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Taken from JRE #1972 - Jim Breuer
@TheStoicMind Жыл бұрын
It's called sashimono
@olivermay647Ай бұрын
This looks cool as hell I admit. But what benefits does it have? It can be taken apart easier? Are these types of houses stronger then normal houses? They take more time to make if you doing it this way, that's for sure.
@murrowboy8 күн бұрын
japan dont have many natural iron, so they had to outsmart that problem with wood origami, its called sashimono
@wikt0r321 сағат бұрын
Hey I don’t like you *casually disassembling your house like a Lego set
@SattawootNae13 күн бұрын
I’m high and carpentry is deep
@Vyes14 күн бұрын
Japan ain't the only one doing this, tbh. Back in the days when metal nails weren't quite being industrialized, humans had to make interlocking slots for the wood frames to lock themselves altogether.
@alfianfahmi543025 күн бұрын
Sashimono is called if I'm not wrong.😊
@robertsima5388Ай бұрын
These Nips Be Craaazy
@thenoobprogaming2755Ай бұрын
Geometrics🎉
@SharkyBwoyАй бұрын
Our barns in Croatia were made the same way. And houses also.
@25thcenturymanАй бұрын
All this talk about wedges got me hungry
@ingamesniperrАй бұрын
Its called sashimono.
@olivermay647Ай бұрын
this is me when i try to do origami but im too lazy to use tape or glue
@collinkim9839Ай бұрын
Every culture with wood does this. Nails are expensive when they had to be hand forged, and they create point loads. Japanese woodworking evolved from China. Like everything else they do, but with their own spin. Colonial american buildings were built this way. All the cathedrals in europe, etc... Of course, these building use lots of nails, or pegs for floring, lathe, tiles, they just don't use them to hold major structural elements in wood.
@tacticalskiffs81342 ай бұрын
Yes, it is so ingenious. One ot my hobbies is trying to learn these techniques.
@jayejaycurry54852 ай бұрын
Aliens built this
@stanganev99852 ай бұрын
It is called mortise and tenon.
@Wtfu22 ай бұрын
And they did it all with no power tools.
@marksstudio2 ай бұрын
Those holes are for nail
@machetevelasco42152 ай бұрын
Shashimano technique
@ashurathi92862 ай бұрын
And We Indians did this 1000+ years ago...
@ujjwalplayz62402 ай бұрын
It’s called Sashimono
@dmumladze2 ай бұрын
Its called "sashimono". Pronounced SAH-she-MOH-NOH
@mclovin21552 ай бұрын
It's called Sashimono
@plnow742 ай бұрын
Its called sashimono, the detail is insane the craftmanship is on another level
@micvili75272 ай бұрын
I just searched sashimono and ofc Joe's got a vid on it 😂
@tamjidshah11102 ай бұрын
Sashimono 👌🏽🗾
@jimmyQuickDraw2 ай бұрын
This dude is way overrated.
@Bootes_Void2 ай бұрын
sashimono woodworking.
@Jake.tm_politics2 ай бұрын
They learned it from the Chinese, google the shit man
@sriramsridharan10412 ай бұрын
I love Japanese Architecture I wanna stay in Japan
@benmavinn16662 ай бұрын
Nobody makes thing like the japanese.
@riomendoza11112 ай бұрын
I only believe in Joe 🥂
@stevenessex55462 ай бұрын
Empire State Building used rivets only too
@keiffybby64712 ай бұрын
How much you want to bet that the Pyramids were also built like this to some degree, but once together had a break point in which gave you all those clean lines or something like that
@kzukiodenthechad72052 ай бұрын
the pyramid blocks were cast in place.
@alexe58918 күн бұрын
Not incredible but, a kemetic science, not forgotten but maximized 🧐
@daryalpotts76703 ай бұрын
It's called Sashimono building, i think...
@philipskovsege37003 ай бұрын
It's called Sashimano.
@joescott9063 ай бұрын
What's more fascinating is they learnt this from the Chinese.
@72lfk3 ай бұрын
Noah was a pro
@kevinmather55893 ай бұрын
This technique is called Japanese Sashimono!
@riddhibarua70373 ай бұрын
Elon musk, goes home and makes a car with no screws!
@Martin15193 ай бұрын
Modern technology has ruined the artist.....
@SuperSilviaS153 ай бұрын
Must be alliens...
@chriskoshinski3 ай бұрын
👏👏👏
@tcchan14374 ай бұрын
Earthquake proof
@45000Feet4 ай бұрын
Lincoln logs
@SoftwareDownloadSuccessful4 ай бұрын
That would be extremely challenging today. Those men were very skilled.
@FerociousSniper4 ай бұрын
If Rogan stuck to this shit, his show might actually be listenable
@ReallyBadJuJu4 ай бұрын
Mind blown by mortise and tenon
@stocktonnash5 ай бұрын
What is more surprising is the wood shown here is very dense and difficult to cut.
@ranjansarma29945 ай бұрын
It's mostly Japanese Cypress and Red Pine. Other woods may be used for special features.
@jayejaycurry54852 ай бұрын
They also build these buildings without ever cutting down a tree to acquire wood.
@healdiseasenow6 ай бұрын
I saw that In Thailand too .. Thai's wooden house.
@cc20166 ай бұрын
😂 wonder who was trying to sell them nails
@stevenmcduffie23956 ай бұрын
Why not look at a fucking high rise? That is so much more impressive! Look how the buildings have use, and require 10X fewer men per cubic foot of space generated! Look how men then can afford SUVS and large homes (as opposed to Japanese). Hell even a strip mall is more impressive than these shinto shrines from the perspective of use and utility and cost and engineering. I grant you that the ones who build these buildings with the technology of the times were highly capable men, but at the same time, they were completely caught in a feudal system from which thousands of Japanese fled, coming instead to America and Canada.
@geekonomist6 ай бұрын
In other words if you are looking for the Dark Ages and Notre Dame Cathedrals and Shinto Shrines, as all fucking Stoics are, then you are imposing upon free men Feudal society, a 40 year life span, and a miserable life groveling to priests and aristocrats.
@geekonomist6 ай бұрын
Maramures, church. Please visit and see. Not scam.
@crasuswolf6 ай бұрын
Would survive earthquakes and the settling of land.
@BLANKU27 ай бұрын
These originate from china not japan
@yoiashi7 ай бұрын
They don't get drunk and smoke weed and chase pussy.
@richardwolfe13557 ай бұрын
their firearms was terribly over built as well.
@adventureguy41197 ай бұрын
It’s called tongue and groove Joe lmfao
@dessadawn54387 ай бұрын
I found a good short video on Japan's ingenious nail-less wooden construction. kzhead.infov-ebuwJ0KpM?si=k_qerT73Zv2HY1iA
@noname-dk7ri7 ай бұрын
Joe Rogan learns about joints, circa 2023...
@MaybeOrangeJuice7 ай бұрын
I love craftsmanship.
@javierpacheco82348 ай бұрын
I must assume Joe didn't take HS woodshop... or missed the week that joints were taught. 😊
@rodleyeriffe91498 ай бұрын
Jim Bruer looks like he huffs paint.
@DrunkBiden8 ай бұрын
Joe. The Omish have been doing this for years in America, and they can build a four bedroom house in 2 days, working together. MR. Rogan really? Don't become Oprah.
@davidpatton5898 ай бұрын
Sashimono. It is beautiful, exacting craftsmanship.
@brendanramroth30678 ай бұрын
"Jamie, pull up the video of a grizzly bear attacking the 100 year old Japanese house."
@oneworldonecrew74338 ай бұрын
💀
@eidsalharbi2 ай бұрын
💀
@BozoTheMonkeАй бұрын
We are working in a building from 1860s and it has huge beams with cuts like I've never seen before and it's crazy it's still standing
@kevinalbertassi35808 ай бұрын
They were constantly losing buildings to typhoons so everything they built needed to be built to withstand storms and be modular for easy repair. Thats why they had paper doors and windows.
@darthsquidious85798 ай бұрын
😂😂😂that horse is a diebetic
@Luke-xx1ri8 ай бұрын
'It was so precise, probably done by aliens, no way humans can be that precise'
@xeflatio938 ай бұрын
Come up with your own f****** content, for Christ sake.
@BRAVOBLUEZ9 ай бұрын
Yet today with all your nails and screws buildings collapse😂...it is called building integrity
@dennistinga249 ай бұрын
Faaaarrrr more than 100 years. The thing is, Japanese structures like this are continuously being taken apart and rebuilt. So some of these are 400 yrs old but......pretty much brand new.
@vincethomrm9 ай бұрын
The temple in Nara is over 1,000 years old and has withstood typoons and earthquakes. No mails, no glue, only complex joints.
@jayejaycurry54852 ай бұрын
The ultimate Legos
@bryangriffin31399 ай бұрын
I listen to trap music but I prefer knowledge
@rah2_raw9 ай бұрын
Can't touch my LINCOLN LOG construction capabilities when I was 10
@LIE11Bldg79 ай бұрын
Also, as a rule they are built to shake throughout an earthquake.. Bend, not break..
@Deeply_Nicheless9 ай бұрын
That's the best Lego construction I ever saw!
@vaberett9 ай бұрын
This is better than Legos. Different shapes and not limited to just square blocks.
@javierpacheco82347 ай бұрын
Carpentry 101 R U NEW?
@zuckfacegobbels45279 ай бұрын
It takes hard work and effort. Most people would go straight for the nails.
@rajendranadarajan89319 ай бұрын
A lot of people don’t know this but Japan has no “natural” iron ore. All the steel they have was either traded for or is from meteorites. It’s why they are so frugal with it and endow their swords with sort of sacred characteristics. It’s also why the sword makers fold them and hit them with straw so much. Meteorite iron is pig iron. You have to add a lot of carbon to make it strong steel.
@makerstudios54569 ай бұрын
Japanese people discipline and hard work is incredible. They’re truly admirable
@rutha.31699 ай бұрын
They truly did the same thing anyone without nails has done since the dawn of time.
@fugotfackerАй бұрын
But behind those praise there's overwork and depression
@artyomxiii19 күн бұрын
@@artyomxiiiand the culture of shame sexual objectification of women
@cr1ym10 күн бұрын
@@cr1ymthat and how they treat marine life are the only 2 negatives i can think of for japan’s society. outside of that, it seems great.
@crushbentКүн бұрын
Arches are pretty cool too I guess
@TheAbyssGazedBack9 ай бұрын
how would that be interjected in the wood
@hellpermonkey9 ай бұрын
someone explain the the SUPER SHARD as a stud??
@hellpermonkey9 ай бұрын
they're called joints Joe.
@alanh72479 ай бұрын
Bro turned a mfqing ikea chair into an entire building 🪑 💀
@SGM_GamesYT9 ай бұрын
The Japanese are amazing at engineering, and their cars last longer than most. Germany is at the top for reliability, but Toyota and Honda are right there with them.
@michaelsparks3509 ай бұрын
Very neat.
@andrewmitchell759210 ай бұрын
This kind of technology exists in every traditional buildings or houses in Malaysia Peninsular and maybe some in Indonesia. I bet the Ancient-Malays may invented it and had exchanged sources with Ancient-Ryukyu. Back then Ancient-Malays People were so advanced, we invented and fight with guns(terakol), musket(istinggar), canon(meriam), shotgun(pemuras) but British said we only an uneducated races fight with keris, spears and machete 😏 They surely know how to f’ked up people history and make next generation believe a false-written history that be thought in school
@wocwoq10 ай бұрын
..and they only used nails as a security guard. They would put two nails close together, so that if an intruder broke in, the two nails would rub against each other making a load squeaking noise as the intruder walks with each step.
@rossanctuary523810 ай бұрын
Log Cabins ... hello "hold my beer" 😂
@frasermackenzie727510 ай бұрын
True beauty
@jlm824610 ай бұрын
That blows the pyramids away!!!
@endofdaysprophet10 ай бұрын
Why are they so afraid of nails?
@franchise336310 ай бұрын
It's very difficult to master! I'm just a student learning everday
@markquilter563810 ай бұрын
People still build like this. Best earthquake safety available.
Taken from JRE #1972 - Jim Breuer
It's called sashimono
This looks cool as hell I admit. But what benefits does it have? It can be taken apart easier? Are these types of houses stronger then normal houses? They take more time to make if you doing it this way, that's for sure.
japan dont have many natural iron, so they had to outsmart that problem with wood origami, its called sashimono
Hey I don’t like you *casually disassembling your house like a Lego set
I’m high and carpentry is deep
Japan ain't the only one doing this, tbh. Back in the days when metal nails weren't quite being industrialized, humans had to make interlocking slots for the wood frames to lock themselves altogether.
Sashimono is called if I'm not wrong.😊
These Nips Be Craaazy
Geometrics🎉
Our barns in Croatia were made the same way. And houses also.
All this talk about wedges got me hungry
Its called sashimono.
this is me when i try to do origami but im too lazy to use tape or glue
Every culture with wood does this. Nails are expensive when they had to be hand forged, and they create point loads. Japanese woodworking evolved from China. Like everything else they do, but with their own spin. Colonial american buildings were built this way. All the cathedrals in europe, etc... Of course, these building use lots of nails, or pegs for floring, lathe, tiles, they just don't use them to hold major structural elements in wood.
Yes, it is so ingenious. One ot my hobbies is trying to learn these techniques.
Aliens built this
It is called mortise and tenon.
And they did it all with no power tools.
Those holes are for nail
Shashimano technique
And We Indians did this 1000+ years ago...
It’s called Sashimono
Its called "sashimono". Pronounced SAH-she-MOH-NOH
It's called Sashimono
Its called sashimono, the detail is insane the craftmanship is on another level
I just searched sashimono and ofc Joe's got a vid on it 😂
Sashimono 👌🏽🗾
This dude is way overrated.
sashimono woodworking.
They learned it from the Chinese, google the shit man
I love Japanese Architecture I wanna stay in Japan
Nobody makes thing like the japanese.
I only believe in Joe 🥂
Empire State Building used rivets only too
How much you want to bet that the Pyramids were also built like this to some degree, but once together had a break point in which gave you all those clean lines or something like that
the pyramid blocks were cast in place.
Not incredible but, a kemetic science, not forgotten but maximized 🧐
It's called Sashimono building, i think...
It's called Sashimano.
What's more fascinating is they learnt this from the Chinese.
Noah was a pro
This technique is called Japanese Sashimono!
Elon musk, goes home and makes a car with no screws!
Modern technology has ruined the artist.....
Must be alliens...
👏👏👏
Earthquake proof
Lincoln logs
That would be extremely challenging today. Those men were very skilled.
If Rogan stuck to this shit, his show might actually be listenable
Mind blown by mortise and tenon
What is more surprising is the wood shown here is very dense and difficult to cut.
It's mostly Japanese Cypress and Red Pine. Other woods may be used for special features.
They also build these buildings without ever cutting down a tree to acquire wood.
I saw that In Thailand too .. Thai's wooden house.
😂 wonder who was trying to sell them nails
Why not look at a fucking high rise? That is so much more impressive! Look how the buildings have use, and require 10X fewer men per cubic foot of space generated! Look how men then can afford SUVS and large homes (as opposed to Japanese). Hell even a strip mall is more impressive than these shinto shrines from the perspective of use and utility and cost and engineering. I grant you that the ones who build these buildings with the technology of the times were highly capable men, but at the same time, they were completely caught in a feudal system from which thousands of Japanese fled, coming instead to America and Canada.
In other words if you are looking for the Dark Ages and Notre Dame Cathedrals and Shinto Shrines, as all fucking Stoics are, then you are imposing upon free men Feudal society, a 40 year life span, and a miserable life groveling to priests and aristocrats.
Maramures, church. Please visit and see. Not scam.
Would survive earthquakes and the settling of land.
These originate from china not japan
They don't get drunk and smoke weed and chase pussy.
their firearms was terribly over built as well.
It’s called tongue and groove Joe lmfao
I found a good short video on Japan's ingenious nail-less wooden construction. kzhead.infov-ebuwJ0KpM?si=k_qerT73Zv2HY1iA
Joe Rogan learns about joints, circa 2023...
I love craftsmanship.
I must assume Joe didn't take HS woodshop... or missed the week that joints were taught. 😊
Jim Bruer looks like he huffs paint.
Joe. The Omish have been doing this for years in America, and they can build a four bedroom house in 2 days, working together. MR. Rogan really? Don't become Oprah.
Sashimono. It is beautiful, exacting craftsmanship.
"Jamie, pull up the video of a grizzly bear attacking the 100 year old Japanese house."
💀
💀
We are working in a building from 1860s and it has huge beams with cuts like I've never seen before and it's crazy it's still standing
They were constantly losing buildings to typhoons so everything they built needed to be built to withstand storms and be modular for easy repair. Thats why they had paper doors and windows.
😂😂😂that horse is a diebetic
'It was so precise, probably done by aliens, no way humans can be that precise'
Come up with your own f****** content, for Christ sake.
Yet today with all your nails and screws buildings collapse😂...it is called building integrity
Faaaarrrr more than 100 years. The thing is, Japanese structures like this are continuously being taken apart and rebuilt. So some of these are 400 yrs old but......pretty much brand new.
The temple in Nara is over 1,000 years old and has withstood typoons and earthquakes. No mails, no glue, only complex joints.
The ultimate Legos
I listen to trap music but I prefer knowledge
Can't touch my LINCOLN LOG construction capabilities when I was 10
Also, as a rule they are built to shake throughout an earthquake.. Bend, not break..
That's the best Lego construction I ever saw!
This is better than Legos. Different shapes and not limited to just square blocks.
Carpentry 101 R U NEW?
It takes hard work and effort. Most people would go straight for the nails.
A lot of people don’t know this but Japan has no “natural” iron ore. All the steel they have was either traded for or is from meteorites. It’s why they are so frugal with it and endow their swords with sort of sacred characteristics. It’s also why the sword makers fold them and hit them with straw so much. Meteorite iron is pig iron. You have to add a lot of carbon to make it strong steel.
Japanese people discipline and hard work is incredible. They’re truly admirable
They truly did the same thing anyone without nails has done since the dawn of time.
But behind those praise there's overwork and depression
@@artyomxiiiand the culture of shame sexual objectification of women
@@cr1ymthat and how they treat marine life are the only 2 negatives i can think of for japan’s society. outside of that, it seems great.
Arches are pretty cool too I guess
how would that be interjected in the wood
someone explain the the SUPER SHARD as a stud??
they're called joints Joe.
Bro turned a mfqing ikea chair into an entire building 🪑 💀
The Japanese are amazing at engineering, and their cars last longer than most. Germany is at the top for reliability, but Toyota and Honda are right there with them.
Very neat.
This kind of technology exists in every traditional buildings or houses in Malaysia Peninsular and maybe some in Indonesia. I bet the Ancient-Malays may invented it and had exchanged sources with Ancient-Ryukyu. Back then Ancient-Malays People were so advanced, we invented and fight with guns(terakol), musket(istinggar), canon(meriam), shotgun(pemuras) but British said we only an uneducated races fight with keris, spears and machete 😏 They surely know how to f’ked up people history and make next generation believe a false-written history that be thought in school
..and they only used nails as a security guard. They would put two nails close together, so that if an intruder broke in, the two nails would rub against each other making a load squeaking noise as the intruder walks with each step.
Log Cabins ... hello "hold my beer" 😂
True beauty
That blows the pyramids away!!!
Why are they so afraid of nails?
It's very difficult to master! I'm just a student learning everday
People still build like this. Best earthquake safety available.
And we took it apart..smmfh