complete process of machining shaft and fitting to wheel
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I'm an 83 year old retired Mfg Eng. I started my career almost 60 years ago in Glens Falls NY USA in a machine shop that used even older machining equipment than yours. What you can accomplish with yours is very impressive!
@rolandgirard39559 ай бұрын
Well those days are gone oldtimer, tolerances within 0.010mm cant be achieved with this old shit
@nosswalg9 ай бұрын
@@nosswalg upload ur video how to accomplish this with new shit.
@raufjaleel83179 ай бұрын
Funny I retired in Glens Falls , N Y too ! CR Bard !
@ronhayes2839 ай бұрын
Finally an engineer that has something positive to say about these hard-working guys. I salute you.❤
@user-tl9cr9vm3x9 ай бұрын
There ARE hard working and given what they have to work with, they do very good work--we're not talking parts for hi tech rockets here--just your basic early 20th century heavy duty ondustrial items that they do very well producing--I'm impressed with them--thanks for your words of encouragement!@@user-tl9cr9vm3x
@rolandgirard39559 ай бұрын
Great to see these seasoned machinist doing real machine work. No computers here. Real men. Real machinist. 👍
@martinswiney219210 ай бұрын
Thanks 👍
@hydraulichands10 ай бұрын
NO PROGRESS JUST GOING BACK TO THE DARK AGES
@mariasoares97088 ай бұрын
@@mariasoares9708 the dark ages being the early 50’s??? Some of them machine tools would be 70’s even 80’s The only thing they didn’t have was a broom 🧹
@theshauny8 ай бұрын
You should be on a stage obviously a comedian
@chrisyboy6667 ай бұрын
real dirty, really careless, really crude. Would you pay for precision work to be done here. What in hell are you complimenting? You work must have been terrible.
@organbuilder2724 ай бұрын
79yr. I keep expecting to see Fred Flintstone to show up. Great job by these skilled machinists.
@johnraynor509510 ай бұрын
These are the machines and type of skilled machinists that built all the great machinery of the first half of the 20th century and it's two great wars...I send my respects.
@markmark20806 ай бұрын
I just love the way these workshops are spotlessly clean, and all the safety wear is the best available!!! Those safety flipflops are something else! However, these guys do a remarkable job.
@tismeagen684Ай бұрын
Молодцы рабочие по развитию вы похожи на Российских рабочих те же станки такие же цеха спасибо Петру 1 что позаботился о вас и о нас оставив в наследство станки
@user-ek3hj7ls9v9 ай бұрын
Noch 2Jahre Grün und es sieht in Deutschland genauso aus.Die Kaftanfuzzies kommen ja schon täglich,nur deren moderne Maschinen fehlen noch.😂😂
@andrearau1939 ай бұрын
Old mining mechanic. This is what Amy and Europe industry once was, with reliable equipment and skilled manpower. . Now we know where the equipment went when greedy corporations destroyed America.
@nadineraynor25394 ай бұрын
These are very hard working men. They do amazing things with very little tools to work with. I admire them Bob Robertson Rake Iowa
@Bob-uy7uf2 ай бұрын
Lavoratori... eccezionale.👍👍👍🇮🇹🖐️🖐️👀👍👍👍👀
@giorgiobassi90789 күн бұрын
A real tribute to the engineers, factory workers that designed and built those old machines.
@davidwell6869 ай бұрын
In Europe & the West?
@pcka129 ай бұрын
@@pcka12 I wonder if they are those old UK made machines. Can't see the mfg. name.
@davidwell6869 ай бұрын
@@davidwell686 if these are not a lot are, some will be 'victims' of the great industrial decline in the 60s.
@pcka129 ай бұрын
Me encanta el sistema de encajar el eje .
@vicentevillalongavillalong67785 ай бұрын
@@davidwell686 The VTLs are definitely UK Webster-Bennett. The lathes and planer are filmed not showing any makers name but in last 40 years vast quantities of old machines have been sold off from factory closures in UK and France, Germany, Italy, Poland etc. I just made a list of 10 local factories I know of that are totally gone and all had masses of basic machines. 100 yards from me was an iron foundry and big machine shop and no trace of them today. Friend worked in machine shop that was working one week and cleared out the next!
@rosewhite---2 ай бұрын
These old machines are from well before the development of built in obsolescence. The workers of these machines surpass the engineers of today. Basic tools and on the job knowledge beats University trained any day. Keep up the great work
@timlewis50969 ай бұрын
You do realise that’s work that any engineering company that supports major infrastructure like mining, oil/gas, power or heavy industry would be able to do yeh? These guys seem to be making it look harder than it is
@theshauny8 ай бұрын
Everything they do is entry level apprentice stuff.
A big job and mostly well done , cooling the shaft down and heating the hub up probably would have made it a bit easier to install the shaft but brute force works to.
@peteveen485510 ай бұрын
Presspassung 1/100 mm genau
@w.k.22398 ай бұрын
It was fairly horrible to be be honest why did they cut the shaft off with the oxy towards the end, why wasn’t the key and key way the correct size to start with? And why didn’t the lay the gear over the hole on its side and put the shaft in from the top then once it stopped going in, just grab one of them heavy machines in the back ground (the red or blue fabricated machines not the machine tools) and if it still got stuck then they could heat the gear with the oxy, also why is the shaft rusty straght after machining if they used cutting oil when turning/slotting there would be enough residual oil on the part it wouldn’t go rust (hopefully get a bit of oil on the lathe bedways too cause you should need to use a bar to move the tail stock like they did it should be a one man operation putting that shaft in the lathe once it has a centre in it
@theshauny8 ай бұрын
@@theshaunyDie Arbeiter sind ohne Fachkenntnisse und wissen eigentlich nichts von dem was sie da machen. Angefangen von der Materialkenntnis über die Handhabung der Werkzeugmaschinen bis hin zum Arbeitsschutz. Es wird alles irgendwie hin gepfuscht. Deshalb sieht auch die Werkstatt so verkommen aus. Das ist die 3. Welt und wenn ich mir alles so anschaue weiß ich auch warum das die 3. Welt ist.
@amyhund37866 ай бұрын
"brute forks works to"... to what?
@The_DuMont_Network3 ай бұрын
They actually don't know about the expansion of metal. I watched a similar video last year where they got a big shaft stuck and I said to warm the gear up by about 100 degrees and it would have expanded about 5 thou. 8 inch bore heated to 100F over ambient = about 5 thou. They said they had never heard of this calculation! But then they don't seem to have micrometers available.
@rosewhite---2 ай бұрын
So much history...Entire libraries...So much life and sacrifice. Masters and more masters who made all those machines authentic monuments to human work and creativity... The world is thanks to them and thousands more in other parts of the world... Greetings to all the metallurgists and colleagues on earth...
@eduardoamaro78673 ай бұрын
Die Arbeitsweise finde ich ja schon immer sehr interessant, was mich aber immer wieder am meisten begeistert sind die Sicherheitsschuhe und vor allem der geile Schweißschirm👍🤣🤣🤣
@willfried753910 ай бұрын
Those shaving are like razor blades. I know for a fact they will cut right though gloves if you try to mess with them. We were always told do not handle the steel shavings with your hands.
@voltmeter210 ай бұрын
Parabéns pela equipe muito bom, grande proficionais.
@aparecidosouza87288 ай бұрын
I enjoy these videos seeing what the workers can accomplish with what their employer’s supply them with.
@mobill5310 ай бұрын
I watch Adam the 2 keiths Kurtis from Australia and this... do I respect those guys more than these? no... these guys work hard and make the best with what they have at hand as do the others I've mentioned
@baldyoldfart582810 ай бұрын
Glad to hear that
@hydraulichands10 ай бұрын
Usually in these types of factories, employers also work alongwith their employees.
@raufjaleel831710 ай бұрын
AND THE EMPLOYERS FEEL THEYRE ASSES WITH MONEY WHILE THEY GET FUCK ALL HOW BEAUTIFUL
@mariasoares97088 ай бұрын
Desde España hacéis un trabajo admirable ,una gran capacidad de ingenio pese a la falta de herramientas modernas
@Lepanto15728 ай бұрын
Seeing their working conditions, one of the first concerns that cross my mind is the accuracy of the measurements. Also, in almost all of these videos the complete lack of basic safety rules, especially when dealing with eye protection. I guess they would never request or complain for fear of being fired for something as simple as safety glasses or shields.
@fredperry23585 ай бұрын
Life if cheap, what you see is how it was in the U.S before the Unions gain enough power to push back
@papabob53johnson464 ай бұрын
What has safety rules got to do with the condition of the machinery, the complete careless handing on the stock and the absolute filth of the place they work in. That alone is a safety hazard.
@organbuilder2724 ай бұрын
Another Awsum Job !!! I'm wandering if they balance a wheel in this application .... Thanks for sharing 😉😎
@deanedeane43187 ай бұрын
After seeing Keith Rucker on vintage machinery restore a shaper that old shaper was cool to see running. Love to see what that part goes to.
@timprussell9 ай бұрын
I was interested in that machine also. Apparently it’s called a “ planer”, it does the same work as a shaper only bigger.
@bobfinning85879 ай бұрын
@@bobfinning8587 yes I used the wrong name, in a shaper the head moves across the workpiece. A planer the bed moves under the head. Keith restored one, about 70 episodes of content.
@timprussell9 ай бұрын
I wasn’t aware of what is was called but just for curiosity I looked it up and found it was a planer, I’ve not seen one before but I have had several years experience on a shaper.
@bobfinning85879 ай бұрын
this Pakistan is clever people you can depend on them . they can use or invent anything.Best regards
@everythingtv19106 ай бұрын
A Heavy Duty Job accomplished Skillfuly with Hard Work without such facilitating Equipment and Tools, they are really great. Thanks for Video preparation and Presentation.
@adnanshuja40753 ай бұрын
Ya i agree to all of the optimistic comments.Good.
@ronnysanjaya6823Ай бұрын
با تشکر از شما جدآ صنعتگران پاکستانی بسیار فنی و با قابلیتهای بسیار بالای هستند .
@alizareebrahimi299310 ай бұрын
I admire how well this axle fit.
@mattikaki5 ай бұрын
😊
@hydraulichands5 ай бұрын
Ja, ein paar zarte Schläge und sie gleitet förmlich hinein 😂
@amyhund37863 ай бұрын
You are all very good skilled persons in India. with out any modern machines and equipment your team work is very talent.I am a retired mechanical engineer in Chennai.
@srinivasansanthanam7495 ай бұрын
I would have loved to see it installed at the job and up and running
@MrRandyj729 ай бұрын
Very hard-working men!The workplace injuries there must be absolutely gruesome… Respect!!!
@trainnerd30299 ай бұрын
Quantos perdem a vida por ano nestas péssimas condições de trabalho?
@toctoctocsemanistia6 ай бұрын
What workplace injuries? These lads know what they are doing. They don’t need to be mollycoddled.
@donalfinn42055 ай бұрын
Very well done!🇨🇮🇵🇸
@donalfinn42055 ай бұрын
@@donalfinn4205 do you consider the off balanced lift of the shafting early on is safe? come on man, or banging the shaft into the tailstock center helps the operation of it?
@paulmiddleton42154 ай бұрын
@@paulmiddleton4215 They know what they are doing. Same as I did in my 40 years in the mechanical/ electrical industry and never had a lost time accident. You can’t replace common sense with regulations.
@donalfinn42054 ай бұрын
Please oh please get these men some safety boots.
@jeffflewelling17038 ай бұрын
Muy muy buenisimo mortal papa se pasan con los trabajos que ustedes hacen los felisiti de Argentina
@arnaulpujol843910 ай бұрын
Keterampilan yang teliti dan cermat. Luar biasa. Selamat. Bekerja.
@Yo-wislah3 ай бұрын
Whole new meaning for 'precision workmanship' and 'workshop safety'. Incredible that the things actually work! I guess 'close counts!'
@asphaltgypsy43903 ай бұрын
😁
@hydraulichands3 ай бұрын
Good work good team.
@loaymm72438 ай бұрын
Why insult these hardworking people? They are manufacturing with primative equipment but they are manufacturing. Come to Africa, they cry everyday of someone stealing their resources but they themselves do not want to do anything with it. You guy are working primativly but you got a great product at the end of the day.
@nelsonchinasamy98573 ай бұрын
Great video thank you
@ricksadler797Ай бұрын
Удивительное производство. Интересно было посмотреть.
@KostsovKonstantinАй бұрын
Estes Homens saõ verdadeiramente profissionais honrados , com o rusticos recurços que teem, eles fazem muito e perfeitamente correto!! Sou brasileiro, mecânico Industral e vos adimiro muito. um gradande abraço irmaõs . 👍👍👍👏👏👏👃👃👃 Parabens pelos trabalho e determinados que saõ .
@calipiomoraes92959 ай бұрын
I love that metal planer!
@DolezalPetr9 ай бұрын
Felicitaciones a los maestros.
@hugoolivares8719 ай бұрын
Muito bom o trabalho de vcs! 🇧🇷🇧🇷🇧🇷🇧🇷
@llucecru10 ай бұрын
Yes, especially the ubiquitous dirt (sand, shavings, stones). They replace the axle, but the bearing is old, they haven't even replaced the grease! Before installing the bases, the worker wipes them with a dirty rag full of impurities.
@franzrogalewski6 ай бұрын
Tu deve entender mt de usinagem kkkkk cara eles sao mt atrasados. Nem a ferramenta sabem afiar. Quer conhecer a 2a revolução industrial industrial veja esses vídeos kkkkkk
@danielbonomi90393 ай бұрын
Máy tiện này tuy rất cổ rồi nhưng vẫn hoạt đông tốt. Tôi rất trân trọng thợ Pakistan, họ có tay nghề cao và làm việc rất hiệu quả
@thongnguyen24478 ай бұрын
Does all the dirt and gravel increase bearing life ?
@buckburton73186 ай бұрын
It absorbs all the pesky blood from the crushing and cutting accidents - the result of wearing no safety equipment at all. If a toe or finger gets cut off, just kick a hole in the dirt and kick some dirt over it. And think of the savings in brooms and sweeping gear!
@The_DuMont_Network3 ай бұрын
Lapping compound!
@andrewjohnmclean5488Ай бұрын
Thật là tuyệt vời chúc chúc các anh luôn luôn vui sẽ trong công việc và thuận lợi bình an nhé tôi thật sự đam mê những công việc như thế này, anh em làm việc vui khỏe nhé
@kimhunglai78453 ай бұрын
Good video! Thanks for showing the whole process, in order, and mostly at normal speed, rather than the cartoonish 5x or 10x that most Pakistani stuff is shot at.
@lwilton7 ай бұрын
زبردست❤❤❤
@ismailhotel40389 ай бұрын
Parabéns pelo trabalho desses caras
@franciscoassis28626 ай бұрын
That's one serious key they got there! Like a loaf of bread in size! :)
@JohanFasth5 ай бұрын
I was delighted to see the one fellow flooding the ways with oil. All it takes is quick maintenance like that to keep the years from accumulating.
@dasworkshop49678 ай бұрын
And that used motor oil with all the metal particulates is so pretty in the sunlight.
@The_DuMont_Network3 ай бұрын
somewhere down the street is a shop that can rebuild those lathes, so everything works again..
@matthewgibbs68869 ай бұрын
Why do they need a 4' pry bar to move the tailstock? Cause those 150 year old machines haven't seen oil on the ways since the Brits left them there.
@craftycri9 ай бұрын
These guys are so good at machining and all work together to get the work done and what a great job they did here I would like to watch these guys live. Know CNC machines hear guess what there so good they don’t need CNC machines all old school and they pass there skills down to the next generation. Any one know what that big wheel was for because I not sure. I’m going to watch the next video. One thing I love them old machines. 💪💪💪
@martinscopes391418 күн бұрын
It's wonderful to see such admiration for these machinists and their traditional machining skills!
@hydraulichands17 күн бұрын
What these people do with their primitive tools is amazing.....think if they had new modern technology.....
@rebeccadeane27749 ай бұрын
Indian guys are hardworking brainy individuals productive and simple no complaining workaholics
@PerumalNayager-pu3vg12 күн бұрын
Chcę tam pracować. Warunki idealne i wyposażenie firmy również. Od razu widać, że dbają tam o dobro pracownika.
@ElektronikMirek197610 ай бұрын
О да, это редкий гадюшник
@sn66489 ай бұрын
You can't even change a lightbulb by yourself in Poland ...well known in the USA. 😂
@user-tl9cr9vm3x9 ай бұрын
@@user-tl9cr9vm3x Why do you think so?
@ElektronikMirek19769 ай бұрын
@@user-tl9cr9vm3x W Polsce potrafimy wymienić żarówkę i nie potrzeba nam do tego dwudziesto stronicowej instrukcji tak jak zapasionym amerykanom.
@franzrogalewski6 ай бұрын
We don’t actually change the light bulbs ourselves here in America, we just call Angie, the handyman network heavily stocked by Polish electrical engineers. Kurva!
@sayjindefender6 ай бұрын
Я в восторге от их чертежей и измерительных инструментов 😂
@user-hy3et9nd2e9 ай бұрын
нас подобное ожидает похоже...
@donXoM9 ай бұрын
Размечтались вы батенька. @@donXoM
@user-st7cr2tt4w4 ай бұрын
You could use proper measuring tools to insure a proper clearance or interference or I guess you could just beat it in like they did.
@BlocknTackle528 ай бұрын
thats really a great job wow thats nice! hi i am john in the usa .
@JOHN2739810 ай бұрын
Hey John, thanks!
@hydraulichands10 ай бұрын
Absolutely awesome ❤ Very important for us Keep up the good work Its very amazing how you have done it. Its really WOW❤..... By Wow Mechanics 1
@Wowmechanics18 ай бұрын
The run out on the drill press at 13:50 has to be close to 100 thou. It is stunning that any two parts fit together. You have to give them credit.
@andrewlangley95074 ай бұрын
I've worked with such worn drills in UK!
@rosewhite---2 ай бұрын
I rather work with old machines then new. Im soon 44 years old, but I have worked with alot of old machines from before ww2
@kempaswe40229 ай бұрын
Magic ! The stuff metalheads dreams are made of ! Well done!😄
@sammyjones350010 ай бұрын
What one can achieve, Its all in the Head!! Thanks
@hydraulichands10 ай бұрын
Cool stuff. I cant wait to get my lathe in action -a 17x42 Willson. 'Perfect for hobby-scale work!
@cameronlilly48143 ай бұрын
Have fun!
@hydraulichands3 ай бұрын
I seriously doubt there were electrically powered lathes in 1873.
@frankorosz9016 ай бұрын
Well,I hate to disagree,but the could have been water powered. Just saying….
@user-ck8up2vp3pАй бұрын
That time, lathe could have been donkey powered.
@halinamartyniak24 күн бұрын
excellent!
@giovannifinievoli88257 ай бұрын
Com ferramentas básicas este maravilhoso povo faz verdadeiras obras de engenharia!
@KaizenJpArcon9 ай бұрын
VAI TRABALHAR COM ELES JA QUE E TAO MARAVILHOSO
@mariasoares97088 ай бұрын
7:32 first sign of a "spec sheet" I have ever seen in any of these videos.
@erikkayVАй бұрын
Hydraulic Hands sure could use a hydraulic press. It would make pressing parts together a breeze. Or better yet use heat and cold for mating parts.
@MrNeverseeme9 ай бұрын
But jeez, this assembly process 😮
@Frank_inSA8 ай бұрын
Mad props to these guys hard work and skills. I just don't understand that part of the worlds lack of cleanliness, organization or why they don't have concrete floors. Odd..
@warbirdwf5 ай бұрын
I will try to answer. Cleanliness: They are not wearing overcoat, they are clean from inside. Thr heart is clean. Organization: that me too, like you don't understand, why they are not organized. Concrete floor: it was started as temporary setup, on rented Land, they are actually shifting very soon to new workshop which is under construction and concrete floor will be thr (this was the answer of owner when i asked him)
@hydraulichands5 ай бұрын
@@hydraulichandsDanke für die Information. Am Hallenkran erkennt der Profi gleich den provisorischen Aufbau. Was macht man eigentlich in Pakistan wenn es mal regnet? Bleiben dann alle Zuhause?
@amyhund37863 ай бұрын
There is a goat picured in the shop, employed there as a shopkeeper. This goat keeps the place clean and tidy.
@halinamartyniak24 күн бұрын
Big job, well done lads. I would like to see what it will be used for, mining?
@Cromwell64810 ай бұрын
Spaceships.
@hubertroscher181810 ай бұрын
It's for a space telescope.
@nandofigueira20059 ай бұрын
Vídeos Educativos Parabéns 😀
@nivaldosilva946229 күн бұрын
They may lack some technology but they make up for that with skill.
@somerandombaldguy52968 ай бұрын
For all you people who are making negative comments. I just want to let you guys know, that this place is OSHA and EPA approved and also it meets all European standards.😅😂😊😫🤯
@ac908127 күн бұрын
what machine is that huge wormwheel for?
@rosewhite---10 ай бұрын
It’s part of the launch assembly for their nuclear weapons program.
@annoyingbstard94075 ай бұрын
Em 7:32 da para ver o excelente desenho técnico da peça a ser usinada, só que não. Com a precariedade das instalações, falta de EPIs, salario miserável esses caras fazem milagre!
@edmil16169 ай бұрын
E ENCHEM A BUNDA DO PATRAO CHEIA DE RUPIS
@mariasoares97088 ай бұрын
The parts that that you make is very big.
@aasstock84659 ай бұрын
I dont see support in the middle of the work piece. It induces a lot of stress. I left my job as a machinist 30years ago. Indeed, I had learnt a lot from this video thks. If I had watched this video I would had been a good machinist and stayed on the job.
@user-xs9gd1lm2x8 ай бұрын
Very good 👍
@user-mx7gr7nd6o6 ай бұрын
After briefly glancing at the comments I guess I'm going to be the only one to state that the worm wheel isn't properly mounted to receive the axle. Every time that wheel moves they lose valuable energy and risk damaging the work piece. I will however refrain from commenting on the dirt floor or the state of the machines and direct you to read "How The Allies Won" by Richard Overy. As Primitive as that shop appears, Joseph Stalin mechanized the Red Army in Siberia with factories and shops what had no roofs and many without walls. I didn't believe it myself until I got to speak to Russians who migrated here in the 1990s.
@sidsimon59636 ай бұрын
Why does everyone make fun of their old school way of doing things,, ????
@ricksadler797Ай бұрын
I know right. Tried and tested workmanship.
@Heffe-hp5xk28 күн бұрын
Bisakah putaran mesin bubut nya di tambah
@Bengkel_Bubut_ANDINI_094 ай бұрын
you guys do a GREAT JOB, but do you ever clean the metal shavings off the lathes.
@MrSanmanbob5 ай бұрын
What do you think?? If they are not cleaning it, than whr all those piles of metal shavings go???
@hydraulichands5 ай бұрын
They are all geniuses!
@herbi10217 күн бұрын
They sure are! These machinists' ingenuity and problem-solving skills make them true geniuses in their field! 🧠🌟
@hydraulichands17 күн бұрын
Real men doing real work! Awesome!!! Great stuff!!!
@jeffgrove65688 ай бұрын
What country is this manufacturing factory located in!?
@NMT19756 ай бұрын
How long did it take to turn this drive shaft ?
@4Tugboats9 ай бұрын
Aeons! RPM seems to be around 50, and it it take 0,25mm cut it takes 80 minute per meter. If rough cut and second to dimension (optimal case) its 160min per meter and add too settings etc. Full day job easily.
@juhajuntunen78665 ай бұрын
seems its a VERY friendly work place 34:49
@sparkes25929 ай бұрын
😅😅😅😅😅😅😅
@user-co8uy5rb2s9 ай бұрын
I was looking for this comment. WTF?
@stoopsartsunlimited7 ай бұрын
Wonder if that feedstock shaft at ~1:35 in the video is cut from a merchant marine drive shaft.
@schsch23909 ай бұрын
Probably
@charlesburgoyne-probyn60449 ай бұрын
parabéns 👍👍👍👋👋👋
@severinodesouzalima86385 ай бұрын
I had it harder than these guys at the beginning starting my working life, my first jobs started off by cleaning and sweeping the shop floors. Lol Impressive to watch the large cuts from these very old machines. The tools are old, very used and crude, No CNC or digital measuring yet still they produce good results the way it was done back when the lathe and drill press were knew.
@wirefeed34199 ай бұрын
To a certain degree: I can understand poverty, but I can't understand being filthy. These shops look like they have never seen a broom, or dustpan , or any jind of cleaning efforts.
@4Tugboats9 ай бұрын
Some of the these videos are very impressive, this one not so much they have all the right tools they need, quite a large work shop (even has the over head crane) a fair amount of workers and they make a job like this harder than it has to be 🤷🏻♂️
@theshauny8 ай бұрын
Funny how people invoke ‘their countries job standards’ on other nations. Life is easier if you let others ‘do’ what works for them and is normal for their way of living!
@mountainryder30567 ай бұрын
Mich erinnern diese Videos an meine Ausbildung zum Maschinenschlosser vor vielen Jahren. In Pakistan fehlt es an Respekt vor dem Leben. Das erkennt man am Umgang mit den Arbeitern die ohne die geringste persönliche Schutzausrüstung ein hohes Verletzungsrisiko haben. Und man erkennt es am Zustand der Werkstatt ohne befestigten Boden und verfallenen Wänden. Mir tun auch die Werkzeugmaschinen leid die alle etwas Zuwendung in Form von Fett, Öl und etwas Farbe bitter nötig haben.
@amyhund37866 ай бұрын
They only work 15 hours a day, it's true they could clean their workplace with the time they have left. ah damn they have to sleep and eat.
@olivierfu77786 ай бұрын
I don’t understand how they don’t care about getting injured. No hard hats, eye protection, freaking sandals instead of boots and as you said, the complete lack of cleanliness. The shop should be cleaned after every work day.
@a.azazagoth54136 ай бұрын
I CANT STAND ALL THE IRON SHAVINGS AND DEBRIS ALL OVER THE PLACE .CLEAN THE AREA AND THE MACHINES AS YOU GO .YOU DO VERY GOOD WORK ,BUT
@user-dz2hp8rr6m9 ай бұрын
Работа прекрасная!!! Но культура производства желает лучшего, не видно "субботников" по уборке территории.
@user-iy3vx5og9s9 ай бұрын
Так,капитализм,какие субботники.
@user-dm5dm6hl2q5 ай бұрын
Machaallah rawoa
@fadhilkafi27576 күн бұрын
That drill press has more run out than a max security prison with open doors
@iknowyourebrokeauto468Ай бұрын
I wszyscy robią w piżamie i klapkach. BHP jest ekstra.
@TheYouDejmien10 ай бұрын
....ммммм,да!?что сказать,молодцы!
@user-bu2sl5rf7r6 ай бұрын
Что такую большую хрень выточили,молодцы.А вот ,что снова придется её точить в скором времени,не сомневаюсь.Без сальников она долго не проходит.Старый то вал, почему кончился?А там явно стояли крышки сальников,дыры под болты видно.
@user-tx7cm7mg9z4 ай бұрын
🎉😂❤PARABÉNS PELO SEU CANAL. PARABÉNS PELO SEU TRABALHO. RIO DE JANEIRO/BRASIL. 21.01.2023 VIDA LONGA E PRÓSPERA 🖖
@geraldoribeiro64033 ай бұрын
These machines were made in 1873??
@mjb1214196310 ай бұрын
I’ve got a lot of tools but I do not have a battering ram !
I'm an 83 year old retired Mfg Eng. I started my career almost 60 years ago in Glens Falls NY USA in a machine shop that used even older machining equipment than yours. What you can accomplish with yours is very impressive!
Well those days are gone oldtimer, tolerances within 0.010mm cant be achieved with this old shit
@@nosswalg upload ur video how to accomplish this with new shit.
Funny I retired in Glens Falls , N Y too ! CR Bard !
Finally an engineer that has something positive to say about these hard-working guys. I salute you.❤
There ARE hard working and given what they have to work with, they do very good work--we're not talking parts for hi tech rockets here--just your basic early 20th century heavy duty ondustrial items that they do very well producing--I'm impressed with them--thanks for your words of encouragement!@@user-tl9cr9vm3x
Great to see these seasoned machinist doing real machine work. No computers here. Real men. Real machinist. 👍
Thanks 👍
NO PROGRESS JUST GOING BACK TO THE DARK AGES
@@mariasoares9708 the dark ages being the early 50’s??? Some of them machine tools would be 70’s even 80’s The only thing they didn’t have was a broom 🧹
You should be on a stage obviously a comedian
real dirty, really careless, really crude. Would you pay for precision work to be done here. What in hell are you complimenting? You work must have been terrible.
79yr. I keep expecting to see Fred Flintstone to show up. Great job by these skilled machinists.
These are the machines and type of skilled machinists that built all the great machinery of the first half of the 20th century and it's two great wars...I send my respects.
I just love the way these workshops are spotlessly clean, and all the safety wear is the best available!!! Those safety flipflops are something else! However, these guys do a remarkable job.
Молодцы рабочие по развитию вы похожи на Российских рабочих те же станки такие же цеха спасибо Петру 1 что позаботился о вас и о нас оставив в наследство станки
Noch 2Jahre Grün und es sieht in Deutschland genauso aus.Die Kaftanfuzzies kommen ja schon täglich,nur deren moderne Maschinen fehlen noch.😂😂
Old mining mechanic. This is what Amy and Europe industry once was, with reliable equipment and skilled manpower. . Now we know where the equipment went when greedy corporations destroyed America.
These are very hard working men. They do amazing things with very little tools to work with. I admire them Bob Robertson Rake Iowa
Lavoratori... eccezionale.👍👍👍🇮🇹🖐️🖐️👀👍👍👍👀
A real tribute to the engineers, factory workers that designed and built those old machines.
In Europe & the West?
@@pcka12 I wonder if they are those old UK made machines. Can't see the mfg. name.
@@davidwell686 if these are not a lot are, some will be 'victims' of the great industrial decline in the 60s.
Me encanta el sistema de encajar el eje .
@@davidwell686 The VTLs are definitely UK Webster-Bennett. The lathes and planer are filmed not showing any makers name but in last 40 years vast quantities of old machines have been sold off from factory closures in UK and France, Germany, Italy, Poland etc. I just made a list of 10 local factories I know of that are totally gone and all had masses of basic machines. 100 yards from me was an iron foundry and big machine shop and no trace of them today. Friend worked in machine shop that was working one week and cleared out the next!
These old machines are from well before the development of built in obsolescence. The workers of these machines surpass the engineers of today. Basic tools and on the job knowledge beats University trained any day. Keep up the great work
You do realise that’s work that any engineering company that supports major infrastructure like mining, oil/gas, power or heavy industry would be able to do yeh? These guys seem to be making it look harder than it is
Everything they do is entry level apprentice stuff.
@@theshaunyprendere...le.misure..con..il..compasso..non..e..da..tutti..👀👀👍🖐️🤗🇮🇹🇮🇹🇮🇹🇮🇹
Maravilha, uma técnica perfeita, parabéns.
A big job and mostly well done , cooling the shaft down and heating the hub up probably would have made it a bit easier to install the shaft but brute force works to.
Presspassung 1/100 mm genau
It was fairly horrible to be be honest why did they cut the shaft off with the oxy towards the end, why wasn’t the key and key way the correct size to start with? And why didn’t the lay the gear over the hole on its side and put the shaft in from the top then once it stopped going in, just grab one of them heavy machines in the back ground (the red or blue fabricated machines not the machine tools) and if it still got stuck then they could heat the gear with the oxy, also why is the shaft rusty straght after machining if they used cutting oil when turning/slotting there would be enough residual oil on the part it wouldn’t go rust (hopefully get a bit of oil on the lathe bedways too cause you should need to use a bar to move the tail stock like they did it should be a one man operation putting that shaft in the lathe once it has a centre in it
@@theshaunyDie Arbeiter sind ohne Fachkenntnisse und wissen eigentlich nichts von dem was sie da machen. Angefangen von der Materialkenntnis über die Handhabung der Werkzeugmaschinen bis hin zum Arbeitsschutz. Es wird alles irgendwie hin gepfuscht. Deshalb sieht auch die Werkstatt so verkommen aus. Das ist die 3. Welt und wenn ich mir alles so anschaue weiß ich auch warum das die 3. Welt ist.
"brute forks works to"... to what?
They actually don't know about the expansion of metal. I watched a similar video last year where they got a big shaft stuck and I said to warm the gear up by about 100 degrees and it would have expanded about 5 thou. 8 inch bore heated to 100F over ambient = about 5 thou. They said they had never heard of this calculation! But then they don't seem to have micrometers available.
So much history...Entire libraries...So much life and sacrifice. Masters and more masters who made all those machines authentic monuments to human work and creativity... The world is thanks to them and thousands more in other parts of the world... Greetings to all the metallurgists and colleagues on earth...
Die Arbeitsweise finde ich ja schon immer sehr interessant, was mich aber immer wieder am meisten begeistert sind die Sicherheitsschuhe und vor allem der geile Schweißschirm👍🤣🤣🤣
Those shaving are like razor blades. I know for a fact they will cut right though gloves if you try to mess with them. We were always told do not handle the steel shavings with your hands.
Parabéns pela equipe muito bom, grande proficionais.
I enjoy these videos seeing what the workers can accomplish with what their employer’s supply them with.
I watch Adam the 2 keiths Kurtis from Australia and this... do I respect those guys more than these? no... these guys work hard and make the best with what they have at hand as do the others I've mentioned
Glad to hear that
Usually in these types of factories, employers also work alongwith their employees.
AND THE EMPLOYERS FEEL THEYRE ASSES WITH MONEY WHILE THEY GET FUCK ALL HOW BEAUTIFUL
Desde España hacéis un trabajo admirable ,una gran capacidad de ingenio pese a la falta de herramientas modernas
Seeing their working conditions, one of the first concerns that cross my mind is the accuracy of the measurements. Also, in almost all of these videos the complete lack of basic safety rules, especially when dealing with eye protection. I guess they would never request or complain for fear of being fired for something as simple as safety glasses or shields.
Life if cheap, what you see is how it was in the U.S before the Unions gain enough power to push back
What has safety rules got to do with the condition of the machinery, the complete careless handing on the stock and the absolute filth of the place they work in. That alone is a safety hazard.
Another Awsum Job !!! I'm wandering if they balance a wheel in this application .... Thanks for sharing 😉😎
After seeing Keith Rucker on vintage machinery restore a shaper that old shaper was cool to see running. Love to see what that part goes to.
I was interested in that machine also. Apparently it’s called a “ planer”, it does the same work as a shaper only bigger.
@@bobfinning8587 yes I used the wrong name, in a shaper the head moves across the workpiece. A planer the bed moves under the head. Keith restored one, about 70 episodes of content.
I wasn’t aware of what is was called but just for curiosity I looked it up and found it was a planer, I’ve not seen one before but I have had several years experience on a shaper.
this Pakistan is clever people you can depend on them . they can use or invent anything.Best regards
A Heavy Duty Job accomplished Skillfuly with Hard Work without such facilitating Equipment and Tools, they are really great. Thanks for Video preparation and Presentation.
Ya i agree to all of the optimistic comments.Good.
با تشکر از شما جدآ صنعتگران پاکستانی بسیار فنی و با قابلیتهای بسیار بالای هستند .
I admire how well this axle fit.
😊
Ja, ein paar zarte Schläge und sie gleitet förmlich hinein 😂
You are all very good skilled persons in India. with out any modern machines and equipment your team work is very talent.I am a retired mechanical engineer in Chennai.
I would have loved to see it installed at the job and up and running
Very hard-working men!The workplace injuries there must be absolutely gruesome… Respect!!!
Quantos perdem a vida por ano nestas péssimas condições de trabalho?
What workplace injuries? These lads know what they are doing. They don’t need to be mollycoddled.
Very well done!🇨🇮🇵🇸
@@donalfinn4205 do you consider the off balanced lift of the shafting early on is safe? come on man, or banging the shaft into the tailstock center helps the operation of it?
@@paulmiddleton4215 They know what they are doing. Same as I did in my 40 years in the mechanical/ electrical industry and never had a lost time accident. You can’t replace common sense with regulations.
Please oh please get these men some safety boots.
Muy muy buenisimo mortal papa se pasan con los trabajos que ustedes hacen los felisiti de Argentina
Keterampilan yang teliti dan cermat. Luar biasa. Selamat. Bekerja.
Whole new meaning for 'precision workmanship' and 'workshop safety'. Incredible that the things actually work! I guess 'close counts!'
😁
Good work good team.
Why insult these hardworking people? They are manufacturing with primative equipment but they are manufacturing. Come to Africa, they cry everyday of someone stealing their resources but they themselves do not want to do anything with it. You guy are working primativly but you got a great product at the end of the day.
Great video thank you
Удивительное производство. Интересно было посмотреть.
Estes Homens saõ verdadeiramente profissionais honrados , com o rusticos recurços que teem, eles fazem muito e perfeitamente correto!! Sou brasileiro, mecânico Industral e vos adimiro muito. um gradande abraço irmaõs . 👍👍👍👏👏👏👃👃👃 Parabens pelos trabalho e determinados que saõ .
I love that metal planer!
Felicitaciones a los maestros.
Muito bom o trabalho de vcs! 🇧🇷🇧🇷🇧🇷🇧🇷
Yes, especially the ubiquitous dirt (sand, shavings, stones). They replace the axle, but the bearing is old, they haven't even replaced the grease! Before installing the bases, the worker wipes them with a dirty rag full of impurities.
Tu deve entender mt de usinagem kkkkk cara eles sao mt atrasados. Nem a ferramenta sabem afiar. Quer conhecer a 2a revolução industrial industrial veja esses vídeos kkkkkk
Máy tiện này tuy rất cổ rồi nhưng vẫn hoạt đông tốt. Tôi rất trân trọng thợ Pakistan, họ có tay nghề cao và làm việc rất hiệu quả
Does all the dirt and gravel increase bearing life ?
It absorbs all the pesky blood from the crushing and cutting accidents - the result of wearing no safety equipment at all. If a toe or finger gets cut off, just kick a hole in the dirt and kick some dirt over it. And think of the savings in brooms and sweeping gear!
Lapping compound!
Thật là tuyệt vời chúc chúc các anh luôn luôn vui sẽ trong công việc và thuận lợi bình an nhé tôi thật sự đam mê những công việc như thế này, anh em làm việc vui khỏe nhé
Good video! Thanks for showing the whole process, in order, and mostly at normal speed, rather than the cartoonish 5x or 10x that most Pakistani stuff is shot at.
زبردست❤❤❤
Parabéns pelo trabalho desses caras
That's one serious key they got there! Like a loaf of bread in size! :)
I was delighted to see the one fellow flooding the ways with oil. All it takes is quick maintenance like that to keep the years from accumulating.
And that used motor oil with all the metal particulates is so pretty in the sunlight.
somewhere down the street is a shop that can rebuild those lathes, so everything works again..
Why do they need a 4' pry bar to move the tailstock? Cause those 150 year old machines haven't seen oil on the ways since the Brits left them there.
These guys are so good at machining and all work together to get the work done and what a great job they did here I would like to watch these guys live. Know CNC machines hear guess what there so good they don’t need CNC machines all old school and they pass there skills down to the next generation. Any one know what that big wheel was for because I not sure. I’m going to watch the next video. One thing I love them old machines. 💪💪💪
It's wonderful to see such admiration for these machinists and their traditional machining skills!
What these people do with their primitive tools is amazing.....think if they had new modern technology.....
Indian guys are hardworking brainy individuals productive and simple no complaining workaholics
Chcę tam pracować. Warunki idealne i wyposażenie firmy również. Od razu widać, że dbają tam o dobro pracownika.
О да, это редкий гадюшник
You can't even change a lightbulb by yourself in Poland ...well known in the USA. 😂
@@user-tl9cr9vm3x Why do you think so?
@@user-tl9cr9vm3x W Polsce potrafimy wymienić żarówkę i nie potrzeba nam do tego dwudziesto stronicowej instrukcji tak jak zapasionym amerykanom.
We don’t actually change the light bulbs ourselves here in America, we just call Angie, the handyman network heavily stocked by Polish electrical engineers. Kurva!
Я в восторге от их чертежей и измерительных инструментов 😂
нас подобное ожидает похоже...
Размечтались вы батенька. @@donXoM
You could use proper measuring tools to insure a proper clearance or interference or I guess you could just beat it in like they did.
thats really a great job wow thats nice! hi i am john in the usa .
Hey John, thanks!
Absolutely awesome ❤ Very important for us Keep up the good work Its very amazing how you have done it. Its really WOW❤..... By Wow Mechanics 1
The run out on the drill press at 13:50 has to be close to 100 thou. It is stunning that any two parts fit together. You have to give them credit.
I've worked with such worn drills in UK!
I rather work with old machines then new. Im soon 44 years old, but I have worked with alot of old machines from before ww2
Magic ! The stuff metalheads dreams are made of ! Well done!😄
What one can achieve, Its all in the Head!! Thanks
Cool stuff. I cant wait to get my lathe in action -a 17x42 Willson. 'Perfect for hobby-scale work!
Have fun!
I seriously doubt there were electrically powered lathes in 1873.
Well,I hate to disagree,but the could have been water powered. Just saying….
That time, lathe could have been donkey powered.
excellent!
Com ferramentas básicas este maravilhoso povo faz verdadeiras obras de engenharia!
VAI TRABALHAR COM ELES JA QUE E TAO MARAVILHOSO
7:32 first sign of a "spec sheet" I have ever seen in any of these videos.
Hydraulic Hands sure could use a hydraulic press. It would make pressing parts together a breeze. Or better yet use heat and cold for mating parts.
But jeez, this assembly process 😮
Mad props to these guys hard work and skills. I just don't understand that part of the worlds lack of cleanliness, organization or why they don't have concrete floors. Odd..
I will try to answer. Cleanliness: They are not wearing overcoat, they are clean from inside. Thr heart is clean. Organization: that me too, like you don't understand, why they are not organized. Concrete floor: it was started as temporary setup, on rented Land, they are actually shifting very soon to new workshop which is under construction and concrete floor will be thr (this was the answer of owner when i asked him)
@@hydraulichandsDanke für die Information. Am Hallenkran erkennt der Profi gleich den provisorischen Aufbau. Was macht man eigentlich in Pakistan wenn es mal regnet? Bleiben dann alle Zuhause?
There is a goat picured in the shop, employed there as a shopkeeper. This goat keeps the place clean and tidy.
Big job, well done lads. I would like to see what it will be used for, mining?
Spaceships.
It's for a space telescope.
Vídeos Educativos Parabéns 😀
They may lack some technology but they make up for that with skill.
For all you people who are making negative comments. I just want to let you guys know, that this place is OSHA and EPA approved and also it meets all European standards.😅😂😊😫🤯
what machine is that huge wormwheel for?
It’s part of the launch assembly for their nuclear weapons program.
Em 7:32 da para ver o excelente desenho técnico da peça a ser usinada, só que não. Com a precariedade das instalações, falta de EPIs, salario miserável esses caras fazem milagre!
E ENCHEM A BUNDA DO PATRAO CHEIA DE RUPIS
The parts that that you make is very big.
I dont see support in the middle of the work piece. It induces a lot of stress. I left my job as a machinist 30years ago. Indeed, I had learnt a lot from this video thks. If I had watched this video I would had been a good machinist and stayed on the job.
Very good 👍
After briefly glancing at the comments I guess I'm going to be the only one to state that the worm wheel isn't properly mounted to receive the axle. Every time that wheel moves they lose valuable energy and risk damaging the work piece. I will however refrain from commenting on the dirt floor or the state of the machines and direct you to read "How The Allies Won" by Richard Overy. As Primitive as that shop appears, Joseph Stalin mechanized the Red Army in Siberia with factories and shops what had no roofs and many without walls. I didn't believe it myself until I got to speak to Russians who migrated here in the 1990s.
Why does everyone make fun of their old school way of doing things,, ????
I know right. Tried and tested workmanship.
Bisakah putaran mesin bubut nya di tambah
you guys do a GREAT JOB, but do you ever clean the metal shavings off the lathes.
What do you think?? If they are not cleaning it, than whr all those piles of metal shavings go???
They are all geniuses!
They sure are! These machinists' ingenuity and problem-solving skills make them true geniuses in their field! 🧠🌟
Real men doing real work! Awesome!!! Great stuff!!!
What country is this manufacturing factory located in!?
How long did it take to turn this drive shaft ?
Aeons! RPM seems to be around 50, and it it take 0,25mm cut it takes 80 minute per meter. If rough cut and second to dimension (optimal case) its 160min per meter and add too settings etc. Full day job easily.
seems its a VERY friendly work place 34:49
😅😅😅😅😅😅😅
I was looking for this comment. WTF?
Wonder if that feedstock shaft at ~1:35 in the video is cut from a merchant marine drive shaft.
Probably
parabéns 👍👍👍👋👋👋
I had it harder than these guys at the beginning starting my working life, my first jobs started off by cleaning and sweeping the shop floors. Lol Impressive to watch the large cuts from these very old machines. The tools are old, very used and crude, No CNC or digital measuring yet still they produce good results the way it was done back when the lathe and drill press were knew.
To a certain degree: I can understand poverty, but I can't understand being filthy. These shops look like they have never seen a broom, or dustpan , or any jind of cleaning efforts.
Some of the these videos are very impressive, this one not so much they have all the right tools they need, quite a large work shop (even has the over head crane) a fair amount of workers and they make a job like this harder than it has to be 🤷🏻♂️
Funny how people invoke ‘their countries job standards’ on other nations. Life is easier if you let others ‘do’ what works for them and is normal for their way of living!
Mich erinnern diese Videos an meine Ausbildung zum Maschinenschlosser vor vielen Jahren. In Pakistan fehlt es an Respekt vor dem Leben. Das erkennt man am Umgang mit den Arbeitern die ohne die geringste persönliche Schutzausrüstung ein hohes Verletzungsrisiko haben. Und man erkennt es am Zustand der Werkstatt ohne befestigten Boden und verfallenen Wänden. Mir tun auch die Werkzeugmaschinen leid die alle etwas Zuwendung in Form von Fett, Öl und etwas Farbe bitter nötig haben.
They only work 15 hours a day, it's true they could clean their workplace with the time they have left. ah damn they have to sleep and eat.
I don’t understand how they don’t care about getting injured. No hard hats, eye protection, freaking sandals instead of boots and as you said, the complete lack of cleanliness. The shop should be cleaned after every work day.
I CANT STAND ALL THE IRON SHAVINGS AND DEBRIS ALL OVER THE PLACE .CLEAN THE AREA AND THE MACHINES AS YOU GO .YOU DO VERY GOOD WORK ,BUT
Работа прекрасная!!! Но культура производства желает лучшего, не видно "субботников" по уборке территории.
Так,капитализм,какие субботники.
Machaallah rawoa
That drill press has more run out than a max security prison with open doors
I wszyscy robią w piżamie i klapkach. BHP jest ekstra.
....ммммм,да!?что сказать,молодцы!
Что такую большую хрень выточили,молодцы.А вот ,что снова придется её точить в скором времени,не сомневаюсь.Без сальников она долго не проходит.Старый то вал, почему кончился?А там явно стояли крышки сальников,дыры под болты видно.
🎉😂❤PARABÉNS PELO SEU CANAL. PARABÉNS PELO SEU TRABALHO. RIO DE JANEIRO/BRASIL. 21.01.2023 VIDA LONGA E PRÓSPERA 🖖
These machines were made in 1873??
I’ve got a lot of tools but I do not have a battering ram !