I worked 23 years in Gelatin manufacturing. All the pipework used those quickly detachable fittings, and I believe filling the tubes with gas, when welding, also eliminated the risk of bacterial contamination as the product passed through. [Not that that's gonna bother you, in this application]
Yuppers, you knocked that out of the park! Really appreciate that you ran the pipes long! Looks and sounds awesome! Great walk thru and explanation of your process! Sad for Brown Sugar but we know she will rise again! Go LGKustoms, keep moving forward!
The 32 is turning out to be so cool. A real nice touch. The little man seemed to give you the right size spanner. He’s a star. Hope the repair on Brown sugar goes smoothly. Take care best wishes to you your family and friends. O nice drawings by the way. Tim.
Looking good Lee. Maybe I missed in the video but where do you get the piping from in Canada. I’ll be starting mine soon and this looks far more user friendly
Those long lengths that are highly visible ...... BEFORE welding, when they are long straights chuck 'em in a DIY "lathe" with a lawn mower engine and belt and turn 'em fast. Abernathy cloth and polish to a high shine.
If I was welding stainless tubing everyday it would probably be more economical to switch to nitrogen. But for the odd time I do it, probably not worth the extra expense of getting another bottle and regulator set up.
Im sure glad you don't polish . You need to get the right buffing wheels black is for stainless. I've polished for 40 years. Nice try it could be alot better. Stay safe
I’m glad I don’t polish either. I know it’s not the correct polishing wheels. I just made it work with what was already in my shop. And to be honest, I think it turned out great.
Ouch! Poor Brown Sugar! Looking forward to hearing that story. Cheers!
I worked 23 years in Gelatin manufacturing. All the pipework used those quickly detachable fittings, and I believe filling the
tubes with gas, when welding, also eliminated the risk of bacterial contamination as the product passed through.
[Not that that's gonna bother you, in this application]
Yuppers, you knocked that out of the park! Really appreciate that you ran the pipes long! Looks and sounds awesome! Great walk thru and explanation of your process! Sad for Brown Sugar but we know she will rise again! Go LGKustoms, keep moving forward!
Thank you
Looks awesome and sounds awesome!!!
Such a nice, clean and solid setup. I love those pipe clamps.
Thanks!
Another great show...liked that shot taken from low, with you in the car... cool and getting cooler!
Thank you
The pipes look awesome, nicely done, keep an eye on the little Guy so he doesn't grab onto one of those shiny pipes when there hot. 💯%🆒
I like lake pipes even better polished stainless, Great job Lee and Lux. Thank's for the Lesson on welding Stainless. Cheers.
Very cool looking...and shiny. Sounds great!
Looks and sounds so mean! Love it! Nice work Lee!
Appreciate it!
The 32 is turning out to be so cool. A real nice touch. The little man seemed to give you the right size spanner. He’s a star. Hope the repair on Brown sugar goes smoothly. Take care best wishes to you your family and friends. O nice drawings by the way. Tim.
just like waxing a ledge !!!! you are the best lol !!! looks great man !
Old habits die hard
As expected, another great episode and very excellent work. Can't even see the weld joints on the pipes.
Luv a '32! Looking good. 👍👍
Hey those pipes turned out awesome, nice job!
Thanks. I think so too
Great look! I absolutely love it!
I learned lots on this one Lee, thankyou!
Awesome
Looks and sounds great Lee.
Dude!!! Bad as"':!!! Hard work pays off at the end!!!✌️
Great looking exhaust. Sorry to see Brown Sugar like that but it is in good hands. See you again in a few weeks.
Wow what a great job. Very cool 😎 looking 👀.
Thank you! Cheers!
Very well done pipes, keep up the great work!!
Thanks, will do!
Looks and sounds great!
Nice job - I' ll remember the passenger side hint.
Top notch. Looks amazing.😊
Good job, sorry about brown sugar. Hopefully, no one was hurt.
Thankfully nobody was hurt physically. But it still hurts every time I see my truck…
Really good tips, thanks again
Very nice . Well done !
they came out great
Heck yeah!!!! Looks and sounds incredible.
Looks killer man
Thanks
Super Nice!!!!!!!!
Thanks!!
Awesome 👍
As usual Lee, another great video....:-) Good luck with Brown Sugars restoration....:-) & Happy Thanksgiving to you & the family...:-) Mike Lacey,Wa
Happy thanksgiving Mike.
Canada celebrates thanksgiving in October so it’s just a regular week for us haha
Another great job, keep them coming.
Looks great 👍
Thanks
Goldie Locks Exhaust "not too long" and "not too short" JUST RIGHT
👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍
Never get a roadworthy certificate in Australia with unshielded pipes that can be accidently touched . . . but crikey, can't beat a rod with mudguards
In Canada it just has to be under a certain decibel. These are probably pushing it.
Looking good Lee. Maybe I missed in the video but where do you get the piping from in Canada. I’ll be starting mine soon and this looks far more user friendly
I buy this locally from a place called Specific Mechanical.
That's a lot of Green rouge to polish that pipe.
👍😁
👍👍🏆
Those long lengths that are highly visible ...... BEFORE welding, when they are long straights chuck 'em in a DIY "lathe" with a lawn mower engine and belt and turn 'em fast. Abernathy cloth and polish to a high shine.
This sounds the like the black and white part of a workplace safety video hahaha
have you ever made a role bar out stainless
No I haven’t.
You can use nitrogen to purge your pipe. it is much cheaper
If I was welding stainless tubing everyday it would probably be more economical to switch to nitrogen. But for the odd time I do it, probably not worth the extra expense of getting another bottle and regulator set up.
Im sure glad you don't polish . You need to get the right buffing wheels black is for stainless. I've polished for 40 years. Nice try it could be alot better. Stay safe
I’m glad I don’t polish either. I know it’s not the correct polishing wheels. I just made it work with what was already in my shop. And to be honest, I think it turned out great.