The Hidden Truth about Coal Mining | NACCO Natural Resources

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  • Опубликовано: 9 июн 2024
  • This episode followed Aaron, Angel, Ben, and Matt to three separate locations with the folks over at North American Coal.
    Longview, TX Texas
    Shreveport, Louisiana
    Ackerman, Mississippi
    The first location brought them to the Sabine Mine, which was a mine-to-mouth operation that included taking a ride on a Marion 8200, seeing another dragline work on reclamation that had already been mined, and taking coal to the power plant with haul trucks.
    The boys got to see Kress Coal Haulers, 785s, PC 2000s, and another machine that we’d love for you guys to guess in the comments.
    The second location found them at Five Forks Mine in the middle of “Nowhere Louisiana”. The coal here had a really long life span (a 30-year coal seam). This was a unique situation because the coal here wasn’t as deep as the previous operation they visited.
    On this project, NAACO ran a 6020B and Caterpillar 777’s to strip, and then loaded coal onto on-road trucks to take to the plant (which were loaded by smaller excavators - aka 374s.)
    The third location they visited was with Mitigation Resources of North America (a NACCO company) at the Red Hills Mine in Mississippi.
    At this site, Mitigation Resources said they have to continually make sure there are no net losses of streams or wetlands throughout the process of impact. Meaning… They have to put back streams, plant species back, and if it’s farm property, yield a certain amount of crops each year.
    The land here was so beautiful… You’d never ever know it had already been mined. See for yourself by watching the whole vlog!
    Astounding Fun Facts To Relish On:
    From 1970 to 2019 the gross domestic product of coal increased by 285%
    Vehicle miles traveled increased by 195%
    The population increased by 60%
    YET, the aggregate emissions for 6 common pollutants has dropped by 77%.
    If you want to learn more about North American Coal, click here: www.nacoal.com/.
    If you want to learn more about Mitigation Resources of North America, click here mitigate.pro/.
    North American Coal and Mitigation Resources of North America are companies operating under the umbrella of NACCO Natural Resources, all of which can be found at nacco.com/.
    #coal #mining #construction #coalmining
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    --VIDEO CHAPTERS-
    0:00 - Intro
    2:12 - Saving the Environment
    2:45 - Marion 8200 Dragline
    4:13 - Reclamation Process Explained
    7:55 - The Machine Shop
    9:05 - Leaving Land Better Than It Was Before
    10:33 - THICC Excavator and Dozer
    13:33 - Reclamation Laws
    14:33 - Mitigation Banking Explained
    16:12 - We Cannot Survive WIthout Mining
    17:36 - THICC Haul Truck and Dragline
    20:40 - Coal Mining: Before and After
  • Авто/МотоАвто/Мото

Комментарии • 406

  • @AaronWitt
    @AaronWitt  Год назад +45

    What's the most misunderstood thing about mining?

    • @Immortal..
      @Immortal.. Год назад +18

      Miners

    • @Tra-vis
      @Tra-vis Год назад +15

      I had no idea they’re legally required to reclaim/replenish the land when they finish up mining. I figured most mines just close up and leave the land barren

    • @curtis-thebicentennialist1776
      @curtis-thebicentennialist1776 Год назад +21

      Only coal miners are required to perform stringent reclamation. Any other industry or individual can go out and turn an area into a environmental and ecological war zone without regulatory consequence.

    • @jacobszymczak9323
      @jacobszymczak9323 Год назад +13

      That most "eco" people think all miners just make a giant hole and pollute everything in a 100 mile radius and destroy the ecosystem then move on. There's so much more to the entire process with reclamation and safety and eco during the mining process

    • @k.n.o.w2692
      @k.n.o.w2692 Год назад +5

      “The knowledge of the miners”

  • @TravisLaRoche
    @TravisLaRoche Год назад +89

    You provide your viewers with an unwavering amount of knowledge and education. Anyone would be dumb not to study these videos and use them to their advantage.

    • @AaronWitt
      @AaronWitt  Год назад +5

      thanks Travis I really appreciate that. I'm doing my best

  • @patriotcanuck6485
    @patriotcanuck6485 Год назад +99

    You should show people how they mine for battery metals for their "environmentally friendly" EV's. They really should be called blood metals for the same reason they call blood/conflict diamonds.

    • @diegobob3306
      @diegobob3306 Год назад +7

      I would be curious to see some lithium mines, though I'm sure there are good and bad examples and even within the same country... but yes, it would be educational to see those mines, hopefully one day? Although there is less incentive to show those mines, the EV industry with a sterling white reputation... why show people the unpleasant truth, vs coal mines trying to prove their bad reputation is largely undeserved

    • @muhammadnihal2089
      @muhammadnihal2089 Год назад

      Exactly 💯

    • @SovereignTroll
      @SovereignTroll Год назад

      And you want war for polluting other countries? The West is being subdued due to thus destructive thinking. You cannot destroy the environment, no country "owns" it.

  • @WatCharles
    @WatCharles Год назад +41

    The quality of these videos is high, especially with the coloring work. It's well-produced, but not over-produced. Aaron is direct and well-educated on the subjects and that causes the content to hold viewers' interest very well. All of these come together to give high quality documentary-style "vlogs" that are reliable and (literally) down-to-earth, since Aaron has no facade unlike what you see in actors and presenters that usually do documentaries of these kinds of things. (such as Modern Marvels on Discovery).

    • @AaronWitt
      @AaronWitt  Год назад +4

      thanks for the kind comment and for watching. We're doing our best to give a real look into this world most people don't know even exists

    • @xXPacoXx100
      @xXPacoXx100 Год назад

      Dude, check out his website and look at the founding members. This guy is a shill for construction companies. You fell for his facade the moment you thought he was being down to earth lmao.

    • @WatCharles
      @WatCharles Год назад

      @@xXPacoXx100 His whole company is centered around making construction companies look interesting and the work being pretty cool, if not meaningful. He better shill for them if he wants to stay in business.

  • @tabortollefson
    @tabortollefson Год назад +41

    I've toured a coal mine in Colorado and found it truly interesting. I love that old mines are being reclaimed. But of all the advances the industry claims as virtue, how many were done without government regulation. I'm not certain we should be praising the industry for simply obeying the law. I've never been congratulated for not driving while drunk.

    • @mtp123fly
      @mtp123fly Год назад +7

      Yes based on being forced by the government coal has improved. But there are still many nasty places left. Look at mountain top removal and the water issue they cause and left unresolved. Yes this is a great PR video, not does not show the full picture.

    • @coolroy4300
      @coolroy4300 Год назад +3

      Congratulations for not driving drunk 👍

    • @TheAdekrijger
      @TheAdekrijger Год назад

      That is not the same. Not being allowed to do something isn't the same as being required to do something.

    • @tabortollefson
      @tabortollefson Год назад +1

      @@TheAdekrijger Pa-tay-toe pa-tah-toe

  • @PokeMaster1151
    @PokeMaster1151 Год назад +6

    I work in a deep mines in eastern KENTUCKY, 3rd shift 11pm-9am. Coal is all we have, I’m a 3rd generation miner in the same seam of coal POND CREEK seam my dad and grandfather worker in, in the 70’s and 80’s. We’re upwards of 3 miles underground.

    • @Mark-pp7jy
      @Mark-pp7jy Год назад +1

      Respect to you, your father, and grandfather! Be safe andrew!

  • @4pingpro
    @4pingpro Год назад +6

    Love the NAACO series and seeing all the mines. My dad has been with NACCO for 30+ years and it has provided an amazing life for me and my brothers! Was blessed to intern at Sabine mine for several years while in college. Many memories from that operation and the amazing people that work there!

    • @AaronWitt
      @AaronWitt  Год назад

      wow that's fantastic to hear

  • @paulpeters5199
    @paulpeters5199 Год назад +24

    Very very well explained I work in a quarry where we process high calcium limestone and they burn our stone in a power plant to neutralize the acid in the coal

    • @AaronWitt
      @AaronWitt  Год назад +3

      that's awesome. Thanks for watching Paul

  • @justinworkman9980
    @justinworkman9980 Год назад +37

    It's easy to reclaim if the area is already flat terrain in the mountains it's a totally different story

    • @greyfox79007
      @greyfox79007 Год назад +12

      Yeah they gloss over mountain top removal mining. There is a mountain before mining, and it aint there after mining.

    • @butspan7618
      @butspan7618 Год назад +4

      @@greyfox79007 unless there removing snow caped mountains the environmental damage is minor.

    • @asherdie
      @asherdie Год назад

      @@greyfox79007 they should replace the coal removed with liberals.

    • @michaelbranham5854
      @michaelbranham5854 Год назад +3

      Yep backing haulers around the tops of the highwalls.. spent many nights doing that.

    • @finscreenname
      @finscreenname Год назад +4

      On the other hand a mountainous region may benefit from an area with a flattened landscape.

  • @matthewluttrell9413
    @matthewluttrell9413 Год назад +9

    First of all, amazing content!
    I'd love to see more details (if permissable). Like how the pits are planned, the coal is found, site maps, etc... Like in depth interviews with the people who do the planning, that could be it's own video!
    Then you could do a whole video on the soil movement, what the over all plan is, the trucks and machines moving it out and back in. A video on The coal, what quality is needed before it starts going to the power plants, the different machines used, how much is actually moved, the whole supply line of it. Finally a video showing the land reclamation process, how it's starts, planting, terrain matching, everything you can with actual footage of the work. Maybe a whole video just for the repair shop!
    I do love your videos but always wish there were more details and descriptions. I love watching the big machines do their thing but often feel like you could've spent a whole video on one machine explaining how it works and why it's the way it is.
    I honestly think that you could make a lot more videos with the locations you go to and the content you film. But I know it's also a lot more work and setting up more specific filming. Regardless keep up the great work!

  • @TylerOstergaard
    @TylerOstergaard Год назад +10

    I love when a video gives me a new appreciation for something I didn’t understand before thank you for that :)

    • @AaronWitt
      @AaronWitt  Год назад +1

      thanks for watching and for keeping an open mind Tyler

  • @robertdean6084
    @robertdean6084 Год назад +4

    I really wish you could get this out to a much larger audience. I'm in the oil/gas industry and our land reclamation programs are similar on a smaller scale, as you can imagine. (Much less surface disturbance). The general public should be more aware of what the energy industry really does. Best I can do to help you is give you a thumbs up!

    • @Fredster2020
      @Fredster2020 Год назад

      You think putting some grass over a coal mine fixes coal problems??

    • @zAlaska
      @zAlaska Месяц назад

      There are millions of abandoned wells in North America.
      Like Hanford, there are a lot of facilities that don't comply with modern regulations that were abandoned decades ago. Cleaning up and Make It Alright meanwhile eliminating the EPA, and deregulating that you can dump anything. Both popular sentiments within Congress.

  • @Jordan-rc7hl
    @Jordan-rc7hl Год назад +15

    Amazing videos! Only thing I'd love to see would be a tour of some of these power plants where the coal is brought. Try and show people the scrubber systems used, and what they do with the ash. Thanks for all your content and showing how the world lumbers on!

    • @AaronWitt
      @AaronWitt  Год назад +4

      haha if only we could get into a power plant... doubtful it'll happen unfortunately. I'd love to show that side of things

    • @Jordan-rc7hl
      @Jordan-rc7hl Год назад

      That's my current field as a stationary steam engineer. It's pretty amazing to see what actually goes on inside the large plants that people never hear about. It's unfortunate they won't let you tour a large gigawatt facility but maybe try smaller plants? There are really cool systems going into place from ultra low nox using def injection to high tech scrubbers in the stacks. I work in a lumber mill running the boilers that burn biomass to spin a turbine to produce all of our power and create the heat needed to dry the kilns. Every step is being taken to ensure a clean vibrant future for the Maine woods.

    • @cmm3338
      @cmm3338 Год назад

      @@AaronWitt Come out too Utah, I have some family friends in that industry with the ability to grant you access. DM me.

    • @Obshowersyndicate
      @Obshowersyndicate Год назад

      I install exterior trim made from fly ash

  • @Daniel19998
    @Daniel19998 Год назад +4

    Again, great video Aaron. I think you
    hit the jackpot with dealing with this niche of the Dirt World. Not a lot of people know about the backside of how our world is powered and you bring the information to all of us! Thank you

    • @AaronWitt
      @AaronWitt  Год назад

      Thank you very much I appreciate your kind words Dan

  • @dbikeryamaha125
    @dbikeryamaha125 Год назад +5

    This was my favorite video yet. Excellently made. Thank you!!

  • @davidkwas392
    @davidkwas392 Год назад +2

    I was at that mine in the early 80's building the two Bucyrus Erie machines. Worked for a company out of Evansville Indiana. Reagan was president and what good times! Good ol rock n roll hair bands and beautiful Texas women then too!

  • @jonlowe8727
    @jonlowe8727 Год назад +6

    I think you have a small window to see how Germany mines coal still. Top content again 👍

  • @ronlawson5819
    @ronlawson5819 Год назад +6

    What an amazing video……you need to get this on discovery so the whole world can the amazing work they do

    • @AaronWitt
      @AaronWitt  Год назад

      we're doing our best to get there!

  • @albiebakersmith2827
    @albiebakersmith2827 Год назад +11

    Thanks Aaron, interesting to learn about the reclamation process. Could you talk about the wider environmental implications of coal mining on climate? I.e. burning coal as a driver of climate change (you mentioned the coal here was being used in power plants)

    • @Fredster2020
      @Fredster2020 Год назад +1

      No because the video wouldn’t make sense then

    • @any0n378
      @any0n378 11 месяцев назад

      Maybe you should go and research climate change, and look at the methods used to determine if the climate is changing and by how much and how the CO2 link factors in to the debate. If you think this episode on coal mining was interesting, prepare for your mind to be blown.

  • @user-eg4st3vv4l
    @user-eg4st3vv4l 5 месяцев назад

    Very well made video. I am a mining engineer myself and I always want to make a video like this to show the world how much they misunderstood mining.

  • @donharper7759
    @donharper7759 Год назад +4

    I absolutely love you channel! Great job explaining COAL!

  • @MrJohndeere23
    @MrJohndeere23 Год назад +3

    This is a very well done documentary/production, or whatever the term for this is. I love it. Keep it up

    • @AaronWitt
      @AaronWitt  Год назад

      thank you for watching!!

  • @silverfoot1500
    @silverfoot1500 Год назад +3

    Thank you so much Aaron for publishing this. Excellent content 4 the word to see

    • @AaronWitt
      @AaronWitt  Год назад

      thank you very much for watching

  • @jeffreykbevins7116
    @jeffreykbevins7116 Год назад +2

    This was a great video and thank you very much for bringing this to a lot of people that have no idea of how much work goes into mining coal and then how much work goes back into the reclaiming which in most cases makes the land more usable and valuable leveled out in places than it wasn't before the mining .
    🤗👍💫

  • @curtis-thebicentennialist1776
    @curtis-thebicentennialist1776 Год назад +17

    Great vid! When you said "without coal, we wouldnt have electricity", I agree. But I would also say "without coal, we wouldnt have steel, silicon computer processor chips, or concrete", just to mention a few necessities. My motto is:
    Earth First...we'll mine the other planets later!

    • @AaronWitt
      @AaronWitt  Год назад +2

      Great points

    • @berenlea486
      @berenlea486 Год назад +1

      You dont need coal for any of those things, coal is just the super cheep option there are other ways to do them that dont involve coal or any other fossil fuel for that matter

    • @curtis-thebicentennialist1776
      @curtis-thebicentennialist1776 Год назад +6

      @@berenlea486 Wow! It seems that i have just found the only person who knows how to produce steel without coke, produce silicon chips without high purity silicon, and replace flyash in concrete mix.

    • @jeremygrubb1434
      @jeremygrubb1434 Год назад +3

      @@curtis-thebicentennialist1776 good point I’m a coal miner in Kentucky people just don’t realize what all coal provided for them but what Do I know

  • @sicanady
    @sicanady Год назад +1

    From coal country I thank you. I have never been part of the industry but I see and hear about what’s going on up in the mines all the time. Appreciate your content.

    • @AaronWitt
      @AaronWitt  Год назад

      I’m glad you enjoy it!! Thank you for watchinf

  • @doughnutpatrol
    @doughnutpatrol Год назад +5

    Keep up the good work! To be blue collar to be American means we support ALL energy. We need jobs, honest work, and energy people need to know that those of us who work in the energy sector don’t want to destroy the planet, for god sakes we play in it, live in it and die in it! You live in the city and you don’t want to live in the dark ages? You need dirty jobs to fuel your excess. Keep it up man! They’re tryin to kill my state of Wyoming cause of just plain ignorance.

    • @AaronWitt
      @AaronWitt  Год назад

      thanks for watching!

    • @louiearmstrong
      @louiearmstrong Год назад

      Coal isn't going anywhere soon, but Wyoming is digging its own grave by relying on coal for most of the state government revenue. They need to embrace some newer, cold weather friendly industries like data centers and industrial marijuana, instead of crying when Washington state doesn't want to export Wyoming coal, or shitting on Bill Gates for wanting to invest billions in Wyoming nuclear

  • @aokay720
    @aokay720 Год назад

    This is exactly the kind of information I've been looking for!! Thank you!!

  • @benjaminallen2370
    @benjaminallen2370 Год назад

    Love this video! Awesome perspective and production.

  • @gataxis7737
    @gataxis7737 Год назад +2

    wow, I just found your channel today, i'm impressed. I absolutely had no idea that mining operations were restored after being mined.

  • @Holeshot260
    @Holeshot260 Год назад

    Love your videos. I'm happy to see you liked the 800. I have been working for Tennant for 25 years.

  • @HeathFarms
    @HeathFarms Год назад +5

    Another great video. Enjoy this type of content

    • @AaronWitt
      @AaronWitt  Год назад

      Thanks David!

    • @HeathFarms
      @HeathFarms Год назад

      I’ve learned a lot about Naples Florida thing s I never knew yet I live there!

  • @mcc19606
    @mcc19606 9 месяцев назад

    This is one of your most informative videos Aaron. Very enlightening. Mike 🇦🇺

  • @michaelmaas5544
    @michaelmaas5544 Год назад +2

    Well made and informative look forward more like this.

  • @avenheavner108
    @avenheavner108 Год назад +3

    Great video and I love how you explained everything I got s lot of information from this video now I know more about coal mining than I did before! Great video and I’m looking forward to another watch me work video soon!

    • @AaronWitt
      @AaronWitt  Год назад

      thank you for watching!!

  • @chrisearley6629
    @chrisearley6629 Год назад +1

    Company I work for installs the electrical equipment, cables, operators chairs and such. We bring the machine to optimum working condition. Been on all the dragline machines in your videos and a lot more. Great videos keep them coming.

    • @AaronWitt
      @AaronWitt  Год назад

      That’s really awesome you get to work around these machines

  • @kailebleary6488
    @kailebleary6488 Год назад

    Absolutely love these videos ,As a mining boilermaker working on the biggest machinery in the world in the Hunter Valley Australia. It's great to see how mining operations work a round the world with your video Aaron. Also Aaron when are you coming Australia would love to see a video of the super pit in Kalgoorlie or Mt Thorley coal mine.

  • @robertferreiro3466
    @robertferreiro3466 Год назад

    Thank you.....good to see this again...I worked in coal mining in South Africa...I loved it

  • @staggerinstanton56
    @staggerinstanton56 Год назад +2

    That was absolutely amazing!

  • @adamhogeland8033
    @adamhogeland8033 11 месяцев назад

    As a coal mining industry employee you have done justice to the industry

  • @danielormsbee7668
    @danielormsbee7668 Год назад +1

    Dude your channel is sweet. Keep up the good work. These videos are great quality

  • @georgewashington938
    @georgewashington938 Год назад +3

    Coal is certified organic!

    • @AaronWitt
      @AaronWitt  Год назад +1

      Ain’t that the truth

  • @DAMotorsports
    @DAMotorsports Год назад +5

    Oh look electric car fuel. Wait until you find out what it takes to mine material for all those Californian batteries you can’t charge.

  • @DAD-yf6fi
    @DAD-yf6fi Год назад

    I love your videos, keep up the good work!

  • @martymorse2
    @martymorse2 Год назад +1

    Awesome video Aaron. Keep up the great content.

  • @CarsPawsOutdoors
    @CarsPawsOutdoors Год назад

    Used to run a Tennant s30 for a few years I bloody loved that thing ❤️🇦🇺

  • @danwatson8245
    @danwatson8245 Год назад +2

    Worked at a long wall mine for 10 years on the surface as a dozer operator. Before cline passed away it was the best place I ever worked after he passed not so much. But I do miss it.

    • @AaronWitt
      @AaronWitt  Год назад +1

      really cool Dan. Thanks for watching

  • @terrellscaife2411
    @terrellscaife2411 Год назад +1

    Really cool stuff I bet you put in a lot of time and effort to make this video flawless

    • @AaronWitt
      @AaronWitt  Год назад

      thank you very much for watching!

  • @urbanbasementoperator
    @urbanbasementoperator Год назад +1

    Dude thank you for this, it was great.

  • @ripbozo8829
    @ripbozo8829 Год назад +3

    Nice filming!

  • @RoundaboutASMR
    @RoundaboutASMR Год назад

    This whole video is massively eye opening. I can't say how right you are when I think of coal mining, even though I know its not the case, your mind still goes to the guys covered in black head to toe with a pickaxe and a oil lamp.
    The reclamation is amazing.
    The one thing I will say is these dude for sure SOUND like miners haha.

  • @watchthe1369
    @watchthe1369 Год назад +1

    The Big Muskie's uncle, cousin, little brother? I like these the is always something new I learn watching these.

  • @benja_mint
    @benja_mint Год назад

    I'm pretty impressed at how it looked afterwards. Remarkable! But also nobody can deny that we should reduce coal usage as much as feasible.

  • @scrotiemcboogerballs1981
    @scrotiemcboogerballs1981 Год назад +1

    There was two drag lines that size or a little bigger running around my house back in the 70-90s area after they shut down I got a chance to explore one of them they are so huge

    • @AaronWitt
      @AaronWitt  Год назад

      They’re awesome machines

  • @maksz6204
    @maksz6204 Год назад +1

    Keep up the good work !

  • @shrinkingtyler4945
    @shrinkingtyler4945 Год назад +1

    Damn. These are some good videos

  • @Truckerjohn174
    @Truckerjohn174 Год назад +1

    Love the vids. It'd be helpful for regular joes if you referenced cubic yards when describing machines... this dragline bucket pulls x yards. For the normal dirt monkey the size of these things is astounding. Keep up the good work.

    • @AaronWitt
      @AaronWitt  Год назад

      Gotcha will do thanks John

  • @ernierundall1336
    @ernierundall1336 Год назад +2

    Great video again

  • @buglet59
    @buglet59 4 месяца назад

    I know this business very well for many years.

  • @southernstar4353
    @southernstar4353 Год назад +2

    Great video!

  • @rdk162
    @rdk162 Год назад

    GREAT VIDEO!

  • @MrSwitchblade2000
    @MrSwitchblade2000 Год назад +2

    You have really stepped up your RUclips game recently!

    • @AaronWitt
      @AaronWitt  Год назад

      we're doing our best!!! Thanks for watching. Only up from here

  • @RhanerMediaWorks
    @RhanerMediaWorks Год назад +1

    Excellent

  • @maksz6204
    @maksz6204 Год назад +1

    Nice video!

  • @danielmarshall4587
    @danielmarshall4587 Год назад

    All the love from the UK. Here's a point, I'm old enough to remember the buildings in the "Northern Town" where I live being black because most people had coal burning fires/stoves in their houses. These building have been cleaned and look nice and clean. If you go to wikipedia and look up Sellafield Nuclear site, part of that talks about a clean up(for part of the site) running until 2104. TWO THOUSAND AND ONE OH FOUR, boy oh boy I shudder reading that. Many thanks for this vid.

  • @Brake_MagnetoMan175
    @Brake_MagnetoMan175 Год назад +1

    Would love to see a video like this showing off a smaller aggregate operation. My particular one is ran by a large company, but we're their basement essentially. I work production and maintenance on the plant and fill in as needed. We're lucky to go a week without fighting the plant. We crush roughly 2500 tons a day, but the whole crushing operation is ran with 5 people. 1 loader man, 2 haul truck drivers, and 2 at the plant.

    • @AaronWitt
      @AaronWitt  Год назад

      we will see what we can do

  • @flyingscalpel7
    @flyingscalpel7 Год назад +1

    Gotta comment, great video Aaron!

  • @yenerm114
    @yenerm114 Год назад +1

    Hard to get a grasp on how gigantic them machines really are !!!! Almost prly drive a truck into the bucket of that 6020!!!! 🤩 🤩 🤯

  • @ColtonBlumhagen
    @ColtonBlumhagen Год назад +1

    You joke but I always though the floor cleaning machines were so cool in the truck shop.

  • @sshaw7912
    @sshaw7912 Год назад +1

    Great video.

  • @byrdprecision8824
    @byrdprecision8824 Год назад +2

    You know what would be a good video series is if you went down to Texas to shoot some videos on the oilfield, wether they are spreading the used mud, or building the pads or actually drilling or fracing the well, with your quality of videos that would be amazing to watch

    • @AaronWitt
      @AaronWitt  Год назад

      problem is the oil companies chase us off

    • @byrdprecision8824
      @byrdprecision8824 Год назад

      @@AaronWitt thats what sucks but thankfully I’ve been an insider on the downstream of things, my dad used to crack and now we own a trucking company hauling crude oil through out Oklahoma, Texas, New Mexico, Colorado and just all over where ever pays the best.

    • @byrdprecision8824
      @byrdprecision8824 Год назад

      He used to frac*

  • @richardhaselwood9478
    @richardhaselwood9478 Год назад +4

    Here in Australia, we've a few problems with owners not being on top of their rehab, until quite a bit later in the operation. This is more an issue with older mines, where rehab wasn't taken as seriously as it should have been.
    Most current mines are pretty on top of their rehab from the moment the dirt starts getting moved. Rehab has to be designed into the mining operation.
    How well do you guys cope with acid sulphates in overburden? This is something we've only just realized is a problem here in Aus in the last 10 years or so, and has the potential to be a major issue?

    • @AaronWitt
      @AaronWitt  Год назад +1

      not sure. I'll ask about it next time I'm with these folks

    • @richardhaselwood9478
      @richardhaselwood9478 Год назад +1

      ​@@AaronWitt Yeah, Australian operators basically took the attitude that "Acid sulphates. That's only a problem in hard rock mines!" Then they ran some tests, and got a very rude surprise....
      Especially when you consider you need to design spoil piles to last about a thousand years if they are part of final landforms.
      One more question. Are these guys in pit dumping? Obviously, that's the case with the dragline, but with truck and shovel operations, it normally gets transported to a spoil pile. I ask because, over the last few years, a few operators have been regretting in pit dumping because with the substantial increase in coal price, digging deeper is now really worthwhile. A number of pits in Australia are going to nearly 200m, or deeper, seam thickness dependent Unless your pit has been already filled in (another reason some big operators, e.g. Glencore, don't like draglines.)

    • @andreyfomenko2644
      @andreyfomenko2644 Год назад

      @@richardhaselwood9478 Well, they reference a regulation from 1970', so I wouldn't expect a stringent rules on a modern lookout on a soil chemistry.

    • @richardhaselwood9478
      @richardhaselwood9478 Год назад +2

      @@andreyfomenko2644 It's not just soil chemistry though. You need to have a good understanding of the chemistry of all your overburden, otherwise, you get unpleasant surprises 20 to 30 years later.

    • @rebeccamcgrew9681
      @rebeccamcgrew9681 Год назад +1

      Before mining, we drill cores to 10' below the lowest coal seam we mine. Samples are sent for laboratory analysis & if acid forming materials are identified, we know to bury them so no acid seeps will form in the reclamation.

  • @Traks_threw_life86
    @Traks_threw_life86 Год назад +2

    I worked in an open pit mine that was a smaller scale. It's called Pabco Gypsum of Las Vegas and it's the only drywall manufacturer that mines gypsum and puts it straight into the production plant. This is a great video and I love seeing the reclamation process.

  • @magmomwise
    @magmomwise Год назад

    I worked at an surface coal mine in Montana for about 5 years. I saw first hand all of the rules and regulations that mines operate under. Complicated work. As far as I'm concerned it was one of the best paying in wages and benefits jobs I've ever had. I wouldn't hesitate to recommend anyone working at a coal mine.

  • @shenghan4897
    @shenghan4897 Год назад

    Awesome video

  • @jeffgannon1
    @jeffgannon1 Год назад

    Bravo!

  • @anthonygredig
    @anthonygredig 14 дней назад

    So pleased to see the reclamation after coal mining. I'm interested to know what happens when coal runs out?

  • @jackryan7397
    @jackryan7397 Год назад +1

    i loved this bcs it’s not what i thought it was going to be about

  • @theloniousmonk1000
    @theloniousmonk1000 Год назад

    Good blokes digging up the mineral , making tha mun , fair play to them

  • @Ratkill9000
    @Ratkill9000 Год назад +1

    PA Mining did a live Q&A stream a couple weeks ago and he talked about some of this. It's quite interesting what people don't realise and what other refuse to say on the subject.

    • @AaronWitt
      @AaronWitt  Год назад

      I’ll have to look around for that

  • @Obshowersyndicate
    @Obshowersyndicate Год назад

    I install exterior trim made from fly ash the stuff is amazing

  • @garycsfunlife
    @garycsfunlife Год назад +1

    Am I the only one that sees that dragline and wants to drive that thing ! well not drive it but operate it ! it looks like a lot of fun 😁👍 yes I already operated equipment so it's not a huge leap for me obviously I already like operating equipment but still that thing looks awesome 😎👍

    • @AaronWitt
      @AaronWitt  Год назад +1

      they're very neat I'd love to operate one too!!

  • @robertandreoli9764
    @robertandreoli9764 Год назад +1

    Aaron awesome video

    • @AaronWitt
      @AaronWitt  Год назад

      thank you Robert!!

    • @robertandreoli9764
      @robertandreoli9764 Год назад

      Aaron your welcome I work for a construction company in new Hampshire in there gravel pit👍

  • @Oliver-Kirsch
    @Oliver-Kirsch Год назад +1

    I am an in school for environmental conservation and i think ill show this to my professor because a lot of students here in New York just don't understand anything about mining because were all mainly hydroelectric or wind and solar now.

    • @AaronWitt
      @AaronWitt  Год назад

      yeah but funny enough a vast majority of our power is still from coal and gas...

    • @Oliver-Kirsch
      @Oliver-Kirsch Год назад +1

      @@AaronWitt Yea, where i'm from in buffalo most of the area is powered by Niagara Falls and everybody in the area thinks that people who don't use hydroelectric are doing something wrong, when in reality its just not possible in most areas because people just don't have that kind of access. And Niagara Falls it barely powers two cities so i'm and im not sure where people think the other power comes from in the winter when its frozen over ori n other areas in new york further away 🤣 Your videos are really good man keep it up.

  • @tonymidkiff2108
    @tonymidkiff2108 Год назад +1

    I wish the mining companies in Wv would reclaim their mines as well as this company does

  • @patrick247two
    @patrick247two Год назад

    Thank you coal for all the good times, but those times are a changin'.

  • @zacharyfloyd3697
    @zacharyfloyd3697 Год назад +2

    Would love to see ya come to trapper mine in Craig Colorado

    • @AaronWitt
      @AaronWitt  Год назад +1

      that would be a neat one to see

  • @AveryExcavating
    @AveryExcavating Год назад +1

    great video. Thanks for putting this together.

  • @jasonlaiym
    @jasonlaiym Месяц назад

    Coal is the bedrock of modern civilization.

  • @botfoblhrp
    @botfoblhrp Год назад

    the area made into ponds by Big Brutis when it was mining is some best fishing you'll ever have in southeast kansas. just like stated in the video, you would never know it was a coal mine field.

  • @smokeyjo7420
    @smokeyjo7420 Год назад +5

    First, this channel is great and i just discovered it.
    Second, how are coal miners still getting black lung if coal mining isn't what it used to be?

    • @thangknowa3288
      @thangknowa3288 Год назад +1

      Mostly underground mining, look up "Longwall Mining". All the dust you can stand, and then some.

    • @AaronWitt
      @AaronWitt  Год назад +1

      yep that's all a different type of coal mining. This is surface mining. Thanks for watching!

    • @mzee5533
      @mzee5533 Год назад

      Let me tell you simple answer for that is people don’t use the protective equipment they’re provided by the company. I’m in this industry i see it everyday. Yesterday another guy he was nearly crushed while lifting the cutting edges by a magnet 🧲. And this was not reported to the management. So don’t blame the companies but we grow up people are a big problem. Don’t expect a safety officer to chase you around to wear a musk or follow the safe procedure of doing a job.

  • @ethans2223
    @ethans2223 Год назад

    I think Aaron is an equipmentphile the way he's talking about that excavator

  • @D4NS80
    @D4NS80 Год назад +1

    Well made video, probably wanna turn your music breaks down a bit in volume as we have to keep adjusting our volume. Cheers.

  • @jz1340
    @jz1340 Год назад +1

    Kress Manufacturing is still in business....Peoria, IL

  • @jamesketchum4014
    @jamesketchum4014 Год назад

    Have a good look at lithium strip mines and the sulfiric acid leach pits

  • @baden5502
    @baden5502 Год назад

    I have seen that mine from a distance!!

  • @forloop7713
    @forloop7713 Год назад

    Where do they get the dirt to fill in all the holes? Clearly there's a net reduction in the total volume of dirt and rock once the coal is taken away

  • @wbball15
    @wbball15 Год назад +1

    Blue Collar Photography & Eric Jumper are unsung heroes of Build WITT

  • @Abanggun
    @Abanggun Год назад

    Wow...😱👍❤👍👍👍

  • @rckc.1719
    @rckc.1719 Год назад +1

    this should be taught in school