My grandpa is one of the reasons forklift have a cage over them now. he was crushed by a giant roll of paper back when truckers had to load their own truck. He lived and was in traction for 6 months while they wired his bones together with copper wire it was the 40s so I guess they used what they had.the doctor said he would never walk again he said I'll walk to each of you funerals he was able to walk again and walked till the day he died at 94 of a brain aneurysm. And true to his word all the doctors some of which were younger than him died before him. He lived an amazing life but that's my favorite story.
That's an incredible story, thanks for sharing. My grandfather is 98 and still sharp as a tack. The stories of growing up during the dust bowl and WW2 are amazing
I enjoyed the build. One thing to note is that these old forklifts count on the motor as counterweight for lifting capacity. Depending upon what you are doing, you may need to add counterweight on the back of the machine to keep it stable. Something to keep in mind when you go to lift something heavy for the first time.
I also wondered about losing the previous motor as part of the counter-weight. One thing to keep in mind is that EVERY PIECE of the truck is made heavy from the beginning. Usually vehicles are designed to weigh as little as possible to reduce rolling resistance. Lift trucks are made heavy on purpose.
Very valid point. I'd weigh the removed engine and add plates of that weight to the body at least as far back, and if possible as low as can be. That would help stability and lower the center of gravity and mass.
Considering he rebuilt the whole thing, im pretty sure he knows this. I'm assuming he plans to not life very heavy things with it, or is planning on adding a counter weight to it. Of course I could be over estimating him and could be completely wrong, but how about giving him the benefit of the doubt, considering that it not having a counter weight is pretty obvious where the counter weight was coming from.
Amazing resto. The paint is a bomb of retro color. I can see where the lack of speed can be a benefit. More careful and precise movement and placement. You have more than enough power provided in how you built it and you can safely put that power where you need it most. No reason to go mach 5.
Especially on a forklift! As a Certified Forklift Operator, I can assure you going fast in one is a great well to cause serious damage, or get yourself killed.
You know, I really had no intention of watching an almost hour long video of a forklift resto-mod. But here I am, very into it! You've killed an hour of my rather boring day, so thank you. And as others have mentioned, your time lapse and voiceovers are of superb quality. Consider me subscribed, and I look forward to watching more of your content! 10/10.
Hey Austin! This is my first watch of your channel ... Things I love: The timelapse with voice over description format. Your shop. The paint curtain. Your ingenuity in the "mod" part of resto-mod. The color choices. Cleanliness of the workspace. Your helpful children. And helpful wife. The pacing. Your focus on safety. The craftsmanship. In short, there is TOO much to love to list it all here. Bravo, I am subscribed!
An automotive museum or industrial design museum should have this on display. The level of work and attention to detail is amazing. Most definitely a new subscriber
Man, that forklift was in cosmetically great shape. Someone took good care of it before you got it. Great mod job...now, it will get another 67 years! Also, awesome to see the kiddos involved.
Hope you have good relief valves on those hydraulics, like when you use the hydraulics to slow down, the oil pressure isn't regulated by the oil pump relief valve anymore.. you might have huge spikes in the pressure when slowing down! especially in downhill you might pop a hose, or even crack the spool block. Also get some protective sock on those hoses you have next to your legs.. hydraulic injection is no joke.
Amazing video. Thank you so much for posting! This was a definitive identifier of an identical Hyster we have, because all our nameplates were missing!
This was a big job... no wonder we hadn't heard from you in a little while. Quite impressive ingenuity with all the modifications you made.... GENIUS, I'd say. Thanks for sharing this with us. Turns out you've been holding out on us with some of your most sophisticated skills!!! lol. Can't wait to see what you get up to next... and it will be great seeing you put this machinery to use.
Yea, this project was not supposed to be so intense. I was hoping to just swap the motor and clean it up a bit. Maybe shoot it with a quick coat of some cheap paint.
The paint job really ties it all together. Very fitting for the era it was originally manufactured. Even the crankcase looks mint. Very impressive work!
Great job on the restoration. You would think you were restoring an antique car. Your kids helping you remind me when mine were young when I was working on the cars and around the house.
I drove this type of forklifttruck in my time on the Hero in Breda, The Netherlands. This beside all the other "heftrucks" I worked with. This was a nice time for me, now almost fifty years agon. The Hyster was dependable and one of the easiest to work with. You made a work of art from this "heftruck". My compliments. It should be in a museum for modern technics. Beautiful. Well done.
This is gorgeous and you are talented beyond belief! Just found your channel. Going to share with my son and brother. My dad is watching from heaven with much admiration. I used to watch him make things when I was little. Good dad with your kids! Teaching them things that matter instead of sitting them in front of a screen. ❤️
Missed you Austin! What a great project, as usual your attention to detail and your ability to fabricate based on needs is amazing! I enjoy all your videos. It’s great to see the family help. The kids will have some great skills to fall back on in the future. Thanks for the videos!
It takes a high level of intelligence to do what you have just demonstrated to us amazing a big plus for me is seeing dad teaching his kids your kids learning and the gift of spending time with your kids WELL DONE
Triple A+ all around- filming, voice over, perfect editing, out of mind skills and best of all kids included. Everything you absorbed from whomever taught you, who learned from someone else will get absorbed hopefully into both children. There is so much power and juice when these sorts of skills are handed down. By teenage years they will know as much as you do and can create such wonderment with their projects. Yes- they might choose to not make their living with tools, but having those skills lends tons and tons of self confidence in their journey thru their life's arc. Cannot wait to watch you daughter rebuild a scabbed out mustang for her every day runner !!!
Hi, just new to your channel and as a l o n g retired old plant mechanic I really love the format (time lapse) you use along with commentary you can't ever take your eyes off the screen, such great work done and all the attention to detail, well done sir, fully subscribed too Russ from England👍😉
I love your talking. You are informative with your talking. Your in-site and life lessons are wonderful. The most wonderful is how you and your family (of all ages) plus the people you interact with both for work and your personal needs. This was a very funny and fast installment. Don’t change what’s not broken. Thank you for all you do for us watching!😊❤
Grandpa George used to say, "it's all about the right tool". As I've gotten older I found that to be true, however a bit of skill, like the kind you display is also required. Amazing shop, amazing tools, amazing skill set self-employed and a beautiful family. You my friend, are on top of the world. Best wishes. CG
Nice job!! Redesigning the motor and hydralics was very interesting. Thanks for sharing. It's nice to see you training your kids up too. They will always remember the times spent together. Great job!!
This is the first video I've watched. I didn't expect a restomod. I was expecting just a paint and rebuild, the amount of fabrication and your knowledge surprised me.
Well I'm 5 months late, but as my old boss would say, "Better to have seen it late, than never at all", he was referring to a close call on the road, but it seems appropriate. I am an old retired engineer that travelled across the UK, EU and the US mainly fixing industrial gearboxes, most of them very large. This forklift build/modification was awesome and entertaining. Clearing out decades of dirt is something I've done as well, in some strange places too. The hydraulic motor was interesting as my first thought was speed, but as you said it was only for basically hard work so speed was not a large concern. I'll go and watch as much of your back catalogue as I am able, good post.
I literally had a smile on my face watching this restomod! What an amazing job, both with restoration and re-engineering. Oh, and I did watch your ice cream truck videos as you posted them. Another great build!
Some men have nice cars, this man whips out a resto-modded Forklift to retrieve his oversized packaged from the delivery guy. Love it. excellent paint job! Keep it up!
You are super talented & knowledgeable! I admire your attention to detail, and love the metallic flake in that paint. I really enjoyed watching this one.
AMAZING JOB YOU DID WOW THATS UNBELIEVABLE, I GOT TO WATCH YOU TEAR IT DOWN INTO PIECES , CLEAN IT , REPAIR IT , CHANGED THE ENGINE , DRILL IT , SAND IT , PRIMER IT , PAINT IT , ADD PARTS TO IT , RE-ASSEMBLE IT , START IT UP , DRIVE IT AND THEN TESTED IT , GREAT PROJECT , GREAT VIDEO SPEED , BEAUTIFUL WORK , THANKS ALOT , HAVE A GREAT DAY !!!❤🎉 AMAZING !!!
I would give anything to learn under you. I am mechanically inclined and have a job in fluid/hydraulic/pneumatic systems and dabble in basic electrical. However, im not a fabricator by any means. Your ability to change the form and function while increasing reliability is amazing to me. To have the chance to become as well rounded as you are would be such a blessing.
How many hours do you have into the forklift? Very creative restomod! The pizza and ice cream truck are incredibly creative builds. You have astonishing skills and your video are terrific!
My work has been talking about replacing my 1973 Tcm forklift, I finally got them to rebuild it, new paint, rebuilt engine, new rad and all the bs. This is so cool to see someone treat this old forklift like a rare corvette. I have 3 forklifts and a 3 wheeler that hangs on to my flatbed. But that 1973 TCM and i have had some good times for the past 20 years, it’s definitely my favorite
I had a YE-40 for many years. I made lots of money using it. The Hyster dealer in Salt Lake City-Arnoldsen Machinery still had parts for it. I used to run 20 psi in the front tires to run in in the dirt or higher if I was using it on pavement. Yours restored is beautiful. Good job!
Have you shared this with Hyster? I was an intern there, they love photos/videos from people using/upgrading old stuff, they'd print it out and put it on the wall and all the old engineers would hold people hostage and tell stories. I got a lecture about the tooling that used to exist for side arm assemblies that actually accidentally helped like 3 years later when I had a separate project. Those guys love their stuff. Love the content!
I stumbled onto this video and have been left speechless. I freak out when it’s time to change the air cleaner in my car! The video and soundtrack is nearly as good as the restoration and your skills. Thank you.
The algorithm showed me your channel and wow! Subscribed less than 10 minutes in. Every other channel the restores anything on RUclips now seems to be some ASMR nonsense and it's nice to see someone explaining what they're doing instead of some grinder sped up 1000x. Can't wait to binge watch the rest of your vids. Thank you.
I ran a few forklifts in the 80's. I also Love watching Very Creative people do what you have done in this Video! What was Old...Is now New, I'm certain that Hyster would Approve!!
the ones I've seen called widowmakers are the 3 piece rims used on old tractors and construction equipment where the split flange points óutward, so in case of a blow out the flange would be launched outward and kill anyone unfortunate enough to be standing next to the machine. these ones are less catastrophic in the sense that they're only dangerous when airing up so you can just be more careful
If you wanted to add an electric start in the future, but are worried about your hourmeter constantly running with key on, one thing you could do is have a normally open oil pressure switch T'd in with the pump outlet, that way the switch only closes and sends power to the hourmeter when it is closed by the oil pressure created by the pump, which only happens when the engine is running. May or may not be possible, but in theory it should work. Awesome video, i really enjoyed it 👍
My anthropomorphic side really likes this. Having worked logistics for a long time i'm quite familiar with how these things get treated and beat on. To see such an old example get all that love and attention is just heartwarming. It's only a good thing that she is a bit slow. That gives you a better chance of keeping that gorgeous paintjob intact. Cheers!
It's really great that you get your kids involved with some of these activities; it builds skills, confidence & understanding whilst thier young minds are developing & so inquisitive.
You know, my dad worked on forklifts this last 15 years of his life, renewing factory lifts and pallet jacks for a local forklift dealer. Pretty them up for used market re-sell. He'd really like this creation of yours. Quite a bit of ingenuity and something different. He's gone now but I know he'd give a big thumbs up! SN, I learned to drive manual on a 1964 Hyster. He had free labor running stuff all over the yard.
Wauw, both content as esthetically and technically this is a top video. Information, good music, nice to have the kids in there, see technical stuff. And the perfect balance between details and quick scanning through the labour. Perfectly fine and a real joy to watch. Thank you! Usually I don't really respond, but this is really good!
I watched the ice cream truck video and the pizza truck and the old Ford pickup, etc.. LOVED them all. You are truly skilled at a great many trades. Cool to see you including the family and inspiring them to learn how to build/fix things.
I really hope that you will love, obey, cherish and honor your lovely wife. She is one of a kind. Not many girls I know would appear in the garage to lift something wearing a dress, so she must really care about you and your hobby to give you her total support. I am seriously impressed with the finished result, and that great paint job is really good looking.
In the 1990s and 2000s we ran our storage yard with two dual pneumatic HC80 Hysters, one built in 1966 and the other 1971. Sometime around 1999 to 2000 we had both units completely restored to original specifications and paint jobs down to the sticker kits from the manufacturer. Your video got me reminiscing about both of those fabulous forklifts I used to own. Thanks for the memories. Great video!
Fantastic job, mate! Love your work. Good to see the family getting in on the act, too. I drove forklifts, on and off for 50 years, and one of the first ones was a Hyster 3 wheeler, that looked pretty much the same as yours, except the drive was electric. Cheers.
Ditto on the loss of weight affecting capacity. Love the upgraded steering. NOTE that forklifts use a priority hyd system that allows steering, lifting,tilting and now the drive to work safely together. Excellent quality video and sound👍
Colors you chose give me good memories of the Ford my grandparents owned in the 80s and the 80s Ford I bought for myself and owned up till maybe a decade ago.
You've got great kids man. It's a really good sign of independence when they take an interest in what you're doing. It shows that they want to learn. You should let them get involved if only for the smaller tasks like wrenching on something. It will peak their interest & it makes it easier for them to lean later on when it comes to something more complex. EDIT: I saw you working with your son later on. Sorry. I typed this out before I saw that.
Just found this channel and loved every second of this video. It’s really nice to see some great engineering and fantastic to see your family also getting involved. Thanks for sharing. 😊
I am a 32 years old guy from Germany. Can you adopt me? Really amazing that your children are helping you out and learning lessons here and there. The only thing I got thought from my dad was to hold the light and yes he screamed at me. Don't know why but I am into Forklifts: Heavy, compact and really helpful. Great video too: Editing, music and commenting.
I got my start holding flashlights, too. Those old 5D maglights got heavy and I would stop paying attention and shine it all over the place. Now they have headlamps so my kids missed out on a valuable lesson
Great freakin job. You need to take it to your local Hot rod night. It would be a HIT!!! Super cool to see the children helping out. My kids did the same. Now they can do anything. Good parenting.
I love the voice over edit while using sped up footage. It's really a great experience and makes the entire video enjoyable to watch. Subscribed and about to check out the ice cream truck bill. Thanks for the content.
Gday Ade, sometimes we have to sit back and finish all the little jobs we keep putting aside, the name plate is looking fantastic, great job mate, cheers
My first visit to your channel. I am glad I dropped on it by chance. Great content and camera work. I am now subscribed. Thanks for taking the time to put this video on you tube.
My grandpa is one of the reasons forklift have a cage over them now. he was crushed by a giant roll of paper back when truckers had to load their own truck. He lived and was in traction for 6 months while they wired his bones together with copper wire it was the 40s so I guess they used what they had.the doctor said he would never walk again he said I'll walk to each of you funerals he was able to walk again and walked till the day he died at 94 of a brain aneurysm. And true to his word all the doctors some of which were younger than him died before him. He lived an amazing life but that's my favorite story.
That's an incredible story, thanks for sharing. My grandfather is 98 and still sharp as a tack. The stories of growing up during the dust bowl and WW2 are amazing
Saying you are going to walk to the doctors funeral is straight up gangster.
@@AustinCoulsonpls do a q&a with your grandfather
they didnt live in the stone age back in the 40s
Folks were tougher back then...💜🫡
I Cannot believe I sat and watched a fork lift restoration and enjoyed it
AGREE BRO
Same
Me too
To quote Training Day, " Life's a trip, man. "
my friend its not war,sex,religion, its just plane wow. watch these and your soul will be at peace
I enjoyed the build. One thing to note is that these old forklifts count on the motor as counterweight for lifting capacity. Depending upon what you are doing, you may need to add counterweight on the back of the machine to keep it stable. Something to keep in mind when you go to lift something heavy for the first time.
I was wondering every one I’ve worked on the rear weight was a separate thing
I also wondered about losing the previous motor as part of the counter-weight. One thing to keep in mind is that EVERY PIECE of the truck is made heavy from the beginning. Usually vehicles are designed to weigh as little as possible to reduce rolling resistance. Lift trucks are made heavy on purpose.
@@TerminusVox😊
Very valid point. I'd weigh the removed engine and add plates of that weight to the body at least as far back, and if possible as low as can be. That would help stability and lower the center of gravity and mass.
Considering he rebuilt the whole thing, im pretty sure he knows this. I'm assuming he plans to not life very heavy things with it, or is planning on adding a counter weight to it. Of course I could be over estimating him and could be completely wrong, but how about giving him the benefit of the doubt, considering that it not having a counter weight is pretty obvious where the counter weight was coming from.
Clearly the kids did most of the job, good work! Very enjoyable!
Amazing resto. The paint is a bomb of retro color. I can see where the lack of speed can be a benefit. More careful and precise movement and placement. You have more than enough power provided in how you built it and you can safely put that power where you need it most. No reason to go mach 5.
Just because a machine can go fast doesnt mean you have to drive it at that speed
Especially on a forklift! As a Certified Forklift Operator, I can assure you going fast in one is a great well to cause serious damage, or get yourself killed.
First - generation forklift would be olive drab (they were military equipment..)
❤😊😅😊❤😊😂🎉😮😊🎉😂
Should have put a barra in it 😂
You know, I really had no intention of watching an almost hour long video of a forklift resto-mod. But here I am, very into it! You've killed an hour of my rather boring day, so thank you. And as others have mentioned, your time lapse and voiceovers are of superb quality. Consider me subscribed, and I look forward to watching more of your content! 10/10.
Me too!
This guy is the Chris Fix of old forklifts! 😊
Man I love a good restomod. Seeing all that grime cleaned up and fresh paint on everything really flips my pancakes. Excellent work Austin 👍👍
“Really flips my pancakes” bro’s cooking with peanut oil now
same bro
Hey Austin!
This is my first watch of your channel ... Things I love:
The timelapse with voice over description format.
Your shop.
The paint curtain.
Your ingenuity in the "mod" part of resto-mod.
The color choices.
Cleanliness of the workspace.
Your helpful children.
And helpful wife.
The pacing.
Your focus on safety.
The craftsmanship.
In short, there is TOO much to love to list it all here.
Bravo, I am subscribed!
same here!
Another one
Same! Good stuff right here. I like that the family came out and helped. Very cool.
An automotive museum or industrial design museum should have this on display. The level of work and attention to detail is amazing. Most definitely a new subscriber
I really agree
You have excellent taste for the paint job.
And your kids helping are super cute!
Man, that forklift was in cosmetically great shape. Someone took good care of it before you got it. Great mod job...now, it will get another 67 years!
Also, awesome to see the kiddos involved.
Hope you have good relief valves on those hydraulics, like when you use the hydraulics to slow down, the oil pressure isn't regulated by the oil pump relief valve anymore.. you might have huge spikes in the pressure when slowing down! especially in downhill you might pop a hose, or even crack the spool block.
Also get some protective sock on those hoses you have next to your legs.. hydraulic injection is no joke.
This is a crazy build. I love seeing old equipment get a second life.
Amazing video. Thank you so much for posting! This was a definitive identifier of an identical Hyster we have, because all our nameplates were missing!
This was a big job... no wonder we hadn't heard from you in a little while. Quite impressive ingenuity with all the modifications you made.... GENIUS, I'd say. Thanks for sharing this with us. Turns out you've been holding out on us with some of your most sophisticated skills!!! lol. Can't wait to see what you get up to next... and it will be great seeing you put this machinery to use.
Yea, this project was not supposed to be so intense. I was hoping to just swap the motor and clean it up a bit. Maybe shoot it with a quick coat of some cheap paint.
@@AustinCoulson I think you should build a mobile playhouse with that international truck with the bus on it
The paint job really ties it all together. Very fitting for the era it was originally manufactured. Even the crankcase looks mint. Very impressive work!
Better than I imagined! A beautiful restoration!!!
Great job on the restoration. You would think you were restoring an antique car. Your kids helping you remind me when mine were young when I was working on the cars and around the house.
This guy easily could buy a new forklift but nope, he restore an old forklift, thats what a pure heart forklift certified looks like
I drove this type of forklifttruck in my time on the Hero in Breda, The Netherlands. This beside all the other "heftrucks" I worked with. This was a nice time for me, now almost fifty years agon. The Hyster was dependable and one of the easiest to work with. You made a work of art from this "heftruck". My compliments. It should be in a museum for modern technics. Beautiful. Well done.
So awesome. You know everyone is going to want you to make drop in repower units for their forklifts now right? Such a cool setup.
That is one mint fork. Love the paint job super cool. Thanks for sharing.
Great job getting the kids involved too with all the safety precautions they will make great engineers 👍👏
This is gorgeous and you are talented beyond belief!
Just found your channel. Going to share with my son and brother.
My dad is watching from heaven with much admiration.
I used to watch him make things when I was little. Good dad with your kids! Teaching them things that matter instead of sitting them in front of a screen. ❤️
Missed you Austin! What a great project, as usual your attention to detail and your ability to fabricate based on needs is amazing! I enjoy all your videos. It’s great to see the family help. The kids will have some great skills to fall back on in the future. Thanks for the videos!
Thanks for the nice comment.
It takes a high level of intelligence to do what you have just demonstrated to us amazing a big plus for me is seeing dad teaching his kids your kids learning and the gift of spending time with your kids WELL DONE
I am in love with the colors you chose they just pop just right not to much. AMAZING JOB!
Thanks. I have a questionable style that doesn't always translate from my head to reality, but I am thrilled with how this came out.
Triple A+ all around- filming, voice over, perfect editing, out of mind skills and best of all kids included. Everything you absorbed from whomever taught you, who learned from someone else will get absorbed hopefully into both children. There is so much power and juice when these sorts of skills are handed down.
By teenage years they will know as much as you do and can create such wonderment with their projects. Yes- they might choose to not make their living with tools, but having those skills lends tons and tons of self confidence in their journey thru their life's arc. Cannot wait to watch you daughter rebuild a scabbed out mustang for her every day runner !!!
Hi, just new to your channel and as a l o n g retired old plant mechanic I really love the format (time lapse) you use along with commentary you can't ever take your eyes off the screen, such great work done and all the attention to detail, well done sir, fully subscribed too
Russ from England👍😉
This was, without a doubt, the best restoration video I have ever seen. Absolutely amazing.
I love your talking. You are informative with your talking. Your in-site and life lessons are wonderful. The most wonderful is how you and your family (of all ages) plus the people you interact with both for work and your personal needs. This was a very funny and fast installment. Don’t change what’s not broken. Thank you for all you do for us watching!😊❤
Grandpa George used to say, "it's all about the right tool". As I've gotten older I found that to be true, however a bit of skill, like the kind you display is also required.
Amazing shop, amazing tools, amazing skill set self-employed and a beautiful family. You my friend, are on top of the world.
Best wishes.
CG
Nice job!! Redesigning the motor and hydralics was very interesting. Thanks for sharing. It's nice to see you training your kids up too. They will always remember the times spent together. Great job!!
This is the first video I've watched. I didn't expect a restomod. I was expecting just a paint and rebuild, the amount of fabrication and your knowledge surprised me.
It's amazing all that you do in one shop
Nice piece of machinery to work on. And great video indeed! Almost 70 yo forklift still doesn't look outdated. Timeless
I enjoy that your spreading your knowledge to others by this video and also teaching your children. Way to help the next generation 👏
Literally the best channel on RUclips! So underrated. Keep up the awesome work. Always enjoy the videos.
Wow, thanks!
Well I'm 5 months late, but as my old boss would say, "Better to have seen it late, than never at all", he was referring to a close call on the road, but it seems appropriate. I am an old retired engineer that travelled across the UK, EU and the US mainly fixing industrial gearboxes, most of them very large. This forklift build/modification was awesome and entertaining. Clearing out decades of dirt is something I've done as well, in some strange places too. The hydraulic motor was interesting as my first thought was speed, but as you said it was only for basically hard work so speed was not a large concern. I'll go and watch as much of your back catalogue as I am able, good post.
Awesome workmanship and functional ideas!! Two very admirable qualities in a restoration with enhancements. Great project 👍
Really nice Forklift. Love watching the old stuff getting restored.
I literally had a smile on my face watching this restomod! What an amazing job, both with restoration and re-engineering. Oh, and I did watch your ice cream truck videos as you posted them. Another great build!
Some men have nice cars, this man whips out a resto-modded Forklift to retrieve his oversized packaged from the delivery guy.
Love it. excellent paint job! Keep it up!
You are super talented & knowledgeable! I admire your attention to detail, and love the metallic flake in that paint. I really enjoyed watching this one.
You've got to admire a bloke who can do something like this. Very clever indeed. He's the sort of neighbour everyone wishes they had. Loved it.
I like how his 8-year-old son is actually working on it and learning how to do mechanical things. Amazing.
AMAZING JOB YOU DID WOW THATS UNBELIEVABLE, I GOT TO WATCH YOU TEAR IT DOWN INTO PIECES , CLEAN IT , REPAIR IT , CHANGED THE ENGINE , DRILL IT , SAND IT , PRIMER IT , PAINT IT , ADD PARTS TO IT , RE-ASSEMBLE IT , START IT UP , DRIVE IT AND THEN TESTED IT , GREAT PROJECT , GREAT VIDEO SPEED , BEAUTIFUL WORK , THANKS ALOT , HAVE A GREAT DAY !!!❤🎉 AMAZING !!!
What a cool video to watch. Awesome design and mechanical choices. A+ dad on top. Respect.
I would give anything to learn under you. I am mechanically inclined and have a job in fluid/hydraulic/pneumatic systems and dabble in basic electrical. However, im not a fabricator by any means. Your ability to change the form and function while increasing reliability is amazing to me. To have the chance to become as well rounded as you are would be such a blessing.
How many hours do you have into the forklift? Very creative restomod! The pizza and ice cream truck are incredibly creative builds. You have astonishing skills and your video are terrific!
I didn't log my hours on this build, but it took about 3 months of maybe 30 hours a week
It's good seeing your kids getting involved
Came for the forklift, stayed for the icecream truck...
Love your no nonsense get on with it attitude very refreshing in todays over complicated dramatic content providers
Your mechanical and fabrication skills are off the chart. That is the best looking forklift ever. Thanks for sharing 👍
This is my first time watching you're a channel that forklift looks awesome.
I am not so sure about the bus but the front end of the bus is very cool.
That bus body was just sitting on that old truck frame to keep it off the ground. I turned the bus into a playhouse and sold the truck
@@AustinCoulson Interesting that explains it.
My work has been talking about replacing my 1973 Tcm forklift, I finally got them to rebuild it, new paint, rebuilt engine, new rad and all the bs. This is so cool to see someone treat this old forklift like a rare corvette. I have 3 forklifts and a 3 wheeler that hangs on to my flatbed. But that 1973 TCM and i have had some good times for the past 20 years, it’s definitely my favorite
I had a YE-40 for many years. I made lots of money using it. The Hyster dealer in Salt Lake City-Arnoldsen Machinery still had parts for it. I used to run 20 psi in the front tires to run in in the dirt or higher if I was using it on pavement. Yours restored is beautiful. Good job!
Have you shared this with Hyster? I was an intern there, they love photos/videos from people using/upgrading old stuff, they'd print it out and put it on the wall and all the old engineers would hold people hostage and tell stories. I got a lecture about the tooling that used to exist for side arm assemblies that actually accidentally helped like 3 years later when I had a separate project. Those guys love their stuff.
Love the content!
I stumbled onto this video and have been left speechless. I freak out when it’s time to change the air cleaner in my car! The video and soundtrack is nearly as good as the restoration and your skills. Thank you.
Love this comment, thank you.
One of the nicest I’ve seen, love the colours, thanks for sharing 😃👍
Incredible! What a peice of art this FL is right now. Respect man. Very well done. 👏👏👏👏👍
The algorithm showed me your channel and wow! Subscribed less than 10 minutes in.
Every other channel the restores anything on RUclips now seems to be some ASMR nonsense and it's nice to see someone explaining what they're doing instead of some grinder sped up 1000x.
Can't wait to binge watch the rest of your vids.
Thank you.
It’s so Awesome to see you guys restoring this forklift from the 50s amazing work my friend
I ran a few forklifts in the 80's. I also Love watching Very Creative people do what you have done in this Video! What was Old...Is now New, I'm certain that Hyster would Approve!!
You did a great job bro. Bless you and your family for helping you out man! You are blessed.
the ones I've seen called widowmakers are the 3 piece rims used on old tractors and construction equipment where the split flange points óutward, so in case of a blow out the flange would be launched outward and kill anyone unfortunate enough to be standing next to the machine. these ones are less catastrophic in the sense that they're only dangerous when airing up so you can just be more careful
If you wanted to add an electric start in the future, but are worried about your hourmeter constantly running with key on, one thing you could do is have a normally open oil pressure switch T'd in with the pump outlet, that way the switch only closes and sends power to the hourmeter when it is closed by the oil pressure created by the pump, which only happens when the engine is running. May or may not be possible, but in theory it should work. Awesome video, i really enjoyed it 👍
My anthropomorphic side really likes this. Having worked logistics for a long time i'm quite familiar with how these things get treated and beat on. To see such an old example get all that love and attention is just heartwarming. It's only a good thing that she is a bit slow. That gives you a better chance of keeping that gorgeous paintjob intact. Cheers!
It's really great that you get your kids involved with some of these activities; it builds skills, confidence & understanding whilst thier young minds are developing & so inquisitive.
Hyster became Hipster 😁
Amazing job Austin, trully impressed !
Great work..been heavy equipment tech for 30 years I know good work when I see it...I'm booked on your show now..cheers
You know, my dad worked on forklifts this last 15 years of his life, renewing factory lifts and pallet jacks for a local forklift dealer. Pretty them up for used market re-sell. He'd really like this creation of yours. Quite a bit of ingenuity and something different. He's gone now but I know he'd give a big thumbs up! SN, I learned to drive manual on a 1964 Hyster. He had free labor running stuff all over the yard.
Why am I sat watching a man restore a fork lift? Thanks you tube, great job pal. You know what else is great, seeing you get the kids involved 🙂
That’s beautiful work. I watched the video on my downtime for three days after my wife and kid went to sleep. Getting hyped to try my own projects.
Wauw, both content as esthetically and technically this is a top video. Information, good music, nice to have the kids in there, see technical stuff. And the perfect balance between details and quick scanning through the labour.
Perfectly fine and a real joy to watch. Thank you! Usually I don't really respond, but this is really good!
I watched the ice cream truck video and the pizza truck and the old Ford pickup, etc.. LOVED them all. You are truly skilled at a great many trades. Cool to see you including the family and inspiring them to learn how to build/fix things.
I really hope that you will love, obey, cherish and honor your lovely wife. She is one of a kind. Not many girls I know would appear in the garage to lift something wearing a dress, so she must really care about you and your hobby to give you her total support. I am seriously impressed with the finished result, and that great paint job is really good looking.
Totally impressed at the broad range of abilities you have and the quality of work you did here. Fantastic!
In the 1990s and 2000s we ran our storage yard with two dual pneumatic HC80 Hysters, one built in 1966 and the other 1971. Sometime around 1999 to 2000 we had both units completely restored to original specifications and paint jobs down to the sticker kits from the manufacturer. Your video got me reminiscing about both of those fabulous forklifts I used to own.
Thanks for the memories. Great video!
Awesome and outstanding.Thanks for sharing and taking us along
This turned out just beautifully! And it's really awesome that you not only teach your kids how things are done, but let them try to do it as well.
Fantastic job, mate! Love your work. Good to see the family getting in on the act, too.
I drove forklifts, on and off for 50 years, and one of the first ones was a Hyster 3 wheeler,
that looked pretty much the same as yours, except the drive was electric. Cheers.
Hyster makes nice stuff with Clever Design Features, Excellent Work, first class Job.
That is one Awesome looking Forklift you do not see that every day.
Ditto on the loss of weight affecting capacity. Love the upgraded steering. NOTE that forklifts use a priority hyd system that allows steering, lifting,tilting and now the drive to work safely together. Excellent quality video and sound👍
Colors you chose give me good memories of the Ford my grandparents owned in the 80s and the 80s Ford I bought for myself and owned up till maybe a decade ago.
Wonderful work and nice to see you involve the children.
Holy crap dude… you are one talented guy. And involving the kids… priceless!
I love that your kids are involved. That's awesome there dad. Keep it up man. You guys did a great job on that thing.
You've got great kids man. It's a really good sign of independence when they take an interest in what you're doing. It shows that they want to learn. You should let them get involved if only for the smaller tasks like wrenching on something. It will peak their interest & it makes it easier for them to lean later on when it comes to something more complex. EDIT: I saw you working with your son later on. Sorry. I typed this out before I saw that.
Just found this channel and loved every second of this video. It’s really nice to see some great engineering and fantastic to see your family also getting involved. Thanks for sharing. 😊
Awesome restoration....but I am completely jealous of those curtains in your garage! 😂
Having been a forklift driver for over a decade....
PUT THE DIDE SHIFT BACK ON!
Such a handy feature.
I am a 32 years old guy from Germany. Can you adopt me? Really amazing that your children are helping you out and learning lessons here and there. The only thing I got thought from my dad was to hold the light and yes he screamed at me.
Don't know why but I am into Forklifts: Heavy, compact and really helpful.
Great video too: Editing, music and commenting.
I got my start holding flashlights, too. Those old 5D maglights got heavy and I would stop paying attention and shine it all over the place. Now they have headlamps so my kids missed out on a valuable lesson
Bud you are a master of what you do. Really inspirational! Also, kudos to involving your kids. Reminds me of my childhood!
Fabulous job there and shows off your fabricating skill, top notch.
The finished article looked superb.
Well done👍👍
Amazing work !
Great freakin job.
You need to take it to your local Hot rod night.
It would be a HIT!!!
Super cool to see the children helping out.
My kids did the same. Now they can do anything. Good parenting.
I love the voice over edit while using sped up footage. It's really a great experience and makes the entire video enjoyable to watch. Subscribed and about to check out the ice cream truck bill. Thanks for the content.
Gday Ade, sometimes we have to sit back and finish all the little jobs we keep putting aside, the name plate is looking fantastic, great job mate, cheers
My first visit to your channel. I am glad I dropped on it by chance. Great content and camera work. I am now subscribed. Thanks for taking the time to put this video on you tube.