Step Up Your Custom Car Building! -- How To SHRINK Steel (Metal Shaping For Beginners)
ฝัง
- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 8 ก.ย. 2023
- #fabrication #hotrod #custom
This is the beginning of a NEW series! Metal Shaping For Beginners.
You've asked for it, and we are delivering.
In this video, Ryan does a dive into Shrinking Steel by showing you 5 different ways to shrink steel. A shrinking stump, tucking fork, hand shrinker, kick shrinker and pullmax thumbnail dies.
Let us know what other Metal Shaping skills you would like us to teach in the comments below!
Tools List:
Teardrop Mallet Set: bit.ly/TeardropMalletSet
Hand Shrinker/Stretcher Combo: bit.ly/HandShrinkerStretcherC...
Deep Jaw Shrinker Stretcher: bit.ly/DeepJawShrinkerStretcher
Deep Jaw Stand: bit.ly/StandForDeepJaw - ยานยนต์และพาหนะ
Yep, keep em Rollin' out Ryan... boilermaker of 20years learning with every episode on this channel. I love that you don't have any million dollar tooling and it's predominantly manual machinery or improvised self made tooling. It's more than just the medium that you use, it's the tooling that's interesting too!
So good to see in-depth how this is done, and have a clear explanation of what you're aiming to achieve and why you're doing each step. Also great seeing multiple ways of achieving the same thing. Keep 'em coming!
The in depth-videos like this one are amazing. I want to eventually get good at bodywork on cars, as to keep them on the road/out of the scrapyard. Now that is a complex thing of course, and I'm nowhere near that level, but videos like these really help me visualize the type and amount of work it would take to do certain repairs, as well as how to go about it. So far, this is the only channel where I've found this kind of in-depth metalworking specifically applied to cars, and I'm really grateful for your guys' content!
I don’t really work metal, but I had a couple bends in the edge of my rear fender on my motorcycle that I was able to flatten out with the first shrinking method from this video. Thank you!
Great video, very well explained and filmed! Thanks for sharing it
Awesome video my dude! Never would’ve thought it would be shrinking when hammer forming but your description helped me see how that works.
Just stumbled across your channel and subscribed, awesome video! Always love seeing how different people's brains solve a problem
The whiteboard illustration is very good!
outstanding looking forward to the rest of the series. 👍👍👍
as a welder who welds cars for fun this information will go in use
Good vid.... It helps me determine which metal shrinkers to buy for my car project
TH-cam is my go-to for how-tos. This is perfect. And as a body tech this will help with me metal straightening before i go to town with glaze. Keep it up!
I used to work with metal , but it was generally done with heavy-duty equipment . We took rolls of flat steel and turned it into things like corrugated siding and flashing for construction . And since nothing is ever perfectly straight in construction . We had to use some stretching and shrinking techniques . But like I said all of it was done with heavy-duty equipment . The brake that we used was probably the smallest tool . And it was 25 ft wide , with hydraulics running it instead of your arm .
Well done video. Good Luck, Rick
Great video guys, love the content please show more stuff about shaping and welding 😊😊😊😊
Just love this. I was always confused what you meant about shrinking.
Dont know why i dont get all your video's at time of release when im on all notifications. I had to go searching for this one. It's probably a little late now but yes more of these videos like this please. I would like to know more about plannishing hammering. Why do the cheap ones use a rubber top lip? How much pressure to apply, and then handheld ones. What surprised me was the weight of one a saw being used to do a roof section. I thought the weight would be a detrimental force to the area. Thanks guys.
Very informative video, learned so much. Thank you!
GREAT VIDEO! Thank you! More please.
I’m a wood worker so metal working has always been a mystical thing. This is a great video.
Awesome! Glad you enjoyed it!
Same for me. Also a woodworker and learned a lot from this video. Keep them coming! :)
I work with metal, when a wood project comes up I run for the hills, can't work with wood to save my life
@@ForgedShaft Ryan here, I also am very intimidated by woodwork. I just have Tony do all the wood projects in the shop. 😂🤙🏻
Ok... so now I have to watch all these episodes. Why couldn't you be less interesting, useful or brilliant?
(Great stuff, just the right level of knowledge conveyed to encourage me to up my game)..
EXCELLENT video, thank you! Really appreciate your efforts to make these vids.
This is such a great video and super helpful to me! Definitely gonna invest in a kick shrinker. Love all your work bro 😁
Yes definitely make a video with the cheapest machines you got online!!! I have all cheap machines and they all work 👍👍👍👍
Great video, you have a new subscriber.
Great vid Ryan thanks
Awesome work as usual and very informative.
Cool.
Great tutorial video! While shaping, how much stretching and shrinking will you use?
Please go ahead with the cheap machines, since those are the ones non-professionals may buy.
Really depends on what I’m making. I try to use a good balance between shrink/stretch to avoid the material getting too thin.
And sounds good! 🤝🏻
The piece you are making will tell you what it needs, if spots need more shrinking or stretching in spots, it's just about getting to the point where you can look/feel the metal and understand what is happening
Im 12 too, can't stop laughing at deep throat 😂
Getting much sleep new dad?🎉
Still adjusting! 😂🤝🏻
I just realized the shear’s name is ed “ed shearing”…
you are such a nerd 🤣🤣
Heheheheh
I bet you could name your kick shrinker Linda and no one would know why... outside the random 12 year olds.
idioot