I love the attention to detail to get it right the first time. So many people do things half assed because they are lazy. Nice to see someone take pride in their work! Good job!
I wouldn't say its taking pride, it's more like having the self discipline and ability to do the job properly, too many only "think" they are good at what they try to do
One of my favorite things about your work is seeing the jigs you come up with - the way you suspended that hub with the box sections and clamps was just brilliant! Thanks for letting us watch you work this stuff out.
You said you were not paying attention, I disagree. If you weren't paying attention you would you have welded the center in upside down. Nice Job keep up the great work . I'm rooting for you kid.
Nothing wrong with that Oliver. I do like your quick and easy fixture to get the offset where you want it and your method to get the wobbly's out. Well done👍
Good work! I always hated dismounting and mounting tractor tires. I worked on farms when I was younger. It can be pretty hard work at times, and long hours, especially if you have livestock to take care of. I joined the Army for an easier job. It wasn't, but at least I didn't have to work cattle anymore. I like eating them but I don't like raising them.
Fair play to you for sharing with us the centre upside hiccup. You could have edited it out and we wouldn't have known. Seems to me no workshop can be without the essential equipment, of a big hammer and a lump of wood for those tasks requiring "persuasion". I was wondering how "out of true" the wheel rims may have been before you cut the centres out. Maybe you have given them back to the customer with a tighter tolerance than you received them! Great job thanks for bringing us along.
The older style 2 piece wheels on tractors were a great job, not suitable for heavy, heavy work but having 4 offsets that you could change with an impact gun and a bit of grunt in brilliant
Taking the tyre off really added a lot of time to the job but it was absolutely the correct thing to do, nice to see someone take the time to do it once and do it right.
I'm surprised you didn't put your 200mm spacers on the floor then set the rim over them, so your weld would have been facing up. Good catch on that flipped center. That would have been a bad day.
Found your channel via Paul & Hedley. The Silent Pool is close to where I grew up and is a magical place. The gin is excellent as well. Alas the legend was a Victorian invention to encourage tourism. It certainly worked.
Awesome job again ...I do miss my 9inch angle grinder moved to Canada 15yrs ago don't seem to have the same stuff as back in the uk ...thks again for your videos they always give some new way of doing stuff thks ...
Nice to see your Dad, you should introduce him , I often see him in the background. Looks like a nice dog who came to watch too. Nice job on the wheel rims !
Definitely the right call to take off the tyre. The heat itself from the gouging would cause the air to expand inside the tyre and it could potentially explode. Good job! 😊
Somewhere on You Tube there is an old video that a tire company made showing why you should dismount the tire when welding. Blowing your head off was the number one reason. Good call Oliver
While you are right about the pressure I always just let the air out. Never bothered to take the tire off and never had a problem with anything. Just make sure it's not a tubed tire xD
Amazing... You figuring out the steps and process to reconfigure the wheel rims... I did not know silicone was used to seal the weld bead... Seems I learn stuff on each of your videos... Thanks...
Very good job .what ever you charge for this kind of service its well earned hard work. I did a lot of this sort of work back in the day at least your looking after your lungs an angle grinder is a dirty tool. Keep up the good work.
Well done on trueing the wheels up. Reminded me of trueing up wedge lock rims on JD 4020. Set a spray can beside the wheel and roll it over tightening the bolts to get it even. I was yelling at the phone when I seen the second center upside down!😂 I had faith you would see before you welded it. Don’t blame you for sending the wheels back without the tires on them. Save the customer money 😁. Great video! Be Safe!
Hey mate, thanks for your videos, they're good stuff and I like the way you approach and clearly think about jobs. I've got a bit of a tip for you if you're interested about using heavy hammers, or more accurately how to reduce having to use them.... first off, I'm 6'4" and 120kg, and I'm not built for using sledge hammers either - Nobody is. So, the thing about hammers is that when you use a hammer you're always actually using two: there's the hammer, and there's the thing you're hammering against which is a dolly or anvil or forklift tine or whatever. The thing you're hammering against has a bigger effect than the hammer, it's hitting back at the same time as you are hammering. In this video you hammer out the centre after gouging with the rim sitting on the forklift tines. If you look at the video you can see how you're wasting a huge amount of energy by just bending the tines, which is effectively the same as having a spring between your hammer and the workpiece. If you lower the tines so they're on the ground then more of the energy from the hammer will be focused into the join you're trying to break and I guarantee you'll need a fraction of the hammering for the same work. One other tip is that moving the hammer twice as fast quadruples the energy, whereas doubling the weight of the hammer only doubles the force. So if you can use a hammer half the weight but swing it twice as fast, you'll be doubling the force of your hit. Hope you get some use out of the tip, and thanks again.
I love seeing all of the creative ways you're able to fixture and maneuver unwieldy materials in your shop, it really inspires some of the design work I do professionaly as well as how I operate in my home shop as a weekend warrior. quick question but do you know why the rims only get welded on one side? Intuitively to me it seems like welding both sides is stronger but clearly that's not the standard.
@@snowballengineering Its probably that the one side weld is sufficient to hold the rim , most people would do a double weld , ( belt and braces ) . I think it is purely down to cost by the manufacturer .
Gday, I think you did a good job getting the centre squared up as close as you did, probably closer the it was originally when you see how they are made, great job mate, cheers
Nice job!!! Good Idea mounting the wheel center on a spare hub! Hindsight is always easier... But, I might have done that before I started just to get a baseline for how far out of center it was and how much it wobbled when I received it. I also might have tried mounting the wheel on the spare hub and securing the edge of the rim to the table while I air arced out the wheel center. With the wheel secured in that fashion it may have been easier to "float" the wheel center in place and use spacers on the hub to create the required offset... Once it was tacked securely, welding it out like you did was just like having a rotary positioner...
Bit of a chew that one but you pulled it off marvellously. Great video, great techniques for truing the wheel, not many would tackle a job like that. Well done. 👍👍
Have an idea for the next video. Fabricate a stand for the rotary table so it can adjust to a vertical position so you don’t have to stand on your head to weld. I do admire your will to get the job done right though. Keep up the good work and Be Safe.
Awesome video. Would have been great to see how much the run out is on the standard wheel before you changed the offset. Wonder how true they are from factory?
My first reaction was it use threaded rod to suspend the nave (centre) of the wheel and then use wedges to centre it but your method works admirably. The only point worth making is that as the offset is now greater there is more leverage on both the steering and the bearings that will need to be monitored more regularly.
Lot of work to offset two wheels. But nicely done. So many of those big front wheel tractors come out the factory with the wheels hitting the tractor at full lock. Years ago had a brand new County. Chewed into itself every time you took a tight turn. Ie. Only one football field. Some manufacturers get over this by making the wheels lean out as you turn. Whichever it is a problem you don't get with the small 2WD tractor wheels.
that was a clever solution to what appears to have been a very complicated situation and for wheels that size on a slow moving vehicle I think the tolerance difference will probably not be noticable.
Very interesting, I thought the hub would have been welded from both sides, just shows what thought does. I used to moan changing a tyre on my motorcycle, those tyres on the tractor were beasts. Thanks for the post, enjoyed it. Keep well 👍
Pleased to see that you removed the tyre , as W.Jones also commented , it's possible to get a runaway fire or reaction inside a wheel and tyre with catastrophic results. More people should be made aware of this , as I was untill a few years ago. Great video as always Oliver.
one would think those rims came off a FELD Monster jam truck being so out. might have found a niche market Ollie - custom making wheels for UK / European Monster truck teams. for free handing gouging the centers out , welding them back in the rims came out pretty damned good
For a job like that you can use the smaller gouging rod and probably move along faster, because you don't have to be as careful and you can get a hotter burn at the rod's end making it easier to control your gouging area. (I would use the smaller rods when I couldn't get enough amps because of my distance from the machine, and you can move along pretty fast with those.)
💥great video 👍the arc gouged better on the second rim , it burnt of less paint on the outside . Thicker rod or your technique improved , nice one Mr Snowball.
Tractor tyres without the right tools are a pig to get off! I use my telehandler to push down on a block of wood on the tyre wall. Pops off every time without breaking a sweat
Soapy water is your Best Friend doing tire changes...add some dishwashing detergent to water in a spray bottle and lube the bead areas on tire and rim..lots !! The stiffer the tire the more lube helps...still going to be tough if you don't do tires lots...
That was an interesting and tricky job. Maybe you could have set that box section jig upside down on the forks and put the rim onto it. That way, it would have been the right way up to weld it.
😜 if you’re gonna try tyre removal, go for the biggest one 😅 wow that was a neat gouging free hand 👌🏼 might have been smoother on a powered foot pedal turntable 😝
Hi Oliver great job as usual pal just a thought maybe that runout is in the rotary table and not in your wheel your measurement seems very good to me good show from PAUL in AUSTRALIA 🇦🇺🍻
The run out was probably down to the leveling of the tyre when trying to remove it, buckled the time in places. I'd say get the the customer to remove the three before you take on the job. Great video and problem solving
30:39 could be an option to put the rim on the welding table. A good spacer under the centre plate. Looks to me a more accurate methode. Especially when u use a pipe you’ve made to length on the lathe. But as always, good job. 👍
Great vid👍. Dont mean to sound annoying but just looking at when you were gouging and grinding, you were bent over, its hard on the back over time and ya wont realise til you have trouble with your back like alot of us. Like when ya have the forklift there, lift up the forks and u be standing straighter. Maybe the gouging couldnt be done with the rim up straight, i dunno.
This is the problem with doing anything for farmers, they never have the intelligence, manners or appreciation to either wash anything or prepare it before bringing their equipment to a workshop for repair. I can say this after 25 years of this kind of work. Here in particular they could have brought those rims to any tire shop and had the tyres whipped off them saving this man and his dad a couple of hours of hardship.
I recall a comedy song by Flanders’s and Swan in the fifties or sixties called “ It all makes work for a working man to do”😊. It was good of the farmer to think of Snowball Engineering to sort. It all helps Oliver in his business.
I love the attention to detail to get it right the first time. So many people do things half assed because they are lazy. Nice to see someone take pride in their work! Good job!
Eh
True words!!
A great job! Thanks for sharing! 👌👍
I wouldn't say its taking pride, it's more like having the self discipline and ability to do the job properly, too many only "think" they are good at what they try to do
One of my favorite things about your work is seeing the jigs you come up with - the way you suspended that hub with the box sections and clamps was just brilliant! Thanks for letting us watch you work this stuff out.
You said you were not paying attention, I disagree. If you weren't paying attention you would you have welded the center in upside down. Nice Job keep up the great work . I'm rooting for you kid.
Nothing wrong with that Oliver. I do like your quick and easy fixture to get the offset where you want it and your method to get the wobbly's out. Well done👍
Thanks!
Considering the size of the wheel, I am impressed that you got the runout down to that, well done sir!!
Thanks!
Good work! I always hated dismounting and mounting tractor tires. I worked on farms when I was younger. It can be pretty hard work at times, and long hours, especially if you have livestock to take care of. I joined the Army for an easier job. It wasn't, but at least I didn't have to work cattle anymore. I like eating them but I don't like raising them.
The jigs you make to help you do the job, is sometimes more interesting to me than the job. 👍🏻
Nothing on the box tonight, to compete with a bit of gouging and welding....Thanks for posting.
Thanks for watching!
I’m looking forward to the book/video of 101 use,s of a set of forks that the forklift maker never listed in the sales pamphlets. Good work mate.
Fair play to you for sharing with us the centre upside hiccup. You could have edited it out and we wouldn't have known.
Seems to me no workshop can be without the essential equipment, of a big hammer and a lump of wood for those tasks requiring "persuasion".
I was wondering how "out of true" the wheel rims may have been before you cut the centres out.
Maybe you have given them back to the customer with a tighter tolerance than you received them! Great job thanks for bringing us along.
Excellent job. I was delighted to learn how you got the centres on straight! Thanks for another excellent video.
The older style 2 piece wheels on tractors were a great job, not suitable for heavy, heavy work but having 4 offsets that you could change with an impact gun and a bit of grunt in brilliant
Taking the tyre off really added a lot of time to the job but it was absolutely the correct thing to do, nice to see someone take the time to do it once and do it right.
Definitely the right decision to remove the tyre. Three guys were killed near me while welding a brake drum on a partially deflated scraper tyre.
I'm surprised you didn't put your 200mm spacers on the floor then set the rim over them, so your weld would have been facing up. Good catch on that flipped center. That would have been a bad day.
It would have been interesting to see the original runout.Impressive what you achieved!
Enjoyed that. You're always trying to show us something different each video. Definitely a tricky one. Well done you.👍
Bigger hammer! Bigger grinder! Great watching you skilled fabrication
Having spent many years site welding in all sorts of contorted angles to get to the job my heart goes out to your back. That had to hurt.👏👏
Found your channel via Paul & Hedley. The Silent Pool is close to where I grew up and is a magical place. The gin is excellent as well. Alas the legend was a Victorian invention to encourage tourism. It certainly worked.
interesting to see how you worked out how to do it. good job.
Oliver ain’t no fool, good job. This young gentleman has a very creative thinking problem solving mind. So good to see in a younger person.
I love the problem solving! Best part of the job for me. 😁
Awesome job again ...I do miss my 9inch angle grinder moved to Canada 15yrs ago don't seem to have the same stuff as back in the uk ...thks again for your videos they always give some new way of doing stuff thks ...
Good problem solving there, well done.
Nice to see your Dad, you should introduce him , I often see him in the background. Looks like a nice dog who came to watch too.
Nice job on the wheel rims !
That forklift makes a great mobile workbench.
Definitely the right call to take off the tyre. The heat itself from the gouging would cause the air to expand inside the tyre and it could potentially explode. Good job! 😊
Somewhere on You Tube there is an old video that a tire company made showing why you should dismount the tire when welding. Blowing your head off was the number one reason. Good call Oliver
Wheels of fire
ruclips.net/video/jBUVzgCHHuA/видео.html
Search for tyre pyrolysis explosion
While you are right about the pressure I always just let the air out. Never bothered to take the tire off and never had a problem with anything. Just make sure it's not a tubed tire xD
Amazing... You figuring out the steps and process to reconfigure the wheel rims... I did not know silicone was used to seal the weld bead... Seems I learn stuff on each of your videos... Thanks...
Excellent welds, we see you can do it all. Thanks for the video.
It’s an absolute pleasure to watch your video
Excellent work 👍👍👍 . Thank you for sharing. Take care of yourself 🇨🇦
Great job as always, removing those tyres was a pain.
Thanks for sharing
Thanks for watching!
Good job Olly 👍
Very good job .what ever you charge for this kind of service its well earned hard work. I did a lot of this sort of work back in the day at least your looking after your lungs an angle grinder is a dirty tool. Keep up the good work.
As always great attention to detail and a job well donw. Look forward to the next job.
It’s a good job you are wearing that air filter helmet, those shipyard welders during the war should have had something like that.
Well done on trueing the wheels up. Reminded me of trueing up wedge lock rims on JD 4020. Set a spray can beside the wheel and roll it over tightening the bolts to get it even. I was yelling at the phone when I seen the second center upside down!😂 I had faith you would see before you welded it. Don’t blame you for sending the wheels back without the tires on them. Save the customer money 😁. Great video! Be Safe!
Likened your honesty with your work.
Another interesting project ~ the alignment and concentricity was dam near perfect ~ well done and thanks for posting 👍🏻
Many thanks!
Hey mate, thanks for your videos, they're good stuff and I like the way you approach and clearly think about jobs.
I've got a bit of a tip for you if you're interested about using heavy hammers, or more accurately how to reduce having to use them.... first off, I'm 6'4" and 120kg, and I'm not built for using sledge hammers either - Nobody is.
So, the thing about hammers is that when you use a hammer you're always actually using two: there's the hammer, and there's the thing you're hammering against which is a dolly or anvil or forklift tine or whatever. The thing you're hammering against has a bigger effect than the hammer, it's hitting back at the same time as you are hammering.
In this video you hammer out the centre after gouging with the rim sitting on the forklift tines. If you look at the video you can see how you're wasting a huge amount of energy by just bending the tines, which is effectively the same as having a spring between your hammer and the workpiece. If you lower the tines so they're on the ground then more of the energy from the hammer will be focused into the join you're trying to break and I guarantee you'll need a fraction of the hammering for the same work. One other tip is that moving the hammer twice as fast quadruples the energy, whereas doubling the weight of the hammer only doubles the force. So if you can use a hammer half the weight but swing it twice as fast, you'll be doubling the force of your hit.
Hope you get some use out of the tip, and thanks again.
Great advice!
Awesome video, thank you Oliver. Great work
I bet those rims were out by quite a bit before you took them apart. Like you said so well, it's a tractor, not a Ferrari. Top work, Ollie!
I love seeing all of the creative ways you're able to fixture and maneuver unwieldy materials in your shop, it really inspires some of the design work I do professionaly as well as how I operate in my home shop as a weekend warrior.
quick question but do you know why the rims only get welded on one side? Intuitively to me it seems like welding both sides is stronger but clearly that's not the standard.
I’m not sure. All tractor rims with pressed solid centres like this are only welded on one side. Must be a reason but I don’t know what it is.
@@snowballengineering Its probably that the one side weld is sufficient to hold the rim , most people would do a double weld , ( belt and braces ) . I think it is purely down to cost by the manufacturer .
Gday, I think you did a good job getting the centre squared up as close as you did, probably closer the it was originally when you see how they are made, great job mate, cheers
Thanks Matty, hope you’re doing alright!
Great problem solving mate 🇦🇺
Nice job!!! Good Idea mounting the wheel center on a spare hub!
Hindsight is always easier... But, I might have done that before I started just to get a baseline for how far out of center it was and how much it wobbled when I received it. I also might have tried mounting the wheel on the spare hub and securing the edge of the rim to the table while I air arced out the wheel center. With the wheel secured in that fashion it may have been easier to "float" the wheel center in place and use spacers on the hub to create the required offset... Once it was tacked securely, welding it out like you did was just like having a rotary positioner...
Real witches cauldron job. Well done indeed, excellent.
Bit of a chew that one but you pulled it off marvellously. Great video, great techniques for truing the wheel, not many would tackle a job like that. Well done. 👍👍
Have an idea for the next video. Fabricate a stand for the rotary table so it can adjust to a vertical position so you don’t have to stand on your head to weld. I do admire your will to get the job done right though. Keep up the good work and Be Safe.
Good work. Thanks for the video and your time.
20,000+ subscribers, and you can understand why...great video, cheers
Thanks!
Awesome video. Would have been great to see how much the run out is on the standard wheel before you changed the offset. Wonder how true they are from factory?
Yes please to the drawbar and a look at the finished trailer thanks
Great video,could you have made up a plate to bolt onto rim and used a circinus roller with the gouger.
My first reaction was it use threaded rod to suspend the nave (centre) of the wheel and then use wedges to centre it but your method works admirably. The only point worth making is that as the offset is now greater there is more leverage on both the steering and the bearings that will need to be monitored more regularly.
Lot of work to offset two wheels. But nicely done. So many of those big front wheel tractors come out the factory with the wheels hitting the tractor at full lock. Years ago had a brand new County. Chewed into itself every time you took a tight turn. Ie. Only one football field. Some manufacturers get over this by making the wheels lean out as you turn. Whichever it is a problem you don't get with the small 2WD tractor wheels.
Thank you for sharing, I learn a lot, I enjoy your project 👍👍👍👍
that was a clever solution to what appears to have been a very complicated situation and for wheels that size on a slow moving vehicle I think the tolerance difference will probably not be noticable.
Very interesting, I thought the hub would have been welded from both sides, just shows what thought does. I used to moan changing a tyre on my motorcycle, those tyres on the tractor were beasts. Thanks for the post, enjoyed it. Keep well 👍
Excellent job you never know if you'd checked those rims before cutting the centre out they might have already been out.
Well done mate !
Thanks for the video! Is there a chance for a Q&A video?
really enjoy your videos. good job. hope your channel grows fast soon. greets from germany
Pleased to see that you removed the tyre , as W.Jones also commented , it's possible to get a runaway fire or reaction inside a wheel and tyre with catastrophic results. More people should be made aware of this , as I was untill a few years ago.
Great video as always Oliver.
I have done one before with the tyre on, luckily nothing happened but I’ve since learnt the damages!
Thanks!
Good work right there, always a pain getting them to run true again after moving the centres 👌
one would think those rims came off a FELD Monster jam truck being so out. might have found a niche market Ollie - custom making wheels for UK / European Monster truck teams. for free handing gouging the centers out , welding them back in the rims came out pretty damned good
Am I the last one to have not heard of an arc gouger? It looks a really handy bit of equipment.
It’s very handy. I’d never heard of one either in my working career until I saw one on RUclips.
I first came accross it on ICweld channel then CEE showed it@@snowballengineering
Seems like the PLASMA CUTTER would have done much cleaner job than arc gouging ?
Have you seen On Fire Welding. He has a hydraulic line boring machine which looks quite trendy.
Good to watch. You made it look easy.
Thanks 👍
patience of a Saint Oliver wow 👌
Great job.
For a job like that you can use the smaller gouging rod and probably move along faster, because you don't have to be as careful and you can get a hotter burn at the rod's end making it easier to control your gouging area. (I would use the smaller rods when I couldn't get enough amps because of my distance from the machine, and you can move along pretty fast with those.)
💥great video 👍the arc gouged better on the second rim , it burnt of less paint on the outside . Thicker rod or your technique improved , nice one Mr Snowball.
Nice work as always!
Thanks for the education I have to do that on some 12 inch Deere wheels
Tractor tyres without the right tools are a pig to get off! I use my telehandler to push down on a block of wood on the tyre wall. Pops off every time without breaking a sweat
great work as usual
You did the right thing taking the tires off the rims buddy
Soapy water is your Best Friend doing tire changes...add some dishwashing detergent to water in a spray bottle and lube the bead areas on tire and rim..lots !! The stiffer the tire the more lube helps...still going to be tough if you don't do tires lots...
Nice job. Thanks for sharing. God Bless
That was an interesting and tricky job. Maybe you could have set that box section jig upside down on the forks and put the rim onto it. That way, it would have been the right way up to weld it.
Good work mate.
Seen one done before he used thread bar to centre it and level just tightening or lossening the nuts it was hanging out of box section like u did it
I guess being a tyre fitter is some type of essestial service that most peeps dislike.
😜 if you’re gonna try tyre removal, go for the biggest one 😅 wow that was a neat gouging free hand 👌🏼 might have been smoother on a powered foot pedal turntable 😝
Hi Oliver great job as usual pal just a thought maybe that runout is in the rotary table and not in your wheel your measurement seems very good to me good show from PAUL in AUSTRALIA 🇦🇺🍻
Great video!
Nice job has always bud
Great job sir. Love the videos.
Where there’s a will there’s a way. Brilliant vid. You’ll get all the boy racers wanting to reverse the rims on their Vauxhall Corsa.😂😂
Great job - well done.
Well done! I *** hate taking tyres off, think I would have told the customer, deliver rims only 😢s
The run out was probably down to the leveling of the tyre when trying to remove it, buckled the time in places. I'd say get the the customer to remove the three before you take on the job. Great video and problem solving
30:39 could be an option to put the rim on the welding table. A good spacer under the centre plate. Looks to me a more accurate methode. Especially when u use a pipe you’ve made to length on the lathe. But as always, good job. 👍
Great vid👍. Dont mean to sound annoying but just looking at when you were gouging and grinding, you were bent over, its hard on the back over time and ya wont realise til you have trouble with your back like alot of us. Like when ya have the forklift there, lift up the forks and u be standing straighter. Maybe the gouging couldnt be done with the rim up straight, i dunno.
Good Work. Good video bro.
This is the problem with doing anything for farmers, they never have the intelligence, manners or appreciation to either wash anything or prepare it before bringing their equipment to a workshop for repair. I can say this after 25 years of this kind of work. Here in particular they could have brought those rims to any tire shop and had the tyres whipped off them saving this man and his dad a couple of hours of hardship.
Stupid farmer could bought correct rim and saved any work whatsoever! 🙄
I recall a comedy song by Flanders’s and Swan in the fifties or sixties called “ It all makes work for a working man to do”😊. It was good of the farmer to think of Snowball Engineering to sort. It all helps Oliver in his business.
A straight rim on a tractor wheel !. Never, not even from new, and even more so after the farmers have driven them a few times.
I reckon I would have carted those wheels into town and had the local tyre bloke do the job of taking them off!