Lotta people say they do different way. But they don’t set up and edit like do you. They sit watch football an tell player how to do. Your effort is magnificent...Thankyou friend.
I just happened to find your video, was curious and stayed to watch. It was AMAZING. You are obviously a very skilled lathe operator as well as a great video photographer. I'd love to see more.
I think if it was for show, you would definitely want to perfectly smooth the larger flat surfaces, and then yeah, leave the jaws and threads unpainted. But if its functional, which im sure it is in this state, it doesnt matter much. In use the threads and jaws paint will come off anyway, its not a big issue. That all just depends on the use case. This type of restoration resulted in more of a functional and usable tool rather than a showpiece.
The video was asking for feedback. It said "Leave a comment with your opinion", which he did without being rude. And all y'all jumped on his shit. All because he did what the video asked.
You know I'm not entirely convinced these restoration TH-camrs don't throw the tools the find into the dirt, outside, under the rain for a few weeks XD Kidding. The wrench does actually look like a forbidden snack tho.
@@Matisyahuwu I have a display of tools at least a hundred years old and many a lot older than that. Sometimes people give me old tools that look almost brand new. I was even given a washboard with a receipt of date of purchase of 1912 that was still in a box. Pristine and it just would not fit in with the older tools . So what I do is I put them on my roof to weather for however long it takes. Sometimes 6 months sometimes two years. I don't make them like this wrench but just enough to fit in with the rest.
The restoration work is astonishing. And it is matched by the videography and the editing. This was incredibly satisfying and I never would have believed that I would watch a video of a wrench restoration and find it’s so pleasurable.
I think that the restoration intended also for the reuse of the tool, in this case it was worth all the work you used. I am not much for removing dents and putty, because they are part of the history of the object. Probably, given the oxidation, it will have been abandoned in a few buckets outside, in the rain, but afterwards you have given it back its life and the respect it deserves. Buying an instrument of that size costs a lot of money, and in addition it is made with alloys that were used to make objects last hundreds of years, not the crap they sell now. Bravo and thanks for the video.
Good job! The next time you could leave the work area unpainted for better practical use. This refers to the thread and grip zones. Also, the lateral planes of the zone near the teeth are usually left unpainted and even polished on working tools.
Mă bucur să văd că și la noi sunt oameni care s-au apucat de treaba asta, am restaurat și eu tot felul de "barn finds" și vechituri de prin oser pentru colecția personală. Dar mai sunt cei care lasă lucruri la învechit intenționat ca apoi să le poată restaura, sper că nu e cazul aici. Cu o procedură de electroliză pot face o astfel de sculă nouă să arate în halul acesta în 24h. Vezi indieni etc. La noi și vechiturile sunt scumpe în oser...
Beautiful restoration! Before it looked like somebody had stored it in the ocean for the last five years. I think the only thing I would have done different is perhaps leave the Jaws unpainted but that's really more personal preference. Great job!
I don’t even know why I’m here. I usually pass my restoration videos when I’m on a TH-cam deep dive lol they’re pretty interesting. I wouldn’t know any better, but to me you did a great job!
I really liked this. Thanks so much. You asked for my opinion: I thought that the head and body, after the restoration, looked like what they were. That was, lumpy, bumpy pieces of metal that someone had simply spray painted. Still all pock-marked, rough, and lumpy. In other words, not at all what they were when it was first built. I vastly prefer the style of restoration that "my mechanics" uses. He restores things to look just exactly like they were when brand new. I suggest moving in that direction. Thanks again for sharing your marvelous skill and commitment. I love how freely you share the results with us. Please do more.
Thank you for your opinion, I know about the channel "my mechanics", but I prefer to do a slightly different business, to look like new .... you have to do it again :)
As a plumber of 22 years I enjoy and appreciate old tools, especially old plumbing tools. I think it would have been much better if you didn't paint, file down the jaws, and didn't paint the upper piece the adjustment nut threads up and down on.
I did something similar to a huge 3’ wrench that was my grandfather’s (I’m 70!). But , you had to do more, like straighten & fabricate......awesome, my friend. A work of pristine beauty.
Hasantha Sasika at the risk of inhaling dust and fumes, I am extremely comfortable using a sandblasting booth. I wouldn’t drive a car for almost 3 days to get to California, when I could fly in a plane and it only takes five hours
The way the surface is raised consistently over the whole wrench shows that. It may be old, yes. But the level of rust probably wasn't sufficient for his video needs. I don't like it when people cheat.
I don’t usually post comments but I gotta say this was amazing. That thing looked like it was far beyond repair. Just pure garbage. What you did there takes some real skill. I wish this was the standard rather than just buying a new and likely poorly made one. The companies that make them could easily charge to do what you did and still be able to make good quality product and not have to rely on just buying new ones and still make a profit while reducing unnecessary waste. It looks like a lot of work and/or a long process so I commend you for taking the time and effort to not only do it but record it and post it, which I imagine makes it even more work. 😀👍🏼👍🏼
Your results speak for themselves, but I’m personally skeptical of the vinegar method. I feel Evaporust + sandblasting would be both quicker and more effective.
That was very interesting how he done ✅ it !!! Thank you !!! This is a great hobby provided that he has the right tools 🧰🛠⚒🔩🔧⚙️🔩⛏🛠⛓🪓 to get the job done ✅!! Thank you! 😊👍
I have my great uncles Premier Lifetime K1 Germany pocket knife. It's in decent condition but I'd love to have it fully restored. I cleaned it the best I could, before I couldn't even open one of the blades. Do you restore fan items? I would obviously pay to have it done. I could send photos of what the knife looks like.
AxelMaze yeah well it’s not copyrighted. But it is stolen. Shame on this hack. Using his method (barely) and then using his phrase, This whole thing was a hack job.
Very nice knurling work, and the hot bluing came out very well. I am surprised that you did not do electrolysis to remove the rust. I think it would have saved a lot of effort (and any loss of metal) from the vinegar and wire brush work.
My very first look at a restoration video. I had no idea how you were going to do it. You did a very nice job. It was a very interesting video even though you weren't speaking in English. It turns out that not having English didn't matter at all.
You did an amazing job on this tool and great editing!🥰
Thenks 😇
Aici nu se vorbeste Romănește? 🤔 🤔 🤔
😹😹😹
Se vorbeste Chinese 😁😎
Ce romana , am uitat cum se vorbește românește 😹😹
Step One: Build a $50,000 workshop
Step 2: $50,000 worth of lathes, turners, grinders, chemicals...
Step 3: Spent 50+ hours doing hard dangerous work
@@6anial
Zr
😂
Step 4:???
Wrench resurrection......great job giving new life to this pitifully- neglected, hard-working tool!
Скорее вуду зомби ключ
Wrenchurrection. Indeed.
Lotta people say they do different way. But they don’t set up and edit like do you. They sit watch football an tell player how to do. Your effort is magnificent...Thankyou friend.
It was a 3 week job
It must really Suck to be a "disliker"~!!
Good for another 50 years, nice video with no annoying music..thank you!
Ok ok no music 😹
YES! No annoying music. Brilliantly done.
ok :))
"Amazing grace, how sweet the sound that saved a wrench like me." 🤗
Haha that's great dude!
Somewhere during a few micro-seconds within the Big Bang, the “stars aligned” to allow this comment to occur 13.7 billion years later.
😂
Being a tool restorer myself I can honestly say I can't believe how this turned out . I am at a total loss for words !
Nothing like the old school blueing technique, great job.
термообработка? Нет, не слышал.
Видимо по рассчету на прочность там сгодится и деревянный болт
I just happened to find your video, was curious and stayed to watch. It was AMAZING. You are obviously a very skilled lathe operator as well as a great video photographer. I'd love to see more.
A treia zi la rand cand dau peste un canal de genul. Si toate trei detinute de romani. Bravo!
hehe mersi , nu prea vezi romanii sa aprecieze acest gen de continut :)
@@GarageRestoration Pacat, faci/faceti o treaba foarte placuta ochiului. Acum depinde si de gusturile fiecaruia.
Publicul din afara tari apreciază foarte mult astfel de clipuri , in România e simplu , da-o dreacu iau alta 😂😂😂
Vốn những bài hát ngày xưa đã rất hay rồi mà thêm giọng hát giàu cảm xúc của Phúc nữa thì đúng là cực phẩm cover😍
I would leave the jaws and thread without paint.
Idem
I think if it was for show, you would definitely want to perfectly smooth the larger flat surfaces, and then yeah, leave the jaws and threads unpainted.
But if its functional, which im sure it is in this state, it doesnt matter much. In use the threads and jaws paint will come off anyway, its not a big issue.
That all just depends on the use case. This type of restoration resulted in more of a functional and usable tool rather than a showpiece.
It’s okay he spray painted it all of the paint will chip right off anyway. Tools need to be powder coated.
@B B love fun and sad so many emotions you must be a nice girl😚
The video was asking for feedback. It said "Leave a comment with your opinion", which he did without being rude. And all y'all jumped on his shit. All because he did what the video asked.
Looks like someone deep fried a pipe wrench.
You know I'm not entirely convinced these restoration TH-camrs don't throw the tools the find into the dirt, outside, under the rain for a few weeks XD Kidding. The wrench does actually look like a forbidden snack tho.
@@Matisyahuwu yea most do. Some even joke about it and show how they make things look bad for dramatic effect
@@Matisyahuwu
I have a display of tools at least a hundred years old and many a lot older than that. Sometimes people give me old tools that look almost brand new. I was even given a washboard with a receipt of date of purchase of 1912 that was still in a box. Pristine and it just would not fit in with the older tools . So what I do is I put them on my roof to weather for however long it takes. Sometimes 6 months sometimes two years. I don't make them like this wrench but just enough to fit in with the rest.
@@n40tom why the fuck would you do that? Perfect condition and from 1912!? And you threw on you fucking roof!!?
Good
The restoration work is astonishing. And it is matched by the videography and the editing. This was incredibly satisfying and I never would have believed that I would watch a video of a wrench restoration and find it’s so pleasurable.
thanks a lot for the message, that makes me keep going :X
Ditto! I totally agree! I did exactly the same as you did! Not to mentioned that he did such an AMAZING MIRACLE & EXQUISITE JOB!
For those who cherish old, watching someone do a restoration is so satisfying
10:22 "Dad!!” First time I've heard someone speak in one of your videos!!
Alway satisfying watching your restorations!
"I make a newone"... Reminds me of something... :)
" My mecanics " :))
That wrench was not only rusty, but abused, judging by the bolt. Good work!
It was used in communist factories :)), what can you expect?
Wow this guy can bring back anything back to life. Lol kudos.
WOW You got skills could not stop watching great job👍
Thanks
Very interesting and I learned a lot. Take care of your tools first and foremost. You are a
fantastic teacher. Loved the description of the poor guy.
Thanks
I think that the restoration intended also for the reuse of the tool, in this case it was worth all the work you used. I am not much for removing dents and putty, because they are part of the history of the object. Probably, given the oxidation, it will have been abandoned in a few buckets outside, in the rain, but afterwards you have given it back its life and the respect it deserves. Buying an instrument of that size costs a lot of money, and in addition it is made with alloys that were used to make objects last hundreds of years, not the crap they sell now. Bravo and thanks for the video.
My whole family loved watching your restoration on Christmas day!!
thank you very much, people like you make me continue.....
Always like it when a tool can be put back in service when needed., Bravo....
Mersi :)
2:10 I use vinegar plus salt, very effective! Great restoration, this wrench will again give years of good service!
Salt? Ok thanks 🙏
Pov: got recommended this after the knife, and butcher knife
Literally 😂🤣
Lmao fr
I clicked don't recommend channel with the butcher knife and they just give me another rusty video...
Dam you beat me to the comment-
Lmao yup
I really don't know why but these kinds of stuff really catches my attention.
Wow ! Buddy absolute delightment in watching the transformation
Wow, very creative, classy and beautiful. Keep going and give us something new and wonderful 👌🏻👌🏻👌🏻👌🏻👌🏻👌🏻👌🏻👌🏻👌🏻💕💕💕💕💕💕
Thanks :)
Foarte bine lucrat si felicitari pentru munca depusa si orele pierdute in garaj.
Mai mult la atelierul de la munca , nu am acasa mașini CNC și strung 😇
Good job! The next time you could leave the work area unpainted for better practical use. This refers to the thread and grip zones. Also, the lateral planes of the zone near the teeth are usually left unpainted and even polished on working tools.
You're right, but the key is a little different from the standard ones
Wow, that's a truly impressive display of craftsmanship. Well done.
That wrench seems to have been found on the Titanic. Bravo buna treaba!
Mă bucur să văd că și la noi sunt oameni care s-au apucat de treaba asta, am restaurat și eu tot felul de "barn finds" și vechituri de prin oser pentru colecția personală. Dar mai sunt cei care lasă lucruri la învechit intenționat ca apoi să le poată restaura, sper că nu e cazul aici. Cu o procedură de electroliză pot face o astfel de sculă nouă să arate în halul acesta în 24h. Vezi indieni etc. La noi și vechiturile sunt scumpe în oser...
It was satisfying to watch how you did a great job on that one! Well done!
Thanks, you're doing a good job :)
I am viewer number 2,798,806!! Love these "rust-o-rations" and great video and editing!!
Thank you !
Went a little bit paint happy, but good restoration overall. Especially considering what you started with!
Personally I would have never done a job this good. Amazing work.
Strive and you will do :)
I know everyone is thinking “I can do this” until he pulls out the metal lathe.
My drill has a chuck therefor it is a lathe
I do not like using car body filler to patch holes. Try using soft solder instead, will last forever. Good job.
Thanks
Wow that thing was really rusty. Nice job
Beautiful restoration! Before it looked like somebody had stored it in the ocean for the last five years. I think the only thing I would have done different is perhaps leave the Jaws unpainted but that's really more personal preference. Great job!
Since it will be more of a collection, I decided to paint everything, thanks for the appreciation
I don’t even know why I’m here. I usually pass my restoration videos when I’m on a TH-cam deep dive lol they’re pretty interesting. I wouldn’t know any better, but to me you did a great job!
That was not rust that was a wrench dipped in KFC broast mix!
what
It does look like the wrench was dipped in a fried chicken batter. Crunchy
Was just about to say "It's been battered and fried!!!"
where there is a will there is a way. i love your work, God is good
Beautiful. Finally the proper use of a file! And proper technique of spraying paint.
Thank you for a great video.
There's nothing like seeing a useful tool come back to life again. Well done.
Neighbor: "Hey do you happen to have a wrench there?"
"Yeah lemme just shake some of the rust off"
You do great work! Your videos are fascinating to watch. Not to mention your editing skills.👍
I really liked this. Thanks so much. You asked for my opinion: I thought that the head and body, after the restoration, looked like what they were. That was, lumpy, bumpy pieces of metal that someone had simply spray painted. Still all pock-marked, rough, and lumpy. In other words, not at all what they were when it was first built. I vastly prefer the style of restoration that "my mechanics" uses. He restores things to look just exactly like they were when brand new. I suggest moving in that direction. Thanks again for sharing your marvelous skill and commitment. I love how freely you share the results with us. Please do more.
Thank you for your opinion, I know about the channel "my mechanics", but I prefer to do a slightly different business, to look like new .... you have to do it again :)
Love the hand gestures and casual entertainment
Thanks
12:14am don’t know why it was in my recommendations but yet here I am and I do not regret it
was a good recommendation then 💪
Great restoration it's amazing what can be done with skill and the right tools !!
Restorer: Now I'm gonna apply some paint to protect the wrench from rust.
Wrench: I AM the rust...
I'm glad you didn't try to fill all the pitting. It looks great!
I’ve know nothing about using tools and creating/restoring but for s me reason this channel is super chilled to watch 😅
Looks like someone stored it in a lake for a few years.
Lady of the lake what is your wisdom... I don't have any swords left, here take a pipe wrench
@@foxified2451 It's been.... a while.....
maybe it was found in an underwater city?
Muito bom mesmo!! Existe algum curso para ser um restaurador?
Lindo trabalho. Parabéns 👏🇧🇷
Well done Sir. Most people would have scrapped the wrench. Glad to see you showing us how to fix it.
An excellent video by an excellant machinst/craftsman!!
Thanks !
very HowToBasics energy here. Was waiting for you to throw an egg at the workbench.
As a plumber of 22 years I enjoy and appreciate old tools, especially old plumbing tools. I think it would have been much better if you didn't paint, file down the jaws, and didn't paint the upper piece the adjustment nut threads up and down on.
Can you send me some plumbing books on email
Only thing I’d recommend doing different would be to tape off the threads of the hook jaw so the paint doesn’t bind up the adjustable nut.
Ok thanks for opinion 😇
You did an amazing job work on this tool Pipe rench its looks a new tool.
thanks !
I love videos like this I will be watching more of your work
Thanks 😇
Looks great. Should've tempered the jaws for longer use. But for art couldn't be better
I did something similar to a huge 3’ wrench that was my grandfather’s (I’m 70!). But , you had to do more, like straighten & fabricate......awesome, my friend. A work of pristine beauty.
Thank you
Mr. sandblaster has entered the chat
Then he leaves like the Vault Dweller after bringing the water chip to Vault 13... :C
Hasantha Sasika at the risk of inhaling dust and fumes, I am extremely comfortable using a sandblasting booth. I wouldn’t drive a car for almost 3 days to get to California, when I could fly in a plane and it only takes five hours
Neither bad nor good.
You can do it better by sand blasting parts and sanding to shine more.
Keep going
I didn't have sandblasting at the time, or anything to polish it with :)
good job, but I still believe this wrench was rusted on purpose so it can be restored.
The way the surface is raised consistently over the whole wrench shows that. It may be old, yes. But the level of rust probably wasn't sufficient for his video needs. I don't like it when people cheat.
First thing I thought of when he laid the tool down, fake rust. Honestly, the end result wasn't so good either.
Even if he did or didnt it still gave us a great video to watch
Nature does it best, the key is more than 40 years old
Suhayl shut up
Vintage pipe wrenches are my favorite. Done 5 so far. From 4-36"
Me too I like to leave quite a bit of patina and age on them though, just remove the rust and square up the teeth or jaws, and condition any wood.
@@ahabsbane He said "wood" .
@@jonb5817 extraordinary skill 👍👍
I love this video! No commentary and all the noises are strangely relaxing. How cool.
I don’t usually post comments but I gotta say this was amazing. That thing looked like it was far beyond repair. Just pure garbage. What you did there takes some real skill. I wish this was the standard rather than just buying a new and likely poorly made one. The companies that make them could easily charge to do what you did and still be able to make good quality product and not have to rely on just buying new ones and still make a profit while reducing unnecessary waste.
It looks like a lot of work and/or a long process so I commend you for taking the time and effort to not only do it but record it and post it, which I imagine makes it even more work. 😀👍🏼👍🏼
Thank you very much for your appreciation, people like you make me continue !
I haven’t seen anyone use bondo on something other than a car, very creative
Your results speak for themselves, but I’m personally skeptical of the vinegar method. I feel Evaporust + sandblasting would be both quicker and more effective.
There are many methods, but I chose the cheapest and simplest
What actually different from both method?
That was very interesting how he made the rustiest pipe wrench 🔧 like new again !!!
That was very interesting how he done ✅ it !!! Thank you !!! This is a great hobby provided that he has the right tools 🧰🛠⚒🔩🔧⚙️🔩⛏🛠⛓🪓
to get the job done ✅!! Thank you! 😊👍
Hola, Princess Diancie. Hola, Herramientas.
I'm 200% sure that I'm not going to do this in my entire life. Still watching it 😭😭😭😭
i am not a Mechanical Person at all but its kinda fun watching your videos
Great restoration man but you really need a blast cabinet make cleaning up the rust so much easier and faster
I bought it later
I like the part where he restored the wrench.
Wait, fuck which part of the video was this? I think I missed it
@@TonyAurum I think it's at 4:20 or something I can't see it clearly
SPOILERS!
My watch history is getting weirder by the day.
same
ahahahahahahahahaha
I have my great uncles Premier Lifetime K1 Germany pocket knife. It's in decent condition but I'd love to have it fully restored. I cleaned it the best I could, before I couldn't even open one of the blades. Do you restore fan items? I would obviously pay to have it done. I could send photos of what the knife looks like.
Not during this period, I am involved in many projects :)
Great job.
Next time make the top and bottom jaws the same color as the adjustment nut.
Bloody well done Mate, Cheers from Michael. Australia.
Australia, a country so big and far from Europe
You’re not allowed use his phrase
I make a new one? Lol
Lol, looks like 'my mechanics' police is on the watch. XD
I thought the same thing tho 😂
AxelMaze yeah well it’s not copyrighted.
But it is stolen.
Shame on this hack.
Using his method (barely) and then using his phrase,
This whole thing was a hack job.
@@damiencerutti6269 no, u
Absolutely gorgeous, mate!
Another tool is disfigured. Instead of restoring it in its former splendor (metal), paint is simply slapped generously on it.
How else would you keep it from tidying again?
@@Davesobscurevideos mirror finish? Oil? Blackened?
It's what I've learned from watching other videos 😂👌
Pawel Kita “mirror finish” you mean polishing? Yeah, won’t last that long.
I tried to keep it as it was
Pawel Kita I meant rusting
Very nice knurling work, and the hot bluing came out very well. I am surprised that you did not do electrolysis to remove the rust. I think it would have saved a lot of effort (and any loss of metal) from the vinegar and wire brush work.
the sanding was good, but I didn't have it at the time
You have mad skills, and the tools to back them up. Fabulous.
thanks
*Garage* - Oh, perfect a Sillson wrench. i saved 10 dollars
*Materials* - no, u did't
it's a stillson wrench dumb ass
TH-cam video-I’ll earn that back but 500x more
Wow! I've never seen so much rust on one tool. The final effect is amazing! And good old vinegar for removing rust. 👍
Thenks 😇
I just want to know, who breads his tools? 🤔😜
The Baker?
My very first look at a restoration video. I had no idea how you were going to do it. You did a very nice job. It was a very interesting video even though you weren't speaking in English. It turns out that not having English didn't matter at all.
thank you very much, it's nice for people to appreciate your work, I don't speak English because it's not my language 😇
These guys are the Doctors of the restoration world & prove it by their surgeries 100% complete satisfaction,
This guy : restores a pipe wrench
Zombies :why do I hear boss music?
:)))))
Parabéns amigo ótimo trabalho 👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻
congratulations friend great job 👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻
Muito obrigado
WD 40 is not a penetrant, it is a "Water Displacer". Some kind of penetrating oil would have been a better choice.
Loosener
Better than factory boy!! Absolutely awesome job!! I love it!! I really really do.
My opinion is................you did a damn good job ! 👍👍
My favorite part is when he decided to just make his own bolt
he replied " my mecanics "