>grab a few pints on the way to work. >climb 300 foot ladder. >hit a bunch of bricks with me 'ammer

>grab a few pints on the way to work
>climb 300 foot ladder
>hit a bunch of bricks with me 'ammer
>damage the roof of some pooftahs Volvo, not me fault though, he parked there
>climb down
>cash me 7 grand
>eat a steak with me tea
>work on me steam engine
>simple as
Were norf industrial workers the most based in the world?

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  1. 10 months ago
    Anonymous

    >die at 45.

    • 10 months ago
      Anonymous

      He made it to 66. Kidney cancer that spread. RIP in piece.

  2. 10 months ago
    Anonymous

    That guy's youtube vids are god tier. Looks dangerous at first, until you realize just how simple and brilliant his techniques are, and are probably even safer than modern practices.

    • 10 months ago
      Anonymous

      >That guy's youtube vids are god tier.

      and your post might approach peasant tier if you had identified him, but you're an idiot.

      • 10 months ago
        Anonymous

        I did it purely to be a dick, for you being such a pleb and not already knowing. Still not doing it either, fricko.

      • 10 months ago
        Anonymous

        It's Fred fricking Dibnah, for christ's sake. He's only been one of the most famous diyers for like 50 years now. Why don't you go and sell all your tools, you queer?

        • 10 months ago
          Anonymous

          Based. Anyone who is unaware of Fred Dibnah deserves to be executed.

          • 10 months ago
            Anonymous

            It's Fred fricking Dibnah, for christ's sake. He's only been one of the most famous diyers for like 50 years now. Why don't you go and sell all your tools, you queer?

            I have been a tradie for a decade and I have never looked up anything diy on youtube except gardening. Why the frick would I. I can ask colleagues and coworkers If I dont know something.

            So who is the larper here? homosexuals who consume diy content as entertainment, rather than make things, methinks.

            • 10 months ago
              Anonymous

              The anon probably thinks you're also english.

      • 10 months ago
        Anonymous

        Anyone who has ever looked up diy video on YouTube knows who this guy is. Now we know you’re just a visitor from PrepHole.

    • 10 months ago
      Anonymous

      my hands got sweaty just by looking at it

      • 10 months ago
        Anonymous

        i also had some issues with the captcha on another board moments ago and there are like 3 posts on this board in 10 minutes including mine, is shit fricked again?

  3. 10 months ago
    Anonymous

    >Restoring the steamroller placed a heavy burden upon his marriage and Alison would often complain that her husband spent more time in the shed, repairing the engine, than he did in the house. He responded by naming the vehicle Alison, telling his wife "It's not every woman that has a steam engine named after her.

  4. 10 months ago
    Anonymous

    He was a victorian industrial era man trapped in an increasingly post industrial world.

    • 10 months ago
      Anonymous

      So he was LARPing

      So comforting to know “le wrong generation” isn’t new.

      • 10 months ago
        Anonymous

        He was literally a professional steeplejack?

        • 10 months ago
          Anonymous

          And I’m a professional carpenter.

          But my shop isn’t powered by belts and pulleys.

          • 10 months ago
            Anonymous

            I think you've got the wrong analogy.

          • 10 months ago
            Anonymous

            And I'm a professional engineer
            Yeah your shop is.

  5. 10 months ago
    Anonymous

    >tfw you grew up in the 80s/90s in yorkshire and this guy was all the rage

    • 10 months ago
      Anonymous

      Cuz I'm Yorkshire til I die
      Yorkshire til I die

  6. 10 months ago
    Anonymous
    • 10 months ago
      Anonymous
  7. 10 months ago
    Anonymous
  8. 10 months ago
    Anonymous

    His steeplejacking stuff was impressive, though he actually did a lot more stuff than that for money, he was a mason and carpenter and all that too. In fact, from what he said, he always kind of disliked working on big ass chimneys, though that's what made him famous.

    The big diy interest should be that the crazy fricker built and entire working steam shop in his back yard, then once he completed that, he decided to to build a steam powered mining operation and sunk a mineshaft in his fricking garden.

    • 10 months ago
      Anonymous

      >and sunk a mineshaft in his fricking garden.
      He what?

      • 10 months ago
        Anonymous

        Yea he legit built a small yet functional mine in his back garden, there was even a TV series albeit a short one of him doing the work.

        • 10 months ago
          Anonymous

          Coal?

          • 10 months ago
            Anonymous

            I don't think he did any real actual ore mining with it. He was just having fun digging a mineshaft with his steam powered tools.

  9. 10 months ago
    Anonymous

    Balls of pure fricking British steel.

    • 10 months ago
      Anonymous

      You've got to be fit climbing ladders all day.

    • 10 months ago
      Anonymous

      >British steel

      Frick yeah. Manly like Judas Priest and tough as nails.

      • 10 months ago
        Anonymous

        Fricking chicks is for poofs

  10. 10 months ago
    Anonymous

    >300 foot ladder
    Sauce me fren

    • 10 months ago
      Anonymous
      • 10 months ago
        Anonymous

        >BBC cameraman on a boom lift as the chimney chad builds his own ladder with no safety tie-off.

      • 10 months ago
        Anonymous

        It's actually really safe from a structural perspective. The flexibility of the wooden ladders and natural rope offer resilance the dogs are pretty strong too since both of the force is vertical and the force is distributed across the whole structure.

        the only thing you might add is a climbing harness and some clips to tie yourself off at

        • 10 months ago
          Anonymous

          Probably the scariest part is how loose everything is lashed, and how you can see the ladders kind of shifting around a bit as he climbs them.

          If you think about it though, i mean, pretty much every ladder does that. If you walk up a 10 foot ladder it probably will move and bounce around slightly, and you don't really care. But...i guess it becomes a little different when you're 300 feet up in a 20mpg crosswind.

          • 10 months ago
            Anonymous

            The flex and give are an advantage in this case because of the forces around it it from the wind and shifts in the stack.
            Now the really scary part is not the ladder part but when he gets up top, if someone wants to find and post a good video of that stage then we'll see how they react.

            • 10 months ago
              Anonymous

              The freaking board on a rope he sits on is an eye opener. Also how he struts around his scaffold like he's dicking around on a sidewalk is pretty balsy. Especially since there's giant gaps in it that you can fall right through, not mention just fly right off the side. Of course he did that shit for like 50 years and had 0 issues with falling to his death, so what do i know?

              • 10 months ago
                Anonymous

                It looks like hes tied to an anchor and has tension on the rope, that makes shit way easier, and safer obviously. I can't stand working on roofs etc with loose ropes, because they become more of a liability if you fall vs keeping it tight.

              • 10 months ago
                Anonymous

                >The freaking board on a rope he sits on is an eye opener
                Have you never seen a bosun's chair before?

              • 10 months ago
                Anonymous

                That little segment after 9 minutes in is what gets me.

              • 10 months ago
                Anonymous

                The real scary part is the fact that he doesn't even spend that much time on the scaffold. He actually stands on a 300 year old decayed, rotting chimney most of the time.

                Think about that. He's standing on crumbling, rotting bricks, on a path less than 2 foot wide, as he sits there with a chisel and hammer and slowly brings the whole thing down. I mean heck, go walk around on a pile of uneven rubble on the ground and see how surefooted you are on that, much less 300 feet in the air.

  11. 10 months ago
    Anonymous

    Best vid of his is the one where he lights the fire under the big chimney to collapse it in the middle of some neighbourhood and it just falls perfectly where he wants it. I don’t know what kind of operation you’d need to do that these days but it sure ain’t a one man show like Mr dibnah, rip Fred you fricking legend

    • 10 months ago
      Anonymous

      The early 20th century videos of people taking them down with nothing but hammers and chisels are even crazier. One wrong move and they're fricked

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