Excellent job!!
the interior looked like the final battle between the spider and the fly, might have been a truce? Great work, loved it.
Very good! #i have an old rusty bell, i might give it a go!
The spider is YAAAAAAAAAAAA!
Great work. The bell was stubborn. But you have victory in the end. 👍🍻
Yes, I also liked how it came out at the end, thank you for your appreciation.
Wet sanding with glass cleaner? Never seen that before
I moisten the sanding paper and the piece so that it doesn't scratch too much and I use glass product because it has soap in it and makes it slip easily. I tried many methods but this seemed the best.
good job friend, but i prefer to finish it with thw mirror polishing instead
Thanks for the advice, the problem is that I don't know how to polish, I tried other pieces and I didn't succeed, I rather do it like that, I still have to learn. I always look to others to learn.
I saw that you do very beautiful things, I've been following you for a long time and I'm trying to I steal your job.😊
What is the manufacture of this bell?
Great restoration, don't forget the lube though!
@@tybyrestoration2716 Any place with metal to metal contact, so the shaft where the striker and lever sit, on the threads and a little oil on the spring can prevent it breaking .
Now I remembered after you commented, see if we have bicycles with electric bells. When I was little, I used a bell like this and I remember putting lubricant or oil on it.
Unfortunately the spider was beyond restoration!
I couldn't remake the spider because it was finished. The spider needed surgery and I'm not a doctor.
You scratched too much primer when "wet sanding". As it was already said here, threads should be greased.
I think these kind of bells are supposed to go "ding dong", the hammer hits the lower and then the upper part.
The restoration looked beautiful but the sound was a shame.
@@tybyrestoration2716of course, you are right, mentioning different tones, but this "is" a two-tone bell, so there is a little work left to adjust the hammer, so that it touches dome and bottom, each after the other. Apart that, it sounds horrible; a pity after such a lot of good work. The "art" is to adjust the hammer so, that it does not stay in contact with dome nor bottom after producing the sound. Yours stays quite clear to near to the bottom at the end, which on the other hand let him fail to touch the dome in the first part of the two-tone job. You can hear the click, when the first sound should take place. The misplaced dome because of the damaged central screw may be the reason.
We repaired one of these bells two weeks ago, and it sounded as new, even when it looked far uglier than yours.
So, very good job optically. Mechanically, 1 point out of ten.
Please, don't paint your hands, use gloves! 😂
I said I use gloves throughout the video, I started with gloves and finished without and forgot to put on my gloves, I'm not used to wearing gloves.
🥰👌 perfect restoration
Thanks