My grandfather and great-grandfather were carpenters and master builders back before the days of pneumatic nail guns and power tools. They actually built the house that I grew up in with lumber and bricks brought in on mule drawn wagons. This was when things were built on site and not in a factory and assembled like a puzzle. Real rough cut 2 X 4s that were actually 2 inches by 4 inches, etc. They had several Stanley braces and bits including one that fascinated me as a child. It was made to bore holes close to walls or corners so everything was set at about a 45 degree angle to the actual chuck. Watching you restore this brought back a lot of good memories. Well done, sir.
@@meinemechaniker You are very welcome sir. The level of craftsmanship is on another level. Thank you for putting out great work. Looking forward to seeing more of your work. 👍👍
@@meinemechaniker całkowicie się zgadzam z Jonny pan i my mechanics jesteście na bardzo wysokim poziomie, myślę dlatego że przydzielacie bardzo uwagę szczegółam. Pozdrawiam z Polski
I have acquired 12 braces, I need to start restoring them, a couple of them may be beyond repair but I may be to use parts from them to help repair others. Excellent work on the restoration, enjoyed watching, even though I’m a little late in finding the video, thank you.
One of my all-time favorite hand tools. You could fully disassemble it, allowing for a beautiful restoration. Everything polished up magnificently, like new. I have some Stanley braces, unfortunately, the handles are made of wood, so I can't do a complete disassembly.
I have exactly this drill - and lots of the bits that fit it - it is fantastic for the right job - a lot of control, plenty of torque and drills holes with character. Another great video - Danke from Manchester (a great engineering city).
I love your attention to detail. Thanks for sharing. Again I watch many many restoration videos and you are just the best. I have one of these hand cranks and you have motivated me to restore it.
Another fantastic restoration. In English/American these are known as a "brace and bit" or a "bit brace." And until the invention of electric drills, they were the only way to drill holes in most materials. A bit-brace is still a very useful tool for the woodworker/craftsman. To start with, since they require no electricity or batteries - you can always count on them to work. Even if the power goes out, your battery is flat, or you left your charger at home. A bit-brace also gives you very fine control over the depth of cut. If you need to drill a hole in wood without risking tear-out on the opposite side, its fairly easy to tell when the pilot screw (the "snail") has gone through. At that point just reverse the work, put the pilot bit into the little hole and finish the cut. No need to put in a sacrificial backer board to prevent tear-out. Every craftsman/woodworker should have one of these. And know how to use it. Clean it up like Meine Mechaniker has shown us. And keep it in your tool bag. Because sooner or later, you are going to be very glad indeed you had one.
Masterful work, as always. One of the few channels that I truly get excited about when I see there's a new upload. Keep up the great work. We love you so much.
abi bu videoda da başlığı odun parçası ile çıkardın 😅 yemin ederim harikasın 😅 ellerine sağlık seni geç keşfetmiş olmanın hüznünü yaşıyor tekniker kalbim 😅
Да сегодня мало кто может помнить что когда-то был такой инструмент для сверления отверстий в ручную я из детства помню мой дедушка всё время что-то этим интернетом сверлил мой дедушка был плотником.
I have 15 braces and hundreds of bits I use most of them each day for my work as I don't use power tools anymore. I haven't seen this make yet but, I prefer the older braces. I never take mine to bits or over clean them as I like to see traces of its past owners.
Sorry Meine Mechaniker but there was no sign of the collars holding the central handle on the main crank when you fitted both ends of the drill. I watched this a couple of times. Then suddenly they appeared as if by magic when the two halves of the handle needed to be fixed in place. Call me a nird but this not attention to detail. Still, a great video, Ive watched them all.
Two problems: you avoided showing the damaged area of the chuck that you rasped at, and you started out with a cheap-o piece of English toolmaking with plastic parts. No matter how much you polished it, you couldn’t turn it into as good a tool as an old Stanley or Millers Falls brace and bit.
Thank you for watching. Don't forget to ''Subscribe''
My grandfather and great-grandfather were carpenters and master builders back before the days of pneumatic nail guns and power tools. They actually built the house that I grew up in with lumber and bricks brought in on mule drawn wagons. This was when things were built on site and not in a factory and assembled like a puzzle. Real rough cut 2 X 4s that were actually 2 inches by 4 inches, etc. They had several Stanley braces and bits including one that fascinated me as a child. It was made to bore holes close to walls or corners so everything was set at about a 45 degree angle to the actual chuck. Watching you restore this brought back a lot of good memories. Well done, sir.
thank you, sir. it is a pleasure to help you refresh your memories about your past.
You and "my mechanics" are the only guys worth watching. Thanks for your awesome video. 👍👍
The greatest of the comments I've heard to date. thank you so much. 👍
@@meinemechaniker You are very welcome sir.
The level of craftsmanship is on another level.
Thank you for putting out great work.
Looking forward to seeing more of your work. 👍👍
👍👍
@@meinemechaniker całkowicie się zgadzam z Jonny pan i my mechanics jesteście na bardzo wysokim poziomie, myślę dlatego że przydzielacie bardzo uwagę szczegółam.
Pozdrawiam z Polski
I have acquired 12 braces, I need to start restoring them, a couple of them may be beyond repair but I may be to use parts from them to help repair others. Excellent work on the restoration, enjoyed watching, even though I’m a little late in finding the video, thank you.
Thanks sir
Super, excellent 👍🏽👍🏽
Grandpa had one of these in his workshop... Miss him! 😢
🤗
Great job! Thank´s for sharing.
🙏🏻🍀
One of my all-time favorite hand tools. You could fully disassemble it, allowing for a beautiful restoration. Everything polished up magnificently, like new. I have some Stanley braces, unfortunately, the handles are made of wood, so I can't do a complete disassembly.
I have used several braces, from Stanley and others. It was very interesting to see one taken apart and see how everything fits and works together.
I have exactly this drill - and lots of the bits that fit it - it is fantastic for the right job - a lot of control, plenty of torque and drills holes with character. Another great video - Danke from Manchester (a great engineering city).
🙏🏻
Huh, I have several hand drills... now it makes me want to take them apart and polish them up! ;)
Good job.
Works so good and looks amazing too! Great job
Thanks
Hi bro 👋👋👋 very good restoration hand drill 👍👍👍
Thank you 👍
I just came across one of these and didn't know how to use it! Much less to restore it. Nice!
Thank you
Güzel olmüş ellerine sağlik abi.
Teşekkürler Bunyod
Perfection as always 🌟 Be safe and cheers my dear friend 🥃
thanks man, nice to see you here. It's like we've time traveled 🥃🍒
PERFECT RESTORATION !!!👍👍👍
Thank you 👍
Nice!
vintage hand crank drill work on modern hex bits❓❓
I love your attention to detail. Thanks for sharing. Again I watch many many restoration videos and you are just the best. I have one of these hand cranks and you have motivated me to restore it.
Awesome, thank you!
Your videos are always well done and the stuff you restore done to the max. A true craftsman!
Thank you sir
Another great job. Your videos are a joy to watch Thx
🙏🏻🌿
Very clean restoration. 👍. I’m just trying to catch up on some of your older projects.
thanks 👍
Another fantastic restoration.
In English/American these are known as a "brace and bit" or a "bit brace." And until the invention of electric drills, they were the only way to drill holes in most materials.
A bit-brace is still a very useful tool for the woodworker/craftsman. To start with, since they require no electricity or batteries - you can always count on them to work. Even if the power goes out, your battery is flat, or you left your charger at home. A bit-brace also gives you very fine control over the depth of cut. If you need to drill a hole in wood without risking tear-out on the opposite side, its fairly easy to tell when the pilot screw (the "snail") has gone through. At that point just reverse the work, put the pilot bit into the little hole and finish the cut. No need to put in a sacrificial backer board to prevent tear-out.
Every craftsman/woodworker should have one of these. And know how to use it. Clean it up like Meine Mechaniker has shown us. And keep it in your tool bag. Because sooner or later, you are going to be very glad indeed you had one.
Thank you, thank you also for the information you provided. 👍
Alles richtig gemacht, Top Arbeit...
danke schön
Masterful work, as always. One of the few channels that I truly get excited about when I see there's a new upload. Keep up the great work. We love you so much.
Thanks mate 🙏🏻🌿
Harika gidiyorsun👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻tebrikler.
👍
Very nice, chrome turned out perfect.
thanks
Are you located beside a freeway? Or perhaps your shop is next to main streets? great work 🙂
Airpot 🙁 thanks sir 🙏🏻
Perfect video. There is quite a lot of labor. I'm looking forward to the other videos.
👍
I have an older one like that, wooden handles, I enjoy using it.
👍
Realy good👈
👍
Perfect as normal. You really manage to bring the “new tool” look out of the piece, while making the process look simple. 🇦🇺👍👏👏👏
thank you so much.
Wow 👍⚒️🛠️
abi bu videoda da başlığı odun parçası ile çıkardın 😅 yemin ederim harikasın 😅 ellerine sağlık seni geç keşfetmiş olmanın hüznünü yaşıyor tekniker kalbim 😅
Teşekkürler 🙏🏻
Really good job great restauration 💪🏼💪🏼
👍
Çok iyi ⚓⚓⚓
👍
Lovely. (Apart from the new hole in your bench from the test drilling...).
👍
Очень качественное видео 👍
Cool bro
👍
Bravo , tebrikler 👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾
👍
Fairy liquid should sponsor you lol love your video's 🤛
:) thanks
Awesome like all your other projects. job well done.
Thank you so much, Ottoman 😉
@@meinemechaniker 👍
Nice
Thanks Mr. Baker 👍
Un taladro de pecho, años que no veia uno, se usaban mucho para hacer agujeros grandes. Muy lindo.
thank you so much
Excellent , keep up the good work.
Thank you 👍
Wunderbar, I thought the only thing made in Gateshead was the crappy old statue, 'The Angel of the North', a brilliant restoration.
Thanks 👍 Newcastle 👈
You do go through a lot of Nutella. My granddaughter likes it on pancakes.
I am curious as to whether you are doing these restorations for yourself, a client or for resale? No matter what you do excellent work!
I do it for you viewers and then add it to my own collection. 🙏
Ich glaube das ist für schrauben ziehen geplan. Habe ich auch eine zuhause hier in Brasilien
vielleicht
Its so impressive restoration again, bravo!
👍
Cleaning Pennie’s electric, lost and found? Full fare plus mass transit.
Eski bir video ilk deneyimin olabilir ince ayrıntılarına fazla dikkat edilmemiş polisaj daha iyi olabilirdi yinede elinize emeğinize sağlık.....
Good job, keep up with the videos.
👍
Да сегодня мало кто может помнить что когда-то был такой инструмент для сверления отверстий в ручную я из детства помню мой дедушка всё время что-то этим интернетом сверлил мой дедушка был плотником.
уважение к дедушке.
What's the tool called at 2:46 that you used to remove the pin?
I have 15 braces and hundreds of bits I use most of them each day for my work as I don't use power tools anymore. I haven't seen this make yet but, I prefer the older braces. I never take mine to bits or over clean them as I like to see traces of its past owners.
man, all those screw sure came out easy.....
👍
Sorry Meine Mechaniker but there was no sign of the collars holding the central handle on the main crank when you fitted both ends of the drill. I watched this a couple of times. Then suddenly they appeared as if by magic when the two halves of the handle needed to be fixed in place. Call me a nird but this not attention to detail. Still, a great video, Ive watched them all.
No electric for village well. How depend sober 12&12 turn switch
Çok iyi 👏🏻🔫
👍
Please don't put the final piece on the thumbnail love ur videos
No Brasil, essa ferramenta chama-se "arco de pua"
Não sei se o Google vai traduzir da forma corrreta.
Sorry....
💪💪💪
👍
🙌🙌🙌
👍
Очень круто!
спасибо
🥳🥳🥳
👍
👊👊👊
👍
👍👍👍👏👏👏👏👏👏🇧🇷
🙏🏻
🤗🤗🤗
👍
😊👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👍🏻
👍
Two problems: you avoided showing the damaged area of the chuck that you rasped at, and you started out with a cheap-o piece of English toolmaking with plastic parts. No matter how much you polished it, you couldn’t turn it into as good a tool as an old Stanley or Millers Falls brace and bit.
I think this is the best. 😉
👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻
👍
Stick it in
🔱🔱🔱
👍
foi só limpeza, nada de mais.
?
Restoration? Rusty? Are you kidding me?
🤷♂️
Whats up with the sound? Are you trying to make it sound haunted?
🤷♂️
Doesn’t take Pennie’s? Get five, go to bank get nickel, then full fare out of pocket, plus change
This is not a restoration. All you did was clean it
Cutting no way has car, stay home n die beer divorce
Why not choose a more original name? Yours just reinforces the fact that you are the "off-brand" clone of My Mechanics...
believe me . this is not a concern. thanks.
His restoration projects speak for itself, besides the names are distinctively different. both characters are awesome.
👏👏👏
👍
🤙🤙🤙
👍
Great piece of work. 👍👍👍
Thanks 👍