Guy helps restore the oldest surviving Brixham sailing trawler, the boat that launched the modern fishing industry and transformed the way a nation ate. Guy learns how the trawler's radical design saw off the competition, tries his hand at the precision joinery that made that design possible, tests his own version of an Industrial Revolution life jacket by jumping into the sea, and makes rope using the original machines that wove the ropes for Nelson's HMS Victory. He experiences deep sea trawling - said to be the most dangerous job of the 19th century - for himself, and discovers how Britain acquired its taste for fish and chips. Air Date : 18th-Nov-2012
Guy helps to overhaul a steam locomotive used on the popular Severn Valley Railway, a 16-mile stretch of track in Shropshire preserved to look just as it did in the 19th century. He joins a team of volunteers, some as young as 17, to help repair its boiler, safety valves and one of its two-tonne wheels. He also lays some track using exactly the same methods as the notorious 'navvies' - the hard-drinking, hard-living labourers who laid Britain's railway infrastructure by hand. Guy learns the dying arts of the Victorian blacksmith to make a coal shovel out of wrought iron, and repairs a century-old train driver's pocket watch using washers just 1mm wide. If everything can be made to work then Guy will get the chance to try his hand at every young boy's dream job: steam train driver. Air Date : 21st-Oct-2012 Read More
Guy works to get a Yorkshire saw mill up and running again, and then use it to make a replica of one of the less-celebrated inventions of the Victorian era: the first pedal-powered bicycle. Using his engineering skills, Guy helps the restoration team repair the ingenious water turbine that's needed to power the whole of Gayle Mill in Wensleydale, but which is currently leaking 43 litres of water a second. He ropes in his old mate Mave, who's a carpenter, to help fell a tree by hand, transport it to the mill on a steam traction engine and then use it to make his bike. Along the way, Guy learns about the lives of factory workers: the foot soldiers of the Industrial Revolution. He discovers how the mechanisation of farming left many with no choice but to head for the new industrial cities and towns and how child apprentices were often little more than slave labour. If Guy can get the mill running and build his bike, it'll need a test run and, as Guy is a man who likes a bit of an adrenalin rush, this is unlikely to be a gentle trundle across the dales! Air Date : 28th-Oct-2012 Read More
Guy visits Llandudno to help get this Queen of Victorian resorts up to scratch in time for the summer season. The great British seaside holiday was a largely Victorian invention. Once it had caught on, tiny fishing villages up and down the country were transformed into giant pleasure parks complete with all the latest attractions. Over the course of the winter, Guy gets stuck into essential and dangerous restoration work on the town's magnificent pier, rebuilds a towering original helter-skelter ride and gets up to his elbows in grease servicing the town's funicular tramway. He learns how our appetite for sea-bathing began when word began to spread that it was good for the glands. He finds out how the engineering developments taking place in the great factories also led to a revolution in musical instruments. And he joins a brass band to play his part in a special promenade concert - with mixed results... Air Date : 4th-Nov-2012 Read More
In this edition Guy's project is the first piston engine ever built. The Newcomen Beam Engine was the first practical device to harness the power of steam and kick-started the Industrial Revolution by allowing coal mining to operate on an industrial scale. Newcomen engines were used throughout Britain and Europe, principally to pump water out of mines, thereby allowing coal mining to go deeper and operate on a scale never before envisaged. If Guy and the restoration team at the Black Country museum can restore their Beam Engine to full working order it will be the only working example of this ground-breaking technology in the world. Success would mean witnessing the glorious sight of one the Industrial Revolution's most impressive inventions running again just as it first did 300 Years ago. Guy helps replace the rotting timber structure above the shaft, restore the worn parts and clean the boiler and he makes fire bricks the Victorian way to re-build crumbling brickwork around the engine. Meanwhile he learns about the lives of the men women and children who went down the mines to dig for coal. Joined by his girlfriend Steph, Guy heads deep underground to dig for coal and experience the almost impossible conditions that miners worked in. Air Date : 11th-Nov-2012 Read More
Guy helps restore the oldest surviving Brixham sailing trawler, the boat that launched the modern fishing industry and transformed the way a nation ate. Guy learns how the trawler's radical design saw off the competition, tries his hand at the precision joinery that made that design possible, tests his own version of an Industrial Revolution life jacket by jumping into the sea, and makes rope using the original machines that wove the ropes for Nelson's HMS Victory. He experiences deep sea trawling - said to be the most dangerous job of the 19th century - for himself, and discovers how Britain acquired its taste for fish and chips. Air Date : 18th-Nov-2012 Read More
Birmingham Botanical Gardens may seem an unlikely place to explore the wonders of the Industrial Revolution, but hidden behind its fragrant borders Guy Martin finds a hidden world of hi-tech Victorian engineering, show-off architecture, intrepid plant-hunters scouring the furthest corners of the Empire, and city fathers terrified of the 'degenerate' urban poor. As Guy helps to get the gardens back into shape, he tries to learn one of the Industrial Revolution's most skilful and dangerous jobs: blowing glass for the gardens' enormous greenhouses. He has a go at rebuilding the very first lawnmower - another great British invention. Guy also uses a little-known 19th-century technique to make his own rock to go in the garden's restored rockery and then - if all goes to plan - he'll be given the job of turning on his newly installed fountain at the grand opening ceremony. Air Date : 25th-Nov-2012 Read More
Better Man 2024 - Movies (Feb 9th)
Turn Me On 2024 - Movies (Feb 9th)
Melanies Grave 2024 - Movies (Feb 8th)
Reality Bites A Hannah Swensen Mystery 2025 - Movies (Feb 7th)
Black Diamond 2025 - Movies (Feb 7th)
Horror Able 2024 - Movies (Feb 7th)
Fight Another Day 2024 - Movies (Feb 7th)
Down Below 2024 - Movies (Feb 7th)
Over The Red River 2024 - Movies (Feb 7th)
Modì Three Days on the Wing of Madness 2024 - Movies (Feb 7th)
Daytime Revolution 2024 - Movies (Feb 7th)
Night of the Dead Sorority Babes 2025 - Movies (Feb 7th)
The Lion King at the Hollywood Bowl 2025 - Movies (Feb 7th)
Can You Feel the Beat The Lisa Lisa Story 2025 - Movies (Feb 7th)
Flight Risk 2025 - Movies (Feb 7th)
Disco’s Revenge 2024 - Movies (Feb 7th)
The Coddling of the American Mind 2024 - Movies (Feb 6th)
Death Without Mercy 2024 - Movies (Feb 6th)
V/H/S/Beyond 2024 - Movies (Feb 6th)
Mafia Wars 2024 - Movies (Feb 5th)
Love Hurts 2025 - Movies (Feb 5th)
Perfect Match - (Feb 9th)
Married at First Sight UK - (Feb 9th)
Australian Idol - (Feb 9th)
48 Hours - (Feb 9th)
All Elite Wrestling- Collision - (Feb 9th)
Lakefront Luxury - (Feb 9th)
Lidias Kitchen - (Feb 9th)
Oceanfront Property Hunt - (Feb 9th)
Prosecuting Evil with Kelly Siegler - (Feb 9th)
Gangland Chronicles - (Oct 1st)
Ruby Wax- Cast Away - (Oct 1st)
Deadliest Catch - (Oct 2nd)
Murder in a Small Town - (Oct 2nd)
Slow Horses - (Oct 2nd)
The Kelly Clarkson Show - (Oct 2nd)
On Patrol- Live - (Feb 9th)
New York Homicide - (Feb 9th)
Michael McIntyres Big Show - (Feb 9th)
Love Island- All Stars - (Feb 8th)
The 1 Club - (Feb 8th)