Isaac is so candid with his thoughts and emotions, I would be a little nervous prepping that too. Love that there is zero pretentious bravado here, it's what it is 🤙
I like how he expresses his doubts and fears. He's not afraid to tackle hard and new jobs. When he finishes, the jobs looks good and it all works out in the end. Sir, you continue to make these jobs look easy. Wish my welds looked that good, even after grinding.
Especially when we consider that someone like me wouldn’t get ANYWHERE near that project; as it’s almost destined to fail. Sometimes we look at something and say it’s all kinds of flipped up and can’t be fixed…..but this dude just dives right in.
@@ricktalbott9611 Exactly Right! How did you know, Rick? Both the scientist and the artist are, like Jacob, open to learning on each effort. Someone said be careful because there is nobody easier to fool than yourself.
Will it work? Well you will never know if you dont try it. Thats whats so great about Isaac. Hes not afraid to give it a shot. My father was born in 1914 and he always said "someone built it, so you can fix it if it breaks"
Probably cast steel vs cast iron since it welded up so nicely and didn't immediately crack after welding. Very creative solution. Your "I don't know if this is going to work, but I'll give it a shot" attitude + ingenuity = pretty awesome result." My hat's off to you Isaac.
You and Curtis at Cutting Edge Engineering both working on motor grader components. He was replacing ring gear tooth sections. He's a fan of your welding expertise, and mentioned that in the comments when your name was brought up.
Yet another skill demonstrated. You constantly amaze me with your skills and the practical way that you come up with solutions and make it look easy. True sign of a master of his craft. Thank you for sharing your knowledge. 👍👍
Yeah, Its actually a 2" depth annular cutter but I forgot the wording when I was on camera. I try and only do one take on my videos so sometimes i mess up. oh well. Thanks for the comment and support.
Is this man a great teacher and craftsman or what??? I have a small farmstead and a 110v 135 amp mig for repairs and light projects, but whenever I have a project or repair, I ask myself, "How would Isaac attack this"!! Very methodical, even with repairs he has never done. Thank you sir!!!
Apart from your exceptional welding skills, I am in awe how you managed to center those sleeves. I'd have attempted making a flat template that would bolt to the other surface and then use it to transfer the centering on the broken piece. I'd still be on the job... You are a true welding master
So far our operators havent managed to destroy a circle gear box .But when they do I now know the secret formular to fix it . Thank you Isaac . you are a genius .
I like your attitude.....could be the rods, could be me. I have learnt more from you in 3 hours watching your vlogs than I have learnt from other places. Your not a tradesman, your a craftsman, and that's at the top of your field, and you're prepared to admit your stuff ups. Top work.
Incredible repair. The message that even if it hadn’t worked out there was value in the learning experience is a strong one. Thanks for taking the time to film it all!
Marvelous repair you did on that circle drive gear box ! I like the way you talk to us as you do the job but some times hard to hear you. I have a cat grader that has 2 of those holes with pull threads !!!! I’m dreading the day when I have to work on it !! 😂 Thanks you are great!!!
Issac? You nervous? about anything made of metal? You sir are the one most welders go to for help and inspiration. You Issac are the man. Thank you for your videos.
I appreciate that. I've been at this for a good little while now so I don't get too worried about most repairs. I've mentioned before that the parts come to me already broken so I cant do any more damage to them. they're already broke!😄😄 So, if I can fix it, great, if not, no problem, at least I would be learning something.👍👍
Nice repair. You are one of the rare ones who understand burning out the impurities of the cast in order to get the new material to bond properly. 👌 In 40+ years of doing repairs of all kinds, I've seen a lot of guys make a mess of a repair like that. You definitely have a knack for complex metal repair.👍 New to your channel and already subscribed.🤙
I am a welder and metal worker and I admit I am absolutely not knowledgeable when it comes to welding cast steel or iron. His welding style on it is new to me. I wish he could explain how he does it and give the info on the welding rods he use on casts
@@Frank-Thoresen There are several videos Isaac has done, but even he admits that any kind of cast is complicated to weld because the cast metal itself is full of impurities. Sometimes you are able to seal the impurities in the base pass of the weld and then just build on that, other times you have to grind, clean, and flux it to seal.
@@Frank-Thoresen I'm diesel mechanic of 40 years and have done in the field and on the road repairs that require creative solutions. I caught Isaac's channel quite a while back, but only started commenting about a year ago I think. Perhaps you can post a question on current post or see if you can contact him through his email, it might be in the description. He might even see this comment activity and respond back to you.🤙
I've been a welder for about 15 years now. Plants, shipyards, and fab shops. I like watching you work to see if I'd work it the same as you. Sometimes yeah, sometimes no, but it always comes out! There's more than one way to skin a cat, and I reckon you showed me one lol. I love your channel
An alternative and good method I found is to tack together and butter the iron surfaces with nickel. Once the iron is covered weld it out the rest of the way with mild steel. Works especially good in grooves and where steel repair parts are used. Or when you are running low on expensive nickel filler wire. Anyway in my experience what you are doing here should work well especially since you took the time to insure the parts are all on the same plane so when it's tightened down it will not pull too much on one side or the other. It also appeared that the nickel flowed in nice on the first try, that does not always happen. Great repair in my book. Cheers.
Hey, from an ald man: I admire you; you are part of ehat mekes life worth living. You keep the wheels turning doing the work that others turn their noses up at. Well done sir.
Watching you problem solve first, then begin the repair work, both keeps my engineering mind alert and and eager to see just how you set about making your ideas work.. As I am normally a noisy person you keep me quiet and happy to see your work through to the finished product, and happy to see a craftsman of his trade - Thank you for the video-- Ian - UK.
You are one smart and adaptive person sir!! It's a pure pleasure to watch you work your craft! Your taste in music for the videos ain't bad either. Thank you very much
Wow! That’s an awesome job. Really professional. Your problem solving skills are brilliant but they are nothing if you don’t have the ability, skill and experience to match. You have all of that and more. I salute you sir.
I am not a welder, machinist or fabricator but I follow for how great you are at solving problems on the fly. Nothing like real world experience. Makes me wana change careers. Keep it up brother.
You reminds me of the owner of the welding shop we had back in my home town. He used to say “Nothing is impossible, the impossible just takes a little longer and a whole lot more money”.
IMPRESSIVE!!! Excellent results. Thanks for showing even the parts where you didn’t like the looks of it and ground it down and redid it. Some people edit out the real world stuff. Your work is amazing.
Watched it again Issac. You ought to be very proud of this job. Had me worried there on the last position you trimmed off. You made it look almost like factory! Great job
As always great craftsmanship. In the past working in plants i found mig 035 ERNIFeCi wire with 75 25 gas works really good when you have to maintain position on cast.
Awesome repair Sir. Your very multitalented. Thought that was a awesome touch sending one your welding beanies/ hats to Cutting Edge in Australia. Keep the videos coming.
Results were perfect. Repair was well thought out before just doing a patch job. Saved several thousands of dollars with repair such as this. Very impressive.
Last I know and tried welding cast vertical is very difficult flat position preferred. Preheat and post heat is important to minimize thermal expansion and contraction to prevent cracking. Very well done repair nice machine work for a talented welder 👍
Wow, impressive work as always. Please let us know if it holds. It'd be really cool to see a picture of this part back on the grader so we can see where it goes and what its function is.
What a great SAVE. It sure helped the guy out. Very interesting type of repair completed. Called for jack of all trades and yep, you filled the billet. Thank you so much for sharing this save.
I'm with you on if it's already broke I can't mess it up trying to fix it. I enjoy your repair video's. As a machinist I've fixed a lot of broke stuff.
Awesome work man. I love watching you, being in the field myself, your natural talent and clear, to the point thinking is inspiring and makes me want to better myself. You are a very talented my friend, so glad I stumbled across your channel. 👍🏻
I agree. I think that is a large part (the lack of 'attitude' that many welders get for some reason) of why his videos are just pleasant and relaxing as well as instructive. The man is a true artist and a great pleasure to watch as he figures these challenging tasks out. I always walk away impressed even though he doesn't try to impress anyone. Doesn't get much better no matter the topic.
Well this turned out to be a really interesting video. Initially my mind was thinking brazing and repairing the thread with inserts of some kind. Interesting to see how you handled it. Thanks for the videos as always.
That is an amazing repair. A lot of guys would have thrown that casting on the scrap pile and ordered a new one. The finish you put on the job after the welding is incredible.
When I have used nickel rod in the past to repair cast iron If I have used a couple of passes of nickel to interface with the casting then use the mig to fill in or weld to steel.
great job , you made something useable again , hope your customer appreciates all the hard work you put in , thanks for taking the time to do the video
Just another humble American craftsman, keeping the country moving. No whining, no excuses, just getting it done. Thank you sir.
まみまま
amen
Quality a!!⁷66+!q!qq
A dying breed for sure
Well said
Part welder, part machinist, part fabricator, and major problem solver. I so enjoy watching you work.
Yes...
And talk.
@@dcolb121 wel he always has sometthing insightful to say!
Isaac is so candid with his thoughts and emotions, I would be a little nervous prepping that too. Love that there is zero pretentious bravado here, it's what it is 🤙
I like how he expresses his doubts and fears. He's not afraid to tackle hard and new jobs. When he finishes, the jobs looks good and it all works out in the end. Sir, you continue to make these jobs look easy. Wish my welds looked that good, even after grinding.
Especially when we consider that someone like me wouldn’t get ANYWHERE near that project; as it’s almost destined to fail. Sometimes we look at something and say it’s all kinds of flipped up and can’t be fixed…..but this dude just dives right in.
He pretends he cant do it but when he does he looks like a genius, its like my dad same thing he does n we all think hes a master, well he is
To me he's a scientist and and artist to make his jobs work !
@@ricktalbott9611 Exactly Right! How did you know, Rick? Both the scientist and the artist are, like Jacob, open to learning on each effort. Someone said be careful because there is nobody easier to fool than yourself.
Just a fresh Caterpillar-yellow spray paint and that part as good as new
Will it work? Well you will never know if you dont try it. Thats whats so great about Isaac. Hes not afraid to give it a shot. My father was born in 1914 and he always said "someone built it, so you can fix it if it breaks"
Thats right. If someone built it, it can be repaired!
Probably cast steel vs cast iron since it welded up so nicely and didn't immediately crack after welding. Very creative solution. Your "I don't know if this is going to work, but I'll give it a shot" attitude + ingenuity = pretty awesome result." My hat's off to you Isaac.
You and Curtis at Cutting Edge Engineering both working on motor grader components. He was replacing ring gear tooth sections. He's a fan of your welding expertise, and mentioned that in the comments when your name was brought up.
Curtis is a very smart lad. I never miss his vids or IC Weld. Always interesting and varied with high quality outcomes from both guys.
Absolutely, Cutting Edge Engineering Australia is another brilliant channel!
was about to comment that!! must be a common part that breaks.
Love watching Curtis at Cutting Edge, every job is Amazing, and the out takes are funny as fuck.
Love watching Curtis at Cutting Edge, every job is Amazing, and the out takes are funny as fuck.
Damn son, that end-result looks fantastic.
Yet another skill demonstrated. You constantly amaze me with your skills and the practical way that you come up with solutions and make it look easy. True sign of a master of his craft. Thank you for sharing your knowledge. 👍👍
You have a very likable personality. Those cutters are called " End Mills" Nice job, love your videos.
Yeah, Its actually a 2" depth annular cutter but I forgot the wording when I was on camera. I try and only do one take on my videos so sometimes i mess up. oh well. Thanks for the comment and support.
Is this man a great teacher and craftsman or what??? I have a small farmstead and a 110v 135 amp mig for repairs and light projects, but whenever I have a project or repair, I ask myself, "How would Isaac attack this"!! Very methodical, even with repairs he has never done. Thank you sir!!!
Glad its helped
Apart from your exceptional welding skills, I am in awe how you managed to center those sleeves. I'd have attempted making a flat template that would bolt to the other surface and then use it to transfer the centering on the broken piece. I'd still be on the job... You are a true welding master
There's so much more to welding than just sticking parts together. I'm always amazed to see how you guys figure this stuff out.
Certain metals require certain filler or rod and pre heat and post heat.
So far our operators havent managed to destroy a circle gear box .But when they do I now know the secret formular to fix it .
Thank you Isaac . you are a genius .
glad it'll help.
I like your attitude.....could be the rods, could be me. I have learnt more from you in 3 hours watching your vlogs than I have learnt from other places.
Your not a tradesman, your a craftsman, and that's at the top of your field, and you're prepared to admit your stuff ups.
Top work.
Thanks bud.
I don't praise many people these days, because I find it hard to find such pro's, but you my man, you're a pro at what you do, big respect 👍
I appreciate that!
Incredible repair. The message that even if it hadn’t worked out there was value in the learning experience is a strong one. Thanks for taking the time to film it all!
Marvelous repair you did on that circle drive gear box ! I like the way you talk to us as you do the job but some times hard to hear you. I have a cat grader that has 2 of those holes with pull threads !!!! I’m dreading the day when I have to work on it !! 😂 Thanks you are great!!!
You are like the bob ross of welding, so soothing but methodical, nothing is ever a problem. You are an inspiration
Thanks for bringing us along on this adventure. I believe we all want to know if the part worked back on the grader
and held up after some use.
Issac? You nervous? about anything made of metal? You sir are the one most welders go to for help and inspiration. You Issac are the man.
Thank you for your videos.
I appreciate that. I've been at this for a good little while now so I don't get too worried about most repairs. I've mentioned before that the parts come to me already broken so I cant do any more damage to them. they're already broke!😄😄 So, if I can fix it, great, if not, no problem, at least I would be learning something.👍👍
Nice repair. You are one of the rare ones who understand burning out the impurities of the cast in order to get the new material to bond properly. 👌
In 40+ years of doing repairs of all kinds, I've seen a lot of guys make a mess of a repair like that. You definitely have a knack for complex metal repair.👍
New to your channel and already subscribed.🤙
Thanks bud ;)
I am a welder and metal worker and I admit I am absolutely not knowledgeable when it comes to welding cast steel or iron. His welding style on it is new to me. I wish he could explain how he does it and give the info on the welding rods he use on casts
@@Frank-Thoresen There are several videos Isaac has done, but even he admits that any kind of cast is complicated to weld because the cast metal itself is full of impurities. Sometimes you are able to seal the impurities in the base pass of the weld and then just build on that, other times you have to grind, clean, and flux it to seal.
@@gwbuilder5779 Thank you for explaining
@@Frank-Thoresen I'm diesel mechanic of 40 years and have done in the field and on the road repairs that require creative solutions. I caught Isaac's channel quite a while back, but only started commenting about a year ago I think.
Perhaps you can post a question on current post or see if you can contact him through his email, it might be in the description.
He might even see this comment activity and respond back to you.🤙
43:45 minutes have never gone by so fast! It is amazing to watch you work, great job!
Thank you very much!
I was so impressed with your repair, I watched it a second time!
Thank you, thank you. haha
I've been a welder for about 15 years now. Plants, shipyards, and fab shops. I like watching you work to see if I'd work it the same as you. Sometimes yeah, sometimes no, but it always comes out! There's more than one way to skin a cat, and I reckon you showed me one lol. I love your channel
Thank you very much!
Gotta love your can-do attitude. Thanks for sharing!
That was a beautiful result and interesting video! I actually said "WOW" out loud at the finished product
Glad you enjoyed it!
An alternative and good method I found is to tack together and butter the iron surfaces with nickel. Once the iron is covered weld it out the rest of the way with mild steel. Works especially good in grooves and where steel repair parts are used. Or when you are running low on expensive nickel filler wire. Anyway in my experience what you are doing here should work well especially since you took the time to insure the parts are all on the same plane so when it's tightened down it will not pull too much on one side or the other. It also appeared that the nickel flowed in nice on the first try, that does not always happen. Great repair in my book. Cheers.
Warren!
A master Welder/Fabricator /video producer all rolled into to one man....nice work sir.
You are such a professional, always polite and personable. Stay humble my friend - it always brings glory to God.
wow that is some A+ number one work... amazing ... just wow ... it looks factory .. you sir are one hell of a welder !!
I like how even when you mess up you still show that you messed up! Not trying to cover nothing up. Very humbling
Very good job a pleasure to watch
Hey, from an ald man: I admire you; you are part of ehat mekes life worth living. You keep the wheels turning doing the work that others turn their noses up at. Well done sir.
Someone mentioned your channel over on Instagram so I came to take a look. Enjoyed the video. Great repair job!
Welcome aboard!
Super impressed! I like the humbleness of the welder too.
That’s a hell of a project.
You’re the man.
We’re close to the same age, but I want to be like you when I grow up. Much respect.
You know you're in for a good one when he starts out with the word yeek. Forklift is just another name for a portable adjustable workbench.
haha
@@ICWeld rod, rod size, amperage would be a big help. I have already copied your techniques, a BIG help. Thanks!
I like how you go about figuring out how to attack each project; you look at several options before deciding on a path. Nice work!
I'm thinking your problem solving skills are becoming legendary in the welding world!
Thnx for another background music concert also.
Absolutely solid repair. Good work!
I love the new welding view!
But wait, there's more! I've been working on a product to make viewing welds much easier, instead of taping the auto darkening lens to the camera.
Wow. I had my doubts. That was impressive. Such a modest guy 🏆
Watching you problem solve first, then begin the repair work, both keeps my engineering mind alert and and eager to see just how you set about making your ideas work.. As I am normally a noisy person you keep me quiet and happy to see your work through to the finished product, and happy to see a craftsman of his trade - Thank you for the video-- Ian - UK.
And on top of all your worck it is relaxing to hear you explain your worck , thank you isac.
You are one smart and adaptive person sir!! It's a pure pleasure to watch you work your craft! Your taste in music for the videos ain't bad either. Thank you very much
Do you know the name of the music?
@@Smartzenegger No Idea, but I like it LOL
@@johnmcgreevy742 #ImLovinIt
You make a good choice of music. Perfect for welding.
Wow! That’s an awesome job. Really professional. Your problem solving skills are brilliant but they are nothing if you don’t have the ability, skill and experience to match. You have all of that and more. I salute you sir.
Thank you very much!
If you please what rod were you using thx
@@joewest1972 Секрет
I am not a welder, machinist or fabricator but I follow for how great you are at solving problems on the fly. Nothing like real world experience. Makes me wana change careers. Keep it up brother.
You reminds me of the owner of the welding shop we had back in my home town. He used to say “Nothing is impossible, the impossible just takes a little longer and a whole lot more money”.
Our village craftsman has a sign "The impossible we do immediately........miracles take a little longer!"
Stavros
Exactly, Nothing is impossible. haha
@@ICWeld would u recommend going to college to learn how to weld or just getting a job in a shop thats doing this or both
Welder, Fabricator, Artist. You do it all
Always a pleasure to watch a master craftsman at his trade!!
Not a heroes wear capes.
Some speak softly and just try their best.
Cheers to the nicest guy on RUclips
IMPRESSIVE!!! Excellent results. Thanks for showing even the parts where you didn’t like the looks of it and ground it down and redid it. Some people edit out the real world stuff. Your work is amazing.
Wow , That was pure magic . I bet it will hold better than original and saved the owner big money .
Impressive as always and an ear to ear smile when it at the end came to the esthetics 😊
Surgical…some of your most interesting work. Great example of talent and creativity meeting fearless bounds to push limits…💪
Fascinating! I always like when needle scaler comes out to show the weld. You are quite good probably a 8k dollar housing if not more
And months to get one.
Great job putting the ears back on that odd duck and sweet job welding up that one with the dead end hole
Fantastic work. You and Kurtis both did motor graders today.
Another Kurtis fan here.
The master of you’ll never know till you have a go ! Well done
I would guess 90% of subs watch CEE channel also. I hope this channel blows up, Isaac deserves it. Not a lot of chit chat just work.
I hope so too!
I C a problem and I C a solution, Fantastic problem solving skills.
That is an art only a few masters can achieve. Thank you for sharing your skills with us, sir. Mesmerizing to watch!
Best welding channel on RUclips. 👍👍👍
Great thought Isaac...." The Impossible we do immediately.....Miracles take a little longer"....
Watched it again Issac. You ought to be very proud of this job. Had me worried there on the last position you trimmed off. You made it look almost like factory! Great job
As always great craftsmanship. In the past working in plants i found mig 035 ERNIFeCi wire with 75 25 gas works really good when you have to maintain position on cast.
Awesome repair Sir. Your very multitalented. Thought that was a awesome touch sending one your welding beanies/ hats to Cutting Edge in Australia. Keep the videos coming.
Results were perfect. Repair was well thought out before just doing a patch job. Saved several thousands of dollars with repair such as this. Very impressive.
I always learn something from watching him. Truly a craftsman! Keep the videos coming.
Last I know and tried welding cast vertical is very difficult flat position preferred. Preheat and post heat is important to minimize thermal expansion and contraction to prevent cracking. Very well done repair nice machine work for a talented welder 👍
Yeah on the heating. I think most cast will very brittle after welding due to chilling? Might look great and be brittle as glass?
This man is a master craftsman. Great job. Great video
Wow, impressive work as always. Please let us know if it holds. It'd be really cool to see a picture of this part back on the grader so we can see where it goes and what its function is.
Yes I agree did it hold? Love the videos!
If it's part of the gearbox, it probably goes somewhere in line with the drive line depending on drive train configuration?
It appears to be a worm-drive gearbox, which implies it is the drive box for rotating the blade circle frame.
@@tutekohe1361 Yeah, could be? Road graders are fairly complex machines.
Very nice finished product, craftsmanship is an art and you sir are an artist
Great job. Only thing is there are a lot of customers that don't understand the extra hrs that goes into a repair like this!
They only care that the repair is cheaper than a replacement casting.
What a great SAVE. It sure helped the guy out. Very interesting type of repair completed. Called for jack of all trades and yep, you filled the billet. Thank you so much for sharing this save.
I'm with you on if it's already broke I can't mess it up trying to fix it. I enjoy your repair video's. As a machinist I've fixed a lot of broke stuff.
That was another example of the master at work. Nice solution. It csme to you a mess and you sent it back as good as new..
Awesome work man. I love watching you, being in the field myself, your natural talent and clear, to the point thinking is inspiring and makes me want to better myself. You are a very talented my friend, so glad I stumbled across your channel. 👍🏻
I appreciate that!
Artistic...well done...enjoyed content and creativity...🤙
Great job! Smooth instructional teaching voice too!
Great to see the craftsmanship and salvaging an important part instead of just buying a new or replacement part. Strong work, sir.
Another great video my friend that “belongs on a shirt it’s already broken it can’t get any worse and you learn new things awesome job😎👍👍
something like, "It is already broken, so what the hell ..." 😆
Or “ it’ll hold until it doesn’t “
Beautiful job bringing back someone’s machinery to working order!!!☝️
That’s amazing work wish I had a fraction of the skills and experience you have. Hope to learn one day. Thank you for sharing
Many Thanks Isaac.. that was most interesting, seeing assessment then development of a process for something not done before
That is some piece of work. It is just amazing how you can take something that busted up and fix it.
I agree. I think that is a large part (the lack of 'attitude' that many welders get for some reason) of why his videos are just pleasant and relaxing as well as instructive. The man is a true artist and a great pleasure to watch as he figures these challenging tasks out. I always walk away impressed even though he doesn't try to impress anyone. Doesn't get much better no matter the topic.
Thanks for the kind words
Well this turned out to be a really interesting video. Initially my mind was thinking brazing and repairing the thread with inserts of some kind. Interesting to see how you handled it.
Thanks for the videos as always.
A very very good work Sir. You are a great welder. A german craftsmaster.
Nice job. Cast sucks to weld. Too bad we couldn't see the finished product in action on the machine.
That is an amazing repair. A lot of guys would have thrown that casting on the scrap pile and ordered a new one. The finish you put on the job after the welding is incredible.
When I have used nickel rod in the past to repair cast iron If I have used a couple of passes of nickel to interface with the casting then use the mig to fill in or weld to steel.
Very good job, just watching this makes me tired. You put a lot of hard work into this piece.
if i didn't know that they were snapped off, would swear they were cast like that, great job as always cannot wait for the next impossible job :-)
great job , you made something useable again , hope your customer appreciates all the hard work you put in , thanks for taking the time to do the video
Love the first piece of music. The Hammond Organ sound is cool.
You a magician with machining and welding. What a great video. All your videos are good. I enjoy and learn from all of them.
Beautiful, your a true craftsman
That part looks very expensive. You are saving these customers big bucks..