Pakistanis; these people really do know well about what they are doing regarding their work and I feel so excited to see them working with those with what all they handle .....lots of love and respect to all the workers there in Pakistan from NEPAL we love you all....☺️
Čista zafrkancija druže moj. Vidiš li ti na kakvim mašinama izrađuju radilicu, vratilo? Ne može ovo da radi, vidiš da nisu ni rupu za ulje izbušili na mestu gde treba...? Ovo je čista šala...
Sixty five years ago I served my time in a machine shop with ex W D lathes, shapers, milling machines etc. Manual chain hoists over the machines.. Steel rules, calipers and micrometers borrowed. Engineers blue and a scraper for lapping in. Like these guys we got the job done. Happy days and hard work.
I did my apprenticeship 50 years ago, and I bet, like you, my foreman would have given me a clip round the ear if I'd left my workspace in such a mess or treated my tools the way they did. I also had to wear safety shoes but no eye protection.
I always thought Latin America has very bad working conditions, but after to see this set of videos, I conclude there are modern slavery in other countries where the human life is the cheapest thing into a working place, it is congratulate the person who do the video to show the world, how is the real explotation of the human being in certain countries......going to the technical issue is really disgusting to see how these people discard the accuracy measurement instruments, egipcians of BC worked with more precision of this people, for me is not amazing, is really a show of human poverty and explotation......We must not forget on those countries there are a very small and rich elite that have to maintain the critic poverty to let them to live on the wealth.....When you see this type of video anybody can conclude that America is the most balanced country in the world.....
I dream of working in a machine shop. Maybe a dumb dream but metal work has appealed to me ever since i first got to use a lathe in high school. Lathes, mills, bandsaws, welders, torches they are so much fun and satisfying.
@@guillermojorgenardi570 "it is congratulate the person who do the video to show the world, how is the real explotation of the human being in certain countries......going " i need to ask you who is exploiting them as they clearly are not part of some big corporation and working there in this conditions because this is how the reality there is and they want to work there like that... If you want to talk bout accuracy then first you need to actualy do a proper measurement of the element in question... or are you claiming that by eye-balling what you saw in this video (that is on top of it played much faster than it was recorded) you are able to take make more accurate measurements than this guys with tools?🤣
I'm from America,I have worn many hats in my life, machinist,welder,auto mechanic, plastics blow molding technician, electrical, plumbing and other construction techniques,I must say what these men accomplish with the tools they have at hand and sometimes just good old psychical labor is amazing to watch!!
I'm also enjoying how these Pakistani Technical People working, they work as one, sharing their skills.... I have a lot of Pakistani Friends in my 28 years in Saudi Arabia, they are friendly and industrious people... now im here in the Philippines I missed them all....This is the reason I enjoying watching the Pakistani Technical Workers....Keif Halik Sadik?
I don’t understand why people always see these videos and think the way they work is amazing. White people did it this way like this 100 years ago, these people literally have a blueprint of how to do all this from whites who pioneered it and they can barely even copy it correctly. They are lazy af and put in the absolute bare minimum effort and are too lazy to innovate. The amazing work is the people who built giant machines to do all this. All these tools and giant machines were built by whites because they work harder and smarter. It’s like seeing a group of people using a piece of flint and grass to light a cigarette. The person isn’t an amazing hard worker for doing it that way, it’s because they are to dumb and lazy to put in the effort of building a gas lighter. Look at these peoples work spaces, they are too lazy to even stay after work to clean it up. If they were hard workers their communities would be nice and clean
Восхищаюсь высоким профессионализмом этих рабочих,на таком старом и примитивном оборудование, выдавать такое качество работ,я сам рабочий и знаю цену высокотехнологичному труду,смотрел этот ролик и был в восторге от проделанной работы, мои восхищения!!!!!!!!!
@@shreddertm6736 хуюдшее оборудование. Открой глаза, совкопитек. Советскому союзу везли запчасти с Запада в обмен на газ и пшеницу. Ехало самое отребье, худшие станки. По сравнению с немецкими, американскими, японскими станками - советское и российское барахло просто курит в сторонке. Если ты хоть немного имеешь отношение к технике, наверно в голове причинно-следственную связь сможешь установить почему в мире покупают технику BOSCH, Makita, JET, Caterpillar и так далее.
ive worked under these conditions and can relate to these guys, not only is it back breaking heavy work that you pay for when you get older and your body gives out on you but it takes its toll on your mental health . this is not fun to do everyday for years, your miserable.
They say a worker complains about the tools,but these guys are amazing with the limited resources they have and real hard work. Real team work at the end of the day.
As someone watching from the US • It’s good to see how well these workers are able to use whats available to get the job done and that the products passes all tolerance tests • Hope that everyone stays safe and starts thinking more about using safety equipment (gloves / goggles / steel toe shoes, etc) • Thanks so very much for posting and sharing! All the best and God Bless. 🙏❤🇺🇸
I agree. But these guys make less than $300 a week. Just enough for the clothes on their backs and to get to work. Somewhere, someone is making decent money off these guys, but they will never see any of it.
Thats some MASSIVE "premium" forged steel there in that crankshaft. Yee haw! Im jealous. The amazing perfomance parts that could be made from that boggles my mind! Cranks, cams, rods , oh my , all billet forging, wowowow!! ( im a machinist/ fabricator/ engine builder ) giant forgings arent cheaply available here. Really $$$
Not a micrometer nor vernier in sight, just basic callipers, ruler, and a scrap of paper with dimensions given in "fractions". Incredible what these guys can do with antiquated drop hammers, lathes, and drills, all without coolant or cutting oil.
@@jdsingh1670 they did not put a rover on Mars. They sent an orbital craft. NASA has actually put 5 vehicles ON the surface of the planet. ‘Curiosity’ landed in 2012 and its still working. China is the only other country to put a (1) vehicle on Mars. Props to India but an orbiter is nowhere near a rover
When they put that piece on the second lathe it was nice and shiny surface finish on the one side. By the time they took it off it was rusted again lol. Definitely high humidity.
Pakistanis are incredibly engineous to the highest degree of engineering! I know them from Dubai (Emirares Engineering Foundry) where, back in 80's, I had brilliant work from them to re- fabricate a 400kg heavy flour grinding machine. The original sample machine was from Christy & Norris of Chelmsford UK. My name is Geyash from Tanzania.
Well, now I know where all the old, solidly built engine lathes ended up. You know your shit when you your CAD drawing resembles a hand-written image with dimensions & notes. Amazes me how close they can get using crude, but highly effective old-school techniques to find centers, measure TIR, & check their diameters. Just impressed.
In the early 1960's I worked as an apprentice machinist at a facility similar to this. On the job injuries were common. In the mid-70's OSHA came in and the owners and their workers screamed bloody murder over their imposed rules about safety. In the early 80's I saw a guy lose his thumb despite all the new safety protocols. While operating a 500 ton press he made one error in the protocol of a machine which he had worked with for over 25 years. He claimed that he had worked a double shift and he said fatigue was the likely cause for his catastrophic error. That error in protocol caused him to lose a thumb on his right hand, his job and his side job as an arborist. Could never understand why the workers supported the owners with their resistance to any kind of rules or establishing proper safety protocols with the operation of each machine. At least when I worked at that shop they did require safety glasses and steel toed boots. However, I really wish I had done more to protect my ears. Both ears now have below average hearing and it drives my kids crazy with my terrible hearing. On this kind of job site I am sure that once someone has an injury they are out the door and there's hundreds of other desperate people looking for any kind of work. Meanwhile, in the USA, we keep these kinds of workers out of our country just because they are "different." Wake up America, we need labor willing to do any kind of work that our younger population refuses to do.
It slowly changed over time because in the very beginning, the danger was hard to accept as part of the job and many lost life and limb then the next generation wanted safety because their dads had died or lost limbs. Then by the 60's the unions started to fall apart because women entering the work force produced an over supply of labor and of course the campaign against unions and by the 70's employers had convinced employees that THEY had assumed the risk by making the choice to do that job. By the time the "Love Canal Disaster" happened and the EPA, OSHA were started by Nixon, the work culture had flipped. There was a period where the liability was on the owner, not the employee, but corporate law was changed so the liability was on the employee as assumed risk which changed the work culture and when unions became weak, there was no single organization that really carried the flame of workers rights forward. Today, people are totally brainwashed so they work for, accounting for inflation, on average, the same wage they were paid in 1970. In 1970 the average wage was about $3.70 per hour, today the average wage is about $26.00 per hour which is about $3.70 in 1970's money. When looking at those numbers you have to keep the sin of averages in mind which means the average worker makes much less that $26.00 per hour. Energy, housing and food are not part of that equation which means it's actually worse. On top of that since 1970 productivity has increased about 56%. It's not that people do not want to work, it's that you cannot survive on what is being paid. A foundation of economics is that people respond to incentives. If the market is flooded with jobs that only pay $18.00 per hour and it takes over 70 hours of work to live in the top 20 cities in America, there is literally no incentive to work. There is the concept of scarcity which is very important in employment in motivating people to not lose their job and to work hard. If you are paid well, you don't want to lose that job and you will do whatever to keep it. But because employment wages do not operate in a free market, the market cannot correct itself so you have a market failure which creates an oversupply of jobs that cannot be filled yet very low unemployment because so many have dropped out of the work force. Wages have been stagnant since 1970 and kids are not stupid.
The track burner reminds me of the old days. Old man way back then told me when torch sounds you're tearing paper its burning correctly. If it's set right you'll not need a grinder to remove the slag. Just tap it with a chipping hammer. Same with welding. The slag will curl up behind the welding arc. Bet the top of their feet is tough as a gators hide from sparks and slag hitting those feet all day.
I love these videos. They do amazing work with limited tools. Especially the way they cut that thick steel with a torch. Just as well as any machine can do. Very skilled workers. Great video 👍👍
I also have an engineering background - but me oh my,what these people achieve /produce with what they have is absolutely amazing. I loved the"crankshaft blueprint, the cowdung patties used in a furnace to smelt the raw metal, all those bare toes,then the somewhat basic measuring tools to produce the finished product.Y`know what betcha Wartsilla doesn`t produce their engines like this..
Fucking amazing. a newly college graduated engineer from the U.S. or U.K. or anywhere they are talking about safety jokes could not dream of completing something like this. Masters of their craft.
Gotta love how the wrap a chain around the finely machined bearing journals the throw it on the dirt. Then the bent drill for drilling the oil passageways. That said it all works in the end.
Actually, now that I have fully watched this video. How is it that I am Horrified and impressed all at the same time.. This is some serious work...no doubt.
A habilidade desses funcionários é memorável. Hoje um centro de usinagem prepara uma eixo deses em poucos minutos. É interessante ver como eram feitos esses serviços há um século atrás.
Literally a nails on a chalkboard moment for me when i saw that...and the hand drill using the tailstock center 🤣🤣..do they not have chucks and center drills?
Эти люди если их так можно назвать, потом для конченого автоваза делают детали, которые через пару тысяч км, превращаются в гавно из которого эти черти его и сделали. А о точности там и речь не идёт, эти типа люди делают полное гавно...
@@Vperedsmotryashii 20 лет назад эти станки были уже в работе и не один десяток лет. и в тех же местах. так что про орехи детям рассказывай. подсказка, англичане когда ушли из пакастана-индии?
Станки конца 19 начало 20 века, так делали первые двигателя для всей техники. На них ездили, летали, плавали, тысячные начали ловит потом. Некоторые даже до сих пор работают. Китай работал так-же, теперь как.
Если этим людям дать нормальный измерительный инструмент, они легко луну колонизируют. Ахренеть, в наличии только линейка и кронциркуль и они такие; что? Коленвал? Да легко! Мне кажется не будь у них станков, так они бы его молотками из болванки выковали, а потом напильником чистовую выполнили.
Hats off! This is amazing. It shows us there is no need to high technology high precision cnc machines to manufacture crankshafts. Double the wages of these hero guys and see what happens. Also note that there is no engineer, manager and quality guy around. Fire them off.
I work for a major military manufacturing company in America....these guys in this video have some amazing skills with limited resources, they could probably teach some of the machinist in USA a thing or two.... Also, no CNC machines, using a mechanical lathe and doing superb work...!!!!👍👍👍
calipers and a ruler, thats it. No dial caliper, vernier caliper, digital lol, dial indicator, or micrometer, not one in sight, amazing. When I was a kid I watched a master straighten a bent drill press quill in a V block with a lead hammer, got it within 0.006" by eye. So I know it's possible but wow!
And an INCH ruler at that! Where are the metric inquisition priests preaching hellfire and brimstone down on the heretics? Or are all the inch-slurs reserved for the U.S. only?
At the start of the video the position of the hook of the slings is incorrect. The open end of the hook should face outwards - much less risk then of the chain slipping through the hook.
The whole freaking video is unsafe, you really want to just point out the least safest part of it? Those metal streamers from their lathe cuts will snatch a person in a second,any machinist worth a crap knows your cuts should produce chips,as fast as they were running that lathe the streamers would have wrapped his ass around that shaft before he could shit himself.
just goes to show - if something is big enough, suddenly everyone is impressed. and incredible the kind of work you can produce when you're entirely expendable.
Hmmmm, don't know how to breaking to you but if the repugnican party ever gains power to do so this is exactly whut the future will be in these UN-United states will be for the common man there ain't not one country that has an oppressive authortarian government the common man is reduced to the bare necessities and antiquated industry. Ingenuity is not every man's ability but some are fortunate enough to have money to bypass the necessity or have machines to do the work. Movies like ready player one are not to far off about the future.
Grunt labor is still a major fact in those and other industries. Somebody always got a better more efficient way to get things done and mainly by computer and machinery. We marvel and at how intricate, complex, sophisticated, geometrical beyond the apparent capabilities of that civilization then you dumbbasses criticize the ones who with a mnimum of computer and mechanical assist can turn out prefect examples of their craft. If a superior and sentient and curious entity will dig up some of the ashes the world is reduced to and wonder how those people could do this wonder of manufacturing and building without the use of technology just like they do this present day
Very amazing indeed.... its about 120 years behind today...i worked in the 1960s areo craft machine shop. It was very advanced...................Willie
My friend, who used to work in a steel mill, told me they had a lineup of ambulances waiting like taxicabs for injuries to occur. Something tells me these gentlemen may benefit from a similar arrangement. On a positive note, the donkey (?) did appear to be wearing some eye protection. Amazing video, thanks for sharing.
Absolutely amazing. Look at the small chains used to hoist the scrap camshaft. It could break if jostled too much. This could be something out of a post-apocalyptic civilization.
@@АгронДепартье : Many (not all of them) were designed for wide-belt drive from centrally powered jack/counter shafts. They were later converted to individual motor drive. Wide belt/centrally driven equipment was phased out in the 1920-30's. So, it is cool to see those machines still living on after all these years !
This is incredible.Using very basic machinery and measuring kit, these guys are turning out such quality crankshafts. I have no idea as to the precision. The H&S aspects are frightening.
All that and in my opinion a better work environment than the usual U.S. manufacturing facility. Outdoors, no assembly line, lots of teamwork, problem solving and variety of tasks. safety wise it is way sketchy but I didn’t see any missing limbs.
@@leebatt7964 Of course not. Those with severe injuries are immediately replaced with ones from the line up outside the door. Exactly like the early days of Henry Ford’s factories.
Western hobbies and sports like TT race, sky diving, skateboarding, parkour, cliff diving, rock climbing, mixed martial arts, etc have safety issues, all done in the pursuit of adrenaline, admiration, and bragging rights. These people make do with the cards they are dealt to put food on the table.
All of the union guys in the U.S. said they wouldn't like this anymore, so they shipped all the machines overseas and now they are doing all of the production.
As the official government Safety Officer, I approve the use of the laboratory surroundings in the manufacturing processes in this film. Likewise, I approve of the safety clothing and footwear, leading a healthy environment. The men working here were, previously inside, cleaning chimneys from the age of three years, an excellent preamble to a worthwhile apprenticeship.
It actually makes me sad that a crankshaft that extraordinary, with all the work that went into it, is worth nothing other than the metal its made of. The juxtaposition of mankind's ingenuity and wastefulness is profound.
Great mind at work. Even an certified engineer cannot undertake this type of job. Hope after finishing crank shaft would have gone fr balancing ( static & dynamic). Trust this unit works successfully after this much of hard work.
Incredibly spartan and primitive conditions, like stone knives and axes... but, they get the job done!! That guy with the cutting torch is an artist!!!
I believe we did it this way before we had any safety organizations and automated machinery. But didn't have as much movie footage for posting on social media back in 19th century. When parts are crafted by hand, there are skills that are polished by day to day labor. I started on cnc and some manual machining in the early 80s. Then I witnessed through the years, an evolution of machinists using modern equipment for a few different reasons. 1st reason was probably speed, to start mass producing widgets for contract manufacturing. As we started to produce educated engineers, these manufacturing companies implemented efficiency processes. Along with refining quality, uniformity, accuracy, tighter tolerances, and safety due to osha and insurance liability. This is basically called overhead that makes it more challenging to compete with some other countries that do not recognize these standards. Also, along with automated machinery and "good" engineering making procedures to take the guesswork out of the employee's task. Manufacturing starts to evolve into actual machine operators that require minimal training and obviously less skill requirements, "not skill ability". So in some cases, the company thinks they are worth less than a machinist that can figure out how to make a part and problem solve. Then speed and greed come back into the equation. I didn't see anyone in this video telling them to go faster and make more parts per day or hour to support an office full of high paid office people. So the point I'm making is , we made crankshafts like those guys in the video a long time ago. But comparing to our modern techniques are apples and oranges. And I still love watching these old techniques, definitely very resourceful that keeps their skills polished!👍👏👏
Seems, the footage is somewhere from Gadani ship recyclign yard - Pakistan We, here in India are also engaged in salvage of recycled vessels, however, whatever we salvage is exported back to shipping industry. Since it being cost effective and most importantly, where else would you find OEM marine machinery, equipment, replacement parts and spares other than from a salvaged vessel.
My thoughts are, for how many times we have seen that crankshaft reversed out of the four jaw then put back in, never once have we seen the crank set up concentric to the axis of the spindle. Agreed it looked pretty concentric after he had tightened the chuck, but to what accuracy when he then starts turning the tail stick end to whatever diameter he has on the chicken scratch drawing and to what tolerance is he working to? Plus or minus 1/16" ?or 3/32"?
Pretty sure this is just rough machining, then they send it to be ground etc. Cheaper to pay these guys to forge and machine to loose specs, then send to the final destination and precision grind and finish. Close enough is good enough, as long as it is oversize.
@@wolfy9005 I have been thinking the same thing the whole time ... they are making a crankshaft shaped object and skipping the critical details.. I was kinda disappointed that the finalization wasnt in the video..I am curious to see how close they come to the critical details
Где такие коленвалы делают интересно и на каких станках растачивают если он сам таких размеров и весом с большой грузовик, представляю мотор на котором он стоит наверно размером с 2 этажный дом
So much respect for these guys. Some of these shops reminds me of Fred Upshaw in Anaheim, California, that I worked for when I was just a kid, rebuilding antique cars so much respect for these guys so skilled.❤❤❤❤
We in the west would not even contemplate this sort of work, most workshops will say we can't do that, here the answer is Yes Sir sure we can do that. That shows how highly skilled these people are, of they had proper heavy modern machinery they could do miracles, but this generation 0of men would find it hard to learn new technique of programming CNC machines
These guys are amazing! Working extremely hard and making the most of the equipment they have! I do wonder about the lack of accuracy in the workpiece and what type of application it is used in. Another aspect is, how hard that metal is after the whole process of production. I guess it must be sufficient as they obviously are manufacturing a large number.
Forge then rough machine, ship overseas, final machining/grinding of necessary bits, bam ez pz. Way cheaper to do it like this, probably cheaper than the chinese too
просто оч хуевый труд , других слов нет. я у них кроме рулетки других инструментов снятия размеров даже не видел + они все без защиты ходят , что весьма странно , потому что я там не вижу одноглазых
bravo a vous , J'ai été bluffé par votre savoir faire , j'ai été tourneur fraiseur pendant 41ans et bien vous méritez toute mon estime et tout l'or du monde
Pakistanis; these people really do know well about what they are doing regarding their work and I feel so excited to see them working with those with what all they handle .....lots of love and respect to all the workers there in Pakistan from NEPAL we love you all....☺️
ny ny koi okývby
have you noticed? no safety gear/glasses for these guys-they are engineers.
Čista zafrkancija druže moj. Vidiš li ti na kakvim mašinama izrađuju radilicu, vratilo? Ne može ovo da radi, vidiš da nisu ni rupu za ulje izbušili na mestu gde treba...? Ovo je čista šala...
@DaniLex-un7fh what am I supposed to be jealous of?
Sixty five years ago I served my time in a machine shop with ex W D lathes, shapers, milling machines etc. Manual chain hoists over the machines.. Steel rules, calipers and micrometers borrowed. Engineers blue and a scraper for lapping in. Like these guys we got the job done. Happy days and hard work.
I did my apprenticeship 50 years ago, and I bet, like you, my foreman would have given me a clip round the ear if I'd left my workspace in such a mess or treated my tools the way they did. I also had to wear safety shoes but no eye protection.
I always thought Latin America has very bad working conditions, but after to see this set of videos, I conclude there are modern slavery in other countries where the human life is the cheapest thing into a working place, it is congratulate the person who do the video to show the world, how is the real explotation of the human being in certain countries......going to the technical issue is really disgusting to see how these people discard the accuracy measurement instruments, egipcians of BC worked with more precision of this people, for me is not amazing, is really a show of human poverty and explotation......We must not forget on those countries there are a very small and rich elite that have to maintain the critic poverty to let them to live on the wealth.....When you see this type of video anybody can conclude that America is the most balanced country in the world.....
I dream of working in a machine shop. Maybe a dumb dream but metal work has appealed to me ever since i first got to use a lathe in high school. Lathes, mills, bandsaws, welders, torches they are so much fun and satisfying.
@@guillermojorgenardi570 America é um Continente... EUA (USA) é um pais. obrigado.. de nada.. concordo 100% com você sobre a exploração humana...
@@guillermojorgenardi570 "it is congratulate the person who do the video to show the world, how is the real explotation of the human being in certain countries......going " i need to ask you who is exploiting them as they clearly are not part of some big corporation and working there in this conditions because this is how the reality there is and they want to work there like that...
If you want to talk bout accuracy then first you need to actualy do a proper measurement of the element in question... or are you claiming that by eye-balling what you saw in this video (that is on top of it played much faster than it was recorded) you are able to take make more accurate measurements than this guys with tools?🤣
I'm from America,I have worn many hats in my life, machinist,welder,auto mechanic, plastics blow molding technician, electrical, plumbing and other construction techniques,I must say what these men accomplish with the tools they have at hand and sometimes just good old psychical labor is amazing to watch!!
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Same here and totally agree with you it's amazing
I'm also enjoying how these Pakistani Technical People working, they work as one, sharing their skills.... I have a lot of Pakistani Friends in my 28 years in Saudi Arabia, they are friendly and industrious people... now im here in the Philippines I missed them all....This is the reason I enjoying watching the Pakistani Technical Workers....Keif Halik Sadik?
@@Λαζαρος-β6ν 980⁰
I don’t understand why people always see these videos and think the way they work is amazing. White people did it this way like this 100 years ago, these people literally have a blueprint of how to do all this from whites who pioneered it and they can barely even copy it correctly. They are lazy af and put in the absolute bare minimum effort and are too lazy to innovate. The amazing work is the people who built giant machines to do all this. All these tools and giant machines were built by whites because they work harder and smarter.
It’s like seeing a group of people using a piece of flint and grass to light a cigarette. The person isn’t an amazing hard worker for doing it that way, it’s because they are to dumb and lazy to put in the effort of building a gas lighter. Look at these peoples work spaces, they are too lazy to even stay after work to clean it up. If they were hard workers their communities would be nice and clean
Восхищаюсь высоким профессионализмом этих рабочих,на таком старом и примитивном оборудование, выдавать такое качество работ,я сам рабочий и знаю цену высокотехнологичному труду,смотрел этот ролик и был в восторге от проделанной работы, мои восхищения!!!!!!!!!
Это советское оборудование там погрешности микроны лучшее оборудование в мира по сей день
@@shreddertm6736 хуюдшее оборудование. Открой глаза, совкопитек. Советскому союзу везли запчасти с Запада в обмен на газ и пшеницу. Ехало самое отребье, худшие станки. По сравнению с немецкими, американскими, японскими станками - советское и российское барахло просто курит в сторонке.
Если ты хоть немного имеешь отношение к технике, наверно в голове причинно-следственную связь сможешь установить почему в мире покупают технику BOSCH, Makita, JET, Caterpillar и так далее.
@@shreddertm6736 Скорее всего там английское оборудование. Это бывшие колонии Великобритании.
@@shreddertm6736Какие там нахуй микроны? Они поковкой прям по направляющим долбят, дай бог если оно в десятку точит. Хотя для компрессора пойдёт.
@@shreddertm6736 у них чертежи в дюймах) и меряют линейкой
Мастера-Золотые руки и умные головы...!Браво...!Человеку всё подсильно...!👍👍👍
Don't ever complain about your "heavy work"...this guys are amazing...
ive worked under these conditions and can relate to these guys, not only is it back breaking heavy work that you pay for when you get older and your body gives out on you but it takes its toll on your mental health . this is not fun to do everyday for years, your miserable.
They say a worker complains about the tools,but these guys are amazing with the limited resources they have and real hard work. Real team work at the end of the day.
Самое главное забыл сказать, уважуха этим людям, береги их господь.
My hat is off to these men. Doing what they must to take care of their families.
No one ever mentions how good the camera man is! I love hearing the actual work noises and not some irritating background music.
ในล
@@ประถมรักษ์ชน❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
No kidding, it’s a real treat.
As someone watching from the US
• It’s good to see how well these workers are able to use whats available to get the job done and that the products passes all tolerance tests
• Hope that everyone stays safe and starts thinking more about using safety equipment (gloves / goggles / steel toe shoes, etc)
• Thanks so very much for posting and sharing!
All the best and God Bless. 🙏❤🇺🇸
I agree. But these guys make less than $300 a week. Just enough for the clothes on their backs and to get to work. Somewhere, someone is making decent money off these guys, but they will never see any of it.
C.N.C. Chakshu Nagpal controlled. Great work with more skill than shiny equipment. Unlike the rest of us. Much respect
Thats some MASSIVE "premium" forged steel there in that crankshaft.
Yee haw! Im jealous. The amazing perfomance parts that could be made from that boggles my mind! Cranks, cams, rods , oh my , all billet forging, wowowow!!
( im a machinist/ fabricator/ engine builder ) giant forgings arent cheaply available here. Really $$$
Not a micrometer nor vernier in sight, just basic callipers, ruler, and a scrap of paper with dimensions given in "fractions". Incredible what these guys can do with antiquated drop hammers, lathes, and drills, all without coolant or cutting oil.
Very much respect for all the workers and especialy for the turners at the lathes, very good craftsmen!! Good video!
24:42 The engineering drawings are something to behold.
something to consider... India's successful mars rover that landed cost 73 million, Americas cost 1.03 billion...
@@jdsingh1670 this is pakistan not india
@@jdsingh1670 Сэкономили на чертежах.
@@jdsingh1670 they did not put a rover on Mars. They sent an orbital craft. NASA has actually put 5 vehicles ON the surface of the planet. ‘Curiosity’ landed in 2012 and its still working. China is the only other country to put a (1) vehicle on Mars. Props to India but an orbiter is nowhere near a rover
@@jdsingh1670 this is not Bharat, this is pakistan, Bharat mein aisa faltu kaam thodi hota hai
По первым кадрам был удивлён, думал они и его починят, но нет, они его распилили. Он умер что бы дать потомство)))
Aaaa
Indiana workers
It's probably 90 degrees there and 90% humidity. Plus shop heat. Amazing human endurance.
When they put that piece on the second lathe it was nice and shiny surface finish on the one side. By the time they took it off it was rusted again lol. Definitely high humidity.
I love what these guys can do even with their limited resources
Fabulous all things considered with fairly limited resources
The British built the modern world with this level of technology
@@tbrowniscool
Maudsley's, 'Trolley' and the Bramah Press.
@@tbrowniscool
It didn't go that fast with carbon steel in the tool post.
Pakistanis are incredibly engineous to the highest degree of engineering! I know them from Dubai (Emirares Engineering Foundry) where, back in 80's, I had brilliant work from them to re- fabricate a 400kg heavy flour grinding machine. The original sample machine was from Christy & Norris of Chelmsford UK. My name is Geyash from Tanzania.
Well, now I know where all the old, solidly built engine lathes ended up. You know your shit when you your CAD drawing resembles a hand-written image with dimensions & notes. Amazes me how close they can get using crude, but highly effective old-school techniques to find centers, measure TIR, & check their diameters. Just impressed.
Amazing
This is how it's always been done, cad spoiled everything
Даже без "кислородного копья". Вполне хорошо 👍
Я так и не видел как грели судовой коленвал хотя наверное резали еще пару раз
May god bless the great skill of these workers.☘️👍
In the early 1960's I worked as an apprentice machinist at a facility similar to this. On the job injuries were common. In the mid-70's OSHA came in and the owners and their workers screamed bloody murder over their imposed rules about safety. In the early 80's I saw a guy lose his thumb despite all the new safety protocols. While operating a 500 ton press he made one error in the protocol of a machine which he had worked with for over 25 years. He claimed that he had worked a double shift and he said fatigue was the likely cause for his catastrophic error. That error in protocol caused him to lose a thumb on his right hand, his job and his side job as an arborist. Could never understand why the workers supported the owners with their resistance to any kind of rules or establishing proper safety protocols with the operation of each machine. At least when I worked at that shop they did require safety glasses and steel toed boots. However, I really wish I had done more to protect my ears. Both ears now have below average hearing and it drives my kids crazy with my terrible hearing. On this kind of job site I am sure that once someone has an injury they are out the door and there's hundreds of other desperate people looking for any kind of work. Meanwhile, in the USA, we keep these kinds of workers out of our country just because they are "different." Wake up America, we need labor willing to do any kind of work that our younger population refuses to do.
It slowly changed over time because in the very beginning, the danger was hard to accept as part of the job and many lost life and limb then the next generation wanted safety because their dads had died or lost limbs. Then by the 60's the unions started to fall apart because women entering the work force produced an over supply of labor and of course the campaign against unions and by the 70's employers had convinced employees that THEY had assumed the risk by making the choice to do that job. By the time the "Love Canal Disaster" happened and the EPA, OSHA were started by Nixon, the work culture had flipped. There was a period where the liability was on the owner, not the employee, but corporate law was changed so the liability was on the employee as assumed risk which changed the work culture and when unions became weak, there was no single organization that really carried the flame of workers rights forward.
Today, people are totally brainwashed so they work for, accounting for inflation, on average, the same wage they were paid in 1970. In 1970 the average wage was about $3.70 per hour, today the average wage is about $26.00 per hour which is about $3.70 in 1970's money. When looking at those numbers you have to keep the sin of averages in mind which means the average worker makes much less that $26.00 per hour. Energy, housing and food are not part of that equation which means it's actually worse. On top of that since 1970 productivity has increased about 56%.
It's not that people do not want to work, it's that you cannot survive on what is being paid. A foundation of economics is that people respond to incentives. If the market is flooded with jobs that only pay $18.00 per hour and it takes over 70 hours of work to live in the top 20 cities in America, there is literally no incentive to work.
There is the concept of scarcity which is very important in employment in motivating people to not lose their job and to work hard. If you are paid well, you don't want to lose that job and you will do whatever to keep it. But because employment wages do not operate in a free market, the market cannot correct itself so you have a market failure which creates an oversupply of jobs that cannot be filled yet very low unemployment because so many have dropped out of the work force. Wages have been stagnant since 1970 and kids are not stupid.
По правде я думал, что коленвалы делают немного по другому, а здесь на коленке на древних станках при помощи кувалды и какой то матери... браво!
не зря же он называется колен-вал
The track burner reminds me of the old days. Old man way back then told me when torch sounds you're tearing paper its burning correctly. If it's set right you'll not need a grinder to remove the slag. Just tap it with a chipping hammer. Same with welding. The slag will curl up behind the welding arc.
Bet the top of their feet is tough as a gators hide from sparks and slag hitting those feet all day.
Mostly true but some rods don't lend themselves to slag like that.
Yep, I have tore a many pcs. of paper in my days
I love these videos. They do amazing work with limited tools. Especially the way they cut that thick steel with a torch. Just as well as any machine can do. Very skilled workers. Great video 👍👍
I can't believe how skinny that chain was that they were lifting that huge crankshaft with that was like frightening
I also have an engineering background - but me oh my,what these people achieve /produce with what they have is absolutely amazing. I loved the"crankshaft blueprint, the cowdung patties used in a furnace to smelt the raw metal, all those bare toes,then the somewhat basic measuring tools to produce the finished product.Y`know what betcha Wartsilla doesn`t produce their engines like this..
all the little bits of metal flying around with no eye protection ....bit dumb
Fucking amazing. a newly college graduated engineer from the U.S. or U.K. or anywhere they are talking about safety jokes could not dream of completing something like this.
Masters of their craft.
Lol! Like that original shaft they started with came out of a back street shop.🤦♂️
Those guys are not engineers.
engineers aren't required to do basic lathe work in dangerous workshops.
You and your group are AMAZING - your skills are preserved - thank you for sharing!
no heart disease related to obesity in this workshop.
Gotta love how the wrap a chain around the finely machined bearing journals the throw it on the dirt. Then the bent drill for drilling the oil passageways.
That said it all works in the end.
Pretty astounding how they drilled that hole.
You see the lathe bit at 30:23, clearly has not been dressed in a long time (aka ever)
39:45 - You want the hole centered..... so like even if a tiny part of it is touching the center, dose that count?
For how long will it work?
Well... The pyramids where built to... With great precision
Actually, now that I have fully watched this video. How is it that I am Horrified and impressed all at the same time..
This is some serious work...no doubt.
A habilidade desses funcionários é memorável. Hoje um centro de usinagem prepara uma eixo deses em poucos minutos. É interessante ver como eram feitos esses serviços há um século atrás.
😂pk is centuries behind the world. Its bound to happen when their disease doesn't allow science😂😂😂😂.
I ran a lathe for a cpl yrs, but im a boringmill operator by trade and im very impressed by the massive parts you guys make
11nj
I know! I've seen them use a lathe in such a wrong way yet they were precise enough to cut a hole to the perfect size for a press fit bearing.
Съемки рабочих - настоящий фильм для мужчин, а не голливудские сказки для девочек 👍
What skilled individuals these people are! How do they learn this stuff?! Goes to show there is no limit to what mankind can do!
U r very right sir
14:08 LOL clunking and dragging that chunk of steel all over the lathe slide-ways... Beauuutiful. 1st class tradies.
Literally a nails on a chalkboard moment for me when i saw that...and the hand drill using the tailstock center 🤣🤣..do they not have chucks and center drills?
@@chuckfoye4563 Welding over rhe bed aswell.. Zero common sense.
кувалда, болгарка и песок повсюду - лучшие инструменты для изготовления детали, в которой важны тысячные и балансировка)
как могут, так и делают. А как иначе учиться? Еще 20 лет назад эти люди собирали в джунглях орехи.
Эти люди если их так можно назвать, потом для конченого автоваза делают детали, которые через пару тысяч км, превращаются в гавно из которого эти черти его и сделали. А о точности там и речь не идёт, эти типа люди делают полное гавно...
@@Vperedsmotryashii 20 лет назад эти станки были уже в работе и не один десяток лет. и в тех же местах. так что про орехи детям рассказывай. подсказка, англичане когда ушли из пакастана-индии?
Станки конца 19 начало 20 века, так делали первые двигателя для всей техники. На них ездили, летали, плавали, тысячные начали ловит потом. Некоторые даже до сих пор работают. Китай работал так-же, теперь как.
@@ЕгорБаишев-т5ж такое чувство что не они отстали в развитии , а мы.
When it's worn out in the compressor they will take it apart and machine them into crankshafts for Briggs & Stratton engines
And bicycle cranks after that!
I love the man, machine and animal collaboration in this era .
Yes, the donkey cart is amazing and essential to the society.
Don't think I have ever seen men working so hard in such constant danger. Wish you a safe and long life. //ji
A small example of the massive things we humans can do. You guys are impressive.
ลบลง
@@mlppmlpp5702 English translation; delete?
@@immrnoidall HACKS
Felicitaciones a esas personas trabajadoras que aunque no cuentan con tecnología moderna hacen un excelente trabajo👍🇬🇹
que ironico que su pais sea desarrollado y tenga cohetes espaciales y bombas nucleares pero no eliminen la pobreza y el desorden en sus ciudades
Мастера !!! Попробуй запори такую деталь , это конец столько трудов на смарку .Молодцы !
Bravo bravo!!!
5million people are watching you!!!!
Amazing craftsmanship.
Если этим людям дать нормальный измерительный инструмент, они легко луну колонизируют. Ахренеть, в наличии только линейка и кронциркуль и они такие; что? Коленвал? Да легко! Мне кажется не будь у них станков, так они бы его молотками из болванки выковали, а потом напильником чистовую выполнили.
сомневаюсь что точность посадки под подшипник достижима таким образом.
@@АлександрБомба-д4и точность посадки ,вероятней всего, компенсируется кувалдой
И на бую они видали эти " ваши " чпу , сертификации и прочее ... Пацаны свое дело знают !
Для компрессора и так сойдет.@@АлександрБомба-д4и
Думаю проблема не в его отсутствии.. А в том, что они им не смогут работать.. Кувалдой все махать умеют
Me gustan ese tipo de trabajos se ve que son de profesionales en tornos y muy bien documentado
Not sure what is more impressive… making that cruise ship crankshaft, or the power of the machine that broke it…
Hats off! This is amazing. It shows us there is no need to high technology high precision cnc machines to manufacture crankshafts. Double the wages of these hero guys and see what happens. Also note that there is no engineer, manager and quality guy around. Fire them off.
Incredible skills, gentlemen. As an American, I would be proud to have any one of you working in my shop. Stay safe.
Sponsor one of theme’s visa so they could come work for you for better wages
I work for a major military manufacturing company in America....these guys in this video have some amazing skills with limited resources, they could probably teach some of the machinist in USA a thing or two....
Also, no CNC machines, using a mechanical lathe and doing superb work...!!!!👍👍👍
You clearly never worked with US machinists
@@Trident_Euclid ...I have, at the company were I'm employed...I'm saying, with the limited resources they do a pretty good job.
@@frankpitochelli6786 well. I can't argue against that
calipers and a ruler, thats it. No dial caliper, vernier caliper, digital lol, dial indicator, or micrometer, not one in sight, amazing. When I was a kid I watched a master straighten a bent drill press quill in a V block with a lead hammer, got it within 0.006" by eye. So I know it's possible but wow!
Finely honed.
And an INCH ruler at that! Where are the metric inquisition priests preaching hellfire and brimstone down on the heretics? Or are all the inch-slurs reserved for the U.S. only?
@@rharris22222 maybe they were a British colony? But yeah I was surprised as well
Amazing what a properly calibrated human eyeball is capable of.
@@mickthemonkey ISO-17025 calibration standard??
At the start of the video the position of the hook of the slings is incorrect. The open end of the hook should face outwards - much less risk then of the chain slipping through the hook.
The whole freaking video is unsafe, you really want to just point out the least safest part of it?
Those metal streamers from their lathe cuts will snatch a person in a second,any machinist worth a crap knows your cuts should produce chips,as fast as they were running that lathe the streamers would have wrapped his ass around that shaft before he could shit himself.
just goes to show - if something is big enough, suddenly everyone is impressed. and incredible the kind of work you can produce when you're entirely expendable.
Hmmmm, don't know how to breaking to you but if the repugnican party ever gains power to do so this is exactly whut the future will be in these UN-United states will be for the common man there ain't not one country that has an oppressive authortarian government the common man is reduced to the bare necessities and antiquated industry. Ingenuity is not every man's ability but some are fortunate enough to have money to bypass the necessity or have machines to do the work. Movies like ready player one are not to far off about the future.
Grunt labor is still a major fact in those and other industries. Somebody always got a better more efficient way to get things done and mainly by computer and machinery. We marvel and at how intricate, complex, sophisticated, geometrical beyond the apparent capabilities of that civilization then you dumbbasses criticize the ones who with a mnimum of computer and mechanical assist can turn out prefect examples of their craft. If a superior and sentient and curious entity will dig up some of the ashes the world is reduced to and wonder how those people could do this wonder of manufacturing and building without the use of technology just like they do this present day
Super video. That's one impressive crankshaft ! 👍
Very skilful if not 50 years behind modern machinery….love it.
No
@@Senkino5o ???
Very amazing indeed.... its about 120 years behind today...i worked in the 1960s areo craft machine shop. It was very advanced...................Willie
My friend, who used to work in a steel mill, told me they had a lineup of ambulances waiting like taxicabs for injuries to occur. Something tells me these gentlemen may benefit from a similar arrangement. On a positive note, the donkey (?) did appear to be wearing some eye protection. Amazing video, thanks for sharing.
Yes they go through all that work for nothing very low pay and so much danger .
you're just jelly cause you can never machine as good.
Sounds like a urban legend. What company is going to advertise to injury lawyers like that?
Don’t mistake what these guys work in for a steel mill.
qqqq
Absolutely amazing. Look at the small chains used to hoist the scrap camshaft. It could break if jostled too much. This could be something out of a post-apocalyptic civilization.
All those Power Hammers and Lathes are over 100 years old and still on the job !!
40-60 years for lathes ?
@@АгронДепартье : Many (not all of them) were designed for wide-belt drive from centrally powered jack/counter shafts. They were later converted to individual motor drive.
Wide belt/centrally driven equipment was phased out in the 1920-30's.
So, it is cool to see those machines still living on after all these years !
That was brilliant what skill all without modern high tech absolutely spot on
And probably way off spec and elwill live a very short life before failing
Magnífico trabajo. Saludos cordiales desde México. Mis respetos y admiración para todos ustedes.
I am in awe. It is like being on another planet. I would most probably end up in prison if I had a workshop with the same conditions in my country.
I would at least grind the edges smooth before the eccentric milling so your arm gets torn off nice and clean.
@@matthewchin6454 hhhhh
USA! Our government would shut this operation down before it turned its first crankshaft. We have very strict job safety laws.
13:50 that chain next to the spinning chuck/counter weight. Your Darwin Award is waiting...
No, it will be the Capitalist of the Year award.
This is incredible.Using very basic machinery and measuring kit, these guys are turning out such quality crankshafts. I have no idea as to the precision. The H&S aspects are frightening.
It’s CNC machining. “ Close. Not Close”.
It has to be spot on with the RPM it's going to be spinning at otherwise it would be a cluster fk and they are obviously used to doing it.
Look like they turned
10,000 lbs into 100 lbs
All that and in my opinion a better work environment than the usual U.S. manufacturing facility. Outdoors, no assembly line, lots of teamwork, problem solving and variety of tasks. safety wise it is way sketchy but I didn’t see any missing limbs.
@@leebatt7964 Of course not. Those with severe injuries are immediately replaced with ones from the line up outside the door. Exactly like the early days of Henry Ford’s factories.
old fashioned engineering ,what I served my apprenticeship in-love it!
Again! True, quality work! Hard working people! They do the right things for other people, not weapons like damn Russia! I wish you success!
Thanks
Me encanta como siguen produciendo con estas maquinas viejas,esto si que es mano de obra!
A
10:33
I appreciate the hard work , skill and the ability to recycle. But at every stage I just see huge safety issues and I'm putting it nicely.
Western hobbies and sports like TT race, sky diving, skateboarding, parkour, cliff diving, rock climbing, mixed martial arts, etc have safety issues, all done in the pursuit of adrenaline, admiration, and bragging rights. These people make do with the cards they are dealt to put food on the table.
I was about to say "at least they're wearing shoes"... but that didn't last long
All of the union guys in the U.S. said they wouldn't like this anymore, so they shipped all the machines overseas and now they are doing all of the production.
As the official government Safety Officer, I approve the use of the laboratory surroundings in the manufacturing processes in this film. Likewise, I approve of the safety clothing and footwear, leading a healthy environment. The men working here were, previously inside, cleaning chimneys from the age of three years, an excellent preamble to a worthwhile apprenticeship.
Love your videos, I like seeing the whole process. It reminds me of how machining used to be.
@King Of Crunk me too
NO safteyr eye protection or boots there eh
I also enjoyed a final chapter on how this crankshaft is installed to a machine part
It actually makes me sad that a crankshaft that extraordinary, with all the work that went into it, is worth nothing other than the metal its made of. The juxtaposition of mankind's ingenuity and wastefulness is profound.
How is it wasteful? The metal is being reused for other applications…
"the juxtaposition..." The most cringe thing I've read all day
Great mind at work. Even an certified engineer cannot undertake this type of job. Hope after finishing crank shaft would have gone fr balancing ( static & dynamic). Trust this unit works successfully after this much of hard work.
Primitive machining where close enough is good enough.
@@csimet depends on the tolerances and use. some things can run fine way off tolerance, especially older machinery. newer machinery, not so much.
@@rickylafleur5823 Exactly my point.
@@csimet my point exactly.
@@rickylafleur5823 Point my exactly.
*It's Pakistani Hard Workers, I love them*
This was pretty fascinating. I’ve lost count of all the Honda cg125s in the video.
Very impressive with what they work with, highly skilled men
Выставление кувалдой в токарном при проточке "шеек", бесподобно!)))
Ходид а это главное.
@@fannyp7958 что такое ХодИд, имя токаря?
Да там всё бесподобно😂
what am i watching now? excursion to the stone age
Love how they made something out of junk engine part hard work !!! Looks great
Incredibly spartan and primitive conditions, like stone knives and axes... but, they get the job done!! That guy with the cutting torch is an artist!!!
One of the most amazing things is that all those flowing garments don’t burst into flames.
Cotton aren't they? Not very flammable then, unlike 'modern' petroleum based synthetic fiber clothing.
They stay damp with sweat and grease. Basically asbestos lol.
THEY CUT THAT HUGE CRANK SHAFT IN PIECES . ABSOLUTELY AMAZING
I believe we did it this way before we had any safety organizations and automated machinery. But didn't have as much movie footage for posting on social media back in 19th century. When parts are crafted by hand, there are skills that are polished by day to day labor. I started on cnc and some manual machining in the early 80s. Then I witnessed through the years, an evolution of machinists using modern equipment for a few different reasons. 1st reason was probably speed, to start mass producing widgets for contract manufacturing. As we started to produce educated engineers, these manufacturing companies implemented efficiency processes. Along with refining quality, uniformity, accuracy, tighter tolerances, and safety due to osha and insurance liability. This is basically called overhead that makes it more challenging to compete with some other countries that do not recognize these standards. Also, along with automated machinery and "good" engineering making procedures to take the guesswork out of the employee's task. Manufacturing starts to evolve into actual machine operators that require minimal training and obviously less skill requirements, "not skill ability". So in some cases, the company thinks they are worth less than a machinist that can figure out how to make a part and problem solve. Then speed and greed come back into the equation. I didn't see anyone in this video telling them to go faster and make more parts per day or hour to support an office full of high paid office people. So the point I'm making is , we made crankshafts like those guys in the video a long time ago. But comparing to our modern techniques are apples and oranges. And I still love watching these old techniques, definitely very resourceful that keeps their skills polished!👍👏👏
Wow, a very fine Comment!, arthur !
hi arthur, how many time do they need to split the Crankshaft ?? Thanks for answering: Tom
"
V
😎 that's true
Seems, the footage is somewhere from Gadani ship recyclign yard - Pakistan
We, here in India are also engaged in salvage of recycled vessels, however, whatever we salvage is exported back to shipping industry.
Since it being cost effective and most importantly, where else would you find OEM marine machinery, equipment, replacement parts and spares other than from a salvaged vessel.
My thoughts are, for how many times we have seen that crankshaft reversed out of the four jaw then put back in, never once have we seen the crank set up concentric to the axis of the spindle. Agreed it looked pretty concentric after he had tightened the chuck, but to what accuracy when he then starts turning the tail stick end to whatever diameter he has on the chicken scratch drawing and to what tolerance is he working to? Plus or minus 1/16" ?or 3/32"?
He is within a inch at least…
Pretty sure this is just rough machining, then they send it to be ground etc. Cheaper to pay these guys to forge and machine to loose specs, then send to the final destination and precision grind and finish. Close enough is good enough, as long as it is oversize.
@@wolfy9005 I have been thinking the same thing the whole time ... they are making a crankshaft shaped object and skipping the critical details.. I was kinda disappointed that the finalization wasnt in the video..I am curious to see how close they come to the critical details
Good technician and great manual handling job 👍
Где такие коленвалы делают интересно и на каких станках растачивают если он сам таких размеров и весом с большой грузовик, представляю мотор на котором он стоит наверно размером с 2 этажный дом
Amazing skills here, what they lack in equipment, they make up in their skills…
So much respect for these guys. Some of these shops reminds me of Fred Upshaw in Anaheim, California, that I worked for when I was just a kid, rebuilding antique cars so much respect for these guys so skilled.❤❤❤❤
Были мысли что сейчас начнут ремонтировать.
Тоже так думал, представил мастаб сварки электродами.
these guys are great. If they can do this they can do everything.
We in the west would not even contemplate this sort of work, most workshops will say we can't do that, here the answer is Yes Sir sure we can do that. That shows how highly skilled these people are, of they had proper heavy modern machinery they could do miracles, but this generation 0of men would find it hard to learn new technique of programming CNC machines
These guys can work, and they seem to enjoy it. GREAT!
молодцы ребята
все делают как в советское время
лайк
Советская продукция до сих пор в строю ! 🔧🔨
These guys are amazing!
Working extremely hard and making the most of the equipment they have!
I do wonder about the lack of accuracy in the workpiece and what type of application it is used in.
Another aspect is, how hard that metal is after the whole process of production.
I guess it must be sufficient as they obviously are manufacturing a large number.
Accuracy might be a big word as they use 1/4" as the smallest dimension.
application used : pencil & piece of paper
Forge then rough machine, ship overseas, final machining/grinding of necessary bits, bam ez pz. Way cheaper to do it like this, probably cheaper than the chinese too
Given the size and type of the stuff they work on a keen eye can give your acceptable results in terms of accuracy
It's like people from the Middle Ages using technologies from the US in 1940, but in 2022... Incredible.
Esse é o novo caminho para o trabalho, se vc não está preparado... 🤔🤔🤔
Perfectly described
Or from 1940ties Australia!
@@janvisser2223 more like pre ww1 except they were more accurate back then
They is be in 🇵🇰 Paquistan
Вот что значит "сделали на коленках"))
Просто сумасшедший труд.
похоже на колено , но для чего понять не могу
Про расход Газа и эл.энергии даже не парятся
просто оч хуевый труд , других слов нет. я у них кроме рулетки других инструментов снятия размеров даже не видел + они все без защиты ходят , что весьма странно , потому что я там не вижу одноглазых
@@65-Region заголовок прочти - коленвал для больших компрессоров
bravo a vous , J'ai été bluffé par votre savoir faire , j'ai été tourneur fraiseur pendant 41ans et bien vous méritez toute mon estime et tout l'or du monde
Really good to see safety is being taken seriously here....
Delivered to the client in the donkey cart! These men are amazing....even the centre punch is homemade.
the workshop is within the zero emissions zone of the city
The center punch was made from a hardened end mill, when, not if it shatters it's going to go through skin like razor blades.
Naaw. I think they made it right in that shop.