Interesting and Humour - page 4862

 
Vitaly Muzichenko:

Now there is a trend towards eco-houses, people are thinking more and more about health and are not ready to bring plastic, OSB and other rubbish into the house. So clay still has potential.

Read up a little bit for the background - it's interesting.

Yeah, but it's a hassle) My brother insulated a sauna, wood and between it and clay with straw. It was long and painful. But it was warm.)

 

Watch this guy's video (by the way, there's another unique guy there, also explaining the proportions and nuances) - you'll learn a lot of interesting things for yourself. I watched both their videos with rapt attention. I gave this video for you to get to the whole series of videos.

They add lime to the clay there!


 
Better to watch from the first clip to the last - the logic of the subsequent products becomes clearer if you watch the previous ones
 
Vitaly Murlenko:

Watch this guy's video (by the way, there's another unique guy there, also explaining the proportions and nuances) - you'll learn a lot of interesting things for yourself. I watched both their videos with rapt attention. I gave you this video clip just to get you to the whole series of videos.

They're putting lime in the clay!


You ordered the hook from Aliexpress, but you didn't have the brains for the line? All the time it took to make the line... it's a mess.

 
Alexey Viktorov:

You ordered the hook from Aliexpress, but you didn't have the brains to make the line? Took you so long to make the line... it's a shame.

I told you to look first. Earlier he showed HOW he made it and how he got the metal from natural materials.

On the subject of fireclay.

When clay products are fired, some crack and become unusable. Such items were crushed as finely as possible and added in some proportion to the clay. Crushed burnt clay is chamotte. Products made from such a mixture were stronger than those made of simple clay. One could say, waste-free production.

If instead of real fireclay all sorts of rubbish is used, calling it chamotte, the question of toxicity will be relevant. When using real fireclay the question of toxicity falls away as irrelevant :)

I'm going to look for (I think I'll find it quickly) a video of the other guy. They are both really smart guys. Look - you will not regret - to acquire such knowledge will not be superfluous.

 

Yeah, that's the second guy right there. These videos have credits in Russian, so I watched him first. I watched the second guy's video first out of inertia - I just wanted to compare the work of both of them. But when I understood that the second guy is also a first class technician (and in some moments even cooler than the second one), I began to watch his work more carefully. And I didn't regret the time. At first, I was VERY impressed with the second one's pottery - he just sculpted it. But when I saw the first one making utensils from nothing on a potter's wheel, I was just as impressed. Still, a machine's a machine. It's not handiwork.


 
Yeah, there's more. How do you find it all on YouTube? Use the search term "Primitive Technology" - good stuff, I tell you.
 
Vitaly Murlenko:
Yeah, there's more. How do you find it all on YouTube? Use the search term "Primitive Technology" - it's pretty good stuff, I'll tell you that.
Tough, Amazonian high-tech.)
 
Vitaly Murlenko:

Yeah, that's the second guy right there. These videos have credits in Russian, so I watched him first. I watched the second guy's video first out of inertia - I just wanted to compare the work of both of them. But when I understood that the second guy is also a first class specialist (and in some moments even cooler than the second one), I began to watch his work more carefully. And I didn't regret the time. At first, I was VERY impressed with the second one's pottery - he just sculpted it. But when I saw the first one making utensils from nothing on a potter's wheel, I was just as impressed. Still, a machine's a machine. It's not handiwork.


I still don't believe it. I've made hooks with my own hands and seen the difference. If this hook is homemade, at least it was made with good locksmith's tools. And before showing you the ready-made one, pay attention to the sting... It's not the same as the ready-made one. Oh, come on. Getting steel to harden under such conditions is beyond imagination. A non-hardened hook will be bent by a fish weighing a kilogram with such ease that it will look as if it was made of dried ....... All this was made for hype and has nothing to do with reality. Well, except for making a fire. I don't say anything about the dishes. Didn't watch it.

 
Maybe they should get a drill and a bolt cutter over there. :)
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