They couldn't. This method was invented in the 1950s. Windows used to be made by blowing glass into spheres, cutting it open and flattening it while still hot. The result looked very different than the glass windows we have today.
I work at a plant and we make bulletproof resistant units for schools / governments but anyways we get full packs of sheets 144” x 108”. You have to use a 5 ton crane to move the packs
I wish they showed better the actual sheets being made
seems super complex. amazing they could do this same process hundreds of years ago.
They couldn't. This method was invented in the 1950s. Windows used to be made by blowing glass into spheres, cutting it open and flattening it while still hot. The result looked very different than the glass windows we have today.
I didn't know that. That's super interesting, thanks for sharing! :) @@Bobb87
The narrator sounds a little bit like Ryan Reynolds 😂
Crap he does lol
Wow that’s insane! Just interesting knowing how things we take for granted are made.
I work at a plant and we make bulletproof resistant units for schools / governments but anyways we get full packs of sheets 144” x 108”. You have to use a 5 ton crane to move the packs
Incredible!
It is crazy to fathom that they liquefy tin to extrude it into a sheet
Very interesting but this hectic music is totally unnecessary.
Cool
They have robot shrink wrappers😳 us movers have to manually shrink wrap sometimes! And glass made from recycling glass.
do you use sand and raw materials to create again glass
Do they make good money?
I run 800TPD.
Is it sand
Poor