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my terrmite backhoe is suffering some metal damage on the fixed thumb that I built 7 years ago. so we are going to make sure it is strong enough to not happen again. lets fabricate some parts and weld them up.

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31 thoughts on “backhoe thumb rebuilding.

  1. Enjoy your videos Mustie , however I find it interesting that in your country you can drive an unregistered vehicle on a public road. Seen that on quite a few videos from the US .

  2. Great old time video working out of your garage and fabricating right out of your imagination. Even thou it is 2021
    the video is relevent and worth watching. Watching you work reminds me of this expression……. We have been doing
    so much with so little for so long , that now we can do anything , with nothing at all.

  3. I know that your a very capable man at working with your air tools however using a “death wheel” one handed is a accident waiting to happen! Because it happened to me and now I don’t have any feeling in my left thumb because of it. It happened in a spit second doing something very similar to what you were doing. It caught, stopped & slipped out of my hand and then as it was flipping around I hit the trigger again as it was heading right at the base of my thumb! 28 stitches later. I’m saying this selfishly because I want more of your great videos with both of your hands!

  4. If you want to build a Thumb like this, but haven't got the extra hydraulics, then consider a coil spring shock absorber for your back arm so you don't bend it like Mustie's friend did.

  5. I used one of these Terra Mites for almost three weeks. The things I didn't like was that it struggled going up about a 30° slope. Also, it had no parking brake. It would drift downhill if I didn't have one of the buckets dug in. A little disconcerting at times.

  6. Realy like watching you fix things the 175honda you fixed i bough one the same collar in 1976 and it was a 1976 model also wish i could find one like it again im 64years but still would love to have one to enjoy life and ride again thanks so much for your knollege of fixing thing

  7. Great content and I thank you for it…one word of advice, if you're going to use a grinder above your lathe ways, ALWAYS lay a protector rag across your ways. It's extremely hard to get ALL of the grit out of nooks and crannies on a lathe, and the grit will destroy your ways accuracy !!! Use a piece if 1/4" 2" x 2" angle iron and form a triangle using the piece you tacked on first. then come off with a flat-bar tab on each side to line up with your pin hole spots. Less welding and less material, but structurally beefier than original and 45 degree of angle Iron on inside should give more clearance…just head figuring…but, yours looks good. Just a note, if you can spray paint it while it's hot, the paint will bake on and be a lot tougher and last longer.
    Oh, and thanks for the "wheelie" at your video's end. KEWL.

  8. Owns a lathe, uses an angle grinder to reduce diameter of the rod???
    If the length of the rod is too long for the lathe bed, put the rod through the headstock and only turn down half the length at a time. I am sure that rod was anything but smoothly round after that. I know it's just a pivot pin, but my OCD is telling me to do it right the first time for a better fit.

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