I was home on leave years ago from the ROK. When I returned, I had 2 kilos ( 4 pounds) of ground coffee. I got it from across the river in Mexico, good, strong brew. The CO loved it.
Finally!! Someone who knows how to put a spring back in a case!! None of that winding it and holding it and putting a zip strap on it to hold it in size to try and put it in.. great job!
I’m just blown away at each of these magnificent restorations on all these restoration channels at the craftsman ship and the dedication to restore these artifacts back to working order you guys just leave me speechless I’m like wow spectacular I just have no words
What a great ending to an excellent restoration video-well done Richard. What a genuine smile and response-like a 60 yr old child at Christmas. God bless.
love this one. I really enjoyed your talk at CPS the other week, and I'm enjoying your channel, Restoration videos are my ASMR before bed, I'm so glad to have found a local channel.
Хай-тек ! Винтаж ! В то время не было таких увлекательных зрелищ , как ваше , и люди находили отдохновение в обычных , для них, вещах и процессах. Получил несравненное удовольствие от вашей работы. Спасибо .
Thank you so much for your kind words! I'm thrilled to hear that you found entertainment and inspiration in my content. It's comments like yours that motivate me to keep creating!
I appreciate your comment and enthusiasm! It's always great to find simple solutions that don't rely on technology. Kerosene and freshly roasted coffee definitely make for a unique experience.
To begin with: Excellent and marvellous job on the restoration process, sir! I never knew that these types of coffee bean roaster even existed. Your passion and patience truly paid off, the roaster now has a new lease on life thanks to you! What a jewel of true craftsmanship this simple yet ingenious machine is! Back in the days, appliances were honorably well-built and designed to last forever. Modern appliances are fitted with multiple points of failure which take destructive action once the two-year warranty ends.
Thank you so much for your kind words! I'm thrilled that you enjoyed the restoration process and discovered something new. It's amazing to see how craftsmanship from the past still holds up today.
From The British Trades Directory, 1915: under the heading 'Coffee Mill Makers", Savage & Co. 28 Love lane, Eastcheap EC: works, 8, 9 & 10 Hardwidge St., Snow's Fields SE. EC and SE were postal districts in London. I cannot find any other references with a simple search - the usual method is to investigate the same book title published in different years, but it seems that they haven't all been digitised yet. A most enjoyable video - thanks!
Lovely! I used to restore antique horsedrawn carriages and frequently found information related to manufacturers doing searches on Google Books. I found snippets of information on the Savage Company in trade journals there, one items was from 1926. There is address info, etc. The last restoration was a gorgeous little buggy that I found a maker name on the axles. I found city directories, etc. on Google Books that allowed me to date the construction of the running gear within 10 years by tracing company history and name changes. I love following your restorations, thank you for sharing!
I really appreciate your kind words and support! It's great to know that my restorations resonate with fellow enthusiasts like you. Thank you for following along!
that's cool and neat 😊😊 IVE heard of them it's the 1ST time I have seen 1 in use 😊😊 and the should taste alot better than what it did a richer flavor indeed 😊🎉 OMG 9 26 2O23
I had to subscribe to your channel !! I love your work I have watched about 6 of your videos and finally decided to comment ....excellent work and you have a lovely home in the video of the Coal Shuttle!!
Awesome! Thank you! I do a lot of restorations for free for museums and that was a living museum where you can visit and buy scones and cakes made in the coal range and cups of tea😀
You may have a one of a kind piece there. As i have been searching for close to 3 hours and have not found a single scrap of evidence that this piece ever existed let alone the companys name. But this turned out wonderful just the same. I remember working at a coffee house and roasting the coffee beans i could smell the beans roasting now.
Hi Charlmlane thanks for looking , i lost count of the hours looking myself .I did find mention of it in a English cookbook from the 1880s of a wind-up coffee roaster in London
Wonderful job. Some 35 odd minutes went by in a breeze, and definitely NOT the same as "watching paint dry"! For reference: 23:45 😇 Nowadays most people buy their coffee today already roasted and ground to suit their needs. Not that I am complaining - it is convenient - but perhaps the old ways were better. I bet that coffee tastes amazing! ☕
You did a wonderful job restoring this roaster I do have a question? Why did you make new handles the old ones just looked like they needed refinished ?
Hi thanks for watching the video and enjoyed it , The reason why I made two handles is because one was missing and I couldn't match the timber so therefore I had to make two handles but I have saved that handle for another project that's coming up, I love the Patina on the handle and it will give some instant age to the project, cheers Richard
@@richardrestorations Oh ok totally understand now ! How was the first cup of coffee out of it? How does that coffee pot work never seen one with beans in the bottom always been a basket inside thanks for the reply
hej jag hade problem med att Facebook stjäl mina videor och laddade upp dem som sina egna. Jag har nu åtgärdat det problemet och jag kommer inte att sätta min logotyp så mycket på mina videor
I believe the roaster is from an Australian coffee shop. The Australians used to have coffee clubs similar to a pub, but with coffee instead of beer in the 1880's and 90's.
huh, was poking around and found an early 1800s roaster that looked a little like the one you restored here. the company was out of Austria. but nothing with the word "London" closest i could find to that (other than England) was in North Carolina. but i think the company there is very new.
I was listening to the gentleman at the end and thinking 'Aussie or Kiwi' ? but I concluded Kiwi..then looked in the 'About' for your channel info and it was confirmed, Kiwi..very nice job you did and I was wondering if they run a coffee shop, because that's where that gadget belongs, whether in use or as just display, bt it's nice it works..
this is my favorite resto ever. and now I want one. -.-
Thanks a lot Glen Havard and glad you enjoyed! 👍👍👍
@@richardrestorations Can you buy raw coffee beans in the UK?
@@nixxonnor Yes. You'll need to find a specialty shop or an online supplier. But that said, the city I live in has many sources for unroasted beans.
I was home on leave years ago from the ROK. When I returned, I had 2 kilos ( 4 pounds) of ground coffee. I got it from across the river in Mexico, good, strong brew. The CO loved it.
Thanks!
Thank you Richard you're the first one to give me a super thanks in two years😍
@@richardrestorationsI would love to add a link to your Savage makeover. Would that be OK with you. You have given me a roadmap to rebuild my Savage.
I’m wondering if you could give me info on where you got your brass nuts. I would like to do the same for mine
Finally!! Someone who knows how to put a spring back in a case!! None of that winding it and holding it and putting a zip strap on it to hold it in size to try and put it in.. great job!
thanks @frogjunk for the encouragement😀
I’m just blown away at each of these magnificent restorations on all these restoration channels at the craftsman ship and the dedication to restore these artifacts back to working order you guys just leave me speechless I’m like wow spectacular I just have no words
Wow, thank you!
What a great ending to an excellent restoration video-well done Richard. What a genuine smile and response-like a 60 yr old child at Christmas. God bless.
Glad you enjoyed it
That was a real treat watching your restoration on the old girl. Delightful indeed!
thanks for the encouragement😀
I believe that having one of these at that time was very pleasurable!!!! ❤❤❤ Amazing!!!
Thank you for taking the time to watch my video and leave a comment. It means a lot to me!
Freshly roasted. Freshly ground. Freshly brewed. Very good, sir!!
thanks for watching😀
love this one. I really enjoyed your talk at CPS the other week, and I'm enjoying your channel, Restoration videos are my ASMR before bed, I'm so glad to have found a local channel.
Thanks a lot Adrianne and glad you enjoyed! Thanks again for these kind words 👍👍👍
That Moca Pot needs very fine ground and full to the top. And you made a lite roast. Needs dark. Very cool roaster.
Thanks for your feed back cheers Richard 😀
Хай-тек ! Винтаж ! В то время не было таких увлекательных зрелищ , как ваше , и люди находили отдохновение в обычных , для них, вещах и процессах. Получил несравненное удовольствие от вашей работы. Спасибо .
Thank you so much for your kind words! I'm thrilled to hear that you found entertainment and inspiration in my content. It's comments like yours that motivate me to keep creating!
Great respect for the use of the Moka. And also great work in putting the roaster at good use again. Loved it.
thanks Danilo Pia for the encouragement😀
Incredible,Amazing work Sir. Thank You and CHEERS
Thank you! Cheers!
*_The original is one of my favourite restorations. You guys do top work. Seriously impressive effort and results._*
thanks Fully Restoration Solution for coming back😀
You are very lucky to have all those Coffee equipment.. i am so happy to see yours and share to us
🤯👍👏👏👏that looks so amazing 👍.no batteries needed and no power cord 👍.just a little 🤏kerosene and a good cup of coffee freshly roasted 👍👏👏👏👏🇺🇲
I appreciate your comment and enthusiasm! It's always great to find simple solutions that don't rely on technology. Kerosene and freshly roasted coffee definitely make for a unique experience.
all those gears are cool, i enjoy this video
Beautiful restoration. Fine attention to detail.
Thank you so much! I really appreciate your kind words and support.😀
Very cute innovative, beautiful gadgets of those years .
I appreciate your kind words! It's always great to hear that people are enjoying the content I create.
To begin with: Excellent and marvellous job on the restoration process, sir! I never knew that these types of coffee bean roaster even existed. Your passion and patience truly paid off, the roaster now has a new lease on life thanks to you!
What a jewel of true craftsmanship this simple yet ingenious machine is! Back in the days, appliances were honorably well-built and designed to last forever. Modern appliances are fitted with multiple points of failure which take destructive action once the two-year warranty ends.
Thank you so much for your kind words! I'm thrilled that you enjoyed the restoration process and discovered something new. It's amazing to see how craftsmanship from the past still holds up today.
Excellent work! One sees plenty of coffee grinders, but never anything like this.
Thanks a lot Nineteen AndFortyOne and glad you enjoyed!
From The British Trades Directory, 1915: under the heading 'Coffee Mill Makers", Savage & Co. 28 Love lane, Eastcheap EC: works, 8, 9 & 10 Hardwidge St., Snow's Fields SE. EC and SE were postal districts in London. I cannot find any other references with a simple search - the usual method is to investigate the same book title published in different years, but it seems that they haven't all been digitised yet.
A most enjoyable video - thanks!
Thanks for your feed back cheers Richard 😀the owner found in a English cookbook dated 1886 mentioning a windup coffee roster
new zealand is a beautiful country and has great fitters. thanks for your contribution and stay healthy ❤ michael
thanks leahcim ressik for the encouragement😀
I've never seen one of these before. It turned out absolutely fantastic. You did an excellent restoration job on it.
thanks for watching 😀
What a treat! Great job
Thanks a bunch! It means a lot to me that you enjoyed it!
@@richardrestorations I'd quite like to be able to sit down and watch my dad tinker away at a restoration, but this'll do :-)
What a fabulous restoration.
Great work - yet again!
Thanks a lot Emyr Jones and glad you enjoyed!
Lovely! I used to restore antique horsedrawn carriages and frequently found information related to manufacturers doing searches on Google Books. I found snippets of information on the Savage Company in trade journals there, one items was from 1926. There is address info, etc. The last restoration was a gorgeous little buggy that I found a maker name on the axles. I found city directories, etc. on Google Books that allowed me to date the construction of the running gear within 10 years by tracing company history and name changes. I love following your restorations, thank you for sharing!
I really appreciate your kind words and support! It's great to know that my restorations resonate with fellow enthusiasts like you. Thank you for following along!
Very good effort and result, very nice devise, keep on restoring.
Thanks, will do!
what a great restoration!
thanks for the encouragement😀
Oh, wow! I was expecting the burners to be gas-fed. Interesting! Very interesting!
"That is so amazing" indeed. Very nice refurbishing
Many thanks!
I've never seen such a thing but it's beautiful! I'll bet it smelled good as it roasted.
I worked near a place that roasted their coffee beans once a week. Man did it stink!
@@michelecrown2426 hahahaha....
Thanks for your feed back cheers Richard 😀
thanks for watching😀
Well done! Such a beautiful piece of history!❤❤❤
Thank you! I'm just trying to bring history to life, one video at a time.
Excellent, 1000% wow restoration
Keep it up, you are a real genius
Thanks a lot Adnan Karim and glad you enjoyed! Thanks again for these kind words 👍👍👍
Excellent restoration. Saving history.
thanks for watching😀
You should send that along to James Hoffman 😁. excellent work 👍👍👍👍👍
Great idea have sent him a link cheers Richard
What a fabulous restoration.
Great work - ///
Thanks a lot 2K Restoration and glad you enjoyed! 👍👍👍
@@richardrestorations
Amazing restoration !!!
Glad you like it!
Awesome, I can almost smell the coffee aroma!
thanks for watching😀
old things take time and wear away slowly why they last longer than modern cheap china thin wall stuff
this was A great coffee resto
thanks for watching😀
that's cool and neat 😊😊 IVE heard of them it's the 1ST time I have seen 1 in use 😊😊 and the should taste alot better than what it did a richer flavor indeed 😊🎉 OMG 9 26 2O23
Thanks a lot @clarencetrice4442 and glad you enjoyed!
The happiness on the brass discovery at the end is what sold it to me
thanks for watching😀
I sooooo want that now! Job well done!
Thanks for watching and sharing your comments, I must admit I found it very hard to give it back to the museum😀
Outstanding stupendous Excellent terrific job you did with that coffee roaster and stay safe and well.
thanks Gregory Talber 😀
Very good work!
Thank you! Cheers!
Outstanding job and an amazing reveal to the owners.
thanks Shed Man X for coming back😀
You are great man. You did a great job, thank you
thanks for the encouragement😀
Hi, great job, well done. Cheers from Italy ;-)
Thank you! Cheers! Greetings From New Zealand
I think I liked the original wooden handles better. The rich, red color can never be replaced. Great job, I love coffee!
Thank you so much! I appreciate your feedback and I'm glad to hear that you love coffee too!
good job!
see for the first time!!
thanks for watching😀
Juste magnifique waouwwwww, un très beau travail chapeau l'artiste 😌 😌 😌 😌 😌
Thanks a lot Patrick Stoquert and glad you enjoyed! Thanks again for these kind words 👍👍👍
Beautiful Coffee Roaster👍
good job
thanks for watching😀
Beautiful!👍🙂
Thank you! Cheers!
I went on Google and typed in "Savage of London Coffee Roaster". It appears the company is still in business.
He must've used Bing, despite using you tube.
i looked at that I think that was registered in 1987 there has been a few Savage company's i didn't find any before 1970
@@richardrestorations you think they had internet at those days?
@@HanDekker🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
@HanDekker no but they had company registrations.
Beautiful Restoration
thanks car restore for the encouragement😀
Had to subscribe. You did an amazing job!
Welcome aboard!😀
I had to subscribe to your channel !! I love your work I have watched about 6 of your videos and finally decided to comment ....excellent work and you have a lovely home in the video of the Coal Shuttle!!
Awesome! Thank you! I do a lot of restorations for free for museums and that was a living museum where you can visit and buy scones and cakes made in the coal range and cups of tea😀
Beautifully done 🤗
Thanks a lot jackie foot and glad you enjoyed! Thanks again for these kind words 👍👍👍
Great to see you make it. It looks real good after renovation. 😍😍
Thanks a lot MASI and glad you enjoyed! Thanks again for these kind words 👍👍👍
Nice restoration! Nice to see a kiwi channel!!
Thank you, It means a lot to me that you enjoyed the restoration. Keep watching for more!😀
Nice job !
Thank you! Cheers!
Amazing bro 👏😁👍👍👍👍👍
Thank you so much 😀
Cool device!
Oh, I want a cup of this!🥰
Same here! It's so good, I can't resist it!
You did a great job buddy! The color choice was perfect.
Thanks a lot Mike L and glad you enjoyed! Thanks again for these kind words 👍👍👍
A good watchmaker's job ⏰😉 Good for something small from the grill 🐿🤪
thanks for the encouragement😀
Excellent restoration and you did a masterful job restoring it also!!!
Enjoyed your video and I gave it a Thumbs Up
thanks oneshot_me for coming back😀
@@richardrestorations You're welcome
Excellent restoration. This is coming from a 65 year old man who
never developed a taste for coffee. Although I love to smell it brewing.
thanks for the encouragement😀
Beautiful!
Thank you! Cheers!
Nicely done!
Thanks for the visit
Beautiful job Richard Thank You. Sir why the jumper lead on the parts when you were spray painting.
Thanks for your feedback, I was using powder coat not paint cheers Richard 😀
You may have a one of a kind piece there. As i have been searching for close to 3 hours and have not found a single scrap of evidence that this piece ever existed let alone the companys name. But this turned out wonderful just the same. I remember working at a coffee house and roasting the coffee beans i could smell the beans roasting now.
Hi Charlmlane thanks for looking , i lost count of the hours looking myself .I did find mention of it in a English cookbook from the 1880s of a wind-up coffee roaster in London
I love the durability of old machines 😊
thanks for watching😀
Size that up it would make a pretty interesting popcorn maker...
Thanks for your feed back cheers Richard 😀
Clever "engine"😮. This is first time i saw that kind of coffee roster. A beautiful restoration Regards Stig Österberg from Dalsbruk in Finland.
Thanks a lot Stig Österberg and glad you enjoyed! Thanks again for these kind words 👍👍👍
I agree with your choice of finish. Not glossy.
Thank you! I'm glad you agree with my choice of finish. It's always great to have someone who appreciates the same aesthetic.
Oh my God! WOW!
Thanks for watching, I really appreciate it
Wonderful job. Some 35 odd minutes went by in a breeze, and definitely NOT the same as "watching paint dry"! For reference: 23:45 😇
Nowadays most people buy their coffee today already roasted and ground to suit their needs. Not that I am complaining - it is convenient - but perhaps the old ways were better.
I bet that coffee tastes amazing! ☕
Thanks a lot Geo and glad you enjoyed! Thanks again for these kind words 👍👍👍
Nice job and this roaster can to serve up again.
thanks for watching😀
Great restoration
thanks for watching😀
Looks delicious
Thank you 😋
You did a wonderful job restoring this roaster I do have a question? Why did you make new handles the old ones just looked like they needed refinished ?
Hi thanks for watching the video and enjoyed it , The reason why I made two handles is because one was missing and I couldn't match the timber so therefore I had to make two handles but I have saved that handle for another project that's coming up, I love the Patina on the handle and it will give some instant age to the project, cheers Richard
@@richardrestorations Oh ok totally understand now ! How was the first cup of coffee out of it? How does that coffee pot work never seen one with beans in the bottom always been a basket inside thanks for the reply
Splendid job
Thanks for your feed back cheers Richard 😀
Älskar dina filmer, verkligen. Lite irriterande att du har din logga mitt i bilden hela tiden. Annars, kanonbra.
hej jag hade problem med att Facebook stjäl mina videor och laddade upp dem som sina egna. Jag har nu åtgärdat det problemet och jag kommer inte att sätta min logotyp så mycket på mina videor
What an outcome. From start to finish completely great work . Savage of london sell coffee. Belive they have are still about
Thanks for your feed back cheers Richard 😀
Great work as always man 👍👍
thanks FIRE KING for coming back😀
How u put the coil back again❤😊?
I believe the roaster is from an Australian coffee shop. The Australians used to have coffee clubs similar to a pub, but with coffee instead of beer in the 1880's and 90's.
Thanks for your feed back cheers Richard 😀
concern over buffing the cogs because of heat... Would Brasso or some other liquid de-oxidizer work?
Thanks for your feed back cheers Richard 😀
Very interesting ! Looks like a Rolex movement ! 😂
Thanks for your feed back cheers Richard 😀
와우...가지고싶다 ^^ ❤❤❤
그래 난 내 자신을 원하지만 그게 내가 본 유일한 사람이야
Muito obrigado por seu trabalho fantastico, trazendo de volta a vida um pedaço da história
Muito obrigado
Thanks a lot cfrefrigeração and glad you enjoyed! Thanks again for these kind words 👍👍👍
Good experience sir ❤
Thanks a lot Shezan Shezankhand and glad you enjoyed! Thanks again for these kind words 👍👍👍
When I saw the Equus bucket I thought “is this a NZ’er?” Then I heard the accent and it seems confirmed. Nice work mate.
Thanks a lot John Ferguson and glad you enjoyed! 👍👍👍
huh, was poking around and found an early 1800s roaster that looked a little like the one you restored here. the company was out of Austria. but nothing with the word "London" closest i could find to that (other than England) was in North Carolina. but i think the company there is very new.
It was pretty cool when you lit that thing up like a menorah bong.
thanks for watching😀
Super! Очень необычный предмет!👍
Thanks for your feed back cheers Richard 😀
Is one complete turn of the spring the amount of time it take to roast the beans.
Thanks a lot @powers1079 and glad you enjoyed! took three wind ups to do a full dark roast 👍👍👍
What made you replace the handle? It looked like it was still in good shape.
there was a handle missing of the burner and I didn't have the same timber so I had to make two to match them up
I was listening to the gentleman at the end and thinking 'Aussie or Kiwi' ? but I concluded Kiwi..then looked in the 'About' for your channel info and it was confirmed, Kiwi..very nice job you did and I was wondering if they run a coffee shop, because that's where that gadget belongs, whether in use or as just display, bt it's nice it works..
thanks for watching😀yes they do make coffee and cakes in a coal range