This reminds me of when I used to do landscaping with my brother and anytime we would have to go through a toll booth while driving around, we would jump out for about 30 seconds each and find more change than we could pick up. We would always have enough to pay for the toll with plenty of change leftover.
In the UK we call your split pin an R-clip. Split pins have two straight legs and are turned outwards after insertion. I don't recall ever finding money but I've had quite a few hand tools from roundabouts and junctions. One of the benefits of bicycle riding is time see the good stuff. Keep up your good work, Beau.
You are totally right. I've been calling an R clip a split pin my whole life. Makes way more sense, especially considering a split pin is a split, pin...
Technically, to be picky, only 6mm (1/4") hexagonal key wrenches are Allen keys. The name refers to the specific standardised size. (Like how a Phillips screwdriver is a 1/4 inch [6mm] cross-point screwdriver.)
Nice work Beau! As a cyclist and fossicker I can attest that on virtually every ride I find shackles, shackle pins and magnetic L plates. They’re everywhere.
I go metal detecting all around Australia and have found thousands of dollars in coins at all sorts of random places you would least expect it. But i've never tried roundabouts. Now I am going to give it a crack :)
Excellent video, Beau! This is one of my favourite hobbies. I did a 102km walk two weeks ago and found a $1 coin halfway through. Middle of nowhere. What a find. I also found a $20 note in a drain last month. But the number one find will always be the $2 coin!
Get a metal detector and it will pay for itself in no time. $1 and $2 coins are what I target on side walks and at parks, great fun and if you know how to use your machine it is a profitable side hustle.
I admire Beaus complete lack of inhibition when it comes to running around a Roundabout looking for nails and coins and treasure. If i were to do this I wouldnt be able to get over my concern for how I might look to others 😅
Life becomes really great when u start doing what u want. Caring what people think is such a massive limitation on your life but such a simple thing to change
Man, I love this. I do this, and have for years. I used to go on daily walks that I called "money walking," and there was a point where I found money literally every day for over a year. It's may favorite hobby.
@@tarkka6145 Here in the US (Texas, specifically) I found money in parking lots around gas stations and convenience stores, at grocery stores, fast food restaurants, and places like that. I'd sometimes find it in random spots while walking, so I tended to watch the ground. Maybe controversial to say, but the places I tended to find it the most were in the more low-income areas. Something I found ironic (and perhaps a bit sad).
Take a metal detector with you and your walks will be very profitable. Not uncommon for me to go for a swing at a local reserve or park and come home with a pocket full of goldies. Best session was just over $50 in under half an hour.
@@bigchief2331 Ok, that's a good idea. I have a metal detector gathering dust. My wife will be very happy to hear I'm putting it to use. Might have to use it somewhere other than car parks... they tend to frown on you using a spade to dig through the asphalt. :)
Its great idea to stop and look at something people go past so many times. Its worth going around circles for and if you have the time. Great results on your findings. Another great video. You are a great human metal detector 👍👍
Love it. Inspired by beau I decided to build a pantry for my fiancé. Found all the wood and a tape measure within a mile of the apartment. Just gotta look!
Dips and bumps on a high speed road can also be productive. Lots of stuff bounces off trucks and utes. Personally, I love finding for tools. I've still got an adjustable spanner I found running to work 30 years ago.
Beau those are what I believe are called cotter pins or 'R' pins. Split pins normally go through a castlated nut on a bolt or stud, then are "split" with pliers to lock the nut in position
Love your work. FYI 1 and 2 cent coins are still legal currency. They just aren't circulating currency. You can take them to the bank and cash them in!
loving you're wearing altras just like mine beau. 4 mortons neuromas removed earlier this year and altras are the only things i can walk in now. love your work. wish i could come see you at a secret screening, but your schedule selfishly clashes with mine. 😝😝😝 keep it up beau. loving the beautism videos. 😄😄😄
I picked up a pair of sunnies the other day, but the big thing, because I drive a bus and pick up disabled kids for school, I picked up a bloody $40 broom from the side of the road!! Guess who’s got the cleanest for free-est wheelchair bus in the whole fleet! I also picked up a beautiful block of wood from the middle of my main road, has to be 100yrs old piece of wood. I’m going to turn it into a guitar, it’s got beautiful grain.
That my good sir is an R clip not a split pin. I know because I had to learn the name of them to buy some once. Same same but different. I have considered working at a hardware store just so I would get to play with all the cool clips, pins, nuts and bolts. haha
The question I have then is: is an R-clip a sub-type of split pins? Or are both sub-types of something else? Wikipedia (and elsewhere) lists both as types of cotter pin.
Beau out there in jeans is wild, like a hipster skater bro gleaning for gold. Beau thanks for the inspiration. You should check out one of my favorite films. "The Gleaners and I" (2000) It's all about gleaning the goodness from life and people like you.
I went to a wreckers in Blacktown once in the early 80's to buy a part And left with $90 in change from between the seats of multiple old broken Holden's and valiants
@@IIChristisKingII Just looked back, was one of his patreon exclusive ones 😅 He went out for a run, collecting interesting things from the side of the road along the way.
What about lead weights as used to balance tire rims? Here in the states, they used to actually be lead, and at one point I had accumulated ten pounds of these weights. I was in Atlanta going for a walk, and at nearly every intersection I found three or four weights. I flew home with them, and of course they stood out on the X-Ray like a, well, like a pile of lead weights. TSA asked "Why do you have lead weights in your bag?" I explained that they were dangerous to have in the environment, and I was recycling them. They let me through with them!
I picked up wheel balance weights during walks along roads for years until they stopped making them from lead. Melted them down a few years ago to make a pyramid anchor for my boat. Saved me $75 USD.
This is such a Canberra vibe video. Also, it's been more than 30years since 1 and 2 cent coins were in circulation I'm pretty sure. Hope that made you feel as old as it made me feel.
I found $180 in Canberra on side of ride few months ago. Driving at 80kph thought I say a wallet. Stopped and as I walked back along the way slowly picking up 10s 20s and 50s. Handed in to police
I can't believe I just watched a grown man go round the roundabouts again 😂I bloody love how he tells these stories of what would otherwise be basic and not very interesting. Only to turn it into something fun where I want him to "win" and get lucky on the quest. I am keen to see more of these videos! Cheers @beauisms !
The fact this was filmed mere seconds from my home and I didn't see him trudging around is an absolute tragedy! Send up a flare next time and I'll join you!!
I'm with you about centrifugal force, but I've never been in a situation where I would need to get money out at a roundabout. I've also never seen someone accidentally leave coins on the roof of their car when they drive off. Wouldn't some place near parking meters, or vending machines, or stores, or toll booths, etc be better hunting grounds?
I wonder if the old 1 2 cent coins came from dirt being moved around in construction and demolition rubble and some has fallen out and the dirt washes away but the coins remain.
I would sacrifice coins to a roundabout just to attract a wild Beaukemon to my area
Beaukemon made me snort.
Abeautley!
I have no idea what this is, but I like the sound of it
Cokemon made me snort, I can't stop help!! @MarkARoutt
@@BeauMiles It's a portmanteau of Beau and Pokémon.
This reminds me of when I used to do landscaping with my brother and anytime we would have to go through a toll booth while driving around, we would jump out for about 30 seconds each and find more change than we could pick up. We would always have enough to pay for the toll with plenty of change leftover.
Beau running around. Picking up 1 and 2 cent pieces while driving a g wagon is hilarious.
I think it's an Ineos Grenadier but still haha
@@hughh106correct. Not a common vehicle in the slightest!
@@TheNewBorkTimesBet it's cheaper than a bloody 70 series though!
Well even if it was a g wagon thats why he can afford it by being frugal
@@scrummpybear I want all the best for Beau. I could see him finding a car in a creek and fixing it before buying that though.
In the UK we call your split pin an R-clip. Split pins have two straight legs and are turned outwards after insertion. I don't recall ever finding money but I've had quite a few hand tools from roundabouts and junctions. One of the benefits of bicycle riding is time see the good stuff. Keep up your good work, Beau.
We call them the same here in NZ too mate. Aussies are always giving things their own names or claiming its from Aus haha.
Aussie here, I'd've called it an R-clip too. Must be a Victorian thing. I wonder what ACTians call them.
You are totally right. I've been calling an R clip a split pin my whole life. Makes way more sense, especially considering a split pin is a split, pin...
Another Aussie here I live not far up the road from Beau - everyone I know calls them an R clip also.
It's a hairpin in Canada.
The makita battery is a big win, especially if you already have the tools
The early stages of profound compulsive hording can seem innocuous enough.
He’s like a little ginger magpie
Found a nice 8mm Alan Key whilst biking to school today so I think I won
You beautayyyyy
Allen
Give Alan his key back mate
Technically, to be picky, only 6mm (1/4") hexagonal key wrenches are Allen keys. The name refers to the specific standardised size. (Like how a Phillips screwdriver is a 1/4 inch [6mm] cross-point screwdriver.)
Nice work Beau! As a cyclist and fossicker I can attest that on virtually every ride I find shackles, shackle pins and magnetic L plates. They’re everywhere.
Beau, you’re probably the best example of a man living free. Love ya. Darlington, South Carolina USA
Nice Grenadier
Ta mate. very nice loaner
I don’t know what split pins are used for but your joy of finding one is lovely!
In a world that thinks it likes new, shiny and easy, Beau’s videos are very refreshing 😅
I go metal detecting all around Australia and have found thousands of dollars in coins at all sorts of random places you would least expect it. But i've never tried roundabouts. Now I am going to give it a crack :)
Excellent video, Beau! This is one of my favourite hobbies. I did a 102km walk two weeks ago and found a $1 coin halfway through. Middle of nowhere. What a find. I also found a $20 note in a drain last month. But the number one find will always be the $2 coin!
Get a metal detector and it will pay for itself in no time. $1 and $2 coins are what I target on side walks and at parks, great fun and if you know how to use your machine it is a profitable side hustle.
@@bigchief2331 Thanks, that sounds great!
$2 are the best, they are small and they don't make much noise when they hit the ground people don't know they dropped them.
@@Miakel they sure are , I get heaps of them at the local sports ovals with my metal detector
@@Miakel Don't give all the secrets away!! I used to find these all the time at the Central markets in Adelaide when I shopped there. :D
Whoa! I was at the show LAST NIGHT and can't believe y'all shot and released a video so fast! Good onyas.
Facts to see the man behind these videos is a different breed 😂
The Excitement he gets from his st search is so funny !!! Even I’m chuffed !🤣
As a Tuggeranong local, im always chuffed to see bits and pieces around where i grew up shown in his films
Me too mate (not a local, but family in the area)
I admire Beaus complete lack of inhibition when it comes to running around a Roundabout looking for nails and coins and treasure. If i were to do this I wouldnt be able to get over my concern for how I might look to others 😅
There is immeasurable joy in not caring what other people think, my friend.
They will forgot about you as soon as the light reflected off your body leaves their retina
@@benjigirl1971 i hope i find this one day
Life becomes really great when u start doing what u want. Caring what people think is such a massive limitation on your life but such a simple thing to change
Im sure pulling up in a G wagon kinda nullifys this lol
Man, I love this. I do this, and have for years. I used to go on daily walks that I called "money walking," and there was a point where I found money literally every day for over a year. It's may favorite hobby.
What kind of spots were best for finding money? I go to long daily walks myself, wouldn't hurt to find money while doing so :D
@@tarkka6145 Here in the US (Texas, specifically) I found money in parking lots around gas stations and convenience stores, at grocery stores, fast food restaurants, and places like that. I'd sometimes find it in random spots while walking, so I tended to watch the ground.
Maybe controversial to say, but the places I tended to find it the most were in the more low-income areas. Something I found ironic (and perhaps a bit sad).
Take a metal detector with you and your walks will be very profitable. Not uncommon for me to go for a swing at a local reserve or park and come home with a pocket full of goldies. Best session was just over $50 in under half an hour.
@@bigchief2331 Ok, that's a good idea. I have a metal detector gathering dust. My wife will be very happy to hear I'm putting it to use. Might have to use it somewhere other than car parks... they tend to frown on you using a spade to dig through the asphalt. :)
Its great idea to stop and look at something people go past so many times. Its worth going around circles for and if you have the time. Great results on your findings. Another great video. You are a great human metal detector 👍👍
I like how you love split pins and hold up an R clip haha Brilliant. The 1 and 2 cent find seems crazy, Cheers sir.
Thanks mate. Great! I've been calling them that for years! goodonya
a man that talks cents
@@BeauMiles Yeah i was calling them that too until i tried to buy some , and couldn't find what i was looking for. Everyday is a school day hey.
I know those "split-pins" as cotter pins.
Beau, you are so passionate about everything that you do, and I LOVE IT!! ❤❤
So funny. The first YT-er who drives a Grenadier and it’s all about….finding stuff on roundabouts. Very Beau! He doesn’t even mention it.
Fantastic finds there. I'm not sure I would be as excited about the R pin, but whatever floats your boat, go with it.
Love it. Inspired by beau I decided to build a pantry for my fiancé. Found all the wood and a tape measure within a mile of the apartment. Just gotta look!
I love the world that you live in, Beau!
Thanks for the 2x5c discount on your secret screening in Canberra last night. 9YO daughter was pleased with the memento ;)
Dips and bumps on a high speed road can also be productive. Lots of stuff bounces off trucks and utes. Personally, I love finding for tools. I've still got an adjustable spanner I found running to work 30 years ago.
Beau is the only one to naturally pull this off, one of a kind
Beau those are what I believe are called cotter pins or 'R' pins. Split pins normally go through a castlated nut on a bolt or stud, then are "split" with pliers to lock the nut in position
You are a little bit crazy 🤣. Thanks for sharing this with us. Love your work
I love your energy for life beau thank you
You will love Warrnambool, 20+ roundabouts in the CBD alone, 6x4 blocks.
That's called a R pin brother but love is love 😂
Love your work.
FYI 1 and 2 cent coins are still legal currency. They just aren't circulating currency. You can take them to the bank and cash them in!
Beau... your rocking around in an Ineos Grenadier as your rental out there? Its a BEAUTY!
loving you're wearing altras just like mine beau.
4 mortons neuromas removed earlier this year and altras are the only things i can walk in now.
love your work.
wish i could come see you at a secret screening, but your schedule selfishly clashes with mine.
😝😝😝
keep it up beau.
loving the beautism videos.
😄😄😄
This is a representation of RUclipss monetation program.
I picked up a pair of sunnies the other day, but the big thing, because I drive a bus and pick up disabled kids for school, I picked up a bloody $40 broom from the side of the road!! Guess who’s got the cleanest for free-est wheelchair bus in the whole fleet! I also picked up a beautiful block of wood from the middle of my main road, has to be 100yrs old piece of wood. I’m going to turn it into a guitar, it’s got beautiful grain.
Split pins are great! One of the many different pins.
its a R clip ///////
\
Glad to see you're a viewer here Sean ;)
Great show last night. Great to see you in Canberra
That my good sir is an R clip not a split pin. I know because I had to learn the name of them to buy some once. Same same but different. I have considered working at a hardware store just so I would get to play with all the cool clips, pins, nuts and bolts. haha
The question I have then is: is an R-clip a sub-type of split pins? Or are both sub-types of something else? Wikipedia (and elsewhere) lists both as types of cotter pin.
@@garethjmsaunders I'd say they are both bolt retention clips of which there are many more than those two.
Beau out there in jeans is wild, like a hipster skater bro gleaning for gold.
Beau thanks for the inspiration. You should check out one of my favorite films. "The Gleaners and I" (2000) It's all about gleaning the goodness from life and people like you.
I thought I'd found a pair of ladders on a roundabout once. Until the geezer came running around for them
I went to a wreckers in Blacktown once in the early 80's to buy a part
And left with $90 in change from between the seats of multiple old broken Holden's and valiants
Brilliant stuff, I was introduced to your channel via the roundabout theory video, off the back of Geowizard doing his own video referencing it.
Love Geowizard, can you let me know which video he mentions the roundabout theory.
@@IIChristisKingII Just looked back, was one of his patreon exclusive ones 😅
He went out for a run, collecting interesting things from the side of the road along the way.
We call those hitch pins. Split pins have 2 straight legs and are often used to lock a nut in place on a bolt.
Visit a nightclub in the morning after the lights come on. Lots of interesting goodies :-)
Found a small snap on ratchet one time on the loop while running. Cleaned it up. Works great
You’ll need to try this when you’re in Warrnambool, they too have many roundabouts and plenty of utes to spill the good stuff
That’s not a knife, this is a knife! 🤣
That split pin looks fresh. Some bloke is down the road with his trailer flipped over in the ditch.
Only Beau could find a way to live a hunter gatherer lifestyle inside of an industrialized 1st world country
Beau you need to come and visit Milton Keynes in the UK, the place is built of roundabouts 😆 my best find nearby to MK was an O-ring pick 😎
Watch out beaus, canberra drivers are crazy. As a canberran we are pretty tight. Wont even let 0.5c hit the ground haha 😊
All whilst driving around in an Ineos Grenadier???
Kind of defeats the purpose.
What about lead weights as used to balance tire rims? Here in the states, they used to actually be lead, and at one point I had accumulated ten pounds of these weights. I was in Atlanta going for a walk, and at nearly every intersection I found three or four weights. I flew home with them, and of course they stood out on the X-Ray like a, well, like a pile of lead weights. TSA asked "Why do you have lead weights in your bag?" I explained that they were dangerous to have in the environment, and I was recycling them. They let me through with them!
Technically that’s an R clip, split pins split in the middle like you have on trailer axles to retain the nut/bearings. R clips are awesome.
I've never seen someone so excited about coins
I picked up wheel balance weights during walks along roads for years until they stopped making them from lead. Melted them down a few years ago to make a pyramid anchor for my boat. Saved me $75 USD.
If that Makita battery still works, that's pretty valuable
Why do you think roundabouts have larger quantities of stuff?
How the hell did you manage to shoot, edit and upload this in a day, all while on tour?!?!? Mad respect!
Excellent work, but it's called an R clip, split pins are the single use ones you bend with pliers
It's crazy seeing Beau in a roundabout that I take to go to work.
What a bloody haul! Quality stuff mate
love it pulls up in that truck to look for change
Ive always wondered where all the missed notes are surely alone fence lines and other borders
Finding a $2 coin is like finding $200 when you pick it up.
You seem quite upbeat! Glad you are recovering well mate
I feel like you where the kind of kid who came home from every walk with about 10 sticks and as many cool rocks as your pockets could hold.
This is such a Canberra vibe video.
Also, it's been more than 30years since 1 and 2 cent coins were in circulation I'm pretty sure. Hope that made you feel as old as it made me feel.
Don't want to make you feel old Beau, but the Aussie 1 cent coin went out of circulation in 1992. Closer to 40 years ago than 20 haha.
I often finish a run carrying roadside treasure.
It always amazes me what's out there.
I'm sure he missed a coin just before the 4 minute mark. A 20 or 50 cent? Anyone else see it?
Massive enemy of these endeavours is the road sweeper trucks
What is that thing on your head? Looks useful!
i want to see more, now you have to go to every or almost every country, im throwing some change out the car next time im at a round about lo😂 😂
For someone who loves split pins you would think you would know that's not a split pin! 😂
Last year our city put in like 6 roundabouts in the span of about a mile, it's crazy!
My son used to check out the vending machines whenever he passed one. He found loads of cash !!
Looking under vending machines at airports was always a profitable endeavour as a young child
I’d be stoked to find the Makita battery. I have the drill and the charger but no battery. 😅
Feel like Canberra has too many round abouts and it dilutes the treasures.
Surely a large town with 1 round about would be a goldmine.
Thank you for sharing this video ! Hope to watch more videos from you😊 have a great day ❤ Greetings from our Family - Kapiso Mo Vlog 4:57
2:26 I've never understood this. "Because of centrifugal force things just fall out". They fall out from WHERE? I cannot picture how this happens help
Utes. Truck beds. Not from inside cars that’s for sure.
I found $180 in Canberra on side of ride few months ago. Driving at 80kph thought I say a wallet. Stopped and as I walked back along the way slowly picking up 10s 20s and 50s. Handed in to police
Just be carefull out there. Everybody seems to be driving on the wrong side of the road 😮😱
I can't believe I just watched a grown man go round the roundabouts again 😂I bloody love how he tells these stories of what would otherwise be basic and not very interesting. Only to turn it into something fun where I want him to "win" and get lucky on the quest. I am keen to see more of these videos! Cheers @beauisms !
"let's go to Canberra and look for coins on the road"
"By God you're a genius boy!!"
he’s alive!!
The fact this was filmed mere seconds from my home and I didn't see him trudging around is an absolute tragedy! Send up a flare next time and I'll join you!!
I go on “treasure hunts” at my gym. Lifting weights puts people in all sorts of strange positions and 1, 5, and 10 cent pieces are all over the place.
"You call that a knife? This is a knife"
How did you like the inios beau? My brother sells them, they're are a beast of car!
I think Beau loves split pins
I'm with you about centrifugal force, but I've never been in a situation where I would need to get money out at a roundabout. I've also never seen someone accidentally leave coins on the roof of their car when they drive off. Wouldn't some place near parking meters, or vending machines, or stores, or toll booths, etc be better hunting grounds?
My best find was two $20 bills in the middle of the road while running about 6 months ago.
I wonder if the old 1 2 cent coins came from dirt being moved around in construction and demolition rubble and some has fallen out and the dirt washes away but the coins remain.