AND they need to be wearing a brain bucket (hard hat) when working near that machine. One piece goes the wrong way and it'll be light's out for that guy!
I wonder if they are cutting teeth, or a set of hydraulic hammers that pulverize in an in-and-out motion? The steel is emerging straight, not twisted in any way, so I don't think there is anything being cut, chewed or ground.
Do you think this rebar could practically be put back in use in the very same application again, or would it be better to only use new rebar in making new ties?
Stan, the best is actually to sell the rebar to the next scrap yard - acc. to the scrap metal price in your region, its around 150 to 300 bucks an hour for that. You cant put them back into the process.
I'm picturing prisoners being shackled in chairs, being forced to watch hours and hours of this video until they either confess to a crime, or go stark-raving mad.... lmao
Looks like dude would reach over there with the claw and tidy up the rebar pile to keep dumba#$ FROM GETTING KILLED!!!
it would be nice to see inside the crusher head to see the blade that chew through concrete and the rail blocks?
Its not a blade, its actually a jaw crusher
The steel separation definitely needs development to do it's job properly and keep humans out of harms way
AND they need to be wearing a brain bucket (hard hat) when working near that machine. One piece goes the wrong way and it'll be light's out for that guy!
Write
Сколько стоит такой комплекс?
How does it separate the wood from the rail plates and other metal, without destroying the cutting teeth?
The ties are cement not wood hence the rebar that is coming out along with the gear to attach them to the tracks.
Dan Rossell.
They're concrete not cement.
I wonder if they are cutting teeth, or a set of hydraulic hammers that pulverize in an in-and-out motion? The steel is emerging straight, not twisted in any way, so I don't think there is anything being cut, chewed or ground.
its actually a jaw crusher - minimum wear
110 concrete ties per hour and cleaned our rebar for low cost is pretty awesome...
Do you think this rebar could practically be put back in use in the very same application again, or would it be better to only use new rebar in making new ties?
Stan, the best is actually to sell the rebar to the next scrap yard - acc. to the scrap metal price in your region, its around 150 to 300 bucks an hour for that. You cant put them back into the process.
So high cost
@@A.kdreanaim Why the high cost when getting the high gain?
Give me your contact I send break psc sleeper video
What is the location
Yes, a helmet would have beed necessary - sorry for that...
Would a hard hat have saved him ! I doubt it, somehow.
Is the guy at 03:30 suicidal ? Looks like he quickly changed his mind. Wonder if he had to change his pants?
this is why women live longer than men :)
👍
How about a hard hat? Furthermore, this guy doesn't seem to be the most productive one in town.
Perhaps adding 'Crushing CONCRETE and REBAR' to your title may gain more attention...
Red D Film.
Why, they're recycling concrete sleepers, what's so hard to understand about that?
mr grumpy.
Are you being forced to watch it?
I'm picturing prisoners being shackled in chairs, being forced to watch hours and hours of this video until they either confess to a crime, or go stark-raving mad.... lmao
Stan Patterson.
Yeah, A Clockwork Orange style.
Don't know the technical term for those things that they used to hold his eyes open, but yes, that's it exactly :)
Evidently *concrete ties?* If that was creosote soaked wood, a definite health hazard...
T
ustedes no reciclan lo q hacen es destruir los durmientes o sleepers
Removing the rebar...not really a n easy task and dangerous job;