The coolest thing about a masterpiece like that, is its like a fingerprint, no 2 will ever be the same. The patterns in the way you work your magic are entirely unique to you and your style. Nice work sir. Nice.
Euripodes, I don't have an apprentice. But, I am working to make sure that my knowledge of this work is recorded to be shared. Thanks for the appreciation!
I am just blown away by your supreme skill Steve, where did you learn and as i live in England how can i buy one of your knifes? The pattern is just beautiful, you are an artist no question. Respect's sir.
SuperDiddzz Thank you for the appreciation!! I have about a 2 1/2 year waiting list of knife orders. However, I also make some knives to put on my table at knife shows. I occasionally have some of these knives available for immediate sale. They can be seen on my web site. www.culverart.com/knivesavail.htm Or, you may email me about placing a knife order. steve@culverart.com Thank you again!!
Imagine Birmingham, England in the 19th century. Thousands of highly skilled workers producing millions of hand made parts, and assembling beautiful guns to be exported all over the world.
Thanks Phanum, glad that you enjoyed it! I thought that I sounded pretty dull. LOL! Video production is not my forte. I might have tried to do a better job, if I had realized that so many people would watch it!
One of the best Japanese bladesmiths started off as a gunsmith. If you don't learn good forgewelding technique as a gunsmith making forgewelded barrels you don't last long.
excellent presentation. thank goodness there are still some of us that do things "old school)...I use old methods with wood projects...keep up the good work!
Many thanks for posting this excellent video, I find it strange that in this day of available information, there are still ignorant people that consider Damascus barrels to be weak ! how do they think that some of them have lasted for 200 years! Tell them to send me their Damascus barrels!
Wow! Thanks for posting this. A true artisan at work, is what I thought to myself. Hopefully you have someone you can pass your knowledge on too. It would be ashamed if true craftsmanship like this would be nothing but a memory.
I am glad I found this video. I have always wanted to see this process, having heard the process. This was professional and amazing to watch, Great job.
Now I have even more respect for the old chaps who made the barrels for my double 12 bore! 30inch barrels with the patterns on each barrel a perfect mirror of the other. Even the top and bottom ribs are Damascus as well. I think the gun dates from about 1875 as it has rebounding locks but still the Jones underlever. The gun carries the name of Weekes & Son of Dublin but I think it was probably made in Birmingham, by the proof marks. The top rib carries the words 'New Barrels by Cox & Clarke of Southampton', which is near where I live. No idea what happened to the original tubes! It's properly nitro proofed for 1-1/8 ounce charge and still gets a few outings with my precious stock of old paper case cartridges, some of which are 50 years old. Modern plastic cartridges work perfectly well, but it's just not the same! Snicking back the hammers and dropping a fine, fast cock Pheasant is VERY satisfying...
+1946nimrod Thanks nimrod!! The 1875 date opens the possibility that the barrels were Birmingham made. British barrel making ended around 1903. Virtually all barrels after 1903 were made in Belgium. The nitro proof marks indicate a late proofing on the barrels. There's something special about the smell of the smoke from old shells. I don't know if it's the chemicals used or the aging of them. Maybe a hint of cordite? Just makes you smile.
+Steve Culver Indeed, almost certainly Birmingham barrels as very few provincial gunmakers would have had the facilities - or the knowledge - to make their own. I have various recipes for a Browning mixture - drinking them cannot be recommended. Keep up the good work!
I owned an old Parker CHE and I gather that was about the end of Damascus firearm production, it also was beautiful but only shootable with .410 inserts. Yours has a "tight" no void look that needs to be taught to young fellows so we don't lose that craftsmanship.
Wow! What a lot of work went into making that short barrel! I can't imagine the work involved in making two barrels long enough for a double barreled shotgun. Thanks for documenting this process!
I read an article in the publication Double Gun Journal where in 5 damascus steel barreled, late 1800’s American shotguns, proof load after proof load was fired in these barrels and NONE of they ruptured. In one shotgun the barrels ever so slightly went off-face. That’s it. Claims of modern, smokeless powder posing a risk are greatly exaggerated. I have a Colt 1873 hammer-fired shotgun with Damascus barrels. I fire 7/8’s load of 8-shot. No barrel rupture, barrels never came off face, no barrel-receiver wobble.
Many old shotguns that were originally proofed for black powder were subsequently reproofed for nitro powder. A gun in sound condition is perfectly safe to shoot with proper pressure and shell length loads.
You can get blackpoweder if you have permit. You cant get smokeless propellant uness it is for a licensed company. The law regarding a lot of this stuff is so complex here it's stupid
That has been the accepted theory. I do not profess to be an expert in ancient metallurgy, but recent discoveries suggest that we do not know everything about where pattern welding originated. Smokeless powder did not end damascus barrel manufacturing, but it was the destruction of the damascus barrel industry during WWI. Many old Damascus barrels were proofed for smokeless. You can today buy a gun from WW Greener with damascus barrels. These are made from 100 year old barrel forgings.
Saw you on Forged In Fire...as soon as you said you made spiral welded damascus gun barrels, i went straight to Google to find your work. Great Job...awesome work. -Monty from NC
Thats alot of fkng work, wow, amazing what people can do. That guy must be physically in shape,extreme hard work. I am impressed. Back in the 1800s when they did this all by hand they didn't have battery operated drills or anything like that it was done in absolute unbelievable work exhausting work I'm sure it's amazing
Just....amazing. Absolutely mind-blowing. It's wonderful to know someone is doing such out of the ordinary work, and doing it so well...My hat's off to you, Sir.
With a coal or charcoal forge, you can control the heat in a very small section of the steel that you are working. Propane forges have large heating areas and are best for heating a large amount of steel. To weld a barrel, you must localize the welding heat in a very small section of the tube. My large propane forge, that I use to weld most of my damascus, was unsuitable for welding barrels. That's why I built the small barrel welding forge that can be seen on one of my videos.
Congratulations!! Very very very nice handwork! I hope it would be my job if I could have a second life!! Now Im retired and its my hope for many years to learn....such little parts of this art! Thanks from France.
i gotta say that this is the coolest barrel iv'e ever seen. i couldn't believe how cool the pattern is! I know where to go if i ever want some of this steel ! =D
"How do you keep scale from being trapped between layers when forging them together?" Well..... it's danged hard to do. Experienced manipulation of the welds is the key. Even the old gun barrel welders had problems with this. WW Greener (of Greener Gun Co.) stated in a book he wrote that they called slag inclusions "greys". That's because they inclusions wouldn't blue, but looked like specks of grey in the finish of the barrel.
My only complaint is the resolution of the video. I wish it were in glorious full HD. This sort of work deserves high production value. That said, it was still one of the most interesting videos on pattern welded steel I have seen.
This video is rather old and was shot with a camera that was not HD. CZcams's formatting was not as good at that time either. So, less definition than is common today. I have a GoPro camera for shop videos now. Check out my video, on this channel, of the Freedom's Steel Pistol build.Thanks for the compliments on the pattern welding process!!
After drawing out the individual rods: 'wow those look sick! now just bore a hole through right?" after welding: "hmm. still going eh? they look ok i guess. hope it gets back to looking sick though." after coiling: "you did it again my friend! quite badass" after welding, drawing out and cleaning: "NOOO it's just a regular steel tube now :(" machined: "how could you... make something... so.... beautiful."
There are tens of thousands of old damascus barreled shotguns still in service. They are used every day, by hunters and sport shooters around the world. Like any old gun, they should be checked before shooting by a competent gunsmith; someone who understands damascus gun barrels. Many old shotguns had chambers which were shorter than today's 2 3/4 inch shells. Each old gun must be checked to see what the chamber length is. Safe ammunition for these old guns is made by a couple companies. One company is RST Shells. You can learn a lot about damascus barreled shotguns on the damascus-knowledge.com web site. sites.google.com/a/damascusknowledge.com/www/home There is also a great gun forum, where you can find information and ask questions of very knowledgeable gun collectors. www.doublegunshop.com/forums/ubbthreads.php?ubb=cfrm&c=1
The problem started when nitro powders were introduced, and people didn't realise that only half the amount was needed as an equivalent charge. Black powder is slower burning.
Forge welding temperature is a very narrow range of heat. The mandrel is cold when you put it in the tube for closing the welds. There is no time for the mandrel to get hot enough to weld, before the barrel tube is below welding heat. The mandrel can actually cause problems with closing the welds in the barrel. It sucks the heat out of the coils and shortens the amount of time available to get the welds closed.
MegaGouch The pattern is called, "Two Iron Crolle". The pattern is displayed in the damascus after an etching process that affects the two steels differently. Nickel in the 15N20 resists the etchant more than the non alloyed 1084. There are so many different bluing/browning mixtures that it is impossible to state with certainty how each will color the steels. Finishing damascus often includes etching and then sanding to remove color from the steel that is less affected by the etchant.
+Toolrific Thank you!! I made this barrel to be used on the flint-lock pistol part of a combination weapon. There is a video on my CZcams Channel, of me firing this piece.
For flux, I typically use 20 Mule Team borax. I have been experimenting with adding hard-wood charcoal dust to the 20MT. I used up to a 50/50 mixture for some of the welding on this barrel. Still testing this mixture, so have not decided if it is worth it. I build my own propane forges. They are very efficient and will run at a welding heat with a reducing fire.
Wow, what an amazing piece of steel! Incredible workmanship. The finish on that is insane. Out of pure curiosity how much would a raw forged barrel sell for?
Thanks Eric!! I'm not certain that I could put a sales price on raw forged tube. I don't have this process down to a point where I would consider making a raw barrel to sell. Besides; the machine work to finish out a raw barrel tube is very complicated. I would have serious concerns about passing a barrel tube off for anyone else to do the machine work on. Don't mean to be elusive. Just can't put a price on it at this time.
I cant help but think about all those workers in Belgium in the mid to late 1800s doing this on water/steam powered machines. Turning out barrels by the thousands. Day in and day out... For decades...
For flux, I typically use 20 Mule Team borax. I have been experimenting with adding hard-wood charcoal dust to the 20MT. I used up to a 50/50 mixture for some of the welding on this barrel. Still testing this mixture, so have not decided if it is worth it.
My apologies for being so slow to respond to all of the kind compliments and questions. At this point, I am a bit of a CZcams newbie. I didn't expect the video to draw so much attention.
Actually, the 19th century barrel smiths were very efficient with the process. Their charcoal forges were a much better heat source than a propane forge. Too, the iron and steel that they had available were much softer and easier to weld than modern steels. I had to work much harder than they did.
Val I used 1084 high carbon steel and 15N20 steel. 15N20 is basically 1084 with 2% nickel content. I use this combination of steels for the damascus that I make for knife blades.
That was interesting! Pity the barrel was so short after all that work went into it! The boom at the end was satisfying, but I would have loved to see the ball punch into something downrange! Maybe a pumpkin, or a watermelon? Lol.
My intention was to make a 6 inch barrel. Lost a portion of it to a bad forge weld. Extremely difficult to weld modern steels into a gun barrel! Guess I should have thought about filming to ball hitting something interesting. 🙂 Was just shooting at a paper target.
Fascinating. I think the accepted theory is that Western gunsmiths learned the technique from the Moghuls of India in the 17th century. Only the most expensive sporting guns used the technique and it did not survive transition into the smokeless era. Pattern-welding really only made sense with the more primitive steel of past centuries.
This old video was shot with a standard definition camera. Please check out another video on my CZcams channel. This second video is of a pistol build that I did, which also had a damascus barrel. It is in HD. czcams.com/video/AFrZulegvFs/video.html
Lane, I've not had anyone ask me about making just a barrel to sell to them. But, I would consider a serious request. A barrel of about his size would be in the $3,000 to $5,000 price range; depending on the specifications of the barrel ordered.
The steels that I used in this barrel were 1084 and 15N20. These are not steels that I feel are best for a gun barrel; but rather, they are steels that I am familiar with forge welding. While discovering the process of welding a barrel, I was having a number of issues with closing the welds in the coil. I chose to use steels that I was familiar with to minimize the number of unknown variables.
Must have taken many years as an apprentice back in the day to learn how to properly make a musket barrel. How many teenagers scorched themselves on red hot metal or squat a part of their hand while hammering, I'll never know. They themselves would eventually become masters of the art, and take on young apprentices themselves some day I imagine, creating the tools that would be used to make history on the battlefield. History aside, it's fascinating to see how a damascus barrel is made, looks like that one is going to be used in a reproduction muzzle loading pistol. Why is it so much longer when it is loaded though? It appears to be maybe 5" when completed, but when loaded it looks like another 10" or so was attached. Is that what a breech plug is supposed to be? I guess it's the 'breeching system' that was referenced a couple times at the end. Need to brush up on my knowledge of muzzle loaders, the repeating firearms made between 1888-1956 is the primary era my interest started with. Great vid, thanks for sharing. Cheers!
Thanks Norman! The breeching system that I used for proof firing the barrel, was just a piece o f raw bar stock that I had in the shop. It's just a temporary tool and the length of it is arbitrary.
I have a matchlock from the Amber Fort armory, Jaipur. Looking along the barrel it is just possible to see a faint twist pattern It's about 0.6 " bore. Age? Difficult to say. I wish I had bought the rampart gun with an 8ft barrel; Imagine the work involved! I have the letter of authenticity from the armory with the number stamped on it. I only fired it once, using the powder from a 12 gauge shell. It's difficult to get black powder nowadays, due to the panic!
Toy, Sounds like a cool gun. But please, be careful about loading it with modern smokeless gunpowder. That could be dangerous. I can't imagine the work involved to make an 8ft barrel!
X-Ray Crystallography LOL!!!! Yea, I picked them up a lot! When the barrel tube is removed from the forge, especially to close a weld, there is only a few seconds to get the work done before the material cools too much. There isn't time to carefully place the tongs on something. I don't care where the tongs go, as long as they are out of my way. Once the forging is done, there is plenty of time to pick up the tongs and reset my tools for the next forging session. You know; I only included clips in this video where everything went correctly. Moving so quickly to get the work done, it isn't too uncommon to drop the hammer, knock the mandrel on the floor, or even drop the barrel tube. The camera was running those times too. I could put together a half hour video of blacksmith bloopers. :-) This wasn't my first attempt to make a Damascus barrel. There were many failed attempts before it. Those were filmed too. I could also put together a one hour video of how to ruin perfectly good damascus steel, by trying to make a gun barrel out of it. Thanks for watching my video!
The panic is totally justified... Enjoy what you have now because soon the shtf and survival and fighting for freedom and what is right will be every day
Lane Making a damascus barrel is so very time consuming. That's the reason for the high cost. I could maybe build some more tooling to speed the process up, if I did this enough to make it worth it. But this isn't all that I do, so it's not high priority. There's lots of good forging information on the American Bladesmith Society Forum. You should check it out. You have to be an ABS member to post, but anyone can view.
I made this barrel of 1084 and 15N20 steels. I made a barrel for a different project from 1084 and 1018 steels. I chose these steels because of my familiarity in working with them. That doesn't make them the best steels for making spiral welded of barrels from. They are of course, modern steels. Modern steels resist forge welding, because of thier alloy content. We make damascus knife blades from modern steels all of the time. Forge welding modern steels to make knife blades is easy, because of the severe dimensional reduction of the stock. Lots of heat, lots of compression. You can't do this degree of dimensional reduction on a gun barrel. So it is very difficult to make a damascus gun barrel from modern steels, because it is a challenge to get the spiral welds to take and hold.The best materials for making spiral welded barrels, is what they used 100 years ago and more. Old damascus gun barrels were made from wrought iron and very low carbon steel. This combination of metals is very soft under the hammer and very easy to forge weld. On my CZcams channel, there are a couple of videos of me reforging a 100 year old shotgun tube into a pistol barrel. The short version of the video shows all of the forging process.If I were to make a barrel from wrought iron and low carbon steel, I would use some old wagon tire or anchor chain for the wrought iron. I would use 1002 or 1005 for the steel.
Awesome, I was wondering if a low, medium or high carbon would need to be used. I have worked with 1084 and 15n20 some for use in blades. Is there any kind of heat treating being done or are they in the annealed state?
The coolest thing about a masterpiece like that, is its like a fingerprint, no 2 will ever be the same. The patterns in the way you work your magic are entirely unique to you and your style.
Nice work sir. Nice.
Such skill, such artistry. I hope you have an apprentice. Men who know how to make something from nothing are a dying breed.
Euripodes,
I don't have an apprentice. But, I am working to make sure that my knowledge of this work is recorded to be shared. Thanks for the appreciation!
I am just blown away by your supreme skill Steve, where did you learn and as i live in England how can i buy one of your knifes? The pattern is just beautiful, you are an artist no question. Respect's sir.
SuperDiddzz
Thank you for the appreciation!!
I have about a 2 1/2 year waiting list of knife orders. However, I also make some knives to put on my table at knife shows. I occasionally have some of these knives available for immediate sale. They can be seen on my web site. www.culverart.com/knivesavail.htm Or, you may email me about placing a knife order. steve@culverart.com
Thank you again!!
Imagine Birmingham, England in the 19th century. Thousands of highly skilled workers producing millions of hand made parts, and assembling beautiful guns to be exported all over the world.
There's quite a few folks still doing that today! Not so much on the damascus barrels............
Most English barrels were made in Belgium
@@markcooper9063watch: canon damas de fabrication. Here on youtube. Early 1900s footage of Belgian men making damast barrels.
It is good to watch a craftsman at work, I believe that it would take a long time to learn. The result is a work of art.
Enjoyed your video! The fact you talk so clearly and keep things simple for everyone to understand the process is great! Thank you for posting this.
Thanks Phanum, glad that you enjoyed it!
I thought that I sounded pretty dull. LOL! Video production is not my forte. I might have tried to do a better job, if I had realized that so many people would watch it!
thanks for posting. this is what you tube should be all about.
One of the best Japanese bladesmiths started off as a gunsmith. If you don't learn good forgewelding technique as a gunsmith making forgewelded barrels you don't last long.
excellent presentation. thank goodness there are still some of us that do things "old school)...I use old methods with wood projects...keep up the good work!
Thank you John!
There is a lot of knowledge and skill behind that, nice job.
Thank you Richardsen!!
I wish I was this talented.
santhony,
I don't see myself as more talented than thousands of other smiths. You just have to want to do it enough to just go for it. :-)
Fastastic! Thanx. While watching, I kept thinking of equipment available to do this in the 17th and 18th centuries. Wow!
Thanks Ray. Actually, they had some pretty cool tools back then! And they worked smarter than most of us do today.
Many thanks for posting this excellent video, I find it strange that in this day of available information, there are still ignorant people that consider Damascus barrels to be weak ! how do they think that some of them have lasted for 200 years! Tell them to send me their Damascus barrels!
I could watch this work all day. A true artist.
Thank you xram!
You are both an inspiration and a hero.
A master at work ! Thanks for taking the time to make these vids .
Thanks for the kind comments, MrRichinil!!
man that is gorgeous! i wish all my rifles had barrels like that! i could just stare at them all day haha
Thanks bob!!!
Wow. Impressive. I didn't see how it could turn into a barrel. It turned out beautiful.
Wow! Thanks for posting this. A true artisan at work, is what I thought to myself.
Hopefully you have someone you can pass your knowledge on too. It would be ashamed if true craftsmanship like this would be nothing but a memory.
Thanks Dave,
I'm sharing the information with some other smiths and also writing it all down. Might become a book, some day.
I am glad I found this video. I have always wanted to see this process, having heard the process. This was professional and amazing to watch, Great job.
Thanks Eric!! I'm glad that you enjoyed watching it!
Now I have even more respect for the old chaps who made the barrels for my double 12 bore! 30inch barrels with the patterns on each barrel a perfect mirror of the other. Even the top and bottom ribs are Damascus as well. I think the gun dates from about 1875 as it has rebounding locks but still the Jones underlever. The gun carries the name of Weekes & Son of Dublin but I think it was probably made in Birmingham, by the proof marks. The top rib carries the words 'New Barrels by Cox & Clarke of Southampton', which is near where I live. No idea what happened to the original tubes! It's properly nitro proofed for 1-1/8 ounce charge and still gets a few outings with my precious stock of old paper case cartridges, some of which are 50 years old. Modern plastic cartridges work perfectly well, but it's just not the same! Snicking back the hammers and dropping a fine, fast cock Pheasant is VERY satisfying...
+1946nimrod
Thanks nimrod!! The 1875 date opens the possibility that the barrels were Birmingham made. British barrel making ended around 1903. Virtually all barrels after 1903 were made in Belgium. The nitro proof marks indicate a late proofing on the barrels.
There's something special about the smell of the smoke from old shells. I don't know if it's the chemicals used or the aging of them. Maybe a hint of cordite? Just makes you smile.
+Steve Culver Indeed, almost certainly Birmingham barrels as very few provincial gunmakers would have had the facilities - or the knowledge - to make their own. I have various recipes for a Browning mixture - drinking them cannot be recommended. Keep up the good work!
Some of the prettiest patterns I've seen.
Thank you B. Constable!!
I owned an old Parker CHE and I gather that was about the end of Damascus firearm production, it also was beautiful but only shootable with .410 inserts.
Yours has a "tight" no void look that needs to be taught to young fellows so we don't lose that craftsmanship.
Wow! What a lot of work went into making that short barrel! I can't imagine the work involved in making two barrels long enough for a double barreled shotgun. Thanks for documenting this process!
Thank you!!
I read an article in the publication Double Gun Journal where in 5 damascus steel barreled, late 1800’s American shotguns, proof load after proof load was fired in these barrels and NONE of they ruptured. In one shotgun the barrels ever so slightly went off-face. That’s it. Claims of modern, smokeless powder posing a risk are greatly exaggerated. I have a Colt 1873 hammer-fired shotgun with Damascus barrels. I fire 7/8’s load of 8-shot. No barrel rupture, barrels never came off face, no barrel-receiver wobble.
Many old shotguns that were originally proofed for black powder were subsequently reproofed for nitro powder. A gun in sound condition is perfectly safe to shoot with proper pressure and shell length loads.
Allways interesting to see this stuff. Just wish that here in the UK we were allowed to do stuff like that.
Thank you Gordon! Regrets that you are not allowed to do this kind of work. Maybe saves you a good bit of frustration though. :-)
Gordon, the ban is on blackpowder and potential firearms or even general blacksmithing and equipment?
You can get blackpoweder if you have permit. You cant get smokeless propellant uness it is for a licensed company. The law regarding a lot of this stuff is so complex here it's stupid
That has been the accepted theory. I do not profess to be an expert in ancient metallurgy, but recent discoveries suggest that we do not know everything about where pattern welding originated.
Smokeless powder did not end damascus barrel manufacturing, but it was the destruction of the damascus barrel industry during WWI. Many old Damascus barrels were proofed for smokeless. You can today buy a gun from WW Greener with damascus barrels. These are made from 100 year old barrel forgings.
Beautiful work. Thanks for the upload.
Saw you on Forged In Fire...as soon as you said you made spiral welded damascus gun barrels, i went straight to Google to find your work. Great Job...awesome work. -Monty from NC
Thanks Monty!!Did you see my CZcams video of building the Damascus Steel Pistol? It's my best video, also on my CZcams channel.
Thats alot of fkng work, wow, amazing what people can do. That guy must be physically in shape,extreme hard work. I am impressed. Back in the 1800s when they did this all by hand they didn't have battery operated drills or anything like that it was done in absolute unbelievable work exhausting work I'm sure it's amazing
Thanks Wayne! Yea, buddy! It's hard work!
What an incredible process. Great video, much information. It must have been like magic to do this in the hand job days.
+stanthology Thank you!!!
absolutely fascinating, I want to be a blacksmith now, thanks for the lesson Master Culver.
***** Thank you for the appreciation!!
facsinating,didnt know anyone was still doing this---great film
Man this is hard work!..respect for the craftmanship, very interresting so thanks for sharing!.
Thanks!!!
very hard work bro. I appreciate all of the time and energy that you put to learn us something. Thank you
Thanks BB!
No imagine doing that on a 30 in side by side 12ga. Holy hell a lot of work
I couldn't pull that off in my little shop! :-)
@@SteveCulverMS1 you still one up on me. I couldn’t pull it off with the right setup! Lol
Thanks honda!
I have an L.C. Smith double barrel 10 gauge. I always wondered what went into making these barrels. Great video and fine work💪
Thanks Moss!
That was really cool to see how that is done!
Thank you Tom2112Tom!!
Omg! Very impressive! I'm looking at my 1880 double barrel 10 gauge with 32" barrels like totally different now!
Thank you Jason!
Just....amazing. Absolutely mind-blowing. It's wonderful to know someone is doing such out of the ordinary work, and doing it so well...My hat's off to you, Sir.
Thank you Just!!!
Thanks for this beautiful video !
Respect.
Thanks!!!
Quite amazing craftsmanship!
Thank you!!
Beautiful Video. Excellent work. Hats off to You MR.
Thank you, Math J!!
Absolutely beautiful.
Nice work man!! Awesome.
Thanks James!
Enjoyed that!
Thank you!
With a coal or charcoal forge, you can control the heat in a very small section of the steel that you are working. Propane forges have large heating areas and are best for heating a large amount of steel. To weld a barrel, you must localize the welding heat in a very small section of the tube. My large propane forge, that I use to weld most of my damascus, was unsuitable for welding barrels. That's why I built the small barrel welding forge that can be seen on one of my videos.
Wow! Thanks for this great video!
powermugu You're welcome!!!
Simply beautiful.
Congratulations!! Very very very nice handwork! I hope it would be my job if I could have a second life!! Now Im retired and its my hope for many years to learn....such little parts of this art! Thanks from France.
Thank you Mr. Alwayson!!
Wow that view of the damascus pattern was just beautiful.
Beautiful work, btw. This makes making bar stock for knive blades look easy- at least a blade doesn't have to have a hole running end-to-end.
i gotta say that this is the coolest barrel iv'e ever seen. i couldn't believe how cool the pattern is! I know where to go if i ever want some of this steel ! =D
Thank you adam!!!
So many gun shots in Damascus now !!!
Impressive stuff sir.
Thank you farmers!
"How do you keep scale from being trapped between layers when forging them together?"
Well..... it's danged hard to do. Experienced manipulation of the welds is the key. Even the old gun barrel welders had problems with this. WW Greener (of Greener Gun Co.) stated in a book he wrote that they called slag inclusions "greys". That's because they inclusions wouldn't blue, but looked like specks of grey in the finish of the barrel.
Amazing work
Thanks Greg, I hope to have another gun barrel video to post soon.
Very cool. Thanks for sharing
Thanks jaces!
truly amazing.
Great video - thanks!
Thanks Ross!! Glad that you enjoyed it!
craftsman, pure beauty
Thanks for the appreciation Sully!!
My only complaint is the resolution of the video. I wish it were in glorious full HD. This sort of work deserves high production value. That said, it was still one of the most interesting videos on pattern welded steel I have seen.
This video is rather old and was shot with a camera that was not HD. CZcams's formatting was not as good at that time either. So, less definition than is common today. I have a GoPro camera for shop videos now. Check out my video, on this channel, of the Freedom's Steel Pistol build.Thanks for the compliments on the pattern welding process!!
Thank you, thank you thank you for a wonderful video and a lot of work😳❤️🔥❤️🔥❤️🔥❤️🔥❤️🔥
fantastic, a real craftsmen wish I could watch in real time ,be there I mean great work ,
+LOZBRY Thank you!!
After drawing out the individual rods: 'wow those look sick! now just bore a hole through right?"
after welding: "hmm. still going eh? they look ok i guess. hope it gets back to looking sick though."
after coiling: "you did it again my friend! quite badass"
after welding, drawing out and cleaning: "NOOO it's just a regular steel tube now :("
machined: "how could you... make something... so.... beautiful."
I've always heard horror stories about Damascus barrels but after watching this I now I want a Damascus barrel shotgun
There are tens of thousands of old damascus barreled shotguns still in service. They are used every day, by hunters and sport shooters around the world. Like any old gun, they should be checked before shooting by a competent gunsmith; someone who understands damascus gun barrels. Many old shotguns had chambers which were shorter than today's 2 3/4 inch shells. Each old gun must be checked to see what the chamber length is. Safe ammunition for these old guns is made by a couple companies. One company is RST Shells.
You can learn a lot about damascus barreled shotguns on the damascus-knowledge.com web site. sites.google.com/a/damascusknowledge.com/www/home
There is also a great gun forum, where you can find information and ask questions of very knowledgeable gun collectors. www.doublegunshop.com/forums/ubbthreads.php?ubb=cfrm&c=1
The problem started when nitro powders were introduced, and people didn't realise that only half the amount was needed as an equivalent charge. Black powder is slower burning.
Outstanding.
Thank you morefreedom!!!
Thank you for this.
You're welcome Dave.
You, sir, have my respect.
Thank you Machinist!!!
Forge welding temperature is a very narrow range of heat. The mandrel is cold when you put it in the tube for closing the welds. There is no time for the mandrel to get hot enough to weld, before the barrel tube is below welding heat. The mandrel can actually cause problems with closing the welds in the barrel. It sucks the heat out of the coils and shortens the amount of time available to get the welds closed.
amazing video
Thanks Danny!!
Richard,
Anything is possible. :-) But, it would be an enormous job. And expensive.
MegaGouch
The pattern is called, "Two Iron Crolle". The pattern is displayed in the damascus after an etching process that affects the two steels differently. Nickel in the 15N20 resists the etchant more than the non alloyed 1084.
There are so many different bluing/browning mixtures that it is impossible to state with certainty how each will color the steels. Finishing damascus often includes etching and then sanding to remove color from the steel that is less affected by the etchant.
Beautiful! And that (work involved) is why it's expensive.
Awesome
Fantastic end product !!
A craftsman that know's his stuff. Never misses a beat. Beautiful final product. Pistol barrel?
+Toolrific Thank you!! I made this barrel to be used on the flint-lock pistol part of a combination weapon. There is a video on my CZcams Channel, of me firing this piece.
For flux, I typically use 20 Mule Team borax. I have been experimenting with adding hard-wood charcoal dust to the 20MT. I used up to a 50/50 mixture for some of the welding on this barrel. Still testing this mixture, so have not decided if it is worth it.
I build my own propane forges. They are very efficient and will run at a welding heat with a reducing fire.
Wow, what an amazing piece of steel! Incredible workmanship. The finish on that is insane. Out of pure curiosity how much would a raw forged barrel sell for?
Thanks Eric!!
I'm not certain that I could put a sales price on raw forged tube. I don't have this process down to a point where I would consider making a raw barrel to sell. Besides; the machine work to finish out a raw barrel tube is very complicated. I would have serious concerns about passing a barrel tube off for anyone else to do the machine work on. Don't mean to be elusive. Just can't put a price on it at this time.
pleasure to watch.
Thanks jeetenz!! I'm glad that you enjoyed it!
Mick
Thanks for liking my video!
I cant help but think about all those workers in Belgium in the mid to late 1800s doing this on water/steam powered machines. Turning out barrels by the thousands. Day in and day out... For decades...
They were amazing artists!
Amazing
Thanks 19hummer73!!
For flux, I typically use 20 Mule Team borax. I have been experimenting with adding hard-wood charcoal dust to the 20MT. I used up to a 50/50 mixture for some of the welding on this barrel. Still testing this mixture, so have not decided if it is worth it.
My apologies for being so slow to respond to all of the kind compliments and questions. At this point, I am a bit of a CZcams newbie. I didn't expect the video to draw so much attention.
Actually, the 19th century barrel smiths were very efficient with the process. Their charcoal forges were a much better heat source than a propane forge. Too, the iron and steel that they had available were much softer and easier to weld than modern steels. I had to work much harder than they did.
Val
I used 1084 high carbon steel and 15N20 steel. 15N20 is basically 1084 with 2% nickel content. I use this combination of steels for the damascus that I make for knife blades.
thats insane
LOL!!! Thanks steffo1!
That was interesting! Pity the barrel was so short after all that work went into it! The boom at the end was satisfying, but I would have loved to see the ball punch into something downrange! Maybe a pumpkin, or a watermelon? Lol.
My intention was to make a 6 inch barrel. Lost a portion of it to a bad forge weld. Extremely difficult to weld modern steels into a gun barrel! Guess I should have thought about filming to ball hitting something interesting. 🙂 Was just shooting at a paper target.
You, sir, are a poet. Beautiful work, and thanks for sharing! I believe I saw the finished pistol in Blade Magazine...
Thanks Jeffery!!!
Yes; that's the pistol with this damascus barrel, on the cover of the July, 2014 Blade Magazine.
Fascinating. I think the accepted theory is that Western gunsmiths learned the technique from the Moghuls of India in the 17th century. Only the most expensive sporting guns used the technique and it did not survive transition into the smokeless era. Pattern-welding really only made sense with the more primitive steel of past centuries.
Awesome, would like to see it at higher definition
This old video was shot with a standard definition camera. Please check out another video on my CZcams channel. This second video is of a pistol build that I did, which also had a damascus barrel. It is in HD. czcams.com/video/AFrZulegvFs/video.html
Lane,
I've not had anyone ask me about making just a barrel to sell to them. But, I would consider a serious request.
A barrel of about his size would be in the $3,000 to $5,000 price range; depending on the specifications of the barrel ordered.
Nice Damascus
Thanks Yeah!! I'm working on a new damascus pattern right now.
Any type of gun powder can be measured by volume or by weight. Charge weight is the standard method of measurement.
KJ
You're welcome!
The steels that I used in this barrel were 1084 and 15N20. These are not steels that I feel are best for a gun barrel; but rather, they are steels that I am familiar with forge welding. While discovering the process of welding a barrel, I was having a number of issues with closing the welds in the coil. I chose to use steels that I was familiar with to minimize the number of unknown variables.
Must have taken many years as an apprentice back in the day to learn how to properly make a musket barrel. How many teenagers scorched themselves on red hot metal or squat a part of their hand while hammering, I'll never know. They themselves would eventually become masters of the art, and take on young apprentices themselves some day I imagine, creating the tools that would be used to make history on the battlefield.
History aside, it's fascinating to see how a damascus barrel is made, looks like that one is going to be used in a reproduction muzzle loading pistol. Why is it so much longer when it is loaded though? It appears to be maybe 5" when completed, but when loaded it looks like another 10" or so was attached. Is that what a breech plug is supposed to be? I guess it's the 'breeching system' that was referenced a couple times at the end. Need to brush up on my knowledge of muzzle loaders, the repeating firearms made between 1888-1956 is the primary era my interest started with.
Great vid, thanks for sharing. Cheers!
Thanks Norman!
The breeching system that I used for proof firing the barrel, was just a piece o f raw bar stock that I had in the shop. It's just a temporary tool and the length of it is arbitrary.
from the looks of your weld and the thickness of the barrel,you won't have a problem.going to be a heavy pistol! or cannon !
rcmoot,
Safety first!!
I have a matchlock from the Amber Fort armory, Jaipur.
Looking along the barrel it is just possible to see a faint twist pattern
It's about 0.6 " bore. Age? Difficult to say.
I wish I had bought the rampart gun with an 8ft barrel; Imagine the work involved!
I have the letter of authenticity from the armory with the number stamped on it.
I only fired it once, using the powder from a 12 gauge shell.
It's difficult to get black powder nowadays, due to the panic!
Toy,
Sounds like a cool gun. But please, be careful about loading it with modern smokeless gunpowder. That could be dangerous.
I can't imagine the work involved to make an 8ft barrel!
X-Ray Crystallography
LOL!!!! Yea, I picked them up a lot! When the barrel tube is removed from the forge, especially to close a weld, there is only a few seconds to get the work done before the material cools too much. There isn't time to carefully place the tongs on something. I don't care where the tongs go, as long as they are out of my way. Once the forging is done, there is plenty of time to pick up the tongs and reset my tools for the next forging session.
You know; I only included clips in this video where everything went correctly. Moving so quickly to get the work done, it isn't too uncommon to drop the hammer, knock the mandrel on the floor, or even drop the barrel tube. The camera was running those times too. I could put together a half hour video of blacksmith bloopers. :-)
This wasn't my first attempt to make a Damascus barrel. There were many failed attempts before it. Those were filmed too. I could also put together a one hour video of how to ruin perfectly good damascus steel, by trying to make a gun barrel out of it.
Thanks for watching my video!
The panic is totally justified... Enjoy what you have now because soon the shtf and survival and fighting for freedom and what is right will be every day
Lane
Making a damascus barrel is so very time consuming. That's the reason for the high cost. I could maybe build some more tooling to speed the process up, if I did this enough to make it worth it. But this isn't all that I do, so it's not high priority.
There's lots of good forging information on the American Bladesmith Society Forum. You should check it out. You have to be an ABS member to post, but anyone can view.
That's crazy, Very nice work. What kind of steel would be suitable for a barrel like this?
I made this barrel of 1084 and 15N20 steels. I made a barrel for a different project from 1084 and 1018 steels. I chose these steels because of my familiarity in working with them. That doesn't make them the best steels for making spiral welded of barrels from. They are of course, modern steels. Modern steels resist forge welding, because of thier alloy content. We make damascus knife blades from modern steels all of the time. Forge welding modern steels to make knife blades is easy, because of the severe dimensional reduction of the stock. Lots of heat, lots of compression. You can't do this degree of dimensional reduction on a gun barrel. So it is very difficult to make a damascus gun barrel from modern steels, because it is a challenge to get the spiral welds to take and hold.The best materials for making spiral welded barrels, is what they used 100 years ago and more. Old damascus gun barrels were made from wrought iron and very low carbon steel. This combination of metals is very soft under the hammer and very easy to forge weld. On my CZcams channel, there are a couple of videos of me reforging a 100 year old shotgun tube into a pistol barrel. The short version of the video shows all of the forging process.If I were to make a barrel from wrought iron and low carbon steel, I would use some old wagon tire or anchor chain for the wrought iron. I would use 1002 or 1005 for the steel.
Awesome, I was wondering if a low, medium or high carbon would need to be used. I have worked with 1084 and 15n20 some for use in blades. Is there any kind of heat treating being done or are they in the annealed state?