I used to work at Kango Electric Hammers. I think I built every model they made. They did their own aluminium casting in-house if I recall. That was in the 70s. Time flies. Thanks for the videos--very captivating.
@AnthonyRBlacker9 ай бұрын
When I was a very young man (still a boy really) I worked with a carpenter and it was my job to learn to maintain all the tools. The plunge saw, well back then we didn't have one like that but we had tools that I would frequently disassemble, clean and lubricate. Paslode nailers were infamous for jamming up after a while without maintenance. It's tricky, as you say, some of these tools you must be quite certain you don't bend or crack anything while working on them. Nice job. Also, great to see that Kango, what a tool!!
@sabitiskoglu12689 ай бұрын
Your videos makes addiction sir.Respects as always .
@edgarcornette638726 күн бұрын
I am speechless ... all I can say is you bring honor and honesty to everything you do .. Thank You. Amazing work. just beautiful craftsmanship. You customers are lucky to have you.
@deandohertygreaser25 күн бұрын
Thank you so much
@simontravis74529 ай бұрын
Great save on the old Kango, i remember using one of them 40 years ago to demolish a wall in a house and ripping mortar of some walls we were renovating, totally love the long videos, keep the great work up.
@waynemccammon69927 ай бұрын
A machine to test the shoulders on any apprentice lol
@markywilba9 ай бұрын
Dean, really enjoying watching you do your stuff. I really like the format of your video's, no fancy music or long boring intro's, just a quick hello and straight down to business. I think i have watched all of them twice now, can't get enough of them. Love it when you get a machine in and you notice that there's nothing wrong, other than the user doesn't know how to use the machine properly. 😄😄
@johnkopiec31709 ай бұрын
That Kango took me back 17 years old on a site in the late 80s they where really the only thing out there. Enjoyed that selection Dean thanks 👍
@jimmysalford84159 ай бұрын
First day as a labourer at 16 in 1980 they gave me a Kango and pointed me at a concrete retaining wall that had to come out. It was fun for the first 10 minutes…😂
@tonydaddario47069 ай бұрын
@@jimmysalford8415 Still have my K900, it's a classic for sure.
@jasonbuckler1909 ай бұрын
Excellent job and tutorial as usual! Keep up the good work! Love the longer videos even if I don't get to finish in one sitting
@jamesriordan34949 ай бұрын
Love seeing the old quality, hanging in for another decade
@edchristie48399 ай бұрын
Great class Dean! Every days a school day for sure! 👏🏻👍
@ianlacey8121Ай бұрын
Hi Dean,I used to be an armature and stator winder back in the day and that burnt out motor smell we used to call our bread and butter smell.😁 love the videos 👍
@cyrusgorman90599 ай бұрын
I really enjoy your videos- very well done and narrated. The older tools were a joy to see. What a difference in build quality. Shame there are few parts left.
@ilfordjedi9 ай бұрын
A long format repair vid and a few Heinekens is my perfect end to a Friday.
@TurboTel689 ай бұрын
Seeing that Kango takes me back nearly 30 years using one to take all the render off a 3 bed bungalow in the heat of summer.
@prasadvn5249 ай бұрын
You are a pro.Thanks for the videos
@amcluesent9 ай бұрын
Dean could be a GP, "Sounds slack inside...hmmm, doesn't sound healthy anyways...unmistakable smell!"
@bayadere83089 ай бұрын
Also switching to Holmes mode: 'hmm, sawdust might be a clue (rubs between thumb and forefinger), mahogany I think Watson; a very hard wood.'
@robertchapin36839 ай бұрын
Thanks for these very informative videos. I was inspired to buy a couple of broken Makita drills and repair them. Both were very inexpensive to buy and very cheap to fix. One needed brushes and a brush holder and the other a chuck. Made a little profit on them. Keep the classes coming!
@chrissometimes74739 ай бұрын
One thing I especially appreciate about the way you work - when you do an electrical crimp, you always use a controlled cycle ratchet crimping tool. In North America, most people doing your job would use those terrible crimping pliers that look something like a pair of wire strippers. Car guys mostly use that type as well. They just don't do a consistent, reliable job. They are, of course, forbidden when working on things like aircraft and for cars and tools the manufacturers use proper tools. Just one of my pet peeves, along with people who solder crimps to make them "better" - all they are doing is bypassing the stress relief.
@markuscremer8759 ай бұрын
Danke!
@UnCoolDad9 ай бұрын
If those Makita plunge saws are popular, it may be worth getting a jig made to safely remove that pin more safely in the press.
@keymad49 ай бұрын
you are brilliant, thank you for your time.
@jmonsted9 ай бұрын
Glad to hear you like the DSP600 so much. Mine's pretty new and seeing light duty, but it's nice to know it's mostly well designed.
@whitacrebespoke4 күн бұрын
I still have a Kango 950 still going well.
@whitacrebespoke4 күн бұрын
Can get kango brushes, brush caps, hammer rebuild parts online likely not genuine but there’s a way to get them going again I will keep mine alive as long as I can
@deandohertygreaser4 күн бұрын
yes you can still get parts online for yourself, i see ebay has still got rebuild kits for them.
@tomasbengtsson51577 ай бұрын
Thanks for another great video. You wonder why Makita didn’t put a bushing in that hole, especially on an expensive machine like that.
@2chipped9 ай бұрын
Thanks! Same tracksaw,slowly getting harder 2017 model.
@josephking65159 ай бұрын
Are you brave enough to have a go getting the pivot pin out? Once when I was young and a stupid cocky bastard I may have but now, *nah!* 😁
@2chipped9 ай бұрын
@josephking6515 am in the process of selling it actually. With it not being seized,I would try the grease trick and first see if it will self-correct...given it not being fully bound up. Yes I would definitely press , if it got that far. The one shown is actually dangerous.
@robertonicolosipiva26466 ай бұрын
Dean dorerty Very good service from Brasil
@JohnWick-mi4hy9 ай бұрын
How the hell are ya Dean! Just wanted to say to keep up the good work with these videos. It's very interesting to watch and I'm learning a lot. Actually had to trouble shoot my rotary hammer on site and was able to take care of it and keep working for the day. Appreciate all you brother
@georgebonney909 ай бұрын
Thank you Sir
@LawrenceWinterburn9 ай бұрын
On the makita plunge...would silicone or lithium grease help?
@Dr_V9 ай бұрын
May not be the safest thing to do, but for old hammers like that if the switch goes bad you can by-pass it completely on the inside and install an external switch on the lead. Works well enough on low speed machines like a demolition hammer (not as dangerous as say a big angle grinder), but you may get in trouble if there's an (even unrelated) accident or a safety inspection on the work site. So basically if you chose to do this you should also retire the tool from any business use, just keep it home as a "hobby" machine and never lend it to anyone else.
@MilovanLoon9 ай бұрын
Steel on aluminium could oxidize if the parts get electricity running through them.
@AnthonySmith-hr2kp9 ай бұрын
Lmao, loved the crunching noise.....I thought it was the pin Justin the aluminum, ya got me
@reptilianasdf9 ай бұрын
Got me too! "Only joking."
@EliotTruelove9 ай бұрын
I definitely agree that that pivot pin on the plunge saw fix should be its own KZbin and Instagram short, edited down of course. Id think a small grease fitting tool that can operate off a grease gun that screws into that hole would be an awesome repair item rather than having to go through all that effort to remove the pin. And if i were you i would definitely rig up a jig out of a 2 x 10 wiith a hole drilled into it with a drill press to have the pon push through, but keeping everything level.
@Electricity_education9 ай бұрын
الله ينور عليك
@paulrainsford19539 ай бұрын
Have you tried rubbing a soft black pencil on the Makita pivot pin? The graphite is a good dry lubricant. Great videos!
@Electricity_education9 ай бұрын
ممتاز جدا ❤
@marcelsmit87899 ай бұрын
Everybody in the Netherlands calls a demolition hammer, no matter what the brand is, a Kango !!
@STV-H4H9 ай бұрын
I have a very old Bosch reciprocal saw that has a part that needs replacing. When I looked it up it’s no longer available. But it’s something that I imagine many other sawzall’s all use. Offhand I can’t remember exactly which piece, but I think it’s the fan blade or very closely linked or located. Do you have any videos that you have made that include a dated corded reciprocating of this type? I’ve watched so many of your videos and not once have I seen this tool amongst the multi tool repairs. I bought Makitas cordless version (it’s an 18v version, nowhere near the usefulness or durability) and buying a +250 equivalent (that won’t last decades) is a hard sell. I used this thing to chop entire cars in half in the 90s (back when I bought it used from a pawn shop) and until last summer when I needed to trim small tree branches that a chainsaw was my alternative, had the carburetor cooperated
@garyduke40569 ай бұрын
What brand of bearing puller are you using? Could not make out the name on the side.
@marcelsmit87899 ай бұрын
Hey, I watched this the 2nd time and in the end when Dean changed the yellow saw blade, I saw something really strange! I didn't know you can flip the flange from 20 to 30 mm. Went straight to the shed just to check my HS7601 and guess what.... Yep.... Dean is right (how could he be wrong??) Worst is.... it is even in the manual.... 😒Main reason I stay stupid...I don't read the manuals...
@deandohertygreaser9 ай бұрын
Noone dose.
@marcelsmit87899 ай бұрын
@@deandohertygreaser Thank god I am not the only one... 😅
@thomasbrown94024 ай бұрын
I love how you just casually toss small parts around your workbench, lol. Something that comes with repairing 20K+ tools, I suppose. I'm labeling and bagging and notating taking videos and still losing half the fasteners or forgetting how things go back together.
@kizzjd95789 ай бұрын
Be careful taking the base plate off the plunge saw. There is about 1mm movement in it and can throw your blade location out on your guide rail rubber splinter guard. Generally need a splinter guard replacement with any base plate adjustments.
@Matt-ns2ty9 ай бұрын
hi Dean, i love your content you really explain well how to desassemble the whole tool. Do you ever use silicon lubricant on any tools or parts since residue and dust doesn't stick on it ?
@simesimicevic87139 ай бұрын
Whats in your opinion a good reliable cordless drill for a home shop from bosch or makita?
@MargaretWynn-h5e9 ай бұрын
Couldn't stop watching. You are great fault finding all sorts of tools. From Margaret in Scotland.🧓
@EliotTruelove9 ай бұрын
I had no idea you could bypass the controller in a DSS611, thats crazy to me. Im betting thats why Makita have been putting more and more robust battery protections in their battery protection boards, to account for older tools or kmockoff tools that domt have any protections.
@Mouse66779 ай бұрын
Thanks for filming these repair vids....A little question please...ON the SDS drill, what tyoe of greases do you use in the motor area and the chuck end??? Graphite/lithium etc....Thanks again Dean
@deandohertygreaser9 ай бұрын
I Use mainly bosch grease myself. 1615430015 and 1615430001. But these are expensive. So a lithium grease will also do fine
@Justicesdad9 ай бұрын
Algorithm to get on more feeds, get more subs, get 🎉
@DarkMetaOFFICIAL9 ай бұрын
Yoooo! New upload 😅 sweet
@BurnzyXXD9 ай бұрын
clicked so fast still 360p ^
@troubleis52719 ай бұрын
teacher is in the house- pay attention and sit up straight
@aydenandchase72209 ай бұрын
Please explain how people drop off tools without ANY info, I don’t understand how that’s a thing, do they know you??? Do you ever repair and they never come back to pick up
@jonashermansson25199 ай бұрын
Just a question about Kango. Are they owned by Milwaukee? I have a K540 and it says Kango on it.
@deandohertygreaser9 ай бұрын
They are owned now by TTI, along with milwaulee, AEG, Hart, stiletto and ryobi.
@jonashermansson25199 ай бұрын
@@deandohertygreaser that explains why spare parts are hard to find…
@fredholmes62849 ай бұрын
Was "kango" made in England
@michaelfairchild9 ай бұрын
Dean: Lets see whats wrong with her. *turn it on* Me: Techno rave party inside.
@stuartyoung95044 ай бұрын
Dean Doherty were are you based and your address I may have a DeWALT cordless drill that needs fixing please let me know thanks
@bassboat19 ай бұрын
I let a little water hit the floor during the Makita pin press you sob😢😊
@refactorear9 ай бұрын
1:08:10 Curious, do you still charge a nominal fee (like, wasted storage or time) when they drop you something that works but they don't know how to use it?
@deandohertygreaser9 ай бұрын
it simply depends. if it is from one our customers who bought it here, or if iv spent no time on it, then no. But if i have wasted time with it or if it has to be boxed up and posted back. then i would have to charge an inspection fee. But the most I can convince my boss ( the owner of the hardware shop) to charge is 5 euro.
@jonashermansson25199 ай бұрын
I thougt you where the owner 😎
@connahjones81789 ай бұрын
Those DSS611 and the 610 should have had a car fuse built in which stopped them from drawing too much current, an easy fix when it blows and keeps the saw alive. Bad design makita (i have the 610)
@EliotTruelove9 ай бұрын
Seems like it wouldn't be impossible to add to it, there may be room in the handle for that
@paulcollin13989 ай бұрын
That old kango why can't they still make um like that 👍
@josephking65159 ай бұрын
Same reason they had the "Lightbulb Cartel" in the mid 20s to mid 30s.
@brickleyyard49669 ай бұрын
How can I send my tools to be repaired by you if I'm in the u K is that something you interested in taking on.
@deandohertygreaser9 ай бұрын
Sorry I cannot. I'm only doing local repairs.
@repairs5249 ай бұрын
Just looking Dean that old armature for the Makita had a magnet taco on it but the new one didn't did that make any difference to the Machine
@deandohertygreaser9 ай бұрын
the taco is the red disc on the bottom, there was one on the old and new one
@leoionita80839 ай бұрын
Hi Dean. I've been watching your videos for a long time now mate and really enjoy it. I work as a plumber and I like to try to fix my tools by myself when they brake but now I'm a bit stuck. I have a makita dga517 grinder that only works when I tur the disc a little then when i let go of the triger most of the time I have to turn the disc again. I'm not going to open it as its still on warranty but I was just courious if you'd have any thoughts on what the issue might be.
@GRS19037 ай бұрын
Wonder if anyone can help, I have a kango 950k, was working great , then motor runs half speed, new brushes, no difference, took out piston,striker and motor runs perfectly,it’s well greased any help, advice would be appreciated, thanks
@deandohertygreaser7 ай бұрын
If it was running full power and dropped speed when you where using it. Then more than likely it will be a burnt out armature. Under no load with the piston removed, it might run fine. But once the extra load from the piston on added, the motor with struggle and start to spark heavily. If it was not being used and you simply found it running half speed then check the wiring. Someone my have rewired the plug wrong
@GRS19037 ай бұрын
Thank you kind sir, I appreciate your advice, I have been watching your channel with interest and impressed with your knowledge, thank u 🙏 for your time 🏴
@bigdavedownunder9 ай бұрын
I'm grand mate
@mirzech9 ай бұрын
How the hell are yous… eyval
@vunguy3n9 ай бұрын
I'm sure I'm not the first to say this, but I feel like I'm listening to Shrek fix tools. Don't take that in a bad way, I think it's fantastic. Thanks for sharing your videos. I've learned fixing tools is like an onion