- published: 14 Nov 2007
- views: 52850
- author: CuriousInventor
7:43
Basic Metal Working
Learn how to tap holes, accurately locate and drill holes, and use some basic tools: calip...
published: 14 Nov 2007
author: CuriousInventor
Basic Metal Working
Learn how to tap holes, accurately locate and drill holes, and use some basic tools: caliper, center punch, square, file, and more.
- published: 14 Nov 2007
- views: 52850
- author: CuriousInventor
4:53
Metal Working - Handmade Tools for Dapping and Doming and Bending Steel Loops
Metal Working with Bruce Cheaney www.SpurMaking.com Handmade metal benders for shaping and...
published: 26 Jun 2012
author: cheaneysaddles
Metal Working - Handmade Tools for Dapping and Doming and Bending Steel Loops
Metal Working with Bruce Cheaney www.SpurMaking.com Handmade metal benders for shaping and forming metal loops plus a dapping block for doming handmade conchos. DIY metal bending forms and jigs to simplify your metal working and save time and money...
- published: 26 Jun 2012
- views: 3653
- author: cheaneysaddles
4:33
metal working
hammer and dolly...
published: 20 Sep 2007
author: sevtchevelle
metal working
hammer and dolly
- published: 20 Sep 2007
- views: 65481
- author: sevtchevelle
2:09
Oak Slapper - Metalworking Hand Tools
Kent White shows how to use an Oak Slapper to shape and smooth metal....
published: 14 Aug 2009
author: tinmantech
Oak Slapper - Metalworking Hand Tools
Kent White shows how to use an Oak Slapper to shape and smooth metal.
- published: 14 Aug 2009
- views: 5381
- author: tinmantech
10:06
MetalWorking Hand Tools organizer by Swag Off Road
www.weldingtipsandtricks.com Metalworking hand tools holder by Swag off road Swagoffroad.c...
published: 25 Aug 2011
author: weldingtipsandtricks
MetalWorking Hand Tools organizer by Swag Off Road
www.weldingtipsandtricks.com Metalworking hand tools holder by Swag off road Swagoffroad.com has a tool organizer designed for welders.
- published: 25 Aug 2011
- views: 16444
- author: weldingtipsandtricks
13:21
Metalwork-Making Gears
Making gears for magnet motor concept, so I can try and space out the spindles a bit more....
published: 08 Jan 2012
author: themetalcutter
Metalwork-Making Gears
Making gears for magnet motor concept, so I can try and space out the spindles a bit more. The magnet motor has been sat in the back of a cupboard for 8 or 9 months, then someone sent me a comment asking me to try different spacing between the spindles. I wanted to make a gear cutting video so I decided to make them for this project even though I don't think the magnet motor will ever work.
- published: 08 Jan 2012
- views: 98754
- author: themetalcutter
3:10
SMITHY GRANITE 3-in-1 Combo Metalworking Lathe Mill Drill - GRANITE INTRODUCTION
www.smithy.com (see transcription of video below) Learn about the basics of metal lathe op...
published: 20 Nov 2008
author: SmithyCo
SMITHY GRANITE 3-in-1 Combo Metalworking Lathe Mill Drill - GRANITE INTRODUCTION
www.smithy.com (see transcription of video below) Learn about the basics of metal lathe operations using our Smithy Granite combo lathe machines. You can visit us at www.smithy.com for more information or send us any questions about your project. Our trained technicians will be glad to help you with your project. "Now that you've read all about your Smithy Granite machines, here's your chance to see one in action. This is our Granite 1324. Since we introduced this machine in 1996, it has become our most popular 3-in-1 machine tool, and there are some good reasons why. With the Granite, you'll have the three most essential metalworking tools, a lathe, milling machine, and a drill press, right in your own shop. You can build your own parts or restore and maintain the tools and equipment you already have. Turn just about any type of metal or plastic material you can think of. Cut right-hand and left-hand threads. Do taper turning, drill accurate holes, mill flat surfaces, cut grooves, slots or pockets. In fact, if you're the kind of hands-on, do-it-yourself person that likes to get in there and get things done, chances are, you can take a complete project from start to finish, and do it all with a Granite 1324. So what's the difference between a Granite and all the other 3-in-1 machines on the market today? Well, plenty. We designed the Granites from the ground up, and included features our customers told us they wanted in the ultimate combination tool. Here are just a few ...
- published: 20 Nov 2008
- views: 75093
- author: SmithyCo
4:04
Flow Forming Part 1 - Metalworking Tips from TM Tech
This is only a short demo because the tooling and form blocks are so varied I could not re...
published: 13 Aug 2009
author: tinmantech
Flow Forming Part 1 - Metalworking Tips from TM Tech
This is only a short demo because the tooling and form blocks are so varied I could not really do this justice in a "clip" format. This is a traditional but not widely known metalworking method. (Part 2 shows the wingtips I mention on this video). -- Kent White
- published: 13 Aug 2009
- views: 32591
- author: tinmantech
5:28
Metalcraft Metal Working Tools - Complete Demonstration Video
With our machines you can do lots of things in your workshop or farm you would not normall...
published: 11 Jul 2011
author: MetalcraftAustralia
Metalcraft Metal Working Tools - Complete Demonstration Video
With our machines you can do lots of things in your workshop or farm you would not normally be able to do. You can work with modern materials to recreate the traditional blacksmith's crafts, without using a forge for heating, nor hammer, nor anvil. Make Better Products: Best of all Metalcraft machines enable you to design and make better products, to do things you were not able to do before, to enlarge your boundaries of thought. Our hand operated tools eliminate weight, reduce raw materials and improve appearance. Make Anything: From light fittings to gates, fences, security grills, tow bars, boat trailers, garden furniture, wrought iron, bed heads, wine racks, etc. You are only limited by your imagination. Our 150 page design and ideas book gives you over 350 good products to make. Not A New Gimmick: Our range of metal working tools is the result of over 50 years practical experience in this industry. We were not able to buy machines which adequately did the job so we developed the Metalcraft range here at our factory. And the machines just keep getting better and better. They are made by tradesmen for tradesmen, and are exported to even the most remote places every day. Junk Free: We know you can buy junk. We do, every week, from all over the world, just to see what equipment is being offered on the market, and to look for fresh ideas. We get a warm feeling knowing we make the best range of metal working machines in the world.
- published: 11 Jul 2011
- views: 11918
- author: MetalcraftAustralia
2:39
Steel Slapper - Metalworking Hand Tools
This metalworking tool is highly effective for smoothing and planishing sheet metal. A bod...
published: 12 Sep 2009
author: tinmantech
Steel Slapper - Metalworking Hand Tools
This metalworking tool is highly effective for smoothing and planishing sheet metal. A body hammer does a good job, but the slapper covers five times the area, and with every blow it knocks two high spots down while lifting a low spot up. Fastest most efficient hand tool ever made for smoothing wrinkled metal. Hardened spring steel and it leaves no marks. Only shiny spots. Great balance in the hand, too.
- published: 12 Sep 2009
- views: 37916
- author: tinmantech
4:58
Carlos Nielbock: Metalworking Master Craftsman
Carlos Nielbock is a Master Craftsman in architectural ornamental metalwork and design. He...
published: 30 Nov 2012
author: makemagazine
Carlos Nielbock: Metalworking Master Craftsman
Carlos Nielbock is a Master Craftsman in architectural ornamental metalwork and design. He started his craft as an apprentice in a German monastery, then trained further in the ancient Journeyman tradition. In this video he shows his replica of the 1862 World's Fair welcome gate, his Low Altitude Wind Turbine, and passion for ancient bronze castings from Benin.
- published: 30 Nov 2012
- views: 4363
- author: makemagazine
8:52
Welding Metalworking Fabrication Workbench
This is a fabrication table I been putting together. I tried to add some features that'll ...
published: 28 Nov 2009
author: SmokinPHorses
Welding Metalworking Fabrication Workbench
This is a fabrication table I been putting together. I tried to add some features that'll make it easy to hold and position the work. I most always work alone and some of the things here around our place get pretty big and clumsy. Finally got tired of working on the ground and jury rigged arrangements. The video was taken with a Canon digital camera. It was my first time taking a movie so it's not the best quality but I suppose you get the idea. I did the best I could with Windows Moviemaker to clean it up.
- published: 28 Nov 2009
- views: 48870
- author: SmokinPHorses
10:08
Bangladesh Metalwork - Hammering & Scraping.mov
msspfollen.blogspot.com I visited two workshops in a small 'hamlet' near Dhaka. The men ca...
published: 14 Jul 2010
author: Steven Follen
Bangladesh Metalwork - Hammering & Scraping.mov
msspfollen.blogspot.com I visited two workshops in a small 'hamlet' near Dhaka. The men cast brass, from scrap, into an open shallow mold to make a flat circular ingot. Together they then stretch up to 8 of the ingots at a time into thin sheets which are made into school gongs, temple gongs, ritual dishes or engraved trays for the home/ tourist market. They work together in order to be able to afford the costs of the metal, materials and equipment and to share the physical workload. The rhythm of the work is musical, The man controlling the fire moves the plates through the stack to ensure that they are all stretched evenly. Further stages in the production process include: Cutting and shaping the rim/ edge of the bowls - requiring good co-ordination between the workers. Scraping the surface smooth by hand, using steel tools held in lengths of bamboo. An additional steel length is used to guide the scraper across the surface. The tools are sharpened on pieces of hardwood using an abrasive powder similar to sand or emery. The surfaces are also worked on an improvised lathe. The sheet of metal is attached to a block of wood using a natural resin, heating and cooling the 'glue' to make it stick. The lathe is driven by a bicycle chain system. msspfollen.blogspot.com
- published: 14 Jul 2010
- views: 4197
- author: Steven Follen
2:51
Metalcraft Tools -- The No.1 Choice for Ornamental Metalwork
For over 50 years, customers around the world have used the authentic and original Metalcr...
published: 17 Mar 2011
author: metalcraftuk
Metalcraft Tools -- The No.1 Choice for Ornamental Metalwork
For over 50 years, customers around the world have used the authentic and original Metalcraft branded products to make a huge range of practical and decorative items for pleasure and profit. Our metal bending tools are all hand powered and don't need any heat or electrical power. These tools punch, shear, bend, roll and rivet together metal strip and bar. We also have metalcraft tools to produce decorative scrolls and twists and shape metal into ornamental metalwork as well as endless useful components. Metalcraft tools are used for DIY or as a rewarding and income generating craft, in education for teaching Engineering and Design & Technology subjects, for training and rehabilitation and many commercial and industrial organizations where specialist components or ornamental metal products are manufactured. British made tools often copied but never bettered. For more information visit our website www.metal-craft.co.uk for UK & Ireland or www.metalcraft-tools.com for Europe.
- published: 17 Mar 2011
- views: 9746
- author: metalcraftuk
Vimeo results:
78:24
The Inaugural Henry Cole Lecture: Sir Christopher Frayling, 30 October 2008
The inaugural Henry Cole Lecture, held at the V&A; Museum in London on 30 October 2008. Th...
published: 22 Sep 2009
author: Victoria and Albert Museum
The Inaugural Henry Cole Lecture: Sir Christopher Frayling, 30 October 2008
The inaugural Henry Cole Lecture, held at the V&A; Museum in London on 30 October 2008. The purpose of the lecture is to celebrate the legacy of the Museum’s founding director, and explore its implications for museums, culture and society today.
The lecture, entitled 'We Must Have Steam: Get Cole! Henry Cole, the Chamber of Horrors, and the Educational Role of the Museum' was delivered by Professor Sir Christopher Frayling. He presented new research on the “chamber of horrors” (a contemporary nickname for one of the V&A;'s earliest galleries, 'Decorations on False Principles', that opened in 1852) and the myths and realities of its reception, then opened up a wider debate on design education and museums from the nineteenth century to the present day.
Transcript:
Mark Jones: The annual Henry Cole lecture has been initiated to celebrate Henry Cole's legacy and to explore the contribution that culture can make to education and society today. It has also been launched to celebrate the opening of the Sackler Centre for arts education, including the Hochhauser Auditorium in which we sit tonight. There could be no one better than Professor Sir Christopher Frayling to give the inaugural Henry Cole Lecture. Christopher is a rare being: an intellectual who is a great communicator; a theorist who has a firm grip on the practical realities of life: a writer who truly and instinctively understands the words of making design and visual communication. As an enormously successful and respected Rector of the Royal College of Art, as Chairman of the Arts Council, and as a member and chair of boards too numerous to mention - but not forgetting the Royal Mint Advisory Committee which has recently been responsible for redesigning the coinage (personal interest) and as by far the longest-serving Trustee of the V&A;, he brings together culture, education and public service in a way which Henry Cole would have approved and admired. So it's more than fitting that he should be giving this first Henry Cole Lecture, 'We Must Have Steam: Get Cole! Henry Cole, the Chamber of Horrors, and the Educational Role of the Museum'.
CHRISTOPHER FRAYLING:
Thank you very much indeed Mark and thank you very much for inviting me to give this first Henry Cole Lecture. Just how much of an honour it is for me will I hope become clear as the lecture progresses.
Mark, Chairpeople, ladies and gentlemen:
Hidden away in the garden of the South Kensington Museum - now the Madejski Garden of the V&A; - there is a small and easily overlooked commemorative plaque that doesn't have a museum number. It reads: 'In Memory of Jim Died 1879 Aged 15 Years, Faithful Dog of Sir Henry Cole of this Museum'. Jim had in fact died on 30 January 1879. He was with Henry Cole in his heyday, as the king of South Kensington - its museums and colleges - and saw him through to retirement from the public service and beyond. And next to this inscription there's another one dedicated to Jim's successor, Tycho, and dated 1885. The dogs are actually buried in the garden. Now we know from Henry Cole's diary that between 1864 and 1879 Jim, who was a cairn terrier, was often to be seen in public at his master's side. In 1864 they were together inspecting the new memorial to the Great Exhibition of 1851 just behind the Albert Hall - a statue of Prince Albert by Joseph Durham on a lofty plinth covered in statistics about the income, expenditure and visitor numbers to the Great Exhibition: 6,039,195 to be exact. Cole had been a tireless champion of Prince Albert and according to the Princess Royal (later Empress of Prussia) there was a family saying in Buckingham Palace at the time, invented by Albert himself, that when things needed doing 'when we want steam we must get Cole'. We may therefore assume that when looking at the memorial, Cole was interested in the inscription, the statistics and the likeness of Prince Albert, while Jim was more interested in the possibilities of the plinth. In early 1866 - these are five studies of Jim, an etching by Henry Cole himself of 1864. In early 1866, first thing in the morning, soon after the workmen's bell had rung, Henry and Jim would set forth together from Cole's newly constructed official residence in the Museum (where he moved in July 1863) to tour the building sites of South Kensington - a name which was first invented by Cole when he re-named the museum The South Kensington Museum to describe the new developments happening around Brompton Church. According to 'The Builder' magazine, these two well-known figures would 'be seen clambering over bricks, mortar and girders up ladders and about scaffolding'. Several buildings in the South Kensington Renaissance Revival style were springing up all around them: The Natural History Museum, The College of Science, the extension to this Museum. And on the morning the Bethnal Green Museum opened - 24 June 1872 - Jim showed a healthy distaste for his master's well-known predilection for pomp and
6:33
Modern Alchemy
A short documentary featuring artists David Dowling, Dennis Svoronos and Brady Scott as th...
published: 23 Jun 2009
author: Patrick Johnson
Modern Alchemy
A short documentary featuring artists David Dowling, Dennis Svoronos and Brady Scott as they design and construct their steam boiler, Ignatius.
Directed by:
Patrick Johnson - www.journeymanstudios.com
Featuring:
David Dowling - studiokes@gmail.com
Dennis Svoronos - dennis@dennissvoronos.com
Brady Scott - brscottdesigns@gmail.com
Music by:
John Murphree - www.johnmurphree.com
Camera by:
Patrick Johnson
Ben Hartman - www.who-is-sure.com
1:05
Wire sculpture by Gavin Worth
A sculpture I made out of steel wire and poplar.
"And Light Fell on Her Face Through Heav...
published: 23 Nov 2009
author: Gavin Worth
Wire sculpture by Gavin Worth
A sculpture I made out of steel wire and poplar.
"And Light Fell on Her Face Through Heavy Darkness"
24"x18"x8"
2:22
METALWORKS
A day in the life of a welder, one who works weeks on a single project just for the gratif...
published: 30 Nov 2010
author: Kurt Sensenbrenner
METALWORKS
A day in the life of a welder, one who works weeks on a single project just for the gratification of seeing the final piece hopefully sell.
John Pahlas - sculptor & musician
Shot in 2006
Edited in 2010
Youtube results:
1:57
Beading Daily Workshop 'Metalwork: Making Cold Connections with Rivets'
Beading Daily Workshop 'Metalwork: Making Cold Connections with Rivets'...
published: 11 Jan 2010
author: Interweave Craft
Beading Daily Workshop 'Metalwork: Making Cold Connections with Rivets'
Beading Daily Workshop 'Metalwork: Making Cold Connections with Rivets'
- published: 11 Jan 2010
- views: 17849
- author: Interweave Craft
2:26
Beading Daily Workshop - MetalWork: Wire Fusing & Other Micro-Torch Techniques
Join artist and best-selling author Denise Peck as she shares her wire fusing and related ...
published: 26 Oct 2009
author: Interweave Craft
Beading Daily Workshop - MetalWork: Wire Fusing & Other Micro-Torch Techniques
Join artist and best-selling author Denise Peck as she shares her wire fusing and related metalwork expertise in 8 watch-and-learn lessons, including 6 step-by-step projects. Go to Interweavestore.com to purchase the full length DVD!
- published: 26 Oct 2009
- views: 31286
- author: Interweave Craft
5:13
Metalworking Welding Fabrication Table Update,The Vise
Here is a little more detail on the vise I built. It has some features that will be handy ...
published: 06 Dec 2009
author: SmokinPHorses
Metalworking Welding Fabrication Table Update,The Vise
Here is a little more detail on the vise I built. It has some features that will be handy over a standard vise. I'll have some more thoughts on it on my blog page. www.smokinpranch.wordpress.com Always appreciate comments...good or bad.
- published: 06 Dec 2009
- views: 16856
- author: SmokinPHorses
0:40
Metalworking with a Hardwood Maple Slapper
Shape metal using a buck and a Hardwood Maple slapper. Easy shapping and shrinking, finish...
published: 05 Jun 2007
author: mstoly28
Metalworking with a Hardwood Maple Slapper
Shape metal using a buck and a Hardwood Maple slapper. Easy shapping and shrinking, finishing with out leaving hammer marks.
- published: 05 Jun 2007
- views: 98979
- author: mstoly28