Absolutely love all your videos , and am now re-watching them. Love the humour and self deprecation which is very endearing. Once Ive re-watched the Benz being re-built ill be going back to watch the Rangey build which I first watched many moons ago.
This series feeds the soul, I do not know how to properly explain the feeling but your videos are so special and your production a ahead of its time... I am safe in Namibia , Africa and yes your video made it all the way here LOL
Cant think of a better way to start the weekend, than watching that beautiful Merc go back to life bringing you and all of us joy while drifting on the grass. Thank you George for never letting us down!
As a guy slowly but surely building a car channel, the amount of work you put into your production is absolutely mindboggling . I literally cannot wrap my head around the stop motion video and how you pull it off. It is inspirational and remarkable.
I've grown to love the W123 and find myself drawn to watching your transformation of this lovely car. My regular car is a 2007 Golf and maybe my last 'modern car' I hanker after a useable classic and the W123 is that car. Thank you for great videos 😎😎
What I do when rebuilding suspension is leave everything loose, lower the vehicle so it sits on all wheels, bounce the vehicle up and down to settle everything and then tighten it all up when it's sitting on the ground.
Yeup... I was going to comment the same thing. BUT I would add to roll the vehicle a bit as well. Just like in the video, you want everything to be "neutral", including any side load on the tires. As for the bushing, it's ESPECIALLY important when you have the rubber type bushings that are in direct contact with the chassis (inner or outer is non-moving). The suspension movement results in the rubber bushing being twisted. IF you tighten it up while the vehicle is in the air, and the suspension is in full drop, then when placed on the ground the bushing will be "over twisted". This includes shock bushing as well.
This is like a Zen class for the motor mechanic. I seem to remember in 'Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Mechanics' that a workshop manual started with the words 'First get a peaceful mind'. Quite. Thank you so much for the peaceful journey, I look forward to the next episode.
Not one to comment to ANY video, by ANYONE, and I usually watch youtube on my TV, but I must. I do thoroughly enjoy your work, and deeply appreciate all that you must go through to make them.
Not only it's amazing to see my dream ride being treated with incredible attention to detail, it's also captured made beautiful to view in a incredibly captive way. Nothing but respect man! Nothing but respect!
How I wish I had your skills and ingenuity. Not to mention garage space. I still dream of retiring at 55 and spending the rest of my days learning how to take apart, clean and restore old Mercedes.
First off, you're the only channel I get legitimately excited for. Cinematography A++. 23:43 - I've always leaned toward the tighter side on the principal that you can always replace bearing cheaper than you can replace a worn spindle hub.
The end of this took it from great to wow. I totally understand. I spent the early 90s ripping around fields in Buckinghamshire. You simply cannot get a life or period like that back. But for just a few seconds, I was there again. Cheers.
Cheers for the fine technical work done. Made me remember time ago when I dismantled EVERYTNG absolutely in my 1972 300D . I added a second line of shock absorbers inside the front springs . Rebuid absolutely everything and now finishing paint and final adjustments of diesel injection pump and injectors. Nobody helped me to even tight a bolt . Bleeding hydraulic clutch and brakes was a test of creativity and produced a simple pipe and bottle device to pump pedals and later press the bleeder screws.
Seeing you grass drift at the end was epic. Choked me up a bit. Dakar Ralley was their playground back in the day. These cars are incredible. Almost sentient.
I always forget how much I love this channel, then a video comes out and I want to pour my heart out into the comments section once I've watched it. That's Soup magic.
Don't ever change! Your style is so different from everyone else. The voice over focus much more on the wholesome experience of fixing something dear to you, yet your visuals educates better than anything else I've ever seen. Ten thumbs up!
Haha you got all that new paint dirty at the end, looks like too much fun! Did you wait to tighten the suspension until it was at ride height? I think the bushings will bind and get chewed up if you tighten everything while on jack stands. Great work though! Smoother then the cream in a twinky.
Hi George just had to say, I just recently bought a 1982 280E automatic and came across your videos and trying to catch up with them all, it's excellent to watch someone do work that keeps me interested through out. thanks for the great videos keep up the great work if ever you find yourself in the Midlands when all ever becomes normal as such kettle will be on 👍👍👍
Excellent to see a fresh SOUP update again, as always. I'm going to need all of the inspiration in your finely crafted videos for the latest acquisition here that's been off the road almost as long as I've been alive; an old Barker bodied Lanchester LD10. I've never worked with aluminium body panels, separate chassis cars (EDIT: oh wait, there was that Renault 6), or wooden framed bodies, but if SOUP has taught me one thing its that you should always take on a challenge because you never know what fun you're going to have until you do.
Lovely to watch your work. Next time you have to clean holding tanks or even a fuel tank put a cleaning cloth in it and chase it around with a air hose, it always come clean. Regards Billy
Your work is incredible, I have recently been gifted an 85 300D Turbo Diesel, it's so difficult for me to watch this and not want to restore mine with the same care, thank you for your videos
Loved the animation on this video. You don't see that on any other TH-cam video. I used to rebuild master cylinders on various cars. Just hone them with sandpaper and slap new seals on them. Never had one I had to pry the reservoir off. Just give it a good yank. I always hated those clamps on the spindles. Some don't open so are hard to turn off and on even with the bolt loosened completely. I lost a new bearing on my 123 because of that. These cars are tanks and will run forever with a bit of maintenence. Now I wish I still had mine.
@@soupclassicmotoring Remember that they will expand as they get hot. That is the reason for the back off after hand tightening them. Good luck with the car.
The Cobra is a fine piece of work the precision and time the engineers put into making this vehicle is amazing. Thanks for the video the W123 is an epic automobile.
I seem to be doing all the same things to my Mk2 Golf right now, only I snapped a bleed nipple in one of my callipers and butchered one of my copper brake pipes. Not a clever day for me today but watching this made me want to carry on and get it right. Thanks dude.
As the song says ‘first love stays with you forever’ hope the drifting brought back memories. Thanks for the films making me realise I can restore my own vehicle. It helps build my confidence.
great video, always a pleasure to watch. An old timer told me once, never pack bearings to the brim, always leave a little room for movement for initial roll.
That was a great moment seing you enjoy the car in this field after all this work. That was the best place to really take advantage of all the suspension work!
Hahaha. That made me laugh. "Ok babe, pump the pedal a few times then hold." -"OK IM HOLDING!" *bleed valve sucks in air* "What happened, are you holding?" -"Yeah, I stopped pumping." "Ugh." I basically bought speed bleeders after this.
@@soupclassicmotoring I'm glad you find it funny, but it wasn't a joke! I put a little lipstick on my pressure bleeder and curl up next to it at night...
I opted to finally buy a pressure bleeder after attempting it once with my wife.... while she read a fashion magazine in the driver seat. Bleeding process was a disaster.
So glad you used that music for the final field drive. That music is Soup Classic Motoring! Keep up the good work big man! You are a inspiration to the rest of us!
You can grease bearings by hand as fast or faster then a packer. Put your index finger through the top of the bearing and pinch it with your thumb. Slap it quickly on your other palm and rotate as soon as you see grease pop out the top of the cage. Once you get the hang of it, you can have it done before someone even has a bearing installed in the packer. Love the build!
My man. That has got to be the best automotive video I have seen in a long time. Your attention to detail and calm narration are top shelf! I have the same car, same colour and need to do a myriad of repairs. Thanks for the brilliant video. Cheers.
I nearly spit my stout across the room when you said it was only fitting the merc gave ye a golden shower ha! But honestly contrasting that with aerial footage drifting her in success truly made my night and gives me hope of finishing my Datsun 240z on a budget restoring parts like you instead of just throwing heaps of money at it.... keep up the amazing cinematography and I look forward to seeing that fiberglass gem purring down the back roads....stay real cheers from Connecticut USA 🇺🇸
Doing it the conscientious way is good for the car, the planet and your wallet... good luck with the rest of the work and keep at it. Thanks for the support and kind words :) Lotus coming in Autumn [Fall]
George, love to see your content, brilliant work as usual. So glad to see you back. I have to say I am anxiously awaiting either more Lotus or the Jag Rebuild!
This is one of the most satisfying videos I've ever seen in my life. Worth the wait every time. I admire what you do and how you do it. Cheer to you mate!
Sublimely hypnotic and deeply satisfying! My G.P. says I should watch more of your videos....it's great for lowering my B.P. Superbly photographed in stonking high definition and exquisitely narrated, ah the David Attenborough of the classic car world, you obviously know the W123 species inside out.
Loved the Allen key bolts going on the disc absolute perfection. Just lefty tighty and loosie on wheel bearing that will do the trick. Nice shot in the field my self and my dog Suki who got separated from her 9 pups yesterday enjoyed this episode I think you put a smile on her face 😂 love the show
masterful videograpaphy as always, the shot of the moving rear end in the field from below the car near the end made my whole face smile and even laugh in happiness a bit, sooo good to see this
George, a buddy recommended your channel to me as a motivator for my own project car malaise/excuse funk (Volvo S60R and DeLorean DMC-12, the latter getting a drivetrain swap). I just finished binging the entire back catalog, and you have motivated me to start working on the DMC for the first time in years - currently building a cardboard model to simulate a few tricky mounts in real space. It is massively encouraging to see how far you've come and the regular reminders to just get stuck in have broken me out of my long winter of excuses and into action. So, thank you for that! One note - some of your later videos omit the episode number from the title and TH-cam is REALLY not sure how to order them. Might be worth adding the numbers on the end so they're all consistent, if there's room.
I am following along your videos since the Land Rover. And I am really enjoying this W123. With that prospected amount of bodywork which then went into the W123 I would have called it dead. Props to you for saving this beauty from the scrap yard. I own one of these too, the drifting on a meadow gave me a lot of inspiration for a bit of fun with this thing :)
No matter how much time passes, every upload is a call for a cup of tea and an uninterrupted sit down. Thank you for measurably improving my day.
Or even a Gin & Tonic! But whatever your poison you are spot on Alfred.
Agreed, I was suffering from "lack of soup..."
RJPick1 OH! It must be afternoon there. 🍸
@@rcpmac Not necessarily !
I went & made a coffee first. But the sentiment is the same!
This Channel has to be One of the best on TH-cam, good job George 👍👍👍
Absolutely love all your videos , and am now re-watching them. Love the humour and self deprecation which is very endearing. Once Ive re-watched the Benz being re-built ill be going back to watch the Rangey build which I first watched many moons ago.
Thanks for being here :)
Those calipers looked like they were forged sometime during the Iron Age.
That whole ending sequence in the field moved things to a completely different plane. It's just plain, good filmmaking.
🙂 thanks for the support :)
We are so blessed here in texas . Our vehicles never rust.
@@Smarterthanyou-mthrfkr
Not true.
Y’all have oceans.
But....
At least your ocean in the gulf is filled with oil.
This series feeds the soul, I do not know how to properly explain the feeling but your videos are so special and your production a ahead of its time... I am safe in Namibia , Africa and yes your video made it all the way here LOL
Greetings from Okahandja. Stay safe.
No need for any LOL. Out old Peugeots and Mercedes were exported right here, right?
Cant think of a better way to start the weekend, than watching that beautiful Merc go back to life bringing you and all of us joy while drifting on the grass. Thank you George for never letting us down!
I watched this video all the way through. It’s a TH-cam treasure
As a guy slowly but surely building a car channel, the amount of work you put into your production is absolutely mindboggling . I literally cannot wrap my head around the stop motion video and how you pull it off. It is inspirational and remarkable.
Much appreciated thanks! Stick with it, it takes time and is tougher than ever these days to build a channel that isn't just all hype. Good luck :)
Soup Classic Motoring Thanks man. It’s definitely building… And definitely not hype. I think when you have a cool project, eventually people find it.
My thoughts exactly. That little detail puts this video above all others. !
I've grown to love the W123 and find myself drawn to watching your transformation of this lovely car. My regular car is a 2007 Golf and maybe my last 'modern car' I hanker after a useable classic and the W123 is that car. Thank you for great videos 😎😎
What I do when rebuilding suspension is leave everything loose, lower the vehicle so it sits on all wheels, bounce the vehicle up and down to settle everything and then tighten it all up when it's sitting on the ground.
Yeup... I was going to comment the same thing. BUT I would add to roll the vehicle a bit as well. Just like in the video, you want everything to be "neutral", including any side load on the tires. As for the bushing, it's ESPECIALLY important when you have the rubber type bushings that are in direct contact with the chassis (inner or outer is non-moving). The suspension movement results in the rubber bushing being twisted. IF you tighten it up while the vehicle is in the air, and the suspension is in full drop, then when placed on the ground the bushing will be "over twisted". This includes shock bushing as well.
This is like a Zen class for the motor mechanic. I seem to remember in 'Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Mechanics' that a workshop manual started with the words 'First get a peaceful mind'. Quite. Thank you so much for the peaceful journey, I look forward to the next episode.
Hell of a lot of effort to keep the grass down. Well done George, absolutely love your videos...top 5 on youtube in my opinion!!
Wow, thank you! Well someone's got to mow ;)
That segment, 20:40 - 23:20, what a beautiful piece of art that is. Stunning!
Thank you :)
The passion in your videography and love of automobiles is unmatched. I always look forward to a new video. You are an inspiration. Thank You.
Glad you like them and thanks for the support :)
Very few things in this life are more satisfying than seeing car parts being decrudified and refurbished in time lapse. Great work!
Couldn't agree more! thanks :)
Not one to comment to ANY video, by ANYONE, and I usually watch youtube on my TV, but I must. I do thoroughly enjoy your work, and deeply appreciate all that you must go through to make them.
Not only it's amazing to see my dream ride being treated with incredible attention to detail, it's also captured made beautiful to view in a incredibly captive way. Nothing but respect man! Nothing but respect!
Thank you very much!
How I wish I had your skills and ingenuity. Not to mention garage space. I still dream of retiring at 55 and spending the rest of my days learning how to take apart, clean and restore old Mercedes.
A Soup video is a surefire way to put me in a great mood.
Thanks for the lift, George.
love it man and you bet! :)
i love people who show love to old cars..dont stop doing videos as this one i loved it
thanks :)
First off, you're the only channel I get legitimately excited for. Cinematography A++.
23:43 - I've always leaned toward the tighter side on the principal that you can always replace bearing cheaper than you can replace a worn spindle hub.
Def going back to check and retighten if necessary. It's all learning for me. Thanks for the support and pick me up words :)
The end of this took it from great to wow. I totally understand. I spent the early 90s ripping around fields in Buckinghamshire. You simply cannot get a life or period like that back. But for just a few seconds, I was there again. Cheers.
Very cool! Couldn't wish for someone to get more from a vid, glad man, thanks :)
Absolute gem of a video...Fascinating stuf!!.....A must see for every W123 owner/lover...Cheers!!
Thanks :)
Cheers for the fine technical work done. Made me remember time ago when I dismantled EVERYTNG absolutely in my 1972 300D . I added a second line of shock absorbers inside the front springs . Rebuid absolutely everything and now finishing paint and final adjustments of diesel injection pump and injectors. Nobody helped me to even tight a bolt . Bleeding hydraulic clutch and brakes was a test of creativity and produced a simple pipe and bottle device to pump pedals and later press the bleeder screws.
Seeing you grass drift at the end was epic. Choked me up a bit. Dakar Ralley was their playground back in the day. These cars are incredible. Almost sentient.
I always forget how much I love this channel, then a video comes out and I want to pour my heart out into the comments section once I've watched it.
That's Soup magic.
the soft comments always get me the most lol ;) Thanks man
Don't ever change! Your style is so different from everyone else. The voice over focus much more on the wholesome experience of fixing something dear to you, yet your visuals educates better than anything else I've ever seen. Ten thumbs up!
I appreciate that! It's why I started the channel. thank for the support :)
So happy to see you back my friend . As a Mercedes fanatic, these videos are a treat. Cheers !
Haha you got all that new paint dirty at the end, looks like too much fun! Did you wait to tighten the suspension until it was at ride height? I think the bushings will bind and get chewed up if you tighten everything while on jack stands. Great work though! Smoother then the cream in a twinky.
Thank you for doing what you do. Please don't stop.
😊🙏🏼
What a treat, awesome work as always. Loving the progress on the Mercedes
Hi George just had to say, I just recently bought a 1982 280E automatic and came across your videos and trying to catch up with them all, it's excellent to watch someone do work that keeps me interested through out. thanks for the great videos keep up the great work if ever you find yourself in the Midlands when all ever becomes normal as such kettle will be on 👍👍👍
31 minutes of sheer automotive bliss. Excellent video. Earned a subscriber.
deadly, thanks a welcome aboard :)
Every episode is a reminder to find a project car of my own; not to work on my friends' cars. Keep on keeping on George. We believe in you.
I can literally restore a W123 on my own now and I don't know jack about cars, what a fantastic video, so much effort, bravo!
deadly! .... and you should ;)
It's engineering, it's art and it's truly beautiful! Thank you!
Thank you too!
George, the video quality keeps going up! Even when I thought not possible. Thank you for the uploads!
My pleasure Jacob, thank you :)
Excellent to see a fresh SOUP update again, as always. I'm going to need all of the inspiration in your finely crafted videos for the latest acquisition here that's been off the road almost as long as I've been alive; an old Barker bodied Lanchester LD10. I've never worked with aluminium body panels, separate chassis cars (EDIT: oh wait, there was that Renault 6), or wooden framed bodies, but if SOUP has taught me one thing its that you should always take on a challenge because you never know what fun you're going to have until you do.
Ahhh felt proud to be mentioned in the patron list. Still learning from you everyday. Appreciate it Soup.
Lovely to watch your work. Next time you have to clean holding tanks or even a fuel tank put a cleaning cloth in it and chase it around with a air hose, it always come clean. Regards Billy
Your work is incredible, I have recently been gifted an 85 300D Turbo Diesel, it's so difficult for me to watch this and not want to restore mine with the same care, thank you for your videos
Thank you very much, and what a gift! Good luck, you'll never look back :)
I have to agree with everyone else, you're videos are simply a genuine joy to watch. Thanks so much
Loved the animation on this video. You don't see that on any other TH-cam video. I used to rebuild master cylinders on various cars. Just hone them with sandpaper and slap new seals on them. Never had one I had to pry the reservoir off. Just give it a good yank.
I always hated those clamps on the spindles. Some don't open so are hard to turn off and on even with the bolt loosened completely. I lost a new bearing on my 123 because of that.
These cars are tanks and will run forever with a bit of maintenence.
Now I wish I still had mine.
I was probably a bit sheepish with the reservoir ;) Will be rechecking the front bearings for tightness after a few miles. Thanks a mil :)
@@soupclassicmotoring Remember that they will expand as they get hot. That is the reason for the back off after hand tightening them. Good luck with the car.
glad to see you back, been looking out for this vid
Masterpiece..... this channel is where Art meets how to.
Thanks a mill :)
Nooo, the reservoir is on back...oh thank God.
Best restoration videos on you tube. Thank you for such incredible quality.
lol, phew ;) Cheers
The Cobra is a fine piece of work the precision and time the engineers put into making this vehicle is amazing. Thanks for the video the W123 is an epic automobile.
Every time I watch your videos it really makes me miss the 1990 300e I used to have.
Has to be one of the greatest saloons ever made :)
George, always such a pleasure to watch your process! It literally feels like art. Well done again!
Cheers Ben, lovely to hear man :)
I seem to be doing all the same things to my Mk2 Golf right now, only I snapped a bleed nipple in one of my callipers and butchered one of my copper brake pipes. Not a clever day for me today but watching this made me want to carry on and get it right. Thanks dude.
This was the last place I expected to hear the term golden shower, but waddayaknow..
As the song says ‘first love stays with you forever’ hope the drifting brought back memories. Thanks for the films making me realise I can restore my own vehicle. It helps build my confidence.
great video, always a pleasure to watch. An old timer told me once, never pack bearings to the brim, always leave a little room for movement for initial roll.
Great tip! thanks :)
Hats off to you, Sir Weldalot. Fantastic media as always.
lol Sir Weldalot, baby got back[fire]
As always, worth the wait. Wonderful to see the Merc back on the move. Excellent.
That was a great moment seing you enjoy the car in this field after all this work. That was the best place to really take advantage of all the suspension work!
After I bought a pressure bleeder, I realized there was no point in being married anymore.
Hahaha. That made me laugh.
"Ok babe, pump the pedal a few times then hold."
-"OK IM HOLDING!"
*bleed valve sucks in air*
"What happened, are you holding?"
-"Yeah, I stopped pumping."
"Ugh."
I basically bought speed bleeders after this.
lol!
@@soupclassicmotoring I'm glad you find it funny, but it wasn't a joke! I put a little lipstick on my pressure bleeder and curl up next to it at night...
I opted to finally buy a pressure bleeder after attempting it once with my wife.... while she read a fashion magazine in the driver seat. Bleeding process was a disaster.
So glad you used that music for the final field drive. That music is Soup Classic Motoring!
Keep up the good work big man! You are a inspiration to the rest of us!
Ran out of footage! Thanks a mill Owen
What a blast that romp in the field must have been! Enjoy yourself! You've earned it!
Good to have you back, another interesting video. Thanks.
I think, just found my new favorite channel 👍👏
Welcome aboard ;)
You can grease bearings by hand as fast or faster then a packer. Put your index finger through the top of the bearing and pinch it with your thumb. Slap it quickly on your other palm and rotate as soon as you see grease pop out the top of the cage. Once you get the hang of it, you can have it done before someone even has a bearing installed in the packer. Love the build!
Your attention to detail is just amazing, thanks for sharing 🇬🇧
Thank you very much!
My man. That has got to be the best automotive video I have seen in a long time. Your attention to detail and calm narration are top shelf! I have the same car, same colour and need to do a myriad of repairs.
Thanks for the brilliant video.
Cheers.
The best restoration video ever👍👍👍👍
Cheers :)
Was so happy to see this video come out! I was starting to get worried that Covid had eaten the Soup!
I nearly spit my stout across the room when you said it was only fitting the merc gave ye a golden shower ha! But honestly contrasting that with aerial footage drifting her in success truly made my night and gives me hope of finishing my Datsun 240z on a budget restoring parts like you instead of just throwing heaps of money at it.... keep up the amazing cinematography and I look forward to seeing that fiberglass gem purring down the back roads....stay real cheers from Connecticut USA 🇺🇸
Doing it the conscientious way is good for the car, the planet and your wallet... good luck with the rest of the work and keep at it. Thanks for the support and kind words :) Lotus coming in Autumn [Fall]
Smoother than the cream in a Twinkie is damn near the funniest thing I heard this year. Your the bee's knees friend.
Inspiring work - I keep coming back to watch
these are the BEST videos...no...this is ART....so therapeutic
:)
Dude you put so much work & thought into your content... very inspiring - looking forward to the next one!
Thanks a mill and more to come! :)
George, love to see your content, brilliant work as usual. So glad to see you back. I have to say I am anxiously awaiting either more Lotus or the Jag Rebuild!
As always, some of the BEST automotive content on TH-cam!!!!!
Wow, thanks! :)
This is one of the most satisfying videos I've ever seen in my life. Worth the wait every time. I admire what you do and how you do it. Cheer to you mate!
Glad you enjoyed it and thanks for waiting Alejandro :)
Such amazing photography it was good to see another episode of Soup
Thanks a mill, and thanks for waiting :)
Amazing 🇮🇪 old Mercedes are amazing. Great channel 👍
Couldn't agree more, and thanks a mill :)
One of the most precise video I have ever seen. Very good level of restoration too. Thanks.
Thanks, and glad you liked it :)
Sublimely hypnotic and deeply satisfying! My G.P. says I should watch more of your videos....it's great for lowering my B.P. Superbly photographed in stonking high definition and exquisitely narrated, ah the David Attenborough of the classic car world, you obviously know the W123 species inside out.
Tell your GP I got a fever.... and the only prescription is more cow bell :D Thanks man
BRAVO Yorgo!. u r a professional, perfectionist and a very talented person!. Proud of U!..
Loved the Allen key bolts going on the disc absolute perfection. Just lefty tighty and loosie on wheel bearing that will do the trick. Nice shot in the field my self and my dog Suki who got separated from her 9 pups yesterday enjoyed this episode I think you put a smile on her face 😂 love the show
Glad to have you back, George. Looking forward to seeing more videos from you. And yeah, life...
masterful videograpaphy as always, the shot of the moving rear end in the field from below the car near the end made my whole face smile and even laugh in happiness a bit, sooo good to see this
This is so much easier to watch than to do that it's a real pleasure!
:)
George, a buddy recommended your channel to me as a motivator for my own project car malaise/excuse funk (Volvo S60R and DeLorean DMC-12, the latter getting a drivetrain swap). I just finished binging the entire back catalog, and you have motivated me to start working on the DMC for the first time in years - currently building a cardboard model to simulate a few tricky mounts in real space.
It is massively encouraging to see how far you've come and the regular reminders to just get stuck in have broken me out of my long winter of excuses and into action. So, thank you for that!
One note - some of your later videos omit the episode number from the title and TH-cam is REALLY not sure how to order them. Might be worth adding the numbers on the end so they're all consistent, if there's room.
Godammit George!
This was worth the wait.
You're really elevating this.
Thanks brother
lol thanks man, especially for the continued support :)
What a massive work you did! Wow!
I am following along your videos since the Land Rover. And I am really enjoying this W123. With that prospected amount of bodywork which then went into the W123 I would have called it dead. Props to you for saving this beauty from the scrap yard. I own one of these too, the drifting on a meadow gave me a lot of inspiration for a bit of fun with this thing :)
They're tough old cars and here to be enjoyed... so why not after all the effort ;) Have fun with yours :)
@@soupclassicmotoring thanks, will do so :).
Congrats on 60 great episodes, George!
Thanks Jeff, rolled up on me quickly!
These are such a treat. Such craftsmanship--both on the car and the video. Cheers!
Glad you enjoyed it, thanks a mill :)
i love the idea of beat up exterior with perfectly done everything behind the shell.
Another fantastic episode. Hooning around the field 👍👍.
So glad to see you back! Thank you for this wonderful content.
Looks well going sideways! Getting there now! Well done 👏
Just went and watched the whole series. Excited to see more!
Great to see you once again :-)
You too Sean! Hope the Lotus is well :)
Always such an inspiration, thank you for all your hard work. Also dealing with tons of rain in my neck of the woods, so living vicariously for now :)
Thank you so much! : ) greatings from Holland.
Astonishing- really, a delight to watch. Thanks
It is such a joy to see that car drive again. My father had one of these for a long time before, sadly, the rust took it away.
The rust had a good go at this one too!
INCREÍBLE. Gracias por compartir con nosotros tan maravillosos videos, maestro 👏