Dude you are once again the coolest environmentalist ever! Cleaning up the rivers and not caring about other people's opinion! As for that sealed box, you got it in one, bro! It IS an electrical box, one probably off of the side of a building, where the power lines arrive from the main lines. It looks like it was never used as it is completely empty
Whoever is the manufacturer of that wagon is needs to sponsor you. I can’t believe that thing holds up with the amount of stuff you’ve put in it time and time again.
That chrome piece looks like the end part for chrome trim on an old car. It is a nice piece of history. You need to bring Owen out there, magnet fishing with you. Great job cleaning that section of the river. I bet a lot of bottom feeders are down there doing a happy dance. 😊
Definitely agree with you. I remember that it was a sad, sad day when the last cart died on the job.... hmmmm was it the same type of cart? This one seems a bit tougher than that one.
Definitely a bumper jack. You use a tire iron to jack with. And there's a flatter plate it stands up in. There is a lever on the side to indicate up or down.
The cylinders with the wires coming out are solenoid solenoids. when you give power to the wires the rod will ether push out or pull in. they have many uses but you will know them from the click you hear every time you start a car. they are on the engine starter. They push the starter gear out to engage the engine and turn it over to start.
Hi Tyler 😊❤It just boggles my mind at all the stuff you pull up out of the water and the next time you go there…..there will be more. Amazing really. I am thankful for you in what you are doing.😊❤and yes that was an old school car jack. You are missing the base and the tire iron. I hope you have a great week. Look forward to more videos from you. Stay safe my friend.😊❤Paula from Michigan
Hey Tyler. When you mentioned the eggs on the cone piece I started looking up zebra mussels. Those are from the mussels. The grown mussels can live up to 5 days out of water. The mussels, once dry can be broken down and used for garden fertilizer OR fed as an addition to chicken food. By the way that cone could go to the jack.
The knobs with the threaded rod looks like the thing you find under a boat seat that you tighten or loosen to be able to twist the seat. It goes through a clamp and tightens the clamp around the pipe.
Not likely. The base for those car jacks were heavy, more flat and slotted to fit the jack. Speaking from experience. That cone looks like a cover for something.
I think those round objects that you find at minute 1:55 are part of the car clutch, in those spaces there are some kind of springs, I think that's what it's about. a big hug from Buenos Aires Argentina, I never miss a video, greetings also to Alex, take care.🤜🏼🤛🏼 Emilio.
Phenomenal finds today Tyler. The box you pulled, is an old electric box that the main line runs through. That spot is a gold mine of treasures. The football looking pieces are very old water valve shutoffs. It makes sense if there was a factory there. Have a great day my friend ❤️🙂⚘️🛠🔩🧲.
HI Tyler. I enjoy your video's. I enjoy all your video's. And yes that was a Old school car jack . Keep them coming your video's. Have a great day and stay safe.❤😊😊😊🙏
Wow so many unusual finds in that one spot by the rocks! I’m thinking a repair shop was there on shore back in the day and used the river as their dumpster! Saddens me to think how abused our waterways had suffered. But glad you’re there cleaning it up one toss at a time! Funny how you were saying this was the heaviest find on almost each recovery! Looking forward for your next videos Tyler! Cheers! 🎉
Those could have been Franky eggs !!! 😊 great video as usual glad you shore friend wasn’t there he was a fun addition. Love your stuff. Thanks for all you do.
Great end to the weekend watching my favorite Utuber!! That's a great spot you found. Every time you load the cart. Have a great week & I'll be waiting for the next video.
At 13:40 that is a key. The two prongs at the end would fit in holes and you turn it with the T handle. It is flat in the middle for an wrench if you need some extra strength.
The old school car jack usually came in 3 parts: a plate to insert the jack in so it would stand it up, the jack itself, what was called a tire iron. The tire iron would be flat on one end like a flat head screwdriver and a ratchet head on the other to remove tire lug nuts. you would stick the pointed end into the jack to use as a handle to jack your car up.
12:30 - common car Jack for cars in the 60-70’s. Thanks for saying “old”,😮. Missing base (it slips on) and the curved piece that would clip into the moving piece you found and wrap around the bumper.
Get an aquarium and grow out those eggs to see what they are...just a thought. I believe that the "tool" would be called a gate or water valve key. These were used for accessing underground or difficult to reach valves. These could have various end fittings depending on the type of cap on the valve. I believe earlier versions (1860+-1930) had holes and later versions where square or hex headed. A keeper.
The round bike sprocket looking things contained wires that go around it and you put a bunch of those together it makes a brush that you would use to sweep pavement. Those big attachments they put on skid steers to sweep a parking lots. You are finding the remains after the wires rusted off
At 6:10 the knob is from a Mirro cookie press. At 26:00 those go on the other end opposite the knob. There was a Mirro factory near there where the River House Apartments are now.
25:48 Those are the business end of the press - the part that does the actual pushing of the cookie dough through the dies. The outer shell and end caps of the presses are aluminum, so you won't pull those unless they're attached to the ferrous parts. I can't remember if the dies are aluminum - but I'm guessing they are since you haven't pulled any that I have seen.
I don't know where my comments are going. 🤷🏼♂️ The discs with the groves around the outside edges are seed corn planter plates. I'm sure you're pulling up stuff from a farm equipment factory.
Check your water meter or input point of the water to your hous. You found the 2 prong tool for turning it off and on. Unless of course yours is different , but that would work on mine.
Thank you so much for watching ❤️ I hope everyone has a great week! 🇺🇸
I watched this under 10 days
I'm glad I found you. Your voice is not abrasive like some young men. Also a boat is the BEST way to go
YOU KNOW WHAT YOU SHOULD GET AWARD FOR
CLEANING UP THE RIVERS.
GOD BLESS YOUR FAMILY
AND HAVE A GREAT DAY.
Alot of unusual finds for sure! ♥️👍
Having such an amazing and loyal fanbase is my award ❤️
Can you please stop saying flipping ❤
@@user-lk7yv8ey5f What's wrong with that? It's not a swear word or anything. He could say the other word it replaces but he doesn't.
You should get some kind of recognition for cleaning out that creek alone. Not to mention all the others you’ve done.
Dude you are once again the coolest environmentalist ever! Cleaning up the rivers and not caring about other people's opinion! As for that sealed box, you got it in one, bro! It IS an electrical box, one probably off of the side of a building, where the power lines arrive from the main lines. It looks like it was never used as it is completely empty
Whoever is the manufacturer of that wagon is needs to sponsor you. I can’t believe that thing holds up with the amount of stuff you’ve put in it time and time again.
I was thinking the same thing.
I agree
That chrome piece looks like the end part for chrome trim on an old car. It is a nice piece of history. You need to bring Owen out there, magnet fishing with you. Great job cleaning that section of the river. I bet a lot of bottom feeders are down there doing a happy dance. 😊
Great finds! Kudos to the cart manufacturer. That cart can sure hold a lot of weight!!❤❤❤
Definitely agree with you. I remember that it was a sad, sad day when the last cart died on the job.... hmmmm was it the same type of cart? This one seems a bit tougher than that one.
Another happy video from Ty. Need those right now! Always watching from East Texas😃
Thank you so much for watching ❤️ I hope you’re staying cool! 😅 🥶 🥵
She’s from the place of higher ground.
This spot is just loaded. Unbelievable how much stuff people throw in a river😮. Awesome video 😊
HEY! I’m fishing in New York and you’re crossing my line! Could you stop it?
🤣
😂😂
He scared the fish away in CT!
🤣🤣🤣🤣
Time to go to the anchor and lure honey hole
Definitely a bumper jack. You use a tire iron to jack with. And there's a flatter plate it stands up in. There is a lever on the side to indicate up or down.
So much stuff in that one area!?! 😳 That was so much fun!!! Thank you, Tyler!!!💖
Those last two pipes looked like they were going to be chained together. Pipe nunchucks 😂
You should use those old faucet turners for Roosts for the chickens. 😀
The T shaped “key” is either for opening a cover in the ground or turning on a sprinkler system
Hallo met erik uit Utrecht is top video gr erik 👍
I love that you share knowledge of fishing and fish species with us. As well as the little bits of history of the area.
Yepp here watching 👀. All that Funky stuff..used them car Jack's a few times lol. Old guy.. the old bumper jacks..
Super Cool Adventure
Totally made me chuckle when you found the big “boing boinger “ 😅😅😅
Excuse me can you not come down this way my line is in the water..... LoL Hahaha 😂😂😂
It is beautiful weather
The tool with the prongs looks like the tool to turn on and off your water outside in the yard
The cylinders with the wires coming out are solenoid solenoids. when you give power to the wires the rod will ether push out or pull in. they have many uses but you will know them from the click you hear every time you start a car. they are on the engine starter. They push the starter gear out to engage the engine and turn it over to start.
I'm already getting hyped to see your finds
Hi Tyler 😊❤It just boggles my mind at all the stuff you pull up out of the water and the next time you go there…..there will be more. Amazing really. I am thankful for you in what you are doing.😊❤and yes that was an old school car jack. You are missing the base and the tire iron. I hope you have a great week. Look forward to more videos from you. Stay safe my friend.😊❤Paula from Michigan
Hey Tyler. When you mentioned the eggs on the cone piece I started looking up zebra mussels. Those are from the mussels. The grown mussels can live up to 5 days out of water. The mussels, once dry can be broken down and used for garden fertilizer OR fed as an addition to chicken food.
By the way that cone could go to the jack.
Water looks much cleaner today
@12:37 yes! A car jack and that other thing I think @11:09 🤔 anyway...that's what held the jack in place! Had one for my VW bug years ago 😄
The knobs with the threaded rod looks like the thing you find under a boat seat that you tighten or loosen to be able to twist the seat. It goes through a clamp and tightens the clamp around the pipe.
17:00. Train car spring. They have value. Don’t scrap.
You better come back here again. You are too much fun to watch.
What a beautyful day!!! 😎Watching now...💖
Great video, I think this was the heaviest video of the week😂 Keep tossin.
That four sided cone is probably the stand for the old car Jack.
Not likely. The base for those car jacks were heavy, more flat and slotted to fit the jack. Speaking from experience. That cone looks like a cover for something.
I was thinking the same thing
12:36 Old school bumper jack for a car.
I do like it, you stood your ground , dude needed his azz kicked😂😂
You definitely get some unusual stuff. It's fun to watch you find.
I love when I can hear the klunk when the magnet 🧲 hits.
I think those round objects that you find at minute 1:55 are part of the car clutch, in those spaces there are some kind of springs, I think that's what it's about. a big hug from Buenos Aires Argentina, I never miss a video, greetings also to Alex, take care.🤜🏼🤛🏼 Emilio.
I think the long threaded knob you found looks like an adjustment screw for a machine like a table saw or something 😊 cool finds
Phenomenal finds today Tyler. The box you pulled, is an old electric box that the main line runs through. That spot is a gold mine of treasures. The football looking pieces are very old water valve shutoffs. It makes sense if there was a factory there. Have a great day my friend ❤️🙂⚘️🛠🔩🧲.
HI Tyler. I enjoy your video's. I enjoy all your video's. And yes that was a Old school car jack . Keep them coming your video's. Have a great day and stay safe.❤😊😊😊🙏
Awesome video fisher. Found a lot of cool stuff. And cleaning up the rivers and lakes too. ❤ have a great weekend also.
Hi The Fisher & it's is Randy and i like your video is Cool & Thanks The Fisher & Friends Randy
Thanks for making our day brighter …
Wow so many unusual finds in that one spot by the rocks! I’m thinking a repair shop was there on shore back in the day and used the river as their dumpster! Saddens me to think how abused our waterways had suffered. But glad you’re there cleaning it up one toss at a time!
Funny how you were saying this was the heaviest find on almost each recovery! Looking forward for your next videos Tyler! Cheers! 🎉
Those could have been Franky eggs !!! 😊 great video as usual glad you shore friend wasn’t there he was a fun addition. Love your stuff. Thanks for all you do.
I sure enjoyed this video! 😻
@22:05 reminds me of the boxes outside of businesses that catch rats in it.
As always very entertaining!!!!
@13:30 - The pickle fork is used to turn water on/off to a house w city water.
2:40 Old car Bumper Jack and there was a foot missing! 20:57 Solenoid 22:07 Electrical junction Box
Great end to the weekend watching my favorite Utuber!! That's a great spot you found. Every time you load the cart. Have a great week & I'll be waiting for the next video.
Have you tried SW Ohio yet 🤔
I sure hope your not getting horrifically sunburnt 🤣🤣 must be nice and toasty there lol
I was thinking the same thing. For all the time he spends in the sun he doesn’t seem to get any tanner. It’s that northern blood.
21:05 - kinda reminds me of The M4 Shermans driver/radio operator hatch.
At 13:40 that is a key. The two prongs at the end would fit in holes and you turn it with the T handle. It is flat in the middle for an wrench if you need some extra strength.
Turns off/on slotted valves; typically water or gas.
@@davidturk6170 Yup, it is also used on boat fuel tank caps.
Looks like a water shut off tool.
@@ronaldhandley6073 used for that often.
Wow!! That spot is loaded! It would be cool to go scuba diving to visually see what is down there. Loved the video! 🎉🎉🎉
Yes sir that’s an old rr plate. Cool T Tyler nice video ✌🏻
Getting ready for a Knee replacement. Will catch up with you after surgery blue eyes. ❤
I hope everything goes well! ❤️
Thanks for another great video ❤
Good day sir, pls say gd to Owen and thank you for another great video to watch. Pls have a great and blessed day, both you and Owen.
Its called a bumper jack. Back in the day bumpers had notches in them to hold the jack in place as u raised the vehicle.
the box is a small power box that is just scrap not worth anything really but cool to see something i work with keep at it Mr.fisher !!!!!!!!!!
I always get excited whenever I see you have posted a new video. It is the first one I watch. Keep them coming!
The old school car jack usually came in 3 parts: a plate to insert the jack in so it would stand it up, the jack itself, what was called a tire iron. The tire iron would be flat on one end like a flat head screwdriver and a ratchet head on the other to remove tire lug nuts. you would stick the pointed end into the jack to use as a handle to jack your car up.
12:30 - common car Jack for cars in the 60-70’s. Thanks for saying “old”,😮. Missing base (it slips on) and the curved piece that would clip into the moving piece you found and wrap around the bumper.
Great video Tyler as always I love watching them❤
I like ham but the heck with them green eggs, it’s like look out where them huskies go and don’t you eat that yellow snow🤣🤣🤣
~12:30 - that first looked like The M1919 Colt M1 Browning MachineGun
The round disk with hole in center and the screw like with a turner attacked was old stile caulking gun.
Get an aquarium and grow out those eggs to see what they are...just a thought. I believe that the "tool" would be called a gate or water valve key. These were used for accessing underground or difficult to reach valves. These could have various end fittings depending on the type of cap on the valve. I believe earlier versions (1860+-1930) had holes and later versions where square or hex headed. A keeper.
Time to go back to that fishing lure honey hole. Can you imagine what you could pull up with a larger magnet?
4:40. Wheel piece. That is a wheel
Bearing
7:19 It looks like a neck bolt from Frankenstein's monster
@10:00, it's a door check.
The round bike sprocket looking things contained wires that go around it and you put a bunch of those together it makes a brush that you would use to sweep pavement. Those big attachments they put on skid steers to sweep a parking lots. You are finding the remains after the wires rusted off
At 6:10 the knob is from a Mirro cookie press. At 26:00 those go on the other end opposite the knob. There was a Mirro factory near there where the River House Apartments are now.
1:34 - Based on the cutouts, it may be the gear that attaches to the wheel of the old push mowers (multi blade).
Awesome !!!😎
Awesome always cool stuff always thanks
A lot of the big stuff could come from steam trains, you are next to an old rusted railway track. Yet another guess of mine. Lol.
Maybe those spinning football shaped things are valve buttons from a steam engine train. That's my guess. 😁
That cone is used for measuring the SLUMP of concrete… fill cone with concrete and see how much it settles
Happy to see you have achieved 1.02M subscribers, that is quite an accomplishment. Keep up the good work and by the way how are your chickens doing.
Thank you! They are getting huge 🐓
25:48 Those are the business end of the press - the part that does the actual pushing of the cookie dough through the dies. The outer shell and end caps of the presses are aluminum, so you won't pull those unless they're attached to the ferrous parts. I can't remember if the dies are aluminum - but I'm guessing they are since you haven't pulled any that I have seen.
The gear you called is a roller bearing
Awesome video 😊
Those bike sprocket looking things are flywheel for smaller cars to turn the motor over with the starter
I don't know where my comments are going. 🤷🏼♂️
The discs with the groves around the outside edges are seed corn planter plates. I'm sure you're pulling up stuff from a farm equipment factory.
Cool stuuff
The cog wheel was probably part of the old railroad bridge that made the bridge turn in the old days.
Cool finds 💙👊😎
How’s your chickens doing ? Getting big ,I suspect😂😂
Very big! 😳 I will do an update soon ❤️
Check your water meter or input point of the water to your hous. You found the 2 prong tool for turning it off and on. Unless of course yours is different , but that would work on mine.
Cool stuff
I will always look at yours videos.
You kidnapped the whole next generation of fishes in that river today 😂
Maybe you should come with 2 carts lol