I've been a boilermaker/welder under the maintance section at the sinter plant in Newcastle - South Africa for my whole life after doing my military service and I'm 60 now and on early pension due to hearing damage from all the noise exposure (even though we used ear protection and dust masks and all the other ppe required), and prolonged work in this sort of inviroment is not good at all, but I must say your way of explaining how raw material is prepared for the furnace is all spot on, though some process goes through different machines here like the cooling process of the sinter happens on the same bed or strand where the strand is split for the cooling process with fans on either end of the plant for the sintering and cooling before going through the crusher and screening plant, but it all comes to the same product in the end and ends up in bunkers or on the bed where a stacker reclaimed will feed the furnace in a break down situation or while the sinter plant is down for maintenance, a plant such as this has a verry high wear rate and always requires tons of maintance, this was a verry acurate explanation of exactly how a sinter plant works 👍
I've been doing mechanical maintenance for long time/south Korea pohang. working at the sinter plant is very bad, but you did a grate job.... if you work there for a long time, everyone has problems with their ears. I feel the same ^^ I hope you have a comfortable retirement life. I'm also a retiree at a sintering factory. But where is that place? sinter plant in the Newcastle?
@@이좋은날 it's in South Africa / KZN (or Natal) and the company is Mittal steel, and thank you so much and I hope you're retirement is also good and you have a good rest, yes your right it's a terrible dirty hot dusty noise and dangerouse place to work and hearing is one of the first to suffer from long exposure to this work inviroment, I'm glad it's over for me because even though I loved and had pride in my work and I gained much respect for my hard and reliable work and problem solving, it was hell, now I build things for my home to keep myself going 🤣👍
I've been doing mechanical maintenance for long time/south Korea pohang. working at the sinter plant is very bad, but you did a grate job.... if you work there for a long time, everyone has problems with their ears. I feel the same ^^ I hope you have a comfortable retirement life. I'm also a retiree at a sintering factory. But where is that place? sinter plant in the Newcastle?
I've been a boilermaker/welder under the maintance section at the sinter plant in Newcastle - South Africa for my whole life after doing my military service and I'm 60 now and on early pension due to hearing damage from all the noise exposure (even though we used ear protection and dust masks and all the other ppe required), and prolonged work in this sort of inviroment is not good at all, but I must say your way of explaining how raw material is prepared for the furnace is all spot on, though some process goes through different machines here like the cooling process of the sinter happens on the same bed or strand where the strand is split for the cooling process with fans on either end of the plant for the sintering and cooling before going through the crusher and screening plant, but it all comes to the same product in the end and ends up in bunkers or on the bed where a stacker reclaimed will feed the furnace in a break down situation or while the sinter plant is down for maintenance, a plant such as this has a verry high wear rate and always requires tons of maintance, this was a verry acurate explanation of exactly how a sinter plant works 👍
I've been doing mechanical maintenance for long time/south Korea pohang. working at the sinter plant is very bad, but you did a grate job.... if you work there for a long time, everyone has problems with their ears. I feel the same ^^
I hope you have a comfortable retirement life. I'm also a retiree at a sintering factory. But where is that place? sinter plant in the Newcastle?
@@이좋은날 it's in South Africa / KZN (or Natal) and the company is Mittal steel, and thank you so much and I hope you're retirement is also good and you have a good rest, yes your right it's a terrible dirty hot dusty noise and dangerouse place to work and hearing is one of the first to suffer from long exposure to this work inviroment, I'm glad it's over for me because even though I loved and had pride in my work and I gained much respect for my hard and reliable work and problem solving, it was hell, now I build things for my home to keep myself going 🤣👍
@@이좋은날 you can see it on Google earth, the dirty parts is sinter plant and the coke ovens 🤣✌
You were working in Arcelormittal Newcastle nhe?
@@asandakelembe1256 yeah
I've been doing mechanical maintenance for long time/south Korea pohang. working at the sinter plant is very bad, but you did a grate job.... if you work there for a long time, everyone has problems with their ears. I feel the same ^^
I hope you have a comfortable retirement life. I'm also a retiree at a sintering factory. But where is that place? sinter plant in the Newcastle?
Sir, which software you used to make this animation!??
Great. I've been looking for this video. I can't match the name with the real object through a lot of literature. It's very clear to watch this video.
helpful vedio thanks
Great video.thank you
thank you !
Sir please do video on blast furnace
Great, informative, and fascinating film. Thanks for creating.
everything is for the blast furnace :))
Production 470 million tons per year??? It is sure wrong number...
sure wrong