The missing energy of the past is hidden from us. Why hide vintage tools of the 19th century? Iron processing in the 19th century, despite the visible simplicity, remains one of the huge number of unresolved mysteries. The most common way to design something from steel in the 19th century was the use of compounds on clans. They were used so often that it seems that the bolted compounds were much more complicated, and the welds were not even invented - there was no need for them. Applying claps in the 19th century in the 19th century was about the same as to score nails (for example), although in the case of clans in our time, a number of additional conditions are required. Of course, to sculpt claps as nails, you need to be able to get steel with the same ease, and then rushing from it the necessary profile, well, and make the same clouds. With this, apparently, in the 19th century, too, there were no special problems. We must pay tribute, I didn't pay attention to such a technological distortion. A lot of historical riddles researchers repeatedly paid attention to their audience on the very closed compounds of the 19th century, which took place from the preserved artifacts. Indeed, there is something to pay attention to. All clans are similar to each other as the twin brothers, and have almost perfect symmetry, and from both sides. They are not viewed by any piece defects that are necessarily on claps from the 20th century. And this rule is observed even in places in which the closed data is quite difficult to put due to the complexity of the details. And this is regardless of the size of the clapses themselves, which on individual products have quite considerable size and for obvious reasons for the usual hammer they are so easy to score.
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