Hoffman Reproductions
Hoffman Reproductions
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Are small axes worthless in the woods, chapter 2
We test an even smaller axe.
zhlédnutí: 969

Video

Are small axes worthless in the woods?
zhlédnutí 11KPřed 21 dnem
We test how useful a small axe can be.
Making a 18th Century Hammer Polled Belt Axe
zhlédnutí 1KPřed měsícem
This time around, I show you how I forge an axe.
18th Century Fire Making
zhlédnutí 1,2KPřed 3 měsíci
I demonstrate fire making styles from the 1700's.
Musket done.
zhlédnutí 923Před 3 měsíci
To see me shooting- czcams.com/video/S3XNmDV2W5g/video.html
Staining & Finishing a Brown Bess Musket Stock
zhlédnutí 2,2KPřed 4 měsíci
I show my method for staining & oil finishing a gun stock.
Testing new powder!
zhlédnutí 838Před 4 měsíci
Trying out new powder made with pre-treated charcoal.
Test Fire.
zhlédnutí 737Před 4 měsíci
Firing a new Bess.
Making an axe handle.
zhlédnutí 1,2KPřed 6 měsíci
On this episode, I show you how to make a 18th Century styled Belt Axe handle.
The 1842 Springfield Musket, Part 2
zhlédnutí 1,2KPřed 8 měsíci
This time around, we live fire the musket.
The 1842 Springfield musket.
zhlédnutí 2,4KPřed 8 měsíci
On this part 1 of two series, we take a look at a good old Springfield.
New powder making tip.
zhlédnutí 2,7KPřed 10 měsíci
New findings!
The Bumford Fowler, Chapter 2
zhlédnutí 2,2KPřed 11 měsíci
New fowler done.
"Swiss Style" Powder Update
zhlédnutí 2,3KPřed rokem
New powder tested.
Benjamin Church's Sword
zhlédnutí 1,2KPřed rokem
We take a look at a replica sword based on an original from the 1600's.
Swiss BP. Code cracked !?!?!
zhlédnutí 8KPřed rokem
Swiss BP. Code cracked !?!?!
Powder update
zhlédnutí 1,9KPřed rokem
Powder update
The Pattern 1769 Brown Bess Musket
zhlédnutí 2,9KPřed rokem
The Pattern 1769 Brown Bess Musket
Making An English Trade Knife
zhlédnutí 6KPřed rokem
Making An English Trade Knife
Making Cleaner Powder, Part 2
zhlédnutí 1,7KPřed rokem
Making Cleaner Powder, Part 2
Daniel Boone & The Tale Of The "Giant Man"
zhlédnutí 158KPřed rokem
Daniel Boone & The Tale Of The "Giant Man"
How to Corn Black Powder
zhlédnutí 16KPřed rokem
How to Corn Black Powder
Making Cleaner Powder
zhlédnutí 2,6KPřed rokem
Making Cleaner Powder
Testing New Charcoal
zhlédnutí 2,3KPřed rokem
Testing New Charcoal
1842 Springfield Musket
zhlédnutí 1,1KPřed rokem
1842 Springfield Musket
The Type C Trade Gun.
zhlédnutí 7KPřed 2 lety
The Type C Trade Gun.
Making Your Own Musket Caps
zhlédnutí 14KPřed 2 lety
Making Your Own Musket Caps
The 1861 Springfield Rifled Musket.
zhlédnutí 5KPřed 2 lety
The 1861 Springfield Rifled Musket.
Fun on the 4th of July!!!
zhlédnutí 855Před 2 lety
Fun on the 4th of July!!!
DIY Powder
zhlédnutí 6KPřed 2 lety
DIY Powder

Komentáře

  • @stevenblackstone2501
    @stevenblackstone2501 Před 36 minutami

    Where in Ohio are you . I'd like to get some alder buckthorn

  • @royberry6673
    @royberry6673 Před 3 dny

    light and could be used on a trap line . as traps are heavy , less to drag around .

  • @larryk113
    @larryk113 Před 4 dny

    Beautiful land!!

  • @chrismaurer2075
    @chrismaurer2075 Před 6 dny

    If I was an American Soldier during the Revolution and having to walk everywhere while carrying a pack plus a rifle that probably weighed around 15 pounds , I would want everything as light as possible but still capable of doing the same thing as a larger one the larger one's . l live in Michigan and we get very humid weather in the summer plus some day's over 90 degrees and the winters can be brutal especially in Northern Michigan at both of the Fort's there , so again I would choose the smaller lighter axe for sure.

  • @chrismaurer2075
    @chrismaurer2075 Před 6 dny

    Just happened on to your channel and It's right up my alley . So much so that I liked and subscribed . Thank You.

  • @mikeblair2594
    @mikeblair2594 Před 7 dny

    When I was a kid i used something like that for skinning game that my great uncle and I had trapped or hunted. Its got the same blade geometry as a skinning knife, but no point to ruin A valuable fur. We used em' on everything from weasels to elk and bear. They really come into their own when used on big game, but we'd case out any kinda fur bearing critters that we'd be trapping in the winter.

  • @Traderjoe
    @Traderjoe Před 8 dny

    Anything is better than nothing, is what I always say

  • @rebeccaback3287
    @rebeccaback3287 Před 11 dny

    I like all of the secisions on the belt ax! They get the job done! I will have to get me some of these in the future! God speed to you Ben and your family! David Back.

  • @countryboy20781
    @countryboy20781 Před 11 dny

    Benjamin church is my ancestor. My grandmother's maiden name was church. My cousin has a lot of info on the lineage

  • @musicalcompanion5890
    @musicalcompanion5890 Před 11 dny

    what book(s) more than one source? can i find this information from?

  • @ILoveMuzzleloading
    @ILoveMuzzleloading Před 12 dny

    Great video!

  • @puddin94
    @puddin94 Před 13 dny

    Nice video, thank you 😊

  • @XX-qd6ke
    @XX-qd6ke Před 14 dny

    That isn't a 'small axe'...it isn't even a 'small hatchet'...it's a 'tomahawk'. My answer would be...if it's all you got with you, it's pretty damn valuable...

    • @HoffmanReproductions
      @HoffmanReproductions Před 13 dny

      True as to the use being valuable in the woods. However the descriptions tomahawk, belt axe & hatchet, were all used interchangeably many a time during the 18th Century according to documents of the time period.

  • @texaskidzuk
    @texaskidzuk Před 15 dny

    Sasquatch were called " Yahoos" in Daniel Boone's time and area. I heard 2 Sasquatch in Kenefick, Texas bellow out "YAHOOOOOOOOO !" in November 2018 while hunting on my Aunt's land. They were about an 1/8 mile east and 1/8 mile north of me. I believe the were hunting and probably smelled me. Me and my family have seen them all our lives living in Kenefick.

  • @Odawa
    @Odawa Před 15 dny

    Ben where can I get those reproduction glasses that you wear?

    • @HoffmanReproductions
      @HoffmanReproductions Před 15 dny

      @@Odawa Got them about 20 years ago through James Townsend & Son Company.

    • @Odawa
      @Odawa Před 13 dny

      Ok thanks

  • @jeffdavis4154
    @jeffdavis4154 Před 17 dny

    Awesome gun. Can a rear site be installed on it

  • @dansutherlin9244
    @dansutherlin9244 Před 17 dny

    Hi Ben, I carried a little axe, that Bill Reynolds made, for years and found it useful. It fell out of my bag at Ft. Meigs and the guy that found it wouldn't give it back. So he apparently thought it was useful also.

    • @HoffmanReproductions
      @HoffmanReproductions Před 16 dny

      Hello! Sounds like a nice axe. Very low of the other guy not returning to you…

  • @snellaltal
    @snellaltal Před 17 dny

    Live in the southwest and have used one many time while bushcrafting to process campfire wood and make small overnight shelters. Not chopping down and oak but for smaller chores does a great job and saves your knife.

  • @SirTickleTots
    @SirTickleTots Před 17 dny

    Hoffman Practical

  • @mhutchins27
    @mhutchins27 Před 17 dny

    I stumbled across this video and enjoyed it so much I’m going to give you a follow. I checked out your site and found some very interesting items. I live at ground zero for the revolution, the battle of Lexington and Concord and the old north bridge are about 8 minutes from me, Salem is about 25 minutes, Boston Freedom Trail and Tea Party Museum about 15 minutes and Plymouth Rock is about an hour. As you can imagine, these types of items are pretty popular around here. I’m going to take another look and reach out if I come across something that would turn some heads at some of the events we have around here.

  • @johnlweeks8096
    @johnlweeks8096 Před 17 dny

    Hey Ben, Jack Weeks here. I have enjoyed your on facets of our early times. Beautiful jobs on the guns you have shown. My bag and leather work has slowed down quite a bit, but still doing. Hunts and treks have gotten slower not too intense. Rick is still screaming horns. I think went to 2 shows down state. Seems like Bidenomics may have slowed his business... maybe. I hope you are well. Jack

    • @HoffmanReproductions
      @HoffmanReproductions Před 16 dny

      Hi Jack! Hope you are well. Thank you for watching and hope things pick up for you. All the best, Ben

  • @user-kx9mt1kb5k
    @user-kx9mt1kb5k Před 17 dny

    I've done pretty much the same with a tomahawk ; but when it came to splitting a , not even , very large log it got stuck , so I batonned my way through with a stick on the hammer pole .

  • @caked3953
    @caked3953 Před 17 dny

    I use a very small axe myself for mostly tarp stakes. Was already used to chop kindling from firewood and to cut chickens in half while camping. Small head + small handle (just enough for the hand) I would describe the use as "everything where my knife will get damaged or takes to long"

  • @inregionecaecorum
    @inregionecaecorum Před 17 dny

    A tool is a tool is a tool, whatever you have you make the best use of. Did they not have small saws on the pattern of a modern pruning saw? There is always the question of when it is more efficient to saw through something or chop it.

  • @uncletiggermclaren7592

    Far from useless, obviously. People are funny, to be honest, they get some crazy ideas, and a LOT of the time, base their decisions on nothing more than image. Long time ago, I met a visitor to my country. He had flown in the night before, it was his very first day back-packing, his first day in all his life, outside of the USA. And he had his sleeping bag in a non-waterproof bag on the outside of his pack. We were both going to walk down to the railway/ferry station to catch a train . . . and it was POURING rain. I gave him a big clean rubbish-bag out of the hostel cupboard, and said, cover your sleeping bag, or it will get wet, and you will be cold sleeping the whole trip . . . He put it on the bag . . . looked at it . . . and took it off. Because it LOOKED FUNNY TO HIM. And he just accepted a wet sleeping bag . . .

  • @CapitanFantasma1776
    @CapitanFantasma1776 Před 17 dny

    Thanks!

  • @k9six185
    @k9six185 Před 18 dny

    Cool little axe…I have a cold steel of a like pattern and find it very useful

  • @philbrown6787
    @philbrown6787 Před 18 dny

    Looks like it would make a fine tool for processing deer (rib cage, tenons, etc.) in camp, kindling, pounding stakes…

  • @FrankMuchnok
    @FrankMuchnok Před 18 dny

    Today, with so many options, everything is a compromise. Do you want to carry a heavier axe and leave something else out of your kit, or carry a lighter axe and add another item for the same weight of pack ? There's no perfect choice, only what you think is best for you. All of the pompous arguments for one or the other are just egocentric BS.

  • @svernwarunos546
    @svernwarunos546 Před 18 dny

    This is a cheap fake.

    • @HoffmanReproductions
      @HoffmanReproductions Před 18 dny

      ​@@svernwarunos546 Nope, tis neither cheap nor fake. Made by my own hand, coming with a lifetime guarantee to the person that just bought it.

    • @k9six185
      @k9six185 Před 18 dny

      Explain your expert reasoning on yer statement please…….feel free to reveal your experience and direct first hand knowledge regarding this exact hatchet .

    • @HoffmanReproductions
      @HoffmanReproductions Před 18 dny

      ​@@k9six185 Whoops! Forgive me for the mix up!

    • @k9six185
      @k9six185 Před 17 dny

      @@HoffmanReproductions my comment was to the cheep fake guy also……I believed you from the get…..

    • @HoffmanReproductions
      @HoffmanReproductions Před 17 dny

      @@k9six185 Whoops! My apologies!

  • @MJGEGB
    @MJGEGB Před 18 dny

    Is that 12oz overall or just head weight?

    • @HoffmanReproductions
      @HoffmanReproductions Před 18 dny

      @@MJGEGB overall.

    • @MJGEGB
      @MJGEGB Před 18 dny

      @@HoffmanReproductions that's a really light little belt axe. The only thing I have in that range are old Vaughn mini hatchets. I'd say it performs well for its weight and size.

    • @HoffmanReproductions
      @HoffmanReproductions Před 18 dny

      I though it did pretty good for a little guy too. Thank you!

  • @MJGEGB
    @MJGEGB Před 18 dny

    A hawk has become my favorite woods tool. I prefer a slightly longer handle, but the profile on yours looks nice. My favorite is very similar to the original Biscayne trade axes with a slightly different shape to the eye. Never fails to put a smile on my face.

  • @duybear4023
    @duybear4023 Před 18 dny

    I feel a small axe and large knife are both competing for the same job. A kukri, parang, or golok can also do light chopping.

  • @craigpalmer9196
    @craigpalmer9196 Před 18 dny

    i have two

  • @craigpalmer9196
    @craigpalmer9196 Před 18 dny

    faster in cleaning game

  • @leoscheibelhut940
    @leoscheibelhut940 Před 18 dny

    I that this one is below optimum tool size, but as you showed completely usable. I'd choose the one you demonstrated last time as a better balance between frequent chore use and occasional but life or death use as a weapon.

  • @chopsddy3
    @chopsddy3 Před 18 dny

    That does good work for a package that weighs less than a pound. It is far from “worthless”. As a general purpose ,lightweight edged tool that functions as an effective defense weapon , It’s definitely better than a belt knife alone. It’s a good sized wood chisel on a stick that can act as a froe when making kindling from small branches. If one’s task is to fell and process a large white oak tree into fuel and lumber , it’s not the right tool for the job. If your just exploring afield, it’s handy and easy to carry. The only problem I can see with the small tools your showing, is people’s perceptions of them. I bet a primitive man would trade you a couple wives and a winter’s worth of mastodon meat for one of those and hold it as his most prized weapon and labor saving possession. Worthless? I don’t think so. If they were “worthless” ,they wouldn’t have been carried.

  • @jamesvatter5729
    @jamesvatter5729 Před 18 dny

    Good stuff, Ben. I was at a shoot once and saw a guy whose belt axe blade was just over an inch. It had a squared pole...kind of Meig's-like. He used it as a throwing hawk, but also for setting "tent" stakes. I doubt it weighed even as much as your example. He was good with it, but I'm guessing the average guy would find it tough to use. IMO- the heft and sharpness of the head is what makes it a good cutter.

    • @HoffmanReproductions
      @HoffmanReproductions Před 18 dny

      Thank you! Very true! I think much under this size shown here, would not be much good as a tool.

  • @earlshaner4441
    @earlshaner4441 Před 18 dny

    I love to use the U fire striker ( french striker)

  • @earlshaner4441
    @earlshaner4441 Před 18 dny

    Good morning from Syracuse NY brother and thank you for sharing this subject

    • @HoffmanReproductions
      @HoffmanReproductions Před 18 dny

      Morning! Thank you and your most welcome Earl.

    • @earlshaner4441
      @earlshaner4441 Před 18 dny

      @@HoffmanReproductions my friend and I have shared your video with other people who shoot black powder also

  • @user-pc2wo9vm2k
    @user-pc2wo9vm2k Před 18 dny

    If you want willow i have a hole tree come get

  • @Guitarplayer724
    @Guitarplayer724 Před 19 dny

    Any cutting tool is going to find use in the woods.

  • @jackdelvo2702
    @jackdelvo2702 Před 19 dny

    Weight, weight, weight. In a time before light weight materials such as synthetic fabrics or aluminum the hatchet was the light weight multi tool of its time. It may not be the best tool for all tasks but it can be used for most.

  • @dennisleighton2812
    @dennisleighton2812 Před 19 dny

    Interesting historical context. However, if your title meant are they still of much use today in the outdoors, that is a different context altogether. For modern forays into the wild, there are far better alternatives. Firstly, for doing cross-cutting of wood a saw is a far more efficient tool. At 8:00 that branch would have been cut through in a quarter of the time with a Silky saw, and with a fraction of the effort ( and much more safely!). The branch at around 6:30 would have been cut just as effectively with a good belt knife. Also, even a small tomahawk like that is still quite a cumbersome tool to carry around. A Silky Gomboy is far more compact and light. However, I concede, these tools I mention are not as much fun! ;-) Cheers mate.

  • @darkwood777
    @darkwood777 Před 19 dny

    Always better than no axe at all.

  • @Chris-sm6xu
    @Chris-sm6xu Před 19 dny

    I have the RMJ Tactical SHRIKE, and I think it’s the best Bushcraft tool I have. 1:16

  • @edi9892
    @edi9892 Před 19 dny

    How do you think would a bearded axe performed that offered a three inch blade while only being marginally heavier?

  • @rutrutbella600
    @rutrutbella600 Před 19 dny

    Knew to black powder after 55 yrs ty so much for tutoring me and ty mr knight RIP sir

  • @rutrutbella600
    @rutrutbella600 Před 19 dny

    Knew to black powder after 55 yrs ty so much for tutoring me and ty mr knight RIP sir

  • @keithbayless8364
    @keithbayless8364 Před 20 dny

    Its good as both tool and weapon. Its up to it's owner to come up with it's uses.