Gerstner & Sons Factory Tour

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  • čas přidán 5. 09. 2024
  • Gerstner & Sons would like to offer a 20% off promo code for Abom79 viewers for all Made in America products. Use promo code "Abom79" on their website. (excludes sale items)
    Check out their website for info and prices on all of Gerstner's products. www.gerstnerus...
    I traveled to Dayton Ohio to visit with H. Gerstner & Sons and take a tour of their shop where they have been hand crafting fine wooden tool chests since 1906! Gerstner & Sons is world renowned for their high quality tool chests that have been a staple in machine shops, and many other industries. They build many different sizes and styles of chests right in Dayton in their original building. It was an honor to be invited in, tour the shop, and share my experience with all of my viewers!
    I will be sharing a separate video of my Gerstner tool chest restorations at a later time so please be sure to check that out!
    Paypal Donation: www.paypal.com...
    Support though Patreon: / abom79
    Abom79 t-shirts: www.storefront...

Komentáře • 556

  • @ccrider5398
    @ccrider5398 Před 5 lety +254

    Your tour of Gerstner brought tears to my eyes. I'm so glad there is someplace that still believes in quality, craftmanship, and a pride in the work. So often we're forced into buying something we know we'll throw out, or doesn't work "quite right." Anxious to see your box refurbished!

    • @jeangade5809
      @jeangade5809 Před 5 lety +4

      You said it. So true.

    • @isbcornbinder
      @isbcornbinder Před 5 lety +8

      I thought I was the only wet eye guy. Beautiful beyond words.

    • @Abom79
      @Abom79  Před 5 lety +15

      CC Rider I’m so glad you guys enjoyed the video! 👍🏻

    • @tgo6292
      @tgo6292 Před 5 lety +10

      I was dry until Adam's damn music at the end! Deeply nostalgic. Thanks for the tour!

    • @rudyschwab7709
      @rudyschwab7709 Před 5 lety +4

      It was also good to see that management understood real craftsmanship and quality doesn't come from the "Work faster! More product!" leadership model. There are reasons why some businesses last 100 years or more and others don't even come close.

  • @jamesstanlake4064
    @jamesstanlake4064 Před 5 lety +1

    My brother in law is a senior restorationist for Gerstner. He is a retired police officer in California and recently moved to southern Utah from about 3 miles from Bar Z Industrial. We recently visited him and my sister in law where my wife got her very own Gerstner tool box (riser and top box, made from Walnut; it did not have the felt liners in the drawers and I will line them in leather for her to store her craft tools and supplies. Myself I like the metal tool boxes for my woodworking tools, mainly from a security standpoint. My wife and I just moved to the Phoenix area from Las Vegas. I will have my first air conditioned wood shop in the RV garage attached to the house we bought . I got the same Mr. Cool unit you featured in your shop.
    As always enjoy your videos and the great content no matter the subject matter.

  • @lou196t
    @lou196t Před 9 měsíci +1

    Absolutely enjoyed this tour. Brings me back in time being with my dad while he did his woodworking. He had a similar wooden tool box and kept some of his smaller tools and measuring devices inside. I have it now and plan on using it for jewelry tools…for my new hobby.😉I feel privileged to have it.❤

  • @tomt9543
    @tomt9543 Před 3 lety +1

    This video validates an opinion I’ve had for many years, and that’s how interconnected the various trades used to be. I live in a relatively small town in NC, the lifeblood of which for 100 years or more was furniture manufacturing and textiles. Growing up in the 60’s & 70’s, I saw these industries at their peak, and during those years this town had several machine shops, welding shops, electric motor shops etc., all of which supported these two industries! The machine shops in particular did a huge business building specialized machinery like the box assembly jig you showed, and repairing existing machines. By the late 80’s, all of that industry was long gone, and only one machine shop and an electric motor shop are left, struggling to stay afloat! This was a very uplifting video! Thanks Adam!

  • @roberthayes6329
    @roberthayes6329 Před 2 lety +1

    Thank you Abom79 and Gerstner. I mean ...🇺🇸THANK YOU SO MUCH!🇺🇸
    Glad to see someone still cares about American Pride.

  • @henryskinner1092
    @henryskinner1092 Před rokem +1

    I now realize that these chest are worth the price. Excellent!

  • @thomasdevery2566
    @thomasdevery2566 Před 5 lety +1

    Long may they reign, lovely factory filled with lovely machines, benches, work spaces, tools and skillful people.

  • @garyseaman6105
    @garyseaman6105 Před 2 lety +1

    Thank you for the video. Bought back some good memories.

  • @raymuttart5484
    @raymuttart5484 Před 4 lety +1

    Wonderful shoptour, Thanks Adam.

  • @TheEngineer71
    @TheEngineer71 Před 5 lety +2

    I worked as a journeyman machinist for nine years while going to college to become a mechanical engineer. I did not like working in an office and found that I had to have hands-on in whatever job I did. I could never afford to buy a Gerstner toolbox so I got by with a metal Kennedy Kit. I always wanted to have a Gerstner box and now that I am 80 years old I am making a range box for my pistols more or less patterned after a Gerstner machinist's chest. I watch Adam's videos a lot and am familiar with almost everything he does. I have only one or two items that I ever used a shaper for. I always had a milling machine available. My last job was as an Operating Engineer in a bakery here in Seattle for 25 years and 4 days fixing everything in it. I made many shafts and other machine components in those years and did a good bit of welding as well. I worked all those years from midnight to 8 am so I could run my own Corporation on the side. It was a "Commercial & Industrial Troubleshoot & Repair" business. I always told new customers that "if a man made it, I could fix it". They tested me often, but I was persistent enough that I always got things going again.
    Thanks for the tour Adam, it was great!

  • @gfsquall
    @gfsquall Před 5 lety +21

    Man, I inherited a Gerstner model 42 from my late machinist Grandfather last year. I really appreciate seeing this tour. It means a lot.

  • @kevingaughan3170
    @kevingaughan3170 Před rokem

    Interesting seeing all the various jigs that were set up to cut the various components. Wonderful craftsmanship!

  • @wetherabble8031
    @wetherabble8031 Před 5 lety +37

    You are such a vise nerd! No idea how you can be so familiar with a vise to know make and model from across the room in a 100 year old factory.
    Great video, thanks!

  • @luthiermatt
    @luthiermatt Před měsícem

    I have a walnut W52 and an oak O52. I'm a wood worker and I restore and use old tools, machines and even a Union Steel wooden chest. I would love to just hang out in that place and check out the old gear and smell the smells. Fantastic video.

  • @wolverinebear5357
    @wolverinebear5357 Před 4 lety +1

    I love this. God bless America. God bless this company, manufacturers of the finest boxes. WWG1WGA

  • @leondonatello5728
    @leondonatello5728 Před 3 lety

    This is what I think of when we talk about "made in USA" the best craftsmanship you can find,the most beautiful products you can find.. no usa brand but crappy made in China. This make me still believe there is hope . Stay strong . Best regards from Leon. Norway 🇳🇴

  • @ljkck3578
    @ljkck3578 Před 5 lety

    What a great tour of a great company. For an old shop that works with wood and has for over a century, it sure looks clean. And it being clean is a testament of the pride and care the employees have for the company they work for.

  • @jrgates54
    @jrgates54 Před 5 lety +2

    This video got me choked up. I felt like I had the opportunity to travel back in time and see what made America great at manufacturing. "Made in America with Craftsmanship and Pride."

  • @leverman7517
    @leverman7517 Před 5 lety +1

    My dream toolbox for most of my 43 years of machining. Five years ago I bought one that is 70 years young. Still is a great box that I keep my "Keepers" in

  • @7novalee
    @7novalee Před 5 lety

    Very emotional and proof some things in America still respect craftsmanship. Cheers to all the workers and thanks to ABOM to bring us a fantastic history lesson.

  • @billlee5307
    @billlee5307 Před 5 lety +4

    Thank you Gerstner & Sons for keeping people at the heart of what you do!!

  • @chuckwin100
    @chuckwin100 Před 5 lety +61

    Very nice tour of a factory that still values quality for the customer.

  • @amdg2023
    @amdg2023 Před 5 lety +17

    The music at the end? Powerful, emotional tribute to American quality and to the creative liberty of a country still good in it's heart.

  • @dangerrangerlstc
    @dangerrangerlstc Před 5 lety +23

    Still made in the same building for over 100 years. Not many can say that. Awesome video. Can't wait to see the restoration of your box.

    • @Eytaris
      @Eytaris Před 5 lety

      I worked at a paper mill that is almost a 100 years old (80 years, to be true, but the main building dates from 1880). most of the process is modernized, but the overall structure of the main paper machine dates back from the beginning. there is a beautiful vibe you have when you look at old all-forged machines that you don't get with new systems, however neat they can be.

  • @wizzardofwizzards
    @wizzardofwizzards Před 5 lety

    The true essence of American manufacturing!

  • @895shultz
    @895shultz Před 2 lety

    Great tour of a well known product. I was really interested as my dad had one of the smaller boxes ( he was an engineer ) that needs restoration and happened on your video. So the process and materials used have given me a great base to work from. Thanks for the insite and a big thankyou to Gerstner for allowing you to visit and tour the workshop. Fantastic history and well explained.

  • @silverbullet7434
    @silverbullet7434 Před 5 lety +3

    The way it was , shops of yesteryear. Makes me very sad to see how far we have cheapened ourselves . Going cheap driving our businesses out of the USA. We had so many factories in almost every state , till we taxed them , inspected and basically drove them away. To many hands in the pockets of corrupt states , cities , . Just makes me mad losing so much for greed. Love the Gerstner tour the boxes are the best. I'm lucky to have one. Sorry for ranting old age I guess.

    • @azza-in_this_day_and_age
      @azza-in_this_day_and_age Před 5 lety

      it feels like people are getting fed up with the emptyness of cheapness and greed. gen z is very conservative for the most part, not buying into the medias narratives of promiscuity and self indulgence, the pendulum is swinging back to honor culture and its driving degenerates insane because they soon will be judged for their behavior no matter how much the news wants to call it brave. we dont believe the corrupt and choose not to live that way, and while they destroy themselves we will be raising kids with morals that God established to inherit the future. i have hope for that, but its going to get much worse before then, because we put it off too long. for that dereliction will come much painful lessons

  • @janusszakazu9318
    @janusszakazu9318 Před 3 lety +1

    Awesome tour. Big thanks Adam.
    Pozdrowienia z Polski 🇵🇱

  • @wdhewson
    @wdhewson Před 5 lety +4

    Its a great compliment to Adam that he is well received by such such important business professionals.
    Thanks Adam...............

  • @robertbownes6718
    @robertbownes6718 Před 5 lety

    This encouraged me to go look at the old wooden toolbox I got with $50 of machine tools. I thought it was a Gerstner at the time, but there were no markings on it. Now I know some of the tidbits of how they are built, it is definitely a Gerstner, albeit missing the tag (but the holes for it are there). A bit of digging on the net shows that I can get a new tag for it if I send Gerstner some pictures and get info to them. Well worth restoring.
    My pride and joy however, is still going to be the wooden toolbox my grandmother had built for her in the late 20's. It came with the receipt and a handwritten note from the guy who built it. During The War, it held the tools she used working on cash registers (remember mechanical cash registers?) for NCR. Lady was a mechanical genius.

  • @johnbell1396
    @johnbell1396 Před 2 lety

    Bought a new Journeyman Toolbox Thursday. Got it today. Very pleased, and glad to support an American worker.

  • @isbcornbinder
    @isbcornbinder Před 5 lety

    The only other video that got me this emotional is a Porsche video of a young man in school who goes to the Porsche Dealer after school. I drove Porsche since 1964 and I get this quality craftsperson thing. Thankyou so much. I have always wanted a GERSTNER. I got too old too soon and it may never happen, now. You are looking good Big Man.

  • @danilko1
    @danilko1 Před 5 lety

    Guys, what makes a company last, and still function in America, is good old fashion management. You can see they try to diversify. When the owners care about their employees, the customers and their business, they tend to stick around. When they care only about money, they dry up. From what I can see, Gerstner & Sons is a very nice business and deserves our patronage.

  • @IR-nq4qv
    @IR-nq4qv Před 5 lety +49

    You did a top notch professional interview and asked all the right questions , thanks for the tour, interesting indeed. I can see why some would want a tool box like that especially when good tools do not come cheap. I absolutely loved the custom dark chest with all the brass knobs.

  • @pavski
    @pavski Před 3 lety

    I snagged two Gerstner boxes full of tools from a sale a few months back. I shared them in a Facebook group and someone said it best "thats a man's whole life in those boxes." From the black and white photos pinned on the inside of the lid to the custom date stamped washers lining the lower part of the lid to remember important dates - the tools were scribed with names and dates going back to the 40s. The boxes are probably from around the same time.
    I hope to redo the felt and use them as display pieces and motivation / inspiration to always put my best at whatever I'm doing around the shop. They give me a feeling of comfort and organization when I look at them. All the shelfs loaded with metal cut offs taps and reamers opened up effortlessly for being probably over 50 years old. I hope to visit the factory one day and hope I could find more of these boxes to preserve and share with people who appreciate them. You sometimes hear horror stories of people coming across them at dumps / scrap yards. I'm glad the two I found won't be one of those stories, at least in my life time.

  • @backtoearth1983
    @backtoearth1983 Před 5 lety +2

    I'm loving these factory tours. H. Gerstner & Sons feels like an English company, it's all older crafts, nice wholesome vibe

  • @onehot57
    @onehot57 Před 2 lety

    Thanks for the tour, I was in Dayton last fall and went by the factory but couldn’t stop so thanks again.

  • @danthefrst
    @danthefrst Před 2 lety

    A beautiful little min docu.
    Thanks

  • @fpr283
    @fpr283 Před 2 lety

    Excellent tour and quality video! Thank you all, I’m definitely motivated to get myself a made in the USA Gerstner now!

  • @stanervin6108
    @stanervin6108 Před 5 lety +5

    Man, you're lucky! Going to all the fun places!
    Edit: Never seen a new one. Thought they were all over fifty years old! Absolutely amazing!

  • @jimbarnes8706
    @jimbarnes8706 Před 5 lety +1

    Thank-you Adam. My dad had a Gerstner machinist tool box he bought new in the late 50's. I really appreciated seeing how they were manufactured.

  • @MikeBramm
    @MikeBramm Před 5 lety +1

    Beautiful chests. Good old American craftsmanship still going strong. Thanks for taking us along on your tour.

  • @MADMAX353
    @MADMAX353 Před 3 lety

    Wow...saving up for my first Gerstner Chest....great to see traditional craftsmanship alive and well in the USA.

  • @kc8bdr
    @kc8bdr Před 5 lety +1

    What an awesome video.

  • @stevenrice47
    @stevenrice47 Před 5 lety +1

    My dad and I bought my mom a Gerstner silverware box in 1995. Still look great after all these years. Thank you for the tour video!

  • @neiltingzon
    @neiltingzon Před 4 lety

    I want one not because I need it but because it's a Gerstner!

  • @davidoberlin7198
    @davidoberlin7198 Před 5 lety +3

    Hope you enjoyed your time in Dayton Ohio, ( tool and die capital of the world) Gerstner and sons make a first class product. As a side note Kennedy tool boxes are manufactured in Van Wert Ohio. Ohio loves their machinists and tool makers. Liked your video Adam

    • @YMF1891
      @YMF1891 Před 5 lety

      Is there a lot of tool shops in Dayton? Are they hiring?

  • @jimharris4013
    @jimharris4013 Před 5 lety +35

    Very well done Adam. Great questions and answers. It is nice that they do it the old way, because that is way the customers want.

  • @AaronBelknap
    @AaronBelknap Před 5 lety +1

    Adam. You made me forget that this was a CZcams video and was watching a big production company. Your camera work, interview and editing should be award winning work. I am so pleased to see how those boxes are made and the quality they have. From the old shop made tooling to the new laser cutter for the felt, what a process. Makes me want to get one now. Thank you for the video. What a blessing for Gerstner to let you in their shop. What a great team to build these beautiful boxes. I can’t wait until you get yours back.

  • @michaelwillis8730
    @michaelwillis8730 Před 5 lety

    WOW! Thank you so much!!! I bought my first Gerstner in 1986, a model 41C. At present I have 13 Gerstners and my prize one is the cherry briefcase the guys bought me when I was promoted to Vice President / General Manager. This tour really brings home the legacy and timelessiness of Gerstner.

  • @paulehlers2225
    @paulehlers2225 Před 5 lety

    Watched this on the 4th of July. It's so heartwarming to see this old school high level craftsmanship is still alive in America. Kudo's to Gerstner for keeping with tradition, their products are truly an American icon of quality craftsmanship. Thanks Adam for posting this video!!!!

  • @douglaspierce316
    @douglaspierce316 Před 5 lety +4

    loved the fold up table. the coffee table show drawer was nice also. great show. I don't own enough machine tools to need nice box like these. just old drag racer trying to keep the old heap running. thanks for sharing

  • @maggs131
    @maggs131 Před 2 lety +1

    I hope this amazing and wonderful business never sees hard times. It is a page out of history and it's a real tear jerker seeing it still in use. The older I get the more I gravitate to this time period that I didnt experience but still have the capacity to miss it. Bless you Adam and everyone at Gerstner 💗

  • @kennethwhite1883
    @kennethwhite1883 Před 5 lety

    Hats off anyone you takes the time/money to restore any American treasure! That’s not only doing the job its a work of art.

  • @raymondmucklow3793
    @raymondmucklow3793 Před 5 lety

    Every man or women newly married should receive one of these chests. I remember on school field trips getting tours of the plant. You brought me back to those trips. San Gabriel mission, was one of them, La Brea Tar Pits, also a meat packing plant. Several others. My grandpa a Machinest and my Uncle and cousin are all Machinists. I did get to Cruz thru there shop when I was young. But touring a plant or manufacturer is awesome. Thanks for sharing i can't wait to see how Paul did.

    • @thatrealba
      @thatrealba Před 5 lety

      It would be a travesty for someone like me to be given such a beautiful item. Everything I own fits in my truck and aside from my PC and monitors, coffee pot, and two framed pictures... gets tossed in the truck to hit the road. 😂

    • @raymondmucklow3793
      @raymondmucklow3793 Před 5 lety

      @@thatrealba I used to travel in the driveaway buisness 10 years I did that. Moving diesel truck around. I understand the everything fits in my truck. But there used to be a tradition when folks got married, one common thing was the man got a skilsaw not the cheap one the expensive one, my dad has three and has given me one. Also the women was given a jewelry box, for when the man screwed up he then could fill the box. 😁 my take on those 2 items was sorta teach a man to fish he could feed himself for life type. Of course the items can be different but my point is they are built by hand and last a very long time. My grandpa was a machinest he had a couple gerstner chests, my uncle got his shop nobody know where any if the stuff is. I whish I had one of them.

  • @tardbuster007
    @tardbuster007 Před 3 lety

    ...a national treasure
    ...hoping they''ll be making their gorgeous pieces for decades to come.... and then some!

  • @Theladorn
    @Theladorn Před 5 lety +4

    I'm loving these tour videos. They remind me of the "This Old House" factory tours. Very professional work by both of you. Thanks for sharing American craftsmanship by American workers.

  • @audimaster5000
    @audimaster5000 Před 5 lety +16

    It’s like they’re making fine musical instruments. I love this stuff. Thanks for the video!

    • @mohabatkhanmalak1161
      @mohabatkhanmalak1161 Před 5 lety

      I think the company does make fine wooden parts for other manufacturers.

  • @peterklaus8703
    @peterklaus8703 Před 5 lety

    One of the best vidoes I have seen in a long time !!!

  • @oliverjh1281
    @oliverjh1281 Před 5 lety

    I hope that place never changes it’s like a working museum , absolutely outstanding hand crafted American quality right there 👏 we have lost a lot of industries like this in England .

  • @PatriotPaulUSA
    @PatriotPaulUSA Před 4 lety +1

    Really Amazing! I had No Idea these were still being made. Incredible quality! So Great to see old world craftmanship still around .

  • @jacksak
    @jacksak Před 5 lety +1

    Excellent. It's wonderful to see a shop like this taking so much pride in their beautiful products and process.

  • @JC-gs3br
    @JC-gs3br Před 5 lety +7

    As a wood worker I thoroughly enjoyed this tour.
    Subbed to your channel for a glimpse into the machinist world, and end up being right at home.

  • @azza-in_this_day_and_age

    this is the America i pledge my allegiance to. what a wonderful experience youve shared masterfully, great work brother! thank you

  • @UnbeltedSundew
    @UnbeltedSundew Před 5 lety

    Boy oh boy, that is seriously cool.

  • @izzynutz2000
    @izzynutz2000 Před 5 lety

    my grandfather's box was like the one you have Adam..I always admired the green felt ,
    But the red looks pretty awesome too... And that display table with the pull-out drawer with the glass top that was awesome, very beautiful craftsmanship..Thank you thank you for taking us along Adam and Abby...Gerstner thank you for having us...

  • @Jeppe.P.Bjerget
    @Jeppe.P.Bjerget Před 5 lety

    Really great tour of the fabrication of a beautiful product. To still see family businesses is so special, and the way they do their productions has not changed a lot in 116 years. Thank you for the presentation. Have a nice and warm week

  • @Ujeb08
    @Ujeb08 Před 5 lety

    I've owned my oak Gerstner for more than 40 years and it's still working great. Loved this tour! Amazing that they're still using 100 year old machines that were built in America.

    • @1pcfred
      @1pcfred Před 5 lety

      It isn't that amazing. When I worked in a tool and die shop we used a horizontal mill that was over 150 years old. The newest piece of equipment in the shop was about 40 years old. Welcome to America.

  • @TheTacktishion
    @TheTacktishion Před 5 lety +1

    Nice tour....! Thanks for bringing us along...

  • @geoanth
    @geoanth Před 5 lety +2

    Awesome work Adam and Abby, there is nothing to beat traditional craftsmanship, they are the most beautiful chests I have ever seen.
    I am afraid I would not have left that factory without one of those dark chests under my arm. ;-)

    • @xenonram
      @xenonram Před 5 lety

      He has one. They're restoring it for him.

  • @bennyrooman8257
    @bennyrooman8257 Před 5 lety +1

    Bravo Monsieur Adams, la véritable économie est celle que font les hommes et les femmes en travaillant chaque jour pour améliorer leur condition de vie et de celle de leur communauté.
    B. Rooman

  • @t.d.mich.7064
    @t.d.mich.7064 Před 5 lety

    I very seldom watch an entire video on You Tube, but this one made me watch every minute! I was fortunate enough to purchase a new Gerstner box in 1968 ($56.00), which I still have and use. It has been a faultless piece of my tool collection for over 50 years, and it still looks new, with a bit of maturity on the wood finish. thanks for taking this tour and sharing!

  • @bobscott8785
    @bobscott8785 Před 5 lety +1

    It's just wood, but GD was that awesome! So much history behind these hand crafted boxes. I hope they can continue the tradition for a 100 more years too. One of my favorite vids form Sir AB.

  • @RRINTHESHOP
    @RRINTHESHOP Před 5 lety +1

    Nice tour Adam. Enjoyed.

    • @Abom79
      @Abom79  Před 5 lety

      Randy Richard In The Shop thanks Randy 👍🏻

  • @milkman1944
    @milkman1944 Před 5 lety +14

    Thanks for the video, good to see heirloom quality craftsmanship, a quality that can be used and handed down to the next generations.

  • @stevesus3295
    @stevesus3295 Před 5 lety +1

    This one brought tears to my eyes. Still, made in the USA. I use to live in Dayton and I saw a few people I know there.

  • @Alan1970B
    @Alan1970B Před rokem

    what a magical place

  • @jasoncarpenter4498
    @jasoncarpenter4498 Před 5 lety +10

    Thanks for the video.I have been making their tooling for years,cool to see where it’s being used.

  • @kbinmissoula
    @kbinmissoula Před 5 lety +62

    Perfect video to celebrate American workmanship on the 4th of July!

  • @greybeard3759
    @greybeard3759 Před 5 lety +1

    Talk about an American treasure!
    Thanks for showing us a place we may never get to.

  • @bcbloc02
    @bcbloc02 Před 5 lety +4

    I really enjoyed seeing the place. I never considered one of those boxes really because like a Kennedy I felt the drawers were too shallow. Looks like they have more options than I knew of. That custom walnut stained job was fantastic!

    • @1pcfred
      @1pcfred Před 5 lety

      Gerstner will build any box you pay them to make. Of course you might have to borrow a ski mask and a gun to finance it. Up in the 5 figure range it's pretty nice stuff though.

  • @railgap
    @railgap Před 4 lety

    Serious thanks to Gerstner for inviting Adam to the shop and letting us fans of hand-craftsmanship see how these famous chests are made!

  • @abelincoln95
    @abelincoln95 Před 5 lety

    God bless these smaller companies that stay in the U.S.. Very cool to see the diversification in providing pieces & re branding for other companies.

  • @emilr5815
    @emilr5815 Před 5 lety +1

    thanx for the video. in the early eighties i needed a box to house the tools i had gathered from when i started in the tool making trade. some of the older guys i worked with had Gerstners and they looked great and i wanted one but couldn't justify the cost. i ended up with a kennedy that served me well for the better part of 20 years but i always remembered all the gerstners that were around and this video took me back to that again. thanx again for the video, well done.

  • @swordsilkscreen9333
    @swordsilkscreen9333 Před 5 lety

    Those are some beautiful boxes.

  • @davidrichards5594
    @davidrichards5594 Před 5 lety +1

    Great presentation Adam, Made in America....I'll bet it really smelled great in there with the wood and finishes....Dave

  • @komradebob
    @komradebob Před 5 lety +4

    Maybe come up to New England and get a tour of Starrett. If you do, let me know and we'll get you a tour of the last foundry left in New York too!

    • @xenonram
      @xenonram Před 5 lety

      John Saunders from NYC CNC has already done a Starrett Factory tour at their Athol, Massachusetts.

  • @DavidMilum
    @DavidMilum Před 5 lety +2

    Got to be one of the very best tour vids I've ever seen.

    • @Abom79
      @Abom79  Před 5 lety

      DavidMilum thank you! 👍🏻

  • @348loadedlever3
    @348loadedlever3 Před 5 lety +1

    Darnit. Now I gotta go buy one

  • @revtmyers1
    @revtmyers1 Před 5 lety +4

    Always loved their work. Live by them but never got to see it like this.

  • @justaguy427
    @justaguy427 Před 5 lety

    Good American made quality. Love to see places like this keeping American families employed. Thanks for putting this video up Adam.

  • @fbtool
    @fbtool Před 5 lety

    I was a Cincinnati Ohio Toolmaker and bought my 1st Gerstner chest from their factory in 1977. I can't describe my pride opening that "Journeyman's Chest" every morning for 37 years at the start of my day. (I still in use it in my home woodshop) As a proud member of The Gerstner's Owners Club for over a decade now, I visit and tour the shop every year. I still saw somethings and learned some things I didn't know before I watched this video. There are many of us that own more of these fine chests than we need, but you just can't help but collect them, treasure them and someday pass them on to your loved ones. The men and women working at Gerstner & Sons continue to show off their pride and expertise in every product they make in this historical Dayton Ohio factory so rich in early industrial American history. You've heard the phrase "They don't make em like they used to"? Well after 113 years Gerstner is the exception to that rule in every way. I enjoyed this video very much and shared with friends.......Thank you!

  • @stime6472
    @stime6472 Před 5 lety +1

    Thank you to the Gerstner team!

  • @ArcAiN6
    @ArcAiN6 Před 5 lety +5

    You just can't beat an american made, hand crafted product.

  • @robthewaywardwoodworker9956

    Does my heart good to see there is still a demand for such highly crafted work. So much junk passed off as quality, but this stuff is amazing.

  • @markl3328
    @markl3328 Před 5 lety

    Thank You very nice hope to see more tours.

  • @michaelryan6884
    @michaelryan6884 Před 5 lety +1

    Glad you went so I could see it too! Thanks!

  • @schummiehugo
    @schummiehugo Před 5 lety

    thanks adam... great movie.!

  • @MinhasA
    @MinhasA Před 5 lety +4

    Beautiful video! Ohio proud 🌰

  • @absolutelynonameslef
    @absolutelynonameslef Před 4 lety

    Another historic company here in Dayton. We make some cool stuff here.