@@christianboushell4380 polishing it in steel shot more than likely takes off a tiny amount of gold. Whether it shows up on the scale or not we don't know since he didn't weigh it after polishing.
@@___DARK_PURSUIT___ I see your point. You might just be right but the question is how much is left. Polishing would remove exactly how many grams? Would it matter if it was .5 grams? You got me curious now. Lol.
@@Duciousness he says he puts the bars in there for 10-15 minutes. While I don’t think it would take off a considerable amount of material, you’d still be losing money if you’re paying even market value for this gold due to the printed weight being wrong.
People in the comments really complaining how he's a useless middleman for converting gold into gold bars. Guess what? He sells the gold bars, not the gold. He takes the time and effort to make all his gold bars weight the same and make it easier to everyone who purchases them to count them. He gets rid of impurities and guarantees a pure 99.9% gold bar. It would be like complaining that all a carpenter does is convert wood to a wooden chair.
Besides the gold shot he shows kilo bars as his “raw material”. Which are already refined to 24k and weighed by a trusted refinery. So yeah, to use your carpentry analogy he takes ready made chair and makes his own plus paints it at the end
@@hanskaiser6030never once did he say "raw" or "material" he said "we purchase gold from our trusted supplier. Hes buying a kilo bar, making 36 1oz bars and banking on the premium times 36. You may try to discredit the skill but you cant knock the hustle.
a wooden chair is vastly different in function than a piece of wood a gold bar that says liberty is not at all different from a piece of gold the same mass
cope. but yeah it is just a service not laying down his life or busting ass out in the heat building shit. it’s a family trade that is kickass and his thing. don’t have to defend the idea of making gold so hard
with pure gold, it's more just burnishing or rearranging the surface. it's just too soft to break off pieces like that. i'd be shocked if a measurable amount is removed.
Low key they're not even that well polished. Since they're essentially a fancy statement piece (gold doesn't need to be stamped to worth, well, it's weight in gold), might as well be jewelry quality polished.
@ConnorGaughan-do9hg Only governments can issue coins. If it was stamp on a round planchet, it'd still wouldn't be a coin it be a round. But typically rectangle shape bullion is referred to as a bar
only a government can issue a coin that has monetary value* *ftfy. Or did you forget about the Chuck E. Cheese coin tokens or the free vacuum coins you get for buying that supreme tier wash at the local touch-free behind the Shell station?
@@Skurvy2k well, the problem with your comment is one……….I’d never have a leftist friend and two…….leftist generally aren’t friendly, especially if you disagree with ANYTHING they say. I’ll still keep buying precious metals, just like buying firearms, you’ll probably never lose money on purchasing either one.
random note, you are certainly not washing graphene off of that ingot. I think you meant graphite unless you have the most expensive crucible in the world
@@johnrus7661you’re incorrect. “The IUPAC (International Union for Pure and Applied Chemistry) recommends use of the name "graphite" for the three-dimensional material, and "graphene" only when the reactions, structural relations, or other properties of individual layers are discussed.” It’s still a graphite crucible that he has shaved graphite off of. Please prove how he only shaved a one atom 2d layer off of it…? 🤔 He didn’t. Graphite.
@@voodooreptiles3553 bro I’m not even into collecting coins or precious metals but the fact that he called these coins I can’t tell if he’s trolling or not
I ain't never seen so much hate in a comment section before. I don't understand why everybody is bitching about this guy and his product. He tells you right up front what it is and what the price is.
First his showing a product called a "bar", coins are the round ones. If he doesn't know the difference between gold coins and bars, this product is 100% not real gold like advertised in this video and in turn will trick people who do not know any better. aka. a scam
Look up the definition of a coin dummy. If it has a denomination, it is a coin. If not, it's a round or bar. Literal definition: A flat piece of metal issued by governmental authority as money. So mind your business
@@danielking4880 Only governments can issue coins, what he’s making is just common bullion, and that bar should weigh about 31.1 grams for it to be a Troy ounce which is the standard in the bullion/precious metals market
yes, dont do it... its keeping or raising in worth for centurys, better stay with the dollar. at least you can use it to make a fire in 2 years, when BRICS is taking over :)
Bro. Gold is always so valuable. Even if today we use artificial money, gold still valuable. Electronics is a thing today. Gold and rare earth metals are so worthy to collect to save our assets/money. Rather than deposit it in bank. Bank is SUS. Crypto currency is far more sus than Bank.
Genuinely curious. What makes for a high quality gold bar? Is it just the stamping process and such looks kinda home brew? Hypothetically it’s still just all good right? You get the value of the weight you pay for?
@@justinbailey8976 generally yes, the gold itself isn’t cheaper, but the premium is substantially lower compared to a good quality bars. Also the gold purity isn’t the same. Good quality bar has 999.99% gold, and this one is more like 999.0%
@@OtakuBoe maybe, point is most people don't want to buy gold unless it comes with an assay (independent certification that the gold bar is in fact a .999 pure gold bar) or is a government issued coin that can be checked to ensure it's not a counterfeit
@@justinbailey8976 I think it also has to do with the fact that it's all scratched up, and it seems like it'd be too easy to mess up the stamping process imo
@@LavigneProductions I think you would have to be an actual idiot to do that. Engraving a design like that by hand would easily approach doubling the cost of the bar If you were smart and cheap you engrave a die and use an arbor press to do the same job. That's... possibly what he meant I suppose.
@@johnrus7661 It can actually be both but bar/ingot is whats typically used when referring to a rectangular slab of metal. The 1oz dragon bars/coins by Perth mint are a good example since they are frequently called both.
@@kevinsutton5580 the definition of a coin is "a small, flat, round piece of metal used as money, with a number showing its value and often a decorative picture"
I’m at the grocery store right now trying to buy a loaf of bread with one of your coins but the clerk is just saying over and over that they need “real money”…what do I do now?
@@Apollo-Computers Dude, the gold standard hasn't been a thing for 50 years. There's literally nothing backing up the USD, or any other currency for that matter. It all just works on collective belief. It's all fiat!
yeah genuinely scary this dude is stamping as though theyre legit certified gold bullion producers haha, my instant thought the gold content could be ANYTHING with a 999 stamp.
It is not a coincidence that as there is no denomination on it but in Japan they did do oval coins and they are coins as they had a denomination on them
I used to work for a minting company about 10 years ago (large operation). We served clients and governments from all over the world. It's always fascinating to see and create flawless coins, where some clients wanted only perfection, which we were able to fulfill.
Square coins have existed before, as well as oval-shaped coins, though those designs were more common in East Asia. If you’re familiar with Pokémon Meowth’s little coin on his head is based on such currency. Granted most coins these days are circular but the point still stands, I guess.
I agree, they're not coins. Not because they're rectangular. But because this just isn't what a coin is. This is just a thing to have or buy to have some gold, whether it's for investment purposes or just to be like "ooh gold." The reason it's not a coin is because it's got a frickin certificate on the back. It's not currency, and it's not decorative. It's ugly. It's just not a coin. If I wanted a gold coin, this is not what I would buy. So, I know I did a terrible job explaining it, but basically it's not a coin because it's not a coin 😂 to me it's more like a very small gold bar. And it's ugly.
@@Doflaminguard generally in the gold and silver market, "coin" is specifically reserved for government backed products like American gold/silver eagles or Canadian gold/silver maples, "bar" is used to describe anything rectangular, especially if it doesn't have a denomination assigned to it, and "round" is used for coin like items that are *not* issued/backed by a government.
I'm not sure why he referred to it as a coin, everything else seemed legit. Eventually I'd love to have the equipment to stamp out signature bullion. I'm more in the amateur refiner garage days, but people who aren't educated slightly on the subject probably haven't bothered learning the difference between coinage and bullion.
Im a cnc machinist we got a huge ass tubler since im young alot of times i have to run it because my co workers are 50+ years old its def a workout lol
1. He does not validate purity 2. Polishing tumbler DOES remove weight, if he doesn’t re-weigh at the end and sells for 37.5g stated, he’s cheating the customer. Not by much, about 7.5-15 dollars per coin.
i couldn't find any documentation on their website about authenticity or if any third party verifies the gold purity/weight at any point - if it isn't a scam then they really need to provide some documentation or something on the website bc right now the website seems extremely sketchy. if it is a scam then its sad because they are selling these for thousands of dollars... crazy
@@baby_muppy I couldn’t agree more with this sentiment. If they don’t have any documentation it and honestly I wouldn’t trust with just them saying their supplier. They should at least let us know how the supplier gets their gold. I’ve seen people skim for gold up in the small creeks near Sacramento.
No, if it was loosing gold in the polisher the polisher would have a large amount of super fine gold dust which would make the whole thing gold in color.
@@foxtrotdeltausn4757 over time they do fill up with gold dust, I tumble brass in a similar fashion, and it absolutely gets filthy after about 20 hours of tumbling.
Yes, they lose weight during the tumbling the coarse material used in tumblers act the same way as sandpaper by grinding down and polishing (depending on the size and type of coarse material used) whatever items you put inside it
@@johnmccarroll It's worse than that, a coin is made by a government mint (or on behalf of a goverment) and has a monetary value. A 'coin' made by a non-goverment mint is a round. These are bars. Eventually, after many months he claims that he does it deliberately to drive engagement whereas it actually makes him seem like a clueless unprofessional tosspot.
Interesting I didn’t know that “coin = gold rectangle” I must live under a rock, because the only coins I know about are the round ones, these to me are gold mini bars 😂
Coins isn't a word for round always it's for goverment issues currency also he says coins to Increase interaction to his video (he has made video about it)
It's kind of strange it's really heavy when compared to steel of the same size. If you picked up one US pound of gold you would be shocked of how small it is.
You can purchase our gold coins at kimminhstudios.com
Are you guys a refiner..
I legit have a gold coin 1945 carat from the Dutch worth around 1.2$
those are not coins
@@lucky43113 its a bar
Hi
Our trusted gold supplier is definitely an 8 year old African kid
Listen man, if I can get a hold of that kid I'd love to do some business with him 😂🎉😅
Nah South American Africa's running dry.
@@brian6391 It is the messiah!
White People already took all diamonds and gold and more in africa
Insert south park gold circle music
Step one: Have a trusty gold supplier
How to turn a gold bar into another gold bar. Something something middleman
He said that as step 1.
@@donaldphillips2648 keep it up ethan
Step one, have money to even purchase gold from a trusty gold supplier
Step 2 : have machines worth thousands.
I love the sound of the coins at the end dropping on the conveyer belt , clink, clink, clink.
Its 100% a Money Sound 😂😂
I thought solid gold made a dull thud sound??? 🤔
Seemless transition into Pink Floyd's Money
Bars*
It's a gold bar, not a coin lol
Make a video showing you collect and recycle the gold dust from filing them down to accurate weight.
Okay so step one, get the scrap. Step two melt it. Or alternatively just sell it back to the supplier and they do it
I guess i'll just wait in NYC for trax to throw some my way
😂😂😂😂😂
And say nah and keep walkin like everybody😂
😂 what about the idiots who looked at him like he was mad and just walked past him, there loss
@@lionheart9692 yeah dude even if i didn't know him, based on the fact that he wouldn't want anything in return i would just take it
I'd take one an walk back with a wig an different cloths on then send my old lady over there
I love how you file it down to 37.5 grams before you take off more material
Where is more material taken off? The weight stamped on the them is still 37.5 grams.
@@christianboushell4380 polishing it in steel shot more than likely takes off a tiny amount of gold. Whether it shows up on the scale or not we don't know since he didn't weigh it after polishing.
@@christianboushell4380 the weight printed doesn’t matter. When you polish anything you’re removing a thin layer off the top.
@@___DARK_PURSUIT___ I see your point. You might just be right but the question is how much is left. Polishing would remove exactly how many grams? Would it matter if it was .5 grams? You got me curious now. Lol.
@@Duciousness he says he puts the bars in there for 10-15 minutes. While I don’t think it would take off a considerable amount of material, you’d still be losing money if you’re paying even market value for this gold due to the printed weight being wrong.
Step one : Buy your gold from only trusted dealers that have a guarantee for purity and weight. Otherwise, ignore them!!!!
You need to have the machines first 😂
Dam I want to eat gold now
@@muhammadhadif1183 IKR!!!!! THAT'S WHAT I'M HERE FOR NGL
So you’re saying we *should* or *shouldn’t* be buying gold from DHgate? 🙋
@@chrisjenkins203Should. Its SO much cheaper than any reputable jerk.
People in the comments really complaining how he's a useless middleman for converting gold into gold bars. Guess what? He sells the gold bars, not the gold. He takes the time and effort to make all his gold bars weight the same and make it easier to everyone who purchases them to count them. He gets rid of impurities and guarantees a pure 99.9% gold bar. It would be like complaining that all a carpenter does is convert wood to a wooden chair.
Bro these people think they found an infinite gold glitch in a CZcams short, what dicks to be rude about it
Besides the gold shot he shows kilo bars as his “raw material”. Which are already refined to 24k and weighed by a trusted refinery. So yeah, to use your carpentry analogy he takes ready made chair and makes his own plus paints it at the end
@@hanskaiser6030never once did he say "raw" or "material" he said "we purchase gold from our trusted supplier. Hes buying a kilo bar, making 36 1oz bars and banking on the premium times 36. You may try to discredit the skill but you cant knock the hustle.
a wooden chair is vastly different in function than a piece of wood a gold bar that says liberty is not at all different from a piece of gold the same mass
cope. but yeah it is just a service not laying down his life or busting ass out in the heat building shit. it’s a family trade that is kickass and his thing. don’t have to defend the idea of making gold so hard
You forgot to include the part when you use the Fortune III diamond pick axe to obtain the Ore
The Raw gold*
Nah the kids in Africa do that for them
@@raffimolero64that's... kinda the same thing?
Fortune 3!!! 😂😂😂😂😂😂
fortune 3 doesnt work on gold bro 🤦♂️
personally i like the part where you weigh it before polishing. very choice
Bro I was thinking the exact same thing
with pure gold, it's more just burnishing or rearranging the surface. it's just too soft to break off pieces like that. i'd be shocked if a measurable amount is removed.
@@samboheena that’s what you call a euphemism
Low key they're not even that well polished. Since they're essentially a fancy statement piece (gold doesn't need to be stamped to worth, well, it's weight in gold), might as well be jewelry quality polished.
Such choice
"...gold coin like this"
Points to a bar
Still a coin
@ConnorGaughan-do9hg Only governments can issue coins. If it was stamp on a round planchet, it'd still wouldn't be a coin it be a round. But typically rectangle shape bullion is referred to as a bar
@@ConnorGaughan-do9hg its not u dmb fk.
only a government can issue a coin that has monetary value*
*ftfy. Or did you forget about the Chuck E. Cheese coin tokens or the free vacuum coins you get for buying that supreme tier wash at the local touch-free behind the Shell station?
@@ConnorGaughan-do9hg only if you're a moron. Coins are currency issued by a government. These are bars.
As an African warlord I love what I am seeing
"To remove oils" picks it up directly after 💀
It's called a cut?! LMAO NOT YOU THINKING THAT WAS REAL TIME
@@OtakuBoe boy get yo condescending ass outta here thats not even the point of their comment 😭
@@OtakuBoe I don’t think you understood what he meant
@@StarKatGaming he meant nothing it’s a failed joke
@@christianobabalao9302 He’s talking about the oils produced by your skin. He’s not joking, but I don’t even know if it matters.
Finally, my day can now become much easier. I'm sick of laboring over all of this gold. Thanks sir.
Man I can't wait to get my gold stamping machine my family are poor and have to do it by hand still.
Just watching the video makes me want to buy more gold. I’m hooked on precious metals.
You might have an exploitation problem, please seek the help of a local friendly leftist immediately.
@@Skurvy2k well, the problem with your comment is one……….I’d never have a leftist friend and two…….leftist generally aren’t friendly, especially if you disagree with ANYTHING they say. I’ll still keep buying precious metals, just like buying firearms, you’ll probably never lose money on purchasing either one.
As an engineer, i can tell you. You can reduce your manufacturing time and wastage with some minimal changes.
random note, you are certainly not washing graphene off of that ingot. I think you meant graphite unless you have the most expensive crucible in the world
Graphene is just a ultra thin layer of graphite, you can make graphene with some pencil lead and some scotch tape. He is correct, it is graphene.
@@johnrus7661you’re incorrect.
“The IUPAC (International Union for Pure and Applied Chemistry) recommends use of the name "graphite" for the three-dimensional material, and "graphene" only when the reactions, structural relations, or other properties of individual layers are discussed.”
It’s still a graphite crucible that he has shaved graphite off of. Please prove how he only shaved a one atom 2d layer off of it…? 🤔
He didn’t. Graphite.
These are the perfect example of sketchy gold bars you don’t buy randomly off eBay
They are real fool.
Who does the assay? Are they verified? Traceable?
@@sprky777 They dont have to be. pirates used peaces of eight for years you people are so brainwashed you dont even understand barter anymore.
@@voodooreptiles3553 bro I’m not even into collecting coins or precious metals but the fact that he called these coins I can’t tell if he’s trolling or not
@@Willppyro coin doesn’t necessarily mean round. There are goldback bills that are technically coins.
The sound of the gold going thro the pres is just pure satisfaction
I ain't never seen so much hate in a comment section before. I don't understand why everybody is bitching about this guy and his product. He tells you right up front what it is and what the price is.
prob jealousy
Only unknowledgeable brokies are complaining
They don't like seeing Asians with money. Pure jealousy and racism
Nope...too many Chinese fakes...not hatin on orientals..just facts
First his showing a product called a "bar", coins are the round ones.
If he doesn't know the difference between gold coins and bars, this product is 100% not real gold like advertised in this video and in turn will trick people who do not know any better.
aka. a scam
"Coins" are issued by the government. That's a Bar buddy. How much do they weigh?
Look up the definition of a coin dummy. If it has a denomination, it is a coin. If not, it's a round or bar. Literal definition: A flat piece of metal issued by governmental authority as money.
So mind your business
@@danielking4880 😭
@@danielking4880 nope
@@danielking4880 I’m sorry Daniel. I have ADD. Can you tell me the weight of the bar again?
@@danielking4880 Only governments can issue coins, what he’s making is just common bullion, and that bar should weigh about 31.1 grams for it to be a Troy ounce which is the standard in the bullion/precious metals market
Moral of the story: don't buy gold bars.
bro what 💀
yes, dont do it... its keeping or raising in worth for centurys, better stay with the dollar. at least you can use it to make a fire in 2 years, when BRICS is taking over :)
Bro. Gold is always so valuable.
Even if today we use artificial money, gold still valuable.
Electronics is a thing today. Gold and rare earth metals are so worthy to collect to save our assets/money. Rather than deposit it in bank. Bank is SUS. Crypto currency is far more sus than Bank.
Those are "coins" lol
Doesn’t he lose a lot of gold in the process? When filing, etc
"It's like printing my own money"
Now thats shiny 🪙
Really low quality bars
Genuinely curious. What makes for a high quality gold bar? Is it just the stamping process and such looks kinda home brew? Hypothetically it’s still just all good right? You get the value of the weight you pay for?
@@justinbailey8976 generally yes, the gold itself isn’t cheaper, but the premium is substantially lower compared to a good quality bars. Also the gold purity isn’t the same. Good quality bar has 999.99% gold, and this one is more like 999.0%
Maybe bc the vid is showing the creation process and not the selling process? Lmao
@@OtakuBoe maybe, point is most people don't want to buy gold unless it comes with an assay (independent certification that the gold bar is in fact a .999 pure gold bar) or is a government issued coin that can be checked to ensure it's not a counterfeit
@@justinbailey8976 I think it also has to do with the fact that it's all scratched up, and it seems like it'd be too easy to mess up the stamping process imo
I love this machine so much makes my day so easy…. Guy said it like he was doing it by hand once upon a time…
They probably were.
You do dummy, hammer and the stamp
That’s what I thought
@@LavigneProductions I think you would have to be an actual idiot to do that. Engraving a design like that by hand would easily approach doubling the cost of the bar
If you were smart and cheap you engrave a die and use an arbor press to do the same job. That's... possibly what he meant I suppose.
The end was the best part! It seems to just produce itself. That’s the sound of profit 👌🏽🔥
I forgot all about gold. I have so much of it just laying around that I often forget it's even there.
While coins don't have to be round,. I'd refer to those as ingots or bars, dude. Nice work.
It is a bar, not a coin.
on the website it says bar
@@johnrus7661 It can actually be both but bar/ingot is whats typically used when referring to a rectangular slab of metal.
The 1oz dragon bars/coins by Perth mint are a good example since they are frequently called both.
Coins are round in most every country!
@@kevinsutton5580 the definition of a coin is
"a small, flat, round piece of metal used as money, with a number showing its value and often a decorative picture"
Sir that is not a coin, that is a domino
Dominos without dot? 🙄
What about the blank | blank one
@@JakeMckay1738 no 🗿
Bru
Mahjongg
Where do you run your business??!! Your posts are informative and interesting!!
Gold is so pretty!
Imagine finding out 2 years later the suppliers was a scamming agency and sold you and everyone else fake gold !
Only in your imagination! People who buy gold know what that are doing!
Imagine Me not investing in Gold or Anything Else ....
@@jimgoodreau1245 So do con artists. It isn’t called an art for nothing.
nice imaginary world you have
@@itsjamesly who does your assays?
I’m at the grocery store right now trying to buy a loaf of bread with one of your coins but the clerk is just saying over and over that they need “real money”…what do I do now?
what about when the USD becomes worthless?
Ironically enough, this is real money. USD (or any other currency) is a fiat currency that has no intrinsic value, and as such isn't money.
USD is backed by gold.....
so how is gold not real money. LMFAO
@@Apollo-Computers Dude, the gold standard hasn't been a thing for 50 years. There's literally nothing backing up the USD, or any other currency for that matter. It all just works on collective belief. It's all fiat!
@@Apollo-Computers But yes, gold is real money. USD is not.
Super cool! Thanks for sharing!!🎉
Beautiful work
Man’s giving us a tutorial on how to do this like we casually have all these things just chilling in another room of our house
xD i thought the same way.. cool i wanna do this, nah i only got like 3 bucks
This is why u don’t buy gold off eBay
Ahh shit I bought 2 grams of gold off of ebay
@@aaronysaguirre183 might be fake bro be careful
yeah genuinely scary this dude is stamping as though theyre legit certified gold bullion producers haha, my instant thought the gold content could be ANYTHING with a 999 stamp.
@@namename8986 true that. This is why I only buy from reputable sellers
This is real. Do youre research.
It is not a coincidence that as there is no denomination on it but in Japan they did do oval coins and they are coins as they had a denomination on them
Bro thanks so much for all of these videos. This is super educational
You could make some sick designs on those gold coins but you choose.... The statue of liberty.
I liked how they printed liberty on the bar as gold standard is something that resonates with liberty.
What?
Pov: you don't know the targeted audience is Americans
Liberty from banks
🇺🇸🦅💥
Thats a good point. Liberty is equated with gold.
I'm not sure if I'd call those coins, but cool bars nonetheless. I'm interested in how you created the dies to stamp them 👍
How much did the equipment cost all together?
I used to work for a minting company about 10 years ago (large operation). We served clients and governments from all over the world. It's always fascinating to see and create flawless coins, where some clients wanted only perfection, which we were able to fulfill.
Those are definitely not coins 💀
Square coins have existed before, as well as oval-shaped coins, though those designs were more common in East Asia. If you’re familiar with Pokémon Meowth’s little coin on his head is based on such currency.
Granted most coins these days are circular but the point still stands, I guess.
@@mojavefry2617 🤓
American found out they're not the only one with currency
@@brave3951no
I agree, they're not coins. Not because they're rectangular. But because this just isn't what a coin is. This is just a thing to have or buy to have some gold, whether it's for investment purposes or just to be like "ooh gold." The reason it's not a coin is because it's got a frickin certificate on the back. It's not currency, and it's not decorative. It's ugly. It's just not a coin. If I wanted a gold coin, this is not what I would buy.
So, I know I did a terrible job explaining it, but basically it's not a coin because it's not a coin 😂 to me it's more like a very small gold bar.
And it's ugly.
The red coins are fire. How do they make the red?
Do they all weigh 37.5g after completion so they're equal to 1 Japanese Tael or are they further cut down to 31.103g to equal one troy ounce?
Can't trust a man who doesn't know the difference between bars and coins.
That doesnt look thick enough to be a bar.
@@Doflaminguard generally in the gold and silver market, "coin" is specifically reserved for government backed products like American gold/silver eagles or Canadian gold/silver maples, "bar" is used to describe anything rectangular, especially if it doesn't have a denomination assigned to it, and "round" is used for coin like items that are *not* issued/backed by a government.
technically are coins
@@ASSASSIN19923 No, they are bars. Period. There is no technically.
I'm not sure why he referred to it as a coin, everything else seemed legit. Eventually I'd love to have the equipment to stamp out signature bullion. I'm more in the amateur refiner garage days, but people who aren't educated slightly on the subject probably haven't bothered learning the difference between coinage and bullion.
That polishing machine is a tumbler. 🥇🙌
Im a cnc machinist we got a huge ass tubler since im young alot of times i have to run it because my co workers are 50+ years old its def a workout lol
A tumbler is a polishing machine.
Its a machine and it polishes
It's a rotating- make- it- smooth - and - glossy - by-friction- mechanical- implement
@@dittmannrudolfrohr2149😂
I love the sound gold makes when it hits metal
That sound is so satisfying at the end
Don't you check the purity of the gold? No one should trust, especially with counterfeit coins.
Yes we have a gun that test the gold
And asian gold is normally 24k anyway. Weird for asians to use anything below pure, bright, yellow 24k gold.
@@kuchikopi4631 his trusted supplier is African Not Asian so it isn’t piss gold
@@kuchikopi4631 the colour of gold has a lot to do with where it is sourced and how it is polished. It's not a good indicator of purity.
Gotta say, it crushes me to see a fresh stamped bar get tossed onto a metal tray
Its gotta be an amazing unreal feeling holding all that gold in your hands throughout the day
Nice work there. Love it!
How do you validate the purity?
Besides just trusting your supplier?
Does the polishing tumbler change the final weight?
1. He does not validate purity
2. Polishing tumbler DOES remove weight, if he doesn’t re-weigh at the end and sells for 37.5g stated, he’s cheating the customer. Not by much, about 7.5-15 dollars per coin.
If those are 1 troy oz. Shouldn't they be 31.1 grams?
Why would you tell him? Wouldn't it be smart to just go buy one and know you have an instant profit?
@@JM-yx1lm no. I don't like stealing or taking advantage of fellow stackers.
Imperial grams 👍
@@JM-yx1lm because there is a massive upcharge cause of the statue of liberty and stamp.
Why 37 grams? A Troy Oz is 31.1 grams, your throwing gold away
Very informative! Now that I know how to make coins, can you tell me how to get gold?
I love gold coins ive been collecting sovereigns since the mid 90s.
And this is why Canadian gold coins are worth so much more
there are actually well-made american gold coins. we’re not number 1 in gods reserves for nothing, buddy.
I feel like I'm getting cheated, I just can't prove it 🤔
Same bro. Feel like this simple and ... take 1880$/ounce. And how to make sure its 99,99% pure?? 😢😢
@@hudu3632buy gold from miners at cheaper prices 👀
Who are you dealing with? Only deal with reputable people!
@@hudu3632there are machines that can tell you it’s 99.99% gold. But just buy from a good source
Your not getting cheated, i think your just getting confused with the weightings
Did you accept a custom stamp?
Beautiful finished product.
Last time I checked; a gold "coin" is denominated and minted by a sovereign country.
Yea that's bullion.
i couldn't find any documentation on their website about authenticity or if any third party verifies the gold purity/weight at any point - if it isn't a scam then they really need to provide some documentation or something on the website bc right now the website seems extremely sketchy. if it is a scam then its sad because they are selling these for thousands of dollars... crazy
@@baby_muppy I couldn’t agree more with this sentiment.
If they don’t have any documentation it and honestly I wouldn’t trust with just them saying their supplier. They should at least let us know how the supplier gets their gold. I’ve seen people skim for gold up in the small creeks near Sacramento.
🤓
@@error5202 epic comment
TraxBeijing 💀
👏Beautiful work, Sir
Where do YOU purchase all the stampers, get the suppliers, and the stuff to melt the gold at? How much does all THAT cost?
Awesome thanks! Now I know what to say if I ever buy a pill press.
Love the sound when the gold bar drops.
Super dope love the entire process.
Love the process!
I like that you polish after weighing. How often do you do a clean-out on those polishing beads?
How often do you clean up your shop and reclaim the gold lost in the process? And how much do you usually get back?
I made a video on this!
czcams.com/users/shortsn8mVQJkMkS0?feature=share
That noise is so satisfying 😊
Man there is something satisfying about watching this vid, thanks man
Glad you liked it!
Those are bars
Making simple errors such as “37 g in an ounce, and calling a bar a coin, there’s a way to engage viewers.
@@woody6856 No there's a difference, an Asian ounce isn't the same.
@@joshjacobjonesjoshjacobjon2899 gold is measured in Troy ounces. If you’re a jeweler and using something else you’re dumb.
@@woody6856 37.5 is an Asian ounce. It's heavier.
But he does incorrectly call it a coin. It is a bar.
coins dont have to be round...a few countries use square coins
What's a ballpark price for that press, and manufacturer?
how pure is that gold? and how much do you loose in the manufacturing process?
Bro each coin is $2500 I’ll pass
Watched it 5 times. Doesn’t get old 😂❤
Do you have some kind of special license to produce these coins? So, is some special stamp issued? How much taxes?
If you’re the dude who stamps the liberty gold and silver bullion bars then ive definitely bought and sold a few of your bars in the past.
I’d love to work there can I have a job sweeping up?
2,000°F.....damn that's high considering according to NIST you can melt industrial steel with 400°F
400°F is 200°C. Even lead melts at 326°C. Steel alloys on the other hand melt above 1370°C or 2500°F.
@@mustafahakansandk7747 tf you talking bout... C vs F????
@@spaceghost3941 You really think that gold melts at a much higher temperature than steel. Lol
@@mustafahakansandk7747 no I don't actually... My comment was sarcasm 😆
@@spaceghost3941 Yeah totally, NOT. 🤣
I would love to know how you get started in this field!?! I’m assuming a lot of start up capital lol
How to make a gold bar:
Step 1 - START WITH A GOLD BAR
Thanks... thats... just amazing. The exact level of effort I expect out of a youtuber.
I like the red painted gold bars.
Like the sound of the gold bars
What is the price difference between the finished product and the grains of gold at the beginning?
The finished product has a premium about 100-200$ more then spot price of gold
nice job thank you for sharing 😀
Do the coins lose any weight after tumbling?
Exactly this guy is scamming
No, if it was loosing gold in the polisher the polisher would have a large amount of super fine gold dust which would make the whole thing gold in color.
@@foxtrotdeltausn4757 over time they do fill up with gold dust, I tumble brass in a similar fashion, and it absolutely gets filthy after about 20 hours of tumbling.
Yes, they lose weight during the tumbling the coarse material used in tumblers act the same way as sandpaper by grinding down and polishing (depending on the size and type of coarse material used) whatever items you put inside it
Gives off big “the guy who actually owns this shop let me make a video pretending it’s mine” vibes
Yeah it's his father's for now
I love the sound of your machine printing gold bars
same every stamp is moneyyyy
Your definition of coin is different from everyone else's
Right. Why is he calling a gold bar a coin? For those that don't speak English a coin is round.
@@johnmccarroll It's worse than that, a coin is made by a government mint (or on behalf of a goverment) and has a monetary value. A 'coin' made by a non-goverment mint is a round. These are bars. Eventually, after many months he claims that he does it deliberately to drive engagement whereas it actually makes him seem like a clueless unprofessional tosspot.
I dont know why I get so satisfied watching coins getting molded into a bar
that's the sound of real money right there.
Interesting I didn’t know that “coin = gold rectangle” I must live under a rock, because the only coins I know about are the round ones, these to me are gold mini bars 😂
Coins isn't a word for round always it's for goverment issues currency also he says coins to Increase interaction to his video (he has made video about it)
I would love to own a piece of gold. I've never held anything like it before
Our site is up if you want to buy! kimminhjewelry.com
It's kind of strange it's really heavy when compared to steel of the same size.
If you picked up one US pound of gold you would be shocked of how small it is.
@@itsjamesly it’s a 24 karat bar ?
@@davidjackson-ip5gcyea 4 nines
Go to a jewelers and ask to see some pieces, they will do so happily. Check out a gold watch, they are mind blowing.
Nice. Thanks for sharing ❤🎉😊