Get a job as an ironworker (steel erector and fitter) you'll see some clever shit pretty often. One guy using a chunk of scrap metal a hammer and a little tack to leverage a few tons of steel to bend to their will😂 you start thinking of and looking at forces differently
Too bad talent like that isn't worth 1% of what some 23 yr old kid makes throwing a ball! True talent and craftsmanship is worth very little and unappreciated in todays world, no wonder it is disappearing!
I sold Case backhoes for 10 years and never saw any machine with that kind damage. You take smashed machines and fix them. Your abilities to handle tough repair jobs is unparalled! Respect Isaac! 😎👏👏👏👏
How could he remain calm? He remains calm because no matter what he's getting paid. LOL it's a calming feeling to have money sitting in front of you with a job that you're working on. What's not calming is looking at a stack of bills for your sitting at the shop scratching your navel because you got nothing to do. He's definitely a skilled man without a doubt but job security is calming a broken frame for him his job security was not calm probably is the guy who owns the tractor LOL
@@geesss8675 good paying jobs can still be stressful and frustrating lol. I think the calmness is a mindset that comes from relying on skills and experience.
Field repair requires a master fabricator!! You gotta be proficient in all positions of weld. The methods for the base metal...etc...TRUE MASTER HERE!!!
Issac that customer is lucky as hell. To have a welder with the knowledge and capabilities to make a repair like that. You always get the job done and teach us along the way. 😊💯
Issac I work with a man that is a lot like you here in Wichita Falls and men like you are an absolute goldmine. I help him work on my equipment when it’s something to in-depth for me to handle by myself. He’s very patient and methodical like you and I feel like I’d be lost without him. He’s 66 and about to retire so I’m trying to learn everything from him lol. Once the older experienced and wise men like y’all are gone we’re kinda screwed. Keep making videos and showing your son and the other younger generation the way of true American builders. God bless my friend!
I am from New Zealand doing a lot of repairs like yourself on heavy construction machinery , you are very honest and transparent in your workmanship . I have been blessed to have seen many of your videos , and enjoyed them all . Thank you for taking the time and explaining how you are thinking at the moment . Thank you regards Raj
It's been said before, but you'd be a terrific teacher. Your deep knowledge, field experience, ability to explain what you're doing (and why), and patience would put you head and shoulders above most instructors.
You never cease to amaze me with your ingenious solutions to seemingly impossible problems! I would be perfectly happy if Issac and Kurtis were the only two channels on UA-cam!
Watching from Ireland,,nice job,a man with a real job doing real work,Welders like Issac are the backbone of any country not some stealing banker, suing attorney or lying politican
"Please set the machine on jackstands." ...Comes back to machine sitting on hydraulic bottle jacks on top of firewood. Jesus. Has that company never had one single day of safety training?! What a bunch of idiots. At least they were smart enough (or maybe just luck enough) to get a Primo welder! Nice work Sir! As always.
Just enjoying breakfast and watching IC Weld work! Let's see..its a B20 and it has a set of forks where the bucket should be...operator overload! Don't touch the weld! LOL... not only is it a difficulty repair, but you are doing double duty setting up camera for viewers! Great challenge resolved!
With patience and perseverence, you saved that guy a boatload of money replacing that frame or writing off that machine altogether! Seein that damage, they were very very close to collapsing that frame. Amazing job!
Would been a write off I work at cat that frame ain't available we got 3 of them hoes sitting out back that need frames there going to auction cat says to much liability to repair them
J Hanna Hopefully with the knowledge that Isaac did the best he could (that could only be attempted by 1%) operator will not go back to what caused the damage!
That machine is clearly out classed and overloaded for what they are doing with it. Excellent welding and technique, I do learn a lot watching you. I am pretty sure you will be back to work on that machine again.
I think you did an extraordinary job repairing that backhoe, you may consider charging extra for working on a filthy machine. You would think they could have pressure washed machine before you started
Hey! My hubbs was a Master Cat Machanic for 33 yrs. .. Since retired...Here in Wisconsin. I enjoyed this video and will share your channel with him. I'm sure he will find it intetesting.
You are not only skilled at making proper weld repairs in less than ideal conditions but you also have great mechanical insight in failure mechanics, including what to do to prevent future problems. Kudos to you sir.
As an amateur welder it feels really good to know that this technique I found for myself by accident, is an actual thing used by a professional career welder.
I was thinking the same thing. it's a technique I have used myself, particularly on thin material, and it was good to see it's a legitimate way used by professionals.
Extremely satisfying to see your approach to these repairs. You bring engineering into each fix. Not just a; “well enough and good enough, grind it out and weld it up”. You think it through, knowing the stresses and fatigues that will be put into the piece without the proper metal prep before the welding begins. Back in 1979 our instructor always said; “99% prep and fit up, 1% welding.” I watch your videos, like a kid on Saturday morning watching cartoons. I’m GLUED to the screen! PROPER, ISAAC!!! As Always! ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
Shout out for working safe! I wouldn't have crawled under there with it held up on the wheels either. The guy who did that either didn't think about it or was just too lazy to go back and get the jacks that he probably forgot to put in the truck. Guys new to field repairs can sometimes be unsure or afraid to call the customer out to address safety issues for fear of losing work in the future or just wanting to "cowboy up" and get the job going. Thanks for setting a good example of how to do the job and live to collect the money.
You are a true craftsman at your trade Isaac. I’m amazed at the complex problems that customers provide you with and the process you go through to repair them. As many others have said… Respect Isaac!
Years back I was a laborer and then after college a field engineer and equipment manager on one project (these were all $50M to $500M highway) and I'd see guys like you in the yard welding equipment and I had this work done + approved invoices but your videos show the skill and work that goes into this
I would be shocked if a customer just once cleaned up the equipment they wanted you to weld up after they broke it. Great job Issac as usual. Always a pleasure to watch a master at work. Thanks for sharing.
Hello @frankish , Mechanics Nowadays are really just Spanner monkeys, strip the bit off replace the with a new bit back out on the job , whereas issac is a master welder / fabricator looks at the damage and is working out in his head what he is going to do to weld it all back up and it will b done PROFESSIONALLY , Kurtis Down below in Aus has that same ability to do a job in a professional manner, BECAUSE at the end of the day it's his reputation at stake.
Creating that gap is key. I have tried untold amount of times to bring metal back together by whatever means and failed. It takes some relief somewhere usually. Thx for sharing your skillset with us. I have learned quite a bit from your channel. You and CEE are a wealth of knowledge.
Absolutely amazing repair, and you make it look easy. I've been welding/wrenching on trucks and equipment since 1994, and I learn something every time I watch your videos. Stay safe and God bless
⚓️ Thanks IC 😎 moving those big pieces into position is tough… 🤯 I’ve seen guys weld in tabs & position turnbuckles… steamboat ratchets… to pull the work piece into position … takes time but it’s really a good technique. These guys will get the OEM prints & get the frame aligned… really cool.😎
You would think with all that dress load that JD would make the frame heavy enough for the load. It's definitely a engineering issue to save costs. Great job repairing something very difficult to work with.
Definitely a tough one.. There's lots of difference between kneeling and laying in the rocks (with the wind blowing) and TIG welding clean metal sitting at a bench as we often see on videos.. Every young welder should get a try at a repair like this.. Great Job..
Issac, Once again your experience shows on the practical approach to you creating a solution to a problem in the field! Glad you put the jack sands in place, pieces of logs and hydraulic jacks is a potential for a serious situation! Glad you were in and out on this job with no injuries!
Thanks for Camming this up, fun to watch . At 19 yrs I was a welder making riverbuoys and at 67 own 3 different kinds of welders, a plasma cutter and backpack torch and fix everything I can for friends so watching u and how u Think is Interesting. Now I want stick gouge Lol . Thanks
It look like they overloading front end when they lift something because it developed crack after the beam. I am not a engineer or a welder but gusset plates on inside and out of the beam would reinforce those welds. Always enjoy your videos with hope i learn something new.
Others grind, weld and grind, you sir also do this but bring a vast amount of experience knowledge and skills. That's what brings the big bucks and repeat customers. Thanks, as usual for a great video of craftsmanship and entertainment.
Good Day Mr. Isaac, Good to see you. I did a repair on a boom end for a Woods 7500 back hoe. It was bent and cracked from being smashed by a truck. It bent the bucket cylinder and the end of the boom. I rigged 205 portapower and lots of heat, got it "straighter" and burnt a grove thru the crack. Sounds like you are going the same path. I won't ever challenge you to arm wrestling. That looks like at least a 10# sledge that you were swingin...LOL Thank You, Thank U, Tank U for the "spot welding" technique with your flux core. I've used that since you first showed it and it works GREAT!@!@!@!!!!!!
I sure enjoy watching your repairs .. This one was so hard to get to but like everything you do and fix…you do it safely and you care..I watch another guy that watches you from Australia is cutting edge engineering. you both care so much and your videos are outstanding..
Always a pleasure. Sure glad it was you and not me under that backhoe. Laying with your head extended just gets downright painful in short order! Then add in the shower of sparks in bad places and it gets even less fun after a few minutes. Good job.
Hey Isaac, thanks for passing on the knowledge!:) I'm a hobby welder and am grateful for your site. I butt weld a lot of sheet metal on my car / truck fun (16 - 19 ga) and have only used flux core. I really don't do enough to change my ways and I've learned to make it work. I use the same technique when butt welding light gauge metal. A little too hot, slow wire speed and quick pulses watching the puddle cool to red. Thanks much!
No question about your skills they are top notch. Judging by all the past crack repairs that have been done the material has serious metal fatigue and the only way to fix it right is to remove and replace the the steel. All the welding in the world won't fix metal fatigue it will only make it worse. Watching the video I see other indications of possible cracks. I understand that fixing it proper would cost more that the thing is worth but sometimes you just got to say NO!
I studied mechanical engineering, and Isaac seems to have a keen knowledge of the profession. Anybody can burn rod. The real part which impresses me is thinking about the forces the repaired area will be subjected to. Many of these repairs don’t end up as good as new. With the thought involved, it’s better than the original.
IC, rest assured my friend.. you and I will never be replaced by AI robots for such a task.. it's impossible, Love your videos and I love seeing stuff fixed ! Keep up the good work my friend with special skills.
My back and stomach hurts just watching you... I would need help getting up off the ground if I spent a couple of hours under that thing. Thanks for sharing. Charles
I've been watching for a long time now, you tackle some very serious repairs. After watching you tackle this miscarriage I now believe there isn't anything you can't repair. I tip my hat to you, you are a miracle worker.
Issac you have completed a very hard weld job with the damage to the frame, I think they will have no problems with the frame in that area. The operator must overload the machine with a lot of weight by the looks of those cracks. Nice job again God Speed
Haven’t watched one of your videos in a while. I’ve been a welder for almost 30 years, you’re a good tradesman. Fun to watch. I work in the oil and gas field so it’s interesting to see how you do things, because with welding you can always learn different skills and ideas that can come in handy no matter how long you’ve been doing it. Thanks, keep the videos coming.
When that first tilted around 9 min in, I thought whoa what is the frame doing...then you explained it was on the axle. :) You have such interesting and challenging day to day tasks, thanks for sharing them so we can learn too. :)
Thank you for all the detail, and explaining your techniques, and why it helps a lot of us become hopefully better …maybe never achieve your excellence, but it least improve on our end !
Issac, I used to be amazed at what you can do. I am now inspired as what can be done, with lots of practice and patience. Thank you for sharing your knowledge.
She was a hard one to get at. Thanks for showing us, a look over your shoulder on this repair. Special thanks for detailing how to complete that start-stop welding application. Keep safe and keep showing us the correct way to reason through those tough ones.
You are the man Issac! Like always, you made a tremendously difficult job look easy to execute.....a true professional. Always a pleasure to see your videos. Thanks as always for the content!
Construction company client worker: Boss! The backhoe front end broke in half!! Boss: Don’t worry we’ll call Isaac and he’ll fix it for us. When he fixes stuff we break new parts of the equipment as his fixes are so good they don’t break again! I’m amazed at your skill set and I do know that experience is the key. Awesome work.
44:53 A fire proof blanket (doesn't need to be an expensive one) and a yoga mat. You wrap the yoga mat in the fire proof blanket and have someone sew it shut, and voila, fire proof sharp rock back defender. I have one using one of those fire retardant mats and a cheapie blanket, that's barely good for the job that i sewed together using a mattress needle and some kevlar weave i got from fleabay. Haven't managed to burn it yet.
As always a hard job well done ! To you other welders , learn how to properly do what is called a key hole weld , where you use 6010 or 7010 - DC only or it’s AC counterpart 6011 or 7011 , even 80 series if required , or you could use wire feed (if you have it). The key hole weld is what is used on pipe lines with no backing strip & it’s the inside of the weld that is important ; then you grind the outside to smooth it up , removing every spot or crack/seam of slag , filling up the rest of the gouge with 7018 . Start out with coupons of 3/8” flat plate with a beveled edge @ 45* with a small flat edge facing each other spaced the diameter of the wire of your welding rod , to do your keyhole weld , when you get this one good then you can go on the the pipe ! To practice doing this get some 4” or 6” pipe coupons , 1/4 or 3/8 wall , tack them together , with a space apart , of the welding rod wire - 3/32 or 1/8 , set this up in a 5g position , which is at a 45* angle . Starting at the bottom of the crack, welding up hill , both for the root pass & the subsequent filler passes . When you are finished the weld should look uniform both inside & out .
0ne of the things that make your videos very informative is your thought process as you initiate the project and as you work through it during the repair. This repair had its unique level of process to work through. Awesome
Saw you do a long arm move... Nicely done. Hard to fathom how an operator abuses equipment to the point you have to perform such a repair... Good for your business, but it is expensive to the owner and gets passed on to the customer... I know they are begging for workers, but still it kind of irks me as my dad drilled into my head, "take care of your tools and equipment". You are a good welder and "how I did it" is good enough for me. Have a great one!
Isaac , You are the man . Great repair , super complex , you make it better and stronger than original , but it looks obvious that they are abusing this machine severely . Thank you so much for all the explanation and education . I have become much more confident and creative , since watching and studying your method , procedures and thought process . Thank you also for the camera footage , that's a heavy job in itself , great quality and editing . Thanks again . Just know , many of us greatly appreciate the efforts it takes to put out these amazing high quality video's . Without your talents , that machine would be scrapped or sold for parts .
The best thing about youtube is guys like you. Where else can you watch an experienced welder do his thing.
Get a job as an ironworker (steel erector and fitter) you'll see some clever shit pretty often. One guy using a chunk of scrap metal a hammer and a little tack to leverage a few tons of steel to bend to their will😂 you start thinking of and looking at forces differently
Too bad talent like that isn't worth 1% of what some 23 yr old kid makes throwing a ball! True talent and craftsmanship is worth very little and unappreciated in todays world, no wonder it is disappearing!
I sold Case backhoes for 10 years and never saw any machine with that kind damage. You take smashed machines and fix them. Your abilities to handle tough repair jobs is unparalled! Respect Isaac! 😎👏👏👏👏
In West Texas nothing is impossible. For real.
W Polsce też takie rzeczy niemożliwe robią😊
It looked like the one that fell 100 feet when the strap broke. I was wondering who bought it.
@@siwy165 niemożliwe od ręki na cuda trzeba poczekać dwa dni😅
Couldn't agree more! Great work!
Not only do you teach us technique on welding but also how to be calm, cool and collected when presented with a complex problem. Thanks.
@Maria CANCER I have reported you to UA-cam for spamming. Get yourself a remaining life
How could he remain calm? He remains calm because no matter what he's getting paid. LOL it's a calming feeling to have money sitting in front of you with a job that you're working on. What's not calming is looking at a stack of bills for your sitting at the shop scratching your navel because you got nothing to do. He's definitely a skilled man without a doubt but job security is calming a broken frame for him his job security was not calm probably is the guy who owns the tractor LOL
@@geesss8675 good paying jobs can still be stressful and frustrating lol. I think the calmness is a mindset that comes from relying on skills and experience.
Bingo, you go into the job relaxed because you are sure of your abilityes.@@ctdieselnut
Other significant youtube welders are always referring to how ICWeld would do it. That speaks volumes! Thank you Isaac.
Field repair requires a master fabricator!! You gotta be proficient in all positions of weld. The methods for the base metal...etc...TRUE MASTER HERE!!!
Issac that customer is lucky as hell. To have a welder with the knowledge and capabilities to make a repair like that. You always get the job done and teach us along the way. 😊💯
Issac I work with a man that is a lot like you here in Wichita Falls and men like you are an absolute goldmine. I help him work on my equipment when it’s something to in-depth for me to handle by myself. He’s very patient and methodical like you and I feel like I’d be lost without him. He’s 66 and about to retire so I’m trying to learn everything from him lol. Once the older experienced and wise men like y’all are gone we’re kinda screwed. Keep making videos and showing your son and the other younger generation the way of true American builders. God bless my friend!
I am from New Zealand doing a lot of repairs like yourself on heavy construction machinery , you are very honest and transparent in your workmanship . I have been blessed to have seen many of your videos , and enjoyed them all . Thank you for taking the time and explaining how you are thinking at the moment . Thank you regards Raj
Thank you for the kind words.
It's been said before, but you'd be a terrific teacher. Your deep knowledge, field experience, ability to explain what you're doing (and why), and patience would put you head and shoulders above most instructors.
Those that can do, those that can't well there's always teaching.
I’m in Alaska and the whole time I’m watching this I’m thinking I can’t wait to work in warmer weather!
Minnesota here,we had very warm weather last week now it's back to winter again. Blah!
@@dolphincliffs8864 I hear ya!!
Welding 30 years and in every video he is surprised things are hot. LOL. Love watching these.
I would love for you to come and show my students the way you do things. I learn so much watching your videos.
Maybe one day! where are you located?
You never cease to amaze me with your ingenious solutions to seemingly impossible problems! I would be perfectly happy if Issac and Kurtis were the only two channels on UA-cam!
love your work and love your demeaner, The "im not going to grind it" is prob the most welder thing i ever heard you say lol.
I've been welding and fabricating all my life and I think you did an excellent job
Watching from Ireland,,nice job,a man with a real job doing real work,Welders like Issac are the backbone of any country not some stealing banker, suing attorney or lying politican
I would have expected that backhoe to be written off considering the cracks in the frame and all. Fixed - like magic!
I think you did an excellent job welding, filming and narrating! You kept it interesting to watch the whole thing. Thanks so much for sharing!!
Glad you enjoyed it!
76
That machine has had a hard life. Excellent professional repair as always.
Their operators seem to beat the crap out of their equipment needlessly...either that or they need bigger beefier equipment
"Please set the machine on jackstands." ...Comes back to machine sitting on hydraulic bottle jacks on top of firewood. Jesus. Has that company never had one single day of safety training?! What a bunch of idiots. At least they were smart enough (or maybe just luck enough) to get a Primo welder! Nice work Sir! As always.
A masterful job of welding a basket case stitched together
Just enjoying breakfast and watching IC Weld work! Let's see..its a B20 and it has a set of forks where the bucket should be...operator overload! Don't touch the weld! LOL... not only is it a difficulty repair, but you are doing double duty setting up camera for viewers! Great challenge resolved!
With patience and perseverence, you saved that guy a boatload of money replacing that frame or writing off that machine altogether!
Seein that damage, they were very very close to collapsing that frame. Amazing job!
Would been a write off I work at cat that frame ain't available we got 3 of them hoes sitting out back that need frames there going to auction cat says to much liability to repair them
J Hanna Hopefully with the knowledge that Isaac did the best he could (that could only be attempted by 1%) operator will not go back to what caused the damage!
That machine is clearly out classed and overloaded for what they are doing with it. Excellent welding and technique, I do learn a lot watching you. I am pretty sure you will be back to work on that machine again.
I think you did an extraordinary job repairing that backhoe, you may consider charging extra for working on a filthy machine. You would think they could have pressure washed machine before you started
Hey! My hubbs was a Master Cat Machanic for 33 yrs. ..
Since retired...Here in Wisconsin. I enjoyed this video and will share your channel with him. I'm sure he will find it intetesting.
You are not only skilled at making proper weld repairs in less than ideal conditions but you also have great mechanical insight in failure mechanics, including what to do to prevent future problems. Kudos to you sir.
As an amateur welder it feels really good to know that this technique I found for myself by accident, is an actual thing used by a professional career welder.
I was thinking the same thing. it's a technique I have used myself, particularly on thin material, and it was good to see it's a legitimate way used by professionals.
Extremely satisfying to see your approach to these repairs. You bring engineering into each fix. Not just a; “well enough and good enough, grind it out and weld it up”. You think it through, knowing the stresses and fatigues that will be put into the piece without the proper metal prep before the welding begins. Back in 1979 our instructor always said; “99% prep and fit up, 1% welding.” I watch your videos, like a kid on Saturday morning watching cartoons. I’m GLUED to the screen! PROPER, ISAAC!!! As Always!
⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
As a retired automobile painter body and frameman of 40yrs this applies also, 90% prep 1% painting and 9% politics 😂
@@charlescastillo8870 👍🤣
Shout out for working safe! I wouldn't have crawled under there with it held up on the wheels either. The guy who did that either didn't think about it or was just too lazy to go back and get the jacks that he probably forgot to put in the truck. Guys new to field repairs can sometimes be unsure or afraid to call the customer out to address safety issues for fear of losing work in the future or just wanting to "cowboy up" and get the job going. Thanks for setting a good example of how to do the job and live to collect the money.
Great video, I'm learning a lot. Very enjoyable to watch, thank you Isaac.😊 watching from Rhode Island.
You are a true craftsman at your trade Isaac. I’m amazed at the complex problems that customers provide you with and the process you go through to repair them. As many others have said… Respect Isaac!
Years back I was a laborer and then after college a field engineer and equipment manager on one project (these were all $50M to $500M highway) and I'd see guys like you in the yard welding equipment and I had this work done + approved invoices but your videos show the skill and work that goes into this
I would be shocked if a customer just once cleaned up the equipment they wanted you to weld up after they broke it. Great job Issac as usual. Always a pleasure to watch a master at work. Thanks for sharing.
Wow! Much respect. I would have walked away from that one.
Excellent Repair of an abused machine, catastrophic frame damaged thru misuse, customer lucky to have a skilled technician/field engineer in you
The mechanic expected you to climb under there in hydraulic jacks balanced on timber rounds? Holy cow!
Hello @frankish , Mechanics Nowadays are really just Spanner monkeys, strip the bit off replace the with a new bit back out on the job , whereas issac is a master welder / fabricator looks at the damage and is working out in his head what he is going to do to weld it all back up and it will b done PROFESSIONALLY , Kurtis Down below in Aus has that same ability to do a job in a professional manner, BECAUSE at the end of the day it's his reputation at stake.
@@standonald5145 Absolutely!
Creating that gap is key. I have tried untold amount of times to bring metal back together by whatever means and failed. It takes some relief somewhere usually. Thx for sharing your skillset with us. I have learned quite a bit from your channel. You and CEE are a wealth of knowledge.
Absolutely amazing repair, and you make it look easy. I've been welding/wrenching on trucks and equipment since 1994, and I learn something every time I watch your videos. Stay safe and God bless
⚓️ Thanks IC 😎 moving those big pieces into position is tough… 🤯 I’ve seen guys weld in tabs & position turnbuckles… steamboat ratchets… to pull the work piece into position … takes time but it’s really a good technique. These guys will get the OEM prints & get the frame aligned… really cool.😎
You would think with all that dress load that JD would make the frame heavy enough for the load. It's definitely a engineering issue to save costs. Great job repairing something very difficult to work with.
I wish I could have worked for you a couple years when i was starting out. I am 76 now and think I learn something every time I see work.
Another excellent example of why you are the "Metal Master" when it comes to difficult, taxing jobs in the field. Well Done!!!!
Man man man. Never cease to amaze me.
Definitely a tough one.. There's lots of difference between kneeling and laying in the rocks (with the wind blowing) and TIG welding clean metal sitting at a bench as we often see on videos.. Every young welder should get a try at a repair like this.. Great Job..
Issac, Once again your experience shows on the practical approach to you creating a solution to a problem in the field! Glad you put the jack sands in place, pieces of logs and
hydraulic jacks is a potential for a serious situation! Glad you were in and out on this job with no injuries!
Thanks for Camming this up, fun to watch . At 19 yrs I was a welder making riverbuoys and at 67 own 3 different kinds of welders, a plasma cutter and backpack torch and fix everything I can for friends so watching u and how u Think is Interesting. Now I want stick gouge Lol . Thanks
It look like they overloading front end when they lift something because it developed crack after the beam. I am not a engineer or a welder but gusset plates on inside and out of the beam would reinforce those welds. Always enjoy your videos with hope i learn something new.
Thanks for the explanation of why you don't use add on plates because of the twisting torque. Great job.
Others grind, weld and grind, you sir also do this but bring a vast amount of experience knowledge and skills. That's what brings the big bucks and repeat customers. Thanks, as usual for a great video of craftsmanship and entertainment.
Good Day Mr. Isaac, Good to see you. I did a repair on a boom end for a Woods 7500 back hoe. It was bent and cracked from being smashed by a truck. It bent the bucket cylinder and the end of the boom. I rigged 205 portapower and lots of heat, got it "straighter" and burnt a grove thru the crack. Sounds like you are going the same path.
I won't ever challenge you to arm wrestling. That looks like at least a 10# sledge that you were swingin...LOL
Thank You, Thank U, Tank U for the "spot welding" technique with your flux core. I've used that since you first showed it and it works GREAT!@!@!@!!!!!!
I sure enjoy watching your repairs .. This one was so hard to get to but like everything you do and fix…you do it safely and you care..I watch another guy that watches you from Australia is cutting edge engineering. you both care so much and your videos are outstanding..
33:08- me: “dayum that looks good.” Isaac: “that’s terrible.”
Great job tackling a complex and technically complicated issue. As always you do an awesome job and pleasure to watch and learn from you.
Always a pleasure. Sure glad it was you and not me under that backhoe. Laying with your head extended just gets downright painful in short order! Then add in the shower of sparks in bad places and it gets even less fun after a few minutes. Good job.
Hey Isaac, thanks for passing on the knowledge!:) I'm a hobby welder and am grateful for your site. I butt weld a lot of sheet metal on my car / truck fun (16 - 19 ga) and have only used flux core. I really don't do enough to change my ways and I've learned to make it work. I use the same technique when butt welding light gauge metal. A little too hot, slow wire speed and quick pulses watching the puddle cool to red. Thanks much!
No question about your skills they are top notch. Judging by all the past crack repairs that have been done the material has serious metal fatigue and the only way to fix it right is to remove and replace the the steel. All the welding in the world won't fix metal fatigue it will only make it worse. Watching the video I see other indications of possible cracks. I understand that fixing it proper would cost more that the thing is worth but sometimes you just got to say NO!
I studied mechanical engineering, and Isaac seems to have a keen knowledge of the profession. Anybody can burn rod. The real part which impresses me is thinking about the forces the repaired area will be subjected to. Many of these repairs don’t end up as good as new. With the thought involved, it’s better than the original.
IC, rest assured my friend.. you and I will never be replaced by AI robots for such a task.. it's impossible, Love your videos and I love seeing stuff fixed ! Keep up the good work my friend with special skills.
My back and stomach hurts just watching you... I would need help getting up off the ground if I spent a couple of hours under that thing. Thanks for sharing. Charles
Great tip at 31:32, I've never heard anyone explain overhead that way, and it makes so much sense.
You are an amazing, intelligent mechanic. Experience and humility gives your clients confidence in your work. Thanks for your time.
Talented is an understatement! Master of your craft, sir! Thank you for sharing.
I've been watching for a long time now, you tackle some very serious repairs. After watching you tackle this miscarriage I now believe there isn't anything you can't repair. I tip my hat to you, you are a miracle worker.
Issac you have completed a very hard weld job with the damage to the frame, I think they will have no problems with the frame in that area. The operator must overload the machine with a lot of weight by the looks of those cracks. Nice job again God Speed
Haven’t watched one of your videos in a while. I’ve been a welder for almost 30 years, you’re a good tradesman. Fun to watch. I work in the oil and gas field so it’s interesting to see how you do things, because with welding you can always learn different skills and ideas that can come in handy no matter how long you’ve been doing it. Thanks, keep the videos coming.
I know that is not that easy to do , but you make it look so easy and nice looking .
Your BIG MESS is usually better than a lot of guys best weld on most days
Excellent repair work sir. I for one enjoyed this video.
When that first tilted around 9 min in, I thought whoa what is the frame doing...then you explained it was on the axle. :) You have such interesting and challenging day to day tasks, thanks for sharing them so we can learn too. :)
an amazing job of saving that machine.
Jacks on stands are not the same as a jack stand😂
Seriously creative work. Thanks
Thank you for all the detail, and explaining your techniques, and why it helps a lot of us become hopefully better …maybe never achieve your excellence, but it least improve on our end !
Issac, I used to be amazed at what you can do. I am now inspired as what can be done, with lots of practice and patience. Thank you for sharing your knowledge.
She was a hard one to get at. Thanks for showing us, a look over your shoulder on this repair. Special thanks for detailing how to complete that start-stop welding application. Keep safe and keep showing us the correct way to reason through those tough ones.
Thanks again Isaac for sharing this challenging repair.
First rate work as always. I learn something, and gain confidence with each of your videos. Thank you !
You are the man Issac! Like always, you made a tremendously difficult job look easy to execute.....a true professional. Always a pleasure to see your videos. Thanks as always for the content!
Excellent video showing your problem solving abilities and fun to watch. Great job.
A lot of thought goes into what you do. Very professional job.
I don’t know what you get paid for this kind of work, but it ain’t enough. Nicely done sir.
Fantastic job Sir. Always a pleasure to watch and learn!
When they say all position welding it doesn't begin to describe the body positions one has to use
great craft great work
Well done. I like that you always take the time to do things the right way.
Construction company client worker: Boss! The backhoe front end broke in half!!
Boss: Don’t worry we’ll call Isaac and he’ll fix it for us. When he fixes stuff we break new parts of the equipment as his fixes are so good they don’t break again!
I’m amazed at your skill set and I do know that experience is the key. Awesome work.
Very impressive work given the conditions. You are much more willing to weld barely disassembled stuff than I.
44:53 A fire proof blanket (doesn't need to be an expensive one) and a yoga mat. You wrap the yoga mat in the fire proof blanket and have someone sew it shut, and voila, fire proof sharp rock back defender. I have one using one of those fire retardant mats and a cheapie blanket, that's barely good for the job that i sewed together using a mattress needle and some kevlar weave i got from fleabay. Haven't managed to burn it yet.
As always a hard job well done !
To you other welders , learn how to properly do what is called a key hole weld , where you use 6010 or 7010 - DC only or it’s AC counterpart 6011 or 7011 , even 80 series if required , or you could use wire feed (if you have it). The key hole weld is what is used on pipe lines with no backing strip & it’s the inside of the weld that is important ; then you grind the outside to smooth it up , removing every spot or crack/seam of slag , filling up the rest of the gouge with 7018 .
Start out with coupons of 3/8” flat plate with a beveled edge @ 45* with a small flat edge facing each other spaced the diameter of the wire of your welding rod , to do your keyhole weld , when you get this one good then you can go on the the pipe !
To practice doing this get some 4” or 6” pipe coupons , 1/4 or 3/8 wall , tack them together , with a space apart , of the welding rod wire - 3/32 or 1/8 , set this up in a 5g position , which is at a 45* angle . Starting at the bottom of the crack, welding up hill , both for the root pass & the subsequent filler passes . When you are finished the weld should look uniform both inside & out .
Issac you Sir always bless us with knowledge and good welding! Keep the videos coming and stay safe! Bless you.
0ne of the things that make your videos very informative is your thought process as you initiate the project and as you work through it during the repair. This repair had its unique level of process to work through. Awesome
Saw you do a long arm move... Nicely done. Hard to fathom how an operator abuses equipment to the point you have to perform such a repair... Good for your business, but it is expensive to the owner and gets passed on to the customer... I know they are begging for workers, but still it kind of irks me as my dad drilled into my head, "take care of your tools and equipment". You are a good welder and "how I did it" is good enough for me. Have a great one!
I can’t weld but enjoy and know talented people when I see them, this guy rocks!
Isaac , You are the man . Great repair , super complex , you make it better and stronger than original , but it looks obvious that they are abusing this machine severely . Thank you so much for all the explanation and education . I have become much more confident and creative , since watching and studying your method , procedures and thought process . Thank you also for the camera footage , that's a heavy job in itself , great quality and editing . Thanks again . Just know , many of us greatly appreciate the efforts it takes to put out these amazing high quality video's . Without your talents , that machine would be scrapped or sold for parts .
Is that a couple of tree rounds holding that front axle up? Yikes! You're a courageous man Mr Isaac!
Great job, well done. Thank you for teaching us new ways to do welding.
*I C Weld* Bravo well done, thank-you sir for taking the time to bring us along. GOD Bless.
i really learn a lot...i think together with you and it helps me have better ideas.
Isaac, it's good to see you back on the job using your awesome skills and teaching us... Thanks for the great video... Dave
well done a true pro ,enjoyed watching and learning 10/10
Really good methods for your repairs.
Accounting for flex was something I wouldn't have thought about. Enjoyed it!
Your ability and your knowledge are very interesting I just like to watch
I appreciate that!
love the tips on wire speed and voltage