Blows my mind the amount of knowledge you have. No big ass fancy workshop but 110% quality workmanship! Alot of the big workshop should be taking note!!
Nice skills. It's a pleasure to watch a master at work. Reminds me of my late father, he was an RAF trained engineer & never ceased to amaze me & many others with his skills, wisdom & adaptability - mostly he used to say it's just common sense but, from what I see that's in short supply these days ! He liked draper gauges too - great quality, highly underrated. Best wishes Paul UK.
Back years ago I learned how to check crank shafts for straightness. Surprised how many were not straight right out of the box. Especially the straight 6 crank shafts. We would put the crank in the block with the first and last main bearings. Then set up the Dial indicator gauge checking the center main bearing surfaces. Slowly rotate the crank shaft and bring the high spot up then take a Minny sledge hammer and tunk down on the web of the crank shaft. Slowly rotate the crank shaft and check for straightness. It's really cool, usually only need one tunk and the crank shaft is nice and true again.
Every time you stand a cam on end, my ass puckers up and clamps shut. LOL. I knocked a cam over and broke it one time. I wasn't really in danger of being fired but his look of disappointment rivaled the look my mom could give.
I spent a few seasons as a crane follower at a steel plant and ever since watching the ladle pour the hot metal and see it flow thru the forms and turn into a steel beam as it came down the line before being chopped to length. I am just amazed how metal can be manipulated. Watching you work on a cam shaft with an air hammer! 👏👏
Your level of skills, experience and attention to detail is simply outstanding. After watching your origin video I have an even deeper respect for you and your wife. Y'all are legitimately self made people. Y'all's financial methods are top rate. To have all the equipment and shop building and not owe anyone is the absolute example of true wisdom and stewardship.
Your an expert like I have said before. I worked as a machinist for the government for years. I worked on weapons and it was good fun. But I am not an expert on engines like your are. Great channel.
Pinky in the air while tigging . . . . gotta keep it classy. Seriously, that is really neat to see. I went to trade school in N.E. Ohio back in the eighties, near Akron. So Summit racing main headquarters and Original store location was about a 30 minute drive away. You could buy a SBC cam, lifters & double roller w/a multi cut keyway for $119.95, all day long. . . . _OR_ . . you could go to any number of local speed shops and get "renewed" lifters and a welded/reground seasoned cam for $50 bucks. A "performance" timing set from Napa was $40-ish.
Daniel you're my man. I might have you cut me three in the near future soon we'll talk again but we've already communicated before. Thanks for all your knowledge. For taking your time to explain. Keep up the good work 👍👍
I'm a 25 year machinist up near Chicago. I'm pretty well versed and can handle myself on manuals, CNC, really anything you throw at me I can usually do it or figure it out. But you, my man, are a wizard. This is what this trade is all about. You really should open a school. Or at least a few training classes.
You should open an online school to teach what you know. I would be your first student! Or at least write a series of books. Thanks for sharing your knowledge with us again!
Reminds me when i used to rebuild Torque converters on old WW11 lathes; bolt them up to big old face plates and center the front hub and cut the weld until they would pop; then take a mallet and tap on the housing to ease the 2 halves apart. That's where i learned the basics of machining, welding and fabrication. That was a damn good job! Also learned the art of using a dial indicator to measure how far to run the tool post in before turning anything to size because the original lead screws and half nuts were replaced with threaded rod and a nut welded to center of the carriage! Yeah, old school, red neck machining at it's best!
That's cool never seen cam's being done,the straightening is different, I would have ended up with a pretzel 😂 thanks for sharing, all the best to you and your loved ones
Nice to know that cams can be fixed! hell I have 6or 7 BBF roller cams that we barely hurt a lobe from a lifter failure , and just replaced the cam ! mind you these are like .995" lift cams
I love TIG welding too! Its very hard to put the torch down once you strike the first arc!! Its very addictive for me. I dont want to stop once I start. Ill look everywhere for an excuse to keep welding. 👍
I have a 60 mm roller cam that got dinged when a wrist pin broke. It looks like it got a double line groove from a rod or the lifter in one lobe. I haven't checked the straightness yet. I am not sure it's the right grind for the application though as it appears to be a former Craftsman Truck engine. I may call you to discuss if the machine shop doesn't have something better. They were an ARCA builder in the past.
Another Awesome video Daniel !!! I have never seen nor heard of anybody repairing a camshaft this way. From one worn our welder to another. Get a new gas cap for that TIG. I can hear and see a small amount of porosity there. ❤
Crazy how hitting a cam or crank on the low side makes it spring back! First time I ever helped my machine shop buddy straighten one of my cranks was wild! Would be cool to see how the cam is setup so that the stone follows the lobe. How much can you change a cam on a regrind?
It depends on core matl, current specs, ect, but it's easy to shrink duration and add lift, we can add duration but normally more than 10 degrees is tough
@@powellmachineinc3179 considering giving you a call to talk about a 360 magnum to 408 build. You’re about 4 hrs from me but the last 2 engine builds my regular machinist didn’t impress me. Thanks
You are exactly right, (as you know) let the lash get loose enough and that lobe is in its ramp to open the valve and smacks the shit out of the lifter making those marks on the lobes
Cam grinding is almost voodoo to me 😅😅 I understand how the machine works but there is a lot of setup that I haven’t seen yet. I would love to see a cam getting ground starting from the very first step of setup.
Hi, I just found your RUclips channel and I think everything you do and explain is great. Could you tell me what type of filler you use to fill the camshafts, I don't know English and the translator doesn't do it as well as I would like. New subscriber. Greetings
A great episode of repair when worth it. Now i have a question about your tig torch, are you operating it with your thumb with an on off switch in lieu of a foot pedal ?
@@powellmachineinc3179 does it pulse ? at a setting of your choosing. Ive seen a finger "trigger" that is much smaller than what you have but honestly your set up is larger but looks comfortable for posisitioning the toarch
@@powellmachineinc3179 The Studebaker V8 has a gear-to-gear timing set so the camshaft rotates opposite to the crankshaft, is that an issue or extra charge? Also, can lobe separation be tightened any from the stock configuration?
I had no idea that much repair could be done on a camshaft. I think I would pay the extra money just to have peace of mind with all the junk we are getting.
Cam master, I enjoy your channel. Thanks for sharing your knowledge. Question: how is the grinder indexing controlled for shaping the lobes? Lobe template/pattern, settings? thank you
@@powellmachineinc3179 Dang, machinists here in Vegas skin you. I needed to have a 1 3/8 PTO shaft welded and machined where a bearing froze. Maybe a 3" repair 1/8" deep. He wanted $260. I got a factory splined and keyed shaft for $200.
I'm a noob and I know nothing in comparison to video creator. My first thought when seeing this; Shouldn't you support the cam or crank directly underneath your weld point, so as to not cause warpage? I'm just a noob with curiosity and new to personally rebuilding engines. Genuinely curious
I would think you would want to weld that in some wooden v blocks and then use a magnetic ground right on the end of the cam. You have to be arcing through those v blocks onto the journals the way you are doing it.
Questions for you. How many times do you think Daniel would have welded cams? 2nd. Do you not think Daniel would have noticed if there was arcing on the main journals if there was a problem? How about you give him credit for knowing what he is doing. Daniel also has to warrant the work he does. Would you warrant the work if there was a chance of arcing? Come on.
@@bobhudson6659 I've seen guys weld on a lathe while grounding to the lathe and I've seen what happens to the bearings. It puts little arc spots all over the bearings. Granted this is welding while the lathe is turning. I know I wouldn't do it and I've been a machinist for 40 years
I don't know a damn thing about cars. All I know is Harleys and big rigs...but how is this cost effective from the customer's perspective? a new cam is what? $500 on average? Don't get me wrong it's great work on your part. Just strange to me that they wouldn't just scrap the cam.
Im curious... How are you keeping your weld puddle from being contaminated when the back cap on your torch has the tungsten sticking through it? Thats very strange to me. 🤔
Can you repair some damaged lobes on a m278 engine. Mercedes v8 turbo twin overhead cam. Lobes have damage from failing roller rockers. Probably could just do a regrind.
we ran rollers on lobes much narrower than those, could you have narrowed? did you have to make masters. Some of the new CNC grinders will digitise a lobe and grind from the lift table (sigh)
@@powellmachineinc3179 come to think of it the digitizer was seperate but the grinder could grind from the digital lift table with no master, not in my budget enjoyed your ls video reminds me of working with Bill Jenks (Potvin/Moon) designing cams on a hand calculator and reflecting the flats on the ceiling while smoothing the lobes
I have probably a stupid question, please forgive my ignorance. If you use weld that has a higher hardness than the lobe, say 58 hardness weld on a 50 lobe, does the original material on the lobe not wear faster than the repair spot? If the original material were to wear faster, then would the lifter eventually have an odd wear pattern?
Ask yourself, why would Daniel weld on 58 Rockwell C material on a 50 Rockwell C material camshaft in the first place? He's been doing cams for a year or two so give him credit for some common sense - and experience.
@@bobhudson6659 for sure! Hes an expert, full credit. I know absolutely nothing about machining, thats why i asked and mentioned I'm completely ignorant on the topic.
He had mentioned in another video that a repair was about 1/2 the cost of buying a new cam. So the customer saves, as well as him getting to make money. Pretty cool if you think about it. I'm assuming another reason would be possibly a cam that you cannot buy anymore 🤔
I had never heard of what you’re doing to straighten that cam. Always a master class in automotive machining. Thank you, sir.
Glad you enjoyed it
YT Keith Fenner did quite a few videos about heat-cycling on propeller shafts to remove runout.
That straightening was awesome
Yeah I agree with you on that, I never knew.
Great video
Dang your customers are lucky to have a guy that still even does this at any price
Ty
No Kidding. 💯
Blows my mind the amount of knowledge you have. No big ass fancy workshop but 110% quality workmanship! Alot of the big workshop should be taking note!!
We appreciate that
Nice skills. It's a pleasure to watch a master at work. Reminds me of my late father, he was an RAF trained engineer & never ceased to amaze me & many others with his skills, wisdom & adaptability - mostly he used to say it's just common sense but, from what I see that's in short supply these days ! He liked draper gauges too - great quality, highly underrated. Best wishes Paul UK.
Ty!! I really appreciate that!
Back years ago I learned how to check crank shafts for straightness. Surprised how many were not straight right out of the box. Especially the straight 6 crank shafts. We would put the crank in the block with the first and last main bearings. Then set up the Dial indicator gauge checking the center main bearing surfaces. Slowly rotate the crank shaft and bring the high spot up then take a Minny sledge hammer and tunk down on the web of the crank shaft. Slowly rotate the crank shaft and check for straightness. It's really cool, usually only need one tunk and the crank shaft is nice and true again.
Definitely
Been around this stuff my whole life and had no idea a cam could be straightened or lobe damage welded up. Absolutely amazing fine work sir!!! 👍
Ty!
Every time you stand a cam on end, my ass puckers up and clamps shut. LOL. I knocked a cam over and broke it one time. I wasn't really in danger of being fired but his look of disappointment rivaled the look my mom could give.
Lol, luckily steel cams don't break.
I spent a few seasons as a crane follower at a steel plant and ever since watching the ladle pour the hot metal and see it flow thru the forms and turn into a steel beam as it came down the line before being chopped to length. I am just amazed how metal can be manipulated. Watching you work on a cam shaft with an air hammer! 👏👏
Definitely!, tyvm
Your level of skills, experience and attention to detail is simply outstanding. After watching your origin video I have an even deeper respect for you and your wife. Y'all are legitimately self made people. Y'all's financial methods are top rate. To have all the equipment and shop building and not owe anyone is the absolute example of true wisdom and stewardship.
We really appreciate that! We really try hard!
Always helpful and entertaining for sure...especially when you respond to folks that belong on the bus...
Lol...100%
Your an expert like I have said before. I worked as a machinist for the government for years. I worked on weapons and it was good fun. But I am not an expert on engines like your are. Great channel.
Tyvm
Pinky in the air while tigging . . . . gotta keep it classy. Seriously, that is really neat to see. I went to trade school in N.E. Ohio back in the eighties, near Akron. So Summit racing main headquarters and Original store location was about a 30 minute drive away. You could buy a SBC cam, lifters & double roller w/a multi cut keyway for $119.95, all day long. . . . _OR_ . . you could go to any number of local speed shops and get "renewed" lifters and a welded/reground seasoned cam for $50 bucks. A "performance" timing set from Napa was $40-ish.
Facts
i am glad you were able to help my friend with the mopar roller cores. i sent him your way
We appreciate that 🙏
Daniel you're my man. I might have you cut me three in the near future soon we'll talk again but we've already communicated before. Thanks for all your knowledge. For taking your time to explain. Keep up the good work 👍👍
Sounds good, lmk
I learn so much watching these videos. Appreciate the knowledge you share, even though I’ll never be a machinist.
We appreciate that 🙏
Awesome job! Such finesse and the results are great! I love your videos.
Thank you so much!
I'm a 25 year machinist up near Chicago. I'm pretty well versed and can handle myself on manuals, CNC, really anything you throw at me I can usually do it or figure it out. But you, my man, are a wizard. This is what this trade is all about. You really should open a school. Or at least a few training classes.
I'm hoping this channel will be that, and it will still be here way after I'm gone
@@powellmachineinc3179 You're doing a great job of it already. What brand cam grinder is that?
PUSHROD THIS IS A GOOD CHANNEL I VIUE ALOT THANKS FOR ALL
Ty!
That was a trip to see you straighten that cam.
Definitely
Never seen a cam grinding machine before, very cool
Ty
You should open an online school to teach what you know. I would be your first student! Or at least write a series of books. Thanks for sharing your knowledge with us again!
Maybe one day!
Reminds me when i used to rebuild Torque converters on old WW11 lathes; bolt them up to big old face plates and center the front hub and cut the weld until they would pop; then take a mallet and tap on the housing to ease the 2 halves apart. That's where i learned the basics of machining, welding and fabrication. That was a damn good job! Also learned the art of using a dial indicator to measure how far to run the tool post in before turning anything to size because the original lead screws and half nuts were replaced with threaded rod and a nut welded to center of the carriage! Yeah, old school, red neck machining at it's best!
Definitely
That's cool never seen cam's being done,the straightening is different, I would have ended up with a pretzel 😂 thanks for sharing, all the best to you and your loved ones
We appreciate that
learned something new and im glad people like you have the passion and talent to do this stuff
Tyvm
Wow. That method of straightening was mind blowing. I'm thinking V blocks and a press...nope, air chisel. Ok! 🤯
Definitely
Pretty neat how you straightened it with just a few burps of the air chisel.
Definitely
You’re new nickname is “Daniel The Wizard” 👍🏻☺️
Lol
Nice to know that cams can be fixed! hell I have 6or 7 BBF roller cams that we barely hurt a lobe from a lifter failure , and just replaced the cam ! mind you these are like .995" lift cams
That’s just the big block version of the B303 cam lol. The cam manufacturer should be able to repair them also if needed or wanted.
I can fix it mostl likely
Wow.....
Thanks!
Looking forward to possibly working with you.....
You bet!
Amazing how little it took to straighten!
Definitely
I love TIG welding too! Its very hard to put the torch down once you strike the first arc!! Its very addictive for me. I dont want to stop once I start. Ill look everywhere for an excuse to keep welding. 👍
that was awesome, so many interesting fixes, I don't know what I like bettter, the welding or the straightening (peening) with the air hammer, so cool
Glad you enjoyed it
amazing work!
Ty
Very interesting. Thanks for the post !
Absolutely
I have a 60 mm roller cam that got dinged when a wrist pin broke. It looks like it got a double line groove from a rod or the lifter in one lobe. I haven't checked the straightness yet. I am not sure it's the right grind for the application though as it appears to be a former Craftsman Truck engine. I may call you to discuss if the machine shop doesn't have something better. They were an ARCA builder in the past.
Definitely, lmk
Fascinating, Captain!
Ty
Another Awesome video Daniel !!! I have never seen nor heard of anybody repairing a camshaft this way. From one worn our welder to another. Get a new gas cap for that TIG. I can hear and see a small amount of porosity there. ❤
Definitely, got some in route
Good job from Tripp
Ty
Crazy how hitting a cam or crank on the low side makes it spring back! First time I ever helped my machine shop buddy straighten one of my cranks was wild! Would be cool to see how the cam is setup so that the stone follows the lobe. How much can you change a cam on a regrind?
It depends on core matl, current specs, ect, but it's easy to shrink duration and add lift, we can add duration but normally more than 10 degrees is tough
Are u the turbojohn that was on tsr a while back, Jason interviewed u?
@@powellmachineinc3179 yes sir, that’s me!
@TurboJohnRacing Shoot me a email some time, maybe we can help each other! Powellmachineinc@gmail.com
Powellmachineinc.com
Outstanding repair. Well done!
Many thanks!
I see a YA212 Snap-On mig , used one for many years.
Definitely
awesome thanks for sharing your knowledge
My pleasure!
Nicely done…
Thanks!
@@powellmachineinc3179 considering giving you a call to talk about a 360 magnum to 408 build. You’re about 4 hrs from me but the last 2 engine builds my regular machinist didn’t impress me. Thanks
You are exactly right, (as you know) let the lash get loose enough and that lobe is in its ramp to open the valve and smacks the shit out of the lifter making those marks on the lobes
Great work!
Thanks!
When grinding the weld down do you have to dress the wheel more often? Love the video.
Sometimes
Good information thanks.
Glad it was helpful!
Cam grinding is almost voodoo to me 😅😅 I understand how the machine works but there is a lot of setup that I haven’t seen yet. I would love to see a cam getting ground starting from the very first step of setup.
Awesome video good to know 😊
Thanks for watching!
great information
Glad it was helpful!
Another great video, thank you.
Glad you enjoyed it
Hi, I just found your RUclips channel and I think everything you do and explain is great.
Could you tell me what type of filler you use to fill the camshafts, I don't know English and the translator doesn't do it as well as I would like.
New subscriber.
Greetings
5650
@@powellmachineinc3179 OK Thanks
Amazing, I love this stuff.
Ty
Thank you for telling us the rod type you're using!!!!!!!!!
Definitely
A great episode of repair when worth it. Now i have a question about your tig torch, are you operating it with your thumb with an on off switch in lieu of a foot pedal ?
Correct
@@powellmachineinc3179 does it pulse ? at a setting of your choosing. Ive seen a finger "trigger" that is much smaller than what you have but honestly your set up is larger but looks comfortable for posisitioning the toarch
Mechanical Art
Ty
Thanks for the video.
You bet
Bro, you’re a fucking surgeon with the peening gun, holy shit.
Lol,ty
Nice work!
Can you do a regrind on a Studebaker V8 camshaft?
Should be no problem
@@powellmachineinc3179 The Studebaker V8 has a gear-to-gear timing set so the camshaft rotates opposite to the crankshaft, is that an issue or extra charge? Also, can lobe separation be tightened any from the stock configuration?
Well, who knew!! Way cool, thanks!
Ty
Did you make a lobe master by copying a good lobe? Or did you already have an exact one (same ramps, etc?
We normally have a existing master profile that is close in lift and duration.
Awesome
Ty
Thats 1000% good stuff
Brave with that air hammer. Ive made more work for myself with those than any other tool.
I do it every day, 5 or 6 times a day, it's 2nd nature
Well done 👍
Thank you 👍
Just HOW many tricks do you have up those sleeves 😁😁 I can say for certain that I have never seen this method of straightening before.
It's really the only way to straighten one
Most interesting indeed!
Ty
I had no idea that much repair could be done on a camshaft. I think I would pay the extra money just to have peace of mind with all the junk we are getting.
Absolutely
What would the cost difference be between repairing a camshaft to replacing a camshaft
Cam master, I enjoy your channel. Thanks for sharing your knowledge.
Question: how is the grinder indexing controlled for shaping the lobes? Lobe template/pattern, settings? thank you
The previous cam video shows that in detail
This guy knows his shit. :O
Ty
Great video as always. was the camera behind an auto darkening mask?
No
That amazes me. So all that work is still cost effective as opposed to just buying a new cam?
About 1/2 price almost
@@powellmachineinc3179 Dang, machinists here in Vegas skin you. I needed to have a 1 3/8 PTO shaft welded and machined where a bearing froze. Maybe a 3" repair 1/8" deep. He wanted $260. I got a factory splined and keyed shaft for $200.
I'm a noob and I know nothing in comparison to video creator.
My first thought when seeing this; Shouldn't you support the cam or crank directly underneath your weld point, so as to not cause warpage?
I'm just a noob with curiosity and new to personally rebuilding engines. Genuinely curious
No, , we concentrate the heat in a very small area, so it isn't "sagging the cam.
I’ve got a DeWalt grinder! I’m gonna grind cams…😂
Go for it!
I would think you would want to weld that in some wooden v blocks and then use a magnetic ground right on the end of the cam. You have to be arcing through those v blocks onto the journals the way you are doing it.
Na, good connections don't "arc"
Questions for you. How many times do you think Daniel would have welded cams? 2nd. Do you not think Daniel would have noticed if there was arcing on the main journals if there was a problem? How about you give him credit for knowing what he is doing. Daniel also has to warrant the work he does. Would you warrant the work if there was a chance of arcing? Come on.
@@bobhudson6659 I've seen guys weld on a lathe while grounding to the lathe and I've seen what happens to the bearings. It puts little arc spots all over the bearings. Granted this is welding while the lathe is turning. I know I wouldn't do it and I've been a machinist for 40 years
I don't know a damn thing about cars. All I know is Harleys and big rigs...but how is this cost effective from the customer's perspective? a new cam is what? $500 on average? Don't get me wrong it's great work on your part. Just strange to me that they wouldn't just scrap the cam.
I thought the same thing
I would think the owner is saving at least $150 - $250 versus a new cam.
Depending on what the cam is, they can run around $800 or more.
He pretty much explains it towards the end of the video.
Do camshafts need to be polished after grinding? I know if you don't polish a crank after grinding it can just tear up the bearings.
Some companies do some don't
amazing, and, i stared at a welder :)
Ty!
Im curious... How are you keeping your weld puddle from being contaminated when the back cap on your torch has the tungsten sticking through it? Thats very strange to me. 🤔
It's taped up, I got new coming, it fine.
I have a 0m606 i'd like to have the cams reground, it's a bucket tappet OHC configuration.
We can do it
Can you repair some damaged lobes on a m278 engine. Mercedes v8 turbo twin overhead cam. Lobes have damage from failing roller rockers. Probably could just do a regrind.
I would have to make master plates, so it would cost more than a std regrind
we ran rollers on lobes much narrower than those, could you have narrowed? did you have to make masters. Some of the new CNC grinders will digitise a lobe and grind from the lift table (sigh)
We put our own profiles on it, I haven't seen a grinder that would digitize a existing lobe,
@@powellmachineinc3179 come to think of it the digitizer was seperate but the grinder could grind from the digital lift table with no master, not in my budget enjoyed your ls video reminds me of working with Bill Jenks (Potvin/Moon) designing cams on a hand calculator and reflecting the flats on the ceiling while smoothing the lobes
Do you grind a taper on non roller cams or just do rollers only and can you regrind soilid and hydronic lifters
Roller cams and lifters are flat, we don't touch ft litters any more
I have probably a stupid question, please forgive my ignorance. If you use weld that has a higher hardness than the lobe, say 58 hardness weld on a 50 lobe, does the original material on the lobe not wear faster than the repair spot? If the original material were to wear faster, then would the lifter eventually have an odd wear pattern?
Ask yourself, why would Daniel weld on 58 Rockwell C material on a 50 Rockwell C material camshaft in the first place? He's been doing cams for a year or two so give him credit for some common sense - and experience.
@@bobhudson6659 for sure! Hes an expert, full credit. I know absolutely nothing about machining, thats why i asked and mentioned I'm completely ignorant on the topic.
That is some big pulse width you are using on steel.
No pre heat even 150 degrees it will not temper the steel
Don't the end of your fingers have a tan? You need to use tig fingers or some gloves Daniel, the ultra violet will give you carcinoma.
Yeah, probably
I love the videos and ive learned a lot here but i don't understand how this could be cost effective.
when you look at cost of new bbc cam vs repair regrind significant difference in cost.
He had mentioned in another video that a repair was about 1/2 the cost of buying a new cam.
So the customer saves, as well as him getting to make money. Pretty cool if you think about it.
I'm assuming another reason would be possibly a cam that you cannot buy anymore 🤔
That's crazy. The man is using an air Chisel To straighten a camshaft. A professional shop would have used a camshaft torque plate.😂😂
Lol
Thank you for your knowledge and videos USA 🇺🇸 TRUMP 2024
💯
Why repair the cam?why not get a new one?
I made that clear at the end of the video
Hahaha... got caught up in something else. Didn't watch the video all the way through. Will now though
$125 an hiur.. Not Charging Enough $$$. You need to up your rates..
Yep, I do
That camshaft give-away video will never hit 10k likes.
Then we won't give 1 away....
Fix that tig torch
Agreed. Daniel has no idea what he is doing. Better still, go to his shed and show him how to fix it.