Your videos help a lot with home diagnostics and maintenance, but as most of my tools are cheap(er) "semi-professional" models (plenty good enough for my hobby use) I won't bother with any serious repairs. Professionally I'm a medical doctor, so it's more sensible for me to simply replace a faulty tool than spend hours repairing it even if I'm pretty confident that I could. I'm not wasting the old tools though, I give them to a hard working young man who's struggling to provide for his growing family, he's able to fix most of them and make a few bucks.
Very true, although it's given me a new hobby of buying premium brand broken tools and seeing if possible to repair for less than prosumer level tool I would other wise have bought, so far the answer is very much yes and I now have steadily replaced the cheap green brand with the expensive green brand version of most tools I have (or gone for Bosch 12v version I love that system)
Love watching tools being put back in service most of the time shop will just say by a new one because the labor to fix would be to high truth be told they are not skilled enough to repair
Hi Dean, love the videos my friend. And I love your accent. I've visited Northern Ireland many times and found the people to be very warm. Keep up the great work. Paul.
What a treat! My old Bosch breaker is 30 yrs old,with new sintered metal gear technology.... prefer to repair certain older tooling. The older tools were built for longevity ,however sometimes lacking in function. Newer tools are the reverse. I prefer a mix of both.
You gave me the courage to change the brushes on my brothers Makita BHP451, it was arcing a bit and i found the brushes were half worn, runs sweet now no arching, it the best cordless we have so versatile, keep up the great work.
When I first started watching your channel I thought you had a very nonchalant way of removing parts, throwing them out of your way almost randomly. The more hours I have spent watching you, the more I see how efficient and controlled you operate. A non-expert would keep meticulously track of all the bolts and screws and the order of disassembly. Is there a method to the madness? I also was wondering how you started disassembling, perhaps very different then now, after so many thousand and thousands of repairs. Thank you Dean for your hard work, I am learning a lot from watching your channel.
I love how Dean gives us top tips like make sure you put this back in etc ….. there’s more chance of me walking on the moon than there is of me being able to reassemble anything like this 😂😂😂😂
Great job again. This customer was pretty lucky only one gear had damage, sure not a cheap part, but then again these are 800 Euro machines so well worth replacing that gear.
Nice one, even managed to save the oil seal! You should get a custom Boschhammer housing holder for all the one you get in! Definitely treat us to the parts washer clean out for 100k, nearly there!
In places like Australia and New Zealand the extended warranty is 6 years even on batteries. The easiest way to register is to use the app, you just scan the QR code then it asks for a photo of the receipt, done. It's all one account now as well across Bosch so you can use the same account you use for you appliances.
I keep my receipt until the warranty runs out. Here in canada there's a tool store named KMS tools they are a certified warranty dealer for alot of tool brands. They also give a one year extended warranty with a small deductible
Dean what do you do after the washing, do you clean the residue off with water? Do you have to clean of partswasherliquid? I recall you told you are using kerosene right?
@@tonydaddario4706 hi yea posted the question as I was watching it did watch it to the end thanks telling me off hehe 😜 it’s sod law something always breaks down just after the warranty you would think a pricey machine like Bosch produce would give at least 2 years I’ve bought tools from Aldi and Lidl and they have 3 year’s warranty I’ve had no problems so far sometimes I guess it’s just luck thanks for the reply I’m a Tony to
Too much hassle for a measly three year warranty. I own Bosch makita Milwaukee dewalt tools which I still use older than 20 years. I suppose if I knew that I was going to put a tool thru the grinder and not take care of it, then I would go thru the trouble.
Bosch are probably getting a lot of these back under the extended three warranty and so you would expect that they move away from sintered metal for those gears that come in for a lot of abuse.
and thats why it is important to register for 3 years waranty. bad seller dont inform about it good seller mention that there is that oportunity best seller himself fill 3 year waranty 4 weeks to fill waranty but there is lots who dont do it and it cost sometimes a lot
If I dismantle anything I'm not familiar with, I take pictures as I go. also, I lay the parts down in the order they come apart. There aren't many times I can chuck them around like Dean can! p.s. printing out the exploded diagram from the parts suppliers website helps if you get lost.
I always registered my tools for extend ded warranty. But it really creams my corn how we have to jump through all these hoops & hurdles juts to get something that we should have as standard anyways & is still worse than what they get in the US as standard. Milwaukee give 5yrs warranty in three US but here in three UK some of there tools are only 12 months regardless of registrationike this utterly shut 18v gasless 18g pin gun. Build quality of Milwaukee is shit especially their electronics, over half my tools had warranty repairs & I really look after my tools.
and not a single glove was worn, a true professional at work
We are very lucky that we can watch you at work. Your knowledge, experience and expertise is beyond comprehension.
Im addicted to watching tools get fixed right now. Ive even started to watch a channel from 🇵🇰 who fix big artic lorries. Amazing dean well done pal.
Do you watch My mate Vince? Very entertaining
Your videos help a lot with home diagnostics and maintenance, but as most of my tools are cheap(er) "semi-professional" models (plenty good enough for my hobby use) I won't bother with any serious repairs. Professionally I'm a medical doctor, so it's more sensible for me to simply replace a faulty tool than spend hours repairing it even if I'm pretty confident that I could. I'm not wasting the old tools though, I give them to a hard working young man who's struggling to provide for his growing family, he's able to fix most of them and make a few bucks.
Very true, although it's given me a new hobby of buying premium brand broken tools and seeing if possible to repair for less than prosumer level tool I would other wise have bought, so far the answer is very much yes and I now have steadily replaced the cheap green brand with the expensive green brand version of most tools I have (or gone for Bosch 12v version I love that system)
Love watching tools being put back in service most of the time shop will just say by a new one because the labor to fix would be to high truth be told they are not skilled enough to repair
Hi Dean, love the videos my friend. And I love your accent. I've visited Northern Ireland many times and found the people to be very warm. Keep up the great work. Paul.
What a treat!
My old Bosch breaker is 30 yrs old,with new sintered metal gear technology.... prefer to repair certain older tooling.
The older tools were built for longevity ,however sometimes lacking in function.
Newer tools are the reverse.
I prefer a mix of both.
New tools certainly need more regular servicing than the old dinosaurs.
You gave me the courage to change the brushes on my brothers Makita BHP451, it was arcing a bit and i found the brushes were half worn, runs sweet now no arching, it the best cordless we have so versatile, keep up the great work.
Great to hear!
When I first started watching your channel I thought you had a very nonchalant way of removing parts, throwing them out of your way almost randomly. The more hours I have spent watching you, the more I see how efficient and controlled you operate. A non-expert would keep meticulously track of all the bolts and screws and the order of disassembly. Is there a method to the madness? I also was wondering how you started disassembling, perhaps very different then now, after so many thousand and thousands of repairs. Thank you Dean for your hard work, I am learning a lot from watching your channel.
The fast forward brushing was awesome 😂❤❤
I like the parts washer chats, would be a great format for question answer style vids and vlogs
I love how Dean gives us top tips like make sure you put this back in etc ….. there’s more chance of me walking on the moon than there is of me being able to reassemble anything like this 😂😂😂😂
Straight to the point as always
Great job again. This customer was pretty lucky only one gear had damage, sure not a cheap part, but then again these are 800 Euro machines so well worth replacing that gear.
Brilliant job Dean, Well Done
Glad you enjoyed it
Thank you so much, friend, for showing me how you wash dirty parts.
Nice one, even managed to save the oil seal! You should get a custom Boschhammer housing holder for all the one you get in! Definitely treat us to the parts washer clean out for 100k, nearly there!
I always register them to get extended warranty second I test the tool after I get them. Its also a good thing when you want to sell it.
In places like Australia and New Zealand the extended warranty is 6 years even on batteries. The easiest way to register is to use the app, you just scan the QR code then it asks for a photo of the receipt, done. It's all one account now as well across Bosch so you can use the same account you use for you appliances.
Wow. How enlightened. Easy peasy.
I keep my receipt until the warranty runs out. Here in canada there's a tool store named KMS tools they are a certified warranty dealer for alot of tool brands. They also give a one year extended warranty with a small deductible
KMS tools is such an excellent business. My launch into the trades was using tools bought from them
Excellent repair as usual
Always take the time to register your equipment online so as to receive 3yr warranty otherwise it’s only 1yr.
Another great video, will you be doing a video on cleaning out the parts washer
"Sound like a bag of cats" Haven't heard that saying in a long time, 😂🤣
Dean what do you do after the washing, do you clean the residue off with water? Do you have to clean of partswasherliquid? I recall you told you are using kerosene right?
Thank you Sir
its a shame its only 1 year warranty in Ireland, most of europe are 2 years and some countries even 3 years warranty for everything.
Great job,
Hi Dean. What is the brand and model of that angled plier you used to remove the spade lugs of the brushes? Thank you
Draper ergo plus
@@CharlesFitton Thank you
Hi dean great vids just a quickie on that hammer drill what would have caused that gear to break up on such a newish tool?
See end of video
@@tonydaddario4706 hi yea posted the question as I was watching it did watch it to the end thanks telling me off hehe 😜 it’s sod law something always breaks down just after the warranty you would think a pricey machine like Bosch produce would give at least 2 years I’ve bought tools from Aldi and Lidl and they have 3 year’s warranty I’ve had no problems so far sometimes I guess it’s just luck thanks for the reply I’m a Tony to
I thought 24 month warranty is standard in EU... How come they have only 1 year in Ireland?
Good idea to get a wireless remote and headset for your landline so you can work away .
I don't want to be a Safety Sally, but surely you should be wearing gloves when using solvents in the parts washer?
Too much hassle for a measly three year warranty. I own Bosch makita Milwaukee dewalt tools which I still use older than 20 years. I suppose if I knew that I was going to put a tool thru the grinder and not take care of it, then I would go thru the trouble.
Trying to resell it with some warranty still in place makes it way easier to find a buyer.
OK, that's true, but I dont buy to resell.@@michaelfairchild
Nice
Bosch are probably getting a lot of these back under the extended three warranty and so you would expect that they move away from sintered metal for those gears that come in for a lot of abuse.
Looks like Bosch is having some quality issues with their newer hammers then.
and thats why it is important to register for 3 years waranty.
bad seller dont inform about it
good seller mention that there is that oportunity
best seller himself fill 3 year waranty
4 weeks to fill waranty but there is lots who dont do it and it cost sometimes a lot
Most of the time Receipt fade out within months
Amazinh❤❤ggg
I would never get that thing back together.
If I dismantle anything I'm not familiar with, I take pictures as I go. also, I lay the parts down in the order they come apart.
There aren't many times I can chuck them around like Dean can!
p.s. printing out the exploded diagram from the parts suppliers website helps if you get lost.
I always registered my tools for extend ded warranty.
But it really creams my corn how we have to jump through all these hoops & hurdles juts to get something that we should have as standard anyways & is still worse than what they get in the US as standard.
Milwaukee give 5yrs warranty in three US but here in three UK some of there tools are only 12 months regardless of registrationike this utterly shut 18v gasless 18g pin gun.
Build quality of Milwaukee is shit especially their electronics, over half my tools had warranty repairs & I really look after my tools.
Yeah boy!! First view hahaha 😊
Workhorses these are
Love watching the large hammer repairs. Great work!
Nice one, Dean 👍💯