1910s Electric Breast Drill [Restoration]

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  • čas přidán 3. 06. 2024
  • This restoration is on a 1910s Model "B" electric breast drill made by the Temco Electric Motor Company. The tool was sent to me by a viewer who wanted me to bring it back to original condition.
    I was immediately intrigued as this is the oldest electric drill I have ever had my hands on.
    This drill was designed and produced before the trigger switch drill was brought to market so the switch design was incredibly interesting and complicated. The drill also had a ball bearing around the drill chuck shaft, which would have been quite expensive at the time. Temco also offered a grinding wheel attachment for sharpening drill bits as well as a valve grinding attachment. The drill is so old that it was made before electrical wall outlets were common and standardized, therefore the tool would have originally been plugged into a light socket.
    Restoring this drill was quite a lot of work as all the bushing needed to be remade, aluminum castings repaired, gears brazed, and cast iron parts japanned.
    This was a really fun project and I'll be sad to send it out of the shop, but happy when it gets back in the hands of the viewer who sent it.
    Wrenches, screwdrivers, and socket drivers are now for sale at www.handtoolrescue.com
    Help secure more tools for future videos (if you want):
    / handtoolrescue
    Instagram:
    / handtoolrescue
    Facebook Group - Share your restorations
    / handtoolrescue
    / handtoolrescue
    Reddit - Share your restorations
    / handtoolrescue
    Podcast (with Jimmy DiResta and Andrew Alexander) - anchor.fm/fitzall
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Komentáře • 1,3K

  • @pesterenan
    @pesterenan Před 2 lety +15

    Wow! An Electric Drill for drilling only Breasts!
    Plastic Surgery in the 1910s was *_really wild!_*

    • @Patrick.Weightman
      @Patrick.Weightman Před 2 lety +4

      It's constantly hot with electricity to stun the patient so they don't feel a thing. Very convenient!

    • @Check909
      @Check909 Před 2 měsíci

      Круто

    • @Check909
      @Check909 Před 2 měsíci

      👏👏👏

  • @embers_falling
    @embers_falling Před rokem +49

    Your channel is by far my favorite when it comes to restorations on CZcams because you get the closest to your projects being actual restorations as opposed to refurbishments or something similar. You don’t destroy the history by obliterating casting marks, mirror polishing everything, and powder coating things that weren’t powder coated or even painted. You keep your restorations true to the history of the item and I respect that

    • @crocodile2006
      @crocodile2006 Před rokem +3

      Yeah I hate when they put putty on the metal castings to make them perfectly smooth.... they don't do that now for tools and they didn't do it back then either.

    • @jasenwilkins3598
      @jasenwilkins3598 Před 9 měsíci +1

      @@crocodile2006😅

  • @awdgt2stinger270
    @awdgt2stinger270 Před měsícem +1

    You continue to provide me with countless hours of entertainment! Love your dry sense of humor and of course your mad fabrication skills. Keep it up!

  • @gannonhill8648
    @gannonhill8648 Před rokem +4

    I have only just noticed you caption the videos. A great touch and would take time. Definitely remembering this. 👍

  • @petebeatminister
    @petebeatminister Před 2 lety +430

    I bet this was insanely expensive when it came out new. I remember when my dad got a second hand AEG drill in the 60s, that was still expensive then. And it was still completely made of cast aluminum. If it had a electrical fault, you would notice it at once... :)

    • @HandToolRescue
      @HandToolRescue  Před 2 lety +244

      $58 in 1920, so around $850 today.

    • @petebeatminister
      @petebeatminister Před 2 lety +65

      @@HandToolRescue Certainly not in reach of a hobby DIYer. Peculiar somehow... today you can still buy a electric drill for $58. But a coffee costs $3 instead of 5 cent back then.

    • @skunked42
      @skunked42 Před 2 lety +37

      850 is still kinda what you would pay for something really heavy duty today. I cant imagine this was bought to drill just a couple of small holes. Closest thing I would compare it to would be a mag drill.

    • @TKing2724
      @TKing2724 Před 2 lety +26

      My grandpa had an old drill that he only used when it was dry because if you were grounded through the wet ground, you got a nice zap. He still kept the drill, though, heh.

    • @petebeatminister
      @petebeatminister Před 2 lety +12

      @@skunked42 Well, one thing is for sure: you got a lot of drill for your money back then - it must weigh 20 lbs or so. :)

  • @mafiacat88
    @mafiacat88 Před 2 lety +4

    God, every time I watch these it makes me want to buy a lathe.
    It just seems...so handy. No more cutting shitty gears by hand. No more trying to just get things "round enough".
    Being able to actually resize pins and shafts.
    The dream.

    • @rubendejong4412
      @rubendejong4412 Před 2 lety

      It's a lot of money work and practice to get good at it but yeah it rly does comin handy somthimes

  • @InstrucTube
    @InstrucTube Před 2 lety +1

    And now, with its 60th consecutive week at #1 on the Top 40 charts (a record that is sure to never be beaten ladies and gents) here's HTR with "I'm Gon' Laser You".

  • @zafaradeel2107
    @zafaradeel2107 Před rokem +2

    👌👌👌lovely old all metal power tools ! ! !free from cheap plastic and fancy colors.big and beautiful too.

  • @thouartit
    @thouartit Před 2 lety +78

    These vids are simply perfect. You do it all right. Rarely seen on camera, excellent close in photography, great workmanship on interesting items and really funny at times. This is very rare. Some hosts want to invite you in as their beer buddy & some lecture before doing anything with the camera 6 inches away from their gobs. There's gotta be some award somewhere that
    we can nominate you. The golden screwdriver award !!

    • @psirotta
      @psirotta Před 2 lety +1

      Perfect? Really? Can't watch what he's doing, too busy reading all the subtitles.

    • @tokiWren
      @tokiWren Před rokem

      @@psirotta Well turn them off silly! There's a button for that, and you don't need them to follow along the dialogue ;P

  • @user-js4vh2lw6n
    @user-js4vh2lw6n Před 2 lety +28

    That has got to be one of the most overly designed most complicated and interesting drills ever invented! Awesome restoration!

    • @Vikingwerk
      @Vikingwerk Před 2 lety +7

      Have you seen the apple peeler/corer he restored? That thing is a marvel of over engineering.

    • @pfadiva
      @pfadiva Před 2 lety +1

      @@Vikingwerk yeah, but it works dang good and is fast!

    • @ExtremeSquared
      @ExtremeSquared Před 2 lety

      As much as I want to judge my plastic brushless makita drill in the presence of beautiful old user-serviceable tanks, this one is a bit much. This is the first time I have felt I had a better chance of understanding a brushless ESC than the switching mechanism of an old brushed drill.

  • @cobro2
    @cobro2 Před rokem +2

    this will get me trough this covid illness. Thank you

  • @T.v.d.V
    @T.v.d.V Před 2 lety

    It gets me every time... the grazyness of the "take spectacles off and show the sunshine honey" photo moment......
    🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣

  • @Sqeezerful
    @Sqeezerful Před 2 lety +125

    45:30 You might want to consider a step drill for thin material. They outperform twist drills in regard to distortion, warping and "biting" into the material.

    • @samtyson905
      @samtyson905 Před 2 lety +16

      I'm happy that someone else had this suggestion also. Step bits for thin sheet metal will change your life! Plus the next step in the bit acts as a deburing tool.

    • @TheFurriestOne
      @TheFurriestOne Před 2 lety +20

      A wooden buck to back the thin material is also an option.

    • @Bargle5
      @Bargle5 Před 2 lety +2

      @@TheFurriestOne That was my first thought.

    • @pghgeo816
      @pghgeo816 Před 2 lety

      You beat me to it.

    • @turbodog99
      @turbodog99 Před 2 lety +4

      Or put a piece of cloth under the drill bit. Try it. Sounds crazy. Works perfectly. Thank me later.

  • @waldi2302
    @waldi2302 Před 2 lety +27

    The first electric hand drill was build in 1895 and patened in 1900 by Fein in Germany.
    There is no asbestos in the wiering, they are isolated most likely with Guttapercha (a natural rubber) and cotton strings with tar or wax.
    I love these old machines and love to restore them.
    My oldest one so far was a priting press, from the late 1800 converted after WW1 to an electric motor.

    • @JamesThomas-gg6il
      @JamesThomas-gg6il Před 2 lety +1

      What kind of press? Gordon, Kelsey, Chandler and price? Treadle powered? I'm an old school pressman and I love the old hand presses.

    • @waldi2302
      @waldi2302 Před 2 lety +7

      @@JamesThomas-gg6il, it is an Eyring from Germany, the company is called Wilke since 1911, if I am informed right.
      It hat a big hand cradle on the side.
      The " motor conversion" was a similar mechanic they used in the 1950s to power Church bells but much smaller.
      A friend of mine found it in a barn, he wanted to buy an old Lanz Buldog and ended up with alot of other stuff, the Buldog was sold only minutes before he arrived.

    • @Pimentel-Kreations
      @Pimentel-Kreations Před 2 lety

      What i was about to type. Shellac was also used. Some swore it was asbestos in another comment lol i couldn't stop laughing at their ignorance.

    • @waldi2302
      @waldi2302 Před 2 lety

      @@Pimentel-Kreations you are right, Schellack was used verry often too.
      I can only laugh at these people, who think : Oh it is old, there must be asbestos in and it is radioaktive too.
      In an old Telephone Forum we have these questions weekly in summer when the yardsales and fleamarkets are every single day.
      In my freetime I do nothing else than restoring such old devices. If that really is the case, I must be found dead like a mouse and glowing in the dark many years ago.

    • @mruberkinger8701
      @mruberkinger8701 Před 2 lety +4

      He is not concerned about the wiring but about the mountingplate, wich looks to be made out some sort of a fibre-resin based material. I understand his concern.

  • @TheSoapyJew
    @TheSoapyJew Před rokem +1

    I love that you chucked a chuck in a chuck.

  • @Dj.maddox89
    @Dj.maddox89 Před 2 lety +1

    Just got my friend one of your screwdriver kits as a wedding gift! Its so sick!

  • @3rdworldgarage450
    @3rdworldgarage450 Před 2 lety +33

    They don't make em like they used to! Thank God!
    (There's something to be said for modern plastic housings that wont kill you with bad wiring.)

    • @Pimentel-Kreations
      @Pimentel-Kreations Před 2 lety +1

      That wasn't done for your safety,but rather profit margin. They could have encapsulated the housing in hard rubber

    • @timesthree5757
      @timesthree5757 Před 2 lety

      Half this modern stuff is junk though.

    • @3rdworldgarage450
      @3rdworldgarage450 Před 2 lety +1

      @@timesthree5757 So was much of the old stuff. Its just that the old stuff is more repairable, so we tend to see it through that lens. Honestly, a cheap 18v Ryobi drill from Home Depot probably has similar power to this all metal machine, especially if it's the brushless version. As far as coating a metal drill in rubber goes, that would be dangerous since the coating would degrade and peel off over time, exposing a metal housing that could be live.
      I fix medical equipment for a living (I'm a Biomed) and my job literally came into being because of how unsafe electrical medical devices were designed back in the day. Plastics are inherently safer than metal when it comes to housings. They may not last 100 years, but then nothing has to. It is obsolete long before that is a real issue.

    • @timesthree5757
      @timesthree5757 Před 2 lety

      @@3rdworldgarage450 I own an 89f250 7.3L IDI Diesel. Live in a house built in 1898. Own a 79 bass boat with a 76 115hp Johnson. I never own anything new cause as a Mechanic I know that new stuff is junk. Yer paying 40,000$ for a throw away vehicle. Don't give me this, "modern cars are safer crap. Above 45mph yer dying". I've had to wrecker many new cars to know the safety argument is bull.

    • @3rdworldgarage450
      @3rdworldgarage450 Před 2 lety +1

      @@timesthree5757 Where did I say anything about cars? I was referring to electrical devices. I myself prefer to work on older vehicles and count among my fleet a 425,000 mile 1998 Nissan Frontier that I do all the work on myself. I dont daily it anymore as the nature of where I live and what I do demands a newer vehicle, but I definitely prefer old to new when it comes to cars. Power drills? Ill take my 18v Makita over anything from 50 years ago.

  • @MaesHawkEye
    @MaesHawkEye Před 2 lety +5

    This intro... Will I ever get tired of it ? I don't think so. This is pure gold

  • @Kolokotrones
    @Kolokotrones Před 2 lety

    I love the surprised face in the aluminum casting where the selector switch is

  • @lyrebirdcyclesmarkkelly9874

    The red insulating material is likely to be vulcanised fibre. It was formed as a sheet and then cut or pressed to shape.
    It is an excellent insulator with very good arc and creep properties. It was "superseded" by industrial plastics for most uses for many years but there is a now a resurgence in interest as the material is made of cellulose fibre and zinc chloride and is thus entirely renewable, unlike most plastics.

    • @garyjonah22
      @garyjonah22 Před 2 lety +5

      Ah, yes. Thank Heaven for those cellulose fibre mines and those fabulous zinc chloride wells! And the laughing besmocked peasant girls who collect these ingredients which virtually throw themselves out of the ground into their baskets! And the cheery sounds of their gay traditional songs ringing through the woods as they help to keep making the motors that blow cold air up the arse of yet more entitled Chelsea Tractor drivers.

    • @lyrebirdcyclesmarkkelly9874
      @lyrebirdcyclesmarkkelly9874 Před 2 lety +15

      @@garyjonah22 The cellulose fibre mine would normally be called a tree.
      Although the world is actually running out of zinc, the world production of vulcanised fibre represents less than 10,000 t of zinc from a global production of more than 12 million t. The vulcanised fibre zinc requirement could be produced from seawater so in a way you are right, in that the ocean could be considered a well of sorts.

    • @garyjonah22
      @garyjonah22 Před 2 lety +2

      @@lyrebirdcyclesmarkkelly9874 Oh, how silly of me. I'd forgotten about those Cellulose Fibre Tree plantations where each tree produces thousands of bales of pure, consistent, dry fibres ready for immediate use . Not so sure about the sea washing up sacks of purified zinc chloride conveniently close to the Vulcanized Rubber factory though. But you never know. I mean, anything's possible these days, what with the electricity wells and hydrogen mines that are being planned as we speak. By the way, do you ever hear unexplained loud whooshing noises?

    • @lyrebirdcyclesmarkkelly9874
      @lyrebirdcyclesmarkkelly9874 Před 2 lety +3

      E@@garyjonah22

    • @IronBoy-hf2lp
      @IronBoy-hf2lp Před rokem

      @@garyjonah22 you sound entirely unhinged and like you've never actually researched how these things are made. would you care to cut the sarcasm and say what you really mean

  • @scottgm321
    @scottgm321 Před 2 lety +6

    How many OCD people had a fit with the name plate screws. I laughed so hard. My ex wife would hunt you down if she saw that. Lol. Awesome drill and awesome video. Thanks.

    • @K3PO
      @K3PO Před rokem

      I had a fit about the wires all but one having ring terminals on the ends! haha But awesome videos as always !

  • @joncutt872
    @joncutt872 Před 2 lety +19

    The whole video, I was thinking about how many young guys picked up the drill and pretended that it was a Tommy gun.

  • @jansenart0
    @jansenart0 Před 2 lety +1

    Thank you for restoring something that hasn't been obviously tossed into a vibe table with a bin of seawater.

  •  Před 2 lety

    People don't appreciate how far we've come regarding power tools. That thing you're using is heavy, loud and unstable, but be that as it may, it's still way better than a manual drill. And even now so much improvement is made daily.
    A couple of months back, my company replaced Wurth cordless hand drills with Makitas. The difference was obvious when the first shift using them was over. Lighter, more powerful, better battery mileage

  • @gagatube
    @gagatube Před rokem +13

    A very fine job of restoration! 💯 As a veteran of the British '3-pin plug' fitting era I can attest to the frustration (and safety hazard) of trying to get multi-strand electrical wire caught underneath the head of a round-headed screw (bolt), particularly as time went on and manufacturers liked to cut costs by making the screw-head progressively smaller. The answer was those formed brass (?) ring washers with the multiple flanges including a tail with strain relief for the wire - strip and twist the wire, bend it around an electricians screwdriver and lay it on the washer. Then crimp up all the flanges with fine-nose pliers - almost as good as soldering and practically zero chance of a strand escaping to cause shorts. If I recall correctly they were ludicrously cheap (by today's standards) and should be used everywhere in a piece of equipment like the one shown.

  • @silkysmooth4136
    @silkysmooth4136 Před 2 lety +5

    I’m always amazed at the prowess with which you put these things back together. I mean breaking them down is one thing, but putting them back together is a whole other ball of wax.

  • @WildmanTech
    @WildmanTech Před 2 lety +2

    Man that switch rebuild was something else!

  • @elev8j10
    @elev8j10 Před 2 lety

    I look for old tools like this all the time and never find anything like this. I'd like to use a crazy drill like this for everything to confuse my neighbors.

  • @daemonwhitebeard6590
    @daemonwhitebeard6590 Před rokem +7

    A craftsman who takes pride in his work. No half-axxing or corners cut here. I enjoy watching your videos. It began when I watched a video of an antique Ball Motor restoration you did. Thank you, Hand Tool Rescue.

  • @NikeaTiber
    @NikeaTiber Před 2 lety +10

    As someone that has had to overhaul old tools because of personal poverty and need, the fact that you elevate necessity to art is a very beautiful thing to me.
    Thank you.

  • @beernutsonline
    @beernutsonline Před 6 měsíci

    I could almost smell the metal and light machine oil scent! Thanks for sharing, you make CZcams better!

  • @AndreCFW
    @AndreCFW Před rokem +1

    My OCD is in hyper drive due to those 3 wires that doesn't have lugs on! 🤣 Brilliant work none the less!!

  • @danielrobinson7872
    @danielrobinson7872 Před 2 lety +5

    My “favorite” part of taking things apart are the mysterious screws that twist yet never come out. Fun but sometimes frustrating.

  • @garethjudd5840
    @garethjudd5840 Před 2 lety +3

    I've just finished restoration of a 1962 Swiss made Hilti TE72,110v, Hammer/Dill. The best Breaker ever made.

  • @frankierzucekjr
    @frankierzucekjr Před 2 lety

    The part where "the sand blaster was making noises" and you kept looking back, reminded me of Cast Away. Lol

  • @marcuscicero9587
    @marcuscicero9587 Před rokem +1

    probably one of the most affable, and knowledgeable people on CZcams

  • @gasboy55
    @gasboy55 Před 2 lety +10

    Great work. Thanks for making great videos and narrating them for Patreons :D

  • @jimthesoundman8641
    @jimthesoundman8641 Před 2 lety +106

    7:14 Probably not asbestos. The standard wire construction back then was copper strands covered with natural rubber, then that was covered with a woven cloth jacket, then that usually had some sort of asphaltum type tar rubbed over it. So nothing really dangerous like asbestos. Asbestos was primarily used where you had super hot things like steam pipes you needed to insulate. Although wires in electrical appliances like drills get hot, if their fan is working, then the motor isn't getting so insanely hot that you'd need asbestos.

    • @TKing2724
      @TKing2724 Před 2 lety +20

      I thought he was referring to the terminal block, not just the wires. Asbestos was clearly not only used in high-heat situations because they made asbestos home insulation, flooring, and wallpaper for a long, long time.

    • @These_Old_Engines
      @These_Old_Engines Před 2 lety

      They did those things out of asbestos for defense against high heat.... building fires. All three things were historically not fire resistant and led to many tragedies so they used the "miracle" fiber to slow the spread of fire.

    • @jimthesoundman8641
      @jimthesoundman8641 Před 2 lety

      @@TKing2724 Asbestos in it's original form looks like this: www.h2odistributors.com/global/productpics/misc/asbestos-photo-1_l.jpg
      It's like a rock composed of a million parallel rock threads So it crumbles easily and is not strong at all. No way you could make a terminal block out of it. That terminal block was probably bakelite or some sort of resin impregnated stuff like circuit board are made of, just much thicker.

    • @TKing2724
      @TKing2724 Před 2 lety +6

      @@jimthesoundman8641 I know what asbestos looks like. I'm sure you'll agree that it doesn't look like wallpaper or home insulation either, so that point's not really relevant. Ironically, pressed asbestos boards in electronics were very common, that's why I mentioned it, hah.
      Edit: Your post was removed because of the link, but I can still read it. I'm not trying to be a dick, you're just incorrect in saying the block can't be asbestos because asbestos is a rock.

    • @TKing2724
      @TKing2724 Před 2 lety +6

      @@These_Old_Engines Read this sentence again. "Asbestos was primarily used where you had super hot things like steam pipes you needed to insulate." That is not correct, it was also used as fire resistance in the home products I mentioned (and others).

  • @helipilotuh1
    @helipilotuh1 Před rokem

    In the old days our tools shocked us, and gosh darnit we liked it!

  • @thisidwasavailable3382

    "Violently complicated" had me rolling.

  • @TheDagraner4576
    @TheDagraner4576 Před 2 lety +3

    This thing looks like a waffle iron and sounds like an angry hair drier. Glad to see it got some love 👍

  • @vonchef14
    @vonchef14 Před 2 lety +26

    Awesome job on this unique drill. Oh by the way keep up with that humour in your blogs it’s what sets you apart from the rest once again great Blog keep it up the great work until next time.

  • @cympimpin20
    @cympimpin20 Před 2 lety

    I've never seen your channel before, but I'm sold on the late 80s/early 90's TV show intro. Subscribed.

  • @daneboyd952
    @daneboyd952 Před 2 lety +1

    I was just as suprises as you when the chuck fell off haha. Your reaction had me dying 🤣

  • @ncisawesome
    @ncisawesome Před 2 lety +22

    Best restoration channel there is, no bullshit, no shitty epoxy, hell yeah!

  • @TrevorAndersen
    @TrevorAndersen Před 2 lety +195

    Yes! I was getting tired of watching people restore lighters, axes and bread slicers!

    • @orionwarren4244
      @orionwarren4244 Před 2 lety +57

      That and Malaysian dudes picking up old electronics, motorcycles, etc. from muddy riverbanks and 'restoring' them back to working order!🤣🤣

    • @horstyoutube6413
      @horstyoutube6413 Před 2 lety +50

      „ Hi, this is *generic restauration channel 69* and today we are restoring a spoon - with pink glitter epoxy!“
      Thank god for the few people like Eric that do proper restaurations of old tools that don‘t take 30+ videos to complete.

    • @HandToolRescue
      @HandToolRescue  Před 2 lety +63

      That's the worst of all of them, hands down.

    • @HandToolRescue
      @HandToolRescue  Před 2 lety +92

      Would you like a knife restoration? Has that EVER BEEN DONE BEFORE? Seems complicated...

    • @grekhora
      @grekhora Před 2 lety +18

      Agreed, there is only four proper tube restorers, this man, geoffrey croker, the post apocalyptic inventor and fingerprint workshop.

  • @whitewolfpack0
    @whitewolfpack0 Před rokem +1

    Deciphering the auto-captions is half the fun on some of these. "Champion" instead of "chamfer" was a fun one.

  • @medusaritchie
    @medusaritchie Před 2 lety

    I like that i get manly adverts for chainsaws on this channel. In addition to the restorations obviously!

  • @laurigardner6227
    @laurigardner6227 Před 2 lety +4

    Something that was common until the 1950s with electrics was the chassis would be grounded, which meant that you had a 50/50 chance with the plug in placing it wrong way in electrifying the chassis, like in this case. The older plug types could be placed either way, unlike modern plugs.

    • @mfbfreak
      @mfbfreak Před 2 lety +2

      No. People weren't that stupid in those days. Hot chassis electronics always had proper isolation so even if the chassis is live, you can not touch anything.
      Hot chassis devices are still plentiful. Most LED lighting drivers and solar inverters are of that type.
      The chassis (meaning the electronics) cannot be grounded ever, because that would cause a short circuit between phase and neutral (which is connected to ground somewhere).
      It's important to know the distinction between phase, neutral and ground.
      Any ground connections to such hot chassis devices, is purely a signal ground (such as for the radio reception ground).
      The case could be grounded if it's metal, of course.
      All antique devices i've had in my hands were designed to be safe to touch regardless of plug orientation. It was however a problem that occasionally due to vibration, isolation would wear through and electrify the metal parts. Working with that kind of power tool in the rain also caused many shocks.
      Van Der Heem (a dutch brand of power tools) knew this, and commercialized on making safer power tools in 2 different ways: double isolated tools that featured 2 layers of isolation (the conventional winding isolation, as well as a barrier of plastic or bakelite between any metal part you can touch, and anything carrying mains. This was common for the smaller tools.
      The 2nd one was to supply the tools with a 3 wire power cord, so it could be safely grounded. This was common for the super heavy tools.
      Because the metal case would be grounded, any leakage or short from the phase to the case, would be short circuited, which blows the fuse in case of a 'hard' leakage, or just keeps the case at ground potential when it's only a small leakage.

    • @westonmarkham1294
      @westonmarkham1294 Před rokem

      Since the drill was originally designed to be plugged into a light socket, it may have been grounded at that time, but someone made a mistake later, when modifying it to use a modern plug. As a random CZcams commenter, I should say that I have no particular expertise here, but it seems like an obvious explanation to me.

  • @tomswindler64
    @tomswindler64 Před 2 lety +37

    Interesting restoration,surprised how intricate the drill is for its age.great video always enjoy with your antics.keep on doing what your thinking and doing 👍👍👍😎😎😎

  • @Squatch-sj3vg
    @Squatch-sj3vg Před 2 lety

    28:55 that is the cutest goddamn switch ever, happy little guy was so excited when he got his glasses back to!

  • @kakarrot62
    @kakarrot62 Před rokem +1

    i was wincing when you were forcing the new bushings in to the cases with the vice cause they looked a little tight. i was waiting for them to crack cause they look like old pot metal but you pulled it off! great job!

  • @benzonet
    @benzonet Před 2 lety +5

    That was an amazing restoration. Worth every moment of watching. Thank you for this great content. I truly enjoy this, and many of your other video's.

  • @amaurieduardolinke1601
    @amaurieduardolinke1601 Před 2 lety +3

    very good your work, better is the opening you made in the styles of the 80's series

  • @floorpizza8074
    @floorpizza8074 Před 2 lety

    If you guys aren't watching HTR with the captions on, you're missing all of the narration. :) Yet another fine video... as always.

  • @thedudefella75
    @thedudefella75 Před 2 lety

    You should start an antique tool museum. I'd pay to come and see

  • @ismael4278
    @ismael4278 Před 2 lety +20

    Me encantan tu videos y tu sentido del humor. Eres grande!

  • @VeradonaRestoration
    @VeradonaRestoration Před 2 lety +5

    Amazing thing, I see for the first time. Professional renovation, thanks.

  • @JamesDutka
    @JamesDutka Před 2 lety

    I'm so glad to have seen someone else react the same way, when you see the chuck is friction fit...

  • @manuelweiss3904
    @manuelweiss3904 Před 2 lety

    You've even kept the O-crimp away! Pure nostagic feeling the the wire get's lose from the screw. Ahhh

  • @user-km5vf3go8g
    @user-km5vf3go8g Před 2 lety +6

    Чень ждал видео, автор просто молодец. Всего самого хорошего

  • @Richard22444
    @Richard22444 Před 2 lety +5

    Magnifique travail de restauration ! On apprend beaucoup sur la façon de concevoir des mécanismes de la part de nos anciens ! Très belle vidéo , très bonnes images et explications !!!!!

  • @haraldpettersen3649
    @haraldpettersen3649 Před 2 lety

    Another excellently executed restoration by the smiling restaurateur.

  • @seeburgm100a
    @seeburgm100a Před rokem

    That should read 1910's Electric Beast Drill. That think looks like a beast!

  • @ronwalsh
    @ronwalsh Před 2 lety +4

    Has to be the coolest looking drill I have ever seen. I can already imagine someone making a steam punk ray gun out of one of those.

  • @email4dj
    @email4dj Před 2 lety +3

    Please, if you're going to put stranded wire under a screw, twist it tightly and use a washer. Better yet, tin it with solder and flatten it while it's soft.

  • @Stroke2Handed
    @Stroke2Handed Před 2 lety

    When the chuck fell off, then the slow back away....... Hilarious!

  • @romeo00132008
    @romeo00132008 Před 2 lety +1

    Is it only me or there is anticipation before sand blasting begins . "What will he do this time? " Thought

  • @Putersdcat
    @Putersdcat Před 2 lety +4

    When drilling the thin steel can on the drill press, you can use some cloth scrap on the drill bit to knock down the burrs as it cuts through and prevent the metal walking up the bit. It will make a clean hole without deforming the thin sheet metal.

    • @BravoCharleses
      @BravoCharleses Před 2 lety

      Do I detect a fellow Mark Presling viewer in the wild?

  • @sparkyprojects
    @sparkyprojects Před 2 lety +18

    Not really a complicated switch, it's basically a 2 pole 2 way switch that reverses the brush connections with respect to the field winding
    I'm not keen on that wrapped around wire without a cup washer, i would have hoped you put a ring on it, and hope that you connected a ground wire

    • @V0S1N0
      @V0S1N0 Před 2 lety +1

      I was sure it was a joke, especially when he moved the wire, and still didn't put a terminal on the end.

  • @teknikgroup7597
    @teknikgroup7597 Před 2 lety

    Imagine...if...we could go back in time and show the guys who used these tools, a Makita, or Milwaukee or even a Ryobi cordless driver of today.....RIP our Fellow tradesmen. Without you guys we wouldn't be where we are today.

  • @rayshutsa6690
    @rayshutsa6690 Před 2 lety +2

    I like the restoration. I have never seen a drill of that vintage. It is awesome to see old tools of that age come back to life.

  • @ControlledWrinkles
    @ControlledWrinkles Před 2 lety +5

    I'm loving your vernacular as well as the minor changes the captioning does to it, I also truly enjoyed the quarter turn you gave to the screw on the label to attempt to set off my OCD, at least it was perpendicular to the other and not 30º… whew, crisis averted.

  • @dermozart80
    @dermozart80 Před 2 lety +3

    Greetings to all native speakers that have not turned on the subtitles! You’re missing something out

  • @HeyImGaminOverHere
    @HeyImGaminOverHere Před rokem +1

    I just wanted to know that I appreciate the effort you put into closed captioning your videos!

  • @steadfasttherenowned2460

    It's nice to see that I'm not the only one who uses a vice to press fit things.

  • @patertuus8
    @patertuus8 Před 2 lety +5

    Fantastic restoration, as always. The gear appeared to be previously repaired by brazing; was that truly the case? If so, why does it always get damaged at that particular location on the gear? Is it out of round or warped or something? Did you use Alumiweld to fix the cracked aluminum housing? I know, I know, it's on the inside, but did you consider using braided insulation wires to replace the older wiring you replaced? I sometimes do luthier repairs and modifications on electric guitars and everybody expects me to use braided insulation wires on their electronicals. You know, for that vintage feel.

  • @davidm2645
    @davidm2645 Před 2 lety +26

    A beautiful restoration as usual, sir! I only have one observation that I would change about what you did. I would install the ring eyes on both ends of the wires, not just one end. It looked kinda sketchy on the bare wire under those screws. It looks like that end could easily come out from under the screws causing a safety issue. Would it be a sin to add a ground to the motor and plug?

    • @davidhamm5626
      @davidhamm5626 Před 2 lety +3

      I think a ground will protect you from a short, but I think that the case is "hot". The old plugs had equal sized plug ends.If you got a tingle, you flipped the cord.

    • @timesthree5757
      @timesthree5757 Před 2 lety +1

      @@droopy_eyes we don't use that fake currency here. You would be suprised at how useful that old stuff is.

    • @davidhamm5626
      @davidhamm5626 Před 2 lety

      @@droopy_eyes Yes.

    • @rubiconnn
      @rubiconnn Před rokem +1

      @@timesthree5757 That "fake" currency is worth more than USD.

    • @timesthree5757
      @timesthree5757 Před rokem

      @@rubiconnn no now it isn't. Also don't care.

  • @tonydowe8037
    @tonydowe8037 Před rokem

    I'm glad you didn't go all Hollywood with the fancy lighting and editing like I see so much now. Great job as always.

  • @dhollm
    @dhollm Před 2 lety

    Even though I get the narrated ones I always stop by to upvote these!

  • @MetalRestorationBho
    @MetalRestorationBho Před 2 lety +10

    I love your content. It's always relaxing and inspiring. 🥰🥰🥰

  • @jontrammell7377
    @jontrammell7377 Před 2 lety +6

    Personally, I have found a step drill to be indispensable when I need a hole in thin material, as they are far less likely to grab and pull.

    • @somejoe7777
      @somejoe7777 Před 2 lety

      Step drills work great. You can also put a block of wood on the back side to support the thin steel and let the drill bit go through both the sheet steel and the wood, this will also prevent it from bending.

  • @valdis7663
    @valdis7663 Před 6 měsíci

    Супер. Дедушкина дрель стала как новая, теперь ещё столько же будет жить, внукам на память.

  • @allancollins1937
    @allancollins1937 Před 2 lety

    All your previous trial and error work with japanning has paid off, in spades!

  • @gurbulflap
    @gurbulflap Před 2 lety +7

    I noted that your hair wasn't standing straight out when you tested it at the end. Was the case still live? Just curious. Also curious what vintage that evap-o-rust liqueur is, lol.

    • @bjohnson1489
      @bjohnson1489 Před 2 lety

      Wired up backwards and energized the case

  • @MattsAwesomeStuff
    @MattsAwesomeStuff Před 2 lety +4

    Eric - Take apart a Dewalt Flexvolt battery sometime, to see an even more complicated mechanical switch. IIRC it's 6 bars and sliders, 12 posts, that shift from one position to the other every time the 60v plunger is depressed as you connect it to a 60v tool. It flips the 3x 5cells in series, from 3 parallel sets of 5 in series (20v, in triple), to 3 series sets of 5 in series (60v, in a long chain of 15 in series). And it's the size of a child's palm, on every battery.

  • @tomslick4322
    @tomslick4322 Před rokem

    Did anyone else notice that the black wire in the switch was not very well tightened around the screw. I think he did not notice this. At 32.00 Looks like it could come loose real easy. I love this channel. Smart man.

  • @bulldogger1987
    @bulldogger1987 Před 2 lety +2

    I've got one of the early black and decker trigger drills and the switch mechanism is extremely cool. Basically a square block with a ratchet mechanism so it spins every time the trigger is pulled to make or break connection.

  • @gcarson19
    @gcarson19 Před 2 lety +3

    Baiting the OCD viewers by not soldering a ring terminal on that one connection, well played... okay now put a damn ring terminal on it!
    A totally righteous restoration, by the way.

  • @szafirmeru
    @szafirmeru Před 2 lety +9

    You could have upgraded all wire ends to eyelets and cleaned the shaft and contacts on the rotor.

    • @JCWren
      @JCWren Před 2 lety +1

      I too was surprised that he didn't do that.

    • @HandToolRescue
      @HandToolRescue  Před 2 lety +2

      I actually did clean the commutator bars and the motor shaft, but I cut it for time. You can see that they are more shiny during reassembly.

    • @markfriesen1435
      @markfriesen1435 Před 2 lety +2

      @@HandToolRescue your videos could be twice as long and NOBODY would complain

  • @Frogmood
    @Frogmood Před rokem +1

    Man, top surgery must have been hell in the 1910's.

  • @Prophes0r
    @Prophes0r Před rokem +2

    Keep in mind what the world, and electricity, were actually like when this was made.
    You got power from a LOCAL power-plant. Like, in your county, because there were no power "grids" for another 5-10 years.
    It was less than 10 years after the first vacuum cleaner and washing machine. About 5 years after the first Air conditioner and Refrigerators.
    Electrical wiring were exposed bare wires run along the walls, wrapped around glass knobs (knob-and-tube). And these ran only to light sockets.
    You would either screw this into a bulb socket, or more terrifyingly, clamp the wires straight onto the two exposed wires on the wall.

  • @yeagerxp
    @yeagerxp Před 2 lety +2

    Excellent restoration 👍👍👍Thank you for sharing. Be safe🇨🇦

  • @ryanwagoner6551
    @ryanwagoner6551 Před rokem

    Once again. Amazing work. When you use the braided wire, you can tin them before you wrap around the screw head. It keeps those strays from causing issues.

    • @moonbootlooter
      @moonbootlooter Před rokem

      My strategy with stranded wires on terminals is to twist them counterclockwise before making the hook. Keeps the strays under the terminal and makes the whole thing less likely to fray out as you tighten the terminal

  • @straightouttheshed
    @straightouttheshed Před rokem +1

    when drilling into thin metal like at the end of the video, back up the piece with wood so you drill right into wood.
    this advice comes directly from my 1967 2hp drill press mannual.

  • @tsgsjeremy
    @tsgsjeremy Před 2 lety

    That was some of the best bad machining I've seen in a while. ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐

  • @umcosta
    @umcosta Před 2 lety

    I was going to comment that this is an insane design.
    But then I saw 1910's... Full respect for those engineers.

  • @davidsnyder2000
    @davidsnyder2000 Před 2 lety +1

    Works like a champ…good job👍🙂

  • @frankierzucekjr
    @frankierzucekjr Před 2 lety +1

    No matter how many times I watch this channel, the beginning intro with the glasses off smile gets me everytime. What a great way to start a show. You're a damn trip buddy. Great work too.

  • @jamesreichardt7573
    @jamesreichardt7573 Před rokem

    I bet that back in the day owing one of these was the best feeling in the world ! Hey ! I looks and works Great ! It’s a keeper now ' you must have one big collection of fine old tools , I am impressed complete and total thumbs up !