The process of making the largest hexagonal nut on Earth. Korean metal factory

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  • Опубликовано: 3 янв 2025

Комментарии • 317

  • @DD-DD-DD
    @DD-DD-DD Год назад +101

    Not even close to "world's largest". Change the title.

  • @900stx7
    @900stx7 Год назад +69

    I would like to have seen how the threads were cut.

  • @johndees967
    @johndees967 Год назад +29

    Bud!.. well done on the production!!!!! This was a major part of my job working for a TV production house over the years. Very few people realise how good the production crew must be to make the viewer understand the process or manufacturing of whatever is being made. You have done an outstanding job here, especially considering that there is NO voice-over to explain the processes. Just beautifully filmed and edited video. Normally I hate the god-awful music some of the you-toob producers use, but again.. in your choice of music, in stark and beautiful contrast to the "violence" and "hell-fire" of the production process, making the viewer feel that the workers on the floor is engaged a ballet of movement, exquisitely juggling fire and enormous forces to produce what looks to be a simple, everyday piece of gear. Respect!!!

    • @xl000
      @xl000 Год назад

      it's called continuity editing, and there are a lot of ways to do it
      Basically whenever possible, you try to end each shot (sequence of pictures that were actually shot together in space and time) with the same elements that start the next shot, so that it's easier on the brain to adjust to the transition...

    • @kaptainkaos1202
      @kaptainkaos1202 Год назад

      @@xl000 I probably read your post incorrectly but it really came off to me as a student telling a master how something works. Perhaps you were directing your comment to people who don’t have a background in editing rather than the original poster?

  • @DaxxTerryGreen
    @DaxxTerryGreen Год назад +59

    The worlds largest bolts ever made were specially forged by the Penrith Engineering Works in Clydesdale Scotland in 1967. The bolts measured 27' 4" long each and had a diameter of 4' 2". Each bolt weighed 12.6 tonnes and a total of 60 of them were made. The bolts were made from the ultra hard and super strong metal IRIDIUM. The bolts were used to connect two oil tankers together as an experiment to increase bulk crude oil transport capacity of shipping company SWISSOIL.

    • @rastislavstanik
      @rastislavstanik Год назад +10

      with annual global production of 3 tons of iridium, those must have been pretty expensive.. :D :D

    • @11111614
      @11111614 Год назад

      Один грамм иридия стоит 160💲 , 🤡

    • @IcetipsVideos
      @IcetipsVideos Год назад +19

      There is no way those were made of pure Iridium. Even back then it was very expensive and as far as I understand it, it is very brittle and would not be good for something like bolts, except with other metals. The weight also must be off. A bolt that of that size would be about 10 cubic meters of steel. m3 of steel weighs about 7.8 metric tonnes per m3, making it closer to 80 tonnes. Given that the bolt heads would have been larger than the diameter, might have been closer to 85-90 tonnes.
      I see this information repeated all over on social media, but I haven't found anything that looks like authentic information and I suspect this is something that has been added after the fact. I think the measurements are probably right, although it's difficult to say. But given the measurements, the weight is definitely completely wrong.

    • @uncletam
      @uncletam Год назад +1

      @@IcetipsVideos I totally agree with you having looked this up in the early 90s I thought maybe and april fool!

    • @janvanruth3485
      @janvanruth3485 Год назад

      bullshit.

  • @KEB129
    @KEB129 Год назад +48

    The biggest hexagonal nut we have made here in Denmark (for a ship propeller) weighed about 5 tons!

    • @ZionistZooTube
      @ZionistZooTube Год назад +1

      thank you, I had a 66 inch wheel on my self propelled barge with a 12 inch nut, that was twice the size of these

    • @ZionistZooTube
      @ZionistZooTube Год назад

      FOR ye of little faith, here the name of my 900# prop removal video with the use of 35 ton crane { ALPHA MALE JOBS NEW YORK CITY ON BARGE DRAGON 900# BRONZE PROP REMOVAL }

    • @rcpmac
      @rcpmac Год назад

      @@ZionistZooTube women’s work

    • @briannewton3535
      @briannewton3535 Год назад +2

      As soon as I saw the nut made from a small billet, I quickly realised the title was misleading. Plus there is no thread in the nut, so the nut has not been 'made' as per th video title, only partially made.

    • @user-xc7mt8iq7d
      @user-xc7mt8iq7d 2 месяца назад

      though was bigger gg ëëë

  • @metatechhd
    @metatechhd Год назад +25

    🔩🌍🎥 Not the largest, but definitely an intriguing video with impressive filming and editing. It's fascinating to witness the process of making the largest hexagonal nut on Earth at the Korean metal factory. While size isn't everything, the precision and craftsmanship involved in creating such a massive nut is truly commendable. Thanks for sharing this unique glimpse into the world of metal fabrication! 👏🎬✨

    • @Gottenhimfella
      @Gottenhimfella Год назад +4

      Your first sentence contradicts your second sentence. As the person posting the video, you are responsible for the title. And you acknowledge you know it to be untrue. Shame!

    • @ctdieselnut
      @ctdieselnut Год назад +1

      @@Gottenhimfella right? Had to reread it again and i still don't get what he thinks.

  • @make-love-not-war-Z
    @make-love-not-war-Z Год назад +7

    a beautiful play of light from hot metal, water and darkness. and, I hope the nut is not upset that it is not the largest in the world;)

  • @wmden1
    @wmden1 Год назад +20

    Like several commenters, before me. Those are not the largest. I have seen a few that were as large and larger. It was still an interesting video. Needless to say, a hot dangerous job. Why not show the threading process on one?

  • @islandbry
    @islandbry Год назад +28

    Not the biggest, but interesting and filmed and edited well, thanks.

  • @MAXProcess
    @MAXProcess Год назад +13

    I don't agree with you, it's not the biggest Nut they make much bigger ones in India.

  • @m3n4cE6
    @m3n4cE6 Год назад +1

    you're not integrating, parasites are being removed first.

  • @barrybeckford2733
    @barrybeckford2733 Год назад +5

    Wish you would have shown the thread cutting process...

  • @dipanshuyadav6217
    @dipanshuyadav6217 Год назад +3

    Please tell background music.

  • @АнатолийНиконенко-п7л

    Чем они так интенсивно бойки охлаждают, что заготовка даже ничуть температуру не теряет? Как из ведра льют 😮

    • @СлаваКочетков-с6л
      @СлаваКочетков-с6л Год назад +2

      Я тоже удивился, поливают на а на всем этапе, а заготовки чуть ли не белые выходят в конце

    • @Алекс-ж7ы5е
      @Алекс-ж7ы5е Год назад

      Какие блять бойки? Матрица и пуансон? Охлаждают? Они должны быть горячие, это смазка. Смазка используется "Градис Б" но это дорого, чаще её варят из каустической соды и древесных смол.

    • @Abaddonna
      @Abaddonna Год назад +5

      Все очень просто. Законы физики всего лишь. Вода при соприкосновении с таким разогретым телом не обволакивает деталь, а касается только маленькой частью находясь в каплеобразном состоянии. Следовательно эффективного охлаждения не будет. Вода нужна для того что бы охлаждать окружающие детали. Там она действует именно так как мы привыкли.

    • @Mr_Flybacker
      @Mr_Flybacker Год назад +1

      эффект лейденфроста

    • @Abaddonna
      @Abaddonna Год назад

      @@Mr_Flybacker
      Точно. Я забыл название. Спасибо за напоминание.

  • @romanoschwabel3716
    @romanoschwabel3716 Год назад +3

    and how they do the thread in?

  • @raydunakin
    @raydunakin Год назад +3

    I'm impressed by how hot those things are. They're getting drench with water through most of the process and still remain white hot!

    • @bryandelahoz6063
      @bryandelahoz6063 Год назад

      Exactly this!

    • @glennschemitsch8341
      @glennschemitsch8341 Год назад

      Oddly enough, the water does not cool the nuts being made. the water turns instantly into steam and the rest of the water just bounces off the hot surface of the heated work.

    • @TomokosEnterprize
      @TomokosEnterprize Год назад +2

      Then quench removes the built up scale and really are not for cooling the parts.

    • @raydunakin
      @raydunakin Год назад

      @@TomokosEnterprize Thanks for that info!

    • @TheAmbientUniverse
      @TheAmbientUniverse Год назад

      Those nuts sure are hot. And sticky

  • @edwarddrost5299
    @edwarddrost5299 Год назад +4

    But how do they put the threads inside the nut?

  • @danstephens9500
    @danstephens9500 Год назад +2

    I would have liked to see the threading process.

  • @chrislj2890
    @chrislj2890 Год назад +3

    They're just a big paperweight without the threads. Misleading title and a disappointing ending, but I admire these men for the work they do.

  • @sass1ap
    @sass1ap Год назад +2

    well what about the threads ?

  • @fridaycaliforniaa236
    @fridaycaliforniaa236 Год назад +4

    This level of technology, this is nuts...

  • @Abaddonna
    @Abaddonna Год назад +7

    Судя по размерам, это не самая большая гайка. В России и побольше делают. В атомных реакторах стоят гайки 800.

  • @andrejshamin1452
    @andrejshamin1452 Год назад +3

    Процесс нарезания резьбы пропустили.

  • @TomokosEnterprize
    @TomokosEnterprize Год назад

    Great part by part of the process but ? is the threading look like in the process ?

  • @felixbors7546
    @felixbors7546 Год назад +3

    lose the music. we want to hear the real thing

  • @sayedmasihullah6922
    @sayedmasihullah6922 Год назад +4

    I'm from them who was waiting for it's thread cutting until last..

  • @JeezUriah
    @JeezUriah Год назад +3

    Aaaahh nuts - they didn't show how the internal threads were formed!

  • @tubalcain1
    @tubalcain1 Год назад +1

    How can I get one of these???

  • @desertdog2282
    @desertdog2282 Год назад

    Nice adding the machine set up at the beginning of the video.

  • @trumpingtonfanhurst694
    @trumpingtonfanhurst694 Год назад +6

    That's nuts.

  • @PacoOtis
    @PacoOtis Год назад

    When do we get threads?? LOL Thanks for sharing and the best of luck!

  • @robertpearson8798
    @robertpearson8798 Год назад +2

    Cool, do they come in boxes of 100😜

  • @harrywagner3877
    @harrywagner3877 Год назад +2

    Biggest nut I found. Guinness Book of World Records as the biggest hex nut in the world. 3.6 meters tall and 4.16 meters wide made in Slovenia.

    • @hztn
      @hztn Год назад

      Yep. All those clickbait titles are for normies.
      I remember the old Soviet metric diameter standart required the max diameter up to 600 mm, but guess thet max non-standart limited only by existing industry sizes.
      Had to hold a 420mm nut in my hands once, heh.

  • @bryanxcr600
    @bryanxcr600 Год назад +2

    Not really a nut until it's threaded. Kinda missed that part, boss

  • @redblade8160
    @redblade8160 Год назад +4

    I don't like the way they just drop the nuts into the bin. If I find just one little scratch, I will make you melt them down, and start again!

  • @AppliedCryogenics
    @AppliedCryogenics Год назад +1

    This was fun to watch. Looks kind of like Sam Raimi was doing the cinematography is some places. (Great!)

  • @miguelangelvalderrama1808
    @miguelangelvalderrama1808 Год назад +1

    And the threads?????? You did not show it.

  • @johnnieguitar5724
    @johnnieguitar5724 Год назад +1

    Not in chronological order, many repeated scenes and omitted the tapping of the threads. :(

  • @andyjames2082
    @andyjames2082 Год назад +3

    Large nuts for sure but, some I've worked with are 2 ton. Impressive procedure though !

  • @LordDustinDeWynd
    @LordDustinDeWynd Год назад +5

    Threadless nuts? Why?

    • @morilot
      @morilot Год назад

      They cold roll the thread in nut when it cooled down below recristaline temperature so it gets deformhardened.

  • @hofthomecrap9534
    @hofthomecrap9534 Год назад +1

    Where is the threading part?

  • @regsparkes6507
    @regsparkes6507 Год назад +4

    Change the heading with a couple of more words,..." the process of making 'one of the' largest hexagonal nuts on Earth"

  • @38911bytefree
    @38911bytefree Год назад +1

    Great vid, nothing like industrial metalworking

  • @angrycatowner
    @angrycatowner Год назад

    A great video about huge metal nuts, but it really needs to accompanied by some heavy metal music.

  • @lowelltackett3323
    @lowelltackett3323 Год назад +2

    "Can't" believe these guys are all working with no safety gear!

  • @ДуньяминА
    @ДуньяминА Год назад +3

    Довольно подробно показан технологический процесс горячей штамповки.
    Не показан процесс механической обработки - рассрочка отверстий и нарезание резьбы.
    На данном видео есть видимые нарушения техники безопастности, самодельные сварные рым-болты и ненадежная тара из обрезанных бочек в которых перемещают горячие заготовки. Она может порваться и раскаленные заготовки могут посыпаться на ноги.

    • @поделкиподделки
      @поделкиподделки Год назад

      ТБ ТБ!!! ## Я лично поработав на десятке предприятий в том числе и металургическом не видел что бы это ТБ соблюдалось. За нарушения наказывают рублём исправно ,,,но если всё по ТБ то закрыть надо почти всё потому что тогда прибыли не будет

    • @WhiteEagle-tc9jo
      @WhiteEagle-tc9jo Год назад

      А что такое рым болты ? Нет , ну болты понятно , куда то закр вручаются , а рым болты ?

    • @nike16384
      @nike16384 Год назад +1

      @@WhiteEagle-tc9jo, те же болты, но с кольцами (или проушинами, хз) сверху. Ещё и рым-гайки бывают.

    • @WhiteEagle-tc9jo
      @WhiteEagle-tc9jo Год назад

      @@nike16384 На рым , а рем , от слова ремонт , ремонтировать и тд ! Сказочник !

    • @nike16384
      @nike16384 Год назад +1

      @@WhiteEagle-tc9jo, деточка, тебя в Гугле забанили?

  • @danstrayer111
    @danstrayer111 Год назад +1

    for those visiting Seattle, check out the nuts which secure the Space Needle to its base.

    • @danstrayer111
      @danstrayer111 Год назад

      @@SunriseLAW I think maybe 8" in dia., outside

  • @J-Justice666
    @J-Justice666 Год назад +1

    Nuts are useless without threads. Where's the threading process?

  • @candreel
    @candreel Год назад

    Why didn't you show the thread being made?

  • @killerkane1957
    @killerkane1957 Год назад +8

    Great forging! My squirrel in the back yard has bigger nuts however.

    • @markbounds6413
      @markbounds6413 Год назад +3

      You won't get that squirrel in a skillet!

  • @benitakt8755
    @benitakt8755 Год назад

    the background music is fantastic! may i ask you to post the playlist/ track?
    greets from Germany

  • @dorringtonw
    @dorringtonw Год назад +1

    I cant believe those homemade eyebolts. Washer welded to a bolt! Crazy.

    • @robertcox5861
      @robertcox5861 Год назад

      Forged eye bolts are cheap and don't waste a welder's time.

  • @MrChevelle83
    @MrChevelle83 Год назад +1

    as someone that uses the product they produce. its quite impressive. the mfg process
    veryfew on this earth realize what it takes to keepthe lights on and our global grids energized.
    just please fimiliarize yur self.
    god yah
    bless

  • @kaptainkaos1202
    @kaptainkaos1202 Год назад

    I bet during the cold Korean weather it’s great working around all the heated metal. Summer? Not so sure.

  • @ПорфирийИванов-з2ф

    А почему не показали нарезку резьбы?

    • @hztn
      @hztn Год назад

      - Чтобы каргокультные опущенцы не скомуниздили технологию.

    • @ПорфирийИванов-з2ф
      @ПорфирийИванов-з2ф Год назад

      @@hztn
      Чушь какая-то,в роликах на Ютубе уж точно никаких секретов нет 🤭

  • @dipling.pitzler7650
    @dipling.pitzler7650 Год назад +5

    I hope that nobody gets badly cut by these sharp steel drum edges! I expected more safety from a South Korean company! The toil of these workers day in and day out is admirable!

    • @quantumss
      @quantumss Год назад +1

      Well maybe they dont have a government that wants to protect everyone against everything all the time.

    • @davegrier523
      @davegrier523 Год назад

      No skid lids. Chains and whatnot hanging from above and not a hard hat in site. Must be North Korea....

    • @Wetcorps
      @Wetcorps Год назад

      Yeah the machines are cool but everything surounding them is iffy. Those barrels are accidents waiting to happen.

  • @MrPLC999
    @MrPLC999 Год назад +1

    These may be some of the largest production hex nuts, but they're just miniatures compared to the biggest one-off specimens. One located in Green Bay WI is 10 feet tall and made of 3.5 tons of stainless steel. Another is 13 feet high located in Slovenia.

  • @buyamerican3191
    @buyamerican3191 Год назад +2

    Great video but not the largest hex nut by a long shot!

  • @jefscolnago
    @jefscolnago Год назад +1

    It didn't show the nuts being threaded. Otherwise ...pretty good.

  • @bill3641
    @bill3641 Год назад

    I was hoping to see the threading process....................

  • @larcoal2963
    @larcoal2963 Год назад +1

    No threading process?... c'mon!

  • @KCadbyRacing
    @KCadbyRacing Год назад

    167mm (6.57 inches) nuts are less than 1/20th the size of the worlds largest hex nut (3.6 METERS, 141.7 inches) = largest on Earth Title is "Click Bait".
    I hate click bait channels but I did enjoy seeing "most of the process" (also disappointing that you didn't show the threading process)...

  • @ericl2152
    @ericl2152 Год назад +1

    That is a big nut but I want to see the socket and ratchet that fits it.

  • @Geo_Thermal
    @Geo_Thermal Год назад

    It would have been nice to see the threads being cut.

  • @KC9UDX
    @KC9UDX Год назад +1

    Must be a smaller earth

  • @데고
    @데고 Год назад

    근데 이거 어디에 씁니까?

  • @arnenelson4495
    @arnenelson4495 Год назад

    New type of threadless nut- cool!

  • @CandyLitaiforge
    @CandyLitaiforge 7 месяцев назад

    There are so many oxide scale on the surface,why do not you use the descaling machine to remove it?

  • @DaxxTerryGreen
    @DaxxTerryGreen Год назад

    What size is it?

  • @utrejch-9389
    @utrejch-9389 Год назад +2

    SMERAL LMZ 1600 - made in Czech Republic 🇨🇿

  • @Неисключено-р1д
    @Неисключено-р1д Год назад

    Это что-то, когда режешь эти гайки с каскада они как пробки от шампанского вылетают , класс мне нравилось их бинзорезом сдувать.

  • @drachirreisset
    @drachirreisset Год назад +1

    Is this where Battlebots gets the Giant Nut?

  • @kgdickinson6740
    @kgdickinson6740 Год назад +1

    They skipped the threading step at the end. What a jip!

  • @brianingarfill1773
    @brianingarfill1773 Год назад

    Interesting production system but unfortunately it didn't show how they cut the threads!!!

  • @jeongxgong2082
    @jeongxgong2082 Год назад

    대단, 기능공 굿, 인재,,, 대한민국 발전에 필수 중요 인재

    • @asol5223
      @asol5223 5 месяцев назад

      Это называется ручной труд. Немножко лучше чем в Индии, но все равно - прошлый век.

  • @GpunktHartman
    @GpunktHartman Год назад

    Good wishes ... here is every Day a "Mothersday" 😂😂😂

  • @hyy3657
    @hyy3657 Год назад

    that is nuts man!

  • @markjohnson4962
    @markjohnson4962 Год назад

    Pretty redundant. But didn't show the threads being cut.

  • @fredwood1490
    @fredwood1490 Год назад

    Looks like a looooong day, and that would be every day! Still, once you get into the rhythm, sometimes, the day is simply forgotten.

  • @johndenboer5463
    @johndenboer5463 Год назад

    Leuk om te zien, ik heb zelf 33 jaar dat werk gedaan en gewoon in Nederland

  • @statusquo1473
    @statusquo1473 Год назад

    How much cost one xD? Im guessing 200-300$? More?

  • @focus678
    @focus678 Год назад

    How to make thread?

  • @cuttersgoose
    @cuttersgoose Год назад +1

    Yeah I’ve seen nuts as large as Buick’s , this is considered small

  • @tenminutetokyo2643
    @tenminutetokyo2643 9 месяцев назад

    That is nuts!

  • @timmckee2813
    @timmckee2813 Год назад

    ...what...no threads...?...love...

  • @valensinclair6750
    @valensinclair6750 Год назад +1

    Bummer, I wanted to see the thread tapping process.

  • @АндрианКузнецов-и8б

    Минус. Не показали как резьбу делают

  • @medvejonokolympic5412
    @medvejonokolympic5412 Год назад

    До конца не показали как резьбу делают.

  • @RebuttalRecords
    @RebuttalRecords Год назад

    They're nuts if you ask me.

  • @greglenning2636
    @greglenning2636 9 месяцев назад

    Looks like big bushings to me. Nuts need threads !

  • @MrNights-is8mx
    @MrNights-is8mx Год назад

    No threads?

  • @justincase5272
    @justincase5272 Год назад

    I've seen hexagonal hardened steel nuts several times that size.

  • @frankphillips7436
    @frankphillips7436 Год назад

    “Do you have any idea how much damage you can do with an 8 foot cheater pipe???”
    D Wheeler - Sunday River

  • @humperlumper62
    @humperlumper62 Год назад

    Just to observe what lifting equipment is used like non standard lifting eyes and half drums with wholes in them, make me smile , but nice process for the not so “largest nut in the world”

  • @ASRvw
    @ASRvw Год назад

    Diese winzigen Dingerchen sind ja echt niedlich ...

  • @normsweet1710
    @normsweet1710 Год назад +1

    They must thread them at another factory 🤔

  • @xpump876
    @xpump876 Год назад

    no threads ?!?!

  • @jordankim3337
    @jordankim3337 Год назад

    그냥 대형너트일 뿐이네요
    가장 거대한 너트는 김준현도 너트속으로 통과가능합니다.

  • @tac0ninja76
    @tac0ninja76 Год назад

    Nice try but the world's largest nuts are produced in Wisconsin USA and the world record holder was built in 2016, it's 10 feet tall and made of 3.5 tons of stainless steel. Made by Packer Fastener. These are just little babies.

  • @garystone5338
    @garystone5338 Год назад

    I would like to buy one of those nuts. Would make a great paper weight.