With as much buried "treasure" as you guys have on your property, only a mower with steel tank treads could go unscathed! My wife was a first grade teacher for many years ... I recommended she keep a can of that wasp spray on her desk to repel unwanted "visitors" ... and she did, knowing that the kids would not touch anything on her desk. Evan, your machining looks fab! Going through all the TH-cam comments ... HOMEWORK! My homework is going to the hospital early Monday morning 7/18 and having the first hip replacement surgery. Yay! Such fun. Prayers will be appreciated!
Evan, Those teeth Definitely were not installed incorrectly. They know their business in making those rakes. Usually, a backhoe or excavator are used for rocks. I do hope it works better for you! Nice job on the hay forks. One spear might have worked better when you try to release the bale. Enjoyed watching this one for my first video.
Evan, I don't think there is very much that you can't do and if you can't, then you find another way to get the job done, so you are very good at adapting and over coming what ever you tackle.
I really enjoy this video. I’m a farm girl but my dad never let me near machinery and so I watch a lot of videos on TH-cam and I really love the guys who are very detailed in taking things apart and explaining it and letting the camera show just exactly what they’re doing so that I learn. You know I thought I knew a lot about farming but the more I watch these videos the more I realize I really didn’t hardly know anything except How to work hard which I’m proud of that fact but I am really enjoying videos like yours. And kudos for running out in the rain and not being afraid of getting wet😊❣️
Evan! As to the wasps… don’t waste your$$$ I use a solution of 1 part Dawn Dish liquid & 9 parts water in a spray bottle that’ll spray a stream. They drop DEAD immediately! Cheap and the cleanup is easy peasy!!!
I discovered your TH-cam channel yesterday and have been binge watching from current episodes and working my way backwards. I am impressed and inspired by your skill sets and work ethic. Thanks for all the great content. I'm gonna pay a visit to your merch store for a hat and t-shirt!
I thought about providing my thoughts on the bale spear spacing; but then decided against it after reading all of the “what you should do” comments. I don’t know how you maintain yourself. Great job though. We enjoy the videos. From The Thurlow Family Farm in Gladwin, MI.
Oh ya gotta get the clay put under the concrete pad before something happens to cause it to crack and drop. Would be horrible to see that nice looking pad get messed up. I guess I need a tire changer and a metal lathe now after watching your video. Good work as usual.
We found your channel through Pete at "Just a Few Acres Farm". I'm so glad he passed on your channel. It looks very interesting - we have a lot of videos to catchup on!! LOL
Oh to have rain would be so nice. My yard is already yellow and crunchy. On the bright side I have no possibility of getting hypothermia…it’s 104 in southwest Oklahoma.
Great job Evan ,lots of good work inside the shop today. Great thinking on the new brake too. Thanks for sharing , stay safe and keep up the good videos. Fred.
Greetings from Australia Evan...just a couple of things...I would have been SO angry about the ripper heads being mounted upside down from factory - that is just unacceptable, and good on you for your calm approach and skilful repair. So, repairs...mate, 14:58 is as good as new! Bloody well done! And the others...you're obviously something of a master on the lathe and welder - very envious. Have been enjoying your vids for a while now and appreciate the time and effort you put into them - looking forward to many more! Cheers then...
You can use Soapy Water on insects..Dishwashing detergent and water in a Spray bottle. .....or Brake Cleaner / Carb Cleaner or any Lubricant Spray too.... anything that coats them works to stop them....
Great job on the repairs Evan! You got skills! Whenever you decide to retire, your skills will come in handy to help your neighbors. If that's what you're inclined to do, that is. God Bless!
What a Joy to get that rain, we do Hay and Cattle farming and ranch in South Texas, Really close to Mexico and South Padre Island, TX. We sure could use some of that Rain. Prayers.
When I was a kid working in the tire shop we lit the glue on fire before putting the patch on then ran a roller over it. I guess since the 60's that has changed also.
I keep a few pump up sprayers around the property with just water and dish soap..it'll kill any wasp and not hurt you ,paint or animals.. when cutting cast flip your cutter upside down and it'll throw the chips down instead of up ..thanks for your posts
Well done Evan ! I'm proud of you ! You've done great and have learned alot, remember that you learn something new everyday IF your trying to learn ! I bet your land leveler works soo much better now ! HAHAHA ! I can't wait to see the D17 working again.... but you need to make a 3 point hitch for that blade so you can use it on the other tractors ! that should be this coming winters project !.... and I love the new Jersey heffer .... but if your lucky an hour in the morning and an hour at night milking gets REAL OLD REAL FAST ! you gott'a have Kids to do that stuff to make it worth it... and you NEVER get a break.... you can't miss a milking or be late the cow suffers ! it is a responsibility that few will take on ....I wouldn't ! I'll buy my milk thank you ! LOL but having the cow around...sure I'ed do that !!!!! cows make the best neighbors !
Great Video Evan, nice to see you getting projects done. that you've been putting off. its always nice to catch up on them. nice work on all the projects looks like you did a good job all way round. thanks for sharing. ECF
You certainly have progress in gaining additional skills which will continue to reduce your expenses. I am certain you will continue to learn additional skills because your can do attitude and tackling new jobs, will aid you in the future. Oh your vacation was not a vacation but an "outing" filled with issues. You and your wife must take tine to go on a real vacation no less then one week or two.
Hello nice welding that up and redo it. Nice to have a lathe. Enjoyed you video have a great day. Oh need to clean your eavestrough lol have fun have a good day.
The carcass of your lawnmower's tire has a bias construction. The fabric cords are in multiple layers that cross at an angle. This makes the sidewalls stiff in multiple directions which is suitable for repair. The fabric cords in a radial car tire run in only one direction - from one bead to the other - and this results in a highly flexible sidewall from which the repair patch cannot reliably adhere.
I got the same tire machine as yours , the first thing I did , because I did tires for 15 years was to mount it solid to the concrete floor in my shop , I have a small shop now so I put in anchor bolts I could remove, that way I can put it away till needed. I'm also going to order the duck bill attachment I saw on you tube , makes it so much easier . The mower tire was easy but you get into 6ply 8ply or 10 ply tires you will be glad you bolted it down solid !!!! 😉
Brazing cast iron can be done and it will last, but the charcoal fire has to bring the hub up to temperature hours to do that, ten minutes to braze the metal has to be almost hot enough to braze without a torch and as long as possible to it cool down. you can't get asbestos to cover it anymore during the cool down, rock wool maybe? fiberglass will melt, ashes maybe been over 50 years since the last time I did it.
Really enjoy how you tell why and how you fix all up on your farm...great video....great that you talk us through all your repairs...You do a great job on your videos !!! Thanks so much !! Good summer to you 2 !
Hi, Evan you, Pete from a Few Acres Farm and Farmer Tyler Ranch , it's fascinating to watch the 3 of you working and actually making what you need, Thank You
Hey Evan seeing you break down the tire reminds me of back in the day when my daddy would slowly use his car to drive up on the deflated tire to break the bead 🙂. Your getting to use your shop and equipment that's cool. Thing is you know what your doing.
Great job on the tire, we used plug patches on our tractor tires work great on sidewalls to, also was wondering if we are going to see the rest of the old tractor rebuild soon.
A guy always needs a project and you got several. It’s very enjoyable to putter around the shop. At the end of the day you can see what ya got done. Looks like you are getting your shop outfitted to do what you want to do. Great videos Evan. Appreciate every one of em
I use the string repairs and rubber cement. Always works and don't have to take the tire off the rim. Never had one leak. They make a curved steel line to hook on your air hose to blow your gutters out plus they make a screen to fit over your gutters to allow leaves to wash over the side of your gutters. I think it's called "leaf guard" for gutters.
I also live on a farm and have to pull out my harbor freight tire changer what feels like once a month. Hay equipment, trailer tires, mower tires, tractor tires. Oddly enough I enjoy pulling a tire off the rim for some reason and have heavlily modified my tire changer over the years to make it a no mar changer that I actually do my car tires/alloy wheels with. Best bang for the buck, if you have a decent hammer drill, pick up 4 drop in concrete anchors to mount the tire changer to. These are wedge anchors that stay in the concrere and have female threads to accept bolts. I think I used 7/16" or 1/2" on mine and just run some short bolts back down in the anchors when I'm not using the tire changer and have it stored in the corner. I tried bolting it down to a pallet but got frustrated and eventually broke the wood. Get a couple of the small tire irons HF sells too ($5-10/each), the one that comes with the changer just never works well. I've been watching for a while, and find myself doing very similar things. We fixed up our old NH 7' sickle this year replacing all the guards and teeth and also have a New Idea 402 hay rake we fixed, actually ended up welding the gear box like yours since it kept slipping in the field.
Evan I can see you maybee picking up a good used tire machine. They are out there and with your mechanizability could have it working better than new. Oh Evan you forgot to balance the wheel HA! You need a dome scheen over the down hole on your gutter sown spout. surprised they did not install one. Great job on the break job drum. Thx for the videeo Evan
Another time that you do such great repairs....you should have a spread sheet or log of some kind showing how much money you save in labor and parts for all the jobs you tackle. I will bet it would be a huge amount. It will probably pay for all the tools you have recently purchased. Thanks for sharing how you do these things. Have a Blessed day.
Great vlog! You got a lot done. I try not to go to Harbor Freight, not because I don't like it, but because I either spend too much or wish I'd spent more! Lol Wise decision on not brazing the brake drum. The old one did its job. The one you were able to reuse is a bonus.
I like episodes like this. It's good content and it's fun to see that we all have similar issues across the board and to see the different ways that we accomplish taking care of the same tasks. I really enjoy your content.
Wow Evan, you really did a great job on the brake pin and drum for the Allis Chalmers. I wish I had a lathe, they really come in handy. Nice to see you get the tire fixed and the cutters points switched around. Thanks for sharing have a great week.
Don't worry about the bail Forks, you will get used to them and with practice it will all come together. Really good deal on the brake pin. And as far as a beautiful job on turning the brake drum, for cosmetic purposes ,I wound have a tendency to replace them both. The curvature of the new shoes could crack the old one due to amount of pressure on a smaller area before it wears in. I know from experience that when you forget to release /unlock the brakes the old drums heat up fast and someone may have taken cover of and threw cold water in to put grease/oil/dirt fire out. We had the the old WD.
Years ago, I took my car to have the snow tires put on for the Winter. When the mechanic was done, he held up a pair of needle nose pliers and said that he found them inside my tire. The hubbie did it again!
Great channel you are a humble guy most TH-camr get so big they don't knowledge their fans base their above their base stay grounded my friend.
At the moment I look for videos where it rains! Haven't had any rain for a while and we have 2 hot weeks now.
With as much buried "treasure" as you guys have on your property, only a mower with steel tank treads could go unscathed! My wife was a first grade teacher for many years ... I recommended she keep a can of that wasp spray on her desk to repel unwanted "visitors" ... and she did, knowing that the kids would not touch anything on her desk. Evan, your machining looks fab!
Going through all the TH-cam comments ... HOMEWORK! My homework is going to the hospital early Monday morning 7/18 and having the first hip replacement surgery. Yay! Such fun. Prayers will be appreciated!
Thanks for sharing your videos and keep them coming please.
You must save yourself a lot of money by doing all the stuff yourself! You are a jack of all trades
Evan, while you’re at it, you could go ahead and buy 3 attachment points and weld one in the center for a single spear.
Evan, Those teeth Definitely were not installed incorrectly. They know their business in making those rakes. Usually, a backhoe or excavator are used for rocks. I do hope it works better for you!
Nice job on the hay forks. One spear might have worked better when you try to release the bale.
Enjoyed watching this one for my first video.
A HUGE thumbs up for me! Enjoyable video. Thank you. I like the randomness.
Evan, I don't think there is very much that you can't do and if you can't, then you find another way to get the job done, so you are very good at adapting and over coming what ever you tackle.
You always impress me so much 👍 Enjoyable video
I really enjoy this video. I’m a farm girl but my dad never let me near machinery and so I watch a lot of videos on TH-cam and I really love the guys who are very detailed in taking things apart and explaining it and letting the camera show just exactly what they’re doing so that I learn. You know I thought I knew a lot about farming but the more I watch these videos the more I realize I really didn’t hardly know anything except How to work hard which I’m proud of that fact but I am really enjoying videos like yours. And kudos for running out in the rain and not being afraid of getting wet😊❣️
Glorious rain!!! 🌧 You are quite the problem solver!!!
Hello Sandra
Evan, the next time try using some dish soap on the tire bead, should come off a bit easier!
It’s. nice when you have a nice shop to work in on a rainy day.
Wow, Evan! Your new “toy” made the tire repair much easier.
Your right and saved himself at least $10 having the tire repaired.
You can light the glue with a match to increase stickiness before putting on the patch
We have something similar to Harbor Freight here in South Africa called Adendorff. Seems like a brilliant idea to pickup one of those tyre chagers🤗🇿🇦
I would be the same way on a vacation, still working around the farm. Lol
Evan! As to the wasps… don’t waste your$$$ I use a solution of 1 part Dawn Dish liquid & 9 parts water in a spray bottle that’ll spray a stream. They drop DEAD immediately! Cheap and the cleanup is easy peasy!!!
Yes they do I just found this out this year. Great advice.
I discovered your TH-cam channel yesterday and have been binge watching from current episodes and working my way backwards. I am impressed and inspired by your skill sets and work ethic. Thanks for all the great content. I'm gonna pay a visit to your merch store for a hat and t-shirt!
I thought about providing my thoughts on the bale spear spacing; but then decided against it after reading all of the “what you should do” comments. I don’t know how you maintain yourself. Great job though. We enjoy the videos. From The Thurlow Family Farm in Gladwin, MI.
Oh ya gotta get the clay put under the concrete pad before something happens to cause it to crack and drop. Would be horrible to see that nice looking pad get messed up.
I guess I need a tire changer and a metal lathe now after watching your video. Good work as usual.
We found your channel through Pete at "Just a Few Acres Farm". I'm so glad he passed on your channel. It looks very interesting - we have a lot of videos to catchup on!! LOL
Oh to have rain would be so nice. My yard is already yellow and crunchy. On the bright side I have no possibility of getting hypothermia…it’s 104 in southwest Oklahoma.
Might think about a French Drain along the porch edge...........
You can also try a inner tube to fix it also if the patch dont work .
I am always impressed with your work; great job!
Great videos! I like that hat you were wearing.
Three cheers for the Harbor Freight . Tractor pin part looks good as new, good job, Evan. So nice to see you enjoying your new barn space.
Great job Evan ,lots of good work inside the shop today. Great thinking on the new brake too. Thanks for sharing , stay safe and keep up the good videos. Fred.
Good job!
Greetings from Australia Evan...just a couple of things...I would have been SO angry about the ripper heads being mounted upside down from factory - that is just unacceptable, and good on you for your calm approach and skilful repair. So, repairs...mate, 14:58 is as good as new! Bloody well done! And the others...you're obviously something of a master on the lathe and welder - very envious. Have been enjoying your vids for a while now and appreciate the time and effort you put into them - looking forward to many more! Cheers then...
It's good getting small jobs caught up on.
Thank you
Mr fix it, I wish I had someone like you! 👍🏻
Leaving that grass on top of the mower is a bad thing, it'll start to rust.
You might consider getting gutter guards to keep the leaves out. You will continually be cleaning the leaves out. Well worth the cost
Good creative stuff
You can use Soapy Water on insects..Dishwashing detergent and water in a Spray bottle. .....or Brake Cleaner / Carb Cleaner or any Lubricant Spray too.... anything that coats them works to stop them....
I found out Dawn dish soap is the best and it works really well
@@melchristian8876
plus it CLEANS!! and cleans up better too...the oil sprays are ok on your vehicles or when wrenching...
@@garymallard4699 👍👍
Great job on the repairs Evan! You got skills! Whenever you decide to retire, your skills will come in handy to help your neighbors. If that's what you're inclined to do, that is. God Bless!
Very good work, Evan! You are very talented doing that type of repairs.
What a Joy to get that rain, we do Hay and Cattle farming and ranch in South Texas, Really close to Mexico and South Padre Island, TX. We sure could use some of that Rain. Prayers.
When I was a kid working in the tire shop we lit the glue on fire before putting the patch on
then ran a roller over it. I guess since the 60's that has changed also.
Screens over your gutters might be a good idea, with all those trees around the shop.
I keep a few pump up sprayers around the property with just water and dish soap..it'll kill any wasp and not hurt you ,paint or animals.. when cutting cast flip your cutter upside down and it'll throw the chips down instead of up ..thanks for your posts
Well done Evan ! I'm proud of you ! You've done great and have learned alot, remember that you learn something new everyday IF your trying to learn ! I bet your land leveler works soo much better now ! HAHAHA ! I can't wait to see the D17 working again.... but you need to make a 3 point hitch for that blade so you can use it on the other tractors ! that should be this coming winters project !.... and I love the new Jersey heffer .... but if your lucky an hour in the morning and an hour at night milking gets REAL OLD REAL FAST ! you gott'a have Kids to do that stuff to make it worth it... and you NEVER get a break.... you can't miss a milking or be late the cow suffers ! it is a responsibility that few will take on ....I wouldn't ! I'll buy my milk thank you ! LOL but having the cow around...sure I'ed do that !!!!! cows make the best neighbors !
Great Video Evan, nice to see you getting projects done. that you've been putting off. its always nice to catch up on them. nice work on all the projects looks like you did a good job all way round. thanks for sharing. ECF
Real tough job working on tires
You certainly have progress in gaining additional skills which will continue to reduce your expenses. I am certain you will continue to learn additional skills because your can do attitude and tackling new jobs, will aid you in the future. Oh your vacation was not a vacation but an "outing" filled with issues. You and your wife must take tine to go on a real vacation no less then one week or two.
Hello nice welding that up and redo it. Nice to have a lathe. Enjoyed you video have a great day. Oh need to clean your eavestrough lol have fun have a good day.
Very nice weld and machine job.
The carcass of your lawnmower's tire has a bias construction. The fabric cords are in multiple layers that cross at an angle. This makes the sidewalls stiff in multiple directions which is suitable for repair. The fabric cords in a radial car tire run in only one direction - from one bead to the other - and this results in a highly flexible sidewall from which the repair patch cannot reliably adhere.
Dish soap is your friend for lube to prevent bead tear and wear removing and installing.
Jealous of the rain!! We’ve gone over a month with virtually nothing. Nicely done on the pin and brake wheel!!
I got the same tire machine as yours , the first thing I did , because I did tires for 15 years was to mount it solid to the concrete floor in my shop , I have a small shop now so I put in anchor bolts I could remove, that way I can put it away till needed. I'm also going to order the duck bill attachment I saw on you tube , makes it so much easier . The mower tire was easy but you get into 6ply 8ply or 10 ply tires you will be glad you bolted it down solid !!!! 😉
Brazing cast iron can be done and it will last, but the charcoal fire has to bring the hub up to temperature hours to do that, ten minutes to braze the metal has to be almost hot enough to braze without a torch and as long as possible to it cool down. you can't get asbestos to cover it anymore during the cool down, rock wool maybe? fiberglass will melt, ashes maybe been over 50 years since the last time I did it.
Good job. Keep the videos coming. Aloha from Hawaii
Evan i had my tires on my zero turn filled with foam added 300 lbs to it and now I have puncture proof tires. Cost was 200 a year ago
Hey Evan. It is great to see and watch you do YOUR thing. Thank you for sharing 🤓😎🤓😎
Really enjoy how you tell why and how you fix all up on your farm...great video....great that you talk us through all your repairs...You do a great job on your videos !!! Thanks so much !! Good summer to you 2 !
Amazing job
Hi, Evan you, Pete from a Few Acres Farm and Farmer Tyler Ranch , it's fascinating to watch the 3 of you working and actually making what you need, Thank You
You need some small hand roller to roll over it and flattens the patch against the tire to make even contact.
Hey Evan seeing you break down the tire reminds me of back in the day when my daddy would slowly use his car to drive up on the deflated tire to break the bead 🙂. Your getting to use your shop and equipment that's cool. Thing is you know what your doing.
You spent the day doing things I love to do, every once in awhile you need to catch up, I find it relaxing. Cheers
Great job on the tire, we used plug patches on our tractor tires work great on sidewalls to, also was wondering if we are going to see the rest of the old tractor rebuild soon.
yep plugs work awesome for those tires
Those should be a expanding lock pin. Ck at your tractor dealer store to match your pins.
A guy always needs a project and you got several. It’s very enjoyable to putter around the shop. At the end of the day you can see what ya got done. Looks like you are getting your shop outfitted to do what you want to do. Great videos Evan. Appreciate every one of em
I use the string repairs and rubber cement. Always works and don't have to take the tire off the rim. Never had one leak. They make a curved steel line to hook on your air hose to blow your gutters out plus they make a screen to fit over your gutters to allow leaves to wash over the side of your gutters. I think it's called "leaf guard" for gutters.
Could you possibly use rabbit hutch wire to make a screen for the top of the gutters to help keep leaves from plugging up the downspouts
anchor the tire tool to the concrete and it works much better, my neighbor has one and he has a place to bolt it down when he needs it
I use nickel rod to weld cast. Bless and be Blessed
If you weld cast you have to have fire bricks and blankets to slow the cooling of the cast
I also live on a farm and have to pull out my harbor freight tire changer what feels like once a month. Hay equipment, trailer tires, mower tires, tractor tires. Oddly enough I enjoy pulling a tire off the rim for some reason and have heavlily modified my tire changer over the years to make it a no mar changer that I actually do my car tires/alloy wheels with. Best bang for the buck, if you have a decent hammer drill, pick up 4 drop in concrete anchors to mount the tire changer to. These are wedge anchors that stay in the concrere and have female threads to accept bolts. I think I used 7/16" or 1/2" on mine and just run some short bolts back down in the anchors when I'm not using the tire changer and have it stored in the corner. I tried bolting it down to a pallet but got frustrated and eventually broke the wood. Get a couple of the small tire irons HF sells too ($5-10/each), the one that comes with the changer just never works well. I've been watching for a while, and find myself doing very similar things. We fixed up our old NH 7' sickle this year replacing all the guards and teeth and also have a New Idea 402 hay rake we fixed, actually ended up welding the gear box like yours since it kept slipping in the field.
If you have any extra rain sent it to Texas.
We need rain in New York State too!
Dang I would send all of you some rain if I could it’s been raining all summer up here in wv can’t get hay made or nothing
Agree, we need it so bad here in Texas.
My first hay cutting of the year is typically 70-80 round bales. It was 10 this year. We NEED the rain in Texas.
@@DrewEdwardBacklas we usually get 2 to 3 cuttings a year and around 150 to 230 round bails each time
Excellent job Evan! Good day in the shop! Enjoyed watching Evan!
Evan I can see you maybee picking up a good used tire machine. They are out there and with your mechanizability could have it working better than new. Oh Evan you forgot to balance the wheel HA! You need a dome scheen over the down hole on your gutter sown spout. surprised they did not install one. Great job on the break job drum. Thx for the videeo Evan
Great job keep it up
Another time that you do such great repairs....you should have a spread sheet or log of some kind showing how much money you save in labor and parts for all the jobs you tackle. I will bet it would be a huge amount. It will probably pay for all the tools you have recently purchased. Thanks for sharing how you do these things. Have a Blessed day.
You amaze me of all the things you can do. Love your show.
Great video ,Evan, got a good skill on fixing things when you retire you neighbors are going to be glad your around to fix things
i bought this tire changer from harbor freight ,love it.they also got one for real small tires .that one works good too.
Good job repairing that pin . Turned out good as new .
Great vlog! You got a lot done. I try not to go to Harbor Freight, not because I don't like it, but because I either spend too much or wish I'd spent more! Lol
Wise decision on not brazing the brake drum. The old one did its job. The one you were able to reuse is a bonus.
I like episodes like this. It's good content and it's fun to see that we all have similar issues across the board and to see the different ways that we accomplish taking care of the same tasks. I really enjoy your content.
Wow Evan, you really did a great job on the brake pin and drum for the Allis Chalmers. I wish I had a lathe, they really come in handy. Nice to see you get the tire fixed and the cutters points switched around. Thanks for sharing have a great week.
Love watching you and your homestead evolve just curious what you do for a living when you’re not on the property
Evan great job but next time you break the tire down usr a little soapy water. 👍🇺🇸
Don't worry about the bail Forks, you will get used to them and with practice it will all come together.
Really good deal on the brake pin.
And as far as a beautiful job on turning the brake drum, for cosmetic purposes ,I wound have a tendency to replace them both. The curvature of the new shoes could crack the old one due to amount of pressure on a smaller area before it wears in.
I know from experience that when you forget to release /unlock the brakes the old drums heat up fast and someone may have taken cover of and threw cold water in to put grease/oil/dirt fire out. We had the the old WD.
thats a GROOVY brake drum😎🤣
Yeah ! You got to take a break from everything for your sanity.
Suggest gravel in the drip zone from roof won't wash away as easy
good job on the pin & the brake drum
Your pin repair was really professional looking! Great job, thank you for the videos and please keep it up!
Another educational and entertaining video. Thank you. Have a blessed day. 🙏🏼🇺🇸
Years ago, I took my car to have the snow tires put on for the Winter.
When the mechanic was done, he held up a pair of needle nose pliers and said that he found them inside my tire.
The hubbie did it again!
Great job!
rub a lil dishsoap on the bead of that tire when its on the machine your pry bar will slide along much easier
Hello amber
Great job on your work. Hope you enjoyed your vacation. Love you guys
When i change tires always rub a little oil or grease around edge makes it set faster