Watching Tyler keep saying “Ohh now I figured out what was going wrong, I got this now” and repeatedly fail has gotta be the best thing on the internet😂😂
@@sebastianfinch6611 Top heavy refers to how the weight is distributed, in this case more of the overall weight is towards the top. It doesn't mean they weigh a lot.
The Gordon or harbor freight one probably cut the bottles the best because it is so thin. It also probably dulls the fastest. Remember machetes aren't supposed to be very sharp because they don't need to be very sharp to cut through green plants, and if they are too sharp they roll the edge and dull quickly on thicker branches that you also have to cut through. I would assume the Fiskars is the best option for actual use.
I can agree on the fiskars, I’ve had the same one for over 5+ years probably more it’s been round since I was a kid, we have never sharpened it, although I probably should, but it never fails, and hasn’t slowed down through all the cutting we use it for, and we use it mostly for cutting thicker palm branches in half to fit in our trash can👍🏻
i had one of the harbor freigh one when i was yonger playing in the woods. its not that bad. the only problem is that the handle at the time i had it did come apart but that took over three years for that to realy happen
@@tatertots1292 some future archeologists are gonna find the garage door with the noodles and usernames intact and think it’s a hieroglyphics or something
Before finishing the video I just want to say I have been absolutely satisfied by every Fiskars product I've purchased. Axe, Hatchet, Cultivator, Scissors. They make good stuff.
Holy cow, look at the gouges in the edge of the Coleman after the second chop test. That is garbage quality steel. The most important factor when determining how good a machete is, is not how sharp of an edge you can put on it, but how long will it hold the edge after being sharpened.
@@ericalorraine7943lookup Priscilla Dearmin-Turner, this is her name online, she's now the real investment prodigy since the crash and have help me recovered my loses
@@davidhudson3001 Thank you, i just lookup her accreditation and qualifications on FINRA and SEC, she seems really solid. I already leave her a mail on her webpage🙏
My 2 favorites machete brands for real good quality and a $20 budget are: -Tramontina; made in Brasil and really used hours a day by real worker to cut sugar canne. - 32 Dumas-ainé (that you may pronounce « trant-dou duma-haynee » 😅). Come from Frenche West Indies. A little more pricy, but real good steel.
I agree, for cutting sugarcane and trail clearing of vines, creepers and thin tree trunks about 1". All else, break out the hatchet and be prepared to go up to the tree ax.
@@thedeaderer8791 No, until relatively recently Tramontina's blades were of deplorable quality, currently they are good machetes but there are better options.
"Fiskars" is a well known brand from Finland. they have most things that are used in a garden. Axes, rakes, secateurs, rakes, shovels, shovels and more
My dad always owned Fiskar loppers and sheers. They have I think a lifetime warranty. He owns a large landscaping company but those Fiskars don't leave his truck lol.
The angle you chop it is extremely important. You're cutting less fibers at one time and they slice like butter. At a side to side angle, you're essentially trying to cut them all at once. It's the same concept as ripping a phone book in half. You don't rip the book. It's each page at once but one page at a time.
Machetes are sharpened for cutting the material they are used to cut. Most machetes will have a more blunt edge on them for cutting light brush and small branches. This will give increased durability and maintain an edge for longer. An extremely sharp machete will lose its edge much quicker than a slightly duller one.
Came here to say this, they have come to a 40-50 degree edge vs a knife with a 30-36 degree edge. If it was 30-35 degrees it would chip and roll the edge making it incredibly crappy. It has a utility edge for going through really dense stuff.
that Coleman with the green cloth cover thing is like the one I got as a kid. I remember getting them from a hardware store me and my brother they were like 6 bucks.
I think it depends on the region you’re raised in. I’m from Minnesota so I went through tons of Fellet knives as a kid. If he had machetes, I’m guessing he played around swampy marsh areas as a kid
Never even struck me as being odd, I was also raised in a small town and entire summers were spent down at the creek hacking at different stuff.. or blowing up stuff with giant fire crackers..I kinda feel sorry for the kids that didn't. LOL
Well... Me. I still own the buck knife i was given as a child. The machete disappeared as some point (probably when moving house at one point or another).
Swinging a machete is an art...my hubby is a surveyor and clears property lines with one. I can try for hours and he can do it in one swing. He says it's a balance of stiffness and sharpness for a GOOD machete. Plus knowing how to swing, kind for like throwing an axe or knife.
Go to Lowes and get a Tramontina machete for $20 and you can use it forever. It is a standard bush style blade made of 1750 I am pretty sure so it holds an edge well and has served me well for years. Makes a great gift too.
I have spent 20 years working on brush control for electric companies! We used machetes to hack into trees and squirt our herbicide solution! I have used just about every machete that is out there! The Ontario Knife company has the best there is!! We actually sharpen them razor sharp! Onto machete’s last! They hold their sharpness, don’t bend and have the perfect weight! I’m retired now, but the last machete I bought was around $18.
Technique is the most important part. Where your knuckles are pointed is where the edge is pointed, and the weight of the blade is what's meant to carry it through (so hitting with the widest blade section is key). If your grip is wrong, aim is off, or your knuckle alignment is wrong the blade will twist and skip off. I have that same Fiskars machete, and I've gotten clean cuts through 2-3 inch branches in a single swing. Thing has lasted about 6 years for me so far, and I have beaten the crap out of it on more than a few occasions.
I still have a sugar cane machete that my grandpa bought in 1974. The edge is slightly concave now from 40+ years of sharpening, but he always kept a coat of grease on it and hit it with the occasional rust pad to keep the pitting away, so it's still in surprisingly good condition overall.
You didn't have fun as a kid unless you and a few friends were going in the woods and building your own for with a machete and knife as a kid. We had a whole ass camp with 4 hits, campfire, smoking rack for meat, chopping block, etc. Was the best memories I have as a kid.
@@ReaIJackhammer When I was patrol leader, I ended up doing all the work in the camp while the other guys went out and chopped wood. I didn't say I was an effective leader.
@ReaIJackhammer me and one of my buddies had a 20ft tall 10 ft wide teepee along with a 3d archery trail that winded through about 15 acres of woods the trail itself was about 10ft wide cut with machetes bow saws and Hatchett through the thickest part of his ads property because there was nothing there
tyler for $20 or less you could get a cold steel machete there's a ton of designs to choose from but I've had the kukri , magnum kukri and heavy machete for years . i chop down pine trees with the kukri I personally would have liked to have seen you compare it to something closer to that or even gerber who offers machetes in the area of $20 the one you chose looks like what i bought from farmers markets / flea markets for $5 as a teenager
Tramontina sells their machetes at Lowes for $20. The sheathe is pretty good too. Gerber also sells their Gerber Gator Jr machetes for about $20ish, however I don't know enough of their quality in comparison to these.
you should try THE, technique, you know, first you go like this, spin around, STOP, double take three times, 1, 2, 3, and PELVIC THRUST, "WOO" "WOO" stop on your right foot DONT FORGET IT! now its time to bring it around town, BRING IT AROUND TOWN. then you do this, then this, then this and that and this and that and THEN you can cut the rope twice in a row. Thank me later.
my main takeaways today have been: - tylertube really needs to work on his edge alignment - he seems to think that edge out of the box is more important than edge retention. in a machete. - he also seems to think that you can just sharpen stuff that's dull asf using the same tools as one would use to sharpen a slightly dull knife. dude, if it can't cut paper, even your coarsest stone is gonna take hours, just use a belt grinder, or a grinding wheel if you have it
I'd love to see you collaborate with one of the myriad of blacksmiths or bladesmiths on TH-cam to revisit this video, see if they have any insight in making these blades better, re-profiling them, things like that.
Back handed swings give you better power, and use less space. Grew up cutting brush for work. I also own 2 of the fiskars, and they are decently durable, which is something that is hard to show in a video.
I've owned probably 6 machetes and the last one I bought and the only one I will buy in the future is Marbles brand machete, they are under 20 dollars and they come razor sharp out of the box. They are also extremely durable.
Absolutely a great machete, made by Imicasa in El Salvador. If you're not familiar Condor is the higher end / recreational line by Imicasa. I don't buy Condor because they're just fancier, but they are a good tool.
i love watching tyler cower in fear in the slow mo as he chops a water bottle, then the literal FRAME it doesnt cut his face turns from slight fear to -_-
I bought my hardware store brand machete over a decade ago for les than 20 bucks and its pretty decent... with inflation I cannot imagine getting the same quality for the price.
The way I look at it. They don't want the edge cutting through the packaging or inexperienced users. If a user doesn't know how to sharpen their own knifes. Maybe they shouldn't be using knives. Especially since using such knives will usually require resharpening anyway.
I like tramontina myself. Comes unfinished so you have to sharpen it, but the steel is good and far superior to 3cr options often found in other budget machetes. I clunked an old wheel with mine clearing brush and barely nicked the edge. Less than 2 minutes with stone then ceramic and good as new. I've also seen 3cr ones ruined hitting leftover barbed wire in brush. I haven't checked prices in a while but Ontario used to have a machete in 1095 for right at $20. I got one of them as well, and it's very good as well.
Love mine. I leave tip and front 3 inches blunt for digging and root chopping. Thing holds an edge and handles reckless swing into ground vines well. Hit many rocks and havent chipped or cracked it yet.
here in brazil, we can get a good "tramontina" machete for 40BRL ( around 8 dollars) , these machetes are no joke, you can buy one and have it for the rest of your life
I’ve a had a Gerber I picked up like 8-9 years ago... wasn’t $20 but $40 and I love it. I do yard work with it and go fishing, dig holes with it, use it to pick rocks up while looking for snakes. Been a great machete for me and my uses. I am looking to upgrade into maybe the $100-$200 range though I just don’t know what style I want to get this time.
Love the Gordon machete. Got one from Harbor Freight and it has helped me carve out a camp as well as a nice trail. Edit: that is definitely not the same machete as mine but they look the exact same.
Favorite is US Military 1943. Heavy blade. Used clearing trails in national forest. Holds sharpness. Used to cut fallen trees through to clear trail as well as trim bushes back. Many years of use
Tramontina is king whether it be Bolo or banana … they need basic love and attention they will last forever … anything from brush clearing to meat … they are the best
Just wondering, have your neighbors ever asked about what in the world you're up to in your garage or back yard sometimes? LOL ever gotten any complaints? I'd love to hear those encounters LOL
How your only on 680K is mind blowing. You have been pumping out banger videos for years now. And i have watched every single minute. Tyler under rated fo sure.
A sharpening suggestion I have is to use a flat filer for the machetes. It's a whole lot better because it's meant to file the steel blade. Wet stones won't do much with them. If you use a an angle grinder, a tiger disk(sand paper disk) can polish the edge and sharpen it safely because it won't eat the metal as quickly.
i think a safety thing with budget blades in large stores i think is generally to be sold a little dull in case of some one unhinged tries to take it for a trial run in store , having it dull minimizes possible injury , but as the fisker shows having some time to sharpen it , it has some decent quality
Can you do some more: "As seen on TV" ? Those videos are really great! Well, all your content is really great. I just like those "As seen on TV" videos!!
I love the "white man's overbite" when Tyler's in slow-mo! :-) No, that's not an insensitive comment meant to trigger anyone. Look up clip of "When Harry Met Sally" and "white man overbite".
To slice make sure you pull/drag as you swing. When you're chopping go at much sharper angles. Instead of swinging 2 o'clock to 8, try 1 to 7. (Also they're not made to cut processed lumber, like that board growing in your backyard, that's much more difficult.)
So, a 3/4" manila rope goes to a bar and asks the bartender for whisky on the rocks. The bartender says "You don't look old enough to drink, I'm gunna have to see I.D." So, the 3/4" manila rope leaves and goes down the street to TylerTube's garage and let's TylerTube hit them four times with a coleman walmart manchette. On the way back to the bar the 3/4" manila rope scrunches up and twists around as much as it can bear until it's hard to move and orders a scotch and soda. Of course the bartender asks "Hey, aren't you the 3/4" manila rope that was in here a bit ago?" To which the 3/4" manila rope replies "I'm a frayed knot."
Get 20% off your first monthly box when you sign up at bespokepost.com/tylertube20 and use promo code TYLERTUBE20 at checkout!
You missed one the Ozark trail 15" machete for $12 Ive used mine for a year holds a great edge
something about watching you swing these machetes like bats is halarious.
Its leverage you have to have the rope pulled tight on each wnd
Haha salt lake city Utah 😆
Can you test out some more battle boxes
Watching Tyler keep saying “Ohh now I figured out what was going wrong, I got this now” and repeatedly fail has gotta be the best thing on the internet😂😂
We need a most expensive vs cheap one of this. I would watch it
Yes
I second this
I third this
i fourth this
I fifth this
Machetes are supposed to be top heavy. They're made for chopping, and the extra metal on the end is supposed to make it easier to chop.
No, the machetea are not heavy, they have the pop very in front which is different. An 18"/22" machete should not exceed 500 grams) 1 pound approx.
Nah bro, a chopper like a golaks or kukris heavy, machetes light
@@sebastianfinch6611 Top heavy refers to how the weight is distributed, in this case more of the overall weight is towards the top. It doesn't mean they weigh a lot.
The Gordon or harbor freight one probably cut the bottles the best because it is so thin. It also probably dulls the fastest. Remember machetes aren't supposed to be very sharp because they don't need to be very sharp to cut through green plants, and if they are too sharp they roll the edge and dull quickly on thicker branches that you also have to cut through.
I would assume the Fiskars is the best option for actual use.
almost like its the most expensive or something
I can agree on the fiskars, I’ve had the same one for over 5+ years probably more it’s been round since I was a kid, we have never sharpened it, although I probably should, but it never fails, and hasn’t slowed down through all the cutting we use it for, and we use it mostly for cutting thicker palm branches in half to fit in our trash can👍🏻
I have that same exact Fiskars and it does work very well I’ve had it for 10+ years
i had one of the harbor freigh one when i was yonger playing in the woods. its not that bad. the only problem is that the handle at the time i had it did come apart but that took over three years for that to realy happen
Bruh
I love how the spaghetti is still on the wall in the background
He said it was going to be there forever and it seems he is a man of his words
@@tatertots1292 some future archeologists are gonna find the garage door with the noodles and usernames intact and think it’s a hieroglyphics or something
He replaces it every week to maintain continuity. He can’t risk messing up the lore
@@livid_spider True I'd love to see that discovery
He was right about godpasta
Before finishing the video I just want to say I have been absolutely satisfied by every Fiskars product I've purchased. Axe, Hatchet, Cultivator, Scissors. They make good stuff.
this
The fiskars x25 was the first ax I ever bought. Still have it ten years later
fiskars scissors will never be beaten.
Finnish quality
Same bro
Holy cow, look at the gouges in the edge of the Coleman after the second chop test. That is garbage quality steel. The most important factor when determining how good a machete is, is not how sharp of an edge you can put on it, but how long will it hold the edge after being sharpened.
@@ericalorraine7943lookup Priscilla Dearmin-Turner, this is her name online, she's now the real investment prodigy since the crash and have help me recovered my loses
Investment now will be wise but the truth is investing on your own will be a high risk. I think it will be best to get a professional👌
@@davidhudson3001
Thank you, i just lookup her accreditation and qualifications on FINRA and SEC, she seems really solid. I already leave her a mail on her webpage🙏
A news host spoke so highly of this💕 woman Priscilla Dearmin-Turner and her loss prevention strategies been trying to get to her ever since
I heard she always have a way of linking someone investment into something new and profitable?
“Shipped this back to the cave man days” Damn, Tyler just solved the time travel enigma
My 2 favorites machete brands for real good quality and a $20 budget are:
-Tramontina; made in Brasil and really used hours a day by real worker to cut sugar canne.
- 32 Dumas-ainé (that you may pronounce « trant-dou duma-haynee » 😅). Come from Frenche West Indies. A little more pricy, but real good steel.
You seem to be forgetting that the French are always super mean to Americans so we don't generally want to use yall's tools.
The tramontinas r the best machetes made by far. If u want a good machete look at the people who need to use them all day
I good basic military surplus machete is hard to beat at $20...
I agree, for cutting sugarcane and trail clearing of vines, creepers and thin tree trunks about 1". All else, break out the hatchet and be prepared to go up to the tree ax.
@@thedeaderer8791 No, until relatively recently Tramontina's blades were of deplorable quality, currently they are good machetes but there are better options.
tyler’s a lot more confident when recording compared to 3 years ago his content has improved so much and his confidence on camera
"Fiskars" is a well known brand from Finland. they have most things that are used in a garden. Axes, rakes, secateurs, rakes, shovels, shovels and more
they are pretty well known in the us too...
They are also well known for their decent quality sewing scissors. Some argue that they're as good as Ginghers.
@@Sabamika1 As long as you treat them right, those can be generational tools.
My dad always owned Fiskar loppers and sheers. They have I think a lifetime warranty. He owns a large landscaping company but those Fiskars don't leave his truck lol.
We’ll make sure to tell us about the shovels at least!
The angle you chop it is extremely important. You're cutting less fibers at one time and they slice like butter. At a side to side angle, you're essentially trying to cut them all at once. It's the same concept as ripping a phone book in half. You don't rip the book. It's each page at once but one page at a time.
Yep, cutting at a 45 degree angle definitely works better than going in at 90 degrees.
Machetes are sharpened for cutting the material they are used to cut. Most machetes will have a more blunt edge on them for cutting light brush and small branches. This will give increased durability and maintain an edge for longer. An extremely sharp machete will lose its edge much quicker than a slightly duller one.
Came here to say this, they have come to a 40-50 degree edge vs a knife with a 30-36 degree edge. If it was 30-35 degrees it would chip and roll the edge making it incredibly crappy. It has a utility edge for going through really dense stuff.
Just wanted to say that.. Just this.. made for twigs...
Tyler Leveled up!
Tyler learned the move: Edge Alignment
Edge Alignment Proficiency: 2/10
that Coleman with the green cloth cover thing is like the one I got as a kid. I remember getting them from a hardware store me and my brother they were like 6 bucks.
honey, he's out there calling 2x4s trees and chopping them with machetes
the 2x4 was an extremely invasive species apparently 🤔
"I've had ten of these in my lifetime, doing things kids do with machetes" who on earth owned a machete as a kid?! Let alone multiple?! XD
I think it depends on the region you’re raised in. I’m from Minnesota so I went through tons of Fellet knives as a kid. If he had machetes, I’m guessing he played around swampy marsh areas as a kid
@@chupacabra8479 lmaooo goddamn
I'm a Michigan farm kid, and I've been through a few clearing trails and fence rows, I personally prefer the Gerber's, they're cheap and really good
Never even struck me as being odd, I was also raised in a small town and entire summers were spent down at the creek hacking at different stuff.. or blowing up stuff with giant fire crackers..I kinda feel sorry for the kids that didn't. LOL
Well... Me.
I still own the buck knife i was given as a child. The machete disappeared as some point (probably when moving house at one point or another).
I love Tyler's content. He is a dude scientist, answering all of the important questions.
Swinging a machete is an art...my hubby is a surveyor and clears property lines with one. I can try for hours and he can do it in one swing. He says it's a balance of stiffness and sharpness for a GOOD machete. Plus knowing how to swing, kind for like throwing an axe or knife.
Go to Lowes and get a Tramontina machete for $20 and you can use it forever. It is a standard bush style blade made of 1750 I am pretty sure so it holds an edge well and has served me well for years. Makes a great gift too.
32:23 should have taken a sip of the water like you made a cup XD opportunity missed
I have spent 20 years working on brush control for electric companies! We used machetes to hack into trees and squirt our herbicide solution! I have used just about every machete that is out there! The Ontario Knife company has the best there is!! We actually sharpen them razor sharp! Onto machete’s last! They hold their sharpness, don’t bend and have the perfect weight! I’m retired now, but the last machete I bought was around $18.
Technique is the most important part. Where your knuckles are pointed is where the edge is pointed, and the weight of the blade is what's meant to carry it through (so hitting with the widest blade section is key). If your grip is wrong, aim is off, or your knuckle alignment is wrong the blade will twist and skip off. I have that same Fiskars machete, and I've gotten clean cuts through 2-3 inch branches in a single swing. Thing has lasted about 6 years for me so far, and I have beaten the crap out of it on more than a few occasions.
Forgot to say, I love all your videos Tyler. I watch every video as soon I notice you've uploaded. Thanks for the entertainment.
I still have a sugar cane machete that my grandpa bought in 1974. The edge is slightly concave now from 40+ years of sharpening, but he always kept a coat of grease on it and hit it with the occasional rust pad to keep the pitting away, so it's still in surprisingly good condition overall.
Just imagine what the neighbors would think if Tyler had a forest of those trees pop up one day...
😂😂
Broham trying to get two cuts in a row and each time i thought "aw man!" Super relatable lmao
Who else is happy he just made it through the video without any major injuries? :)
You’re probably the only TH-camr I watch whose sponsors actually interest me.
“Mom Tyler’s in the backyard with the machete again” 😂
11:05 “That’s what happens when you have a long machete……I guess”
Man this is exactly what I needed to make me feel better. Thank you Tyler. ❤️🤝
11:27 Best part: Tyler worried about spilling water on his water drenched table lmao!
I had no idea kids were expected to do anything with machetes. Who knew?
Merica
salt
You didn't have fun as a kid unless you and a few friends were going in the woods and building your own for with a machete and knife as a kid. We had a whole ass camp with 4 hits, campfire, smoking rack for meat, chopping block, etc. Was the best memories I have as a kid.
@@ReaIJackhammer When I was patrol leader, I ended up doing all the work in the camp while the other guys went out and chopped wood. I didn't say I was an effective leader.
@ReaIJackhammer me and one of my buddies had a 20ft tall 10 ft wide teepee along with a 3d archery trail that winded through about 15 acres of woods the trail itself was about 10ft wide cut with machetes bow saws and Hatchett through the thickest part of his ads property because there was nothing there
tyler for $20 or less you could get a cold steel machete there's a ton of designs to choose from but I've had the kukri , magnum kukri and heavy machete for years . i chop down pine trees with the kukri I personally would have liked to have seen you compare it to something closer to that or even gerber who offers machetes in the area of $20 the one you chose looks like what i bought from farmers markets / flea markets for $5 as a teenager
"Doing whatever kids do with machetes."
Uhh Kids don't normally have machetes lol
Tramontina sells their machetes at Lowes for $20. The sheathe is pretty good too.
Gerber also sells their Gerber Gator Jr machetes for about $20ish, however I don't know enough of their quality in comparison to these.
you should try THE, technique, you know, first you go like this, spin around, STOP, double take three times, 1, 2, 3, and PELVIC THRUST, "WOO" "WOO" stop on your right foot DONT FORGET IT! now its time to bring it around town, BRING IT AROUND TOWN. then you do this, then this, then this and that and this and that and THEN you can cut the rope twice in a row. Thank me later.
YES my excitement on that cut: 23:41 and then I'm just yelling TECHNIQUE in spongebob voice.
someone should count in all his videos how many water bottles he has wasted😭😭Love the videos i watch every one of them
my main takeaways today have been:
-
tylertube really needs to work on his edge alignment
-
he seems to think that edge out of the box is more important than edge retention. in a machete.
-
he also seems to think that you can just sharpen stuff that's dull asf using the same tools as one would use to sharpen a slightly dull knife.
dude, if it can't cut paper, even your coarsest stone is gonna take hours, just use a belt grinder, or a grinding wheel if you have it
I'd love to see you collaborate with one of the myriad of blacksmiths or bladesmiths on TH-cam to revisit this video, see if they have any insight in making these blades better, re-profiling them, things like that.
I would like to see home collaborate with “Nate from the internet” and make a machete to test.
I’d love to see you do different food processors and blenders. Really put em through the tests!
Budget machete and no Tramontina? You're outta you're damn mind
11:40 me everytime I watch Tyler’s videos
Would love to see you attempt a forged in fire style video. Where you made you're own novice machete.
15 videos later, the pasta is still there 🤣🤣🤣
Back handed swings give you better power, and use less space. Grew up cutting brush for work.
I also own 2 of the fiskars, and they are decently durable, which is something that is hard to show in a video.
I love that in every video the suspense of him needing a trip to the ER is right on the edge.
I've owned probably 6 machetes and the last one I bought and the only one I will buy in the future is Marbles brand machete, they are under 20 dollars and they come razor sharp out of the box. They are also extremely durable.
Absolutely a great machete, made by Imicasa in El Salvador.
If you're not familiar Condor is the higher end / recreational line by Imicasa.
I don't buy Condor because they're just fancier, but they are a good tool.
The Fiskars machete is SOOO good at messing with Tyler. 😆 It's in his head.
"Doing whatever kids do with machetes"
PREFERABLY NOTHING???
9:08, I legit thought that was thunder
I love the slow motion sound effects when Tyler slices through a water bottle and then the face of fear he makes lol
I would have added a post-credit scene using the second machete to spread some butter on a toast 🤣
In this video: Tyler learns how to hone his machete skills
30:47 Tyler, to explain it is that the rope is thicker, has more resistance, and so when you hit it the blade doesn't deflect.
i love watching tyler cower in fear in the slow mo as he chops a water bottle, then the literal FRAME it doesnt cut his face turns from slight fear to -_-
2:56 Sir that's not a sheathe, that's a sock! 🤣
Well, you're a utah resident! Umm me too haha at least now I know I can get the box with the weapons shipped to me🤣
The best cheap machetes are made by Tramontina Brazil. The steel is light and hard, wood handle, super simple and basic, made to do real work.
I'm amazed he made it out of childhood with all his fingers if he had machetes then.
love to see Fiskars, as Fin. love your channel man
I bought my hardware store brand machete over a decade ago for les than 20 bucks and its pretty decent... with inflation I cannot imagine getting the same quality for the price.
heh I should have started the video before commenting. your mid range is the one I own right down the the canvas scabbard.
31:40 he almost cussed but caught himself. What a legend
i was always under the impression those required sharpening when purchased new.
The way I look at it. They don't want the edge cutting through the packaging or inexperienced users. If a user doesn't know how to sharpen their own knifes. Maybe they shouldn't be using knives. Especially since using such knives will usually require resharpening anyway.
Tyler discovers why cutting a free hanging rope is considered a significant challenge.
I have one of the Fiskars one. Been a great blade after all these years.
Got my midnight snack and cant wait to watch 🤘
I like tramontina myself. Comes unfinished so you have to sharpen it, but the steel is good and far superior to 3cr options often found in other budget machetes. I clunked an old wheel with mine clearing brush and barely nicked the edge. Less than 2 minutes with stone then ceramic and good as new. I've also seen 3cr ones ruined hitting leftover barbed wire in brush. I haven't checked prices in a while but Ontario used to have a machete in 1095 for right at $20. I got one of them as well, and it's very good as well.
Love mine. I leave tip and front 3 inches blunt for digging and root chopping. Thing holds an edge and handles reckless swing into ground vines well. Hit many rocks and havent chipped or cracked it yet.
here in brazil, we can get a good "tramontina" machete for 40BRL ( around 8 dollars) , these machetes are no joke, you can buy one and have it for the rest of your life
Fiskars is actually a decent brand I have several of their tools
25:00 funniest thing i saw today. Truly made my day
I just can’t imagine the neighbors watching him😂😂😂
I’ve a had a Gerber I picked up like 8-9 years ago... wasn’t $20 but $40 and I love it.
I do yard work with it and go fishing, dig holes with it, use it to pick rocks up while looking for snakes.
Been a great machete for me and my uses.
I am looking to upgrade into maybe the $100-$200 range though I just don’t know what style I want to get this time.
It’s all about the steel type.
Love the Gordon machete. Got one from Harbor Freight and it has helped me carve out a camp as well as a nice trail.
Edit: that is definitely not the same machete as mine but they look the exact same.
Do you live in the mountains? When I grow up I will probably move to the mountains area
@@fizzy4050 yeah I live in a mountainous area
"Got some good flex to it. " 😂😂
Favorite is US Military 1943. Heavy blade. Used clearing trails in national forest. Holds sharpness. Used to cut fallen trees through to clear trail as well as trim bushes back. Many years of use
Tramontina is king whether it be Bolo or banana … they need basic love and attention they will last forever … anything from brush clearing to meat … they are the best
Just wondering, have your neighbors ever asked about what in the world you're up to in your garage or back yard sometimes? LOL ever gotten any complaints?
I'd love to hear those encounters LOL
How your only on 680K is mind blowing. You have been pumping out banger videos for years now. And i have watched every single minute. Tyler under rated fo sure.
How about a test of something different: best RC car for $60 - $70 price range? Or best X type of RC car? Just throwing random idea out.
Some machetes are not sold with an edge and are meant to be sharpened upon arrival before use.
A sharpening suggestion I have is to use a flat filer for the machetes. It's a whole lot better because it's meant to file the steel blade. Wet stones won't do much with them. If you use a an angle grinder, a tiger disk(sand paper disk) can polish the edge and sharpen it safely because it won't eat the metal as quickly.
What do you mean whet stones arent made for steel blades?
Where does that knowledge come from?
Green trees, bushes,vines,branches are easier to cut with a machete. But who expects you to bring a forest in your garage. Good video. 👍
i think a safety thing with budget blades in large stores i think is generally to be sold a little dull in case of some one unhinged tries to take it for a trial run in store , having it dull minimizes possible injury , but as the fisker shows having some time to sharpen it , it has some decent quality
U should do a video on what liquids can you put in a kettle and keep doing what ur doing ur videos are great👍🏻
Calls the sheath horrible, sets it aside and says it’s nothing horrible.
I just stubbled upon one of your review videos and now I can’t stop watching them. He kind of reminds me of Ricky from trailer park boys.
"My first swing is a perfect and beautiful swing and all the ones after that are, like, garbage."
Tyler has mastered Jigen-ryu style swordsmanship.
The first bottle sounded like a thunderstorm in the slomo xD
I still have my coleman from when i was 7. Its still my honey suckle wacker 😂
My Fiskars hatchet is super sharp. But I have sharpened it since I bought it.
Fiskars is a pretty good brand in my opinion for the money.
Can you do some more: "As seen on TV" ? Those videos are really great!
Well, all your content is really great. I just like those "As seen on TV" videos!!
Your trees you need to cut are called naked pine they're really useful for a lot of things LOL
Tyler's neighbors be like "There he is doing weird shit in front of the camera again" 😂😂
I love the "white man's overbite" when Tyler's in slow-mo! :-)
No, that's not an insensitive comment meant to trigger anyone. Look up clip of "When Harry Met Sally" and "white man overbite".
To slice make sure you pull/drag as you swing. When you're chopping go at much sharper angles. Instead of swinging 2 o'clock to 8, try 1 to 7.
(Also they're not made to cut processed lumber, like that board growing in your backyard, that's much more difficult.)
So, a 3/4" manila rope goes to a bar and asks the bartender for whisky on the rocks. The bartender says "You don't look old enough to drink, I'm gunna have to see I.D."
So, the 3/4" manila rope leaves and goes down the street to TylerTube's garage and let's TylerTube hit them four times with a coleman walmart manchette.
On the way back to the bar the 3/4" manila rope scrunches up and twists around as much as it can bear until it's hard to move and orders a scotch and soda.
Of course the bartender asks "Hey, aren't you the 3/4" manila rope that was in here a bit ago?"
To which the 3/4" manila rope replies "I'm a frayed knot."