We're going to attempt a repair we've never done before! Hope you enjoy this one and we also celebrated the 10th birthday of the Safety Officer aka Homey Big Nutz this week 🐾🎉🎂 As you can see he had a great day 🤣👍 Follow us online here 👇🤳 TikTok: vt.tiktok.com/ZSdax3gNQ/ Instagram: instagram.com/cutting_edge_engineering Facebook: facebook.com/cuttingedgeengineeringaustralia/ Official CEE Merch shop: www.ceeshop.com.au
“I hardly do TIG anymore…”. Proceeds to do perfect TIG welds. This really was a great project. No one wanted to touch it, I’ve got nothing to lose, but your hunch was right! That new customer will for sure be coming back.
How does it feel to be the leader of a new generation of machine mechanics? Your example of a strong work ethic and onscreen presentation politeness makes me proud. Thank you.
Kurtis' knowledge of the Cat models and their hydraulic cylinders' operation is extraordinary. Much respect to your welding and machining, and the camera work is great as usual, Karen. Homie's party cake didn't last long. He tore through that little pig in no time. Dogs usually do that! I enjoyed your presentation.
theres no amount of money in the world that you could pay to learn the shit this guy knows. truly an expert craftsman, knows what hes doin/talking about and does shit right. carry on my friend. amazing work.
As I watch this, I'm thinking what a luxury it must be for the mine maintenance guys to have a world-class repair/fabrication shop just down the road. It must save them a lot of stress. Happy Birthday Homey!
@@joso5554 The Maintenance Shop doesn't tend to care about the costs... They pay whatever it takes to get the equipment back in service as soon as possible... The FINANCE Department on the other hand, cares a great deal about how much Kurtis can save them by repairing the parts instead of having to buy new ones from the Dealership...
Your videos are always enthralling. Every time I get to the end of a video, I'm surprised it's already over. Obviously, Kurtis is a mechanical genius and his work ethic and attention to detail are second to none, but Karen does an excellent job filming, and I assume editing the video as well. The shots always seem to cover exactly what I want to see and rarely do I ever find myself wishing for a different angle or feeling like I missed out on something. The clip lengths are perfect as well, showing enough to fully illustrate the current process, but not so much that I get bored and my mind starts to wander. It's easy to appreciate what goes on in front of the camera, but you have to sit back and think about all the things you didn't think about while watching the video to appreciate what happens behind the scenes. Thanks to both of you for your continued excellence! Oh, and happy birthday Homeless! You did a great job demolishing that squeaky toy.
Hey mate wow thanks for the great comment we both appreciate it and always glad to know the video content is being enjoyed. It definitely takes a lot of effort to make the videos so we do appreciate the support!
My father was an engineer at caterpillar tractors in Mossville Illinois USA and I worked at the plant for a while. Pretty cool to see the big parts taken apart and put back together with such skill Awsome
now this is an epic episode, it has a "Nobody would even attempt this repair so I told them to hold my beer" moment and wife jump scare where Kurtis barely even flintches
My thoughts exactly! Plus, now that he's done it, and pretty much the entire planet can see it, anyone who has a similar failure will be knocking down his door... lol
Also, don’t forget Karen making fun of his “I’m going to attack this crack” in the bloopers reel at the end. I was ROFLMAOing myself non-stop, hilarious!🤣🤣🤣
He more than barely flinches it's easy to see but whatever, were all only human and frights can make us jump. What I find amusing and sad is the way you and others seem to think he is some kind of superhero with all the over the top praises. Too much as far as I'm concerned. You all probably think he is just marvelous in every facet of his life and can do no wrong anywhere ever.
Who else wants to know what the customer said after you all saved him 17k/3 months .... Whatever he paid you, your knowledge alone was worth more... and the skill is just icing on the cake. Well done, mate! (And yes, I jumped with Karen and said the exact same thing!)
That’s one happy customer you have for life - sharing risk with the customer and going the extra mile is the basis or trust and professional workmanship. Great work.
Man you are so neat, organized, and meticulous. You are like a surgeon when it comes to mechanical repair. I know so many who just wings it or butchers it. All your work is so clean. It's better than sending it back to the dealership!
Hello, gday mate. You are doing a excellent WORK! I m working since 35 years as hydraulik engineer in Germany. An welded cylinder got in heavy cases like mining Problems with the weld. My experience is in 80% of all cases. Sometimes only after 20 years but damage is damage. Its have to be cheap. Most mistake is missing of preheating. Because the massive component pulls out the heat from the weld. You make it right. Great to see, a man loves his work! Greetings from Germany. Fred.
Kurtis, Karen's reaction when the cylinder separated was effing hilarious. Karen, so glad you left that moment in. Absolutely love the channel. It's so satisfying to watch someone who knows what the hell they are doing. Double thumbs up, mate!
I need to thank you guys! I stare at parts all day long, everyday and then come home and watch your videos'. However I struggle with anxiety attacks and today has been a rather difficult day. I had no reason for the attack that happened today "10 hours" but 8 of them were pretty rough. I come home and watch your video and I relaxe and the next thing I know, I'm much better. You can't admit weakness in a large machine shop or the Buzzards will start circling to pick you apart. Anyway thanks again for the help, to all three...Happy Birthday Homie!!!
I suffered for many years from the same symptoms you described. Chronic anxiety is a living hell, and anyone who hasn't experienced it has no idea. Medication can mitigate the symptoms but doesn't cure the underlying problem IMHO. Standard psychotherapy didn't help me so I went elsewhere. In my case it turned out that the anxiety was caused by the energetic "body" of an unresolved and long forgotten trauma. I know it sounds a little out there but that energy needs to be released. Once released the anxiety ceased for me and never returned. I don't know if your issues are the same as mine were, but it's something to consider. Hang in there, I know it isn't easy.
I smiled a lot when you said no one would touch this repair and said i'll give it a try. Reminds me of my former work, kind of specilized in the impossible. It is not, you just have to use your brain and skills to the max. It is surprising how often jobs are not taken because you have to risk failiure. well their " no can do" was my "lets go" it feels really good when it is done and I enjoyed setting the bar higher than most others. What can be done is more an issue of how much money and time they are willing to spend. To many lazy people that will not put in the efford. You have that in you Kurtis and wonderful support from Karen as well, that means a lot when hours fly by every day.
You're a first class MACHINE SURGEON, Kurtis. A lot of medical surgeons can learn a lot from the care and intelligence you put into diagnosing and solving a problem.
It's bloody amazing how a dog can spread the stuffing out of a pulled apart toy, thin enough to cover a huge area. It seems to bring a smile to their dial when they have covered the yard with "snow" as I used to call it. Nice job Kurtis. Some bean counter owes you a carton, or 2!
Congratulations on taking a risk that no one else had the confidence to attempt. You know your customers systems and parts well enough to know if the job is even worth attempting. And you succeeded. Good work. Cheers from Southern California, United States.
Aww happy 10th safety officer Homey! I live vicariously through several of these channels as I can no longer do this type of work due to several spinal fusions! Good work mate!
@@MegaDirtyberty I’m still mobile just suffer in pain all the time because now as we all know they won’t prescribe anything for the pain! Everything else they can do has either been done or I am allergic to which is quite bad!
Love your videos . I have done your type of work for 45 years. I don't think a lot of people know how technical and how much expertise you add to the job. Great work!
Banging out the jobs no one else will touch is how you build a reputation as a miracle worker. When you’re starting a business, this is the stuff that gets your name out there and brings customers back time and again.
I'm a new subscriber, Your integrity and your moral center is what sold me.. This was about 2 weeks ago, So I have been every day since then binge watching, and hoping to get everyone watched by the end of the month.. I'm a retired Master Carpenter from the USA, so I have plenty of time on my hands and I love watching young people with the mad skills I see you have.. I also love that you like working on the lost causes, LOL.. I kinda did the same, I restored hundreds of wood works from vintage homes, trying to save as much of the original as I could.. Also made very good money doing it, even now, there are few people who are skilled enough to do them, My favorite jobs were old churches, they always have the best things to repair, restore & make look like it has never been touched.. Sorry to babble on.. Thank you for sharing mate.. I love your work ethics and how your mind works to solve & fix problems.. Cheers..........
As Ive grown to expect , Curtis your attention to detail is so amazing ,it saves your customers months of grief as well as getting their machine's up and running in a very timely manner . Much respect from Calgary
Every time I watch one of your videos, I always have a massive appreciation to how detail-oriented, thorough, and professional you are about your job. Makes me kind of wish I got into it or a similar profession over being in IT.
Happy birthday Homey! I hope he has a great day. He always looks so excited to be with you guys. Thanks for always bringing us the best content, Kurtis. Your videos are always enjoyable because you walk us through all your methods and why you do it that way-much love from South Texas. Stay safe, mate! Edit: Someone needs to tell Safety Officer Homey to take it easy on those poor piggies. 😬🤣🤣
That has to be a happy customer. And they can see exactly how the part was fixed. No shortcuts or botched repairs. Good job guys. Happy birthday Homey....
I loved this. First, Kurtis is willing to tackle jobs that nobody will touch. He sets expectations with his customer, and forms deep trust. He said it out loud this time, but we have witnessed it many times: make it a little easier for the next guy”. It is no surprise that he gets big and weird jobs with the trust and professionalism that he demonstrates day upon day. This channel is his CV. Greetings and happy Thanksgiving from Ohio USA to Kurtis, Karen, Homeless, George and the rest.
Congrats to Homey!!! And congrats to Kurtis with the first ever repair of that Double cycle cylinder...top notch work! Says an interested retired optician 🤓🤓🤓
I really enjoy your vids. I’d be interested in seeing how some of these repairs are re-installed and how they perform over a period of time. Great job!
Never underestimate a determined bloke with the tenacity of a staffy , what a recovery from what looked to be a bit of expensive scrap . I reckon you could have saved old mate more the just the part cost down time for a big scraper is rather unpleasant. Well done mate a cracking repair , 😃
Your skill set has no equivalent There isn’t a single word to describe your abilities. I would hope in near future you can find an apprentice to train none of us are getting any younger. Homeless is so fun to watch his personality also your wife goes a superb job filming we need to see some screen time of her she deserves that. Thanks again for great videos
This guy really knows what he is doing. Love his laid back Aussie style and understated confidence. I'm in the UK but if I had a plant problem, I'd consider shipping it to Aus 😁 Really enjoyable watching a master at work.
Happy Birthday Homey Those extra welds are spread out the stress? That bent pipe tricks you at first. Filming the unexpected. Karan's reaction was a honest reaction. Aussie engineering at its finest. "We don't say it can't be done"
I began welding to repair things I couldn't afford to replace and ended up owning a welding shop for thirty odd years. You do some really interesting and difficult repairs as a routine operation and your skills really shine through. Homey just adds to the home-grown crew and what's a shop without a shop dog? Happy birthday, Homey!
Beautiful job once again. After 45 years of Welding I have to use the Pyrex clear Tig cups to get enough light to see what I’m doing.😃. I can still run a reasonable bead but then I used to flip the helmet up and discover that although it looked good it was nowhere near the joint.😡. How the mighty have fallen……….sigh.
@@MegaDirtyberty Yeah I’ve got a couple of good helmets with magnifying lenses but even turned down to the lightest shade I find there’s just not enough light at the lower amperage’s on the Tig. Stick and Mig are not so bad. I’m embarrassed to say that I can’t remember the manufacturer of both helmets and they’re in the workshop and I’m in the house. One is a Miller elite.Filet welds are not too bad because you’re working in a corner,butt welds on 16 or 18 gauge aluminium or stainless, forget it. Can’t see a damn thing. The thing that really helped was installing 300 amp LED lights in the workshop. Turns it into daylight and makes things a lot easier to see. Cheers.
@@davidcat1455 Mine is just a cheap chinese helmet, it was all I could afford. The light idea is a good one, I use a torch and shine it at what I am welding, works okish.
@@MegaDirtyberty There’s nothing wrong with some of the Chinese stuff. You can only use what you can afford and at least you’re having a go👍 I just happened to be in the workshop when I read your comment and my other helmet is a Speedglas. Model 9002NC. Adjustable from shade 8 to shade 12
Line of the episode: “Oh Jesus!” - the usually stoic Karen when Carl separates the cylinder. No surprise the Safety Officer did not like the pointy hat - a clear eye hazard. Always on the job, even on his birthday. Yet another amazing, educational, and entertaining episode. Keep up the great work!
Well she actually said, (or at least what I heard) was "Oh Jesus Christ!" I think that surprised me more than the cylinder dropping. She usually seems so reserved.
Watching u Kurtis was like watching my old man teaching me how too make a 9m shrimp beam trawl. Step by step of clear instructions, and watching how accurate u are with your tools is like watching him turn a length of twine into a patch of mesh with all the mesh being exactly 22mm each and making new the once torn net. Ok u a lot younger than me but you’ve taught this ol dog a few tricks of the trade, plus I do love the once used put the tool back in its place. BTW Happy Birthday Homey 👍✌️🇬🇧
From my experience the guys that are humble and downplay their ability are the best welders. It's the guys that say they're hot shit you gotta watch out for because most of the time they can't walk the walk.
I’ll be honest here guys I can’t weld to save myself, don’t have any form of welding equipment and have never been taught anything about it, I’m sure you’re right things could have been better but to my layman’s eyes it looked great.
It's gotten to the point where I eagerly check your channel for new uploads. Do I machine? Absolutely not, but this is incredible to see and almost feel a part of. Happy birthday Homey!
Morning Curtis, could have fooled me saying you don't do a lot of TIG, welds look really good. Do you know the company that re chrome's the cyli ders as it would be interesting to follow one of your repairs right through. Regards to you both. Richard 🇬🇧
Your skill level is beyond belief. I am dreading a simple job of adding a hitch receiver to the back of my travel trailer so I can carry a Predator generator conveniently. Your beads would make a jeweler cry. Mine look like snot. Thank You for the education I get every time I watch you in action.
I used to have a buddy from the Birmingham area and he had some lovely 'Black Country' phrases (which you have to hear to really appreciate.) One of them was 'Bostin' as in "Thar's a bostin' job mate". And so that was and I loved the throw away line; "I don't do much TIG anymore" and then two circuits of absolutely perfect, copybook TIG welds. If I could TIG like that, I'd go out, buy the kit and set myself up as a jobbing welder - and I'm 75!! Weld done guys, great vlog and many happy returns to Homeless - the only bit of interest my little dog took (sitting next to me) was when Homey was scoffing his cake.
Damn when you applied the heat to the rod, and it dropped off. I wasn’t expecting that. The man knows his stuff. 💪🏼💪🏼 Always enjoying watching your work. Learning something new all the time.
Another beautifully filmed and edited video of a fabulous repair on a difficult job. Thanks for sharing, and a Happy Tenth Birthday to Homey. The skills and knowledge you both have is truly inspiring.!!!
Hey Mark thanks for the thoughtful Super Thanks! Would you like it to go towards the Staffy Rescue foundation or put it towards toys/treats for Homey? Either way, thank you very much!
Not only do I appreciate the repair work, but you two still do the best video work of machining I see - and I watch a lot of videos. Your wife is an artist.
Your skill level is absolutely amazing! I don't think that there is an impossible repair for you. A brilliant mind combined with a well equipped shop can accomplish anything. You are truly a man with no limits!...... thanks to the both of you for all the great videos!
Dear Kurtis was doundly defeated when trying to repair a large cast iron casting. He warned the client in advance that it was a very risky job and, despite his best efforts, it cracked badly after welding. Cast iron is v tricky stuff! But I so admire Kurtis for being willing to give it a go!
@@chrismoyler Yes, he suffered defeat on that one, but that's how he has become so good at what he does. Gotta respect a man that is willing to give it a go on a part like that even though he knows that with cast iron the odds were stacked against him. I bet he tries a different technique on the next one.
What extraordinary welding skills. My early tutor used to say my welding was like the Snowdonia landscape (Snowdonia is a mountain range in Wales) and it's still quite rocky. Oh well! Great filming, Karen - very artistic, atmospheric shooting. Hope Homey doesn't swallow any of that rubber or filling.
This is an incredible repair, especially considering nobody else wanted to touch it. Customer must have been over the moon with this one. Really impressive stuff
kurtis you truly are a craftsman in how you tackle a problem, even though machining your site says it, we are engineers as machinists, Thanks have a wonderful weekend, Love Youz!!!
Great work as always! Not only were you able to fix it properly and have saved them a heap of money on a new part, you have saved them a huge amount of downtime on a very expensive machine, and as we all know those machines are like sharks, if they don’t keep moving they will die (the loan will kill a lot of profit!). Bloody well done! I knew you would make Karen jump when that tube dropped off the spigot. Man that swear jar might need to be larger LOL. Love the content! Cheers from Tokyo! Stu. PS Happy birthday to Homeless for ten he is still a puppy at heart.
Engineering poetry in motion. Having the confidence and knowledge to go where others fear to tread, this is why you are so successful. Absolutely bloody brilliant both of you. 👏👏👏👏
That was absolutely outstanding! Very interesting job. Your customer will be extremely happy. You took all that trouble with the crack test. I call this real professionalism as you could just have left it alone (nobody would see any issue) and shift the responsibility to the customer. Filming and editing top notch as always.
I really liked the forensics in this one. _Now we know how this can fail._ I imagine you must have gone through a similar process many times in the past to become so proficient on the types of jobs you do so routinely that you even have shop-made jigs and tools specific to them.
I'm always impressed in how you can machine out the welds and then get things aligned to weld back together. In the end this looked like another case of having to reverse engineer how the part was manufactured, then undo and re-do it. Always interesting to watch. all. Thanks to you. And HB to Homey, I find it hard to believe he even tasted that 'cake' as he inhaled it!
Happy birthday Homie seems like your “cake “ past quality control , love watching you repair all the different things as we get to learn how they function on their individual machinery .Karen I thought you controlled yourself very well only omitting one expletive when the cylinder dropped
Happy birthday Homie one of my grand daughters was 10 this week as well. I bet this repair had you thinking outside the box! I would bet the customer is not worried about the $17k more likely having a machine down for 3 months.
Not sure what I enjoyed more watching you fix the part or your wonderful dog’s birthday and him playing with his toy but I enjoyed both and you did a great job fixing the cylinder. Great video.👍🏼🤩❤️
Great video guys. This repair is a good candidate for a future QnA on what jobs went well and what jobs did not. I would love to know how this repair held up on 6 months time.
good idea will have to make a note of it, we'll probably do another Q&A at the 500K subscribers and will give updates on how some of repairs have held up
Камрад, я хоть и человек, далекий от инженерного дела, но за твоей работой, граничащей с искусством, очень интересно наблюдать! Также большой привет собаке и оператору, уверен, они вносят большой вклад в общее дело)
Happy Birthday Homeless! Great video, very cool engineering went into that cylinder. Good demonstration of the oil passages. Great camera work as usual. Very nice Tig welding, good penetration, if it ever breaks it won't be from the welding.
I love it when you film while it's raining that big metal shop you can hear the rain come through so clearly sounds relaxing, if I was there I would just close the doors and kick back in the hammock after I finish my work of course😅
Kurtis, amazing repair job. You took something that nobody else would touch and fixed it like a boss. I also was wondering if you did any TIG, another question answered. Great job.
You've definitely mastered your craft, thanks heaps for the uploads, as a business owner myself I'm thankful for the time and effort by you and Karen to bring us these videos. I'm flat out at work and everyone I talk to is the same right now so definitely appreciated.
Happy Birthday Homey, and what an interesting repair to watch through - "no-one normally does this, but there's no stock, a 3 month lead time, and it's tens of thousands of dollars; we'll try it". Very nice looking results, and fascinating to watch you work through the process of investigation & repair.
I just wanted to mention how I appreciate you saving the foul language for the end. I think it's great to be able to let my children see these processes without worrying about them picking up some undesirable vocabulary. 👍
We're going to attempt a repair we've never done before! Hope you enjoy this one and we also celebrated the 10th birthday of the Safety Officer aka Homey Big Nutz this week 🐾🎉🎂 As you can see he had a great day 🤣👍
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Rag man 🤣😂
@Murphy Law was giving KKK vibes 😅😬
@@CuttingEdgeEngineering 🤣😂🤣😂🤣
Just looking at the complexity of the work I am amazed you can break even on a Job like that!
Mate, who does your hard chroming? It's getting darn hard to find anyone these days.
Oh, and who makes that cap/plug kit?
“I hardly do TIG anymore…”. Proceeds to do perfect TIG welds. This really was a great project. No one wanted to touch it, I’ve got nothing to lose, but your hunch was right! That new customer will for sure be coming back.
I was thinking the same thing! That TIG is beautiful!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
He got a little hot on the tig you can see he burned through on the inside.
I was an apprentice welder and had a chuckle and said he didn’t do much Tig and then as you said bangs out a perfect Tig weld🤣
Perfect ? No. Adequate? Yes, more then THAT even.
@@mauricematla8379Second that.
I believe that you’re “easier for the next guy “ ethic is one reason for your success. Refreshing in this day and age.
How does it feel to be the leader of a new generation of machine mechanics? Your example of a strong work ethic and onscreen presentation politeness makes me proud. Thank you.
Kurtis' knowledge of the Cat models and their hydraulic cylinders' operation is extraordinary. Much respect to your welding and machining, and the camera work is great as usual, Karen. Homie's party cake didn't last long. He tore through that little pig in no time. Dogs usually do that! I enjoyed your presentation.
theres no amount of money in the world that you could pay to learn the shit this guy knows. truly an expert craftsman, knows what hes doin/talking about and does shit right. carry on my friend. amazing work.
nah there is an amount. just no one who has that kind of money wants to learn this.
As I watch this, I'm thinking what a luxury it must be for the mine maintenance guys to have a world-class repair/fabrication shop just down the road. It must save them a lot of stress. Happy Birthday Homey!
It also must have saved them a lot of money and time waiting for a replacement part…
@@joso5554 The Maintenance Shop doesn't tend to care about the costs...
They pay whatever it takes to get the equipment back in service as soon as possible...
The FINANCE Department on the other hand, cares a great deal about how much Kurtis can save them by repairing the parts instead of having to buy new ones from the Dealership...
@@HappilyHomicidalHooligan Semantics.
Kurtis seems to be very comfortable working on muddy yellow iron of all sorts.
Your videos are always enthralling. Every time I get to the end of a video, I'm surprised it's already over. Obviously, Kurtis is a mechanical genius and his work ethic and attention to detail are second to none, but Karen does an excellent job filming, and I assume editing the video as well. The shots always seem to cover exactly what I want to see and rarely do I ever find myself wishing for a different angle or feeling like I missed out on something. The clip lengths are perfect as well, showing enough to fully illustrate the current process, but not so much that I get bored and my mind starts to wander.
It's easy to appreciate what goes on in front of the camera, but you have to sit back and think about all the things you didn't think about while watching the video to appreciate what happens behind the scenes.
Thanks to both of you for your continued excellence!
Oh, and happy birthday Homeless! You did a great job demolishing that squeaky toy.
Hey mate wow thanks for the great comment we both appreciate it and always glad to know the video content is being enjoyed. It definitely takes a lot of effort to make the videos so we do appreciate the support!
Gotta love the outtakes at the end.
This has been one of your most watchable episodes, keep them coming, a masterclass in doing a job right.
..The man continues to amaze me.... what a true "caring" CRAFTSMAN.. !!
My father was an engineer at caterpillar tractors in Mossville Illinois USA and I worked at the plant for a while. Pretty cool to see the big parts taken apart and put back together with such skill Awsome
I mean does it really matter if the part happens to be larger ? Engineering wise a smaller part may be way more interresting.
@@mauricematla8379 Unless you are impressed with big things.
@@eriklarson9137 Basicly never grew up then.
now this is an epic episode, it has a "Nobody would even attempt this repair so I told them to hold my beer" moment and wife jump scare where Kurtis barely even flintches
My thoughts exactly!
Plus, now that he's done it, and pretty much the entire planet can see it, anyone who has a similar failure will be knocking down his door... lol
Also, don’t forget Karen making fun of his “I’m going to attack this crack” in the bloopers reel at the end. I was ROFLMAOing myself non-stop, hilarious!🤣🤣🤣
He more than barely flinches it's easy to see but whatever, were all only human and frights can make us jump.
What I find amusing and sad is the way you and others seem to think he is some kind of superhero with all the over the top praises.
Too much as far as I'm concerned.
You all probably think he is just marvelous in every facet of his life and can do no wrong anywhere ever.
@@tfr128 and the channel/site showing your work is where? I would love to compare.
@@56Nine I ain't got shit!!
Who else wants to know what the customer said after you all saved him 17k/3 months .... Whatever he paid you, your knowledge alone was worth more... and the skill is just icing on the cake. Well done, mate! (And yes, I jumped with Karen and said the exact same thing!)
That’s one happy customer you have for life - sharing risk with the customer and going the extra mile is the basis or trust and professional workmanship. Great work.
Very well said.
I think that it was 9,000$$ the time, 3 months, was more expensive than the $$$
Man you are so neat, organized, and meticulous. You are like a surgeon when it comes to mechanical repair. I know so many who just wings it or butchers it.
All your work is so clean. It's better than sending it back to the dealership!
Hello, gday mate. You are doing a excellent WORK! I m working since 35 years as hydraulik engineer in Germany. An welded cylinder got in heavy cases like mining Problems with the weld. My experience is in 80% of all cases. Sometimes only after 20 years but damage is damage. Its have to be cheap. Most mistake is missing of preheating. Because the massive component pulls out the heat from the weld. You make it right. Great to see, a man loves his work! Greetings from Germany. Fred.
I don't know why UA-cam offered me your videos, but I'm glad they did. Addicted to watching your amazing workmanship. And Homey BN big smile!
Thanks for watching!
Kurtis, Karen's reaction when the cylinder separated was effing hilarious. Karen, so glad you left that moment in. Absolutely love the channel. It's so satisfying to watch someone who knows what the hell they are doing. Double thumbs up, mate!
krawist ! 😁
@@markschweter6371 11:08 Kurtis was like- Yep, good on ya. And Karen...
i bet she cut some and left a bit
Bet she peed herself a little when that internal cylinder dropped. hahaha
I need to thank you guys! I stare at parts all day long, everyday and then come home and watch your videos'. However I struggle with anxiety attacks and today has been a rather difficult day. I had no reason for the attack that happened today "10 hours" but 8 of them were pretty rough. I come home and watch your video and I relaxe and the next thing I know, I'm much better. You can't admit weakness in a large machine shop or the Buzzards will start circling to pick you apart. Anyway thanks again for the help, to all three...Happy Birthday Homie!!!
Hey mate glad the videos can help you to feel better, do what you got to do and take care mate
I suffered for many years from the same symptoms you described. Chronic anxiety is a living hell, and anyone who hasn't experienced it has no idea. Medication can mitigate the symptoms but doesn't cure the underlying problem IMHO. Standard psychotherapy didn't help me so I went elsewhere.
In my case it turned out that the anxiety was caused by the energetic "body" of an unresolved and long forgotten trauma. I know it sounds a little out there but that energy needs to be released. Once released the anxiety ceased for me and never returned. I don't know if your issues are the same as mine were, but it's something to consider. Hang in there, I know it isn't easy.
Take care mate but know you're not alone. Best wishes 👍
I smiled a lot when you said no one would touch this repair and said i'll give it a try. Reminds me of my former work, kind of specilized in the impossible. It is not, you just have to use your brain and skills to the max. It is surprising how often jobs are not taken because you have to risk failiure. well their " no can do" was my "lets go" it feels really good when it is done and I enjoyed setting the bar higher than most others. What can be done is more an issue of how much money and time they are willing to spend. To many lazy people that will not put in the efford. You have that in you Kurtis and wonderful support from Karen as well, that means a lot when hours fly by every day.
Always good to earn the reputation as the man who can fix things well that others won't even attempt to fix.
You're a first class MACHINE SURGEON, Kurtis. A lot of medical surgeons can learn a lot from the care and intelligence you put into diagnosing and solving a problem.
It's bloody amazing how a dog can spread the stuffing out of a pulled apart toy, thin enough to cover a huge area. It seems to bring a smile to their dial when they have covered the yard with "snow" as I used to call it. Nice job Kurtis. Some bean counter owes you a carton, or 2!
It's good to see these parts going back into service rather then into the bin.
Awesome that you are always thinking of the next person to work on these pieces even if that person isn’t you. True craftsman full of integrity
Congratulations on taking a risk that no one else had the confidence to attempt. You know your customers systems and parts well enough to know if the job is even worth attempting. And you succeeded. Good work. Cheers from Southern California, United States.
Aww happy 10th safety officer Homey!
I live vicariously through several of these channels as I can no longer do this type of work due to several spinal fusions! Good work mate!
damn that sucks mate sorry to hear that but glad you can still enjoy our videos
My uncle had a spinal fusion years ago, he has been permanently bent over because of it.
@@MegaDirtyberty I have had five and have left me with permanent nerve damage in my left leg!
@@clintonhanson Damn dude, that's rough. My father was told to get one due to his back, he refused and is still mobile despite chalky disks.
@@MegaDirtyberty I’m still mobile just suffer in pain all the time because now as we all know they won’t prescribe anything for the pain! Everything else they can do has either been done or I am allergic to which is quite bad!
Love your videos . I have done your type of work for 45 years. I don't think a lot of people know how technical and how much expertise you add to the job. Great work!
Another great job. You are saving customers thousands of dollars and we get great videos. Happy Birthday Homeless.
Banging out the jobs no one else will touch is how you build a reputation as a miracle worker. When you’re starting a business, this is the stuff that gets your name out there and brings customers back time and again.
Kudos for always being willing to save your customers some money when you can, and kudos for doing the "impossible" repairs!
Another home run from the CEE crew. Thank you!!!
For "not tig'ing much anymore" still got a damn steady hand.
Yeah, slightly annoying :-) "I don't use TIG much anymore..." Proceeds to create a weld most welders would stick on Instagram.
My thinking exactly!
I'm a new subscriber, Your integrity and your moral center is what sold me.. This was about 2 weeks ago, So I have been every day since then binge watching, and hoping to get everyone watched by the end of the month.. I'm a retired Master Carpenter from the USA, so I have plenty of time on my hands and I love watching young people with the mad skills I see you have.. I also love that you like working on the lost causes, LOL.. I kinda did the same, I restored hundreds of wood works from vintage homes, trying to save as much of the original as I could.. Also made very good money doing it, even now, there are few people who are skilled enough to do them, My favorite jobs were old churches, they always have the best things to repair, restore & make look like it has never been touched.. Sorry to babble on.. Thank you for sharing mate.. I love your work ethics and how your mind works to solve & fix problems.. Cheers..........
hey mate welcome to the channel, thanks for subscribing and watching the vids. Always great to know they are enjoyed! Cheers
Those TIG welds are a work of art.
As Ive grown to expect , Curtis your attention to detail is so amazing ,it saves your customers months of grief as well as getting their machine's up and running in a very timely manner .
Much respect from Calgary
Every time I watch one of your videos, I always have a massive appreciation to how detail-oriented, thorough, and professional you are about your job. Makes me kind of wish I got into it or a similar profession over being in IT.
Happy birthday Homey! I hope he has a great day. He always looks so excited to be with you guys. Thanks for always bringing us the best content, Kurtis. Your videos are always enjoyable because you walk us through all your methods and why you do it that way-much love from South Texas. Stay safe, mate!
Edit: Someone needs to tell Safety Officer Homey to take it easy on those poor piggies. 😬🤣🤣
Hey mate! Homey had the best day enjoying all his favourite things 🐾🎉 glad you enjoy the videos thanks for your support
or bring him more piggies :D
@@tabajaralabs That works too! I'll be sending him some toys or treats soon, I hope he enjoys them like our doggo.😬🤣
Beautiful job of welding up that cylinder, especially the final tig job at the end on that thing tube, with out distortion, very nice!!
Hard to believe Homey is 10 already! ... seems like just yesterday we met him!
Homey's masterful disassembly of that piggy was a joy to watch. It's no wonder that he has 10 years of experience. It shines through his work.
You HAVE TO keep bloopers at the end! everybody loves them.
That has to be a happy customer. And they can see exactly how the part was fixed. No shortcuts or botched repairs. Good job guys. Happy birthday Homey....
Absolute legend, is there anything you can’t do. Just brilliant tig welding. Love the channel, u guys rock ! 👍
thanks mate
It really is refreshing to see a guy absolutely dominate a repair that is not an easy one.
That was a huge swear, filled the jar really quickly! Love you three.
I loved this. First, Kurtis is willing to tackle jobs that nobody will touch. He sets expectations with his customer, and forms deep trust. He said it out loud this time, but we have witnessed it many times: make it a little easier for the next guy”. It is no surprise that he gets big and weird jobs with the trust and professionalism that he demonstrates day upon day. This channel is his CV.
Greetings and happy Thanksgiving from Ohio USA to Kurtis, Karen, Homeless, George and the rest.
Constant Velocity?
@@eriklarson9137 Curriculum Vitae, or résumé 😊
She is so patient with the camera work 🤗 another great episode to watch guys
Congrats to Homey!!! And congrats to Kurtis with the first ever repair of that Double cycle cylinder...top notch work! Says an interested retired optician 🤓🤓🤓
I really enjoy your vids. I’d be interested in seeing how some of these repairs are re-installed and how they perform over a period of time. Great job!
Never underestimate a determined bloke with the tenacity of a staffy , what a recovery from what looked to be a bit of expensive scrap . I reckon you could have saved old mate more the just the part cost down time for a big scraper is rather unpleasant. Well done mate a cracking repair , 😃
Your skill set has no equivalent There isn’t a single word to describe your abilities. I would hope in near future you can find an apprentice to train none of us are getting any younger. Homeless is so fun to watch his personality also your wife goes a superb job filming we need to see some screen time of her she deserves that. Thanks again for great videos
This guy really knows what he is doing. Love his laid back Aussie style and understated confidence.
I'm in the UK but if I had a plant problem, I'd consider shipping it to Aus 😁
Really enjoyable watching a master at work.
Happy Birthday Homey
Those extra welds are spread out the stress?
That bent pipe tricks you at first.
Filming the unexpected. Karan's reaction was a honest reaction.
Aussie engineering at its finest.
"We don't say it can't be done"
Hi everyone,
the editing of the videos is just as impressive as the commissioned work. good work as always.
Thank you so much 😀
I feel like whatever you charge your customers it isn't enough, you're a wizard
could you talk to our customers about that? 😂😂😂
I began welding to repair things I couldn't afford to replace and ended up owning a welding shop for thirty odd years. You do some really interesting and difficult repairs as a routine operation and your skills really shine through. Homey just adds to the home-grown crew and what's a shop without a shop dog? Happy birthday, Homey!
Fascinating how Kurtis does stuff, like his integrity and straightforward approach
Beautiful job once again. After 45 years of Welding I have to use the Pyrex clear Tig cups to get enough light to see what I’m doing.😃. I can still run a reasonable bead but then I used to flip the helmet up and discover that although it looked good it was nowhere near the joint.😡. How the mighty have fallen……….sigh.
I'm like that with a mig, I need to get a new helmet.
@@MegaDirtyberty
Yeah I’ve got a couple of good helmets with magnifying lenses but even turned down to the lightest shade I find there’s just not enough light at the lower amperage’s on the Tig. Stick and Mig are not so bad. I’m embarrassed to say that I can’t remember the manufacturer of both helmets and they’re in the workshop and I’m in the house. One is a Miller elite.Filet welds are not too bad because you’re working in a corner,butt welds on 16 or 18 gauge aluminium or stainless, forget it. Can’t see a damn thing. The thing that really helped was installing 300 amp LED lights in the workshop. Turns it into daylight and makes things a lot easier to see. Cheers.
@@davidcat1455 Mine is just a cheap chinese helmet, it was all I could afford. The light idea is a good one, I use a torch and shine it at what I am welding, works okish.
@@MegaDirtyberty
There’s nothing wrong with some of the Chinese stuff. You can only use what you can afford and at least you’re having a go👍 I just happened to be in the workshop when I read your comment and my other helmet is a Speedglas. Model 9002NC. Adjustable from shade 8 to shade 12
@@davidcat1455 I will look that up, cheers.
Line of the episode: “Oh Jesus!” - the usually stoic Karen when Carl separates the cylinder.
No surprise the Safety Officer did not like the pointy hat - a clear eye hazard. Always on the job, even on his birthday.
Yet another amazing, educational, and entertaining episode. Keep up the great work!
It's Kurtis BTW which you know 😂
I JUMPED!
@@djmips Carl!
Well she actually said, (or at least what I heard) was "Oh Jesus Christ!" I think that surprised me more than the cylinder dropping. She usually seems so reserved.
@@1959Aeroflyte I guess it is because the sound it made was very loud, much more than we can hear.
Watching u Kurtis was like watching my old man teaching me how too make a 9m shrimp beam trawl. Step by step of clear instructions, and watching how accurate u are with your tools is like watching him turn a length of twine into a patch of mesh with all the mesh being exactly 22mm each and making new the once torn net.
Ok u a lot younger than me but you’ve taught this ol dog a few tricks of the trade, plus I do love the once used put the tool back in its place.
BTW Happy Birthday Homey 👍✌️🇬🇧
You saved that customer a lot of money.
I keep watching your videos with beer in my hand so relaxing I’m a mechanic and love watching skilled engineers and your dog is cool 😎
“Doesn’t do a lot of tig welding these days”, precedes to lay down a damn near perfect tig weld
yes agree, but... from a tig welder myself, too slow not enough amps, has alot of peno on the inside. could tell as soon as he started welding
Could have used a argon shielding on the root side of the weld, sop in tube welding, but...
Can but have to run even more amps
From my experience the guys that are humble and downplay their ability are the best welders. It's the guys that say they're hot shit you gotta watch out for because most of the time they can't walk the walk.
I’ll be honest here guys I can’t weld to save myself, don’t have any form of welding equipment and have never been taught anything about it, I’m sure you’re right things could have been better but to my layman’s eyes it looked great.
It's gotten to the point where I eagerly check your channel for new uploads. Do I machine? Absolutely not, but this is incredible to see and almost feel a part of. Happy birthday Homey!
Morning Curtis, could have fooled me saying you don't do a lot of TIG, welds look really good. Do you know the company that re chrome's the cyli ders as it would be interesting to follow one of your repairs right through. Regards to you both. Richard 🇬🇧
hey mate nah i'm not sure who they use if we ever get a chance to show that we definitely will!
@@CuttingEdgeEngineering Thank you
Regards
Your skill level is beyond belief. I am dreading a simple job of adding a hitch receiver to the back of my travel trailer so I can carry a Predator generator conveniently. Your beads would make a jeweler cry. Mine look like snot. Thank You for the education I get every time I watch you in action.
I used to have a buddy from the Birmingham area and he had some lovely 'Black Country' phrases (which you have to hear to really appreciate.) One of them was 'Bostin' as in "Thar's a bostin' job mate". And so that was and I loved the throw away line; "I don't do much TIG anymore" and then two circuits of absolutely perfect, copybook TIG welds. If I could TIG like that, I'd go out, buy the kit and set myself up as a jobbing welder - and I'm 75!!
Weld done guys, great vlog and many happy returns to Homeless - the only bit of interest my little dog took (sitting next to me) was when Homey was scoffing his cake.
I really like how dedicated you are to doing a really good job. Good on you.
Damn when you applied the heat to the rod, and it dropped off. I wasn’t expecting that. The man knows his stuff. 💪🏼💪🏼 Always enjoying watching your work. Learning something new all the time.
Another beautifully filmed and edited video of a fabulous repair on a difficult job. Thanks for sharing, and a Happy Tenth Birthday to Homey. The skills and knowledge you both have is truly inspiring.!!!
A little something for the birthday boy. Happy belated Birthday Homey from the 🇬🇧❤️
Hey Mark thanks for the thoughtful Super Thanks! Would you like it to go towards the Staffy Rescue foundation or put it towards toys/treats for Homey? Either way, thank you very much!
@@CuttingEdgeEngineering Hi Guys if he has an abundance of toys at the moment I’ll leave up to you decide. 👍😉❤️
Not only do I appreciate the repair work, but you two still do the best video work of machining I see - and I watch a lot of videos. Your wife is an artist.
Your skill level is absolutely amazing! I don't think that there is an impossible repair for you. A brilliant mind combined with a well equipped shop can accomplish anything. You are truly a man with no limits!...... thanks to the both of you for all the great videos!
Dear Kurtis was doundly defeated when trying to repair a large cast iron casting.
He warned the client in advance that it was a very risky job and, despite his best efforts, it cracked badly after welding.
Cast iron is v tricky stuff!
But I so admire Kurtis for being willing to give it a go!
@@chrismoyler Yes, he suffered defeat on that one, but that's how he has become so good at what he does. Gotta respect a man that is willing to give it a go on a part like that even though he knows that with cast iron the odds were stacked against him. I bet he tries a different technique on the next one.
What extraordinary welding skills. My early tutor used to say my welding was like the Snowdonia landscape (Snowdonia is a mountain range in Wales) and it's still quite rocky. Oh well! Great filming, Karen - very artistic, atmospheric shooting. Hope Homey doesn't swallow any of that rubber or filling.
I could watch him work all day. The Zen of machining! 😊
This is an incredible repair, especially considering nobody else wanted to touch it. Customer must have been over the moon with this one. Really impressive stuff
kurtis you truly are a craftsman in how you tackle a problem, even though machining your site says it, we are engineers as machinists, Thanks have a wonderful weekend, Love Youz!!!
Terrific repair job . You are fast becoming the go to guy as far as impossible repairs are concerned.
Superb video. Karen’s surprise reaction was priceless! Well done, guys… 👏👏👏
Great work as always!
Not only were you able to fix it properly and have saved them a heap of money on a new part, you have saved them a huge amount of downtime on a very expensive machine, and as we all know those machines are like sharks, if they don’t keep moving they will die (the loan will kill a lot of profit!).
Bloody well done!
I knew you would make Karen jump when that tube dropped off the spigot.
Man that swear jar might need to be larger LOL.
Love the content!
Cheers from Tokyo!
Stu.
PS Happy birthday to Homeless for ten he is still a puppy at heart.
Engineering poetry in motion. Having the confidence and knowledge to go where others fear to tread, this is why you are so successful. Absolutely bloody brilliant both of you. 👏👏👏👏
Like like like! You've changed up certain sequences to be more compact without being less entertaining. Brilliantly done. Give your editor a raise.
That was absolutely outstanding!
Very interesting job. Your customer will be extremely happy.
You took all that trouble with the crack test. I call this real professionalism as you could just have left it alone (nobody would see any issue) and shift the responsibility to the customer.
Filming and editing top notch as always.
I really liked the forensics in this one. _Now we know how this can fail._ I imagine you must have gone through a similar process many times in the past to become so proficient on the types of jobs you do so routinely that you even have shop-made jigs and tools specific to them.
I'm always impressed in how you can machine out the welds and then get things aligned to weld back together. In the end this looked like another case of having to reverse engineer how the part was manufactured, then undo and re-do it. Always interesting to watch. all. Thanks to you. And HB to Homey, I find it hard to believe he even tasted that 'cake' as he inhaled it!
Homeless he can't keep a new toy nice, Happy Birthday Homey. The real star of this video.
I have to hand it to you Curtis you know your stuff your workmanship and welding skill and your know how second to none
Happy birthday Homie seems like your “cake “ past quality control , love watching you repair all the different things as we get to learn how they function on their individual machinery .Karen I thought you controlled yourself very well only omitting one expletive when the cylinder dropped
Happy birthday Homie one of my grand daughters was 10 this week as well. I bet this repair had you thinking outside the box! I would bet the customer is not worried about the $17k more likely having a machine down for 3 months.
Happy birthday to your granddaughter! Homey's birthday was Wednesday I wonder if it's the same day 🥰 This repair was a good little challenge
@@CuttingEdgeEngineering No Elsie's was Monday 15th.
That birthday cake lasted fewer seconds than the years it commemorated
I'm wondering if Homey even tasted it!
That dog looks very healthy for 10. Love the party hat on him. Surprised it stayed on. Love it.
Not sure what I enjoyed more watching you fix the part or your wonderful dog’s birthday and him playing with his toy but I enjoyed both and you did a great job fixing the cylinder. Great video.👍🏼🤩❤️
Great video guys.
This repair is a good candidate for a future QnA on what jobs went well and what jobs did not.
I would love to know how this repair held up on 6 months time.
good idea will have to make a note of it, we'll probably do another Q&A at the 500K subscribers and will give updates on how some of repairs have held up
That... sure... but wouldn't you love to hear the unredacted blooper reel too?
Камрад, я хоть и человек, далекий от инженерного дела, но за твоей работой, граничащей с искусством, очень интересно наблюдать! Также большой привет собаке и оператору, уверен, они вносят большой вклад в общее дело)
Happy Birthday Homeless! Great video, very cool engineering went into that cylinder. Good demonstration of the oil passages. Great camera work as usual. Very nice Tig welding, good penetration, if it ever breaks it won't be from the welding.
Great comment! Thanks mate
Kurtis, your knowledge and experience is remarkable.
Your tenacity and attitude is inspiring.
I love it when you film while it's raining that big metal shop you can hear the rain come through so clearly sounds relaxing, if I was there I would just close the doors and kick back in the hammock after I finish my work of course😅
Kurtis, amazing repair job. You took something that nobody else would touch and fixed it like a boss. I also was wondering if you did any TIG, another question answered. Great job.
My favourite part of Friday Arvo tbh. Thanks mate
No worries mate glad you enjoy it!
You've definitely mastered your craft, thanks heaps for the uploads, as a business owner myself I'm thankful for the time and effort by you and Karen to bring us these videos. I'm flat out at work and everyone I talk to is the same right now so definitely appreciated.
Happy Birthday Homey, and what an interesting repair to watch through - "no-one normally does this, but there's no stock, a 3 month lead time, and it's tens of thousands of dollars; we'll try it".
Very nice looking results, and fascinating to watch you work through the process of investigation & repair.
Thanks!
Hey mate thanks for doing a Super Thanks contribution!
I just wanted to mention how I appreciate you saving the foul language for the end. I think it's great to be able to let my children see these processes without worrying about them picking up some undesirable vocabulary. 👍