it will apsolutlig hold upp dut that isent bichos of its dun godd that is bicos of it dusent have the long handel so the energi dusent gett ass muge stres on the hamer but apsolutli its a gud fix temporely meyby you dont whant to go to all the trubbel of meking an new handel from skrach but its isy to gett an old axe handel or slege handel and use that to do it godd
I'd say that its going to break rather soon as you introduced cracks into the wood. not only that but its probably going to loosen too, as the wood isnt shaped like the eye of the hammer.
honestly i cant confidently say a time, as i havent used a tool in such a condition, but I'd guess in a month, if its being well used. however, I could be completely wrong, as i am just guessing.
Wood very dry, not tight fit, wedges only introduced splinters in that direction without really closing the gaps (putting them in the other way), pivoting, etc Like Monty said some resin, glue, antifreeze, linseed oil which expands the wood and makes it more durable would work, but you would have to redo the wedges because they aren't doing much atm and just fracturing the hardened fibers At least its the right length to get the job done!
+Beesta Skarien Unless we have seen cracks in the wood which presage further problems, I think he did a decent job. The wood should be kept conditioned to prevent further shrinkage, but looks in good condition where he cut it. Sure, he could have done a better job matching the profile of the hole...
that's a weird coincidence, i was just fitting an old axe head on an handle minutes ago. my hypothesis about yours (and mine) is maybe the wood was so old and dried, AvE say to tighten up a loose handle you let em soak head down in a bucket of antifreeze, i dunno if i'd go with that but i'm gonna try to soak it up in boiled linseed oil to make the wood swell after it's fitted , it's a 30 y old+ handle so.. btw, it's conter intuitive but i learn recently that to fit a tool on an handle you put it upside down, and wack the bottom of the handle (now up) with a wooden stick (a hammer could break it) and the impact drives the head up (Y)
The power of the hammer comes from the length of the handle - it's called leverage. Hold a chisel in one hand and hit it as hard as you can holding the hammer right at the end of the handle - it's a skill that is acquired with practice, and one that won't be obtained using a hammer with half a handle.
Typed in repair broken hammer in UA-cam and watched two videos. First one was first rate with mostly a karma message to the planet about making the planet a better place through a work ethic. Then I watch your video. Please please please revisit that hammer sometime and try again as you could do better
Maybe look into getting a flatbar type tool ((vaughan, stanley etal.) For fastener removal. Withstands much greater loads than a claw hammer and no chance of breaking its handle. Save your nice old finish hammer for finer work. Nice collection of videos!
3 role of troubleshooting. 1 Do the easiest things first. 2 Don't rely on the guy that tried and failed prior, even if the guy it's you. 3. 90% of problems are between the driver's seat and the steering wheel. +AvE DOCET
I totally agree on you with the shorter hammers, but i find the short ones to be harder to take out nails. For me it's like a double edged sword, idk how it is for you :P
If your object was to break the hammer, well done you succeeded. When taking out long nails put a block of something under the head. The handle is long to provide leverage.
Well done ! The last 3 hammer I had to remake did get a lil bit loose after a month or two, I guess it's because of humidity, temperature variation and the fresh cut on the wood, maybe you'll have the same problem, so don't forget to wack it some more from time to time =)
Not a fan of short hammers, especially with the claw at the end, long handles give better balance when gripping it closer to the head for more accurate striking. Seems where you live it's pretty dry.. soak your hammers in either water or antifreeze occasionally and the metal will mushroom well before a handle breaks.
totally, I posted that comment 1/3 of the way through the video and I meant to comment again to commend you on fixing it with what you already had, the handle didn't look that bad once you had exposed some fresh wood, but a new handle would have lasted you a lifetime for sure. Still you sound like me and you love fixing stuff so fixing your hammer in 10 years isn't that big of a deal. Love your videos!
Noob also dont forget that back home i have a bunch of hammers i love, and will probably last me a lifetime. this hammer is one i'll probably leave outside in the rain and whatnot. :P
A short handle, is inefficient. The longer the handle,to a point, the more efficient it is. Like putting a 4 cylinder engine in a Rolls Royce Phantom. I had to stop watching such idiocy.
I don't get all the negativity, the title says quickly repair.. not a full blown revamp. Maybe you need a Hammer to hand quickly and don't have time.. it will last a bit even if not forever. enough to finish a job etc.
Actually the real point was genuinely fixing the hammer. And it works well for what I want. It's just stupid men that think everything is a nail and hammer handles have to be long.
Dude, I have a hammer rehandling video and I was researching tags. Did you know you have no tags at all? this video would be much higher in the SEO if you put tags on it. Just an FYI.
+BCtruck, rebuild, repair,repurpose tags dont do anything anymore, im able to make a living without using tags. pretty sure people like casey neistat dont use them anymore either. most tags are automatically generated and hidden from the user these days.
I'm not seeing any suggestions about heating the hammer and then pressing it onto the shaft so that when the metal cools and shrinks it will be a tighter fit. so i'll just throw that out there.
yeah i was waiting for that but your the only one to say it. i think i'll put it into a hydraulic press, i'll try without heat first. i think the heat required to make it noticeably bigger would burn the wood.
I don't think it would have to be that hot, maybe 300* F since steel expands 1 thousandth per 100 *F per inch in diameter. At least that's what I got from one of AVE's videos. maybe throw the head in the oven next time you bake something. Just throwing ideas out there.
Try sealing the top of the hammer with some epoxy.. maybe it'll help. and the wood seems too weak from its age and next time you try to pull out a long nail after one effective pull, try adding leverage below your hammer to not break it again Can't wait for another ebike Vlog :)
All that wasted time fixing it with tools. 2 Words: Duct Tape. If it moves and you don't want it to use Duct Tape. If it doesn't move and you want it to use WD-40. You already got yer hammer so now you can fix anything.
Hitting a hammer head with another hammer is really dangerous because they are both hardened. They are prone to chipping, which tends to send the pieces flying outwards at skin breaking, eye smashing velocities. Next time just hold the hammer you're putting the handle into upside down and tap on the butt end of the handle. Momentum will let you easily drive the wood into the hammer head, it looks like the hammer head climbs right up the handle into place.
+Rinoa Super-Genius Bend one of what? The hammer head? The wooden handle? There's nothing there to be bent. I've rehandled literally dozens of hammers and axes, never once had one bend, chip or break. Go watch Diresta or Green Beetle or Wranglerstar put a handle on. They all do it the same way for a reason.
+Rinoa Super-Genius Bend one of what? The hammer head? The wooden handle? There's nothing there to be bent. I've rehandled literally dozens of hammers and axes, never once had one bend, chip or break. Go watch Diresta or Green Beetle or Wranglerstar put a handle on. They all do it the same way for a reason.
let me just say this that hammer was meant to do exactly what you were using it for it's jut that the handle was quite old and dry it probably didn't have much life left anyway descent way to reuse the old handle though
It does work, however, if one takes the time to shape the handle head and use wedges which are not too large, the job will last a lot longer. From a woodworking perspective, the large cracks you have created with the too large wedges greatly weaken the job and are a sign of well, lets just say that I don't think you would solder a couple wires on a circuit board using a torch and big globs of solder. Carpenters and electronic workers have slightly differing skills and tooling tolerances.... In general, don't use wooden handles for pulling nails or major leverage jobs. Wooden handles generally break from such. Metal and fiberglass are better suited, and we uses what we have on hand to work with. There is fixing and there is "fixing!"
"I don't care what it's designed for, that's what I want it to do." I wan't a fork to spread butter. Sometimes shit just isn't meant to work... so get the proper tool.
@@RinoaL then you don't understand the quote... play the hand you're deal = the reality of not having the right tool. Not the one you wished for = physics isn't against you. Not matter what you do to that tool. Get the proper tool.
Sorry, but this time thumbs down. 1 for the short handle. 2 the method that you use to put the hammer on the handle .. You should drop the handle perpendicular to the ground, and let beat the lower part of the handle on the concrete and the hammer will enter the wood and will find its natural position(thanks gravity!). 3 would have at least could secure the hammer with a split cut.. With the method that you have shown it can be used at most 3 minutes. Unless you do not use the hammer as an ornament. (thumbs up for your channel however!)
yeah, after recording this i realized i probably like short handles because i inherited all my great grandfather's tools that he evidently did this exact thing with already. hahaha
Its hard to say when anything will break. But the way you abuse your tools, the age of the wood, and the shoddy repair you did its guaranteed not to last as long as a proper repair. On the other hand it only cost you time so I suppose its a fair trade off. But if you are going to use a hammer in that fashion you really should in vest in a hammer like this www.homedepot.com/p/Stanley-FatMax-20-oz-AntiVibe-Curve-Claw-Nail-Hammer-51-943/203899020
@@RinoaL seems some folks just don't know how to have a lil fun! As if you meant this to be the end all be all primer on handle repairs. Keep up the good work, and don't let the critics get to ya. For being a good sport, you gained a new subscriber.
@@RinoaL PS: I know this is an old video, but I'm just catching up. I love the critics who make suggestions that are just as bad, or worse, than the point they're criticizing. I suppose it gives them something to do...
Should be named "how not to" repair a broken hammer handle.
This is a great example of how not to do it.
maybe, but its working fine for me now.
it is a poor repair BUT it you cap the void in the head with resin if should last a long time
it will apsolutlig hold upp dut that isent bichos of its dun godd that is bicos of it dusent have the long handel so the energi dusent gett ass muge stres on the hamer but apsolutli its a gud fix temporely meyby you dont whant to go to all the trubbel of meking an new handel from skrach but its isy to gett an old axe handel or slege handel and use that to do it godd
Sing Van what the actual fuck
@@michaelkennedy8573 that's how english spelling should work lmao
Not very safe. Bet 20$ that will fly off in a couple months if you use it for more than decoration. Kinda disapointed in this really.
I did exactly the same repair years ago...been working like a champ
I'd say that its going to break rather soon as you introduced cracks into the wood.
not only that but its probably going to loosen too, as the wood isnt shaped like the eye of the hammer.
well then, specify a time you think it will break by and we shall see.
honestly i cant confidently say a time, as i havent used a tool in such a condition, but I'd guess in a month, if its being well used.
however, I could be completely wrong, as i am just guessing.
Wood very dry, not tight fit, wedges only introduced splinters in that direction without really closing the gaps (putting them in the other way), pivoting, etc
Like Monty said some resin, glue, antifreeze, linseed oil which expands the wood and makes it more durable would work, but you would have to redo the wedges because they aren't doing much atm and just fracturing the hardened fibers
At least its the right length to get the job done!
+Beesta Skarien Unless we have seen cracks in the wood which presage further problems, I think he did a decent job. The wood should be kept conditioned to prevent further shrinkage, but looks in good condition where he cut it. Sure, he could have done a better job matching the profile of the hole...
at around 4:10 you can see that cracks along the grain have been made
i like the correct use of the screw driver. Some people have no respect for tools
I have a hard time respecting a harbor freight screwdriver to begin with.
I think this gave me cancer.....
that's a weird coincidence, i was just fitting an old axe head on an handle minutes ago. my hypothesis about yours (and mine) is maybe the wood was so old and dried, AvE say to tighten up a loose handle you let em soak head down in a bucket of antifreeze, i dunno if i'd go with that but i'm gonna try to soak it up in boiled linseed oil to make the wood swell after it's fitted , it's a 30 y old+ handle so.. btw, it's conter intuitive but i learn recently that to fit a tool on an handle you put it upside down, and wack the bottom of the handle (now up) with a wooden stick (a hammer could break it) and the impact drives the head up (Y)
The power of the hammer comes from the length of the handle - it's called leverage. Hold a chisel in one hand and hit it as hard as you can holding the hammer right at the end of the handle - it's a skill that is acquired with practice, and one that won't be obtained using a hammer with half a handle.
Typed in repair broken hammer in UA-cam and watched two videos. First one was first rate with mostly a karma message to the planet about making the planet a better place through a work ethic. Then I watch your video.
Please please please revisit that hammer sometime and try again as you could do better
Maybe look into getting a flatbar type tool ((vaughan, stanley etal.) For fastener removal. Withstands much greater loads than a claw hammer and no chance of breaking its handle. Save your nice old finish hammer for finer work. Nice collection of videos!
The hammer broke because the train orientation is bad
3 role of troubleshooting. 1 Do the easiest things first. 2 Don't rely on the guy that tried and failed prior, even if the guy it's you. 3. 90% of problems are between the driver's seat and the steering wheel. +AvE DOCET
Grain?
next time to get the hammer handle into the head, hammer the bottom of the handle while you grab it upside down, so you dont crack the handle.
you mean like i did in the video?
like you did but suspended in the air, so you just hit the bottom of the handle and nothing else, it drives by itself into the head
Commander
thanks for the offer but ill have to pass.
/watch?v=Qyr4S3oBmi0 minute 17:00 that's what im talking about
sounds crazy lol
Yeah you're gonna end up having to do that again
That is going to break very quickly. The grain is the wrong way and you have split it with the wedges by not seating the head properly.
I totally agree on you with the shorter hammers, but i find the short ones to be harder to take out nails. For me it's like a double edged sword, idk how it is for you :P
After watching this I will never say anything bad about a unboxing video again.
Nice job fella. Keep up the good work !!
Lol 2years later 🔨🗣️
If your object was to break the hammer, well done you succeeded. When taking out long nails put a block of something under the head. The handle is long to provide leverage.
Well done ! The last 3 hammer I had to remake did get a lil bit loose after a month or two, I guess it's because of humidity, temperature variation and the fresh cut on the wood, maybe you'll have the same problem, so don't forget to wack it some more from time to time =)
That was a pitiful example my man,You really should know what you’re doing before you decide to make a video and and teach other people.
The art of craftsmanship is truly dead after seeing this.
damm its fixed?? try to wrap a wet natural cord on the cracks when gets dried will be very strong fix
Use a nail puller to pull nails and a hammer to hammer. The longer handle lets you drive nails into wood versus tapping nails with a short hammer
Not a fan of short hammers, especially with the claw at the end, long handles give better balance when gripping it closer to the head for more accurate striking. Seems where you live it's pretty dry.. soak your hammers in either water or antifreeze occasionally and the metal will mushroom well before a handle breaks.
thats your personal preference. and i think a type of oil would be better than water. like linseed oil or something.
Thanks for the video. At least now I have an idea of what to do.
if you have a loose hammer you can soak the head in engine oil, swells up and holds it tight
You like short hammer handles..... I'm betting you don't use hammer to often.
only every few days.
You should have cut slots for the wedges before you knocked them in.
That way the wood wouldn't have crack. Like a pilot hole for a screw.
So... You need a hammer to repair a hammer?
Seems as though she'd be better off just buying a new one. That wood looks like it seen better days.
Well… he did say quickly ☝️😌🔨
i just looked on ebay and that hammer is worth a good amount of money
Cool!! Looking forward to your surprise in your upcoming videos. Any clues??
good fix. I quit using wooden handled hammers. i am very rough with them and i have snapped many. The ones with steel handles are far better :P
RIP your elbows
the wood is rotted out dude...
yeah i know it is, but its still juuuust usable to make a 15 minute fix worth it.
totally, I posted that comment 1/3 of the way through the video and I meant to comment again to commend you on fixing it with what you already had, the handle didn't look that bad once you had exposed some fresh wood, but a new handle would have lasted you a lifetime for sure. Still you sound like me and you love fixing stuff so fixing your hammer in 10 years isn't that big of a deal. Love your videos!
Noob also dont forget that back home i have a bunch of hammers i love, and will probably last me a lifetime. this hammer is one i'll probably leave outside in the rain and whatnot. :P
I love old tools and am especially fond of the ones marked "Canada" or "USA" tools aren't made to last anymore...
European crap!!
"I like short hammers." Rinoa Super-Genius Sep 2016
A short handle, is inefficient. The longer the handle,to a point, the more efficient it is. Like putting a 4 cylinder engine in a Rolls Royce Phantom. I had to stop watching such idiocy.
+Sasha Whitefur it depends entirely on what your goal is, shorter handles are more efficient for me.
Rinoa Super-Genius
I was just making a dick joke, but in a free society we'd all get to use the tools we like best. :)
put the head in water or vegetable oil,before working with it, for a few hours, and it makes the wood stronger.
I cut off my finger. Oh well. I have 7 more.
Come on guys, its an effort 👍.. using simple tools get the job done.
The wood could just be weak
Why can't we have the hammer with nut bolt system.
Broke my grandad’s hammer now it is ready for another 50 years of use and abuse
I don't get all the negativity, the title says quickly repair.. not a full blown revamp. Maybe you need a Hammer to hand quickly and don't have time.. it will last a bit even if not forever. enough to finish a job etc.
Heads up don't try breaking a nokie phone with a hammer
since the real point of this video is to drive comments, I'd say it's bang on. lol
Actually the real point was genuinely fixing the hammer. And it works well for what I want. It's just stupid men that think everything is a nail and hammer handles have to be long.
the wood is cracked you should put a round wedge in tge middle of the wood that should keep it from splitting
This a joke??
Dude, I have a hammer rehandling video and I was researching tags. Did you know you have no tags at all? this video would be much higher in the SEO if you put tags on it. Just an FYI.
+BCtruck, rebuild, repair,repurpose tags dont do anything anymore, im able to make a living without using tags. pretty sure people like casey neistat dont use them anymore either. most tags are automatically generated and hidden from the user these days.
Ok then. thought I was helping. cheers.
I'm all for re-using and repairing, but if it was me, I would have made a new handle instead of hacking away at the old one
I like short hammers too. I want accuracy, not power
What you need is skill.
This is the tutorial i need after i tried to break a nokia
I'd give you a tip, when trying to remove nails, always put a little piece of wood under the head of the hammer, it works for me.
i didnt have a little piece of wood, plus i didnt care.
And there's that too.
I'm not seeing any suggestions about heating the hammer and then pressing it onto the shaft so that when the metal cools and shrinks it will be a tighter fit. so i'll just throw that out there.
yeah i was waiting for that but your the only one to say it. i think i'll put it into a hydraulic press, i'll try without heat first. i think the heat required to make it noticeably bigger would burn the wood.
I don't think it would have to be that hot, maybe 300* F since steel expands 1 thousandth per 100 *F per inch in diameter. At least that's what I got from one of AVE's videos. maybe throw the head in the oven next time you bake something. Just throwing ideas out there.
*****
1 thousandsth of an inch isnt that important with wood i dont think.
Try sealing the top of the hammer with some epoxy.. maybe it'll help.
and the wood seems too weak from its age
and next time you try to pull out a long nail after one effective pull, try adding leverage below your hammer to not break it again
Can't wait for another ebike Vlog :)
I've watched your videos for ages now , but really wish you would use some of your youtube money on some good tools !
😂😂😂😂😂🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣I'm dead
Add some resin to the top
All that wasted time fixing it with tools. 2 Words: Duct Tape. If it moves and you don't want it to use Duct Tape. If it doesn't move and you want it to use WD-40. You already got yer hammer so now you can fix anything.
get off of youtube.
Hitting a hammer head with another hammer is really dangerous because they are both hardened. They are prone to chipping, which tends to send the pieces flying outwards at skin breaking, eye smashing velocities. Next time just hold the hammer you're putting the handle into upside down and tap on the butt end of the handle. Momentum will let you easily drive the wood into the hammer head, it looks like the hammer head climbs right up the handle into place.
no it will bend one of them, like what happened to the lower one.
+Rinoa Super-Genius Bend one of what? The hammer head? The wooden handle? There's nothing there to be bent. I've rehandled literally dozens of hammers and axes, never once had one bend, chip or break. Go watch Diresta or Green Beetle or Wranglerstar put a handle on. They all do it the same way for a reason.
+Rinoa Super-Genius Bend one of what? The hammer head? The wooden handle? There's nothing there to be bent. I've rehandled literally dozens of hammers and axes, never once had one bend, chip or break. Go watch Diresta or Green Beetle or Wranglerstar put a handle on. They all do it the same way for a reason.
Deucetrinal
yes bend the metal, by me hammering it it smushed the metal down a bit.
That's exactly WHY you should never hit hammer heads together! Wood will never peen metal down.
A shorter hammer don’t give you as much leverage
let me just say this that hammer was meant to do exactly what you were using it for it's jut that the handle was quite old and dry it probably didn't have much life left anyway descent way to reuse the old handle though
For under $10 you can buy a new handle and not endanger everyone around you when the head flies off or that old handle breaks again.
when you try breaking a nokia phone
just use a wire brush and then hit it with some wd 40 to keep it from rusting works for my rusted out tools
It does work, however, if one takes the time to shape the handle head and use wedges which are not too large, the job will last a lot longer. From a woodworking perspective, the large cracks you have created with the too large wedges greatly weaken the job and are a sign of well, lets just say that I don't think you would solder a couple wires on a circuit board using a torch and big globs of solder. Carpenters and electronic workers have slightly differing skills and tooling tolerances.... In general, don't use wooden handles for pulling nails or major leverage jobs. Wooden handles generally break from such. Metal and fiberglass are better suited, and we uses what we have on hand to work with. There is fixing and there is "fixing!"
well i dont care about this hammer too much, this was just a quick and dirty fix.
Absolutely awfully done there bud
still works great
"I don't care what it's designed for, that's what I want it to do."
I wan't a fork to spread butter. Sometimes shit just isn't meant to work... so get the proper tool.
Play the hand you're dealt, not the one you wished for.
Meanwhile forks work fairly well at spreading butter. And playing the hand you're dealt means using a fork.
@@RinoaL then you don't understand the quote... play the hand you're deal = the reality of not having the right tool. Not the one you wished for = physics isn't against you. Not matter what you do to that tool.
Get the proper tool.
Seems you don't understand it. playing the hand you are dealt means using what you have, and if you have a fork, well that's what you can use.
This should be titled how not to hang a handle
He said quickly , not correctly
bro. we dont like what you did to your hammer
Never loan your tools to this hack.
I never borrow tools, I have so many.
Whats wrong fellas? Dudes cheap!
Turns out well
This video just needs a little music. How 'bout the theme from Dragnet? Dumb dah dumb dumb - dumb dah dumb dumb - DUMB!
Ha ha! What a Bimbo - hasn't got a clue about anything!
holy shit he commented
who, me? i reply a lot, but only if i have something to say.
Wut makes me think she is a poor lay as well?
I bet it breaks before 8:36pm on Oct 12, 2016.
ahhhh 8:36, youve been paying attention pretty well. haha
I tried to smash my nokia but this happened
That hammer is kinda ugly too
If you need a shorter hammer, it could be that you don't know how to use a hammer...Just sayin'...
Bodgy fix.
of course, its meant to be quick and dirty.
when are you going to do more electronic videos this video was too short
hopefully soon, but lifes been a bit crazy so maybe a bit from now. i got some surprises coming up for you guys.
Wrong hammer
but cool video
Wow, not how to do it and that pipe wrench is not a hammer.!!
Sorry, but this time thumbs down. 1 for the short handle. 2 the method that you use to put the hammer on the handle .. You should drop the handle perpendicular to the ground, and let beat the lower part of the handle on the concrete and the hammer will enter the wood and will find its natural position(thanks gravity!). 3 would have at least could secure the hammer with a split cut.. With the method that you have shown it can be used at most 3 minutes. Unless you do not use the hammer as an ornament. (thumbs up for your channel however!)
It's a trust method. Everybody use the long handle(even 1000 years ago), drop momentum, and a split cut. It's a millennial collaudate method.
are you drunk? you sound like you are.
Sorry. it's just bad bad translation...
7th comment!
I agree with you on short hammers.
yeah, after recording this i realized i probably like short handles because i inherited all my great grandfather's tools that he evidently did this exact thing with already. hahaha
Bet ya it breaks again.
thats too open-ended, specify a specific time for it to break by. and we shall see if it does.
+Rinoa Super-Genius I bet it breaks before the sun burns out. Nice fix.
+Rinoa Super-Genius 2 to 5 years thats how long my last.
Its hard to say when anything will break. But the way you abuse your tools, the age of the wood, and the shoddy repair you did its guaranteed not to last as long as a proper repair. On the other hand it only cost you time so I suppose its a fair trade off. But if you are going to use a hammer in that fashion you really should in vest in a hammer like this www.homedepot.com/p/Stanley-FatMax-20-oz-AntiVibe-Curve-Claw-Nail-Hammer-51-943/203899020
POVadventure
no thanks, i dont like newer tools.
You NEVER hit a hammer head with another hammer. If you don't know how to do something, please don't make "informational" videos on UA-cam.
well it wont hurt them.
@@RinoaL seems some folks just don't know how to have a lil fun! As if you meant this to be the end all be all primer on handle repairs.
Keep up the good work, and don't let the critics get to ya.
For being a good sport, you gained a new subscriber.
@@RinoaL PS: I know this is an old video, but I'm just catching up.
I love the critics who make suggestions that are just as bad, or worse, than the point they're criticizing. I suppose it gives them something to do...
You need tools a screwdriver lol
That’s a terrible job
Lol
hey this is a great ide
Please don't make any more videos. I feel like I will never get my 4 minutes back.
your 4 minutes were worth more to my ad revenue than to you anyway
So how much have you made on this in 4 years? Good job.
is this a dude or a chick?
neither he is a bitch
Are you kingding it duset exen go upp flyche it vill gett lose faster
sorry but you arnt wery god att handel tols ther is meny vedios on the web abot the topik wach them and try it it vill work better
Awsome
lol
Esta mierda esta muy cutre