Thanks for this vid. I am about to start my work as service advisor by December and this vid maybe used for the future. I am from welding industry a technical engineer from Lincoln Electric. Great video!
I knew you would get comments about covering the chrome, considering you do this for a living you would think people would ask what you use rather than telling you what you need to do.
You made a very interesting comment about the lack of pre-heat during manufacture. I guess you don't get much for several hundred thousand pounds anymore, do we? I admire you ethic about always giving it back better and stronger than it was originally made! Hoping to see you hit 100K subs very soon! Rich
The quality of your workmanship forced me to subscribe! I used to do this type of work for a living but I lazy assed out and went to work welding in a factory.
Couldn’t help but notice you covered the cab glass up. Once had an intern in the shop doing some welding/grinding on the stick of an excavator, he sent so many sparks into that front cab glass we had to replace it!
It's the same thing on building sites, people with grinders and welders, not thinking about where their sparks are going. They end up embedding grinding debris into the glass and the only solution is to replace the glass. A couple of minutes spent covering things up saves a lot of anger, grief and expense later on.
Ok so the guys an intern that generally means some of them aren't really experienced in floor sweeping and tea making, or just graduated from that level, or can read a book and pass exams but practically they are useless in the real world. Why wasn't somebody supervising that was experienced in grinding not pointing out about sparks and windows, it wasn't totally his fault was it !
thanks for explaining why you did the repair that way, I was just wondering " at what point is it more economical to just cut it off and start again". Good tip on the anti spatter spray as well!
With just one side of each plate beveled, how did you keep the work from drawing and locking the pin in place? Thanks and thanks for sharing! Loved the video.
Usually brace it untill cold then remove brace but I'll admit , I forgot and it did pull in abit but persuaded ram to go back in with a few thumps needless to say don't need the shims
Thanks Derick!, They actually take absolutely buggr all time to shoot, I'd say a smoker would spend twice as long havin a smoke, the Time bit is in the evening cutting the video togeather after work. Gets boring quick lol
You can use the soot from straight acetylene burning to protect the chrome. Not to say it works better but good men run out of supplies. Very nice repair! I like your ideas on pre heat and the plate you added for strength was masterfully done as well.
I just found your channel. Pretty good stuff. I am also a welder/machinist here in the US working on heavy stuff. My guess is that repair would have been just fine without the supporting plates. But those plates will insure it will break someplace else 😀 cheers🍻
Looks excellent! What wire do you run for yellow steel (equipment like this)? I've run a ton of Lincoln NR233 (d1.8 spec for earthquake structural) sized at .072" and I would think it would do the trick. What were your preheat and interpass temperatures? I'm assuming you gouged the backs out of your roots and filled them back in, yeah?
nice job with the pallets. if the welding thing don't work out ya might want to get into stair framing. I don't know what draws me to these heavy welding vids, but they sure hold my interest. thanks
G'day there , Thanks for sharing this repair with us , i just love these major repairs . Theres no doubt about your skills ,the welds n prep work speak for themselves . Im guessing you enjoyed a holiday down under recently ,, cos i got a good laugh from the root weld joke . But were good at mathematics too , We learn from an early age that if you subtract ,divide, then add give it a good square root, n it will multiply ,, if ya not carefull. Love your channel ,,keep on bringing it .. Much Respect from Down Under
I would love to work on big machines like that. Unfortunately no apprenticeships for anything close near me and nobody hiring without experience :/ Love watching your videos, I always learn so much.
not sure if it’s been mentioned here, but the broken grease point @ 11.02 will be a huge contributor to the damage done to this machine by a less than mindful operator. Lease company machines are a far cry from a bright owner operator’s steed . Lovely repair detail, no need for new lugs. I am surprised you didn’t grind your welds back for style on your class 1, under the finish coat of primer and paint cover? Great video 👍
I know this is a sensitive question but as a new shop that I'm trying to build up, what would you say a good price or a way to figure a good charge and fair for jons like this, ibe got a crane boom I've got to start tomorrow and I just dont know what the going rates are for projects like this, thanks for the vids and hope to hear from you soon , Michael
Its mint that the plates didn't pull so you could remove the pin after welding and put it back in, it had me wondering when you said youd weld it with the pin in, great job! ps flux core is my favourite wire too
Love seeing another side of the metalworking trades. Kinda surprised you didn't use more solvents to knock that grease out. At least in my shop, some brake cleaner or contact cleaner is the typical way to deal with grease.
@@ericknazik7739 As long as it's non chlorinated, it's reasonable safe. Acetone isn't exactly good for us either. I generally use either depending on situation.
Great video again . Did you weld at the welds with the flux core wire or just the first run . Why do you use hardox 450 plate . Would s355j2+n plate be as strong and cheaper then hardox and the metals would be same in welding.. with the flux core wire do use welding gas or just the wire . Do you have to change the welding liner in the touch and tips . I tried about 20 Years ago using a Lincoln plant and wire in vertical up in a single v 15 mm plate in a test pei
I tried with a Lincoln plant and wire in vertical single v in 15 mm plate in a test . I found it very quick put I was getting slag traps or pin holes and found it very hard cap the final run . And the welding gloves were next thing to going on fire 🔥 hour the gloves fucked. It's so long ago think the welding touch was different then a mig touch . Keep video coming . All the best from Carlow😄
I used th hardox first because it's super strong, that allows me to use much thinner material in a tight clearance scenario, I just done a couple of flat welds and tacks with solid before I switched over to flux core.
The flux core runs on sametips and liners as solid wire, it runs with same gas also, the function of the flux is to aid positional welds as much as shield.
Love watching a pro at work, especially heavy Equipment repairs, a master at your trade. It's hard to believe what punishment company do to there Equipment, especially there lack of Maintenance. Or even daily maintenance like Grease Equipment daily. Especially at prices for heavy-duty Equipment these days. In 1975 I bought a bran knew Backhoes for $24,000 dollars, now that same size Equipment will cost Approximately 150.000. 🤪
I really appreciated the explanation of your methodology. Thank you @10:54 what was the reasoning for not tying the new plate all the way along the seem?
Thanks bud aprecieate it. The new plate was fully welded on inside, on the outside only the broken weld was repaired with some overlap. The original unbroken weld was perfect
Very good! I've just had a gander at JCB's website where the boasting about the superior strength of the steel used that will defy failure even under the most arduous conditions, is almost laughable in light of what Alistair has just done! It would be good to know if Cat, Volvo and others of similar size have the same failure rate at the same hours of work.
This is another great example to my earlier question about "Why don't the Manufactures put more strength into these stress points" Your answer was awesome and it rears its ugly head again. Is JCB a high quality Manufacturer? and if so, do all of these have the same problems or is one the clear cut favorite IYO?!
All manufacturers have failures but if they are fairly isolated incidents and at high machine hours it doesn’t warrant a redesign and adding more cost to the machine. This could have been a manufacturing defect but if caught at an early stage it would have been a simple fix. The crack didn’t happen overnight and there’s enough symptoms to catch the fault before failure
Thanks for another good video, welders hate grease, but as a mechanic if some guys actually used it, it would help me no end when the pins /bushings weren't all chewed to crap needing a machine shop and a welder. Or the pins are seized in so tight it's a days fight getting them out to do a repair. Do you see loads of the same repairs on those model machines or is part of it the guy in the seat pulling the controls, if it's him it will be back when he busts the next weakest link in that boom doing the same thing. But hey we all need to make money to pay bills somehow L.O.L .
Love the “comment” on the “CAT” - YELLOW PAINT: making it last longer , Arrogant CAT. Techs the world over will love that statement LOL ! You’re spot-on with your observation on the buss gun trend it was 100% Snap-On : Now 100% Milwaukee a few IR ,Great VIDJA’s !!!!!!!! To the point 👍🏻
Can anyone explain how this gets broken in the first place ? I know any tool can be “ used “ or “ abused “ . Obviously misuse breaks anything but why don’t the designers count on this ? Cost I suppose is the overriding factor ?
I'd be awful nervous welding something like that without a pin going through the ram ears and I'd try to get most of the welding done before taking pin out. 3M add-flows work good but extremely expensive...
Great video, I know where to come now if I ever brake something ! Does just leaving the pin in stop the holes moving ? I imagine it would nip tbe pin and not be able to get it out ?? Thank Paul
Locating the pin bosses no problem. Would have cut the plates off. Made new ones from 20mm plate. Cut out bosses. Clean up OD in lathe. Rewelded them into new plates. Using centre marks on boom from original plates and bosses marked before plates arc aired off. Fit pin with spacer. Tack and Weld new plates too boom. Paint yellow. I've done it within a day.
Some preheat even on this thickness for a MIG weld is probably the thing to do. I would heat even stick welding the root pass myself. To me just a little insurance of good penetration.
what knid of flux core wire are you using?and what type of gas are you using with it? I have just started using bohler ti 52 t-fd flux core wire 1.2mm .I kept gettin perosity in it and i was wondering if you had any tips for me on using it?maybe im using the wrong gas am i?it argo shield light gas i was using.
I can't remember which is seamless flux core code number, there is one of the ti52 which is rolled tube that can obsorb moisture if it's left in humid air for period of time, the moisture gets into the core. The seamless is awesome it stopped my problems. I use Argo universal or heavy
@@allistairc123 i must get some argo universal and heavy.i think the stuff i have is seamless.its probabbly just a learning urve i have to get over.it seems really good stuff to use.
if there wasn't any heavy equipment there would be no foundations for me to play with my nails and wood on. if there weren't no welders there would not be anyone to keep this heavy equipment in shape to do their jobs.
I would imagine that you would fall on the floor somebody told you to do it right once. At least they know where it's going to fail the next time again.
I'm getting the feeling that there's not so much love for JC Bamforth's machines? Loving the work though, I dunno if I would call it art but there's some real talent and ability on show
That's what you call a PROPER repair rather than just a weld repair
Thanks for this vid. I am about to start my work as service advisor by December and this vid maybe used for the future. I am from welding industry a technical engineer from Lincoln Electric. Great video!
Awesome bud thanks for aupport
I knew you would get comments about covering the chrome, considering you do this for a living you would think people would ask what you use rather than telling you what you need to do.
You made a very interesting comment about the lack of pre-heat during manufacture. I guess you don't get much for several hundred thousand pounds anymore, do we? I admire you ethic about always giving it back better and stronger than it was originally made! Hoping to see you hit 100K subs very soon!
Rich
The quality of your workmanship forced me to subscribe! I used to do this type of work for a living but I lazy assed out and went to work welding in a factory.
grease means that the operator actually cared about his tool
True enough. However, I as well as yourself, clean the teeth before visiting the dentist. How about the same courtesy for the engineer?
Couldn’t help but notice you covered the cab glass up. Once had an intern in the shop doing some welding/grinding on the stick of an excavator, he sent so many sparks into that front cab glass we had to replace it!
It's the same thing on building sites, people with grinders and welders, not thinking about where their sparks are going. They end up embedding grinding debris into the glass and the only solution is to replace the glass. A couple of minutes spent covering things up saves a lot of anger, grief and expense later on.
Ok so the guys an intern that generally means some of them aren't really experienced in floor sweeping and tea making, or just graduated from that level, or can read a book and pass exams but practically they are useless in the real world. Why wasn't somebody supervising that was experienced in grinding not pointing out about sparks and windows, it wasn't totally his fault was it !
The slag rolls off in one piece, excellent welding.
Another great video. 👍 Love seeing some real-life weld repairs on heavy kit. Keep em coming. 👨🏻🏭
Great work lovely to watch someone with your experience tackle these jobs
thanks for explaining why you did the repair that way, I was just wondering " at what point is it more economical to just cut it off and start again". Good tip on the anti spatter spray as well!
When the repair strength has no further potential to be stronger than original, it's time for complete replacement.
Tried de-greasing with a steam cleaner? Seems to be a bit of a jewelery thing, but close enough.
Just found u. Great vid, quality workmanship, a rare thing nowadays. Ty
Thanks for support bud
With just one side of each plate beveled, how did you keep the work from drawing and locking the pin in place? Thanks and thanks for sharing! Loved the video.
Usually brace it untill cold then remove brace but I'll admit , I forgot and it did pull in abit but persuaded ram to go back in with a few thumps needless to say don't need the shims
Great job Allistair keep the vids coming I know there time consuming and times precious in our game but great to see 👍🏻
Thanks Derick!, They actually take absolutely buggr all time to shoot, I'd say a smoker would spend twice as long havin a smoke, the Time bit is in the evening cutting the video togeather after work. Gets boring quick lol
Great bit of engineering there, you should be more than happy to sign off on that job. Well done.
What would a repair like this cost? Very talented work manship. 👍
Excellent work. Awesome repair. Looks great. Thank you for sharing.
Fantastic work well done , artists at works.
Great repair super strong
Regards
Steve UK London
the prep work involved in welding has got to be more time consuming than the welding itself
it generally is yes
always is, and removing a previous repair is always a problem.....great video, Cheers
You can use the soot from straight acetylene burning to protect the chrome. Not to say it works better but good men run out of supplies. Very nice repair! I like your ideas on pre heat and the plate you added for strength was masterfully done as well.
I just found your channel. Pretty good stuff. I am also a welder/machinist here in the US working on heavy stuff. My guess is that repair would have been just fine without the supporting plates. But those plates will insure it will break someplace else 😀 cheers🍻
Great video would love to see some close ups of you welding!
dmadere1 true, just watching his butt from a distance is not very enchanting.
Looks excellent! What wire do you run for yellow steel (equipment like this)? I've run a ton of Lincoln NR233 (d1.8 spec for earthquake structural) sized at .072" and I would think it would do the trick. What were your preheat and interpass temperatures? I'm assuming you gouged the backs out of your roots and filled them back in, yeah?
Good old 10 minus mild steel no preheat and not enough passes to worry about over temp, run mild steel solid wire nothin fancy.
And yeah always back gouge where I can
Great stuff, what machine is the best built?...
nice job with the pallets. if the welding thing don't work out ya might want to get into stair framing. I don't know what draws me to these heavy welding vids, but they sure hold my interest. thanks
I love watching pros make shit look easy!
G'day there ,
Thanks for sharing this repair with us , i just love these major repairs .
Theres no doubt about your skills ,the welds n prep work speak for themselves .
Im guessing you enjoyed a holiday down under recently ,, cos i got a good laugh from the root weld joke .
But were good at mathematics too ,
We learn from an early age that if you subtract ,divide, then add give it a good square root, n it will multiply ,, if ya not carefull.
Love your channel ,,keep on bringing it ..
Much Respect
from
Down Under
H ha ,yeah bud, straya my fave place on earth, was lucky to get a couple of years workingplaying out there!
Thanks for support, appreciate it.
I would love to work on big machines like that. Unfortunately no apprenticeships for anything close near me and nobody hiring without experience :/
Love watching your videos, I always learn so much.
Thanks for support bud. Tricky one that .. can you get a further education qualification or training
An old-hand trick for protecting the chromed rods was covering them in acetylene soot, back in't day before anti-spatter spray, lol!
Cool not herd that one!
How do you apply the acetylene soot? Straight with an oxygen-poor flame? Doesn't that burn the hydraulic oil layer for a part on the rods?
@@tuttebelleke If the flame is rich enough it'll be super cool anyway, probably not hot enough to take up the hyd oil left behind!
Another Outstanding piece of craftsmanship!
Thanks Bryan aprecieate it
Your right. Snap-on's had its day. Milwaukee is the way to go and I love mine 😊
not sure if it’s been mentioned here, but the broken grease point @ 11.02 will be a huge contributor to the damage done to this machine by a less than mindful operator. Lease company machines are a far cry from a bright owner operator’s steed . Lovely repair detail, no need for new lugs. I am surprised you didn’t grind your welds back for style on your class 1, under the finish coat of primer and paint cover? Great video 👍
I know this is a sensitive question but as a new shop that I'm trying to build up, what would you say a good price or a way to figure a good charge and fair for jons like this, ibe got a crane boom I've got to start tomorrow and I just dont know what the going rates are for projects like this, thanks for the vids and hope to hear from you soon , Michael
do i see a crack on 12:40 at rod end where chrome ends?
Love ur repair videos Alistair. Excuse me nievety but whats the difference between the flux core mig wire your using there and gassless flux core wire
The flux core with gas is a positional wire, its very very easy to to weld vertical and overhead
Question, why use wire feed dual shield over stick welding? Stick welding had a higher rating for strength. Just a question.
Easier out of position welding and its much faster than stick welding.
I wouldnt second guess your work, it looks great!
Thank you. Those are good deep wels. I love my mig welder and I covet that cutting table.LOL.
Great video, ball park figures, how much can a job like that cost?
Awesome repair!! Love the video!
Its mint that the plates didn't pull so you could remove the pin after welding and put it back in, it had me wondering when you said youd weld it with the pin in, great job! ps flux core is my favourite wire too
Love seeing another side of the metalworking trades. Kinda surprised you didn't use more solvents to knock that grease out. At least in my shop, some brake cleaner or contact cleaner is the typical way to deal with grease.
I would highly advise against welding on brake kleen
@@ericknazik7739 There are two types of brake cleaner and one is very dangerous to welders. They mention it on Weld.com.
@@markfryer9880 yea I wouldn't weld on any type of brake cleaner I just use acetone but thas just me
@@ericknazik7739 As long as it's non chlorinated, it's reasonable safe. Acetone isn't exactly good for us either. I generally use either depending on situation.
Keep your videos coming. Thank 🧒
How many hours on that digger
Great video again . Did you weld at the welds with the flux core wire or just the first run . Why do you use hardox 450 plate . Would s355j2+n plate be as strong and cheaper then hardox and the metals would be same in welding.. with the flux core wire do use welding gas or just the wire . Do you have to change the welding liner in the touch and tips . I tried about 20 Years ago using a Lincoln plant and wire in vertical up in a single v 15 mm plate in a test pei
I tried with a Lincoln plant and wire in vertical single v in 15 mm plate in a test . I found it very quick put I was getting slag traps or pin holes and found it very hard cap the final run . And the welding gloves were next thing to going on fire 🔥 hour the gloves fucked. It's so long ago think the welding touch was different then a mig touch . Keep video coming . All the best from Carlow😄
I used th hardox first because it's super strong, that allows me to use much thinner material in a tight clearance scenario, I just done a couple of flat welds and tacks with solid before I switched over to flux core.
The flux core runs on sametips and liners as solid wire, it runs with same gas also, the function of the flux is to aid positional welds as much as shield.
@@allistairc123 thanks allistairc 123 for replying . Can you use it outside . Ie wind or rain a problem .
I enjoy your content enough to rewatch it :)
Love watching a pro at work, especially heavy Equipment repairs, a master at your trade. It's hard to believe what punishment company do to there Equipment, especially there lack of Maintenance. Or even daily maintenance like Grease Equipment daily. Especially at prices for heavy-duty Equipment these days. In 1975 I bought a bran knew Backhoes for $24,000 dollars, now that same size Equipment will cost Approximately 150.000. 🤪
Just found your channel..interesting stuff good content. Love this kind of shit it AWESOME. 👍👍👍👍👍👍
I am new to your channel and have a simplistic question. Are you using both gas shielding and Flux core?
How much of those spools of welding wire you use a week?
Boss job big guy. I would have liked to have watched more work being done though.
I really appreciated the explanation of your methodology. Thank you @10:54 what was the reasoning for not tying the new plate all the way along the seem?
Thanks bud aprecieate it. The new plate was fully welded on inside, on the outside only the broken weld was repaired with some overlap. The original unbroken weld was perfect
Crackin Job..i miss the fabrication & repair work...arthiritis has taken its toll on my knee's and now my hands..Great repair! Cj Midlands UK
Brilliant video, good descriptive commentary. Very nice with the 2 extra plates. (More videos please)
That repair is stout. As you say, preparation is the key.
Nice work 👍
Think it's a jcb not 100% sure
🤣
Just Completely Boll-axed
Very good! I've just had a gander at JCB's website where the boasting about the superior strength of the steel used that will defy failure even under the most arduous conditions, is almost laughable in light of what Alistair has just done! It would be good to know if Cat, Volvo and others of similar size have the same failure rate at the same hours of work.
Another excellent job and video !. Thanks.
This is another great example to my earlier question about "Why don't the Manufactures put more strength into these stress points" Your answer was awesome and it rears its ugly head again. Is JCB a high quality Manufacturer? and if so, do all of these have the same problems or is one the clear cut favorite IYO?!
They are a very innovative manufacturer, they produce a lot of specalised machines that others don't
All manufacturers have failures but if they are fairly isolated incidents and at high machine hours it doesn’t warrant a redesign and adding more cost to the machine. This could have been a manufacturing defect but if caught at an early stage it would have been a simple fix. The crack didn’t happen overnight and there’s enough symptoms to catch the fault before failure
“ paint it Cat yellow and make it a bit stronger” love it! JCB made of Toffee
How does stuff like this even break?
Great tip on the anti spatter spray!
Did you run a solid wire root?
No just tacked it and done the base run with solid first.
Can do whole job with ether but flux core much faster
Greetings from the American west coast! I love your content!!
Thanks Ian!
Thanks for another good video, welders hate grease, but as a mechanic if some guys actually used it, it would help me no end when the pins /bushings weren't all chewed to crap needing a machine shop and a welder. Or the pins are seized in so tight it's a days fight getting them out to do a repair. Do you see loads of the same repairs on those model machines or is part of it the guy in the seat pulling the controls, if it's him it will be back when he busts the next weakest link in that boom doing the same thing. But hey we all need to make money to pay bills somehow L.O.L .
Nice repair. Man having a burn table would be sweet.
I always asked customers if they wanted to pay shop rate for degreasing parts... pay a flunky 1/5 shop rate.
Beautiful job...looks better than new
cant tell if you were slagging-off JCB, or CAT with the paint comment?.. Very nice work for sure👍🏻👍🏻.
Better than new. Proper fix.
Слушал внимательно, но всё равно не чего не понял, совсем исковеркали русский язык. 👍
Thankyou my russian brother
Love the “comment” on the “CAT” - YELLOW PAINT: making it last longer , Arrogant CAT. Techs the world over will love that statement LOL ! You’re spot-on with your observation on the buss gun trend it was 100% Snap-On : Now 100% Milwaukee a few IR ,Great VIDJA’s !!!!!!!! To the point 👍🏻
I enjoy your videos. What wire/size did you use before you switched over to flux core?
What wire/size flux core did you use to finish your welds with?
It was 1.0mm mild stee solid then put on 1.2 seamless fulxcore for the positional stuff
Can anyone explain how this gets broken in the first place ? I know any tool can be “ used “ or “ abused “ . Obviously misuse breaks anything but why don’t the designers count on this ? Cost I suppose is the overriding factor ?
I'd be awful nervous welding something like that without a pin going through the ram ears and I'd try to get most of the welding done before taking pin out. 3M add-flows work good but extremely expensive...
very good
missing the yellow spraying
Thats a good time saving tip for protecting the chrome lad cheers
Just found your channel brilliant videos. Is it your own business
Thanks! Family business
Nice job that 👍🏻 we have done the same machine onsite but replace both hangers and x2 new bosses 10 hour shift 💪🏻
Great video, I know where to come now if I ever brake something ! Does just leaving the pin in stop the holes moving ? I imagine it would nip tbe pin and not be able to get it out ?? Thank Paul
Locating the pin bosses no problem.
Would have cut the plates off.
Made new ones from 20mm plate.
Cut out bosses.
Clean up OD in lathe.
Rewelded them into new plates.
Using centre marks on boom from original plates and bosses marked before plates arc aired off.
Fit pin with spacer.
Tack and Weld new plates too boom.
Paint yellow.
I've done it within a day.
1.5 day *very fast. A place the customer would like to be. Awesome repair. M
Some preheat even on this thickness for a MIG weld is probably the thing to do. I would heat even stick welding the root pass myself. To me just a little insurance of good penetration.
Great work Alistair 👏 wear are u based in ni
Thanks Gary, newtownards
@@allistairc123cheers Alistair any chance of fone number for your self please have a friend looking a boom plated on Hitachi zaxis 130lcn
what knid of flux core wire are you using?and what type of gas are you using with it? I have just started using bohler ti 52 t-fd flux core wire 1.2mm .I kept gettin perosity in it and i was wondering if you had any tips for me on using it?maybe im using the wrong gas am i?it argo shield light gas i was using.
I can't remember which is seamless flux core code number, there is one of the ti52 which is rolled tube that can obsorb moisture if it's left in humid air for period of time, the moisture gets into the core. The seamless is awesome it stopped my problems. I use Argo universal or heavy
@@allistairc123 i must get some argo universal and heavy.i think the stuff i have is seamless.its probabbly just a learning urve i have to get over.it seems really good stuff to use.
It also might be not enough stickout
if there wasn't any heavy equipment there would be no foundations for me to play with my nails and wood on. if there weren't no welders there would not be anyone to keep this heavy equipment in shape to do their jobs.
How much do you charge per hour?
We usually quote
Great job we're abouts are u based buddy
I would imagine that you would fall on the floor somebody told you to do it right once. At least they know where it's going to fail the next time again.
What helmet and air fed unit are you using and how do you find it.
3m adflo, bloody love it, very high quality andcomfortable
Ah duel sheild....nice . That's what I run in my suitcase. Nice work
where about in aussie it this?
Cat yellow joke is on point!
I'm getting the feeling that there's not so much love for JC Bamforth's machines?
Loving the work though, I dunno if I would call it art but there's some real talent and ability on show
I've been driving 360 diggers for 15 years and I've never seen that amount of damage on a digger how they manager that I don't know?
Music is doing my head in mate.
I would rather silence
put it on mute then
All our jcbs break and we maintain your stuff our cats never give problems
Yet if you watch IC Weld from Texas, all Issac does is repair Cat equipment. A lot of tough rock and rough operators.
Nice work 👍🏻