I want you guys to know I appreciate your comments on here. Video taping these jobs and then producing them turns a one hour job into a four hour job, so it's nice to hear these videos aren't falling on deaf ears
nice to see videos, i've been looking at getting one. but, it seems it is not good idea to put a car with doors and glass on rotisserie ? my car was nearly completed but, no i want to frame stiffeners and under carriage work. without out stressing my back and hours under the car on jack stands.
Thanks for giving some details on how to install brackets, with modifications as needed. I bought the same rotisserie about six months ago, but it's been sitting because I didn't know if there was a special way to attach the brackets to the car. Thanks for the video, it's a great help! Can't wait for the next one!
As an aside, I see a lot of use of car "tilters" in Europe, but I never see them for sale here in the States. Is there some sort of liability issue for car tilter makers here in the US?
Good evening, that is a good-looking piece of equipment. Are there larger Caster wheels available to maybe roll that thing outside when you need to? I didn't know you had a crank gearbox on it to rotate it, that really makes it nice to use and work with. That rotisserie is definitely the best way to do the underside of a car. Thanks for a great video, you take care.
Hoping you can answer this since i can't seem to find the answer with google. The rotisserie I bought (not a redline) has 2.25" mounting arms(measured them myself), but from what i can find all adapters say they're for 2". Are they all really 2.25" ?
The CR-3000 rotisserie uses 2.25" arms, which I"m betting is what you have. This link below shows all the Kernel adapters that can be used with 2.25" arms. Thanks. www.redlinestands.com/catalog/index.php?main_page=advanced_search_result&keyword=kernel&search_in_description=1&categories_id=212&inc_subcat=1&manufacturers_id=48
So there's really no such thing as a rotisserie for a 66' Fury wagon. Any rotisserie will fit any vehicle as long as you build/buy the adapters to connect the rotisserie's arms to the car.
@@anythingmotor5081 I'm afraid not. My advice to you is to buy the rotisserie, set the car on tall jack stands, roll up each end to the car, and from there, solve the issue of how you plan to connect it to the car. A 66' Fury is just not a common enough car that I have any experience mounting it to a rotisserie.
Seriously? Been so long I didn't even realize I did that in a video. Will take your word for it without rewatching. Definitely sounds like something I'd do
@@idriwzrd Well I'll be damned. I sure did. Too bad I didn't catch that engineering test on camera. I feel like that test should have definitely been shared with the world.
Way over priced equipment.... Definitely not for the working class kind of folks...How many folks working in the background on this video? I bet a bunch
LOL. That's hilarious. I shot this video completely by myself. I have no idea why I'd lie about that. If 5 people did the video, why in the world would I want to hide that? No idea. Notice how the camera never moves? That's because it's on a tripod. Regarding the price, I respectfully disagree. If you bought the materials to make this rotisserie here in the states, you'd spend around $1500, so I feel like this rotisserie shipped to your door for less than two grand is damn reasonable. We sell about 600+ rotisseries a year, and probably 98% of our customers are middle class working Americans.
I want you guys to know I appreciate your comments on here. Video taping these jobs and then producing them turns a one hour job into a four hour job, so it's nice to hear these videos aren't falling on deaf ears
nice to see videos, i've been looking at getting one. but, it seems it is not good idea to put a car with doors and glass on rotisserie ? my car was nearly completed but, no i want to frame stiffeners and under carriage work. without out stressing my back and hours under the car on jack stands.
Great video! So much I didn't know. Door braces, remove glass, etc.
Thanks for giving some details on how to install brackets, with modifications as needed. I bought the same rotisserie about six months ago, but it's been sitting because I didn't know if there was a special way to attach the brackets to the car. Thanks for the video, it's a great help! Can't wait for the next one!
That karate chop comment caught me off guard. I literally laughed out loud.
Great video, very helpful. I've come back to it several times.
This is one of the best rotisserie instruction vids I've seen. Really a huge help. Thanks for making and posting!
Really glad to hear that.
This was great. I learned a lot. Thank you.
its wild how much more you have to do just to get everything to line up
No doubt. When I put the car on a frame jig, I discovered the entire body was about 3/8" out of square.
As an aside, I see a lot of use of car "tilters" in Europe, but I never see them for sale here in the States. Is there some sort of liability issue for car tilter makers here in the US?
Good evening, that is a good-looking piece of equipment. Are there larger Caster wheels available to maybe roll that thing outside when you need to? I didn't know you had a crank gearbox on it to rotate it, that really makes it nice to use and work with. That rotisserie is definitely the best way to do the underside of a car. Thanks for a great video, you take care.
Hoping you can answer this since i can't seem to find the answer with google.
The rotisserie I bought (not a redline) has 2.25" mounting arms(measured them myself), but from what i can find all adapters say they're for 2". Are they all really 2.25" ?
The CR-3000 rotisserie uses 2.25" arms, which I"m betting is what you have. This link below shows all the Kernel adapters that can be used with 2.25" arms. Thanks.
www.redlinestands.com/catalog/index.php?main_page=advanced_search_result&keyword=kernel&search_in_description=1&categories_id=212&inc_subcat=1&manufacturers_id=48
@@RedlineStands Thank you very much, I looked on your website but didn't see these.
Great video, how does the crank handle work for the rotation ?
th-cam.com/video/RMgpCYV6BnM/w-d-xo.html&feature=emb_logo
This might help
Can you advise on why you felt the windscreen would smash when rotating it?
Speaking with professionals who restore cars for a living, they assured me the car would wrap enough the glass would surely bust.
@@RedlineStands how does one go about seam welding or panel repairs if it sags so much? (the chassis I mean)
@@JessopVTS You need to build an endoskeleton so zero deflection occurs
Good video .always use lock washers and never use your tools for hammer
Do you have a rotisserie for a mopar C body???? Need one for 66 plymouth fury wagon.
So there's really no such thing as a rotisserie for a 66' Fury wagon. Any rotisserie will fit any vehicle as long as you build/buy the adapters to connect the rotisserie's arms to the car.
@@RedlineStands Do you have a part # that I could look up and find the one that best fits my needs??
@@anythingmotor5081 I'm afraid not. My advice to you is to buy the rotisserie, set the car on tall jack stands, roll up each end to the car, and from there, solve the issue of how you plan to connect it to the car. A 66' Fury is just not a common enough car that I have any experience mounting it to a rotisserie.
Very good.
Thanks for the great tips. I'll be sure to karate-chop the shit out of my brackets to ensure their strength.
Seriously? Been so long I didn't even realize I did that in a video. Will take your word for it without rewatching. Definitely sounds like something I'd do
@@RedlineStands You should definitely rewatch. It was funny.
@@idriwzrd Well I'll be damned. I sure did. Too bad I didn't catch that engineering test on camera. I feel like that test should have definitely been shared with the world.
😆 Brown line!!!!
Way over priced equipment.... Definitely not for the working class kind of folks...How many folks working in the background on this video? I bet a bunch
LOL. That's hilarious. I shot this video completely by myself. I have no idea why I'd lie about that. If 5 people did the video, why in the world would I want to hide that? No idea. Notice how the camera never moves? That's because it's on a tripod. Regarding the price, I respectfully disagree. If you bought the materials to make this rotisserie here in the states, you'd spend around $1500, so I feel like this rotisserie shipped to your door for less than two grand is damn reasonable. We sell about 600+ rotisseries a year, and probably 98% of our customers are middle class working Americans.
I know they are solid cause I karate chopped the shit out of this one and it’s still there😂😂
See. This guy gets it.