Really nice job. I am restoring a antique Perfection kerosene heater stove parlor. And just ordered another one to restore for my sister, I never restored these kind of stove's before it will be fun. Thank you for ideas. 😊
I am a 53 year old woman who loves watching Restorations. I especially like it when I get to watch sandblasting it is the most rewarding to me because you can clearly see the difference as you're doing it that is my favorite and Restorations is watching the sand blast away years of dirt it's amazing to me just what a little bit of sand and pressure will do I haven't seen your show before this is the first one but so far I've only watched about 5 minutes of it and I think I will be subscribing
Thank you very much for your interest. I also love the sand blasting stage in the restoration videos. I have a little bit of room for now. But somehow I will solve the space problem and I will also sand blast the videos. :)
Personally I think you did a great job. The purist’s comments saying you could have done better are rubbish from people who have no idea how to restore something but think they have all the answers. Sure, there were a couple of dents in the fuel tank which would have taken an enormous amount of work to eradicate; well beyond my skill set for sure, if this was my work. Besides some imperfections give character to the piece and reflect some history. Thank you for all your efforts over the years, and all your future efforts. 🇦🇺👍
you probably dont give a shit but does someone know a way to log back into an Instagram account? I was stupid lost the login password. I would appreciate any help you can give me.
@Musa Tripp i really appreciate your reply. I found the site through google and I'm trying it out atm. I see it takes a while so I will reply here later with my results.
I love these old devices, there's beauty in the old school craftsmanship and functionality of design. Good job and thank you for firing it up at the end. You can't know how satisfying it is for your viewers to see that cheery glow. I do agree with another commenter however that you should have stuck with the original mica window. Both more durable and more importantly, more authentic.
Your wonderful comments and appreciation made me very happy. I would like you to know that I care about the criticism of the audience. Thank you very, very much :)
Merhaba; Tesadüfen videonuzu izledim. Hep Restarasyon videolarını yabancılardan izlediğim için (Maalesef) ilk etapda yabancı bir video şeklinde izliyordum. ancak 9.49 dk da "Isıya Dayanıklı Boya" kutusunu görünce inanamadım, sonra ufak bir araştırma ile sizin hakkınızda bir kaç şey öğrendim. Bu vesile ile sizi bu gayretlerinizden dolayı yürekten tebrik eder başarılarınızın devamını dilerim.
Merhaba Erhan Bey. Evet, haklısınız; ülkemizden izleyenler için (çok fazla olmasa da) böyle sürprizler oluyor genelde :) Ben de restorasyon videolarını hayranlıkla izleyenlerdenim. Gerçi son birkaç haftadır süs havuzlarına merak saldım. İzlemesi çok çok keyifli benim için. Geçmişte tiyatrodan kalan kendi işini kendin yapma alışkanlığından dolayı biraz el becerim vardı. Yavaş yavaş kendimi geliştirmeye sürekli öğrenmeye çalışıyorum. İlginizden ötürü çok çok teşekkür ederim. Sevgiler.
What would you use if you just wanted to clear coat a rusting heater. I've already fixed any bad rust so its structurally sound now and I think I want to leave it like it is and maybe do a matte or flat finish clear coat. Or as flat or matte looking as a clear coat could be? Thanks for your time.
Sorry for the late reply. There are paints that can be applied directly on rust, you can use them if you want. But if you like the current look, you can use clear varnish, but it also needs to be heat resistant.
Great job and fascinating to watch! I'm not sure if you've seen electrolytic rust removal but there is a good Instructible on it (ref. at end). I first came across this method from this article (hence my cut and paste comment from there!). I originally used the method on iron as shown in the Instructable, but I've since used it on other metals so "rust removal" is rather a misnomer. The advantage is it's pretty effortless and gets you down to a good surface without using dodgy or expensive chemicals. It's because of how the process actually works that you can do it on other metals. It works brilliantly (no pun intended- or was it?) on brass and it comes out like new. I have also used it to paint strip old diecast cars for renovation. It has a couple of advantages over paint stripper- it's cheaper and it doesn't harm plastic. After leaving a day or so then a wire brush usually sloughs the enamel paint off, although I have found some more modern ones it didn't. If you can't or don't want to strip down a model and take out the plastic windows, wheels etc. you can leave them on The +ve can still be an old tin can no matter what metal is in the -ve. What is actually happening is that the water is breaking down in to oxygen on the +ve and hydrogen on the -ve. because the oxygen react with the can, it gets rusty. because the metal doesn't react significantly with the hydrogen, it just blows off the loose rust and oxide like atomic sand blasting. Regarding power, I just use a redundant 5v2a wall charger from an old mobile phone. It works fine one the types of things I've used it on up until now, such as diecast cars, brass vases, alloy carburettors etc. I also realised fairly early on that the wire going to the +ve can rots away quickly so I cut open a baked beak cam and put a bend in the corner of the sheet and hang that above the solution to be connect to with a crocodile clip. The other part I use cheap garden zinc plated wire and then trail it out of the solution to connect to the negative. I remember which way to connect by -ve removes the rust, +ve adds the rust. ref: www.instructables.com/id/Electrolytic-Rust-Removal-aka-Magic/
I purposely won’t watch this video , simply for the fact that the thumbnail picture has already shown me the final restoration result. That took all of the fun and anticipation out of watching the video. This is my own personal opinion and I respect everyone’s take on this. If you do agree with me, let’s encourage the restorers to eliminate the picture of the final project in the thumbnail. The anticipation of seeing the project item come back to life is thrilling. Let your viewers have the pleasure of that. Thanks and much respect to all of the wonderful restorers out there that share their talents with us.
I agree. You'd get more views with the added mystery. They'd at least click the video and skip to the end to see, which is better than no hits. ...and start talking. A little history about it, how you found it, and what your doing to it would make a big difference.
I watched it specifically because I loved the finished product shown sat the beginning... Watched without sound and at 2x speed because I have ADD but if I'd been listening I would have enjoyed history too.
Wow, hard to have vishion with that! Then the turn around was honestly really surprising!!! I was wondering "what the hell is that?" Cleaned it looks amazing!
Suburb restoration my friend, I just stumbled on to your site and was pleased to see the fine work you do, I know this is 10 months ago but I did just subscribe and will try to catch up on your work. I like that you used the old wick as it was still in good shape so why replace it, bravo, Happy New year.
Just a thought. Maybe a little gas tank sealer in it to make sure there are no present or future leaks. Great job, by the way. I love these type of jobs with the tools at hand. Not everybody has the space or money for all kinds of tools. So seeing a lot of "elbow grease" put into something like this and leaving a few imperfections is nice.
Hello. Thank you very much for your suggestions and comments. Yes, you are right. I will definitely consider your suggestion about leakage in the following works. An image as if it had just left the factory after the restoration is not true to me. I think it should bear the traces of the past, albeit a bit. Thank you again for your attention :)
@@Restomaniac Hi, thanks for your respond. Could you share why you applied electrolysis for stovepipe ? I had seen this process in your other video - Aladdin heater series 15👍👍👍
Great job, that turned out gorgeous! But man, I can only imagine all hours you spent polishing that brass. Just a tip to help, not criticizing, to speed up getting some of the patina off brass you can 'paint' it in ketchup and let it sit overnight. it's not perfect but I use it all the time on vintage signs. you can also use baking soda & water, but it does make a mess. But great job! you definitely got another subscriber
Thank you so much for your great advice, Steve. I have heard of the use of ketchup in brass and even watched a few videos. As far as I understand it is ideal for a vintage look. I will definitely try it in my next works. Thanks again for your comments :)
Good work. I have a pretty 1900 Perfection kerosene heater that I would like to do if I find the time. I also have a smaller one but its a Boss No.8 I think is the name of it but it has the same internals, tank, same wick and whatnot as the Perfection. I'm thinking Black and Gold as well. Be Blessed
Thank you so much. Yes, you are right, mica was very deformed, it was falling apart in my hands. That's why I used glass. Thank you very much for your comments.
glass can actually explode, also it is fragile and you cannot be hard on it, when you took it out you broke it in the centre also age does not affect it at all, because mica is a rock
Great video. These restorations inspire me to learn the skills so I can pass them onto my little one whose shown a lot of interest in tinkering. My film eye noticed that you seem to have an interlaced field in your video that is making movement look unnatural as the moving object tears. It could have come about from camera or film editor settings. This comments probably coming in late, but keeping the camera set at 1080p and not 1080i, and maintaining the 1080p setting through the edit will make the video lose the tearing/ghosting effect of fast movements. For your video format, it only happens when dissembling and working on a piece which prevents the viewer from clearly seeing the effort going into your work. I'm off to watch more of these vids. Hope you found my comment to be helpful.
Hello. Thank you very much for your like. Yes, I was also very complaining about the disruption in the fast parts of the video, and to be honest, I couldn't understand why. I will definitely try this suggestion. It was a great help, thanks a lot :)
Nice restoration, but you should have put a timer at the end because I think your viewers would have liked to have known how long it took for that pot of water to boil.
Actually, I want it too. Also, like many restoration lovers, I love watching sandblasting. There is a place issue where I can place it for now, but I will definitely buy it :)
I have an antique kerosin/gasolin table lamp of Germany make. Machanism is like your above oven. It is made of brass. How you can help me to restore. Pl advise.
Hello. Thank you for your attention. These old products are actually produced with high quality. If there is no damage or hole in the fuel tank, if the wick is in good condition, you can reuse it with good cleaning. There will be no need to do much. I live in Turkey, I would like to take care of if I were in a nearby country.
@@Restomaniac thank you for your kind reply. I live in kolkata india. The glass chimney of this product so far I remember is no 10 which is not available here. Pl advise.
Elektroliz ile pas sökme yöntemi. Tuzlu su içerisinde paslı metalden başka bir metale pas aktariyorsun. Pasını sökmek istediğin metali eksiye, pası alacak metali de artıya bagliyorsun. 12 volt adaptör kullanılabilir. UA-cam'da elektroliz diye aratırsanız iyi videolar var.
Reyiz kanalını yeni keşfettim ve ilk defa bir Türk yani sen restorasyon videolarını çektiğini gördüm başarılar dilerim ama videolarda Türkçe de kullan anlayalım ne olduğunu
Every time you replace an still working original part. you end up decreasing the value of the object in total. It might not seem like so, but a small thing like the mica can end up being the difference between 20$ and 200$ at an sale. Therefore you should always strive to not replace anything, unless it's absolutely necessary.
When I saw all that corrosion coming out of the fuel reservoir, I had the most overwhelming desire to put 2 or 3 handfuls of crushed walnut shell media in and tumble it for 72 hours.
Really nice job. I am restoring a antique Perfection kerosene heater stove parlor. And just ordered another one to restore for my sister, I never restored these kind of stove's before it will be fun. Thank you for ideas. 😊
Thank you so much. Hope the video helps you :)
...оказывается она такая красивая!-, молодец ретроманьяк, очень хорошо получилось, здоровья тебе и удачи во всём, новых творческих успехов!!!
I am a 53 year old woman who loves watching Restorations. I especially like it when I get to watch sandblasting it is the most rewarding to me because you can clearly see the difference as you're doing it that is my favorite and Restorations is watching the sand blast away years of dirt it's amazing to me just what a little bit of sand and pressure will do I haven't seen your show before this is the first one but so far I've only watched about 5 minutes of it and I think I will be subscribing
Thank you very much for your interest. I also love the sand blasting stage in the restoration videos. I have a little bit of room for now. But somehow I will solve the space problem and I will also sand blast the videos. :)
Personally I think you did a great job. The purist’s comments saying you could have done better are rubbish from people who have no idea how to restore something but think they have all the answers. Sure, there were a couple of dents in the fuel tank which would have taken an enormous amount of work to eradicate; well beyond my skill set for sure, if this was my work. Besides some imperfections give character to the piece and reflect some history. Thank you for all your efforts over the years, and all your future efforts. 🇦🇺👍
Your valuable comments and appreciation made me very happy. Thank you so much. :)
Muito bonito não só a peca, como seu trabalho também parabéns 👍👍👍
Muito obrigado :)
What a fantastic job. I’ve now got so hooked on watching these restoration videos. I look forward to watching you doing your next project 👍🏻
You are very kind. Your interest and appreciation made me very happy. Thanks 😊
you probably dont give a shit but does someone know a way to log back into an Instagram account?
I was stupid lost the login password. I would appreciate any help you can give me.
@Edwin Robert Instablaster =)
@Musa Tripp i really appreciate your reply. I found the site through google and I'm trying it out atm.
I see it takes a while so I will reply here later with my results.
@Musa Tripp it worked and I finally got access to my account again. I'm so happy!
Thank you so much, you really help me out :D
I love these old devices, there's beauty in the old school craftsmanship and functionality of design. Good job and thank you for firing it up at the end. You can't know how satisfying it is for your viewers to see that cheery glow. I do agree with another commenter however that you should have stuck with the original mica window. Both more durable and more importantly, more authentic.
Your wonderful comments and appreciation made me very happy. I would like you to know that I care about the criticism of the audience. Thank you very, very much :)
Merhaba;
Tesadüfen videonuzu izledim.
Hep Restarasyon videolarını yabancılardan izlediğim için (Maalesef)
ilk etapda yabancı bir video şeklinde izliyordum.
ancak 9.49 dk da "Isıya Dayanıklı Boya" kutusunu görünce inanamadım,
sonra ufak bir araştırma ile sizin hakkınızda bir kaç şey öğrendim.
Bu vesile ile sizi bu gayretlerinizden dolayı yürekten tebrik eder başarılarınızın devamını dilerim.
Merhaba Erhan Bey. Evet, haklısınız; ülkemizden izleyenler için (çok fazla olmasa da) böyle sürprizler oluyor genelde :) Ben de restorasyon videolarını hayranlıkla izleyenlerdenim. Gerçi son birkaç haftadır süs havuzlarına merak saldım. İzlemesi çok çok keyifli benim için. Geçmişte tiyatrodan kalan kendi işini kendin yapma alışkanlığından dolayı biraz el becerim vardı. Yavaş yavaş kendimi geliştirmeye sürekli öğrenmeye çalışıyorum. İlginizden ötürü çok çok teşekkür ederim. Sevgiler.
Good jobs, you have golden hands, I like your work, I learn a lot of real things. Thank you very much.
Thank you very much for your interest, likes and comments :)
Nicely done, sir. This could be very handy in the winter when the power goes out, heat and cooking in a small stove.
Thank you so much. :) Yes, it is quite simple and useful.
Excellent job. Awesome little heater.
Thank you very much 😊🤗
Época do bom aço, e designer de bom gosto, aliada a saudosismo 👍🏽👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽😍
Obrigado pelo seu lindo comentário :)
Incredible restoration! 👍🏾
Outstanding 👍 i keep this in my library so i can rewatch.
Thank you very much :)
Harika bir çalışma oldu, tebrikler dostum. Böyle bir soba bulabilmeyi çok isterdim.
Teşekkür ederim 😊
Hola buenas tarde gentes de detros me encanta los que restaura .cuando yo hera niña mis padres usaban eso elementos .abrazo desde Argentina .
What would you use if you just wanted to clear coat a rusting heater. I've already fixed any bad rust so its structurally sound now and I think I want to leave it like it is and maybe do a matte or flat finish clear coat. Or as flat or matte looking as a clear coat could be? Thanks for your time.
Sorry for the late reply. There are paints that can be applied directly on rust, you can use them if you want. But if you like the current look, you can use clear varnish, but it also needs to be heat resistant.
Great job and fascinating to watch! I'm not sure if you've seen electrolytic rust removal but there is a good Instructible on it (ref. at end).
I first came across this method from this article (hence my cut and paste comment from there!). I originally used the method on iron as shown in the Instructable, but I've since used it on other metals so "rust removal" is rather a misnomer. The advantage is it's pretty effortless and gets you down to a good surface without using dodgy or expensive chemicals.
It's because of how the process actually works that you can do it on other metals. It works brilliantly (no pun intended- or was it?) on brass and it comes out like new. I have also used it to paint strip old diecast cars for renovation. It has a couple of advantages over paint stripper- it's cheaper and it doesn't harm plastic. After leaving a day or so then a wire brush usually sloughs the enamel paint off, although I have found some more modern ones it didn't. If you can't or don't want to strip down a model and take out the plastic windows, wheels etc. you can leave them on The +ve can still be an old tin can no matter what metal is in the -ve.
What is actually happening is that the water is breaking down in to oxygen on the +ve and hydrogen on the -ve. because the oxygen react with the can, it gets rusty. because the metal doesn't react significantly with the hydrogen, it just blows off the loose rust and oxide like atomic sand blasting.
Regarding power, I just use a redundant 5v2a wall charger from an old mobile phone. It works fine one the types of things I've used it on up until now, such as diecast cars, brass vases, alloy carburettors etc. I also realised fairly early on that the wire going to the +ve can rots away quickly so I cut open a baked beak cam and put a bend in the corner of the sheet and hang that above the solution to be connect to with a crocodile clip. The other part I use cheap garden zinc plated wire and then trail it out of the solution to connect to the negative.
I remember which way to connect by -ve removes the rust, +ve adds the rust.
ref:
www.instructables.com/id/Electrolytic-Rust-Removal-aka-Magic/
Thank you very much for your comments.
It is Tip Top once again--beautiful!
Very cool stove! Make sure you trim the wick so it burns even!
Keep up the good work!!
Thank you very much :)
I have an old kerosene stove at my house. You inspired me to restore it.
Thank you :)
I purposely won’t watch this video , simply for the fact that the thumbnail picture has already shown me the final restoration result. That took all of the fun and anticipation out of watching the video. This is my own personal opinion and I respect everyone’s
take on this. If you do agree with me, let’s encourage the restorers to
eliminate the picture of the final project in the thumbnail. The anticipation of seeing the project item come back to life is thrilling.
Let your viewers have the pleasure of that. Thanks and much respect to all of the wonderful restorers out there that share their talents with us.
Hello. I am so sorry to hear that. I respect your sensitivity very much. You are right. Thank you for your comments.
I agree. You'd get more views with the added mystery. They'd at least click the video and skip to the end to see, which is better than no hits.
...and start talking. A little history about it, how you found it, and what your doing to it would make a big difference.
I watched it specifically because I loved the finished product shown sat the beginning... Watched without sound and at 2x speed because I have ADD but if I'd been listening I would have enjoyed history too.
Wow, hard to have vishion with that! Then the turn around was honestly really surprising!!! I was wondering "what the hell is that?" Cleaned it looks amazing!
Thank you 😊🤗
Very good restoration. You've got one more subscriber.
Thank you so much :)
I like scrubing the rusty.......is nice 👍👍👍
Thank you very much :)
Beautiful work! Sure wish you could bring my old Perfection 630 back to life.
Thank you very much 😊 Sure I would, but I live in Turkey 😊
Suburb restoration my friend, I just stumbled on to your site and was pleased to see the fine work you do, I know this is 10 months ago but I did just subscribe and will try to catch up on your work. I like that you used the old wick as it was still in good shape so why replace it, bravo, Happy New year.
Thank you so much dear Wayne. If you find time, you can watch other videos :) Happy new year :)
Nicely done, sir. Brought back it's real beauty.
Thank you 😊
Great Work .I learn a lot of real things. Thank you very much.
Thank you very much for your comments and interest :)
Very nice. I really enjoyed your video. Keep the coming. I love watching other people work.
Thank you very much :)
Just a thought. Maybe a little gas tank sealer in it to make sure there are no present or future leaks. Great job, by the way. I love these type of jobs with the tools at hand. Not everybody has the space or money for all kinds of tools. So seeing a lot of "elbow grease" put into something like this and leaving a few imperfections is nice.
Hello. Thank you very much for your suggestions and comments. Yes, you are right. I will definitely consider your suggestion about leakage in the following works. An image as if it had just left the factory after the restoration is not true to me. I think it should bear the traces of the past, albeit a bit. Thank you again for your attention :)
you do a very good job on your restorations well done
Thank you very much :)
EXCELLENT WORK !!!👏👏👏👏
Thank you very much 😊
Friend, your works always perfect. Bravo.
Dostum yine mukemmel is cikartmissin. Ellerine saglik.
Teşekkür ederim Erdoğan Bey, çok naziksiniz 😊
What a fantastic transformation, well done!
You are so kind. 😊 Thank you very much.
Really awesome work!!!
Why did this process need electrolysis, trying to dissolve the dirt on the surface of copper?
Thank you. I don't remember if I applied electrolysis on copper in this video.
@@Restomaniac Hi, thanks for your respond. Could you share why you applied electrolysis for stovepipe ?
I had seen this process in your other video - Aladdin heater series 15👍👍👍
Parabéns 👏🏼 ficou incrível o seu trabalho.
Muito obrigado :)
Классно выполненная реставрация! Супер! Автор молодец! )))
Большое вам спасибо :)
Excellent job. Hope to see more of your work.
You are so kind, thank you 😊
Paint on the pipe, after the arson, began to climb. And so, everything is just super. A job well done.
Thank you very much :)
Very nice heater
Thanks 😊
Great job, that turned out gorgeous! But man, I can only imagine all hours you spent polishing that brass. Just a tip to help, not criticizing, to speed up getting some of the patina off brass you can 'paint' it in ketchup and let it sit overnight. it's not perfect but I use it all the time on vintage signs. you can also use baking soda & water, but it does make a mess. But great job! you definitely got another subscriber
Thank you so much for your great advice, Steve. I have heard of the use of ketchup in brass and even watched a few videos. As far as I understand it is ideal for a vintage look. I will definitely try it in my next works. Thanks again for your comments :)
Another option for brass, copper and a few other things is toothpast , it works well and can be washed off with water
Good work. I have a pretty 1900 Perfection kerosene heater that I would like to do if I find the time. I also have a smaller one but its a Boss No.8 I think is the name of it but it has the same internals, tank, same wick and whatnot as the Perfection. I'm thinking Black and Gold as well. Be Blessed
Hi bro 👋👋👋 awesome restoration kerosene camping stove 👍👍👍🔥👌🏽
Thank you bro 😊😊👍
What a beautiful thing. You did a wonderful restoration on it. I love how old things were beautiful to look at as well as practical. ❤️
Thank you very much 😊
Gorgeous! What a find !
Thanks 😊
Stove is a cute size, but the design of each part is elaborate and wonderful.
Thank you for your coments 😊
Great job, but I think I would have kept the mica window. Glass has a tendency to crack under high heat.
Thank you so much. Yes, you are right, mica was very deformed, it was falling apart in my hands. That's why I used glass. Thank you very much for your comments.
glass can actually explode, also it is fragile and you cannot be hard on it, when you took it out you broke it in the centre also age does not affect it at all, because mica is a rock
Ellerine sağlık yenilerini sabırsızlıkla bekliyorum👍
Teşekkürler canım :)
FANTASTIC STAF, USED FOR MANY YEARS,THE PROBLEM IS THE COOLING ONCE YOU CLOSED IT IT HAS TO BE PUT FAR AWAY FOR COOLING.
Thank you very much for your comments and criticism.
Beautiful design well worth restoring .
Thank you :)
Золотые у вас руки! Супер 👍♥️
Вы очень любезны, спасибо :)
your doing a fantastic job
Thank you very much :)
good job, nice video.
Thank you :)
Artık pusudayım ve takipteyim Türk olman ayrıcalık zaten benim için ❤️ Desteğimi esirgemiyecem teşekkürler.
Teşekkür ederim, çok memnun oldum 😊
A labor of love and it shows
The only thing I would have done differently was use period correct hardware,, but for me small details mean a lot.
Thanks a lot for your comments.
Great job, looks good.
Thank you very much :)
تسلم يداك 👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻🇮🇶🇮🇶🇮🇶🇮🇶👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻
مرحبا. أنا أستخدم مترجم جوجل لذلك لا يمكنني فهم ما تقوله تمامًا.
Mükemmel 👌Elleriniz dert görmesin.
Çok teşekkür ederim Ayhan Bey, saygılar 😊
All the time i like your jobs
Thank you very much :)
*wow it looks great, after you recover it comes alive*
Thank you very much 😊
Great video. These restorations inspire me to learn the skills so I can pass them onto my little one whose shown a lot of interest in tinkering.
My film eye noticed that you seem to have an interlaced field in your video that is making movement look unnatural as the moving object tears. It could have come about from camera or film editor settings. This comments probably coming in late, but keeping the camera set at 1080p and not 1080i, and maintaining the 1080p setting through the edit will make the video lose the tearing/ghosting effect of fast movements. For your video format, it only happens when dissembling and working on a piece which prevents the viewer from clearly seeing the effort going into your work.
I'm off to watch more of these vids. Hope you found my comment to be helpful.
Hello. Thank you very much for your like. Yes, I was also very complaining about the disruption in the fast parts of the video, and to be honest, I couldn't understand why. I will definitely try this suggestion. It was a great help, thanks a lot :)
..great resto of a stove used long before propane and butane.. great vid
Thank you vety much, Bob :)
very authentic...patterns are great..I love it. you chose the right colors.. congrats :)
Thank you so much, Oya 😊
Beautiful work!
Thank you very much 😊
Lindo trabalho. Parabéns 👏🇧🇷
Muito obrigado 😊 Saudações ao lindo país Brasil 😊
Nice restoration, but you should have put a timer at the end because I think your viewers would have liked to have known how long it took for that pot of water to boil.
Thank you so much. I think after burning for 20 minutes, heat accumulates to boil the water.
What liquid did you use when you did the electrolysis?
Thanks. Just water and salt.
Good restoration.
Thank you very much :)
@@Restomaniac Your welcome.
Aca en Argentina no venden ,ni hay ninguno de estos artefactos,donde podria obtener uno para mi
Siempre ando por junkers. Recomiendo :) Saludos a Argentina.
Это же не реально крутячно суперски мега бомбезно ваучески шедевро отлично 👌🏻
Большое спасибо за комментарии :)
@@Restomaniac на здоровье друг
FANTASTIC 🙂
Thank you :)
Very cool, that's a pretty cool stove a lot better looking then the ones sold today, IMO.
Thank you very much for your likes and nice comments :)
Just goes to show what a little elbow grease can do. Well done it looks great.
Thank you very much :)
Would you ever use a laser to remove rust. I saw it once in a video and it looked amazing but no clue how much the hardware costs
I saw it in a few videos. Looks pretty effective.
Bro u should get 1 sandblasting tools fr very rusted things😊🇲🇾
Actually, I want it too. Also, like many restoration lovers, I love watching sandblasting. There is a place issue where I can place it for now, but I will definitely buy it :)
helal sana kardeşim başarılarının devamını dilerim takipçiniz
Teşekkür ederim Sefa Bey 😊
Good Restoration
Thank you 😊
That's a beauty 😍
Thank you 😊
My husband noticed there was no smoking with the oil you used. May I ask which brand or what type?
Hello. Thank you for your attention. The fuel I use is paraffin. Made in Turkey, paraffin standard, I think.
@@Restomaniac Thank you for your reply. My husband, when guessing mentioned paraffin. You can buy it here but kerosene is cheaper where we live.
Is kersoneoil is available now a days may I know
Yes, thank you.
I have an antique kerosin/gasolin table lamp of Germany make. Machanism is like your above oven. It is made of brass. How you can help me to restore. Pl advise.
Hello. Thank you for your attention. These old products are actually produced with high quality. If there is no damage or hole in the fuel tank, if the wick is in good condition, you can reuse it with good cleaning. There will be no need to do much. I live in Turkey, I would like to take care of if I were in a nearby country.
@@Restomaniac thank you for your kind reply. I live in kolkata india. The glass chimney of this product so far I remember is no 10 which is not available here. Pl advise.
Nice work!
Thanks, Serhat :)
Abi o kovaya koyup elektrik akımı verdiğiniz tam olarak nedir
Elektroliz ile pas sökme yöntemi. Tuzlu su içerisinde paslı metalden başka bir metale pas aktariyorsun. Pasını sökmek istediğin metali eksiye, pası alacak metali de artıya bagliyorsun. 12 volt adaptör kullanılabilir. UA-cam'da elektroliz diye aratırsanız iyi videolar var.
WHY did you replace that perfectly good piece of mica?
HELLO first. Mika wasn't in good condition It was weakened and full of cracks due to prolonged use. So it must change.
@@Restomaniac Based on footage shown, I respectfully disagree...
Reyiz kanalını yeni keşfettim ve ilk defa bir Türk yani sen restorasyon videolarını çektiğini gördüm başarılar dilerim ama videolarda Türkçe de kullan anlayalım ne olduğunu
Teşekkür ederim Can Bey :) Tüm eleştirileri dikkate alıyorum. Saygılar.
@@Restomaniac rica ederim bende teşekkür ederim ilginiz için görüntü kalitesi biraz daha iyi de olabilir görüntüde titreme ve dalgalan ma var
Nice job !
Thank you 😊
Well Done! Thump Up!
Thank you very much :)
Great job . Thanx to you
Thank you very much :)
Ulan nasıl 456 görüntülenme olur daha fazla olması lazım usta eline sağlık.
Teşekkür ederim 😊😊
I use these a lot, they are supposed to have a short blue flame when you are using. an orange or yellow flame is a foul flame
Thank you very much for your comments.
اخي صاحب القناة ارجو الرد عليه ومن اهل الخبرة عندي ام فتل اللبة ونفط لايوجد في البلد الذي اسكن فيه هل يوجد بديل ارجوكم الرد
Can you post a link for the silver heat resistant paint?
I bought this from a hardware store in Turkey.
Every time you replace an still working original part. you end up decreasing the value of the object in total. It might not seem like so, but a small thing like the mica can end up being the difference between 20$ and 200$ at an sale. Therefore you should always strive to not replace anything, unless it's absolutely necessary.
Considering what it started out like the finished article was great.
Thank you :)
Yes! Very good!!!
Thank you very much :)
Well done
Thank you :)
Beautifully restored from a time when products were more like architecture than cheap Chinese crap.
When I saw all that corrosion coming out of the fuel reservoir, I had the most overwhelming desire to put 2 or 3 handfuls of crushed walnut shell media in and tumble it for 72 hours.
Yes it would be a great clean :)
I have never seen one of these!
I have't seen before too 😊
Fascinating
Thank you so much :)