Restoration of a 1 Dollar Air Impact (Ingersoll Rand)
Тәжірибелік нұсқаулар және стиль
Welcome to my restoration channel. This is a restoration of an old crusted and somewhat rusted Ingersoll Rand 1/2” Pneumatic Impact. This was found and bought at an auction for around 1 dollar USD (Pretty nice find:)). We have used this for quite some time but the time came when I decide to restore it and rebuilt the impact. I purchased rebuild kit and new rubber protective boot from eBay. Before restoring, when the impact was hooked up to air it would run slowly by it self. It was also missing the the socket retainer which came in the kit and was replaced during the restoration
THE RESTORATION PROCESS
I tore the air impact apart, cleaned it and then began the restoration/rebuild. The motor housing assembly was pretty dented up and scratched from normal wear and tear. I filed and sanded (up to 1500 grit) the housing then gave it a polish. Some of the dents were deep so I did not remove them completely as seen in the restoration video. The hammer case assembly was wire wheeled and then cold blued with Perma Blue. I coated the case twice and steel wooled in between each coat then applying some oil and letting soak over night. The hammer frame and hammers were in nice shape so they only needed a good clean and regreased. I added a new o-ring and socket retainer to anvil assembly 1/2” square drive. The cylinder, motor and other parts were cleaned up then put back together with new bearings, vanes, and new retainer. Both gaskets were replaced. When disassembling the case I didn’t realize that the hammer case pilot was removable until later, I was able to remove and clean before reinstalling. A new detent spring and ball was installed in the reverse valve along with 2 new o-rings. I used pneumatic oil and a moly grease to lube the impact. Then I added the rubber protective boot to help preserve the tool in future use.
I am pretty happy with how the restore turned out and this tool will be used and not retired :)
If you like what I do here, consider subscribing or leaving a like. It helps me out. If you have any questions, comments or advice please feel free to leave in the comment section below the video. Thanks so much for the support. I appreciate your view.
Follow me on Facebook
profile.php?...
Follow me on Instagram
/ rebuiltandrestored
Check out this old Craftsman bench Grinder I Restored and custom new stand: • Awesome Restoration of...
Check out this Snap-On Ratchet Restoration…Mirror Finish: • Mirror Finish. Rusty S...
Check out this old Pipe Vise Restoration: • Restoration of a Ruste...
Check out this Rusted, Stuck Vise Restoration: • Very Rusted & Stuck Vi...
Check out this Vintage Toy Restoration: • Turning a $40 Truck in...
Check out this Old Tonka Truck Restoration: • 1970s Tonka Concrete M...
Have a blessed day!
Kev
Products used in video:
Cold Bluing Solution. amzn.to/3JeNsAs
Ingersoll Rand Protective Boot. amzn.to/3laIfSn
Makita 18v Light. amzn.to/3laSKoz
Craftsman Socket Set. amzn.to/3mFs3sv
Camera and filming gear;
Main Camera. amzn.to/428GF3Y
Video Camera. amzn.to/3JD7J41
Main len. samzn.to/3JDIL4F
50mm Lensamzn.to/3mUZZBt
Disclaimer. All links above are affiliate links. I make a small commission if links are used.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
#restoration
#restore
#tool restoration
#vintage restoration
Пікірлер: 1 000
I hope you enjoy this restoration of the Ingersoll Rand 231 Model A. Let me know what you think! Here is my Bench Grinder restoration if you haven’t seen it! kzread.info/dash/bejne/paGFl8Oah5mTqaQ.html Have a great day!
@paulc7226
Жыл бұрын
Heat expends somthing on the inside as well as the outside. Only making it harder to get somthing apart. Cold contracs....but you can use heat to make the metal walk.
@marccarrier9589
Жыл бұрын
The is the model of my very first 1/2" impact I got back in 1987 and I still have it. Not super powerful but very reliable gun.
@kabibnurmagomedov197
Жыл бұрын
amazing man 👏
@hinesmaster99
Жыл бұрын
Awesome, do some ratchet repair videos please🙏
@danielkendall7081
9 ай бұрын
@@paulc7226I guess I've never heated a nut to get it off a bolt
With a fresh rebuild, that old Ingersoll will probably outlive most of us here.
@RebuiltRestored
9 ай бұрын
Yes, you are probably correct! 👍
I have this exact one. Was given to me for free at the first auto shop I worked at. I was a broke teenager who barely had a $50 crescent toolkit to my name. It got me by for a long time. After watching this, I'll probably unbury it from the bottom of my tool chest and give it some new life. Great video.
@RebuiltRestored
Жыл бұрын
Thank you very much! And that is awesome. The rebuild isn’t bad. I bought the rebuild kit on eBay. Thanks for watching, I appreciate it!
@vandalsgarage
9 ай бұрын
The IR 231 is _the_ classic pneumatic impact. The rebuild kits are inexpensive, and there are numerous step-by-step instructions on KZread or online forums. Its not the most powerful impact, but its my go-to for changing passenger car wheels.
THANK YOU INGERSOL RAND!!!! FOR MAKING A HIGH-QUALITY PRODUCT!!!!!
Old Ingersoll impacts go forever.i have a 30 year old 212 . 3/8 impact that i still use while bench building transmissions.
@RebuiltRestored
Жыл бұрын
Very cool. Thanks for sharing!
@philliphall5198
Жыл бұрын
Those are the best and mine is at least 50 years old, got it in early 70
I had my own air tool repair business for over 20 years. This one is an automotive impact. You can tell by the style of socket retainer. I didn’t make them look pretty, I just made them function again. I probably repaired 1000’s of these for the machine shops and oil refineries in Houston. Since I did this for a living I had presses and special tools, I could go through one of these in 15 minutes. I sold my company in 2001 and I miss it.
@Beenthere5409
3 ай бұрын
That’s great. Maybe you should start it up again. Smaller scale.
@RebuiltRestored
3 ай бұрын
Very cool! Thanks for sharing and yes, maybe you should start it back up! 👍
Repairs can sometimes cost more in parts than the tool bring restored. In this case the original tool cost next to nothing so the parts would not make a big difference. You ended up with a tool that looks and works better than an original because it was hand built with care. I loved the finished product. Keep them coming.
@RebuiltRestored
Жыл бұрын
Very true! Thanks for the comment!
@novavolks9652
Жыл бұрын
@@ericschulze5641 Don't you like Milwaukee impacts?
@novavolks9652
Жыл бұрын
@@ericschulze5641 So you don't like Milwaukee tools? wireless is a bit expensive
@teacheme
Жыл бұрын
@@ericschulze5641 I didn't say it was cheap but referred to the fact that it cost $1, and I did not imply that it was not worth rebuilding, in fact just the opposite. Many restorers seem to spend a small fortune repairing tools that cost less to buy new than what they spent. They are obviously doing this as a hobby regardless of the cost.
@novavolks9652
Жыл бұрын
@@ericschulze5641 In your opinion Milwaukee is better than Dewalt? lately Dewalt manufactures more compact equipment at a lower cost and with more strength. i would also like to ask you from which online site i could buy compact metal cases.
These IR's are the best pneumatic impact guns ever made. They will work forever, and rebuilding them is not hard.
@RebuiltRestored
3 ай бұрын
Thanks for the feedback
now thats how you do a restore,not like some others who would have pulled it apart wash it and put it back together no new parts and paint it & call it restored no way. this was the right way to do it.
Those old 231a guns are virtually indestructible
@RebuiltRestored
9 ай бұрын
They are rugged! 👍
I bought the same impact at the start of my career in the late 80’s. It is still with me now that I’m retired. Great tools built to last. Unlike the planned obsolescence of today.
@RebuiltRestored
Жыл бұрын
True. Thanks for the comment and for watching! Have a great day!
@deebeez4000
Жыл бұрын
Yup still have 2 of them they mean business
@lewiskemp5893
9 ай бұрын
That's true. My Eastwing framing hammer from 1987 works on cars too. Bodyman since 1990. The waffle head is now smooth. My Favorite hammer
I used to work at a tool repair company. I rebuilt many Ingersoll Rands. Excellent tools.
@RebuiltRestored
9 ай бұрын
Very cool! Thanks for the comment! This is a nice unit!
honestly, good on whomever sold that for a buck rather than tossing it in the scrap bin as well. beautiful work cleaning that thing up!
@RebuiltRestored
Жыл бұрын
Thanks much! I appreciate it!
I have the 3/4 drive version of that, looks just like it. Someone had us send it in for estimate of repair, they did not like the price, and I bought it for ?? 20 bucks I guess, this was in early 80's. I don't remember what I did, cleaned it out, probably honed the bore and sanded the edges of the vanes and maybe a bearing or two. When there is something that HAS to come loose, I get it out. Feed it with 1/2" hose
@RebuiltRestored
Жыл бұрын
That is awesome. A 3/4 would be nice. That was a great deal. Thanks for the comment! Have a great day!
I used to backwards engineer machinery replacement parts for Dresser-Rand back in the 1990s and early 2000s. They have this dusty room filled with 150yo drawings of early steam powered machines. It was fascinating work.
@RebuiltRestored
9 ай бұрын
That is awesome. It would be interesting to se that! Thanks for the comment 👍
Beautiful stuff. Overhauled these before at work and they usually get chucked in the bin half way through as we rarely have the right spares at the time. I’ll definitely continue to chuck them in the bin as my boss would ream me if I took this long.
I use this exact same gun every single day at work. They are workhorses!
@RebuiltRestored
Жыл бұрын
Awesome thanks for sharing!
I first used a ir 231 Feb of 1985. It was at a Marathon service station. What a beast. We lubed it with Marvel mystery oil. Brings back memories
@RebuiltRestored
7 ай бұрын
Very cool! They seem popular back in the day. Thanks for the comment!
The first impact I bought as an aspiring mechanic at 17 years old. 30 years later I still have it and use it. it's been taken apart a few times over the years for simple maintenance, but has never failed and is still powerful. That tool has paid for itself 1000 times over.
@RebuiltRestored
Жыл бұрын
Awesome! Hopefully this one will last that long again! Thanks for the comment!
I used to use that exact model of impact wrench when I was a mechanic many years ago. I loved that model of IR.
@RebuiltRestored
4 ай бұрын
Awesome!
My favourite impact of many.
@RebuiltRestored
Жыл бұрын
It seems that a lot of people like these. Thanks for sharing! Have a blessed day!
I was hd diesel mech for over 12 yrs a while back. Big diesel head bolts and main bolts take their toll on impact guns. I had them all, none held up long... till I bought the I/R half inch drive. Best impact ever. No strain on all the diesel overhauls I did. In fact I still have and use the same impact... 30 yrs later!! I love it.
@RebuiltRestored
Жыл бұрын
Very cool. Thanks for the comment. This one should last a long time in our diy garage then! 👍 thanks for watching. Have a great day!
@philliphall5198
Жыл бұрын
I used it to remove main brging on 350 Cummins and head bolts with 210 psi Never quite
Ingersoll Rand is a Reputable company! Many professionals use their products!
@RebuiltRestored
9 ай бұрын
👍👍👍
Came out great! One of their best impacts ever.
@RebuiltRestored
3 ай бұрын
Thank you! It seems a lot of people like these 👍
These are tanks, probably one of the best 1/2" impact guns ever made.
@RebuiltRestored
9 ай бұрын
Pretty popular! 👍
The smiley face was a nice touch 😀
@RebuiltRestored
Жыл бұрын
Thanks 😁
WE NEED MORE HIGH-QUALITY PRODUCTS IN THE MARKETPLACE TODAY!!!!
@RebuiltRestored
4 күн бұрын
Agree!
Was the work horse of automotive industry for years.
@RebuiltRestored
9 ай бұрын
Yes, by the comment I get, this seemed pretty popular. Thanks for the comment! 👍
Nice job, getting this back together and working is no small feat IMO but that info plate you made was the cherry on top.
@RebuiltRestored
5 ай бұрын
Thanks much! I appreciate it!
What a great video, first impact i got new when i started in the field. Now I feel old......
@RebuiltRestored
Жыл бұрын
😁 Thank you very much! Have a great day!
Was at work today and got inspired by this video to do the exact same thing. We have a similar gun there that had been sitting on a shelf for 15+ years and was just blowing air out the exhaust. All rusted out with no oil so it didn’t spin. So I found a exploded blueprint tore it apart degreased de rusted and regreased and that puppy works like a charm. Now we just need some real air tool oil not hydraulic oil lol. Thanks for the inspiration!
@RebuiltRestored
3 ай бұрын
Very cool and good work! Thanks for the comment!! 👍
the attention to detail on this restoration was great -- but that flame effect on the careful not to smoke o-ring text was ::chef's kiss::
@RebuiltRestored
Жыл бұрын
Thank you very much! I appreciate it!
Brings back memories, I used to maintain and repair air tools including this one when I was an apprentice in the early '60's.
@RebuiltRestored
Жыл бұрын
Very cool! Thanks for the comment!
I think you bought it brand new, and just showed the process of you destroying it in reverse order to make it look like it got better with time.
@RebuiltRestored
Жыл бұрын
Lol that would be a good video. “Derestored”
@pantherplatform
Жыл бұрын
@@RebuiltRestored you're probably the only one actually restoring tools unlike the patently fake ones I seen.
I'm watching restorations of tools that keep my shop working. Is this a sign of age? Some dude's collectable German ratchet screwdriver is a daily hand tool.
@RebuiltRestored
Жыл бұрын
Thanks for watching!
I was given one of these at my Job doing heavy machining when I started in 1994. I am still at the same shop and I still use the same impact in industrial use daily. I think we have been into it 2 times for R&R.
@RebuiltRestored
9 ай бұрын
Awesome. The seem to be very popular! 👍
As a former mechanic that model rp 231 is my favorite..I still have two of them
@RebuiltRestored
Жыл бұрын
Awesome! It seems that a lot of people love this the 231. Thanks for sharing! Have a great day!
This brings back happy memories. Far more years ago than I care to recall, I used to work for IR selling parts for their products, including this one. It always was an impressive tool.
@RebuiltRestored
Жыл бұрын
Awesome! Thanks for the comment! Have a great day!
Job well done sir!! And the new label too! Awesome lol! I bought one off the ripoff truck at 16, working in a shop and that unit never failed and took off everything. Then I upgraded to the 2131, still chugging along 30 years later.
@RebuiltRestored
4 ай бұрын
Thank you and very cool! 👍
That’s mighty fine work ya done there!
@RebuiltRestored
7 ай бұрын
Thank you! Appreciate it!
That sound will forever live in my head, the new gen may never know it.
@RebuiltRestored
9 ай бұрын
You probably aren’t far off 👍
@richardsavaglio523
9 ай бұрын
I never thought about that. The sound of air impacts, air ratchets and even air drills is quickly disappearing. I haven’t used any of my air ratchets in years, I’ll occasionally use my air impacts and drills if I have the compressor going just to keep oil through them. I still use my 3/4” and 1” air guns all the time. I have a Milwaukee 3/4 gun but have no intentions of buying a battery 1” gun. I’m a field mechanic and have a big service truck. I have to have it running to use the pto compressor. 10-20 years ago I was entirely air tools with only a cordless drill. I used the computer daily. Now I’m pretty much entirely converted over to battery tools and hardly use my compressor. The same goes for the 4-1/2” angle grinder. Something I use daily. I either needed electric from somewhere or used my welder/generator. Now I have a cordless grinder and I actually just bought a second one. How times have changed
Nice work. Because you were able to restore the air tool to its full, original function, you got way more than your money's worth on it.
@RebuiltRestored
6 ай бұрын
Thanks much! This is still being used. Thanks for watching and have a great week!
2/3 of these died at my old work while I was there, I combined the 2 broken into 1 working, was cool to see someone else taking one apart
@RebuiltRestored
Жыл бұрын
Very cool. Thanks for sharing
Turned out nice, and your methods made me laugh a bit, the showmanship involvedI would enjoy an extended video where you name all the part and describe how it all works.
@RebuiltRestored
Жыл бұрын
Thank you very much! 👍
Well done and a worthy restoration. Ingersoll Rand are top notch pneumatics.
@RebuiltRestored
4 ай бұрын
Thanks much!
I worked for Ingressoll/Rand Proto Hand Tool Division from 1978 to 1984 in Tucson, Arizona until they sold out to Stanley Tools in Covington, Georgia..i was a Senior Forklift operator in the Receiving Warehouse.. 5:55
@RebuiltRestored
9 ай бұрын
Very cool! Thanks for the comment 👍
I gotta fix up my grandpas old air impact now
@RebuiltRestored
Жыл бұрын
That would be cool! Good luck on it!
I have the exact same ingersoll-rand half-inch air gun that I use almost every day, good air gun 👍 good job
@RebuiltRestored
Жыл бұрын
Thanks for sharing! Have a great day!
@GSX-R_BOY
Жыл бұрын
@@RebuiltRestored no problem and thank you have a great day yourself.
I miss my Ingersoll Rand. The best impact gun I ever used. Aircat is a distant second.
@RebuiltRestored
6 ай бұрын
I’ve never heard of Aircat. I’ll have to look them up. Thanks for the comment! Have a great weekend!
Wow does this bring back memories! I worked at the IR plant in Athens, PA for about 5 years, many years ago. There was a tremendous group working there and the town supported the plant 100%. Years before, during a hurricane, the Susquehanna flooded the town and the plant. The towns people came into engineering and took home the drawings and specs and hung them in their homes to dry out before bringing them back to the cleaned up plant. For years after you would sit at an old desk, open a drawer and find evidence of "flood mud" in the drawer. There were marks on the walls showing the depth of the water during the flood. This was back in the day when tools were made in America and you could count on them day in and day out. Today they chrome plate Chinese junk, add a fine old American trade name, and sell them as tools. They look pretty until you apply some torque whereupon the socket splits and you end up across the shop on your butt!
@RebuiltRestored
Жыл бұрын
Thanks for sharing. That is interesting. Yes, stuff seems much cheaper… but more expensive (if you get what I am saying) thanks for the comment and for watching! Have a great day!
@guess1866
Жыл бұрын
Was it hurricane Agnes that flooded the plant?
Nice job , I have one of those and it has worked for at least 40 years
@RebuiltRestored
Жыл бұрын
Very cool! Thanks for the comment!
Im pretty sure i have this exact model my dad had since the 80s i want to say. Still works great.
@RebuiltRestored
6 ай бұрын
Very cool! Better keep it around. Have a great weekend!
Damn. The best part about tiny projects like these is being able to pay attention to the tiniest details. I loved seeing every single piece got blu’d. I don’t see a reason why that thing won’t last 100 years. In 5,000 years when humans dig us up like dinosaurs they’ll find your stuff and be like wow! This dude was a true tool nerd!
@RebuiltRestored
Жыл бұрын
Thank you very much! If this last another 5000 years it won’t be anything I did! 😂 thanks for watching and have a great day!
Excellent restore. Have had my IR 231 since 1997 and it’s still going strong. Fantastic tools!
@RebuiltRestored
Жыл бұрын
Nice! Thanks for the comment! Appreciate it!
That is one fine impact!
@RebuiltRestored
Жыл бұрын
Thanks much!
I restored the exact gun. Still have it. Great job
@RebuiltRestored
Жыл бұрын
Very cool. And thank you!
Ive rebuilt that same impact many times. Ingersoll Rand makes a darn fine tool. Used mine when i was an engine machinist for years. My old mentor gave it to me.
@RebuiltRestored
9 ай бұрын
Very cool! Thanks for the comment👍
That's cool, I'm glad to see you doing this,I used to rebuild these daily at work,we had a pallet full to rebuild and a pallet full of rebuild kits for the production department ,then they changed to a different style and told me to to dump the pallets in the dumpster.I may have kept one or two 😉
@RebuiltRestored
9 ай бұрын
Cool! Definitely worth keeping 😂👍
My dad has this same exact model IR impact wrench. He's had it since the early 90s I believe. It still works, but it could use a nice restoration. After seeing this video, I will show it to him and see if he can restore his own. Thanks. Awesome job!
@RebuiltRestored
Жыл бұрын
Very cool! Thanks for sharing. Rebuilding these aren’t bad and the parts can be found easily on eBay. Thanks for watching and for the feedback. Have a great day!
When I started as a diesel/truck tech 45 yrs ago these were the gold standard air wrenches; did a lit of work on 855 Cummins engines, head bolts were torqued to 250ft.lbs. Chicago Pneumatics wouldn't touch them, the Ingersolls would handle them all day long. When you finally got yours you weren't a rookie any more👊
@RebuiltRestored
Жыл бұрын
Awesome comment. Thanks for sharing. This one belongs to my dad so I guess he isn’t a rookie anymore! :) Thanks for watching!
I own this exact one. Had it for over 35 years and used everyday as a professional mechanic. Never a problem but these were made right here in the USA. The newer ones are made overseas
@RebuiltRestored
Жыл бұрын
Very cool! Thanks for the comment!
Great old gun! I have two old IR 231 in my toolbox. Great job!
@RebuiltRestored
Жыл бұрын
Very cool! And thank you very much!
Shout out to IR for still offering a rebuild kit
The 231 IR Impact Gun brings back memories when I started at the Mazda Dealership back in the early 90's. That Impact Gun deserved that restoration they are the most reliable Impact Guns hands down and still have mine but retired it due to stronger Impacts out there today. Enjoyed the video thanks..👍🏻
@RebuiltRestored
9 ай бұрын
Very cool! Is seems a lot of guys had these. Thanks for the comment!
I have an Ingersoll Rand Air Impact like the one you have repaired and restored. I bought it off the MAC tool van in 1986. I have kept it oiled with the proper air tool oil and have greased the fitting in the rear by the plate you made. I use a grease gun needle to grease that rear bearing. It was the most powerful 1/2 inch air impact that MAC sold at that time. The Chinese have copied that model because it works and is durable. Thanks for showing us your restoration of it.
@RebuiltRestored
6 ай бұрын
Awesome! The seem to be a popular tool and durable. Thanks for the comment!
Keep representing Jesus! Love your channel, Brother!
@RebuiltRestored
7 ай бұрын
Thanks much! I appreciate it! God bless!
What a beautiful work
@RebuiltRestored
Жыл бұрын
Thanks much!
I still have my old Blue Point 1/2 inch rattle gun from when I was an apprentice 20 years ago. I bought it from the Snap on van and it was refurbished then. Only gave up the ghost a few years back, but that thing was a beast. Use to rip truck wheel nuts off no stress. Being young and dumb I was warned not to do that as it kills the hammers. I wonder if there are still kits for those, this has inspired me to rebuild my old girl. Great video, was very therapeutic to watch. Cheers from down under 👌🇦🇺
@RebuiltRestored
9 ай бұрын
Thanks for the comment! And I wouldn’t be surprised if you could find a rebuild kit for it. It would be worth looking into. Thanks for watching and have a great day!! 👍
Ingersoll Rand 231 is a very strong impact.. Good job
@RebuiltRestored
4 ай бұрын
Thank you very much!
I have a IR 235 I bought well over 20 years ago at Harbor Freight. Yes HF used to sell name brand tools. Still works great. Very cool video.
@RebuiltRestored
9 ай бұрын
Thanks and that is interesting about harbor freight. Thanks for the info 👍
It's 4:47am, wed morning, can't sleep, KZread, found your channel. Wow' what a calm & relaxed video. Love the no nonsense, and beautifully done /restoration of a fine piece of machinery. It came out better than factory. Sir' my hats of to you on your superior work
@RebuiltRestored
9 ай бұрын
Thank you very much! Glad you enjoyed. Have a great rest of your day!👍
I like that its in a reasonably realistic state Unlike the fake shit we see on other restoration channels where the device is just made out of inflicted rust or paint
@RebuiltRestored
Жыл бұрын
Thanks for watching!
I’m a mechanic and this is the exact gun I use daily, never fails me it’s an absolute ripper. It was given to me by a guy I grew up with who raced in the Australian V8 super cars in the 90s, it was one of his pit guns and I absolutely love it.
@RebuiltRestored
5 ай бұрын
That is cool! Yeah they seem to be supper popular! Thanks for the comment!
Amazing result. Looks better than new.
@RebuiltRestored
Жыл бұрын
Thank you and thanks for watching!
The first thing I thought of when you put on the new cover on was…. Snoopy!😅 Great job!!!
@RebuiltRestored
Жыл бұрын
Lol thanks for watching!
When I was a teenager my father would bring home all of the broken air tools from the company he worked for since they were being thrown away. All of the tools were either Ingersoll-Rand, Dotco or Sioux. I would disassemble them and figure out how they worked and what was wrong with them. I would usually end up with multiple tools of the model so I would use them for parts to make a good one or even buy parts if they were cheap enough and I had sheets of phenolic materials to make my own blades for the motors. I had o-ring assortments so I could usually find ones that would work and I would buy bearings from a local suppier. I would also sand and polish the ones that were not painted. At one point I had so many air tools that looked like brand new I went to the swap meet and sold a bunch of them.
@RebuiltRestored
Жыл бұрын
That is very cool! Thanks for sharing this. Have a great day!
I have one of those for about 40 years now! It could probably use a rebuild, too. Thanks for showing me how! I won't do a restoration, but at least it'll work like new again.
@RebuiltRestored
Жыл бұрын
Hey thanks for watching! And yes the rebuild isn’t bad to do. I found the rebuild kit on eBay .
Watching this rebuild was very calming and enjoyable. It is always very satisfying to see a finished product that displays the skill of the restorer. Nicely done!
@RebuiltRestored
Жыл бұрын
Thanks much! Glad you enjoyed it!
A good reason to make sure your air supply is clean and moisture free.
@RebuiltRestored
3 ай бұрын
True that!
First airgun i ever owned was an IR. I paid 45 dollars for it from harbor freight. Best airgun i ever owned. Guy i worked with bought a new snap on but used to borrow mine when his wouldn't break something loose.
@RebuiltRestored
6 ай бұрын
Very cool! If Harbor Freight only sold IR now! Thanks for the comment!
We made 500-1000 of those a shift back in the day.... Always liked that tool. Only suggestion - removing and inserting the motor was done as a single group on the assembly line as the rear endplate was very difficult to keep straight in the bore. Never used heat; aside from hot air guns to heat the plastic boots (a major pain to put on).
@RebuiltRestored
Жыл бұрын
Thanks for the info. It is nice to hear from someone that actually assembled these. And that makes sense about installing the motor assembly as a single unit. Thanks for the tip. Yes, this boot was the first I have ever installed and the hot water definitely softened the rubber and made it more workable. I found this trick from another KZread video. Thanks so much for the helpful comment. I appreciate it! Have a great day!
Wow, it sounds so much better after being rebuilt
@RebuiltRestored
Жыл бұрын
Thanks much!
Random click and watch. Thoroughly enjoyed!
@RebuiltRestored
Жыл бұрын
Thank you! Glad you enjoyed!
Brother you do good work it's relaxing to watch you rebuild something and I know that's a lot of camera work to you do good work there to
@RebuiltRestored
Жыл бұрын
Thanks much! I appreciate it!
I appreciate the fact that you have included scripture in your social media via your channel sign/banner in the background . That’s admirable in these days of woke insanity.
@RebuiltRestored
Жыл бұрын
Thank you very much! He gets the credit.
Was anybody else about to go do something and stumble on this? Pulled me right back in.
@RebuiltRestored
Жыл бұрын
Sorry about that! Don’t watch the video and get your stuff done! 😁
I have a 22 year old Harbor Freight impact that I believe is somewhat based off of this model with some slight changes. About 8 years ago it got jammed up so I took it apart and their design has a small ball bearing inside. It had basically turned into a block it was all flattened out. So being that I am a motorcycle mechanic I replaced it with a Yamaha part number ball bearing, cleaned up the inside and put it back together. Still use it almost every day. This video was fun to watch, great job!
@RebuiltRestored
5 ай бұрын
That’s cool! Good work! Thanks for watching!
Nice. Still have my old faithful 231 i picked up from a 2nd hand tool store 15yrs ago.
@RebuiltRestored
4 ай бұрын
Sweet! They were popular 👍
We have had that brand of impact on are farm for years now never had issue with them they are amazing.
@RebuiltRestored
Жыл бұрын
Thank you for the comment! It seems a lot of people love this tool. Very popular! Have a great day!
I ran a tool repair business for over 10 years in Modesto CA. My favorite impact is that IR 231 ,all styles. Very powerful and if you tweek'em a little they'll out do almost any other brand even the Sioux which s the finest piece of engineering I've ever seen ! I rebuilt hundreds of the 231's and they hold up for a very long time. Mine's still slammin' after 25 years ! Enjoyed your video, keep up the good work ! ! !
@RebuiltRestored
Жыл бұрын
Very cool! Thanks for sharing! Have a great day!
As a mechanic this gives me the warm fuzzies
@RebuiltRestored
Жыл бұрын
Lol 😎
THAT CAN BE REBUILT AND GIVEN A SECOND CHANCE AT LIFE!!!!
The IR 231 is one of the best bang for buck 1/2” impact guns available. What you’ve done is guarantee many more years of service.
@RebuiltRestored
Жыл бұрын
That is the plan! Thank you very much! 👍
Fantastic job! I would fail spectacularly by forgetting where all the pieces went!
@RebuiltRestored
9 ай бұрын
That’s the beauty of videoing the process… you can go back and look 👍
Great looking rebuild. Can't beat a classic
@RebuiltRestored
9 ай бұрын
Thanks much!
I've got one just like this. Still working great and has for a long time. Was given to me by a coworker in Bosnia.
@RebuiltRestored
Жыл бұрын
Awesome! Thanks for watching!
A Harbor Freight ultrasonic cleaner will do a better and faster parts cleaning than a tooth brush. Amazing restoration!!!!!!
@RebuiltRestored
Жыл бұрын
Agreed! Maybe someday I can get one. But man, idk if I can retire this toothbrush. From tools to teeth it does an incredible job.
@monkyw5647
9 ай бұрын
What are you spraying on the parts to clean them? @@RebuiltRestored
Amazing restoration, bro!! Super clean.
@RebuiltRestored
5 ай бұрын
Appreciate that!
Awesome restoration. Love the impact and how it turned out.
@RebuiltRestored
2 ай бұрын
Thanks much!
I have one exactly like that, I think I got a 25 years ago. Still works perfect
@RebuiltRestored
6 ай бұрын
Very cool! Hang on to it! They are handy!