Lets be honest here. The amount of skill that it took to hold the camera, watch the welder, and hit the arc interrupt button at the same is phenomenal. ;)
@@ypaulbrown The fellow was asking about how the setup and dimension measurement was done, You are correct Kurtis and Karen have the time to show this in a shop environment. I was not being critical of Greg's work. It is understood one man field work is different. Regards, Jay
@@jayreiter268 I had a hard time wording my comment , it was not meant to slam you, I am sorry about that.....and was actually a compliment to you for mentioning IC weld and Kurtis/Karen...and also letting the comment know the difference in recording styles.....I hope this makes sense, best regards, Paul
That level of skill has a value that is almost unimaginable. You guys blow me away with what you do. My brother is a shop superintendent at large construction outfit up here in Washington state, watching him fabricate stuff is like watching a magician to someone like me.
Let’s not be hyperbolic. This skill Is not unimaginable. There are soooooo many things in this industry that makes This look like a Job you’d give the new guy. And
What would be the time cost difference to set the line bore setup up then gouge the tube off and then set the new tube up with the grease connection done right and then weld and then line bore?
Never seen this channel. Never heard of this line of work. Didn’t even realize those joints on the equipment needed this kind of maintenance. Video just popped up in my recommended feed and I’ve been casually following along for about a half hour now.
I work twelve-hour shifts TiG welding aircraft parts so I feel your pain on those long ass days! That Pie mode welding is pretty slick. I've been dying to attend a Fabtech Convention so I can keep up with all the new tech and processes. well done Sir!!
Absolutely awesome, I’ve been welding on heavy mining machinery for almost 20yrs and weld those bores by hand and never knew a welder existed for that. (I’ve Probably been living under a rock) this is beautiful to watch. Thank you for your artistry.
thats insane. I used to be a commercial landscape foreman and would see you guys come out and work on busted excavators and backhoes etc. I never did get to see what was going on up close though.
I don't own or operate any heavy machinery so it is unlikely I will ever need to know this is even possible, but, I can say with certainty, I can appreciate the amount of skill this takes. This is an invaluable skill set.
Nice feature with the back and forth fill up, that bore looked like a railroad tunnel, I expected that you would have to bore it out to the biggest diameter and weld it back to spec, but the vally filling helped a lot! Thx for showing! 👍👍👍
That is the first time I have seen that sort of work from the welder in line boring. That "pie" mode is a really handy function, they rarely wear out evenly!
Slick repair! Man your making your way up in the rankings of welding on UA-cam! It's crazy how much people watch you just do your job! There's barley anybody out there uploading stuff like this so definately keep uploading!
That's almost the exact line bore I use @ work. It's in a shop so we use the BB5000. It took me a few hours to get to know the machine years ago and it's super cake doing anything nowadays. Nice work, thanks very much for sharing. I do a lot of small articulating dock crane work for the fishing industry. Those guys beat those cranes to death before they say 'Uh...we better fix that.'
Thank you for the explanations, I'm looking to get into line boring and trying to soak up every bit of knowledge possible. You make a great UA-cam mentor.
WOW......DOUBLE WOW! Saw your Page mentioned on a post mentioning four other folks I follow on here - WOW. I can easily see how the post mentions you. Been a welder/fabricator for over 30 years and thoroughly enjoy watching the younger generation and following up with modern techniques to "GET 'ER DONE"!!!! Really like that facing fixture you have - sweet!!! Like having a lathe for something you can't stick in one! I hope you showed your customer this video so he can see for himself the excellent workmanship he's paying for.
I appreciate your excellent discussion and explanations of how and why you are doing what you are doing. The Climax rig is impressive. The only line boring I've done is engine block boring. This is a different caliber! Thanks very much and greetings from Germany.
We did use someone like you at my job saved us alot of money to repair some errors ,so hope besiness owners will see how very useful you guys are,keep doing what you do sir
I started watching your videos a few days ago when one poped up as a suggestion. It was you welding an earth mover which had developed a serious fuel leak deep inside one of the machine's arms. You cut out several large plates just to get to the leak and despite all the flames you successfully welded the many cracks, splits and replacement panels to seal up the tank once and for all. Brilliant job and much skill involved. I was impressed by the shear volume of different situations and problems you dealt with on site and in your workshop. I watched a few videos and subscribed because you do a lot more than set a machine to do your welding for you. I've watched three videos on line boring and this one is by far the most not just interesting but skilful because I had only seen complete revolution welding, but in this one, the borer welded the bottom part first bringing it to a level where full revolution welding was possible. That matchine is bloody marvellous. Your apprentice must be in his element because I would be if I were in his shoes.
That was certainly worn!, quite a difficult operation to maintain lubrication points. Impressive PI or PIE feature and weld interrupt. Great work and video, thanks for sharing. Regards John
I have to say you do fantastic work, I have heard of line boring and did not know how special it is. I don't do your sort of welding ,I do mostly regular fab work , not on heavy equipment. On seeing your work I wish I had know of it sooner, great work your are a master welder.
Your knowledge of the proper tools, such as the line borer, and skillset in using them properly in field conditions, and obtaining the precision to do such quality work is truly outstanding! You truly have my respect, and I want to express my sincere gratitude to you for making these videos! As a fairly new welder, out of welding school a year, I am learning so much from your expertise….thank you!
There is so much more to this than people realize. The weld build up you don't want to be excessive because of machining time. And its best that finish isn't between layer's so peeling of the weld doesn't happen. Great job!!
I would have thought that you would have to treat the metal somehow if you did something like this. This is fine the way it is, no heat treating or anything like that???
@@mitchweber7868I don’t think you would need to per se. Since its a continuous weld surface on a single parent material. Plus there are bushings on top.
13:00. that is cool how the machine uses cams to control the amount of weld distance in PIE cut... .I thought it might be controlled by computer.......great looking job Greg......
That's a really nice feature, perfect for that situation. Idk there's something kinda hypnotic about watching that torch going back and forth. The interrupt button is another handy feature, it's a pretty sweet setup. Climax.
This is a really good video that the guys that hate paying for repairs and should see why it cost so much to repair . lots cheaper to replace a bushing and pin then wait till is half way through a arm lol. Great work cheers from Australia.
It’s not like 3D printing with metal… it’s literally 3D printing with metal. It’s additive manufacturing. Stuff like this has been around as long if not longer than 3D printing. This is the daddy of modern 3D printing. Also, they have actual metal 3D printing in the same format that you’re imagining.
That is a very clever line welder, what with filling the "out of round" bottom of the hole and also being able to jump over the grease holes. The machine designers certainly thought about it. We are definitely an intelligent species. Great video.
Interesting to see how others do the same kind of repairs. I did one of these in pretty similar shape. Thankfully they had the dog bone pins pulled to do a true bar to bar setup. I always weld up stand offs to put the big bearings on to keep the chatter down and take bigger cuts. I always do all the welding by hand with bigger wire too. Took about a 20 hour shift to knock it out from skimming out old bearings with air arc fixing grease lines and build up faces.
Steel is pretty unique as metals go, it’s metallurgy/strength doesn’t get messed up as badly by repeated weld passes as other metals, which helps make repairs like this viable.
Hey mate, surely that line boring machine is worth every cent that it costs. Helped you turn a mushed up piece of machinery back to near new. Well done.
Speaking of being wet with 3 phase; a colleague of mine once briefly held that stuff during a work accident. Company sent him somewhere alone in the middle of the night like idiots. He was lucky to survive that and we couldn't believe that happened because he called me right after. My home was close to the shop we worked at and I almost laughed when I saw him. He was straight out of cartoons, his hair straight up, skin slightly burned here and there and the soles of his shoes were exploded, nearly gone. At that point I realized he was slightly delirious and understood why he was so calm on the phone. Luckily he ended up being alright. Remember boys, if ya don't know what it is, it's buzz!
@@gorillaau it was the only person I've known to not only survive such a shock but also without any major damage. Something must have gone seriously right with his situation aside from being there at night, without rest, dancing with satan. I quit that shithole after a couple of weeks but as far as I know he was ok. Didn't know if he sued and how did it go, I hope he did and ended up shutting down that shop. They were closed after less than a year anyway. I wasn't surprised because the management was a bunch of shitheads
I’m impressed with the Climax machine, does a great job and looks like it has come as a kit. The big blue box visible in the background. Almost all the lineboring equipment I see here in Australia is 3ph or homemade single phase. I note yours is hydraulic, Greg , I’d like to know why you selected hydraulic as the rotational force. Did the Climax come with its own power pack or did you adapt something else suitable? Regardless, it is a very tidy piece of equipment and does a good job. You’re a hand man to have around!
The base Climax kit comes with a 120v electric motor. It’s okay, but the hydraulic has massive amounts of torque. Climax sells all the stuff to make it hydraulic.
Never seen these tools or this process before and it has to be the highlight of my week seeing your skills in action. Love learning and specialized tools in the hands of skilled workers and this hit all the nails on the head.
I can only imagine how much a specialized, high quality instrument/set like that bore lathe costs. I mean, I get it, sometimes for your trade you NEED to have certain equipment so the price isn't as big of a deal breaker as it is for any random dick like me, but damn. That is an impressive piece of specialized kit. I'm sure it pays for itself pretty quick so long as you can line up the work with it, even if its worth more than I make in a year. Beautiful work, thanks for recording this and sharing it with us boss.
Is the new metal that was added back by layering welds as strong as the original metal that was worn down from heavy use? Or will there be flaws in the new metal at a microscopic level that human eyes can't see unassisted that will result in this having to be done again sooner than it would on a new machine? I'm currently at my 3rd job related to metal fab, but I've only gotten to see welds related to sheet metal so I'd love to know the science behind this from anyone that knows!
The weld is the same as the parent material. I don’t care how good anyone is, welding up a bore like this there will be flaws and small imperfections in the weld. But that isn’t really a big deal because the bushing is taking the load and it’s spread evenly over the bore.
You are amazing! I would love to apprentice and learn from you! Such professional and clean looking final products. And you have the right tools for the right job! Awesome video, Thank you for posting.
Awesome work man. I’m a heavy mechanic and I really like watching this kind of work done. I try to stay out of the guys way that does this work for us when he is busy.
This was one of the coolest processes I've ever seen. I wish you had shown a bit more of how you set up your line bore in regards to measuring etc. Another thing i wish you showed was how you knew your last pass gave you the dimension you needed for a press fit? That hydraulic ram must be putting a ton of force into seating those bushings.
That is truly fascinating. It is also something I have to do for a couple of woodchippers here where the bearing surfaces have broken down. At least I can get the bits into a shop. The welder jig is superb..I expected an encoder controlled motor..so the limit switch and sector was a simple joy to see. What happened that you felt the need to move so far away when pressing the bush ? Is it just the fear kicking in. Farther away the better unless there is no option but to get closer. Anyway it's great to see and I certainly appreciate the time taken in making the video. Thanks.
Def see there was a serious lack of inspection done on the machine that was neglected for a long time to get it worn down that bad. Would hope this was a "we need to check rest of our machines" and be on checking them on reg basis.
Seems to me that you are one of the best in the business I love welding my dad was one of the best around doing the old school welding he started back in the 40s and was doing it for over 40 years he showed me everything I could know about welding sick arc mig it’s a really awesome thing to know how to weld it’s a great business.
Lets be honest here. The amount of skill that it took to hold the camera, watch the welder, and hit the arc interrupt button at the same is phenomenal. ;)
I've seen it done by a team of welders in the old days. It's probably a lot cheaper this way.
Americans, do you know that the Ukrainian army commits war crimes? And your old Biden sends them weapons and you become an accomplice to their crimes
Such a weird comment?
@@robmacdermott3975 You seem like a lot of fun to be around
@@robmacdermott3975 what a weird way to talk about your own comment
It would be really interesting to see you actually perform all the measurements step-by-step, and setting up the line bore
Watch CEE Australia He goes into that. It is a different make line borer.
@@ypaulbrown The fellow was asking about how the setup and dimension measurement was done, You are correct Kurtis and Karen have the time to show this in a shop environment. I was not being critical of Greg's work. It is understood one man field work is different. Regards, Jay
@@jayreiter268 I had a hard time wording my comment , it was not meant to slam you, I am sorry about that.....and was actually a compliment to you for mentioning IC weld and Kurtis/Karen...and also letting the comment know the difference in recording styles.....I hope this makes sense, best regards, Paul
@@ypaulbrown I understand.
@@jayreiter268 thank you....Paul
That level of skill has a value that is almost unimaginable. You guys blow me away with what you do. My brother is a shop superintendent at large construction outfit up here in Washington state, watching him fabricate stuff is like watching a magician to someone like me.
Americans, do you know that the Ukrainian army commits war crimes? And your old Biden sends them weapons and you become an accomplice to their crimes
less skill than it used to take
Let’s not be hyperbolic. This skill
Is not unimaginable. There are soooooo many things in this industry that makes
This look like a
Job you’d give the new guy. And
What would be the time cost difference to set the line bore setup up then gouge the tube off and then set the new tube up with the grease connection done right and then weld and then line bore?
Never seen this channel. Never heard of this line of work. Didn’t even realize those joints on the equipment needed this kind of maintenance. Video just popped up in my recommended feed and I’ve been casually following along for about a half hour now.
I work twelve-hour shifts TiG welding aircraft parts so I feel your pain on those long ass days! That Pie mode welding is pretty slick. I've been dying to attend a Fabtech Convention so I can keep up with all the new tech and processes. well done Sir!!
I would love your job
That turned out nice man, you have heavily invested into yourself and your craft and it shows on these type of repairs.👍
Absolutely awesome, I’ve been welding on heavy mining machinery for almost 20yrs and weld those bores by hand and never knew a welder existed for that. (I’ve Probably been living under a rock) this is beautiful to watch. Thank you for your artistry.
Hand welding those bores....Respect man!
@@toast47624 Thanks. it’s a pain, i attached a broom stick to my whip and extended the trigger wires. Tough on the forearms.
Unbelievable job well done
I'd like to see that.
thats insane. I used to be a commercial landscape foreman and would see you guys come out and work on busted excavators and backhoes etc. I never did get to see what was going on up close though.
I don't own or operate any heavy machinery so it is unlikely I will ever need to know this is even possible, but, I can say with certainty, I can appreciate the amount of skill this takes. This is an invaluable skill set.
This Cat was used to build the basement of your house or building. So you indirectly already used it.
Nice feature with the back and forth fill up, that bore looked like a railroad tunnel, I expected that you would have to bore it out to the biggest diameter and weld it back to spec, but the vally filling helped a lot!
Thx for showing!
👍👍👍
Had no idea that it was even possible to rebuild one of those. That man is a Master of his craft. Great FN JOB!!!
That is the first time I have seen that sort of work from the welder in line boring. That "pie" mode is a really handy function, they rarely wear out evenly!
That's what you call field engineering at its best!!!! Awesome work there! Can't wait for the next.
Slick repair! Man your making your way up in the rankings of welding on UA-cam! It's crazy how much people watch you just do your job! There's barley anybody out there uploading stuff like this so definately keep uploading!
I suppose you've seen Cutting Edge Engineering?
Not that I’m a welder, but I do aerial construction and I’ve always wondered if people would just watch me do my job lol
@@josh1234857 i would, ive never seen anyone do it i guess
@@Your_nearest_toyota_dealer well, time to get a go pro I guess lol
@@josh1234857 you can try to just use your phone at first if its fairly secure
That's almost the exact line bore I use @ work. It's in a shop so we use the BB5000. It took me a few hours to get to know the machine years ago and it's super cake doing anything nowadays. Nice work, thanks very much for sharing. I do a lot of small articulating dock crane work for the fishing industry. Those guys beat those cranes to death before they say 'Uh...we better fix that.'
So they don't like preventative maintenance downtime? Let's put it off and have more downtime for longer later on. Short term foolish.
Man that line boring machine is sweet. Pretty impressive how it filled the egg shape on the bottom.
Thank you for the explanations, I'm looking to get into line boring and trying to soak up every bit of knowledge possible.
You make a great UA-cam mentor.
WOW......DOUBLE WOW! Saw your Page mentioned on a post mentioning four other folks I follow on here - WOW. I can easily see how the post mentions you. Been a welder/fabricator for over 30 years and thoroughly enjoy watching the younger generation and following up with modern techniques to "GET 'ER DONE"!!!! Really like that facing fixture you have - sweet!!! Like having a lathe for something you can't stick in one! I hope you showed your customer this video so he can see for himself the excellent workmanship he's paying for.
I appreciate your excellent discussion and explanations of how and why you are doing what you are doing. The Climax rig is impressive. The only line boring I've done is engine block boring. This is a different caliber! Thanks very much and greetings from Germany.
I appreciate when you answer hypothetical questions as in how to line up bar near the beginning. Thanks
I like the safety conciseness at 40:06. I imagine that press is capable of some serious pressure.
I watch CEE AUS do this kind of work in a shop and i find it equally interesting seeing how this sort of work is done in the field.
Your a very talented man you know your trade I'd give you at a boy's all day long from a old retired welder thanks for the videos
Amazing work, job, you are very skilled, your customers don't realize how good they have having you their!!
Excellent video! I never knew those type repair machines existed! Fascinating to watch, and a great outcome.
We did use someone like you at my job saved us alot of money to repair some errors ,so hope besiness owners will see how very useful you guys are,keep doing what you do sir
I started watching your videos a few days ago when one poped up as a suggestion.
It was you welding an earth mover which had developed a serious fuel leak deep inside one of the machine's arms. You cut out several large plates just to get to the leak and despite all the flames you successfully welded the many cracks, splits and replacement panels to seal up the tank once and for all. Brilliant job and much skill involved.
I was impressed by the shear volume of different situations and problems you dealt with on site and in your workshop. I watched a few videos and subscribed because you do a lot more than set a machine to do your welding for you.
I've watched three videos on line boring and this one is by far the most not just interesting but skilful because I had only seen complete revolution welding, but in this one, the borer welded the bottom part first bringing it to a level where full revolution welding was possible. That matchine is bloody marvellous.
Your apprentice must be in his element because I would be if I were in his shoes.
Amazing work! Your equipment is spotless too, not easy to do out in the field.
That was certainly worn!, quite a difficult operation to maintain lubrication points.
Impressive PI or PIE feature and weld interrupt.
Great work and video, thanks for sharing.
Regards John
I have to say you do fantastic work, I have heard of line boring and did not know how special it is. I don't do your sort of welding ,I do mostly regular fab work , not on heavy equipment. On seeing your work I wish I had know of it sooner, great work your are a master welder.
Your knowledge of the proper tools, such as the line borer, and skillset in using them properly in field conditions, and obtaining the precision to do such quality work is truly outstanding! You truly have my respect, and I want to express my sincere gratitude to you for making these videos! As a fairly new welder, out of welding school a year, I am learning so much from your expertise….thank you!
this work looks complicated enough but to be doing it in the field and not in a workshop is very impressive
Your work is top notch and very reasonably priced.
Very impressive.
How much was it?
Really impressive work. Thanks for putting this content out.
Great arc shots in this one Greg!
There is so much more to this than people realize. The weld build up you don't want to be excessive because of machining time. And its best that finish isn't between layer's so peeling of the weld doesn't happen. Great job!!
I would have thought that you would have to treat the metal somehow if you did something like this. This is fine the way it is, no heat treating or anything like that???
@@mitchweber7868I don’t think you would need to per se. Since its a continuous weld surface on a single parent material. Plus there are bushings on top.
Thanks for your videos! Learn a lot watching them.
Top tier skills.
Way more therapeutic to watch than you'd think too.
Thank you.
Excellent work. 👍
That looks brand new.
I think I’d pack those bushings the day before in dry ice so they would shrink then just keep them in a cooler and bring them with you.
I agree we used to make the bushing an interference fit and shrink them in with liquid nitrogen. BUT you do have to get the limits and fits correct...
Cat bushings do not shrink even in nitrogen. It makes no sense but it's true
I've watched all of your videos and taken pointers into my own welding job, real amazing stuff you do man. Truck tour when?? 😅
Great channel! And fantastic work. The bill for this job should surely open the contractor's eyes to the savings of some timely.maintenance!
Mint job,that line boring machine is some kit you got there,stay safe.
13:00. that is cool how the machine uses cams to control the amount of weld distance in PIE cut...
.I thought it might be controlled by computer.......great looking job Greg......
That's a really nice feature, perfect for that situation. Idk there's something kinda hypnotic about watching that torch going back and forth.
The interrupt button is another handy feature, it's a pretty sweet setup.
Climax.
Great filming. That was a complex repair, well done.
That was fascinating, great camera work and good explanations of what you're doing and why.
This is a really good video that the guys that hate paying for repairs and should see why it cost so much to repair . lots cheaper to replace a bushing and pin then wait till is half way through a arm lol. Great work cheers from Australia.
They see the machine making a couple thousand a day and just don’t care.
@@OFW Doesn't that mean it's losing a couple thousand a day just sitting there doing nothing as you're repairing it?
@@BrokenLifeCycle yes it does.
You have some very nice equipment brother. Must have worked hard to get those.
You are using the technology available (which is practical) to its best advantage. Well done.
Great repair and work! It will be a happy customer!
Video is well made as well!!
Impressive. It's like 3D printing with metal.
Those shavings at 32:40 are a beautiful blue color.
It’s not like 3D printing with metal… it’s literally 3D printing with metal. It’s additive manufacturing. Stuff like this has been around as long if not longer than 3D printing. This is the daddy of modern 3D printing. Also, they have actual metal 3D printing in the same format that you’re imagining.
That is a very clever line welder, what with filling the "out of round" bottom of the hole and also being able to jump over the grease holes. The machine designers certainly thought about it. We are definitely an intelligent species. Great video.
Amazing what a small amount of us humans can do, thank you for documenting your work it is much appreciated.
Impressive work. Thanks for filming
Interesting to see how others do the same kind of repairs. I did one of these in pretty similar shape. Thankfully they had the dog bone pins pulled to do a true bar to bar setup. I always weld up stand offs to put the big bearings on to keep the chatter down and take bigger cuts. I always do all the welding by hand with bigger wire too. Took about a 20 hour shift to knock it out from skimming out old bearings with air arc fixing grease lines and build up faces.
Always good to be busy! You hate the days when your getting interrupted all the time but that's when you know your making 🤑🤑🤑
It's amazing how all those layers of weld come up like fresh forged steel once machined!
looks like 3d print
Steel is pretty unique as metals go, it’s metallurgy/strength doesn’t get messed up as badly by repeated weld passes as other metals, which helps make repairs like this viable.
that wasn't a bor watching you boring the apatur... what a beautiful peace of equipment and very well done sir. 👍
Hey mate, surely that line boring machine is worth every cent that it costs. Helped you turn a mushed up piece of machinery back to near new. Well done.
Speaking of being wet with 3 phase; a colleague of mine once briefly held that stuff during a work accident. Company sent him somewhere alone in the middle of the night like idiots. He was lucky to survive that and we couldn't believe that happened because he called me right after. My home was close to the shop we worked at and I almost laughed when I saw him. He was straight out of cartoons, his hair straight up, skin slightly burned here and there and the soles of his shoes were exploded, nearly gone. At that point I realized he was slightly delirious and understood why he was so calm on the phone. Luckily he ended up being alright.
Remember boys, if ya don't know what it is, it's buzz!
How many days in the hospital? Sounds like a big bang, rather than a buzz. Ears might have been ringing also.
@@gorillaau it was the only person I've known to not only survive such a shock but also without any major damage. Something must have gone seriously right with his situation aside from being there at night, without rest, dancing with satan. I quit that shithole after a couple of weeks but as far as I know he was ok. Didn't know if he sued and how did it go, I hope he did and ended up shutting down that shop.
They were closed after less than a year anyway. I wasn't surprised because the management was a bunch of shitheads
@@mistaowickkuh6249 Probably everyone else in the trenches got out after you did. Walk out before you are carried out in a body bag.
I’m impressed with the Climax machine, does a great job and looks like it has come as a kit. The big blue box visible in the background.
Almost all the lineboring equipment I see here in Australia is 3ph or homemade single phase. I note yours is hydraulic, Greg , I’d like to know why you selected hydraulic as the rotational force. Did the Climax come with its own power pack or did you adapt something else suitable? Regardless, it is a very tidy piece of equipment and does a good job.
You’re a hand man to have around!
The base Climax kit comes with a 120v electric motor. It’s okay, but the hydraulic has massive amounts of torque. Climax sells all the stuff to make it hydraulic.
Never seen these tools or this process before and it has to be the highlight of my week seeing your skills in action. Love learning and specialized tools in the hands of skilled workers and this hit all the nails on the head.
Amazing work! 💪🏼
I can only imagine how much a specialized, high quality instrument/set like that bore lathe costs.
I mean, I get it, sometimes for your trade you NEED to have certain equipment so the price isn't as big of a deal breaker as it is for any random dick like me, but damn. That is an impressive piece of specialized kit. I'm sure it pays for itself pretty quick so long as you can line up the work with it, even if its worth more than I make in a year.
Beautiful work, thanks for recording this and sharing it with us boss.
Is the new metal that was added back by layering welds as strong as the original metal that was worn down from heavy use? Or will there be flaws in the new metal at a microscopic level that human eyes can't see unassisted that will result in this having to be done again sooner than it would on a new machine? I'm currently at my 3rd job related to metal fab, but I've only gotten to see welds related to sheet metal so I'd love to know the science behind this from anyone that knows!
The weld is the same as the parent material. I don’t care how good anyone is, welding up a bore like this there will be flaws and small imperfections in the weld. But that isn’t really a big deal because the bushing is taking the load and it’s spread evenly over the bore.
@@OFW that makes sense! thank you for the explanation!
Love the sound of the sleeve going in. Boink!
Moral of this story: Don't let holes get that sloppy.
being that far gone would it be better just to replace the hole end? or is that a lot more work
It’s a decent amount of work and the end piece is very expensive.
@@OFW I kind of thought that, but thanks for answering my question
Very nifty feature that pi partial weld!
Big refit huh? That pie weld option is cool on your climax bore tool. Thanks
That is some coooool chit right there, that welder going back n forth 🥽🥽🥽🥽👍👍👍👍
What a cool setup!
Hermoso equipo de trabajo. Saludos
You are amazing! I would love to apprentice and learn from you! Such professional and clean looking final products. And you have the right tools for the right job! Awesome video, Thank you for posting.
You have a very nice setup!
This is one of the greatest things I've ever witnessed. Super impressive!
Awesome work man. I’m a heavy mechanic and I really like watching this kind of work done. I try to stay out of the guys way that does this work for us when he is busy.
Love the channel man. You have some awesome and unique equipment, thanks for sharing!
Absolutely amazing!! 👌🏼
I don’t what you’re getting paid, but you should double it. Incredible amount of know how,logic and grit to do this work.
Great Video sir love your truck 👍
in the field. savage. i've only ever done things in well equipped shops but the lure of doing stuff in open air looks sick.
Amazing work sir! god bless you
Love that turnaround welding machine 🤩🧑🏭
Merci pour la vidéo 🇫🇷
Great video and job!! Thanks for sharing! 👌👍
Don't know what you get an hr but your work an the precision you do is well worth it ! 👍👍
This was one of the coolest processes I've ever seen. I wish you had shown a bit more of how you set up your line bore in regards to measuring etc. Another thing i wish you showed was how you knew your last pass gave you the dimension you needed for a press fit? That hydraulic ram must be putting a ton of force into seating those bushings.
I have a multimatic 220 and I love that welder. Absolutely amazing machine. Amazing work, Great Job!!
Just amazing job done. Thanks for video!
New to your channel. Really enjoy watching your level of work and skill.
Wow for a field fix that was an amazing job you did. Going to be interesting watching you fix stuff.
awesome work! puts into perspective how much work could have been avoided with proper greasing and pre-work inspections lol!
That smart welding fixture must have cost an absolute fortune...
I love finding repair videos like this. I didn't even know this was a thing and it's very interesting!
Look at that beautiful weather! With love from Canada lol
That is truly fascinating.
It is also something I have to do for a couple of woodchippers here where the bearing surfaces have broken down. At least I can get the bits into a shop.
The welder jig is superb..I expected an encoder controlled motor..so the limit switch and sector was a simple joy to see.
What happened that you felt the need to move so far away when pressing the bush ? Is it just the fear kicking in. Farther away the better unless there is no option but to get closer.
Anyway it's great to see and I certainly appreciate the time taken in making the video. Thanks.
Def see there was a serious lack of inspection done on the machine that was neglected for a long time to get it worn down that bad. Would hope this was a "we need to check rest of our machines" and be on checking them on reg basis.
Seems to me that you are one of the best in the business I love welding my dad was one of the best around doing the old school welding he started back in the 40s and was doing it for over 40 years he showed me everything I could know about welding sick arc mig it’s a really awesome thing to know how to weld it’s a great business.
Awesome work!!