Next Episode of The Repair Shop on the Road is
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The Repair Shop experts are off on a road trip across the UK fixing historical treasures and precious objects that can't be brought to the barn.
Dom and Rich join local craftsmen in a race to restore a memorial sculpture that has been scarred by decades of coastal weather before a poignant remembrance service for lives lost at sea.
In Kincardine, Will collects Lyndsey's unusual family heirloom – a cast-iron pan that cooked thousands of meals – hoping electrolysis will transform it from garden gate stop to a camping essential, before heading to the Borders to learn from some celebrated rush-seated chair makers.
Will and Dan tackle a scale model of the world's only rotating boat lift: the Falkirk Wheel. The wheel's missing cogs, broken bearings and underperforming motor demand precision repairs.
In the barn, Dom entrusts Wappy – a soft toy that saw Robbie through life-saving treatment in Dundee – to Julie and Amanda for a sensitive rebuild, before Will swaps timber for silver as he makes a decorative bowl with celebrated silversmith Katie Watson
Dom steps inside Glasgow's Britannia Panopticon, the world's oldest surviving music hall, to help piano technician Jamie revive Henrietta, a 1904 Nilson pianola with roots in a New York speakeasy.
Will is in Inverness to collect Debbi's handcrafted chess set, a family heirloom that requires Kirsten's expert touch if it is to be played with again.
In Birnam, Dom is getting hands on with a craft that has remained unchanged for centuries as he masters steam bending and pine-tar finishing with Scotland's only wooden ski maker.
Dom teams up with carpenter Jen to save a beloved spider slide that was once a fixture in the local shopping centre and has now been rescued by the Dunblane Centre. Can Dom and Jen make it safe for the next generation to enjoy?
Elsewhere, Will is at the site of the last battle on British soil to collect the Appin Chalice, a Jacobite relic used to give communion on the morning of a fateful fight in Culloden. And Dom gets grief in Crieff while learning the secrets behind hand-blown glass paperweights
It takes a team of experts back at the barn to tackle a monster-hunting camera lost in the depths of Loch Ness for 55 years.
In Glasgow, Dom enlists a local stained-glass restorer to help put a shattered treasure back together, and sparks fly as Will learns how to make a bespoke bike frame in the Scottish Highlands.It takes a team of experts back at the barn to tackle a monster-hunting camera lost in the depths of Loch Ness for 55 years.
In Glasgow, Dom enlists a local stained-glass restorer to help put a shattered treasure back together, and sparks fly as Will learns how to make a bespoke bike frame in the Scottish Highlands.
The team are in Alloa, Scotland's smallest county, hoping to revive Alloa Co-op Bowling Club's faded and warped sign in their centenary year.
Meanwhile, Dom delivers Steve a 19th-century regulator clock from the Hebrides that has a ghostly connection, and Will heads north to Rothes to learn the fiery, and very loud, craft behind forging traditional copper stills for the multibillion-dollar whisky industry.
Prestwick's Broadway Cinema hasn't shown a film since its doors closed in 1976, so Mark Stuckey and Steve Rowley must battle rust, missing wires and obsolete carbon-arc lamps if they hope to bring its twin projectors back to life.
Dom meets Shetlander Victoria, who needs her grandfather's accordion fixed if she is to realise her busking ambitions, and then discovers the centuries-old art of enamelling watch dials, a craft that demands steady hands.
The team face a poignant challenge In Chatham, fixing two vandalised memorial plaques for a proud military community. But honouring the fallen of the First World War is a momentous task, even with the aid of a local bronze foundry. At the barn, Mark Stuckey works on a vintage cine projector that could bring family memories to life for a new generation, and Will steps into history at the Royal Dockyard to master rope making on Victorian machinery.
A neglected phone box in Birmingham becomes a beacon of hope when Will and Liam team up to turn it into a life-saving defibrillator station. Back at the barn, Dom brings scissor expert Jonathan a well-used pair of secateurs owned by a Second World War paratrooper who survived D-Day and a crippling grenade blast. In west London, Will tries to keep his cool, learning the historical and romantic art of fan making with expert Victoria Ajoku.
Steve enlists Will and Cindy's help to fix a 19th-century grandfather clock that once kept everything ticking over at Doncaster School for the Deaf. In Birmingham, Dom battles rust and pressure to bring a classic coffee machine back to life for a family honouring their father's legacy. And Will discovers the delicate craft of marionette making, an art whose future is hanging by a thread.
Dom is called in for some retail therapy by the fifth-generation owner of a Weston-super-Mare department store. Can he and engineer Chris get their pneumatic tube system, once used to ferry cash, receipts – and sweets – firing once more? Will brings in a shattered wedding bowl, signed by guests and full of memories, to Kirsten for a delicate restoration, then Dom climbs 400 feet up Bristol's Clifton Suspension Bridge, lending a hand to a two-year, 8,000-litre paint job.
Steve enlists Will and Cindy's help to fix a 19th-century grandfather clock that once kept everything ticking over at Doncaster School for the Deaf. In Birmingham, Dom battles rust and pressure to bring a classic coffee machine back to life for a family honouring their father's legacy. And Will discovers the delicate craft of marionette making, an art whose future is hanging by a thread.
An anonymous journal from Captain Cook's first voyage resurfaces in Whitby. Can Chris ensure scholars have access to save the stories the Admiralty never wanted told? In east London, Will joins upholsterer Ray to fix an inspirational chair. It once belonged to Trevor Baylis, the eccentric genius who battled the Aids epidemic with the power of his wind-up radio. Later, Dom feels the pressure when he tries his hand at traditional woodblock printing.
Dom and Steve head to Cornwall to resurrect a dead cat, star of an iconic exhibit at the Eden Project, hoping to put a new lease of life into a mechanical marvel that's already run more than one and a half million times. Will tackles the woodworm that has ravaged a traditional Welsh love spoon, carved by a father passionate about keeping a traditional craft alive, and Dom tries to keep dry in a coracle, a boat made of reeds, as he goes basket-weaving in East Sussex.
In Kent, Dom and Henry restore a century-old railway pump trolley, while luthier Julyan helps siblings honour their late father by repairing his cherished guitar. In West Sussex, Sonnaz crafts a ring, using the intricate Japanese metalwork technique of mokume gane.
Dom and Will hit the road to Buckinghamshire on another restoration adventure. At Bletchley Park, Will helps revive a historic Hollerith card-punching machine that powered WWII code breaking, while back at the barn, Rich restores Jackie's cherished floral brooch. Along the way, Will learns the centuries-old craft of wig making.
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