"Basically, this is a whole bunch of cracks." Understatement of the day. The only thing really holding together was your fix from two years ago. Nicely done.
@ronbuckner8179
Ай бұрын
The question to be asked is “can you fix this so they won’t crack again?” I’d be thinking this machine has a whole of issues with a harmonics history.
@ronbuckner8179
Ай бұрын
This machine is going to haunt you. With that many cracks you know . they’re gonna return. It’s like a boxer getting his bell rung, once it’s happened, it can happen again ,its harmonics
@TennSeven3 ай бұрын
Hilarious that every rando on the internet thinks they know better than the guy in the video actually doing the repair. Glad to see you proved the naysayers wrong once again.
@robertdominiczak6523
3 ай бұрын
I use these videos to make me a better welder but I only work on my own machines so I never comment and never judge. Nearly forgot to mention that I am retired,70 years old and still learning.
@orlandochacon9253
3 ай бұрын
You’re so right, they buy a Harbor Freight welder and now they’re experts.
@Jacob-40
3 ай бұрын
And they not even have experience about that work
@piotrpartacz8622
3 ай бұрын
This work is made good
@dirtfarmer7472
3 ай бұрын
@@robertdominiczak6523 You can keep learning until you die, even then the learning continues.
@jamesdrake23783 ай бұрын
Lol "you're wrong" Thanks for the content and continued success from the NJ Bayshore.
@justjoe73133 ай бұрын
"It's two years later. You're wrong." Golden! :D
@danielpullum19073 ай бұрын
I really enjoyed seeing the success of the "firiey fuel tank weld repair". The crack around the bolt circle was scary and you made it look like play. I'm sure glad to see some of the old iron restored for another few yards of dirt. Well done Good Sir!!!!!
@joehirschegger7723
3 ай бұрын
You can't have a channel called "On Fire Welding" without having some content with actual fire, lol.
@jackdawg45793 ай бұрын
old girl has more cracks than a plumbers convention!
@GuppyMilk3345 күн бұрын
It's crazy how much force is needed to make such a solid chunk of metal start to crack. I've never worked with heavy equipment before, and I'm surprised. You do really great work!
@Jdigger41303 ай бұрын
I have always wanted to see the innards of a scraper and this is too cool! THANKS FOR TAKING TIME TO SHOW US!!!! I can only imagine the shocks and stresses the frame endures. Interesting to me that they form at the narrow points and unions! JUST fascinates me!
@briantetreault18752 ай бұрын
That frame is the definition of “I’m tired boss”
@ronbuckner8179
Ай бұрын
Yessir! I truly hope she stays fixed. But I truly doubt it will.
@russellgilson40723 ай бұрын
Your field experience in all aspects of repairs is extremely impressive. Always a pleasure to look over the shoulder of a professional applying their trade!
@MarvUSA3 ай бұрын
Very Nice. I like how you decided to weld up and re-drill the holes. Doing it the right way. Thanks for sharing. !
@BowHunterMadness3 ай бұрын
I love when the fulltime shop guys like to put in their 2 cents on field repairs. It's a piece of equipment used to quite literally move dirt/earth, doesnt need to fancy or pretty just strong enough to hold up to the abuse. Great work as always! Any chance you got a line boring job coming up I cant wait to see that S power in action and get a true honest review. Seems too good of a price to be super quality, I want to see if it would be a good avenue for my business in to line boring. Thanks Greg
@OFW
3 ай бұрын
I should be doing a video on the s power soon.
@ian-petersimpson15653 ай бұрын
Greg welds the fuel tank, the rest of the scraper fails around it! Awesome. Thanks for your tip on Cubitron discs - they're the Dobermanns Danglies!
@hmrody2 ай бұрын
You do good work in a craftsman manner. I am learning so much. I know it takes time and effort to make these videos and slows you down but they are very much appreciated.
@Bigmike3406E3 ай бұрын
An old mechanic would always tell me when I would come out to the job and weld up all the cracks on the cushion hitches on 657 B models that those cracks come from to much use when it was new . 😎. Nice work my friend. So thankful for the new mag drills . 😊
@bryanwillingham702327 күн бұрын
This guy is on point the reason we watch he makes it looks easy. He is highly skilled and his experience shows
@robertbyrne72413 ай бұрын
The paint you put on 2 years ago is the best paint on the machine.
@stephenmeeks6843 ай бұрын
You’re sick. I hope you get to feeling better soon. Great work too.
@billcarlson17303 ай бұрын
Cripes, you will tackle anything. Great job man. Thanks for sharing.
@spencemiller58363 ай бұрын
I guess your channel was put onto my landing page because I watch a lot of Curtis and his Wife from the channel Cutting Edge Engineering. You two have a lot in common especially the part of doing the job the right way...cheers from Jersey!!!
@westerntruckandtractorrepa13533 ай бұрын
That damn cold won't let go, hope you get to feeling better soon. Thanks for the video.
@crbrepairmotorcycles66083 ай бұрын
Thanks for the welcome back 👍 looks like a row of silver dollars, If you built border wall panels would keep you very busy for long time .
@LoBeau533 ай бұрын
A welder’s dream. Chase rack and fill it. I use to have to fix cracks that ran into the mounting holes on 793 diff housings. I would make up a brass stud to screw into the hole then roll the weld metal into the open thread portion without arching on the studs. Once it cooled we could back the stud out and run a tap through the hole and the threads were good to go. Never had a mounting bolt strip out the threads.
@aaronkcmo3 ай бұрын
0:05 I remember that video. Great reference. Your work looks awesome!
@moosetallone23 ай бұрын
I cant believe the 7018 gods are not on here letting you have it 😂😂😂😂😂😂
@badjeepman3 ай бұрын
Lots of people don’t realize how long this prep would take with a normal size engine drive. I have a 300 amp machine and a 500 amp machine, 500 is the largest machine I have ever gouged with the step from 300-to 500 is amazing, can’t imagine 300 to 800 , !!!
@OFW
3 ай бұрын
It’s a big difference. Almost scary.
@markfryer9880
3 ай бұрын
Another 200 Amps and you could run those ridiculously large broom handle sized electrodes that some welding channels have shown off with! 1000 Amps! Absolutely insane!😮
@MrRebar153 ай бұрын
*On Fire Welding* Bravo well done, thank-you sir for taking the time to bring us along. GOD Bless.
@victorjeffers19933 ай бұрын
As particular as you are about how to prep and get to good metal I had no doubt that those welds you did 2 yrs ago would hold ! You do a great job ! If I were 40 yrs younger I would want someone like you to train me to fabricate an work and weld metal ! Thanks for the update ! Stay Safe !
@alanschwier40453 ай бұрын
Greg… we really enjoy your videos and like your other friends, always looking forward to your next projects. It’s amazing to us how these “ monster” machines can get these types of failures. Again many thanks and do take care…
@BigMels..2 ай бұрын
Now this gentleman is what you call a proper welder well done mate cracking job .
@frfrpr3 ай бұрын
Fiery Fuel Tank got me to subscribe. The filming and the welding keep me tuned in. Thanks
@kennytoler64853 ай бұрын
Awesome work as norm. Glad to see your so busy.
@squarecrab3 ай бұрын
People who don’t repair scrapers for a living can say whatever they want about a repair. Scrapers cracking is just what they do from the amount of forces exerted onto them. Doesn’t matter how good of a job you do, the operators are gonna try their best to break it for you.
@dirtfarmer7472
3 ай бұрын
If CAT built a scraper that an operator couldn’t break they wouldn’t be able to sell the thing.
@markfryer9880
3 ай бұрын
@@dirtfarmer7472Or have it move anywhere near as fast as they currently do, because it would be too damned heavy. 😂
@robertpeters94383 ай бұрын
I don't think you need to worry about AI replacing you anytime soon! Keep up the good work!
@justinblanchard27463 ай бұрын
Fun to watch you do your thing. Great job.
@89firebird3 ай бұрын
Wow that's a lot of weld joints on that scraper yeehaw
@gusm51283 ай бұрын
You did a fantastic repair on that tank Greg .
@PrairieMechanic3 ай бұрын
Excellent work as usual. Appreciate the content. Thank you.
@garyyorke10803 ай бұрын
Well that's definitely a hell of a lot of cracks . I guess it show just how much stress these machines put up with . That was a lot of passes on that cross member. I guess that'll hold Thanks for showing how you do the repairs to your std and as your fiery tank is still good that means you know what ya doing ..lol. many thanks from an armchair viewer
@albertgalan24833 ай бұрын
Love your videos, especially since you’re a local welding guy. Keep producing!
@mikeboring12933 ай бұрын
Nice work, my boss thinks welding shouldn’t take that long and tries to rush me when I do it lol. I do go to school for it many years ago passed all the tests it could never find a good job doing it for a living so I just do it part time or when something breaks at work. I use my own welders grinders etc etc. some people never learn
@OFW
3 ай бұрын
Most of the time quality welding work is not fast. But just do it once instead of 3 times.
@markfryer9880
3 ай бұрын
If your boss doesn't appreciate your efforts at work to try and save them some money by repairing things for him, just stop doing that work, say that you are too busy with your ordinary work and let him try and find a reliable welder or boilermaker. Once he starts seeing expensive invoices, he might change his tune and if not then you have saved yourself from his nagging and aggravation. Yes, that is a poor attitude, your boss is not valuing your welding skills so withdraw them until he does. I work maintenance at a large private school in Melbourne, Australia and I have eased back on how much welding and metal work that I do and I still have metalwork jobs to do and others get handed over to our fence contractor. Being understaffed, my jobs list has been steadily growing in red on my tablet, but I can only get through so much work in a 8 hour day by 5 days per week. They have not really wanted to pay overtime, so jobs get done when they can and after urgent jobs have pushed them down the list again. I hope that my comments have helped. Mark from Melbourne Australia 🇦🇺
@jiml99712 ай бұрын
Way too go Greg!! Thanks to your classes. I know use might exclusively in the field on yellow iron crack repairs. It’s so much faster than the 7018 stick method.
@bfd15653 ай бұрын
Sweet how we can electrically erase a wield and then electrically glue it all back together again. Nice job jigging and man handling that Mag Drill. Cool stuff bud.
@troytheconsumeroflargequan3254
3 ай бұрын
Weld thr original hot glue.
@danielelliott36592 ай бұрын
I'm 61 and been doing this kind of thing for over 35 years now. This guy knows what he is doing. He has a bunch of rod to burn. Glad it's not me
@segomatu70633 ай бұрын
Wow ! Serious bunch of cracks there, seems like with a few more loads this 637 could lose its rear axle ah ah ! Rock on Buddy !
@carloskawasaki6563 ай бұрын
Another great project, thank you for sharing ,I learn a lot 👍👍👍👍
@jspice-kl2wc3 ай бұрын
Outstanding work, thank you.
@jshelledy13 ай бұрын
Sounding better. Hope you are feeling better.
@GPz843 ай бұрын
This guy is an absolute maestro.....
@coryl51423 ай бұрын
The redrill and tap look factory new, excellent work!
@TheRitchieLeeShow2 ай бұрын
I like the way you got the tape started. I have never seen a mag drill run a tape.
@lucmarchand61729 күн бұрын
Yes,all this crack is normal I saw lot worse here alberta most on winter work steel is cold and all twist and turn and uphill and downhill when job is over is hell job repair before next job.i saw cat dealers finning repair scraper near due wet dirt on huge job clean up due winter.this huge job but at least ready next job for contractor steady repair due a stress on machine.thanks video again.😊
@glenngosline33033 ай бұрын
Again you have done a great. You are a master.
@jaymarshall76323 ай бұрын
Thank you for your videos!!
@kevinmartin54893 ай бұрын
Excellent work, awesome video.
@jjinak3963 ай бұрын
Great job!
@gordonagent70372 ай бұрын
Gday mate, I’m catching up slowly on the back log of your videos and you level of skill is just sublime. I also find that I get lots of info on just how you set your work up which I find has helped me heaps. One day when you get the chance could you just explain how you build your welds up, like in that big section you just did there as I would like to know how you work it out, why you do it, when do you decide to go up or down the weld etc. I guess a lot of it is from years of practice and experience but it must be based on something. I always have a little chuckle too when you linish a surface back and then spot weld little imperfections up and linish them again, I thought I was being anal when I do it but feel I have the blessing of the master. Anyway, you work is beyond reproach, you are an artisan and I love you basic, simple commentaries. Many thanks
@JonDingle3 ай бұрын
Great work young man, especially around that mount/mating face.
@lildante85223 ай бұрын
Good job man 💯 quality work right there !
@ypaulbrown3 ай бұрын
happy Friday Greg.........have a wonderful weekend, cheers from Paul in Florida......
@fasteddie82252 ай бұрын
Awesome video man! It’s still crazy to me that those pans hold up as long as they do! Had some 657’s at work they are monsters
@merkyworks3 ай бұрын
Nice job on the bolt circle
@ragnarironspear17913 ай бұрын
Brilliant video as always 👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻🇬🇧
@jamesarnold60593 ай бұрын
God bless you Greg... please don't work yourself to death & kick that cough
@ecocrime89573 ай бұрын
This pile of... beautiful equipment!
@falcon85533 ай бұрын
Beautiful work
@terrminatoragain4613 ай бұрын
Great job Greg Looks like you went back to your Milwaukee mag drill I guess if Caterpillar and any other heavy equipment companies,built machinery to last,yourself and a lot of others would be out of work 😂😂😂
@michaelmackey7543 ай бұрын
Great video!
@Tenright773 ай бұрын
An other Epic Repair, Thanks for Sharing...
@fyodorautistoesky9903 ай бұрын
Your editing got a lot better, cheers. But I'd love if you went in depth about the game plan when tackling a job
@ssmith60193 ай бұрын
Great quality welding
@guygfm42433 ай бұрын
Quality work just the best
@robertpeters94383 ай бұрын
On some of these jobs I almost expected you to pull out a ladle of molten metal and just dump it into these large cracks!
@travelingtech32513 ай бұрын
Awesome work
@Bltwll3 ай бұрын
When I was a kid I used to wait for the next episode of dukes of hazzard with so much anticipation. Now I wait you and icwelds videos. What part of Cali are you in? I’m from Tennessee but Sacramento area is my second home. I feel like your in the valley north of LA
@OFW
3 ай бұрын
You would be correct. Fresno.
@Bltwll
3 ай бұрын
@@OFW 😎
@NICK-uy3nl3 ай бұрын
There are more cracks on this scraper than in a plumber's convention !
@Jacob-403 ай бұрын
Good job pal
@samos_sainz3 ай бұрын
Oh, I remember the "firiey fuel tank" case... With everybody talking about "you were wrong", I've had to think twice If I could be wrong too... but I don't remember to have complained about that repair. What I probably did, as I always do... It's to complain about the structural design from factory, they always disappoint me.
@harveystephens61152 ай бұрын
Nice and enjoyed!!!
@AnthonySmith-hr2kp3 ай бұрын
Nice job
@sackvilleweldingservices3 ай бұрын
Where to start on a job like that, well done!
@PAINFOOL133 ай бұрын
It's always an interesting watch. 👍🏻👌🏻
@roadsideservice24063 ай бұрын
Nice work
@toddmuehleip92503 ай бұрын
Is the new welding unit you purchased a few episodes back ? Looked like you were welding dual shield with the brushes between passes. Hope the new unit is proving to be a good purchase, excellent work as always.
@OFW
3 ай бұрын
Yes, the new unit is performing great.
@woodartist20213 ай бұрын
Another superb repair done in the field. Did you use dual shield flux core? Amazing how much stress one of those graders takes, and even more amazing is that the welds you’ve done will hold under those stresses. Probably stronger than it came from the factory. Hope your cold gets better soon, and your videos are most appreciated!
@OFW
3 ай бұрын
Yes, I used dual shield.
@neilheriot23613 ай бұрын
Yikes, nice work👌
@scotthultin77693 ай бұрын
219 👍's up on fire welding thank you for sharing 🤗
@osiris8293 ай бұрын
I see they brought you some cracks with a scraper attached. Nice work! Was that cross member a tube or solid stock?
@OFW
3 ай бұрын
Solid and I believe it was forged.
@Rubbernecker2 ай бұрын
Great video, very interesting! I'm curious how you knew exactly where to drill those holes. Seems like it would be difficult to get them exact. Which is why you're the pro, not me! Thanks for sharing these vids, they are really interesting.
@OFW
2 ай бұрын
A lot of very careful measures. I measured them 5 times before I drilled the holes.
@patrickz87643 ай бұрын
Good job 👷👍🇲🇫
@ypaulbrown3 ай бұрын
More Crack than downtown Hollywood
@BCole-bj4lv3 ай бұрын
Are you always expected to do such work as drilling and taping or even disassembly/ re-assembly? So often you seem to do more than just weld work. Do many welders leave this type of work to the company's mechanics to do?
@OFW
3 ай бұрын
That is what sets me apart from everyone else. Most welders don’t do anything but weld. I love wrenching and taking stuff apart so why not offer it as a service as well. One phone call does it all!
@ypaulbrown3 ай бұрын
10:20...now that is a big ole dog bone........
@bumblebeebob3 ай бұрын
Good grief! If that scrapers name isn't Humpty Dumpty it oughtta be! 😅
@HappyHands.3 ай бұрын
Makes one appreciate the forces involved in these huge machines. Do you think the metal in this rig was over hardened? or just work hardened? or just not thick enough? or operated improperly? or just a bad design?
@OFW
3 ай бұрын
I would say a combination of bad design and thousands of hours of hard work. It’s all apart of the game. All machines crack.
@Daniel-np8zo2 ай бұрын
Shout out from the 209.... handle it!
@dogyerf212 ай бұрын
When you go get the crack from over onto once ice fire tile when tool on? Or popcan tanks underdogs tower?
@Dillon_Sparrow3 ай бұрын
I work for a mine doing heavy equipment repair but I really want to learn how to do this kind of stuff too
@ronnierivera39913 ай бұрын
I am not a welder! I weld to repair stuff around the ranches. But how would I know what kind of material would need pre heat. I know I don’t repair anything that I think Would need it. Mostly repair disks and other farm equipment and cattle pens and trailers. Great videos!!!
@OFW
3 ай бұрын
Just think anything super thick, like 1” or more. Or something that will have a lot of twisting stress. Pre heat and even post heat can help relax the metal.
Пікірлер: 327
"Basically, this is a whole bunch of cracks." Understatement of the day. The only thing really holding together was your fix from two years ago. Nicely done.
@ronbuckner8179
Ай бұрын
The question to be asked is “can you fix this so they won’t crack again?” I’d be thinking this machine has a whole of issues with a harmonics history.
@ronbuckner8179
Ай бұрын
This machine is going to haunt you. With that many cracks you know . they’re gonna return. It’s like a boxer getting his bell rung, once it’s happened, it can happen again ,its harmonics
Hilarious that every rando on the internet thinks they know better than the guy in the video actually doing the repair. Glad to see you proved the naysayers wrong once again.
@robertdominiczak6523
3 ай бұрын
I use these videos to make me a better welder but I only work on my own machines so I never comment and never judge. Nearly forgot to mention that I am retired,70 years old and still learning.
@orlandochacon9253
3 ай бұрын
You’re so right, they buy a Harbor Freight welder and now they’re experts.
@Jacob-40
3 ай бұрын
And they not even have experience about that work
@piotrpartacz8622
3 ай бұрын
This work is made good
@dirtfarmer7472
3 ай бұрын
@@robertdominiczak6523 You can keep learning until you die, even then the learning continues.
Lol "you're wrong" Thanks for the content and continued success from the NJ Bayshore.
"It's two years later. You're wrong." Golden! :D
I really enjoyed seeing the success of the "firiey fuel tank weld repair". The crack around the bolt circle was scary and you made it look like play. I'm sure glad to see some of the old iron restored for another few yards of dirt. Well done Good Sir!!!!!
@joehirschegger7723
3 ай бұрын
You can't have a channel called "On Fire Welding" without having some content with actual fire, lol.
old girl has more cracks than a plumbers convention!
It's crazy how much force is needed to make such a solid chunk of metal start to crack. I've never worked with heavy equipment before, and I'm surprised. You do really great work!
I have always wanted to see the innards of a scraper and this is too cool! THANKS FOR TAKING TIME TO SHOW US!!!! I can only imagine the shocks and stresses the frame endures. Interesting to me that they form at the narrow points and unions! JUST fascinates me!
That frame is the definition of “I’m tired boss”
@ronbuckner8179
Ай бұрын
Yessir! I truly hope she stays fixed. But I truly doubt it will.
Your field experience in all aspects of repairs is extremely impressive. Always a pleasure to look over the shoulder of a professional applying their trade!
Very Nice. I like how you decided to weld up and re-drill the holes. Doing it the right way. Thanks for sharing. !
I love when the fulltime shop guys like to put in their 2 cents on field repairs. It's a piece of equipment used to quite literally move dirt/earth, doesnt need to fancy or pretty just strong enough to hold up to the abuse. Great work as always! Any chance you got a line boring job coming up I cant wait to see that S power in action and get a true honest review. Seems too good of a price to be super quality, I want to see if it would be a good avenue for my business in to line boring. Thanks Greg
@OFW
3 ай бұрын
I should be doing a video on the s power soon.
Greg welds the fuel tank, the rest of the scraper fails around it! Awesome. Thanks for your tip on Cubitron discs - they're the Dobermanns Danglies!
You do good work in a craftsman manner. I am learning so much. I know it takes time and effort to make these videos and slows you down but they are very much appreciated.
An old mechanic would always tell me when I would come out to the job and weld up all the cracks on the cushion hitches on 657 B models that those cracks come from to much use when it was new . 😎. Nice work my friend. So thankful for the new mag drills . 😊
This guy is on point the reason we watch he makes it looks easy. He is highly skilled and his experience shows
The paint you put on 2 years ago is the best paint on the machine.
You’re sick. I hope you get to feeling better soon. Great work too.
Cripes, you will tackle anything. Great job man. Thanks for sharing.
I guess your channel was put onto my landing page because I watch a lot of Curtis and his Wife from the channel Cutting Edge Engineering. You two have a lot in common especially the part of doing the job the right way...cheers from Jersey!!!
That damn cold won't let go, hope you get to feeling better soon. Thanks for the video.
Thanks for the welcome back 👍 looks like a row of silver dollars, If you built border wall panels would keep you very busy for long time .
A welder’s dream. Chase rack and fill it. I use to have to fix cracks that ran into the mounting holes on 793 diff housings. I would make up a brass stud to screw into the hole then roll the weld metal into the open thread portion without arching on the studs. Once it cooled we could back the stud out and run a tap through the hole and the threads were good to go. Never had a mounting bolt strip out the threads.
0:05 I remember that video. Great reference. Your work looks awesome!
I cant believe the 7018 gods are not on here letting you have it 😂😂😂😂😂😂
Lots of people don’t realize how long this prep would take with a normal size engine drive. I have a 300 amp machine and a 500 amp machine, 500 is the largest machine I have ever gouged with the step from 300-to 500 is amazing, can’t imagine 300 to 800 , !!!
@OFW
3 ай бұрын
It’s a big difference. Almost scary.
@markfryer9880
3 ай бұрын
Another 200 Amps and you could run those ridiculously large broom handle sized electrodes that some welding channels have shown off with! 1000 Amps! Absolutely insane!😮
*On Fire Welding* Bravo well done, thank-you sir for taking the time to bring us along. GOD Bless.
As particular as you are about how to prep and get to good metal I had no doubt that those welds you did 2 yrs ago would hold ! You do a great job ! If I were 40 yrs younger I would want someone like you to train me to fabricate an work and weld metal ! Thanks for the update ! Stay Safe !
Greg… we really enjoy your videos and like your other friends, always looking forward to your next projects. It’s amazing to us how these “ monster” machines can get these types of failures. Again many thanks and do take care…
Now this gentleman is what you call a proper welder well done mate cracking job .
Fiery Fuel Tank got me to subscribe. The filming and the welding keep me tuned in. Thanks
Awesome work as norm. Glad to see your so busy.
People who don’t repair scrapers for a living can say whatever they want about a repair. Scrapers cracking is just what they do from the amount of forces exerted onto them. Doesn’t matter how good of a job you do, the operators are gonna try their best to break it for you.
@dirtfarmer7472
3 ай бұрын
If CAT built a scraper that an operator couldn’t break they wouldn’t be able to sell the thing.
@markfryer9880
3 ай бұрын
@@dirtfarmer7472Or have it move anywhere near as fast as they currently do, because it would be too damned heavy. 😂
I don't think you need to worry about AI replacing you anytime soon! Keep up the good work!
Fun to watch you do your thing. Great job.
Wow that's a lot of weld joints on that scraper yeehaw
You did a fantastic repair on that tank Greg .
Excellent work as usual. Appreciate the content. Thank you.
Well that's definitely a hell of a lot of cracks . I guess it show just how much stress these machines put up with . That was a lot of passes on that cross member. I guess that'll hold Thanks for showing how you do the repairs to your std and as your fiery tank is still good that means you know what ya doing ..lol. many thanks from an armchair viewer
Love your videos, especially since you’re a local welding guy. Keep producing!
Nice work, my boss thinks welding shouldn’t take that long and tries to rush me when I do it lol. I do go to school for it many years ago passed all the tests it could never find a good job doing it for a living so I just do it part time or when something breaks at work. I use my own welders grinders etc etc. some people never learn
@OFW
3 ай бұрын
Most of the time quality welding work is not fast. But just do it once instead of 3 times.
@markfryer9880
3 ай бұрын
If your boss doesn't appreciate your efforts at work to try and save them some money by repairing things for him, just stop doing that work, say that you are too busy with your ordinary work and let him try and find a reliable welder or boilermaker. Once he starts seeing expensive invoices, he might change his tune and if not then you have saved yourself from his nagging and aggravation. Yes, that is a poor attitude, your boss is not valuing your welding skills so withdraw them until he does. I work maintenance at a large private school in Melbourne, Australia and I have eased back on how much welding and metal work that I do and I still have metalwork jobs to do and others get handed over to our fence contractor. Being understaffed, my jobs list has been steadily growing in red on my tablet, but I can only get through so much work in a 8 hour day by 5 days per week. They have not really wanted to pay overtime, so jobs get done when they can and after urgent jobs have pushed them down the list again. I hope that my comments have helped. Mark from Melbourne Australia 🇦🇺
Way too go Greg!! Thanks to your classes. I know use might exclusively in the field on yellow iron crack repairs. It’s so much faster than the 7018 stick method.
Sweet how we can electrically erase a wield and then electrically glue it all back together again. Nice job jigging and man handling that Mag Drill. Cool stuff bud.
@troytheconsumeroflargequan3254
3 ай бұрын
Weld thr original hot glue.
I'm 61 and been doing this kind of thing for over 35 years now. This guy knows what he is doing. He has a bunch of rod to burn. Glad it's not me
Wow ! Serious bunch of cracks there, seems like with a few more loads this 637 could lose its rear axle ah ah ! Rock on Buddy !
Another great project, thank you for sharing ,I learn a lot 👍👍👍👍
Outstanding work, thank you.
Sounding better. Hope you are feeling better.
This guy is an absolute maestro.....
The redrill and tap look factory new, excellent work!
I like the way you got the tape started. I have never seen a mag drill run a tape.
Yes,all this crack is normal I saw lot worse here alberta most on winter work steel is cold and all twist and turn and uphill and downhill when job is over is hell job repair before next job.i saw cat dealers finning repair scraper near due wet dirt on huge job clean up due winter.this huge job but at least ready next job for contractor steady repair due a stress on machine.thanks video again.😊
Again you have done a great. You are a master.
Thank you for your videos!!
Excellent work, awesome video.
Great job!
Gday mate, I’m catching up slowly on the back log of your videos and you level of skill is just sublime. I also find that I get lots of info on just how you set your work up which I find has helped me heaps. One day when you get the chance could you just explain how you build your welds up, like in that big section you just did there as I would like to know how you work it out, why you do it, when do you decide to go up or down the weld etc. I guess a lot of it is from years of practice and experience but it must be based on something. I always have a little chuckle too when you linish a surface back and then spot weld little imperfections up and linish them again, I thought I was being anal when I do it but feel I have the blessing of the master. Anyway, you work is beyond reproach, you are an artisan and I love you basic, simple commentaries. Many thanks
Great work young man, especially around that mount/mating face.
Good job man 💯 quality work right there !
happy Friday Greg.........have a wonderful weekend, cheers from Paul in Florida......
Awesome video man! It’s still crazy to me that those pans hold up as long as they do! Had some 657’s at work they are monsters
Nice job on the bolt circle
Brilliant video as always 👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻🇬🇧
God bless you Greg... please don't work yourself to death & kick that cough
This pile of... beautiful equipment!
Beautiful work
Great job Greg Looks like you went back to your Milwaukee mag drill I guess if Caterpillar and any other heavy equipment companies,built machinery to last,yourself and a lot of others would be out of work 😂😂😂
Great video!
An other Epic Repair, Thanks for Sharing...
Your editing got a lot better, cheers. But I'd love if you went in depth about the game plan when tackling a job
Great quality welding
Quality work just the best
On some of these jobs I almost expected you to pull out a ladle of molten metal and just dump it into these large cracks!
Awesome work
When I was a kid I used to wait for the next episode of dukes of hazzard with so much anticipation. Now I wait you and icwelds videos. What part of Cali are you in? I’m from Tennessee but Sacramento area is my second home. I feel like your in the valley north of LA
@OFW
3 ай бұрын
You would be correct. Fresno.
@Bltwll
3 ай бұрын
@@OFW 😎
There are more cracks on this scraper than in a plumber's convention !
Good job pal
Oh, I remember the "firiey fuel tank" case... With everybody talking about "you were wrong", I've had to think twice If I could be wrong too... but I don't remember to have complained about that repair. What I probably did, as I always do... It's to complain about the structural design from factory, they always disappoint me.
Nice and enjoyed!!!
Nice job
Where to start on a job like that, well done!
It's always an interesting watch. 👍🏻👌🏻
Nice work
Is the new welding unit you purchased a few episodes back ? Looked like you were welding dual shield with the brushes between passes. Hope the new unit is proving to be a good purchase, excellent work as always.
@OFW
3 ай бұрын
Yes, the new unit is performing great.
Another superb repair done in the field. Did you use dual shield flux core? Amazing how much stress one of those graders takes, and even more amazing is that the welds you’ve done will hold under those stresses. Probably stronger than it came from the factory. Hope your cold gets better soon, and your videos are most appreciated!
@OFW
3 ай бұрын
Yes, I used dual shield.
Yikes, nice work👌
219 👍's up on fire welding thank you for sharing 🤗
I see they brought you some cracks with a scraper attached. Nice work! Was that cross member a tube or solid stock?
@OFW
3 ай бұрын
Solid and I believe it was forged.
Great video, very interesting! I'm curious how you knew exactly where to drill those holes. Seems like it would be difficult to get them exact. Which is why you're the pro, not me! Thanks for sharing these vids, they are really interesting.
@OFW
2 ай бұрын
A lot of very careful measures. I measured them 5 times before I drilled the holes.
Good job 👷👍🇲🇫
More Crack than downtown Hollywood
Are you always expected to do such work as drilling and taping or even disassembly/ re-assembly? So often you seem to do more than just weld work. Do many welders leave this type of work to the company's mechanics to do?
@OFW
3 ай бұрын
That is what sets me apart from everyone else. Most welders don’t do anything but weld. I love wrenching and taking stuff apart so why not offer it as a service as well. One phone call does it all!
10:20...now that is a big ole dog bone........
Good grief! If that scrapers name isn't Humpty Dumpty it oughtta be! 😅
Makes one appreciate the forces involved in these huge machines. Do you think the metal in this rig was over hardened? or just work hardened? or just not thick enough? or operated improperly? or just a bad design?
@OFW
3 ай бұрын
I would say a combination of bad design and thousands of hours of hard work. It’s all apart of the game. All machines crack.
Shout out from the 209.... handle it!
When you go get the crack from over onto once ice fire tile when tool on? Or popcan tanks underdogs tower?
I work for a mine doing heavy equipment repair but I really want to learn how to do this kind of stuff too
I am not a welder! I weld to repair stuff around the ranches. But how would I know what kind of material would need pre heat. I know I don’t repair anything that I think Would need it. Mostly repair disks and other farm equipment and cattle pens and trailers. Great videos!!!
@OFW
3 ай бұрын
Just think anything super thick, like 1” or more. Or something that will have a lot of twisting stress. Pre heat and even post heat can help relax the metal.
@ronnierivera3991
3 ай бұрын
@@OFW thank you!!
Nice