The irony of this song is that it was written as background music by Piero Umiliani for the "pool party" scene in a the 1968 adult movie "Sweden: Heaven and Hell"
All praise uncle bumble fuck, appreciate your pursuit of the beans we're always chasing. More data is more better! That said I would be surprised if your results MATCHED ours, as if you'll watch our original episode we didn't calibrate to a coefficient or bolt tension multiplier to replicate a Skidmore, we did it to an old school IR 231H US made impact. And everything going forward is compared to that, because brands were advertising numbers multiples more powerful than that, but the guns didn't really FEEL like it, and turns out most aren't. We just wanted to compare tools, not assign an almighty rating to any which we think is silly. You mention impact wrench brands use a Skidmore to rate guns, or even breakaway torque. That used to be the case, but they've moved away from that quite a bit if you talk to their engineers. And especially breakaway and nut-busting which they all rate using different methods, DeWalt using a strain gauge on a torsion shaft for example. I myself am working for an impact wrench manufacturer now in product development (Astro) and there's a list of ways impact wrenches are tested depending on the brand buying. It's crazy. So as long as each tool is used in the same test process, the comparison between each is really the end goal.
Glad you were able to convince those 0 & 1's or at least borrowed someone else's to get an upload out! You know Snap-on heard that mallet fail and are enroute with a new one, a fancy full cab box and fresh 10mm sockets for a measly $35/week!
Depending on the application, many applications with bolts require the bolt to hold things together tightly so the friction resists movement vs. the mechanical interlock of the bolt in the hole. But how do you insure you have the right clamping force? Torque is the worst indicator of this because it depends on type of threads and condition of threads. The bolts laying out in the weather will react much differently than the new ones right out of the sealed box. Tightening to a specified torque may or may not get the results that you want. So you calibrate the system with the Skidmore machine. Put your actual bolt into it, tighten it with a torque wrench until you get the clamping force that you require, then tighten the rest of the similar bolts the same way. Open a new box of bolts and you recalibrate the system. The application I'm familiar with is bolted joints in structural steel construction. A lot of methods have been designed for tightening bolts that don't use the torque wrench, but in other industries we still use the torque wrench and I have 3 of them in my home garage workshop.
One of those has been sitting in our shop for years. No one knew what it was or where it came from. Now that I know what it is, and what we do, I haven't the foggiest ideal why it's here.
theres a good chance your shop was doing some safety critical work with large bolts (think 1 inch plus) likely they needed to prove for some regulation that the bolts were torquing to a specific bolt stretch under a given torque + angle you were applying.
We are a small family excavating company. Like 8 employees was the largest we've ever been big. Dad started the companyin1963 and doesnt remember purchasing it.
As Richard Feynman once said, "there is no resilience in this particular material when it is at a temperature of 32 degrees. I believe that has some significance for our problem"
I use a Skidmore Wilhelm regularly. Torque values for fasteners are based on the thread friction and friction under the head. T=kDF. The K factor is a constant that varies depending the materials and lubricants on the threads. In order to obtain the proper tensile load in the screw you need to know the K value. Using a Skidmore you plot the torque vs tensile load so you can calculate the K. This can then be used to specify the proper torque on the fastener. The Skidmore is perfect for this.
Not but a few weeks back I suggested this very device, ney notion, to the Torque Test Channel. Not sure how the Skidder will stack up against their custom cobble wobble but it's worth a shot. As mentioned previously, I have mostly seen the Skidder used for structural stuff, tension control bolts, DTI squirters, TON wrenches, etc. Important to note, there is a specific coefficient through lubricant when using the Skidder. To the manual, Batman!!
Arrggh -allowing my mild OCD to dominate for a moment - experiments are rarely failures. An experiment whose results disagree with your favorite hypothesis is important, especially if the results disagree with another person's findings. Keep up the good work, AvE ! You are a Canadian hero...
right, you still get information even if the experimental results don't support the hypothesis. It's only a failure when the results are non-repeatable and thus can't be verified by other people. Documenting the methods and procedures for replication is the most important goal of the experiment, not proving the validity of the hypothesis.
I have spent many days with the good old skidmore testing tension control bolts. We teach that torque applied and tension produced by the bolt are never linear because of environmental factors will constantly change.
Love Torque Test Channel - glad other channels like AvE recognize them and hopefully more will start watching their videos. Their testing rig ingunity is write up there with Project Farm
Can't wait for the next video using this new toy. We used one of these at Toyota now Tesla in Fremont while building the truck paint line in 2005. Never saw another one on any job site.
Ah the good ole skidmore. We used to take these out to construction sites and check the iron workers impacts to make sure they were up to snuff. Still remember how hefty they are. But heaving the girthy girl around was a walk in the park compared to taking the 4 foot torque wrench and checking bolts 7 to 9 foot off the ground on a ladder torquing up to 500 ft/lbs. That whooped my ass.
AvE is environmentally conscious. The plating on that socket flicked off and returned to the earth from which it came.... the circle of life is complete
I'm not sure if it's the same brand. But at the steel fabration shop I work at, we have one of these to test th TC bolts. Certain jobs we do we have to randomly check different batches of bolts before we can start bolting up beams. Usually only goberment jobs, we did a shipping port in new jersey and let me tell you bud those inspectors were the dullest batch of dull beavers you've ever had the displeasure of encountering...
I picked up a Snap-On deadblow hammer at a garage sale. First time I used the hammer it shattered like yours did. I called Snap-On customer service and they sent me a new one, no charge, no problem. Gotta love good customer service!
Agree with a lower gauge. Also would like to see you do a load test on them fancy dual threaded bolts these UA-camrs are making just curious how much that diamond thread actually holds.
Suggest a little plumbing partner; add a T and an additional dial for the low end with a valve in front of it; then you can easily isolate the small scale one as and when it goes off the scale to avoid damaging it.
Don’t need a 75k valve lol, 75k denotes the tensile force applied. I’m pretty sure at 75,000 psi that whole assembly would of blown to the moon already
In my younger days I tightened many a bolt by direct measurement of their stretch. Nowadays various big-ass breakover bars and cheaters let me feel when tightening becomes nonlinear. It's good enough for terrestrial use.
My grandfather had a pneumatic tool repair shop. We had one of these (might not have been the wilhem brand) mounted under the bench for final testing of impacts. Nothing major mind you, just simple function testing and to see that they could output some torques. Occasionally we'd put a customer gun on it before bringing it in to verify it was down on power. Usually just used 1/2 and 3/4 guns on it. The big 1" semi wheel guns would rattle everything off the bench wall.
AvE! You suggested APETOR on a video quite a while ago. Sad to say he’s passed away! RIP APETOR and thank you eternally for suggesting his videos way back when!
Great to see you back posting good shit ave missed ya more then you know swooped up some cool shirts recently also 👍 any who hope to see more soon you rock and thank you for the great videos best on UA-cam in my book
"Got a whale of a tale to tell ya, lads. A whale of a tale or two. 'Bout the floppin' fish and the girls I've loved..... on nights like this with the moon above. A whale of a tale and it's all true....... I swear by my tattoo!" ~ AvE in EVERY past life!
The fluid pressure is proportional to the distance between the parallel plates in the mechanism. Increasing the volume of fluid will increase pressure and can be done at a known input torque to calibrate the tool. Cheers!
Was the thread lubricated good? That'll change the torque value as you know. If that thing has been stored a while the lube might have gummed up. Might be good to try and clean it up and use good anti sneeze...
Speaking of changing harmonics and resonance and such, one of the best tools I can recommend for young guys jumping hands-into a trade is a set of "torque-sticks." This is basically a set of extensions for your ugga-dugga that keep you from overtightening stuff with your ugga-dugga. I still have a set in a horrible blow-molded case that I bought from the Horrible Fright for 30 or 40 USD. And ya know what? They were pretty accurate, even when checked against an old-school, Fap-Away dial/click torque wrench.
Fer frog snacks! LMAO! Just used that term better tree-quarders on the way home from the deer huntin cabin today and she said “what!” So I gets home and low and behold the aVe has an new vid! I’ll be damned if it didn’t get muttered at 10:45 so I had to rewind to had to show her how to use the term proper! Ya talk about timing! We both cracked a good chuckle!
Stopped dead when I saw a clear area on a bench in your shop at 1:35 in. Did you cheat and clear it off ahead of time in preparation for this moment? Or was it just serendipitous? And no, spell check did not help on the spelling of serendipitous but I did look to see if I screwed that up.
That old Skidmore is a classic in great condition. I wouldn't change a thing. Mike Wolfe and his brother Robbie (now that they threw Frank Fritz off the show because he struggled with substance abuse) would pay top dollar for it, if they found one like that with original case and manual intact on a pick.
We have a Skidmoor tester at work that I've had to write test plans for. The only guarentee is the you can never get the damn clamp load you want. Definitely depends on the finish. Yellow Zinc is alright. Eco-Guard is more like Eco-Fart. We were getting a range of 14,000 lbf clamp load off the same torque value for a 3/4" bolt. All same loading scenarios. Not even touching the bolts with my greasy bare hands. Also probably helped that we were using Hazard Fart's finest to torque the bolt.
"Snap-On junk' is the truest thing I have heard from a channel that never lies... Id buy a tool from Snapchat chat before I would buy another piece of Snap-On gear
i used to have to test stretch 1" bolts for bridges, samples pulled from assembly, a skidmore, and a 8 ft proto torque wrench... good times... good times..
Strap-On had problems with their orange plastic material in their dead blow hammers crumbling after some time had passed. The material previously used, went from being flexible to become hard & brittle. My orange dead-blow is now a red dead-blow. So far, so good.
Well,Ive been watching this shit for some time ...you allways have something interesting to say....and so it goes,I learn a little more each time I log in....given I do have three trade quals..and pushing 70 you amaze me every time I tune in.....something new everytime..also appreciate the raw sense of Cannuk humour ...keep it up... you are priceless redards peter
Easy way to find what wrench size the nut is if you know the diameter of the bolt/stud. Take stud diameter, let's say 1", divide by half, would be 1/2, than add it back to the stud size. 1-1/2. Add a extra 1/8 inch to that if its a heavy duty nut.
Dig those dove tailed explosive boxes. Buddy's grandfather worked in the DuPont cooper shop and eventually transferred to Atlas Point. I have several of those, they are great items from a older area. BTw 2 grunts=70lbs.
and with one mumbled utterance, my brain finds its old nemesis. It's gonna be a long winter. :D ua-cam.com/video/y5W60VwDkas/v-deo.html
Mana-manah!
Yep.
The irony of this song is that it was written as background music by Piero Umiliani for the "pool party" scene in a the 1968 adult movie "Sweden: Heaven and Hell"
@@shazam6274 Appropriate user name if there ever was one
… and yes I clicked on the link, and yes I watched the whole thing !
Never thought I would need to consider the operating temperature of a hammer.
That's why I only use plastic hammers....
When did the calibration expire on that hammer eh?
Comment of the year 🏅
I always use a chunk of two-by-four and an engineer's hammer. If the wood splits then it goes on the firewood pile.
When his brass one shatters we will know it's cold!
All praise uncle bumble fuck, appreciate your pursuit of the beans we're always chasing. More data is more better! That said I would be surprised if your results MATCHED ours, as if you'll watch our original episode we didn't calibrate to a coefficient or bolt tension multiplier to replicate a Skidmore, we did it to an old school IR 231H US made impact. And everything going forward is compared to that, because brands were advertising numbers multiples more powerful than that, but the guns didn't really FEEL like it, and turns out most aren't. We just wanted to compare tools, not assign an almighty rating to any which we think is silly.
You mention impact wrench brands use a Skidmore to rate guns, or even breakaway torque. That used to be the case, but they've moved away from that quite a bit if you talk to their engineers. And especially breakaway and nut-busting which they all rate using different methods, DeWalt using a strain gauge on a torsion shaft for example. I myself am working for an impact wrench manufacturer now in product development (Astro) and there's a list of ways impact wrenches are tested depending on the brand buying. It's crazy. So as long as each tool is used in the same test process, the comparison between each is really the end goal.
All hail the almighty beans
I love beans diggy do!
I'd be surprised if you both had the same results. But I'd hope they would be the same relative to other tools tested on the same testing thing.
"If you talk to their engineers"... do you know uncle bumblefuck?
The moment he pulled out that tool I thought, "Torque Test Channel!"
Your like the little kid sent to his room to clean it, and ends up playing with all the toys he's forgotten about.
I resemble that remark!
The sound of that hammer chunk hitting the floor followed by Uncle Bumble's reaction had me laughing loudly.
Glad you were able to convince those 0 & 1's or at least borrowed someone else's to get an upload out! You know Snap-on heard that mallet fail and are enroute with a new one, a fancy full cab box and fresh 10mm sockets for a measly $35/week!
Correction: That is $35/week-for life. ;)
Patiently waiting for the AvE - Torque Test Channel collaboration
I think AvE rolls solo only!!
@@grantp1756 Dewclaw!
He doesn't need our help
Edit: AvE for sure you can send us a tool, drop us a line
@@TorqueTestChannel Independent confirmation of results. May I send you a tool for testing?
@Mathew Litke: I am waiting for AVE to use this tester on my little brother. His name is Frankenstein.
Depending on the application, many applications with bolts require the bolt to hold things together tightly so the friction resists movement vs. the mechanical interlock of the bolt in the hole. But how do you insure you have the right clamping force? Torque is the worst indicator of this because it depends on type of threads and condition of threads. The bolts laying out in the weather will react much differently than the new ones right out of the sealed box. Tightening to a specified torque may or may not get the results that you want. So you calibrate the system with the Skidmore machine. Put your actual bolt into it, tighten it with a torque wrench until you get the clamping force that you require, then tighten the rest of the similar bolts the same way. Open a new box of bolts and you recalibrate the system. The application I'm familiar with is bolted joints in structural steel construction. A lot of methods have been designed for tightening bolts that don't use the torque wrench, but in other industries we still use the torque wrench and I have 3 of them in my home garage workshop.
The old "I was looking for that," sadly to only forget where it was when you need again! Yes that's oldtimers disease. 😂
@@BlackSoap361 And then after half an hour of searching you remember where the old hiding place was.
How many licks does it take to get to the center of a SnapOn dead blow? Awon, atwoho, ...three!
*cronch*
I had that same dead blow and it broke too. It didn't even last 35 years. Junk!
All the plastic on my old snap-on tools is selfdestructing at once
A whole machine to show that the more you twist it, the harder it grips it.
It quantifies the qualitative.
I for one am really impressed how you were able to hang from the ceiling and torque that bolt around 5:40. Some real movie magic going on here.
Remember folks, always do your impact hammer tests directly above two dynamite boxes
One of those has been sitting in our shop for years. No one knew what it was or where it came from. Now that I know what it is, and what we do, I haven't the foggiest ideal why it's here.
Probably just cause its cool
Liberate it
theres a good chance your shop was doing some safety critical work with large bolts (think 1 inch plus) likely they needed to prove for some regulation that the bolts were torquing to a specific bolt stretch under a given torque + angle you were applying.
We are a small family excavating company. Like 8 employees was the largest we've ever been big. Dad started the companyin1963 and doesnt remember purchasing it.
So according to Cutting Edge Engineering from Australia that would be a 1 banana bolt.
Wow, I never thought about what device tool companies use to rate torque. Thanks for keeping shit interesting.
As Richard Feynman once said, "there is no resilience in this particular material when it is at a temperature of 32 degrees. I believe that has some significance for our problem"
I use a Skidmore Wilhelm regularly.
Torque values for fasteners are based on the thread friction and friction under the head.
T=kDF. The K factor is a constant that varies depending the materials and lubricants on the threads. In order to obtain the proper tensile load in the screw you need to know the K value. Using a Skidmore you plot the torque vs tensile load so you can calculate the K. This can then be used to specify the proper torque on the fastener. The Skidmore is perfect for this.
Not but a few weeks back I suggested this very device, ney notion, to the Torque Test Channel. Not sure how the Skidder will stack up against their custom cobble wobble but it's worth a shot. As mentioned previously, I have mostly seen the Skidder used for structural stuff, tension control bolts, DTI squirters, TON wrenches, etc. Important to note, there is a specific coefficient through lubricant when using the Skidder. To the manual, Batman!!
You must have missed when they borrowed a Skidmore to test the 1" Milwaukee after that monster partially broke their rig.
Arrggh -allowing my mild OCD to dominate for a moment - experiments are rarely failures. An experiment whose results disagree with your favorite hypothesis is important, especially if the results disagree with another person's findings. Keep up the good work, AvE ! You are a Canadian hero...
Agreed. The only experiment that is a true failure is one that cannot be replicated itself, no so much the findings specifically.
right, you still get information even if the experimental results don't support the hypothesis. It's only a failure when the results are non-repeatable and thus can't be verified by other people. Documenting the methods and procedures for replication is the most important goal of the experiment, not proving the validity of the hypothesis.
I have spent many days with the good old skidmore testing tension control bolts. We teach that torque applied and tension produced by the bolt are never linear because of environmental factors will constantly change.
Ave has been killing me lately. Brandon bucks had me in stitches.
Hahahaha, so good.
Real Tool Reviews… Miss that channel.
Really enjoy TTC… great data, wicked dry humor.
Looking forward to your take on the twisty forces.
Love Torque Test Channel - glad other channels like AvE recognize them and hopefully more will start watching their videos. Their testing rig ingunity is write up there with Project Farm
Can't wait for the next video using this new toy. We used one of these at Toyota now Tesla in Fremont while building the truck paint line in 2005. Never saw another one on any job site.
I like how uncle bumble “accidentally” has the “ mass media breeds mass deception” sticker in the frame for the first few minutes!
The war is every moment.
It's perfectly normal to have performance issues when your... Hammer..... Is exposed to the cold embrace of the icy Canadian winter.
When your hammer came apart I half expected to hear a "Wilhelm scream"
Listen again. There is one at 7:35
@@SSJIndy That's Prudence the safety goat's scream, I was thinking of an actual "Wilhelm scream" but I guess in a pinch Prudence's will work
"with all my brandon bucks bein' printed in the basement" lmfao. barely caught that bad boy. quality entertainment as usual my friend.
Scream more with Wilhelm too.
Ah the good ole skidmore. We used to take these out to construction sites and check the iron workers impacts to make sure they were up to snuff. Still remember how hefty they are. But heaving the girthy girl around was a walk in the park compared to taking the 4 foot torque wrench and checking bolts 7 to 9 foot off the ground on a ladder torquing up to 500 ft/lbs. That whooped my ass.
AvE is environmentally conscious. The plating on that socket flicked off and returned to the earth from which it came.... the circle of life is complete
I'm not sure if it's the same brand. But at the steel fabration shop I work at, we have one of these to test th TC bolts. Certain jobs we do we have to randomly check different batches of bolts before we can start bolting up beams. Usually only goberment jobs, we did a shipping port in new jersey and let me tell you bud those inspectors were the dullest batch of dull beavers you've ever had the displeasure of encountering...
I picked up a Snap-On deadblow hammer at a garage sale. First time I used the hammer it shattered like yours did. I called Snap-On customer service and they sent me a new one, no charge, no problem. Gotta love good customer service!
Agree with a lower gauge. Also would like to see you do a load test on them fancy dual threaded bolts these UA-camrs are making just curious how much that diamond thread actually holds.
Suggest a little plumbing partner; add a T and an additional dial for the low end with a valve in front of it; then you can easily isolate the small scale one as and when it goes off the scale to avoid damaging it.
75000 psi+ valves are kinda hard to come by.
@@Chris_Garman needle valve would do the trick right? Doesn't need high flow or anything.
Don’t need a 75k valve lol, 75k denotes the tensile force applied. I’m pretty sure at 75,000 psi that whole assembly would of blown to the moon already
@@bds21 he's not wrong there; lucky they aren't out with pitchforks yet showing off the smarts like that.
@@bds21 The gauge is in PSI is it not?
In my younger days I tightened many a bolt by direct measurement of their stretch. Nowadays various big-ass breakover bars and cheaters let me feel when tightening becomes nonlinear. It's good enough for terrestrial use.
I laughed like hell when you're dead blow broke! Same things happened to me!
After resting peacefully in my toolbox, all winter, at minus 30 and 40!!
My grandfather had a pneumatic tool repair shop. We had one of these (might not have been the wilhem brand) mounted under the bench for final testing of impacts. Nothing major mind you, just simple function testing and to see that they could output some torques. Occasionally we'd put a customer gun on it before bringing it in to verify it was down on power. Usually just used 1/2 and 3/4 guns on it. The big 1" semi wheel guns would rattle everything off the bench wall.
It's all about the scale. Least that's what I tell myself.
Brandon bucks, I about peed myself!
"Brandon Bucks"! Haha. This is why I subscribe, good sir.
TTC was the first channel I thought of when you pulled that thing out from under the scrapheap!
AvE! You suggested APETOR on a video quite a while ago. Sad to say he’s passed away! RIP APETOR and thank you eternally for suggesting his videos way back when!
Great to see you back posting good shit ave missed ya more then you know swooped up some cool shirts recently also 👍 any who hope to see more soon you rock and thank you for the great videos best on UA-cam in my book
Most definitely changing the gauge will make it much more interesting. I’m looking forward to seeing this baby in action.
Fully vested in Hilti tools now, I appreciate your channel even more.
3:40 "and those guys were fair dinkum" It warms the cockles of my heart to hear a Canuck speak antipodean :-)
"Got a whale of a tale to tell ya, lads.
A whale of a tale or two.
'Bout the floppin' fish and the girls I've loved..... on nights like this with the moon above.
A whale of a tale and it's all true.......
I swear by my tattoo!"
~ AvE in EVERY past life!
The fluid pressure is proportional to the distance between the parallel plates in the mechanism. Increasing the volume of fluid will increase pressure and can be done at a known input torque to calibrate the tool. Cheers!
Old Mr. Tesla understood harmonics pretty skookum. He almost brought down the hotel he was living in one time , just showin off!
You know you're having a bad day when your fixin stick doesn't
Half watching and listening to this whilst installing new ballasts in my parents basement. Happy Friday... Wait. Saturday, everybody.
Was the thread lubricated good? That'll change the torque value as you know. If that thing has been stored a while the lube might have gummed up. Might be good to try and clean it up and use good anti sneeze...
Talks about lubing it up then mentions anti seize... Must be the FNG.
looks just like the one we used at our lab in Cleveland . tested bolts for buildings and bridges .
That poor rubber hammer, it had only one day left until retirement.
This aligns with my interests.
Torque test channel is great! I enjoy the content.
I put you on and put my ear buds in just to listen to. Like the radio in 1945. Listening while I run machinery feeding livestock
Best channel on UA-cam. Pur genius
Speaking of changing harmonics and resonance and such, one of the best tools I can recommend for young guys jumping hands-into a trade is a set of "torque-sticks." This is basically a set of extensions for your ugga-dugga that keep you from overtightening stuff with your ugga-dugga. I still have a set in a horrible blow-molded case that I bought from the Horrible Fright for 30 or 40 USD. And ya know what? They were pretty accurate, even when checked against an old-school, Fap-Away dial/click torque wrench.
keep in mind they are designed for pneumatic tools, the electric tools work at a higher frequency and go past the point they are designed to stop at.
Fer frog snacks! LMAO! Just used that term better tree-quarders on the way home from the deer huntin cabin today and she said “what!” So I gets home and low and behold the aVe has an new vid! I’ll be damned if it didn’t get muttered at 10:45 so I had to rewind to had to show her how to use the term proper! Ya talk about timing! We both cracked a good chuckle!
I’ve dragged a skidmore around for the last 25 years of work. Aptly named lol.
AvE. Great to see you back to the old great video formula that we have come to love. A great change from the recent duds
Let he without gin cast the first groan 😂😂
My jaw literally dropped when you opened that case... Holy shit
Now I'm curious about who "honest abe's non shill reviews" is.
RealToolReviews
Real tool reviews?
That's the only one I could think of but I don't know all of them
Like 3/4trs of YT.
@@shiro-r4m that's what I thought too seems like it fits the description.
That toolbox is pullin' up on the Earth mighty hard.
I was cleaning out my garage today as well... You know you're doing a good job when you're trash pile is larger than your keep pile 🤣
Oh man I've been trying to find a metric clock but I can't even find a reference to em! Cool little piece of Canadian history
Stopped dead when I saw a clear area on a bench in your shop at 1:35 in. Did you cheat and clear it off ahead of time in preparation for this moment? Or was it just serendipitous? And no, spell check did not help on the spelling of serendipitous but I did look to see if I screwed that up.
Nothing like a good skidmore & wilhelm video while I make my morning skidmore & wilhelm.
Now this is the kind of video that I have missed. Boltrs and docking around with old iron are the best formats.
Torquestruct-o-matic + skidmore Torquetester, sounds like hell of a fight to me
Turned into a Cleveland themed episode with the APC box in the background.
It was good to hear Prudence on the job.
Finally some good old ave carnage videos 👌
"what are you watching"
"this Canadian guy do stupid stuff"
"why?"
*hammer breaks*
"that's why."
Is that one of Tomas de Torquemada's implements of turning the screws? Inquisiting minds want to know....
That old Skidmore is a classic in great condition. I wouldn't change a thing. Mike Wolfe and his brother Robbie (now that they threw Frank Fritz off the show because he struggled with substance abuse) would pay top dollar for it, if they found one like that with original case and manual intact on a pick.
Man it warms my heart to hear our lord and savior AvE shoutout the TTC guys.
I like your old wooden dynamite boxes.
AVEs under Grunts will never be the same
The Skidmore is for testing structural A325 and A490 bolts
We have a Skidmoor tester at work that I've had to write test plans for. The only guarentee is the you can never get the damn clamp load you want. Definitely depends on the finish. Yellow Zinc is alright. Eco-Guard is more like Eco-Fart. We were getting a range of 14,000 lbf clamp load off the same torque value for a 3/4" bolt. All same loading scenarios. Not even touching the bolts with my greasy bare hands. Also probably helped that we were using Hazard Fart's finest to torque the bolt.
Thank you for the content over the years.
🤟😎🤘
... And I'm from Cleveland... Dammit... Did I say that out loud and in public. 🤔Dammit😯
Dude, I had a great time when I visited pre coof.
"Snap-On junk' is the truest thing I have heard from a channel that never lies...
Id buy a tool from Snapchat chat before I would buy another piece of Snap-On gear
What a strange way to announce the Boltr for your deadblow! Honestly, pretty excited to see that.
"Yes ma'am" "Brandon Bucks" love it.
that safety squint scream! :)
i used to have to test stretch 1" bolts for bridges, samples pulled from assembly, a skidmore, and a 8 ft proto torque wrench... good times... good times..
Glad to see Prudence hasn't succumbed to the fire or floods. Must be WCB keeping an eye out for her.
The Atlas LF 40 box is interesting. The good old days call to me like fine old spirits.
Strap-On had problems with their orange plastic material in their dead blow hammers crumbling after some time had passed. The material previously used, went from being flexible to become hard & brittle. My orange dead-blow is now a red dead-blow. So far, so good.
Well,Ive been watching this shit for some time ...you allways have something interesting to say....and so it goes,I learn a little more each time I log in....given I do have three trade quals..and pushing 70 you amaze me every time I tune in.....something
new everytime..also appreciate the raw sense of Cannuk humour ...keep it up... you are priceless redards peter
I was going to say. Who the frack breaks a hammer. But then I remembered what channel I was watching.....
I never thought I'd see a grown man circumcise his own hammer. Best wishes for a speedy recovery.
Easy way to find what wrench size the nut is if you know the diameter of the bolt/stud. Take stud diameter, let's say 1", divide by half, would be 1/2, than add it back to the stud size. 1-1/2. Add a extra 1/8 inch to that if its a heavy duty nut.
Dig those dove tailed explosive boxes. Buddy's grandfather worked in the DuPont cooper shop and eventually transferred to Atlas Point. I have several of those, they are great items from a older area.
BTw 2 grunts=70lbs.
Got to love the old snapoff.
So glad to have my other favorite YT channel get a mention.... TTC has made it, they got a mention from AvE!