Smelting Iron from ROCKS (Primitive Iron Age Extraction)
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Need some iron? I've recreated the primitive method of turning iron ore into iron by using a bellow to use the process of smelting iron from small rocks I found in nature.
Check out Good and Basic’s channel: / @goodandbasic
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@alexanderatticus647
3 жыл бұрын
first
@siskanalasneveikia2269
3 жыл бұрын
You should try to look into japanese iron refining.
@ibrahimvardag8685
3 жыл бұрын
hi! notice me!
@ibrahimvardag8685
3 жыл бұрын
I was the one who asked why not build a horse carriage before a cycle and you responded to me on the toilet paper livestream
@jrsforging4898
3 жыл бұрын
Love the video. I been a blacksmith for 3 years now and something that you will need to learn is forge welding because you got a lot of to do. LOL
So, were here at this railroad and we found that these rails are made completely out of iron so were just gonna pop off few bars.
@nexfur
3 жыл бұрын
Pog
@imapigeonyoupeasant1489
3 жыл бұрын
@@nexfur Stop
@nexfur
3 жыл бұрын
@@imapigeonyoupeasant1489 Pog
@mansronnlund9011
3 жыл бұрын
pog champ
@lukel.5815
3 жыл бұрын
Better yet you could take a couple train carts and melt them down.
Ah yes, very clever to use the residue of the still free ranging wild freight trains.
@jwaffe
3 жыл бұрын
Ah yes, a tempting target in ancient times, it would take a large effort from the entire group to take one down, but legend has it, they were so large they could feed a whole city for many weeks.
@trash9378
3 жыл бұрын
@@jwaffe assuming they were preserved right
@M3rVsT4H
3 жыл бұрын
Was watching them pick up little balls and thinking how useful a speaker magnet in a plastic bag might be lol.
@lipeeno
3 жыл бұрын
So much for a reset button..
@9051team
3 жыл бұрын
@@lipeeno to be fair, it is quite hard to find iron ore without it being someone else's property, free and natural.
the amount of decated time, effort, research and will to make these videos is honestly incredible.
Idk how I’ve never seen this channel before, I’m goin through my own similar journey and having the hard work laid before me is really helping so thank you this is right down my alley!
Finally. Tongs. No more messing around with chopsticks.
@werecatninja
3 жыл бұрын
I just wish he would make some wooden spoons and just a general tool refinement episode
@laurenapolis
3 жыл бұрын
werecatninja I like this idea!
@n1elkyfan
3 жыл бұрын
@@werecatninja I think now that they have unlocked iron its definitely time for an upgrade.
@teehongyee4074
3 жыл бұрын
@@n1elkyfan Achievement Get! Getting a upgrade!
@dyingofcringe8839
3 жыл бұрын
Warlord_Pipsqueak but cast iron is very brittle and tongs bend to move.
10:30 Who else thought he was about to start tearing up abandoned railroad tracks?
@nexfur
3 жыл бұрын
Pog
@imapigeonyoupeasant1489
3 жыл бұрын
@@nexfur Stop!
@benrobinett3396
3 жыл бұрын
I instantly thought of the movie: October Sky
@iconicDeya
3 жыл бұрын
I thought he was gonna pick up the railroad spikes. I used to walk the railroad and collect all the loose spikes.
@suzuxiiiahdv
3 жыл бұрын
@@iconicDeya well I mean, he's looking for iron ore, not iron, if he started at iron it would kindof defeat the purpose of smelting it lmao
Watching this makes you appreciate how far weve come as a society in terms of these metallic alloys and elements, and also, this also gives me some kind of excitement as to what is to come in the future in terms of material science. We are still a young species technologically-wise, and Im sure that there will be some some great breaktroughs in the next 500 to 1000 years, as long as we can get along with each other, geopolitcally wise.
@tanner6538
4 ай бұрын
I have a huge love for material. Just a love for all the coolness that materials are. I have to say, I wish we had hung out in the strictly material innovation period of human history longer before we also got into the digital innovation period.
@MikaSerbian
2 ай бұрын
I bet in next 10-20 years we gonna advanced literally like punch of tech like when cellphones computers came and changed everyting
What I liked about all of your Videos the most is 'you show how you failed during the experimentation' this is where I learn about it a lot and get my doubts clear as the video goes on. Thank you for putting so much effort into video editing and everything, we as viewers are learning a lot from you. :)
"I made this" 4 people working the bellows: "I'm sorry what?"
@laurenapolis
3 жыл бұрын
we can let him have his proud father moment lol
@nexfur
3 жыл бұрын
Pog
@coffeewind4409
3 жыл бұрын
Next step in human history: Slavery
@Hi_Brien
3 жыл бұрын
@@coffeewind4409 paid labor*
@Guru_1092
3 жыл бұрын
@@coffeewind4409 *indentured servitude
So we found this natural source of high grade iron *proceeds to pull out an angle grinder and cut up the train tracks*
@Jormungrandrserpent
3 жыл бұрын
LOL, I have bad news for you, most train tracks are made of steel these days because iron corrodes in the rain and steel less so.
@helmsscotta
3 жыл бұрын
I hate to think how many boxes of angle grinder disks it would take to free up a chunk of railroad track.
@troyporter6323
3 жыл бұрын
not to mention that taking rails from the train tracks is a federal offense
@kovona
3 жыл бұрын
@@Jormungrandrserpent depends on the composition of the iron. High silica or high phosphorus wrought iron is relatively corrosion resistant, as demonstrated by the Iron Pillar of Delhi.
@markcurry1168
3 жыл бұрын
@@troyporter6323, thank you for being the voice of reason. I see several comments about taking the tracks and I wonder if some of these people are even familiar with the laws they live under.
This reminds me of my youth at our placer gold mines in B.C. You wouldn't believe the minerals you can find within a 20 minute drive of the hamlet of Wells. The beach sand of Jack-o-clubs lack is literally made of iron ore (iron sulphide to be specific, aka, fools gold or pyrite). It's incredibly heavy and very beautiful. Our mines were only a few miles from the townsite and in that small area you could find shales of all sorts, pyrites, the biggest chunks of quartz you've ever seen (I still have a piece that's probably a couple thousand pounds in front of my house from there), etc. In retrospect, it was a good place to spend the summers as a kid, despite hating it at the time.
@Willrocs
7 ай бұрын
Sounds like a good time.
@GamingHelp
7 ай бұрын
@@Willrocs: Depends on how you look at it really. As a kid, I was often terribly bored. But in retrospect, it was such an amazingly beautiful place. I guess that's life though. Six of one and half a dozen of the other. Lol!
I've been using coal that is found by train tracks here in north Carolina, so I was not surprised at your finding iron ore pellets there. Thanks for showing this!
Achievement reached: “Acquire Hardware”
@gierdziui9003
3 жыл бұрын
Ah yes
@gierdziui9003
3 жыл бұрын
The man of culture himself
@treebeaver
3 жыл бұрын
Yesss
@stupidloserbigidiotbrain8677
3 жыл бұрын
indeed
@boid9761
3 жыл бұрын
Next video Achievement reached: "Isn't it Iron Pick?"
"Anyone wanna try this?" Goes to chill in the background, while the rest works...
@laurenapolis
3 жыл бұрын
NoobForSoup learned it from Tom Sawyer
@SF-li9kh
3 жыл бұрын
Could have introduced the rest of the people though
There's a method of making bellows that doesn't utilize leather and is essentially just a piston. I bring this up because you said leather is a requirement when it's more of a strong suggestion. You have a hollow cylinder with a hole at the bottom for air. You put a disc with a long handle inside it with a trapdoor on the inside so when you're pushing it pushes air through the tube and when pulling it pulls air from the top of the cylinder instead. That's basically it.
Interesting. In Southeast Texas we have "redbeds" of iron ore at the surface from Early Permian-age. They were mined in late 1800's till 1920'ish. Very easy to dig. There are huge piles of it. Often used for rural roads. May have to try to do some smelting.
And lo, on the end of the 6th day, God created tongs. He click-clacked them together twice, and it was good.
@laurenapolis
3 жыл бұрын
You GOTTA give em a couple test clicks
@vegardt3433
3 жыл бұрын
Reminds me of anvils in Dwarf Fortress.
@roland4240
3 жыл бұрын
Ah yes, my favorite bible verse.
@omaralmasri8812
3 жыл бұрын
@@roland4240 *Torah
@randomindividual7704
3 жыл бұрын
this reminds me of rowan atkinsons standup comedy sketch
Everybody gansta till htme starts surpassing modern technology.
@joejia1410
3 жыл бұрын
"Hol up how did you make a teleporter in 2 weeks"
@axavia
3 жыл бұрын
“In our next episode, watch how we make a fusion reactor with our new Iron Age tools!”
@jaymeselliot8181
3 жыл бұрын
he just starts following mainstream science fiction as if it were real
@LordXehenniar
3 жыл бұрын
And now...the microchip.
@logon-oe6un
3 жыл бұрын
The real spook would be the cost actually being comparable to modern. "Now we can put the 3d printer I made all the way back in 2023 to good use in creating articulated prosthetics"
Awesome info. Thank you for doing all of the heavy lifting. And thank you for bringing us along.
Great job! I love your humble curiosity and I admire your willingness to put in a lotta work with a smile to make things basic and authentic.
I've done a few smelts using a similar design to your combined cob stack and bowl bellows. I added ONE extra feature tho. And its made a HUGE difference to the process. I used a thin piece of bark (set low on the inside of the bowl and worked into a recess) to create a one way valve. The difference it made in air flow. AND in shoulder pain was... Tremendous. Basically you take a strip of bark. or anything thin and flexible and bury the top half into the cob wall as you lift the leather the pressure difference lets the valve flex and let air in. But when you push down the valve is forced close and all the air goes out thru the stack. It makes the bellows so much more efficient.
@zinckensteel
2 жыл бұрын
The original African method uses a flap/fold in the leather that opens naturally when pulled up, seals shut when pressed down. Even then, the work appears grueling.
@ibjacked
Жыл бұрын
Came here to say the same thing. I thought "Man, a reed valve on those pots would probably make a huge difference!"
@iowafarmboy
10 ай бұрын
Heck, even a simple hole that you use your free hand to cover and open seems like would help. But, he still got a good result. And certainly respect them for doing the work. It's something I'd love to try and play with sometime. Although kind of sad high quality ore is almost impossible to get anymore.
YEAH WE'RE IN THE IRON AGE!!!!
@nexfur
3 жыл бұрын
Pog
@imapigeonyoupeasant1489
3 жыл бұрын
@@nexfur Stop!
@boatbayre7789
3 жыл бұрын
Pog
Working at a foundry, I learned a little about copper, carbon, manganese, zinc added to the furnaces. High side iron. loved it. Slagging furnaces at 2800 is like breaking through the surface of the sun. It does trip me out though when some say we had to use electricity to get it started. Lol no electricity. Good stuff. I like it.
Thank you for doing this! If I, as a child,saw this it would have changed my whole view of history.
@slavenarkaimovski3897
Жыл бұрын
Funny that you have mentioned the history of metal smelting,about you and others don't know anything.For a start metal smellting was not discovered in anatolia,or by anatolians.The real truth about metal smellting in europe begins with slavs,in 5500BC Vinća/Winncha slavic bronze age civilization.And in serbia,the oldest metal and pottery owens still can be found,after 7530 years.
Ah yes the "involuntary workforce" really makes this historically acurate
@joshmellon390
2 жыл бұрын
Especially the part where someone who we didn't see do anything holds up the bloom and says "I made this" lol. You had the idea, but you used other people's drive. Bet he would have said it was too hard to do alone haha.
I can't wait to see him trying to refine oil...
@carnation969
3 жыл бұрын
I can’t wait for them to build a smartphone!
@scottydu81
3 жыл бұрын
I’m stoked for his uranium mining and enrichment for power plants
@myusername3689
3 жыл бұрын
There are countries in Africa that use stolen oil and refines them using a very dangerous and cheap technique of refining that killed a lot of people trying to refine oil using it.
@ChucksSEADnDEAD
3 жыл бұрын
Mr Teslonian has a 1 hour video on gasoline I haven't watched, but he also has a video of collecting liquid fuel from wood gassifiers.
@Playingwith3D
3 жыл бұрын
yes, and building the first reactor is going to be tricky too I would suspect. lol
Ive literally been looking for a book like that for years, perfect.
Very cool. We survived the bronze, copper and now we know hundreds of ways to smelting. Good job on video.
Did u ever find out who smelt it
@scottyj6226
3 жыл бұрын
Twas he that dealt it.
@joeterpstra125
3 жыл бұрын
@@scottyj6226 Oh, how scandalous
So exciting! I'm glad it turned out so well, and thanks for having us along!
@htme
3 жыл бұрын
You bet!
@ArsenicFault
3 жыл бұрын
You guys are great too! I'm not sure how I found you, but I'm happy to see your videos on my feed as well as new collabs like this
This is amazing. Thank you so much for making this video.
The iron ore at the Soudan Mine can be very high in iron content, they have a sample that they were able to arc weld two pieces together. The mine is way off the beaten path in northern Minnesota, but the tour is really interesting. Most iron is now mined in huge open pits, Soudan was an old fashioned deep tunnel, even though the iron is very high grade, it became too expensive to mine that way. When I visited, the elevator ride up and down was an adventure. We were squeezed into the “box”and half way up I realized there was a bat crawling up my arm, I did not say anything til we were at the top and the door opened.I was not fazed, but could imagine quite a traumatic event if someone freaked out.
@briseboy
Жыл бұрын
Visiting the mine with my granny: The old miner once guiding the tour used to grab bats throw them down & crush them. Made me want to return to stone age. Used to watch bats maneuver & catch insects, & prefer that skill to pick & shovel. I still catch things people bump off or drop, in mid-air.
The Japanese box bellows work really well. There were no railroad tracks or black beach taillings in the Iron Age. Just go to a river and find rocks that look rusty and use those. Smash them up. Also, make a lot of coal out of wood before you start smelting. Take a look at how the Japanese and the Persians used to make high quality steel.
@michaeltheoret3842
Жыл бұрын
Where I live, heavy very strongly magnetic rocks are quite common along the River that I live very close by to . I even found this rock that looked rusty in some areas and with a somewhat shiny black surface and moreover on one side it looked as if that rock was subjected to intense heat . It was strongly magnetic and quite heavy for its size ( around the size of a couple of segments of a peeled orange ) . I was hopeful that I found a meteorite but later was told that a small foundry was upstream from where I found that rock ,so I was left doubting . Even though, I decided to keep that rock " just in case" . I cannot recall whatever happened to that rock ,so I won't ever know .
@themanformerlyknownascomme777
9 ай бұрын
the name for that is "bog iron" it was also very popular In the north of England.
@johnkane1800
8 ай бұрын
The addition of limestone is what made it actually work to melt instead of hammering it in to steal
@dthomas9230
8 ай бұрын
@@themanformerlyknownascomme777 Peat bogs are carbon sinks, too. But, mostly from decomposing plant and animal carcasses. Nessie is always partially decomposed, but lives for eternity. She even has a stall on the Ark Museum in Kentucky. New Orleans is teaching the Loch Ness creature is a dinosaur, and thus no evolution. Dinosaurs are on the Ark in KY, with saddles. Nessie's stall is usually empty. 1 in 8 Americans are QAnon fans, and 62% think Noah was real. GOP POTUS candidates refused to raise their hand when asked if they would teach Darwin in schools.
Dear Andy and HTME team, Thank u for making quarantine interesting.
@deusvult6920
2 жыл бұрын
Just go outside stop falling for the bullshit
Got to see someone smelt in a covered updraft trench (from a good distance). Slag left behind looked volcanic. Very impressive.
Just discovered this channel, instantly hit subscribe. This is exactly what I need in my life! 😁
episode 500: Using my steamhammer to forge steel armor for my battleship
@YagabodooN
3 жыл бұрын
only need about 50 thousand metric tons of it lol
Did this with my son for a science project a couple years ago made a whole smelting thing in the backyard
When working with clay for large projects, I suggest taking a look at the channel primitive technology. You have to let it almost fully dry before going onto the next layer. the way you were doing it, it was too wet, and therefor would collapse onto itself.. The only time you can really ignore that is if you build it around a frame. Then, when it's completed around it, burn away the frame. This will bake it as well as remove the frame at the same time. just clean out by hand and bam! you're good
I grew up in Duluth, live Northeast now. In the summer of 1965, between 7th & 8th grades, I took a history class at the St. Louis County museum which was on East Superior St. at the time. We took some class trips, one of which was to the Tower-Soudan Mine the day before it opened and became a state park. Our guide told us we couldn't tell anyone because the governor of the state had the "official" opening ceremony the next day.
learning science from school:😐 learning science from books:🙂 learning science from dr.stone:😄 learning science from htme:🤯
Heya, for your bellows. Use some hollowed stick (bamboo) with a flanged end. You don't want the inside hole bigger than your thumb. This way when you pull up on the bellows you bring in cooler, richer air from away from the flame into the bellows. The way they were working on this episode, I'm afraid they were pulling in a lot of hot and/or combusted air. The quality wasn't as good so you weren't able to get the fire hotter, faster. If you can get in the quality, rich, oxygenated air that doesn't have CO, CO2, or other derived pollutants then you can get your fire hotter. Just a minor change on the bellows. If you don't have a flanged tube-like object then put a slit in your leather, wet it, and then put in your tube. Tie it tight as possible so when the leather dries, it shrinks, and acts like a natural grommet. For a future episode, either flip the bellows upside down to use a stick to stand on it OR keep them like they are but make the bellows linked on foot pedals (lack of a better term) so that you can just "walk" on them so one presses down when you step down on the left, then the right, etc.... This will be less painful on the arms, knees, and hips so you aren't sitting weird or get tired faster. Quality over quantity.
@dthomas9230
8 ай бұрын
StairMaster bellows is a great idea. I wonder if bones after the marrow is scraped out could offer a tube?
This is such a cool video series/channel idea. I am sure that I could find the answers to the whole 'tech tree' by googling each of them individually, but just like in video games, what fun is it to always play with everything unlocked that you did not do yourself? This is almost like Runescape IRL lol. You put a certain amount of hours in, and gather enough materials... then you can once you have enough XP you level up to unlock more efficient and stronger materials. Super cool. Well, you got a new sub.
18:24 100% accurate. I work in the semiconductor industry where we create organo-metallic compounds out of rare-earth metals to supply some of the world's largest electronics manufacturers. In my first two months alone, I worked with at least a dozen different metals: Zinc, Titanium, Zirconium, Palladium, Hafnium, Tungsten, Osmium, the list goes on. Most eventually end up in the processor chips for your phones and computers in conduits 1000x thinner than a hair on your head. Truly crazy stuff.
Lol "Meteoric iron was to small to make any major 'Impact'" hahaha
Sweet! Cool to see you connect with Good and Basic. Doing an iron smelt with them was tons of fun.
this is a very good video for me...when ever i go to our big Garden i alway looks the small stone and i alway see some iron in/on them i will try to make it out ...thanks for the video
You are the person I was looking for, thanks mate for the brilliant content.
Growing up in an iron mining town, the first thing I thought of when you were looking for iron ore was the train tracks. I remember as a kid, the tracks looked like they were built on nothing but iron ore pellets there were so many on the ground.
@Just_Sara
3 жыл бұрын
You could just get a big magnet and pick it up, I bet. I'm jealous!
@BikiniDuckCreations
3 жыл бұрын
@@Just_Sara Nope. We tried that, and they dont stick. Gotta pick em up by hand.
@scotts4769
2 жыл бұрын
We had a section of tracks by my childhood home where a huge pile had been dumped, we would go there once a week to load up on ammo for our slingshots.
@davidvines6498
2 жыл бұрын
We’d use the iron pellets in our slingshots.
@parmesanchease480
Жыл бұрын
@@davidvines6498 you dang kids got one more warning before i pelt you with ma iron ore!!!
I actually picked up both of Dr. Dartnell's books when you had introduced them while working on clear glass a while back. Origins was fantastic, one of my favorite reads in the last few years. I'm a biologist, so I was aware of a few of those geologic events (namely the Great Oxidation Event that created the banded iron deposits), but it was really mindblowing just how deeply ingrained the geology of the planet has been with the development of human history. Still working through The Knowledge. It was actually that clear glass project that was how I found this channel in the first place, through your collaboration with the late Grant Thompson from TKOR, and Cody.
Growing up in northern MN, we used to grab pellets along the tracks for slingshot ammo. That probably makes me sound 90 years old, but I’m under 40. Definitely brings me back.
Im sure someone else probably mentioned it, but the skins on the bellows ought to be arranged so that when they are lifted, air can enter easily and then mostly seal when compressed down...
Welcome to the Iron Age! Soon you'll be making tools that can last a lifetime :)
@benjaminlamothe2093
3 жыл бұрын
Once he gets good at it
@justaguy0082
3 жыл бұрын
Why just one lifetime?
@silkylevel9633
3 жыл бұрын
You know hat that means! Faster vids!
@nexfur
3 жыл бұрын
Pog
@justindie7543
3 жыл бұрын
Fun fact, even though bronze tools are less durable than iron when used in the short term, and needs constant maintenance, bronze is much more able to preserve through time. Archeological digs often discover large quantities of millennia old bronze tools, art, and weapons in pristine condition, whereas their iron equivalents have long rusted into dust.
Andy: We need tongs to make tongs Me: *tree punching intensifies*
@joshjones6072
2 жыл бұрын
Haha!
I haven't seen anything but the intro. But I know I need to subscribe to this channel. I find this kind of thing fascinating.
I realize I'm a little late but you should have an inlet valve on your bellows. It would stop reversing air flow at the mouth of the kiln, but also reduce the overall effort by around 40%. African tradition has it in the skin atop the drum, opened and closed manually with each stroke. Once you get accustomed it is quite efficient.
I've been to that beach. I didn't know the sand was magnetic. I just know it hurt my feet. 😂
@thomas.thomas
3 жыл бұрын
Next time something bothers you or makes you hurt, stop for a second and concider that maybe there is an incredible history to it :)
@Guffy1990
3 жыл бұрын
@@thomas.thomas *chopping onions, crying* What is _your_ history...
@stupidloserbigidiotbrain8677
3 жыл бұрын
@@thomas.thomas next time something bothers you or makes you hurt, stop for a second and consider if its magnetic :)
@modraxic5670
3 жыл бұрын
That’s so true
Welcome to the Iron Age!! I’ve really been enjoying this series since you started it, I hope you guys make a hammer first out of the ore , insanely useful for future projects/tool making
Still one of my favorite KZread series
A smooth stone in the underside of the leather of the bellows then tied to make a handle might help, keeps it air tight and gives you a grip to hold onto
Oh my gosh I’m a big Pokémon fan that diglet meme was amazing
@shadowtheimpure
3 жыл бұрын
I admit, the diglett got a chuckle out of me.
Using a magnet at that "beach" was so wild omg
you should make this into a playlist of all the stuff from stone to modern age
Iron is also plentiful in Ringwood New Jersey where the iron for the giant chain floated across the Hudson River (to prevent British ships from going upriver) links are displayed at Ringwood manor.
When he went to the train tracks I actually kind of thought he'd start ripping up abandoned rails for some reason
I can't wait to see what you do with iron, and what insight you could provide once you make steel!
Holy Cow. I actually know those guys from Good and Basic. I didn't know they had a KZread channel. But I've seen that big smelter chimney thing they have in person.
Fantastic. I'm gonna have to go back and watch from the start, this is a great idea.
Yay! Really glad to see the transition to iron age. Bronze age was getting a bit tiresome. Im very excited to see what you can make!
Aww heck yeah I've been waiting for this for a long time, since watching Good and Basic's attempts. One thing you didn't mention: do those pot bellows have valves in them? If they don't, then I imagine if you're alternating them, one will be sucking in the air the other just blew out.
@htme
3 жыл бұрын
The leather is folded over itself in a way where you can seal it on the downstroke and let air on the upstroke
Growing up near a steel mill, taconite pellets were my favorite slingshot ammo!
I had no idea about the 'Great Oxidisation Event' ! Really like this btw. Thanks!
that was the cutest diglet noise ive ever heard
They developed Iron Smelting and...uh..."unpaid labour"
i subscribed in like the first 30 seconds this channel is litterally what ive been looking for im about to binge it
Shout out from Uptown! Cool seeing you all do this locally! I love the silver bay area.
Absolutely in love with this series. Has Netflix already contacted you guys to buy the distribution rights?
@supercrafter5351
2 жыл бұрын
If you like the concept of this series, you should definitely watch an anime called “Dr Stone”. The main character is a smart high schooler who does exactly the same thing but in a second Stone Age.
You actually jumped from making "iron" to making "steel", with the use of charcoal.
I like the idea of trying to improve through each "era" a day. would make learning and working fun
Love the little red wacky man. That's just cool.
In the next episode he figures out the hard way why you shouldn't let a newly formed bloom cool down before you hammer it down.
@boid9761
3 жыл бұрын
Why?
@stamasd8500
3 жыл бұрын
@@boid9761 Reheating it to forging temperatures takes a lot of time and fuel, also each of the individual iron nuggets in the bloom becomes coated in an oxidation layer which will make forging them together extra hard. Most of this can be avoided by forging the bloom as soon as it comes out of the bloomery furnace.
@boid9761
3 жыл бұрын
@@stamasd8500 So basically, it took a long ass time to make a reasonably pure iron ingot this way?
@jokerblade6719
3 жыл бұрын
@@boid9761 Not to mention I didn't see them poke a hole for slag to leak out so there is probably a ton of slag in that steel and from what I've learned slag is insulating making it that much harder to heat up later plus the fact that bloomery steel tends to be impure to begin with now with all that slag ? That thing is gonna be a B**** to forge weld later. Also there is almost no way to get pure iron from that method steel was definitely found first so pure iron will come later.
Is it just me or is it ironic that his sponsor is a hair growth company but most his audience is under 20
@vojtator
3 жыл бұрын
Man, imagine being 20 and bolding, such a person would be really desperate and would buy any fake shit they offer them to stop it.
@sunnesonne
3 жыл бұрын
I have just turned 20 and I’m literally fucking bald
@doctorthee
3 жыл бұрын
Not at all actually. Those hair products only work when u still have hair, male pattern baldness is permanent* hair follicles don't generate back. You use the stuff to prevent becoming bald. The only way to get bald spots back is a hair transplant.
@bradley3549
3 жыл бұрын
I would have assumed most of his audience is older, this isn't exactly kid content. I'm already bald though so it's a lost cause for me.
@Just_Sara
3 жыл бұрын
I doubt that most of us are under 20. I’m 38.
Thank you for this wonderful video - it helped me understand so much
I have been looking for this type of content for years
wow this is exactly what I have thought for years. Nice to somebody do the whole series of causality of how iron is made without the iron tools! :)
BRUH I'm waiting for the titanium
@bishop8958
3 жыл бұрын
*IT'S RUTILE TIME*
I’ve visited the sudan iron mine, that place is amazing
I love the tool tree chart!
Ah I love Lauren already
@laurenapolis
3 жыл бұрын
:-) thank you!!
@danpark629
3 жыл бұрын
Im going to marry that woman
A closable door on the bellows is a great upgrade. You open on the refill. Close and press. You go way faster and it's not hard to pull the leather up. It also doesn't pull heat from your fire.
This was awesome 👏 very interesting to see how our ancestors used everything that had at their disposal
Thank you for that little tid-bit on the first pair of tongs. I'd never heard that one. Nice to see a fellow Minnesotan succeed on KZread. Great channel שלום
When are you going to make Plague doctor masks and hazmat suits?
@Koushakur
3 жыл бұрын
Probably never, it was very clearly stated when he started this project that safety equipment would not be a part of it, because well you know, safety.
@avalonpage5985
3 жыл бұрын
- _ % iokc
@Deadlyish
3 жыл бұрын
Plague dr masks were invented in the 1600s, and modern hazmat suits were invented for WW1. HTME is up to about 600 BCE now, so still quite a lot of history to cover until then
@Zero-The-Hunter
3 жыл бұрын
Wait does anyone know when activated charcoal was discovered and used to absorb toxins in the human body?
Awwww yeah. This stuff is pure. I found a fix for dr stone addiction.
Brilliant video, efforts, education. Thanks, dear folks!
Fascinating documentary.
That's definitely a piece of Iron 😎👍💯
He finally saved up 1,000 food and 800 gold.
Excellent show. Fascinating to see sketch of how iron was originally made. I’m going to listen or read Origins. I’m hopeful that here in Wyoming we will begin mining some of our rare earth metals.