I’m a remodeler of over 35 years. I’ve gone behind these guys and torn out what they built 100 years ago. It’s an arduous task to take apart what they masterfully put together.. That truly is an art that is lost.
@juniormint31364 жыл бұрын
My original bathroom and kitchen tile and mud job was like 2 inches thick just to get down to the studs. Aint like the thin backerboard today.
@nathanielflory99164 жыл бұрын
Ain’t that the truth. I was really hoping to see them nail up the lath. They had to be real good at hitting those nails by the end. I demoed a bathroom once that had hand split white oak lath instead of the usual sawn lath like in the video. No clue how old the home was.
@arlenmargolin16504 жыл бұрын
@@nathanielflory9916 I bought a home in 1980 in New Brunswick that just so happened to have owned the land all the way from delavan Street to the Raritan river which is probably a half a mile away this little house when I gutted it was found to have an original cabin sized about 10x10 ft and let me tell you this house was so old that a 90-year-old lady two doors down said that her great-great-great-grandmother was born there this house had built had been built in the late 1600s and when I tell you there was stuff in this house that was so archaic it was just unbelievable to see how they had built every style of framing from log cabin to timber frame to balloon frame to western style framing you name it the additions were just amazing to see there was even a ghost in that house believe it or not
@nathanielflory99164 жыл бұрын
Arlen Margolin that’s awesome. I love working on old homes. There is one for sale not far from me that was built in the mid to late 1700s and has been neglected for too long. Sadly there is really no value in fixing it up so it’s just gonna rot into the ground. I looked at it and would love to fix it up but I just can’t afford to. The original structure is a log home that then had a second floor added at some point and then more additions out the back. Sadly the rubble stone foundation if failing on the one side. It could be saved but will take a lot of time money and devotion.
@johnnybear1114 жыл бұрын
@@nathanielflory9916 whereabouts? I'm in western NY and I don't see too.many homes that before 1900
@Skateforlifelad Жыл бұрын
Thank you to whoever kept this film preserved for us to enjoy almost 100 years later.
@PurpleNinja-vn4hv Жыл бұрын
My great great grandfather Herman Zimmerman (literally means “room man”) owned a construction firm in Germany in the early 1900s. After WW1 (which he served in under the Kaiser) ,with the collapsing economy he was forced to move to the States in 1926 where he built his home, summer cabin and his own beer garden all with nothing but hand tools. All three of them are still standing and in immaculate shape after nearly 100 years, even the bar is still open to the public. Meanwhile my own house built 60 years later is riddled with issues yet pales in comparison to the crap they’re slapping together now. Quality home building is truly a lost art. Here’s to you Herman!
@ememchi371711 ай бұрын
Well tell us the bar and where it is!
@PurpleNinja-vn4hv11 ай бұрын
@@ememchi3717 It’s north of Detroit and now called Terry’s Terrace
@FloydCourtnell5 ай бұрын
The quality nowadays is terrible and will do well to last 40 years We are roofers in England and the rafters are 38mm wide pre made at 600 centres , Too much insulation and air tightness. Condensation is rampant
@jmarco43315 ай бұрын
@@PurpleNinja-vn4hvno way. I know exactly where it is and have been there several times. They do a good business …
@thomaswayneward4 ай бұрын
There are plenty of well built homes built today. I know because I built them for fifty years.
@TacoBell5DollarBox4 жыл бұрын
This is honestly what KZbin is all about. Preserving these historic fantastic video clips
@riverraisin14 жыл бұрын
How long did this film sit unwatched before KZbin came along? I'm guessing 80 years.
@AnguishedMan4 жыл бұрын
No it about shitposts and memes
@qm4214 жыл бұрын
except they deleted the best channel of old reels: WDTV42 had everything.. probably why it was deleted, tons of old military reels
@waterheaterservices4 жыл бұрын
That and censorship of channels that don't have Party Approved Correct Thinking and Speech.
@fnhwk4 жыл бұрын
No it really isn't.
@mcbridecreek4 жыл бұрын
My grandfather started working as a carpenter in 1928. He taught me to hand nail and use a handsaw. A sharp 8 point crosscut handsaw would cut a 2x4 in 7 strokes. When it took 10-15, it was time to sharpen the saw! As an apprentice carpenter, he earned extra money ($.25 per saw) sharpening journeymen’s dull hand saws. They worked 6 day weeks then and with the extra money he paid for Sunday fishing trips with my grandmother.
@oldfashioned41454 жыл бұрын
Do you know what balsafied asphalt is? (4:26) interesting they used it for termite repellent.... I wonder if we still use it today and how effective they're...
@blaketodd12084 жыл бұрын
We still work 6 day weeks
@levonferguson65484 жыл бұрын
@OldFashioned we still use it. I used it not too long ago on the foundation of a house here out in Ohio. Still works great!
@futbolero41524 жыл бұрын
@@oldfashioned4145 think of it as plastidip nowadays foundation concrete is already moist proof but back then it was not. still doesnt hurt to seal it. all depends where you live if re sealing foundation is necessary been in the concrete business my whole life
@oldfashioned41454 жыл бұрын
@Scott Campbell I know right! I'm curious because for example in Hawaii, most houses, you have to spray harmful chemical to avoid termites (it's rampant) AND respray every few years. I felt like, long term this would be less harmful for the environment.
@tikitavi71204 жыл бұрын
Some of those tiled bathrooms from this era really are works of art. Much respect to all of these fine craftsmen from the past.
@arlenmargolin16504 жыл бұрын
I'm amazed that those tile setters didn't have plastic spacers like we do have today and that all the tiles had to be manually set to get them to a line
@bigpjohnson4 жыл бұрын
@@arlenmargolin1650 Back then, they were actual craftsmen who did this for a living. They did a fine job, and got paid a good wage too. Now so much construction is done for pennies by whoever they can scrounge up. Quality has gone down obviously.
@enigmaticx3264 жыл бұрын
@@arlenmargolin1650 Yep, I was thinking “give this man a laser level and some tile spacers”. Must’ve been tedious work.
@trickyricky121475 ай бұрын
@@arlenmargolin1650 I'm sure they had some sort of a trick up their sleeves back then like maybe "the tile spacing should be no more bigger than a nickel", then they probably would use a bunch of nickels as spacers. Being it's back in 1928 though, a .05 cent quarter was a decent amount of money to be using as tile spacers so more than likely just eyeball it.
@dave6425 ай бұрын
@@arlenmargolin1650 I have been to the Philippines and the still set tile the same way, no spacers, nothing and it comes out perfect, of course all houses there are concrete and tile.
@austin28424 жыл бұрын
If this house still exists, the current homeowner would be amazed to see this.
@WelshRabbit4 жыл бұрын
My home, a typical Victorian vernacular farm house in then-rural North Carolina, was built by my great grandfather and "the boys" (i.e., my grandfather and his brothers, my three great uncles) in 1907. I have a few photos of it and them working on it in various stages of construction and those photos are quite precious to our family. Those were the days when 2 x 4 studs were actually 2 x 4. Alas, when built, what passed for "indoor plumbing" was limited to just cold water manually pumped from a well to an elevated tank which served to the kitchen sink via a tap. The "necessary convenience" consisted of a gravel walkway to a small outhouse quite some distance from the house -- and yes, complete with the traditional crescent moon cut in the door.
@arlenmargolin16504 жыл бұрын
@@WelshRabbit that's hard to believe with all that cast iron piping all let it in with Oakham and lead and still there was no septic and no sewage for a toilet that is just hard to believe but amazing to hear they still had outhouses in 1907 wow amazing
@davidc85604 жыл бұрын
@@arlenmargolin1650 My dad, born in 1961, used an outhouse the first 16 years of his life, until his parents moved in 1977. Pennsylvania, USA What is considered "poor" these days is not having the newest Jordan's, the newest iphone, or God forbid hand-me-down clothes. 😲
@hartleyhomesteadmichigan60414 жыл бұрын
Wonder what type of GoPro they used to film that 😁
@austin28424 жыл бұрын
@@arlenmargolin1650 As a kid in Northern England, my dad and his family used a communal outhouse, and this was in the 50s! It was common for row houses to have only one or two outhouses for multiple households . According to him, they were always kept immaculately clean.
@csmith96842 жыл бұрын
nothing like cooking & working with molten lead on the job site lol No soil testing or even compaction before forming the foundation & yet I'd bet this house outlast current standard built homes today. Thanks for YT to be able to see these films & thanks for uploading it IFA!!
@minuteman41995 ай бұрын
My house was built in 1925 and is still solid. It's been rewired and replumbed and has new windows and roof, a lot of the plaster interior walls have been replaced by drywall, but it's still going strong.
@wr70334 ай бұрын
The reason for the compaction testing is literally to go above and beyond to ensure it NEVER fails. There is a lot that goes on in construction that the average person has no clue of. Following International codes ensures the publics safety that they will not be electrocuted, crushed, blown up, injured, or killed due to faulty building practices. One real example is if the person who lived in the house prior to you had an electrical line installed, but did not pull permits and did not dig deep enough while laying the new line per building codes. 15 years later you go to pull permits to make an edition to the house, the hidden electrical line does not show up on the utilities plans and does not get spray painted when marking utilities. So you start digging in the "safe zone" and are immediately electrocuted and die when you sever the shallow electrical line previously installed. Every single day homeowners are hiring cheap laborers to install and build things they are not trained or certified to do which means, some innocent person, hopefully not a child will pay the price, later.
@lamplighter67944 жыл бұрын
As a retired union electrician, I recall when I was an apprentice an old timer journeyman telling me about solid wire splicing back about when this house was built. This video only showed wires being stripped and twisted together. To finish, the twisted wires were cut about an inch long and left hanging down. When all splices were made in an area sparky would then go around with a cup of molten solder known as a "dip pot" and submerse all splices in solder. Then when cool they would be taped with a sticky cloth tape known as friction tape. No plastic wirenuts back then. To this day there are still twisted, soldered solid wire splices in older buildings as good as the day they were made. As a side note, the wire had rubber insulation with a cloth cover. Not many would fit in a half inch pipe.
@franciscodanconia454 жыл бұрын
F’ing sparkys...
@Bradley-tx6ed3 жыл бұрын
this must be chicago otherwise they would be running bare knob and tube
@johnlennon11512 жыл бұрын
@@franciscodanconia45 you sound like a plumber
@gtb81.2 жыл бұрын
i still solder wires for my own stuff. but i use those plastic wire nuts at work, don't much like them but they work alright, i actually still use K&T at home for my projects. going to build a radio repair shop soon, and will be using K&T again, love that old stuff!
@Progrocker702 жыл бұрын
@@Bradley-tx6ed Yep all residential here is still conduit, I've seen a lot of older BX cable in old homes but never knob and tube.
@327Erich2 жыл бұрын
As the owner of a 1928 home, I find this video extremely fascinating. There are specific features of this house that I can still find in mine.
@williamobrien27596 жыл бұрын
I work in historic building preservation as a wood finisher. These old homes were indeed well-made. A lot of the timber was old growth or first growth and hand selected. Dense and sturdy. The craftsmanship was superb in most homes and there was a sense of pride among the tradesmen. I've also been in thousands of new, 'upscale' plan homes for other work. These new homes, most of them, are little more than toothpicks and particle board wrapped up in vinyl and trimmed in PVC. They are being slapped up by the thousands all over the once-pristine countryside with no regard for any kind of quality. It breaks my heart to see thousands of historic structures abandoned and in ruin all over, city and country. Many could be saved and updated for half of what these new designer shacks cost. Shameful where our society at large has gone... Cheap, disposable instant bling. And, these new homeowners actually think they have something special. Sigh.......
@marcinna85536 жыл бұрын
I also work on old houses --- see my comments above. It is certainly true that a lot of old houses used heavier timber etc. But these are the houses that have survived. A lot of house have already been torn down and replaced with new -- and the reason they are not here today was because they were not built with any special pride or craftsmanship or high-quality materials. In every age people try to build things as efficiently and cheaply as possible -- that has never changed. Most of the stuff is discarded in a few decades, the well-built stuff lasts longer and that is what we now see. I was in Williamsburg, VA at a cabinet shop a few years back and the guy working there made the same point. He was showing us furniture from the 18th century and showing how they cut corners and used very cheap materials and quick methods. The key is to be able to do this and also turn out a product people can use. It is always a balancing act and this has not changed in centuries.
@williamobrien27596 жыл бұрын
Marc in NA Good point. There are thousands of poorly built structures all around Pittsburgh here. Mostly mass housing put up by the steel mills for their workers back in the 1800's. Amazing so many still survive. We also have thousands more buildings that are true examples of fine craftsmanship and materials. Those are the ones that I hate seeing abandoned and going to ruin.
@bobsmoth-iv3sp5 жыл бұрын
@@marcinna8553 I worked on a lot of old houses in New England , I know why they have building codes now ... Stair cases with 4 inches of tread. No head room . Sagging floors and roofs . No insulation , drafty windows and doors. Dry laid stone foundations .... As you said , and these are ones that lasted. Also the ones that have lasted have been updated at the least in part. the house in this film was build with the old style roofing and wall latts. Not to mention plaster walls, Does any one want to bet the roof shingles and latts have been torn off and reshingle over plywood ? Or that major sections of the exterior walls have been redone with plywood backing or the interior walls and ceilings have had major sections replaced with sheet rock .
@jayh95295 жыл бұрын
Yeah makes you wonder how they built the Vatican if this is 1928 progress
@Melissa07744 жыл бұрын
Yeah, and the newer houses with the cheapo building materials burn so much more easily too.
@uptalk1444 жыл бұрын
Old timers worked harder and built heavy and sturdy. I almost shed a tear watching these artists at work.
@steak8 Жыл бұрын
That's why there was a tavern on every corner.
@Rickswars5 ай бұрын
@@steak8now theirs meth or crack on every corner.
@vaquero70725 ай бұрын
Alcohol 😂 was medicine
@hayjacob6664 жыл бұрын
When 2x4’s were really 2”x4”.
@paulh75894 жыл бұрын
They have always been 1 1/2 x 3 1/2. Everybody thinks that an old 2x4 is a true 2x4. That just isn't the case. Rarely will you find them. I renovate historic homes in one of the oldest cities in America and have seen more unicorns than true 2x4's. I've seen shoddy workmanship and very skilled workmanship. Just because it's old doesn't make it better. I could go into further detail but I don't feel like typing that much, nobody would read it anyway. I will say that when I hear someone say "They don't build them like they used to." I reply "Thank God for that!"
@michaelkessler38134 жыл бұрын
Paul H I thought it was that true 2x4s and other true sizes are just rough sawn lumber and after planing are about 1 1/2 x 3 1/2 and other corresponding smaller sizes. Would it be possible that there did used to be construction with rough sawn (true size) lumber in more rural areas but planed, "finer" lumber would be used closer to cities?
@paulh75894 жыл бұрын
@@michaelkessler3813 Yes. You nailed it (no pun intended). Rural structures are the only places I have seen true dimensions on a 2x. Urban structures may even have 1 1/2 x 2 1/2 studs. It's a bitch to work on these places as you have to rip all the new studs. My own house was built in 1912 and the 2by's are the same as you buy today. I think the main difference is between "old growth" and "new growth" pine. Take an 8 foot 2x4, set it on a couple cinder blocks and stop on it with all your weight. New growth will snap like a toothpick, old growth will break your feet (and probably the cinder blocks). Old growth has enough natural turpentine in it and a tighter grain making it less susceptible to rot and termites.
@dodgeguyz4 жыл бұрын
I believe true 2X4 sizes go back the the 1800's. Later on (early 1900') is when they went to the nominal sizes of 1 1/2 X 3 1/2".
@feonix1384 жыл бұрын
They were rough cut.
@carlosalvarez65993 жыл бұрын
Respect for the man's doing the plans by hand for real
@jimholmes25554 жыл бұрын
In 1985 I rented a house in Denver, Near Stapleton airport. It was built in 1926, It was a Sears Roebuck kit house.
@backachershomestead4 жыл бұрын
A town where I grew up close to had several of them. There were also modern versions they sold with Fiberglass panels on the outside. Kinda reminded me of a gas station. Lol
@gjle4 жыл бұрын
I was living in Aurora in 1985 on the grounds of Fitzsimmons Army Hospital and was almost under the glide path for Denver Stapleton.
@waterheaterservices4 жыл бұрын
West of Stapleton, Park Hill? Or north of Stapleton? Sounds like some builds north of Stapleton, between Monaco and Quebec. We had a nice house at Montview and Jasmine in the 70s-80s.
@waterheaterservices4 жыл бұрын
@@gjle Oh gosh, it was noisy in those days around Stapleton. Almost unbearable sometimes.
@gjle4 жыл бұрын
@@waterheaterservices I lost a lot of sleep in those days.
@karenolson40007 жыл бұрын
It's amazing to think that most of those work men were born in the 19th century and are all gone now. They worked really hard.
@Jaimebugs6 жыл бұрын
Yes, it is! And, yeah, they did!
@maxi-me4 жыл бұрын
Thank goodness we have robots to build houses now
@finscreenname4 жыл бұрын
Tools make things faster but don't make it any easier. When I got into flooring in the early 80's the old timers would till me about how installing carpet was a 3 day event. First day a installer would get everything laid out and cut down, the next women would come in and hand sew all the seams and on the third day the installer would come back and stretch everything out and tack it down. Today because of seaming irons and tack-strip and staple guns we can do the same job in a day. Still got to handle all the same materials and do all the same steps but instead of driving a tack with a hammer we pull a trigger of a staple gun but we now only have 1/3rd of a day to do it.
@danseabreeze14044 жыл бұрын
Yet I'm sure many of their homes are still standing
@joemasse45684 жыл бұрын
They had to, but it’s still hard work, much has changed, but all the basics are the same. Any work that deals with craftsmanship tends to be hard work.
@larryharris9374 жыл бұрын
I remember my father and a couple of other old timers building a really nice log house for us to live in around 1952. I loved to hang around and watch and listen to them. One guy was talking one day about a power saw and how he would love to have one! The whole house was built with hand tools. They would go out in the swamps around Kissimmee Florida and harvest the cypress logs and bring them back to the home site and cut them to fit. Sad to say it caught on fire and burned a few years later. My father cried.
@guytech73105 ай бұрын
"Sad to say it caught on fire and burned a few years later. My father cried." I would have done the same.
@kmonnier4 жыл бұрын
My grandpa is 96 now and was the little boy’s age in this film.
@garyteague44804 жыл бұрын
Oh wow
@zfilmmaker4 жыл бұрын
Think about everything that’s changed in his lifetime. You should ask him, especially technology and how each was embraced by society and him. Film it.... you will treasure it forever. My father talked about his family having the first TV in his town and then color TV.
@dutchman0633 жыл бұрын
Cool, My dad was 2y/o ..:)
@patbrennan65724 ай бұрын
My dad was two when those amazing skilled workers performed their arts and skills.
@thisplaceisazoo4 ай бұрын
@@zfilmmaker I got to talk to my great grandmother when I was a teenager. She told me about riding in horse and buggies in the late 1800's.
@downhilltwofour00824 жыл бұрын
I find it amazing that while the tools of the trade have changed over time very little has changed about how they actually erect buildings.
@steak8 Жыл бұрын
In the last 20 years things have changed quite a bit. Engineered materials & specialty fasteners allow design not possible before. Codes that focus on high efficiency have created new methods for framing and materials that are quite different than the framing in the video.
@JerryCalvert-x9u10 ай бұрын
@@steak8All modern day homes are utter rubbish built for a quick buck by a greedy con artist using the lowest grade materials from the lowest bidders and the cheapest labor. It's over priced garbage. The codes were created to avoid law suits because they began to skimp out and cut so many corners that houses literally fall apart all around you. Especially once that 10 year warranty expires. All over priced modern day junk. All of it generic store bought synthetic junk. Like a computer threw up all over every town. It's all the same old cookie cutter nightmare slapped together by useless morons who can't find their own rear end without a laser guided gps, not can they wipe without an app to show them how. Not a single one is a carpenter. They have no life inside them and what they build represents them very well Id say. It's a literally extension of who they really are.
@j.clowers72236 жыл бұрын
I’m a builder myself...this was the most satisfying vid I’ve ever watched
@jamesdostie35564 ай бұрын
get a life you mor5on
@rgsaul35 ай бұрын
that little boy would grow up to be what we now call the greatest generation
@vasil123614 ай бұрын
Or he might have got offed in the war.
@12yearssober4 ай бұрын
@@vasil12361 Maybe not
@rgsaul34 ай бұрын
@@vasil12361 offed? you mean killed in action?
@vasil123614 ай бұрын
@@rgsaul3 offed, KIA, you're dead either way.
@rgsaul34 ай бұрын
@@vasil12361 tru dat
@wilshirestrasse22206 жыл бұрын
Fascinating. Watching skilled craftsmen - what ever their trade - is a joy to see. Thanks for posting this video.
@PacoOtis2 жыл бұрын
However, "good old days" my ass! LOL
@robertmejia45542 жыл бұрын
I loved this video on how the carpenters showed true craftsman work and cared about quality of their work.
@nowerries4 жыл бұрын
Interesting to see how they built these old homes I'm now tearing apart. They missed the part where they stuff the walls with old newspaper for insulation.
@elderfarms4 жыл бұрын
That didn’t come until later 😂
@sanfordberg48804 жыл бұрын
Probably California.
@randallbadgett40404 жыл бұрын
My grandmother's house had newspapers dated 1916 stuffed inside the walls.
@sundown7984 жыл бұрын
They would shred it with formaldehyde coating to keep the creepers out.
@nowerries4 жыл бұрын
@chris widney I feel yah on demoing homes with lathe and plaster. Knocking it down only to come to a corner with metal lathe thats like 8" wide. Stuff is hard as rock , then you get the wall stipped only to find 20lbs of the stuff in between the walls.
@tonyfehr1324 жыл бұрын
My house was built in 1915 and it has had updates like central air and new wiring but the bones of it are still completely straight and level after 105 years.
@kevinr32634 жыл бұрын
I remodel houses and I have never once encountered a house that was totally straight and level. Especially a 100 year old house
@captainamerica93534 жыл бұрын
@@kevinr3263 , where do you live? Up North we have frost heaves and temps from -30 to 95 above, not to mention clay soil
@kevinr32634 жыл бұрын
@@captainamerica9353 i live in Baltimore
@darioburatovich22403 жыл бұрын
@@kevinr3263 you are right, I live in Sydney, Australia in a full brick house build in 1910, and you see how out of square is in the tiles on the bathroom floor.
@beav42024 жыл бұрын
“ Mr. and Mrs Homeowners move in while the builders are still at work” .....funny how nothing has changed in 100 years!!
@Guest-br5mz3 жыл бұрын
Just like the Sims
@thomaswayneward4 ай бұрын
LOL, my wife was just saying the same thing.
@faultygrade4 жыл бұрын
Cedar shingles nailed directly to the Douglas fir roof sheathing,no paper. Look at the horn on that double hung window,replete with rope sash cord,and a little fine tuning with a wood plane.Tile tub surround adhered to a wire and mortar bed.Flooring guy installing hardwood flooring directly over the diagonal 1 X subfloor sans felt paper,with hand applied 6 penny finish nails through the tongue.Love old houses,have been inspecting them/ crawling under and over them for over 40 years.
@dbrown69414 жыл бұрын
It was called skip-sheathing, allowed shingles to breath. Just had a roof like that torn off my 90 year old house about 10 years ago.
@davidc85604 жыл бұрын
@@dbrown6941 Was it roofed over? Or did it do it's job for 80 years? That's amazing!
@dbrown69414 жыл бұрын
@@davidc8560 It had one layer of shingles put over it back in the 80's. We tore off the shingles and shakes but left the skip sheathing , put new sheathing and shingles over that. The attic is still full of broken cedar shingles.
@johnwayne39044 ай бұрын
What an absolute time capsule of a film this is, I appreciate you for sharing it with us. It makes me yearn even moreso to find an old house to fix-up and call home.
@MrSloika4 жыл бұрын
I live in a house that was built in 1927, it still has most of its plaster walls. Thanks so much for posting this vid.
@ericfregoso22664 жыл бұрын
Me too
@kskate91 Жыл бұрын
I live in a 1940 house has plaster walls as well. Crazy huh
@sethc47582 жыл бұрын
built a few houses in my lifetime, every time im building one i cant help but admire all these generations of workers who had to cut lumber with an actual hand saw, drive every last nail with hammers, mix every batch of concrete by hand, etc etc. us construction guys still might not have it easy compared to most other professions but man we have it a whole hell of a lot easier than the construction workers of half a century to the construction workers from over a century ago and beyond..
@cricketnpeachesj146 жыл бұрын
Great video, thanks for sharing. My house was built in 1900 and I always wonder how they built them back then. One thing for sure is they built this house to last, we have a stone foundation and the house was built with railroad ties. This house has been thru alot of Oswego, NY winters and held up great.
@seanmcguire79745 жыл бұрын
Cant have a classic home without the old piano
@cowboy_broke6 жыл бұрын
I am a Chicago plumber to see video of plumbers putting together cast iron pipe in 1929 is just incredible.
@svensvrgen63365 жыл бұрын
I've seen some guys use it on commercial jobs
@BigDrewski10004 жыл бұрын
Sadly cast iron pipes are illegal to use here in Florida now. No idea why other than insurance purposes.
@BigDrewski10004 жыл бұрын
Well,I should say illegal to use in plumbing for drainage from sinks, toilets, ever etc. You CAN use it for some things, but the list in highly limited.
@ajvintage95792 жыл бұрын
@@BigDrewski1000 cast iron pipes rust and crumble in on themselves over time, clogging up the lines. Last year I had to have my 1963 Florida house cast iron pipes relined for this issue, and it was quite costly.
@BigDrewski10002 жыл бұрын
@@ajvintage9579 oh yeah! I've found out since then. Had a neighbor have to go through all of that. Had to cut through his floor and everything. Cost him a bit under 70 grand
@lorimeyers383915 күн бұрын
This is SO awesome. It’s so freaky at the same time. Just the way people dressed and looked. Same with the decor. Mind blowing.
@chrismoody13425 ай бұрын
My father post WW2 built some 50 homes. All of them hand nailed, all of them hand sawn. Even myself worked in the new home and custom home industry. Picked up skills that translated to probably $150,000 in my personal home building and constant updating and repair projects.
@linda7345n4 жыл бұрын
My dad, born in 1914, apprenticed under a house builder. He told me once that if he made the smallest error during the build, not only was he yelled at but had to take whatever it was down and do it the right way. I doubt if that same sort of attention to perfection is done nowadays. My dad could build anything, it was amazing. He died in 1989 but still had and used the hand planer and brace & bit.
@abacab875 ай бұрын
Damn, I can relate. I started as an apprentice in the late 80's. I got yelled at frequently. When I became a foreman and then owner, I didn't yell at anybody because of that.
@linda7345n5 ай бұрын
@@abacab87 Well done in holding firm to your honor & integrity and not purposely creating upset with others. I do applaud you.
@gregoryenste38834 жыл бұрын
I’ve been framing for over 30 years. Things have changed dramatically. Much respect all timers.
@thomaswayneward4 ай бұрын
What has changed? I built for fifty years and good framing is still done the same as then.
@brandonlewis29164 жыл бұрын
What amazes me is how much more simple things have been made since then, while some how at the same time they have become much more complicated. That was very cool to watch!
@terrencedillon43454 жыл бұрын
Complicated because everyone wants to earn from your endeavors
@csmith96842 жыл бұрын
thats so true!
@drumer4life215 жыл бұрын
What’s cool is that we still use the same tool to cut tile with. It’s interesting to know that they tool hasn’t evolved like the other tools they use back in the day. And they didn’t use spacers for the tiles. They did it with a trowel.
@GarwoodNick5 жыл бұрын
Actually those tiles have lugs and are self-spacing. They're not consistent in size, though, so the spacing has to be tweaked here and there which is what he was doing with the trowel.
@scratchdog22164 жыл бұрын
16:30 I love this guy's shoes and I'll bet he'd love our modern air nailers.
@foamer4434 жыл бұрын
Guaranteed he had a bad back
@mcbridecreek4 жыл бұрын
That guy can hand nail!
@user-hd8ej8yx9p4 жыл бұрын
They’re called “lace-to-toe” shoes. I love them I have a pair of leather boots like that
@bigpjohnson4 жыл бұрын
My 1950 white oak floors were all hand-nailed, they had to really know how to nail to avoid damaging the edge! I had to install new wood in a closet and bought a $50 Husky floor nailer, much easier!
@willstratton64543 жыл бұрын
@@user-hd8ej8yx9p I honestly think they may be some early converse basketball shoes. You can see the circle logo on them when he turn his foot
@vickileonard725 ай бұрын
Lost skills. My house is 102 yrs old. Entering the basement & seeing the how the framing is joined is a treat
@rubbersole794 ай бұрын
I had an older gentleman neighbor once that told me that as a young boy he pounded lath on the inside of homes in Minneapolis for .75 cents a day. Later, he was a radio communications instructor for pilots heading to Europe to fight the Nazis. (Of course very few would return.) Now days no one appreciates the effort that went into putting a roof over their heads. Or for their freedoms they enjoy and abuse.
@aquicktake4 жыл бұрын
Fascinating to see how little has changed over a hundred years.
@kenelder96154 жыл бұрын
only if you know little about house construction
@heyeverybody56164 жыл бұрын
Respectfully I tell you this. Everything has changed. That home was built by hand. By loving craftsman. Houses today or thrown together with little care.
@aquicktake4 жыл бұрын
@@kenelder9615 Been in construction/contracting for the past 30 years.
@alb123456724 жыл бұрын
@@heyeverybody5616 The tools today are amazing. Imagine if someone did time travel and left a bag of all those Ryobi 18V tools :lol:
@geoffmorgan60594 жыл бұрын
Sort of like a 30 ton "excavator", say "steam shovel", with a riveted boom and on site concrete mixing. Old growth lumber that a "modern" air powered nailer would have trouble sinking a finishing nail in. Cast iron bell and spigot cast iron pipe. No OSB, or wafer board, or even plywood, real full dimension lumber. Lath and plaster! Yeah, not much. (The electrical wiring was a superior job, conduit, etc.)
@enigmaticx3264 жыл бұрын
The skill of those plasterers. Not many who could work like that now.
@abc-bu7nr2 жыл бұрын
Sure they could, there's just no need to.
@johnhiggins39434 жыл бұрын
Can't believe it only took 19 minutes to build a house back in 1928
@randybobandy98284 жыл бұрын
It took even less because they added in all the text and homeowner stuff. They where fast.
@leeb.patersons64634 жыл бұрын
Damn and they took even less time on deciding the color of their furniture and house because the only options were black as white
@ruthcisneros94714 жыл бұрын
@@leeb.patersons6463 Too funny
@playboyvic4 жыл бұрын
😂
@Betterifitsfree4 жыл бұрын
It took even less time to lose it in the 1930's.
@tomj5284 жыл бұрын
Just incredible to watch, a very historical film. I've seen older builder's tool boxes and I've always been amazed at just how few hand tools they had and how they could build an entire house with very little compared to the truck and trailers full of tools that today's builders use. The more I use hand tools, the more I'm convinced that they're a much smarter choice. Not to mention the materials that lasted far longer than modern versions like the plaster, cedar shingles, stucco, tile, cast iron tubs, waste pipes and hardwood floors.
@gheffz4 жыл бұрын
Absolutely amazing !!! Thanks!
@RegisteredTrial10 күн бұрын
It is really cool seeing the plaster work being done. My '38 house has wood lath, and I've been slowly repairing all of it over the last year and a half. Lots of cracks, and a few sections here and there that had to be cut out and re-done due to previous water leaks. I definitely prefer wood lath vs plasterboard. Much easier to repair imo. There is one section of plasterboard and plaster in my kitchen that must have been a repair a long time ago. Both it and the wood lath plaster were exposed to a water leak again, and the wood lath plaster held up so much better. The plasterboard basically de-laminated and fell apart. Wood lath really doesn't care about water too much. Eventually the plaster itself will fail around the wood lath. Then I can just cut out the plaster, and re-plaster over the original wood lath. I recently had to replace a section of my original wood flooring that was damaged, and found what appears to be plaster smears/dust on the sub-flooring. I realized that's likely from when the ceiling was plastered, with the guys working over that original sub-floor, before the oak flooring was installed.
@simontheconner2 жыл бұрын
14:30 100 years later and tiling is still done exactly the same.
@mewhor4 жыл бұрын
That house was ahead of it’s time. Looks more like a split level ranch from the 50s. Than a home built in 1928.
@GG1man4 жыл бұрын
I thought so too. I noticed the electrician installing metal conduit. I haven't seen that done in any housing other than for certain applications or maybe in very high end homes.
@joer34934 жыл бұрын
@@GG1man I'm actually not sure if this video is from the 20s. Some of the stuff, such as the electrical seems more like the 40s.
@bigfig19664 жыл бұрын
@@joer3493 It was definitely the 20's. The cars were from the 20's. Though I agree about the electrical work, it wasn't knob and tube which was done well in to the 30's. EMT for electric wiring. That was great.
@Lugnut640524 жыл бұрын
Was gonna say . . . that looks later than 1928. Looks like the 40s to me.
@LucasFernandez-fk8se3 жыл бұрын
Wtf?! Ur totally right the outside looks straight from the 40s or 50s
@Theresistance644 жыл бұрын
Wow, lathe and plaster. I have always wanted to see that done.
@-_James_-4 жыл бұрын
Plaster is still commonly used in the UK. It's a far superior product to the crap other countries put over dry wall.
@robertbrandywine4 жыл бұрын
In my schools built in the '20s and '30s, they used metal lathes like mini chain link fences stretched tightly over the studs and then plastered over. The walls felt like solid masonry.
@batmansdad31954 жыл бұрын
@@-_James_- you mean paper tape and compound? Nothing wrong with that, makes for a faster job to speed up the process. You still use asbestos plaster in the UK?
@-_James_-4 жыл бұрын
@@batmansdad3195 not asbestos. I think they're usually cement mixed with synthetic compounds these days, but I could be wrong. And they're not just applied to the joints. You do the whole wall for a flat surface. (As opposed to the wavy surface you get from filling and spreading out the joints.)
@seanm32264 жыл бұрын
My father had a lath and plaster business (in Florida) for 40 years. And raised a middle class family (of as many as 8) on it.
@randykreifels61714 ай бұрын
The guy putting the roof shakes on does such awsome work!
@Ts-zy4bw3 жыл бұрын
I’m quite handy, built many projects big and small. Room additions, roofing jobs, etc. to my own houses and I thought I was pretty good. Years ago a relative (retired carpenter) who was in town brought some basic hand tools to help me. Seriously, he brought an old hammer he made as a teenager (was given to me in his will, I still use it as my primary) and other basics like a hand saw. I offered all my battery powered gadgets, pneumatic nailer and lasers. He laughed and put me to shame within two minutes and he was 87 years old at the time. I think most modern contractors wouldn’t last a day on the job back in 1928.
@JerryCalvert-x9u10 ай бұрын
Not sure what a contractor is, but sounds very much like a con artist who drives a tractor. Best to stay very far away from these types of people. Nothing good can ever come from anyone who is lazy, stupid and greedy.
@guytech73105 ай бұрын
"I think most modern contractors wouldn’t last a day on the job back in 1928." Don't sell them short. The framers I hired worked pretty hard. The did use nail guns but also used hammers & nails. Modern roofers, concrete, workers work just has hard today.
@peteboss45194 жыл бұрын
Excellent compilation of the many facets of home building and the dedicated artists of that bygone era.
@cyoungso10 жыл бұрын
It is fascinating they are using rigid conduit for the wiring rather than knob/tube (being phased out in 1928) or the new bx cables. Very important bit of history here.
@WAQWBrentwood7 жыл бұрын
Rigid conduit was indeed rare in frame buildings in 1928! I was shocked to see it here 😜 ! K&T was not only still permitted but common almost up till WW2 in inexpensive frame buildings, But by the mid/late 20s Armored cable was seen in better frame buildings. and NMC was already becoming popular. (Armored cable, or flexible conduit was standard in masonry buildings or multiple tenant buildings). Even though K&T was limited (by most codes )to frame buildings, many "fly by night" crews installed it in masonry buildings into the '30s My great grandfather was an electrical contractor in the 1910s-40s and told "horror stories" of wires buried in plaster, fused neutrals and all manner of things that make you wonder how there are so many old buildings left standing!😨
@MrBrendog67rat6 жыл бұрын
it looks like EMT to me
@fanplant5 жыл бұрын
@@MrBrendog67rat me as well.
@fnhwk4 жыл бұрын
@@WAQWBrentwood one problem with knob and tube is that the t-taps they would make would get buried in the ceiling or wall.. Making it a nightmare trying to troubleshoot the system.
@andrewalexander94924 жыл бұрын
@@MrBrendog67rat EMT wasn't invented until around the Second World War. Edit, checking my sources, it was actually earlier than the second world war although I can't find when exactly. Looking closer at the film I have to agree that in the close-up of the J-box, it does look like EMT, ie: not threaded. Maybe EMT was being used as early as 1928. Jack Benfield, who invented the EMT bender and a lot of the techniques used, tells about being a rep for the company which introduced EMT.
@williamd47074 жыл бұрын
I started in construction in 1964 and what I was taught and introduced with was methods of 40 years earlier. When I retired as a contractor from that field of endeavor in 1989, the basics was still there although modernization was introduced.
@TechMan19004 жыл бұрын
I kept thinking the same thing while watching this. Aside from the lathe and plaster, and cast iron waste lines, it looks very similar to today.
@MemoGrafix4 жыл бұрын
13:54 - That bathtub is probably in the dump now. Replaced with a plastic shower.
@pacz81144 жыл бұрын
...or being purchased sight unseen over the internet for $8,000 by some yuppie.
@NYRM19744 жыл бұрын
That's the type of bathtub that can last Almost a lifetime if properly cared for I know because I have one made by Buffalo Ironworks and Casting Company of Buffalo New York since 1897
@Spahi774 жыл бұрын
Here in NYC they are dime a dozen, and still available....maybe i should open up a yuppie site for $8K per tub as suggested.
@summer-west4 жыл бұрын
I had a bathtub like that growing up. Hated it. It was always cold, slippery, and heavy enough to warp the part of the floor it sat on.
@bigpjohnson4 жыл бұрын
I demolished the 1940s rental house in my backyard but saved a similar tub. The porcelain is still in good shape actually, no rust around the drain. According to the stamp on the bottom, it was made in 1936. I plan to use it somewhere eventually, I like how tall and thick it is.
@lonnarheaj4 жыл бұрын
A "modern cement foundation" poured one wheel barrow at a time, uphill. Yeesch! It looks like it was still basically a pier and beam type foundation, but with beams of reinforced concrete supporting the exterior walls instead of individual piers. I do like the diagonally laid subfloor! That would still be a smart idea today. It leaves a lot of scrap leftovers, but the floor would be more stable.
@tomharris82635 ай бұрын
These men were really craftsmen.
@georgegoltz88138 күн бұрын
They went about their work deliberately and quietly. No radio or even small talk. All work and no nonsense.
@JMorris2164 жыл бұрын
some of those houses still stand today. thats amazing
@Spahi774 жыл бұрын
Some, here in NYC they are almost all there......When i walk into some of these places, i am amzaed at the labor that went into older places.
@TechTokOffical4 жыл бұрын
Prob MOST are still standing
@kays7494 жыл бұрын
Fascinating. My house was built in 1929. Makes me appreciate its finer points, especially the double hung windows.
@mc44924 жыл бұрын
My folks bought their house in 1980 It was built in 1898.. No joke..Built like a tank.Frame rough red wood Thick cement like plaster on thin 2 inch boards. Thick ass IRON pipes for the sewer lines. Wooden shingles. The glass for the widows was a bit blurry, I thinks a few of the windows were still original.Like an ice box in the winter and an oven in the summer. And of course on an elevated foundation. Memories..
@IlIIlllIlIIIlllllIlIIIl4 ай бұрын
Remodeled a 1930s house, when I had to drill through the studs in the wall to pass wire through it. Had to upgrade to a new drill and get some some auger bits--old growth lumber is phenomenal. Was able to count 90+ growth rings on some of those 2x4s. I wished I could package up that aroma it sent through my house as well. Smelt so good.
@SpressoHead5 ай бұрын
All that hearty old-growth lumber! Much more durable than today’s white-wood lumber.
@thomaswayneward4 ай бұрын
No it isn't. Todays lumber is actually better.
@johnwayne39044 ай бұрын
😂 Sure, Timmy.
@wr70334 ай бұрын
@thomaswayneward Are you trolling or did you actually fall out of the stupid tree and hit every branch on the way down? There's a reason loggers in CA were cutting down the giant sequoias when there were millions of acres of small young trees. It wasn't because it was easier. It was way more time consuming and labor intensive to cut a tree down the size of a house. Even they new the older the tree got the stronger the wood got as well.
@thomaswayneward4 ай бұрын
@@wr7033 I am relying on science, not myth. The new strain of Southern Pine grows faster and is stronger. Old growth means nothing except the tree is bigger and older, it is not stronger.
@stevenlake52784 ай бұрын
It you notice, there is no double header. It's one true piece of lumber.
@tdbbuzzard4919Ай бұрын
Guy nailing down the hardwood floor is rockin some old school converse all stars.
@rawbacon4 жыл бұрын
I've been a professional builder for 175 years and I can attest this is the way we did it in the Olden Days.
@only1love1792 жыл бұрын
Prooove itttttt !!!!!! 🤭🤭🤭🤭🤭
@mountainmantararua8824 Жыл бұрын
You beat me by 6 months.🤣🤣
@abacab875 ай бұрын
What was Keith Richards like as a boy?
@MichaelCooley-le4zb5 ай бұрын
😅
@jimcarter49294 жыл бұрын
I knew a fellow who was a retired painter in 1970, he told me that when he when to trade school in L.A. they learned about every trade, he was very knowledgeable and a great guy.
@mindeloman4 жыл бұрын
The floor carpenter at 16:13 is wearing early style chuck taylor Converse basketball shoes. That's very avant garde for the era where every function had a specific dress. No doubt, must've seem weird to other laborers. Would be like wearing bowling shoes today as casual wear. I wonder what his reasoning was behind using basketball shoes to do flooring. To not slip? To not cause dents or imperfections in the nee flooring. Pretty cool to see nonetheless.
@nowerries4 жыл бұрын
Same reason they wear them on basketball courts. The soles don't leave marks on the floor like black rubber ones do which most shoes of the era would have had. At least that, to me, seems a logical assumption.
@beauzer364 жыл бұрын
I was eying those Chuck Taylor's too!
@arlenmargolin16504 жыл бұрын
@@beauzer36 those sneakers in good shape would bring you some money today I saw a pair of 1970s Adidas sell for $1,000 to some Japanese person
@sundown7984 жыл бұрын
Looks like old school Keds!
@Zalgud6 жыл бұрын
Fascinating to watch these artisans at work.
@25mfd6 жыл бұрын
cool vid...back when a 2 x 4 was REALLY a 2 x 4.
@leviSyosef4 жыл бұрын
Real man that made real build that lasted real long time 💪💪💪💪
@bjj215 жыл бұрын
Hell yeah I've been looking for more videos like this. Great. Thanks
@FloydCourtnell5 ай бұрын
My grandfather was a great carpenter. Could pitch roof and make cabinets. All in a suit and tie 😊.
@tedlahm57405 ай бұрын
The ever present STETSON hat. A symbol of an upperclass workmen.
@williamd47074 жыл бұрын
The guy with the hardwood flooring was wearing tennis shoes. LOL
@danielmay88274 жыл бұрын
Maybe bowling shoes, everyone used to bowl back then. The smooth bottom of the shoe is good and clean for the new unstained wood floors.
@guytech73105 ай бұрын
I think those were boxing shoes.
@thomaswayneward4 ай бұрын
Yea but he knew how to nail. Hit the nail, not your foot. LOL
@catherineoconnell32136 жыл бұрын
My dad was a carpenter & did shuttering carpentry .......never wore helmets, masks, goggles, ear protection or special clothing......he was injured bad many times, he worked hard
@miguelclarkeottovonbismarck2 ай бұрын
good man, your dad. now days it's all hi vis monkeys and babies wearing saftey helmets when they ride bikes. Shameful and disgusting society of infants in the west.
@technicalitems7314 жыл бұрын
It would be interesting if one day someone could pinpoint where this film was taken and If the house still exists!!! Eventually, this will happen!
@riverraisin14 жыл бұрын
Definitely looks like a California house. Sure would be nice to know where.
@linda7345n4 жыл бұрын
@@riverraisin1 I agree, it does look like some of the old stucco'd houses here in southern Calif.
@bas10103 жыл бұрын
I'm guessing Los Angeles
@JerryCalvert-x9u10 ай бұрын
I could find out if ai wanted to, but need some motivation for that research. It's late here and I'm tired. But wouldn't be too difficult for me as I can research pretty darn good.
@guytech73105 ай бұрын
There is a commenter that stated the boy in the film was his father, You could ask him were the house is, & if it still standing.
@timklein39623 жыл бұрын
The lath and plaster walls amaze me; these guys were masters; these walls lasted 100 years and still going !!
@rollandjoeseph7 ай бұрын
Could you imagine nailing all the lath , then plastering multiple coats..ughh
@seanm32265 ай бұрын
@@rollandjoeseph My father fed a family of eight doing that 6 days a week.
@wadebarnett25424 жыл бұрын
I've had two houses that were built that way. There weren't so many power tools back then. It had the original plaster, plus the lead-sealed waste plumbing.
@mcbridecreek4 жыл бұрын
Lead and oakem
@joegonzales7725 ай бұрын
i bought my home in 1971 it was built on 1922 it has knob & tube electrical i upgraded the meter it also has rope & sash weights the walls are also plastered its a craftsman design i still live in it
@guytech73105 ай бұрын
You got to be in your eighties! My grandparents home was built in 1905. Had gas lighting fixures in it originally which were refitted for electrical wiring.
@joegonzales7725 ай бұрын
@@guytech7310 you got my age pretty close I'm 77 I was 25 in 1971
@Skateforlifelad Жыл бұрын
Moving that cast iron tubs would be the dreaded task of every house install.
@Vendetta_Armada802 жыл бұрын
My father worked on the twin tower subway lines in the 70s only 5 decades off but the old apartments we fix up all where built in the 1900s
@americanmilitiaman885 жыл бұрын
We rented a 1940s era house when i was younger. Had a red carpet through out minus kitchen and bath. The manager was going to replace the carpet amd we pulled it up the night before. And beneath it was a beautiful hard wood floor.
@MemoGrafix4 жыл бұрын
Many apts I've lived in had beautiful wood floors, cheap old elderly landlords would refuse to pull up old ugggly filthy carpets that had 10 different prior tenants. I will take pictures & pull up the carpets, never failed, beautiful wood floors. The landlords would always say how they did not know what the floors looked like when they bought the house. I ask them but it's okay for the new tenants to have to live with someone else's filthy carpets?? I ask them to at least have the carpets shampooed they refuse to do that much. I only ever had one young landlord remove carpets and refinish the floors, he and I was around the same age.
@mcraigdesign6 жыл бұрын
Using a steam shovel to excavate back then was truly ground breaking.
@shanegalang96 жыл бұрын
lol I see what you did there..........
@jimmymckay734 жыл бұрын
@@shanegalang9 dang you beat me to it. I'm digging what you're shoveling.
@Doomzdayxx3 жыл бұрын
This is amazing to watch. 100% respect to these men.
@justme88374 жыл бұрын
Love the tub and tile, not like the horrific stuff we have today in new homes, unless you pay extra.
@KaMil-gw2qr4 ай бұрын
100 years later, almost nothing has changed, except the 2x4's.
@speedysteve91214 ай бұрын
Insulation has moved from R-1 to R-19
@riverraisin14 жыл бұрын
Anybody ever contemplate the progress that has taken place in the last 200 years? Neighborhoods, cities, urban sprawl? It goes on for miles in some areas. It's truly amazing how far we've progressed in such a short time. I was walking thru a subdivision of over 500 homes that didn't exist 18 months ago. I looked around and wondered what all this is going to look like in 500 years. Will the same houses still be here? New ones built over top of the old ones? Will it revert back to nature? We've come a long ways in a short time. it's hard to imagine society moving along at the same pace for the distant future.
@fluffymittens244 ай бұрын
We did the plumbing on a 1906 house in Mississippi, remodel. I went into the attic and saw the framing, amazing what they did my hand back then.
@williamd47074 жыл бұрын
I believe this home was being constructed in the L.A. area due to the familiar hills and even a couple of palm trees. Panel framing of the framed walls was and is a southern California concept. The first framing contractor that I worked for--Jack Haglund , a framing contractor-- told me that in the early 60's.
@bh92754 жыл бұрын
I wouldn’t be surprised if it was multiple houses that these shots were taken.
@williamd47074 жыл бұрын
@Samwell I wonder what that property is worth now? Probably well into 7 figures.
@williamd47074 жыл бұрын
@@bh9275 I do not think so, due to the fireplace location in several scenes and the earth work that created a bilevel house garage tuck under.
@robertalkemade9895 ай бұрын
back then everyone wanted to do a good job
@RADIUMGLASS4 жыл бұрын
Big building boom during the 1920s in Detroit. Not just towers, but homes.
@drewkaufman1415 Жыл бұрын
I didn't think EMT conduit was used until the 1940s? In the 1920s most house were still built with knob & tube correct?
@robertgregory26184 жыл бұрын
I was surprised to see an electric saw doing the cutting of floor construction.
@waynedaley70484 жыл бұрын
Great to see all the trades doing their thing back in the day 🔨
@basspig4 жыл бұрын
I remember seeing a steam shovel like this one working on an empty lot next to me when I was growing up.
@richardpena72755 ай бұрын
Amazing video. Truly good to see great work ethic and attention to detail.
@alexander26856 жыл бұрын
Amazing work by all😆👍
@papasmurf35297 күн бұрын
16:13 are those some super old school chucks? Bring these back!