In this video, I restore a truly unique historical artifact — a rare German OVA lighter from 1908, manufactured in Berlin by Jacques & Heinrich Kellermann.
This lighter spent more than 100 years underground. It was discovered in Volyn (Lutsk region), Ukraine, at former World War I trench positions.
Since 1916, from the time of the Brusilov Offensive, it lay buried in the soil — and over decades, it fused together with a soldier’s dog tag into a single piece of metal.
I have never seen anything like this before.
⚔️ Historical context
The Brusilov Offensive was one of the largest and most devastating military operations of World War I.
Led by Russian General Aleksei Brusilov in 1916, it resulted in approximately 1.3 million casualties of the Austro-Hungarian Army over just three and a half months.
These positions became a graveyard for thousands of soldiers — and this lighter was lost here during that time.
🪖 The soldier’s dog tag
The dog tag was found in extremely poor condition. Time and corrosion had almost completely destroyed it.
It was entirely covered in rust, and no readable markings remained.
I was able to identify only a single digit — “1.”
I truly hoped I would be able to recover the full information, learn the soldier’s name, and possibly find his descendants to return this lighter — an artifact once carried by their great-grandfather.
Unfortunately, visual restoration alone made this impossible.
🔬 Searching for a name
I managed to arrange cooperation with an archaeological institute, where a lab specialist agreed to examine the dog tag using X-ray imaging.
There is still a chance that traces of the original stamp or engravings remain hidden in deeper metal layers.
The process is slow — the institute warned me in advance due to their workload — but I have not lost hope.
As soon as results become available, I will share them in the Community Posts section of my YouTube channel.
🔧 The restoration process
At first glance, the lighter appeared to be intact.
However, after separating it from the dog tag, I discovered severe through-corrosion across the body.
The restoration required:
🔧 soldering brass patches to seal through-holes,
🔧 filling small corrosion cavities with two-component metal epoxy,
🔧 applying a conductive graphite coating,
🔧 building up a reinforcing copper layer,
🔧 and finally plating the lighter with bright nickel, exactly as it was originally finished.
At first, the lighter would not open at all.
Every step was risky — the metal was extremely fragile, crumbling in my hands after a century underground.
I can honestly say this was one of the most difficult restorations I have ever done.
🔥 Final result
In the end, I didn’t just restore a lighter — I restored a piece of history.
This is one of the oldest lighters I have ever worked on, and for me this project is not only about metal and technique, but about the unknown soldier who once carried it in the trenches of World War I.
I still hope that X-ray analysis will help reveal his name, and that with the help of volunteers and archives, we may one day uncover his story — and perhaps even return this artifact to his family.
⭐ Please rate my work from 1 to 10 in the comments.
Let me know what you think — do you believe it’s still possible to identify the original owner?
📢 Help me reach 50,000 subscribers! Subscribe now — lots of exciting content ahead!
Also, I recommend watching this video.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uRVxQbTFiik&list=PLkz1fMey8ywf18AuHTP8nA8lAT0-SdBNpBecome a channel sponsor, and you'll gain access to exclusive bonuses.
Learn more:
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCxi-Dk2IiEHNeloaiRfqLzw/join🔧 Support the project and help me get a lathe:
https://ko-fi.com/reflameAlso, I recommend watching this video.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uRVxQbTFiik&list=PLkz1fMey8ywf18AuHTP8nA8lAT0-SdBNp#restoration #asmr #lighter #WW1