This is one I've been looking forward to actually. My whole life (and my dad's, and most of my grandad's) anytime we had issues with starters/generators/magnetos etc. we always ran them to our local auto electric shop, Harvey Bros. They were in business for ages, and anything you needed, they knew how to fix it, where to get it, or what would work in it's place. Model T buzz boxes, mags of all kinds, any starter, any generator, no matter what, they tackled it. Walking into their shop was like going back in time. But, all good things must end, and the guys were all getting old, so they shut down recently, and now I find myself needing to learn the magic of electrical doo-hoppers and thingymabobs, so this video will come in handy. Thank you for taking the time to make stuff like this, we all appreciate it.
There was a shop like that in Russellville Arkansas years ago...back in 1970's there were two brothers that must have been in their late 70's that owned the shop ...they could track down your electrical issue fast...those old timers were outstanding! The name just came to me "Bowden Electric"
I’m expecting in the next episode you’ll have a growler, a commutator lathe, and a mica under cutter out on your workbench ready to work on those armatures. Am I warm ? Parts catalogs are a thing of the past unfortunately. It’s a lot easier to reference back and forth through the pages than on a computer screen ! 29 years ago I was repairing my father’s 50 year old D2 and called our nearest Caterpillar dealer in Montreal. Parts guy told me that he couldn’t get anything for it. A friend told me to call the Cat dealer in Albany NY which is about 170 miles south of here. They had everything I needed within 3 days !! I’m positive that the guy up here didn’t want to bother looking it up in a catalog. Thanks for the great videos.
My local Ziegler Cat dealer stopped being able to look things up manually at around that same time, that’s when the word came down from Corporate that all the old paper manuals and Micro-Fische machines were to be removed to clear space for more stock because everything was being converted to computer databases. A few dealers kept that stuff around for a little longer if they still had older parts guys that didn’t like the computers, but after they finally retired the switchover became complete. To this day though, if I look up the old parts numbers for them, they can plug those in and cross it to the modern number.
Another great video. I agree with you, BOOKS, BOOKS and MORE BOOKS. The more information you have makes it easier to find parts and repair anything you are working on. Look forward to the next video.
18:42 Thanks again, Squatch 253, another trip down memory lane. 60 years ago, my dad and grandfather rebuilt the starter and Generator for the Super M that we had on our farm😊
Thank you sir! I deal with Delco starter/generators alot on 60's to 68 Wheel Horse GTs and your info has been an education. I can see I need to start looking for the very thick book you have as well as other manuals. I will never not browse the paper farmer at shows again!
Agreed 100% you can’t beat paper manuals & if you find you no longer need a particular manual or reference book they sell quite well on the internet auction sites to be passed onto another person in need.
Vintage manuals are practically priceless. Being in the parts business for decades managed to “ acquire” the originals when the revised ones came out to replace them. The replacements lacked the age old hand written notes in the margins that were a wealth of knowledge from sometimes decades of use. Thanks for this series, amazing how simple these units really are. Like cmh1984 we always had a local shop to take care of our starter/generator needs that no longer exists. Time for even us old timers to learn a thing or two !! 😆
I think I would have trouble putting all that stuff back together 😢 I love those parts books, I was a partsman at a CASE Dealer back in my youth, 1974. Thanks for Sharing. 😊
I’m always amazed at how those manuals are made and all the info listed. Imagine all the people who wrote them and made the illustrations. Amazing amount of work
Absolutely books on the original equipment is a wealth of knowledge that would be hard to find on the Internet even. If you don’t know what you’re looking for, you could search on the Internet for days, and not find squat. These books or any book, is gonna make it so much easier to find this type of information. At first when you get a book like this it may be hard, and you’ll have to do some searching to find where in a book like that the information you need is, but that’s only the first time. You can do like you did and leave book marks, so next time if you need the same information, you can turn right to it and then even highlight it or mark it, so your eye goes right to it. Then from then on, it’ll take you near seconds to find it lol, faster than typing it in the search bar on the Internet!
When you are an every day farmer. The goal is to keep downtime to a minimum. You can't afford to spend a week working one one component. I was born in 1960. I grew up with this stuff.
Nice feel going through parts you've already serviced and properly lubricated in the past. A far cry from how they usually present themselves; rusty, crusty and ready to fight you till the ends of the world.
I’m not a real mechanic so I’m very nice to the few that I can find. Treat them well, don’t question reasonable estimates, be patient with waiting for the parts to arrive. They( and Toby and Senior are definitely in this class) are real assets and deserve good treatment and respect.
Like this video ! Lucky I didn't have any issues so far with my starter and generator. But if I do ill have some clear instruction and shared experience on how to rebuild them. Man that giant Delco parts and service manual is too cool. Ill be on the lookout for one. Thanks
I like the books too. I bought a stack of Zenith and Marvel Schebler carb books from the 50’s at an auction last year. Just used the Zenith one for my Super A.
Sometimes, an old book is the only way to go. Had a 70s Deere grader that I needed trans parts for. The electronic catalog had all of the newest, latest and greatest part numbers that I couldn't find. I found an early print manual with the original part numbers and eventually found the parts that I needed because they were listed by the original part number.
WOW Delco Remy information in a Ford Garage. Well guess when you want right go with the Leader! I laugh because my early career days were at NAPA jobber. All those manuals and catalogs found their way home with me. Knowing is power.
Fantastic video Toby! It all makes perfect sense to me because i do this daily with my grandfather's small engine shop. We do everything by book or use the old slide cards. Cheers
Love it, so interesting- I remember the old days when all the parts guys had to go through those books to buy any kind of parts! Those days really separated the experienced ones from the rest, when the 50,000 questions started! lol great video
I can still remember as a kid going into the local auto parts store with Senior and they still had the 5-foot long super giant cross reference manual binders on the counter - those guys had looked at those huge compilations of information so many times that they could just about land on the page they were looking for on the first try lol 👍 Now days, that same quantity of information only weighs a few ounces and can be carried in the palm of your hand on an electronic device…
@@squatch253 I know exactly what your talking about, Dohnansky Motor & Implement in Meadowlands, where I grew up, was the Ford Dealer and New Holland Dealer back then- so doesn’t even have to be said that’s all my grandpa and dad ran. That counter for NH parts books for so much equipment was so long I still remember it well! Dad would send me in from the field to get a part, usually old Lillian the book keeper would have to come down out of her office, find the right book look up the part #- then remember-go to the index file cabinet find the part # again to see which numbered bin the part was located. When you did the video at the dealership when you were leaving in the parts area, all those bins and books,and old parts took me way back!! I miss those simple times!
Remembering me and my Dad once went to a shop here, where they sell anything hardware-related stuff, from head- and taillights over door seals and gaskets for any type of vehicle down to special fasteners etc, they even were the only place that could supply a leather piston seal for a hand pump, that my Dad was looking for...they has these giant books also on the counter, but they were quite modern too as they already had a microfiche device... 😉 Thx for showing! 👍👍👍
Waaay off topic here but man did that orange peeler sticker on the parts book brings back alot of memories from my childhood! My uncles put orange peelers on every one of their cars, pickups and any of my grandpa's grain trucks he'd allow them. In my opinion they were a much better sound than the cherry bomb's! 😂😂
Excellent video shop and service and parts books are extremely useful and a must for working on equipment. I have a 1967 Trojan payloader it came with a service and repair manual and parts book in a binder I have found all kinds of parts for it off the internet and from old dealers parts inventory. Keep up the great videos
being an industrial electrician 42yrs and retired 14yrs ago I had many opportunities over the years to contact engineering depts and dig up specks on machinery that my company acquired and wanted to upgrade to the 20th century. they still had the books.
Toby I was a partsman at a trucking company one of my most treasured books was a bendex master air brake book it was a 2 books each the size of your Delco book it had everything in it from 1940 to 2001 I am retired now I hope my replacement person didn't throw it away
The master books are a real must if you work with anything old. Even Google dose not have everything listed not to mention some of the information in the internet is incorrect or unchecked/verified. Starter and generator repair can be fun. What is not so fun is when you have a odd man starter that has a very specific nose cone. If you don't know it's a unicorn lot of bad stuff can happen when you try to find a replacement. Just sharing a personal experience here.
Hi Toby, I have never gasped when watching your videos - until now! That Delco parts manual really is something else. And you have more than one such reference works! Have you thought of starting your own chained library? For those who have never heard of such a thing books were once handwritten, usually by monks, and so valuable that they were chained to the bookcase. Not handwritten now of course but spare a thought for the typesetters who laid Squatch's library out.
If no brush is available, one can be made from the closest denominator. They're extremely easy to make (just keep the right compound and orientation). And if one finds themselves having to put a copper wire to a brush (either broken or never had one) a small copper wedge is perfect. You tap it lightly (into the hole) with the tiniest hammer available to drift in the copper cable. Either by making a small loop to catch with the copper drift or by twisting it around in the hole (like a J). Some of these brushes are unobtanium. For my part, the bigger they are, the better because they're so much easier to make then. Again, i must stress that the most important two things are composition and orientation. You can really destroy the commutator bars with the wrong brush compound. Also, for those that might not be aware of it, never use sand paper on them. The copper on commutator bars is very soft and you end up embedding grit in them that way. You want to use a decent set of needle files to clean them or steel wool. It also suffices to lightly scrape the surface with the back of a worn box blade, just enough to expose a little bit of copper (once you expose a little, the brushes do the rest).
I just found one of those books at work-the big parts manual. Its been sitting on a shelf for probably 20 years as its been that long since they rebuilt anything here-everything now is reman. They were thinking on throwing it away so SCORE for me LOL
Some people think that putting all that parts data online was the best thing ever which it can be nice but there is something about being able to flip pages in a book
Perhaps there is a standard that I have not learned. When you state rotation being CW or CCW, what end are you referencing? Love your breakdowns and parts identification. Thanks for sharing.
It's kinda fun and kind of a pain in the -ahem, to take parts numbers into a shop around here these days. I get a lot of " You need a WHAT??" OK, year, model... wait, pre 1980? NOPE. Don't have it. Next!..." So then I'm left taking the numbers to the internet and hunting down the stuff. Only to find that the parts STILL cross reference to modern manufactured bits and bobs that the parts store Does In Fact Have On Hand After All. AAAAAAARG.
lol that’s when I usually walk back in there and tell them that I found their own part number all by myself and that I’d like to order one, but at a 25% discount for doing their job for them ha ha 😂
I grew up Mopar so Delco-Remy was one the big enemy's subsidiaries. What did Orange Peeler refer to? High Performance (can't make out the last word). The artwork puts it at the end of 60s to the end of the muscle car era a few years into the 70s.
That Delco remy manual is beautiful! I only have 2 questions. 1) Does that include caterpillar tractor models and 2) where can I find that beast of a book?
I’m not sure if you check your comments on your older videos or not, but here goes. I am have a couple of Autolite starters that need field coils. None of the local shops can get parts. I sourced parts on eBay, now, none of the local shops will install parts that they didn’t supply. Long story short, I am going to attempt a rebuild myself, with the help of your videos. I’ve always been confused when it comes to soldering. Acid core, flux core, rosin core. Could you please explain the type of solder you use, and the different scenarios that hat require different soldering materials?
Just been slamming the Members' channel this week, 3 new uploads there in the last 3 days because I've recently upgraded my video equipment and have been experimenting with the new camera, new editing software, and new computer system away from the public feed where I can make mistakes and try new features out in a much more relaxed environment :-) Tomorrow morning though, there will be a new episode hitting the public feed here that was put together entirely with the new operating system, it's rather short but it took a ton of time to create because of the steep learning curve that comes with new technology - and I'm not a natural when it comes to change, or new things lol!
I never thought about it but you are right they are similar on the inside I'll be waiting to see the next video. Any issues with the eye since you've had some more time to heal?
Still difficult to focus in on things that are close-up, also makes reading a bit tricky yet. Still have a squiggle in my vision, everything in the lower quadrant of my right eye has a swale in it if there is a straight edge on what I'm looking at, but I've trained my left eye to take over and it helps my brain to disregard the anomaly. That is slowly going away as the retina continues to flatten back down, but for a while when I walked up to my toolbox, the horizontal drawer fronts looked like they were a side view of stair-steps with that swale line obscuring each one of them at the same time. Transitioning between very bright rooms into dark spaces is also a real treat unless I go slow and give my eye time to adjust, and vice-versa. The affected area where the retina had lifted will "glow" for about a minute if I'm suddenly in a dark space, and then once I get used to the low light if I suddenly go back into a bright space that same area turns into a dark-ish shadow that also takes about a minute to go away. After those transitions though, everything seems to return to normal.
Definitely true that you can't necessarily trust all things Google when it comes to this old school stuff. I had to once call a guy that cut his teeth on the old bump-side Ford trucks when he was just a teen at his dad's garage in a small town. Google said the pink ballast resistor wire for the coil was supposed to read 6-8 volts. Mine read 12 volts. The mechanic told me the concept of the wire was to not actually resist and drop overall voltage but to slow the flow. As fast as the breaker points open and close as the engine runs, the resistor wire slows the flow and only 6 or 8 volts ends up getting to the coil before contact breaks again. The way to test the ballast resistor wire is to ohm it and you should have 1.5 to just under 2 ohms. Try to find that in the forums....
Great video. I have a starter off a cockshutt 50 diesel its a Delco needs to be re wound. Has a short in the armature. Have you ever re wound one? Or is there a place in the US that can rewind them? Nothing up hear in Canada. We have become a throw away country.
How do you determine whether a generator is internally or externally grounded? I had a hell of time determining what mine was on my John Deere 40 C. It seems to be charging properly now, so I must have wired it correctly.
This is one I've been looking forward to actually. My whole life (and my dad's, and most of my grandad's) anytime we had issues with starters/generators/magnetos etc. we always ran them to our local auto electric shop, Harvey Bros. They were in business for ages, and anything you needed, they knew how to fix it, where to get it, or what would work in it's place. Model T buzz boxes, mags of all kinds, any starter, any generator, no matter what, they tackled it. Walking into their shop was like going back in time. But, all good things must end, and the guys were all getting old, so they shut down recently, and now I find myself needing to learn the magic of electrical doo-hoppers and thingymabobs, so this video will come in handy. Thank you for taking the time to make stuff like this, we all appreciate it.
Same for me mate used to go see rodger at Chapman's and was always a pleasure
There was a shop like that in Russellville Arkansas years ago...back in 1970's there were two brothers that must have been in their late 70's that owned the shop ...they could track down your electrical issue fast...those old timers were outstanding! The name just came to me "Bowden Electric"
I’m expecting in the next episode you’ll have a growler, a commutator lathe, and a mica under cutter out on your workbench ready to work on those armatures. Am I warm ?
Parts catalogs are a thing of the past unfortunately. It’s a lot easier to reference back and forth through the pages than on a computer screen ! 29 years ago I was repairing my father’s 50 year old D2 and called our nearest Caterpillar dealer in Montreal. Parts guy told me that he couldn’t get anything for it. A friend told me to call the Cat dealer in Albany NY which is about 170 miles south of here. They had everything I needed within 3 days !! I’m positive that the guy up here didn’t want to bother looking it up in a catalog. Thanks for the great videos.
My local Ziegler Cat dealer stopped being able to look things up manually at around that same time, that’s when the word came down from Corporate that all the old paper manuals and Micro-Fische machines were to be removed to clear space for more stock because everything was being converted to computer databases. A few dealers kept that stuff around for a little longer if they still had older parts guys that didn’t like the computers, but after they finally retired the switchover became complete. To this day though, if I look up the old parts numbers for them, they can plug those in and cross it to the modern number.
Good bro
Love all of the detail you provide
Good bro 😊
Keeping industrial history alive.
Nice episode, Squatch
Good bro 😊
Another great video. I agree with you, BOOKS, BOOKS and MORE BOOKS. The more information you have makes it easier to find parts and repair anything you are working on. Look forward to the next video.
Thanks for another GREAT episode Toby.
Good bro
18:42 Thanks again, Squatch 253, another trip down memory lane. 60 years ago, my dad and grandfather rebuilt the starter and Generator for the Super M that we had on our farm😊
Nice bro 😊
Always enjoy seeing those old manuals and catalogs being put to use
Part #'s.
Nice bro
Thank you sir! I deal with Delco starter/generators alot on 60's to 68 Wheel Horse GTs and your info has been an education. I can see I need to start looking for the very thick book you have as well as other manuals. I will never not browse the paper farmer at shows again!
Agreed 100% you can’t beat paper manuals & if you find you no longer need a particular manual or reference book they sell quite well on the internet auction sites to be passed onto another person in need.
Nice bro 😊
I enjoy when you go through the old manuals! I have some old Motors Manuals and GM service manuals and access them frequently.
Good bro
My electronics background made this video enjoyable to watch. You're correct! Documentation is everything and without it you're shooting in the dark!
Vintage manuals are practically priceless.
Being in the parts business for decades
managed to “ acquire” the originals when the revised ones came out to replace them.
The replacements lacked the age old hand written notes in the margins that were a wealth of knowledge from sometimes decades of use.
Thanks for this series, amazing how simple these units really are.
Like cmh1984 we always had a local shop to take care of our starter/generator needs that no longer exists.
Time for even us old timers to learn a thing or two !!
😆
I think I would have trouble putting all that stuff back together 😢 I love those parts books, I was a partsman at a CASE Dealer back in my youth, 1974. Thanks for Sharing. 😊
I’m always amazed at how those manuals are made and all the info listed. Imagine all the people who wrote them and made the illustrations. Amazing amount of work
love the book, my kids think i'm nuts but books so valuable for stuff like this
Absolutely books on the original equipment is a wealth of knowledge that would be hard to find on the Internet even. If you don’t know what you’re looking for, you could search on the Internet for days, and not find squat. These books or any book, is gonna make it so much easier to find this type of information. At first when you get a book like this it may be hard, and you’ll have to do some searching to find where in a book like that the information you need is, but that’s only the first time. You can do like you did and leave book marks, so next time if you need the same information, you can turn right to it and then even highlight it or mark it, so your eye goes right to it. Then from then on, it’ll take you near seconds to find it lol, faster than typing it in the search bar on the Internet!
When you are an every day farmer. The goal is to keep downtime to a minimum. You can't afford to spend a week working one one component. I was born in 1960. I grew up with this stuff.
Good bro 😊
Nice feel going through parts you've already serviced and properly lubricated in the past. A far cry from how they usually present themselves; rusty, crusty and ready to fight you till the ends of the world.
I’m not a real mechanic so I’m very nice to the few that I can find. Treat them well, don’t question reasonable estimates, be patient with waiting for the parts to arrive. They( and Toby and Senior are definitely in this class) are real assets and deserve good treatment and respect.
Fantastic video Toby. Those books are priceless. I’m looking forward to the next video. Thanks
Sweeet Delco Remy book!!! I'm going to have to keep an eye out for one of those. Can't have too many manuals in your shop library.
Like this video ! Lucky I didn't have any issues so far with my starter and generator. But if I do ill have some clear instruction and shared experience on how to rebuild them. Man that giant Delco parts and service manual is too cool. Ill be on the lookout for one. Thanks
Glad to see I'm not the only one who scavenges ALL the old manuals I can get. You just never know what you might need a part number.
Great video, buddy! I'm riding in the car on my way to Nebraska with Rudy. He understood the info. I'm lost, but that's why I've got your videos!
I like the books too. I bought a stack of Zenith and Marvel Schebler carb books from the 50’s at an auction last year. Just used the Zenith one for my Super A.
Sometimes, an old book is the only way to go. Had a 70s Deere grader that I needed trans parts for. The electronic catalog had all of the newest, latest and greatest part numbers that I couldn't find. I found an early print manual with the original part numbers and eventually found the parts that I needed because they were listed by the original part number.
Good bro 😊
Excellent video also very important information and very usefull information! I
WOW Delco Remy information in a Ford Garage.
Well guess when you want right go with the Leader!
I laugh because my early career days were at NAPA jobber. All those manuals and catalogs found their way home with me.
Knowing is power.
Fantastic video Toby! It all makes perfect sense to me because i do this daily with my grandfather's small engine shop. We do everything by book or use the old slide cards. Cheers
Love it, so interesting- I remember the old days when all the parts guys had to go through those books to buy any kind of parts! Those days really separated the experienced ones from the rest, when the 50,000 questions started! lol great video
I can still remember as a kid going into the local auto parts store with Senior and they still had the 5-foot long super giant cross reference manual binders on the counter - those guys had looked at those huge compilations of information so many times that they could just about land on the page they were looking for on the first try lol 👍 Now days, that same quantity of information only weighs a few ounces and can be carried in the palm of your hand on an electronic device…
@@squatch253 I know exactly what your talking about, Dohnansky Motor & Implement in Meadowlands, where I grew up, was the Ford Dealer and New Holland Dealer back then- so doesn’t even have to be said that’s all my grandpa and dad ran. That counter for NH parts books for so much equipment was so long I still remember it well! Dad would send me in from the field to get a part, usually old Lillian the book keeper would have to come down out of her office, find the right book look up the part #- then remember-go to the index file cabinet find the part # again to see which numbered bin the part was located. When you did the video at the dealership when you were leaving in the parts area, all those bins and books,and old parts took me way back!! I miss those simple times!
My Aunt Lillian (long gone) was a bookkeeper.@@LLAHTI1
Thanks for the video Toby! It’s nice to see how everything goes together and how it all works out. Can’t wait for the next video!
Great older Parts Manual, I read thoughts many times at Part Shop..... Thanks:)
Remembering me and my Dad once went to a shop here, where they sell anything hardware-related stuff, from head- and taillights over door seals and gaskets for any type of vehicle down to special fasteners etc, they even were the only place that could supply a leather piston seal for a hand pump, that my Dad was looking for...they has these giant books also on the counter, but they were quite modern too as they already had a microfiche device...
😉
Thx for showing!
👍👍👍
I remember using a growler in high school auto shop in 1971. I bet most ppl now don`t know what one is.
Waaay off topic here but man did that orange peeler sticker on the parts book brings back alot of memories from my childhood! My uncles put orange peelers on every one of their cars, pickups and any of my grandpa's grain trucks he'd allow them. In my opinion they were a much better sound than the cherry bomb's! 😂😂
Good bro 😊
Excellent video shop and service and parts books are extremely useful and a must for working on equipment. I have a 1967 Trojan payloader it came with a service and repair manual and parts book in a binder I have found all kinds of parts for it off the internet and from old dealers parts inventory. Keep up the great videos
We know @squatch253 is a bad boy now, he uses a chrome socket on an impact 🤣
Squatch, you are a wealth of information ! Great video
being an industrial electrician 42yrs and retired 14yrs ago I had many opportunities over the years to contact engineering depts and dig up specks on machinery that my company acquired and wanted to upgrade to the 20th century. they still had the books.
I too advocate for original service information. Good stuff.
Welcome back!!!! You haven't missed a beat with knowledge, in depth explanation and bringing us all aling on your next adventure!! Thanks Squatch!!
Thanks now I know what to look forward to
Great video. Can’t tell you how much good lighting, sound, and visuals are appreciated. Always tops on your channel.
Nice to learn something new to start the day! Great video!
That was fascinating, I haven't seen a delco remy book like that in at least 30 years maybe more.
You are a book of knowledge yourself!
Toby I was a partsman at a trucking company one of my most treasured books was a bendex master air brake book it was a 2 books each the size of your Delco book it had everything in it from 1940 to 2001 I am retired now I hope my replacement person didn't throw it away
Those manuals are priceless
The master books are a real must if you work with anything old. Even Google dose not have everything listed not to mention some of the information in the internet is incorrect or unchecked/verified. Starter and generator repair can be fun. What is not so fun is when you have a odd man starter that has a very specific nose cone. If you don't know it's a unicorn lot of bad stuff can happen when you try to find a replacement. Just sharing a personal experience here.
Hi Toby, I have never gasped when watching your videos - until now! That Delco parts manual really is something else. And you have more than one such reference works! Have you thought of starting your own chained library? For those who have never heard of such a thing books were once handwritten, usually by monks, and so valuable that they were chained to the bookcase. Not handwritten now of course but spare a thought for the typesetters who laid Squatch's library out.
I can't wait for your next episode been looking for a good test how too
Great video. Keep up the good work
Great video 👍 i just recently acquired a workshop parts manual for my international and already it has paid dividends great advice 👌
If no brush is available, one can be made from the closest denominator. They're extremely easy to make (just keep the right compound and orientation). And if one finds themselves having to put a copper wire to a brush (either broken or never had one) a small copper wedge is perfect. You tap it lightly (into the hole) with the tiniest hammer available to drift in the copper cable. Either by making a small loop to catch with the copper drift or by twisting it around in the hole (like a J). Some of these brushes are unobtanium. For my part, the bigger they are, the better because they're so much easier to make then.
Again, i must stress that the most important two things are composition and orientation. You can really destroy the commutator bars with the wrong brush compound. Also, for those that might not be aware of it, never use sand paper on them. The copper on commutator bars is very soft and you end up embedding grit in them that way. You want to use a decent set of needle files to clean them or steel wool. It also suffices to lightly scrape the surface with the back of a worn box blade, just enough to expose a little bit of copper (once you expose a little, the brushes do the rest).
Love your shop !!!!
Wonderful video. I learned bunches 😊
Love these videos Toby. Always enjoyable. 😃
Very informative video.
Hoping for some cleaning footage!!
I just found one of those books at work-the big parts manual. Its been sitting on a shelf for probably 20 years as its been that long since they rebuilt anything here-everything now is reman. They were thinking on throwing it away so SCORE for me LOL
Nice!!!
As a fellow "5" from the Enneagram: You can never get enough information
There used to be only one local place around here (south Santa Cruz county/North Monterey county). No longer.
Excellent video.
Great video.
Very informative.
Good working bro 💯
Plus you've got the loose wire in the generator to fix.
my model t starter is very similar just replaced a broken spring on it last month
Some people think that putting all that parts data online was the best thing ever which it can be nice but there is something about being able to flip pages in a book
Perhaps there is a standard that I have not learned. When you state rotation being CW or CCW, what end are you referencing?
Love your breakdowns and parts identification.
Thanks for sharing.
It's kinda fun and kind of a pain in the -ahem, to take parts numbers into a shop around here these days. I get a lot of " You need a WHAT??" OK, year, model... wait, pre 1980? NOPE. Don't have it. Next!..." So then I'm left taking the numbers to the internet and hunting down the stuff. Only to find that the parts STILL cross reference to modern manufactured bits and bobs that the parts store Does In Fact Have On Hand After All. AAAAAAARG.
lol that’s when I usually walk back in there and tell them that I found their own part number all by myself and that I’d like to order one, but at a 25% discount for doing their job for them ha ha 😂
I grew up Mopar so Delco-Remy was one the big enemy's subsidiaries. What did Orange Peeler refer to? High Performance (can't make out the last word). The artwork puts it at the end of 60s to the end of the muscle car era a few years into the 70s.
Yes, I believe that Orange Peeler sticker was for a muffler or 'glass-pack exhaust system of some sort.
Those books are amazing but I would have assumed that there would be an online version available now?
Nothing online that I have found, unfortunately. That's not saying there isn't something somewhere, but if there is I haven't located it yet.
This should be interesting (they’re all interesting)
I will need to re watch this as once you got into the book I was disrupted. Did you find any info on your replaced Armature?
Can you show off the bookcase with all your manuals sometime?
@12:12 ....*looks at massive manual* Did you drop that thing the other day, causing that 7.5 earthquake in Japan?
Was the 16/24/25 column (next to the clockwise or counterclock) in the manual the commutator segment count? Neat books. I love that stuff.
I want one of those books, where is it?
That Delco remy manual is beautiful! I only have 2 questions. 1) Does that include caterpillar tractor models and 2) where can I find that beast of a book?
I’m not sure if you check your comments on your older videos or not, but here goes. I am have a couple of Autolite starters that need field coils. None of the local shops can get parts. I sourced parts on eBay, now, none of the local shops will install parts that they didn’t supply. Long story short, I am going to attempt a rebuild myself, with the help of your videos. I’ve always been confused when it comes to soldering. Acid core, flux core, rosin core. Could you please explain the type of solder you use, and the different scenarios that hat require different soldering materials?
Checking to see if I missed episodes? Seems like it’s been a while. Hope dude is doing ok with his eye!
Just been slamming the Members' channel this week, 3 new uploads there in the last 3 days because I've recently upgraded my video equipment and have been experimenting with the new camera, new editing software, and new computer system away from the public feed where I can make mistakes and try new features out in a much more relaxed environment :-) Tomorrow morning though, there will be a new episode hitting the public feed here that was put together entirely with the new operating system, it's rather short but it took a ton of time to create because of the steep learning curve that comes with new technology - and I'm not a natural when it comes to change, or new things lol!
@@squatch253 oh fantastic! Was worried you’d had a setback! Look forward to each new episode!💪🏻💪🏻💪🏻
I downloaded a very legal copy of snap on EPC for my car. All the parts numbered
I never thought about it but you are right they are similar on the inside I'll be waiting to see the next video. Any issues with the eye since you've had some more time to heal?
Still difficult to focus in on things that are close-up, also makes reading a bit tricky yet. Still have a squiggle in my vision, everything in the lower quadrant of my right eye has a swale in it if there is a straight edge on what I'm looking at, but I've trained my left eye to take over and it helps my brain to disregard the anomaly. That is slowly going away as the retina continues to flatten back down, but for a while when I walked up to my toolbox, the horizontal drawer fronts looked like they were a side view of stair-steps with that swale line obscuring each one of them at the same time. Transitioning between very bright rooms into dark spaces is also a real treat unless I go slow and give my eye time to adjust, and vice-versa. The affected area where the retina had lifted will "glow" for about a minute if I'm suddenly in a dark space, and then once I get used to the low light if I suddenly go back into a bright space that same area turns into a dark-ish shadow that also takes about a minute to go away. After those transitions though, everything seems to return to normal.
On an old Volkswagen the starter and generator are literally the same thing!
It's a big deference between having an electric starter to a small gas motor starter
Neat stuff, the devil is in the details.
that is a recipe for disaster for me to work on two different things at the same time. who knows what might be swapped or lost.
Do you ever have to review your videos to see how things came apart and help you with reassembly?
No, compared to the things I used to work on at the Ford dealer, these old tractor projects are pretty easy to stay on top of 👍
@@squatch253 You are sharp as a tack. My mind is like a steel trap; everything that goes in gets mangled.
Definitely true that you can't necessarily trust all things Google when it comes to this old school stuff. I had to once call a guy that cut his teeth on the old bump-side Ford trucks when he was just a teen at his dad's garage in a small town. Google said the pink ballast resistor wire for the coil was supposed to read 6-8 volts. Mine read 12 volts. The mechanic told me the concept of the wire was to not actually resist and drop overall voltage but to slow the flow. As fast as the breaker points open and close as the engine runs, the resistor wire slows the flow and only 6 or 8 volts ends up getting to the coil before contact breaks again. The way to test the ballast resistor wire is to ohm it and you should have 1.5 to just under 2 ohms. Try to find that in the forums....
Excellent!!!
Thanks
Hey man I like that Delco Remy master catalog. What years does it cover?
This one is 1954 and prior 👍
Great video. I have a starter off a cockshutt 50 diesel its a Delco needs to be re wound. Has a short in the armature. Have you ever re wound one? Or is there a place in the US that can rewind them? Nothing up hear in Canada. We have become a throw away country.
It's early, but will you have to polarize the generator when it is installed?
The regulator is what gets polarized 👍
Hey Toby,,,fold over locks!! Score,,lol. Did you film this with the new camera?
No, still using the old setup until my new Omni-directional mic can be procured 👍
@@squatch253 Gotcha,,,great video
How do you determine whether a generator is internally or externally grounded?
I had a hell of time determining what mine was on my John Deere 40 C.
It seems to be charging properly now, so I must have wired it correctly.
I like the books and charts to but I can't seem to find the best books
Dying to know, Allis Chalmers, Leese Neville or Delco Remy?
Is the generator pulley adjustable in diameter?
Yes, it has the same type of adjustable pulley that the water pump uses 👍