Exploring Ford's Detroit Powerhouse - Abandoned After Tragic Explosion

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  • Опубликовано: 19 окт 2024

Комментарии • 265

  • @sccherbatsky
    @sccherbatsky 22 часа назад +55

    To add some encouragement on top of what is in the video, I so highly recommend everyone watch the video of the interview with the survivor of the explosion after you watch this explore. Every bit of it is worth watching, and what Mr. Moran experienced is tragic and incredible. But in particular I found one thing to be amazing: the guys stop at #3 boiler and also dip into a "protective area" right afterwards that turns out to be a break room. Upon first watch, I was interested in looking at the booth outside, the control panels, and then looking at the cool old designs on the vending machines in the break room. After watching the interview (and some before-explosion footage of the same area of the plant) you'll have a new appreciation for this portion of the explore. What an incredible thing to stand in those spots so many years after the accident.

    • @detroitbob58
      @detroitbob58 18 часов назад

      Did they take down the survivor interview already? It's not there any where.

    • @toddprater14
      @toddprater14 18 часов назад

      Watched that first, because of your comment , now watching this video… this is my hometown…southeast Michigan … I remember when this explosion was on the news I was 29 in 99.

  • @djsolaris979
    @djsolaris979 21 час назад +36

    I live very close to this plant, and a lot of my family worked in this very place. So cool to see it from the inside, thanks for making these videos to preserve history :)

  • @MrWhips243
    @MrWhips243 21 час назад +22

    I love these powerplant videos, its what first got me into this channel almost 9 years ago now. Those double decker turbines are insane! Truly a pillar of American Industry

    • @kathrinepearson7528
      @kathrinepearson7528 20 часов назад

      @@MrWhips243 I really enjoyed the one in the rocket engine place and also abandoned theme parks.

  • @Fabfourfan72
    @Fabfourfan72 22 часа назад +16

    So cool to finally see inside of the structure that is such a huge part of not only Michgans history but the world's history! As a born and raised here Michigander I thank you for taking us on this journey. Being able to finally see inside of a building i've known about my whole life is so surreal

    • @toddprater14
      @toddprater14 18 часов назад

      Amen brother, native myself from southeast Michigan ..always wanted to work here or gm or even Chrysler, never got the chance or knew someone to get me in…union job , pension..is be freggin retired right now if I got in after graduating Wyandotte in 88’

  • @Quinnsters
    @Quinnsters 22 часа назад +22

    Man the shots of the turbines with the snow warming up are beautiful. Amazing video as always

  • @PXAbstraction
    @PXAbstraction 22 часа назад +20

    It's funny, I've been kind of a news junkie most of my life and don't remember hearing anything about the explosion back in the day. This is my first time learning about it.
    Really glad you guys were able to document this place before it's demolished.

    • @brendakrieger7000
      @brendakrieger7000 21 час назад +2

      I don't recall hearing about it either

    • @otm646
      @otm646 21 час назад +1

      It was literally front page news in the Detroit Free Press

    • @Geoffr524
      @Geoffr524 20 часов назад +2

      Living on the edge of Detroit, I do remember the explosion, but I never did go to the news to learn more about it. I remember hearing about it on local newsradio 950 am.

    • @kc8bdr
      @kc8bdr 19 часов назад

      @@Geoffr524 I am a lifelong resident of the Detroit area I also remember the reports of the powerhouse disaster on WWJ.

    • @mikesaffran3682
      @mikesaffran3682 18 часов назад

      @@otm646 But not everybody was reading the Detroit Free Press in 1999. Especially those not in Detroit.

  • @My_Random_Brain
    @My_Random_Brain День назад +42

    It’s always a good day when you guys post, always. 😊

    • @Fabfourfan72
      @Fabfourfan72 23 часа назад +2

      I agree! I've been binge watching their old vids and I'm always so happy to see a new one! 😆

    • @janicecopeland9083
      @janicecopeland9083 22 часа назад

      @@Fabfourfan72 I have watched every video they have made three times. lol

  • @paulvamos7319
    @paulvamos7319 23 часа назад +13

    Thank you! I was born in Grand Rapids, MI in 71 and I remember when they were on the news for doing upgrades to the big turbines! 😊

  • @forgelefemme
    @forgelefemme 19 часов назад +8

    I have a couple "2 degrees of separation" ties to this awful event. One was a girl I worked with that was 15 when this happened, awaiting to have a very dangerous back surgery, waiting in the hallway of the hospital. She said it was like a movie, people coming in full bore, severely injured people being rushed as fast as the medics could run right passed her. Doctors, nurses and a full hands on deck type of ordeal. It was so severe that there was no time to spare anyone their feelings. The other was a friend's dad that worked with these guys. He had a mural painted in his garage of his family but also with 6 spirits flying free in the sky. In front of this mural was 3, sometimes 4 motorcycles. 2 belonged to two of the guys that lost their lives that day. I'll never forget the day he was telling me about the mural and how he had to keep their spirits alive, they were great guys, his riding buddies. The old man that had the mural has no passed on, though every now and again my friend and I (his neighbor) would be having end of night beers together and he'd start telling stories about those guys.

  • @shottingham
    @shottingham 22 часа назад +6

    YES! More mid-video history vibes please!
    Always enjoyed the preface info, but diving into it during the video, is amazing. Places like this, and lots of other ones you've been to, must have so much lore. Apologies in advance if it means a tonne more work!

  • @xliquidflames
    @xliquidflames 22 часа назад +6

    After watching this, I watched the interview that's in the description. It is pretty heartbreaking what that guy went through but it doesn't surprise me. I feel for him but I am not surprised by how people reacted and treated him. We do that kind of thing to our heros all the time. We treat the best of us like dirt. I hope he found some kind of closure or peace in his life. He really did a lot of good that day. Go watch the interview. It's good.
    Awesome video, as always.

  • @cstoner9430
    @cstoner9430 День назад +12

    Hell yeah, another great vid!! I love exploring through you guys! Thank you for fantastic quality and through facts/history!

  • @Ganiscol
    @Ganiscol 23 часа назад +9

    The turbine hall is simply spectacular! I dont think I've seen anything like it - well done capturing it!
    Those reactors should be shunt reactors to stabilize the grid this plant served. The pipes on the outside are circulating the oil to dissipate the heat. A very simple design compared to modern shunt reactors.

  • @trailerpark187
    @trailerpark187 21 час назад +22

    Henry Ford Museum is a great place. The oldest surviving steam engine is there, from the 1700s. I love just standing there staring at all the innovation. Definitely worth a visit

    • @Paramount531
      @Paramount531 21 час назад +1

      If I lived in the area, I'd volunteer there. I could live in that place!

    • @MichiganPeatMoss
      @MichiganPeatMoss 20 часов назад +1

      They could renovate part of that abandoned area and give bus tours to that site, much like the truck assembly. Loved going to the museum when my folks lived nearby from '79 to '90.

    • @forgelefemme
      @forgelefemme 19 часов назад

      They happily pay their employees. My friend stopped working there though, he said the visitors were by and large not nice ​@@Paramount531

  • @tsalikaki
    @tsalikaki День назад +8

    I love your videos you guys, the photography, the soothing narration, the atmospheric music. Great work!

  • @denisem.1042
    @denisem.1042 23 часа назад +11

    It's interesting to see this place, with a mixture of very old infrastructure from the beginning of the industrial revolution, with more modern parts from later in the century mixed in. Those old turbines are massive! Modern ones are a fraction of the size. Another great video guys!

  • @rossreed9974
    @rossreed9974 22 часа назад +4

    Fantastic as always, thanks for taking us along - love your explorations! Stay safe!

  • @JSMCPN
    @JSMCPN 21 час назад +12

    The molten glass lenses on the gauges and indicator lights was fascinating. I don't see charring around the area, so I bet rather than direct fire, there was a very intense blast of heat -- hot enough to soften glass for a few moments, short enough to not flat-out burn the whole room to a crisp. Wonderful footage in this episode, glad you got to it before it was razed.

    • @Slane583
      @Slane583 20 часов назад

      Since it was an open hallway with gauges it probably had a backdraft effect that caused the gauge faces and glass lights to melt.

  • @CowTown
    @CowTown День назад +17

    Easily one of my favorite plants, and those generators, what behemoths!

    • @forrestfyre7846
      @forrestfyre7846 21 час назад +2

      It’s sad that they had to be put out of commission… they really were beauties.

  • @dosman01302
    @dosman01302 19 часов назад +1

    Thank you for preserving this history on film. Amazing place that will never be seen again.

  • @JamesCameron1
    @JamesCameron1 22 часа назад +18

    Fun fact: that freezer in the break room saved a mans life.

  • @needleonthevinyl
    @needleonthevinyl 22 часа назад +9

    I always love watching the ones that haven't been vandalized and graffitied.

  • @lindamarie1231
    @lindamarie1231 День назад +5

    Awesome video. Love the background knowledge! Happy Birthday Michael! 🥳🎂🎈

  • @Redrally
    @Redrally 23 часа назад +5

    Always fascinating to explore somewhere industrial while identifying the causes of damage. I'm still in awe of those locations with obvious bomb/wartime damage.

  • @f1guremeout
    @f1guremeout 19 часов назад +2

    Super cool! I lived in Detroit 2007-2011 and had a chance to enter the Central Train Station a few times before it was renovated, but it doesn't compare to the superstructure seen here. Them stairs be creeping when they rust! The vintage hardware is just so historic, its design immediately telling of its age. GE reactors look incredibly aspirational in this era, so industrial with pipes, valves, and a twisting framework is such a treat for the eyes. Massive respect to you both for covering this site. I do recall the original powerplant (that Ford worked in as a young man) still stands right off of Woodward, I believe a McDonalds is just in front of it. I wonder if they do plant tours?

  • @waynebradish6344
    @waynebradish6344 21 час назад +7

    The x's on those lockers, and also if you notice there are square boxes on some of the doors with x's through them. That is designating that that area has been cleared of dead bodies. If any dead bodies were found there'd be a circle with a number next to it indicating the number of bodies.

  • @Andy_Dines
    @Andy_Dines 21 час назад

    Wow a real testament to how well built that place was. All those years of operation. Then it survived a major explosion. Then it had stood there since 1999, so exposed to the elements, amazingly preserved after its tragic fate. Grateful, as always, for the chance to see inside before it was gone forever.

  • @andok0303
    @andok0303 18 часов назад

    I work down in River Rouge, MI at a Precasting place that built the Gordie Howe Bridge, Little Ceaser’s Arena's bleaches, and Parking lot structures around. I've watched all of your videos on RUclips, I'm so excited to see Detroit(River Rouge) on the channel! There's a big industrial boom down there right now.

  • @5olas
    @5olas 18 часов назад

    Thank you for taking us along. God bless.

  • @ToxicFruitSnack
    @ToxicFruitSnack 19 часов назад +1

    Again posted on the weekend! Right on. Thanks for all the uploads over the years guys :)

  • @b3motorsports796
    @b3motorsports796 21 час назад +6

    The control room and control boards were saved and are currently in storage at the Henry Ford Museum.

  • @dannaadams3589
    @dannaadams3589 22 часа назад +4

    They built thing different back then, they were built to last because the materials were so expensive. Even in the building meant for power the little added details are so beautiful.

  • @danieladams5422
    @danieladams5422 18 часов назад

    I live and work right by that plant. I really appreciate getting to see what it looked like inside. And props for sneaking into that steel mill. Their security is ridiculous

  • @bentley3393
    @bentley3393 День назад +3

    Incredible work as always!

  • @sensations111
    @sensations111 21 час назад +4

    Love the old power plants!

  • @kathysmith4274
    @kathysmith4274 18 часов назад

    This was phenomenal. Love the tone of your voices and extensive knowledge. Great video. Look forward to next time. Thank you 😊

  • @ot.bot.249
    @ot.bot.249 23 часа назад +4

    Your guys' cinematic and informative into scenes are one of the best things I've ever seen. So we'll done. Keep it up!
    Also, any plans on ever coming to West Virginia? I suggest it. There's some super cool places.

  • @Awsom47Merc
    @Awsom47Merc 22 часа назад +4

    * Hey guys that's just 40 miles south of us here. My family funeral plot is right on the hill to the northeast in Woodmere Cemetery. Good Mission. Cheers 🍺🤛😎👍p.s. You get caught there and they poor molten slag over ya. Can you say Jimmy Hoffa ? 🤭👍 Love the history lesson. That's what makes an urbex site legendary !

  • @lovexnatalie
    @lovexnatalie 19 часов назад

    Your work to preserve history is so important!

  • @brendakrieger7000
    @brendakrieger7000 21 час назад +3

    Thanks for filming

  • @sinkfire
    @sinkfire День назад +5

    Havent watched the video yet but i know its gonna be a masterpiece as always

  • @RogerBergqvist
    @RogerBergqvist День назад +9

    Have you changed cameras or lenses? I get the feeling that the image is brighter and sharper. Although I could be wrong. Always fun with a new video from you.

  • @kellyl7688
    @kellyl7688 18 часов назад

    The history here was epic. Thanks for letting share in this adventure! 😊

  • @adamterry550
    @adamterry550 День назад +6

    I KNEW it was going to be a good Saturday.

  • @tomahzo
    @tomahzo 20 часов назад +1

    GORGEOUSLY shot, guys! Fantastic work as always. Lovely soundtrack and as always I adore the narration, the historical review and the interleaved historical footage. Love that you guys had a chance to revisit during another season too. Adding that complementary perspective really heightens the mood! Always makes for a better, more multi-faceted video! :)

  • @thebboy1200
    @thebboy1200 День назад +58

    This is going to be a great one! I've been binging your videos again. Any plans on bringing back some of the older videos that were taken down?

    • @L33tSkE3t
      @L33tSkE3t 23 часа назад +10

      Which of their videos was taken down and why?

    • @thebboy1200
      @thebboy1200 23 часа назад +11

      @@L33tSkE3t I reached out to them a while back and they said three or four videos were taken down due to owner's request on certain properties. The specific video that made me realize that some were missing was the one they did at the inside water park at a resort. They walked in through open doors and got caught by security later on.

    • @tjsells9288
      @tjsells9288 23 часа назад +9

      They never communicate with there fans

    • @MERCERENiTY
      @MERCERENiTY 23 часа назад +1

      ​@@tjsells9288 damn

    • @thebboy1200
      @thebboy1200 22 часа назад

      @@L33tSkE3t Check my other comment where I link the thread as to why

  • @jeremyt.8466
    @jeremyt.8466 21 час назад +1

    I had dreamed of this episode for years now. I really wish you guys could have gotten into Trenton Channel power plant just a few miles south before it was imploded back in June. Thank you so much!

    • @detroitbob58
      @detroitbob58 19 часов назад

      I wish that too. I started working for Detroit Edison in 1969 at the Trenton Channel Power Plant as a Power Plant Operator. Got really good training from the company, but left to go to the new Ford Motor Foundry built near there in Flat Rock city. When the foundry closed ended up at the Ford Rouge Complex. In 1997 ended up working in this power house. Just happened to have the day off when it exploded. God was looking out for me I guess?

  • @marionmitchell261
    @marionmitchell261 20 часов назад +1

    So many things point to the engineering and construction process, but those steam generators served so many decades and the turbines were balanced long before any computer based methods. That is a testament to the materials and craftmanship of the time.

  • @OnTheRocks71
    @OnTheRocks71 23 часа назад +7

    I'm wondering if maybe the small turbine provided power to the powerhouse itself? Like maybe it could be brought up to speed before the big ones to provide power to all the other support systems first.

  • @dougd3832
    @dougd3832 22 часа назад +4

    Great video. Check out the video of the interview with the last operator to operate #6 boiler before it exploded. He survived because he was sitting in an explosion proof booth when the explosion happened. He explained a lot of what went on at that plant. A very interesting interview.

  • @MattyMatt80
    @MattyMatt80 День назад +1

    This reminds me of the scene from the movie “Rudy”. Especially if you’ve seen the movie you know that a huge exposure occurs. Great content as always guys!!

  • @jaccurtis5789
    @jaccurtis5789 22 часа назад +1

    Love seeing the nameplates and ratings for the old electrical stuff, one of the best bits for me in these kinds of videos (maybe not so surprising with me working in electrical engineering haha). Those massive reactors were cool :)

  • @grantkennedy3272
    @grantkennedy3272 19 часов назад +1

    I currently work at the steel mill and my dad was working at the steel mill back in 99 when it exploded. Very sad day. Cool to see the ruins of it though!

  • @A_ndrew-zo5bv
    @A_ndrew-zo5bv 18 часов назад

    I’m so happy this video exists

  • @Jason_Phillips3679
    @Jason_Phillips3679 22 часа назад +1

    I never miss a video from The Proper People.

  • @drekor72
    @drekor72 21 час назад

    What an incredible exploration! Well done lads. Thanks for sharing this adventure with us.🥃🍻

  • @dustyc324
    @dustyc324 21 час назад +3

    Hope you enjoyed your trip to Detroit! Make America Detroit Again. Once the wealthiest city in the world.

  • @robertmailhos8159
    @robertmailhos8159 23 часа назад +4

    It's a miracle that the steel Mill is still in working condition

  • @TheCoolDave
    @TheCoolDave 21 час назад +1

    Wow, amazing, been following you guys for a long time now, and this was pretty dam incredible, never seen power plants like this before. Mind blown ! And in the 1930's even cooler....

  • @Candy4greg
    @Candy4greg 20 часов назад

    Been looking forward to another adventure from you guys. Thanks for the cool content!

  • @josedasilva4433
    @josedasilva4433 День назад +1

    Excellent as always

  • @bradhassler1
    @bradhassler1 20 часов назад

    Very interesting, and amazing to see all that equipment. Thank you for sharing !

  • @chatrkat
    @chatrkat 20 часов назад

    Outstanding footage gentlemen. Excellent job start to finish.

  • @nickhurst611
    @nickhurst611 22 часа назад +2

    Worked in this complex a few summers.

  • @melissawo4672
    @melissawo4672 23 часа назад +1

    thanks for coming my area yay i dropped everything when i saw the alert im from detroit area and remember the accident in 1999

  • @MrZx9rdoug
    @MrZx9rdoug 23 часа назад +2

    Fascinating,thank you.

  • @jinrakid
    @jinrakid 23 часа назад +2

    I loved doing this stuff when I was younger and my knees weren’t recked with arthritis.

  • @samuelgilbert9734
    @samuelgilbert9734 22 часа назад

    Awesome exploration! Thanks for sharing!

  • @Dave_9547
    @Dave_9547 22 часа назад +2

    Those hopper like structures at 27:27 are for holding the coal that was burned to create the steam. They were common in older power plants.

  • @pianistleah
    @pianistleah 20 часов назад +1

    I'm born and raised in the thumb of Michigan, near Detroit. It's sh*t on a lot, but this area is rich in history and from my understanding, it's one of the only cities in the world like it that has preserved its Art Deco architecture; you'll see it in buildings like the Fisher Building and Maccabees Building. There's the Detroit Area Art Deco Society, and they're all about preserving and honoring The D's Art Deco Roots and heritage.
    The area also has stadiums, the Detroit Zoo (Which is absolutely massive and very well-kept compared to some zoos I've been to), the Detroit Institute of Arts (a personal favorite) and the Science museum. I've been to many concerts and even family-owned restaurants in Greektown there.
    My great-great grandparents were immigrants from mostly Poland, Czechoslovakia (from when that existed) and Germany that settled down in Detroit in the early 1900s and the Auto industry here provided a lot of people with jobs.
    All that to say, I love Detroit and I'm glad for channels like this exploring every nook and cranny of it 😅 The area certainly needs TLC in ways, but I'm sure that goes for many places, and I appreciate the way this area is quite a bit of a melting pot in terms of cultures: The Belle Isle conservancy hosts a family-friendly Koi Festival to celebrate the Japanese Culture of their Koi fish, for example. There's many ties between Detroit (Michigan in general) and Japan, and other countries too, again especially helped because of the auto industry that bloomed in this area. So there's quite a wide spread of cultural events and roots here.
    If you ever get the chance to visit the area, downtown seems to be booming a bit more recently, maybe because of the casinos, so don't pass up a chance to check out at least some of the museums or something!

  • @MichiganPeatMoss
    @MichiganPeatMoss 18 часов назад

    Wow, those vending machines at 9:25 show up in Bill Moran's video interview at 23:39 (the RougePowerhouse ExplosionSurvivor channel). Thanks for citing that video as further history.

  • @SmolAdventure
    @SmolAdventure 20 часов назад

    Thank you for capturing such Beauty before people decide to demolish it

  • @bronwynleeper2806
    @bronwynleeper2806 20 часов назад

    Magnificent video! Thank you

  • @jimmyjack7141
    @jimmyjack7141 19 часов назад +1

    Detroit needs to become the home of automobile manufacturing again.

    • @toddprater14
      @toddprater14 18 часов назад

      Yeah we also need little plants (like Detroit had back then ) that builds all the car parts instead of getting them from China..maybe there wouldn’t be shortages and so many recalls due to faulty parts…Michigan and the USA is a far cry from what it used to be and it’s sad.

  • @hfvhf987
    @hfvhf987 23 часа назад

    Great explore lads and amazing camera work!

  • @enzoponce-mo4vb
    @enzoponce-mo4vb 20 часов назад

    Love your videos. For the month of October, 1 Bumps in the Night video isn't going to hurt anyone.

  • @Negative13Prod
    @Negative13Prod 23 часа назад +3

    It would of been so cool seeing this place being built

  • @SuzyEH
    @SuzyEH 21 час назад +1

    My Grandfather who died in 1976 at the age of 91. He had a heart attack and died face down in the Wall Street Journal. He had retired from Ford many years earlier where he did Time Motion studies. He was a very strange man.

  • @redsquirrelftw
    @redsquirrelftw 23 часа назад +1

    Wow it's incredible that history stayed there for so long in the middle of an active plant.

  • @random22026
    @random22026 22 часа назад +2

    11:09 Blew-up 25 years ago--a quarter of a century, if the year was 1999...
    27:21 🎃
    28:20 We appreciate Michael's on-site observations about the building: infrastructure can be symmetrically, aesthetically pleasing, as this one is! :D
    30:30 The building looks like it's crying--even more so, after listening to explosion survivor Daniel Moran's heartbreaking story--it's a must watch.

    • @aidanthebestinthe8476
      @aidanthebestinthe8476 22 часа назад +3

      It was most likely a video that was previously recorded in 2020 and didn't get to editing or posting till now

    • @random22026
      @random22026 21 час назад +1

      @@aidanthebestinthe8476 Thank you for the clarification! Makes sense 😔

  • @grabasandwich
    @grabasandwich 23 часа назад +2

    6:08 I'm always hoping to see more comms stuff, as I'm sure they had many internal and external lines back in the days before modern PBX systems.

  • @jameswallace7709
    @jameswallace7709 23 часа назад +3

    Super heated steam is so dangerous

    • @Joetechlincolns
      @Joetechlincolns 21 час назад +1

      Yep, I worked with a guy that served on the JFK aircraft carrier. He told me pinhole superheated steam leaks could amputate and cauterize at the same time and you couldn't see the leaks.

  • @adamsturgell5474
    @adamsturgell5474 22 часа назад +2

    You guys should try to explore the ford foundry in Cleveland. Used to be the casting plant for Cleveland Engine. I always wanted to see the inside. Thanks for the entertainment!! Cheers!!

  • @zstation64
    @zstation64 23 часа назад +3

    Ford’s factory in Dagenham England was the same, iron ore in one end, cars out the other.

  • @ClumsyCars
    @ClumsyCars 19 часов назад

    i like how you document things on video before they are erased forever.

  • @logandrummond3067
    @logandrummond3067 20 часов назад

    As a Ford employee working at the Product Development Center (where the cars and trucks are designed), not far from there, it's cool to see something i knew of but have never seen!

  • @tslim250
    @tslim250 23 часа назад +1

    bummer, i had hoped to run into you guys when you were local. damn!

  • @The-Night-Wolf
    @The-Night-Wolf 21 час назад +1

    10:14 I work in an old paper mill. We have one of those stairwells in the oldest part of the building (150ish years) and when I can I avoid them they are way too narrow and steep.

  • @hyperluminalreality1
    @hyperluminalreality1 19 часов назад

    Thank you. That was very informative. Even though the control room was gutted already. My favorite old reel on the Rouge is the one here on YT called "Trip Trough The River Rouge Plant."

  • @raerutkowski939
    @raerutkowski939 19 часов назад

    I feel like the symmetry of the building is VERY on brand for Henry Ford.
    Anyways, great video as always guys!

  • @danhuyck527
    @danhuyck527 23 часа назад +6

    Been an employee in that steel mill for 26 years now

  • @hardymichael533
    @hardymichael533 23 часа назад +2

    Great 👍😊 RUclips videos 📹and amazing work

  • @drewveitenheimer6531
    @drewveitenheimer6531 21 час назад

    Early-ish to a Proper People vid. What a great Saturday. Cheers fellas

  • @Fran_SG
    @Fran_SG День назад +2

    Very very very coooool!!!

  • @erc1971erc1971
    @erc1971erc1971 23 часа назад +1

    I drive by this place all the time for work.

  • @sci-fyguy7767
    @sci-fyguy7767 23 часа назад +1

    8:15 That ironwork is cathedral-like as they are walking through.

  • @EphemeralProductions
    @EphemeralProductions 22 часа назад +2

    it sounds like those transformer/ reactors are still operating somehow, because I was hearing a transformer hum when you were in that room. about the reactor , this is what i found about them: "Electrical Reactor Definition: An electrical reactor, also known as a line reactor or choke, is a coil that creates a magnetic field to limit current rise, reducing harmonics and protecting electrical drives from power surges."

    • @langford2002
      @langford2002 19 часов назад +1

      The substation just outside the building is still energized and feeding the steel plant.

  • @eloisebrynlee
    @eloisebrynlee 19 часов назад

    Wow! Liked video before I’ve had a chance to watch it. 😀

  • @JohnnySmithWhite-wd4ey
    @JohnnySmithWhite-wd4ey 18 часов назад

    River Rouge had a plant that built B 24's . Mass production style. Consolidated used to build them by hand. No two were ever quite the same. Ford built them using a moving conveyor belt. Parts went in one side and they flew the finished bombers out of the other.

  • @keithingeorgia
    @keithingeorgia 22 часа назад +1

    Awesome job as always guys. Do you two miss Florida?