Attempted Restoration of Mangled Excavator Bucket. Yanmar VIO 50
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- Опубликовано: 9 фев 2025
- This bucket is in bad shape. I thought I would just go buy a new one. Think again. $1300?! For a bucket?? Challenge accepted!
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Undergrounds storage. For you johnson.
Who needs a reason for digging a hole?
ruclips.net/video/ytWz0qVvBZ0/видео.html
A pool
What I really like is this trend with homeowners, homesteaders, and farmers repairing old equipment on screen. Not only is it fascinating to see what you guys are coming up with to make stuff work, but it inspires some of us to not throw away old stuff just because it is worn or broken. This is the ultimate recycling program, and it actually works.
I really love this series of fixing that excavator. Even if it isn't specifically relevant to me, it's just fascinating to see the real troubleshooting and fixing of these kinds of machines.
Good repairs , I would leave the welds as is and let the digging do the grinding. We also always put hard surface welds on anything that contacts dirt or rock .
Agreed. I have no idea why one would ever grind those welds smooth. It's equivalent to pre-wearing them.
I have to say, when he said grind them, by brain broke! Why on earth bring off wearing surface? I cant complain too much, he does come up with innovative solutions to a myriad of problems he encounters.
I weld up a few buckets every winter, basically just the way you did. We don't grind anything. The dirt will smooth out everything wit use. Well done.
Nice repair. The only thing I would have done differently, is weld solid the sides of the new parts you installed to help keep dirt, and moisture from getting between the metals... Thumbs Up!
Smart people are fun to watch. You are inspiring in deed. I learn something in every video. I can't wait for the next one. Thanks
When you have a sawmill, every tree looks like a potential stack of lumber; when you have an excavator, every pasture is a potential stealthy graveyard, but when you have a Johnson... ;-) Nice repair on the bucket, but I think the aluminum on the tooth isn't good. Fill with weld beads, grind to fit.
You were digging a large hole so that a big concrete anchor for the power pole could be set, so that it will be strong enough to run 3-phase power to your shop.
Any type of liquid with ph will cause your aluminum spacer to rust with the steel due to galvanic action, copper or brass would be better although it happens with all dissimilar metals for the most part but not as bad with those. Love the vids, keep em up
Just what I was thinking too.
Beat me to it. But on the upside, pressure from oxide jacking, if it doesn't eventually cause something to snap or pop, may help keep the tooth held in place long enough to be the next guy's problem!
I think I would have welded it to bring it back to specs.
Weld a 1/4" thick piece of scrap to top and bottom of the stud on the bucket. grind it down until the tooth fits.
Listen to@@DogByte2012 that's the way to do it. Remove that aluminium ot will be much better.
Haven't worked with excavators for over 30 years but that's how my father thought me to fix the teeth fittings of the bucket.
Btw you can get new tips for the ones that are worn down as well, alot cheaper welding them on than getting new ones.
Nice bucket fix!
The hole is not quite big enough to bury the excavator in...
Maybe an underground propane tank?
Cheers from Tokyo!
I was thinking the hole might be for the mother-in-law 😅
Looks like the hole you are digging is right beside the main road since you are digging beside the utility pole guy wire. A hole that big could fit a lot of poop for an outhouse with a street front view!
Can I tell you how impressed I am? I had no clue you could remove those metal pieces. I never knew those metal pieces existed exactly. I tell you, I'm learning a ton. I don't know how you do it, but you make any subject fun to learn and your videos are excellent to watch! ☺️
Those "reinforcing strips" are in fact wear bands. They are supposed to be made from a fairly wear-resistant steel rather than just mild steel. They serve the same function as the hard facing weld stringers on the sides of the bucket. Larger buckets often have wear resistant plating of the same material on the sides of the bucket as well as the bottom, rather than just weld stringers. Since they are wear bands, they are consumables and can eventually wear out.
There are companies that rebuild buckets, but I don't know if there are any in your area, or if they would charge more than the cost of a new bucket.
It’s weird too I usually put them going the other way with the ar flat stock. Instead of long ways. The way it is now it kinda does nothing
Yeah just watched the video should’ve put them going the other way and if you can bend them without a torch it’s too thin lol
@@joekartis7564 it's okay, if it wears out (which will be a long time because it isn't used in a commercial setting) he can weld more on 🤷🏼♂️
There made from bisalloy 80
@@wanderingtheoutback157 No , Bis 80 is a high strength structural grade , Wear plate for a bucket should be 360 - 600 brinell hardness which in australia is called Bis 360 , 400 , 450 ,500 or 600 grade , Bisalloy is just a brand name , there are many brands such as Hardox , Welten, Bisalloy , Austen and others , but the correct term is actually "QT Plate" which means quenched and tempered.
Love your video's . I noticed when you was cutting the flat stock with your cut off saw, that You had the stock flat. If you cut it in the upright position your metal blade will cut threw it like butter.
I've had metal up on edge like that catch, bend the metal, and snap the blades, on large cut-off saws. My preference would always be to have them flat.
you're burying a body in that hole, brother, i see through your antics
A moose for such huge hole?
Yes I thought it was a grave as well lol.
Mother-in-law!!!
That's for more than one body.
But he messed up the shut up part of, shoot, shovel, and shut up.
You have became my favorite channel. You are the most
“ accurate “ and correctly educational of all of the channel’s plus your entertaining
Cave in of ditch walls over 4’ deep have safety guidelines, such as 45* layback if your going in the ditch or at least have a safety person to help get you out. I know all of that depends on soil conditions. I have had 8’ - 20+’ bury me and D6 completely, I found out how smashing dirt and rocks can be. Even setting tanks , i would put up sheet steel and 6 x 6 cross bracing.
You are doing great, keep new shows coming.
Looks good. I have to scab a plate on my mini ex bucket we well. Just finished replacing the wear strips on my 72" skid steer bucket, took a total of maybe 15 hours work
Found your channel today. Watched the '52 Johnny rebuild and as a part time marine tech, I was impressed. Got yourself another subscriber today.
DITTO
I was a bit surprised you didn't drill a hole or two in each patch plate and then to a puddle weld to the bucket. Great vid. ALWAYS entertaining and usually educational.
At first, I thought the pit was going to be for an outhouse since sometimes, ya just gotta go.
Great welding job.
Some reinforcing sheet and going back over it with hardfacing, you should make it good to go again.
Hard facing is super important.
My dad is an agricultural mechanic. When I was young ihelped him rebuild a bucket on a tractor for our neighbors. Basically the neighbors just bought a steel plate and we cut off the bottom of the bucket then used a touch to heat the plate and form it into the right shape then welded it all into place and put on those reinforcing ribs the same way you did. As far as I know the neighbors are still using that bucket on that tractor so scrape their feed lot at least 15 years later. Might be worth thinking about just reskinning the bottom of the bucket
My Komatsu pc75 has the same tooth and pin style. They pack with dirt and tighten right up but you will want to weld the pins in. They tend to fall out if you dont.
I have been waiting for that slush in the diesel tank to come and bite you, been there done that. Stil always fun when somebody else than me is having a blast with diesel all over the place. Cant waite for the next one. 😁
Loved the fix to the bucket. Underground utility vault
Use some Hard Surface Welding Rod, Weld with Stick rods. I would also weld some plate inside the bucket. The only thing I would have done different is to stich weld the whole way around the patch to keep the water out. 😁 Why grind the welds, they are on the outside. Looks like you fuel tank needs cleaned out or the filter needs replaced. Now Dig yourself a Hole for a 500 gal. Propane Tank ! Great Video, Thanks for Sharing John !😃
Great video. The bucket will be fine. I bought a International Harvester 504D from my brother-in-law years ago and welded a new bottom on the front end loader on it. It was 3/8" mild steel and bent a little, but I used it to yank stumps, move dirt and push boulders around.
Man that clamp is awesome! I can’t tell you how many times I needed a clamp with that depth of reach! I need to make one of those
Nice miner repair but I would recommend replacing all the teeth so they wear evenly and save the old one incase you loose one
looks great
Looks good brother. I would have tack welded the tooth on there. For extra support.
Man I can’t stop watching videos like these repairs and all. Great job bud.
Always finish your weld seems where water, or moisture may get in. The pit looks like it may be for a septic tank. Close to pole anchors though.
Yeah that was my first thought although a bit narrow maybe?
I agree, weld it completely out. Inviting problems there
@@uhoh71 water obviously wasn't the issue to began with, there was nothing more than a little surface rust typical of an old bucket. Plus any water that may get in, can just leak right back out just the same as box frames on vehicles are not welded solid
@@TedP573 Box frames on anything if they get wet rust from the inside out. Them boat trailers that come with tracker boats are the worst. However, most vehicles aren't submerged. Now when it comes to excavator buckets, they are often submerged. Them seams then pack with mud holding it in. You're better off trying to seal them off. Course you got to know how to weld to do that 😁
Not only water, but dirt WILL pack in there and act just like hydraulic pressure, to start moving the weakest part out of the way.
Propane tank. Hope you didnt compromise those stays for the power poles. Youll know in the winter or if there a big wind load. good job on the welding. it should last the life of the machine.
Im loving this series of buying heavy equipment and doing repairs. I cant get enough
Fantastic job. You are living the life that most men would like to with all your tools etc, well me at least☺
I was waiting for that hole fill you made inside the bucket. Glad I wasn't disappointed. I already know what that hole was being dug out for, so I won't say. I did like that large clamp you had for holding the strapping down.
The hole is for "the wife went on a business trip" I haven't seen her since LOL. I'm impressed that you can cut a straight even line with a grinder!
Looks like a nice mass grave to me! 👍
I happened to stumble across your you tube site. I am very impressed with your expert craftsmanship! I am a fan and will continue to watch and learn. Thank you!
I learned to put Tungsten Carbide facing on farm implements during ROP welding in high school. Graduated in '82 and never welded once since then.
Really like your projects stumbled upon your channel. When your project with Mr "Johnson" started (only two years older than me🤫🤭) Yes the hole you dug ... 🤔 Tired of the wife? 😁 Angry at the neighbor who drives the lawnmower Sunday morning🤔 Big enough for the neighbor and his lawnmower.😎
a little more seriously. Collect rainwater to water the garden?
But believe more in a new sewer system with a cistern to collect you know..💩 Some wild guesses from Sweden.
You keep fixing that excavator with mostly sweat and a few bucks here and there, and the $20 grand will look like a bargin given your skill and equipment. I bought a fixer upper Cat D3C a few years ago and did the same thing and it's given me years of good service. I'm a retired engineer from Caterpillar and cut my teeth on the old 200 series excavators. Watching you pull that swivel was impressive. You do amazing work with camera coverage also.
the correct way to tighten the bucket teeth is to build the base up with a stick welder and angle grind it to shape. I have done several of these in the past where the teeth have become loose through wear. the aluminium will simply compress and it will flop about after a few hours running. Another tip for fitting patches, take a G clamp, cut off the top of the G frame to leave a leg with the screw, tack weld the cut off leg to the work peice and use the screw to press the plate down to conform with the curve as you weld the edges in place.
We used to hard face our plow shares. That really helped cut down on wear !
I am sure you know but for others who might be bothered "plowshares" is one word. Again doesn't matter but if we have to train the algo we should train it right.
@@MichaelMantion obviously your the one that it bothers!
That repair looks excellent !!
Worth the effort, that’s still a good bucket that you made better than new probably. Waiting to see you digging the new building foundation. 👍
Nice work on the bucket! Now I have to watch the rest of the videos on this machine! Scott
Nice job on the bucket patch. You saved quite a bit of money and it should last.
Pick up some hardfacing rod and spend a day on it and it'll last you forever. If the tooth falls off, you can buy replacement shanks and weld them on too.
That was a fun project to watch and just as much fun to do Im sure
I' m a BIG Mustie fan but....... glad I found you .Great videos from a talented humourous man. Biarritz France.
Good job on the bucket, I've heard people like to Bondo the pits and holes but that just sounds stupid when you have a welder.
A fine tip I'd add is you can also use the sharpe trick on the backside of the bucket. If there's a high traffic part the gets hit a lot you can draw a sharpe line over it and if it scrapes the line off you'll know where to add more reinforcement.
Nice repair job on that bucket.
Enjoy your videos of life in the real world of maintance and repair, I use a product from Eastwood that guys use on their car restorations called rust encapsulate, kind of salty but will stop and cover rust with a very durable product, very hard to chip off once cured.
Great series, not that I'm ever going to own an excavator...let alone restore one. I still find it very entertaining to watch you troubleshooting and fixing that machine. Now with regards to that big hole you dug...how is the relation with your mother-in-law?
Should've left the welds to give it a bit more wear area. Good job 👌
Good job. i would have used a full plate Also, weld the teeth, those pins to hold them are a temporary craftsman solution
Your level of cheapness and DIY...man after my own heart. Keep the videos coming!
This is an interesting repair. Well the hole you dug. For an underground bunker ?
Nice repair on the bucket! you might want to trim the new tooth so it's the same length as the old ones. that way it gets equal pressure as the rest when digging or prying.
That's why you should change all of them instead of one.
Again, Nice Job!!
When working on your hydraulic system hook a shop vacuum to your hydraulic tank. Turn it on when you change a hose. Minimal to no lose of fluid.
The hole is maybe for something power related, since you dug it right next to a pole. FYI the anchor rods for the guying of the pole at 8’ long. Just in case you were wondering how deep they went
Hole could be for rain water collector tank. Is my guess anyway... Looks fun! :)
Those support cables indicate that this is right next to a utility pole. The hole is kind of big for a trench for wiring or plumbing, and kind of small for a foundation for a shop expansion. It's a mystery.
One thing you could do is use it to dig a tunnel from your house to the workshop... Hey, it's working for Colin Furze, and with this you could beat him to the finish! 😁
When you were grinding the bottom face of the bucket to prep for welding, I noticed the sparks did not split and explode. Someone, somewhere on youtube told me that means something.
Mild steel so low carbon content. I think. Don't quote me on that. Except if I am right. Then quote me on that.
Sounds like an AvE, he’s where I find that kind of information. (Can’t remember what it means though…)
Will quote @-_gdude_- for the time being!
Great video- I have a yanmar B32 that I’m in process of fixing. Swing motor, gear pump...all the funs!
Love your channel and what a beautiful farm you have.
Watching from south Africa
14:00 be carful about cave ins
The more even you keep your work area hot, the easier it is to get every thing flowing and get an even weld.
And make spot welds small. They can hold a ton even if small and you can weld over them with ease.
If you run some horizontal welds on the bottom of the bucket it will trap dirt and will keep the steel from wearing out
Looks like a first rate job to me. Well done that man.
Good job on the bucket repair. $1200 will buy a lot of MIG wire and tanks of shielding gas. That's really nice ground you're digging up. Around here on the Central Coast of Kalifornia, if you dug a hole that big, you'd have a transfer dump load of large, soft limestone boulders.
Cold shelter for storing vegetables ?
Well done on that bucket repair
Depends on the thickness left between the ridges, maybe a full hard face of the bottom would have been in order. You'll see if you start poking holes through it
You did good with the bucket repair..
Can’t wait to see you making your own bucket ! Future vlog perhaps 🤔 lol.
From someone with no experience but love watching your channel great job 👏👏👏
Great machine you have there.
the shanks that you teeth sit on are wore down from not having a tooth on there. Usually to repair those you would either cut them off and weld a new one on, or the cheaper way to fix is to jsut build them up with weld and grind back down till the tooth fits tight on there.
I do this for a living making teeth for buckets and motor grader edges for Cat, hit up a scrap metal dealer and get some Boron steel or 1/2" high carbon it wears really well, nice repair
Very good Craftsmanship. Thanks for the video.
I'm welder you did just fine! Good video. Bring her back to life.
I'd say that's a nice, big trench to be able to view the soil profile! Nice, thick top-soil layer, then clay. For sure that thing is gonna come in useful for digging that stuff out!
--am soil geologist who has horrible clay soil but no excavator :(
If you have a stick welder, get some Stelite Rod and put some "hard facing" welds on the new wear strips. Like on the sides.
Great job... and why the hole? Let's see... a few options:
1 - just because you feel like digging a hole - because you have a digger!
2 - a small swimming pool... for the fun of it?
3 - a drinking trough for the animals... or,
4 - just because you felt like playing in the garden!
Do keep having fun... we enjoy watching you at it!😁
gonna fix my bucket in the fall. Mine looks as yours did. Nice to see how you did it.
Nice job on that bucket.
i gotta say i really like when you buy stuff and restore it and make it great again. :)
I enjoyed that video too. You might consider replacing the missing bolts on the side teeth on the bucket and tightening the others as well. Cheers Stuart 🇦🇺
When trying to clamp something like this buy or make some weld on welding clamps. You temporarily weld on the clamp and when finished just knock it off. I'd also hard face all the parts that are going to get the most wear.
Swimming pool, no doubt. A little small for laps. Either that, or a hole to bury the dump truck. Interesting video - you know a lot of stuff, so it's always interesting.
Great job. I’m new here. I have a grinder same size and a bigger 5”. I use the bigger one most of the time now. Grinding goes much faster with it and I use flapper wheels a lot too. Like your content 👍
I love your videos my friend always interesting and as a welder fabrication engineer I can tell you you made a good job of that
Some kind of tank obviously? I don't know what though 😯
my guess as well. rainwater cistern? propane tank?
My dream is to find a 20,000 minus 5 ton and do the same Making those pins is awesome.. You are a special teacher Thanks
Was a bit surprised to see the welder come out. Rather than shim the tooth, I would have popped off a couple more and checked how loose they were. Then you could build up the adaptor (the part still on the bucket) with weld and grind it back laying a straight edge along the nearby adaptors to get a more exact fit. The adapters are replicable, if your welder can handle it. If it's loose side to side where you can't compare with the straight edge, do a button weld on each side (like welding a penny or nickel) to each side and slide the tooth on to check fitment until it's tight. Then add more until you have a decent surface area covered.
Unless you like the striped look, I much prefer to have them go perpendicular. No bending and it actually allows dirt to pack in the gaps protecting the parent bucket.
The ground will smooth the welds. You have ground off some good wear on the bucket.
Nice work on the bucket, should work out well for you needs seems like your dirt doesn’t have a bunch of rock enjoyed the video and the workmanship best of all saving 2K on getting and installing a replacement bucket
Underground vault for firearms.
Burial site for family pet.
Burial of household trash like a lot of rural farmers do.
Building an in-ground hot tub.
In-ground safety shelter.
Food storage/root cellar.
Foundation for a large wind generator.