This is truly genius peace of engineering. Only when I finally saw it in action, I fully understood how it worked. Now realise that somebody went and _imagined_ it, then made it. I do that for living---and I bow deeply to the inventor.
Wow! I had no idea something like this even existed! What a magnificent piece of engineering and ingenuity! Excellent job on bringing this back to life and preserving it for future admiration.
Another beautiful result! I especially loved watching this one do its work. I didn't expect it to turn the cob around and spit it back at you. Very cool device.
I found one of those in my grandpa's ole barn. I had horses at the time so my husband made a wooden box for the sheller.. He nailed the sheller on a board then nailed the board to the barn above the wooden box. The first time I saw that cob fly out I was amazed. I couldn't stop. The chickens, horses ,goats and crows all got corn that day. Wow yours looks good.
The tool is amazing. Your talent and skill (like knowing you needed a blow torch when you were twisting that bolt) are amazing and laudable. For me, the one thing I found sad was when you sanded-off the wooden handle. All I saw was thousands of hours of prior owners' perspiration as they hand-cranked their way through hundreds of pounds and thousands of ears of dried corn. Thank you for sharing your gifts.
WOW, never knew something like that existed nor ever seeing one. What an amazing appliance. I'm always saying what next will they think of and seeing something like this always answers that question. Great job
1890’s ? When I was a kid growing up in the 70’s I remember having to go out and use one of these to make feed for our farm animals and that was after having to pick and dry the corn. Looking back now those were the best days of my life, how I miss those days. Thanks for the memories.
Another perfect restoration that definitely looks heck of a lot better than the before picture and it works just like it's supposed to God bless my friend
A very interesting product, a professional dissassembly, cleaning and painting. A vivid and satisfying paint job. A wonderful demonstration of a clever device. Excellent video
Its 02.45 am and now I can Sleep in peace knowing that something like this exists. Just went WAAAAT seeing it in action , what a cool piece of equipment wew.
Fabulous, I know it has been a blessing to many people tasked the job of shucking corn kernels. If these precious items you restore could talk oh the stories they could tell. New subscriber from Arizona 👍☮️👍💟👍✝️👍
I've used one. A guy used his tractor as part of a belt driven corn grinder to make corn mill. He had some of these set up so you can have fun by getting kernels off the cob.
That should be a piece of museum, in my child time i used alot that ,,,good to see someone trying give them an other lifetime. Not everyone use them anymore but i am glad to see Nice work man.
What I love is what he does this plus he can cook the end of his videos are always satisfying whomever his partner is they are lucky! or if he's single just as well. Love your channel I wish you much love
OH MY GOD!!! That’s fabulous machine!!! I ate popcorn 🍿 while I watched your video. Lol 😂, I can eat the corn 🌽 without can. GREAT JOB, FELLOW!!!! Genius!!!
I really need to know how the corn core did that little acrobatic trick at the end there. I thought it was going to spit out the bottom for sure! Also, I can’t tell you how much i need one of these doodads in my life 😆
I find it somewhat remarkable that these items are always so very 'rusty', yet that 'rust' is usually of a bright orange hue with very little patina - almost as if you spray them with some sort of rust-enducing substance, and the items themselves appear to have little to no pitting or scarring from such a heavy coat of 'rust' . . .
@@GameTimeWhy Because, having used, worked on, and observed, rusty objects over many years due to various jobs I've had, I reckon there's a very high probability that the 'rust' on this object, and others this channel 'restores', has been artificially induced. It's too fresh - the bright orange colour denotes that, old rust is dark brown. The colour of the 'rust' is also too even. The 'rust' has no patina - old rust HAS patina - see above. There is virtually zero pitting of the metal underneath the 'rust'. You would expect, at the very least, that something THAT 'rusty' would have scarred the metal in some way, certainly I would expect a MUCH rougher surface for that much oxidisation. A basic solution to create 'rust' is two cups hydrogen peroxide to four tablespoons white vinegar, and one-and-a-half teaspoons table salt. This is sprayed onto a metal surface and, after some hours, 'rust' occurs.
Watching it in action at the end of the video, my mind is literally blown. Jaw dropped and everything!
soooo elegant it is
"literally"
Same here!! Like what!!!!!?
@@jamesmcinnis208 lol they got sniped my a .50 cal
144p 👍
This is truly genius peace of engineering. Only when I finally saw it in action, I fully understood how it worked. Now realise that somebody went and _imagined_ it, then made it. I do that for living---and I bow deeply to the inventor.
Wow! I had no idea something like this even existed! What a magnificent piece of engineering and ingenuity! Excellent job on bringing this back to life and preserving it for future admiration.
This is certainly an antique 70 to 80 years old , most likely before your time
My grandfather still uses one that was his dad's he feeds squirrels and deer in his back yard with the corn.
@@allenwilson9656 the description says 1890, so it's at least 130 years old
me too
Another beautiful result! I especially loved watching this one do its work. I didn't expect it to turn the cob around and spit it back at you. Very cool device.
I found one of those in my grandpa's ole barn. I had horses at the time so my husband made a wooden box for the sheller.. He nailed the sheller on a board then nailed the board to the barn above the wooden box. The first time I saw that cob fly out I was amazed. I couldn't stop. The chickens, horses ,goats and crows all got corn that day. Wow yours looks good.
this is so wholesome
I used ours just like that plenty of times when I was a kid in the 60s and 70s in Kentucky. Had it mounted on a box in our corn crib. Worked great 👍.
It’s so nice that actually use the machine you restore
Wow, the mechanics of this are pretty awesome.
Ну вот же! Круто и с наименьшими затратами. А выгладит просто великолепно!!!!!!!
I remember using these with my grandmother. Her sister, my great aunt, made corncob jelly. It was so good! This turned out amazing!
AMAZING! Sometimes the old simple things are STILL the Best way! So Many things these days are just waayy over thought and over engineered.
Отличная машинка! Ею следует пользоваться и сегодня.
Спасибо за восстановленный полезный агрегат.
The tool is amazing. Your talent and skill (like knowing you needed a blow torch when you were twisting that bolt) are amazing and laudable. For me, the one thing I found sad was when you sanded-off the wooden handle. All I saw was thousands of hours of prior owners' perspiration as they hand-cranked their way through hundreds of pounds and thousands of ears of dried corn. Thank you for sharing your gifts.
That explains how my grandfather always had husked corn in one silo for cattle feed. Thanks for sharing. 👍😁🇨🇱🇺🇸
These videos are so relaxing and make my OCD happy
thats a brilliant piece of machinery, the way it grinds off the corn and spits out the cob, that was revolutionary at one time.
That's so cool. One could make their own popcorn.. I would love something like that.
Old is gold. It's true. Even modern technology, robot can't make such device. What an engineering. This is called as real automation.
We just got one of these at an antique store for our small farm! Thanks for the video on how you restored it. Great job!
WOW, never knew something like that existed nor ever seeing one. What an amazing appliance. I'm always saying what next will they think of and seeing something like this always answers that question. Great job
1890’s ? When I was a kid growing up in the 70’s I remember having to go out and use one of these to make feed for our farm animals and that was after having to pick and dry the corn. Looking back now those were the best days of my life, how I miss those days.
Thanks for the memories.
Another perfect restoration that definitely looks heck of a lot better than the before picture and it works just like it's supposed to God bless my friend
A very interesting product, a professional dissassembly, cleaning and painting. A vivid and satisfying paint job. A wonderful demonstration of a clever device. Excellent video
Сколько мастерства и терпения ! Профи!
I was thinking how does it work. That’s crazy. That’s a impressive design.
شحال نحب هاد الحوايج تاع بكري نموت عليهم ياريت راهم كامل عند
My great grandpa had one of these at his farm. Very cool, thanks for the trip down memory lane!
1st Nice job, great restoration.
2nd I've never seen one of those before. They make quick work of the corn.
Brilliant contraption well worth restoring.
I love how the bare cob ejects at the end.
Great restoration of a vintage appliance! I’d never heard of this, what a cool and functional device.
Half of the joy viewing these restorations comes from getting to see these in action. They’re both impressive and interesting 😌❤️❤️
I would never have guessed what this thing is. It is an interesting machine.
What a great engineering
I like how it was all stuff anyone could do! No fancy machines needed - sand blasters, lathes or powder coating.
Cool machine too!
Typically it is supposed to be mounted on a wooden box 📦 to catch the corn 🌽 .
You did an excellent restoration 👍
I can remember using one of these when I was very young.
And it is really efficient, nice tool
Wow, this is excellent machine useful even now.
Its 02.45 am and now I can Sleep in peace knowing that something like this exists. Just went WAAAAT seeing it in action , what a cool piece of equipment wew.
I saw another restore of this machine, but it did not work nearly as well as yours in the final test. Awesome job.
Wow! This is a nifty invention!
Now the owner will be able to enjoy a delicious corn kernel with paint residue 👍
Wow it worked 😳
What a neat machine!
What an interesting piece of equipment and it works so well! Lovely restoration!
!!!!!!!!!!!!! Потрясающе ! Браво !
Never seen such a device. It works so great!
It actually works pretty well. Pretty cool tool.
What a cool device.
That is so cool! Can't believe that worked as well as it did!
you should of seen my face when that cob came out the other side
what a spectacular piece
Dude! That is insane!
Wow it actually works
Used one of those plenty of times when I was younger.
Гениальный механизм! И отличная работа😍
blya Russkiy…
WOW!! Another great restoration! Thanks for the demonstration at the end.👍
Wow! Beautiful! Loved watching the corn shelling part. Very clever tool.
Fabulous, I know it has been a blessing to many people tasked the job of shucking corn kernels. If these precious items you restore could talk oh the stories they could tell. New subscriber from Arizona 👍☮️👍💟👍✝️👍
Looks like one we used when I was growing up
So satisfying video and that message "subscribe" make me do it immediately 😅👍🏼
I've used one. A guy used his tractor as part of a belt driven corn grinder to make corn mill. He had some of these set up so you can have fun by getting kernels off the cob.
Sweet! I just bought one of these last summer. Luckily, the guy kept it in mint condition. 😊
I'm so happy i found your page it truly addicting watching you restore all these things. thanks for this
Only 10 minutes!? I need an hour of this!
Whaaat??!! I mean, if that ain't the coolest thing, I don't know what is!
U did such an amazing job in restoration! WOW!
Wow neat. Never seen one of those!!! I love seeing old things restored!
That should be a piece of museum, in my child time i used alot that ,,,good to see someone trying give them an other lifetime.
Not everyone use them anymore but i am glad to see
Nice work man.
Cool! Looks great and still works to!
Cool restoration. Gotta find the piece that’s missing on the center of the wheel made the get the corn off the ends.
An impressive piece of technology and an impressive restoration!
What I love is what he does this plus he can cook the end of his videos are always satisfying whomever his partner is they are lucky! or if he's single just as well. Love your channel I wish you much love
What a beautiful resto!!! I want it for no reason lol
That’s a really cool little thing. It looks stunning all fixed up too!
I've never seen one of those much less even heard of it. Excellent work!!
That thing is freaking cool
That thing is awesome. I want one
Beautiful, thank you.
Honestly, that’s ingenious…
Thays the brightest red ive ever seen. Beautiful work
I'd almost say it was Farmal Red lol. Dam close anyway.
Restauração maravilhosa 👏👏👏
OH MY GOD!!!
That’s fabulous machine!!!
I ate popcorn 🍿 while I watched your video. Lol 😂, I can eat the corn 🌽 without can.
GREAT JOB, FELLOW!!!! Genius!!!
عمل اكثر من ممتاز والنتيجة مذهلة ياريت لو كان يوجد مثلها في هذا الوقت تباع في الاسواق
ادهلتني واعجبت بها كثيرا
What the heck! Incredible. Your work is amazing.
weirdest contraption I've seen for a while! so cool!
That looks so damn fun. I want one and I want to use it for meditation or "fidget" purposes
Rusty Cornsheller sounds like a solid country music name
Ooooh, I like that!
Good Work! It looks a little bit like something from another space
I really need to know how the corn core did that little acrobatic trick at the end there. I thought it was going to spit out the bottom for sure! Also, I can’t tell you how much i need one of these doodads in my life 😆
That is clever tech.
Fabulous!!
That’s pretty cool
I find it somewhat remarkable that these items are always so very 'rusty', yet that 'rust' is usually of a bright orange hue with very little patina - almost as if you spray them with some sort of rust-enducing substance, and the items themselves appear to have little to no pitting or scarring from such a heavy coat of 'rust' . . .
Why did you put "rust" in quotes?
@@GameTimeWhy Because, having used, worked on, and observed, rusty objects over many years due to various jobs I've had, I reckon there's a very high probability that the 'rust' on this object, and others this channel 'restores', has been artificially induced.
It's too fresh - the bright orange colour denotes that, old rust is dark brown.
The colour of the 'rust' is also too even.
The 'rust' has no patina - old rust HAS patina - see above.
There is virtually zero pitting of the metal underneath the 'rust'.
You would expect, at the very least, that something THAT 'rusty' would have scarred the metal in some way, certainly I would expect a MUCH rougher surface for that much oxidisation.
A basic solution to create 'rust' is two cups hydrogen peroxide to four tablespoons white vinegar, and one-and-a-half teaspoons table salt. This is sprayed onto a metal surface and, after some hours, 'rust' occurs.
My thoughts also
Excellent!
That is so cool.
It's a beauty.
THAT was cool!
I’m kinda sad you didn’t sandblast it. Also didn’t expect that thing to work so well. Really cool restauration👍🏻🥰
I didn’t have a sandblaster at the time. I just got one.
Espectacular restoration and filming. Kudos.