5:48 is a great example of why you should never drive faster than you can see, whether the visibility is limited by darkness, fog, or precipitation. If you cannot stop within the distance you are able to see clearly, you are driving too fast, no matter why the visibility is limited.
21:30 No, not Duct Tape / Gaffer Tape to repair a dent in an aeroplane wing. Called Speed Tape, it is an aluminium pressure-sensitive tape used to perform minor repairs on aircraft and racing cars. It is used as a temporary repair material until a more permanent repair can be carried out. It has an appearance similar to duct tape, for which it is sometimes mistaken.
It’s not duct or gaffer tape. It’s called speed tape - an aluminum pressure-sensitive tape approved for temporary aircraft repairs until permanent maintenance is done.
"Nothing is more permanent than a temporary solution," so I bet that tape is used a LOT and often replaced with more till there forced to properly repair it;)
Thank you! As a kid my dad had loads of that stuff ypu 'could' create 'foilies' damn it's a pretty serious crime but ig you were REALLY poor... You could stick 2 layers on to one face and a thin strip around the edge of the VERY old style 10p piece. It you did it right it would fool coin-ops and vending machines that it was a 50p. Like I said a serious crime and something I would never have done, I just knew you COULD do it....
I had to clink on the segment you mentioned and yes perfectly normal and good. Narrator is a conceited nasty piece of work himself. As soon as these kind of videos start with the sarcastic condescending voice over it's a thumbsdown for me every time.
At 6:10 , I was 15 ( 1969 ) years old washing dishes at a cafe. I worked until closing time ( 10 pm ) . I was getting the tea kettle ready to wash. I spilled it less than 1/4 full all over me and and the floor. The boss sitting at a table SAID you better clean that up before you leave, duh . Saturday around noon I got my Big pay check , I noticed that he deducted me for the spilled tea . I asked why. He replied cafe policy. Around 1:18 pm I walked out the back door with a bag of trash pretending to empty the trash . Regardless I kept walking 9 miles home.
At 21:41 what you are seeing is indeed a legal repair to damage to the leading edge of an A320. We in aviation call this "speed tape", and it is formulated for 600 mph winds for temporary repairs. I talked a mechanic into giving me half a roll of this stuff, I use it all the time for small jobs. It is just a striking coincidence that this happens to be a Spirit Airlines airplane....
7:38 in this situation plowing trough the car instead of instinctively trying to dodge would mean less potential casualties... people on other lanes/ on the sidewalk are innocent, luckily nothing happened
At 14:22 we see the Golden Ray a U.S. intercoastal roll-on/roll-off cargo vessel built to carry thousands of new automobiles. On September 8, 2019, it capsized in St. Simons Sound near the Port of Brunswick, Georgia, blocking a major shipping channel and becoming a long-term navigational hazard. You can see the dark/light paint showing how it lay on its side half out of the water. The Golden Ray remained partially above water for many months while salvage operations were planned and executed - including removal of fuel and eventual cutting of the wreck for scrap. Thousands of cars that were on board - many still within the upturned hull - were part of the complex salvage considerations.
Exactly - that dark/light paint line really shows how the Golden Ray lay on its side for months during the salvage. An incredible and complex recovery operation.
2:00 Im always annoyed at how there are literal tool to make things like this easier and people still find a way to go.... "Nah its fine" and then have the audacity to be surprised when stuff like this happens.
At 14:22, that’s the Golden Ray, a U.S. roll-on/roll-off car carrier that capsized in St. Simons Sound near the Port of Brunswick, Georgia, in September 2019. The dark/light paint shows how it lay on its side, partially out of the water for months while fuel was removed and the wreck was eventually cut up for salvage-along with thousands of cars still inside.
Pretty sure all of these truck drivers are now in the U.S. with illegally obtained commercial drivers licenses. Don't worry, you all will have them back soon. 😂
I think a lot of these people wear like the third choice of doing stuff because cutting the tree and all you have is like bobcat , you might as well just put rope higher up the tree in pole ,
1:30 tree. Á ROPE? I-use a cable. Something with at least 12,000 lb working limit. 3:30 how could you not see the problem long before it got bad? Other countries do not require stuff secured on roads. I bought 3/8 grade 80 20’ chains under $40 used for decades, over center, later screw type load/chain binders. $20 to $50. Hundreds of uses. Now likely 2x price? Still dirt cheap. I can brake with 100% confidence nothing is coming thru sleeper. Or falling off. You only have to have +50% working limit of cargo. As that’s normally 1/3 breaking limit. 18 minute. Crowd uprighting dozer. That was cool. 20:30 car hauler. Relocate two cars forward. Zero tire hop.
If those floats for track hoe only allow empty bucket directly ahead, behind. Why is that not locked out? He dumped bucket before surface it still dipped front. He had zero ability to rotate to side even empty. So is it transport only? If so bucket, arm, rotate should lock out. Never run a crane. But operators in USA have lift info, and final simple chart by control. Max weight depending on distance, length, angle. Even I understood it in seconds. Boom below 45 degrees *gauge included* extended 30’ max safe weight 4000 lbs. bring it to 20’ 7000 lbs. stay above 45 degrees to ground 9000 lbs… *made up numbers but every improvement seriously increased safe limits. If boom lowered you brought it in. IF you exceeded amount. Load lowered to ground. Boom slowly extended, load kept 1’ above ground or less, ÎF it went, you quick lower you might lift 3”
Where can I go to learn how to be that stupid.? Watching these & other clips like this one makes me very sad, & my head hurt. I Know I Know I need to get out more often.
@ 22:49 Looks like child labor is going on at this company. That's a shame. These youngsters would do better at work after going to school to learn a little about physics, etc.
Was the guy in The Spirit Airlines ground crew uniform taking the piss. Or does Spirit actually fix it's plane with duct tape? I've used it to fix a lot of strange and wonderful things, but a plane?
They fix stuff on spacecraft and military vehicles with duct tape. You will find duct tape kept in many places for an emergency fix, that and zip ties. Heck superglue was invented for the military to seal wounds shut then later was adapted for civilian use.
It's a slightly different version of duct tape. Much higher grade adhesive and the tape is a stronger material. Regular duct tape is the non military spinoff.
We have a _lot_ of safety regulations in the US. OSHA has a shitload of rules about jobsite safety, and while people sometimes complain about "red tape" and such, this video shows why we have them. I think this also affects how DIY and other non-jobsite work is done, too. It also helps that the US is a pretty rich country and so people can afford better tools and materials on average. (The series might be biased in other ways, of course.)
Cm'on man, The dog holding the flashlight was bad ass.
0:45 HOW ‘BOUT DEM APPLES!!! 😂😂😂😂
Don't you mean apple sauce?😂😂
t’s funny to watch, but at the same time kind of scary. One careless mistake at work can turn into a serious accident
16:18 Well done! Turn a prank around on the prankster
16:39 Pure Comedy! Yeah, grab on to that truck!!! 😂😂😂
The 'tree service" one is a classic, so much for so called 'experts'.
Good moning fantastic and beautiful videos thank 💯✖️💯👋🤗👍🏼🆗️
Maintaining equipment is so expensive 🤣😂and safety rules 😂🤣who needs them
Using a ladder safely is actually about common sense, and boy a lot of ladder users don't have it.
Common Sense is a flower that doesn't grow in everyone's garden. :D
I feel so much better about my own job performance now
Most of those videos come from countries with no safety norms and standards or laws.
Or intelligence.
@G2_Shane nicely said,,😊
Precisely why we don’t want to import them.
13:20 holy hair extensions Batman what a mess
5.25 The look on the guys face knowing there's a camera an he still arguing it wasn't his fault hahahah
5:48 is a great example of why you should never drive faster than you can see, whether the visibility is limited by darkness, fog, or precipitation. If you cannot stop within the distance you are able to see clearly, you are driving too fast, no matter why the visibility is limited.
Good heavens, amazing there's any of us left!!
@ 5:21, sure put a smile on my face.
6:10 A Crown for a King! Guy went full Visery-Targaryen-mode...
3:30 dude wasnt even trying
Love the new, peaceful, no-comments video! Thank you MW!
I dont
Overload as usual
21:30 No, not Duct Tape / Gaffer Tape to repair a dent in an aeroplane wing. Called Speed Tape, it is an aluminium pressure-sensitive tape used to perform minor repairs on aircraft and racing cars. It is used as a temporary repair material until a more permanent repair can be carried out. It has an appearance similar to duct tape, for which it is sometimes mistaken.
It’s not duct or gaffer tape. It’s called speed tape - an aluminum pressure-sensitive tape approved for temporary aircraft repairs until permanent maintenance is done.
That stuff is incredible. as good as a rivet patch temporarily.
"Nothing is more permanent than a temporary solution," so I bet that tape is used a LOT and often replaced with more till there forced to properly repair it;)
That’s speed tape, not duct tape. It’s aviation-grade aluminum tape used for temporary aircraft repairs. Common mistake.
Thank you!
As a kid my dad had loads of that stuff ypu 'could' create 'foilies' damn it's a pretty serious crime but ig you were REALLY poor... You could stick 2 layers on to one face and a thin strip around the edge of the VERY old style 10p piece. It you did it right it would fool coin-ops and vending machines that it was a 50p.
Like I said a serious crime and something I would never have done, I just knew you COULD do it....
So little time.....so much incompetence
I don't see any thing particularly stupid happening around 15:11. Seems like a pretty common way to pull out old asphalt.
I had to clink on the segment you mentioned and yes perfectly normal and good. Narrator is a conceited nasty piece of work himself. As soon as these kind of videos start with the sarcastic condescending voice over it's a thumbsdown for me every time.
14:50 nice welding glass
At 6:10 , I was 15 ( 1969 ) years old washing dishes at a cafe. I worked until closing time ( 10 pm ) . I was getting the tea kettle ready to wash. I spilled it less than 1/4 full all over me and and the floor. The boss sitting at a table SAID you better clean that up before you leave, duh . Saturday around noon I got my Big pay check , I noticed that he deducted me for the spilled tea . I asked why. He replied cafe policy. Around 1:18 pm I walked out the back door with a bag of trash pretending to empty the trash . Regardless I kept walking 9 miles home.
Every job comes with risks - attention, training, and teamwork make the difference between a mistake and a lesson.
12:47 What a shirt, it's a jacket! 🤔🤔🤔
Dork cutting down a rare tree should have lost his head to
Lost his head to what?
Never thought before how much chaos is in the world.
Lack of education *is* chaos. :)
3:10... haha the dude at the desk, NO fucks given
There was something very fishy about that.
I’m not even mad… I’m just confused how this even happened.
HEAT..heat..HEAT...
23:58 the funniest moments here
8:38 who's on the other side of a well? the devil? 😂
That's too dangerous.
TIMBER!!!!!!!!
At 9:41 must be a tree surgeon/feller in training. No wonder we see so many tree errors on here!
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
5:09 translation: "You've made a right mess"
PUBLIC SERVICE ANNOUNCEMENT..... Ladder safety....ONE foot out, for every FOUR feet up. Have someone hold the base of the ladder.... that is all...
I remember in the OSHA class it was mentioned that a fair percentage of the handbook relates to ladders.
At 21:41 what you are seeing is indeed a legal repair to damage to the leading edge of an A320. We in aviation call this "speed tape", and it is formulated for 600 mph winds for temporary repairs. I talked a mechanic into giving me half a roll of this stuff, I use it all the time for small jobs.
It is just a striking coincidence that this happens to be a Spirit Airlines airplane....
Saw an Amazon cargo truck cut the corner to tight and trailer swipe a car the other day. I work at Amazon. What way to start the day!
7:38 in this situation plowing trough the car instead of instinctively trying to dodge would mean less potential casualties... people on other lanes/ on the sidewalk are innocent, luckily nothing happened
At 14:22 we see the Golden Ray a U.S. intercoastal roll-on/roll-off cargo vessel built to carry thousands of new automobiles. On September 8, 2019, it capsized in St. Simons Sound near the Port of Brunswick, Georgia, blocking a major shipping channel and becoming a long-term navigational hazard. You can see the dark/light paint showing how it lay on its side half out of the water. The Golden Ray remained partially above water for many months while salvage operations were planned and executed - including removal of fuel and eventual cutting of the wreck for scrap. Thousands of cars that were on board - many still within the upturned hull - were part of the complex salvage considerations.
Exactly - that dark/light paint line really shows how the Golden Ray lay on its side for months during the salvage. An incredible and complex recovery operation.
I took a good job in Spokane Washington for one day in a glazing factory oh my God I was so terrified of being cut by the glass.
And I thought that watching The Three Stooges was fun!!!🤣😂🤪
Amazing demonstrations of why we have so much "red tape". (Except there's a lot more death in the real history of workplace safety regulations.)
Time Stamp 0:25 Here is the proof that this truck was OVERLOADED!
(All product above the Red Metal sides that form the Cargo area)
15:55 If anyone knows of another labourer let me know because this guy won't be here tomorrow.
18:06 What a belcher, it's a rodeo! 🤔🤔🤔
5:48 Final Destination
Physics always wins. Untrained workers help prove the point regularly.
Watching these incredible moments makes me question urban planning in high-risk areas. Should cities rethink expansion?
6:50 bookmark
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂 they are all so 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
Due to RUclips policy thumbnails cannot be shown.
11:15 Deshalb immer den Baum im Blick behalten und die Geräte pflegen, dass man in so eine Situations garnicht erst kommt.
2:00 Im always annoyed at how there are literal tool to make things like this easier and people still find a way to go.... "Nah its fine" and then have the audacity to be surprised when stuff like this happens.
0:41 how do ya like _them_ apples?
I notice most of these are outside the US.
At 14:22, that’s the Golden Ray, a U.S. roll-on/roll-off car carrier that capsized in St. Simons Sound near the Port of Brunswick, Georgia, in September 2019. The dark/light paint shows how it lay on its side, partially out of the water for months while fuel was removed and the wreck was eventually cut up for salvage-along with thousands of cars still inside.
god my jeus
If you came here for the thumbnail you will be disappointed
That's fine, I already have two thumbnails. Don't need more.
a lot of these aren't stupid mistakes on the job, they are purposely created "accidents" in hopes of viral video
.....that reminds me, I MUST get a lobotomy! :(
Could do without the music.
So good to not hear the idiot: NOBODY WAS INJURED!
BUT MANY DIE AND WONDEED!😮
Kranplätze müssen verdichtet sein!!!
19:20 What a shove-hapney it's a buzz-cut! 🤔🤔🤔
But why was the VW creepign closer.
Pretty sure all of these truck drivers are now in the U.S. with illegally obtained commercial drivers licenses. Don't worry, you all will have them back soon. 😂
Aluminum tape on the wing is legal!!
Time stamp 6:34. You can’t be serious!
Idiots at work
Watching this makes you appreciate how demanding natural life really is.
Indeed. It makes me respect the efforts that went into OSHA rules and regulations here in the USA.
I think a lot of these people wear like the third choice of doing stuff because cutting the tree and all you have is like bobcat , you might as well just put rope higher up the tree in pole ,
Or actually take into account the centre of gravity 🤣😂
I can't understand why it blew up. I was only hitting it with a hammer.
Well the music ruins it !!
5:45 that's very stupid
I don't know the truck was packed and why I doesn't have tail lights
I imagine it does but they can't be seen because the wood goes way past them.
21:22. That's all I need to see to know I'll never fly Spirit Airlines.
That's a perfectly normal and usual fix tho ?
They're using something called "speed tape". It's legit for certain kinds of temporary repairs.
Need to hit skip add multiple times before it goes away? Ugh.
Hard to watch
1:30 tree. Á ROPE? I-use a cable. Something with at least 12,000 lb working limit. 3:30 how could you not see the problem long before it got bad? Other countries do not require stuff secured on roads. I bought 3/8 grade 80 20’ chains under $40 used for decades, over center, later screw type load/chain binders. $20 to $50. Hundreds of uses. Now likely 2x price? Still dirt cheap. I can brake with 100% confidence nothing is coming thru sleeper. Or falling off. You only have to have +50% working limit of cargo. As that’s normally 1/3 breaking limit. 18 minute. Crowd uprighting dozer. That was cool. 20:30 car hauler. Relocate two cars forward. Zero tire hop.
If those floats for track hoe only allow empty bucket directly ahead, behind. Why is that not locked out? He dumped bucket before surface it still dipped front. He had zero ability to rotate to side even empty. So is it transport only? If so bucket, arm, rotate should lock out. Never run a crane. But operators in USA have lift info, and final simple chart by control. Max weight depending on distance, length, angle. Even I understood it in seconds. Boom below 45 degrees *gauge included* extended 30’ max safe weight 4000 lbs. bring it to 20’ 7000 lbs. stay above 45 degrees to ground 9000 lbs… *made up numbers but every improvement seriously increased safe limits. If boom lowered you brought it in. IF you exceeded amount. Load lowered to ground. Boom slowly extended, load kept 1’ above ground or less, ÎF it went, you quick lower you might lift 3”
Where can I go to learn how to be that stupid.? Watching these & other clips like this one makes me very sad, & my head hurt. I Know I Know I need to get out more often.
The dubbing is not good
i totally agree
Seriously..... is that inappropriate loud rock music really necessary.? I love rock music,but NOT for background music for this kind of video.
Not sure you can call it rock music but you can turn the volume down anyway if it’s too loud.
thats not rock, techno junk
@jeraldjosey not erven remotely close to techno 😅
@ 22:49 Looks like child labor is going on at this company. That's a shame. These youngsters would do better at work after going to school to learn a little about physics, etc.
ASIA what a disaster
Was the guy in The Spirit Airlines ground crew uniform taking the piss. Or does Spirit actually fix it's plane with duct tape? I've used it to fix a lot of strange and wonderful things, but a plane?
They fix stuff on spacecraft and military vehicles with duct tape. You will find duct tape kept in many places for an emergency fix, that and zip ties. Heck superglue was invented for the military to seal wounds shut then later was adapted for civilian use.
Even fighter jets get tape frequently. This is very standard
It’s pretty normal actually.
It's a slightly different version of duct tape. Much higher grade adhesive and the tape is a stronger material. Regular duct tape is the non military spinoff.
Ive seen them using duct tape (but way stronger ones then the one we use at home) since its made for Planes 😊
Why is it in this series u hardly ever show American mistakes ?
We have a _lot_ of safety regulations in the US. OSHA has a shitload of rules about jobsite safety, and while people sometimes complain about "red tape" and such, this video shows why we have them. I think this also affects how DIY and other non-jobsite work is done, too. It also helps that the US is a pretty rich country and so people can afford better tools and materials on average. (The series might be biased in other ways, of course.)
hate the introduction
Pin before GTA 6
😮😮😮😮😮😮😮😮😮😮😮 from Malaysia 🇲🇾🇲🇾🇲🇾🇲🇾🇲🇾🇲🇾
spam much ?
Had to stop watching coz the stupidity stops being funny and is just frustrating.
Why the f.... comments. I can see what's going on. Clicking away and going to Failarmy clips - they don't add unnecessary comments for 5 year olds.
This dudes are stuped😂
pin me pls
MUNKEES
These crane operators, some of the dumbest humans out there. There is a reason why we have something called “education” in our hemisphere
14:36 is that what i think it is?? 🤢