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1930s Rotary Jigsaw (Cutawl) [Restoration] 

Hand Tool Rescue
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This rotary jigsaw was also known as the Cutawl (Model K8). Based on the age of the motor and the history of patents on this machine, I believe it was made sometime in the 1930s. It had many other cutters available for cutting materials such as metal, wood, leather, fabric, drywall, and essentially anything else that is up to 1.25" thick and softer than hardened steel.
This restoration was a lengthly process as the motor needed work as well. I am stunned this motor eventually ran so well. There is zero play in any direction other than back and forth when I move the armature. For a motor that is ~85 years old, I was very surprised to see the bronze bushings having essentially no wear. It's possible they were replaced at one point.
After doing research on this tool and talking with some collectors and experts, I learned that there were certain parts that were fragile and prone to damage. The large wheel in the back is attached to the main shaft by a pin that does not go through the centre of the shaft, but is offset. This means that over time, the offset pin allowed the wheel to wear around the shaft and starting wobbling itself to the point of bending/breaking the shaft. I chose not to risk it and left the wheel as is.
While looking at a parts diagram of this tool, I decided it was too risky to try and hammer and pry off the rotary mechanism as it's filled with small steel balls and retainer rings. These two things are my enemies. All I do is loose them. The part works completely fine, so there is no reason to mess with it.
I could actually see myself using this tool for some applications. It has a very natural feel to controlling the direction of cut and I feel like I could be more accurate with this than a modern jigsaw.
Hopefully you get a chance to try one of these out one day!
Here is a link to all the materials the tool can cut: imgur.com/a/RDysJ
Thank you to Evapo-rust for sponsoring this video!
Help secure more tools for future videos (if you want): / handtoolrescue
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/ handtoolrescue

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19 июл 2017

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Комментарии : 3,1 тыс.   
@snorklewacker
@snorklewacker 3 года назад
‘Oil Reservoir’? Man, ‘goodbye’ sounds so much fancier in French. :)
@fernandoqueirozpopovic7024
@fernandoqueirozpopovic7024 3 года назад
I see what you did there
@jimbass7867
@jimbass7867 5 лет назад
Wow. I was highly impressed with your idea of remaking the hand knobs with Bondo. Excellent method- I doubt I would have thought of it myself. I was thinking you would laminate circles of black plastic and cut them down with a ball cutter on the lathe and then insert the brash thread boss with epoxy in an oversized hole. I actually stopped the video when you smashed the old ball and began trying to think up how I would have replaced it. I even thought of using billiard balls! Your method was simple, direct tough and worked out quite nicely. I make small movie props for movie productions and am surprised I did not think of using the Bondo trick. Very entertaining and instructive. However, I believe I would have turned and polished the commutator on the armature. I would have also shaped the brush contact ends. But, that turned out not to be overly important. You did, after all, break-in the brushes and the motor ran just fine. Also, I would have likely used lithium grease rather than Preparation-H, a vaseline based, low temp lube. But, holy crap- look at your results. Fantastic. Excellent rebuild. Congratulations on a job very well done.
@frankierzucekjr
@frankierzucekjr 2 года назад
Billiard balls is actually a great idea. He definitely make this look easy lol.
@theindigenouspothead4542
@theindigenouspothead4542 Год назад
Wow, I have one of these, it was my Grandfathers, then my Fathers, now mine, its in great shape as we take great care of all our tools!! Very nice restore!!
@PatIreland
@PatIreland 5 лет назад
What made the cutawl special was that the blade could rotate in 360* With the chisel blade, a lot of lexan material could be cut (even the middle of the letters) w/o picking up a drill. Inside corners could be cut TIGHT.
@joehunt3512
@joehunt3512 4 года назад
I trust an old farts recollection better than a manual
@suep9445
@suep9445 3 года назад
I noticed that - and now I want one...
@DeannaEarley
@DeannaEarley 2 года назад
Yeah, much more flexible than the current “fixed forward” jigsaws!
@Kilbot192
@Kilbot192 6 лет назад
These videos are so fun to watch. Great job!
@HandToolRescue
@HandToolRescue 6 лет назад
Thanks! They are fun to make.
@drummer_1315
@drummer_1315 6 лет назад
yes
@davisjames8484
@davisjames8484 6 лет назад
Hand Tool Rescue great job keep it up proud of you
@mr_paakjaergamlegmail8594
@mr_paakjaergamlegmail8594 6 лет назад
john papple iBook
@clarkhazle9629
@clarkhazle9629 6 лет назад
In a world of throw away stuff it is a pleasure to see these items brought back to life. Just shows the craftsmanship that went into them. A little TLC and they still work.
@Moacirlucas
@Moacirlucas 5 лет назад
Really liked the body filler knob. It was a simple solution instead of a "over worked clear epoxy/wood with a real scorpion in it" knob. Great video!
@BARTeNARUTO
@BARTeNARUTO 4 года назад
Plastic... I have been think to comment about this ... To be plastic free he had to make knob whit wood...
@DasShaten
@DasShaten 4 года назад
Look if you know where to get an epoxy handle with a scorpion in it.... I need links is all i'm saying....
@KR-hg8be
@KR-hg8be 4 года назад
@@DasShaten first one must catch a scorpion. Then the journey may begin....
@mjbirdClavdivs
@mjbirdClavdivs 4 года назад
I think you did an amazing job, and that's a wonderful tool with the blade rotation rather than rotating the body of the tool! The only thing I wished you'd done was run a ground wire to the base plate (inside the switch box). With all that metal, a ground is really a good idea. Thanks for doing this one!
@gabrielsyme4180
@gabrielsyme4180 2 года назад
I bought one to rebuild. Planning on adding a ground.
@youtubeyoutube7086
@youtubeyoutube7086 6 лет назад
The best 23 minutes on RU-vid
@randomsecrets
@randomsecrets 6 лет назад
I have to admit, using bondo to make new knobs was a fantastic idea - Kudo's to you
@GetItDoneProjects
@GetItDoneProjects 5 лет назад
Yah, blew my mind. I"m gonna rewatch this with my kids just for that moment.
@Louie42969
@Louie42969 5 лет назад
I have a Cutawl K-11 in the shop, I use it to cut gaskets with a circle cutter attachment. They're great tools. Great restoration!
@TangoDownProduction
@TangoDownProduction 3 года назад
When you smashed that ball with the hammer, I almost spit coffee all over my monitor. That was not just a surprise, but hilarious as well. Love your channel. Thank you for the content!
@cjserf2939
@cjserf2939 6 лет назад
Thanks for not putting some free crap background music on, it is much nicer to watch a video without that constant audio harassment.
@VHflyboy
@VHflyboy 6 лет назад
You mean you don't listen to royalty-free youtube music for fun?
@MmmChipotle
@MmmChipotle 6 лет назад
VHflyboy hahahha
@RHBengal
@RHBengal 6 лет назад
ditto!
@MrDanbecker
@MrDanbecker 6 лет назад
Agree
@CiscoWes
@CiscoWes 6 лет назад
You don't like Kevin Macleod - Scheming Weasel? It's on a whole lot of videos as background music.
@knightwizaed6921
@knightwizaed6921 5 лет назад
Incredibly satisfying and relaxing watching someone restore
@satt131313
@satt131313 5 лет назад
The nice thing about old tools and objects was they were made to be taken apart and repaired.
@WildeFyre69
@WildeFyre69 5 лет назад
If I had not seen it with my own 2 eyes, I would not have believed how you fashioned that ball. Amazing. Thanks for another great video!
@MakingStuff
@MakingStuff 6 лет назад
Another beautiful tool brought back to life. Awesome!
@k.mydeenk.mydeen7076
@k.mydeenk.mydeen7076 6 лет назад
Hai
@SUMANGUPTA-xm7jd
@SUMANGUPTA-xm7jd 5 лет назад
NOT beautiful
@SVTJD
@SVTJD 5 лет назад
If your profile pic is of you, you look like a serial killer
@rbmk__1000
@rbmk__1000 3 года назад
I allways wanted a sewing machine that could cut wood
@lemau8458
@lemau8458 3 года назад
amazing stuff buddy
@scottcates
@scottcates Год назад
This is easily the second-best sewing maching router on RU-vid
@KLP99
@KLP99 3 года назад
In reference to you being told not to remove the fragile wheel, I can attest that many "experts" deal with idiots constantly, so have become accustomed to telling everyone not to do this or that because only someone with their expertise and skill can accomplish such a delicate task. I've learned that an equal percentage of them are idiots themselves and have broken things they arrogantly believed only they could work on successfully. The moral to that story is, you always need to know the source of your information. That's especially true with the current methodology of education doled out at the university level. Trade schools are where you actually learn useful life skills. I guess that's why Mike Rowe is giving scholarships to those who attend trade school instead of the university. So, keep fixing things the experts can't fix, because it's just too difficult for them to do. We love watching you do the impossible. At least the impossible to those who can't think and don't understand the physics behind what they are doing. Thank you for sharing your gift with us. Oh, and my wife thinks I can fix anything. Just yesterday she told me I could fix the plastic lid to her mixer that broke in two pieces. I might, but is it worth it? To help her be happy with her husband of 43 years, it might be, but frankly, the time it would take me will cost more in lost revenue were I to work a little overtime than the price of a new mixer. Now to sell her on that idea. Not an easy sell... The type of plastic they make those lids out of requires more than I wish to worry about, especially since we lost the piece that broke off, and it contains half of the hinge. One thing I do is buy old, broken grass rakes if they are steel. Why? Because the steel "teeth" in the rakes can be used to make smaller tools, such as locksmith rakes, which I need now and then (hobbyist, not professional) and for this project, new blades.
@bashkillszombies
@bashkillszombies 3 года назад
Nah this guy is deffo an idiot. Check all his content, 20-50% downvotes because he ruins antiques and calls it 'restoration'.
@sube1988
@sube1988 6 лет назад
Every single time you getting better and better love it thanks bro great job keep it up!!!
@HandToolRescue
@HandToolRescue 6 лет назад
Thank you! This one took a lot of work.
@TheKNOTTYMAN
@TheKNOTTYMAN 6 лет назад
PrepH?
@lar10101
@lar10101 6 лет назад
shark's liver oil
@RFDeadKey
@RFDeadKey 6 лет назад
Lol I was just watching waterjet cutting when they had a prewar mechanical press can you fix that😀
@robbaiahsu
@robbaiahsu 6 лет назад
G o
@t.j.mckenna8263
@t.j.mckenna8263 6 лет назад
I wouldn't have given that thing a second look in the trash. If I had it after you restored it I would never let it go.
@tonyday7233
@tonyday7233 4 года назад
Nice machine, Nice job, i love the method of making the new knob, the preparation H helps the machine do piles of work. excellent. Tony, Australia.
@DavidFlores-cz4vu
@DavidFlores-cz4vu 3 года назад
How flammable is this guy's workbench at this point?
@greghanlon2235
@greghanlon2235 5 лет назад
Amazing transformation from back when Black & Decker was a quality brand.
@jxavier3876
@jxavier3876 4 года назад
Greg Hanlon I mean this is a a useless tool nowadays
@Impreza_S206
@Impreza_S206 4 года назад
now its just crappy cheapo plastic sold at target
@Cloudslinger
@Cloudslinger 6 лет назад
Was falling asleep to this video and the "fragile alert" about killed me!
@HandToolRescue
@HandToolRescue 6 лет назад
+Cloudslinger You have no idea how much pleasure comments like this give me.
@jurjanatimmermans
@jurjanatimmermans 6 лет назад
I had same problem lol greetings from Belgium
@IvayloMarkovski
@IvayloMarkovski 6 лет назад
almost died lol
@gile849
@gile849 6 лет назад
I have mini stroke
@gianbattista
@gianbattista 6 лет назад
ritorna a dormire tanto quello sai fare
@scyther1141
@scyther1141 6 лет назад
You really deserve more subs these are great videos.
@HandToolRescue
@HandToolRescue 6 лет назад
+scyther1 Thank you! I already have way way more subs than I ever thought possible.
@mrhutt857
@mrhutt857 6 лет назад
And now you have another. That was amazing. I restore antique locks as a hobby, and your video gave me some great insight into restoration techniques that do no harm. Thank you!
@Zaque-TV
@Zaque-TV 2 года назад
I love watching these old tools have their souls restored.
@tribblebooth1224
@tribblebooth1224 5 лет назад
Gunk. I cleaned the engine bay of my car with the stuff, and the results were amazing, but it was few months before the smell finally disappeared! Great video! *****
@almeyer405
@almeyer405 6 лет назад
Very nice restoration! One thing I would have liked to have seen is the use of braided cloth covered wire instead of the lamp cord, but all in all very nice!
@Yoursoul101
@Yoursoul101 6 лет назад
Finally. A practical solution to cutting cardboard.
@ramabary
@ramabary 5 лет назад
I use scissor.
@dmandc
@dmandc 5 лет назад
He was joking
@drwhoscumrag
@drwhoscumrag 5 лет назад
r/whoosh
@3-body-problem
@3-body-problem 5 лет назад
I'm still using my pet piranha, Chompy.
@wray1104
@wray1104 5 лет назад
While I expect that was intended as sarcasm, you're absolutely right - The CutAwl was intended for exactly that kind of use - on a scale that you couldn't accomplish easily with scissors or a hand-held knife: Think set and prop-making for theaters, stencils for painted billboards, etc. It's impractical to cut that kind of thing with hand-powered tools, and, it's also impractical to elevate them on stands to make clearance for a long penetrating blade like a normal jig-saw uses. The CutAwl can be adjusted so that you can just lay a sheet of material on the floor and drive it around to cut your design, without damaging the floor underneath.
@denaredford6701
@denaredford6701 5 лет назад
I think it’s amazing how you don’t forget how to put it back together. Good job
@lurezpe8655
@lurezpe8655 5 лет назад
The video...
@takleung7130
@takleung7130 2 года назад
And I thought lighting on power tools were a relatively new thing. Learned something new today! Thank you! BTW that jigsaw is amazing. Why don't they have something like that today?
@snelgrave101
@snelgrave101 2 года назад
Because no-one cares these days, the buyer doesn't care if he gets crap items so the manufacturer doesn't care about churning out utter shite, no quality control anywhere these days, sad but very very true.
@joedzuanirharun3284
@joedzuanirharun3284 6 лет назад
These is one restoration masterpiece I ever watch. It's not easy to do it. You are like Picasso doing art!
@franciscosalamanca8174
@franciscosalamanca8174 5 лет назад
Joe Galaxy Harun Que buen trabajo saludes🇨🇴
@kuplung22
@kuplung22 5 лет назад
Not bad,but you must see this guy ru-vid.com/show-UCMrMVIBtqFW6O0-MWq26gqw
@ptyo3892
@ptyo3892 5 лет назад
Yeah...I am agreed. Not only a highly skill, he also have magnificent sense of art....👍👍
@picax8398
@picax8398 6 лет назад
yay HTR uploaded!
@KPearce57
@KPearce57 5 лет назад
US Patent: 1,492,554 Scroll-cutting machine Patentee: Vincent Colby - Chicago, IL USPTO Classifications: 30/164.9, 30/275 Tool Categories: woodworking machines : handheld power tools : handheld jigsaws woodworking machines : reciprocating saws : handheld jigsaws Assignees: International Register Co. - Chicago, IL Manufacturer: International Register Co. - Chicago, IL Witnesses: Unknown Patent Dates: Applied: Jan. 19, 1921 Granted: May 06, 1924
@micuentaparaforosycosas3484
@micuentaparaforosycosas3484 5 лет назад
Nice vid: .- Nice job, .- No boring words, .- AND NO ANNOYING MUSIC! (Thank you very much for that!)
@AUSSIEMADMATT
@AUSSIEMADMATT 6 лет назад
Well done mate, we need more people like you in this world!
@user-km8zs2lh1c
@user-km8zs2lh1c 4 года назад
Все таки,до середины 70х годов прошлого века,инструменты делали не только вечные,но и красивые. Мастеру-респект и уважуха!
@elpaso--west7354
@elpaso--west7354 5 лет назад
WONDERFUL VIDEO,I LOVE OLD TOOLS AND MOTORS--HAVE A FEW..THANKS FOR THE VIDEO...
@georgebrown8312
@georgebrown8312 Год назад
That is really splendid how you restored that rotary jigsaw to working order. You got it looking a lot better as well. Great work.
@RIOHOTRIO
@RIOHOTRIO 6 лет назад
Beautiful job! That’ll last another 100 years!
@SUMANGUPTA-xm7jd
@SUMANGUPTA-xm7jd 5 лет назад
It won't make past one of it's used
@csorrows
@csorrows 5 лет назад
Not with Preparation H in the crank case it won't. WTF.
@larrypostma2866
@larrypostma2866 5 лет назад
csorrows better than that Nutella that can e out of it
@quibster
@quibster 6 лет назад
truly a beauty, a bonny and a joy for all
@JDevine687
@JDevine687 6 лет назад
Hello uncle bumblefcuk!
@michaelcolgan3182
@michaelcolgan3182 2 года назад
wonderful job as usual. Im 66 and never seen one before
@artszabo1015
@artszabo1015 2 года назад
Preparation H for grease?? Body putty knobs? You got me again young fella. Congratulations, I really love the knobs. What they lack in durability is balanced by their ease of replacement. Just genius. Art
@MrREMEKIN
@MrREMEKIN 5 лет назад
For me it's like an old movie... One, that you saw dozen or maybe hundred of times... You already know how it will ends... but you can't simply stop watching.
@Kayaz48
@Kayaz48 4 года назад
These are just so satisfying to watch! Especially at the end when you get a working antique.
@daviddonaghy6494
@daviddonaghy6494 3 года назад
tim kenney I’m a working antique.
@user-cc4xz3ib7w
@user-cc4xz3ib7w 5 лет назад
Всё таки у старых машин есть какой-то шарм и породистость! Делали основательно и красиво. Реставратору респект!
@douglaspierce316
@douglaspierce316 4 года назад
when tools were built to last. you only had to buy one to work your lifetime. then someone else used it again. I still like to take thing apart to see how they work. love your show and my little wrench. need big one in the future. thanks for the show
@Rob.Coleman
@Rob.Coleman 6 лет назад
Nice job, I used to use a very similar Cutawl (albeit a newer model). It was the rotary diemakers saw of choice way before lasers were affordable. Great to see it back in action 👍
@MichaelMacGyver
@MichaelMacGyver 6 лет назад
Somebody needs to tell the Evapo-Rust folks that you're in the pocket of Big Bondo ;)
@machobunny1
@machobunny1 4 года назад
Now there is a tool that I'd probably use several times on just about every project I get into. Really a clever, unique and useful tool for detail cutting. Well Done.
@Bk99JzM
@Bk99JzM 4 года назад
Witam!!Renowacja wyrzynarki z dawnych lat wyglada jak nowa ,bedzie dalej sluzyc,rzetelnosc i cierpliwosc daje dobry efekt,dobry pokaz filmu ,tak trzymac!!
@WooShell
@WooShell 5 лет назад
If only you had repaired the lamp holder as well.. such a great restoration effort, and then you stop five minutes before the masterpiece is finished..
@marcmckenzie5110
@marcmckenzie5110 5 лет назад
Somehow I had missed this fantastic restoration! There is so much good here, in the history, the technical aspect, and you are telling the project through video which you do so well. The best part for me was the peek-a-boo surprise near the end when you show the steam-engine style cam action which is such beautiful movement, but certainly envisioning and executing the Bondo handles was impressive. As a fellow restorer, I appreciated all the embedded tips. Thank you!
@greghoward756
@greghoward756 3 месяца назад
I used a Cutawl right up to retirement age when working in CBC Art Department. A great tool for fine detail work . Using the rotating saw blade with a forward motion of the machine took time to learn, but was amazing after. Although ours was a later model, (50s/60s? ), it was black, not brown. Fine job restoring though!!
@BC-kx5zb
@BC-kx5zb 5 лет назад
Back in the day when you bought tools or equipment they were made to last, they were expensive AF! But you got what you paid for. All you had to do was maintain it and use it for its purpose. And it would last forever. Now we have circuit boards and plastic in the simplest of things. Use it once and it's broken. This guy does amazing work!
@Carnac311
@Carnac311 6 лет назад
Just stumbled upon your channel by total accident, so glad I did. You're an embodiment of what makes youtube great as a medium, thank you. Modern power tools are great and all and offer great flexibility due to battery power, often offer more options that old tools etc, but realistically speaking they are mostly "plastic crap" and tools won't be around in 85 years (and wouldn't be worth/impossible to restore then). Very different story for a tool like this cutawl. Also, will you be my friend when the zombie apocalypse comes?
@MegaQuadguy
@MegaQuadguy 5 лет назад
I hate these comments about all tools being plastic crap, you know what nothing has changed the covers went from tin to plastic and stoppers went from leather to rubber. You want a good quality tool spend good money.
@jakeoutdoors9600
@jakeoutdoors9600 6 лет назад
I have never seen one of those before. Fantastic job!!!
@nickblakemore3643
@nickblakemore3643 3 года назад
THE TWO TONES OF BROWN WAS A GREAT CHOICE. REALLY LIKE IT. I WOULD'VE NEVER THOUGHT OF THAT MYSELF WHEN CHOOSING WHAT COLOR TO PAINT IT.
@bellameigg7595
@bellameigg7595 4 года назад
I watch a lot of these videos with my husband, and most are pretty interesting to me. But what I was really excited about it I was born and raised in the small town of kent ohio!! I live down south now, but it always fansanates me the time and effort you put in to your work!! Thanks for the continuous great watch!!!!
@shakdidagalimal
@shakdidagalimal 4 года назад
That has an amazing amount of little parts and machine holes and dealies for a 1930's tool.
@adurpina
@adurpina 5 лет назад
Hows great & nice sharing this video thanks!!
@PsycoDad1604
@PsycoDad1604 4 года назад
By all means, this thing looks like a transformed sewing machine. Very nice job, good that this kind of history do not rots away in a barn or gets thrown away. Thanks for sharing
@FuneralK9
@FuneralK9 5 лет назад
Really cool to see how machinery used to be designed and how it functioned. Then you think about how much more difficult things used to be and how easy we have it now.
@Painless61
@Painless61 6 лет назад
I like to see your work ... how you handle old mashines and how they look after you had them in you Hands ... awesome Job ... again ... 👍🏽
@karloherceg7514
@karloherceg7514 6 лет назад
Joe Kerr true
@OsmosisHD
@OsmosisHD 6 лет назад
Foam ear plugs... Why did I never think of using that. Thank you! Bet it creates a much better seal then what I was using often to plug holes before painting, Toilet paper.
@jonashaus6921
@jonashaus6921 5 лет назад
This is one of the coolest little machines i've ever seen!
@nguyenbatung2772
@nguyenbatung2772 4 года назад
Now I knew about first 20's century equipments. Great!! Thank for your videos
@DonGorm
@DonGorm 6 лет назад
AvE are you here? Look at this man, he is fixing stuff !
@stanleyroberts801
@stanleyroberts801 6 лет назад
Green. Air. Denailer
@dregenius
@dregenius 6 лет назад
How flammable is this guy's workbench at this point?
@76thMarauder
@76thMarauder 6 лет назад
Very...
@dreadmireironbound8418
@dreadmireironbound8418 6 лет назад
Mauro Molinero Its more likely to explode into a giant fireball
@tpobrienjr
@tpobrienjr 6 лет назад
SHH, it's a secret offshore site unknown to EPA or OSHA, or EU. He keeps it warm by burning MSDS.
@Panda-qs1sh
@Panda-qs1sh 6 лет назад
Its over 9000
@tiheich
@tiheich 6 лет назад
9:47 Well that's dangerous enough
@rodneyfrost1674
@rodneyfrost1674 3 года назад
Excellent. A real restoration is why I really like watching your work. In restoration a thing should look like it just came out of the shop, no improvements, just the honest truth of this how it was before it got into the mess it's in now. A pleasure to behold your work, sir. Thanks.
@rodneydelaney9227
@rodneydelaney9227 4 года назад
Love it. Great example of a restoration. Especially liked the bondo Knobs. 👍
@TimothyMichaels
@TimothyMichaels 6 лет назад
Beautiful
@richardmattingly7000
@richardmattingly7000 5 лет назад
Nice, it looks like it might of have been a pattern cutter from the clothing/leather good industry where they stacked multiple layers and it's razor sharp blade could follow contours easily.
@kellyhill1265
@kellyhill1265 Год назад
I’ve seen you do a lot of ingenious things while watching your videos but the way you made those two handles out of Bondo was just over the top fantastic.seeing that confirms it for me that you can fix anything.
@allenbuck5589
@allenbuck5589 3 года назад
Way better tool then what they make now. Lots of engineering and well designed. Semper fi
@phayzyre1052
@phayzyre1052 5 лет назад
Preparation H as a substitute for grease!!?? That's a first for me. Nice video by the way.
@wilsoncalhoun
@wilsoncalhoun 4 года назад
The cooling and anti-inflammatory properties help keep high-speed, high-friction machine parts well within tolerances.
@tommypetraglia4688
@tommypetraglia4688 4 года назад
It's an emoillient with lubricating properties, really any similar "preparation" would do but he was just messin' with us knowin some would think it's special then go tell their machinist old uncle ... lol👍😃
@ChuckHickl
@ChuckHickl 4 года назад
Well you sound fortunate enough to have never had to use it. Otherwise, you'd know. Lots of maintenance wipes during a day of usage.
@edop6450
@edop6450 6 лет назад
An absolute delight to watch.
@HandToolRescue
@HandToolRescue 6 лет назад
+Ed Op Thank you!
@SUMANGUPTA-xm7jd
@SUMANGUPTA-xm7jd 5 лет назад
NOT
@billymayhem667
@billymayhem667 3 года назад
Kent, Ohio....my hometown! Nice work as always.
@hurst2385
@hurst2385 4 года назад
The best thing I've seen black and Decker make.
@nicholastriana5803
@nicholastriana5803 6 лет назад
seriously my favorite youtube channel to watch. keep up the awesome vids man
@HandToolRescue
@HandToolRescue 6 лет назад
Thank you! Maybe one day I'll restore my life.
@nicholastriana5803
@nicholastriana5803 6 лет назад
+Hand Tool Rescue all you need for that is Nutella👍
@coxie230179
@coxie230179 6 лет назад
Nicholas Triana i may have to agree with you on that one.
@nicholastriana5803
@nicholastriana5803 6 лет назад
+stuart cox hahaha hey can't get any better than Nutella
@jimlondon1
@jimlondon1 6 лет назад
great job. I really like watching your videos as there is no talk, just action and you are very skilled. I have a 1970s hilti hammer drill lying in the corner of my shed if you want it?
@elshaghol9432
@elshaghol9432 6 лет назад
James Healy i want it 😂
@babbetto1
@babbetto1 5 лет назад
You are, if nothing else, insanely thorough.
@manolo5914
@manolo5914 4 года назад
Esta es una restauración de las mejores que he visto. No como algunos que ensucian un ventilador,lo limpian y listo....... Enhorabuena,me quito el sombrero...
@Joannesyoga
@Joannesyoga 5 лет назад
Very good, and thanks for showing the machine being used at the end too.
@nadinerisse6927
@nadinerisse6927 5 лет назад
Oh I love the colours. It looks like it came directly from the factory. It is so beautyful. Really good job sir 😊😊😊❤
@HandToolRescue
@HandToolRescue 5 лет назад
Thank you!
@anthonypapadopoulos8662
@anthonypapadopoulos8662 2 года назад
I was half asleep watching this and chilling and then the warning sound happened.
@Bk99JzM
@Bk99JzM 5 лет назад
Witam!!Dokladna i rzetelna renowacja urzadzenia do ciecia roznych materialow!!Cierpliwoscprzynosi pozadany efekt!Bedzie dalej sluzyc!!Dobry pokaz filmowy!!Tak trzymac...
@jamesbarisitz4794
@jamesbarisitz4794 5 лет назад
Here's a tip on re-creating the ball. Instead of blobs of bondo on a board - Find a hollow plastic ball (ping pong, tennis , etc. and fill it with bondo) Spray WD-40 into your ball mold before squeezing in the bondo from a loaded plastic freezer bag. When cured, grind a flat spot on the cured ball you've cut out of the mold. Drill and tap. -Yay!
@Thunderstixx77
@Thunderstixx77 4 года назад
That's a great idea !!!
@tommypetraglia4688
@tommypetraglia4688 4 года назад
@@Thunderstixx77 Thought exactly the samr thing two but ping pongs are too small and hunting down a pair of the right sized hillow balls as well as mold material to use golf balls is kinda a pain. This was a case of Occam's Razor where the most simplest answer no matter how obvious is usually the correct choice. So using everything on hand... a board, and a bit of extra time finishing, that's all... he Hobo Hacked it and got exactly what he needed, no compromise, no fuss and maybe a little muss
@SeaCowsBeatLobsters
@SeaCowsBeatLobsters 3 года назад
Or buy plastic roundstock
@Fedor_Murzov
@Fedor_Murzov 5 лет назад
в хорошее время живём, современный инструмент, химия всякая разная, молодец дядька дай бог тебе здоровья.
@Ness1279
@Ness1279 4 года назад
Фёдор Мурзов - In English, please
@thebatman911
@thebatman911 5 лет назад
One of the greatest videos ever! Your skills are sublime!
@cecilgore495
@cecilgore495 2 года назад
I live very near the city of Kent where the motor was made. You work very quickly and skillfully, always enjoy your work.
@BlackringIII
@BlackringIII 3 года назад
The shade of "poo brown" you used on the tool is really quite charming, not something you see often in restorations.
@wyattshelton2080
@wyattshelton2080 2 года назад
He almost always matches original colors. The company must've like poop
@ershvv7567
@ershvv7567 5 лет назад
применение в мастерской под сомнением ,вот в музей загнать...респект мастеру!
@ogiahuy8378
@ogiahuy8378 5 лет назад
BÔN12310🖒🖒🖒🖒🖒🖒🖒🖒🖒🖒🖒🖒🖒🖒🖒🖒🖒🖒🖒🖒🖒
@Yadryon_Bobyor
@Yadryon_Bobyor 4 года назад
эл. лобзик.
@witblitsfilm
@witblitsfilm 5 лет назад
I've just discovered these restoration videos and MAN are they relaxing and satisfying. Yours are some of the best, as are "my mechanics" (although he only has a few).
@tenchuu007
@tenchuu007 5 лет назад
This is one of my favorites of yours. Just a great little machine.
@donparker8246
@donparker8246 6 лет назад
I really enjoy your videos. Taking something old and making it look new AND functional again is just awesome. Keep it up :-)
@nicholasofalexandria1286
@nicholasofalexandria1286 6 лет назад
Everything back then was designed and built so much better.... Maybe not from a safety perspective, but man, they were rugged machines.
@jaytonhawkins2872
@jaytonhawkins2872 6 лет назад
Actually, if you think about it, the only machines we see around these days are the ones that were built to last. There was plenty of junk, it just didn't last long enough for us to see it.
@Atticblur
@Atticblur 6 лет назад
Reminds me of music.
@jaytonhawkins2872
@jaytonhawkins2872 6 лет назад
Atticblur Exactly. There's plenty of bad music from "back in the day" but we only remember the good stuff. Likewise, there's plenty of good music being made right now.
@shuhood3763
@shuhood3763 6 лет назад
Jayton Hawkns that is true, therefore the phrase 'old is gold' is not true
@terribledotjpg7330
@terribledotjpg7330 6 лет назад
It may have been built better. But it wasn't designed better. The reason these things last forever is because they're chunky cast metal pieces of very basic engineering. The motor's power is directed through a shaft to the a rotating piece to move the blade. If you got this thing's equivalent now it would be half the size and have a gear box for speed control. And also be produced in such a way to reduce cost as much as possible, while still being somewhat sturdy. Not to mention it would also be half this thing's weight. They didn't make it that way by choice either, the only real plastics that they had were natural polymers that needed to farmed, and bakelite. Because of that you can see that the motor winding's are covered in really old nasty natural lacquer. This thing also would've cost you an arm and a dick back when it was new. Most people don't really realize that, these things were not in the same price range as what we have now. For a chainsaw you could be paying $1000+ modern day equivalent money because everything was a chunk of metal that need to be shaped by hand. But you payed it because you were positive this thing would last you the rest of your life. While now you can buy 5 chainsaws before you spend the same kind of money. Of course, you probably will buy 5 chainsaws over your life because everything is cheap it's not really worth fixing.
@antonov5170
@antonov5170 3 года назад
Офигеть. Высший класс. Сейчас такое не купишь. Тебе в мастерскую в самый раз.
@johnkinnane547
@johnkinnane547 4 года назад
G’day another fantastic job the making of the balls was something else. Good one John😊😎
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