That was fascinating! Love the craftsmanship as well. What a neat process. Never would have guessed that's how it was done, but just one of those luxuries you take for granted. Thanks for sharing.
@@sasquatchboogieoutdoors9267 the chuck holds the handle but when it spins forward there’s nothing keeping the chuck from spinning backwards or is nothing to keep it from going backwards
Hey Randy, congrats on finding and restoring your kick winder. My spool of wire was fashioned on the axle as to not allow the spool to freely spin on the axle. Then the axle runs through 2 pieces of wood attached to the frame that act as brake pads. The drag is adjusted with a single bolt. It sounds a little complex but very basic. The spool is permanent on the axle, I just rewind wire as needed. Hope this helps and please keep me posted. I’d love to see your handy work!!! Good luck and God bless
@@sasquatchboogieoutdoors9267 Thanks so much I guess the brake was eaten but termites I my kickwinder I have the shaft and the spool looks like I can just build the brake
I'd reckon everything was " homemade" when it was produced. Simple design and simple construction even if a "factory" produced it. Now everything's plastic and disposable. Makes one wish for the old days that weren't that long ago when things could be fixed and still function if you had the wherewithall and desire to do so. Crazy how times have changed in just a few short years. 50 yrs ago fixing things was possible, not many realize progress wasn't really progress. More like a dumbing down of society as a whole.
I'm not sure, there is nothing motorized about the kick winder so I would assume that it would be permissible. Either way they would do a much better job than me. Hope you enjoyed my attempt.
@@sasquatchboogieoutdoors9267 Yes I was thinking it would be cool to make a hand whisk broom for the workbench / lathe area. Have you ever tried making a smaller hand whisk broom?
Good job!
@@stevecook9606 thanks!!
Awesome! How does it maintain even tension on the steel string? Is it just stubborn enough about rotating that friction's doing it?
That was fascinating! Love the craftsmanship as well. What a neat process. Never would have guessed that's how it was done, but just one of those luxuries you take for granted. Thanks for sharing.
Thanks for the kind words...I ain't to good at it but I love the things of old.
Been looking for a kick winder for years. :) Great video!
Thanks,glad you enjoyed the video. I didnt know what a kick winder was until it kinda fell in my lap. Goodluck with your search.
This was a great video. You underestimated the quality of that broom. Looked great and I am sure it will last a long time!
Wow I really appreciate the kind words. I have another broom video coming soon. Thanks alot
we have a lot of brooms
Now you got a broom for your garage
I have started restoring my kick winder. Now I have ran into a problem with it. It will not lock the handle to keep the tension.
Do you mean the “chuck” will not tighten down on the handle?
@@sasquatchboogieoutdoors9267 the chuck holds the handle but when it spins forward there’s nothing keeping the chuck from spinning backwards or is nothing to keep it from going backwards
Congrats on 1000 views
Ok Im trying to save a vintage kickwinder i need information on how the wire keeps tension. I believe I have most of the parts but not 100% sure.
Hey Randy, congrats on finding and restoring your kick winder. My spool of wire was fashioned on the axle as to not allow the spool to freely spin on the axle. Then the axle runs through 2 pieces of wood attached to the frame that act as brake pads. The drag is adjusted with a single bolt. It sounds a little complex but very basic. The spool is permanent on the axle, I just rewind wire as needed. Hope this helps and please keep me posted. I’d love to see your handy work!!! Good luck and God bless
If you look close you can see the wooden brake at the 2min mark.
@@sasquatchboogieoutdoors9267 Thanks so much I guess the brake was eaten but termites I my kickwinder I have the shaft and the spool looks like I can just build the brake
@@coalcountrycandles many of the parts on mine are homemade. That’s One of the things I loved about it… I have 2 more to rescue.
I'd reckon everything was " homemade" when it was produced. Simple design and simple construction even if a "factory" produced it. Now everything's plastic and disposable. Makes one wish for the old days that weren't that long ago when things could be fixed and still function if you had the wherewithall and desire to do so. Crazy how times have changed in just a few short years. 50 yrs ago fixing things was possible, not many realize progress wasn't really progress. More like a dumbing down of society as a whole.
Loved it
Thankyou.
What did you do with the broom after the video
Swept my garage! Haha
@@sasquatchboogieoutdoors9267 cool and thats your new car lol
👍👏👏👏👏
we have a company that exports to foreign countries
ОК
Just Cool, Rex 1.3K views, I know a Real RUclipsr. 🤜🤛
Ha..yea boy I'm plum famous..
👍👏👏👏❤🇭🇺🇭🇺🇭🇺
Thanks!!!!!
@@sasquatchboogieoutdoors9267Iam in Hungarie-ön honnan való????
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I wonder if Amish people use a machine like that, or if they do it with their bare hands?
I'm not sure, there is nothing motorized about the kick winder so I would assume that it would be permissible. Either way they would do a much better job than me. Hope you enjoyed my attempt.
@@sasquatchboogieoutdoors9267 Yes I was thinking it would be cool to make a hand whisk broom for the workbench / lathe area. Have you ever tried making a smaller hand whisk broom?
@@timeflysintheshop I've only made brooms on the kickwinder. Let me know how it goes.