This brought back some memories! I maintained one of these back in the mid 70's when I was a small engine mechanic for a landscaping company. It was used as a backup/punishment saw for when someone dug the Homelite 55 chainsaw into too much dirt. They quickly learned not to cut dirt with a chainsaw!!
the reason I cherish ur vids the most among other restauration videos is, that u show us so much of ur, dare I say messy workshop. from chaos to perfection, it's beautiful! never change!
That paintjob just brought this tool back to life like a hot rod out of a garage. Quite literally so, with the nature of this thing, especially the engine...
Don't change anything, this is perfect. The tool, your hands, no music, and always a very interesting restoration (and some humor). :) Thanks for the videos. Thumbs up.
I agree, but wouldn't mine some humorous sound effects. Like the sound of a sander when you are sanding by hand. This channel and This Old Tony are my 2 favorite TH-cam channels.
I don't know if you acknowledge comments on older videos or not but I wanted to tell you in my opinion there is no one else who is better at restorations I've seen on any video. You are meticulous and exacting. I admire your work.
At ~16:40 I was stunned to see that you were able to find parts for the carb. There's a lot of work and skill involved in these restorations, but it seems to me the most difficult part has to be finding parts...or making new ones. Well done.
I dont know why and I mean no disrespect but I think all Canadians instinctively know how to operate and repair chainsaws and other wood cutting devices.
@@maggs131 and Alaskans.... & country ass grew up off grid in the 70’s big islanders.... & once upon a time all Washingtonians but their more all on the flaky side these days.. ran all my relations off to the hinterland anyhows, crazy days
He earned an F from me. This is a horrible restoration. He didn't touch the engine. At a minimum, it should have new rings and the cylinder should be honed. I would flunk a high school student on this. It's terrible.
Rain on them hose lmfao this is, by far, the funniest TH-cam channel I've ever had the pleasure of stumbling across. The intro, the sensual voiceovers, the everything.
Adam Jubinville ASMR refers to a sensation people get from hearing sounds. Raspy sounds and whispering seem to trigger it. Most ASMR videos I've come across involve a woman whispering stuff to you. It can be soothing, but some people might find the content odd. The feeling of ASMR is kinda like frisson - that goosebumpy tingling you get when register something emotionally profound.
Holy heck, TH-cam algorithm strikes gold..... I actually have one of these saws, I never thought I'd see another! An old guy gave me it when I was in my twenties, and wasn't allowed to use a chainsaw at my weekend job until I'd done the chainsaw training, so I used it for fencing and firewood work until I'd passed. Mine is brown, and still has its patina. It had no recoil starter when I got it, I modified one off a small lawnmower engine to fit, I had to reverse its rotation. I also had to clean the points, and sharpen the blade. The air cleaner on mine had an old scouring pad bunged in it, and a jubilee clip holding it together, it's great to see what it's supposed to be like! The exhaust was a plate with some holes drilled in it. You're dead right on two fronts, it is bloody loud, and it does make a very clean cut! Next job if I get mine out again, one of the cylinder studs is stripped out, so I'll need to take the cylinder off and helicoil it 😔 Lots of people in the comments are saying its slow, my experience says not as slow as you'd think 😂 it cuts so cleanly you could literally just saw a slice off a log with it, slap some legs on and call it a coffee table.
“Rain on them hose” lmao😂 You do excellent work! I don’t know anything about engines or how hand tools are made and work but I sure like watching them get fixed haha 😆 ✌🏼
Man I love this videos restoring this old junky stuff and making them look spanking brand new it's amazing work of art just shows u how much love was out into this instrumentals of machines
Awesome video! Great work on everything, but I especially liked how you decided to “do better” on the label and how you fabbed the replacement spring clip. Thanks!
Say, where did you get those Labels? And do they do labels for other tools and things? I've got some old McCulloch Chainsaws and a Wheelhorse Garden Tractor Id love to give the old Shinola to.
One of your best refurbished piece of equipment yet. Looks like new. I love the hidden message in the handle. Only men would know what that really means.
you mean machines? also inefficiency is its point if i remember correctly. Chainsaws were invented then someone was like "hmm how can i make this more inefficient and more dangerous?" and thus this was born. p.s. this is a joke nothing here is guaranteed to be fact
Hand Tool Rescue so it did come after chainsaws? i thought i was making a joke by saying that the chainsaw came first but if what you say is true my joke is actually factual and ironic AND FUNNY. XD
How on earth is this more dangerous than chainsaw? This thing has few flaws tho.... Chainsaw without chainbrake and clutch is a definite killer even in hads of a professional
So happy I found your channel. I used to repair old coal mining and industrial hand tools for Black and Decker 40 years ago and it was my favorite job of all times. Just subscribed and I am sure you will bring back my memories. Thank you, Steve
I was running this saw for about 2 hours at about a 30-50% duty cycle th-cam.com/users/postUgkxfQm1wmg0ItKDLavxj1nXtQY9HP7EF504 and it did a great job. I used the lever for the built in sharpener to clear chip buildup out more than to actually sharpen the chain. It managed to cut some hardwood stumps much larger than it's size without bothering the neighbors with hours of 2 stroke noise.
I just acquired the exact same saw today off Craigslist for $60 dollars! It was so dirty i could hardly see what color it was! But I couldn't believe what I found under all that crap, it actually preserved the paint after all these years and it's incredible how beautiful it is! What a score to add to the 135 chainsaws that I have in my collection of vintage chainsaws. Only thing missing is the air filter and the back section of the air box. I can only imagine that parts are almost impossible to find for one of these monsters? The guy i bought it from said he was going to throw it in a pile of scrap metal that was headed to the recycling center and decided to post it to see if anyone would give him fifty dollars for it. I told him if he would hold it until I found a ride across town because my wife had the car at work today until 8:00pm and it was 11:00AM and I have had bad luck with waiting for hours and someone else ends up with a once in a lifetime opportunity! So I beat on my neighbors door and gave him $20 bucks to go get it with me and he said yes! So he has one in the bank for favors after doing that kind act for me. But he was asking for $50 and I gave him $60 to sweeten the deal. It works every time! And by the time I was handing the money over to the guy he said that the phone was blowing up with calls for the saw! I remember when I was about thirteen years old, my mom was dating a really cool old guy and he had one of these saws in his garage and it seemed so huge i didn't even think about trying to pick it up.
Fine Job! Seal-All will stop up gas tank holes, especially the ones in a 5-horse Briggs 'L' heads with the dimple in the bottom. And the shiny tape is WONDERFUL stuff for wrapping gas lines to keep them from vapor-locking with this marvelous ethanol gas.
That's one of the sharpest looking tools that you've restored I like that you keep most of the old tools strip down the middle but this one it looks really good
Kinda neat, but they weren't very popular. The blades were easier to change than chains but didn't last as long before needing to be sharpened due to the cutting being done in a smaller area. There was also the issue of them not being self clearing as you experienced... you had to move it like a saw to clear the cuttings so it could continue to cut. I think the problem with clearing was really their major downfall, as engines became more compact and powerful chainsaws had the advantage since you could place the saw body against what you were cutting and let the chain pull and cut it's way through... teeth were added to the chainsaw bodies to allow for more pressure on the chain to better utilize the available power... something these little saws would never be capable of. Oh, and that wasn't a muffler, just a spark arrestor... nobody seemed to give a squat about their hearing back in those days...
i dont even know how i got here. the video just started playing when i turned on the computer. Ive got work i should be doing.10/10 would watch again!!!
Fantastic job on all your videos. These are really a pleasure to watch, or have run in the background. Calming. So nice just to see someone doing such detail, and not needing to abuse the viewer with pinheaded banter, swinging the camera around like they are in a Cat-5 with a selfie stick. I also appreciate you attention to detail, such as not accepting that old label issue and not overtightening any fastener. This and all the great little tricks you have for cleaning, passivating, electroplating, normalizing, through hardening, case hardening, lead testing, etc., etc., etc. Great work!!!
Thats one of my favorite channels on yt. You did a nice job like always :) more gas powered tools please!!!...hmm...do a generator restoration next time for example. Well what ever it is i'll hit the thumps up button! Greetings from germany...btw...maybe we'll send you Angela Merkel...she needs a full restoration. I thought it was a job for you
Remember seeing one of these Wright saw machines long ago--hardware store demo.The demenstrator took pride in the smoother-but slower cut than a chainsaw.Good look inside the machine to show how it worked-no recip mechanism-the blade connected to what looked like the piston rod shaft!The rotating action of the motor spun the flywheel to cool the motor.Good point-the blade looks easy to sharpen with a file or even a Dremel tool.
When I worked in Alaska I got to visit some of the Inuit villages, and every house would have an enclosed porch on the front, with frozen caribou stacked up either side of the front door, and a little Stihl chainsaw with a bottle of corn oil in the corner. When they were getting low on meat, they'd go out to the porch, put corn oil in the bar oil reservoir, fire up the saw and hack off a quarter to bring inside to defrost.
Add a set of bumper spikes and this thing will really chew through wood! What a magnificent restoration. You just keep getting better and better. This was your best effort yet. Almost too nice to use. Almost. Great job!
Imagine in modern times and you are building a house and someone asks if you brought a recip saw and then you pull out this thing !!! Lol !! It turned out great ! I’d never even seen one before !
I agree. I can't say anything about the sharpness of the blade, but when you look at the performance of the saw in the video - it's weak! It took almost 30 seconds to cut through that log! A 18v machine could do just as well, maybe better! Not also forgetting that with the best batteries of today you can go for quite a long time before needing to recharge! I think battery power is the way to go - as it has evolved a lot since Li-Ion technology became the new standard! The development of this technology isn't even finished! Can you imagine the next battery technology after Li-Ion? I think it will be a beast!
a good hand saw would be much faster than that. and that's actually safer than this abomination, not going lie it might be fun to watch, but you wouldn't want to use something like that. well except if you want a massive arm jiggler. why not just use a tiny little chain saw like ave th-cam.com/video/ziKCqU40g_E/w-d-xo.html at least it doesn't vibrate.
And pick up one of the pro-point crimpers with the exchangable jaws next time you're at Princess Auto. They make crimping the connectors so much easier.
rickcavanaugh1 in my experience I can just remember. For some reason there's an image of how I took it apart in my brain. Now for the novice take video or pictures of disassembly and refer to them. Nothing wrong with that either. I do that if something has been apart for a long time and I've forgotten something.
Tried to operate one of these as a kid, in 1962. Frankly, even factoring in operator error, it wasn't very good at actually cutting wood. In any case, I'm amazed at the design and engineering that went into making this thing.
When I was a kid I always used to take old things apart just to see how they worked. Never put them back together though. I really wish I had the patience to be able to do this type of thing!
The second I saw you putting on the old detail leaflet thing I was like NOOOOOOOOOOOO!!!!!!!!!!! it's going to ruin the whole machine , then you make and put on the new one and I was I WANT TO HAVE ITS BABIES she's a beauty job well done , love watching you restoration vids
Hand Tool Rescue! I see that I'm 3 days late to this video to make comment. I first watched this morning & enjoyed from start to finish the entire process. Then I thought, although there is probably no relation, if Orville & Wilbur were alive to see this they would applaud you for making this machine fly again & for giving it back it's "Wright stuff" I am a new subscriber too!
I’ve seen your videos in my recommended multiple times liked all of them so I subscribed love the style with no music and just the simplicity keep it the way it is
This is fucking hilarious. This is also so amazingly stupid. Dude, if you hurt yourself on camera pulling one of these stunts, you’d better post the video.
I just picked up one of those saws, your video was very interesting, you did a awesome restoration on it, they are extremely neet. I would of never guessed there were 2 pistons, excellent job!!!
This brought back some memories! I maintained one of these back in the mid 70's when I was a small engine mechanic for a landscaping company. It was used as a backup/punishment saw for when someone dug the Homelite 55 chainsaw into too much dirt. They quickly learned not to cut dirt with a chainsaw!!
If you are talking about the homelite wiz 55 i think its not much of a upgrade from that atleast not in the wheight apartment.
the reason I cherish ur vids the most among other restauration videos is, that u show us so much of ur, dare I say messy workshop.
from chaos to perfection, it's beautiful!
never change!
Your restorations show me how truly beautiful machines really are! Thank you
That paintjob just brought this tool back to life like a hot rod out of a garage. Quite literally so, with the nature of this thing, especially the engine...
Don't change anything, this is perfect. The tool, your hands, no music, and always a very interesting restoration (and some humor). :)
Thanks for the videos.
Thumbs up.
I agree. No music; music just gets annoying because your taste might not be my taste.
I agree, but wouldn't mine some humorous sound effects. Like the sound of a sander when you are sanding by hand. This channel and This Old Tony are my 2 favorite TH-cam channels.
Onel s4
I don't know if you acknowledge comments on older videos or not but I wanted to tell you in my opinion there is no one else who is better at restorations I've seen on any video. You are meticulous and exacting. I admire your work.
Well thank you very much!
I love the way you use no music but only the fats forward sound of you pulling appart all the stuff and putting it back together!
From a worn-out, hell-rusted piece of crap... to a fully-functioning, museum-worthy saw! Great work, HTR!
At ~16:40 I was stunned to see that you were able to find parts for the carb. There's a lot of work and skill involved in these restorations, but it seems to me the most difficult part has to be finding parts...or making new ones. Well done.
Wow, that saw cut through wood, like a hot knife cutting through ... wood.
Funniest thing I've read in a long time. Fuck and its 2 years old.
I dont know why and I mean no disrespect but I think all Canadians instinctively know how to operate and repair chainsaws and other wood cutting devices.
@@maggs131 and Alaskans.... & country ass grew up off grid in the 70’s big islanders.... & once upon a time all Washingtonians but their more all on the flaky side these days.. ran all my relations off to the hinterland anyhows, crazy days
the tilting back and forth it improved but like the man said, meat cutting would be a dream with this, maybe.
He earned an F from me. This is a horrible restoration. He didn't touch the engine. At a minimum, it should have new rings and the cylinder should be honed. I would flunk a high school student on this. It's terrible.
It is quite amazing to watch old tools I've never seen in my lifetime come back to life
Glad you enjoyed.
Ive only seen one like this once, it was an old Homelite, I believe. It had the same blue color as the old homelites
No talking, just demonstration. I love it. Subbed.
That was an awesome job you did with that saw. I don’t know how you keep all the parts together. Thanks for the video. Rick
Loved this video Thank you for sharing the repair on this machine. Great job.
Man it took less time to restore it that thing than it did to cut through that branch!
ROFL Mike...
MikeHawke83 mabey so but beats doing it by hand
LOL
I suspect the Wright Reciprocating Saw is more in line with a vintage hedge trimmer than a chain saw replacement.
It probably needs some sharpening
Rain on them hose lmfao this is, by far, the funniest TH-cam channel I've ever had the pleasure of stumbling across. The intro, the sensual voiceovers, the everything.
How can anyone dislike these videos ?? Love your work , keep it up !!!
millions of bits n bobs,very complicated renovation,but you did a first rate job,well worth my thumbs up
Best channel on TH-cam..like ASMR for the guys that live in their garages . Amazing restore..cheers bud
Haha, thank you!
OMG i said the same thing!!!!
Adam Jubinville ASMR refers to a sensation people get from hearing sounds. Raspy sounds and whispering seem to trigger it. Most ASMR videos I've come across involve a woman whispering stuff to you. It can be soothing, but some people might find the content odd. The feeling of ASMR is kinda like frisson - that goosebumpy tingling you get when register something emotionally profound.
Anytime I say modern stuff is junk and somebody disagrees with me, I can now show him your videos, THANK YOU!!!
Your attention to detail on this one was exceptional. One of my favorite videos you've made so far.
Are you related to shannon szabo from B.C.Canada?
Holy heck, TH-cam algorithm strikes gold..... I actually have one of these saws, I never thought I'd see another! An old guy gave me it when I was in my twenties, and wasn't allowed to use a chainsaw at my weekend job until I'd done the chainsaw training, so I used it for fencing and firewood work until I'd passed.
Mine is brown, and still has its patina. It had no recoil starter when I got it, I modified one off a small lawnmower engine to fit, I had to reverse its rotation. I also had to clean the points, and sharpen the blade. The air cleaner on mine had an old scouring pad bunged in it, and a jubilee clip holding it together, it's great to see what it's supposed to be like! The exhaust was a plate with some holes drilled in it. You're dead right on two fronts, it is bloody loud, and it does make a very clean cut! Next job if I get mine out again, one of the cylinder studs is stripped out, so I'll need to take the cylinder off and helicoil it 😔
Lots of people in the comments are saying its slow, my experience says not as slow as you'd think 😂 it cuts so cleanly you could literally just saw a slice off a log with it, slap some legs on and call it a coffee table.
“Rain on them hose” lmao😂
You do excellent work! I don’t know anything about engines or how hand tools are made and work but I sure like watching them get fixed haha 😆 ✌🏼
Man I love this videos restoring this old junky stuff and making them look spanking brand new it's amazing work of art just shows u how much love was out into this instrumentals of machines
I love how you match screw head alignment, great attention to detail
I used to do this for days without sleeping,just a mild adderall addiction to blame that on,but sure was a blast!!!
Awesome video! Great work on everything, but I especially liked how you decided to “do better” on the label and how you fabbed the replacement spring clip. Thanks!
Glad you liked that!
James Ralston hbbbkjb divy hnmlgjv
Say, where did you get those Labels? And do they do labels for other tools and things? I've got some old McCulloch Chainsaws and a Wheelhorse Garden Tractor Id love to give the old Shinola to.
One of your best refurbished piece of equipment yet. Looks like new. I love the hidden message in the handle. Only men would know what that really means.
Yet another awesome tool underutilized by horror movies.
hahaha
Schnot you're sick
I'm not sure that "The Texas Reciprocating Saw Massacre" would have been a better movie :P
I'd watch it
Schnot lmfao
This kind of videos it's like therapy for me, they relax me so much and I love to recycle old tools because of my grandfather
It's one of the most inefficient and dangerous machine I've ever seen... xD nice restoration ! Don't change anything it's perfect
you mean machines? also inefficiency is its point if i remember correctly. Chainsaws were invented then someone was like "hmm how can i make this more inefficient and more dangerous?" and thus this was born.
p.s. this is a joke nothing here is guaranteed to be fact
Ironically, this was marketed as a safer option to chainsaws since there is no high speed revolving chain.
Hand Tool Rescue so it did come after chainsaws? i thought i was making a joke by saying that the chainsaw came first but if what you say is true my joke is actually factual and ironic AND FUNNY. XD
inefficient as it was, these still cut faster than a comparable chainsaw. they werent as popular though
How on earth is this more dangerous than chainsaw? This thing has few flaws tho....
Chainsaw without chainbrake and clutch is a definite killer even in hads of a professional
So happy I found your channel. I used to repair old coal mining and industrial hand tools for Black and Decker 40 years ago and it was my favorite job of all times. Just subscribed and I am sure you will bring back my memories. Thank you, Steve
Welcome!
Can i borrow it for Turkey day..look on the family's face when I take that beast to the bird would be absolutely priceless
I just played that image in my mind. Epic!
The comments here are making this the funniest video ever posted on you tube. Priceless
Reminded me of the one my father bought. No threat to the chain saw industry for sure! Thanks.
I was running this saw for about 2 hours at about a 30-50% duty cycle th-cam.com/users/postUgkxfQm1wmg0ItKDLavxj1nXtQY9HP7EF504 and it did a great job. I used the lever for the built in sharpener to clear chip buildup out more than to actually sharpen the chain. It managed to cut some hardwood stumps much larger than it's size without bothering the neighbors with hours of 2 stroke noise.
spam bot go home
I just acquired the exact same saw today off Craigslist for $60 dollars! It was so dirty i could hardly see what color it was! But I couldn't believe what I found under all that crap, it actually preserved the paint after all these years and it's incredible how beautiful it is! What a score to add to the 135 chainsaws that I have in my collection of vintage chainsaws. Only thing missing is the air filter and the back section of the air box. I can only imagine that parts are almost impossible to find for one of these monsters? The guy i bought it from said he was going to throw it in a pile of scrap metal that was headed to the recycling center and decided to post it to see if anyone would give him fifty dollars for it. I told him if he would hold it until I found a ride across town because my wife had the car at work today until 8:00pm and it was 11:00AM and I have had bad luck with waiting for hours and someone else ends up with a once in a lifetime opportunity! So I beat on my neighbors door and gave him $20 bucks to go get it with me and he said yes! So he has one in the bank for favors after doing that kind act for me. But he was asking for $50 and I gave him $60 to sweeten the deal. It works every time! And by the time I was handing the money over to the guy he said that the phone was blowing up with calls for the saw! I remember when I was about thirteen years old, my mom was dating a really cool old guy and he had one of these saws in his garage and it seemed so huge i didn't even think about trying to pick it up.
SO relaxing. NEVER put in any of that fairground music.
I don't even know why am I watching this. It is really good way to relax. Kind of therapy.
"Rain on them hose" You've set the bar way too high way too early for my day.
belle rénovation....ça fait plaisir d'entendre "pété" cette vieille machine. Bravo !
Perfect restoration - as always ! however this saw is so inefficient, I'm so happy there are chain saws up there :)
I thought it'd work better than that. It would be easier hiring termites
The blade directly connected to the piston.... Wow... Great restoratian and an interesting bit of kit!
Yay ! Ultrasonic cleaner ! I am amazed by what they can accomplish
I still think of a deep fryer when I see them haha.
I need to get me one of those! For now, I have been simply boiling the Carbs on my stuff!
Fine Job! Seal-All will stop up gas tank holes, especially the ones in a 5-horse Briggs 'L' heads with the dimple in the bottom. And the shiny tape is WONDERFUL stuff for wrapping gas lines to keep them from vapor-locking with this marvelous ethanol gas.
I love this channel
That's one of the sharpest looking tools that you've restored I like that you keep most of the old tools strip down the middle but this one it looks really good
I am now imaging a TH-cam channel in 2117: rescue rescued tools. That will be a great future ❤️
Hello from 2020, we may not make it to 2021 lol
I was really impressed by that new decal you made with the aluminum foil tape and then sprayed polyurethane on it. So simple, but basically perfect.
“Rain on them hose” lmao 😂
Andrew Marquez This is why this channel is the best. 😂😂😂
Sorry, I still don't get it.
You haven't missed anything, actually. But if you really need to: genius.com/Fat-joe-make-it-rain-lyrics
You have upped your game! Your paint skills and that label replacement look great in addition to all your other restore magic! Congratulations!
+Peter Muir Thank you!
Kinda neat, but they weren't very popular. The blades were easier to change than chains but didn't last as long before needing to be sharpened due to the cutting being done in a smaller area. There was also the issue of them not being self clearing as you experienced... you had to move it like a saw to clear the cuttings so it could continue to cut. I think the problem with clearing was really their major downfall, as engines became more compact and powerful chainsaws had the advantage since you could place the saw body against what you were cutting and let the chain pull and cut it's way through... teeth were added to the chainsaw bodies to allow for more pressure on the chain to better utilize the available power... something these little saws would never be capable of.
Oh, and that wasn't a muffler, just a spark arrestor... nobody seemed to give a squat about their hearing back in those days...
WHAT DID YOU SAY? SPEAK UP!!
Nothing today's tech and metallurgy cant solve. The cuts were narrow and smoother than chain and nothing broke!!
@@causwayspeedway I don't think so. The major problem is the stroke. It can't clear chips fast enough.
th-cam.com/video/lAIXPu-gFNg/w-d-xo.html
This saw looks incredibly complicated for what it is... Great restauration work! I am always impressed at your versatily and attention to detail!
"Honey fire up the meat saw and I'll light the grill !"
i dont even know how i got here. the video just started playing when i turned on the computer. Ive got work i should be doing.10/10 would watch again!!!
Holy-o-fuck! That was a treat especial!
GREAT TIP ! ! ! ! ! SCAN AN OLD LABEL AND STICK IT TO A/C DUCT TAPE WITH CLEAR COAT AND IT SURE LOOKS FACTORY FRESH. WHAT A NICE DETAIL ! ! ! ! !
Fantastic job on all your videos. These are really a pleasure to watch, or have run in the background. Calming. So nice just to see someone doing such detail, and not needing to abuse the viewer with pinheaded banter, swinging the camera around like they are in a Cat-5 with a selfie stick. I also appreciate you attention to detail, such as not accepting that old label issue and not overtightening any fastener. This and all the great little tricks you have for cleaning, passivating, electroplating, normalizing, through hardening, case hardening, lead testing, etc., etc., etc. Great work!!!
27:57. NO!!! don't do that.
I immediately knew what you were referencing before I clicked the time stamp. Lol It was all of the Cringe.
Hahaha, you gotta have fun with it.
Cracked a kidney stone from that cringe. now it's jagged, thnx HTR.
Safety 3rd! 😜
@@HandToolRescue You have an excellent sense of humor.
I can't believe I've only just discovered this channel. Bliss.
Thats one of my favorite channels on yt. You did a nice job like always :) more gas powered tools please!!!...hmm...do a generator restoration next time for example. Well what ever it is i'll hit the thumps up button! Greetings from germany...btw...maybe we'll send you Angela Merkel...she needs a full restoration. I thought it was a job for you
Remember seeing one of these Wright saw machines long ago--hardware store demo.The demenstrator took pride in the smoother-but slower cut than a chainsaw.Good look inside the machine to show how it worked-no recip mechanism-the blade connected to what looked like the piston rod shaft!The rotating action of the motor spun the flywheel to cool the motor.Good point-the blade looks easy to sharpen with a file or even a Dremel tool.
It's hilarious to think that there is a context in which "gas-powered meat cutting saw" is or ever was appropriate.
When I worked in Alaska I got to visit some of the Inuit villages, and every house would have an enclosed porch on the front, with frozen caribou stacked up either side of the front door, and a little Stihl chainsaw with a bottle of corn oil in the corner. When they were getting low on meat, they'd go out to the porch, put corn oil in the bar oil reservoir, fire up the saw and hack off a quarter to bring inside to defrost.
More than likely an option for butchers,hunters,serial killers ya know that type of thing
Amazing work/what he does working with old crude tools...Bravo !!
"Rain on them hose"
... Really, man? God damn it :D
Explain to us folk who don't get this. Thnx
@@jodidavis6595 Pop culture joke. "Make it rain on them hoes", or in other words to throw money at promiscuous women.
It’s nice to see somebody doing things the Wright way
Had to rewind to make sure I didn’t make up “2 furious”
;)
Same
Wow, that thing was amazingly low-use before you even started. Looks like a fathers day gift from someones wife and it never got used.
Hey man I have a question what do you do with your finished products? Do you sell them or do you have like a big collection?
0
@@elisafaro8219 Thanks for the contribution.
I think soon we'll be invited to museum) i would like to visit
Yes.
0
Add a set of bumper spikes and this thing will really chew through wood! What a magnificent restoration. You just keep getting better and better. This was your best effort yet. Almost too nice to use. Almost. Great job!
Two stroke no muffler no detergent oil lubed meat cutting tool???
I suspect that for food use a different oil (maybe vegetable oil of the appropriate viscosity) would probably have been used to lube the blade.
Still a two stroke beast that spews toxins everywhere. :P
mmm, tasty.
adds flavor. ain't you ever heard of smoked meats?
nothing like a two stroke mixed with peanut oil
Thank you for redoing the label. That was a beautiful resto and that old label was killing me as you were putting it back on. Well do e as usual.
Me: Hey that's my saw !
HTR: well i don't see your name on it?!
Me: oh yeah?...
This comment brought to you C/O boredom :P haha
Imagine in modern times and you are building a house and someone asks if you brought a recip saw and then you pull out this thing !!! Lol !! It turned out great ! I’d never even seen one before !
I can't think of one reason why this saw shouldn't still be built today.
I can't think of one either.
Ten maybe, but not just one.
I agree. I can't say anything about the sharpness of the blade, but when you look at the performance of the saw in the video - it's weak! It took almost 30 seconds to cut through that log! A 18v machine could do just as well, maybe better! Not also forgetting that with the best batteries of today you can go for quite a long time before needing to recharge! I think battery power is the way to go - as it has evolved a lot since Li-Ion technology became the new standard! The development of this technology isn't even finished! Can you imagine the next battery technology after Li-Ion? I think it will be a beast!
a good hand saw would be much faster than that. and that's actually safer than this abomination, not going lie it might be fun to watch, but you wouldn't want to use something like that. well except if you want a massive arm jiggler.
why not just use a tiny little chain saw like ave th-cam.com/video/ziKCqU40g_E/w-d-xo.html at least it doesn't vibrate.
The blade will wear unevenly too. A chain saw blade would wear equally. Even in the video it looks like the spot near him is the most worn.
I can think of 3 chainsaw chainsaw and chainsaw
This is the main reason I love the internet. Deeply fascinating, great learning experience
@AvE should send you some teflon lable removers :p
And pick up one of the pro-point crimpers with the exchangable jaws next time you're at Princess Auto. They make crimping the connectors so much easier.
I'd love that!
That trick with the aluminum tape was awesome. Thanks for sharing!
Where did you get the new diaphragm from?
Sugar Creek Supply.
HeartLessTinMan
The diaphragm is in the carburettor.
Hand Tool Rescue ..Do,you sell the restored tools? I would buy!
when I saw it, I thought it looked like a bicycle inner tube. I was more surprised at the quality of the gaskets.
That's what she said.
Good Lord... Points and Condenser ! Very impressed with that sticker rehab. Beautiful work!
How do you remember where to put everything back on these rebuilds??
rickcavanaugh1 he watches the video again
Mechanics just know how to rebuild it..
rickcavanaugh1 in my experience I can just remember. For some reason there's an image of how I took it apart in my brain. Now for the novice take video or pictures of disassembly and refer to them. Nothing wrong with that either. I do that if something has been apart for a long time and I've forgotten something.
You only have to forget how a complex tool goes back together a couple of times before you pay more attention to the disassembly
rickcavanaugh1 that's probaly the only reason he make the vids :D
Ich kann nur sagen RESPEKT!!Super das es Leute wie dich gibt, die sich dieser Ingenieurskunst von damals annehmen
Danke!
Adjust the backstop guide on your band saw. I see way too much deflection on the blade. Also, your hose need to learn to walk between the raindrops.
My Dad had and used one of those Wright Saws in the mid ‘60’s. Great Vid!!
Where on earth did you find a new diaphragm and pin for that carb?
I think your elegant solution for the damaged label was my favorite part. Great video!
Просто здорово!)) нет слов) кстати, а эта бензопила точно по дереву? не для льда ли она?
Tried to operate one of these as a kid, in 1962. Frankly, even factoring in operator error, it wasn't very good at actually cutting wood. In any case, I'm amazed at the design and engineering that went into making this thing.
"2 Furious"
When I was a kid I always used to take old things apart just to see how they worked. Never put them back together though. I really wish I had the patience to be able to do this type of thing!
Why would anyone ever buy a sawzall instead of one of these?
Mike Stroz
I’d trade my 3 Sawzalls for one of these not running
Mainly because this thing weighs like 50 lbs lol
If a sazall breaks, you can use your lunch money to get another. If this breaks, you have to do what he just did.
Becuase gas powred thats why:p
try running one and you won't have to ask. they used to be refered to as "bone rattlers" for a reason.
The second I saw you putting on the old detail leaflet thing I was like NOOOOOOOOOOOO!!!!!!!!!!! it's going to ruin the whole machine , then you make and put on the new one and I was I WANT TO HAVE ITS BABIES she's a beauty job well done , love watching you restoration vids
30:39 With or without grease?
Famscrow LOL
Outstanding! Love seeing old technology resurrected.
Check your email Sir..... A video awaits you...
I have a restoration project I bet you can't do
my financial situation
Montou a presilha errado
Hand Tool Rescue!
I see that I'm 3 days late to this video to make comment.
I first watched this morning & enjoyed from start to finish the entire process.
Then I thought, although there is probably no relation, if Orville & Wilbur were alive to see this they would applaud you for making this machine fly again & for giving it back it's "Wright stuff"
I am a new subscriber too!
How did you make that new sticker
I'm sure its a reproduction, probably bought it somewhere, unless he has one of those machines that print on Vinyl.
its all in the description under the vid,, scroll down.
I’ve seen your videos in my recommended multiple times liked all of them so I subscribed love the style with no music and just the simplicity keep it the way it is
@27:55 jesus fuck
I also do this all the time sometimes.
Haha, your reaction made that bit worth the risk, thank you.
It was clearly just for trigger some people, Good trolling, loved it :)
Fucking madman
This is fucking hilarious. This is also so amazingly stupid. Dude, if you hurt yourself on camera pulling one of these stunts, you’d better post the video.
I just picked up one of those saws, your video was very interesting, you did a awesome restoration on it, they are extremely neet. I would of never guessed there were 2 pistons, excellent job!!!
*rain on them hose*
I have never seen a saw like that in my life, another fine job!!