Car builds are great fun, but also an exercise in patience since many can take months or even years to yeild a final result (*cough*cough* my Prelude build *cough*). But recently I've been enjoying those restoration videos like these:
I find these videos extremely relaxing.
Now, taking pictures and general production value aren't really my thing, but I did want to feel that satisfaction of a rebuilt item myself.
I have an old hand truck that a couple left at our house when they came to pick up the oven we were selling (when I moved into the house it had an electric stove/oven, I'm for natural gas all the way!). It was pretty well used when they left it, and then I've been using it for several years since then, and the wheels have pretty much disintegrated off of it.
So this is what we were starting with:
First thing is to take everything off and work on just the bare cart.
Off came the crappy old wheels
And I guess that was it. There was also that old peice fo rope on it. That came off and here's just the bare cart.
Now for one of my favorite tools: the wire wheel.
Getting started with the wire wheel:
More wire wheel:
Even MORE wire wheel:
I think that's pretty much everything. Now for the Rustoleum. First is primer:
Bottom half first:
Let it dry for a bit and then do the top half:
Let that dry for a while and then get started on the paint. I went with red. Again I started with the bottom half.
The paint takes a while longer to dry than the primer. Gotta be patient (I'm not very patient when it comes to paint drying).
Then you do the top half:
Lookin' pretty good! I tightened up that hardware after I primed it, but before I painted it.
New wheels. Got 'em from Amazon. I tried to spring for some pretty decent ones since I figure those more or less make or break the whole truck.
Took some goo-gone to get the rest of the label adhesive off of my shiny new wheels.
Slap them on there and enjoy your like new hand truck!
I haven't actually had to use it yet, but hey, that just means I haven't had to move anything heavy in a while! If restoring a hand truck means I never have to move anything heavy again then I would say that's money and time well spent!