The Art of Cooperage at Nephin Whiskey

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  • čas přidán 20. 12. 2020
  • Join the Leonard brothers at Nephin Whiskey for a behind-the-scenes experience of a real Cooperage in action.
    Each Nephin cask is crafted by hand by their Coopers from carefully sourced wood and exclusively traditional, natural methods such as using rush grass for sealing.

Komentáře • 25

  • @abcstardust
    @abcstardust Před 2 měsíci

    Excellent video! I really enjoy watching these barrels come together under your skillful hands!

  • @paulfarley454
    @paulfarley454 Před rokem +6

    Reconditioning old American Bourbon barrels as they can only be used once, by law, and are fully useful. Added..to the demise of the cooper trade in Ireland ,Scotland and England.

  • @umami0247
    @umami0247 Před 9 měsíci

    That is some serious craftsmanship. It was fun watching you build these barrels.

  • @barrypurves4524
    @barrypurves4524 Před 2 měsíci

    Not a micrometer or other precision measuring device in site honned skill and experience, Grat video

  • @yujinny1999
    @yujinny1999 Před rokem

    Thanks for uploading. I really enjoyed this.

  • @flaviopaulopereira2731
    @flaviopaulopereira2731 Před rokem +2

    Belíssimo trabalho. Gratidão por compartilhar. Estas fitas de vedação nas tampas são naturais ?

  • @Eggosj
    @Eggosj Před 9 měsíci

    Love it

  • @MrSoarman
    @MrSoarman Před 2 lety

    I like the railroad rail Anvil

  • @Serasphiel
    @Serasphiel Před rokem

    Cool

  • @craigberube9890
    @craigberube9890 Před 3 lety

    Awesome! Where do I get the rivets?

  • @fredrickpinckney1092
    @fredrickpinckney1092 Před rokem +1

    I don't get it. How come the staves are already bent and charred and the hoops rusty? They don't make new barrels?

    • @foggy7595
      @foggy7595 Před 9 měsíci +3

      Stock from steel supplier is often rusty when you buy it, they probably buy dimensional flat stock.

    • @fredrickpinckney1092
      @fredrickpinckney1092 Před 9 měsíci +2

      @@foggy7595 I worked nearly thirty years in a cooperage where we made new barrels. Trust me, they are only recycling old stuff.

    • @foggy7595
      @foggy7595 Před 9 měsíci +1

      @@fredrickpinckney1092 Okay so let me get this straight.
      You're saying these guys take old hoops, cut off the rivet and punched ends (making the bar shorter and final hoop smaller), straighten the hoop out (which makes the stock thinner because of the "slant" needing to be corrected), whew we got a bar! Then they bend it again, punch holes and install rivet, and put the slant back in again, leaving you with a smaller and thinner hoop than the original. Yeah, I don't think so... sounds like it would be easier and much cheaper (labor alone) to just skip that first part and buy cheap 1/8" x 1" mild steel flat stock from a supplier for maybe 0.50 $/ft (that's what I pay, they are probably a large business and make big orders).
      Unless you mean they don't make new hoops at all and just reuse old ones, which I doubt.
      In my experience as a blacksmith, recycling is fun and I'm always throwing steel I find in the trunk, but if you're trying to sell something it is going to be cheaper 99% percent of the time to buy proper stock materials than to try and scrounge up what you can find (which usually means scrapyard unless you just make one-offs, so you pay something anyway), unless you value your "shop time" at slave pay lol. It also costs actual money (fuel, abrasives, power, etc) to prep the materials...

    • @fredrickpinckney1092
      @fredrickpinckney1092 Před 9 měsíci +1

      @@foggy7595 wow you have a big imagination, all you have to do is watch the video and see what's going on. There's not one single new or unused component shown in this entire video.
      By the way, you had me laughing out loud at your suggestion that this could be a large operation. I suggest you visit a modern cooperage and see the mass production methods used nowadays. No way is this outfit making any money unless they are charging outrageous prices to "craft" distillers for custom size barrels.

    • @foggy7595
      @foggy7595 Před 9 měsíci +1

      @@fredrickpinckney1092 So you're saying they don't make any new hoops? If they just reuse the same hoops over and over again fair enough, but there was a time when they needed to make those lol... so at that time, when they made them, they probably went out and bought flat stock.

  • @cooper68ns
    @cooper68ns Před 11 měsíci +1

    Thank you for giving credit to the celtic people and not roman.

  • @Billy-in7rl
    @Billy-in7rl Před 4 měsíci

    At a first glance they using old staves from larger barrels they just cutting them shorter this would be missing out real stave production how can this be a master cooper

  • @nerkaperkadoniz
    @nerkaperkadoniz Před rokem +1

    they just recycled old barrels.. to produce new one is far bigger chalenge...

  • @jafojafo5412
    @jafojafo5412 Před rokem

    Unless they can do it all with hand tools alone I wouldn’t call them a true cooper.

  • @anthonysillett6678
    @anthonysillett6678 Před rokem

    The young lad knocking the end hoop down with his hammer near the end of the video needs a bit more practise.

    • @Euan96
      @Euan96 Před 6 měsíci

      He needs to use a bar mate. The surface area of the hammer isn’t great enough will just bend when trying to get a tight end hoop down

    • @anthonysillett6678
      @anthonysillett6678 Před 6 měsíci

      We used to use a tool called a big hitter or coopers maul but I have seen old car suspension springs welded together used.@@Euan96