@@theghostofthomasjenkins9643 - Used one many many times in flame proof areas, no one ever told us that there were mechanical hammer drills, game changer! Apprentices are cheap though.
@@kenjepson1908 The mechanism of this thing would have to be at least capable of creating a spark; all those metal parts snapping and banging around in there... Although, I suppose one of those could be sealed or built with sealing in mind...
One thing I can say for myself and everyone else thank you for just leaving the real sound in the video and not adding some stupid dorky music very satisfying video
But its MORE satisfying if it's got that "satisfying" genre music from TH-cam's library. Everyone knows that. LOL I 1000000000% agree with you! The worst is when the video is like an hour long, and the song (not songS) is like 20 seconds long...... and just repeating over and over.
A wonderful restoration, you have brought me back to my childhood. My father hand one of those, although with slight differences. Ours didn't have the shoulder rest or the hidey -hole for the tool in the handle. It had a pivot and a ring on the base of the handle for a lanyard like a military service revolver. I am glad you polished the main body as they never were painted, they were always bare aluminium and where you painted the handle red was a black textured rubber grip between the depressions in the castings. To remove the drilling tool you didn't need to heat it. they supplied a simple metal, chamfered bar that you inserted into the cross hole behind the bit, tapped with a hammer which released the drill bit. And yes they where close to useless for drilling holes but to a young boy with a big imagination it was a great machine gun that went bang. Thanks for the reminder of an earlier life time.
Hahahahaha guess I wasn't the only one who thought this tool made an amazing imaginary machine gun...ahhh nothing like reminiscing on childhood memories
@@catto4934 That's very good for him but I did not read his. I just had a thought and posted it if you don't like it you don't have to read it. Bye bye now.
@@outshimed well, a hammer drill IS for brick/concrete/mortar, (ive never used a hand crank) i can only assume it would probably be more useful on its intended surface rather than wood? the bit is a triangular chisel. not a drill bit after all
As many have commented below...you had me at final coat. Thats when I knew you're a good man sir! Thanks and keep at it. Its good to know that there are still some "youngsters" who appreciate what the "oldsters " did. One of my co-workers has a Hilti hammer. Puts the bit in, marks his hole,touches tip to mark, turns it on and only uses his finger to steady the drill. Just made me smile when you "six min later"
Great job on the restoration and the actual use demo. This would be a step up for me using a single "star" bit, strike with a suitable hammer, clear hole, reset bit, turn slightly, strike again repeat for days on end.
wow people used these into the 70s even, before electric drills were cheap. but if you were an apprentice , it was your job to do this awful job. let us see if you drill an entire hole in a brick, like it was meant for!
We are so spoiled now with electric motors everywhere. I remember in the 70s my dad built a hundred chairs and 25 tables for a restaurant and he put in every screw by hand...with a bar of soap to help get them started.
@@ModMINI yep i think this is a great tool i was born in the 90s so i got no clue how things worked in the 70s but i like old tools and before this the alternative was a hammer and a drill chisel the same hole he made would take 20 min at least and all these hand tools run on 100 W of power that is the power out put of a human on a good day
@@dementedbowine8681 Theses tools will still be in use long after the non serviceable toools of the 1990's have broken down and aren't repairable. 3-D printing may let us make new bodies that are broken when opening them though..So maybe they might be able to be salvaged..... Only Hand Tool Rescue's will will show if such is possible.
I really like the old tools you find, and I enjoy watching the restorations, but if I'm being completely honest, it's the tiny touches of humor that crop up from time to time that really keep me coming back time and again.
Was that supposed to be a mystery box in the intro? I love the clever intros more and more every video, but the standard one with the 90’s sit-com feel will forever be the best. Please don’t ever stop making videos! I need this as part of my life now lol.
I just found this channel a few days ago. I'm a mans man. I love tools,gadgets and the like but I fricken love this channel!! I am hooked! I dont even know why I like it so much!! You are outstanding at this though and these are thoroughly entertaining and I'm shitting my pants at the thought that you've gained almost HALF A MILLION SUBS IN A YEAR!!! WOW!!! This will get as big as you let it. Glad I'm here for the ride.
Many an unhappy memory of using the hand version with a 2 1/2lb club hammer, putting outside lights up and fixing socket boxes to the walls. Man, they were useless ! Every apprentice had skinned knuckles from using those. Funny enough, was clearing my shed out at the weekend and came across an old raw plug jumper with a 2.5 mm bit in for yellow plugs. Thank god for battery tools and spare batteries, would hate to have to go back to those.
Yes, me to. One of my jobs when I was an apprentice was to fix rainwater down pipes using the manual hand tool with a hammer. Bang, bang, bang, twist. My hand would be sore at the end of the day. Always had a spanner or pair of grips handy for the times it would bind in the hole.
When I was an apprentice I used the manual version installing electrical boxes and conduit. Always had a mouth full of fiber raw plugs chewing the ends to swell them up to fit tight in the hole. I remember when I saw some one with a hammer drill. It was a Metabo. I thought the bearings were shot. The guy told me he had used the drill bit for weeks.
How many remember Rawl Plugs? Those anchors you pound in concrete to accept a sheet metal type screw for fastening. Big company and widely recognized as a product, like Crescent wrench or Kleenex back in the 50s+. I believe the wood post absorbed some of the needed "impact" needed to drill in concrete. Nice restoring a piece of history. A kid buying this thing at a garage sale would have no clue how to connect it to his USB port.
Excellent video, interesting restore. Many years ago I worked for a company that sold pneumatic rock drills, so cool to see how this works in a hand tool. Thanks!
Interesting, because I have one of these, in a bit better condition, complete with original box of bits and plugs - good info for my future restoration… Thanks a lot!
Just read your text; the original colour is black on the handle, red on the crank, the body is raw aluminium. Rawlplug provided an ejector, basically a 4.5mm dia. nail with a tapered point, which is pushed into the hole at the end of the spindle and hammered to force out the bit. Hope this helps!
Love that stalagmite of grunge on your drill press post from all the wire-wheeling. Archaeologists will one day discover that as a forensic record of all your projects.
I can see the new kid in the shop being given this tool on his first day of work, because it truly is a punishment. What a racket it makes! Great video!
Michael Corley he said it peened into place which means the pins would’ve had to be drilled out and re peened. Or could’ve gone for a more modern replacement like a roll pin or taper fit. But not really sticking with the theme I guess.
As a machinist I would caution you about wearing loose clothing around rotating machine heads. A light leather apron might keep you from winding your shirt around your middle an being injured. I like your videos and don’t want to see you hurt.
Nitro 5000 No, I’m a machinist because that’s what my diploma says and people pay me to make parts for a power plant. It’s a good safety tip regardless.
You work bare handed as I do. It's is much more satisfying to feel the various materials and lubricants. I can feel a tiny cross cut on a small screw with my bare fingers. That is probably what I am into, plus the pleasure of disassembling and then reassembling the project. I have several vice grips. They are in much better shape than the one I saw you use. Nice work though.
I’m finishing the restoration of a 1950’s Rockwell bandsaw. I have a question: How frequently do you need to review the tear down parts of your videos while you’re putting a tool back together? Love the last coat. Thanks
Great video! The drill bits are quickly and easily changed with a drift key made for the drill, ypu just druve it in the hole that is in the side of the drill shank, no need for flame! my drill press uses the same taper system as that drill, only larger. It is a lot more secure then a normal drill chuck
Dear Mr H T Rescue, my gawjus wrench arrived today and I am as pleased as punch with it vowing to put it to work this very weekend on my old Vespa. Many thanks from Ian in the UK :D
There was a time when workmen DREAMED of having such a wonderful, time saving, easy to use tool.
use a star chisel once and you'll be begging for this thing.
@@theghostofthomasjenkins9643 - Used one many many times in flame proof areas, no one ever told us that there were mechanical hammer drills, game changer! Apprentices are cheap though.
Ye mate, i think u just used ur hands and some rocks aren't ya?
@@kenjepson1908 The mechanism of this thing would have to be at least capable of creating a spark; all those metal parts snapping and banging around in there...
Although, I suppose one of those could be sealed or built with sealing in mind...
One thing I can say for myself and everyone else thank you for just leaving the real sound in the video and not adding some stupid dorky music very satisfying video
Why do all of you hate musuc?
@@eduardolarrymarinsilva76 we don't hate music, but we prefer real sound
@@eduardolarrymarinsilva76 if you hear the same music every fucking time,you gonna hate it.
But its MORE satisfying if it's got that "satisfying" genre music from TH-cam's library. Everyone knows that.
LOL
I 1000000000% agree with you! The worst is when the video is like an hour long, and the song (not songS) is like 20 seconds long...... and just repeating over and over.
Until today, I did not know that hand-cranked hammer drills exist. Thank you for showing us this one.
Same here.
I didn't either
It does sound a bit like a machine gun
Same here
Same here!
5:20 “Just leaving it as one piece before I break something.” Oh, if only I could be so wise...
Missed an opportunity to put an empty hanger up there for "clear coat" ;-) Excellent video as always, sir! Happy to be a patron!
i though about this kind of plastic transparents things that you wear when it's raining but your proposition is even better !
Cyril Sebadelha I too had this thought of a plastic clear rain coat.
Clearly, my jokes are not transparent enough.
@@HandToolRescue Hee Hee Hee!
Right after the final coat joke 😂 Fool 'em twice
Only used in apartment buildings between 2 and 4 AM. Or in Hospitals needing expansion of the ICU, Nursery, and Maternity wards anytime.
Clyde Decker 😂😂😂
Yup
Also used in schools during final exams.
Also used by neighbours at sunday afternoon
ppp
y
A wonderful restoration, you have brought me back to my childhood. My father hand one of those, although with slight differences. Ours didn't have the shoulder rest or the hidey -hole for the tool in the handle. It had a pivot and a ring on the base of the handle for a lanyard like a military service revolver. I am glad you polished the main body as they never were painted, they were always bare aluminium and where you painted the handle red was a black textured rubber grip between the depressions in the castings. To remove the drilling tool you didn't need to heat it. they supplied a simple metal, chamfered bar that you inserted into the cross hole behind the bit, tapped with a hammer which released the drill bit. And yes they where close to useless for drilling holes but to a young boy with a big imagination it was a great machine gun that went bang. Thanks for the reminder of an earlier life time.
Thank you! This is awesome to know.
Hahahahaha guess I wasn't the only one who thought this tool made an amazing imaginary machine gun...ahhh nothing like reminiscing on childhood memories
Same as mine.
That is awesome. I spent my whole life taking this stuff apart as a child to see how it worked... It is so cool to see people put it back together.
Same for me 😃
If I was a kid, and I found this it would automatically be a machine gun.
I'm an adult and I'd definitely act like it's a machine gun🤓
Definitely
1joshjosh1 basicly that’s what I said ( I’m the guy below you in the comment section) but I’m. Ok with that
@@catto4934
That's very good for him but I did not read his.
I just had a thought and posted it if you don't like it you don't have to read it.
Bye bye now.
@@catto4934
It seems to be very controversial on who posted first.
🤣🤣🤣
"6 minutes later"... Well it looks very cool and you did a fantastic job restoring it.
I couldn't stop laughing
Geezless thats a lot time and work for one little hole. I couldn't imagine having to do that for a living back then.
Same thought. I can't imagine to drill a lot of things with that system today. Exhausted as fuck.
This can't be the intended use. They've had regular augurs forever. Did they make this complicated thing that's straight up worse?
@@outshimed well, a hammer drill IS for brick/concrete/mortar, (ive never used a hand crank) i can only assume it would probably be more useful on its intended surface rather than wood? the bit is a triangular chisel. not a drill bit after all
Adult: hammer drill
6 year old me: tommy gun
Home Alone 2: Get down on your knees and tell me you love me!
You made a good comment that's for sure!!!!
👍👍👍👍👍👍
Are You Latvian?
The speed at which you play the video makes it look like you're angry at whatever you're restoring and definitely adds to the entrtainment factor! lol
It really does
“The company I got this from wouldn’t ever fix it, so I’m gonna fix this dang thing myself right now.”
Dig the humor you put into these projects as well.
As many have commented below...you had me at final coat. Thats when I knew you're a good man sir! Thanks and keep at it. Its good to know that there are still some "youngsters" who appreciate what the "oldsters " did. One of my co-workers has a Hilti hammer. Puts the bit in, marks his hole,touches tip to mark, turns it on and only uses his finger to steady the drill. Just made me smile when you "six min later"
Great job on the restoration and the actual use demo. This would be a step up for me using a single "star" bit, strike with a suitable hammer, clear hole, reset bit, turn slightly, strike again repeat for days on end.
I'm over 60, but i have never seen such a tool. Good Work!
Another great video. I just got my first pail of Evaporust for my birthday. Thanks to you and your channel!!
Be careful, it's addictive!
Listen to him buddy. Been on the Evaporust for years and now I can't do a single job properly without it!
I resisted watching any of these videos because i knew i would get sucked in. It is insanely interesting to see the engineering behind a badass tool.
It’s going to be a good day today, because there’s a new HTR video.
Stop... Hammer drill.
Lol err no, try an sds......you can thank me after. Basically an SDS plows through concrete like butter, and a hammer drill just doesn't lol
@@shonaoneill5151 Can´t touch this.
@@shonaoneill5151 SDS is short for slotted drive system. It's still a hammer drill.
dun dun dun nah nah nah naah!
I may have mentioned this before, but the sheer joy with which you approach sandblasting is inspiring :D
wow people used these into the 70s even, before electric drills were cheap. but if you were an apprentice , it was your job to do this awful job. let us see if you drill an entire hole in a brick, like it was meant for!
We are so spoiled now with electric motors everywhere. I remember in the 70s my dad built a hundred chairs and 25 tables for a restaurant and he put in every screw by hand...with a bar of soap to help get them started.
@@ModMINI yep i think this is a great tool i was born in the 90s so i got no clue how things worked in the 70s but i like old tools and before this the alternative was a hammer and a drill chisel the same hole he made would take 20 min at least and all these hand tools run on 100 W of power that is the power out put of a human on a good day
@@dementedbowine8681 Theses tools will still be in use long after the non serviceable toools of the 1990's have broken down and aren't repairable. 3-D printing may let us make new bodies that are broken when opening them though..So maybe they might be able to be salvaged..... Only Hand Tool Rescue's will will show if such is possible.
Before we made the tools to withstand. They were expensive. Found my model 100 in storage.
never seen this tool before, its interesting to see. now I want to see it in action
I really like the old tools you find, and I enjoy watching the restorations, but if I'm being completely honest, it's the tiny touches of humor that crop up from time to time that really keep me coming back time and again.
Haha, glad to hear.
I get a kick out of it every time you lay head down to sandblast! lol many times!
Was that supposed to be a mystery box in the intro? I love the clever intros more and more every video, but the standard one with the 90’s sit-com feel will forever be the best. Please don’t ever stop making videos! I need this as part of my life now lol.
All hail the invention of the power tool. 🙌🏻🙌🏻👍🏻
Glad you left most of it unpainted...looks real cool that way. Nice enough to hang on the wall. As always...nice job!
6 minutes to drill a 1" deep hole? That thing is twice as fast as the harbor freight hammer dill I bought!
Well does your hammer drill has a buttstock?
I think any drill is faster than dill, just a thought though! ;P
@@soulextracter yeah I need something to get me out of this pickle.
With a tap? Thats resonable.
what size bit?
i love that your not just a restoration channel, your a comical restoration channel.
You look so peaceful on the sandblaster today haha
It's sleepy time :)
I almost felt cheated not getting the face smack on the shield
Maybe he did it by ear?
@@Boudico I felt the EXACT same way
I just found this channel a few days ago. I'm a mans man. I love tools,gadgets and the like but I fricken love this channel!! I am hooked! I dont even know why I like it so much!! You are outstanding at this though and these are thoroughly entertaining and I'm shitting my pants at the thought that you've gained almost HALF A MILLION SUBS IN A YEAR!!! WOW!!! This will get as big as you let it. Glad I'm here for the ride.
Many an unhappy memory of using the hand version with a 2 1/2lb club hammer, putting outside lights up and fixing socket boxes to the walls. Man, they were useless ! Every apprentice had skinned knuckles from using those. Funny enough, was clearing my shed out at the weekend and came across an old raw plug jumper with a 2.5 mm bit in for yellow plugs. Thank god for battery tools and spare batteries, would hate to have to go back to those.
Yes,I used those plus timber plugs, where we raked out the mortar with a plugging chisel, bad times.
Yes, me to.
One of my jobs when I was an apprentice was to fix rainwater down pipes using the manual hand tool with a hammer. Bang, bang, bang, twist.
My hand would be sore at the end of the day. Always had a spanner or pair of grips handy for the times it would bind in the hole.
When I was an apprentice I used the manual version installing electrical boxes and conduit. Always had a mouth full of fiber raw plugs chewing the ends to swell them up to fit tight in the hole. I remember when I saw some one with a hammer drill. It was a Metabo. I thought the bearings were shot. The guy told me he had used the drill bit for weeks.
j
How many remember Rawl Plugs? Those anchors you pound in concrete to accept a sheet metal type screw for fastening. Big company and widely recognized as a product, like Crescent wrench or Kleenex back in the 50s+.
I believe the wood post absorbed some of the needed "impact" needed to drill in concrete. Nice restoring a piece of history. A kid buying this thing at a garage sale would have no clue how to connect it to his USB port.
"final coat". You need to stop the dad jokes before you hurt somebody.
Agreed. Weapons grade dad jokes are a crime against humanity.
Hahaha, never!
That joke put me on the floor. Well played!
What’s wrong with dad jokes? I like dads, and I like the jokes.
I too am a 'Dad'. I too do the 'Dad Jokes'. My kids love them. M'hm.
Excellent video, interesting restore. Many years ago I worked for a company that sold pneumatic rock drills, so cool to see how this works in a hand tool. Thanks!
Interesting, because I have one of these, in a bit better condition, complete with original box of bits and plugs - good info for my future restoration… Thanks a lot!
I was waiting for you to smack your head on the sandblaster but you changed it up on us. Well done, sir..... Bravo.
If I had a sand blaster.. I'd snuggle it just like that too :]
So nice. So cozy.
Anakin will never understand our love.
He put a hammer and a drill into the Tickle Trunk and got a hammer drill?! This man is a magic man!
That is an pretty cool hammer drill.
It’s not that often that we see your sense of humour, but that was great, made me chuckle out loud, carry on with the great videos
Just read your text; the original colour is black on the handle, red on the crank, the body is raw aluminium. Rawlplug provided an ejector, basically a 4.5mm dia. nail with a tapered point, which is pushed into the hole at the end of the spindle and hammered to force out the bit. Hope this helps!
Thank you!!! I tried hammering on that part, but it didn't help get the bit out. May have just been stuck at the time. This all makes sense now.
I put in a request to join your FB closed group, so I can post a pic of my tool and the box.
You need to make a movie about a Man and his love for his sand blasting booth. Amazing job as always. Thanks for sharing what you do.
Final coat!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! lol, for clear coat you could have hung an empty coat hanger. Awesome! Loudest hand tool of all time.
I hadn't ever seen a chest rotohammer ... it's pretty cool. Very nice work!!
WoW that thing must’ve taken a lot of muscle to use back in the day! I love tools! Thanks for the great video 👍😊
Love all the variations on the sandblaster gag!
StG-44 for the builder 😄✌
Looks more like a Sten or M3A1
@@awldune i d Go with a sten
Sounds like one too! 😂😂
aw
ldune
Love that stalagmite of grunge on your drill press post from all the wire-wheeling. Archaeologists will one day discover that as a forensic record of all your projects.
Hahahahaha holy crap I lost it when you "applied" the "final coat". 10/10 perfectly timed old Dad joke
I'm happy to see you brought your old, explosive table to the new shop.
Ручной перфоратор? Шикарно! Shut up and take my money, i want that! Можно мучать соседей не платя за электричество.
и даже если соседи отключат тебе свет, ты продолжаешь долбить стену
Расскажите соседям о наборе "Новосёл" и они согласятся потерпеть хоть полчаса.
@@buival6993 krsk.au.ru/8018103/
@@stanislav.n82 Во-во оно самое ;) !
Yes, I agree!
I can see the new kid in the shop being given this tool on his first day of work, because it truly is a punishment. What a racket it makes! Great video!
5:02 Couldn't you have tapped the pins out, instead of prying it apart? Srs question, not sure if it's an option
Michael Corley he said it peened into place which means the pins would’ve had to be drilled out and re peened.
Or could’ve gone for a more modern replacement like a roll pin or taper fit. But not really sticking with the theme I guess.
The best resto channel on the TH-cam.
I can think of some very naughty bedroom antics you could get into with this particular item...
This one has polished up beautifully.
next projekt: your drillpress ;)
A fascinating find. I never knew a hand-cranked hammer drill existed-Cool restoration!
I see all your videos and congratulate on your work! But I'm curious, what do you do with the tools you restore?
Absorbs them to expand his database😂
Kudos to a company who made a tool that could be used by both left-handed & right-handed people. I bet they sold 5% more of them.
Суровый девайс!
Great assortment of plains in the back ground of opening shot. Wish they were mine
As a machinist I would caution you about wearing loose clothing around rotating machine heads. A light leather apron might keep you from winding your shirt around your middle an being injured. I like your videos and don’t want to see you hurt.
David Page You’re not automatically a Machinist Just because you used a Lathe in metal shop
Nitro 5000 No, I’m a machinist because that’s what my diploma says and people pay me to make parts for a power plant. It’s a good safety tip regardless.
Nitro 5000 no need to be a dick bro
@@fingerscenterbrookdiploma 😂
So am I an historian because my Master degree says so? Am I a philosopher because my degree says so?
I have never touched a lathe and even I know loose clothing can be a bozo move. Dreadlocks are also dangerous.
Excellent restoration, but ... God bless the inventor of the electric hammer drill !!!
отверстие в шпинделе - туда вбивается клин для извлечения сверла.
hole in the spindle - there is a wedge driven in to extract the drill.
Thank you!
I love this guys subtle sense of humor 😋
"Final coat"
Stahp.
Please, you're killing me.
You work bare handed as I do. It's is much more satisfying to feel the various materials and lubricants. I can feel a tiny cross cut on a small screw with my bare fingers. That is probably what I am into, plus the pleasure of disassembling and then reassembling the project. I have several vice grips. They are in much better shape than the one I saw you use. Nice work though.
I’m finishing the restoration of a 1950’s Rockwell bandsaw. I have a question: How frequently do you need to review the tear down parts of your videos while you’re putting a tool back together?
Love the last coat. Thanks
Actually a fair point and always wondering that myself....
All the time!
way more impressive than I thought it would be... very cool
I have this same drill (much older version) mint in the case
Can I borrow it? I want to fix my watch.
Just curious have you ever tried using it with a modern hammer drill bit, and if so how were the results???
flatrockfiend it drills good with the original bit for 1/4 inch holes
Post a picture
It's good to see old tools being brought back from the brink
Теперь я видел ручной перфоратор )))) спасибо Ютуб.
Механический перфоратор
I liked this video as soon as the final coat came out, bloody classic
I'm pretty sure everyone laughed their ass off at the "Final Coat" joke!!!!!
Great work. Super catchy opening. I appreciate your commitment to producing something that is always edutaining.
Presto Changeo!
Do you sell a junior version called rust-eze?
Beautiful as per usual. Final coat looked good
Lol, I loved the video.....but I think I'll stick with the sds 😂
I think the sds might actually be quieter
Great video! The drill bits are quickly and easily changed with a drift key made for the drill, ypu just druve it in the hole that is in the side of the drill shank, no need for flame!
my drill press uses the same taper system as that drill, only larger.
It is a lot more secure then a normal drill chuck
Yep I lost it at final coat. Laughing like a crazy person at work.
Dear Mr H T Rescue, my gawjus wrench arrived today and I am as pleased as punch with it vowing to put it to work this very weekend on my old Vespa. Many thanks from Ian in the UK :D
Awesome!
for the clear coat I was hoping you'd hang up an empty hanger.
Who’s the best at restorations on TH-cam? I’ve seen 4 or 5 different people but one was a beast
I wish I could just find vids of someone using these old tools and talking about them instead of just restoring them...
Then you might like my instagram stories!
@@HandToolRescue sorry no Instagram not trying to shit talk your vids I enjoy them just wish there was just a lil more to them
i love manual tools, they give you so much precision, i want one of those
That little screw looks like a lady bug!!
That palm wratchet is so cool!!
you wearing long sleeves around things that spin very fast terrifies me.
Love the channel tho lol
I really like what you're doing with staging and editing - but I especially dig the comedic elements. Keep going! Get weirder! :)
That thing looks awful to use
that thing looks reliable in 1937
That’s what I was thinking. I love modern technology.
I like the nice balance between humor and work.
Это он все делал, чтобы метчик испортить? Вообще у него дом деревяный и из гипсокартона. А попробуй советский бетон м-800 пробури?
Бурили, только пробойник держали руками и били чем потяжелей
просверлил камень или бетон, но не гипс.
это не метчик а древний бур по бетону.
It’s cool to see how this ancient piece of technology works
Мда сегодня не такое жестокое начало :)
Куда мир катится, вот так соседи и перестают знать кто живет рядом с ними.
А что это было? Ручной перфоратор что ли?
@@telek2142 Да, жестокое время, жесткие вещи ......
Even your oil can is cool . Awesome work Mate .
"One eternity later" jajaja
out of the 20 restoration videos ive seen over the last few days your the only one who uses evaporust
Oh, it's a masonry drill, cool! Came out beautiful!