Good one Mr. Pete! Admire your vitality and enthusiasm when it comes to preserving and restoring vintage machinery. Glad to see some reassembly also. My dad always said " the longer things are apart, the further apart they get!"
Can't wait to see more in this series. I love this size shaper. I don't have much room but even so it's something I could see myself getting at some point. Thanks Mr. Pete!
I suddenly realized why Mr.Pete's videos are so oddly satisfying: This is the 'Murican version of Norwegian Slow-TV! True, his videos are speeded up compared to the Norwegian stuff, but you get to watch the whole process - an assembly coming apart, being cleaned, polished, painted and finally coming together again. This stuff is incredibly calming, I always take my time to watch Mr. Pete's videos from end to end. There is something nostalgic about them and you come away with the feeling that you watched something very constructive. Sorry, English is my third language, I may not be expressing myself correctly here...
I sure had fun and it looked like you did too...beyond painting anyway. Great to see how old iron is designed and manufactured in a process like this. Thanks Mr. Pete, looking forward to the next escapade. Hat Tip!
Mr Pete, thank you so much for doing this shaper series of videos, it really helps (me at least) understand how they work. I also appreciate from my own experience of making TH-cam videos how much longer a job like that takes if you are filming at the same time! So thanks again and I'm looking forward to the next one. Cheers, Alan.
With so many machine tools fabricated from steel or even aluminium with plastic knobs and handles, isn't it a pleasure to see those beautiful and perfectly functional castings with ball handles and turned dials. Those iron founders and Patten makers were magicians. Keep away from the rocking chair Mr. Pete.
I liked the Bijur oilers that were basically a reservoir with a spring loaded T-handle on top that put pressure on the pump piston. Had a single small output fitting that utilized tiny brass tubing that branched out in strategic directions by means of tees, crosses, and tiny manifold blocks to enable lubrication at all points. A lot of the Chicago Rivet machines were fitted with them.
Very interesting series of videos. You have your Mr. Pete sized shaper and Adam Booth has his Abom79 sized shaper. I have really enjoyed watching Abom's shaper work, and look forward to hearing yours. I find the sound of a shaper working very soothing. Thanks.
Hi Lyle, there is a paint additive called Penetrol (from The Flood Company). I have used it for decades and is very good on bare metal to prevent rust. Unlike oil, it dries so dirt does not collect. I have found that warming cast iron helps it penetrate into the surface ans seals it (not too hot to burn your fingers). I last coated my welding table 10 months ago and it still looks like white metal. Stay safe and well :)
There a very simple piston pump assembly with one way check valve and a couple of O rings. Most with home shops could re-make the whole lube system from scratch without much expense or trouble. It's a fair amount of work to get them removed for a diagnostic check, but there's little than can go wrong other than plugged oil lines, bad O rings, stuck check valve, or possibly a scored piston and cylinder if it was ever run dry for long enough.
I see you get excellent results painting with aerosol cans. I've always used alkyd enamel (battleship gray), applied with a foam brush and baked in an old oven set at 150° for 15 - 20 minutes, just long enough for the casting to reach temperature. The paint flows out to a smooth finish with no brush marks before baking. Just saying. Thanks my Friend ps One of the reasons I do this is less masking.
I love the inexpensive, light-weight LED flashlights that you can buy now. I'm sure you remember the old, 2-battery, D-cell flashlights from years ago. They were heavy, the battery was always dead when you needed it most, and they were so dim that if you turned it on in a room in the middle of the day, the room would actually get darker.
Great stuff Mr Pete! I'm looking to buy a shaper and your vids are arming me with plenty of ammo in my search for a useable/ restorable specimen. Looking forward to your next vid on this project. Thanks for all your time and information. 👍🇺🇸
I find it very interesting to watch you take stuff apart, to see the many different tools you have other then your great collection of Starrett tools. One of the very first tools I got was a SanpOn impact screwdriver. Back then I needed it to remove screws from large casting. I haven't used it in maybe 25 years...And with today's castings, I would be afraid to use it because they are so fragile. Have to make things lighter to cut down on shipping costs from China.........
Very nice! I could use your help over here in Virginia Lyle. Or, maybe I could just drop off my machines at your place and wait for your pick-up call. LOL. Great vid. Gil
Hi Mr. Pete! When you removed the crank pin, you may not have realized it but you got EXTREMELY lucky. Here's why....located at the bottom of the crank is a drilled and tapped hole, 5/16-18 for a square head screw. This screw locks into a flat on the crank pin. It is very difficult to get to for removal. It requires reaching down into the crankcase with a small wrench. Very Darn Hard to do!!!! It appeared that the square head locking screw on your machine was missing. I have never seen a hex head bolt on the outside of the casting holding in the crank pivot pin. I have only had about 4 of these apart but they all had that square head lock screw inside the crankcase. I wonder if they changed the design on yours. Good luck! Mark Clauss
You were right, mine was missing. I did not know it was a squarehead. I thought that it would have been a socket head setscrew. I try to put one in there and could not to get at it. Maybe someone drilled and tapped that screw hole on the side?
Fwiw I just checked my SB shaper that's of the same vintage as the one in the video and there's no shaft keeper on the outside of the column casting either. I haven't got to my shaper's disassembly yet so thanks for the heads up Mark.
Hello Mr. Pete. I’m enjoying the videos on your shaper restoration, takes me back to learning in the machine shop. While listening to you speak, it struck me how much you kinda sound like Jimmy Steward. Of course you’d have to slow the speech down a little to get his cadence. Anyway, looking forward to seeing the next one. Take care. SMIB
I have the same shaper. years ago it was putting out to much oil to one side of the ram. I adjusted it. now i'm not sure it is getting enough oil. My question is the 2 adjustment screws do you turn the counter clock wise to get more oil or do you line the slow up with the tubing ? I sure wouldn't wan't to have one drop into the oil. I have tried some turning but can't see any difference. I don't use the shaper much. ( like twice a year for small jobs. Thanks Ernie..
Good morning Mr. Pete, Look Like a complete reconditioning. The machine looks very similar to my Atlas 7b. Make it look pretty and maybe that young lady may come over to see your machine?
Hi Mr.Pete.One question if you would please tell me the procedure for the drawer removal from the cabinet base I have one of these machines and would like to move it into my basement shop thank's
Lyle, Does the machine have enough stroke to resurface itself on both damaged table faces? That would be my desire. The dressed table surfaces would then be parallel to the machine stroke. I wouldn't cleanup to full cleanup if those chip gouges are really deep.
Afaik most or maybe all shapers were designated by there stroke length to also be capable of machining a cube the same size as that stroke. That's true for this South Bend one. Since the working surface on my late model shaper that's the same as this one is 7" x 5" then it should be just barely possible. The sides may not be since the table doesn't pivot like a universal shapers table can. But having a second shaper like he does then yes those could still be done. Again afaik shapers were supposed to have a light but full clean up cut made to the top surface when first bought to ensure it is exactly parallel to the ram stroke much like a lathes face plate is done when installing a new one. With noticeable ram way wear? I dunno, checking it's alignment numbers to the ram and then setting the shapers table to a corrected number for that true alignment to the ram on a vertical mill and then fly cutting it true and to clean up minor markings might be a bit better. There's really not a whole lot of extra metal in these shaper box tables so taking the barest minimum is pretty important.
Mr Pete I now have a gerstner tool chest no machines yet and I have machinist fever I’m going crazy that I haven’t been to a flea market in a month and am always on eBay looking for stuff the worst part is that I’m 12.
Simple and great idea on the oil extension nipple.. that's really not a good position for it... Can't wait to get a bigger place so I can buy one of those and also get into the not making a proffit club. How is the height gauge video going?
Mr Pete I did not see you put the pin in the lead screw for the clapper. Mine has a round pin which would serve the same purpose as a square key or wood ruff key. Mine came without the half round slot in the lead screw and I still need to cut that slot. The man i bought it from had 3 of the lead screws and the new one did not have the slot but he had the pin and told me to use a ball end mill to cut the slot. The pin is meant to keep the handle from slipping when cranking the clapper up and down. Did yours have the slot and did I just miss it or does it not have the slot and pin? Thanks.
I assume that when yopu are through with the shaper you will want to dispose of it. I would love to be able to buy one for my small shop. I do sop poor machining on my chinese drill press and the shaper would fit right in and be much more accurate than my poor drill press. The small shaper would not tax my wood floor. :
"Borrowed from my wife's silverware drawer." In all seriousness Mr. Pete, you're more active and in better shape than many forty year old men I know. Keep it up!
Mr. Pete do you still have that little shop built shaper that someone gave you about seven years ago? It was a little table top beauty that was hand powered.
Do you know anything about the amco shapers? Good, bad, or problematic? 30s n 40s generations I think. I never see little shapers around me to speak of. Have seen a couple of those, either incomplete or ready to use. All priced beyond reality. Automotive machinery company I believe. You could buy two large shapers for some of what I've seen. Thanks for sharing
I'd love to find one of these in the UK, nice compact shaper. I posted the second half of the bore-Rite video : th-cam.com/video/NjsWj8U-UmM/w-d-xo.html. Cheers Mr Pete
Good one Mr. Pete! Admire your vitality and enthusiasm when it comes to preserving and restoring vintage machinery. Glad to see some reassembly also. My dad always said " the longer things are apart, the further apart they get!"
Yes
Good work. Nothing more satisfying than cleaning up and bringing back an old machine.
Yes
Can't wait to see more in this series. I love this size shaper. I don't have much room but even so it's something I could see myself getting at some point. Thanks Mr. Pete!
👍👍
I could spend hours watch MrPete do his favorite thing- painting.....
lol
I suddenly realized why Mr.Pete's videos are so oddly satisfying: This is the 'Murican version of Norwegian Slow-TV! True, his videos are speeded up compared to the Norwegian stuff, but you get to watch the whole process - an assembly coming apart, being cleaned, polished, painted and finally coming together again. This stuff is incredibly calming, I always take my time to watch Mr. Pete's videos from end to end. There is something nostalgic about them and you come away with the feeling that you watched something very constructive. Sorry, English is my third language, I may not be expressing myself correctly here...
We missed the best part, watching the paint dry.
I sure had fun and it looked like you did too...beyond painting anyway. Great to see how old iron is designed and manufactured in a process like this. Thanks Mr. Pete, looking forward to the next escapade. Hat Tip!
Lots of parts to clean. Nice start.
Yes
I have this very shaper to restore. So glad you are doing a video series on it. Thanks Mr Pete.
Thanks
Mr Pete, thank you so much for doing this shaper series of videos, it really helps (me at least) understand how they work. I also appreciate from my own experience of making TH-cam videos how much longer a job like that takes if you are filming at the same time! So thanks again and I'm looking forward to the next one. Cheers, Alan.
Thank you. Yes, I just finished the final part of the series yesterday. Ten parts all together. It took three weeks. Much longer when you are filming
@@mrpete222 Ten parts, that's great, so much to look forward to. Thank you again.
i didn't expect this machine to get full strip and overhaul, but bravo Mr Pete, you've made this series all the enjoyable . thanks.
Thanks
I wouldn’t mind a 30 min video on this stuff, interested in seeing the inner workings.
Looking good so far.👍🏻👌👏🇺🇸
Just bought myself a southbend shaper, gonna follow your series through again and go step by step!
👍
Great way to start the morning, coffee and Mr Pete.
With so many machine tools fabricated from steel or even aluminium with plastic knobs and handles, isn't it a pleasure to see those beautiful and perfectly functional castings with ball handles and turned dials. Those iron founders and Patten makers were magicians. Keep away from the rocking chair Mr. Pete.
👍👍
The table would be a prime candidate for a scraping vid!!
It's so much fun cleaning and restoring an old machine. Look forward to seeing more.
👍
I'm learning so much watching your videos.
Have a Jesus filled day
Greg in Michigan
I love seeing these old machines brought back to life. Looking forward to your next installment.
Love a good disassembly and clean up, and this did not disappoint.
Very interesting. I have an old shaper but I’m afraid It’s beyond saving. Keep the videos coming love them!
THANK YOU...for sharing. For a man who does not like to paint you sure do handle that spray can pretty good. Enjoyed.
lol
Really enjoy seeing all of the parts in detail. Old machinery is so wonderful. Thanks, Mr. Pete! :-)
👍🇺🇸
I liked the Bijur oilers that were basically a reservoir with a spring loaded T-handle on top that put pressure on the pump piston. Had a single small output fitting that utilized tiny brass tubing that branched out in strategic directions by means of tees, crosses, and tiny manifold blocks to enable lubrication at all points. A lot of the Chicago Rivet machines were fitted with them.
Thank you MrPete my machine shop teacher. Nice work and keep the series going Sir. Good day too.
👍
@@mrpete222 Thanks and keep making great videos my shop teacher.
I'm liking the series! Good job.
👍
It is such a reward to restore old tools then put them back in use and not just to become shop art. "So along for now"
you know youtube stopped notification of new videos? they just get better and better.
Did not know
@@mrpete222 I think they stopped telling us on August 13th.
Mr Pete, you missed the opportunity to put a hose on the drain and directly to the bucket.
Thanks for the "Clapper" bit, I laughed pretty good.
Very interesting series of videos.
You have your Mr. Pete sized shaper and Adam Booth has his Abom79 sized shaper.
I have really enjoyed watching Abom's shaper work, and look forward to hearing yours. I find the sound of a shaper working very soothing.
Thanks.
👍
I love Shapers from the 7" to the 36", always have, and always will. Great series of videos mrpete.
Very nice Jubel I’m an old people and I like old things
Yes
Excellent, the shaper will look great when you're done!
I remember your earlier shaper, you put your ram head on it. Ram on the ram.
That is funny that you said that. I just came in from the garage where I was filming. And the last film clip I made was with the ram head, LOL
@@mrpete222 Good timing! And the ram head deserves a revisit, lol!
Hi Lyle, there is a paint additive called Penetrol (from The Flood Company). I have used it for decades and is very good on bare metal to prevent rust. Unlike oil, it dries so dirt does not collect. I have found that warming cast iron helps it penetrate into the surface ans seals it (not too hot to burn your fingers). I last coated my welding table 10 months ago and it still looks like white metal. Stay safe and well :)
Thanks
Nice job so far Mr. Pete, thanks!
That is a sweet little machine. I enjoyed the still shots at the end. Especially the one with the little metal can of 3 in 1 oil.
03:19 Mr Pete you know as well as me, it's fun when things go smoothly.
You know it don't when using those words that soap in mouth washes away. Lol.
Mr. Pete & coffee, so yes I'm happy! Fastest 18-1/2 minutes of the day.😊
😃
I hope you got Mrs. Pete's silverware organizer back in time. I'd hate to see you get busted! Lol. Great video series, looking forward to the rest.
I am stoked that you are going to go over the lubrication system. I have a SB shaper that works beautifully other than the lubrication system.
Coming soon
There a very simple piston pump assembly with one way check valve and a couple of O rings. Most with home shops could re-make the whole lube system from scratch without much expense or trouble. It's a fair amount of work to get them removed for a diagnostic check, but there's little than can go wrong other than plugged oil lines, bad O rings, stuck check valve, or possibly a scored piston and cylinder if it was ever run dry for long enough.
Turning Point excellent, thanks for the clarification. I wasn’t sure what to expect and could never find much good information regarding them.
Nice pace to the video. I'm not normally one to watch disassembly/assembly videos.
Thanks, knowledge and skill equal entertainment.
This machine has a lot of parts, hope you don't have any left over parts when it is finished, grin... Thank you for sharing your project on here.
lol
Allright. It's a good morning now.
Watching Mr. Pete and an old black & white episode of Gunssmoke...at the same time....Does it get any better than this LOL
I watched two episodes of Gunsmoke every night. Love the black-and-white episodes
Thanks for sharing, can't wait for part 5!
I see you get excellent results painting with aerosol cans. I've always used alkyd enamel (battleship gray), applied with a foam brush and baked in an old oven set at 150° for 15 - 20 minutes, just long enough for the casting to reach temperature.
The paint flows out to a smooth finish with no brush marks before baking. Just saying.
Thanks my Friend
ps One of the reasons I do this is less masking.
I love the inexpensive, light-weight LED flashlights that you can buy now. I'm sure you remember the old, 2-battery, D-cell flashlights from years ago. They were heavy, the battery was always dead when you needed it most, and they were so dim that if you turned it on in a room in the middle of the day, the room would actually get darker.
Boy do I remember those, hated them. I still have a couple that I should throw out
Enjoying the video series,never had a shaper apart interesting to see the intrnals,thanks for the video😀😀.
I have spent this past week doing all of those same operations on my little no-name shaper project. It's like deja vu all over again.
👍👍
Thanks for the great video, Mr. Pete, you are an awesome teacher! I hope I get a chance to rebuild one of these someday!
Thanks
Great stuff Mr Pete! I'm looking to buy a shaper and your vids are arming me with plenty of ammo in my search for a useable/ restorable specimen. Looking forward to your next vid on this project. Thanks for all your time and information. 👍🇺🇸
👍👍
I would have to bag & tag; (along with the parts list & diagram). Thanks Mr Pete.
Hey Mr Pete you still remind me of my old shop teacher Mr Nordhoff
👍
You know what would do a good job resurfacing that table? A shaper! ;-)
lol
These will be really nice after the Lyle touch!
Excellent video.Thank you.
very good video..thanks for your time
I wonder how many watching know who you are mimicking when asking, Is Everybody Happy? I do.
lol
Good show. Many thanks.
I find it very interesting to watch you take stuff apart, to see the many different tools you have other then your great collection of Starrett tools. One of the very first tools I got was a SanpOn impact screwdriver. Back then I needed it to remove screws from large casting. I haven't used it in maybe 25 years...And with today's castings, I would be afraid to use it because they are so fragile. Have to make things lighter to cut down on shipping costs from China.........
Yes
Wow, nice job ted!
Chowdered vise block? Seems like a perfect job for a shaper! Love your vids good sir keep em coming! Thanks
What was the kerosene can you use to squirt down the inside, Tubalcain ? That is very handy for doing cleanup of machinery. As always great video,
Very nice! I could use your help over here in Virginia Lyle. Or, maybe I could just drop off my machines at your place and wait for your pick-up call. LOL. Great vid. Gil
lol
Hi Mr. Pete!
When you removed the crank pin, you may not have realized it but you got EXTREMELY lucky. Here's why....located at the bottom of the crank is a drilled and tapped hole, 5/16-18 for a square head screw. This screw locks into a flat on the crank pin. It is very difficult to get to for removal. It requires reaching down into the crankcase with a small wrench. Very Darn Hard to do!!!! It appeared that the square head locking screw on your machine was missing. I have never seen a hex head bolt on the outside of the casting holding in the crank pivot pin. I have only had about 4 of these apart but they all had that square head lock screw inside the crankcase. I wonder if they changed the design on yours. Good luck! Mark Clauss
You were right, mine was missing. I did not know it was a squarehead. I thought that it would have been a socket head setscrew. I try to put one in there and could not to get at it. Maybe someone drilled and tapped that screw hole on the side?
Fwiw I just checked my SB shaper that's of the same vintage as the one in the video and there's no shaft keeper on the outside of the column casting either. I haven't got to my shaper's disassembly yet so thanks for the heads up Mark.
you are amazingly helping me. from the lost land in east Africa !!!do you have plans to make bevel and helical gears please?
I do not have the machinery to make those gears
Hello Mr. Pete. I’m enjoying the videos on your shaper restoration, takes me back to learning in the machine shop. While listening to you speak, it struck me how much you kinda sound like Jimmy Steward. Of course you’d have to slow the speech down a little to get his cadence. Anyway, looking forward to seeing the next one. Take care. SMIB
👍👍
I have the same shaper. years ago it was putting out to much oil to one side of the ram. I adjusted it. now i'm not sure it is getting enough oil. My question is the 2 adjustment screws do you turn the counter clock wise to get more oil or do you line the slow up with the tubing ? I sure wouldn't wan't to have one drop into the oil. I have tried some turning but can't see any difference. I don't use the shaper much. ( like twice a year for small jobs.
Thanks Ernie..
Good morning Mr. Pete, Look Like a complete reconditioning. The machine looks very similar to my Atlas 7b. Make it look pretty and maybe that young lady may come over to see your machine?
Yes, because she surely wouldn’t come over just to see me, LOL.
If you have reassembly problems just don't ask me where all those parts go! Love the video though.
Always interesting!
Very well executed as usuall Mr. P, T/Y.
Thanks
The one and only Pete
Thanks
Keep it up Mr. PETE
Hi Mr.Pete.One question if you would please tell me the procedure for the drawer removal from the cabinet base I have one of these machines and would like to move it into my basement shop thank's
Open the drawer fully you will see a little hole on each track. You must press the spring with a small screwdriver then the drawer will pull out
Looking pretty nice!
Lyle,
Does the machine have enough stroke to resurface itself on both damaged table faces? That would be my desire. The dressed table surfaces would then be parallel to the machine stroke. I wouldn't cleanup to full cleanup if those chip gouges are really deep.
Good idea
Afaik most or maybe all shapers were designated by there stroke length to also be capable of machining a cube the same size as that stroke. That's true for this South Bend one. Since the working surface on my late model shaper that's the same as this one is 7" x 5" then it should be just barely possible. The sides may not be since the table doesn't pivot like a universal shapers table can. But having a second shaper like he does then yes those could still be done. Again afaik shapers were supposed to have a light but full clean up cut made to the top surface when first bought to ensure it is exactly parallel to the ram stroke much like a lathes face plate is done when installing a new one. With noticeable ram way wear? I dunno, checking it's alignment numbers to the ram and then setting the shapers table to a corrected number for that true alignment to the ram on a vertical mill and then fly cutting it true and to clean up minor markings might be a bit better. There's really not a whole lot of extra metal in these shaper box tables so taking the barest minimum is pretty important.
Mr Pete I now have a gerstner tool chest no machines yet and I have machinist fever I’m going crazy that I haven’t been to a flea market in a month and am always on eBay looking for stuff the worst part is that I’m 12.
👍👍
Wow, you really move fast.
My 1965 South Bend shaper had cigarette butts, gum wrappers, old tool bits in the bottom of the oil reservoir when I did my restoration.
Wow, it must have come from a school. I really found nothing in mine except chips
THANK YOU MR P, REGARDS R
👍
Simple and great idea on the oil extension nipple.. that's really not a good position for it... Can't wait to get a bigger place so I can buy one of those and also get into the not making a proffit club. How is the height gauge video going?
It’s on the back burner
@@mrpete222 lol... oh well... no rush
Mr Pete how did you clean the crank handles and dials? What do you soak them in?
Mr. Pete paints? WOW
Mr Pete I did not see you put the pin in the lead screw for the clapper. Mine has a round pin which would serve the same purpose as a square key or wood ruff key. Mine came without the half round slot in the lead screw and I still need to cut that slot. The man i bought it from had 3 of the lead screws and the new one did not have the slot but he had the pin and told me to use a ball end mill to cut the slot. The pin is meant to keep the handle from slipping when cranking the clapper up and down. Did yours have the slot and did I just miss it or does it not have the slot and pin? Thanks.
It has a pin
@@mrpete222 thanks
Morning Lyle
I assume that when yopu are through with the shaper you will want to dispose of it. I would love to be able to buy one for my small shop.
I do sop poor machining on my chinese drill press and the shaper would fit right in and be much more accurate than my poor drill press.
The small shaper would not tax my wood floor. :
"Borrowed from my wife's silverware drawer." In all seriousness Mr. Pete, you're more active and in better shape than many forty year old men I know. Keep it up!
Thanks
I thought you were done with painting!? I hate it too, you’re not alone.
Believe me, it wasn’t easy
Mr. Pete do you still have that little shop built shaper that someone gave you about seven years ago? It was a little table top beauty that was hand powered.
No, it is long gone. Wish I still had it
@@mrpete222 I hope whoever owns it now appreciates the craftsmanship that went into making it. Every once in awhile I revisit those videos.
9:15 Clap. Clap clap clap clap. They call it the Clapper. Clap. Clap. Clap. You know what it's after.
Do you know anything about the amco shapers? Good, bad, or problematic? 30s n 40s generations I think. I never see little shapers around me to speak of. Have seen a couple of those, either incomplete or ready to use. All priced beyond reality. Automotive machinery company I believe. You could buy two large shapers for some of what I've seen. Thanks for sharing
I have never seen one of those except in videos or pictures
I hope you have a good memory.
Do not
Hiya Mr Pete
Is there a spray paint brand you recommend for this?
They are probably all about the same, but I typically buy rust oleum or Ace. The cheap Walmart stuff is only good for graffiti.
Morning
Looks like the hammer and chisel mechanic had put on the vice if he had went to mr Pete’s class he would have got a E in class for that jod
Yes
Sure is easier working on a miniature rather a vary large one.
Yes
Mamy many pictures at the end!!
Lots
I'd love to find one of these in the UK, nice compact shaper. I posted the second half of the bore-Rite video : th-cam.com/video/NjsWj8U-UmM/w-d-xo.html. Cheers Mr Pete
You bet your life we are 😅