most of the time i agree but its surprising how many people ask for the sub par repair because they don't want to have to pay for it to be properly fixed, as long as it will work and its cheap they don't care... sometimes its just managements fault.
@@treavormiller9552 that is kinda sad. I am lucky. I am 63 running a Texas Agriculture family business that is older than I am. We will not cut corners and our many clients learned long ago not to ask. As I said, this is luck and probably unique. Great repair in any event!
this is what i do for a living as a mobile rig welder and as far as i can see you had a very big job ahead of you and trying to keep the bore from locking and seizing the pin up you did a bang up job. grat job thumbs up your a true tradesman.
@@meyou245good question, but judging by the state of that boom any close tolerance on that pin bore left years ago. The nice tolerances on these things does not last a lifetime.
@@meyou245 I'd sure agree with nutwiss, and looking at the track condition, tightness and the overall condition around the repaired areas this machine hasn't seen too many decent operators or timely maintenance. So the pins and bushings for the stick are probably due for new ones soon. They can line bore it at that time to correct for any minor misalignments this repair might have caused. Somebody hasn't been treating that hoe too well, that amount of damage was almost certainly caused by multiple years of operator abuse.
@@meyou245 If it was critical, you could probably get those pin holes bored back into alignment and cylindricity, but this is probably the best of a long series of good enough repairs.
Hahaha hahaha "overhead grinding should be reserved for paedophiles". I wholly agree. You get to the stage ,after a couple of hours of it where you have to stop every 30 seconds for a rest. Horrendous . Best do it with a buddy.
I'm not a digger driver, but to me it looks like some those cracks were caused by sideways or twisting forces on the boom. As if the driver was in the habit of putting sideways forces on the bucket instead of pulling/pushing. Good repair, wonder how long it'll take him to wreck it again!
Yes , its called " Sweeping " , and usually it causes cracks up at the arch of the boom , twisting against the inside baffle plates , or around the lift clylinder furrels . Im the shop foreman , Mr Meany . You sweep our machines , you sweep out house for 2 weeks
Man good job. I’ve done a ton of repairs over the years and am one to always try to reuse, save, fix, repair. Whatever. But man. She was almost to far gone. Good job bringing her back. Whoever is running that machine shouldn’t be aloud to. There just not using it right to break it that many times.
Operators always get blamed for breakdowns. maybe the wrong machine was used due To boss's hurry. you don't know the whole story. U sound like a know it all.
bill tribble so your saying it isn’t the operators job to not bust the machine!!?? That’s ridiculous. Doesn’t matter what anyone tells you. If you are the one running the machine then you are the one responsible for it. That’s like saying it’s the states fault I hit the person because it was posted at 25 so I didn’t need to stop. Ridiculous.
@@Mad.Man.Marine never said that jar head. if DUMBASS foreman says "do it" & don't worry about big boulders or the cracked boom you will do as told or move on . I know it happens & you know the truth. I had to fix what operators broke too. Peace
@@allistairc123 Once u can remove all the old patches & poor welding u can move along. repairs may have been on job site with less than perfect materials. having good equipment & tools make the repairs helps .
any video that will hold my attention to watch every second of it is more than worthy of a sub. You certainly made the person who repaired it the last time look a little amateurish. Thank you for sharing your world with me/us.
I like the repairs you have done on the plant machines. And all the scrap balers and quarry crushers real heavy duty stuff. And a lot of hard graft and sweat. I was very interested when your uncle drew said about his patent. It seems to me that clever people like him with good ideas and designs get taken by other people who could not work it out themselves. He was right in my book. Knows his stuff for sure. I am a big county fan love your fathers tractors and enthusiasm. Keep the video's coming love em best wishes to you all at Cooke engineering. From jonsey south Wales GB.
I was a fabricator/welder etc etc for Halliburton. Some of the "field" repairs stuff was off the chart likethis boom repair. Some pieces were so thick it took two rosebuds to preheat. It's was hard work many times but I loved it.
I have been doing this exact same type of work for the past 16 years. It takes a massive amount of prep to do a good job. Patience is so key and not to rush to weld. Been watching your videos lately and can't say enough about how good of a job you do. Its been several years since I had a partner in the shop that worked efficiently and effectively. Lol I would take a $10 hr pay cut to come work with you!
Absolutely fantastic! This is the proper way of doing a repair correctly. Don't scab on more crap like it was when it came in for repair. Remove ALL of the bad work and start fresh at the base metal! Great job!! This repair will last the life of the machine. 👍💪
That is a real nice repair considering what you started with,and should outlast the rest of the machine. The guy that did it before tried for his ability and what he had by the looks of it. it's amazing how much worse stuff i see here in Canada on farms where they just wasted 3 packs of rods and found some old flame hacked scrap to weld on that wasn't even suitable for the repair, welding to me is something where less done right can be better with some jobs. One loader I saw looked real rough and the guy told me the "local welding shop "did it. I'm not a full time professional welder by any means and generally don't do much customer welding, unless it's a smaller repair or I know it's within my ability to get it right. if that was my machine it would of never left my workshop looking like his did, and I'd certainly never billed a guy for the mess either. They go big on licences not practical experience for most trades here. I got my UK city and guilds in Ag machinery nearly 30 years ago, half these guys here i'd run away if they start saying i've got a licence for my trade. It's pure garbage they put out and bill customers for if you understand quality workmanship when you are educated, and know if they did it right or not for the huge price they charge an hour for the age it takes them sometimes. Thanks for the video, Take care.
Your comment reminds me of something similar here in the USA, though my example is on a much smaller scale. I'm strictly a hobby welder but I can mention that I was pressed into service at my place of work to repair the boom of a truck-mounted drill rig where the connection for one of two hydraulic cylinders for lifting that boom had ripped completely loose. It took me a few days of piecemeal work, shopping for materials, fabricating patches at home and bringing them back for fitting and welding at my place of work (a pro with all the right equipment could have done the whole job in a couple of hours), but now ten years later the repair is still holding up. Years before that I took an introductory welding class at a local technical college to get a jump start on what I might otherwise only have learned after years of practice or maybe never at all while trying to figure things out on my own. The class was mostly made up of local union plumbers who where there to get "certified" that they could do the kind of welding that might be required at times in their line of work. All those guys were total clutzes who's arc and puddle control wouldn't have been any worse if they had been welding with their feet instead of with their hands. There were two classes a week for six weeks, and during that time these guys just never got any better at all, I think because they couldn't be bothered with thinking or *caring* about why they were there, and yet they came out of there with their union certifications that they had been "trained".
Yes shit on the guys that have tried to have a go. Fantastic you have 30 more years experience than the rest. You started somewhere, and didn't know it all. And if all the customer wanted was a quick fix to get them through which was cheap then they got that. I hope you don't fall off that high horse you're on, or you'd better have a parachute.
@@ToxicMrSmith YUP my first reaction was like yours (a bit milder) but then consider his PRIDE in his hard won SKILLS I agree, being a fan of ag videos that Sven the farmer needs to spend a week at a welding basics course So MrSuper why not make a must see video of welding basics for those SOD (and equipment) BUSTERS !!
@@ToxicMrSmith He wasn't shitting on guys trying to learn, he was shitting on guys who weren't trying but rather just going through the motions or people who are charging clients for subpar work.
That was a fish plated hunk o junk. This repair was a better repair than that just get it back in the field messy attempt at a repair. I have done many Cat Excavator boom repairs. Most manufacturers have a written procedure for boom repairs but the problem is companies don't want to spend the time to do it right. I was wondering how long it would take him to move that cylinder out of the carbon arc blow. And damn, move the hard lines. Good video though.
I used to love using the gouge cutter. And fixing someone elses bad work too. I miss welding for a living . I still do it on the side but it`s not the same as industrial fabricating. Cheers from Ontario ,Canada.
So here I am going through the tube vids looking for help and information, with a view to buying my first mig welder. The information so far indicates that 'gasless/flux cored' machines are for occasional light duty diy use only. And then I stumble upon your videos. And you are rebuilding monster machines, and smashing in two inch plate with 1.2 mm flux core! And I am mind blown. I appreciate that your welder will be oodles of amps and your wire feed rate no longer measured in metres per minute, but spool RPMs. But I'm still well impressed.
Okay, I'm no pro, but that looked like awesome quality of work that you were able to keep those pin holes lined up so well. I can just imagine that pin getting more and more stuck due to warpage as work progressed, but you avoided that problem.
It is nice to see someone that really knows what they are doing. I am curious as to how costly would a repair like that be? One heck of a lot of work went into that job!
I haven’t commented before but this repair was a thing of beauty. I would like to know more on what products you use and why and also your techniques using them.
I watch your videos and think I could fix it just as good with my mig and a grinding disk and some plain square patch plates. My repair would be half as good as the repair you just untangled that wasn’t nearly good enough. You are really good at what you do.
You can tell the quality of the work you will get by the gear the welder wears! A true pro takes his own care first and then the job! You should teach, you make it so clear!
I'm no welder but sometimes customers don't want to pay to do it correctly. I was an auto bodyman and I had to do that just to stay in business. I always made them sign off before I started the repair.
Hello. I have enjoyed your repair video a great deal. I am not a welder like alot of your other commenters. But how about a video on what equipment your are using and a bit more detail on the wire type etc used. Keep up the great production and the great work.
I work for a company that manufacturers explosive vehicles for mining companys the amount of times I've had to do similar things to AN bins and Emulsion tanks is ridiculous. Comment of the century for the grinding over head mate.
Your skills appear to be near perfection. I know very little about welding; however, from a physics aspect, the curved edges provide more strength than right angles and straight edges. I am glad you are keeping the workers safe by utilizing your strengths! and skills!!
FANTASTIC JOB. THE FOLKS THAT JUST WELDED UP THE CRACKS DIDN'T CARE ABOUT QUALITY... IMO. YOU SIR ARE A CRAFTSMAN... YOU DID EXACTLY WHAT IS SUPPOSED TOO BE DONE TOO REPAIR THAT DIGGER.
Very interesting video, thanks. I can see that the plates you added are shaped to minimise stress but some explanation of how this works would be most welcome. Your videos are most enjoyable.
Great video and great work. Do you think if this machine came from the manufacturer with the reinforcement you installed, the boom would ever need repaired ? Just wondering why they aren't reinforced from the factory.
Well done, those are some really nasty looking previous repairs, you sure brought it back to good health, really enjoy your videos........Cheers from USA, Paul
Great to see some-one who knows what they are doing.........except the over-head grinding...this is where a 2nd year apprentice would fit the bill...Shudder when me sees carbon arc gouging in a workshop......from a previous pressure vessel welder and later a welding inspector...from Australia..
Another well done and very elaborate repair. I recall some repair welds are on both sides of the plates. Are you able to apply the root passes without any backup strips to avoid any internal notches? It seemed like the previous repair came undone from the inside out, so just wanted to know your strategy on how to prevent this.
good job when filling the gaps do you let the weld pool grow and then move on as it touches the sides? what sort of amps are you using? thanks for sharing
How did you keep the 'flux core BB's" away? Your weld looks almost clean of them and I don't see the telltale grind spots showing where they were. Excellent job. What were the drill holes in the fish plates for? Allthread clamps?
Is there a reason you weld uphill rather then downhill? I’m a new welder seems like downhill would be easier but idk if it has less penetration or what
So the question I have is on the ends of the doubler plates. It's welded around the end but I have seen where the factory stopped short of the end and I have seen where they ran tails out and ground them smooth, even crossing the tails. So, for the welders out there that have seen more failures than I, have you seen consistent failures on any specific method of ending those doublers?
Yes seen the long weld tails too and repairs lotsof them cracked also. They are so application specific generally I repair with full weld and have no come backs. I think in a lot of cases the weld tails area cheap minimum dressing way to terminate a weld without having to dress down and blend a join
I love how the patch on the patch welds were ran downhand. When making a repair weld weld uphill in stringer beads, not big weaves. Also grind or gouge a V in the crack to the base of the crack so you have 100% penetration. A good weld the weld will be stronger than the base metal. These patches were not welded with structural welding rods or wire.
@@grahamshelton3448 I’ve been welding since ‘89. That is the welding process for repairs, especially if it’s going to be inspected. UT or X-Ray. Sorry if it’s too much information for you.
First repair(s) - likely the owner/operator just bodging it together to keep going. Until it got so bad he finally calls in a pro. Always wonder why they bother trying to fix these old booms - by the time you add up the cost to repair multiple times and the downtime on the machines, just go buy a boom off a scapped machine and save the headaches.
ArthurDentZaphodBeeb not too many of these 30 year old machines around as donors. It's worked all its life in a quarry, even if it doesn't quite make 30 more years still worth 3 or 4 days, even at premium rate!
ArthurDentZaphodBeeb I bow to your knowledge, perhaps you should go to Ulster and set up an agency? Although finding, buying, and fitting one may make 3 days labour and some plates seem like a good deal.
Hi nice work you have done there.... just curios when your working on a machine like that....to save damaging the battery/electric systems do you .....disconnect the battery....or apply a device to save them from surges??
It may have failed from side swipe impacts which produce twice the normal working stress. Remembering that all metals have tiny cracks in them. However when they reach 0.005" in length you're in big trouble. But the main problem in this case was the heat affected zone from the previous repairs. This weakened the parent metal and it cracked at the weld toe.
Hi, l find it all very interesting as l work in ship building industry for many years, l guess it must be cost effective to carry out such repairs otherwise the customer would not entertain such a repair. Also does the repaired equipment have to tested and certified before being returned to a working environment?
Overhead grinding should be reserved for the person who “repaired” it before. You did it right. Outstanding job.
most of the time i agree but its surprising how many people ask for the sub par repair because they don't want to have to pay for it to be properly fixed, as long as it will work and its cheap they don't care... sometimes its just managements fault.
@@treavormiller9552 that is kinda sad. I am lucky. I am 63 running a Texas Agriculture family business that is older than I am. We will not cut corners and our many clients learned long ago not to ask. As I said, this is luck and probably unique. Great repair in any event!
@@treavormiller9552 just wanted to write exactly the same.
Have watched some other repair video's and you are the only one to preheat before welding. Glad to see it done right.
I thought preheat was only needed for high strength or high carbon steel. Is that what’s used in the boom!
I think he was just removing the paint by heating
@@sureshdissanayake3019 No he was doing a preheat. Nice to keep heat in it while it is being all stitched up.
That boom is high strength steel. Maybe T1 or hy 80
Great job, sir
This chap is craftsmen at top of his game......the success is all down to the preparation, well done for excellent hight quality welding job.
this is what i do for a living as a mobile rig welder and as far as i can see you had a very big job ahead of you and trying to keep the bore from locking and seizing the pin up you did a bang up job. grat job thumbs up your a true tradesman.
Would this need to be line bored after welding? Or is it possible to get it that straight welding?
@@meyou245good question, but judging by the state of that boom any close tolerance on that pin bore left years ago. The nice tolerances on these things does not last a lifetime.
@@meyou245 I'd sure agree with nutwiss, and looking at the track condition, tightness and the overall condition around the repaired areas this machine hasn't seen too many decent operators or timely maintenance. So the pins and bushings for the stick are probably due for new ones soon. They can line bore it at that time to correct for any minor misalignments this repair might have caused. Somebody hasn't been treating that hoe too well, that amount of damage was almost certainly caused by multiple years of operator abuse.
@@meyou245 If it was critical, you could probably get those pin holes bored back into alignment and cylindricity, but this is probably the best of a long series of good enough repairs.
@@meyou245 I’m assuming that’s why he put the pin back in
Hahaha hahaha "overhead grinding should be reserved for paedophiles". I wholly agree. You get to the stage ,after a couple of hours of it where you have to stop every 30 seconds for a rest. Horrendous . Best do it with a buddy.
Excellent work by a master welder. Loved the 'overhead grinding' bit
I'm not a digger driver, but to me it looks like some those cracks were caused by sideways or twisting forces on the boom. As if the driver was in the habit of putting sideways forces on the bucket instead of pulling/pushing. Good repair, wonder how long it'll take him to wreck it again!
Its not going to break again.
@@davidcraft4909 Don't let the operator hear that, he might take that comment as a challenge.
David Craft not if the operator uses the damn machine correctly
Yes , its called " Sweeping " , and usually it causes cracks up at the arch of the boom , twisting against the inside baffle plates , or around the lift clylinder furrels . Im the shop foreman , Mr Meany . You sweep our machines , you sweep out house for 2 weeks
"Its not going to break again" yeah lol, so many defects after welding
Thanks for taking the time to post your work. Never a dull day around there!
Man good job. I’ve done a ton of repairs over the years and am one to always try to reuse, save, fix, repair. Whatever. But man. She was almost to far gone. Good job bringing her back. Whoever is running that machine shouldn’t be aloud to. There just not using it right to break it that many times.
Lol she was close t cut it off low, throw it away and start again lol
Operators always get
blamed for breakdowns.
maybe the wrong machine was used due
To boss's hurry. you
don't know the whole
story. U sound like a
know it all.
bill tribble so your saying it isn’t the operators job to not bust the machine!!?? That’s ridiculous. Doesn’t matter what anyone tells you. If you are the one running the machine then you are the one responsible for it. That’s like saying it’s the states fault I hit the person because it was posted at 25 so I didn’t need to stop. Ridiculous.
@@Mad.Man.Marine
never said that jar head.
if DUMBASS foreman
says "do it" & don't
worry about big boulders
or the cracked boom
you will do as told or
move on . I know it
happens & you know
the truth. I had to fix
what operators broke
too. Peace
@@allistairc123
Once u can remove all
the old patches & poor
welding u can move
along. repairs may have
been on job site with
less than perfect materials. having good
equipment & tools make
the repairs helps .
any video that will hold my attention to watch every second of it is more than worthy of a sub. You certainly made the person who repaired it the last time look a little amateurish. Thank you for sharing your world with me/us.
I like the repairs you have done on the plant machines. And all the scrap balers and quarry crushers real heavy duty stuff. And a lot of hard graft and sweat. I was very interested when your uncle drew said about his patent. It seems to me that clever people like him with good ideas and designs get taken by other people who could not work it out themselves. He was right in my book. Knows his stuff for sure. I am a big county fan love your fathers tractors and enthusiasm. Keep the video's coming love em best wishes to you all at Cooke engineering. From jonsey south Wales GB.
I was a fabricator/welder etc etc for Halliburton. Some of the "field" repairs stuff was off the chart likethis boom repair. Some pieces were so thick it took two rosebuds to preheat. It's was hard work many times but I loved it.
I have been doing this exact same type of work for the past 16 years. It takes a massive amount of prep to do a good job. Patience is so key and not to rush to weld. Been watching your videos lately and can't say enough about how good of a job you do. Its been several years since I had a partner in the shop that worked efficiently and effectively. Lol I would take a $10 hr pay cut to come work with you!
Thanks bud,aprecieate it
First thing that went through my head when you were assessing the damage was thats scrap, your work is second to none, incredible
Great job. That entire front section of the boom should be boxed up and welded with 5 additional plates to distribute stress forces over a wider area.
I was wondering that. Will the next crack be right on the other side of the new plate?
Now THAT is a repair!!!! Solid work, mate! Absolutely beautiful and beautiful welds, too.
Great job. You may be aware of I C Weld in Texas? He does similar work. You guys are in a totally different league to me! Ha ha ha ha ha ha...
Absolutely fantastic! This is the proper way of doing a repair correctly. Don't scab on more crap like it was when it came in for repair. Remove ALL of the bad work and start fresh at the base metal! Great job!! This repair will last the life of the machine. 👍💪
That is a real nice repair considering what you started with,and should outlast the rest of the machine. The guy that did it before tried for his ability and what he had by the looks of it. it's amazing how much worse stuff i see here in Canada on farms where they just wasted 3 packs of rods and found some old flame hacked scrap to weld on that wasn't even suitable for the repair, welding to me is something where less done right can be better with some jobs.
One loader I saw looked real rough and the guy told me the "local welding shop "did it. I'm not a full time professional welder by any means and generally don't do much customer welding, unless it's a smaller repair or I know it's within my ability to get it right. if that was my machine it would of never left my workshop looking like his did, and I'd certainly never billed a guy for the mess either.
They go big on licences not practical experience for most trades here. I got my UK city and guilds in Ag machinery nearly 30 years ago, half these guys here i'd run away if they start saying i've got a licence for my trade. It's pure garbage they put out and bill customers for if you understand quality workmanship when you are educated, and know if they did it right or not for the huge price they charge an hour for the age it takes them sometimes. Thanks for the video, Take care.
Your comment reminds me of something similar here in the USA, though my example is on a much smaller scale. I'm strictly a hobby welder but I can mention that I was pressed into service at my place of work to repair the boom of a truck-mounted drill rig where the connection for one of two hydraulic cylinders for lifting that boom had ripped completely loose. It took me a few days of piecemeal work, shopping for materials, fabricating patches at home and bringing them back for fitting and welding at my place of work (a pro with all the right equipment could have done the whole job in a couple of hours), but now ten years later the repair is still holding up. Years before that I took an introductory welding class at a local technical college to get a jump start on what I might otherwise only have learned after years of practice or maybe never at all while trying to figure things out on my own. The class was mostly made up of local union plumbers who where there to get "certified" that they could do the kind of welding that might be required at times in their line of work. All those guys were total clutzes who's arc and puddle control wouldn't have been any worse if they had been welding with their feet instead of with their hands. There were two classes a week for six weeks, and during that time these guys just never got any better at all, I think because they couldn't be bothered with thinking or *caring* about why they were there, and yet they came out of there with their union certifications that they had been "trained".
Yes shit on the guys that have tried to have a go. Fantastic you have 30 more years experience than the rest. You started somewhere, and didn't know it all. And if all the customer wanted was a quick fix to get them through which was cheap then they got that.
I hope you don't fall off that high horse you're on, or you'd better have a parachute.
@@ToxicMrSmith
YUP my first reaction was like yours (a bit milder) but then consider his PRIDE in his hard won SKILLS
I agree, being a fan of ag videos that Sven the farmer needs to spend a week at a welding basics course
So MrSuper why not make a must see video of welding basics for those SOD (and equipment) BUSTERS !!
@@ToxicMrSmith He wasn't shitting on guys trying to learn, he was shitting on guys who weren't trying but rather just going through the motions or people who are charging clients for subpar work.
That was a fish plated hunk o junk.
This repair was a better repair than that just get it back in the field messy attempt at a repair. I have done many Cat Excavator boom repairs. Most manufacturers have a written procedure for boom repairs but the problem is companies don't want to spend the time to do it right.
I was wondering how long it would take him to move that cylinder out of the carbon arc blow. And damn, move the hard lines.
Good video though.
You're an incredible tradesman! I would love to see a lot of your jobs after some paint!
I used to love using the gouge cutter. And fixing someone elses bad work too. I miss welding for a living . I still do it on the side but it`s not the same as industrial fabricating. Cheers from Ontario ,Canada.
So here I am going through the tube vids looking for help and information, with a view to buying my first mig welder. The information so far indicates
that 'gasless/flux cored' machines are for occasional light duty diy use only. And then I stumble upon your videos. And you are rebuilding monster machines, and smashing in two inch plate with 1.2 mm flux core! And I am mind blown. I appreciate that your welder will be oodles of amps and your wire feed rate no longer measured in metres per minute, but spool RPMs. But I'm still well impressed.
I'm running dual shield flux core which means it runs with gas bud
Great job but I'm thinking repairs will not hold. Hats off to you as a craftman....
absolutely fantastic work there alistair , i agree there is nothing worse than overhead grinding and welding .
Awesome job. You had a mess when you started and ended up with a like new and maybe better than new repair.
Okay, I'm no pro, but that looked like awesome quality of work that you were able to keep those pin holes lined up so well. I can just imagine that pin getting more and more stuck due to warpage as work progressed, but you avoided that problem.
It is nice to see someone that really knows what they are doing. I am curious as to how costly would a repair like that be? One heck of a lot of work went into that job!
There's a huge amount of work involved in that job. How long did it take if you don't mind me asking. 4 - 5 days ?
Balls to wall three7 hr days from memory
I haven’t commented before but this repair was a thing of beauty. I would like to know more on what products you use and why and also your techniques using them.
Another great job. Love the grinding overhead. Comment. Great idea!! Where a T-shirt and shorts
I watch your videos and think I could fix it just as good with my mig and a grinding disk and some plain square patch plates. My repair would be half as good as the repair you just untangled that wasn’t nearly good enough. You are really good at what you do.
Very thorough repair. No shortcuts. Good on you!
Home run! Fantastic, exceptional. Lots of skill.
You do very nice work !!!!! You treat each project as your own equipment or item. Cheers...
JCB is terrible equipment, you did a professional repair.... Great!
Why is it terrible?
Thanks
Brilliant video. Very satisfying 😌 as always..
Jesus! You’re an absolute artist with what you do! You make it look effortless!
What a great job. Just found your channel. What were they doing to exceed that boom arms structural integrity.
This chap and IC weld I rate very highly . Highly skilled people .
You can tell the quality of the work you will get by the gear the welder wears! A true pro takes his own care first and then the job! You should teach, you make it so clear!
I'm not a pro welder bud the previous welds look awfully! Great video again.
Keep it up!
Taking the time to do it right! Great job. Too many “repairs” are short cuts and end up costing way more in the end. I know - because I’ve done it
I'm no welder but sometimes customers don't want to pay to do it correctly. I was an auto bodyman and I had to do that just to stay in business. I always made them sign off before I started the repair.
Done a similar repair on a Hyman excavator think the first repair was done by a blind man, well done mate good repair
Hello.
I have enjoyed your repair video a great deal. I am not a welder like alot of your other commenters. But how about a video on what equipment your are using and a bit more detail on the wire type etc used. Keep up the great production and the great work.
I work for a company that manufacturers explosive vehicles for mining companys the amount of times I've had to do similar things to AN bins and Emulsion tanks is ridiculous. Comment of the century for the grinding over head mate.
You amaze me. Great job! This job was amazing!
Your skills appear to be near perfection. I know very little about welding; however, from a physics aspect, the curved edges provide more strength than right angles and straight edges. I am glad you are keeping the workers safe by utilizing your strengths! and skills!!
Another excellent repair putting life back in to a good machine . 5 star job. Nice .
You great job welding on excavator . You fix excavator can use again. 😎😎🙌🙌🙌💪💪
A very talented fabricator and repairman. Enough said!!!!
FANTASTIC JOB. THE FOLKS THAT JUST WELDED UP THE CRACKS DIDN'T CARE ABOUT QUALITY... IMO. YOU SIR ARE A CRAFTSMAN... YOU DID EXACTLY WHAT IS SUPPOSED TOO BE DONE TOO REPAIR THAT DIGGER.
Very interesting video, thanks. I can see that the plates you added are shaped to minimise stress but some explanation of how this works would be most welcome. Your videos are most enjoyable.
They should have called you first. Poor machine.
Здравствуйте.Отличная работа. Не понятно, чем срезали старые усилители?
Great video and great work.
Do you think if this machine came from the manufacturer with the reinforcement you installed, the boom would ever need repaired ? Just wondering why they aren't reinforced from the factory.
Man that looks good. I could not figure out what you would do with that mess.😊
Crikey, what a complex repair, beautiful work and methodology. Subscribed! Thanks.
Nice job, bud. Truly looks better than factory! Overhead grinding comment was mint also!
very nice ...what type of wire and steel did you use for the repair??
Nice work . Just subscribed. Looking forward to watching some more beautiful work.
I know an Andrew Robinson, where do you live ? Thanks for support bud
@@allistairc123 Goldenbay Perth Australia
Cracking job was a pure pleasure to watch you fix someone else's temp repair
Nice finish
👍👍👍😜🏴🦄🎣😁🤞✌️
Hi! I really enjoy watching those big machines coming back to life. May I ask - is it normal that those repairs aren't painted afterwards?
Depends on customer preference
@@allistairc123 thank you 🙂 I just think such a good job begs for painting 😁
Dude, you are amazing at your craft!!!
Thanks bud
Well done, those are some really nasty looking previous repairs, you sure brought it back to good health, really enjoy your videos........Cheers from USA, Paul
Great videos! Why Hardox and not mild steel plates?
Great to see some-one who knows what they are doing.........except the over-head grinding...this is where a 2nd year apprentice would fit the bill...Shudder when me sees carbon arc gouging in a workshop......from a previous pressure vessel welder and later a welding inspector...from Australia..
Great job there. What brand/spec of shielded flux core wire do you use for those type of repairs?
This vid seems a little old, but I still feel the need to say, that was really excellent!
brilliant job, working on those big machines is hard work, well done, proper job,
I like how he just brushes red hot steel with his hands
Excellent work. Great video. Thank you for sharing.
Another well done and very elaborate repair. I recall some repair welds are on both sides of the plates. Are you able to apply the root passes without any backup strips to avoid any internal notches? It seemed like the previous repair came undone from the inside out, so just wanted to know your strategy on how to prevent this.
good job when filling the gaps do you let the weld pool grow and then move on as it touches the sides? what sort of amps are you using? thanks for sharing
How did you keep the 'flux core BB's" away? Your weld looks almost clean of them and I don't see the telltale grind spots showing where they were. Excellent job. What were the drill holes in the fish plates for? Allthread clamps?
Hi ... Possible to list down the tools u used ?
Would be cool if we could get a closer look of the gouging and welding.. by using a welders helmet over the camera or something cool
What a difference in repairs from amateur & from a professional
Cracking job big man
Great to watch master craftsmen at work
Is there a reason you weld uphill rather then downhill? I’m a new welder seems like downhill would be easier but idk if it has less penetration or what
So the question I have is on the ends of the doubler plates. It's welded around the end but I have seen where the factory stopped short of the end and I have seen where they ran tails out and ground them smooth, even crossing the tails. So, for the welders out there that have seen more failures than I, have you seen consistent failures on any specific method of ending those doublers?
Yes seen the long weld tails too and repairs lotsof them cracked also. They are so application specific generally I repair with full weld and have no come backs. I think in a lot of cases the weld tails area cheap minimum dressing way to terminate a weld without having to dress down and blend a join
Got any room for an Apprentice? :P
Thoroughly enjoy watching you work.
That’s a proper repair bud nice work!!!
Well done! Keep up the good work! That flux core is nice to work with. I have it in my Miller 12VS. Great stuff!
Outstanding repair! Good job!
I love how the patch on the patch welds were ran downhand. When making a repair weld weld uphill in stringer beads, not big weaves.
Also grind or gouge a V in the crack to the base of the crack so you have 100% penetration. A good weld the weld will be stronger than the base metal. These patches were not welded with structural welding rods or wire.
Go away
@@grahamshelton3448 I’ve been welding since ‘89. That is the welding process for repairs, especially if it’s going to be inspected. UT or X-Ray. Sorry if it’s too much information for you.
Shit, sorry. Misread what you wrote. But honestly, go away
@@grahamshelton3448 😂
A proper job done by a proper welder ,better than before.
👍🏻
What size fluxcore did u use on this one? Nice work
1.2 always bud
If the first repair would have been done like this repair it would have been the last repair. That is impressive work.
First repair(s) - likely the owner/operator just bodging it together to keep going. Until it got so bad he finally calls in a pro. Always wonder why they bother trying to fix these old booms - by the time you add up the cost to repair multiple times and the downtime on the machines, just go buy a boom off a scapped machine and save the headaches.
ArthurDentZaphodBeeb not too many of these 30 year old machines around as donors. It's worked all its life in a quarry, even if it doesn't quite make 30 more years still worth 3 or 4 days, even at premium rate!
@@industry65 there are thousands of old machines sitting around contractor yards, farmers fields and outfits that part them out.
ArthurDentZaphodBeeb I bow to your knowledge, perhaps you should go to Ulster and set up an agency? Although finding, buying, and fitting one may make 3 days labour and some plates seem like a good deal.
fantastic video, great to see inside the boom. was expecting a web inside the boom like an H section beam.
Did these cracks develop all at once or over time and they just kept using the equipment?
great job , who are you working for and where is base .
A polarized filter in front of the camera when your cutting could prevent the bars of light, and protect your camera sensor.
West house. I was thinking the same thing.
How.much was the cost of the repair if you don't mind asking
Hi nice work you have done there.... just curios when your working on a machine like that....to save damaging the battery/electric systems do you .....disconnect the battery....or apply a device to save them from surges??
Thanks!, Turn off the main isolator
Love to see work like this, done in the right way.
Just subscribed 👍🏻
Masterful job,can you shed some light on why the old repair failed in your opinion?
It may have failed from side swipe impacts which produce twice the normal working stress. Remembering that all metals have tiny cracks in them. However when they reach 0.005" in length you're in big trouble. But the main problem in this case was the heat affected zone from the previous repairs. This weakened the parent metal and it cracked at the weld toe.
Hi, l find it all very interesting as l work in ship building industry for many years, l guess it must be cost effective to carry out such repairs otherwise the customer would not entertain such a repair. Also does the repaired equipment have to tested and certified before being returned to a working environment?
Grate content👌 but you could leave out the music it's not need
Great work man, no easy money coming to you, well done, much respect 💪