Great skills on show there, and a marvellous result. Thanks for sharing!
Of the many restoration channels on Youtube this is probably one of the best:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PbIj7v5oFUE
The phrase 'I make a new one' has attained legedary status (along with the broken sand blaster switch).
Great skills on show there, and a marvellous result. Thanks for sharing!
F.T.F.A.
lovely to watch,thanks.although semi retired and having simular equipment in my workshop i never seem to get the time to do things just for pleasure..mind you i have a wolseley "sheep shearing"stationary engine that has been following me around for the last 40 years,will have to get around to sorting that.it has stamped on a plate "maximum 700 rpm"..
Weirdly, I watched this last night after discovering his channel a couple of weeks ago. It's a bit addictive. He has some serious skills, nice attention to detail (polished washers!) - and no annoying music.
Clickspring is another channel well worth watching (his clock-making vids are also addictive).
Stunning work. The video is all the better for no commentary or music.
Lovely, thanks for posting that. The soundtrack was an ASMR delight as well.
If you like that one he has a number of other videos which are worth watching:
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCMr...Wq26gqw/videos
I really enjoyed that, thank you.
Although no trees were harmed during the creation of this post, a large number of electrons were greatly inconvenienced.
Craftsmanship at its best. Very impressive.
Thanks for sharing.
Thank you for posting that. Awesome!
R
Ignorance breeds Fear. Fear breeds Hatred. Hatred breeds Ignorance. Break the chain.
I enjoyed that!
Have a couple of metal lathes, wood lathe and milling and plenty of projects and I’m electrical/ mechanical engineer trained
Must get started.....
Interestingly, the engineers vice the guy is using really is something special- Swiss made by Gressel - about £1000,iirc- probably more.
Last edited by GOAT; 15th November 2019 at 15:08.
I’ve got a bit addicted to these.
This one is a bit more hardcore,
from the Soviet school of mechanics.
https://youtu.be/vwLZUeaIR38
I’d be grateful if any metal working experts can tell me what he is doing when he wires up a biscuit tin full of acid to the car battery.
A great watch - I love seeing such skills being put to work. Thanks for posting