I think editing probably takes three or four times as long as I may think it will, so quite a time. Thanks for taking the time to film and then edit, much appreciated by all of us I'm sure! Have a good week.
Another customer wanting a silk purse from a sows ear. Ollie you did a great job. If I had been that customer I would have had you make a complete new one with proper size box sections knowing it would last years longer.
The fact that Ripon Farm Services sent you that job to sort out speaks volumes for the high regard in which they hold you, and the quality of your work. Dad swopped the Major for a second hand MF 65 with multi power from them in the mid sixties sometime but cant recall whether they were called Glovers or Appleyards back then. The 65 certainly saved some time on the road leading muck.😊. Ps, You and your Dad certainly did a tidy job on the ceiling given the degree of difficulty.
Gotta laugh though. Olloe has insulated the roof, has got the heater going and at 1:13 you can still see condensation coming out of his mouth. Keep going Ollie !
Good to see you back ! I love how you always come up with a solution to repair someone elses poor design work. Thanks for this weeks update. Brian from South Yorkshire.
Thanks Oliver, very interesting and educational, as usual. I agree with the comments that the customer should've shelled out for you to replace the box sections with ones with heavier walls, instead of bracing the existing ones . But well done on an ingenious and effective fix. On another note, I'd love to see you working on a car next time you do it! I know you're not a car channel, but I'd love to see how you tackle the different challenges posed by car repair. Here's one "aye" for recording it next time. Many thanks and all the best!
OMG- I'm assimilating. When I first started watching you videos I couldn't understand a single word. Now I realized that I am understanding more and more each time.
Good to hear you have reduced the condensation in the work shop with the insulation. A more comfortable work place now. We have 40c here in Victoria Australia today and not much cooler for the next few days. Thanks for the effort you put into your videos. cheers, Butch.
Very interesting repair. I think the people who built, then repaired that, need to hire a welder. I am always impressed with your reasoning and procedures when making repairs. I could watch your videos all day. Again, greetings from West Texas.
Thanks for taking the time to share your videos with us. I look forward to every single episode. The ceiling looks great. A large ceiling fan will definitely be a great addition. Thanks again.
Bloody good job mate , if you get sick of repairing other people's crap you can always manufacture your own line of attachments , Made Once , Made Right !! The Snowball Way
Oliver; years ago I insulated a work shop, and the heat stayed in the peak of the roof. To fix the problem, I mounted a squirrel cage box fan (from a evaporative cooler) in the peak, and routed ductwork (8 inch round flexible vent pipe) down to the floor in several locations. This pushed all the heat down to the floor and warmed the shop from the floor up instead of pushing warm thru the cold air trying to make it to the floor. Just a thought for you to think on. I look forward to seeing what projects you have to show us.
Hello Oliver. Roof panels look great. 😊 once sides are all done it should be like a little hot house. Another interesting job. Happy days from kiwi land.
Thank you for another great video. From someone who spent 45 years in heavy equipment maintenance and pressure welding. I can really appreciate your thinking and detail that goes into every job you do.
Good morning, Oliver. Nice job on the ceiling. No more condensation dripping and a little warmer. 👍 That slurry tanker boom frame sure needed some help. You definitely earned your fabricator's pay on that job. But it's ready for another season. Have a good week and see you Sunday. Cheers, mate.
Nice the roof is making a difference, it should also be cooler in the summer which will also help. That work is really slick, not sure what the previous person was on when they welded that box on. Should now last a lot longer and serve the farmer well. 👍
Its great seeing what you are able to do using your torch cutting table and press to make your adaptions ,but what ever repair work you do is interesting to see ,great works done.
Thank you for taking the time to put your videos together i only found your channel afew mounts back and have many of happy hour watching the videos u have already done i take my hat off to u sir its not bloody easy work that u do ive played around with a welder for years and know how hard it is but u make it look so easy 😊 keep up the good work we all enjoy your videos thank you 😊
Your ceiling looks amazing. even the center line that you say doesn't fit quite right. Also , Thank you for sharing your work with us and letting us view it. We all know it takes a lot of effort to film, edit and post.
The shop ceiling looks great. Looks a lot brighter on my screen anyway. That's a very professional looking repair on the sprayer. If they break that, they have bigger problems. And good luck with the car!
That sounds like a true Yorkshireman. My neighbour is from Whitby. If he can't get something for nothing, or borrow someone else's, he doesn't want it. Mind you I am from the south. If I can do a job myself, why pay anyone else. I liked working on old cars and tractors. Then they started getting complicated. Now I don't touch them. I put a salvaged, replacement engine in a sports motorcycle. Not too hard. Then had to take it to a dealer to programme the ECM. They get you in the end.
Greetings from Canada! Just a quick note to let you know how much I appreciate your taking the time to do these videos. I have worked in television and I know how much work there is to doing editing. Just wanted to say thanks and hope that you keep it up.
Well it looks like I am not the only crap welder around but like you said those welds actually made the hole frame weaker. Once again you done a nice job I admire your work by watching your videos I think I found out why my welding is crap.
0:55 If you can get H profile steel or plastic, usually used for various types of panel spacing or termination, you can cut small clips, and using a pick, sneak them into those areas where you have uneven gaps. Another thing you can do is to get a piece of trim, paint it with a matched paint and then screw it (through slightly larger holes, pre-drilled into the trim piece) to the meeting point. That will suck both sides down and will define the line solidly. The trim caps for the top of the roof will work just fine on the inside.
You have made a great job of insulating and cladding that roof. Walls next and you will have a great building. Fans at high level blowing downwards will really help too! 👍👍
The roof looks good Oliver, The range of jobs you are willing to tackle is impressive. As usual, you did a fabulous job for the customer. A a tight Yorkshireman, I do not believe that for a minute.
Missed your video last week, but I figured you were busy finishing the insulation. The ceiling looks good now and the main thing was that it stopped the indoor rain. Next steep, installing the ceiling fans you mentioned (which I was just thinking you needed when you mentioned it) and insulating the walls. That should keep you a lot warmer when it's freezing outside. It should help with the summer heat (if it even gets hot there) as well.
Another great video. I used to live in Wath and know Ripon farm services well. Watching you it seems you need a shop crane like Kurtis from CCE. It would be great content to see you fab one up too.
Some people say that gas-less welding is no good, but I've seen some really big jobs done with it (on UA-cam) and you use it quite a bit. I've been doing gas-less MIG welding for around 30 years now and I've done a lot with it over that time. I've never actually done gas MIG welding, so I don't have the problem of running out of gas! There might be situations where gas-less is unsuitable, but it works for me and many others in a lot of situations.
Nice to see those gear wheels turning in your head again that's an awesome fix just look at how professional it looks with those side holes and shaped ends ..ya cars are a pain to work on for sure busted knuckles lots of nice language but I get the fact u can save money doing it yourself just have to put ya mind to it ..thks for the content awesome job thks..
Great to see you back, Oliver! Hope you enjoyed your holiday! You certainly look fresher, the job on the ceiling looks great, you will notice a big difference, on the subject of the walls; you must know of any building salvage companies in your area, might be an idea to see if they have any ‘box’ insulated sheeting for the walls!💡 That would make a huge difference! Just replace the walls sheets with the box! Great to be able to watch your expertise again. Fantastic work on the tanker frame, what about reinforcing the bottom end from the inside? Just the ends that fit into the brackets on the tanker? Would that be possible? Great to see you repaired all those dodgy welds👍 Great to have something worthwhile to watch on Sunday mornings, kind regards, Mark from Scotland 😀😁👍
My lockup garage for my car had a corrugated cement board roof that was all cracking up and falling apart, I knew of the salvager because they have been there a while. We had the garage roof replaced with insulated box and it has made the garage much better for the car, especially in winter. Worth looking into, you’re bound to have companies in Yorkshire who sell this stuff.😉 The salvage people may be cheaper. Mark from Scotland 👍👋
If you can pour a new concrete over the existing, you can prep for radiant flooring. Heat rises so a heated floor will heat the boots & every thing else. It's long term & low operating cost once in place. I like your videos & can't believe the work you do to make old into new.
When they stiffened the structure they transfered dynamic stress to the new crack. That beam is not bent, so I think the design error is that it needed much longer and tapered gussets. But your fix is even better because it appears that it exceeds needed strength.
They make a primer specifically for sandwiching materials. I do not remember the name, but it has the word copper in it. Car metal fabricators use it extensively.
Oliver,it always seems that the companies that make the farming equipment seems to use inferior material as not thick enough again super outcome on you're part,take as always when working alone regards from Greenock
3:37 because they're absolute junk and they break if you so much as sneeze. Every time i see a repair on a slurry frame, i'm justified more and more in what i did years ago with my brother's stock. Discard rail from the place where the rail roads trash their old stuff, had it bent on side using their own machines in to an U and that's the frame. It's been working for nearly... 14 maybe 15 years. Not a single crack on any of them. Heavier, much more expensive than normal stuff, had to get a permit to use the stuff from the mayor's office, but not having to deal with cheaply made frames is the best.
Your shop looking great you might look into high bay lights made by hyperlite for it I’ve been replacing mine with them as my old ones burn out they are amazing.
Nicely done mate. That undercutting was atrocious, any welder worth their salt would not have been proud of that. We had an aeroplane engine maintenance stand, and that box section was cracked in 2 places due to the frame twisting, fixed it similarly to your fix. Take care, be well 👍
Loving the videos even though its prob nothing ile ever do, just a thought if you could put in a notch filter in post when using the plasma as the high pitch it makes makes everyone in the house ask what is up :p
Yet another piece of equipment going back to the farmer a lot stronger than when it was new. These manufactures under-designing things sure keep you busy fixing their mistakes.
I think editing probably takes three or four times as long as I may think it will, so quite a time. Thanks for taking the time to film and then edit, much appreciated by all of us I'm sure! Have a good week.
Another customer wanting a silk purse from a sows ear. Ollie you did a great job. If I had been that customer I would have had you make a complete new one with proper size box sections knowing it would last years longer.
Always impressed to see that the most used and most versatile tool in the shop is the forklift 😂. The videos are always a nice start of Sunday morning
True 😂😂
The fact that Ripon Farm Services sent you that job to sort out speaks volumes for the high regard in which they hold you, and the quality of your work.
Dad swopped the Major for a second hand MF 65 with multi power from them in the mid sixties sometime but cant recall whether they were called Glovers or Appleyards back then. The 65 certainly saved some time on the road leading muck.😊. Ps, You and your Dad certainly did a tidy job on the ceiling given the degree of difficulty.
The new ceiling looks good. Glad it keeps it from raining inside your shop. Love watching your videos and watching you puzzling out a problem.
Gotta laugh though. Olloe has insulated the roof, has got the heater going and at 1:13 you can still see condensation coming out of his mouth. Keep going Ollie !
Good to see you back ! I love how you always come up with a solution to repair someone elses poor design work. Thanks for this weeks update. Brian from South Yorkshire.
Thanks Oliver, very interesting and educational, as usual. I agree with the comments that the customer should've shelled out for you to replace the box sections with ones with heavier walls, instead of bracing the existing ones . But well done on an ingenious and effective fix. On another note, I'd love to see you working on a car next time you do it! I know you're not a car channel, but I'd love to see how you tackle the different challenges posed by car repair. Here's one "aye" for recording it next time. Many thanks and all the best!
OMG- I'm assimilating. When I first started watching you videos I couldn't understand a single word. Now I realized that I am understanding more and more each time.
Your roof panels look great, it looks so much brighter, hope it works as well as you hoped.
Good to hear you have reduced the condensation in the work shop with the insulation.
A more comfortable work place now. We have 40c here in Victoria Australia today and not much cooler for the next few days. Thanks for the effort you put into your videos. cheers, Butch.
Very interesting repair. I think the people who built, then repaired that, need to hire a welder. I am always impressed with your reasoning and procedures when making repairs. I could watch your videos all day. Again, greetings from West Texas.
Nice one Olly, something different again and us non farmers get to see all kinds of weird stuff. Well done with the ceiling, drip free lol. 👊
Thanks for taking the time to share your videos with us. I look forward to every single episode. The ceiling looks great. A large ceiling fan will definitely be a great addition. Thanks again.
Bloody good job mate , if you get sick of repairing other people's crap you can always manufacture your own line of attachments , Made Once , Made Right !! The Snowball Way
Thanks for explaining why you don't Weld certain areas.
Another superior job done. Always enjoy watching your thought process tackling & problem solving. Congrats on the dry roof.
Oliver; years ago I insulated a work shop, and the heat stayed in the peak of the roof. To fix the problem, I mounted a squirrel cage box fan (from a evaporative cooler) in the peak, and routed ductwork (8 inch round flexible vent pipe) down to the floor in several locations. This pushed all the heat down to the floor and warmed the shop from the floor up instead of pushing warm thru the cold air trying to make it to the floor. Just a thought for you to think on. I look forward to seeing what projects you have to show us.
Hello Oliver. Roof panels look great. 😊 once sides are all done it should be like a little hot house.
Another interesting job.
Happy days from kiwi land.
Thank you for another great video. From someone who spent 45 years in heavy equipment maintenance and pressure welding. I can really appreciate your thinking and detail that goes into every job you do.
Good work as usual Mate, thoroughly liking your videos as usual of coarse. I like the new roof, you working with your Dad always good to see.
Good to see you back Oĺly nice job mate
Good morning, Oliver. Nice job on the ceiling. No more condensation dripping and a little warmer. 👍 That slurry tanker boom frame sure needed some help. You definitely earned your fabricator's pay on that job. But it's ready for another season.
Have a good week and see you Sunday. Cheers, mate.
Nice the roof is making a difference, it should also be cooler in the summer which will also help. That work is really slick, not sure what the previous person was on when they welded that box on. Should now last a lot longer and serve the farmer well. 👍
Much appreciate your time videoing your jobs they are really interesting
Its great seeing what you are able to do using your torch cutting table and press to make your adaptions ,but what ever repair work you do is interesting to see ,great works done.
Thank you for taking the time to put your videos together i only found your channel afew mounts back and have many of happy hour watching the videos u have already done i take my hat off to u sir its not bloody easy work that u do ive played around with a welder for years and know how hard it is but u make it look so easy 😊 keep up the good work we all enjoy your videos thank you 😊
After the roof sheeting, without adding lights. It's already much brighter on video. Nice job 👍
Lesser known tip for Dewalt chucks on drills, tighten as normal, then turn it back until it clicks. This locks the chuck.
your videos is much appreciated thanks.
The roofs looking good Oliver
Nice, Mr Snowball! I REALLY like your reinforcement designs, I must say! Thanks a lot!
A lovely example of design and fabrication to resolve a previous poor attempt to strengthen equipment
Another perfect Sunday, thanks for sharing Oliver
Love watching you work.😊
Your ceiling looks amazing. even the center line that you say doesn't fit quite right. Also , Thank you for sharing your work with us and letting us view it. We all know it takes a lot of effort to film, edit and post.
The shop ceiling looks great. Looks a lot brighter on my screen anyway. That's a very professional looking repair on the sprayer. If they break that, they have bigger problems. And good luck with the car!
Wow that ceiling looks great Should really help a lot. Project turned out nice 👍
That sounds like a true Yorkshireman. My neighbour is from Whitby. If he can't get something for nothing, or borrow someone else's, he doesn't want it. Mind you I am from the south. If I can do a job myself, why pay anyone else. I liked working on old cars and tractors. Then they started getting complicated. Now I don't touch them. I put a salvaged, replacement engine in a sports motorcycle. Not too hard. Then had to take it to a dealer to programme the ECM. They get you in the end.
Greetings from Canada! Just a quick note to let you know how much I appreciate your taking the time to do these videos. I have worked in television and I know how much work there is to doing editing. Just wanted to say thanks and hope that you keep it up.
Well it looks like I am not the only crap welder around but like you said those welds actually made the hole frame weaker.
Once again you done a nice job I admire your work by watching your videos I think I found out why my welding is crap.
0:55 If you can get H profile steel or plastic, usually used for various types of panel spacing or termination, you can cut small clips, and using a pick, sneak them into those areas where you have uneven gaps.
Another thing you can do is to get a piece of trim, paint it with a matched paint and then screw it (through slightly larger holes, pre-drilled into the trim piece) to the meeting point. That will suck both sides down and will define the line solidly. The trim caps for the top of the roof will work just fine on the inside.
That adjustable workbench sure is handy. It makes your job a lot easier by getting it to a comfortable level. Jobs would be more difficult without it.
Good on you for your consistent use of PPE 👍🏻
You have made a great job of insulating and cladding that roof. Walls next and you will have a great building. Fans at high level blowing downwards will really help too! 👍👍
Olá amigo muitop bom trabalho como sempre!!!
Ficou super reforçado!!!
Boa sorte sempre!!!
The roof looks good Oliver, The range of jobs you are willing to tackle is impressive. As usual, you did a fabulous job for the customer. A a tight Yorkshireman, I do not believe that for a minute.
Great job with the roof. Even better job on the frame. Well done
A very tidy job Oliver and well thought-out
First. Welcome back Oliver, keep up the fantastic work👏
glad to see you got the roof done great video
I bet its so much brighter in there sir!!
Ceiling looks great, liked your idea/method to repair the farm item.
Great job on the ceiling and the video.
Another great video. It would have been interesting to see the car repair but needs must. Have a good week and see you next Sunday.
Missed your video last week, but I figured you were busy finishing the insulation. The ceiling looks good now and the main thing was that it stopped the indoor rain. Next steep, installing the ceiling fans you mentioned (which I was just thinking you needed when you mentioned it) and insulating the walls. That should keep you a lot warmer when it's freezing outside. It should help with the summer heat (if it even gets hot there) as well.
great show. thanks for your time.see you next week.
Another quality Snowball OEM+ repair 👍👍
Another great video, always interesting, thanks!
Ceiling looks nice Oliver. Hopefully it will help keep some of that heat inside!
Good job Oliver, they say if something looks right it probably is right. well that repair certainly looks right, and will last the test of time
Very nice job Ollie!
Great vidio Ollie, a proper fabrication job that.
Nice roof job too, your a bit like me much rather sort a job myself wherever n whenever possible 👍
Always brilliant videos 👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻🇬🇧
Nice work, thanks for sharing
Very nice job on the roof looks far better, and maybe a little bit warmer.👍
Another great video. I used to live in Wath and know Ripon farm services well.
Watching you it seems you need a shop crane like Kurtis from CCE. It would be great content to see you fab one up too.
Great editing, i know it takes a lot of time. Thanks.
Hi My Dear Friend Very Very Great Job Sir ❤❤❤❤❤
Some people say that gas-less welding is no good, but I've seen some really big jobs done with it (on UA-cam) and you use it quite a bit. I've been doing gas-less MIG welding for around 30 years now and I've done a lot with it over that time. I've never actually done gas MIG welding, so I don't have the problem of running out of gas! There might be situations where gas-less is unsuitable, but it works for me and many others in a lot of situations.
Nice to see those gear wheels turning in your head again that's an awesome fix just look at how professional it looks with those side holes and shaped ends ..ya cars are a pain to work on for sure busted knuckles lots of nice language but I get the fact u can save money doing it yourself just have to put ya mind to it ..thks for the content awesome job thks..
The roof insulation project looks great.
Should help with noise levels, too, and no more drips.
Cool repair, Oliver.
Be well .
Great to see you back, Oliver! Hope you enjoyed your holiday! You certainly look fresher, the job on the ceiling looks great, you will notice a big difference, on the subject of the walls; you must know of any building salvage companies in your area, might be an idea to see if they have any ‘box’ insulated sheeting for the walls!💡
That would make a huge difference! Just replace the walls sheets with the box!
Great to be able to watch your expertise again. Fantastic work on the tanker frame, what about reinforcing the bottom end from the inside? Just the ends that fit into the brackets on the tanker? Would that be possible?
Great to see you repaired all those dodgy welds👍
Great to have something worthwhile to watch on Sunday mornings, kind regards, Mark from Scotland 😀😁👍
My lockup garage for my car had a corrugated cement board roof that was all cracking up and falling apart, I knew of the salvager because they have been there a while. We had the garage roof replaced with insulated box and it has made the garage much better for the car, especially in winter. Worth looking into, you’re bound to have companies in Yorkshire who sell this stuff.😉 The salvage people may be cheaper.
Mark from Scotland 👍👋
If you can pour a new concrete over the existing, you can prep for radiant flooring. Heat rises so a heated floor will heat the boots & every thing else. It's long term & low operating cost once in place. I like your videos & can't believe the work you do to make old into new.
"Saved means earned"
Thanks again for an informative video 🤙🤙🤙
1,521 👍's up SBE thank you for sharing 🤗
Inspirational! Thank you!
Good job Ollie 👍
17:40 good idea to put that plate under where you are grinding it protects the treatment on the top of the welding table.
Mr Snowball!!! I hope you are well? Thanks so much for the amazing content sir!
When they stiffened the structure they transfered dynamic stress to the new crack. That beam is not bent, so I think the design error is that it needed much longer and tapered gussets. But your fix is even better because it appears that it exceeds needed strength.
good job on the celling lol on drilling the cracks
Keep the door shut!! Nice fix using the long flitch plates. One good thing about being left Handed is the 9" grinder sits the right way.
They make a primer specifically for sandwiching materials. I do not remember the name, but it has the word copper in it. Car metal fabricators use it extensively.
Roof looks great. I hope in now stops raining inside!
Celing looks great
Nice job...Thank You...
Fantastic 😊😊😊
Great video man, same here on working on car's, don't like it at all,lol 😂..I do alot of machine work and fab work, welding but not automobiles...
Top looking roof (pun intended) thanks for the content
Oliver,it always seems that the companies that make the farming equipment seems to use inferior material as not thick enough again super outcome on you're part,take as always when working alone regards from Greenock
Great job.
3:37 because they're absolute junk and they break if you so much as sneeze. Every time i see a repair on a slurry frame, i'm justified more and more in what i did years ago with my brother's stock. Discard rail from the place where the rail roads trash their old stuff, had it bent on side using their own machines in to an U and that's the frame. It's been working for nearly... 14 maybe 15 years. Not a single crack on any of them. Heavier, much more expensive than normal stuff, had to get a permit to use the stuff from the mayor's office, but not having to deal with cheaply made frames is the best.
Nice job
Your shop looking great you might look into high bay lights made by hyperlite for it I’ve been replacing mine with them as my old ones burn out they are amazing.
good job again
Great video.Have you thought about building a simple gantry crane across the workshop? Would save a lot of faffing about with a forklift.
Yes, that would be good
Nicely done mate. That undercutting was atrocious, any welder worth their salt would not have been proud of that. We had an aeroplane engine maintenance stand, and that box section was cracked in 2 places due to the frame twisting, fixed it similarly to your fix. Take care, be well 👍
Loving the videos even though its prob nothing ile ever do, just a thought if you could put in a notch filter in post when using the plasma as the high pitch it makes makes everyone in the house ask what is up :p
Yet another piece of equipment going back to the farmer a lot stronger than when it was new. These manufactures under-designing things sure keep you busy fixing their mistakes.