Комментарии:
2 half helmet parts are not realistic
ОтветитьYes, to everything else but you don't want to be kicking a man holding a knife as a general rule.
ОтветитьAwesome work.
Also I want that Quetzalcoatl shirt
thats what i called “heavy metal music”
Ответитьroman imperial gallic type H
ОтветитьG'day! I craft history-focused Shorts videos. Liking and subscribing helps me a lot!
ОтветитьThis isn't an armet, it's a closed helmet
Ответитьart that happens to be armour
ОтветитьComo eram feitas na idade media sem maçaricos e sem soldas??🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔
ОтветитьBeautiful work! Video just needs some Metal music and we could watch this at the office all day!
Ответить❤❤❤
ОтветитьIn an apocalypse,I know who would survive...😅
ОтветитьIs that mild steel? I'm surprised cold hammering it like that works and didn't split the metal. The stuff is a lot more malleable than I expected.
Ответитьhow were these made without modern welding tools? Did they rivet them together at the top or was that made out of one piece?
ОтветитьNot trying to be one of those ppl but this is a closed helmet
Ответитьa work of art ,,, your weldings a bit tragic lol ,,, but who cares.
ОтветитьVery cool
ОтветитьThis video taught me how to make latches
Ответитьcheating with modern tools
ОтветитьThe way things are going these days we will all be needing this kind of stuff pretty soon
Ответитьhow would they have joined two halves like that before torch welding? rivets?
ОтветитьSo you are one of those champion unit from aoe2?
ОтветитьDo you have patterns for these? Or could you direct me to where I could get some?
ОтветитьHow do you deal with the rust. I mean while you are forging the armor thats fine but afterwards, like after vew months it should start getting rusty, isnt?
Ответить"Do it yourself" uh?
ОтветитьWhat gauge steel are you using and im curious on the tooling like the round anvil like inserts for the vise. Love the videos and stay safe
ОтветитьI love the tempering demonstration.
Ответитьit’s always been a mystery as to how armour got made
ОтветитьDo you sell any?
ОтветитьНу стальной прокат если есть , как у него листы стоят - то что и не сделать подобие какое-то 🙂 Пускай без следов молотка попробует выковать - как старинные доспехи сделаны )
ОтветитьА по средневековым технологиям как сварить?
ОтветитьПро какую свободу можете говорить польский холоп?
ОтветитьDoes anyone know the steel thickness?
2mm maybe? 12 gauge?
You should make printable templates for your armor
ОтветитьI was wondering why you were doing so much cold forging at first, then you used the blowtorch. It's a lot easier that way lol XD
ОтветитьWould you sell that helmet to me please? I live in the United States.
ОтветитьSuperb craftsmanship, amazing Iam a retired engineer in my 70s in Cornwall UK, and this has inspired me to give it a go.👍👏
ОтветитьThey didn't have welders in them days how did they join the pieces together . ??
ОтветитьDo you make a paper model of it first so you know where to hit?
Ответитьbeautiful
ОтветитьBROOOO the difference in size of his right forearm compared to his left is ACTUALLY crazy.... dude has one popeye arm and one normal arm.
Ответитьbro cut ur thumbnail... whyyyy is it long but the rest are cut.... I dont see the point in this...
ОтветитьThere's no need for heating up the steel when you have shit to work through
LMFAO
He's the kind of armorer that would make a lord go: "Bro! I get it! It's properly hardened, go easy on it!"
Ответитьwhy is it always welding, just why, almost every forging video
ОтветитьHitting that steel like it's the like button! 😅
ОтветитьClang clang clang clang clang
ОтветитьHow was it made in the Middle Ages when there was no welding technology?
Ответить