чай..... И пипеЦ, пью после видоса, со льдом ... 😂😂😂
Это, несомненно шедевральное изделие, только на полку!!!!! Ибо вымыть после работы будет тяжко!
Написано же: не для использования на планете ))
поэтому и рукоять не стал делать . )
А я б не мыл даже... После работы...
Таких полoвина TH-cam.
Hay friend like mi.
Honestly, I've never posted a single commented on a knife before today.. I have to say this is the nicest blade I've even seen in my life, it's truly hard to put into words how I felt seeing the creation of it, a piece of art and pure genius ! ! !
same vibe
The TH-cam play button knife he did was pretty fuckin badass too.
Also I had high hopes for the outcome of this blade and your comment reassured me of that.
Yeah I think the TH-cam button knife is better than this one.
It's amazing to watch a master craftsman working. You can't teach this, many years of practice, learning the tiny things that matter. So amazing.👍👍
Unlike other things such as sports where raw athleticism can’t be coached, everything he did here can and is thought regularly. He doesn’t possess anything that you don’t OTHER than many years of practice and learning the tiny things. It can be taught and your statement contradicts itself heavily. So amazing 👍🏻👍🏻
For those wondering using gloves can often be more dangerous than not. When using tools that spin like this you run a greater chance of getting a glove caught and it destroying your whole hand than you getting a small scratch or burn. Also gotta know exactly where those digits are at all times
Yes exactly most of these people probly haven't done much work with their hands
I can't tell you how much your videos fascinate and relax me,I love them. Thank you.🍻
5:39 My man said TEA TIME 😤🌋🔨
Do you know what tea is that ?
@@markogrbavac1197 I do not but I would like 2 know. You willing to enlighten us less cultured viewers?
Chokehold Jones I believe those are black pearls. It’s a dark tea. I could be wrong but you should try them.
It looked like a dehydrated flower or something. It's interesting asf
@@mrdeeds807 I don't know exactly what taste this is but it's called a blooming tea ^_^
Not for use on the planet.
Doom guy: hmmmmmm
Mars then!
I do not want to upset you, but Mars is also a planet.
@@Make_it_easy001 On THE planet not planetS.
@@Make_it_easy001 goes to hell to use it
I guess we know what his doomblade is made of, I guess
This dude be taking a bath in a lava pool and still stay: "Damn, not warm enough"
После каждого видео сложно представить себе, как мастер удивит в следующий раз, но каждый раз у него это получается!!!
The builds done from chains are my all time favorites.... well, and the the canister steel too.
Dragon Scale Damascus is one of my top favorites. Canister Damascus takes a little longer but many of the patterns are extremely beautiful when done right, easily worth the extra time
: “ _Remember, No Russian_ ”
: 3:05
Bro I'm dead 💀💀💀
🤣🤣🤣
R/whoosh here
i dont get it? what the joke?
Friendship Rat no Russian was the mission in mw2 in the airport u shoot civilians
Beautiful knife. Really nice work. Watching forging videos is very entertaining and the end result is always great. Much appreciated
What’s the name of the blade?
I would personally name it: Doom Blade
Damage: 400-500
Rate of Fire: 275%
Fame Bonus: 4%
Rotmg?
Luis Valdez omg yes! I thought no one would notice!
Haha I knew it 😭
Sugar Waves dude I got like 1,300 hours ☠️
If its Doom blade then rate of fire should be like 33% :D
I feel like this is the heavy metal of the ASMR world!
I hope that pun was intended
So funny I literally had the thought, and flicked the comments to scroll, and look what I found
I know enough that when something looks this easy it’s actually incredibly difficult. That’s true with any master craftsman though.
Rick Solid you just have to be brave enough to mess up an insane amount of times and learn from them to get this good, also sounds easier than it is but perseverance is the way
You guys are both right. Most knife makers on TV or social media have very little idea of metallurgy. As a metals tech in the airforce I got a pretty decent education in steel and aluminum alloys and I often cringe when knife makers talk about hardening steel. But sharup is quite on point in this regard. He's a master because he has true knowledge and good methods and not just the persistence to polish something that had a flawed start. That said I think anyone can learn to eventually get a decent final result but it has to be a labor of love because without the right equipment and a plan and practice and the ability to see things going wrong before it's too late you will get overwhelmed in the straightening process and detail work.
Nah, dude, it's just tea.
@@envoyroth lol
@@envoyroth Iroh style
The thought and the fore thought to make this design is just astounding! You have an amazing artistic eye that compliments your Blacksmithing skills. Hope you are doing well in this crisis.
Using materials that don't stick, making it part of the pattern, Genius.
These videos are like therapy for me! Another beautiful job, thank you!
Wow, that looks amazing! Great pattern on the blade, I was shocked when you punched out the rivets hahah I thought it was going to be a solid piece! Great work!
I wonder why the pins didn't weld like the rest of the chain did? Are they made of a different steel?
Вітаю ,
не маю жодного відношення до ковальською справи , але Ваша робота це бальзам на душу !!! Ви майстер своєї справи.!!!.....роблю меблі...
This reminds me of the scene in toy story where the old man repairs woody
Him: Working
Safety Officer: Am i joke to you?
OSHA inspector: *crying in the corner*
🤣
@@KarolOfGutovo in the corner adding up the fines.
If your talking about him not wearing gloves theres a very good reason why wearing gloves could be more dangerous than just using your hand in the blacksmithing trade.
@@codyschmidt510 Well, there's the whole 'sticking red-hot metal in a can of kerosene' thing too.
Absolutely stunning! You create the most beautiful knives ever!
The love of a work of art doesn't have to make sense, but this knife is my favorite of all your magnificent creations. You are a truly skilled and wonderfully eccentric artist. Bravo!
I got so anxious watching him with out any protection and how close his hand is to the burning hot metal
Hands down some of the most beautiful work I've seen.
Wow so stunning.. love the detail of the chain coming through
This is the second ever video I’ve seen of this guy (thank you TH-cam algorithms), and the smithing is fantastic, but this guy’s tea collection deserves respect.
"Not for use on this planet" then continues to use it.... while on the planet no less
Ya no tengo más palabras para elogiar tu maravilloso trabajo, te felicito y gracias por enseñarnos esas maravillosas obras de arte.
Man, everything he makes in that shop is absolutely beautiful...even the pot of tea lol!
Like mi
Sorry. Making tea with boiled rather than boiling water is the mark of an absolute barbarian.
@@simonlukic951 only idiots who don't know how to Make Tea use boiling water, but sure suit yourself as The Tea Will undoubtably taste like bad coffee and i quess that's a personal preference.
It's a master of his art that shows pride in his work. And what damn fine work it is.
No idea what's going on, but the result looks amazing.
Watching him make tea is always my favorite part 🫖 ☕️
💯
Always the best work. You have been an inspiration for years and I hope you continue coming up with unique ideas.
I Love When He Takes His Tea Break. Very Soothing.
I love this guys work, he does the most extraordinary pattern welded pieces....I know he doesn't black smith a lot per say, as I make pattern welded steel billets myself but I forge many of my knives in their entirety and he cuts the nose off to make forming the tip easier, etc, etc...but if I could give him one piece of advice, the hammer is just supposed to be guided, when he puts his thumb up as you see on the handle of the hammer, to help his control, he is going to cause himself big wrist issues over time....it is not the way to forge or at least from what I have been taught or have read from documents and books on smithing, as I am a member of an artist blacksmith association and I am also a blade smith. I use a forging press and a much larger power hammer and many of the same tools as he uses, but the hammer grip is a no no in how I train anybody when controlling a hammer
Now it all makes sense. My wife has tea like that.... and she’s from Ukraine too. Beautiful knife!
That's an awesome knife. I would love to have one for my collection.
A couple of years after watching this it's popped up again, and I'm still perplexed about why the links forge welded together but the pins could still be knocked out!
“Not for use on the planet” this man is an alien
He's an astroknight
видимо мастер может сделать козырный клинок из любой стали, браво Мастер!
Funny because I got this on my kar98k
The hells the best sniper doing here cuh
Nice to see you here dude!
I didn't expect you to be here
No you dont
Nice.
Best looking blade I have EVER seen! Super job!
I'm reading a lot about the risk he brings to his hands. Yet, after many, many blades his process is established and remarkably he also has all his digits.
I’m fully convinced that he has no nerve endings in his fingers anymore lol
My girl: what do you watch on TH-cam ?
Me: it’s complicated
Blacksmithing.
There, I fixed it for you.
That's funny
I’m gonna just sub and hit the bell. Every time one of your videos is in my feed you make a stunning piece.
не первый год смотрю канал,,, но это просто пистецццц, это лучшее что я видел
Как произведение - изделие просто бомба. А практично - наверное возникнут неудобства. В отверсвиях будут накапливаться продукты резания, их нужно будет выковыривать, дабы содержать нож в чистоте. Ну... такое..
Кёрхер в помощь
Да, эстетично, но не практично
С языка снял !!
Настенное украшение !!
👍
Для вскрытия конвертов самое то , НО если червивый глаз попадётся - можно и хамон срезать и консервы ему вскрыть без проблем.
Дима , так держать, гни свою линию.
Aquí esta el comentario en español que buscabas ;)
I love you
Sigo buscando un comentario sobre el vídeo.
@@christianlessaripoll9895 entonces sigue buscando
@@gussosa822
Gracias Crack Saludos desde Argentina papahhh Sabpeee
Top Arbeit macht richtig Spaß zu sehen wie ein Stück Metall sich in so eine schöne Klinge verwandelt 👍👍👍👍👍
Another amazing piece! It must be incredibly light. I watch a lot of bladesmith videos on TH-cam and I can't believe nobody has copied your hand-sanding machine. That must save an incredible amount of time.
I agree lol that is an amazing machine he made. Yet very simple and effective.
Check out Big Dog Forge, who uses the same style of machine.
@@Temp0raryName I follow Big Dog, but don't recall ever seeing it.
The kettle heater is such a flex I love it 😂
"Not for use on planet."
*What?*
Yes
Yes
Too powerful
Yes
For hammer
Not gonna lie, that is not the way I thought you would go with this one, but it is beautiful brother! And you are absolutely amazing!
I feel like this man is trying to make melting his hand in half look like an accident
Era em português que procuravas um comentário meu consagrado? Poise nem eu entendi esse vídeo.
Kkkkk e esse título ?
@@caiocesar9881 pse mano, nada a ver kkk
Trabaio da bexiga pra fazer uma faca 🤦🏽♂️
Tu é português ou BR ? Ksksks
@@adestenesgomes7130 melhor comprar nos importados mais barato e prático 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
Я человек простой,вижу Диму,ставлю лайк
Очень красивая железка! Наглядно демонстрирует проффесианализм, опыт и творческий потенциал мастера!
A good chunk of Bird's Eye Maple for the handle maybe? Beautiful knife!
Or some Buckeye Burl would look sweet too
Сколько труда было вложено в нож для сыра. Надо же так любить сыр🤩
Это скорее чисто полочник.
Goddamn what a skillset, and I can only imagine the cost of all that equipment.
Almost nothing/ Look at 5:19 - left square device (temp gauge). Written on it "Made in the USSR". And all equipment we can see at Shurap's facility is old, but very simple and therefore reliable. In the late 90s, plants often sold it for next to nothing.
It's amazing that he could see where the chain roll pins were in order to punch them out before hardening or I believe it's also called "Annealing"
Do you sell these or do you just have an apocalyptic stash laying about😂
Wow! That turned out looking really cool! I'd buy it in a heartbeat!
Parabéns shurap manda um abraço aqui pro pessoal do Brasil maravilhoso trabalho
Também acho espetacular o trabalho do cara, mas o problema que é ele nunca faz uma porra de um teste de corte no final do vídeo, por isso não tem 100% graça
A wonderful masterpiece of craftsmanship. Second to none.
I just want to know what kept those pins from forge welding allowing them to be knocked out that easily.
Different kind of metal.
They are made of steel with the addition of chromium and do not weld.
They are stainless steel, which doesnt weld very well. It needs to be cast forged to make parts.
How does that differ to when bicycle chain, motorbike chain or chainsaw chain is forge welded together? Is it just that the pins get riveted over or are they made of a different, more weldable steel?
@@josephdorey8458 this looks to be an engine cam timing chain. I'd imagine it's made of tougher materials to withstand the higher stresses.