I miss working. When I was young I never though that would come out of my mouth. Even after I retired I had plenty of "projects", but now that I am in South Florida, 1700 miles from home, I have a nice shop, but not much to do in it. BUT, I don't get cold in the winter... LOL
While I am as always inspired by your craftsmanship Dave I am so much more inspired by the coming together of family and friends in the community to help a member of that community. Alone, we can do good things; together we do great things. I always love watching your craftsmanship and attention to detail but it reaffirms my since of community to watch you all come together to make this happen. Thank you Dave for showing a cynical world what community means!
I watched this thinking your comment and then find your comment. I suspect a good meal was also shared by all these folks when the work was done. It would have been fun to have been part of that group.
The first video of this channel that I ever watched was when you were setting the tires on these wheels the first time. Then, I went back and watched ever video of the building of the Borax builds. Watching this video reminds me of when I used to sneak into a theater mid movie after the one I paid for ended. I'd stay until I got caught up, and I'd say something like, "Well, this is where I came in"--and then I'd get up and sneak into another one. Well, this is where I came in, but I'm sticking to this theater because the show is a fantastic one. Thank you for the years of entertainment since then! I look forward to what's ahead.
Hi Dave and the gang of helpers you had was great, some proper help when you need it is worth more than sympathy,lol, this whole process looked as if it went whithout a hitch, it must have been a big relief getting them all tyred up at once, I suppose getting them all fastened back in the trailer will be big job ,after seeing the amount of lumber that held them in, thanks for another great video, stay safe mate, best wishe's to all, Stuart and Megan UK.
Dave & Diane it is great to see Nate and Janelle back home for a bit. I can see Dave still has his treasures behind the shop. Tell Janelle I love the hair color, I sure it gave dad a few grey ones at first. Lol
Dear SKIL Marketing Dept - Like many people that watch this channel, I have used SKIL Products for most of my life, though not for my living. I also enjoy videos that show good family values, not the trash the is so prevalent on "trash TV' nowdays. THIS is a channel you need to sponsor! This man is believable because he doesn't just spout "do it this way, do it that way" but because he DOES do this and DOES do that. Dave is a man of his word; we've seen that from Day One. If Dave says a product is good (or bad!) you can "take that to the bank" - not just because he says so, but because he proves its use and worth to himself as well as his viewers in each and every video. The standard Dave has set for himself attracts others with similar beliefs and actions, and THAT is a worthy target market. So, my viewer friends, if anyone knows the right people at SKIL, let them know they have a really good market looking for service, and with our support maybe Dave can get some well-deserved help/support in his shop. Thank you Dave, for being a true man of your word; someone we can always look up to for excellent advice and information. Have a great trip to Bishop, stay safe, and keep on making smoke!
I remember stories from my dads family about my grandad working those wheels, it too was a big gathering of family and friends, kids stacked the wood on, they used a swinging beam on a heavy wagon to go from fire to table and pick them up to roll away. There was always a big BBQ for all that attended. I envy you folks still getting to do this work. Great job as usual to all! To think that my grandads shop made many sets of those very same wheels for the borax wagons and tankers way back when, just brings memories of my childhood flooding back, listening to those stories. Again, I thank you sir!
Period correct even for this stuff! When a man needed assistance "back then" friends, family, neighbors and other members of the community showed up to help. Too bad we've lost that spirit in many aspects of today's life. Can't wait to see those wagons roll once again in Bishop. Wish I could be there but I guess I'll have to settle for a vicarious presence. Thanks again Dave & Diane, travel safe!
@@dianeengel4155 hi Diane crazy weather up there, Mother Nature still doesn’t want to let go just yet, for Nebraska, we didn’t get hardly and snow and spring isn’t producing much yet
Just like we did in my industrial mechanic trade. Heat a bearing up to shrink fit on a shaft. Janelle is a real pro forklift operator. 3 cheers for the whole team!!! Great camera angles to get a complete view of everything.
Hey Rick, nice camera work. Glad you were able to get pics of the friends and family who participated. You can bet they will be talking about this day for some time.
Wow just Wow! What an undertaking this would have been without that fork lift and running water. Wood, fire, steel, and not to mention the water all being man handled. Maybe this is one of those undertakings that you take up when the good Lord provides the running water from above back then. Very nice to watch the wagon wheel dance performed.
I abuse my Milwaukee metal cutting saw every day as a commercial electrician and couldn’t do without it. You will love the Skill saw Dave! Wonderful show by the way!
There are few things nicer to watch, mechanically speaking, than a quality tool being used by a person who knows how to use it properly and well. And that is seen in this video...
I hope you had a big beef roast or two buried below that bonfire. We used to wrap some meat in aluminum foil and bury it in the sandpit so that the last of the cast iron that was not used would be poured into the sand to make an ingot for the next art pour. On the evening of the pour, we would dig the meat out and have a big party with baked beans done in a big charcoal cooker, along with other goodies. We would smelt about 6K lbs. of radiators, engine blocks, cylinder heads, and any other salvage yard finds. We would break them up with a concrete breaker mounted on a backhoe. That many coals just begged for cooking something.
Someday I hope I am around to help with setting some rims! Probably just work to you by now but it looks like so much fun to me! On the cutting of the rims, there are lots of ways to get a job done and you do. But I can't imaging trying to cut something that thick with a circular saw. Have you ever considered using a portable bandsaw? A moot point by now but if you had to do very many that size I have to think a bandsaw would be a good candidate for the task. Keep up the great work and thanks for sharing what you do.
I hope that you put a grill over those hot coals and had a nice BBQ ! You all deserve it ! Once again a masterful job and the coming together of family and community !! Hats off to ALL !!!!!
Loved the video. If I remember right you had quite a crew the first time around. so glad that you were able to make light work of it with so many family and friends helping
Now that’s an example of family, friends & neighbours helping out when they need to. Community such as this is a valuable asset to anyone. You are really blessed Dave with both personal skill, enterprise & friendship by those who value you. Stay safe and well.
What a joy to see your family & friends showing up for this monumental task! Thanks Rick for some great camera work. We love your lamp videos as well! Blessings to you all from Jerusalem. Thank you for sharing this beautiful gathering. ב"הש
was in Bishop this past Tuesday hoping to see the wagons went to the train museum but they were working on them in town getting ready for mule days, oh well next trip down we'll stop by and see them !!
I put an 8" abrasive cut off wheel in my 8 1/4" Makita circular saw for metal cutting on one job. It cut quite well but the plume of hot sparks heated up and annealed the return spring in the blade guard rendering it useless. I like your Skilsaw and the shaving/dust collection system is great.
@@1pcfred It was more than 30 years ago and I still use the saw (for wood cutting as it was intended) never replaced the spring though so guard kinda flops around awkwardly. I'll get around to changing it one of these days.
@@jeremymasterson5818 I've wired back the guards on saws a lot. It's only really good for setting them down. I usually have enough sense to not touch the blade when it's spinning.
@@1pcfred The spring loaded guard is supposed to offer a degree of protection in the case of a kickback when the saw jumps out of the cut and back towards you. I'm very negligent in not fixing mine but wiring it back is not recommended.
@@jeremymasterson5818 I hear about kickback. It's nothing that's ever happened to me. I've felt saws being a little squirrely sometimes. I just grip them harder then. I get the whole risk using circular saws. I was on a job once where a guy almost cut his leg off using one. We were working in a mall. The blood shot all the way up the wall. That was like 3 stories. If you were to go there today with some luminol it'd look like a murder scene I bet. It was pretty nasty.
Wow! Ok, it cut the steel really well but what impressed me was this housing that caught all of the metal filings. That side housing is what really impressed me.
Incredible work by the team, bittersweet moment packing them up and seeing them off for what will be the final time? So grateful to have been follow the original construction and now the follow up. Thank you from Taiwan.
Doesn't appear to be a shortage of scrap wood out in the alley ! Nice work...harmonious as they say. Yeah, that Skill metal blade really did the job. 2 minutes x8 is faster than 1 tire with the abrasive wheel ! Darn toot'n.
@@jeremymasterson5818 the blades for those I have been around are carbide teeth, and tend to blow teeth off due to feeding thru material to fast/slow before they ever get dull. But used right, they are pretty amazing.
@@jeremymasterson5818 they make various carbide blade sharpening machines. I've even seen some folks put diamond wheels on table saws and make a jig to hold a blade so they can sharpen blades. Diamond tooling is pretty accessible today. It doesn't work good with steel though. I think hot the carbon in diamond gets absorbed by steel? Diamond abrades tungsten carbide OK though.
@@1pcfred Professional sharpening services should be able to sharpen a carbide blade like this for between $15 - $30 depending on the number of teeth. They can replace lost teeth too for a few dollars more. I would not advise doing your own unless you can achieve an extremely high degree of accuracy. The cutting angles and consistency between teeth is critical to a safe blade.
Doing this job originally was the first video of yours I ever saw. It's that feeling of deja vu all over again! You have good family and friends Dave, you're a rich man.
A most impressive operation. I watched it five years ago and it's no less impressive today. A great team doing great work. Certainly a winning combination. 👍👍Thank you for sharing, again. Have a great day and stay safe. 🙂🙂
This was a wonderful display of teamwork. Dave you are a skilled teacher and conductor for the work at hand. I know you are proud to work with your family and freinds. In return it shows that each of them is proud to get to work with you. Your son and daughter grew up working with you in the shop and they will always treasure their memories. Blessings, Don
The first thing I thought of when I saw you were rebuilding/resetting these wheels is how much work it was going to be, especially this process right here. But once again, you assembled the well oiled team and made it look (relatively) easy. Fascinating to watch Dave. I'm sure it was a long day and you all slept well that night! Thanks and well done!
Hell of an operation to set so many so quickly. Must have taken all day. I remember watching you set them originally.
I saw the first tire placement. It never gets old thanks for the video and watch your community pitch in.
Doncha love it when a plan comes together I saw some serious team work going on there
👍👍👍 Фиолетовая девушка на погрузчике-огонь!!! 👌👌👌
I miss working. When I was young I never though that would come out of my mouth. Even after I retired I had plenty of "projects", but now that I am in South Florida, 1700 miles from home, I have a nice shop, but not much to do in it. BUT, I don't get cold in the winter... LOL
Lord as an old saying goes (Who is rich in friends and little trouble) a greeting from Sicily
Many hands make work light. Many families make work fun...
While I am as always inspired by your craftsmanship Dave I am so much more inspired by the coming together of family and friends in the community to help a member of that community. Alone, we can do good things; together we do great things. I always love watching your craftsmanship and attention to detail but it reaffirms my since of community to watch you all come together to make this happen. Thank you Dave for showing a cynical world what community means!
Absolutely! Community is priceless.
Watching everyone lend a hand, warmed my heart beyond belief! Good people, good community, good values! It showed by how you all worked together.
I watched this thinking your comment and then find your comment. I suspect a good meal was also shared by all these folks when the work was done. It would have been fun to have been part of that group.
Exactly!!!
Forklift Operator....Excellent Job!!!!!
That Daughter is a fine picker and setter, she is.
If you would have put the word out I bet folks from all over the country would have helped. I would have driven from Pa. Simply an amazing project!
And all those metal shavings will work well next time you need to age some wood - win/win!
Very nice....I watched the first time too.....Thanks for sharing
Thanks Dave. I can't tell you how much I enjoy watching these. The words just don't work.
*- Good family. Good friends. Good job. Good life.*
*- Thanks everyone for helping Dave out.*
I bet that day was one of the best days in the shop for you.
The first video of this channel that I ever watched was when you were setting the tires on these wheels the first time. Then, I went back and watched ever video of the building of the Borax builds. Watching this video reminds me of when I used to sneak into a theater mid movie after the one I paid for ended. I'd stay until I got caught up, and I'd say something like, "Well, this is where I came in"--and then I'd get up and sneak into another one. Well, this is where I came in, but I'm sticking to this theater because the show is a fantastic one. Thank you for the years of entertainment since then! I look forward to what's ahead.
We appreciate you sticking with us.
@@dianeengel4155 It's my pleasure!
Let's pray that future generations will keep this tradition alive, but you know someone will try 3D printing one.
Congrats to the forklift driver who performed A+++ under pretty bad conditions..
and never hurt anyone who was standing in the pathway of death.
In a couple weeks , Will be able to watch these videos,and have coffee in the Engles Coach Shop coffee mug,Great video
Project farm has a good video on cut of blades and the best ones
Just as much fun to watch as the first time. Great team work.
GREAT TEAMWORK, GREAT JOB, AND GREAT VIDEO, TELL EVERYBODY HELLO...SEE YOU NEXT WEEK...
Hi Dave and the gang of helpers you had was great, some proper help when you need it is worth more than sympathy,lol, this whole process looked as if it went whithout a hitch, it must have been a big relief getting them all tyred up at once, I suppose getting them all fastened back in the trailer will be big job ,after seeing the amount of lumber that held them in, thanks for another great video, stay safe mate, best wishe's to all, Stuart and Megan UK.
That’s a good day’s work there. A lot of folks will sleep well after that.
Setting tires the traditional way is a great opportunity to bring the whole community together.
I wonder how many people, they had building the wheels, back in the day. Anything like this, done with family, is a good day.
Dave & Diane it is great to see Nate and Janelle back home for a bit. I can see Dave still has his treasures behind the shop. Tell Janelle I love the hair color, I sure it gave dad a few grey ones at first. Lol
Amazing progress and craftsmanship Dave! Many blessings to you and Diane. ✌🏻❤️
Thank you.
I love seeing the family and community coming together to get the job done, well done to you all from England :)
Thanks to you Mr. Engel !!!!!!!!
The Essential Craftsman will be proud of you.
I didn't see any marshmallows while those tires were heating up 😂. Have a great day 😊.
Greetings from Sweden! Wonderful end result.
Thank you Dave, for another great video. Warm greetings from the Netherlands, Bram
Dear SKIL Marketing Dept -
Like many people that watch this channel, I have used SKIL Products for most of my life, though not for my living. I also enjoy videos that show good family values, not the trash the is so prevalent on "trash TV' nowdays. THIS is a channel you need to sponsor! This man is believable because he doesn't just spout "do it this way, do it that way" but because he DOES do this and DOES do that. Dave is a man of his word; we've seen that from Day One. If Dave says a product is good (or bad!) you can "take that to the bank" - not just because he says so, but because he proves its use and worth to himself as well as his viewers in each and every video.
The standard Dave has set for himself attracts others with similar beliefs and actions, and THAT is a worthy target market.
So, my viewer friends, if anyone knows the right people at SKIL, let them know they have a really good market looking for service, and with our support maybe Dave can get some well-deserved help/support in his shop. Thank you Dave, for being a true man of your word; someone we can always look up to for excellent advice and information.
Have a great trip to Bishop, stay safe, and keep on making smoke!
Nice comment. Thanks.
I remember stories from my dads family about my grandad working those wheels, it too was a big gathering of family and friends, kids stacked the wood on, they used a swinging beam on a heavy wagon to go from fire to table and pick them up to roll away. There was always a big BBQ for all that attended. I envy you folks still getting to do this work. Great job as usual to all! To think that my grandads shop made many sets of those very same wheels for the borax wagons and tankers way back when, just brings memories of my childhood flooding back, listening to those stories. Again, I thank you sir!
Period correct even for this stuff! When a man needed assistance "back then" friends, family, neighbors and other members of the community showed up to help. Too bad we've lost that spirit in many aspects of today's life. Can't wait to see those wagons roll once again in Bishop. Wish I could be there but I guess I'll have to settle for a vicarious presence. Thanks again Dave & Diane, travel safe!
I would be willing to bet that Henry, Clement, John, Peter, and Jacob are all proud of you guys. Awesome job!!!
Gives a whole new meaning to "tire fire"
Wonderful experience for everyone. Lovely community of people enjoying a rare sight.
Like the Stanford press you will be in the newspaper after that, looks like several others besides the work party showed up to see the excitement
Hi Jason
@@dianeengel4155 hi Diane crazy weather up there, Mother Nature still doesn’t want to let go just yet, for Nebraska, we didn’t get hardly and snow and spring isn’t producing much yet
@@jasonwells7737 yes, we've had some good moisture but also some real cold mornings.
That tire setting reminds me of barn raising and community threshing. Good people there for one another.
Lot's of work, time to see the family 😊, everyone came together, people seemed interested in the goings on... all in all a very good day , or days.
Dave you had a lot of fine folk's helping you with those big wheels + your beautiful daughter....Thanks young man blessing u'all way............Shoe🇺🇸
It's so good to see family and friends helping out. Thanks for sharing a lovely video.
Just like we did in my industrial mechanic trade. Heat a bearing up to shrink fit on a shaft.
Janelle is a real pro forklift operator. 3 cheers for the whole team!!! Great camera angles
to get a complete view of everything.
It's crazy I've watched these tires be set twice now
Hey Rick, nice camera work. Glad you were able to get pics of the friends and family who participated. You can bet they will be talking about this day for some time.
Wow just Wow! What an undertaking this would have been without that fork lift and running water. Wood, fire, steel, and not to mention the water all being man handled. Maybe this is one of those undertakings that you take up when the good Lord provides the running water from above back then. Very nice to watch the wagon wheel dance performed.
Those are beautiful welds, invisible!
Great work by an excellent crew! Enjoyed watching. Thanks!
I abuse my Milwaukee metal cutting saw every day as a commercial electrician and couldn’t do without it. You will love the Skill saw Dave! Wonderful show by the way!
simply stated, that is an awesome video
Уважение тебе и благодарность!МУЖИК.
Достойное дело,сохранить знание прошлого.
Успехов!
I love the fascinating collection of useless/useful junk/stuff behind your shop. Ever reminding us- 'parts is parts.'
There are few things nicer to watch, mechanically speaking, than a quality tool being used by a person who knows how to use it properly and well. And that is seen in this video...
I hope you had a big beef roast or two buried below that bonfire. We used to wrap some meat in aluminum foil and bury it in the sandpit so that the last of the cast iron that was not used would be poured into the sand to make an ingot for the next art pour. On the evening of the pour, we would dig the meat out and have a big party with baked beans done in a big charcoal cooker, along with other goodies. We would smelt about 6K lbs. of radiators, engine blocks, cylinder heads, and any other salvage yard finds. We would break them up with a concrete breaker mounted on a backhoe.
That many coals just begged for cooking something.
Nothing like a small town. Family and friends getting together for a retirement party.
Someday I hope I am around to help with setting some rims! Probably just work to you by now but it looks like so much fun to me! On the cutting of the rims, there are lots of ways to get a job done and you do. But I can't imaging trying to cut something that thick with a circular saw. Have you ever considered using a portable bandsaw? A moot point by now but if you had to do very many that size I have to think a bandsaw would be a good candidate for the task. Keep up the great work and thanks for sharing what you do.
Wish there was that kind of team spirit in the UK as you have in Montana.
I hope that you put a grill over those hot coals and had a nice BBQ ! You all deserve it ! Once again a masterful job and the coming together of family and community !! Hats off to ALL !!!!!
It's good to have friends when working big tires. Good video, Mr Engels.
Loved the video. If I remember right you had quite a crew the first time around. so glad that you were able to make light work of it with so many family and friends helping
Well done, everyone.
Wonderful to have family and friends to help. Nice system everyone seemed to know what they had to do. Enjoyed watching. Thank you
Now that’s an example of family, friends & neighbours helping out when they need to. Community such as this is a valuable asset to anyone. You are really blessed Dave with both personal skill, enterprise & friendship by those who value you. Stay safe and well.
What a joy to see your family & friends showing up for this monumental task! Thanks Rick for some great camera work. We love your lamp videos as well! Blessings to you all from Jerusalem. Thank you for sharing this beautiful gathering. ב"הש
was in Bishop this past Tuesday hoping to see the wagons went to the train museum but they were working on them in town getting ready for mule days, oh well next trip down we'll stop by and see them !!
I put an 8" abrasive cut off wheel in my 8 1/4" Makita circular saw for metal cutting on one job. It cut quite well but the plume of hot sparks heated up and annealed the return spring in the blade guard rendering it useless. I like your Skilsaw and the shaving/dust collection system is great.
That was a right rocket surgery move on your part.
@@1pcfred It was more than 30 years ago and I still use the saw (for wood cutting as it was intended) never replaced the spring though so guard kinda flops around awkwardly. I'll get around to changing it one of these days.
@@jeremymasterson5818 I've wired back the guards on saws a lot. It's only really good for setting them down. I usually have enough sense to not touch the blade when it's spinning.
@@1pcfred The spring loaded guard is supposed to offer a degree of protection in the case of a kickback when the saw jumps out of the cut and back towards you. I'm very negligent in not fixing mine but wiring it back is not recommended.
@@jeremymasterson5818 I hear about kickback. It's nothing that's ever happened to me. I've felt saws being a little squirrely sometimes. I just grip them harder then. I get the whole risk using circular saws. I was on a job once where a guy almost cut his leg off using one. We were working in a mall. The blood shot all the way up the wall. That was like 3 stories. If you were to go there today with some luminol it'd look like a murder scene I bet. It was pretty nasty.
Oh, yeah. That's an all-day job, for sure. "Many hands make light work."
Love it how you were able to ramp up your one man show to a full Opera. I like the forklift-cam, she took some wonderful shots. 👍
Great to watch. Bonus being that at the end, you have a giant BBQ and time to catch up with family and friends over a beer. Well done!
Wow! Ok, it cut the steel really well but what impressed me was this housing that caught all of the metal filings. That side housing is what really impressed me.
Forgot to say I enjoyed watching you work on the Borax wagon this second time. I remember watching Death Valley Days as a child loved the 20 Mule Team
What a great family!
Incredible work by the team, bittersweet moment packing them up and seeing them off for what will be the final time? So grateful to have been follow the original construction and now the follow up. Thank you from Taiwan.
Agree
This whole wagon wheel/tire series has been absolutely fascinating.
Now that I have it twice, it is more than twice as impressive.
NICE 👌👌👌👍👍👍
Good to see all the help that showed up.
Community is priceless. Great to see you keeping the traditional ways alive.
Great community spirit and what an assett the son and daughter are! Who was in charge of coffee making? 😁😁👍
Just watching this it came to mind. The frst video I ever watched on this channel was tyre setting and that was some years back.
That's a nice saw that was well worth the money
Doesn't appear to be a shortage of scrap wood out in the alley ! Nice work...harmonious as they say.
Yeah, that Skill metal blade really did the job. 2 minutes x8 is faster than 1 tire with the abrasive wheel ! Darn toot'n.
Yeah and it cut clean and straight too. Which has to be worth something in its own right.
The blade should be able to be sharpened two or three times too unlike the diamond blade that is throw-away once it stops cutting effectively.
@@jeremymasterson5818 the blades for those I have been around are carbide teeth, and tend to blow teeth off due to feeding thru material to fast/slow before they ever get dull. But used right, they are pretty amazing.
@@jeremymasterson5818 they make various carbide blade sharpening machines. I've even seen some folks put diamond wheels on table saws and make a jig to hold a blade so they can sharpen blades. Diamond tooling is pretty accessible today. It doesn't work good with steel though. I think hot the carbon in diamond gets absorbed by steel? Diamond abrades tungsten carbide OK though.
@@1pcfred Professional sharpening services should be able to sharpen a carbide blade like this for between $15 - $30 depending on the number of teeth.
They can replace lost teeth too for a few dollars more. I would not advise doing your own unless you can achieve an extremely high degree of accuracy. The cutting angles and consistency between teeth is critical to a safe blade.
Doing this job originally was the first video of yours I ever saw. It's that feeling of deja vu all over again!
You have good family and friends Dave, you're a rich man.
You have raised and built up an impressive crew. Great to see how this works
Great video and a wonderful showing of support by friends and family.
Willing and able hands make short work of any project!
Well done crew!
A great great gathering of friends and family. Job well done
Boy that was special,got to watch them tires set twice thanks for the video you'll🤗😎🤗😎
Oh, and very cool. Wish I had your family and your neighbors.
Waited all week for this one! Just like the original.
A most impressive operation. I watched it five years ago and it's no less impressive today. A great team doing great work. Certainly a winning combination. 👍👍Thank you for sharing, again. Have a great day and stay safe. 🙂🙂
This was a wonderful display of teamwork. Dave you are a skilled teacher and conductor for the work at hand.
I know you are proud to work with your family and freinds. In return it shows that each of them is proud to get to work with you. Your son and daughter grew up working with you in the shop and they will always treasure their memories.
Blessings, Don
The first thing I thought of when I saw you were rebuilding/resetting these wheels is how much work it was going to be, especially this process right here. But once again, you assembled the well oiled team and made it look (relatively) easy. Fascinating to watch Dave. I'm sure it was a long day and you all slept well that night! Thanks and well done!
Dave, what an awesome family operation! You should be proud!!
Evolution built the first of those saws over 25 years ago, I've had mine 23 years and use it a lot.
Evolution is near me in Davenport Iowa. Great people.
I add my kudos to the others of commenters who saw the great value of the generosity of family and friends.
Some impressive skills from that forklift driver Mr. Engels, hope your proud of that kid.
We are.