Episode 1 The Repair Shop


Episode 1

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Welcome to The Repair Shop,

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where cherished family heirlooms are brought back to life.

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Anything can happen - this is the workshop of dreams.

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Home to furniture restorer Jay Blades.

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Nowadays, things are not built to last,

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so we've become part of this throwaway culture.

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It's all about preserving and restoring.

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We bring the old back to new.

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Working alongside Jay will be some of the country's leading

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crafts people...

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I like making things with my hands.

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I love to see how things work and I want to know how things work.

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Whether it's a Rembrandt or somebody's family piece,

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every painting deserves the same.

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..each bringing their own unique set of skills.

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You're about to witness some magic.

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They will resurrect...

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-..revive...

-Oh, yes.

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..and rejuvenate...

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treasured possessions and irreplaceable pieces

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of family history...

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Oh, my goodness me, it looks like it's new!

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..bringing both the objects...

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Oh!

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-Oh, wow!

-..and the memories that they hold...

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back to life.

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Oh, thank you!

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In The Repair Shop today,

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accordion expert Roger Thomas wrestles with an instrument

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that survived the Blitz, but now sounds like a strangled cat.

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DISCORDANT SQUEAKING

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I have to be very careful not to cause any damage because

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if I snap that off, then I'm going to be in trouble.

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While furniture restorer Will Kirk

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performs some emergency surgery on a 50-year-old fish.

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This was probably carved by one of Fletcher Christian's descendants.

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But first, something to test the skills of furniture restorer

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Jay Blades and clockmaker Steve Fletcher -

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a treasured family piece belonging to Jane Fanner.

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-What have we got here, then?

-Something that, to me, is very,

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very special because it was made by my dad.

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-It feels like Christmas time.

-Unwrapping a present.

-Wow.

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-And there we are.

-So, your father made this clock?

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All of the clock, yes.

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-Wow.

-One of the things that you need to know is my father was totally

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blind, I mean, he couldn't even tell the difference between day and night.

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Seriously?

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Dad and I were very close.

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He was born with something called retina pigmentosis and gradually

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the eyesight got narrower and narrower and narrower.

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By the time he met my mother,

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he was able to see only a minuscule amount and he'd lost his sight

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completely after that.

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I absolutely love this clock.

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It always chimed all the time he was alive, and then, just after he died,

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it stopped chiming, it stopped working, and it needs mending.

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Well, I've never seen anything like it in my life.

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I can see and hear that it's got nine gong rods,

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which means that it plays Whittington chimes.

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I can't remember the exact tune,

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but I can tell you it sort of trills,

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it's an incredibly pretty little... ble-blible-blibble...

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-sort of tune.

-Wow, really?

-Yeah.

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I'm just looking at the door that goes on there.

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I was just trying to figure it out, how he made that by feeling there.

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That in itself is just, like, amazing.

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-It's incredible.

-Sound mattered so much to him...

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-Yeah.

-..that I really want to hear the chime working more than anything.

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I don't even mind if it doesn't keep good time...

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-It's just the chime.

-..but I'd love to hear those chimes again.

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-We'll do him proud, we'll do your dad proud.

-Oh, I'm so thrilled.

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-All right, you take care now.

-Bye-bye, now.

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Now, that's blown me away, now. That just made me, like, wow.

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I'm actually thrilled and excited, but also missing Dad more than ever.

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Now it's down to Jay,

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Steve and The Repair Shop team to get this treasured timepiece

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ticking and chiming again.

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What I think I'll be able to do is revitalise the actual case.

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So not taking away any of the integrity,

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but making sure it just shines.

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It's looking a bit tired at the moment, isn't it?

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-It does look a little bit tired.

-Yeah.

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I think the main challenge is going to be just making sure

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we get the movement working OK.

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So, I'll strip down the whole clock, right down to every single screw.

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-Seriously?

-Yeah, yep, yep.

-So, you're not going to lose any screws,

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you'll take them all apart and then be able to put it back

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-together again?

-Yeah, yeah, every single part.

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Right, I've taken the mechanism out.

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So, it's like a piece of furniture now.

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Cool, so I can have my wicked way with it?

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-You can have your wicked way with it.

-Thank you, sir.

-Yeah.

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-Kirsten.

-Steve.

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I wonder whether you can do a little job for me...?

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Steve is also calling on the skills of Repair Shop ceramics expert

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Kirsten Ramsay to help give the face a well-needed makeover.

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I've got this dial here that I think we could improve by painting

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-the numerals black.

-OK.

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That leaves Steve with the main

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challenge of getting the chimes sounding.

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The hammers that hit the gong rods are powered by the clock mechanism,

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which hasn't worked since Jane's father's death.

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So, to fix the chimes,

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Steve's going to have to first mend the whole clock mechanism.

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The main problem is in the bearings, these holes here.

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Even more tough than that is that some of the teeth are slightly worn.

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So the main challenge is going to be to get the chimes sounding

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as Jane would have remembered them, and...

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..that's going to be quite interesting.

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From tired treasures that just want some TLC to mouldering Old Masters

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in need of a full MOT,

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The Repair Shop team takes on labours of love

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that have lain unfixed and forlorn for years.

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Will, here you go, there's one for you.

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Faye, what's in the box?

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It's...

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a flying fish.

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Wow!

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This family pet was plucked from a remote corner of the Pacific

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by Faye Lambert's parents nearly 60 years ago.

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He needs a little help from furniture restorer Will

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-to bring him out of retirement.

-You can see what's happened.

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-Oh, no!

-Its tail, it's snapped off, unfortunately.

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Aw! Um, you don't happen to have...?

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I'm sure that you would have brought it with you if you did have...

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-I'm afraid that's long gone.

-Right.

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It was bought on our way back from Australia and I remember my mother

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coming down, waking my sister and me up, and saying, "Come up on deck,

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"cos something quite exciting's happening,"

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and the islanders were rowing out in their canoes from Pitcairn Island,

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and they were selling their wares.

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-Wow.

-I don't know if you've heard of Mutiny on the Bounty?

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-Yes.

-But this was probably carved

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by one of Fletcher Christian's descendants.

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The crew who mutinied on HMS Bounty in 1789 in the South Pacific

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settled on Pitcairn Island.

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Their descendants live there to this day.

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And carved flying fish like Faye's

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-can fetch up to £200 in good condition.

-Steve?

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-Yeah.

-You haven't got a pair of callipers?

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Will's toughest test will be to make a seamless repair without the

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original piece of tail that's broken off,

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as it was carved from a tree that grows on the other side of the world,

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thousands of miles from The Repair Shop.

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So, I've managed to find some wood

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that has a very similar colour and grain to the fish and, hopefully,

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I might have enough width on that

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to make up the missing part of the tail.

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So, what I'm looking for here...

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I mean, I have an overall decent colour match,

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but it'd be quite nice to get a similar grain pattern.

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Excuse the licking.

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If you look here, we've also got a bit of figure and a bit of grain going

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on in the wood there, so I think, if I can get the angle right,

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I could probably have, like,

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a decent colour match and also a match for the pattern as well.

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It's weird to think that the last person working on this fish

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would have been one of the islanders.

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It's actually quite an honour, really.

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Meanwhile, third-generation clockmaker Steve has reached a critical point

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in getting Jane's clock working again.

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It's bath time.

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So, I'm just cleaning up these barrels now.

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We use old-fashioned clock cleaning fluid

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and then I scrub them up in normal washing-up liquid.

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This is the way that we've been cleaning clocks forever

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and my grandfather used to clean them in exactly the same way.

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I'm just using a water-based paint with pigments and just flooding that

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into these areas, but it's quite painstaking and quite fiddly,

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hence the magnifying glass.

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I just find when I'm doing really sort of fiddly painting,

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really close up, you sort of tend not to breathe, you hold your breath

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so that you get a completely sort of straight line.

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So, yeah, not much chatting while I get on with this.

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-Jay?

-Yeah?

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You look better with your mask on.

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That's what the missus tells me!

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With the hundreds of individual parts washed and clean,

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Steve must now put the clock back together again before he can fix the

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chimes and find out exactly what they sound like.

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-How we doing, Steve?

-I'm just putting some new springs into two of the barrels.

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What, that's going in one of them?

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Yep, and then the barrels go into the clock.

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So, Steve, do we know anything more about the Whittington chimes, then?

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Any history about that?

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Yeah, they're based on the chimes of St Mary's church at Bow.

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-So, the Bow bells.

-Bow bells, yeah.

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-East London. All right.

-And they're called Whittington because they're

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based on a story about Richard Whittington, the Mayor of London...

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-Yeah.

-..when he was a lad and he was Dick Whittington.

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-Oh!

-And they've just been called Whittington chimes.

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So, Steve, when will we hear the chimes the same way that Jane remembers them?

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I'm almost there on the movement. I know it doesn't look it,

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but I'm on the home straight at the moment.

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-Really?

-This is the easier part, actually.

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Did you just say this is the easy part?

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-Yeah.

-It doesn't look easy at all.

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How many pieces have you got here that goes into this clock?

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Just in this unit alone, I suppose there's, um, 100 pieces.

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-Wow.

-And the rest of the clock...

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I suppose another 150 pieces.

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But hold on, I do see a washer there. What's going on there?

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No, no, no, no, that was an extra washer.

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-You sure?

-Don't point that out.

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You know what? Funnily enough...

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You had lost a washer?

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I had lost a washer, so I took a washer out of my washer drawer,

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-put it in and then I found the other washer.

-The washer.

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See, it does happen.

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So now you've got to just put it all together.

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Yep, I'm just putting it all together now.

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So I'd best go and crack on with the case, shouldn't I?

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-Have you not done it yet?

-Well, I'll see you in a minute, um...

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-I'm gone!

-Good.

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-Right.

-How are you doing?

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The young lady you need to see is Kirsten just over there.

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The Repair Shop experts have countless years of experience at rescuing

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cherished possessions from languishing broken in the country's attics and cellars.

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What have you got there? That looks nice. Hello.

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-So, what's this?

-This was my mother's accordion.

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-Oh, wow.

-But she has given it to my daughter now.

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Next to arrive in need of some Repair Shop TLC,

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the Brierley family have something to test the musical talents

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of accordion expert Roger Thomas.

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Cos Sarah's the musician of the family.

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Oh, so you can play this, Sarah?

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Well, I would like to.

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-It was my mum's...

-Right.

-..who is now 94.

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-And do you know when she got this one?

-When she was 17,

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she came home with her first week's wages and her mum went

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and put it down as a deposit for them to buy this,

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so it was actually brand-new when they bought it.

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-So I'm just trying to do the maths. So, how old...?

-So, she's 94,

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-so it's just under 80 years old, isn't it?

-OK.

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Roger is one of just a handful of specialist accordion restorers in the UK.

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But can he get this antique instrument playing sweet music once more?

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HE PLAYS A NOTE I can hear that really high note.

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-Yeah.

-Cos it shouldn't make that really high-pitched noise, should it?

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No, no, it's very annoying, actually.

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Because you can't actually play it, either.

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SQUEAKING

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-Yeah, it's like a cat, isn't it?

-Yeah.

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That doesn't sound right, either.

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-No. OK.

-These keys that are popping up,

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they look like they're kind of broken.

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-You can deal with that, can't you?

-Yeah. It's a beautiful instrument, isn't it?

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-Yeah.

-But the story about the accordion

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is my mum used to play it during the war,

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-during the Blitz...

-Oh, wow.

-..in the shelters.

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-Really?

-So they used to go, obviously,

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underground and play to keep people's spirits up.

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So where does she think this is? Does she know this is here today?

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-She doesn't know.

-She doesn't know anything about it.

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She doesn't know anything about it.

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-Seriously?

-Yeah.

-And, in fact, last time she saw Sarah, she said,

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"How are you getting on with my accordion?"

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Sarah then says... "Ask Dad."

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-Just pass the buck!

-She knows it's broken and she's been nagging

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for a couple of years now for me to get it done.

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So, what would this mean to Mum to actually get this repaired, then?

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-Oh, she'd...

-She'd be really pleased, wouldn't she?

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Yeah. I think really she'd like me to be able to play it.

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-So it's going to mean a lot to her.

-It's going to mean a lot.

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So, hopefully, by the time -

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not hopefully - by the time you come back... I know,

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-you looked at me funny then.

-Yeah, yeah, yes, the "hopefully", yeah!

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Definitely, by the time you come back,

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it will not sound like a strangled cat.

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-It will if I play it.

-Yeah, if you play it, or me, as well,

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but it's definitely going to sound good.

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Thank you very much, nice to meet you.

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-You take care now. All right?

-Bye-bye.

-Bye-bye.

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-Well, that's a nice story.

-Yeah, it is.

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Hm. I've got to adjust the levers inside here...

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There's always a little bit of risk there,

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so I've got to be very careful I don't break anything, that's the kind of first challenge.

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OK. So, what should a working accordion sound like anyway?

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Well, I can't actually play this one right now, but I've got...

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Why don't we go over to the bench...

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-OK.

-I've got a little... A little melodeon over there that I can just give

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-you a rough idea of what it ought to sound like.

-All right.

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-HE PLAYS A TUNE

-That sounds all right. Yeah.

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That's really nice, yeah.

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So, that kind of gives you...

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-Well done.

-Yay!

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-Come on, eh?

-..a rough idea.

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-So, have you fixed it already, then?

-He has fixed it.

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I'd quite like to save that as a ringtone on my phone.

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Actually, if you could do that again...

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Before he can get Iris' 80-year-old machine sounding as good as that,

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Roger needs to investigate.

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So, it's always a bit kind of entering into the unknown

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when you open up one of these... to take a look inside.

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And we'll take the grill off...

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An accordion works by blowing air from the bellows across the reeds

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inside. The notes are determined by which keys and buttons are pressed.

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Roger's detective work reveals a problem straight away.

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What I can deduce from this is that one of the pallets has fallen off

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and... Look, there's the pallet.

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This is a pallet. It's a leather and felt sandwich,

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and when you operate the bellows it forms an air seal,

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and this is why we're getting the sound when you...

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-SQUEAKING

-The dead cat sound.

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But the thing I need to do is just give this leather a bit of a brush.

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I can glue that back on there.

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I then can give it a full test,

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so I can test all the notes to see

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whether there are any other sounds that we don't want.

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While Roger's specialist skills are focused on finessing the accordion,

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the rest of The Repair Shop team

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have been turning their talents to getting Jane's clock ticking

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and chiming again in time for her return.

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-You got a minute, Steve?

-Yeah.

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-Oh.

-I've got your clock face.

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-Would you call that a clock face or...?

-It's a chapter ring.

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-Chapter ring, OK.

-That is looking really good.

0:16:250:16:28

-Is that OK?

-Brilliant, oh, fantastic, thank you.

0:16:280:16:31

I'll leave it with you.

0:16:310:16:32

Now with all the pieces back in Steve's hands,

0:16:320:16:34

his final job is to put it back together again before Jane arrives.

0:16:340:16:39

Um...

0:16:390:16:41

I've got to make an adjustment. it's not going to go straight in.

0:16:410:16:44

I've put a bolt instead of a riveted screw in and I've just got to take

0:16:450:16:50

a very small amount of material off of the case.

0:16:500:16:54

After taking the clock apart down to the very last screw,

0:16:540:16:58

it's the very last screw that's undone Steve.

0:16:580:17:01

Precious seconds slipping away,

0:17:010:17:03

it's over to Jay for a last-minute fix.

0:17:030:17:05

I can't get me file in there.

0:17:050:17:06

I don't know whether you can just cut something like that here?

0:17:060:17:09

Oh, I tell you what we could do, though, we could take the door off,

0:17:090:17:11

cos it's the door that's in the way, isn't it?

0:17:110:17:13

-Yeah, it is. Yeah, yeah.

-There we are.

0:17:130:17:15

-So just going straight down, you want, yeah?

-Yeah, yeah.

0:17:150:17:18

I think that might do, actually.

0:17:230:17:25

-Yeah?

-Right, ready?

-Yeah.

0:17:250:17:27

What am I holding my breath for?

0:17:270:17:29

Tense moment.

0:17:290:17:30

-Perfect.

-That's good.

-Absolutely perfect.

0:17:320:17:34

Well done.

0:17:340:17:36

-Hello, Jane.

-How are you?

0:17:370:17:39

Yeah, good. This is the bit we really love,

0:17:390:17:41

so I'll just go and get it for you.

0:17:410:17:43

Oh, wow.

0:17:430:17:45

There we are.

0:17:490:17:52

That looks wonderful.

0:17:520:17:54

Oh, look, you've done the dial...

0:17:540:17:56

The case...

0:17:570:17:59

It...

0:17:590:18:01

How we doing, Jane, you all right?

0:18:010:18:03

Dad would have liked that.

0:18:030:18:05

-Yeah.

-He'd be, um...

0:18:050:18:07

He'd be proud of that and he'd be...

0:18:080:18:11

He would have loved to have met you.

0:18:110:18:13

-Aw, fantastic.

-And you.

0:18:130:18:15

Does it go?

0:18:150:18:17

It-it-it's all going absolutely beautifully.

0:18:170:18:22

So I'm just going to chime it for you.

0:18:220:18:24

Ooh!

0:18:240:18:26

CLOCK CHIMES

0:18:260:18:29

How's that?

0:18:350:18:36

-Wonderful.

-Fantastic.

0:18:400:18:42

HOUR STRIKES

0:18:420:18:44

It was ticking and chiming the day he died.

0:18:460:18:51

Which came as a complete surprise and was...

0:18:510:18:54

If you can have...

0:18:540:18:56

a good death, then he certainly did.

0:18:560:18:58

-He fell asleep in the chair next to this clock.

-Aw, bless.

-So...

0:18:580:19:03

To hear this again is absolutely wonderful.

0:19:030:19:07

-Um...

-Bless him.

0:19:070:19:09

You've given it life that it had lost.

0:19:090:19:13

Let's have a look at the back.

0:19:130:19:14

-Yes, as I'm turning it around...

-Let's have a look at it!

0:19:140:19:16

Its innards!

0:19:160:19:18

Oh, my goodness me!

0:19:180:19:19

I've cleaned everything up.

0:19:190:19:21

It looks like it's new!

0:19:210:19:23

-Yeah.

-It's... That is astounding.

0:19:230:19:26

By getting the clock working again, I've got a bit of our father back,

0:19:260:19:31

which both myself and my sisters will love.

0:19:310:19:35

Oh, thank you...

0:19:350:19:38

Thank you so much, that is...

0:19:380:19:40

You're very, very welcome. It's been an absolute pleasure to do.

0:19:400:19:42

Ooh! I want to kiss you!

0:19:420:19:45

But I don't know if this is allowed!

0:19:450:19:47

I'm going to grab my sisters and say, "Come up here, girls!

0:19:470:19:50

"Let's have a party... Let's have a clock party!"

0:19:500:19:54

It's part of our family

0:19:540:19:56

and I am absolutely thrilled to be taking it home.

0:19:560:19:59

As another Repair Shop project is restored to pride of place,

0:20:060:20:10

accordion restorer Roger has reached a crucial point on his project.

0:20:100:20:15

He's taken the 80-year-old instrument to pieces

0:20:150:20:18

and is testing all 448 individual reeds.

0:20:180:20:23

-So, all of these are like notes, then?

-That's correct.

0:20:230:20:27

-NOTE PLAYS STRONGLY

-So that's kind of OK.

0:20:270:20:29

QUAVERING NOTE

0:20:290:20:31

-That's not.

-OK, that's quite cool, man.

0:20:310:20:33

So that's how it works

0:20:330:20:34

and I've just been checking the general condition

0:20:340:20:36

of these valves, these little strips of leather.

0:20:360:20:39

So, Roger, now you've got this apart,

0:20:390:20:41

can you tell me anything more about the history?

0:20:410:20:43

Well, we know it's made in Italy.

0:20:430:20:44

Actually, this one was made in Castelfidardo.

0:20:440:20:46

-Oh, right.

-And Castelfidardo these days is regarded

0:20:460:20:50

as the capital of quality accordion manufacturing.

0:20:500:20:53

So this has come from good stock, then?

0:20:530:20:55

-Yeah.

-And the most expensive accordion would be, roughly...?

0:20:550:20:58

Well, you'd pay 5,000, 6,000, 7,000 or more...

0:20:580:21:03

-Thousand?

-Yeah, yeah.

0:21:030:21:05

For professional accordions, yeah.

0:21:050:21:06

-Wow.

-Or even more, I mean, I've seen them more than that.

0:21:060:21:09

And we're going to get it working and sounding beautiful again?

0:21:090:21:11

Yeah. It's a lovely instrument, actually, I have to say.

0:21:110:21:14

It just looks beautiful and when it comes back together,

0:21:140:21:16

-it will sound beautiful as well.

-Yep.

0:21:160:21:18

-I'm just going to put it back again.

-SQUEAK

0:21:200:21:23

The accordion's not the only thing in the workshop in need of a tuning.

0:21:230:21:26

Do you want me to tell you what note that is?

0:21:260:21:29

I think it was a B. I think it was...

0:21:290:21:31

-Oh, sorry.

-There we go, try again.

0:21:320:21:35

HE PLAYS A "B" AND DRAWER SQUEAKS

0:21:350:21:38

-Yeah, there you go.

-So that is B, innit? Yeah.

0:21:380:21:40

It's about a B.

0:21:400:21:42

-Is that an E-sharp?

-Yeah, it's there, it's that one there.

0:21:440:21:47

Oh, that's a flat. That's a flat.

0:21:490:21:51

SQUEAK

0:21:510:21:52

-Finished.

-So, I have to be very careful not to cause any damage

0:21:520:21:56

to where this lever is fixed to the key. Because if I snap that off,

0:21:560:22:01

then I'm going to be in trouble.

0:22:010:22:03

Roger's realigning all the keys on the keyboard and making sure

0:22:030:22:06

none are leaking air.

0:22:060:22:08

But the parts are nearly 80 years old and one false move now

0:22:080:22:12

could spell disaster.

0:22:120:22:14

Originally, I thought I'd just need to adjust one or two of these keys,

0:22:140:22:17

but actually, they all need adjusting.

0:22:170:22:21

And the reason why you want the keys nice and flat like this

0:22:210:22:23

is because it gives you a nice action.

0:22:230:22:26

It's like the response of the keyboard.

0:22:260:22:28

And also, aesthetically, of course, it looks a lot nicer.

0:22:280:22:31

Because now I just use my little gauge to check...

0:22:330:22:37

No, it's still a bit proud.

0:22:370:22:38

The other way. Sometimes you get it right first time and other times you

0:22:380:22:41

don't, but you obviously don't want to be bending it backwards and

0:22:410:22:44

forwards too often too much because then you're going to introduce

0:22:440:22:47

some kind of, you know, metal fatigue in there.

0:22:470:22:50

Hang on. If I broke one of these levers it would be a bit of a

0:22:500:22:54

problem. I'm not going to.

0:22:540:22:56

Also at the fine-tuning stage,

0:23:010:23:05

Will's angling to get a seamless fix for Faye's 60-year-old fish before

0:23:050:23:09

she arrives to pick it up.

0:23:090:23:12

A little bit of polish on that tail and we are just in time, I think.

0:23:120:23:16

We are really up against it today.

0:23:160:23:19

-Hello.

-Hello.

0:23:240:23:26

-So, are you ready?

-Yes, I am.

0:23:260:23:29

Da-da-dah-dah!

0:23:290:23:31

-Oh, lovely! My goodness.

-It's got a tail!

0:23:310:23:34

-We have his tail! Oh, it looks great!

-Yeah.

0:23:340:23:36

And you've actually managed to get the colour spot-on.

0:23:360:23:38

He's looking pretty smart and he will go home and

0:23:380:23:41

be put in pride of place.

0:23:410:23:42

-Thanks, Faye, very much.

-Thank you for all that hard work.

0:23:420:23:45

-Bye-bye.

-Bye-bye.

0:23:450:23:47

Roger's hoping he'll also hit the high notes with the owners

0:23:520:23:55

of that very special instrument he's been working on.

0:23:550:23:58

This is the final bellows pin, so put that in there...

0:23:580:24:02

And the next stage is for me to give it its final test.

0:24:020:24:05

-How we doing, Roger? Are we ready?

-We are, yes, it's done.

0:24:050:24:08

It does look gorgeous.

0:24:080:24:10

-The only thing left now is to hear what it sounds like.

-Yep.

0:24:100:24:13

HE PLAYS A FEW NOTES

0:24:130:24:15

It sounds better.

0:24:150:24:17

HE PLAYS A TUNE

0:24:170:24:20

I told you I'm not a maestro, but...

0:24:250:24:26

-No, it sounds good.

-A kind of demo, really.

-No, that's a good demo.

0:24:260:24:29

-So, you've fixed it, then?

-Yeah. But what we've got...

0:24:290:24:31

I noticed it when I came in, it is just the case.

0:24:310:24:34

Looks extremely tired and a repair that we would not be proud of.

0:24:340:24:38

You've done such a great job on the actual machine itself, Roger,

0:24:380:24:42

it seems a shame to put it in something like this...

0:24:420:24:44

-Yeah, I agree.

-Yeah?

0:24:440:24:45

So, I know a man who might be able to...

0:24:450:24:48

Will? He's trying to shy away at the moment.

0:24:480:24:50

So, Will... How we doing, my friend?

0:24:500:24:52

-Ah...

-Got this.

0:24:520:24:54

-Sounds like trouble.

-It is trouble. We need this repaired.

0:24:540:24:57

-Sounds like trouble. What's all this?

-I know...

0:24:570:24:59

But I was thinking, what we could do...

0:24:590:25:01

is take this off and then you must have some kind of...

0:25:010:25:05

-Oh, gosh.

-That's it.

0:25:050:25:06

-Let's not make it any worse, though, yeah?

-Not any worse.

0:25:060:25:09

Just so it looks uniform, I would say.

0:25:090:25:11

Right, uniform. Well, the good thing is...

0:25:110:25:13

-It's solid.

-It's made of plywood, I think.

0:25:130:25:15

Yeah, so it's just a superficial damage to the surface.

0:25:150:25:18

-Yeah.

-I am going to work some magic.

0:25:180:25:21

In the next five minutes, yeah?

0:25:210:25:23

There's no rush, there's no rush.

0:25:230:25:25

OK. But probably five to three minutes.

0:25:250:25:27

If you make me a cup of tea, three minutes.

0:25:270:25:30

-I'm on it, mate, I'm on it.

-Yeah?

0:25:300:25:31

Cup of tea. Cup of tea. Two and a half minutes now, yeah?

0:25:310:25:33

-Yeah, right(!)

-All right, see you in a minute.

0:25:330:25:36

-That looks diamond.

-Yeah?

0:25:490:25:51

Yeah! That looks good.

0:25:510:25:53

I'm very pleased and it looks...

0:25:540:25:55

It is a stunning looking instrument, I mean, I have to say,

0:25:550:25:58

and I am still amazed at the condition that it's in given its age,

0:25:580:26:02

and it's 80 years old. And I hope Sarah enjoys it and it'll keep her going

0:26:020:26:05

for a good few years, maybe another 80 years, who knows?

0:26:050:26:09

Cheers, mate.

0:26:090:26:11

Now restored to its former glory,

0:26:110:26:13

Sarah and Howard are ready to reveal the accordion to its original and

0:26:130:26:18

unsuspecting owner...

0:26:180:26:20

94-year-old Iris.

0:26:200:26:21

-Hello.

-Mum...

-Right, we've got a surprise lined up,

0:26:250:26:28

in case you hadn't guessed.

0:26:280:26:29

-Are you all right? Do you need a hand?

-All right?

0:26:290:26:33

Hello.

0:26:330:26:34

So, this is your surprise.

0:26:350:26:38

So, you know when you opened it up and it made a terrible noise?

0:26:380:26:42

Yeah? Oh, you had it fixed!

0:26:420:26:44

Yeah. Because there was a key sticking up here...

0:26:440:26:47

Yeah, it was this one, I think, wasn't it?

0:26:470:26:49

And then when you opened it, it was...

0:26:490:26:51

-The note was...

-Yeah, permanent noise, yeah.

0:26:510:26:53

Yeah. Must be ten years since I used that.

0:26:530:26:56

-Mm.

-But it's all in working order now.

0:26:560:26:59

-Do you want to see Sarah play it?

-Yes, please!

0:26:590:27:01

SHE PLAYS "SHE'LL BE COMING ROUND THE MOUNTAIN"

0:27:030:27:07

She's good.

0:27:090:27:10

# Singing ay ay yippee yippee ay Yee-ha!

0:27:220:27:26

# Singing ay ay yippee yippee ay

0:27:260:27:30

# Singing ay ay yippee, ay ay yippee

0:27:300:27:34

# Ay ay yippee yippee ay. #

0:27:340:27:39

-That's smashing.

-Yay!

0:27:390:27:40

Good, very good.

0:27:420:27:43

She was just so happy that it had been fixed.

0:27:430:27:46

I can't believe what they've done. I knew nothing about it.

0:27:460:27:51

It was a complete shock.

0:27:510:27:53

The best thing was her reaction to seeing Sarah play it, without a doubt.

0:27:530:27:57

She got quite emotional because it brought back memories for her,

0:27:570:28:00

but it was also, you know, passing that legacy on to her granddaughter.

0:28:000:28:04

I hope that my granddaughter will look after it and play it and enjoy it

0:28:040:28:10

as much as I did.

0:28:100:28:12

Life goes on.

0:28:120:28:14

Join us next time as more precious pieces are rescued

0:28:180:28:22

and their cherished memories restored in...

0:28:220:28:25

The Repair Shop.

0:28:250:28:27

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