Vintage Bristol Dozer repair part 1
HTML-код
- Опубликовано: 18 окт 2024
- I'm doing some repairs on the old Bristol Bulldozer I picked up for $500 for last month. It needs a lot of work, this time I'll concentrate on rebuilding the water pump and thermostat housing, both are in pretty bad shape, and it looses most of its coolant after 10 minutes running.
- Хобби
Jaysus, I can't believe how many people come here just to tell him what he's done wrong, forgot to do, or could have done better. It's his dozer, his channel, his life. Watch, learn, enjoy.
Thanks man.. I do appreciate constructive criticism, I am learning from some comments
I'm pretty impressed. Good work he does. My only question is why isn't he painting clean and pretty? Especially while he has bits all apart. Fan & water pump etc..... I guess he's just going for that look
Yeah, these people need to shut the fuck up.
@@steveaguinaga3821 he did say in another video that he prefers the old look
I was a mechanic for twenty years in the service and I watch just to relive old memories of working on equipment that in some cases was older than I was. Thanks Marty T.
So I watch this guy make his own power and I think.. he must have a background in electrical engineering. Then I see him solve complex mechanical problem and I think… he must be a mechanical engineer. Now I’ve just decided that he’s just a soft spoken genius with a beautiful life and family and my spirit animal! Im 53 years old and when I grow up I want to be like Marty T. I literately can’t wait until the next video. I may have to force myself to not watch for a while just so I can binge watch later. I might need to talk to someone about this. 😳😂greetings from Alabama, USA!
The thermostat was some pretty impressive engineering, gotta say. I wouldn't have thought to do that.
Yes very good work ,but isn't it restricting the flow of coolant ?
@@doncodman913 thats the idea behind a thermostat
@@johndowe7003 Yes but only when the engine is cold. When the engine is hot the smaller hole he now has will slow the flow of coolant from what was originally designed. Merry Christmas.
You don't want the coolant too fast, it won't spend enough time in the radiator cooling off.
@@karaayers2867 Or enough time in engine to exchange the heat ^^
Marty,as a Kiwi living in Aus,I love hearing the rich bird life noises as the soundtracks to your videos.Makes me somewhat homesick !!
It beats fill-in music any day ;)
With you Paul. The tui has a wonderful song.
yep,the cawing of crows with the squawking of parrots gets old .
now that you mention that I can hear it as well. its much like an older mustie1 video before he switched shops, his old shop was full of wonderful bird notes, much like a Marty video
@@warwickhowland5816 yep, I sure notice the kiwi calls.
"... See that bearing in there. Its pretty shagged..."
This is one of the reasons I enjoy Marty's channel. He doesn't mince words. Plus, there's definitely some sort of familial thing between Brit's, Aussies and Kiwis, each using similar or exactly the same phrases as each other.
Off topic I know, but years ago I lived in a flat with Kiwi neighbours. There was about twenty of them all sharing a flat. And it was party central almost every night. They all worked hard, or were students and a nice bunch of blokes. They would do anything for you and never expect anything in return. Except maybe a beer in the local pub when you saw them. My girlfriend moved in with me, and had trouble sleeping cos' of the raucous partying next door. I asked a couple of them in the pub if they could keep the noise down just a bit and maybe end the party a bit earlier than five in the morning?
They always laughed at me. Not in a dickhead way. But they couldn't believe they were being asked to do something that was alien to them. They sympathised and that, but it was like asking them to ritually sever one of their own limbs. This went on for a few weeks and one night in the pub, I'd had a few and asked again if they could town it down a bit. The usual happened and nothing changed until I told them that Nicola, my girlfriend, was pregnant.
It was like a bomb had gone off. You'd never seen so much contrition and apologies. It was weird. That night they still partied but it wasn't as loud and ended much earlier. The following Monday à good mate of theirs was arriving in London and was gonna stay with them. Now normally, this would have meant ear-defenders for me and Nicola, lol. But they invited us to their flat for the party and my god, the kindness and respect they showed Nicola was unreal. One of them, called Richard, or Rich' (for months I thought his name was Reg', short for Reginald because of their accent when calling his name out) who was built like a prop-forward but had long blond hair and worked as a hairdresser in Golders Green. He sat chatting with us for hours and explained that all I had to do was tell them Nicola was pregnant and everything would have changed. I sort of lol'd and asked why? Rich' said that back home they were always brought up to respect a pregnant woman like they would someone old. Great bunch of lads who often talked about The Land of the Long White Cloud, and introduced me to what I called a buried bbq. Dig an hole, line it with rocks, wrap your meat, yams, etc in foil and chuck that in with coals and dirt on top of that (I think) and fuck off to the pub. I hadn't tasted better cooked meat EVER after a night in the pub. 😊
Scott L. Champion story Bro
Not like the Polish then, take a job, buy the car you wanted, & can’t even be bothered to say hello.
Your lucky they were kiwi’s & not Eastern European’s
On this side of the pond, the run-on sentences from the locals would have me blow my head. Folks here don't appreciate good grammar and prose. Cool story.
The new bearings also will not last long dry. 13:26
If you had paid your back taxes and resisted the urge to toss our tea in to Boston Harbour you too would have been in the same club as the Brits, Australians, New Zealanders and Canadians.
Genius. Methodical. Not just repairing but also making later services easier. Genius.
Loving your videos. Have zero knowledge of mechanics. My old man does. He was in the REME back in the 60’s. Used to watch him on the spanner’s back in the day. He’s in his late seventies now.
Keep the videos coming, I find them relaxing and interesting. 👍🍷
@@JohnSmith-yv6eq Hi John, I’d probably have to visit him and put it on. After that, he’d probably take to it.👍😎
This gents is how a real mechanic fixes vehicles, something that lost on today's modern cars and machinery.
Thanks Marty for showing a few 'tricks of the trade' a lot of young mechanics can certainly learn a thing or two from you.
Been a mechanic myself for about 27 years, nice to see the old school repairs with the lathe work as well, brings back some fond memories.
Marty your perfect. Your intelligent those other dudes givin advice need to be asking of you. Your a genius.
I love this type of restorative work. It’s not a complete disassembly of each and every part and restored to brand new quality, it’s a clean everything good, complete a full service and repair anything that would hinder its ability to be worked, then actually be used for what it’s intended purpose was created for! Absolutely love this stuff! Can’t freakin’ wait for the next part Marty!
I love the birds in the background!
You have a real gift Marty. Even when I lay all my parts out in a row, I have trouble reassembling them in the right order. Really enjoy your videos.
Haha Thats one good thing about videoing the fix, I can always go back and look at the footage if I forget how it goes together
A no-nonsense guy who knows what he is doing with the tools he has.
Maybe it's easier than I imagine, but I'm always impressed with how you find parts for all the old machines that you work on. Love the channel, keep up the good work.
see I like videos like this and THANK YOU for not putting in a bunch of bad music in the background!
the sound of nature is the ideal music in his videos
Easy to do when you've got all the right tools and all the perfect junk laying around. Put this guy in a junk yard with a drill and a screwdriver and he'll come out with a brand new Cadillac the next day.
Your corded cordless drill gave me a good chuckle. Good on you mate these “will it run” series are a treat to watch.
Good thing having a lathe around making your own parts, great fixing skills for sure !
Its old and worn out but gets the job done
Sure did, very talented mechanic skills Marty.
Thanks mate
You are welcome, looking forward to the next video with quality repairs.
@@MartyT So, I'm new and glad to see you do have a lathe. How about a mill? They come in handy when bringing relics back to useful life! Good job.
Man, you are acquiring quite the stable of working, vintage equipment. Very cool.
When you started making the gaskets it really brought back to me my dear old dad doing the same for the197 cc Villiers motor on our go-kart in the mid 70s. Nice on Marty from a fellow Kiwi
I do believe sir that you are what the brits would call a Bodger. Someone who can fix just about anything, with whatever they've got on hand. AS the full saying goes, Jack of all trades, master of none, but still better than a master of one.
if he can't get a part he just simply makes it..amazing
Yea, That is the biggest thing I took away. He is pretty amazing.
In Production from 1955-1959 nothing available!
The dozer is getting some lovin.
happy yellow machine. Incredible work!
Looks like you got a willing tool....GOOD SAVE..! Perfect for carving some more trails , driveway planing and firebreaks...!!
This brings back so many memories of when I was a kid with my dad my grandpa and my uncles in the winter time we would pull them equipment in and rebuild anything that needed to be rebuilt for next year's login season and watching you build that shaft up and milling it down is just exactly what my dad and my grandpa would have done thank you You're bringing back a lot of memories to an old man Good memories
Marty's Museum of Mechanical Marvels lol .
I watched how you make it run after being junked for couple of years and now these i love you vlogs keep it man
You do fantastic work on these old machines. I have watched about 4 of your videos and think they are really good and you know how to bring these machines to life and put them to good use. I admire your skills and love what you do.
Great job. Good thing about old technology was that everything was serviceable. Now a days waterpumps are not and they are expensive for equipment equipment like this. You are a lucky guy.
Oh my God!, you do have a power washer! GREAT! I've been watching many of your video's and all of the gear you work on, is stink-en dirty! LOL! Job # 1. Clean the project, before getting one's hands covered in dirt! LOL@! ALL GOOD!! Cheers from Canada. You sure do get great deals on stuff out there, would not happen out here. People are bloody greedy Junk sells for outrageous prices.!
I really enjoy watching your videos. I love working with mechanical things and I learn things every time I watch one of your videos. Thank you!
I do have to tease you about one scene, the bulldozer parked next to the swimming pool is just hilarious! 😅🙂
All the kudoos and a couple of bravos Few more barrels of oil saved
Summer time Marty, the native birds are making a racket! Nice.
Gotta love the tuis and bellbirds
Good fix on this. You are a very talented man.
you are one very clever kiwi well done sir
You are really taking me down memory lane. First I saw the DB 990 video, the first new tractor we had on a hill farm I worked on as a kid. When I left school I went to work for Bristol Tractors at Sough Mill, Earby, UK, as a trainee cost accountant (1969, £5 per week £4-8-4d) take home).
They had just completed development of a tractor, with cab, that could load at the front and tip behind ( The Bristol Taurus?). They were then taken over by Marshall-Fowler, a company which started out building steam traction engines.
Bristol were connected to Jowett Cars, made in Bradford.
Tusen takk for god underholdning. 👍🤗👍🇸🇯
I've changed a water pump before, but building up that shaft and lathing it down at 9:30 and making the washer and sleeves for the thermostat at 18.00, wow, that's next level there. And the seamless editing, tips, and description, nice job!
When that Dozer was built it was built to last! It’s awesome seeing someone take the time to maintain it!
Very cool to see you sort your way thru each bit of work using common sense, skill and the right tools.
and most of the work done on the good honest dirt outside lol. No fancy stainless steel workbenches here.
Very interesting as always a blow by blow account of what you are doing
Great stuff Marty T! Watching this in the middle of a snow storm in New England, what a joy to hear the birds in the background.
Excellent job Marty.👍👍
Nice fix on the water pump shaft, and the retro fit of a newer style thermostat.
Love these old pieces of equipment which you find and resurrect. Would love to live on a piece of property like yours.
Nice job of adapting the thermostat!
Where you find so many classics.
All computer free self maintainable machines as hiw they intended to be when they got designed.
Great you keep them alive
Your skills are amazing Marty - thanks for bringing us along with you..
Marty, I love the way you tackle each of these mechanical nightmares, and never give up on an engine!
Some serious funk in that cooling system. Looks like it's never been changed, eva! :)
Your camera work is very intuitive and shows just enough to understand the fix! The editing is spot on! Your dialog has got to be total fabrication, or you have zen master patience! Thanks for making the videos; they are addictive!
It's awesome to see a mechanic at work.......now days you mostly see parts re-placers...........Fantastic job Marty
I like how you time lapse some of your videos so we can see it all and it’s not boring! Thanks friend
Just come across your channel, brilliant, I love your laid back approach. Look forward to watching more.
Great Video Marty! It never ceases to amaze me the hours you put into this old gear! well done and thanks
That’s a beautiful old machine, there’s a deep part of me that wants to just clean, sandblast and paint stuff… it would look it would look amazing!
Awesome vid, looks like an interesting series!
Thanks again Marty for bringing back memories from back in the day. As a kiwi living through ‘50’s & ‘60’s the only way to buy a new car back then was to have overseas funds. So we had to learn the skills you show in your videos to keep our old cars running. Glad to see some kiwis are still maintaining those skills. 👍
a constructive tip from a mechanic Marty. when using wad punches go in to END GRAIN. it will cut much cleaner. enjoy watching you work on this old stuff.
Useful tip cheers
You are a true master craftsman and so humble. It’s a pleasure watching you do the amazing things you do.
Nice to see the way you improvise.
Always enjoy your videos! Great job on the repairs. $500. Great deal!
Excellent channel, every video is 100% no skip throughs. Great content, admirable skills, brilliant editing. Nice work fella, industrial resurrection par excellence! ... look forward to the next one!
Fantastic really enjoyed this one was beginning to worry the dozer was a lost cause and had been sold looking forward too the continuation
Best wishes to you Marty
Mark
That's what I like about you Marty, you don't let nothing stop you, if they don't make the part anymore you have what you need to fabricate one. LOVE IT brother!!! Can't wait for part 2!!! 👍👍☆Jay.
I studied Mechanical Eng. When i was young. Strip, clean, repair, lube, brings it all back, love it!
Very nice piece of work on the thermostat
Nice work Marty, Sadly New Zealand is one of the few places on earth where blokes will take the time to machine, weld and finesse old gear back to life using whatever they have on hand.
And in Martys case with nice straightforward language and Kiwi-isms lol
Not sure what took me so long to find your channel but love your videos.
i'm glad to see you had the seance to pressure wash the machine 1st nice old dozer, worth looking after
Impressive doing the shaft repair like that.
I've spent many years rebuilding worn out hydro turbine shafts, learned a few tricks along the way ;)
You have tremendous skills! A joy to watch.
There's no end to the diamonds in the rough you come up with. Brilliant idea with the thermostat. Nice work!
Stay tuned mate, we have some beauties coming up soon
Very good skills , welding and turning .
I'm no expert but I can usually get the job done
I find your restorations impressive you see beyond the dirt and damage. Inspiring
Always nice to watch a repair done by someone with good mechanical abilities and also a great in depth repair on that thermostat housing to make it functional again! 👍
How I wish that I had your gift of giving a old machine a new life. It would be so cool if you could restore and repaint it. Make it look like new. Good job!!!😄😃😎
As usual Marty great work repairing old machinery - you're thorough, methodical and have so many skills. Thanks a lot for sharing, I learn a lot.
Marty definitely has a knack when it comes to repairing thing's . Wish I had his abilities ! He probably makes Jay Leno green with envy !
brilliant watching you make the parts and giving live back to that old bristol
I really enjoy watching you work on these vintage machines.
Wow fixing that shaft in the water pump was Ingenious
Marty love watching you fix up all the old equipment.. your a very knowledgeable man.. keep up the good work 👍cheers 🍻
Superb problem solving, you are a master mechanic.
Thanks for the video Marty. I know nothing about engines, yet always manage to understand what bit or part you're talking about. Pretty sure that's part of the appeal to your viewers. That you don't lose it in a mêlée of technical terminology. Nice one.
The wiggly muffler (silencer) is awesome!!! Chitty Chitty Bang, bang's cousin. Nice Bulldozer you got there, keep fixing her, don't give up!
Skills and some thought , ingenuity goes a long way . . Just the way it should be . Top man marty .
One thing I learned with the dastardly little grease buddies on trailer hubs is that if you over pack the grease in it, it can blow out the back seal, I think it's better to hand pack your bearings before installation and fill the cavity by hand with grease and you'll be good for 30 years 😃
I like your background bird tweets. Looks like an interesting project. Thank you
Your work ethic is way up there. Love your videos and subjects..
I have watched you countless times fix different equipment, but redesigning the thermostat is very impressive again awesome job ! Are you self taught ,work with or for someone because your knowledge is vast , a true pleasure to watch thank you for your videos
my favorite gasket scraper, a wood chisel! I bout a bunch at a yard sale just to use for that.
Oh my. That poor old thing has lived a tough life.
Sweet, you talk life back into them by not getting in a hurry and taking the time to do it once. Great video
Your a bold man. Long sleeves and a lathe don’t mix!
Really resourceful. Nice work. Looking forward to the next project. Ps. Sounds much better!
I really enjoy watching these.
Very mesmerising and intellectually stimulating to watch these old machines been brought back to good nick by skillful mechanical hands, of an expert who has a passionate know how, mechanical diagnostic to keep the mind attentive.
Its a well spent time just watching your show even for anyone, with no care about machines.
Fascinating.
Great work.
Awesome work, and great narration. Thanks MARTY GOD BLESS.😇
You're an inspiration and I had never heard of a Bristol bulldozer until I watched your Channel I watched you buy it and bring it home and then this video not to mention the excavator videos were an inspiration also sincerely Derek from Ohio USA