Hi folks! I hope you will enjoy the restoration video! If you have any questions, please write them down below. I answer all of them, as usual. Cheers, Johnny!
This is a beautiful, sunny shade of yellow. I wouldn’t have taken bets that you could fix this poor thing! Saving the tires is incredible, and I love watching the laser rust removal. The googly eyes on the tumbler are so cute.
"Dampfgezogen" means that the wood is softened in steam and than it is bent into shape. After drying it stays that way. The manufacturer is the Biermann company from Orsoy on the Rhine (river in germany) 😊
Another great restoration. I prefered the natural color of the wood but glad that you rescued this little bit of history. I love the sound of "Dampfgezogen"!
LOL. That was the first thing I thought when you had the wheels in front of you. I was thinking the word out loud that they looked like dumb bells. Thank you for this and have a nice day😉
I’ve used a lot of these hand trolleys in my 66 years, some in worse condition than yours before you restored it but have never seen one restored. A magnificent job done mate. Restoring the tires was genius and I learned a lot from your process.
Enjoyed the video sir, first time I have seen anyone use laser cleaning rust and old paint, it does a nice job. The cart came out great, like the color also. Thanks for the video.
It's a very basic tool, but one that took a lot of work, patience and know-how! Well done! This is my first encounter with a barrel bearing; very interesting. Nice choice of colour! Anyone who can't find this devil in a warehouse should quickly consult their occulist!
It's always wonderful to see you bring an old tool back from the brink of death, giving it new life for modern times. Just curious: Why no wood glue when you drove the wood tenons into their mortises, or perhaps a through-dowel to pin the tenon in the mortise?
You did an amazing job again! 👏 I am restoring a vintage steiff child scooter and the front wheel is missing the square nut. Do you know where I could get one of those square nuts in Germany? Thank you!
It looks great and you did a wonderful job restoring it as well!!!! With all the insect holes I don't think I'd try to move something heavy or you might have more restoring to do I'm sure they still make that style of tire. I don't think you'll misplace that bright yellow in your shop HAHAHAHA I enjoyed your video so I gave it a Thumbs Up
For sure, two sacks of 25 kg each, quickly. I can bet on that, but the point here isn't to put it to work but to save it from decay and preserve it because not many are left in good condition.
Dampfgezogen is not the brand, its the production method. Its written on the wood, because its a term of certain production and quality. But im not a professional of wood work. So thats all i know.
@ 2:22 Notice when the nut is removed... ... Just how DRY the threads are... But if penetrating oil rocks your boat;... makes U feel good... Then go 4 it... ... Me;... heat then a sudden shock of cold water;... does the job just fine...
I just wrote a guy in Germany who is selling a similar trolly and he said this: "Hallo, das bedeutet, dass das Gestell aus einem Holzstück gezogen wurde und nicht geleimt ist o.ä.. Bedeutet deutlich höhere Stabilität." You can Google translate it:)
With antiques there is a controversy between restoration people and "patina" people. I never know which is the best option for resale value. How do you know which items to restore and which to just clean?
Hi David! That's right, there is a fragile line between those two opinions. My approach looks like this: patina is noble and usually is there because the material that the piece is made from is a quality one. That patina usually works as a protective layer and helps to preserve the piece and has various colours. Most of the time, I won't touch that because the piece is safe from decay and can prove its authenticity/have a value on the markets. So for me it is important what we call patina! Unfortunately, some people call Rust/dirt, patina, which for me is unbelievable because that is only corrosion. In most cases, the rust eats the metal, and very soon, that "patina" will leave you without your beautiful antique, and the value will drop to zero. The same as with the woodworms etc... So, please clean what is in danger of disappearing and let what is protected by time. 🙂 I hope you'll get my point of view; English is not my 1st language, so I may be interpreted wrong.
Pour visser ou dévisser des écrous carré, il faut mesurer le coté de l'écrou et prendre cette mesure et rajouter la moitié de la mesure. Par exemple, pour un écrou carré de 10 mm de coté, il faut ajouter 5 mm, donc utiliser une douille de 15 mm pour pouvoir utiliser une douille de 12 pans hexagonaux pour que celle-ci puisse fonctionner, car une douille 6 pans hexagonaux ne marcherait pas.
What should I improve, and why do you say that? Did you see the result? What's wrong with that? I'm inquisitive because I don't see any problem with painting. Are you a professional painter, or are you just talking based on other videos? 1. The process of painting manually with a brush looks weirdly filmed, but things are changing, and the final result is different. 2. Using Hammerite paint also looks strange for someone who doesn't know how that paint changes in a few seconds or what it is. 3. That's just black paint spray, and I don't know what can be in your mind wrong with it as a viewer... Waiting for your prompt answer, and if possible, please provide me with some of the many restoration videos that you have watched where they paint wood manually plus spray Hammerite paint.. You can add some links here for others to see what are you talking about. 🙂 If you don't do that your comment has no value, I accept criticism, but when you are critical, make sure you come up with a solution and much more arguments. Thanks! Johnny
@@rustyshadesrestoration I didn't mean to sound harsh. I'll try to explain. Yellow color isn't really a nice tint, but it gets easily dirt and while dirty natural wood is still appreciable, dirty paint is not. Then you can clearly notice brush strokes and paint drips, to me as an autistic are really annoying. Hammerite is evil, I hate it so much, I detest the uneven effect it gives to surfaces. The last black part was painted while still bent and pitted, without a primer coat an without a wet sanding for perfect final smoothness. You surely may argument that it is unuseful for an heavy duty tool, but still my soul was expecting a mint new looking handtruck. The rest is super cool, I am amazed by laser rust removal, so satisfying.
Thanks for explaining; now I've got you. I just want to know if there is space for improvement and ensure the viewer is aware of some stuff. I won't comment on your preferences about Hammerite or yellow paint because I just think the opposite, especially since the trolley was yellow and the rims were painted with silver Hammerite, so I just wanted to keep the original vibe with some fresh ones. When it comes to the metallic front part, that one plus the axle were left like that, with the rust pitting on to keep a vintage look and to preserve the item's identity as much as possible. Actually, what you see in most of the restoration videos (including some that I made) about sanding the rust pits and using a metal filler till everything is smooth and lovely it is only done for satisfactory purposes! In reality, those marks should stay because they prove how old and original the antique is. Now, if you see UA-camrs that are doing it all the time, it doesn't mean that that's the only way. ,, I like to do things in both ways and sometimes just to preserve the history that comes with that beautiful piece. PS: It is like hating the wrinkles and trying to smooth them out while they're so beautiful on human faces! 😍 Best, Johnny
@@milanfanasSanding the plate would be "over restoring", you can be sure it was not straight and smooth even when new. Also, the uneven surface effect in hammer paint is meant to hide imperfections - that is the whole point.
I had to apply two coats of paint; otherwise, it could look worse than now. Without it, the wood will not be protected; with oil, it will look bad because of filled holes. There are always some reasons behind the decisions. So, what you see is the best version; the wood is protected and looks better than before, and it is yellow like it was originally from the factory and treated to exist 100 more years from now. If you were in my place, you'd understand these facts better and you'll never repeat what you said above; watching and seeking perfection in paint jobs is easy. I can do that all day long, too. Best, Johnny
Definitely? Look, I didn't, and I managed to restore it beautifully and to preserve its shapes and value. If you prefer to replace the wood, do it; nobody stops you from that, but please don't tell me what I should do with my projects. Ah, replacing, in some cases, can send you from restoration to refurbishment and a cheap replica as a result. Best, Johnny
Hi folks! I hope you will enjoy the restoration video! If you have any questions, please write them down below. I answer all of them, as usual. Cheers, Johnny!
Looks great!!
What were you using to remove the rust?
This is a beautiful, sunny shade of yellow. I wouldn’t have taken bets that you could fix this poor thing! Saving the tires is incredible, and I love watching the laser rust removal. The googly eyes on the tumbler are so cute.
"Dampfgezogen" means that the wood is softened in steam and than it is bent into shape. After drying it stays that way. The manufacturer is the Biermann company from Orsoy on the Rhine (river in germany) 😊
Thank you for the info. 🙂
Cool. Three of my favorite things: 1) Laser rust removal 2) laser engraving 3) the sound of nature in the video. Nice restoration job!
Thank you! So, it means that you love nature and technology! 🙂
@@rustyshadesrestoration yes, and I appreciate antiques. 🙂
Laser engraving and laser rust removal really shines for me! The final product is stunning too! I love antique restoration projects!
Another great restoration. I prefered the natural color of the wood but glad that you rescued this little bit of history. I love the sound of "Dampfgezogen"!
Thanks a lot! 😀
I think this would of been a good resin job would of made th3 wood stronger and last longer but still and awesome job done on this
LOL. That was the first thing I thought when you had the wheels in front of you. I was thinking the word out loud that they looked like dumb bells. Thank you for this and have a nice day😉
Thanks a million! Have a great day too! 😀
Great work as usual. Really enjoy watching your videos. I personally would prefer a natural wood look for the frame.
I’ve used a lot of these hand trolleys in my 66 years, some in worse condition than yours before you restored it but have never seen one restored. A magnificent job done mate. Restoring the tires was genius and I learned a lot from your process.
Thank you for watching my videos! I'm glad that you liked the tire restoration process. 🙂
It's great to see this sort of thing restored. Never think of something like this looking brand new
Great restoration. You earned a subscriber sir 🎉😊
Thank you! 🙂
That turned out beautifully!
Мастер от Бога! Реставрировал старую тележку и создал шедевр! Спасибо за видео! Привет из России!
I'm glad you like it! Greetings from Poland! 🙂
I don't think I've ever seen bearings that long in a cage. Interesting to see what other countries used in their products.
Stellar job dude 👏👏👏 !!! Lovely result 👊👊👊. 😎
Wow impressive, the restoration was perfect, congratulations!😀💜💜💜
Thank you so much! 🙂 I'm always glad to see you in the comments section! All the best! Johnny
@@rustyshadesrestoration Hi Johnny, thank you very much!😀🥰💜💜👍
Cool engraving!!
Great restoration and well done.
Thank you! 🙂
Так нравится, когда старые вещи обретают новую жизнь!
"Knee pain cream" 😂😂 also the googley eyes 😂😂 I love how those tires came out! I wouldn't have thought they could have turned out so well!
Very well done, I remember using ones like that, at my first job back around 1972-73 !
Thank you! 🙂
Excellent work my friend!
Thank you very much! 🙂
Very nice video 😊 Restored tires look wow, i didn't expect this 😮
I'm glad you liked the finish of the tires. Thank you! 🙂
この人って、木製品の修復も徹底的に行うんだよね😊😊レストアでは大抵木製品は作り直してしまう😮😮とても良い🎉🎉❤❤新しい錆落とし技術も使う😂😂
Enjoyed the video sir, first time I have seen anyone use laser cleaning rust and old paint, it does a nice job. The cart came out great, like the color also. Thanks for the video.
I'm glad you enjoyed the video! Thank you for watching! 🙂
Lovely work. Great to see it moving a load after nearly a century. ❤
Glad you enjoyed it
Beautiful restoration mister good job well done
Glad you like it! 👍 🙂
Great work. I like the blackened metal and yellow colors. Sehr gut gemacht ❤ greetings from Berlin
Thank you! 🙂 Greetings from Poland! 🙂
Such a beautiful designed thing! And nice job!
Indeed! Thank you! 🙂
Great job well done!
Thank you! 🙂
Very nice !! It looks fantastic and will most likely last another 50 years great work !! 😂👍👍
Thank you! 🙂
Beautiful restoration. Dampfgezogen: steam-shaped
Thank you! 🙂
Комментарий в поддержку канала. Спасибо за красивую реставрацию старинных вещей!
It's a very basic tool, but one that took a lot of work, patience and know-how! Well done! This is my first encounter with a barrel bearing; very interesting. Nice choice of colour! Anyone who can't find this devil in a warehouse should quickly consult their occulist!
@ 6:02 ROFL ? How clean did the Subscribe Note come out...
Awesome!
Glad you think so!
Great job, enjoyed watching your work.👍🏼
I'm glad you enjoyed the video! 🙂
Great video,job well done.very nice restoration.just keep doing what your doing and carry on.👍👍👍😎😎😎
Thank you for your kind words, Tom! Greetings from Poland 🇵🇱
It's always wonderful to see you bring an old tool back from the brink of death, giving it new life for modern times. Just curious: Why no wood glue when you drove the wood tenons into their mortises, or perhaps a through-dowel to pin the tenon in the mortise?
Great job, I'm a fan of your channel. say hi Brazil, hugs!
Hey, thanks! 😍
Perfect channel. Its my therapy ❤
Whoa! Whoa hold on what is that laser rust removal thing?! 😮😮😮😮
Eine schöne Restauration für die alte Sackkarre. Früher waren diese Karren beim örtlichen Futtermittel handel im Gebrauch.
just subscribed. loving your work,
Awesome, thank you!
Great!!!!👍🙌
Thank you! Cheers!
As always, excellent work and although I love sandblasting, laser cleaning is really a step forward, I love it!
Couldn't agree more!
Very "Nice" 👍!
Great "Job"!
Can't wait to see what You do "Next".
Sincerely 🤠 Mr Severance,
"The Cake 🍰🎂 🥳🎉 Man".
You did an amazing job again! 👏 I am restoring a vintage steiff child scooter and the front wheel is missing the square nut. Do you know where I could get one of those square nuts in Germany? Thank you!
I'm not sure, but let's hope that my German viewers will see your comment and help you with that. Thank you! 🙂
It looks great and you did a wonderful job restoring it as well!!!! With all the insect holes I don't think I'd try to move something heavy or you might have more restoring to do
I'm sure they still make that style of tire. I don't think you'll misplace that bright yellow in your shop HAHAHAHA
I enjoyed your video so I gave it a Thumbs Up
Perfect 😊
Thank you 😊 💓
And now I'm watching the video:-)
Przepięknie jest ten bardzo mocno stary wózek spacerowy odrestaurowany Pozdrawiam serdecznie 👍👍👍👍👍👍
Świetna robota!!!
Dziękuję ❤️
Awesome restoration but what did you use to fill the wood holes (Ive used something similar to fix a wall I think but im not quite sure)
Thank you. Just simple wood putty 🙂
MUY BUENO
When you say" it 's raining heavily" , maybe you shoud show us the rain or the snow in your town.
Ok, I will try.
What process are you using to strip the metal???
I'm using a laser machine
@ 15:57 ROFL ... I C the Subscribe Note came out a treat...
What do you move with this small thang looks like it couldn’t even move a small box
For sure, two sacks of 25 kg each, quickly. I can bet on that, but the point here isn't to put it to work but to save it from decay and preserve it because not many are left in good condition.
I almost wonder if you could fill the worm holes with resin or something instead of just covering them over. the resin might make the wood stronger
That's also an excellent way to solve that issue, but it's more expensive.
Dampfgezogen means pulled by steam.
I found that information, but I can't understand why it was written on it? That's how the brand is called right?
Dampfgezogen is not the brand, its the production method. Its written on the wood, because its a term of certain production and quality. But im not a professional of wood work. So thats all i know.
Interesting information. Google Translate fooled me again when it came to the German language 😅
I actually have Continental tires on my car. gives the car a nice ride
@ 2:22 Notice when the nut is removed...
...
Just how DRY the threads are...
But if penetrating oil rocks your boat;... makes U feel good...
Then go 4 it...
...
Me;... heat then a sudden shock of cold water;... does the job just fine...
Restaurada caminhão de mão 😉
I just wrote a guy in Germany who is selling a similar trolly and he said this: "Hallo,
das bedeutet, dass das Gestell aus einem Holzstück gezogen wurde und nicht geleimt ist o.ä..
Bedeutet deutlich höhere Stabilität." You can Google translate it:)
Can we just appreciate the googly eyes and the knee pain cream for a moment? 😂
With antiques there is a controversy between restoration people and "patina" people. I never know which is the best option for resale value. How do you know which items to restore and which to just clean?
Hi David! That's right, there is a fragile line between those two opinions. My approach looks like this: patina is noble and usually is there because the material that the piece is made from is a quality one. That patina usually works as a protective layer and helps to preserve the piece and has various colours. Most of the time, I won't touch that because the piece is safe from decay and can prove its authenticity/have a value on the markets.
So for me it is important what we call patina! Unfortunately, some people call Rust/dirt, patina, which for me is unbelievable because that is only corrosion. In most cases, the rust eats the metal, and very soon, that "patina" will leave you without your beautiful antique, and the value will drop to zero. The same as with the woodworms etc...
So, please clean what is in danger of disappearing and let what is protected by time. 🙂 I hope you'll get my point of view; English is not my 1st language, so I may be interpreted wrong.
@@rustyshadesrestoration Thank you for the response, that is very helpful.
👍👍💪
Dampfgezogen is German and means steam bent. So not a brand name but the production method.
Aha, that's a very nice information. I couldn't find it nowhere. Thanks a lot!
I hope you remembered to floss after brushing..lol...
😂
😊
Pour visser ou dévisser des écrous carré, il faut mesurer le coté de l'écrou et prendre cette mesure et rajouter la moitié de la mesure. Par exemple, pour un écrou carré de 10 mm de coté, il faut ajouter 5 mm, donc utiliser une douille de 15 mm pour pouvoir utiliser une douille de 12 pans hexagonaux pour que celle-ci puisse fonctionner, car une douille 6 pans hexagonaux ne marcherait pas.
I usually feel blessed while watching restoration videos. But painting jobs (all 3) in this case left a bitter taste. There's much to improve
What should I improve, and why do you say that? Did you see the result? What's wrong with that? I'm inquisitive because I don't see any problem with painting. Are you a professional painter, or are you just talking based on other videos?
1. The process of painting manually with a brush looks weirdly filmed, but things are changing, and the final result is different.
2. Using Hammerite paint also looks strange for someone who doesn't know how that paint changes in a few seconds or what it is.
3. That's just black paint spray, and I don't know what can be in your mind wrong with it as a viewer...
Waiting for your prompt answer, and if possible, please provide me with some of the many restoration videos that you have watched where they paint wood manually plus spray Hammerite paint..
You can add some links here for others to see what are you talking about. 🙂
If you don't do that your comment has no value, I accept criticism, but when you are critical, make sure you come up with a solution and much more arguments.
Thanks! Johnny
@@rustyshadesrestoration I didn't mean to sound harsh. I'll try to explain. Yellow color isn't really a nice tint, but it gets easily dirt and while dirty natural wood is still appreciable, dirty paint is not. Then you can clearly notice brush strokes and paint drips, to me as an autistic are really annoying. Hammerite is evil, I hate it so much, I detest the uneven effect it gives to surfaces. The last black part was painted while still bent and pitted, without a primer coat an without a wet sanding for perfect final smoothness. You surely may argument that it is unuseful for an heavy duty tool, but still my soul was expecting a mint new looking handtruck. The rest is super cool, I am amazed by laser rust removal, so satisfying.
Thanks for explaining; now I've got you.
I just want to know if there is space for improvement and ensure the viewer is aware of some stuff.
I won't comment on your preferences about Hammerite or yellow paint because I just think the opposite, especially since the trolley was yellow and the rims were painted with silver Hammerite, so I just wanted to keep the original vibe with some fresh ones.
When it comes to the metallic front part, that one plus the axle were left like that, with the rust pitting on to keep a vintage look and to preserve the item's identity as much as possible.
Actually, what you see in most of the restoration videos (including some that I made) about sanding the rust pits and using a metal filler till everything is smooth and lovely it is only done for satisfactory purposes!
In reality, those marks should stay because they prove how old and original the antique is. Now, if you see UA-camrs that are doing it all the time, it doesn't mean that that's the only way. ,, I like to do things in both ways and sometimes just to preserve the history that comes with that beautiful piece.
PS: It is like hating the wrinkles and trying to smooth them out while they're so beautiful on human faces! 😍
Best, Johnny
@@milanfanasSanding the plate would be "over restoring", you can be sure it was not straight and smooth even when new. Also, the uneven surface effect in hammer paint is meant to hide imperfections - that is the whole point.
Gdybyś użył wałka do pomalowania drewna, lepiej by to wyglądało.
Dziękuję ❤️
Dampfgezogen is not a brand name: it means “steam pulled” = steam bent.
Knee pain cream 😂
😅
I guess it takes a real man to admit this, but....your bearing pull is bigger than mine. 😔
Was the original color really that bright?
For sure, it wasn't that bright, but something different I couldn't find. PS: A part of that brightness is given by studio lights reflection, too.
It was a really bad idea to paint the wood , you should have stained it instead . But it was a great restoration
5:55 🤣🤣🤣🤣
👀
Wish you would’ve kept the natural wood.
Great job though
Восстановленные вещи выставляются на продажу? Или что? Дни, потраченные на работу, должны же как-то быть вознаграждены.
I'm not selling them. 🙂
Must have had really short people back in those days. Or it was for little people. 😂
possiblement dans les anneés 50
pneumatic tires are the only way to go. built in shock absorbers. Germans using their noodle
sorry but that yellow paint is terrible
Not for me 😅
@@rustyshadesrestoration the paint is too thick, you can see the brush strokes in the dry paint
I had to apply two coats of paint; otherwise, it could look worse than now. Without it, the wood will not be protected; with oil, it will look bad because of filled holes. There are always some reasons behind the decisions. So, what you see is the best version; the wood is protected and looks better than before, and it is yellow like it was originally from the factory and treated to exist 100 more years from now.
If you were in my place, you'd understand these facts better and you'll never repeat what you said above; watching and seeking perfection in paint jobs is easy. I can do that all day long, too. Best, Johnny
Definitely should have got new wood instead of trying to restore
Definitely? Look, I didn't, and I managed to restore it beautifully and to preserve its shapes and value. If you prefer to replace the wood, do it; nobody stops you from that, but please don't tell me what I should do with my projects.
Ah, replacing, in some cases, can send you from restoration to refurbishment and a cheap replica as a result. Best, Johnny
Stellar job dude 👏👏👏 !!! Lovely result 👊👊👊. 😎
Thank you! 🙂
Wonderful job, fantastic
Thank you very much!