/ tpai
Paypal-Donation-Link: www.paypal.com/donate/?hosted...
Email: inventordonations@gmail.com
Other Repair-A-Thons:
Episode 1:
• Scrapyard Finds Repair...
Episode 2:
• New Scrapyard Finds! R...
Episode 3:
• More Scrapyard Finds! ...
Episode 4:
• Even More Scrapyard Fi...
Episode 5:
• Many More Scrapyard Fi...
Episode 6:
• Great Scrapyard Finds!...
Episode 7:
• Awesome Scrapyard Find...
Episode 8:
• Amazing Scrapyard Find...
Episode 9:
• More Beautiful Scrapya...
Episode 10:
• Huge Scrapyard Finds! ...
Episode 11:
• Terrific Scrapyard Fin...
Episode 12:
• Beautiful Scrapyard Fi...
Episode 13:
• New Amazing Scrapyard ...
Episode 14:
• Incredible Scrapyard F...
Episode 15:
• New Great Scrapyard-Fi...
Episode 16:
• More Amazing Scrapyard...
Episode 17:
• Scrapyard Finds Galore...
Episode 18:
• Scrapyard Finds to spa...
Episode 19:
• Rare Scrapyard Finds! ...
Episode 20:
• Fantastic Scrapyard Fi...
Episode 21:
• More Epic Scrapyard Fi...
Episode 22:
• Scrapyard Finds! Repai...
Episode 23:
• Exciting Scrapyard Fin...
Episode 24:
• Quality Scrapyard Find...
Episode 26:
• Surprising Scrapyard F...
Episode 27:
• Supreme Scrapyard Find...
Episode 28:
• Exotic Scrapyard Finds...
Episode 29:
• Precious Scrapyard Fin...
Episode 30:
• Unique Scrapyard Finds...
Episode 31:
• Valuable Scrapyard Fin...
Episode 32:
• Expensive Scrapyard Fi...
Episode 33:
• Unusual Scrapyard Find...
Episode 34:
• Military Grade Scrapya...
Episode 35:
• Scrapyard -Treasure Hu...
Episode 36:
• Terrific Scrapyard Fin...
Episode 37:
• High Power Scrapyard F...
Episode 38:
• Scrapyard Pneumatics a...
Episode 39:
• Scrap-Vehicles and Ele...
Episode 40:
• New Awesome Scrapyard ...
I was interview by Deutschlandfunk Nova today, a nationwide German public radio station. For all German-speaking listeners: You can check out the interview here under the link below this comment. A big Thank You goes out to the team at Deutschlandfunk Nova and the long-time viewer who made this possible! I've been doing this for ten years and have largely been ignored by everyone but my trusry viewers on KZhead,. So it's nice to get some recognition from you guys! www.deutschlandfunknova.de/beitrag/recht-auf-reparatur-wenn-reparieren-selbstverstaendlich-ist
So inspiring to see what you do and how you work. I learn so much from you and others like Marty T all the time. The diagnosis of the plasma was incredible to take such a complex system and trace it all back to some dirty water just shows me what true genius is. Thank you so much.
WOW that thing is powerful! 16mm steel!
Congratulations it's time you got more attention considering your message is so eco friendly and educational. 👍🏻
Your first thing should have been a metal three d printer
Sympathisches Interview! :)
Loved to see the F&T brand capacitors in the beginning of the video. My granddad was the founder of that company.
I am still so amazed there are no forced ad reads in your videos. Such high quality content, and your Patreon members are to thank for keeping it that way. ❤
You are welcome 😉 but it's Gerolfs vision, spirit and dedication that truly makes it possible.
Love the enthusiasm when the plasma cutter worked. My five year old said "I knew he could fix it."
An eureka momment
My 2 year old boy gets mesmerized by these videos
@harlanbarnhart4656 Cool! I love it! Great that you got your young child watching this with you! Same for @alfredonski
Apparently, I ain't figured out this tagging stuff with @...whoever ! 🤪
Wooo Hoooo. I know that feeling ! :-)
That plasma cutter is going to be a game changer.
He should scoop an arcdroid cnc
Even the MINI MINI version Is! Parkside has now one for 50 Bucks or so, and its sometimes just a better solution! And fund to diddleduddle around with it!
I think this is probably one of the best videos you have put up here. It was interesting, it talked about where you began, and the reason why you are fixing all of these big pieces of equipment. It included some failures (3D printed pulley) - always important to show people that even if they fail with something, to find a new way forward and not just give up. It included a great example of how to troubleshoot something that doesnt work. Thank you for this content. Hoping that, even when you do get a massive workshop full of fancy equipment, that you keep making videos about doing stuff like this on a budget (rather than just tossing around loads of money to solve your problems).
Dear the1stDDD 👍👌👏 I happily agree. I almost stopped watching this channel but especially this kind of content definitely makes me come back respectively ignites my interest once more. Best regards, luck and health in particular.
Ooh yeah baby, it's scrapyard time! Why do I get so excited by German scrapyards? They seem like they are full of TREASURE!
Indeed! But its the same way around as well: I love the american or Australian version to watch! As a German Viewer there is always Stuff you dom´n't see here... . LOw Buck Garage has a pretty cool Video about a Desert Scrapyard. check it out! A good channel also! Greetings from Oldenburg/Germany ;-) Its Sunday, Its Musti1 Time, Its Scrapyard Time!
@@beakittelscherz5419 Thanks! Low buck garage subscribed!
Dear @@beakittelscherz5419 👍👌👏 I watch the mentioned channels too. By the way: Nice to meet you again. Best regards, luck and health in particular.
Just a quick tip to save you headaches - HF start plasma as yours is will cause no end of issues on a CNC machine. The EMI causes the controllers to crash randomly. Lots of people on forums learn the hard way after buying a HF plasma cutter
Interesting, can you shield the controllers?
@@ArmySigs go on the CNC forums and look at all the inventive ways people try to overcome the EMI issues. 99% of them end up buying a blowback start plasma cutter. Nothing like wasting lots of good steel to finally realise it's not worth the hassle
Thanks for the heads-up! Makes total sense
I have read that quite a few times as well.
EMI? Electro-Magnetic-Induction?
I bought one of the original Murex plasma cutters (one of the first models designed to be used outside of an Industrial setting) and, man, was it a learning curve! Things you need to know to save costs: 1) pilot arc wears out consumables really quickly so don't just start the torch in freezer air but, instead, position the torch at the start of the cut before pulling the trigger, 2) moisture is the enemy of plasma cutters torches. You need a really good line dryer to reduce moisture in your air supply to an absolute minimum. 3) the same goes for oil in the air supply, you may want to look for and combined oil/water separator to fit to the air inlet of the Plasma cutter. I can't remember the details now but experiment with cutting round pieces and holes. When you cut a hole or a circular piece only one edge has a really clean, accurate edge. This is due to the fact that the plasma is created by constricting the arc in a high speed air vortex so it has a negative or positive rake depending on which side of the arc is considered. One side gives a cleaner edge than the other so if you cut a circular hole and it looks rough try cutting it in the opposite rotation (clockwise/anticlockwise). Plasma cutter fumes need to be treated the same way as wiring fumes: there is a lot of metal vapour and oxides of Nitrogen in the fumes.
My whole workshop is based on the exact same way as you, everything was purchased broken and cheap and repaired. I just wish I had a great scrap yard like the one you go to, but so many scrap yards are now closing to the public here in the UK, because of insurance against people getting hurt.
that is happening more and more in the USA too but Texas is still relatively free.
You should try Norway. Everything is streamlined and closed down. If stuff is delivered to a scrapyard it is lost to the fixit crowd. A shame for fixers, but it get faster into a meltdown and reuse materials cycle.
UK is pretty much the same when it comes to the council run dumps and so on.@@noldushumlesnurr6169
Your laughter at the first cut is priceless! Well done sir!
Awe man, with as expensive good nuts and bots are these days, seeing all that basically brand new hardware just dumped on the ground left to rot and rust hurts my soul! There is easily a couple grand worth of hardware in that pile, really glad you didn't let some of them sit there. Wish I lived in Germany to be able to visit these awesome junkyards and pick some great finds and to prevent perfectly serviceable equipment from rotting away. Best series on youtube right here!! 👍👍
A project supervisor once told me to throw out a similar mixed pile of hardware because he didn't think it was worth paying an apprentice 8USD and hour to sort it. This was decades ago but still seemed silly.
I started watching a vlog by a scrap guy and I am truly amazed by the things he finds and recycles for mostly scrap value. I think still valuable things end up in the scrapyards or the trash dumpsters because it cost more in labor and expenses for the companies to handle the stuff then just through it away it is just short term expediency
@@unclefrogy743 Also consider efficiencies, the company I work for is investing(replacing) in "green" equipment. Sometimes it makes sense but these replaced equipment would still service someone with a lower duty cycle just fine. The risk in finding those people and liability and paper work and and.. results in me picking up the phone and calling a scrap dealer. Just to get an asset donated on paper consumes several people's time and this is also a large factor.
Last year a large dealer in my area went bankrupt and solt truckloads of new stuff to scrapyard. I know a guy that runs the scrapyard and he told me that they bought just over 70 tons of bolts, nuts, drill bits of all sorts, pins, washers...everyting was packed nicely in boxes and sorted out on pallets when they went to load it. I bought some 70 kilos i believe...just imagine a 4 large truckloads of completely new stuf just piled up by a big CAT loader. I cannot imagine all the stuff that was simply burrowed too deep and forever lost . Lots of stuff was not of high quality but there were still tons of quality 10.9 and 12.9 bolts, drill bits for metal and concrete, washers...Eventualy they sold few tons but like 99% went to be melted...Such a shame.
That plasma cutter is a proper tool, I would be plasma cutting everything, any slightly tight nuts - PLASMA CUTTER, left the key for a lock at home - PLASMA CUTTER, a tin of beans for lunch - PLASMA CUTTER.
I loved your logical method of tracking down the fuse issue. This is the basis of all good troubleshooting.
Hearing you happy and laughing when the Plasma cutter started working made me grin big time! Congrats. So many small repairs to get to the final goal. Awesome man.
There’s something really special about a German doing a Southern American accent 😂 Well done as usual. Thank you!
Dear justina208 👍👌👏 I agree. Nevertheless: After all those years I still hope that this ingenious guy will lose respectively give up the bad habit to speak typical "German English" so much at last. Especially "though" and "here" and "then" are extremely often used at the end of sentences. All this is definitely not common, not necessary and therefore completely senseless/useless. To be completely honest: To me it's even very annoying and distracting (although I'm a German too). Best regards, luck and health in particular.
Man I love your channel. I respect those people who always tries to give life back to old stuff rather than buying new ones.
You are a rare breed these days. I grew up repairing equipment and cars due to being poor, funny how you learn more that way. I admire your life and skills. Great content as always. 🎉❤
Your next equipment foray should be into metal casting. That 3D printed pulley would have made a good pattern. Lost foam casting can be really, really powerful tech to master.
Just so you get some of the feedback I bet you wish. I've made a habit of buying machnies that I need for cheap in non working condition, learning to repair them and then put them to good use. You are quite a big part of why I do that. My latest achievement: a rinding lawn mower with a non running engine i found for 200€. Used and in working condition, you can't find them below 600, new they cost 1700. All i had to do to get it running again was a bit of modification to the intake valve, because it was stuck open. Thank you for inspiring people.
Very impressive plasma cutter repair, your troubleshooting was spot on. Hats off! ✌️🎉
1. You replaced a ceramic sand filled fuse with a glass one. Usually the requirement for ceramic sand filled is a safety reason so you may want to put "proper" one in. 2. Automotive coolant systems can usually be rinsed out with plain tap water with some "household soda" added. Go through one heat cycle, flush with tap water. Repeat until clean soda water comes out after a heat cycle. Do not leave soda water in, but replace with proper coolant. I have done many cars, with both copper and aluminium parts in the system without having bad effects. Leaving liquids in a cooling system without the proper anti-oxidation additives will be harmful to the system, so your destilled water is probably not suitable to stay in there for any extended period.
That plasma cutter repair is incredible!
really cool stuff! you can consider a VFD for the compressor, and let it run faster at lower tank pressure, regulated by a pressure sensor connected to a arduino that in turn controls the VFD, these can often also be found used for very little money, and will make your compressor fill back up much faster.
Wow! That plasma torch works great!
Always glad to find another of your videos. Stay safe, and happy tinkering!
Bro, those cast iron bath tubs are gold! Maybe not for the weight of them at the scrap yard but... the older style ones done up and painted fetches a good price. Also, retangular ones you can build brick walls to support it and light small fires under them - perfect for when you get out of the city. I´m working on one right now for my wife!! She is a teacher and deserves a bath every now and then (we generally don´t have baths in our country so its quite a novelty).
Your troubleshooting skills with the electrical components never cease to amaze me. I have never seen a plasma cutter that can cut steel that thick!
Wow! That plasma cutter is a beast! Congrats on the radio interview - well deserved!
The best part is his joy when the thing works. Really felt that. 😊👍
I've been watching your channel since 2017 and I am absolutely amazed at the talent you possess I am a metal fabricator from Ohio and to watch you restore these pieces of welding equipment it's just amazing as well as all the other Contraptions that you get ahold of you've taught me a lot about circuitry and I thank you
That plasma cutter fix was awesome! A flawless, textbook execution of following the issue to the source as opposed to treating a symptom or two! Beautiful!!!
That plasma is a beast!
Awesome to see that old plasma cutter fixed :)
I'm sorry. With a wife and kids in today's economy, I can't justify donating. But please keep going I've been watching for 7 or 8 years. I love the content and even when the electrical engineering parts are a bit above my pay grade I learn a lot about troubleshooting my own mechanical issues. Good job!
I love finding used equipment and fixing it, most times the older built equipment is more robust and lasts much longer than new! Great finds!
You are a beast when it comes to electrical equipment bro. Your skills and knowledge is top shelf.👌👍🤘🔥🔥🔥
Can’t wait to see your CNC project
Great job diagnosing and fixing the problem with the blown fuse on the plasma cutter! Thanks for sharing with everyone. I hope many of us learn a lot from your well thought out process. Excellent! I also love it when I find such treasures at the scrap yard! I bought several pounds of stainless steel TIG filler rods at scrap prices once. The bolts and nuts & hardware you got were a bargain, I love it! I would have struggled to keep it so limited, and would have bought more than I could ever use. 😁
As someone who has a service shop for welding and plasma machines, I always find it exciting seeing content related to that field. Happy seeing people still re using old machinery, which in my opinion where made with the intention to last, not to be sold. Also if you want to choose a controller for the CNC, I recommend not to choose a Mach3 one but instead to buy a Chinese CNC controller with a built in THC controller. It's cheap, very user friendly and convenient.
Love the enthusiasm when that bad boy kicked on at the end!
I really enjoyed hearing your back story and how you came to be the repair guru you are today. I'm following a similar path of buying old broken tools and fixing them up for use in my shop. It is a really great way to build your tool collection and your skill set at the same time. Thanks for sharing your journey through this process.
Once upon a time your family's and yours way of doing things was called "living". My heart bleeds to see what people throw away in scrapyards.
Congratulations for getting all that stuff working again. While I am saddened by the mindblowing wastage of our society, I am rather envious of you having access to such treasures, and heartened that you and like-minded people are doing something to try and recycle what you can !
normaly the pipe from the pump to the tank is is hard copper or steel line with flared fittings, that's why it had UNF threads on it. The reasoning for hardline their is because the pump can get very hot from running long which makes the air come out burning hot at.
Yes I don't expect the rubber plumbing hose to last too long!
That plasma cutter is a very powerful tool glad you got all three tool’s straight thank you
Well done. I know and can appreciate the massive hours it takes to refurbish gear like this. A feather in your cap my friend.
That is a potent plasma cutter. great to see it fixed and in action.
The troubleshooting of the plasma cutter was very entertaining and well documented. The euphoria getting it working must have been incredible.
i love videos : diging in scrap - then repair and use - this is pinacle of this channel !!!!!!!!!!!!!
Awesome content as always dude, That laugh of happiness when you first got the plasma cutter working and realised what capabilities have opened up to you was priceless. been watching for years and I love seeing the constant growth, cant wait to see the future installments with the newfound tooling putting in some work!
This was such a joy to watch Always enjoy your work and findings at the scrap yard. This video was awesome to see and hear your absolute joy & happiness in finding and fixing those great pieces of machinery. Thank you for taking us along and sharing your life with us all Really love your channel
That Plasma Cutter is Going To Be A Game Changer
I think this raises an intresting point, nothing sounds cooler than a plasma cutter
Wow. That plasma cutter. Talk about a hot knife through butter. And such a beautiful cut!
All these industrial tool repairs you do are full of useful details and tips for others to follow as well. Good work!
Phenomenal work as always! Thank you for sharing your passion, expertise, and philosophy with us. You are not alone in your belief that waste is all too abundant. As well as your demonstrated belief that restorations are a truly viable means of achieving self sufficiency in the home, and potentially the commercial workshop. Thanks again for the enjoyable inspirational instructions and glorious deconstruction with purpose! -CY Castor
I love that gentle 50Hz hum while cutting, thanks for recording it! :D
Ridiculously fun, and I rejoiced when the HARD work paid off. Great job ! !😮
Guys at that scrapyard should give you a Platinum Customer card. Discount and each kilogram of parts you buy is one point to collect.
What a coup for you to have a plasma CNC cutter! I can see that it was a lot of planning and work, years of salvaging parts not even being half of that. I share your joy and it quite an inspiration seeing how much money you saved through repairing used components. I look forward to your videos for weeks and, as the ambition for this project was huge, it is quite a treat to view!
Finally some worthy stuff! HandyTIG looks similar to larger ISITIG or IT252/420GW, but extremely squeezed together. IT252/420GW is awesome, extremely repairable.
It's always a joy to see you bring old equipment back to life. Well done on another successful set of repairs.
This is the awesome electromechanical inventor I enjoy watching! You are back using your talents brilliantly. Yeaaaaasss! Thank you Gerolf.
That plasma cutter works brilliantly
You made an error in replacing the fuse. The fuse you showed originally in it was a type ABC ceramic sand filled high temp fuse. The one you replaced it with was a standard glass type. It will likely fail due to not having the heat dissipation. You might want to change it out wit the correct type fuse, especially if you are using it in a extended use CNC machine.
Slo-blow fuse just takes out the next component. lol
Good advice. Although I must add that the simple glass fuses will hold up just fine as long as their rated current is not exceeded. But in circuits with higher voltages they will explode violently when they blow. The air inside the glass tube expands rapidly by the heat of the arc when the fuse breaks the ciruit. The sand filling inside the fuse reduces the volume of air as well as it dissipates the arc's heat.
I'm using my DIY skills today. Began fitting an air transfer system. Next I have to get under the house and reinforce the floor where my new wood heater is going to go. Despite having huge natural gas reserves, Australian's pay very high prices for natural gas. We happily export it for small profits though. Natural gas connections are now banned on new houses in my state for carbon emissions targets. Despite still being primarily generated from cheap brown coal, our electricity is expensive too. Looking forward to the wood heater so I can afford to actually be warm. It will be nice to have off grid heating and cooking options in case of failures too. I'm getting a wood fire with oven and cook top.
That plasma cutter looks like a solid unit, well done.
Wow! Richtig toll so mitzuerleben woran es gelegen hat, dass der Cutter nicht funktioniert hat! Ich kann mir vorstellen, dass du da eine ganze Weile Ursachenforschung betrieben hast! Bitte mehr davon
Took the words right out of my mouth.
I am used to cut metal 4 mm thick with an angle grinder, and I alredy thought investing in a plasma cuter, only to abandon this idea, because after seeing new plasma cutters that I could afford in actions they were not much better than an angle grinder, but those were probably rather been cheap versions (or a copressor not powerful enough) compared to what we can see here. It is just incredible how the machine cuts through 6 mm steal easier than a hot nife through butter! I must probably conside buying a second hand one with a fix nedeed, not sure though I would be able to identify the fault and repare it, especially if it is in a high voltage circuit board. Great repare, keep posting, I always enjoy your videos.
Im impressed, I would have thought old industrial gear like that plasma cutter would have been totally wreaked and I wouldn't have risked buying it. What a mug I would have been.
That. Was. Amazing! I’m always impressed by your ability to repair things. I look forward to the near equipment you source / make
Shaking my head at whoever threw away all those nuts and bolts in excellent condition.
we had a massive CNC plasma table at my old work & it was good for around 18mm steel pretty cool project ngl
Have you ever considered using the old Bosch pump and motor , even the tank as a Vacuum tank and pump? Although not a perfect unit you can make a very serviceable unit. Great for anything from casting to paint mixing.
I watch almost all of these, this is my favorite in a long time, new capabilities are always interesting.
Nice! Thorough forensics and a new tool emerges.
Always fun to watch you sort out problems and fix them properly!
Haven't had a chance until now to comment on a current video, but I have to say I am a huge fan of this channel and all the work that goes into it. I kind if wish we had metal scrapyards in my area now that allowed people to go and explore around.
That plasma cutter is a *beast* I wish I had a scrapyard similar to yours within reach.
A plasma cutter is definitely a game changer in any workshop. A cnc one, Even more so.
Great stuff Gerolf, so happy to see you building up your workshop again. I'm always impressed with your electrical technical skills and your troubleshooting acumen. I noticed the washer on your compressor pump pulley looked loose, hope that bolt is tight. Keep up the good work, and stay safe. I'm excited to see what else you're going to come up with. Thanks!
Man, that scrapyard is my concept of paradise
That plasma cutter is a born again beast ! Love your content, amigo.
Great job fixing that plasma cutter. If I were there in that scrapyard I would’ve taken home even that storetec systems carousel warehouse system that you showed at 0:49
Ahhhh .... another repairathon!
I wish I had scrapyards like that where I live
Lorch Handy Tig are excellent machines. Probably one of the best in their class. Theyre also very expensive. I have one too that I got new years ago and I cherish it a lot. It still looks like new.
Those are some pretty heavy-duty upgrades! Looks like the TIG welder is already earning its keep, and I can't wait to see you get started on the CNC for the plasma cutter, so it can get to work as well.
Your talent with electronics and all thing mechanical is amazing. Nice job on the compressor and plasma cutter. I built my own 4’ x 8’ table a few years ago and love it. I wish I spoke German I would love to hear the interview.
I can't wait to see the CNC/plasma cutter setup that sounds amazing.
Well done. Always an informative episode. I love seeing the stuff people discard in your junkyards. I even saw an EG Civic sitting on top of a pile - these cars are rare and valuable here in Australia.
Really enjoyed this one! Seeing the full system working together and chopping 12mm steel was great,
That plasma cutter is a beast!
I think it is important go depressurize the compressor pump after the motor shuts off to prevent damage to the internal pump memebranes. This is what causes the typical compressor hissing noise after it shuts off. Maybe add that to the build to make it last longer.
I was as happy as you, seeing the equipment working once again! I love to repair and I love your explanations also for the electric/electronics which is still very difficult for me! Thanks a lot!
pulling yourself up by your own bootstraps is actually physically impossible. but working smart is definitely valuable
You are what humans are supposed to be like. You are a rare one.
I really enjoy your narration and learning about European manufacturing history
Great work on the plasma cutter! It cuts nicely! Looking forward to the CNC build - my dream!