Giant steam forging hammer in Chicago -- Огромный Кузнечный молот в Чикаго США

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  • Опубликовано: 5 июн 2018
  • This steam hammer was installed in 1940s.
    Гигантский паровой молот, установленный в 1940х годах.

Комментарии • 154

  • @whatever8165
    @whatever8165 5 лет назад +92

    This is my kind of ASMR

  • @GreatBlueWhale
    @GreatBlueWhale 3 года назад +28

    Friend: Hey dude - what kind of Music are you listening to?
    Me: Oh, you know, Industrial.

    • @nlo114
      @nlo114 3 года назад +2

      I'm definitely into heavy metal!

  • @lightning9279
    @lightning9279 3 года назад +35

    I'm in NC, now I know where that damn knocking sound is coming from.

    • @ph11p3540
      @ph11p3540 2 года назад +2

      That's your friendly neighborhood subway train going bump in the night.

  • @shaitshait123
    @shaitshait123 2 года назад +17

    Cool to see rammstein making progress on the new album

  • @JonathanMartinez-xs5ze
    @JonathanMartinez-xs5ze 5 лет назад +55

    Completely deaf by age 32

    • @brandonroach2370
      @brandonroach2370 4 года назад +27

      What?

    • @erikthechosenone
      @erikthechosenone 4 года назад +2

      Brandon Roach The sound that the hammer is making is loud.

    • @OperatorMitch
      @OperatorMitch 4 года назад +16

      @@erikthechosenone I think you missed the joke Brandon was making

    • @alternator7893
      @alternator7893 3 года назад

      I would like this comment if not for my love of consistency

    • @delbroncarter5121
      @delbroncarter5121 3 года назад

      Ear plugs!!!

  • @sherrylowe126
    @sherrylowe126 2 года назад +8

    My late father worked at Kropp Forge for about 25 years, starting back in the mid-50’s. He ran the largest drop hammer they had. My 2 brothers also worked there for 20+ years. I grew up hearing workplace stories about this place.

    • @IgorChudov
      @IgorChudov  Год назад

      Glad to hear Sherry!!! All the best to you

  • @markhosbach9420
    @markhosbach9420 2 года назад +17

    Company I retired from used to sink and repair dies for Kropp Forge. I recognize the part and I’m sure we worked on these many times. They always let their tooling go to shit, then we were expected to make it right again.

    • @hyacinthhouse3307
      @hyacinthhouse3307 2 года назад

      How long does it take to EDM sink one of those dies?

    • @josejuanrosales3614
      @josejuanrosales3614 2 года назад

      Yep of course repair and grind is always cheaper than do the machine do the work

  • @eduardoruiz6813
    @eduardoruiz6813 2 года назад +3

    i remember in 1979 ,Reisner metal there i wrked when i was 20 years old in L.A california,in a steam forgin hammer , thanks for sharing this video , nice memory.

  • @savejets
    @savejets 4 года назад +18

    A British announcer once exclaimed that Mike Tyson "hits like a steam hammer".
    I now know what he meant by that.

  • @steamgent4592
    @steamgent4592 4 года назад +26

    Love these old steam forges!! Totally awesome. What a kool job

    • @imreboldis
      @imreboldis 2 года назад +3

      I have a feeling that it is not really cool after 20-30 years.

    • @steamgent4592
      @steamgent4592 2 года назад

      @@imreboldis like any and all jobs thats probably true. Especially like today when they make jobs harder than they need to be with stupid rules from college educated folks who never made anything in their life nor were ever made to run a forge like they made them do before ever being in charge back in the day.

    • @charlesburgoyne-probyn6044
      @charlesburgoyne-probyn6044 7 месяцев назад

      ​@@imreboldissadly I would probably have to agree not from personal experience but from logic the noise and vibration will take its toll

  • @johnnymalesevich1837
    @johnnymalesevich1837 3 года назад +32

    This hammer is the 5051 at kropp forge in cicero ill. Its on 54th ave. U can watch when they got the big hammershop door open. The 40 is at the other end. My daddy retired from there in 2002.

    • @richb.4374
      @richb.4374 3 года назад +2

      I used to live just a half mile from this monster in Cicero. When I was a kid I used to ride my bike there to watch them forge parts like this, it was awesome to see. The ground shook with each blow, the video can't do it justice. My dad worked at the plant next door to Kropp called National castings. It's now an Amazon warehouse.

    • @codprawn
      @codprawn 2 года назад

      Is it still in use?

    • @toshockamazeandamuze8531
      @toshockamazeandamuze8531 2 года назад +1

      does it exist or it is now taco bell place??

    • @WAL_DC-6B
      @WAL_DC-6B 2 года назад

      @@toshockamazeandamuze8531 Yeah, now they forge out steel tacos.

    • @IgorChudov
      @IgorChudov  Год назад +1

      @@codprawn no the place closed a few months ago and was bulldozed

  • @gigabilitydontask1549
    @gigabilitydontask1549 3 года назад +5

    Dad did this for so long he would go to sleep right arm and right foot would keep going

  • @randyschneider6086
    @randyschneider6086 2 года назад +2

    I worked in a factory where deep tiller cultivator shovels were made using drop hammers very noisy and hot.

  • @drlegendre
    @drlegendre 2 года назад +2

    Not Krupp, but Kropp.. weird. Is thus just coincidence?
    Btw, as huge as this old girl is, she's by no means the largest in use.

  • @Smokeysmoke42o
    @Smokeysmoke42o 4 года назад +9

    I run a 40k pound Ceco Hammer.. they are so much fun!

  • @herculesrockefeller8969
    @herculesrockefeller8969 3 года назад +2

    "Why do I have pounding headaches?"

  • @thetigerstripes
    @thetigerstripes 3 года назад +4

    Sounds like gunfire. Forging like that is probably on S/E part of Chicago, close to Indiana Harbor and the steel mills.

  • @charleshultquist9233
    @charleshultquist9233 3 года назад +2

    Awesome!

  • @JohnnyFKNRipp
    @JohnnyFKNRipp 3 месяца назад

    I ran steam hammers at Rockford Drop Forge... mine was a 5000pd ram...these hammers hit with authority and they were tricky for me at first, I come from a different forge shop..we had hydraulic Lasco hammers which I liked alot better. I also ran those old Board hammers, those things could be a nightmare.

  • @giovannifontanetto9604
    @giovannifontanetto9604 3 года назад +5

    when the hammer rebounds, it losses some energy by not being perfectly in sinc with the rebound, it rebounds, drops a bit, then goes up. This probably losses some energy.

    • @Kunstsmed
      @Kunstsmed 2 года назад

      It is a drop hammer not a forging hammer like you would have in a blacksmith shop. There is nothing wrong with it.

    • @giovannifontanetto9604
      @giovannifontanetto9604 2 года назад +2

      @@Kunstsmed You did not understand me. I know what it is. Im talking about the way it comes back up, not about the way it goes down.

  • @trickydale9895
    @trickydale9895 10 месяцев назад +1

    Does anyone have any idea how much the hammer weighed and how much force it produced?

  • @TokenTombstone
    @TokenTombstone 2 года назад +1

    That thing could probably make your thumbnail turn purple.

  • @christophe8549
    @christophe8549 2 года назад +2

    Le meilleur ami de l’homme ! Mais en très grand !!!

  • @delbroncarter1668
    @delbroncarter1668 5 лет назад +2

    I loved this Work.All done By Hand No Hi'lo's.

    • @ronzo9377
      @ronzo9377 3 года назад

      How would you like to listen to that for about 20 years

  • @gigabilitydontask1549
    @gigabilitydontask1549 3 года назад +5

    If that is the 50 my father broke it more than once

    • @dugtrux686
      @dugtrux686 2 года назад +1

      worked on the "chambersburg" next to the 50 (erie) 35000, and the 50000. that looks like the 35000.

  • @charlesburgoyne-probyn6044
    @charlesburgoyne-probyn6044 7 месяцев назад

    It seems that parts of this unit were reused at the canton drop forge

  • @JonDingle
    @JonDingle 4 года назад +5

    I want one! Just to hammer anything for the fun of it.

    • @joshschneider9766
      @joshschneider9766 3 года назад +1

      Costs kropp forge 35000 dollars a year just to maintain it

  • @joshschneider9766
    @joshschneider9766 3 года назад

    I grew up a few kilometers from this facility

  • @rosewhite---
    @rosewhite--- 2 года назад +3

    Can't see what the forging is but it will sure be tough after all that forging!

    • @stasbaginskij4068
      @stasbaginskij4068 2 года назад +1

      Это не ковка,это штамповка в закрытых штампах,ковка выполняется плоскими бойками.На видео молот с массой падающих частей примерно 16 т

    • @josejuanrosales3614
      @josejuanrosales3614 Год назад +1

      Looks like a part from a Boeing plane

  • @lembriggs1075
    @lembriggs1075 3 года назад +1

    What are they making there?
    And what are those dangling chains up above on the steam gland and bolts used for? Are they there to warn that it’s falling apart and needs attention?

    • @carljacobson8903
      @carljacobson8903 3 года назад +5

      They are attached to the packing plate bolts around the rod in case they brake so they don’t fall on your head.

    • @MrSunrise-
      @MrSunrise- 3 года назад

      @@carljacobson8903 Thanks!

  • @gigabilitydontask1549
    @gigabilitydontask1549 3 года назад +2

    My father worked there for 30 years this was my destiny

    • @stasbaginskij4068
      @stasbaginskij4068 2 года назад

      Интересно кузнечно штамповочный цех что на видео ещё работает?Я в таком цехе мастером проработал семь лет после института а завод назвался Донецкий экскаваторный завод ,находился в Ростовской области

  • @julianbarrios3176
    @julianbarrios3176 5 лет назад +14

    is that at KROPP FORGE ????? in chicago??

    • @joshschneider9766
      @joshschneider9766 3 года назад +1

      yes it is.

    • @gigabilitydontask1549
      @gigabilitydontask1549 3 года назад +2

      My father worked there for 30 years this was my destiny but instead I decided to kill fish the rest of my life seeing that brings back some memories I will never forget the smell wasn't allowed but I would snuck in there to run a hammer one of the best parts of growing up

    • @gigabilitydontask1549
      @gigabilitydontask1549 3 года назад

      I would like to hear some memories from the old timers probably all rubbed out

    • @joshschneider9766
      @joshschneider9766 3 года назад

      it still exists but its aerospace forgings so im pretty sure industrial secrecy applies.

    • @joshschneider9766
      @joshschneider9766 3 года назад +1

      its an insane survivor, most companies like it were gone in the 80s and 90s when i was growing up but what it can make and where its located kept it alive. they forge titanium plane parts now

  • @rickskedden9595
    @rickskedden9595 Год назад

    I used to work on repairing one of them when I started working as a millwright in mid 90s

  • @lbochtler
    @lbochtler 9 месяцев назад

    This is a musical instrument

  • @yassineabdoulayfadoul6449
    @yassineabdoulayfadoul6449 2 года назад +1

    هذه الصناعات مهمة جدا لدول لتقوية اقتصاده

  • @user-yd3ir4wb1m
    @user-yd3ir4wb1m 2 года назад

    Этому молоту наверное 1000 лет... 😁

  • @tandemcompound2
    @tandemcompound2 3 года назад +1

    Chicago Steel and Boiler? made bridges, reactors and parts for the Manhatten Project

    • @SynchroScore
      @SynchroScore 2 года назад

      You mean Chicago Bridge & Iron?

  • @laawedreteip
    @laawedreteip 3 года назад

    There was one on tata steel you can hear that thing 1000 meter from there it qas really loudth

  • @yassineabdoulayfadoul6449
    @yassineabdoulayfadoul6449 2 года назад +1

    مثل هذه المطرقة مهم في صناعة

  • @yassineabdoulayfadoul6449
    @yassineabdoulayfadoul6449 2 года назад

    المشكلة كيف نجيب المكابس الكبيرة والخولب وماكينات الخراطة الحديث

  • @lucreziaborggia466
    @lucreziaborggia466 Год назад

    Now I have anxiety and new fascination

  • @rezosful2072
    @rezosful2072 2 года назад

    Why water?

  • @andystevenson5067
    @andystevenson5067 2 года назад

    Would anyone be able to explain to me why they have the hose of water spraying on the item they're forging?

    • @danjo64
      @danjo64 2 года назад

      The man on the left side of the screen is blowing scale off the dies and the forging. Usually compressed air is used for this, but it looks like they might be using steam. At 0:15, the forging is lifted out of the bottom die, and he blows a ton of scale out of the bottom die cavity. You can see it all blowing over the guy's head and landing on the frame of the hammer and the floor. If the scale is not blown off, it will embed itself into the forging causing a pockmarked surface after the scale is cleaned off. The scale is also very abrasive and contributes to die wear, so you want to get it out of there if you can. At 0:30, after the scale is blown out, the other operator applies a lubricant to the bottom die. This whole process is repeated at 1:10. It looks like they are using graphite suspended in oil. The flare-up is the oil burning off, leaving a coating of graphite on the die surface. The forging would be at somewhere around 2200° F - 2300° F, so the oil ignites when it contacts the forging. There is someone else off-screen toward the right spraying water on the forging from a hose. I have no idea why they are doing this.

    • @paulbourgeois4491
      @paulbourgeois4491 Год назад +1

      Breaks up the scale as the water boils and bursts after spraying out of the hose

    • @MrMcbmgb
      @MrMcbmgb 5 месяцев назад

      @@danjo64 great answer. I also know they liked to use sawdust and wood chips. More of an art than science. I was told the moisture and oils in the wood would explode on impact and blow the scale away.

  • @jaykuruvilla
    @jaykuruvilla Год назад

    Anyone know an experienced 50k Hammer operator? I’m looking to hire

  • @steamgent4592
    @steamgent4592 5 лет назад +5

    Badass! That's having fun making real man stuff!

  • @kevins5011
    @kevins5011 2 года назад +6

    Worked in a forging operation just like this for Ford Motor Co. back in the day. Same type of vertical drop stem hammer. This job gave you a sense of pride mainly because it was seriously dangerous physically demanding work. New guys starting out were sent packing if they couldn't cut it. No women were allowed to work in these operations.
    We were only a few in the company work force cut out to do this day in and day out. It took a special kind of guy to "make it"in these operations.
    Our work crew could achieve the company's daily production quota in as little as 5 hours, from that point you were headed out the door getting paid for 8 hours of labor. It was a good deal

    • @homeopathicfossil-fuels4789
      @homeopathicfossil-fuels4789 Год назад

      I mean it looks like a death trap, but also like it does all the heavy lifting, what was the physically demanding part and why were women not allowed in the job? Was it that long "back in the days"? I am asking out of curiosity, as a woman who has worked hard physical industrial labor before, it wasnt that bad, actually it was a special kind of awesome and paid fitness if you ask me, heavy and exhausting but I just got healthier from it than a desk job and the people there were much more interesting to hold smoke breaks than any other job I have had.

    • @kevins5011
      @kevins5011 Год назад +1

      ​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​@@homeopathicfossil-fuels4789 each forging operation varies depending on what is being produced.
      In this operation the forging is large requiring a forklift to handle it.
      In our operation at Ford, steel bars were heated in a furnace directly behind the drop hammer. Workers pulled these heavy orange hot bars out the furnace by hand using kevlar pads and grippers and then walk the heated steel to the hammerman to forge.
      The danger existed in various ways: the first obvious way is the 2000+ degree burns you get just handling the heated bars, your then being hit and burned by the flying steel particles from the orange hot steel being hammered on.
      Sometimes the whole fuel oil fed furnace would malfunction and completely burst in to flames while your working and your back is turned and you are unaware of what just happened directly behind you!! (those out of control furnace fires were spectacular to see as the intensity of the flames would collapse the plant roof overhead)
      Sometimes it took the fire department to come out and put these furnace fires out.
      Ford did try to implement women into these jobs at one time but it didn't work out because the women didn't have the upper body strength to carry the heavy steel bars and swing the sledge hammers required for the job.(if you couldn't adequately swing the sledge hammer with power behind it in the probationary period of being hired, management let you go)
      It was a big enough challenge for a man to do alone

    • @homeopathicfossil-fuels4789
      @homeopathicfossil-fuels4789 Год назад

      @@kevins5011 The additional detail absolutely clarifies that! This is very interesting to read about, I can definitely see it not just being a "culture of the times" decision there. The experience working there as you relay sounds, for the lack of a "cheaper word" absolutely hadean. Must have taken a major toll on your body with those conditions. Did Ford ever compensate for any health related issues among workers at that plant?

    • @kevins5011
      @kevins5011 Год назад

      ​@@homeopathicfossil-fuels4789 Ford and the union had good relations when i started in 1993, since i only worked at the Vulcan Forge plant in Dearborn my first 3 years at Ford i didn't have any long term adverse health problems. Ford generally moved workers on to better /easier jobs as they became available.I believe the company knew that workers longevity at that level of physical demand was limited. and looking back i appreciate the company was looking out for us because no one could be swinging sledge hammers at 50 or 60 years old. My long journey with Ford will be over in oct. of this year

    • @homeopathicfossil-fuels4789
      @homeopathicfossil-fuels4789 Год назад

      @@kevins5011 That is really good to hear, I always carry a bit of worry for my fellow industrial laborers across the Atlantic. Wishing you the best of times in your otium/retirement! Thanks for telling me your story!

  • @delbroncarter1668
    @delbroncarter1668 2 года назад +3

    The Hammer Should Swing.Up & Down Always For Maximum Hitting Power! The Workspace Would Take Less Hits To To Finish The Forging.

  • @brianbooher7318
    @brianbooher7318 2 года назад

    I ran one of those in tennesee.ours had been converted to from steam to air.i lost my thumb cause of that dam thing

    • @camojoe83
      @camojoe83 2 года назад

      It took your thumb because you got stupid. Be honest.

  • @mahakalvlog5377
    @mahakalvlog5377 11 месяцев назад

    Kitna ton ka haymer hai

  • @yassineabdoulayfadoul6449
    @yassineabdoulayfadoul6449 2 года назад +1

    ان مويد توفير مطرقة الكهرباية والهيدرليك حتي لو بمشاركة شركات متخصص ويكون متوفر في السوق هو وماكينات الخراطة الحديث مرطبة بجهاز كمبيوتر

  • @kentsarr1856
    @kentsarr1856 2 года назад

    My uncle and father worked a forge plant named " Cornell forging",,,In chicago ( late 60' s early70's) Is this " Cornell",,,???or renamed,,??? Once named " Cornell",,,???

    • @danjo64
      @danjo64 2 года назад

      Cornell Forge is still operating. This is not Cornell.

  • @grilbenko5241
    @grilbenko5241 4 года назад +2

    Warhammer 40k?

  • @djlau1
    @djlau1 3 года назад

    If the car scrapyards use these it wil save alot of diezel cars wil flatten in one go

  • @harleypiper
    @harleypiper 3 года назад +1

    Did board drop hammer for 4yrs

    • @paulbourgeois4491
      @paulbourgeois4491 Год назад +1

      Hello timekeeper this is Hammer 10 punch me out on change boards!

  • @user-rp9zc9kl7q
    @user-rp9zc9kl7q 3 года назад +3

    А у нас такой на заводе в металлолом порезали наши идиоты.

  • @marcuscicero9587
    @marcuscicero9587 3 года назад

    this is got to be what hell is like.

    • @IgorChudov
      @IgorChudov  3 года назад

      That was MY first thought also when I saw it in person

  • @cutratecontractor1000
    @cutratecontractor1000 2 года назад

    Be gentle it's my first time.
    Also her...

  • @6ixss
    @6ixss 2 года назад +1

    this job must pay good

    • @paulbourgeois4491
      @paulbourgeois4491 Год назад

      $30 to $40\hr while they are in production making rate on a standard, time studied for piecework. I used to do the time studies at Interstate Drop Forge in Milwaukee Wisconsin, 1919-2002.
      RIP IDF!

  • @lostallmymoney2082
    @lostallmymoney2082 2 года назад +2

    Where are the feminists to do these jobs?

  • @user-bv1jz8bl5z
    @user-bv1jz8bl5z 2 года назад +1

    его бы модернизировать, еще 100 лет проработает

  • @gigabilitydontask1549
    @gigabilitydontask1549 3 года назад +2

    Is that the 50

    • @ronblack7870
      @ronblack7870 7 месяцев назад

      nope the 50 is hydraulic in cleveland

    • @gigabilitydontask1549
      @gigabilitydontask1549 7 месяцев назад

      @@ronblack7870 there was a 50 in Cicero in the 60s and 70,s

  • @jesusdiaz2772
    @jesusdiaz2772 2 года назад +1

    50000#?

  • @SirSquash
    @SirSquash 2 года назад +2

    this will be perfect for squishing the most communism out of the most communists at once. like tomatos.

  • @fahrettinmustu584
    @fahrettinmustu584 5 лет назад

    Bu hava lı çekiç kaç binlik 30000 mi müthiş makina

  • @marcioadrianodossantossant835
    @marcioadrianodossantossant835 2 года назад

    QUE MARTELO EMMMMMM

  • @patrickr2686
    @patrickr2686 4 года назад

    Why steam?

  • @junkddisgustipate7812
    @junkddisgustipate7812 3 года назад +2

    0:39 me knocking on my girlfriends door after she kicks me out

  • @delbroncarter5121
    @delbroncarter5121 3 года назад

    Money!!!

  • @Shershivrajhai
    @Shershivrajhai 3 года назад +1

    That's the inspiration behind Thor Hammer.

  • @erikthechosenone
    @erikthechosenone 4 года назад +2

    *2:03* *T* *O* *Y* *O* *T* *A*

    • @duesenberg1000
      @duesenberg1000 4 года назад

      That,s the fork lift used by thousands of companies in the USA Look at the workers(large Chicago men)

    • @gigabilitydontask1549
      @gigabilitydontask1549 3 года назад

      Believe it was called a manipulator

  • @rabahbendahmane7577
    @rabahbendahmane7577 11 месяцев назад

    9 tonnes el halouf

  • @plkrishh
    @plkrishh 3 года назад

    Poor dies

    • @paulbourgeois4491
      @paulbourgeois4491 Год назад

      Die steel is tough, resilient, dense, and impressions sunk in them will be re-flood welded, in the cavity, planed smooth, re-traced, and re sunk. The dies are stamped with numerical Identities, as re sinking is done over and over. That die block is a badass, and loves it's job, trust me.

  • @SanjuSanju-et3cm
    @SanjuSanju-et3cm 6 месяцев назад

    Video call kar

  • @user-mq8qg2tk8s
    @user-mq8qg2tk8s 3 года назад +2

    А что в итоге получилось - хрен его знает!

  • @r0id465
    @r0id465 Год назад

    Какая электроника? Не не слышали)