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Old School Restoration
United Kingdom
เข้าร่วมเมื่อ 30 ก.ค. 2022
Welcome to Old School Restoration!
I am right at the begining of my restoration journey on TH-cam! Please subscribe and leave a thumbs up!
I have been restoring and fixing things, and taking things apart and putting them back together my whole life but now I finally have a decent workshop it's time to share my work with the world!
I already have a whole rusty toolbox full of tools to restore and I am always on the lookout for anything interesting to work on, if you have any restoration ideas please let me know, the rustier the better!
Please let me know your thoughts on my work and videos so far, ideas for the next restoration project, and any improvements you would like to see in my restoration videos!
Thanks for watching!!!
I am right at the begining of my restoration journey on TH-cam! Please subscribe and leave a thumbs up!
I have been restoring and fixing things, and taking things apart and putting them back together my whole life but now I finally have a decent workshop it's time to share my work with the world!
I already have a whole rusty toolbox full of tools to restore and I am always on the lookout for anything interesting to work on, if you have any restoration ideas please let me know, the rustier the better!
Please let me know your thoughts on my work and videos so far, ideas for the next restoration project, and any improvements you would like to see in my restoration videos!
Thanks for watching!!!
Restoration of a 100 year old Victorian Bean Slicer, Antique to Awesome!
Restoration of a 1900 - 1930 Victorian bean slicer!
I found this rutsy bean slicer on ebay and decided to give it an Old School Restoration.
I used simple techniques to give the old treasure a new lease of lease and the final paint job brings this bean slicer up to date!
With the blades sharpened all the rust removed will this old kitchen gadget slice beans once more?
Watch to find out!
Enjoy the restoraion and pleae leave a comment with any questions or any ideas for my next restoration project!
Thanks for watching!
I found this rutsy bean slicer on ebay and decided to give it an Old School Restoration.
I used simple techniques to give the old treasure a new lease of lease and the final paint job brings this bean slicer up to date!
With the blades sharpened all the rust removed will this old kitchen gadget slice beans once more?
Watch to find out!
Enjoy the restoraion and pleae leave a comment with any questions or any ideas for my next restoration project!
Thanks for watching!
มุมมอง: 3 122
วีดีโอ
I Brought This RUSTY Wrench Back to LIFE with a MIRROR FINISH!
มุมมอง 4.2K3 หลายเดือนก่อน
I have had this rusty pipe wrench for a very long time and it was about time it had an Old School Restoration! I disasembled this and drilled out the rivets, then I used evaporust to remove the rust. Once cleaned up I began the restoration, filling, sanding and lots of polishing, then tapping holes to replace rivets with machine screws. Finally picking out some detail with red paint. I was pret...
BEAUTIFUL Stanley Plane Restoration!
มุมมอง 17K3 หลายเดือนก่อน
I picked this rusty Stanley plane up for £18 at a car boot sale in the UK a few years ago. It was about time it had an Old School Restoration! I began disassembly which was fairly straight forward except a couple of points where I had to use an impact driver to remove rusted in screws on the handle and the frog adjustment. I tried electrolysis for rust removal, but there was some rust left so t...
I tried 3 Rust Removal methods! Plus FULL RESTORATION #restoration
มุมมอง 3.1K3 หลายเดือนก่อน
I tried 3 Rust Removal methods! Plus FULL RESTORATION #restoration
CAMMO FINISH - 1936 Air Ministry Spanner Restoration!
มุมมอง 1.8K3 หลายเดือนก่อน
This is an Air Ministry spanner from 1936. The Air Ministry was the pre-runner to the Royal Air Force in the UK. All tools of the Minstry were stamped with the crown and the date at the time. I found this rusty spanner on ebay and though it was worthy of an Old School Restoration and little bit of fun on the paint job! I hope you can still see it!!! For the rust removal I used evaporust and the...
Green beans and fingers
Mostly fingers!
Fingers
Yes!
Broad Beans
@@GLFiveGaming and 🤘
Be careful boiling linseed oil. It’s unpredictably combustible.
Thanks for the warning. I actually bought pre boiled to avoid that danger, I also left the rags outside, spreadout to dry out before binning. You never know! Thanks for the comment!
🥃👍👏🥃👍👏🥃👍👏🥃👍👏🥃👍🥃👍👏🥃👍👏
I would have used black on the lettering rather than white.
Yes that would have looked good! thanks for the comment.
The Victorian era was between 1837 and 1901.
It was you have a great memory!
ตรงจุดครับผม😮สีเดิมสวยจากดวงตาแรกเห็นสีของเหล็ก😮เท่ดึงดูดสายตา😮ไม่ได้ดูเก่าเก็บสนิมเพียบ😮❤
Thanks for the comment!
You earned a new subscriber !! I enjoyed your work very much !! I am on board !! 👍👍
Welcome aboard! Thanks alot, glad you enjoyed it! Much appreciated!
𝗥𝗲𝘀𝘁𝗮𝘂𝗿𝗮𝗱𝗼 𝗰𝗼𝗿𝘁𝗮𝗱𝗼𝗿 𝗱𝗲 𝗳𝗲𝗶𝗷𝗮̃𝗼 😉
Thanks!
Magnificent job you did restoring the bean slicer. It looks much better and it works like a charm too. Excellent work as usual.
Thanks for that! Much appreciated! I was supprised how well it worked, it's now in the kitchen ready for the next batch of beans!
Very nice work and better than new 👍👍👍
Thanks for that and for the comment! Much appreciated!
That's cool. I Love the old agriculture machines. They just have such a great look to them. That came out Awesome!
Hey, Thanks much, I took a gamble with the yellow but I think it just about worked out! Glad you enjoyed! I am planning a Record 84 vice next.
I like it, nice job, looks great, works well. Thanks for the video, enjoyed watching.
Hey thanks for the comment! Much appreciated, glad you enjoyed it!
Was it definitely the vinegar, was the pitting not already there ? I've had some good results with it ? Not used it recently and I can't remember how long I left it
Hi there, yes pretty sure it was the vinegar, I left it too long probably, over 24 hours, I think a couple of hours would have been ok, but it just ate the metal by the time I went back to it the next day! I will have another go at it, but check each hour. Thanks for the comment!
This will be an AWESOME addition to your 'so you don't wanna come off ehh? FINE! I have a wrench that will 'persuade' your attitude!' wrench collection!
Right now, even ScoutCrafter is saying 'DANG THAT'S SHINEY'!!!
It is! its already scared off a few nuts!
@@AndyM. Ha! Thanks now that would be cool!
Wow I have restored 5 planes but this gives me new Ideas to do it better. Thank you.
Thanks for the comment! Glad to help, good luck!
I really loved this video, so good and the Plane looks just amazing 🙏 respect Jako 🙏
Glad you enjoyed it! Thanks for the comment!
Loved it ❤ Liked & subscribed 😊
Thanks for that! Much appreciated 👍
Beautiful work 👏🏻
Thanks, much appreciated 👍, and thanks for the comment!
Cracking restoration. I’ve just been given a Stanley plane from my Dad and am planning on giving it a quick once over. Maybe not quite to this standard but very satisfying to see what can be done 🙌🏼
Thanks, give it a go, just take your time, and work on each piece, no real specialist tools needed, I only really had the polisher, and that really only speeds up the final polish. Its basically time! Enjoy the process, and your Dad's plane can easily come out as good!
@@OldSchoolResto thanks, I’ve got some polishing discs for my air sander, so I might have to give it a polish too.
Wow amazing bro 👍👍👍👍👍
Thanks for the watch bro!
Nice restoration. Excelente restauración.
Thanks, and thanks for the comment!
Nicely done! Nothing like the old tools.
You got that right! Thanks for the comment!
Marvelous restoration job you did on the old plane. It looks much better than before and it works like a charm after you sharpened and adjusted the blade. Excellent work.
@@georgebrown8312 thanks, much appreciated! Thanks for the watch and the comment!
One thing, flattening the sole should only be done with the blade and it's parts installed.
Thanks for the watch and the comment. I did give it another go after assembly, but didn't film it.
What a lovely tool!
Thanks, and thanks for the comment and the watch!
Excellent restoration, like the way you went about the whole process. You have turned that into a beautiful, and usable plane, must be a pleasure to use. Thanks for the video, enjoyed watching.
Hey thanks for the comment! It really is a pleasure to use, it feels totally solid and has a real weight to it, planes lovely, it almost glides along! Glad you enjoyed the video too! I am probably going to be doing my record vice from around 1953 next. I use it all the time but it needs new jaws and some soft jaws I can clip in, or easily swap out. And some kind of base so I can move it on the bench somehow.
Great job, but why leave the plane body unprotected from rust and not repair the crack in the knob?
Hi There, thanks! The inside of the plane body, and the frog got three coats of boiled linseed oil, that dries and forms a layer which will prevent rust, it's like a vey thin resin when it dries, you can feel it on there, it will need coating again, eventually. The outside of the plane body has loads of polishing compound still on it which again will protect from rust. When that wears off with use I will rub paste wax into it every 6 months or so, that will keep it rust free. The crack on the knob, excellent question! I went round and round with that! The issue was it was so dry, like a bone, so it needed soaking in oil, and that expands the wood, so if I filled it first I was worried that the wood would expand and the filler wouldn't and so it might crack all the way though. So I soaked it first, then my concern was that the filler wouldn't adhere to the wood with the oil on, and I thought the wood may contract again. In the end I went for no filler so the it can expand and contract with no issue. With it oiled it does now feel more stable! Thanks for the watch and the question!
@@OldSchoolResto I hate the original glossy japanning, and I've finished all my restored planes in matte black paint. With these post-1950 beech handles, you should definitely try making your own out of nicer wood! I've made some out of walnut, and while it's not as fancy as the original rosewood, it's still much nicer than the beech they started using after WWII.
Yes, the rosewood are so nice, but I can never find any at reasonable prices! That's not a bad idea, I might have a go at making my own next time, thanks!
The oil significantly reduced the crack and the knob looks to be perfectly usable. I like this restoration; sympathetic and no OCD replacement of any slightly worn part. This is a restoration I could attempt with my modest collection of tools.
@@brians654 thanks Brian! That is exactly what I am going for with this channel, trying to do some nice sympathetic Restorations to get things usable, and nice looking without going overboard, and with pretty much standard tools. Thanks again!
Fantastic restoration 👍
It’s the wrench that made the Kessel run in less than 12 parsecs
@@OldSchoolResto 😀
Shiny! Lovely work.
@@theoneandonlyowl3764 thanks! Much appreciated!
A real beauty🥃👍👏🥃👍👏🥃👍👏🥃👍👏🥃👏👏🥃👍👏🥃👍👏
Thanks do much for the comment! Glad you liked it!
Многое осталось за кадром🤷♂️
Thanks for the watch and the comment, what more would you like to see in my next video?
@@OldSchoolResto может быть велосипед?
@@Valera1983 Hey nice idea! thanks!
That's pretty cool. I like how you did a paint job with the polished finish.
@@UwannawatchHey thanks for the watch and the comment! I wanted to try and do something a little different, and the cammo matches the origin story! Thanks again.
Just started restoring old tools myself so looking forward to see what tips and methods you can show me.
Hey thanks for the comment! I have some more video in the pipe line and will be trying out a few differnt techniques soon! Thanks again
Really wonderful work. I also have a Stanley Bailey 4 1/2 Made in England plane that went through a similar process. I decided to take the wood down to it's natural color and apply a clear finish. I also power coated the body black. I really love those 1/2 size Stanley Bailey planes! You did exquisite work. One thing I would have like to see, put that board on it's face and let us see faceplaning as well as edgeplaning. Again, great restoration, Well Done!
Hey there. Thanks so much for the nice comment, much appreciated! I did think about going further on the wood, but it was so dry I was worried it was going to crack before I got the oil on. I agree on the half size, it gives it a real weight it's a chunky plane! And you're right I should have captured faceplaning! I will record it on the next one, thanks again!
I envy you, you have a powder coating setup :) I recently spray-painted the metal parts of a transitional plane, and the paint's already coming off :(
It works great for metal gas tanks that are rusted on the inside.
I was really suprised how well it worked!
So pretty
Here is my latest restoration, turning a pile of rust into a thing of "PLANE" beauty! th-cam.com/video/ux5Ek0iXojE/w-d-xo.html Please leave a thumbs up and subscribe to help me on my restoration journey!
Please leave a thumbs up and subscribe to help me on my restoration journey! here is my next vdieo, it's a stunning mirror finish at the end!!! th-cam.com/video/vlg4qZfpvF4/w-d-xo.html thanks guys!
its very good, I wish I had one, would make it as good as yours👍
@@raymondcarter thanks!
I have never seen a cammo spanner, good work again!
@@seemacarter hey thanks! I wanted to do something a bit different with this one!
Nice work! Looks solid!
@@seemacarter thanks for the watch and the nice comment!