This is the sixth episode in a series of similar videos! The other five episodes can be found in the video description under 8"show more" under this video!
Hello from Dayton, Ohio! Staco Energy Products is located 9 miles from were I live and this is the first time I’ve heard of them 🙂 It was nice to hear Dayton, Ohio mentioned in you video 👍
The Post Apocalyptic Inventor Sehr Interessantes Video wie immer. Der Größe Kompressor und der Lüfter mit dem Radiator der auf dem Schrottplatz lag ist ein Kühlaggregat von einem Kühlhaus bzw. Expliziter von einem Tiefkühlhaus.
You should do Brian, and make vids from all the repairs. Those channels are very hot nowadays, i like to watch them. Looking forward to see your first restore.
I wondered if anyone else picked up on that. It showed that when he said "cubic feet per minute". Being from metric land, was he making fun of our units? Also from Ohio BTW. 😀
This is my favorite type of episode of yours. - I thought you were going to dig into that car at the start, now that would truly be post-apocalyptic! Thanks for the vids!
I'm from Hinckley Ohio.. We are famous for Buzzards (Turkey Vultures) returning to our town every year, on the same date.. I sure do appreciate your videos, and your philosophy of repairing and reusing what we already have.
I'm in northern Indiana, about 4 hours from Dayton. I attended college at the University of Dayton from 1965-1969. I have a son who still lives there. I always liked the town, and go back periodically to visit my son.
Please, carry on with this series. I may never do anything quite as involved as you do, but it helps the flow of ideas (and ideals) and encourages me to keep trying. Thank you! Les in UK
Love your use of the smallest reused components. Many people think its a waste of time to scrounge fasteners. But I find there are many opportunities to sort small parts during a working day. It's a great way to clear your head, or cool off after a big day wen your head is just over stimulated.
I really like the fact that you emphasize German made products but at the same time you don't bash american products. Much respect. Your talents are much appreciated.
I enjoy scrap and salvage yards myself. They present so many repair adventures. I too can't ignore the wasted energy and resources and feel driven to respect them.
There are many junk yards in the States that don't even allow the public to go and purchase scrap (more along the lines of straight recycling centers). You might be lucky to at least have a pick-and-pull yard near you, but they don't charge at scrap value like a scrapyard yard would as they charge by the part type in many cases.
@@richard1165 Most recycling centers will allow you to pick through and buy stuff if you are a smooth talker/nice guy just go be nice and ask the big dawg. Duluth, GA Georgia USA.
@@dfpguitar Yep) Here in ukraine "scrapyard" means a place for utterly unusable junk. Because often anything that is usable/repairable doesn't get anywhere close to junkyard. When I moved in I had a lot of stuff to clean out. Old bed, sewing machines, whole kitchen, old women's clothes, pots, 60 year old TV, lots of junk. I would just put everything near a dumpster and every time I come out, some of the stuff would be gone. The next morning the dumpster is still full of garbage, but everything I brought out is gone.
We all do, and that is what, unfortunately, makes this video pointless, but that's not to say it's not enjoyable, but there is little to take away from it.
I especially enjoyed your re-purposing of the second blower motor and enclosure! I'm primarily a woodworker, and I work in almost 100% found wood (found in cabinet shop dumpsters mostly, so it's pretty easy to work!).
Got that exact same drill, just the 230VAC variant. It is very capable, and is light, so you will find that you use it for all work that needs concrete drilling, as it drills the holes so fast. Best is to use the matching Bosch SDS bits as well, they are much better than the clones, and last a long time as well. I also used a old 8mm SDS bit ( it had a good life, but the electrician finally killed it after 12km of lighting installation) and put a thread on the broken end, and put a keyless chuck on there, so that I could use the drill, in non hammer mode, to do things like put in screws and use regular non SDS bits. Very useful, and the chuck was free, from a dead cheapie drill I picked up in a lot, and lucky for me I had the right ( old, imperial specification) die nut to cut the thread it needed, or at least the die nut was close enough to not matter.
Viewer from WV , not quite Ohio but as a ham radio op I have made MANY trips to Dayton OH for the Hamvention, USA’s biggest Hamfest. Praying it still exists after CORONA is done screwing everything up! I like this step down isolation transformer project. Fairly certain I have that variac in my junk box , but need the 120/120 isolation transformer itself. You have some amazing scrap yard! I am not sure of any near me but it sure looks like great fun scavenging for materials. Lord knows new materials of about any kind are ridiculous expensive! I was an IT guy many years and now regret not taking more time to salvage good stuff from the hundreds of dead printers and scanners I’ve had to dispose of through proper channels. So how’s a guy become so well informed on what and how to find the gear you collect and the amazing diagnostics you are so capable of? Very much enjoy your channel and innovative work
The Drill is most likely from the UK.110-115 volt is the safety voltage required on building sites using a transformer that has a grounded center tap so that there is only around 55 volts to earth making a sub lethal voltage in wet conditions. I still have one of those drills I purchased in the early to mid 1990's.
I must add my voice to many it is great to see these videos they motivate people to look beyond the main use of something to other uses. I love seeing old stuff back up and running. I into ham radio and always find things from household stuff to reuse I have built several radios with bits from TV stereo systems or even toasters! Not used a kitchen sink yet but I have just incase! No I really do.
Must be really exiting & fun to be a machinery pro Iike this guy with a uni degree to recognize all the stuff he is seeing on a scrap yard! That's the reason why this channel is so important. He really knows what he is talking about, and the educational benefits for us to get it free is awesome! He deserves more Subscribers to make some cash though. To provide this kind of show and tell! Even if he himself doesn't seem to think though.. So everybody: Share this channel with your friends!
I'm loving this series. The multiple re-purposing is excellent. BTW, the Backside is what we sit on, simply the Back is sufficient or perhaps the Reverse is sometimes appropriate. I say this like an an expert in the German language. :) Those steel cantilever tool boxes will last you a life time as mine have.
i added you to my patreon account. i truly enjoy your vids, and always learn something. i am in my mid 50's and am a semi-retired carpenter/handyman. at this point in my life i can build, repair or destroy pretty much anything. i also repair, rather than replace things when possible. to be honest, most of what i use every day someone else threw away first. some of it i even got paid to haul away. the things i can, i fix and either i use myself, or sell to someone else. i would go back and get that sheet metal brake if i were you. if you can't use it, i'm sure you could sell it to someone who would for a profit. i hate to see such useful, and valuable tools going to scrap. craigslist is an awesome tool i use quite often to find new homes for the things that i repair, but don't use. facebook marketplace is another. good luck, and thanx for the inspiration.
So happy to find this channel again.. Love this series,re-subbed as this is what takes me back many years ago when I found your channel. Greetings from 🇸🇰
115V tools are used for site work, at least in the UK; they are powered with an isolation transformer with a centre tapped secondary, the tap is grounded so you only get 58V with respect to ground on either line.
I really enjoyed the converter build! Very nice build. Hope to see it painted and labeled (Decal) in the future. Thanks for sharing your wonderful Ideas.
I have one of those old boxes, in red. I've had it since I was a kid. Drove around with it in my old truck all through high school full of tools to keep the truck running.
"Universal Hand Torch type Glt5 " - it is what you have written in polish on it. ;) And the 1 inside the triangle pictogram means - "1st (top) quality".
Ha Ha Ha Ha! How many Hogsheads per fortnight? Good one! What does that look like? Brilliant! !:^) Mirth or humour aside, yes it is past time that the 'Throwaway Society' needed to change but change we all must. Nice piece of salvaging. Interesting videos and likesaid elsewhere, "I wish I had scrap-yards like that near me nowadays!" So many are cleaned up and gentrified. A different time and mind-set in the people back then, when these places were working or scrapping. Your Repair-a-Thon videos do encourage others.
Nice video and cool variac build! But you don't have to lean onto a pneumatic drill that hard, It'll do its work also if you just hold it firmly. Thats why they are so much nicer than hammer drills.
Great video!! An permanent volt meter would be great to instantly see the voltage. On the 32 volt side to which you can add a rectifier that will be an instant charger to be selected to any voltage between 0 and 32 volts DC using the veriac.
The motor is a 3 stage vacuum motor normally used in industrial carpet cleaning machines well it was some 30 years ago when I used to service/ repair them lol
That air conditioner is for most likley for a freezer or walk in cooler the evaporator with those brackets are for mounting to the inside to of the cooler or freezer, the compressor could be mounted atop or actually outside...
I love the fact you make use of everything you get your hands on excellent channel I thoroughly enjoy your videos big fan from London uk 🇬🇧 thanks for sharing your knowledge and experience god bless
scrapyard like that would be more than a tourist attraction for me. so much to see and learn and question. shame we don't have many in the UK. sad to see so much wastage. have you had a look on German facebook marketplace? you might find salvage stuff even cheaper on there
those bosch (and hilti etc) drills last forever. Your one looks unused but I see heavily used ones regularly from ex construction or rental companies and even as old as the 1970s and they work perfectly with nothing broken or worn out.
@@alanmumford8806 No the wide yaws is where you put in a piece of metal, then it rotates on a center and you can cut an inner or outer round out with some cutting wheel
@12:29 "It should be able to handle a few hundred VA." - I think you meant to say 'a few thousand VA'. A normal transformer of a 800W microwave oven is rated at about 1-1.1kVA, and is less than twice the volume/mass of this beast. Anyway, I love these salvage/repair/rebuild/re-purpose videos! I absolutely hate wasting perfectly usable material and machinery, and do a fair bit of 'dumpster diving', 'scrap yard scavenging', and repair/disassembly/recycling work myself.
I've looked at isolation transformers like you make here on E. Bay and they cost over 40 Euros for a used/broken one. In England we use such transformers and 110V tools on building sites... I assume for (lower voltage) safety... maybe that's what the original owner of the Bosch hammer was doing.
Very interesting videos, danke für sharing them ! Here in Canada, Quebec province, we have one of the world's biggest hydroelectric plants company: Hydro Québec, the transportation is achieve by some 735KV powerline. Our household voltage is rated at 120/240Volts, 60Hz Keep posting some videos, it is very interesting ! Greetings from Quebec city, Canada !🇨🇦
At 11:25 the internals in the drill say 240v - maybe someone made an adjustment previously? The drill sounds a little slow on 110v...But hard to gauge on video!
This is the sixth episode in a series of similar videos! The other five episodes can be found in the video description under 8"show more" under this video!
Really enjoy the repairatons... hope you will keep them coming. They are excellent. Well done.
I love your videos, greetings from spain!
How to find a local scrapyard? Any tips?
Hello from Dayton, Ohio!
Staco Energy Products is located 9 miles from were I live and this is the first time I’ve heard of them 🙂
It was nice to hear Dayton, Ohio mentioned in you video 👍
The Post Apocalyptic Inventor Sehr Interessantes Video wie immer. Der Größe Kompressor und der Lüfter mit dem Radiator der auf dem Schrottplatz lag ist ein Kühlaggregat von einem Kühlhaus bzw. Expliziter von einem Tiefkühlhaus.
Your videos are helping inspire me and my son to think about how to repurpose and restore 'lost' and discarded objects. Thank you for your work here!
You should do Brian, and make vids from all the repairs. Those channels are very hot nowadays, i like to watch them. Looking forward to see your first restore.
4:36 Hogshead per fortnight - that's my new measurement standard! lol
i am still falling about
Bushels per parsec comes in at a distant second.
I wondered if anyone else picked up on that. It showed that when he said "cubic feet per minute". Being from metric land, was he making fun of our units? Also from Ohio BTW. 😀
@@timeflysintheshop Yeah of course he was taking the Michael out of imperial
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/FFF_system
From Ohio, love the repair-a-thons.
🇩🇪🇧🇷🇺🇸✌🏼
Ohio here 🕯️
Another Ohioan here!
Lancaster, Ohio here.
Columbus 614
This is my favorite type of episode of yours. - I thought you were going to dig into that car at the start, now that would truly be post-apocalyptic! Thanks for the vids!
I'm from Hinckley Ohio..
We are famous for Buzzards (Turkey Vultures) returning to our town every year, on the same date..
I sure do appreciate your videos, and your philosophy of repairing and reusing what we already have.
I'm in northern Indiana, about 4 hours from Dayton. I attended college at the University of Dayton from 1965-1969. I have a son who still lives there. I always liked the town, and go back periodically to visit my son.
Please, carry on with this series. I may never do anything quite as involved as you do, but it helps the flow of ideas (and ideals) and encourages me to keep trying. Thank you! Les in UK
The propane torch marking says "Universal hand torch"
In Polish language.
Universal hand blow torch
I suspect it is used for soldering. The pistol looks incomplete. Gas valve knob and several parts missing.
Yes and it's used with soft solder.
It's about 80 EUR new
Ebonite handle, B quality mark, red propane-butane tank ... This is from the 80s
Love your use of the smallest reused components. Many people think its a waste of time to scrounge fasteners. But I find there are many opportunities to sort small parts during a working day. It's a great way to clear your head, or cool off after a big day wen your head is just over stimulated.
I am so impressed by how precisely you speak English, your second language. Your usage is perfect, much better than many Americans and Brits.
I really like your scrap yard refurbishment series. Always illuminating.
Writing from Texas. Really enjoy watching your videos and I share your philosophy of fixing old machines/devices. Please keep making these!
I really like the fact that you emphasize German made products but at the same time you don't bash american products.
Much respect. Your talents are much appreciated.
I enjoy scrap and salvage yards myself. They present so many repair adventures. I too can't ignore the wasted energy and resources and feel driven to respect them.
I wish there was a scrapyard like yours near me.
There are many junk yards in the States that don't even allow the public to go and purchase scrap (more along the lines of straight recycling centers). You might be lucky to at least have a pick-and-pull yard near you, but they don't charge at scrap value like a scrapyard yard would as they charge by the part type in many cases.
@@richard1165 Most recycling centers will allow you to pick through and buy stuff if you are a smooth talker/nice guy just go be nice and ask the big dawg. Duluth, GA Georgia USA.
it's funny you both assume Dennis is in the USA. I know it's probable but there are a lot of other countries in the world lol
@@dfpguitar Yep) Here in ukraine "scrapyard" means a place for utterly unusable junk. Because often anything that is usable/repairable doesn't get anywhere close to junkyard. When I moved in I had a lot of stuff to clean out. Old bed, sewing machines, whole kitchen, old women's clothes, pots, 60 year old TV, lots of junk. I would just put everything near a dumpster and every time I come out, some of the stuff would be gone. The next morning the dumpster is still full of garbage, but everything I brought out is gone.
We all do, and that is what, unfortunately, makes this video pointless, but that's not to say it's not enjoyable, but there is little to take away from it.
I especially enjoyed your re-purposing of the second blower motor and enclosure! I'm primarily a woodworker, and I work in almost 100% found wood (found in cabinet shop dumpsters mostly, so it's pretty easy to work!).
Got that exact same drill, just the 230VAC variant. It is very capable, and is light, so you will find that you use it for all work that needs concrete drilling, as it drills the holes so fast. Best is to use the matching Bosch SDS bits as well, they are much better than the clones, and last a long time as well. I also used a old 8mm SDS bit ( it had a good life, but the electrician finally killed it after 12km of lighting installation) and put a thread on the broken end, and put a keyless chuck on there, so that I could use the drill, in non hammer mode, to do things like put in screws and use regular non SDS bits. Very useful, and the chuck was free, from a dead cheapie drill I picked up in a lot, and lucky for me I had the right ( old, imperial specification) die nut to cut the thread it needed, or at least the die nut was close enough to not matter.
I was given by a friend the same bosch hammer drill 25 years ago and I still have it and it works great. I call it Captain, does the hard work.
Viewer from WV , not quite Ohio but as a ham radio op I have made MANY trips to Dayton OH for the Hamvention, USA’s biggest Hamfest. Praying it still exists after CORONA is done screwing everything up! I like this step down isolation transformer project. Fairly certain I have that variac in my junk box , but need the 120/120 isolation transformer itself. You have some amazing scrap yard! I am not sure of any near me but it sure looks like great fun scavenging for materials. Lord knows new materials of about any kind are ridiculous expensive! I was an IT guy many years and now regret not taking more time to salvage good stuff from the hundreds of dead printers and scanners I’ve had to dispose of through proper channels. So how’s a guy become so well informed on what and how to find the gear you collect and the amazing diagnostics you are so capable of? Very much enjoy your channel and innovative work
I love your scrapyard videos. I really wish there was a scrapyard anything like that here! Please make more of these videos!
The Drill is most likely from the UK.110-115 volt is the safety voltage required on building sites using a transformer that has a grounded center tap so that there is only around 55 volts to earth making a sub lethal voltage in wet conditions. I still have one of those drills I purchased in the early to mid 1990's.
Love the junkyard repairs.
Thanks for the inspiration and keep on trucking (from France)!
I must add my voice to many it is great to see these videos they motivate people to look beyond the main use of something to other uses. I love seeing old stuff back up and running. I into ham radio and always find things from household stuff to reuse I have built several radios with bits from TV stereo systems or even toasters! Not used a kitchen sink yet but I have just incase! No I really do.
At 3:15, yes, it is a polish hand torch. The writing is "Uniwersalny palnik ręczny" = "Universal hand torch."
Man that first scene with the bridge took me straight back to fall out 4.
Must be really exiting & fun to be a machinery pro Iike this guy with a uni degree to recognize all the stuff he is seeing on a scrap yard! That's the reason why this channel is so important. He really knows what he is talking about, and the educational benefits for us to get it free is awesome! He deserves more Subscribers to make some cash though. To provide this kind of show and tell! Even if he himself doesn't seem to think though..
So everybody: Share this channel with your friends!
I'm loving this series. The multiple re-purposing is excellent. BTW, the Backside is what we sit on, simply the Back is sufficient or perhaps the Reverse is sometimes appropriate. I say this like an an expert in the German language. :) Those steel cantilever tool boxes will last you a life time as mine have.
That forge blower was sturdy. Adaptable. Surprised it didnt go back to shop.
Great videos. More, please, more. Love the scrapyard repair videos the most.
i added you to my patreon account. i truly enjoy your vids, and always learn something. i am in my mid 50's and am a semi-retired carpenter/handyman. at this point in my life i can build, repair or destroy pretty much anything. i also repair, rather than replace things when possible. to be honest, most of what i use every day someone else threw away first. some of it i even got paid to haul away. the things i can, i fix and either i use myself, or sell to someone else. i would go back and get that sheet metal brake if i were you. if you can't use it, i'm sure you could sell it to someone who would for a profit. i hate to see such useful, and valuable tools going to scrap. craigslist is an awesome tool i use quite often to find new homes for the things that i repair, but don't use. facebook marketplace is another. good luck, and thanx for the inspiration.
All of these Scrap repair/renew videos are great!
So happy to find this channel again..
Love this series,re-subbed as this is what takes me back many years ago when I found your channel.
Greetings from 🇸🇰
I was born very near Dayton (Greenville). Good video! I like your attitude about repurposing things and your skills at making them work.
115V tools are used for site work, at least in the UK; they are powered with an isolation transformer with a centre tapped secondary, the tap is grounded so you only get 58V with respect to ground on either line.
Great video!! the Scrapyard finds are awesome!!👍👍👍
My father in law got some 110v tools from work. We used a transformer from beer dispensing equipment to power them from 240v.
I really enjoyed the converter build! Very nice build. Hope to see it painted and labeled (Decal) in the future. Thanks for sharing your wonderful Ideas.
I have one of those old boxes, in red. I've had it since I was a kid. Drove around with it in my old truck all through high school full of tools to keep the truck running.
Unfortunately in the UK we are not allowed to walk around scrap yards unless you know the boss of course. Great content & very creative!
7:31 I tough you were saying all keep my ass open! Hahaha
It's always a pleasure to look your videos. Keep going on .Greetings from France Laurent
I remember the Bosch tools in North America came with really short cords a while back - a lot that I saw had longer cords like that added
Good to see your using the Firkin-Furlong-fortnight system of measurement to measure the airflow
"Universal Hand Torch type Glt5 " - it is what you have written in polish on it. ;) And the 1 inside the triangle pictogram means - "1st (top) quality".
Can not get enough of your repurpose/restore videos.
Thank you!
Great series - please keep up the good work! It was so cool to reuse both the blower and the case from the spare turbine. Cheers, Craig
Love these repair-a-thons! I found out many new things from an old tech)
Hello from the high desert of northern Nevada, USA.
Though all your videos are great, your Scrapyard and Repair-A-Thons are my favorites.
I went to college at the University of Dayton and grew up and now live about two hours away.
From Ohio 70 miles North of Dayton. Enjoyed your content.👍
Always a pleasure to watch a brilliant German engineer. :)
Ha Ha Ha Ha! How many Hogsheads per fortnight? Good one! What does that look like? Brilliant! !:^)
Mirth or humour aside, yes it is past time that the 'Throwaway Society' needed to change but change we all must. Nice piece of salvaging. Interesting videos and likesaid elsewhere, "I wish I had scrap-yards like that near me nowadays!" So many are cleaned up and gentrified. A different time and mind-set in the people back then, when these places were working or scrapping. Your Repair-a-Thon videos do encourage others.
Nice video and cool variac build! But you don't have to lean onto a pneumatic drill that hard, It'll do its work also if you just hold it firmly. Thats why they are so much nicer than hammer drills.
Great video!! An permanent volt meter would be great to instantly see the voltage.
On the 32 volt side to which you can add a rectifier that will be an instant charger to be selected to any voltage between 0 and 32 volts DC using the veriac.
The motor is a 3 stage vacuum motor normally used in industrial carpet cleaning machines well it was some 30 years ago when I used to service/ repair them lol
Use the portable compressor to paint the portable compressor
That would be the ultimate meta
Much love coming from here in Ohio! I live very close to Dayton.
From North Carolina USA - Enjoy your videos!
That air conditioner is for most likley for a freezer or walk in cooler the evaporator with those brackets are for mounting to the inside to of the cooler or freezer, the compressor could be mounted atop or actually outside...
I am glad I came across your UA-cam channel. I have to look forward to your videos
I see you put alot of pressure on the drill, try it with minimal pressure to make it hammer better. Works on my bosch drill.
Full steam ahead, captain!
definitely nice videos bringing stuff back to life from scrapyard and with nice philosophy of yours -
I love the fact you make use of everything you get your hands on excellent channel I thoroughly enjoy your videos big fan from London uk 🇬🇧 thanks for sharing your knowledge and experience god bless
Love the scrapyard repairs.
the intro of every episode of this series is absolutly insane! this so deep and true! ppl have lost themself these days.
Ich muss wirklich danke sagen für die tollen Videos, zusammengesetzt aus Know-how, gut angewendet und innovativen Ideen!
Traditional Chinese characters for "Hammer Drill" on the blue Bosch.
I love these types of videos. I agree we need to repurpose more and send lass to the land fill!
scrapyard like that would be more than a tourist attraction for me. so much to see and learn and question. shame we don't have many in the UK. sad to see so much wastage. have you had a look on German facebook marketplace? you might find salvage stuff even cheaper on there
those bosch (and hilti etc) drills last forever. Your one looks unused but I see heavily used ones regularly from ex construction or rental companies and even as old as the 1970s and they work perfectly with nothing broken or worn out.
Your message at the start is most inspiring, thank you so much.
Always like your videos! Nice selection and rebuild of items!
I agree with you more things need to be repared/reused, great video!
The green fasti tool is for making round pieces of sheet metals, i used them to work on ventilation systems.
A bit like an English Wheel?
@@alanmumford8806 No the wide yaws is where you put in a piece of metal, then it rotates on a center and you can cut an inner or outer round out with some cutting wheel
@@homeistheearth Aha. Thanks for the education. ;-)
Im in Ohio, About 30 mins west of Pittsburgh Pennsylvania. Thanks for the shout out
Brilliant modifications. 👍👍👌👌👏👏
Cool mono-log at the beginning. I've wondered some of the same things my shelf. Cheers!
Here in 'Murca we say "Waaag-nur." Go long on the vowels.
I could be wrong but I dont think the hammering on that rotary hammer has as much jam as it should.
@12:29 "It should be able to handle a few hundred VA." - I think you meant to say 'a few thousand VA'. A normal transformer of a 800W microwave oven is rated at about 1-1.1kVA, and is less than twice the volume/mass of this beast.
Anyway, I love these salvage/repair/rebuild/re-purpose videos! I absolutely hate wasting perfectly usable material and machinery, and do a fair bit of 'dumpster diving', 'scrap yard scavenging', and repair/disassembly/recycling work myself.
Writing on handle of polish gas torch says "Universal hand torch". Great video!
I've looked at isolation transformers like you make here on E. Bay and they cost over 40 Euros for a used/broken one. In England we use such transformers and 110V tools on building sites... I assume for (lower voltage) safety... maybe that's what the original owner of the Bosch hammer was doing.
Very interesting videos, danke für sharing them ! Here in Canada, Quebec province, we have one of the world's biggest hydroelectric plants company: Hydro Québec, the transportation is achieve by some 735KV powerline. Our household voltage is rated at 120/240Volts, 60Hz Keep posting some videos, it is very interesting ! Greetings from Quebec city, Canada !🇨🇦
amazed at how far that staco made it from my city. i have never heard of them but will look into it now
i always wish we had scrap yards like that here in the uk in south wales but sadly nothing like this :(
I very sparsely give comments but I like your videos. Keep on going! Maybe also show one or two repair failure videos for other people to learn.
Who could possible give down votes for this video?? He took stuff that was basically being thrown away and gave it a new life.
Man! You sure have great scrap yards in Germany!
3:22 uniwersalny palnik ręczny ;-), universal handheld burner
Great video salvaging parts, and as an American I now know how the say Wagner correctly lol!
Anther great repair! You do have a special talent! You also have great luck at the junkyard.
Thanks for encouraging me to do the same. Regards jim333
Great video, keep them coming.
Hogshead per fortnight..... Brilliant.
3:50 beer stash!!
"...and of course, I have a box of used knobs".. call me immature, but that tickled me lool
At 11:25 the internals in the drill say 240v - maybe someone made an adjustment previously? The drill sounds a little slow on 110v...But hard to gauge on video!
I agree, the Internals look like they allow for wiring 120v or 240v or it's just one item in the drill which is designed for either.
Hello, 3:25 "Universal hand torch" :)
Back to the good stuff.