Well done, geez. The item is is the dog's nadgers, and the production was hilarious. A good bit of comic relief around some serious processes. A few measurements and a source for that crazy skull-head would be supremely helpful, but I also get the fact that one could put pretty much anything of the right material, size, relative shape, and thread in its place. Respect.
That would've been considered one gorgeous club by any Tommy. I remember as a kid in the 70's going to the USMA at West Point's museum where they have a section dedicated to WW1 and my Grandpa Tommy (not kidding, stereotypes don't come out of thin air) who had fought in the Great War as a Tommy before immigrating to the USA, pointed to a simple wood club with barbed wire wrapped around the end of it and said he had one just like that but got rid of the barbed wire after a while because it kept getting stuck to the fabric of Jerry's greatcoat*. Then he pointed to a bayonet that had teeth like ridges filed into the top edge and said- don't ever do that, anyone taken prisoner with one of those would get their eyes taken out with it to teach them a lesson. *I always remembered this because I was amazed at my Grandpa opening up to me, and like any 10 year old American of the time I had no idea who Jerry was or what made his coat so great. So it was a bit confusing for me but I just went with it and enjoyed his narration of the exhibits.
@@DiesInEveryFilm Italy fielded a unit for trench warfare in WWI that was armed with nothing by knives...they'd provide cover fire for them to crawl close enough to dive into the trenches & just commit mayhem & slaughter
I was shown a club, taken from a thief, that was made of a similar door spring with a lump of lead moulded around one end and a grip made of tape at the other end. It could break windows and skulls equally well.
My step grandfather was a WWI Vet and he carried a heavy spring that had a wooden dowel about 6"-7" long that fit inside of one end of the spring and then he wrapped and braided leather boot lace around the spring and dowel for a handle and had about 20"-24" sticking out from top of the handle with a lead ball about the diameter of a silver dollar that threaded onto the opposite end and was wrapped in leather boot lace that was woven into the spring rite below it where it was fully threaded/seated on the spring,that resembled what they call a monkeys fist . The lead ball must've been around 8,10 maybe 12oz. in weight. He was a bartender at the American legion and would walk home after closing and he had a wooden leg that could make him look like an easy mark to someone who didn't know any better but they wouldn't make that mistake twice for sure. He mentioned that,that's why he carried it. And you could tell that it was put to work at least once because there was dried blood on the one side of the business end of it. Dont know if he carried it in the war or made it at home but he was about the business(as most those old boys were) that I assure you.
I carried one in the 80s while serving in the USMC that I made from an 18-inch piece of 1-1/2 inch recovery cable. I cast lead on the business end and cast aluminum for the handle. I thought I might get in trouble when the Gunny saw it, but he just told me to make him one. Nice piece of work. Well done.
@@DiesInEveryFilm I will only say I had several chances to use it and it performed as intended. It was brutally efficient and worked like an extension of my arm. After the first use, I learned how important follow-through was. It was equally brutal in an overhand swing as with a horizontal swing, meaning helmets were little protection.
I do actually love the way you set up your video, first time viewer. The quick intro, non interrupted content and channel shout out at the end after what I wanted to watch. Just giving credit where credit is due. Hope to see more soon. :)
Great video as always man. The original trench club video was one of my favorites and ww1 is an era I’m most interested in (especially the austro-italian front) and I’d love to see you make more cool ww1 mele weapons in the future
Why is it at 54 years old and a war history buff have I never owned one of these? Well, now I know how to make one, I can remedy that situation. Liked and subbed.
Looks like a garage door spring? I did garage doors before and i saw springs like this all the time, i never thought to do this with one. But they are extremely dangerous if used wrong, like i heard about a spring snapping once, the cable whipped out, broke a 2x4 like a toothpick. So i thought about... what if? Not that I'd ever do it because i like not being in prison. But if the springs were used as booby traps. Never saw that in a movie before
@@derealized797 I bought a load of sprigs so im unsure what they are off but if you saw one break then it had a bad heat treat as they shouldn’t do that
@@DiesInEveryFilm nah garage door springs snap over time because people don't oil them. They're supposed to be oiled often, like once a month, otherwise they actually dry out and weaken. Also people sometimes do something not knowing how, over extend them, or even use the wrong springs. Overhead doors get as complicated as they are interesting, but there was money in it.
The words trench and club immediately perked my interest. This said your imagination and ability validate you as mentally more than capable with a twist of deranged a perfect combination. Oddly enough my great grandfather was a GRANT and fought in the trenches. The mighty BLACKWATCH 42nd Royal Highland Regiment. So you keep letting that genius create 👍👍
This is awesome! I made a police truncheon out of some walnut last year during lockdown. I don't have a lathe so it's a little rustic but not bad for a non-woodworker. Managed to keep all my fingers too. Bonus!
@@666toysoldier this is an exact replica of one in a museum near me and plenty of pictures of similar online (i changed the top from a ball to a skull) It’s my job to make this stuff
An interesting thing. But the shock part, the skull looks decorative, won't it fall apart? And as always, great work with anything, even wood, even metal.
Thank you, the skull is solid brass and is held in with 8mm steel hook there’s no way it’s coming off, the original ones had lead heads which is softer than brass
@@DiesInEveryFilm I'm a bit skeptical about the epoxy alone keeping the spring secure over time. Then again though, how much use is the thing going to get?
@@peachmelba1000 , It is possible to leave the spring eye on the end of the spring going into the handle. Lightly tack weld a small hex nut inside the spring eye. Drill the inside of the hex nut to perfectly fit a steel pin, which, of course, will then be applied through the rear of the wooden handle, cross-pinned. Also do the epoxy & that should be solid. Another way would be to lightly tack weld a 3/8”x16t nut inside the rear of the spring & use a bolt through the pommel. But his design is most likely enough.
I've never heard of a trench club before. I was thinking about how they were used in ww1 and they are seriously dark and brutal. Imagine you a new recruit and tucked away in the trench and an enemy soldier suddenly pops over the edge and he's to close for your rifle. Your side arm is snapped in your holster and there isn't enough time to draw it and bring it to bare. You look over and your trench club is leaning only a few inches away from your hand. You grab it and start bludgeoning the enemy but he doesn't go down right away and starts attacking back. You struggle in a life and death clench up, swinging your club but you can't bring it down with full force. Finally you knock him back just enough to swing for his head and he goes down only to push back to attack again. You swing and swing and swing. Finally he drops but you keep swinging in a panicked rage. Until there is nothing left of his head. You keep swinging until one of your buddies pulls you off the carcus. So brutal.
@DiesInEveryFilm Customs especially when you arnt the first owner of the club. It's previous user or 2 got killed to death and it was issued to the replacement
I made one a few months back. I used a drive gear from a crane for the head, a 1" cable bunged on both ends. One bung is welded to the gear, the other to a 3' pipe. I was making 2x4s explode, and broke 4 x 4s in half.
A great idea brought to life, and finished off beautifully, as usual. Superb piece of work Onur. A real 21st century take on the traditional trench club. Perfect mate 👌
I wouldnt be surprised if Dave Mustang doesn't come knocking on your door wanting on of those Billy Clubs!! That was amazing!! Maybe Vic Rattle Head could inspire a future creation?
@@DiesInEveryFilm Dave Mustane is the lead singer of The heavy metal band, Mega Deth. Vic Rattle Head is thier mascot. Kind of like Eddie from Iron Maiden. Vic Rattle Head looks like the skull you made for the club. 👍👍👍
Just found your channel and I've gotta say your Deadpool is top notch! How have I never come across your content before!?! Anyway love your stuff and btw as a mechanic I can confirm the same shit happens to me with my right thumb every single time I put on gloves. Can't wait to see what you make next.
That is absolutely brilliant in design and execution! Each component threads into the handle and maximizes strength. The skull striker is the piece de resistance adding weight and fear to the end. Outstanding workmanship! I'd love to make it with my lathe.
Hopefully, you still keep fock-ing off the takes so we can keep the outtakss and the shannigans. Its awesome how you recreate part of the history with common life tools and random stuff. See you next saturday ✌🏻 Blademaster Out
Dude, that's a sweet build!!! Damn, I would buy one of those from ya!! Make a great self defense weapon especially where I live!! Too many lunatics and psychos, gotta be careful out there, thanks for sharing!!!!
I just found this channel, the algorithm worked! You are a goofy and very talented man. If I ever have the pleasure of meeting you, the pints are on me.
Just saw this video on my feed, and thought cool club. Adding deadpool to it just made it better for me since I'm a member of a deadpool cosplay group called the Dragon Con Deadpools. I truly enjoyed the craftsmanship of the build. Truly awesome.
Reminds me a little of what William Gibson described as a "Cobra" in Neuromancer, though in that, I think the idea of the design was that it was like one of those collapsible batons, but with springs instead of shafts, that ended on a pyramid tip!
I am trying to understand this thing. Does the flex in the spring aid in delivering more power? Looks like an interesting idea, and could be very effective.
I'm pretty sure that's how blackjacks work as well. If it's all one solid piece you lose your grip. If it has a tiny bit of give, you keep your grip and deliver more impact.
I own one of these babies. The ball on the end of mine is spiked. I never knew what it was called and had never seen another like it... until just now.
@@DiesInEveryFilm Well, you did a great job. Even the style of the handle, with the carved rings. Now you've got me wondering how old mine is. I've had it 20-30 years.
What did you think of this build?
Remember to stick around till the end for testing and outtakes.
Now here's a weapon that would also actually be useful in a zombie apocalypse.
Supremely badass :)
@@Syberz Onur is the perfect go to fella if the Zombies ever rise up 😄
Would be cool if you made other trench weapons
Well done, geez. The item is is the dog's nadgers, and the production was hilarious. A good bit of comic relief around some serious processes. A few measurements and a source for that crazy skull-head would be supremely helpful, but I also get the fact that one could put pretty much anything of the right material, size, relative shape, and thread in its place. Respect.
That would've been considered one gorgeous club by any Tommy. I remember as a kid in the 70's going to the USMA at West Point's museum where they have a section dedicated to WW1 and my Grandpa Tommy (not kidding, stereotypes don't come out of thin air) who had fought in the Great War as a Tommy before immigrating to the USA, pointed to a simple wood club with barbed wire wrapped around the end of it and said he had one just like that but got rid of the barbed wire after a while because it kept getting stuck to the fabric of Jerry's greatcoat*. Then he pointed to a bayonet that had teeth like ridges filed into the top edge and said- don't ever do that, anyone taken prisoner with one of those would get their eyes taken out with it to teach them a lesson.
*I always remembered this because I was amazed at my Grandpa opening up to me, and like any 10 year old American of the time I had no idea who Jerry was or what made his coat so great. So it was a bit confusing for me but I just went with it and enjoyed his narration of the exhibits.
Thanks very much, i have a war museum near me and i love looking at all this kind of stuff
What means jerrys great Coat?
@@philippproba9242 the long coat the Germans had.
The Germans were nicknamed the Jerry's
@@DiesInEveryFilm Italy fielded a unit for trench warfare in WWI that was armed with nothing by knives...they'd provide cover fire for them to crawl close enough to dive into the trenches & just commit mayhem & slaughter
@@jefflockaby702 used to put fear into the souls of their enemys!
If you were making trench clubs for your blokes during WW1 it would've been a heck of a lot more brutal than it was. Great build as always cheers
Hahahahaha yeh id love to have. Thanks
If you had "blokes" in ww1 you were on the wrong team
@@edgarserna5042 do you know what a bloke is?
@@edgarserna5042 are you ok?
@@DiesInEveryFilm u might have to explain
I was shown a club, taken from a thief, that was made of a similar door spring with a lump of lead moulded around one end and a grip made of tape at the other end. It could break windows and skulls equally well.
Absolutely brutal things they are
My step grandfather was a WWI Vet and he carried a heavy spring that had a wooden dowel about 6"-7" long that fit inside of one end of the spring and then he wrapped and braided leather boot lace around the spring and dowel for a handle and had about 20"-24" sticking out from top of the handle with a lead ball about the diameter of a silver dollar that threaded onto the opposite end and was wrapped in leather boot lace that was woven into the spring rite below it where it was fully threaded/seated on the spring,that resembled what they call a monkeys fist . The lead ball must've been around 8,10 maybe 12oz. in weight. He was a bartender at the American legion and would walk home after closing and he had a wooden leg that could make him look like an easy mark to someone who didn't know any better but they wouldn't make that mistake twice for sure. He mentioned that,that's why he carried it. And you could tell that it was put to work at least once because there was dried blood on the one side of the business end of it. Dont know if he carried it in the war or made it at home but he was about the business(as most those old boys were) that I assure you.
@@DiesInEveryFilm That's why they are illegal to carry in germany.
Yeah that's called a blackjack or cosh
I carried one in the 80s while serving in the USMC that I made from an 18-inch piece of 1-1/2 inch recovery cable. I cast lead on the business end and cast aluminum for the handle. I thought I might get in trouble when the Gunny saw it, but he just told me to make him one. Nice piece of work. Well done.
Great bit of kit and brutal as hell
@@DiesInEveryFilm I will only say I had several chances to use it and it performed as intended. It was brutally efficient and worked like an extension of my arm. After the first use, I learned how important follow-through was. It was equally brutal in an overhand swing as with a horizontal swing, meaning helmets were little protection.
These things you make are not only brutal they're also really beautifully made. They look terrific finished.
Very nice to hear that, thank you very much
I do actually love the way you set up your video, first time viewer. The quick intro, non interrupted content and channel shout out at the end after what I wanted to watch. Just giving credit where credit is due. Hope to see more soon. :)
Thanks very much, i try to make my content how i would like to see it so it’s good that you enjoy it that way as well, new video went up lastnight
Honestly like the humor you throw in makes it just that much better
Glad to hear it mate, new video up tomorrow
Great video as always man. The original trench club video was one of my favorites and ww1 is an era I’m most interested in (especially the austro-italian front) and I’d love to see you make more cool ww1 mele weapons in the future
That’s great to hear mate, thank you and yeh definitely need to do more.
The Italian knife fighting SF. They where crazy! 🗡️🗡️🗡️
Why is it at 54 years old and a war history buff have I never owned one of these? Well, now I know how to make one, I can remedy that situation. Liked and subbed.
Haha i love stuff like this, thank you very much, ill be making a few different styles of these soon
DANG, man. That turned out really well. The skull thingie was a really nice touch. Truly a piece of (brutally lethal) art!
Thank you so much mate I really appreciate it
Looks like a garage door spring? I did garage doors before and i saw springs like this all the time, i never thought to do this with one.
But they are extremely dangerous if used wrong, like i heard about a spring snapping once, the cable whipped out, broke a 2x4 like a toothpick. So i thought about... what if? Not that I'd ever do it because i like not being in prison. But if the springs were used as booby traps. Never saw that in a movie before
@@derealized797 I bought a load of sprigs so im unsure what they are off but if you saw one break then it had a bad heat treat as they shouldn’t do that
@@DiesInEveryFilm nah garage door springs snap over time because people don't oil them. They're supposed to be oiled often, like once a month, otherwise they actually dry out and weaken. Also people sometimes do something not knowing how, over extend them, or even use the wrong springs.
Overhead doors get as complicated as they are interesting, but there was money in it.
The Deadpool in your shop acts a lot like the Deadpool living in my kitchen....he don't talk a lot but he's always moving my stuff around!!
The words trench and club immediately perked my interest. This said your imagination and ability validate you as mentally more than capable with a twist of deranged a perfect combination. Oddly enough my great grandfather was a GRANT and fought in the trenches. The mighty BLACKWATCH 42nd Royal Highland Regiment. So you keep letting that genius create 👍👍
Glad to hear it, got more of these planned soon, thats cool stuff man
That things wild. The threaded rod in the handle was a good idea. Sure was nice of deadpool to store your chuck key for ya.
Cheers mate, I didn’t want the flex to cause too much stress on the wood so that was a big step in helping, haha it’s easier to find there
This is awesome! I made a police truncheon out of some walnut last year during lockdown. I don't have a lathe so it's a little rustic but not bad for a non-woodworker. Managed to keep all my fingers too. Bonus!
That’s wicked mate and always fun to try stuff a little different
Using the stiff spring is a nice touch. It doesn't flop like a chain, but doesn't transfer shock to the hand and arm.
It’s how they were made
@@DiesInEveryFilm Really? I've done some reading on this, and have never seen a heavy coil spring used for an actual WWI trench club.
@@666toysoldier this is an exact replica of one in a museum near me and plenty of pictures of similar online (i changed the top from a ball to a skull)
It’s my job to make this stuff
An interesting thing. But the shock part, the skull looks decorative, won't it fall apart?
And as always, great work with anything, even wood, even metal.
Thank you, the skull is solid brass and is held in with 8mm steel hook there’s no way it’s coming off, the original ones had lead heads which is softer than brass
@@DiesInEveryFilm I'm a bit skeptical about the epoxy alone keeping the spring secure over time. Then again though, how much use is the thing going to get?
@@peachmelba1000 , It is possible to leave the spring eye on the end of the spring going into the handle. Lightly tack weld a small hex nut inside the spring eye. Drill the inside of the hex nut to perfectly fit a steel pin, which, of course, will then be applied through the rear of the wooden handle, cross-pinned. Also do the epoxy & that should be solid.
Another way would be to lightly tack weld a 3/8”x16t nut inside the rear of the spring & use a bolt through the pommel. But his design is most likely enough.
Love deadpool just mucking about xD
Cheers dude
I've never heard of a trench club before. I was thinking about how they were used in ww1 and they are seriously dark and brutal. Imagine you a new recruit and tucked away in the trench and an enemy soldier suddenly pops over the edge and he's to close for your rifle. Your side arm is snapped in your holster and there isn't enough time to draw it and bring it to bare. You look over and your trench club is leaning only a few inches away from your hand. You grab it and start bludgeoning the enemy but he doesn't go down right away and starts attacking back. You struggle in a life and death clench up, swinging your club but you can't bring it down with full force. Finally you knock him back just enough to swing for his head and he goes down only to push back to attack again. You swing and swing and swing. Finally he drops but you keep swinging in a panicked rage. Until there is nothing left of his head. You keep swinging until one of your buddies pulls you off the carcus.
So brutal.
Hahahahaha crazy isn’t it
@DiesInEveryFilm Customs especially when you arnt the first owner of the club. It's previous user or 2 got killed to death and it was issued to the replacement
are you a cannibal corpse fan?
What the fuck
Soldiers didn't have sidearms, they were officer only (exceptions happened, but not for new recruits)
Much better than some others I've seen. It looked straight and solid after testing. And when the Pool says subscribe you better listen!!!!!
Yeh man it worked a treat, thank you
"Loved your work. You are very talented. The fact you wear a Deadpool mask is even cooler."- John Brown,Creator of Deadpool Jan. 1987.
Thanks mate, deadpool is the fun part for sure I really enjoy filming little skits. Thanks for watching
I made one a few months back. I used a drive gear from a crane for the head, a 1" cable bunged on both ends. One bung is welded to the gear, the other to a 3' pipe. I was making 2x4s explode, and broke 4 x 4s in half.
Really powerful tool
A great idea brought to life, and finished off beautifully, as usual.
Superb piece of work Onur. A real 21st century take on the traditional trench club. Perfect mate 👌
Thanks man, I really do enjoy making these old tools that have such a crazy back story to them.
6:38 I wonder if the majority of your audience in old enough to know this is a reference to Raiders of the lost Ark.
Haha im finally glad someone noticed that.
Gonna be a useful tool in the near future . Thanks for showing us how .
Haha it certainly feels that way
Hahaha leaving the wrench in the chuck and running away.
I like to annoy the internet experts
Absolutely killer killer build mate!!!! As always really enjoyed
It!!!!💀🤘🏼💀🤘🏼💀💀
Wicked mate so glad you enjoyed it it, thank you
I wouldnt be surprised if Dave Mustang doesn't come knocking on your door wanting on of those Billy Clubs!! That was amazing!! Maybe Vic Rattle Head could inspire a future creation?
Not sure who they are, thanks for watching
@@DiesInEveryFilm Dave Mustane is the lead singer of The heavy metal band, Mega Deth. Vic Rattle Head is thier mascot. Kind of like Eddie from Iron Maiden. Vic Rattle Head looks like the skull you made for the club. 👍👍👍
Just found your channel and I've gotta say your Deadpool is top notch! How have I never come across your content before!?! Anyway love your stuff and btw as a mechanic I can confirm the same shit happens to me with my right thumb every single time I put on gloves. Can't wait to see what you make next.
That’s wicked mate im glad you found me, im uploading weekly now so hopefully gets me found by more people.
Never have luck with these gloves haha
AGREED.. LOVED IT TO SEE DEADPOOL APPEAR
@@keithking1985 thank you
That is absolutely brilliant in design and execution! Each component threads into the handle and maximizes strength. The skull striker is the piece de resistance adding weight and fear to the end. Outstanding workmanship! I'd love to make it with my lathe.
Thank you so much, i have so many more fun builds coming out
@@DiesInEveryFilm Can I order one from you?
Great build!! Your humorous parts always make my laugh🤣🤣Keep up the great work Onur!!!
So glad to hear that mate, i enjoy making these videos my own style
Am I glad you were suggested to my feed, I'd changed emails, and all of my subscriptions were deleted. I've resubscribed, and won't miss a video!
Glad to hear it mate, thank you
I feel like this was a quest in Dying Light or some other zombie shooter...pretty damn cool!
I am planning on a build from that game soon
Nice spring cosh. Awesome build. A bit of revenge on childhood fruits and veg. Thank you for showing this to us, Onur. Stay safe and stay cool
Thanks man, haha yeh serves my mum for forcing me to eat that stuff
Hopefully, you still keep fock-ing off the takes so we can keep the outtakss and the shannigans. Its awesome how you recreate part of the history with common life tools and random stuff. See you next saturday ✌🏻 Blademaster Out
Haha i am still getting it wrong so definitely lots of outtakes coming.
Ill be doing more like this in the future for sure, cheers mate
The dead pool in the beginning killed me LOL!!!!!
Glad you enjoyed it
Dude, that's a sweet build!!! Damn, I would buy one of those from ya!! Make a great self defense weapon especially where I live!!
Too many lunatics and psychos, gotta be careful out there, thanks for sharing!!!!
Thanks dude I really appreciate it
If it’s that bad you should move out.
What country do you live in that is that dangerous? Or were you being hyperbolic?
@@GameTimeWhy I live in the U.S., it's getting pretty crazy out here!!!
That bit at the start with the spring ??
SUBSCRIBED !!
Hilarious. 😂
Haha thanks, new video is up now
A truly savage object Mr.Pool !! Savage but beautiful !!
Thanks mate, had to give this a revisit
I just found this channel, the algorithm worked! You are a goofy and very talented man. If I ever have the pleasure of meeting you, the pints are on me.
That’s wicked mate thanks very much, I really appreciate it
The Deadpool stuff cracked me up. Well done.
Cheers buddy, like to have fun while i work
my home dense weapon is a " Johnny be good" it was a hybrid between medieval war mace with triangular bladed vanes and tommy club.
Nice
You have some beautiful wood in your drawers.😉
Ooooooffff yesss
Simple but nice craftsmanship!
Thanks for watching
Beautiful work of destructive art!
Thanks very much
The spring itself can be a really good weapon. It depends on how stiff it is.
Yeh definitely
what was that furniture maker. They sent a bunch of chair legs for use as trench clubs?
Not actually sure but they uses a variety of things as clubs
Just saw this video on my feed, and thought cool club. Adding deadpool to it just made it better for me since I'm a member of a deadpool cosplay group called the Dragon Con Deadpools. I truly enjoyed the craftsmanship of the build. Truly awesome.
That’s wicked mate, be cool if you shared my stuff with your group im always wanting to find more deadpool fans
Well done Sor!
Thanks dude
You hit someone with that it's gonna hurt, and they're gonna stay hurt! I like that in a weapon!
For sure
Reminds me a little of what William Gibson described as a "Cobra" in Neuromancer, though in that, I think the idea of the design was that it was like one of those collapsible batons, but with springs instead of shafts, that ended on a pyramid tip!
Yeh man, those batons exist as well, really cool concept
What was that grease stuff you used to stain the handle?
It’s a wax mix using turpentine, blo and beeswax
I love the screw/bolt etc. drawer! I feel at some point in manhood you look at a bolt and nut and say "I could use this somewhere later".
Yeh i save everything tbh haha
@@DiesInEveryFilm Same...probably because of my dad. My wife hates me for it. But anyways, damn good video!
@@elliotbruce7173 haha my Mrs is the same, thank you i have a new video up tomorrow
Where did you get the brass skull ? Want to make a version of my own nice work man
Ive linked the guy in pinned comment replies
that was the first good laugh I've had in ages. thankyou
Thanks for watching
well now that was a fine bit of work, extremely resourceful like it.
Cheers dude, they sure were resourceful in them trenches
I really like this one. The skull was a nice addition.
Thank you, just had to add something of my own touch
Doin' the jiggly! Yes!
Everyone should
The Deadpool thing in the beginning made me like this video 😂
Good stuff, thank you
Always nice to see your content Onur. Top trench club turned out a treat.
Cheers mate, really happy with how this one came out especially the wood
I was wondering why the spring but I guess if u tried to block it with forearm or something it would still travel to maybe hit something vital
These were deadblow, the spring is what gives it that on these types
Once again, another winner, excellent job. TP
Thanks so much
Love it, but what I love more is the lathe key in the chuck. Can’t get lost if you leave it in there 🤣🤣🤣🤣
Hahahahaha i like to wind up the internet experts
Fine craftsmanship bro!
Thank you mate
@@DiesInEveryFilm welcome bro
Where do you get all that lovely handle material from !
I make knives for a living so it’s part of my job
@@DiesInEveryFilm so you stabilise the wood yourself you mean ?
@@hw7032 some i do yes
Anybody with a Deadpool mask can't be all bad. I subscribed
Wicked thanks very much I really appreciate it
You capture Deadpool beautifully
Thank you very much
That was a great build love the skull detail as the hitting end of the mace those outtakes always bring me a laugh be safe everyone
Thanks mate, I knew i wanted to revisit this build and definitely had to put a twist on it.
I like how you can tell it's a club by the way it is. Also neat Deadpool mask. You can tell it's Deadpool's mask cause it looks like his.
Yeh man, thanks for watching
He's so sensual with the materials this video was a Masterpiece
I got thrills there multiplying, and im loosing control
if you want to get the copper shinier you can rub it down with a green brillo pad.
You polish it if you want it shiny, pads just give a satin finish
6:45 where did you purchase that skull?
Beautiful work! It would be nice if you could explain a bit about the process as you go.
Thanks, there’s not really much to explain, I explain the bits I think people don’t understand but my videos are build videos not instructional ones
Seeing this reminds me....summer is coming. I can't wait for some watermelon.
Oh yes
I am trying to understand this thing. Does the flex in the spring aid in delivering more power? Looks like an interesting idea, and could be very effective.
It’s more of a deadblow effect, crazy how powerful it is tbh
@@DiesInEveryFilm very cool, so the spring does flex when delivering a blow? I may have to try and make something like this. super cool build man
I'm pretty sure that's how blackjacks work as well. If it's all one solid piece you lose your grip. If it has a tiny bit of give, you keep your grip and deliver more impact.
@@cennon yeh blackjacks are similar idea and billyclubs
@@DiesInEveryFilm I remember Tony Soprano using a blackjack on Coco. He messed that dude up big time.
I own one of these babies. The ball on the end of mine is spiked. I never knew what it was called and had never seen another like it... until just now.
Yeh man thats what i pretty much copied but added a skull instead
@@DiesInEveryFilm Well, you did a great job. Even the style of the handle, with the carved rings. Now you've got me wondering how old mine is. I've had it 20-30 years.
Que tal creatividad, saludos desde Lima Perú 🇵🇪. ✌️
Thank you very much mate
Great build mate! Deadly and beautiful
Thank you so much
Nice! The skull!!!
Thank you
That thing is sick Bro
Thanks very much mate
Brilliant, love the the build, proper own take on it, come out really well and must have been fun to do
Thanks so much for watching mate I really appreciate the feedback
The Deadpool mask cracks me up. 🤣
Always something cool and interesting on your channel. 👍
Very much appreciated mate thank you
Ooo I have trampoline springs lying around.
Oh yeahh
What size spring did you use?
Erm im not sure think 25mm
Made me smile, subscribed.
Thanks very much, new video up Saturday
WHERE did you get that wonderful SKULL on the end❓️
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Great flail-mace trench club hybrid!
Just trench club on this mate, has a few differences from flails and maces
Well done mate👌🏼👌🏼
Thanks very much Timo mate
That’s some wild spring action. Lmao great video as always
Haha cheers buddy
Have you ever used narra wood from the Philippines? It feels heavier and more solid than oak.
Ermm i don’t think i have mate no
@@DiesInEveryFilm It's available online to order. It might be fun to work with.
Love the trench club builds
Wicked i need to do more
I bet you could make a pretty serious club with a 2 and 1/2 inch trailer hitch ball.
Yeh definitely
cool video. it would be interesting to hear your thought process thru the build!
Thank you, I prefer to just do the work, less talky n all that.
Artful n Wonderful - luv it
Cheers dude
Amazing!! I’ve got a chain flail I did with a trailer hitch ball…
This one you’ve done is much fancier!
Love it!
Thanks for watching
This vid is AWESOME , really love it ! thanks and kisses from France ! Axelle.
I really appreciate you taking time to watch, thank you very much
Love it. Gonna make one too!
Cheers mate, give it a go
Great video man!
Thanks so much, new one up today
Very cool,funny,educational,and useful.
Thank you very much
Lost it when I saw Deadpool. Nice🤣
Haha he’s always about