The two pronged anvil tool is for bending hot iron bars that you don't want hammer marks on. That chisel looks more like it's wrought iron with a steel edge forge welded on.
With that Pipe Wrench you can unstuck anything you can grab with it, becouse it doesnt slide, actually when you put force on it, it bites harder, we just have some european stuff which is cool enough too @Wranglerstar
As soon as you said/ showed the name I knew you (&sweetloaf) were in for a good time. Many happy returns Cody from nw uk. P.s. the dehydrated water lasts longer if you keep the can in the fridge ;-p
Hilti is a German tool brand could you do some reviews ther hat very strong drills and saws that are cord less and I think they are better than the makita hand saws
You might consider sending some of those old publications to Keith Rucker (yt) @ www.vintagemachinery.org. He'll scan and add them to a vast online collection of old manuals, etc. that's free to access.
So what the 2 stroke oil is saying is that you can mix it to any ratio that you want so if your chain saw uses 40:1 than you can mix the oil 40:1 no need for a different oil
Yes that is it and also back before the rise of 4-strokes a lot of racers would run mix ratios leaner than what the manufacturers suggested for the bikes. It makes the bike run hotter and you get a little more performance out of it. I’d never do it, but then again the racers got new bikes at the beginning of every year anyway so they weren’t concerned with engine life.
Buddy of mine only runs Saber in all his 2 strokes going back to an old Cr500, been trying to find a local dealer to switch over from Lucas "smokeless" for my chainsaw & 2000' rm 125 but can only find by gallon jug in stock
I don't know exactly what the jug is saying but I know a long time chainsaw repair man who uses Amsoil 2cycle oil and he mixes everything 80 to 1 even some of the old 16 to 1 saws he says the high end 2cycle oil made today are far superior than oil made back when they were new much better additives.
All the oil bottle was saying was that it was one big bottle, that you can use the measurements on the side to mix to any ratio. Typically 2 stroke oil is bought in the smaller, or the smaller bottle that you then add to 1 gal of gas to get either 50:1 or 40:1. Well that's great but what if you need something other than those 2 measurement, or what if you want to mix it with more or less than 1gal of gas. All that bottle is saying is that it is a big bottle that can mixed to any ratio all the way up to 100:1. As for the artic grease that stuff is really good, we use it at work mostly to rebuild the swivels on the airplane refueling trucks. Temperature doesn't seem to have to much of effect on it, and more importantly it doesn't seem to get washed away, or dissolved in the jet fuel.
That's a Swedish style pipe wrench. I have used them a lot working as a car mechanic, mostly to hold things very tight. For example when changing shock absorbers, when the nut was rusty I used them to hold the shaft from spinning. Other times to hold an axle while removing the CV joint. The thing on the end is to make it more comfortable when holding on to it
I think the forged hold downs are for your wood working bench. They should fit down the dog holes on the bench. A quick mallet blow will lock them in place
The 2-stroke oil is for when you have multiple tools that take different mixes. Like a still chainsaw, poulan weedeater, and homelite leaf blower... You mix that oil at a ratio of 100:1. And it will work in all those tools. Eliminating the need for different containers for different mixes.
My dad was an amsoil rep 30 years ago. You can run amsoil synthetic at 100:1 ratio all day. But, the stuff costs ALOT. No fowled plugs though. My dad (he passed) and I where very much into vintage snowmobiles, and we were money poor. The sleds recommended mix was usually 20:1 but pops sprung for amsoil and we'd run five times as long on a set of plugs. Great stuff, not a rep...lol.
WD40 now has a system that you can switch between the straw and spray without detatching the straw. I love it when companies come up with ingenious little changes that make their products easier to use.
The tail of the pipe wrench is just to make it more ergonomic. You grab it at the end to get a better leverage. And by the way you pronounce Knipex with a hard K and then NEE-PEX. Greetings from Germany.
Am I naïve? dehydrated water.....'just add water', surely that means you open an empty tin and fill it up...Et Voila, you have re-hydrated it!. As your Birthday is April 1st, surely your friend Ken was playing an All Fools Day trick on you.
The ams oil saber is tested work in all 2 stroke engines at 100:1 safely no matter what I'd probably still go somewhere between 50:1 and 80:1 just to play it safe
Some nice tools . Happy Birthday young man . Amsoil must have improved a lot since they first introduced synthetic oils in the 70s . I just did multiple searches and there was nothing about how poor a lubricant it was . In testing during a lawsuit it was found to have about 20% the lubrication of conventional oil right out of the bottle . And dropped off quickly . Plus I knew a crooked Amsoil dealer in 75' , not the kind of guy you would wish to do business with . I am sure it is great oil now , but even hearing the name still disturbs me . That will be fun watching Sweetloaf play with that box .
Late to the party, sorry I've been in the hospital recovering from surgery. The lathe tools, only the four longest ones are for the lathe, the other are hand chisels. Love the cat in the box from Japan!
The Amsoil 2-cycle oil is great. You mix it 100 to 1 or 1 oz oil to 100 oz gas. I used this exclusively in my chainsaw, Sthl FS-80 trimmer, and moped. If you put more oil in the mix than 100 to 1 it will smoke.
You never have to many tools. My roll a way must weigh a thousand pounds. I would not use Ams oil in a two cycle engine if you want to keep it running. I have tried them but 100 or more to one scares the hell out of me. I use Stihl Ultra at 50:1 in all my two cycle stuff, whether Stihl or Husqvarna,.mixed with Premium, non-ethanol gas. Actually, I run PNE gas in everything but the cars. I do not like cleaning carbs and replacing fuel hoses and diaphragms.
Howdy! Have you ever thought of working with Essential Craftsman and maybe making a video together? I really enjoy both your channels, and it would be a great collaboration. I believe you two are in the same corner of the world, and I think he's got a line on an anvil or two.
Nicholas Gajewski Excellent idea. I love EC's channel also. But he's going to be busy with the spec house build, so that might not be possible for a while.
Swedish pipe wrench one of the best designed pipe wrench when I was an alignment tech these were the only thing that would bite and hold onto tie rod ends to adjust them.
Knipex is amazing. I own many different sets of their pliers and put them through Carpenter hell and they work. I also like the Wiha terminator bits-practically indestructible, but sadly not magnetized.
when You go for a bigger anvil, I used 4X4s and stacked them, cinching them down with long lag bolts to make a heavy and sturdy base... I hand planed the bottom and top to make it as level asd I could get it and it works well
You can use the bending fork in a leg vise, or a decently mounted heavy duty bench vise Cody, no need for an anvil with that tool. The hot cut could also be used in a leg vise (till you get an anvil with a larger Hardy hole) but not in a bench vise as it's essentially a struck tool. There is the option of forging a square taper at the end of the shank of the hot cut to make it an interference fit in your current anvils hardy hole. Not the best solution in my opinion but some Smith's (Brian Brazeal for example) forge hot cuts that are deliberately meant to be an interference fit rather than having shoulders supported by the anvil face (like the one you have). Nice additions to the Smithy in any case and Happy Birthday :)
i have two of the exact same framing chisels. one has a nice brass ring and a pretty clean short handle like yours. the other one has no handle and has been hammered like a cold chisel so the socket it flat lol
Another great video on a great day! Happy Birthday Cody! My Dad's birthday was yesterday and mine is tomorrow, and my Mom always reminded us of an Airies axiom of life. "Let's do it my way; I'll show you how!" Love all your videos.
Python 357 micro molly (1micron), both of the oil brands also used in family transmission shop. SCHAEFFER outlasts amsoil, and bearing testing comparable oils from both companies SCHAEFFER beats amsoil.
Not many tractor videos this winter that just passed. Did the snow plow not work? I must admit i like them the most along with blacksmithing and tool restoration and your family members are a bonus. Don't really watch that clickbaity enigmatic titled videos that seem to me a rant about nothing. Ever thought of working with other youtubers? Maybe you can invite them do some stuff together then they can invite You to their place etc. Regards.
Very special video. With the countless videos we get to enjoy all year long it is very satisfying to see the appreciation pour in. Well done everyone and Happy Birthday Cody!
Get your very own useless box here for only $30 Free Shipping...amzn.to/2CVyTRb (amazon affiliate link
That box seems like it’s more of a toy for Cody then for the sweet loaf. Lol.
The two pronged anvil tool is for bending hot iron bars that you don't want hammer marks on. That chisel looks more like it's wrought iron with a steel edge forge welded on.
With that Pipe Wrench you can unstuck anything you can grab with it, becouse it doesnt slide, actually when you put force on it, it bites harder, we just have some european stuff which is cool enough too @Wranglerstar
As soon as you said/ showed the name I knew you (&sweetloaf) were in for a good time.
Many happy returns Cody from nw uk.
P.s. the dehydrated water lasts longer if you keep the can in the fridge ;-p
Hilti is a German tool brand could you do some reviews ther hat very strong drills and saws that are cord less and I think they are better than the makita hand saws
I sent you the Knipex Swedish Pipe Wrench. Hope you enjoy it Cody!
can I get those here in Australia?
I can't find them in America. I'm not much of an online shopper hahaha. Amazing gift tho!
I ordered them from Amazon
You have a good taste of tools! 😁
@@TheBiglew415 thank you!
You might consider sending some of those old publications to Keith Rucker (yt) @ www.vintagemachinery.org. He'll scan and add them to a vast online collection of old manuals, etc. that's free to access.
So what the 2 stroke oil is saying is that you can mix it to any ratio that you want so if your chain saw uses 40:1 than you can mix the oil 40:1 no need for a different oil
That's what I was thinking during the video but I couldn't be too sure LOL! Thank you for the comment sir!
Yes that is it and also back before the rise of 4-strokes a lot of racers would run mix ratios leaner than what the manufacturers suggested for the bikes. It makes the bike run hotter and you get a little more performance out of it. I’d never do it, but then again the racers got new bikes at the beginning of every year anyway so they weren’t concerned with engine life.
Buddy of mine only runs Saber in all his 2 strokes going back to an old Cr500, been trying to find a local dealer to switch over from Lucas "smokeless" for my chainsaw & 2000' rm 125 but can only find by gallon jug in stock
I don't know exactly what the jug is saying but I know a long time chainsaw repair man who uses Amsoil 2cycle oil and he mixes everything 80 to 1 even some of the old 16 to 1 saws he says the high end 2cycle oil made today are far superior than oil made back when they were new much better additives.
That hold down will also work on your woodworking bench
All the oil bottle was saying was that it was one big bottle, that you can use the measurements on the side to mix to any ratio. Typically 2 stroke oil is bought in the smaller, or the smaller bottle that you then add to 1 gal of gas to get either 50:1 or 40:1. Well that's great but what if you need something other than those 2 measurement, or what if you want to mix it with more or less than 1gal of gas. All that bottle is saying is that it is a big bottle that can mixed to any ratio all the way up to 100:1. As for the artic grease that stuff is really good, we use it at work mostly to rebuild the swivels on the airplane refueling trucks. Temperature doesn't seem to have to much of effect on it, and more importantly it doesn't seem to get washed away, or dissolved in the jet fuel.
We used those pliers to adjust tie rods for vehicle alignments!
That's a Swedish style pipe wrench. I have used them a lot working as a car mechanic, mostly to hold things very tight. For example when changing shock absorbers, when the nut was rusty I used them to hold the shaft from spinning. Other times to hold an axle while removing the CV joint.
The thing on the end is to make it more comfortable when holding on to it
There is „Rohrzange“ written on it which is German for pipe wrench. :)
I think the largest "anvil tool" that you showed us is actually a hold down for your wooden workbench.
I think the forged hold downs are for your wood working bench. They should fit down the dog holes on the bench. A quick mallet blow will lock them in place
The 2-stroke oil is for when you have multiple tools that take different mixes. Like a still chainsaw, poulan weedeater, and homelite leaf blower... You mix that oil at a ratio of 100:1. And it will work in all those tools. Eliminating the need for different containers for different mixes.
My dad was an amsoil rep 30 years ago. You can run amsoil synthetic at 100:1 ratio all day. But, the stuff costs ALOT. No fowled plugs though. My dad (he passed) and I where very much into vintage snowmobiles, and we were money poor. The sleds recommended mix was usually 20:1 but pops sprung for amsoil and we'd run five times as long on a set of plugs. Great stuff, not a rep...lol.
You need to check out Essential Craftsman. He knows anvils. Great channel.
WD40 now has a system that you can switch between the straw and spray without detatching the straw. I love it when companies come up with ingenious little changes that make their products easier to use.
the black hold down is a bench dog usually used in wood shop to hold down boards on your bench. slid in a 3/4 hole.
If he had watched the Wood wrights Shop he would know a bench dog isn't used on an anvil
@@mtavish got that right.
The tail of the pipe wrench is just to make it more ergonomic. You grab it at the end to get a better leverage. And by the way you pronounce Knipex with a hard K and then NEE-PEX. Greetings from Germany.
Delta2 Thank you for the pronunciation clarification. I’ve always said it as Cody did.
Am I naïve? dehydrated water.....'just add water', surely that means you open an empty tin and fill it up...Et Voila, you have re-hydrated it!. As your Birthday is April 1st, surely your friend Ken was playing an All Fools Day trick on you.
In Poland, we call this key "Swede"
dehydrated water - we have some!! LOL Can't wait to see Sweetloaf's reaction to the box!
Thanks for the video ! What's the best birthday gift you ever received ?
hah dehydrated water is one of the oldest jokes in the book...way to play it straight
If you set it right, the pipewrench will give you crazy leverage. It almost feels like it eats itself into the pipe/bolt.
Cody, have you ever seen The Woodwrights Shop? He's been on for 37 years and does traditional wood working on PBS. You would LOVE it.
Excellent program. If he wasn't a Chapel Hill graduate it would be my favorite of all time,
I haven't seen the Woodwrights Shop in many years! Is Roy still doing the show or is it someone else now?
@@pivers01 It is still Mr. Roy Underhill
The ams oil saber is tested work in all 2 stroke engines at 100:1 safely no matter what I'd probably still go somewhere between 50:1 and 80:1 just to play it safe
You know it's a good day when the Rolex comes out to play.
Happy Birthday Cody!
Fun day at the Mail Call at the Homestead!
I binge watch these videos 10% for the content, and 90% for the tangent stories.
Some nice tools . Happy Birthday young man . Amsoil must have improved a lot since they first introduced synthetic oils in the 70s . I just did multiple searches and there was nothing about how poor a lubricant it was . In testing during a lawsuit it was found to have about 20% the lubrication of conventional oil right out of the bottle . And dropped off quickly . Plus I knew a crooked Amsoil dealer in 75' , not the kind of guy you would wish to do business with . I am sure it is great oil now , but even hearing the name still disturbs me . That will be fun watching Sweetloaf play with that box .
Happy birthday 🎂
@wranglerstar I purchased my 200# “smithy special” anvil from Texas farrier supply, it works fantastic hand made in Texas.
The octagonal handled tools are carving tools, the others are lathe tools (and a bowl knife of course)
Late to the party, sorry I've been in the hospital recovering from surgery.
The lathe tools, only the four longest ones are for the lathe, the other are hand chisels.
Love the cat in the box from Japan!
I am a fan from morroco and i am not late today
same here, cheers bro
You can use those holdfasts with your workbench for woodworking as well.
Gonna need the model on that knife. Looks really nice.
That knipex is a pipe wrench/any wrench and snap on carries them and I have 3 of them and I love them that work great
There is „Rohrzange“ written on it which is German for pipe wrench.
The Amsoil 2-cycle oil is great. You mix it 100 to 1 or 1 oz oil to 100 oz gas. I used this exclusively in my chainsaw, Sthl FS-80 trimmer, and moped. If you put more oil in the mix than 100 to 1 it will smoke.
You never have to many tools. My roll a way must weigh a thousand pounds. I would not use Ams oil in a two cycle engine if you want to keep it running. I have tried them but 100 or more to one scares the hell out of me. I use Stihl Ultra at 50:1 in all my two cycle stuff, whether Stihl or Husqvarna,.mixed with Premium, non-ethanol gas. Actually, I run PNE gas in everything but the cars. I do not like cleaning carbs and replacing fuel hoses and diaphragms.
And that one that looks like a fork is a Hardy hole tool for bending
Howdy! Have you ever thought of working with Essential Craftsman and maybe making a video together? I really enjoy both your channels, and it would be a great collaboration. I believe you two are in the same corner of the world, and I think he's got a line on an anvil or two.
YES! excellent suggestion.
Nicholas Gajewski Excellent idea. I love EC's channel also. But he's going to be busy with the spec house build, so that might not be possible for a while.
I'd love to see a video on that chisel restoration
You got it, Jake. Part 1 will upload tomorrow,
Swedish pipe wrench one of the best designed pipe wrench when I was an alignment tech these were the only thing that would bite and hold onto tie rod ends to adjust them.
Cool, I smell a chisel restoration video soon!
Knipex is amazing. I own many different sets of their pliers and put them through Carpenter hell and they work. I also like the Wiha terminator bits-practically indestructible, but sadly not magnetized.
I really like the idea about you making a birdhouse
when You go for a bigger anvil, I used 4X4s and stacked them, cinching them down with long lag bolts to make a heavy and sturdy base... I hand planed the bottom and top to make it as level asd I could get it and it works well
cant wait to put the chisel in evaporust and sharpen it!
You will see it tomorrow Kevin,
No blood drawn in this video super sharp knife you’d thought there would be a cut finger. Good to see the thoughtfulness of your viewer 👍
Warning to anyone who has recently had surgery and don't want to pull your stitches"Don't look at the box"
Love to see a video of that big chisel restoration, that looked nice.
I thought all pipe wrenches looked like that, those are the ones we have here in Norway, not sure I've seen any other types lol
You can use the bending fork in a leg vise, or a decently mounted heavy duty bench vise Cody, no need for an anvil with that tool. The hot cut could also be used in a leg vise (till you get an anvil with a larger Hardy hole) but not in a bench vise as it's essentially a struck tool. There is the option of forging a square taper at the end of the shank of the hot cut to make it an interference fit in your current anvils hardy hole. Not the best solution in my opinion but some Smith's (Brian Brazeal for example) forge hot cuts that are deliberately meant to be an interference fit rather than having shoulders supported by the anvil face (like the one you have). Nice additions to the Smithy in any case and Happy Birthday :)
Dehydrated water, more compact and lighter weight than just some other canteen. Remember SAWC.
Happy Birthday, you received really nice gifts.
Well Happy Birthday Cody.
Happy Birthday 🎁🎊🎉🎂
Your Birthday, then Happy Birthday!!
Looks like the red wrench may lock down like vicegrips perhaps?
That large 2" "chisel" is a Timber Slick...
I might get the Knipex cutters. They seem great.
I love that box with the tiger, I'm a big kid and want one, and no I don't share my toys so there 😝
Dehydrated water?!?!?
We hope you had a great birthday!
I don't know If they are lathe tools or if they are carving chisels
That box made me crack up
Nice score !!!
Great video!
Yes
Happy birthday to you!
i have two of the exact same framing chisels. one has a nice brass ring and a pretty clean short handle like yours. the other one has no handle and has been hammered like a cold chisel so the socket it flat lol
My pops and I use to watch a show on PBS called Yankee Woodshop, and the guy used bench dogs like that black one.
Another great video on a great day! Happy Birthday Cody!
My Dad's birthday was yesterday and mine is tomorrow, and my Mom always reminded us of an Airies axiom of life. "Let's do it my way; I'll show you how!"
Love all your videos.
That box is great lmfao its hilarious it hits the switch off haha
That gerber looks like a kershaw
excuse me, what is dehydrated water?
Awesome Gifts
13:37 indeed,
Somebody sharpened a good two or three inches off that chisel before getting a new one, yet still couldn't just throw it away
happy birthday Cody great video
Awesome!
Now I can't wait for Sweetloaf to play with her new Tiger toy.
This pipe wrench is the most popular tool in the universe,how come you have never seen one like it!!
If you are getting into AMSOIL you should look into SCHAEFFER oils and lubricants.
Much better product than amsoil!!!
Objectively, how is it "much better" than Amsoil?
Python 357 micro molly (1micron), both of the oil brands also used in family transmission shop. SCHAEFFER outlasts amsoil, and bearing testing comparable oils from both companies SCHAEFFER beats amsoil.
dehydrated water lol
It's Synthetic 2 stroke oil for mixing with gas for 2 stroke engines!
When are you going to show off that new watch? Been trying to get a good look at it in videos here and there.
I want that damn straw holder, I need that. Damn. And that chisel? Jeez!
Happy Birthday.
I am a plumber by trade and my go to pliers is knipex
how nice! can't waith for SweetLoaf and the box video!
I think the heart from prong horn is actually the umm pronghorn...
Not many tractor videos this winter that just passed. Did the snow plow not work? I must admit i like them the most along with blacksmithing and tool restoration and your family members are a bonus. Don't really watch that clickbaity enigmatic titled videos that seem to me a rant about nothing. Ever thought of working with other youtubers? Maybe you can invite them do some stuff together then they can invite You to their place etc. Regards.
Add the useless box to your wranglermart, I’ll get one from there.
Happy birthday love your videos
make some nice lay tool box/storage for those nice new tools
Run 80:1 on the Sabor. Been running it for years in my ktm300 and its the best!
that is some cool stuff and the cutest useless box i have seen in a long time.
You had quite the birthday. Happy Birthday.
Very special video. With the countless videos we get to enjoy all year long it is very satisfying to see the appreciation pour in. Well done everyone and Happy Birthday Cody!