Things like this make me so happy. Quality tools and items that have been lost, forget or neglected, returned to their true glory. As a young, blade-smith in training, this is the kind of video content I love.
Thanks for making this video..I've done alot of stuff just like this..n..took a break..too long a break..this just made me realize I need to get back to it..I need that in my life..it's always made me feel so good to restore things better than they were..sorry for rambling..but thanks
@@theinstitute1324 So true. A real Craftsman puts his tools above his own fingers. With a well-kept set of tools, you can build nearly anything. Without em it's hard to make anything.
I found some old rusted screwdriver bits, let them sit in hydrogen peroxide a few days most of the rust bubbled off I wiped the rest off but it did require a little bit of sanding.
So my dad was a blacksmith for the first half of my life. Unfortunately times got hard and he had to sell everything but watching you brought back so many memories from my childhood. To this day my favorite smell is smoke from a forge
There is always a good story, a great idea, and wonderful dreams, and the good lives behind these tools...every handy man will be glad to see them restored, workable and shining again...!!! 🤩😉😊👌👊🙏
Beautifully done! I love how you salvaged that ax head and turned it into something amazing! I'm a sucker for old hammers and have refurbished a few of them. I'm not great with the handles and have much to learn. I wish I lived closer so I could see you at work there, pick up some pointers and learn from the master!
My dad bought that hand cranked grinder years ago. After I bought an angle grinder I just abandon that hand cranked grinder. Well, I think it's a good idea to restore it back to working condition. Thank's for the inspiration.
Fantastic! Thanks for the encouragement. Wish I could have attended the Good of the Land fest. I have been collecting the hammers, axes and other tools for some time now and will be doing a neighborhood tool fix it day in the spring. Cheers!
I watched this video when it was like 2 weeks old, loved it, watching it again at 2 years old and I still love it, don't know why but this is the only restoration video that isn't bullshit for views, it's actual restoration
This is literally a guide to half-ass homegrown making right here.... You get yourself a couple basic tools and supplies and you can have some cool shit too. Love it... Keep it up.
I love restoration videos, and some don't get the point of it all (they'd give you the math on time, material, or work spent vs buying something new), but there's something therapeutic (cathartic?) about seeing "junk" turned back into something of beauty. That joy and satisfaction are things you simply can't put a price on.
This is absolutely the best restoration of tools that I've ever seen!!! Fantastic job. Can you tell I'm IMPRESSED? !!! Thanks for sharing your expertise and video, Rodney
Great project(s). My maternal grandfather had a hand-cranked grinder similar to the one you restored. I haven't seen it since 1964. Great memories. Thanks.
I got a hammer like that with a shorter handle and it's my favorite for automotive work. It's light enough to use laying on my back but heavy enough to get the job done and it was only $5 at my antique mall.
I watched this once a long time ago and it still amazes me showing all the methods and items and steps, I'm only 15 and Really want to get into blacksmithing and crafting work
You saved a lot of nice tools that most people would have thrown out , that damaged double bitted axe is now a woodsman axe any one would be proud to own. That table (clamp mounted) sharping wheel is a great super handy shop item.
I nearly wept when I saw the miracle of the restoration of the hand plane. I simply cannot understand why anyone would allow a tool of that quality to deteriorate like that. Well done, sir! You have a gift.
None.. Because no grinder wheels were used in this video. Only sandpaper. I definitely wouldn't have tried sanding my way through that axe head. Especially since he has a blacksmithing setup right there. Two cuts with a disk would have saved 20 minutes of sand-grinding and left enough material to forge into a longer hook.
Wow great job! I've been on a restoration binge on youtube and have been watching nothing but videos like this. Lol i don't even know all of the tools you fixed but I DO know they look a lot than when you first got em!
I remember when every neighbourhood had a tailor, a butcher, a cobbler, and a repair shop. When your toaster stopped toasting or your gardening shears went rusty you didn't throw them away and buy new ones from China, you brought them to the greasy fellow in overalls at the repair shop and he'd restore it to working order. Things were made to last multiple lifetimes. When my parents married in 1967 they bought two pairs of Singer scissors for $20. That's the equivalent of $150 in today's money. Fifty years later, my father is still using those same scissors. They've had to be sharpened a few times and the screw needed to be tightened on one pair, but they look absolutely brand new. They outlived my mother and will probably outlive my father. They may even outlive me. Meanwhile, trying to buy a pair of Chinese-made scissors actually capable of cutting paper at the dollar store is an exercise in frustration and sheer luck.
My grandmother gave me a rusted pair of Wiss scissors from 1931. I found a local guy to clean them up and sharpen them, and I can tell I'll be giving them to my grandchildren.
really should be wearing gloves with that degreaser man. My grandpa was a mechanic and died of cancer that started in his skin from using degreaser and other chemicals and spread through his body. Really enjoying the channel, I want you to be around for a long time to keep teaching us.
Bet grandpa also washed his hands in the parts cleaner barrel or used gasoline. Benzene and other stuff is bad news, just hope I don't get anything from all the stuff I've gotten on me over the years. Sorry for your loss.
Back in the day, all of us old school mechanics washed our hands in Stoddard solvent in the parts washer, a bad practice. The modern hand cleaners stopped that practice. I've probably been exposed to more Benzene that a lot of folks. I worked on a petrochemical ship and we carried thousands of barrels of very crude Benzene. Luckily, I've had no bad side effects. I am allergic to Xylene. One whiff and I start having a skin reaction. Be careful and take precautions, it's your hide and no one cares as much.
whats that rig you used to run current through the metal in the bucket at 14:00ish? where did you buy it, or if you made it, do you show how somewhere?
Hi there I am a fan Wrenglerstar for 3 years. I love what you do. I relax all the time when I watch your show and I love the your work. Kind regars Andrei Anitii
love the video, saw a couple ham handed restoration channels before this. With that being said, you know you can cut things right? not everything needs to be ground. Keep up the good work.
hello again i commented a few videos back. i made a coffee can forge and made a few tools nothing fancy but iv been going to yard sales and buying old tools and fixing them up and filling my step dads garage with them XD but this way ik once i get a garage il have anything a handy man could dream of. thanks for the idea to fix restore and create.
This has to be one of the best 5 gallon bucket finds in recent history. It's not everyday that you find a hand crank grinder outside of an antique mall/swapmeet. Great score, and great video putting them back to work. I can't fault anyone who finishes a job to completion no matter how I question their methods. Liked and subbed, looking forward to seeing more.
@@noone-nd4ml Of course, I realize that; I have one. The problem is: Only one hand is available to guide the workpiece whereas with my bench grinder (electrically-driven), I steady the steel against the grindstone..... An assistant is NEEDED....!
Had a bucket very similar to that which I was saving for restoration, had to leave it back in FL. I'm on the road now so only so much moves with me and haven't found a new place to settle yet. Nice work!
+Donald Duncan I have one. You cant see what I'm doing in a blast cabinet and I have found that a wire wheel can be a bit faster unless you have crevices. Not to mention blast cabinets don't stab you in the stomach with wire needles. I love being stabbed with wire nee.....uh, I'm going to use the cabinet in the next vid!😁
6 років тому
@@TheGoodoftheLand Blast cabinets REQ. very stout compressors. The least expensive course would appear to be 1.) Exposure to some sort of degreaser---even diesel--and over some days..... 2.) Next exposure to Electrolysis.... 3.)Lastly, if it's really needed, mechanical debriding. Abrasives not cheap & can pointlessly alter the appearance of a tool. Also--as you indicate--some pose a risk
I use a blast cabinet, I also have a tank of phosphoric rust stripper and a pedestal mounted wire wheel. Most parts go into the acid stripping tank whilst I’m blasting or wire brushing, that way rust is being dissolved when I’m busy with other parts. It’s nice to sit back and watch other people do similar work and see how they do it, there’s always something new to learn.
As A truck driver working with an old school shop I found that diesel fuel is cheap and works well to remove rust and if you add old motor oil it also will lubricate and loosen any metal mechanical parts like rusted up scissors or rust welded nuts and bolts. You will be surprised how well it works but it does take time to penetrate and eat away the rust without all that grinding, heating or using other expensive chemicals. It also works well as a grease cutter for mechanical parts in a bath.
+Craig Marshall It doesn't take Wranlerstar any more time to restore something. He is teaching while he does it. I have always been a fan. Check out his video titled " This axe is insane" that's my axe head.
@@TheGoodoftheLand oh im a long time subscriber of wrangler star too. I entered the giveaway of the jewel incrusted axe head lol i was just teasing a little bit.
This guy has an excellent eye and a definite talent for the nuances of art. Working with only tools some would call nothing less than primitive, he creates works of art and utility. Having done a lot of the things he does here, I would not even attempt it without better tools. Someone should hire and finance him. He obviously loves doing this.
It's actually called a duplex filletster and rabbet plane as the cutting iron can also be mounted in the front position. Some calls it a Kaiser blade, but I calls it a sling-blade. Mmm-hmm...
The Rust converter is one of my favorite products, I would recommend that to anyone. Great job on the restorations.
It's great stuff! I love it as a finish.
Cola is a really good rust remover too just bath it in cola and than scrub it
6000 grit on an axe head? Are you insane? Did you mean 600? This isn't the Ridler awards.
Also, these videos are awesome. After a long hard day it's either something like this or an episode of Seinfeld before bed. lol
How many trips back to home Depot?
Things like this make me so happy. Quality tools and items that have been lost, forget or neglected, returned to their true glory. As a young, blade-smith in training, this is the kind of video content I love.
Thanks for making this video..I've done alot of stuff just like this..n..took a break..too long a break..this just made me realize I need to get back to it..I need that in my life..it's always made me feel so good to restore things better than they were..sorry for rambling..but thanks
One of my favorite things to do, take old rusty stuff and give it a new life, I find it very satisfying somehow.
I'm old and rusty. New life please?
If you're like me there is probably too much pitting.
We r same sir :)
+Adeel Syed Excellent!
Orville SY Illusions samw
I think it's great that there are people who are re-preparing and reusing the old tool
I love how you took a bucket of nothing and made it into some awesome tools
The reason he was able to do that, friend, was because he knew that it wasn't a bucket of nothing. It was a bucket of mistreated somethings.
@@theinstitute1324 So true. A real Craftsman puts his tools above his own fingers. With a well-kept set of tools, you can build nearly anything.
Without em it's hard to make anything.
great hobby, great tools, real world actual recycling, loved every part of it :)
Your son has good manners and seems thankful. That's great, continue raising them this way. The world will need men like that in the future!
Only two differences between your restoration process and mine, one is you do it right and the other is I swear at myself the whole time.
+justen sr Ha! Its called editing 😁
@@TheGoodoftheLand, true true. Great job on those tools
Lmao
I found some old rusted screwdriver bits, let them sit in hydrogen peroxide a few days most of the rust bubbled off I wiped the rest off but it did require a little bit of sanding.
The wrong way is the right way 😉😁😆
So my dad was a blacksmith for the first half of my life. Unfortunately times got hard and he had to sell everything but watching you brought back so many memories from my childhood. To this day my favorite smell is smoke from a forge
There is always a good story, a great idea, and wonderful dreams, and the good lives behind these tools...every handy man will be glad to see them restored, workable and shining again...!!! 🤩😉😊👌👊🙏
+Kloyd Arne Peña Amen! Thanks Kloyd!
They all turned out real nice. Restoring old tools is favorite hobby of mine. I especially love wood planes.
Beautifully done! I love how you salvaged that ax head and turned it into something amazing! I'm a sucker for old hammers and have refurbished a few of them. I'm not great with the handles and have much to learn. I wish I lived closer so I could see you at work there, pick up some pointers and learn from the master!
Wow! I love a man that works w his hands
My dad bought that hand cranked grinder years ago. After I bought an angle grinder I just abandon that hand cranked grinder. Well, I think it's a good idea to restore it back to working condition. Thank's for the inspiration.
Fantastic! Thanks for the encouragement. Wish I could have attended the Good of the Land fest. I have been collecting the hammers, axes and other tools for some time now and will be doing a neighborhood tool fix it day in the spring.
Cheers!
+Patrick Hayes The fest will be livestreaming on November 17!
SNAP! I will be watching from time to time. any chance there is a schedule of events that will be streamed?
Lots of really great entertainment in this video. Thanks for the effort it took to get this recorded and posted.
+Rusty Gun Thanks for noticing.
Thank you. It's really nice watching things being brought back to life instead of thrown away.
Thanks for doing right by those knives! People just don’t value good knives anymore. You did well!
I just watched 30 minutes of pure satisfaction
I watched this video when it was like 2 weeks old, loved it, watching it again at 2 years old and I still love it, don't know why but this is the only restoration video that isn't bullshit for views, it's actual restoration
Im especially jealous of that rebate plane find
GREAT DEDICATION TO CRAFTMANSHIP AND DETAIL !!! WISH I HAD A WORKSHOP LIKE THIS ...All the best from Jamaica
all carefully stored in a bucket of rainwater,
To protect the tools from the elements.
Oqutzz but water is one
@@gappuma7883 r/woosh
Oqutzz the four nations lived in peace and harmony until the water nation attacked
Nova_Freak dont woosh me i know what i say freak
This is literally a guide to half-ass homegrown making right here.... You get yourself a couple basic tools and supplies and you can have some cool shit too. Love it... Keep it up.
I enjoy using a draw knife to make axe and hammer handles, give it a try. Thank you for sharing your skills and knowledge with us.
I need to get some practice with the draw knife. Have you ever seen Blacksmith Liam Hoffman use one? Its incredible.
Or a spokeshave. Much easier to use than a drawknife and available very cheaply.
I love restoration videos, and some don't get the point of it all (they'd give you the math on time, material, or work spent vs buying something new), but there's something therapeutic (cathartic?) about seeing "junk" turned back into something of beauty. That joy and satisfaction are things you simply can't put a price on.
Not to mention the quality of the item and steel compared to today offerings. Satisfaction is just the frosting!
I missed the tool restorations SOOO much, thank you!!!!
This is absolutely the best restoration of tools that I've ever seen!!! Fantastic job. Can you tell I'm IMPRESSED? !!! Thanks for sharing your expertise and video, Rodney
I've got a minor cold, I lost my job on Christmas Eve and I am withdrawing from antidepressants on top of it all. This video makes things better.
Jeez bruh
Careful with just cold turkey dropping antidepressants. You need to be weaned off.
Great project(s). My maternal grandfather had a hand-cranked grinder similar to the one you restored. I haven't seen it since 1964. Great memories. Thanks.
I got a hammer like that with a shorter handle and it's my favorite for automotive work. It's light enough to use laying on my back but heavy enough to get the job done and it was only $5 at my antique mall.
The lavish manner in which you over applied that sealer oil to the axe handle will no doubt stay with me forever.
I’d love to be the guy that sells you grinding supplies
Out of context that sounds sexual
Most things do.
I'm sure his grinder tools cost more than a buck!
+Raiden Dot $300. Not cheap and definitely not for everyone. I was a bodyman for years and have accumulated a ton of tools. Time is money in a shop.
@@TheGoodoftheLand Well if you want to save time AND money you would use a cut-off disc to remove 90% of that material on the axe.
Great job sir.i wish I had your time,patience,skill and determination.i love to see old tools brought back to life.
Remember when Tetanus was a huge deal?
Good times, good times...
Now we just get shots for a it so no one gets it
@@wafflekatt7776 You might be surprised how many still die each year of tetanus. It is a nasty and very painful way of dying.
I watched this once a long time ago and it still amazes me showing all the methods and items and steps, I'm only 15 and Really want to get into blacksmithing and crafting work
Did you do it?
You saved a lot of nice tools that most people would have thrown out , that damaged double bitted axe is now a woodsman axe any one would be proud to own. That table (clamp mounted) sharping wheel is a great super handy shop item.
robert miller thats a fire axe now...
I nearly wept when I saw the miracle of the restoration of the hand plane. I simply cannot understand why anyone would allow a tool of that quality to deteriorate like that.
Well done, sir! You have a gift.
How many grinder wheels do you go through in a day?
all of them
None.. Because no grinder wheels were used in this video. Only sandpaper. I definitely wouldn't have tried sanding my way through that axe head. Especially since he has a blacksmithing setup right there. Two cuts with a disk would have saved 20 minutes of sand-grinding and left enough material to forge into a longer hook.
@@Grizzydan Would this have made the head too hot and lost the temper?
Yes
@@nriyo3 there wasn't much tempered part left to begin with anyway, but that is still a valid point :)
Wow great job! I've been on a restoration binge on youtube and have been watching nothing but videos like this. Lol i don't even know all of the tools you fixed but I DO know they look a lot than when you first got em!
This would have taken wranglerstar 2 years and 500 videos to complete
😂🤣😂🤣
Lol I watch his channel as well.
Loooool
And they would have all been chock full of his pompous bloviating. Can’t stand watching his BS.
Why u have to be mad
These videos are so calming to watch right before sleep. I know I'm not the only one who thinks so.
I think you found a gold mine in the bucket they are all turning out great. Keep up the great videos
You are a genius!!! Greetings from Argentina!!
I remember when every neighbourhood had a tailor, a butcher, a cobbler, and a repair shop. When your toaster stopped toasting or your gardening shears went rusty you didn't throw them away and buy new ones from China, you brought them to the greasy fellow in overalls at the repair shop and he'd restore it to working order. Things were made to last multiple lifetimes.
When my parents married in 1967 they bought two pairs of Singer scissors for $20. That's the equivalent of $150 in today's money. Fifty years later, my father is still using those same scissors. They've had to be sharpened a few times and the screw needed to be tightened on one pair, but they look absolutely brand new. They outlived my mother and will probably outlive my father. They may even outlive me. Meanwhile, trying to buy a pair of Chinese-made scissors actually capable of cutting paper at the dollar store is an exercise in frustration and sheer luck.
NoJusticeNoPeace z
Was that “sheer” pun intentional?
My grandmother gave me a rusted pair of Wiss scissors from 1931. I found a local guy to clean them up and sharpen them, and I can tell I'll be giving them to my grandchildren.
kelath5555 I recently bought a pair of Weiss scissors. Full tang and THICK by modern low standards. Best $25 i've spent in years.
Yeah... right... Blame chinese for capitalism.
The good of the Land, I really enjoy watching the process of taking a bunch of rusty pieces to such beautiful pieces.
really should be wearing gloves with that degreaser man. My grandpa was a mechanic and died of cancer that started in his skin from using degreaser and other chemicals and spread through his body. Really enjoying the channel, I want you to be around for a long time to keep teaching us.
:)
U are a good man
Bet grandpa also washed his hands in the parts cleaner barrel or used gasoline. Benzene and other stuff is bad news, just hope I don't get anything from all the stuff I've gotten on me over the years. Sorry for your loss.
just wear gloves in general when dealing with any chemical
Back in the day, all of us old school mechanics washed our hands in Stoddard solvent in the parts washer, a bad practice. The modern hand cleaners stopped that practice. I've probably been exposed to more Benzene that a lot of folks. I worked on a petrochemical ship and we carried thousands of barrels of very crude Benzene. Luckily, I've had no bad side effects. I am allergic to Xylene. One whiff and I start having a skin reaction. Be careful and take precautions, it's your hide and no one cares as much.
Nice conversion into a fireman's axe! You have the patience of a trap door spider!
whats that rig you used to run current through the metal in the bucket at 14:00ish? where did you buy it, or if you made it, do you show how somewhere?
You do a GREAT job shaping the hips into the wooden handles with the sander. Looks fantastic.
+Crawl It Thank you.
He has a nice forge one day I will have a forge like that
Thank you for giving these tools a new lease on life!
"Do not stab ur brother"
🤦🏻♂️ parenting 101
@William White Phillips or flat head?
@@bajamus69 the question that needs asking 😂😂
@@bajamus69
Y-head.
Is he okay
I've been told not to stab my siblings many times
I could watch this all day. F’n awesome!
Was this garage sale at a serial killer's house?
HA!
Quality
Ellie gotta agree with you there
😂😂😂😂
Am I missing something? serial killer? why, because he had knives? What?
Hi there I am a fan Wrenglerstar for 3 years. I love what you do. I relax all the time when I watch your show and I love the your work.
Kind regars
Andrei Anitii
love the video, saw a couple ham handed restoration channels before this. With that being said, you know you can cut things right? not everything needs to be ground. Keep up the good work.
i think he was pushing the tool to its limits
hello again i commented a few videos back. i made a coffee can forge and made a few tools nothing fancy but iv been going to yard sales and buying old tools and fixing them up and filling my step dads garage with them XD but this way ik once i get a garage il have anything a handy man could dream of. thanks for the idea to fix restore and create.
Nice finds, totally worth 1$
This has to be one of the best 5 gallon bucket finds in recent history. It's not everyday that you find a hand crank grinder outside of an antique mall/swapmeet. Great score, and great video putting them back to work. I can't fault anyone who finishes a job to completion no matter how I question their methods. Liked and subbed, looking forward to seeing more.
Dad: cut some hot dogs?
Son: Maybe
Dad: Spread some butter?
Son: Maybe
Mom: Don't stab your brother?
Son: Maybe
Dad: proceeds to stab himself
Lol lmfao
I really like the idea of giving a second life to objects that could have ended up in the trash.
it's a good job !!
From France, greetings.
"LOOK MOM! NO GLOVES!"
Worried but very entertaining
For some reason this videos are very relaxing, regards.
These are my favorite videos
well done ! each thing has its own story. And it's good that you give a second life to these things!
I would love one of those old hand grinders.
you could set one up as a pedal grinder
@ they clamp onto a work bench
@@noone-nd4ml Of course, I realize that; I have one. The problem is: Only one hand is available to guide the workpiece whereas with my bench grinder (electrically-driven), I steady the steel against the grindstone..... An assistant is NEEDED....!
@ have kids they can crank pretty sure this is what my parents would do
Wouldn't be too hard to mount an old drill under the work bench and run a belt to it. Boom, belt-driven grinder.
Maybe one of my favorite videos of all time now!! such an inspiration great work!
That axe get my vote for 'Best in bucket' :) But it's a close contest!
You didn't like the jack plane?
Great JOB MATEY, really enjoyed watching YOUR restorations. KEEP EM coming. 👍👍👍
Imagine walking to a garage sale and being like "yo, give me everything thay can give me tetnis for a dollar"
Had a bucket very similar to that which I was saving for restoration, had to leave it back in FL. I'm on the road now so only so much moves with me and haven't found a new place to settle yet. Nice work!
You look like you need a media blaster , but I love that manual grinder I use mine to sharpen mower blades
+Donald Duncan I have one. You cant see what I'm doing in a blast cabinet and I have found that a wire wheel can be a bit faster unless you have crevices. Not to mention blast cabinets don't stab you in the stomach with wire needles. I love being stabbed with wire nee.....uh, I'm going to use the cabinet in the next vid!😁
@@TheGoodoftheLand Blast cabinets REQ. very stout compressors. The least expensive course would appear to be 1.) Exposure to some sort of degreaser---even diesel--and over some days..... 2.) Next exposure to Electrolysis.... 3.)Lastly, if it's really needed, mechanical debriding. Abrasives not cheap & can pointlessly alter the appearance of a tool. Also--as you indicate--some pose a risk
ahoy,
I was thinkin he needs a molasses tank, thats what I been using for years,
fair winds,
Salty,
google - "rust removal with molasses"
I use a blast cabinet, I also have a tank of phosphoric rust stripper and a pedestal mounted wire wheel.
Most parts go into the acid stripping tank whilst I’m blasting or wire brushing, that way rust is being dissolved when I’m busy with other parts.
It’s nice to sit back and watch other people do similar work and see how they do it, there’s always something new to learn.
You're a real magician! Beautiful salvage job there.
Fine UA-cam I’ll watch it!!! You win
+Justin Wood Ha!
I hope that someday I love something as much as you love using that grinder. Cheers
Best $1ever spent
Love that you ground down the bread knife to make it a filet knife...even if we didn't get to see it :D
Love the Norton disks. They last forever it seems. :)
Thanks for sharing. Love these videos. Some amount of talent people have.
Woop woop 👍👊
*and Ganja...*
just some guy grinding down metal and doing some wood work... but somehow so entertaining and satisfying to watch! loved it!!
So much good stuff in one video. Excellent work. Don’t forget the step wedge.
Never again my friend! You bringing the family to the festival? Tickets on me!
The Good of the Land how could I say no to that? I didn’t think we would be able to. Thanks buddy. We’ll see you there.
+John Capps Excellent! Can't wait to see the everyone!
John Cap
I really liked it. I have never seen such a hardworking person
+Umar Azad Working on another one for your enjoyment!
Awesome stuff man! You need a 2x72 belt grinder with a bunch of belts, it will save a ton of time
Thanks Lonnie, I'm in the process of building one. Can't wait!
I made a 2X72 and it is by far the most used tool in my shop now.
It is about the most used tool in my shop too. You won't regret it
As A truck driver working with an old school shop I found that diesel fuel is cheap and works well to remove rust and if you add old motor oil it also will lubricate and loosen any metal mechanical parts like rusted up scissors or rust welded nuts and bolts. You will be surprised how well it works but it does take time to penetrate and eat away the rust without all that grinding, heating or using other expensive chemicals. It also works well as a grease cutter for mechanical parts in a bath.
Sad part about this is you put more effort into a bucket full of rust than I've put into just about anything
WOW YOU SOOO CLEVER!!! THUMBS UP!! LOVE IT.
It took wranglerstar 2 different videos to restore a single ballpeen
wranglerstar thinks metric is inferior to imperial and cant identify what stainless steel is.
+Craig Marshall It doesn't take Wranlerstar any more time to restore something. He is teaching while he does it. I have always been a fan. Check out his video titled " This axe is insane" that's my axe head.
@@TheGoodoftheLand oh im a long time subscriber of wrangler star too. I entered the giveaway of the jewel incrusted axe head lol i was just teasing a little bit.
They Were made nice had lot more editing and talking where he just uploaded a cut video
P
very relaxing watching the process, also like seeing the older tools get brought back to such a nice finish.
That's some quality "rustoration". :D
Get out
No.......stay
This guy has an excellent eye and a definite talent for the nuances of art. Working with only tools some would call nothing less than primitive, he creates works of art and utility. Having done a lot of the things he does here, I would not even attempt it without better tools. Someone should hire and finance him. He obviously loves doing this.
That ‘knock-er’ Loose, I wish I had a can of that to spray on my missus 😂😂
I'm sure you're missus knockers are loose enough.
1$...value as 200000000..God of art..dat' s you👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍❤❤❤❤❤
Most satisfying video
From rust to "GOLD", $1.00 to a couple $100.00 fair trade for the work involved. I'd love to have that rabbit plane.
Yeah like Rabbits can fly a plane. Geesh.
Nd the Mrs would love a Rampant rabbit instead of a rabbit plane so I guess but a rabbit each and both be satisfaction.
Yeah, alright, in some parts of the world it is called a rebate plane. But where I hail from rabbit is the most common term.
It's actually called a duplex filletster and rabbet plane as the cutting iron can also be mounted in the front position.
Some calls it a Kaiser blade, but I calls it a sling-blade. Mmm-hmm...
It's not really much of a bargain considering the time spent on restoring the items.
All the amazing projects you can do when you live in a house 👍
I hate living in this apartment!! 😩
i feel you bro i feel you
Plasma Cutter woulduh saved ya a lot of time on that axe head.
Man the views and likes are well deserved here, this was great to watch from start to finish!
Best wishes from Scotland :)
A Vice would be a worthy investment
Leo Rivera he has one
@Leo Rivera you missed it ??
The guy has a Dremel™ swivel bench top vice. Looked like a 3"
That was so satisfying l watching you turn a literal rust bucket into workable tools