Very nice collection. I really liked the A-62 and the 575 Bowser. I have several Wayne 70s . Always loved the Wayne 60 and I'd love to have a 71. Great video!
Rob you keep on knocking it out of the park. I have to say your content is very comforting. It is a slice of Americana pie. It’s comforting to know that the America I cherish is being preserved. Thank you for your service! This is coming from a prior military man that is now securing our country’s borders.
@@jccrown2187 Thank you for the nice compliment. I am glad my videos bring a bit of comfort to you and hopefully others. The things we preserve and collect are from a America 🇺🇸 and time period we are proud of . Thank you for serving and working towards securing our boarders.
@@RobertGott-c3f Thanks 😊 We had a great time shooting the video together that afternoon. We appreciate you watching and commenting. I appreciate your continued support.
That’s 60 Chevy brought back some memories. Had a family member that really liked those 60 Chevys. I actually had a daily driver years ago and it was a four-door Belair. It’s still sitting in the barn along with the impala flat top four-door hardtop. I’m thinking it is a Brookwood by the 59 wagon. So that’s some years ago. It might be a Parkwood. Always got it in the 61 Chevy confused and it’s a wagon as well, well I have enjoyed watching a video. I usually try to pump up the comments but it’s been out for a while now. . Great job on video.
When your guest opened this pump 6:08 there wasn’t any guts inside. When you restore pumps do you leave them empty inside? Or do you rebuild them to the level that if you wanted to you could pump gas with them?
Hello , I must say their are many different opinions on this. If the restored pump is going inside a nice house then most people will remove the heavy and sometimes smelly guts. Personally I keep my pumps natural in original paint and leave all the internal parts in tact. But to answer your question the majority of nicely restored pumps have no internal guts left inside. Thanks for asking
@@gaspumprob Thanks for the answer. I rescued a couple pumps back in the 80’s here in Oregon when the DEQ was going after Old Gas Stations. They were making them remove their tanks and a lot of the dirt around them. The station I got the pumps from wasn’t even selling gas anymore and they gave the pumps to me just to get them out of there to get the DEQ off their back. Those pumps were very heavy.
The lubster filled up a metal container with motor oil that is used to fill up a engine on a oil change. The smaller gear oil dispenser was used underneath the car or truck to fill the rear differential with oil . Thanks for asking these questions. Thank you for watching. Gas Pump Rob
@@peterselten500 Yes here in the 40s and 50s same thing. Thanks for adding this information. In the 60s 70s 80s and even now we use a metal container with a swing spout to fill the engines with. My shop has overhead reals now but for years we used the old approach.
Nice 60 wagon,,& Dave has a awesome huge collection of gas pumps ,,he done some really nice restoration work ,,great video Rob 👍👍
@@anthonynapier4668 Thanks for watching Anthony and for leaving a nice compliment to Dave on his wagon and collection of pumps.
Thanks again Rob........ Appreciate the Videos.....Dave has a Awesome Collection 💯⛽💯⛽💯⛽💯⛽
Thank you for your continued support Mark!
Beautiful collection ! Thanks Rob ! 👍
Thanks brother for watching another 🥳🥳🥳🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸⛽️⛽️⛽️
Very nice collection. I really liked the A-62 and the 575 Bowser. I have several Wayne 70s . Always loved the Wayne 60 and I'd love to have a 71. Great video!
What a collection!
Thanks for taking the tour!
Rob you keep on knocking it out of the park. I have to say your content is very comforting. It is a slice of Americana pie. It’s comforting to know that the America I cherish is being preserved. Thank you for your service! This is coming from a prior military man that is now securing our country’s borders.
@@jccrown2187 Thank you for the nice compliment. I am glad my videos bring a bit of comfort to you and hopefully others. The things we preserve and collect are from a America 🇺🇸 and time period we are proud of . Thank you for serving and working towards securing our boarders.
Great video Rob
What a collection😊😮
Thanks to Dave and yourself for showing us⛽️⛽️⛽️
@@RobertGott-c3f Thanks 😊 We had a great time shooting the video together that afternoon. We appreciate you watching and commenting. I appreciate your continued support.
Your videos are always great to watch😮😮😢⛽️⛽️⛽️
Wow that’s my kind of collection! ⛽️
Thanks Jeff! I really enjoyed touring this amazing collection.
Very cool!!!
Thanks my friend. I am glad you enjoyed this video.
Hi Rob,
Awesome the Pegasusmobile.
I liked it so much.
Hello my friend, Thank you 😊
Man, I’m all pumped up after seeing this many pumps.🤣 great video
Thanks I am glad you enjoyed it!
Hi rob thanks alot to you an dave a totally awesome collection so many pumps we never got . Cheers mate
@@peterselten500 You are welcome 🤗. I am glad you saw a few that your country didn’t have. Cheers from America 🇺🇸
@@gaspumprob we had wayne as70 not the same as yours an gilbarco cm
@@peterselten500 Awesome. I never asked you so I will now. Do you currently own any pumps or signs?
@@gaspumprob 14 gas pumps an 4 more coming . signs .cans .25 lubsters .1 golden fleece 3 lubster bread bin an oil bottle racks
Incredible, thanks for sharing.
Thanks for taking the pump tour Tom. I really enjoyed visiting Dave. We were talking gas pump lingo for several hours 🤣🤣🤣
Dave is a wonderful person to visit with ! Nice video Rob !
@@rileydog362 Yes he is a great person and friend. Thanks Tom
That’s 60 Chevy brought back some memories. Had a family member that really liked those 60 Chevys. I actually had a daily driver years ago and it was a four-door Belair. It’s still sitting in the barn along with the impala flat top four-door hardtop. I’m thinking it is a Brookwood by the 59 wagon. So that’s some years ago. It might be a Parkwood. Always got it in the 61 Chevy confused and it’s a wagon as well, well I have enjoyed watching a video. I usually try to pump up the comments but it’s been out for a while now. . Great job on video.
Thanks for sharing!!! Memories made
Wow! This is an amazing collection! Thanks for the great video and taking us along!
I am glad you enjoyed the pump tour Brian, Thank you 😊
I like the haze 655. Oh, it’s 10 minutes into your video. I like that shell globe pump as well.
That globe tops it off !!!
Amazing,Thanks for sharing!
Thanks for watching . I am glad you enjoyed the tour.
When your guest opened this pump 6:08 there wasn’t any guts inside. When you restore pumps do you leave them empty inside? Or do you rebuild them to the level that if you wanted to you could pump gas with them?
Hello , I must say their are many different opinions on this. If the restored pump is going inside a nice house then most people will remove the heavy and sometimes smelly guts. Personally I keep my pumps natural in original paint and leave all the internal parts in tact. But to answer your question the majority of nicely restored pumps have no internal guts left inside. Thanks for asking
@@gaspumprob Thanks for the answer. I rescued a couple pumps back in the 80’s here in Oregon when the DEQ was going after Old Gas Stations. They were making them remove their tanks and a lot of the dirt around them. The station I got the pumps from wasn’t even selling gas anymore and they gave the pumps to me just to get them out of there to get the DEQ off their back. Those pumps were very heavy.
@@Steverinomeister That’s great that they gave them to you. They are very heavy when complete! Thanks for sharing
I’d actually like to know the use of the lubricator and grease pump? And how do you use them?
The lubster filled up a metal container with motor oil that is used to fill up a engine on a oil change. The smaller gear oil dispenser was used underneath the car or truck to fill the rear differential with oil . Thanks for asking these questions. Thank you for watching. Gas Pump Rob
@@gaspumprob the lubster filled oil bottles here in oz at some stations into the late 80s
@@gaspumprob thank you!
@@mrperkinsthehusky You’re welcome ⛽️⛽️⛽️
@@peterselten500 Yes here in the 40s and 50s same thing. Thanks for adding this information. In the 60s 70s 80s and even now we use a metal container with a swing spout to fill the engines with. My shop has overhead reals now but for years we used the old approach.
The Hayes is a 600NC not 655 as we stated in the video. Must have been a stagefright moment.
@@Davidgillette-e3f Well we were running down the line with no rehearsal lol ! I think overall we covered everything quite well. Thanks Dave
Why did the electric car run into a light pole? It was discharging.
Hahaha that’s hilarious
le faltó el de Energina 😠
I can’t understand what you wrote? Please translate for us if you can. Thanks