With respect to things being relatively quiet, your students will ask questions and you able to respond to them speaks volumes. A friend of mine went to two different one room, school houses. His intermediate education before high school in a one room school house produced two Valedictorians in high school. When he and I discussed it, we concluded that when you attended the first year at that school, you learned everything there in that class and heard everything in the other classes ahead of you and then when you move onto the next class the next year you heard everything from the previous year and the next year ahead of you And so you’ve got it three times. I love your videos.
I like Wray Shelins idea how to make his flexable patterns but he make the curve gauges like you do .Putting info and coordinates marked where the curve gauges fit on the pattern. Love your video's Lazze I was a collision guy for years and also did rust repair ,but only the past 5 years Ive been metal shaping. Wish I started years ago.
Lazze...You're metal shapping experience and teaching ability is amazing. Your contribution to ensuring this craft will carry forward will be your legacy. I might be able to assist you sourcing your special magnets from the US as I have a friend who specializes in magnetic products. Let me know if you'd like me to make this introduction.
@@welderinchiefmattcarr2653 Thank you so very much, that would be great, Go to my website www.lazzemetalshaping.com and send me an email and we go from there :-) Thank you, Kind Regards Lazze
Thank you so very much, I appreciate your feedback 🙂Yes, that would be great, Go to my website www.lazzemetalshaping.com and send me an email and we go from there :-) Thank you, Kind Regards Lazze
Thank you, I'm looking forward to seeing you in the step 2 class, I'm very impressed by the work you do making aftermarket patch panels, Keep up the good work, Kind Regards Lazze
Hey Lassi, we haven't seen you for ages. Hope you are doing well! I thought, first, something wrong happened to you. Wish you good health, peace and more tutorials. Your classes are really meticulously describing the kitchen of metal shaping. Please, continue. I would appreciate if you can show how you weld up the frames and match them to bodies. Important to know what are the control points for the right fit. Thanks!🙏👍😉
Thank you, more videos on the way. Everything is just fine with me, It was difficult to have time for Step 1 & 2 classes and make all the equipment to ship out and in the same time make Free videos for RUclips, Just a One Man show 🙂so I had to reorganize and change my priorities a little bit, Kind Regards Lazze
This guy is incredible. The measuring tool that was shown is called a Trammel Bar. They are usually clamps that hold points on either end of a wooden stick or square aluminum tube. Then a scale (or tape measure) is used for the measurement. They come from layout and lofting in ship building. A simple set can be bought for about $15-20, but you can spend a lot more if you want. For inside measurements an inside (suitcase) micrometer with extension bars is used.
You could probably make a jig to press out most of those panel's out of sheet metal? You have the metal broken down in a sciences 👍🏽 I would love to take one of your classes I know I can learn so much from other's.
L. great to see you back...please keep up the encouragement and tutorials. thank you for all your Hard Work and Great Video Content. we've watched all of your vids from the beginning; sub'd, always "like", comment occasionally. very best to you and yours. walt+mrs.
Thank you, I really appreciate that you're Thankful that I make those videos and put them up here for you to learn from 🙂More on the way, Kind Regards Lazze
Thank you, I appreciate your feedback, Not really, I talked to him one time when he sent two of his fabricators to my step 1 class many years ago. Thank you, Kind Regards Lazze
Boyd Coddington had other people doing the work, but they only assembled pre made parts! What he is doing is craftsmanship! Not just assembly of what someone else made. Boyd never made anything close to this!
@@cousinitt7915 Why are you comparing Boyd to Lars? I did no such thing, Boyd build many cars in his early years when he was getting a name for himself, he never said he was a metal worker but had visions of Hotrods. How pathetic of you to even compare two totally different people yet they ran in the same circles, obviously you're not embracing anything car related be it fab work, visions, final products.
nice tools ,believe me the mecanical gauge its better like the digital ,i have e lot of tis and had also the digital ,i prefer the mecanical like tis one ,you also nevver need battery
Mrs Richards: "I paid for a room with a view !" Basil: (pointing to the lovely view) "That is Torquay, Madam ." Mrs Richards: "It's not good enough!" Basil: "May I ask what you were expecting to see out of a Torquay hotel bedroom window ? Sydney Opera House, perhaps? the Hanging Gardens of Babylon? Herds of wildebeest sweeping majestically past?..." Mrs Richards: "Don't be silly! I expect to be able to see the sea!" Basil: "You can see the sea, it's over there between the land and the sky." Mrs Richards: "I'm not satisfied. But I shall stay. But I expect a reduction." Basil: "Why?! Because Krakatoa's not erupting at the moment ?"
I know about that car. The story on that body being cut in half, is the individual was going thru a divorce and she wanted to take his Hot Rod and other items the man enjoyed. He made sure she got her fair share.
With respect to things being relatively quiet, your students will ask questions and you able to respond to them speaks volumes. A friend of mine went to two different one room, school houses. His intermediate education before high school in a one room school house produced two Valedictorians in high school. When he and I discussed it, we concluded that when you attended the first year at that school, you learned everything there in that class and heard everything in the other classes ahead of you and then when you move onto the next class the next year you heard everything from the previous year and the next year ahead of you And so you’ve got it three times. I love your videos.
Thank you, Kind Regards Lazze
Awesome show, love that rigid tape - would be very useful in boat building. Also use it to easily scribe an arc. Neat tool.
You are the Master Builder! Thanks !
You have been teaching me for years. thanks!
Best teacher i ever had ! ! !
Thank you for sharing. Your videos are so inspiring! You have so much talent!👍
I just found your channel and I will be watching some of your older videos.
Like you said it takes week's to prep to lay everything out just to get an understanding where to start.
very nice, quite impressive, beautiful, 1 of the best videos I have seen
Always a joy to watch you work .
Good to see you back on RUclips, thank you very much
Thank you, I appreciate that you're Thankful for the videos I make and put up here, More on the way 🙂 Kind Regards Lazze
I like Wray Shelins idea how to make his flexable patterns but he make the curve gauges like you do .Putting info and coordinates marked where the curve gauges fit on the pattern. Love your video's Lazze I was a collision guy for years and also did rust repair ,but only the past 5 years Ive been metal shaping. Wish I started years ago.
Impressive work great to follow,greetings from Norway 🇳🇴
Lazze...You're metal shapping experience and teaching ability is amazing. Your contribution to ensuring this craft will carry forward will be your legacy. I might be able to assist you sourcing your special magnets from the US as I have a friend who specializes in magnetic products. Let me know if you'd like me to make this introduction.
@@welderinchiefmattcarr2653 Thank you so very much, that would be great, Go to my website www.lazzemetalshaping.com and send me an email and we go from there :-)
Thank you, Kind Regards Lazze
Thank you so very much, I appreciate your feedback 🙂Yes, that would be great, Go to my website www.lazzemetalshaping.com and send me an email and we go from there :-)
Thank you, Kind Regards Lazze
You are an amazing person. Thanks for the video.
Great video Lazze!! I need to get out there and take the next class! Hopefully next winter and escape the cold weather for a week :)
Thank you, I'm looking forward to seeing you in the step 2 class, I'm very impressed by the work you do making aftermarket patch panels, Keep up the good work, Kind Regards Lazze
I made my own telescoping tram 20 years ago. Needless to say its not high tech like yours, but it works. It's long enough to x-out a full size frame.
First class work , I bet your classes are popular
Excellent work, very informative video. Thanks!
Lazze I can't wait to make it back for your step 2 class!
Next open spot for the step 2 class is in August-Oct-Nov, Thank you, Kind Regards Lazze
Hey Lassi, we haven't seen you for ages. Hope you are doing well! I thought, first, something wrong happened to you.
Wish you good health, peace and more tutorials. Your classes are really meticulously describing the kitchen of metal shaping.
Please, continue. I would appreciate if you can show how you weld up the frames and match them to bodies. Important to know what are the control points for the right fit. Thanks!🙏👍😉
Thank you, more videos on the way. Everything is just fine with me, It was difficult to have time for Step 1 & 2 classes and make all the equipment to ship out and in the same time make Free videos for RUclips, Just a One Man show 🙂so I had to reorganize and change my priorities a little bit, Kind Regards Lazze
Its called a tram gauge measure. The one from Wurth are the best in the buisness, with a kit for inside measure aswell. Greetings from Sweden!
This guy is incredible. The measuring tool that was shown is called a Trammel Bar. They are usually clamps that hold points on either end of a wooden stick or square aluminum tube. Then a scale (or tape measure) is used for the measurement. They come from layout and lofting in ship building. A simple set can be bought for about $15-20, but you can spend a lot more if you want. For inside measurements an inside (suitcase) micrometer with extension bars is used.
superb Lazze
You could probably make a jig to press out most of those panel's out of sheet metal? You have the metal broken down in a sciences 👍🏽
I would love to take one of your classes I know I can learn so much from other's.
some really nice work!
Lookin good!!
Beautiful work 👌
Wonderful stuff!!
Thank you, more on the way
I love this video. I stamp sheetmetal for a living, I'm unaware if anyone stamps the window frames.
Can we see how do you make cowl panel? Thanks!
When you moved to your new shop, what did you do with that "wall art" of the 1/2 of a European sports car?
AMAZING!!!!
Show de Mestre no metal, fica minha admiração
what do you do with the to the bodies you make? do you sell them?
I like the way you think
Those magnets afre an interesting alternative to Clecoes (if you're building in steel) , Wouldn't work on aluminum, obviously.
L. great to see you back...please keep up the encouragement and tutorials.
thank you for all your Hard Work and Great Video Content.
we've watched all of your vids from the beginning; sub'd, always "like", comment occasionally.
very best to you and yours. walt+mrs.
Thank you, I really appreciate that you're Thankful that I make those videos and put them up here for you to learn from 🙂More on the way, Kind Regards Lazze
For on hands metal shaping top chop ect. See Bello's kustoms videos 30 to 50s car restoration metal shaping.
There are more 32 Ford coupes on the road now than were on the road in the year 1932.
You are the man, did you happen to ever cross paths with Boyd Coddington
Thank you, I appreciate your feedback, Not really, I talked to him one time when he sent two of his fabricators to my step 1 class many years ago. Thank you, Kind Regards Lazze
@@lazzemetalshaping That's nice you got to speak to him, i actually believe those 2 that attended your class was in 1 of episodes on Boyds TV show.
Boyd Coddington had other people doing the work, but they only assembled pre made parts! What he is doing is craftsmanship! Not just assembly of what someone else made. Boyd never made anything close to this!
@@cousinitt7915 Why are you comparing Boyd to Lars? I did no such thing, Boyd build many cars in his early years when he was getting a name for himself, he never said he was a metal worker but had visions of Hotrods. How pathetic of you to even compare two totally different people yet they ran in the same circles, obviously you're not embracing anything car related be it fab work, visions, final products.
nice tools ,believe me the mecanical gauge its better like the digital ,i have e lot of tis and had also the digital ,i prefer the mecanical like tis one ,you also nevver need battery
Nice Video.
#STAYSAFE
#PHILLYPHILLY 🇺🇸
Trammels?
Mrs Richards: "I paid for a room with a view !"
Basil: (pointing to the lovely view) "That is Torquay, Madam ."
Mrs Richards: "It's not good enough!"
Basil: "May I ask what you were expecting to see out of a Torquay hotel bedroom window ? Sydney Opera House, perhaps? the Hanging Gardens of Babylon? Herds of wildebeest sweeping majestically past?..."
Mrs Richards: "Don't be silly! I expect to be able to see the sea!"
Basil: "You can see the sea, it's over there between the land and the sky."
Mrs Richards: "I'm not satisfied. But I shall stay. But I expect a reduction."
Basil: "Why?! Because Krakatoa's not erupting at the moment ?"
Cortar o teto de um carro exige muita experiência e bom senso, se cortar demais fica feio e desproporcional!
Bad Chad would have just welded sheets of metal together, made relief cuts all over, bend, the use coat hanger to fill gaps. Lol
Maybe someone cut it in half because they had half a car they needed to fit it to.
Charlatán
Blah Blah Blah Bye
I know about that car. The story on that body being cut in half, is the individual was going thru a divorce and she wanted to take his Hot Rod and other items the man enjoyed. He made sure she got her fair share.
Do you sell the paper templates.
Have no access to a car to get the patterns