Yes hopefully. I have one I'm hoping to start on next week - a pneumatic cut off saw. Potentially a few stumbling blocks, most of all my skill level, so we'll see how we go! It's just getting the time to do everything in life! Ha, a balancing act to say the least
Now this is a tool worth restoring, this type of manual drill is not only rare, but also still useful, in some cases even better than modern power tools. Whatever you decide to do with your other restored items keep this one in your workshop, you'll find it priceless if you do more intricate woodwork in the future. If you can't find more original drill heads you should be able to modify modern ones to fit, you'll find smaller diameter ones more useful whenever you need to drill angled holes in hard wood consistently and without damaging the surface.
pgfollett - Was that the awesome little block plane (?) with the removable side making it a little shoulder style plane?! I thought my eyes had failed me! Magici tell ya!
Just thinking the same thing...as he graces his hand right above the spinning blade...worked at a company where THAT happened to someone who was a tiny bit careless!!
Another piece of American history brought back to life through your work. It probably was an awesome tool for its time. Enjoyed the video thanks for sharing. 😁👍🇺🇸🇨🇱
Never seen one of these drills before . but have seen dozens of the augers. Bought a hundred year old farmhouse in the forest of South Sweden. Did a lot of restoration on it and found that the walls are made of complete tree trunks , squared off. .Not a nail in sight . Every trunk joined to the one underneath with a 12" 11/2" wooden pin. as well as all the joints. .There must have been 500-1000 to pin the house together. Found a lot of old augers tossed aside in the barns . but never came across one of these. I guess they must have had something like this to make it easier and keep it straight. I use the word ``easier`` but still must have been damned hard work.. Advanced technology in 1902.
Oh god, amazing work brother another fine tool saved and brought back to life by your skilled hands and various chemicals....keep up the good work, I can't wait to see what you have up your holy sleeve next
Awesome video, I love to see these old tools come back to life! You are truly a craftsman, I'm glad you share your work with us. That said, the video was a bit _boring_ at times.... I'll see myself out.
I restored one almost exactly like that with 30D-90Deg angle and 12” plunge that i regularly use in my 100 year old timber frame barn restoration. Id never go back to power tools again!
Hey for those pins you pull with the vise grips You can weld a make shift slide hammer to the vise grips to make it easier to pull Less twisting and prying Jody has a vid making one on welding tips and tricks
Hello my friend nice project and awesome work, but always keep 1-2 cm of the saw blade over the wood, with this solution you will have less burn marks. Have a great time ☺️
How do you remember how it all goes back together? I get that you pretty much have it recorded on video, so do you replay it as you put it together? Curious
That's my thought. I also figure that when he shows off the fasteners to the camera that helps him later when he needs to figure out what bolt/nut/screw goes where.
In his QA video he said that the reason he started this youtube channel was because he was recording everything to remember how to put it together. So yeah, i guess he replays it.
I thought it was awesome you went the extra mile and welded the broken bolt head to a new shaft. I was expecting you cut down a hex head from a larger new bolt and chemically age it. Good work saving this piece.
COME ON SUPPLIERS !!!! GIVE THE MAN A PILLAR DRILL , TABLE SAW , JOINER , MORTISER !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! AND LOTS OF OTHER TOOLS !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! KEEP UP GOOD WORK !!!!!!!!!!!!!
Have you ever tried dumping a whole sub assembly, screws and all into the Evaporust? I have one such, a forge blower, and want to give it a try, but that much ERust is a bit expensive to try as an experiment. I was hoping you would give it a try as an adjunct to one of your resto videos. If it works, meaning that the screws, etc are easier to remove and most of the rust is gone, I'll give it a go.
I have one MAJOR personal complaint with the video uploader and it is centered around you wearing long sleeve shirts or long sleeve coat while working around a table saw if you would personally review this video you would see just how close you come to the saw blade many of people have maimed themselves even die from injuries suffered BECAUSE of lose clothing long sleeves and jackets and or long hair and jewelry getting caught in saws mills drills lathes ETC no one wants to see you lose a hand or your life like that please lose the sleeves stay focused around moving machinery
Love your videos. I think keeping the old wood in some of your restores would be the way to go. This project being a good example. Cracks could be repaired or left to show character. Obviously the handles were pretty rough. Please consider keeping the wood if possible. No hate. I think you do great work
Hey there, I really like your channel and videos. How do you get thiese projects? Do you buy them yourself or are they mainly others people restorations? They are very cool things I've never seen before? Thanks
I've been watching restoration videos from many channels and I have to ask. What do you guys do with the tools that are restored? Are they used in other projects? Kept? Are the restorations commissioned by someone?
Beautiful work HTR! One of my favorite restorations you have done. Such a great piece of history that can now be put back into use. Thanks!
Thanks man! Any restorations coming up?
Yes hopefully. I have one I'm hoping to start on next week - a pneumatic cut off saw. Potentially a few stumbling blocks, most of all my skill level, so we'll see how we go! It's just getting the time to do everything in life! Ha, a balancing act to say the least
+Will Matthews Sweet! I've got a pneumatic drill next in line, so we will match.
Sounds awesome man! Will keep an eye out for it :)
ahh, such a wonderful sight! my 2 favorite restoration youtubers communicating
Now this is a tool worth restoring, this type of manual drill is not only rare, but also still useful, in some cases even better than modern power tools. Whatever you decide to do with your other restored items keep this one in your workshop, you'll find it priceless if you do more intricate woodwork in the future.
If you can't find more original drill heads you should be able to modify modern ones to fit, you'll find smaller diameter ones more useful whenever you need to drill angled holes in hard wood consistently and without damaging the surface.
Will do!
Oh man I’ve been waiting for a new vid!! Thank You, I love ur channel! Keep up the great work👍🏻
Very nice work. Glad to see someone else has a Stanley #140 in use. Very handy little plane.
pgfollett - Was that the awesome little block plane (?) with the removable side making it a little shoulder style plane?! I thought my eyes had failed me! Magici tell ya!
That's the one. I have one in my shop but it's missing the removable side plate. No biggie cause I use it as a shoulder plane only.
Great project.
I just hate seeing anybody reach near the blade of a table saw, wearing long sleeves.
Know what I mean??
Keep the fine work coming.
Just thinking the same thing...as he graces his hand right above the spinning blade...worked at a company where THAT happened to someone who was a tiny bit careless!!
I was thinking the same.
Another piece of American history brought back to life through your work. It probably was an awesome tool for its time. Enjoyed the video thanks for sharing. 😁👍🇺🇸🇨🇱
the only thing I would have done differently is coating the timber before assembly- absolutely love your work hand tool rescue!
man, I gotta keep my eyes open for a set of those old school adjustable pliers... I really love the look of them!
i love the sound of the bolts falling and the spray U use
Haven’t watched this one yet, but it appears to have it all, industrial, wood, metal, sexy mid century, steam punkish... should be a gem of a episode.
17:50 it's really cool how you can kinda see the progression of the woodgrain.
I usually save beard buffing for beaver skins.
The Empire of Dirt well played, sir!
I like to call it thigh exfoliating
Bahaha that's the best!
🤣🤣
Hey man
I just came home from work and grabbed a beer, saw this and this is just perfect. Cheers from the Netherlands!
Glad you didn't put in any music, I could now put it on 0.75x speed without annoyances
Your handling of the table saw is scary.
the best channel of restoration of old tools
Everytime perfect work equal Hand Tool Rescue!
Very nice finish. Supreme level!
Congratulations! Keep it up...
One's again your the man my brother awesome restoration :)
Once*
One's = One is
Superb restoration as always ! And a hint of fun ! Thanks for sharing 😀
what's this? HTR using chisels for their intended purpose?
+gabriel Sturdevant Blasphemy!
It is the third time I see this, and I enjoy it just as much as I did the first time. Great job.
Thank you.
Surely I’m not the only one who gets tickled watching the fast hammer taps. Warped sense of humor I guess.
Never seen one of these drills before . but have seen dozens of the augers. Bought a hundred year old farmhouse in the forest of South Sweden. Did a lot of restoration on it and found that the walls are made of complete tree trunks , squared off. .Not a nail in sight . Every trunk joined to the one underneath with a 12" 11/2" wooden pin. as well as all the joints. .There must have been 500-1000 to pin the house together. Found a lot of old augers tossed aside in the barns . but never came across one of these. I guess they must have had something like this to make it easier and keep it straight. I use the word ``easier`` but still must have been damned hard work.. Advanced technology in 1902.
Oh god, amazing work brother another fine tool saved and brought back to life by your skilled hands and various chemicals....keep up the good work, I can't wait to see what you have up your holy sleeve next
I jak zwykle świetna robota. Świetnie ogląda się te filmy. Widać ciężką i trudną pracę ale i wielką pasję. Serdecznie pozdrawiam.
Dziękuję Ci!
Is it meant to be clamped to the workpiece? Seems like that would eliminate a lot of the wobbles.
+awldune You are actually meant to sit on the wooden base.
Ah, yes. I actually believe I have seen Mr. Chickadee do this.
Later versions had attached clamps
Awesome video, I love to see these old tools come back to life! You are truly a craftsman, I'm glad you share your work with us.
That said, the video was a bit _boring_ at times....
I'll see myself out.
Congrats on the sponsor!! I can't think of anything else more apt considering your content :)
Excellent buffing technique.
Way cool! I’ve never even seen one, talk about necessity being the mother of invention.
Just found this guys channel love it u have another sub i could watch this kind of content all day
I restored one almost exactly like that with 30D-90Deg angle and 12” plunge that i regularly use in my 100 year old timber frame barn restoration. Id never go back to power tools again!
You are good of service even in! Congratulations.
so exited to watch this when I get home!!
oh gawd the disco dance drill is awesome!
Hey for those pins you pull with the vise grips
You can weld a make shift slide hammer to the vise grips to make it easier to pull
Less twisting and prying
Jody has a vid making one on welding tips and tricks
Hello my friend nice project and awesome work, but always keep 1-2 cm of the saw blade over the wood, with this solution you will have less burn marks. Have a great time ☺️
How do you remember how it all goes back together? I get that you pretty much have it recorded on video, so do you replay it as you put it together? Curious
That's my thought. I also figure that when he shows off the fasteners to the camera that helps him later when he needs to figure out what bolt/nut/screw goes where.
Some people have that sort of 'mechanical mind' that they can just remember that kind of stuff as well.
In his QA video he said that the reason he started this youtube channel was because he was recording everything to remember how to put it together. So yeah, i guess he replays it.
In one of comments he mentioned that he does it often.
Guys...he has a video of himself taking everything apart...you just watched it.
I bet, that when the idea came to recess heads of bolts and nuts that it really revolutionized design in this era.
Beautiful tool. Well done.
Absolutely brilliant job mate well done 👍👍
pretty ingenious for 1910!
Man, I really want one of these old beam augers. The auger bit itself on this one looks pretty crappy, but the rest of the tool is pretty fly.
another awesome project.
that green beveling tool, tho... beautiful
I thought it was awesome you went the extra mile and welded the broken bolt head to a new shaft. I was expecting you cut down a hex head from a larger new bolt and chemically age it. Good work saving this piece.
I remember seeing one of these on The Woodwright Shop on PBS a long time ago. :)
Wow! I had no idea Evaporust could freeze. Good to know.
Whenever I watch these older videos it's like when's he going to repair a heater?
Excelsior!! My favorite restore!
COME ON SUPPLIERS !!!! GIVE THE MAN A PILLAR DRILL , TABLE SAW , JOINER , MORTISER !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! AND LOTS OF OTHER TOOLS !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! KEEP UP GOOD WORK !!!!!!!!!!!!!
Fantastic job as usual....well done indeed sir!
excellent video. Thank you my friend.
Have you ever tried dumping a whole sub assembly, screws and all into the Evaporust? I have one such, a forge blower, and want to give it a try, but that much ERust is a bit expensive to try as an experiment. I was hoping you would give it a try as an adjunct to one of your resto videos. If it works, meaning that the screws, etc are easier to remove and most of the rust is gone, I'll give it a go.
Very cool. Very entertaining. Thank you.
Ancient cordless drill technology? Must have been brought here by aliens!
Have you ever tried welding ears back on to an auger bit? Your holes would be much cleaner if it had them.
Outstanding work 👍👍👍👍👍
Dude, where do you find these gems?Fascinating.
lovely job
Great stuff as usual. Who made that skewed block plane with the removable side for rabbets? That's kewl. Never seen one.
Very nice restoration. Yes a lathe, either wood or metal.
How long do your wire wheels last?
you have mad skills bro !!!
I have one MAJOR personal complaint with the video uploader and it is centered around you wearing long sleeve shirts or long sleeve coat while working around a table saw if you would personally review this video you would see just how close you come to the saw blade many of people have maimed themselves even die from injuries suffered BECAUSE of lose clothing long sleeves and jackets and or long hair and jewelry getting caught in saws mills drills lathes ETC no one wants to see you lose a hand or your life like that please lose the sleeves stay focused around moving machinery
Great restoration..I’m guessing a certain website doesn’t like fire ?? ..lol , too much , Cheers bud
Wow! Amazing work.
I love your channel you do amazing work!! Keep the videos coming!!
Dangit, I got so far into my restoration but couldn't finish because I don't have a beard!!
Time to just throw it out now
Love your videos. I think keeping the old wood in some of your restores would be the way to go. This project being a good example. Cracks could be repaired or left to show character. Obviously the handles were pretty rough. Please consider keeping the wood if possible. No hate. I think you do great work
Super nice restoration you always find nest stuff. . But what did you get from amazon prime?
I love your videos! ❤️ Excellent Work 😃
That looks like the drill that Charles Engles was using in some of the "Little House on the Prairie" episodes.
Madre mía donde las encuentras son una maravilla del pasado.
Fantastic video!! Just how cold is your shop, and does it affect the functionality of the glue at all?
The glue is stored inside as it doesn't work below 15C.
You sit on it. Great tool
looks great!
BETER THAN A MOVIE GREAT MECH
Mr chicadee would use this everyday. Also how do you like the flexible 90° drill bit thing? I been thinking about getting one
Beautiful work 👌🏾😸
Excellent work 💯👏🇱🇰
I literally almost bought this one yesterday
Just amazing.
Well done!
It's amazing! 👍🔨
When I build a house. I will want one of these.
Hey there, I really like your channel and videos. How do you get thiese projects? Do you buy them yourself or are they mainly others people restorations? They are very cool things I've never seen before?
Thanks
I've been watching restoration videos from many channels and I have to ask. What do you guys do with the tools that are restored? Are they used in other projects? Kept? Are the restorations commissioned by someone?
if i play your videos with the screen on my laptop closed my puppy tries to eat my laptop. He thinks there is tiny repairmen inside it
never been this early before! love your channel!
Besides olive companies, I've never seen anyone ever try to match the pitting! Oh sorry what about racing? 😬
What did you spray on to loosen the parts at the 5 minute and 5:19 mark? Worked a treat!
Penetrating oil and heat.
nice work, please tell me what is the 'oil' that smokes and frees a rusted part? thanks
Nice video
Isn't one supposed to stand on the wooden part. To keep the pressure on the drill bit.
Are these yours or customers tools that you revitalize
This is exactly the tool im missing...
I just got two of these, One has a broken handle. It is cast iron. Can it be fixed by some means?
this thing is cool...
So do you keep or resell these tools when you restore them?
Excellent!!!
Beard buffing for the win!
My God, where did you get that ?!