This man and millions like him are the people that keep the wheels turning in his country. Major props to him. As 'humble' as his work may be, he is doing something more useful for society than most of the politicians that serve in my nations capitol.
@dunexapa10162 жыл бұрын
I'm agree with you
@waliabeltranpares36442 жыл бұрын
totally agree with you, politicians are useless bloodsuckers !!! this guy is a hero
@mikemuller43762 жыл бұрын
Даже я согласен, политики у вас ужас
@Staflain2 жыл бұрын
👍
@aproman4all2 жыл бұрын
He does more than the Aussie politicians also 👍👍👍🤣🤣✊✊✊
@frankcensored11862 жыл бұрын
This guy is toast. I used to own a body shop with a junkyard and I repaired radiators when I was in my mid 20's. I started going to radiator repair clinics and noticed all the old timers had various neurological tics, blinks and shakes. I had my lead tested and it was off the charts! I cut up my repair tank and had chelation therapy to get the lead out and later had my mercury fillings replaced with composite. I'm 74 now and still work long hours in my own small business with a great memory and am very healthy. Folks, don't breath lead, plastic and sulfuric acid fumes !!!
@georgeforeman7121 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for this important message. I cringed as i watched this poor guy's hard work. It takes so little lead to damage us.
@aclearlight Жыл бұрын
Also " Safety Glasses / goggles " needed with hot lead & sulfuric acid ,, plus controlled ventilation...
@1arritechno Жыл бұрын
Он это так делает не от хорошей жизни. Ему есть нужно. У него да же стула нет. Работает вдоль дороги.
@user-ot3sc7uz1e Жыл бұрын
@@user-ot3sc7uz1e I understand that and I wish I could help him and all those like him. My comment was a warning to those who could find another way to make enough to eat...
@georgeforeman7121 Жыл бұрын
Does anyone remember the phrase, "Mad as a hatter"? People used to make hats using mercury, which also causes neurological disorders.
@MultiPleaser Жыл бұрын
This is not restoration. This is making a new one. Genius of a man. You gotta do what you gotta do to survive
@simbayoung475711 ай бұрын
Хорошо когда зимы нет. У нас новый 3 года служит ,на 4год в минус 20 едва крутит ( хоть в тепле и показывает себя молодцом). Думаю такой восстановленный и недели зимы на Урале не выдержал бы. Хотя наблюдать очень интересно. Молодцы крутятся как могут
@user-te5xp9vq2e Жыл бұрын
У меня Бош. Восемь лет уже пользуюсь, всё нормально. Живу на Урале. От производителя зависит.
@vastan694 ай бұрын
туда бы еще навозу от священной коровы )))
@user-og4jb2jq2y4 ай бұрын
Курский, 7-я зима, полёт нормальный.
@romanat43583 ай бұрын
Have you had a battery smoke due to cold? It has been -10F (-20C ?) And the battery in my wife's Prado 120 smoked. I'm away from home and can't look at it
@wilurbean3 ай бұрын
@@romanat4358Брехня, сам из Курска. Знаю. До 2012 такие были. Сейчас 3 года, потом лучше заменить перед зимой.
@user-cb3jn8ns2k3 ай бұрын
I never realised there could be so much craftsmanship in refurbishing batteries! Very interesting to watch
@carvoloco42292 жыл бұрын
Yes this is far from my interests but it was really fun to watch
@AboynamedJason_2 жыл бұрын
These are the real guys that keep India moving forward. Here in the UK if we ran out of new car batteries then we'd be fucked.
@Kr00zA2 жыл бұрын
Indeed
@islamisthetruewaytogod68122 жыл бұрын
@@Kr00zA This is Pakistan
@dncdnc74472 жыл бұрын
And I never realized that in this country, you don't need education to do all kinds of shit Lmao
@anchorpoint36312 жыл бұрын
This man is not just focused on outcome of that battery, but he maintains finishing of product too. Genius
@kushalthapa35482 жыл бұрын
And he is using gloves!!
@matiasgatti19872 жыл бұрын
I I
@o.04252 жыл бұрын
Repent to Jesus Christ “Search me, God, and know my heart; test me and know my anxious thoughts. See if there is any offensive way in me, and lead me in the way everlasting.” Psalms 139:23-24 NIV G
@getonthecrossanddontlookba50042 жыл бұрын
@@getonthecrossanddontlookba5004 Booooo
@fukingidiot91562 жыл бұрын
I have nothing but respect for people who, instead of throwing things in the land fill, refurbish them to use again and again. The pure ingenuity is wonderful.
@joelstein465711 ай бұрын
Joel, why do you think there is a core charge on car batteries here in the USA? Its because we do exactly the same thing but using safe methods that wont kill you by the time you turn 30.
@nickv40733 ай бұрын
I have learned so much from these resourceful and ingenious people. This task is fairly “low tech”, but they have taught me some amazing skills using the most basic tools and techniques, like one man who carved an RC airplane propeller by hand, which may not have been as efficient as a commercial prop, but it flew amazingly well.
@mbunds Жыл бұрын
Как же мы привыкли к роскоши и разучились работать руками и головой... Молодцы мужики!
@Ehret872 жыл бұрын
Ну каг бэ вы бы что выбрали, сдать аккум в лом и доплатить 7 тыс и купить новый, или отдать на ремонт и из говна получить говно за 3000?
@user-rd8hp3lr1f Жыл бұрын
ничего необычного. это работа аккумуляторщика времён СССР, когда они были разборными и заливались битумной мастикой. можно было самим ремонтировать. в эбонитовых чёрных корпусах.
@user-ez2qb5vd4i Жыл бұрын
@@user-rd8hp3lr1f с этим согласен. неизвестно кто будет собирать и какие пластины и электролит туда запихает. а так же старые сепараторы в целях экономии.
@user-ez2qb5vd4i Жыл бұрын
Я к роскоши не привык это Абрамович привык
@user-cp9rp7xy4t Жыл бұрын
@@user-cp9rp7xy4t держи всех в курсе. Это конечно же всем интересно)
@stephankarsakov9641 Жыл бұрын
The two things I love most about this vid? My man's soldering technique, and the fact that he does it all with pink dish gloves 😎
@byobchandler37092 жыл бұрын
Only one glove needed on the left hand for most of the work! 🤣
@aa-theone2 жыл бұрын
He isnt your man
@MrDeceptacon882 жыл бұрын
He's not your man pal
@C54rlo2 жыл бұрын
@@C54rlo he's not your pal, buddy
@samfish902122 жыл бұрын
@@samfish90212 I'm not you buddy, lad
@C54rlo2 жыл бұрын
Incredible skill set here, but sadly I think he's ingesting a lot of lead here. He will be lucky to live past 30
@leokimvideo9 ай бұрын
Are you blind ? The man looks to be 40 ish. And in good health . But you are correct about his skill level .
@TiredOldMann9 ай бұрын
He just turned 19.
@chrissuave928 ай бұрын
@@chrissuave92😂
@dudearlo8 ай бұрын
@@chrissuave92one day he’ll be 20…. Maybe 🤣
@loganmannke90238 ай бұрын
He’s 49 already
@alexcorona8 ай бұрын
In the 1960s we did similar in the RAF. Fortunately I only helped with a few, so lead exposure was limited. I must say though I admire these hard working men. They do what they do to put food on the table.
@rodpettet2819 Жыл бұрын
Can you explain? I know he used lead to make the connection, but what liquid did he pour at the end please
@mastopage3120Ай бұрын
Hazardous work, but I can't help admiring how he manufactures these parts so well
@catarmour45722 жыл бұрын
The new guy wares gloves.
@andrewsparks41122 жыл бұрын
@@andrewsparks4112 lmfao
@helloimclaudio2 жыл бұрын
@@andrewsparks4112 Yeah gloves stop toxic fumes from giving him cancer lmao
@ommsterlitz18052 жыл бұрын
Not very hazardous, the main problem with working with batteries is the lead dust you could breathe, but since the battery was used they are removed of any possible dust , the only issue here is the acid. But just put some gloves on and you're fine Manufacturing these batteries at their facility is WAAAYY more hazardous than this. You handle giant machines and charge them with fresh plaques full of powder, you have to clean powder from the machine and keep it going and stick your hands in places where you can easily say goodbye to them, you have to clean lead from the melting machine with A STICK , over a pool of melted lead wearing skinny ass gloves
@DomaninNicola2 жыл бұрын
@@DomaninNicola question is there no better facility than the middle of the road to do this work? A better shack with some ventilation? I get it the guy is poor with the low tech equipment and everything but this project is exposing some threat to the public.
@jacobsalmi55822 жыл бұрын
I work for a battery manufacturing and distribution company here in the UK .. This is some serious skill ... Great content
@tigerchillyable2 жыл бұрын
Lauda uk mein kam karta hein tu
@lsgaming99962 жыл бұрын
Ola uber
@kirataarjuniyam76522 жыл бұрын
@@maxfactor4209 This way they can more relaxed and lerr stress on their back. need more practice to understand what I mean
@borisliu50242 жыл бұрын
@@maxmaxwell4211 Not sure, maybe good to hemorrhoids too. Better ask a real doctor to confirm. To practice this position is good for your health in long run.
@borisliu50242 жыл бұрын
Yo también trabajo en una maquiladora de baterias plomo ácido, usan las máquinas de TBS engineering?
@brandonamaro31592 жыл бұрын
Все пишут про технологию восстановления... а у меня ностальгия по этой картине. Работа на улице, читают Коран (наверное, мечеть рядом). Жил на Ближнем Востоке, любил наблюдать за их безмолвной работой.. Трудолюбивые и неприхотливые люди.
@urtovec39773 ай бұрын
This worker really made a brand new battery.Bravo !
@peaceknight5485 Жыл бұрын
Вот, индусы, удивительные люди. Сколько уже роликов пересмотрел, восстановят всё, что душе угодно! Так держать, молодцы!!!
@sergeymolkov3201 Жыл бұрын
Сам ты индус это пакистанцы Везде показывают свою работу
@user-mg7jw7dd1h Жыл бұрын
В СССР в семидесятые должность была аккумуляторщик и акб были разборые.
@alexzubenko8992 Жыл бұрын
@@user-mg7jw7dd1h слушай неуч, пакистанцы это и есть индусы, только мусульманский веры
@ANONYMOUS-lj8px Жыл бұрын
@@user-mg7jw7dd1h kkojom ok I'm my pp lol No olkj
@wahomesammie1840 Жыл бұрын
@@user-mg7jw7dd1h of
@wahomesammie1840 Жыл бұрын
В 90 е годы я в армейской аккумуляторе делал то же самое . Были и отливочные формы и все что надо..Правда пластмассовые АКБ мы не делали. А вот деревянные и фиберглассовые с заливкой мастикой ремонтировали на раз .И 6 СТЭМ 140м и 12 СТ ...и любые..
@gintnerserg Жыл бұрын
А чем вы заменяли разложившиеся свинцовые пластины, в этом ролике тоже не показали?
@user-dp6nh1cs5i Жыл бұрын
@@user-dp6nh1cs5i Он просто набирает с других АКБ комплект.
@user-mt8rw5pt4l Жыл бұрын
Чувак явно занизил ёмкость АКБ, т.к. пластин стало меньше, чем было изначально.
@user-mt8rw5pt4l Жыл бұрын
@@user-mt8rw5pt4lну теперь понял, спасибо.
@user-dp6nh1cs5i Жыл бұрын
Между свинцовыми пластинами белый пластик ?
@user-dm9os1vm7t Жыл бұрын
How I wish we have such a handy people that will repair a solar batteries in Nigeria like this guy does. He could have help a lot and earn money. Greetings from Nigeria
@yusifsuleiman5502 Жыл бұрын
Считай что на коленке смастерил то,что делает целое производство.Вот что значит-светлая голова у человека и руки из нужного места. Супер!❤
@user-eu5mr8xg1z2 ай бұрын
че супер, валенок, и сколько проходит этот акум? это все от бедности.
@SegaEkb7772 ай бұрын
Never in my life have I seen or heard of a battery being rebuilt. Extremely toxic process involved there coming in contact with lead and burning plastic but the skill and innovation is fascinating. I take my hat off to this gentleman and anyone else around the world keeping the wheels turning in their society.
@aarenmyatt45092 жыл бұрын
Last I heard -- although the info is YEARS out of date now, if not decades -- Bangladesh was the place to go for battery rebuilding. You wonder where your recycled Duracells and Die-Hards go? You're looking at it. Like it or not, this is what that core charge at Advance Auto buys you. Love it or hate it -- the companies that did it don't care. It was cheap for them and that's what they think matters. Welcome to the modern world. I'm not here to peddle a better way. I don't have one of those today. But this is the life of those who make possible the lives of those of us in the cushy parts of the world. This is how the other half lives... oh, and it's a lot more than half nowadays. By the way, if you want to know where your electronics go... that would be Guiyu, China, for the most part. Technically illegal for decades now... nobody cares. The boats will come as long as there are people still alive and willing to work. When you think about it, we live in a utopia. I live in America. For my specific county in my specific state, median income was a bit over $45k in 2020. The per capita income of Bangladesh as a country was the equivalent of $2227 for 2020. Both of those figures are in 2020 US Dollars; in 2022 US Dollars, that's almost $43k where I live and roughly $2383 in Bangladesh. Say what you want about the US government -- and there's plenty to say, wherever you lay on the political spectrum, let's be honest -- but most of our civil issues don't have to deal with things like minor municipalities not having any running water at all and thus every family in that entire village (we'd say small town) having to walk for multiple hours every day to get water -- the luxury of something like a bicycle, let alone any sort of motorized vehicle, being distinctly aspirational for most folks at that economic level -- and having kerosene fires routinely burning down their dwellings because that's how they heat, cook, and light the place; it's all they can get -- the electrical grid in most poorer countries is, let's face it, not the sturdiest even in the larger cities, and it simply doesn't exist outside of them. There's no money for that kind of infrastructure. This is how you get your Starbucks Shangri-La. This is the price of utopia. I wish I had better news to give you. I wish I had a happier answer to provide. I wish this story had a happier ending. Sadly, life is not a Disney movie... to paraphrase an actor , and character, far better than I -- welcome to the scrapyard of the real.
@laserhawk642 жыл бұрын
Aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaand aaaaaaaaaall of thaaaaaaaaaaaaat chemical shait goes right there on the street... Would you say the same if that would be going in any western city right now??
@marekzielinski35982 жыл бұрын
@@marekzielinski3598 I do believe I agree, although I'd like to think I phrased things a bit more artfully. As an aside: KZhead considers itself a family-friendly website, and as such language filters exist for a reason and comments tend to disappear which attempt to circumvent them. I won't be reporting your comment personally, as IMO if they're going to make it THAT easy it's not worth my bother, but I did want to leave you a heads-up as websites generally take these things a bit seriously, and Google (which owns KZhead) does occasionally hand down bans if people get annoying enough. I'm told it's like being erased from the Internet. But this topic is heavy enough as it is, so on a happier note: I hope you have an unusually nice day, OK?
@laserhawk642 жыл бұрын
@@laserhawk64 Nothing i said in here is against google or YT policy. Also i do not understand what is your problem do begin with? My comment wasnt left for you at all. Do you know how the comment section works? You understand that i do not have to read the whole reply thread to leave my comment for the same person you did and you will see those as replies? And btw i didn`t so maybe you got the wrong impression here? Anyway since we got that( i hope) out of the way and since you directly commented i will add something on the side. When i was 10 my native countrys GDP per capita was 1,750 US so let me assure you i understand a struggle of a poor country where everything i mean everything that could be fixed have been fixed. You would not throw away nut a bolt or a screw... to damaged, sell for cash untill there was nothing left. So before you start another lesson mind what i just wrote above. Onto another topic then: Anyone who worked in any factory that is fixing anything knows how the world works, a lot of people know where the so called unusable by the west parts go. The problem is that nobody in the west wants to agree that this is happening otherwise our moral preaching about reducing emisions, waste and so on would collapse like a house of cards. Last but not least: Really? Reaaalllyyy? You are offended by the word "shit" You do know that word is considered by youtube as light profanity and is allowed in their videos but they will not get domenatized. You would have to stretch the ban definition hard to get me out for the use of it in way that is not directed at any person to begin with but at toxic mix of chermical material. You get offended on behalf of a toxic sludge? Also what you wrote - even though i fully understand and hope you did not meant like that - sounded like a vailed threat? For a person who wishes me a good day it does sound a little bit toxic ^^ Now then i with all honesty of my heart i actually do wish you a good day
@marekzielinski35982 жыл бұрын
@@marekzielinski3598 My, my, my... such a long diatribe for one single swear word with an extra letter in it to defeat the language filter. I think I understand the YT Comment section better than you :) One, you are reading far, FAR too much into things if you think I somehow believed your comment was replying to mine. I did not. Two, what is allowed in the videos is different from what's in the comments. Three, most of us in the West, particularly in America, tend to be a bit ignorant of stuff like this. I'm in an odd position, I've "fallen through the cracks" -- so to speak -- in my own country, abs I live in poverty now, but this is after getting a decent education and having experienced other cultures in other countries. I just never got the opportunity to do anything with what I had; as soon as I got it, my world fell apart and now I'm a very different person with a very different life. Four, I'm genuinely sorry to hear that you live in such a difficult country. Just because we live so well, doesn't mean you should not. Probably there should be some sort of middling-out... sad to say, enough of us are too comfy and it will never happen while countries like mine remain as they are, but perhaps someday... remember the phrase: "all things end". For better or worse, there are no exceptions. Five, I was not offended. More that you gave me a chuckle for something that seemed obviously out-of-place. Six, I genuinely meant my kind words... just as I mean them again now: have an awesome day, sir or miss.
@laserhawk642 жыл бұрын
I have no clue why this ended up in my recommended feed, but the repurposing of the lead oxide sheets to stabilize the whole battery assembly is clearly genius!
@Bourinos022 жыл бұрын
Просвети в чем смысл манипуляций? На сколько я понимаю аккумулятор подыхает когда сыпется свинец с пластин он в оксид превращается. (чёт там не оксид а какая-то муть получается точно не помню). По сути надо плавить свинец восстанавливать его чистоту и формовать обратно на пластины, но так как в аккумуляторе высоко пористый свинец, процедура вообще смысла не имеет! Что он сделал то? Ну максимум поднял ток отдачи на какое-то время (ну так можно было просто промыть его и электролит поменять). Ну возможно чистый сепаратор уменьшит нагрев , ток утечки и снизит внутреннее сопротивление. Но на старых пластинах, на сколько этого эффекта? На 2 месяца? Что он делает то в итоге?
@Staflain2 жыл бұрын
@@Staflain ну чтобы поменять электролит, надо все выпотрошить. Там все высохшее, нечего проводить.
@games4us1322 жыл бұрын
@@Staflain если приглядеться то видно что пластины из старого аккумулятора пошли в дело не все, т.к. положительные пластины высыпались при разборке (катод). Поэтому он собирает грубо говоря один аккумулято из двух.
@Maximspec2 жыл бұрын
Lead dioxide.
@GrimReaper-ly8zk2 жыл бұрын
I'm impressed with the skill this work requires. I don't think it leads to a long, healthy life. But really, wow.
@2flight Жыл бұрын
Very interesting to see this done. One slight slip could be catastrophic since he has almost no protective equipment. The toxic fumes are ridiculous. I hope he survives and moves into a healthier career,
@raisagorbachov9 ай бұрын
Какая карьера? Когда средняя зарплата в Индии меньше 150 $ в месяц? Там главное выжить. Хоть как. У меня, примерно 350$ в России. И это очень мало...
@user-lg7qo2pm9v5 ай бұрын
@@user-lg7qo2pm9v I make about that in a day!
@raisagorbachov5 ай бұрын
If we overlook the safety precautions, this work is amazing! That man is skilled and he works hard.
@Georgesspierre2 жыл бұрын
Good you decided to overlook the safety precautions….
@josephajibodu23772 жыл бұрын
@@Jesse_Johnson they said precautions not regulations
@DemonFoxRose2 жыл бұрын
@@Jesse_Johnson let's not pretend this car battery would pass any sort of quality control. he's skilled at what he does and it probably helps a lot of people get cheap truck batteries but don't make this more than it is.
@TrueScandinavia2 жыл бұрын
@@Jesse_Johnson I guess you have a bad day or something?
@Perfucna2 жыл бұрын
@@TrueScandinavia I think the main point is not the quality of the battery, its the lead vapour this man will be inhaling for hours every day. This job will kill him, no ifs or buts, just a matter of time
@TheDemonarta2 жыл бұрын
Excellent work although I worry that all of this lead, acid and plastic fumes exposure is taking toll on this man's health. I hope he stays safe and healthy.
@MultiHunterOne2 жыл бұрын
They are and sadly he won't. He has already been exposed to much. In time it will all come home to roost.
@MovieMuscle2 жыл бұрын
He's not doing bad for 74 years old
@undieturd2 жыл бұрын
U should pay his bills
@PIS1872 жыл бұрын
@@PIS187 right
@buckfizzard2912 жыл бұрын
Mix all of that with the exhaust he's straight inhaling at face level by all of that passing traffic and I feel for the guy.
@paulh.78332 жыл бұрын
well done brother, really enjoy seeing people with real life skills 👍 top video to watch
@r1zw4n29 Жыл бұрын
Total respect to this guy! Surely THIS is sustainability writ large!!
@daveh10813 ай бұрын
He has a trade and his own business but his labor is so cheap that he can profit from the battery it took so much time, material, and fuel to refurbish. He has clients because the price of a new battery is too expensive for so many. I live in Thailand I've seen guys rewiring electric motors by hand. One thing, very little goes to waste unlike in more affluent countries. Thank you for the very informative video. I was well-edited and compelling to watch.
@RaymondCore2 жыл бұрын
In Germany swapping a part is always cheaper as restoring it because the parts come from China where labor is 1/100 of labor costs in Germany.
@CraftingCake2 жыл бұрын
Что не сделаешь чтобы прокормить семью, ради куска хлеба. Здоровья этому трудолюбивому человеку !!👏👏👏✊✊✊
@djamalvasiliev71112 жыл бұрын
Делал такую работу в детстве когда летом во время школьных каникул работал в колхозе (мне тогда было 14 лет). Ничего сверхъестественное. Конечно тогда сами аккумуляторы небыли такие красивые, но было очень легко разбирать и собрать.
@robertasb72492 жыл бұрын
Слава Украине!
@doctorvazilin69192 жыл бұрын
бесполезная работа. если свинцово кислотный аккум сел, больше нет смысла его восстанавливать, он больше не будет держать заряд. только первое время и всё!
@user-gu9zm5yj6g2 жыл бұрын
@@user-gu9zm5yj6g Вы аккумуляторщик?
@djamalvasiliev71112 жыл бұрын
@@user-gu9zm5yj6g в детстве мы старые пластины меняли на новые и аккумуляторы опять работали как новые (4 - 6 лет).
@robertasb72492 жыл бұрын
QUE TRABALHO ARTESANAL BRILHANTE, PARABÉNS PELA DEDICAÇÃO EM FAZER O MELHOR PARA AGRADAR OS CLIENTES.
@arnox0 Жыл бұрын
Sim, ótimo profissional desse Ramo de negócios
@dnjr6227 Жыл бұрын
I could watch these guys all day long. AMAZING. SO TALENTED. 👍👍👍
@inthelandofmilkandhoney457 Жыл бұрын
Someone put a lot of thought into how to recondition those batteries, amazing what can be achieved with basic tools and a skilled hand and mind....
@jedics12 жыл бұрын
many things in life are simple. But if you want to be done in safe way, that would make things complicated. Like pouring Acid from a water jug and boiling lead in a wok.
@sweetpoison53412 жыл бұрын
The hard part is inventing the first or improving the process of creating the tech. Once it's out, mechanics and those who service these things can usually repair the most advanced tech using pretty rudimentary tools.
@JE-zl6uy2 жыл бұрын
Lead acid batteries are (ignoring the plastic housing and paper separators) basically 100% recyclable. Wish the same could be said for all battery technology.
@ashurean2 жыл бұрын
Lead acid is inferior to lithium ion. Can't even compare
@phillyd20182 жыл бұрын
@@phillyd2018 the only place they lose out is upfront costs and, as demonstrated above, user serviceability :)
@ryans48772 жыл бұрын
@@phillyd2018 So why don't we use Li-Ion in cars and just everywhere? Because Li-Ion has pros and cons about it. Same as Ni-Cd batteries.
@CitarNosis3172 жыл бұрын
@@CitarNosis317 li-ion has less cranking amps I think mainly.
@wadevid2 жыл бұрын
@@phillyd2018 In terms of energy density, yes, but it's bad engineering to dismiss them solely on that. LiPo batteries cannot compete in terms of current output. Not only that but lead acid charge/discharge characteristics are very forgiving, they won't blink at a dead short. Also, Lead acid likes to be stored at 100% charge, meaning they are ready to go when you need them. Try that with LiPo and you'll be doing damage to them.
@thomasharker60972 жыл бұрын
Merci de cet vidéo c’est incroyable de voir des gens comme lui recycler du matériel comme cet batterie,Mise à part le manque de détails concernant les matériaux utilisés, comme les isolateurs de chaque côté des plaques
@crissgen2 ай бұрын
I really love to be trained by this man if I have the chance,then it can be taken to the next level,there is a great opportunity in their skill
@Sholar12 Жыл бұрын
Love the fact the materials are being reused. This man has serious skills. Love it I worry about the lead contamination he might get. Stay safe !
@Ima-hoot2 жыл бұрын
If you never know about lead. Lead can’t kill you.
@ezmony192 жыл бұрын
@@ezmony19 Children and adults can get lead poisoning by breathing or swallowing dust that contains lead. Once absorbed, it affects almost every organ and system in the body. Even a little lead can make children slower learners. Very high levels of lead exposure can cause coma, seizures and death.
@chaz0000062 жыл бұрын
Yeah lead fumes are extremely dangerous
@adamr1492 жыл бұрын
@@ezmony19 how can you be so confident to tell someone that they're wrong when you dont even know what you're talking about
@apolloxlix6792 жыл бұрын
@@apolloxlix679 He was just being humorous making a joke.
@JustSomeGuyLV2 жыл бұрын
Просто на улице. Человек- фабрика, 🏭 не торопясь, без суеты и оглядки, криков и многословия...... Браво!!!!! 👍👏👏
@user-761222 жыл бұрын
У нас раньше немец ремонтировал батареи в совхозе. Уехал в Германию какая у тебя профессия аккумуляторщик . что это батареи ак делал . наин такой профессии не бывает это вредно для здоровья🇰🇿
@user-vz3px5jc1n2 жыл бұрын
они выживут и на марсе потресаюше.
@user-pl8jh6hx5m2 жыл бұрын
Проблема в том ЧТО аккумулятор получается из ДВУХ неисправных на это уходят (кажись) минусовые пластины а поскольку обмазка минусовых пластин не такая как у плюсовых то и мощность аккумулятора почти в два раза ниже ЭТО знает любой аккумуляторщик.
@user-tx1hm7zi2b2 жыл бұрын
Скоро в рФии
@MAPKCuCT2 жыл бұрын
Это так пойдет, но стартер тянуть не будет......
@user-iv3ty3jj9k2 жыл бұрын
У них так всё красота получается и есть надежда что всё будет работать отлично 👍
@denkom4637 Жыл бұрын
Big up from Jamaica this man is a true engineer
@lovisstewart2128 Жыл бұрын
I sometimes complain about my life and look at things like this and feel humbled and privileged for what I have although I don’t like my circumstances. I respect this man all the way.
@mario62792 жыл бұрын
I think this guy would be amazed to know his work is being viewed worldwide on KZhead.
@Hidden_Destinations2 жыл бұрын
Nope..you're thinking from an American perspective. If your living day to day just surving, the value of people watching on the internet would mean nothing to you.
@op89952 жыл бұрын
He thinks it’s just work but we see him saving the planet if he was living in a modern country he would probably get a government grant for a company to do that
@sko1beer2 жыл бұрын
It is a pity the filmmaker is earning much more money than the starring.
@SM-zs4wr2 жыл бұрын
@@sko1beer He lives in a modern country. lol
@zereimu2 жыл бұрын
@@zereimu sure he does them roads and shops are cutting edge
@sko1beer2 жыл бұрын
Its good to see when such masters do his job and reuse what they have
@semseriou9763 Жыл бұрын
Honest work of an honest man
@jbcom24168 ай бұрын
With the exposure to lead, acid and exhaust fumes, this man will not get old...
@Ujuani682 жыл бұрын
Probably die before getting old
@AshwaniGuptaJi2 жыл бұрын
Dermatologists hate him! Find out how this man stays young with this one simple trick.
@ulisesr6142 жыл бұрын
@@ulisesr614 Death.
@andrew_owens76802 жыл бұрын
Sadly but either this or starve to death.
@cancel.lgbtq.68922 жыл бұрын
You sound like the system already shove it up your rear end 😉
@carbonio282 жыл бұрын
Respect to the man doing what he needs to do to provide for his family. You are what we need in this world to make it a better place. A man who work hard to make a honest living. A man who work hard to provide for his family. Such a honorable way to live. Salute to you !!! 🙌🏽🙌🏽🙌🏽
@jayhaviv42862 жыл бұрын
Cannot work hard when boss takes half your earnings for himself, how is that "honest" the man may work hard and be honest, but he lives under a dishonest system.
@SMGJohn2 жыл бұрын
@@SMGJohn : sometimes those are cards that you are dealt with.. a smart man will learn the trade and go right across the street and open his shop. We all have to eat a crow in life .. if you have not so far .. You will In future
@jayhaviv42862 жыл бұрын
@@jayhaviv4286 In dream world where he gets paid enough to buy a building to open a shop or has enough money saved up to quit his current job to open his business maybe. But in real life you wont be able to unless you have someone bankrolling you while you start your business.
@Brian-iz9sh2 жыл бұрын
@@Brian-iz9sh : How do you think his boss open the shop. You rent the shop ( no need to buy a building ) over there you don’t need the whole store, like many business owners just rent a portion of a shop.
@jayhaviv42862 жыл бұрын
LOL
@weefek2 жыл бұрын
Show de bola muito bom, quanto conhecimento.Deus te abençoe sempre.
@luizrodrigues3497 Жыл бұрын
faveila louca speaking
@advocatusconciliumtantrino3126 Жыл бұрын
Que obra de arte. Y que profesional. Eso si faltaba ver el resultado de cargarla.
@carlosaam3485 Жыл бұрын
Great example of real recycling. I do hope though as his business picks up that he will look into and invest into some good safety gear and procedures. Dish gloves, as those appear to be, aren't rated for acid. I wonder how many chemical burns he's endured. Also, he works so close to the fumes of the job. It won't take long for metals and fumes to take their toll. Then there's the spilling of old battery contents on the ground, which over time will have a detrimental effect on the area. I applaud the guys ingenuity and expertise. I also feel bad for him and the surrounding area because of the long term toll doing things that way will take on him and others. We here in supposedly advanced countries have learned from the pain and suffering of others that safety requirements and standards are needed. It looks like he's an entrepreneur and not an employee, so if anybody knows him, maybe help him to find online the meds sheets for the chemicals and metals he's working with. It's wouldn't take much to get acid rated gloves and some sort of respiratory gear. Also, he may get some energy savings if he enclosed the burner with bricks. I would hate for us to applaud him and in not too long he starts to feel the effects of metal poisoning or have organ damage from absorbing toxic metals and chemicals over time.
@haddow7772 жыл бұрын
His buisness won’t pick up , he will do that until someone cheaper comes along or he dies from lead poisoning
@paulbackhard63152 жыл бұрын
@@paulbackhard6315 This is the reality.
@nukem1702 жыл бұрын
Exactly what I was thinking. I was cringing very hard when he was cleaning the old battery waste and washing it with water on the ground. It must be disposed properly as it can slowly seep into ground reservoirs and potable drinking areas. I also applaud his work though. I would recommend wearing protective gear when he was soldering, especially considering lead fumes can have a serious detrimental effect to your health with respirated. I’m pretty sure this took place in Bangladesh or Pakistan so I am not familiar with their environmental laws.
@benyseus63252 жыл бұрын
@@benyseus6325 even if you gave him protective gear he would sell it as it would be worth a few months wages to him
@paulbackhard63152 жыл бұрын
@@benyseus6325 if anything we should export to the world, it should be safety standards. How many toxic sites have we had to clean up. How many preventable illnesses and deaths on the job have we seen. We've learned a lot of tough lessons and we really should be helping these countries to benefit themselves. I love to see such amazing talent and ingenuity and at the same time cringe at the thought of the long term impact. I saw a video a number of years ago out of Indea where men were fluffing Asbestos with something like rakes in nothing but their underwear. No breathing masks, no eye protection, no ventilation. By now, everyone in the video is most likely dead. In another, I saw videos of hits in shoes and shorts taking acetylene torches and cutting ships into pieces. One guy blowup because he started cutting a fuel tank that someone hadn't emptied and aired out.
@haddow7772 жыл бұрын
There is no million $$ government grants here... Just a skilled worker putting in a days work and keeping the land fill empty. Nice work
@eddiemoore75622 жыл бұрын
Suco de groselha com pupunha menino
@robsonandradevieira62552 жыл бұрын
He doesn't give a hoot about any landfill. The return on selling that is a lot more than the material he put in and his time, as sad as that is. Pompous westerners man.
@derekv64792 жыл бұрын
@@derekv6479 His time has no value to us pompous westerers. He'd be lucky to earn $50 a week. Our landfill, on the other hand... now that has value
@eddiemoore75622 жыл бұрын
Yup... That's the kind of work most people would be doing without government regulations.
@kimchristensen21752 жыл бұрын
Practice makes perfect and it surely shows. Regretfully the job is hazardous, but a real artist in his work. Recycling at it's best.
@nico7858 Жыл бұрын
Amazingly competent tradesman working under difficult conditions.
@glennmcgrath971 Жыл бұрын
Seriously, he IS amazing (as well other workers who refurbish, repair or restore nearly everything).
@miroslavzima88562 жыл бұрын
Amazing he hasn't lost his vision with no safety glasses:D
@bam57322 жыл бұрын
The real art of repairing things. My deepest respect to this man. I lived in India for some time, love it dearly and adore its nice people. Great job done, a real JUGAAD at its best. Regards!
@alexchubbymclynn6060 Жыл бұрын
Actually, this is in Pakistan. You can tell from the dress style, urdu writing, phone numbers car license plates etc. Not that in India "informal" i.e. Not under pollution regulations, does not take place. There are large unauthorized recyclers, about a 1000, in India that smelt the lead at low cost because of hoodwinking of pollution standards, but the lead supply chain then goes into battery manufacturers plants. Once you have the lead, manufacturing can be done on a large scale with semiautomation with much better efficiency and low cost. Sitting on the sidewalk and poring melted lead by hand and plastic welding by lighting the plastic on fire is inefficient, although requiring high degree of skill and necessary when you don't have alternatives. Pakistani people show the same jugaad as Indian people, but most of the fruit of their sweat is skimmed off by the Army and extraordinarily corrupt polity, even by south asian standards.
@suryamitra7397 Жыл бұрын
Pakistan
@hamzamehmood1976 Жыл бұрын
Indian bro, if you have kept your political rhetoric aside in this video of entirely different genre. It would have been much better. Porus chan-nee can't accuse lota for a hole.
@survivor79045 ай бұрын
Круто... , но я бы такой аккум не купил...
@extremelive19425 ай бұрын
The man works. Props to him.
@opnwndo Жыл бұрын
My grandfather was a heavy machinery mechanic in Eastern Europe from the 60s on. These were routine procedures in Europe too when there was a scarcity of almost everything. Instead of the molten plastic they’d use molten asphalt as it’s easier to work with.
@aronkovacs13862 жыл бұрын
very interesting thanks for sharing
@cornishcat112 жыл бұрын
Bakelite was the name of the material and it was very easy to weld and repair...
@64TommyG2 жыл бұрын
Долгих лет жизни Вам и Вашим родным, Вы мастер своего дела!!!
@user-dv8pn3fv3l2 жыл бұрын
да, это пожелание ему наиболее актуально. жизнь в постоянной атмосфере кислотно-свинцовых паров долгой не бывает.
@user-yc5ee9ji7w2 жыл бұрын
Repent to Jesus Christ “Search me, God, and know my heart; test me and know my anxious thoughts. See if there is any offensive way in me, and lead me in the way everlasting.” Psalms 139:23-24 NIV
@getonthecrossanddontlookba50042 жыл бұрын
@@user-yc5ee9ji7w 😞🥺
@mitaskeledzija62692 жыл бұрын
Это ирония была?
@user-lz1bd3jd6o2 жыл бұрын
@@user-lz1bd3jd6o нет, нравится как человек делает свою работу.
@user-dv8pn3fv3l2 жыл бұрын
To all the hard working brothers and people in the world, I wish you and your family all the the best and luck!
@sunset3052 Жыл бұрын
Excelente reparación de baterías saludos desde Ecuador bendiciones.
@juanpazmino660410 ай бұрын
This is absolutely insane, where would someone even learn to do that? On the side of the street of all places! Absolutely amazing what these people achieve and do considering how little they have to start.
@swaggadash90172 жыл бұрын
He worked at the battery factory down the street
@johndenver50292 жыл бұрын
@@AngelTorres-pm9yl who are you responding to?
@johndenver50292 жыл бұрын
@@AngelTorres-pm9yl I'm not going to argue but the pound is worth much more 🤷 Doesn't mean I can't respect his hussle on the side of the street literally rebuilding batteries. I'm also not talking shit about 3rd world countries, it's just a fact that they don't have the same resources open to them as us and they still achieve amazing things like this guy.
@swaggadash90172 жыл бұрын
@@AngelTorres-pm9yl cope
@NoMoreMeNoMoreBelief2 жыл бұрын
@@AngelTorres-pm9yl He's not wealthier than me, and I work far harder in my life than he does. Not everyone is lazy like you.
@FinalFront2 жыл бұрын
It's nice to see this progress how it should work... But when I was in India, especially in Kalkutta, I saw many of those "shops" and it was just terrible. Nobody ever had any kind of protection like gloves... They worked bare handed and with bare feed in shops completely covered in lead and acid. Their arms and legs were black and corroded by the acid. Most of them were kids.... I already told a lot of people that this is what I remember of being the worst thing I have seen in all of India (and I have seen a lot of crazy shit over there). I hope they will improve general health conditions for those workers.
@julgoe54932 жыл бұрын
I mean this video was of a Pakistani not an indian so yeah.
@dncdnc74472 жыл бұрын
@@dncdnc7447 yeah...huge difference....right?
@indy18692 жыл бұрын
@@indy1869 It's a fact that shouldn't be overseen, the video is in Pakistan not India.
@dncdnc74472 жыл бұрын
It's an environmental nightmare. He handles hazardous and toxic substances as if they were flour and sugar. There's nothing brilliant about it. Just looking at the end: That's sulfuric acid and not apple juice that he's spilling around with.
@frankwaldmann1252 жыл бұрын
@@gokusan1015 come on...really...white privilege? Health, safety and environmental protection becoming a white privilege? People who are not white are just allowed to destroy the environment? Can't think of more?
@frankwaldmann1252 жыл бұрын
Блестящие мастера своего дела👍👍👍👏👏👏
@ilyamuromets99127 ай бұрын
Thanks for this video it will serve me well.
@kevinharrington64028 ай бұрын
Неожиданно, гениально. Человек понимает технологию. На коленке реабелитировал. Like a Bos :)
@ElectroLRG2 жыл бұрын
Что понимает? Что реабилитировал? Не будет он работать!
@user-lz1bd3jd6o2 жыл бұрын
Буду ждать с нетерпением следующее видео "Блестящая методика восстановления атомного реактора" )))
@MrZef772 жыл бұрын
ЧАЭС
@vitya-ploxo-ili-poxyu2 жыл бұрын
Смех смехом но так живут люди в ебенях
@user-fi6sj8nn6o2 жыл бұрын
Да хуйня наждачкой шлифанет промоет и в путь
@sanya87892 жыл бұрын
так собрал же один чувак ядерный реактор дома в сарае. В Америке кажется. И тот работал. Правда чувака потом посадили за это
@bogdanbogdanov63542 жыл бұрын
@@steelmetal8038 Странно, что вроде все цивилизованные страны хотят улучшить экологию, а один и самых сильных уронов по ней - аккумуляторы разных типов и я думал, что они реально не восстановимы, а оказывается, что вполне себе. И вот тут то и странно, зная технологию и изобретательность Европы и Америки, они так и не наладили восстановления АКБ, чтобы спасти природу, как-то не обычно, не находишь? Ну зато доллар по 150, хоть тут у них есть положительный результат, видимо ничто не остановит их от "добрых дел".
@karabassbarabass45922 жыл бұрын
What a amazing knowledgeable man he impressisers me a lot.
@davidupton525211 ай бұрын
I've spent a lot of time in the Philippines, you see a lot of the same ingenuity and resourcefullness there. When you're dirt poor nothing gets thrown away, everything can be reused somehow.
@SandmannOZ4 ай бұрын
A post nuclear war, these guys would rebuild a city from bits of scrap metal, old tyres, an old computer. Truly masters of ingenuity.
@DrumToTheBassWoop2 жыл бұрын
What a skill, hard labour, humble and productive existence! My hat is off to him 🙏
@hansmeyer403 Жыл бұрын
Bravo to all those who works hard and humble to save his family.
@S-MKim6 ай бұрын
Świetna robota i akumulator jest jak nie nowy pozdrawiam twórcę tego filmiku 👍👍👍👍👍👍
@andrzejporeda7281 Жыл бұрын
no zdrowia mu zycze zeby raczyska nie dostal
@Rycet Жыл бұрын
Внимательно смотрю и запоминаю. С новыми санкциями скоро прийдется тем же заниматься.
@umabezzdna76292 жыл бұрын
Мастерскую также придется оборудовать... И ремонт производить строго на кортах сидючи...
@MrChDennys2 жыл бұрын
с чего-бы ради? против нас что, Китай санкции введёт?))) даже то-же ифоны в Китае делают) так что без электроники мы точно не останемся)
@google53552 жыл бұрын
@@google5355 как ты говоришь ифоны, только ифоны это американская компания, и если компания обьявить санкции, то клепать-то они будут в китае, а приезжать не будут
@HaroshijParen2 жыл бұрын
@@HaroshijParen ага, только вот санкции она не объявит, эпл не монополист на нашем рынке, и если они вдруг перестанут продовать, А ещё лучше вырубят свои смартфоны на территории РФ(да они могут), то их тупо вытеснят с рынка другие производители, свято место-пусто не бывает! и потом хрен они его обратно отобьют! а это немалые бабки. и хрен они так сделают) максимум отсрочка релиза новых моделей)))
@google53552 жыл бұрын
@@google5355 я тебе говорю не об эпл, а в целом, замечание на аля все делается в китае и эпл тоже, только это американские фирмы. а ты мне втираешь какую-то дичь.
@HaroshijParen2 жыл бұрын
إنه إنسان كباقى البشر لكنه أبدع من فكره ما لم تهتم به الدول المصنعة. الحاجة أم الاختراع. برافو.
@houcinekd45852 жыл бұрын
I had no idea. What a craftsman.
@elmerfudd59255 ай бұрын
Besides the health concerns -- how good are the remanufactured batteries? I have somewhere in the back of my mind the idea that "dead" batteries are bad because both the anode and the cathode have changed into lead sulphate. What does it take to reverse that change?
@InssiAjaton10 ай бұрын
You can't really reverse it. It's a chemical change. Soft of like burning wood and it turning into ash. All you can do really is scoop it out and replace it. It's really simple if it wasn't for all the lead.
@illidari122113 ай бұрын
This battery wallah is tops. Every locale on this planet needs such innovative individuals to operate in this way. From boot makers to computer repairs. We all have to become local self sustaining communities. Great vid. 👍
@catsamazing3382 жыл бұрын
What's wrong with recycling centers, and rebuilding new ones in facilities where employees don't have to be exposed to acids, heavy metals and dangerous fumes? I think you have it backwards. It's better for people to get out of poverty, than to admire how poverty makes ends meet. This is what people are trying to escape. He's not doing it because he's a craftsman, his wages are probably horrendous and he would take another better paying job if there were any.
@bradleyakulov36182 жыл бұрын
@@bradleyakulov3618 Totally agree.
@BPTtech2 жыл бұрын
@@bradleyakulov3618 those truck batteries go for $200 USD. Sell one, and you have a day's pay. Imagine having a full out shop that would do everything to repair a truck. You won't get rich, but you'll make a good living. Nobody sees what his home looks like.
@danieljones3172 жыл бұрын
@@danieljones317 Only, he's not the one who gets that $200 USD. He'll see $3.50 of that (cost of labor). Someone rich is getting richer, and it's the owner. Someone who's going to expose himself to poisons isn't the same person who's going to acquire materials and manufacture the molds and all that. In third world countries, there's no middle class. There's the ultra rich and there's the poor and that's it.
@bradleyakulov36182 жыл бұрын
Мужик, конечно умелец 80-го левела, но самое поразительное, что он работает с КИСЛОТОЙ в почти белом х/б наряде и без дыр !!! Интересно , а сколько они там живут, при такой работе и в таких условиях ???
@anatoly48222 жыл бұрын
Думаю долго, смотри у него даже седых волос нет
@olegbaklagan2 жыл бұрын
@@olegbaklagan зря так думаешь, средний возраст 45 лет
@dailer3502 жыл бұрын
@@olegbaklagan они красят волосы
@Kurah_Daglar2 жыл бұрын
He has neither dyed hair nor the average age is 45 here. This video is from Pakistan. Its a land of hardworking people :) average life is 60+. People generally like to stay happy here
@parayshanbacha2 жыл бұрын
@@parayshanbacha я рад что ошибся)
@dailer3502 жыл бұрын
In awe of the skills. 👏
@nickinthefield42025 ай бұрын
Well done great job. Really seen real life and that guys skills.
@balasubramani2463 Жыл бұрын
I have just seen a true craftsman at work in the most humble working environment, It brings me back to my young days working as a motor mechanic (as we were called then) when we would repair a lot of car and engine parts, but then we were overtaken by cheaper replacements. this man is saving a lot of plastic being dumped by reusing the battery shell. Enjoyed watching this thanks for sharing. Carl-UK👍
@carl-uk1774 Жыл бұрын
He's also saving the atmosphere from most of the pollution generated by melting the plastic and metal by using his lungs to filter it out.
@nukepuke932 Жыл бұрын
In the West, car batteries are made in a closed loop manufacturing process and almost all of a scrap battery, including the case, is re-used to make new batteries.
@TruckingVideos Жыл бұрын
He ain't saving anything. Look at this mess, lead everywhere--this would be a hazmat site after a few years in the West.
@evanfinch4987 Жыл бұрын
@@TruckingVideos That‘s true although this also means it’s a closed profit loop.
@demil3618 Жыл бұрын
Dude, why do you think there is a core charge on all car batteries here in the USA? Its because we do the same thing just using safer methods.
@nickv40733 ай бұрын
Crazy amount of respect. Dude goes above and beyond to just have a bit more then survival and I love how he does it. The combed hair for presentability it’s important for what he’s trying to do and I love it and the fact he has to use jumper cable grips to hold it still to weld it’s crazy and mad props cause he’s making it work
@hemphry_71292 жыл бұрын
God, without any eye protection too... and just Marigolds (Gloves)
@johnpotter47502 жыл бұрын
You know what's amazing is imagine if this guy came to America there is no telling what he could do. These are the people that have to wait in line to become American citizens they can't sneak across the border like everyone else coming through our southern border. Well they could but they would have to fly to Mexico. These people are the immigrants we want. Not someone just to take up space and vote democrat!
@joeybod682 жыл бұрын
@@joeybod68 the immigrants already doing most of the basic work for lazy americans xd.
@juanuzziel2 жыл бұрын
LOL
@weefek2 жыл бұрын
@@joeybod68 you know the Democrats are the ones who came up with the skilled visa program and have pushed green cards for years, and it's the Republicans blocking poorer immigrants (eg: the Indian guy in the video) with crap like the " public charge" rules implemented by Trump, right? You know what Trump says though, "I love the poorly educated", he means you - low information voters.
@sammysdroid2 жыл бұрын
Absolutely brilliant
@luisnarvaez4147 Жыл бұрын
Главное по технике безопасности, чтобы помещение хорошо проветривалось!))
@romadent170 Жыл бұрын
This is really something to see. He makes it look so easy. Like he's already done hundreds of these. Fascinating. But I doubt I could do this on my own. Hats off to this man
@reallue2 жыл бұрын
Probably thousands
@Letsgobrandon8272 жыл бұрын
@@Letsgobrandon827 Yea he probably does a hundred a week
@heavyglassglass2 жыл бұрын
He's also going to die from lead poisoning and cancer.
@Bismuth002 жыл бұрын
@@Bismuth00 small price to pay for the millions of dollars saved by his developing country thanks to him and people like him.
@titanium41672 жыл бұрын
@@titanium4167 yes death is a small price to pay. Give your head a shake. Money is not more important than someone's life. If that was the case we would still be using slaves.
@Bismuth002 жыл бұрын
A lot of us talk about recycling, but he's actually on the front lines, DOING it - absolutely amazing!
@grampsinsl52322 жыл бұрын
You would be doing it too if it was your means to your income.
@TheHardTruth3152 жыл бұрын
Recycling isn’t the same as refurbishment. Just simply sorting bulk recyclable materials is a whole lot more complicated than people realize. And product impurities means not everything can be made from recycled waste
@nadlug91992 жыл бұрын
@@nadlug9199 the vast majority of “recycled” stuff just gets shipped to china & stuffed into a landfill & the American government is so generous with our money there’s millions in kickbacks leftover for those same politicians
@patrickancona11932 жыл бұрын
Practically 100% of car/truck batteries get recycled. They’re a notable exception to the “ship it all to poor countries” of most recycling. In wealthy countries the recycling is performed very differently (via shredding and then separating the materials by flotation), but it’s done because a) the lead is so easy to recycle b) car batteries are expensive to ship because of their weight, and c) they’re not allowed in landfill or incinerators due to the lead.
@tookitogo2 жыл бұрын
Not amazing at all as it was mentioned this make huge harm to environmelt as all the servis and spill vill be washed to soil or river with first rain. Not mentioning danger for the person himself. And Im doubfull that acid and derbis washed from old battery is properly handled and destroyed. I understand its simply done because of needs but it is great example how it must not be done.
@VavrMar2 жыл бұрын
Seeing many videos of late where impoverished communities have become increasingly important in the world of manufacturing disciplines, which might have been lost, if not for the necessity of the product. Those in the West had better pay attention, as these craftsmen who utilize the old ways of manufacturing and production may be the way of the future!
@lawrenceklein3524 Жыл бұрын
Need more people like him!
@apurvdas227210 ай бұрын
Хорошо они работают ! Трудолюбивые люди , знают что надеяться не на кого
@user-ry6fq3ds9y2 жыл бұрын
А из какого материала белые прокладочки?
@user-ek2ul2hg1w2 жыл бұрын
@@user-ek2ul2hg1w любой диэлектрик подойдёт, который имеет пористую структуру, чтобы пропускать электролит. В некоторых современных аккумах эти пластины заменены пластиковыми сетками.
@alkonaut15332 жыл бұрын
Вспоминаю себя в детстве! Раньше валялись аккумуляторы прям на улице, а сколько кислоты вылили от баловства, ломали их кирпичном доставали эти пластины, отбивали палками и переплавляли в битки! И также ни очков но и перчаток небыло, и как никто не пострадал даже представить не могу!)))
@Ramazanovich2 жыл бұрын
Раньше аккумуляторы были разборный, банки меняли
@user-fv5iy5zw5c Жыл бұрын
@@user-fv5iy5zw5c раньше гудрон битум был залит сверху в текстолитовую, или как там ее называли дымовушку, я написал не про то что было разборное или нет, мы ломали аккумуляторы из пластика белые были аккумуляторы от грузовиков.
@Ramazanovich Жыл бұрын
@@Ramazanovich от того из какого материала сделан корпус, не меняет его содержимого, тот же свинец и раствор серной кислоты. Хотя сегодня есть какие-то геливые аккумуляторы, был у меня такой - замерз зимой...
@user-fv5iy5zw5c Жыл бұрын
@@user-fv5iy5zw5c ' ' . . ' ' . ' . ' .
@ivan12101 Жыл бұрын
@@user-fv5iy5zw5c .
@ivan12101 Жыл бұрын
Very useful for our environment. Thanks to this awesome professional.
@oscartorrezoviedo92023 ай бұрын
So nice of you.
@Evidz3 ай бұрын
This kind of battery rebuilding was once common everywhere automotive batteries were used. The battery cases were designed to be disassembled and individual garages could order plates, separators, terminals etc from the suppliers. So this guy took some old batteries apart, but there must have been some new materials obtained? Those separators looked brand new for example. I wonder where he got them from?
@xanataph Жыл бұрын
This is how may father use to make batteries 20 years back, usually we use to prepare 2 batteries per day, nowdays very less peoples involved in preparation recondition Battery process, Happy to remember those days by seeing him. Thanks
@ramacharirn81292 жыл бұрын
Dude's literally sacrificing part of his life to continue his local society. Noble.
@badguacamole37092 жыл бұрын
What are you talking about? This is probably his job.
@Pharizer2 жыл бұрын
@@Pharizer .....woosh
@badguacamole37092 жыл бұрын
Dangerous fumes/metals he coming into contact with its his Job but over time he will be poisoned hence sacrifice
@brakernight78812 жыл бұрын
Not much more than the rest of us prob. Toxic world.
@Skribblez_Entertainment2 жыл бұрын
@@Skribblez_Entertainment if you expose yourself to molten lead, fumed plastics, and fumed metals all day... I feel for you.
@badguacamole37092 жыл бұрын
That was impressive. A master of his craft!
@LOT9T20 күн бұрын
This is how life will look like when Mad max comes. This guy is brilliant. In the other end, he meets no health or environment standards. Inhales lead, plastic and acid, as well as contaminates his environment too with these. Wish the good industrial solutions may be affordable everywhere!
@sandormiglecz1186 Жыл бұрын
Офигеть, думал там будет какой-то колхоз. а нет.. он просто взял в ручную и перебрал аккумулятор. Индусы не перестают удивлять. Жалко только их, не самая "полезная работа" для здоровья. P. S не думал, что это Пакистанцы, спасибо что поправили. Но уж очень у них все похоже😀
@doctorpineapple28132 жыл бұрын
I think he is from Pakistan not India. I observed the Truck Decoration Art, which is very popular in Pakistan.
@bilalshera11102 жыл бұрын
На Красной площади
@user-cf3hw3xl8b2 жыл бұрын
He is from Pakistan a different nation
@SaddamHussain-we9ec2 жыл бұрын
@@bilalshera1110 Yes, it’s Pakistan. The writing in the back is urdu which is mainly used in pakistan.
@ambi3nttech2 жыл бұрын
учитесь,скоро мы начнем так же работать
@user-nj2ox6hk1r2 жыл бұрын
Чувак реально крут. За его работой можно глядеть не отрываясь... Я думал так только мы можем, но я видимо сноб.
@user-xt2sg1gd2h Жыл бұрын
Такой работой от бедности занимаются.
@user-xo8dj7lx8r Жыл бұрын
Skoro Russkie budut na kajdom uglu takoy xuyney zanimatsya
@kidzeezy0112 Жыл бұрын
@@kidzeezy0112 сгинь, охломондер!
@Pogakopyta Жыл бұрын
You got to love those pink kitchen gloves and why all the work has to be done on the floor and there's not a workbench
@goringsotiri Жыл бұрын
Much respect to this guy and admiration for his skill. There's absolutely no way he will escape the long-term health effects of lead poisoning, however. 😵💫
@herrunsinn7742 жыл бұрын
@biyukia The solder may be lead-free, but that's about it. There is no lead-free lead.
@androidphone19012 жыл бұрын
I was thinking exactly the same thing, really I can only imagine the hardships. At times he’s wearing just one glove. Also no respirator he’s definitely got high levels of lead in his blood.
@jolivera84512 жыл бұрын
Damn man all he needs is an n-95 and that should stop most particles:/
@Huppy12345672 жыл бұрын
@biyukia Yea? He got lead free lead acid batteries too, numpty?
@shawnpitman8762 жыл бұрын
@biyukia No, but he's certainly breathing it in(particularly when melting it), and touching it every day. I have no idea whether or not that's worse than all the traffic fumes he's breathing in from the street though.
This man and millions like him are the people that keep the wheels turning in his country. Major props to him. As 'humble' as his work may be, he is doing something more useful for society than most of the politicians that serve in my nations capitol.
I'm agree with you
totally agree with you, politicians are useless bloodsuckers !!! this guy is a hero
Даже я согласен, политики у вас ужас
👍
He does more than the Aussie politicians also 👍👍👍🤣🤣✊✊✊
This guy is toast. I used to own a body shop with a junkyard and I repaired radiators when I was in my mid 20's. I started going to radiator repair clinics and noticed all the old timers had various neurological tics, blinks and shakes. I had my lead tested and it was off the charts! I cut up my repair tank and had chelation therapy to get the lead out and later had my mercury fillings replaced with composite. I'm 74 now and still work long hours in my own small business with a great memory and am very healthy. Folks, don't breath lead, plastic and sulfuric acid fumes !!!
Thank you for this important message. I cringed as i watched this poor guy's hard work. It takes so little lead to damage us.
Also " Safety Glasses / goggles " needed with hot lead & sulfuric acid ,, plus controlled ventilation...
Он это так делает не от хорошей жизни. Ему есть нужно. У него да же стула нет. Работает вдоль дороги.
@@user-ot3sc7uz1e I understand that and I wish I could help him and all those like him. My comment was a warning to those who could find another way to make enough to eat...
Does anyone remember the phrase, "Mad as a hatter"? People used to make hats using mercury, which also causes neurological disorders.
This is not restoration. This is making a new one. Genius of a man. You gotta do what you gotta do to survive
Хорошо когда зимы нет. У нас новый 3 года служит ,на 4год в минус 20 едва крутит ( хоть в тепле и показывает себя молодцом). Думаю такой восстановленный и недели зимы на Урале не выдержал бы. Хотя наблюдать очень интересно. Молодцы крутятся как могут
У меня Бош. Восемь лет уже пользуюсь, всё нормально. Живу на Урале. От производителя зависит.
туда бы еще навозу от священной коровы )))
Курский, 7-я зима, полёт нормальный.
Have you had a battery smoke due to cold? It has been -10F (-20C ?) And the battery in my wife's Prado 120 smoked. I'm away from home and can't look at it
@@romanat4358Брехня, сам из Курска. Знаю. До 2012 такие были. Сейчас 3 года, потом лучше заменить перед зимой.
I never realised there could be so much craftsmanship in refurbishing batteries! Very interesting to watch
Yes this is far from my interests but it was really fun to watch
These are the real guys that keep India moving forward. Here in the UK if we ran out of new car batteries then we'd be fucked.
Indeed
@@Kr00zA This is Pakistan
And I never realized that in this country, you don't need education to do all kinds of shit Lmao
This man is not just focused on outcome of that battery, but he maintains finishing of product too. Genius
And he is using gloves!!
I I
Repent to Jesus Christ “Search me, God, and know my heart; test me and know my anxious thoughts. See if there is any offensive way in me, and lead me in the way everlasting.” Psalms 139:23-24 NIV G
@@getonthecrossanddontlookba5004 Booooo
I have nothing but respect for people who, instead of throwing things in the land fill, refurbish them to use again and again. The pure ingenuity is wonderful.
Joel, why do you think there is a core charge on car batteries here in the USA? Its because we do exactly the same thing but using safe methods that wont kill you by the time you turn 30.
I have learned so much from these resourceful and ingenious people. This task is fairly “low tech”, but they have taught me some amazing skills using the most basic tools and techniques, like one man who carved an RC airplane propeller by hand, which may not have been as efficient as a commercial prop, but it flew amazingly well.
Как же мы привыкли к роскоши и разучились работать руками и головой... Молодцы мужики!
Ну каг бэ вы бы что выбрали, сдать аккум в лом и доплатить 7 тыс и купить новый, или отдать на ремонт и из говна получить говно за 3000?
ничего необычного. это работа аккумуляторщика времён СССР, когда они были разборными и заливались битумной мастикой. можно было самим ремонтировать. в эбонитовых чёрных корпусах.
@@user-rd8hp3lr1f с этим согласен. неизвестно кто будет собирать и какие пластины и электролит туда запихает. а так же старые сепараторы в целях экономии.
Я к роскоши не привык это Абрамович привык
@@user-cp9rp7xy4t держи всех в курсе. Это конечно же всем интересно)
The two things I love most about this vid? My man's soldering technique, and the fact that he does it all with pink dish gloves 😎
Only one glove needed on the left hand for most of the work! 🤣
He isnt your man
He's not your man pal
@@C54rlo he's not your pal, buddy
@@samfish90212 I'm not you buddy, lad
Incredible skill set here, but sadly I think he's ingesting a lot of lead here. He will be lucky to live past 30
Are you blind ? The man looks to be 40 ish. And in good health . But you are correct about his skill level .
He just turned 19.
@@chrissuave92😂
@@chrissuave92one day he’ll be 20…. Maybe 🤣
He’s 49 already
In the 1960s we did similar in the RAF. Fortunately I only helped with a few, so lead exposure was limited. I must say though I admire these hard working men. They do what they do to put food on the table.
Can you explain? I know he used lead to make the connection, but what liquid did he pour at the end please
Hazardous work, but I can't help admiring how he manufactures these parts so well
The new guy wares gloves.
@@andrewsparks4112 lmfao
@@andrewsparks4112 Yeah gloves stop toxic fumes from giving him cancer lmao
Not very hazardous, the main problem with working with batteries is the lead dust you could breathe, but since the battery was used they are removed of any possible dust , the only issue here is the acid. But just put some gloves on and you're fine Manufacturing these batteries at their facility is WAAAYY more hazardous than this. You handle giant machines and charge them with fresh plaques full of powder, you have to clean powder from the machine and keep it going and stick your hands in places where you can easily say goodbye to them, you have to clean lead from the melting machine with A STICK , over a pool of melted lead wearing skinny ass gloves
@@DomaninNicola question is there no better facility than the middle of the road to do this work? A better shack with some ventilation? I get it the guy is poor with the low tech equipment and everything but this project is exposing some threat to the public.
I work for a battery manufacturing and distribution company here in the UK .. This is some serious skill ... Great content
Lauda uk mein kam karta hein tu
Ola uber
@@maxfactor4209 This way they can more relaxed and lerr stress on their back. need more practice to understand what I mean
@@maxmaxwell4211 Not sure, maybe good to hemorrhoids too. Better ask a real doctor to confirm. To practice this position is good for your health in long run.
Yo también trabajo en una maquiladora de baterias plomo ácido, usan las máquinas de TBS engineering?
Все пишут про технологию восстановления... а у меня ностальгия по этой картине. Работа на улице, читают Коран (наверное, мечеть рядом). Жил на Ближнем Востоке, любил наблюдать за их безмолвной работой.. Трудолюбивые и неприхотливые люди.
This worker really made a brand new battery.Bravo !
Вот, индусы, удивительные люди. Сколько уже роликов пересмотрел, восстановят всё, что душе угодно! Так держать, молодцы!!!
Сам ты индус это пакистанцы Везде показывают свою работу
В СССР в семидесятые должность была аккумуляторщик и акб были разборые.
@@user-mg7jw7dd1h слушай неуч, пакистанцы это и есть индусы, только мусульманский веры
@@user-mg7jw7dd1h kkojom ok I'm my pp lol No olkj
@@user-mg7jw7dd1h of
В 90 е годы я в армейской аккумуляторе делал то же самое . Были и отливочные формы и все что надо..Правда пластмассовые АКБ мы не делали. А вот деревянные и фиберглассовые с заливкой мастикой ремонтировали на раз .И 6 СТЭМ 140м и 12 СТ ...и любые..
А чем вы заменяли разложившиеся свинцовые пластины, в этом ролике тоже не показали?
@@user-dp6nh1cs5i Он просто набирает с других АКБ комплект.
Чувак явно занизил ёмкость АКБ, т.к. пластин стало меньше, чем было изначально.
@@user-mt8rw5pt4lну теперь понял, спасибо.
Между свинцовыми пластинами белый пластик ?
How I wish we have such a handy people that will repair a solar batteries in Nigeria like this guy does. He could have help a lot and earn money. Greetings from Nigeria
Считай что на коленке смастерил то,что делает целое производство.Вот что значит-светлая голова у человека и руки из нужного места. Супер!❤
че супер, валенок, и сколько проходит этот акум? это все от бедности.
Never in my life have I seen or heard of a battery being rebuilt. Extremely toxic process involved there coming in contact with lead and burning plastic but the skill and innovation is fascinating. I take my hat off to this gentleman and anyone else around the world keeping the wheels turning in their society.
Last I heard -- although the info is YEARS out of date now, if not decades -- Bangladesh was the place to go for battery rebuilding. You wonder where your recycled Duracells and Die-Hards go? You're looking at it. Like it or not, this is what that core charge at Advance Auto buys you. Love it or hate it -- the companies that did it don't care. It was cheap for them and that's what they think matters. Welcome to the modern world. I'm not here to peddle a better way. I don't have one of those today. But this is the life of those who make possible the lives of those of us in the cushy parts of the world. This is how the other half lives... oh, and it's a lot more than half nowadays. By the way, if you want to know where your electronics go... that would be Guiyu, China, for the most part. Technically illegal for decades now... nobody cares. The boats will come as long as there are people still alive and willing to work. When you think about it, we live in a utopia. I live in America. For my specific county in my specific state, median income was a bit over $45k in 2020. The per capita income of Bangladesh as a country was the equivalent of $2227 for 2020. Both of those figures are in 2020 US Dollars; in 2022 US Dollars, that's almost $43k where I live and roughly $2383 in Bangladesh. Say what you want about the US government -- and there's plenty to say, wherever you lay on the political spectrum, let's be honest -- but most of our civil issues don't have to deal with things like minor municipalities not having any running water at all and thus every family in that entire village (we'd say small town) having to walk for multiple hours every day to get water -- the luxury of something like a bicycle, let alone any sort of motorized vehicle, being distinctly aspirational for most folks at that economic level -- and having kerosene fires routinely burning down their dwellings because that's how they heat, cook, and light the place; it's all they can get -- the electrical grid in most poorer countries is, let's face it, not the sturdiest even in the larger cities, and it simply doesn't exist outside of them. There's no money for that kind of infrastructure. This is how you get your Starbucks Shangri-La. This is the price of utopia. I wish I had better news to give you. I wish I had a happier answer to provide. I wish this story had a happier ending. Sadly, life is not a Disney movie... to paraphrase an actor , and character, far better than I -- welcome to the scrapyard of the real.
Aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaand aaaaaaaaaall of thaaaaaaaaaaaaat chemical shait goes right there on the street... Would you say the same if that would be going in any western city right now??
@@marekzielinski3598 I do believe I agree, although I'd like to think I phrased things a bit more artfully. As an aside: KZhead considers itself a family-friendly website, and as such language filters exist for a reason and comments tend to disappear which attempt to circumvent them. I won't be reporting your comment personally, as IMO if they're going to make it THAT easy it's not worth my bother, but I did want to leave you a heads-up as websites generally take these things a bit seriously, and Google (which owns KZhead) does occasionally hand down bans if people get annoying enough. I'm told it's like being erased from the Internet. But this topic is heavy enough as it is, so on a happier note: I hope you have an unusually nice day, OK?
@@laserhawk64 Nothing i said in here is against google or YT policy. Also i do not understand what is your problem do begin with? My comment wasnt left for you at all. Do you know how the comment section works? You understand that i do not have to read the whole reply thread to leave my comment for the same person you did and you will see those as replies? And btw i didn`t so maybe you got the wrong impression here? Anyway since we got that( i hope) out of the way and since you directly commented i will add something on the side. When i was 10 my native countrys GDP per capita was 1,750 US so let me assure you i understand a struggle of a poor country where everything i mean everything that could be fixed have been fixed. You would not throw away nut a bolt or a screw... to damaged, sell for cash untill there was nothing left. So before you start another lesson mind what i just wrote above. Onto another topic then: Anyone who worked in any factory that is fixing anything knows how the world works, a lot of people know where the so called unusable by the west parts go. The problem is that nobody in the west wants to agree that this is happening otherwise our moral preaching about reducing emisions, waste and so on would collapse like a house of cards. Last but not least: Really? Reaaalllyyy? You are offended by the word "shit" You do know that word is considered by youtube as light profanity and is allowed in their videos but they will not get domenatized. You would have to stretch the ban definition hard to get me out for the use of it in way that is not directed at any person to begin with but at toxic mix of chermical material. You get offended on behalf of a toxic sludge? Also what you wrote - even though i fully understand and hope you did not meant like that - sounded like a vailed threat? For a person who wishes me a good day it does sound a little bit toxic ^^ Now then i with all honesty of my heart i actually do wish you a good day
@@marekzielinski3598 My, my, my... such a long diatribe for one single swear word with an extra letter in it to defeat the language filter. I think I understand the YT Comment section better than you :) One, you are reading far, FAR too much into things if you think I somehow believed your comment was replying to mine. I did not. Two, what is allowed in the videos is different from what's in the comments. Three, most of us in the West, particularly in America, tend to be a bit ignorant of stuff like this. I'm in an odd position, I've "fallen through the cracks" -- so to speak -- in my own country, abs I live in poverty now, but this is after getting a decent education and having experienced other cultures in other countries. I just never got the opportunity to do anything with what I had; as soon as I got it, my world fell apart and now I'm a very different person with a very different life. Four, I'm genuinely sorry to hear that you live in such a difficult country. Just because we live so well, doesn't mean you should not. Probably there should be some sort of middling-out... sad to say, enough of us are too comfy and it will never happen while countries like mine remain as they are, but perhaps someday... remember the phrase: "all things end". For better or worse, there are no exceptions. Five, I was not offended. More that you gave me a chuckle for something that seemed obviously out-of-place. Six, I genuinely meant my kind words... just as I mean them again now: have an awesome day, sir or miss.
I have no clue why this ended up in my recommended feed, but the repurposing of the lead oxide sheets to stabilize the whole battery assembly is clearly genius!
Просвети в чем смысл манипуляций? На сколько я понимаю аккумулятор подыхает когда сыпется свинец с пластин он в оксид превращается. (чёт там не оксид а какая-то муть получается точно не помню). По сути надо плавить свинец восстанавливать его чистоту и формовать обратно на пластины, но так как в аккумуляторе высоко пористый свинец, процедура вообще смысла не имеет! Что он сделал то? Ну максимум поднял ток отдачи на какое-то время (ну так можно было просто промыть его и электролит поменять). Ну возможно чистый сепаратор уменьшит нагрев , ток утечки и снизит внутреннее сопротивление. Но на старых пластинах, на сколько этого эффекта? На 2 месяца? Что он делает то в итоге?
@@Staflain ну чтобы поменять электролит, надо все выпотрошить. Там все высохшее, нечего проводить.
@@Staflain если приглядеться то видно что пластины из старого аккумулятора пошли в дело не все, т.к. положительные пластины высыпались при разборке (катод). Поэтому он собирает грубо говоря один аккумулято из двух.
Lead dioxide.
I'm impressed with the skill this work requires. I don't think it leads to a long, healthy life. But really, wow.
Very interesting to see this done. One slight slip could be catastrophic since he has almost no protective equipment. The toxic fumes are ridiculous. I hope he survives and moves into a healthier career,
Какая карьера? Когда средняя зарплата в Индии меньше 150 $ в месяц? Там главное выжить. Хоть как. У меня, примерно 350$ в России. И это очень мало...
@@user-lg7qo2pm9v I make about that in a day!
If we overlook the safety precautions, this work is amazing! That man is skilled and he works hard.
Good you decided to overlook the safety precautions….
@@Jesse_Johnson they said precautions not regulations
@@Jesse_Johnson let's not pretend this car battery would pass any sort of quality control. he's skilled at what he does and it probably helps a lot of people get cheap truck batteries but don't make this more than it is.
@@Jesse_Johnson I guess you have a bad day or something?
@@TrueScandinavia I think the main point is not the quality of the battery, its the lead vapour this man will be inhaling for hours every day. This job will kill him, no ifs or buts, just a matter of time
Excellent work although I worry that all of this lead, acid and plastic fumes exposure is taking toll on this man's health. I hope he stays safe and healthy.
They are and sadly he won't. He has already been exposed to much. In time it will all come home to roost.
He's not doing bad for 74 years old
U should pay his bills
@@PIS187 right
Mix all of that with the exhaust he's straight inhaling at face level by all of that passing traffic and I feel for the guy.
well done brother, really enjoy seeing people with real life skills 👍 top video to watch
Total respect to this guy! Surely THIS is sustainability writ large!!
He has a trade and his own business but his labor is so cheap that he can profit from the battery it took so much time, material, and fuel to refurbish. He has clients because the price of a new battery is too expensive for so many. I live in Thailand I've seen guys rewiring electric motors by hand. One thing, very little goes to waste unlike in more affluent countries. Thank you for the very informative video. I was well-edited and compelling to watch.
In Germany swapping a part is always cheaper as restoring it because the parts come from China where labor is 1/100 of labor costs in Germany.
Что не сделаешь чтобы прокормить семью, ради куска хлеба. Здоровья этому трудолюбивому человеку !!👏👏👏✊✊✊
Делал такую работу в детстве когда летом во время школьных каникул работал в колхозе (мне тогда было 14 лет). Ничего сверхъестественное. Конечно тогда сами аккумуляторы небыли такие красивые, но было очень легко разбирать и собрать.
Слава Украине!
бесполезная работа. если свинцово кислотный аккум сел, больше нет смысла его восстанавливать, он больше не будет держать заряд. только первое время и всё!
@@user-gu9zm5yj6g Вы аккумуляторщик?
@@user-gu9zm5yj6g в детстве мы старые пластины меняли на новые и аккумуляторы опять работали как новые (4 - 6 лет).
QUE TRABALHO ARTESANAL BRILHANTE, PARABÉNS PELA DEDICAÇÃO EM FAZER O MELHOR PARA AGRADAR OS CLIENTES.
Sim, ótimo profissional desse Ramo de negócios
I could watch these guys all day long. AMAZING. SO TALENTED. 👍👍👍
Someone put a lot of thought into how to recondition those batteries, amazing what can be achieved with basic tools and a skilled hand and mind....
many things in life are simple. But if you want to be done in safe way, that would make things complicated. Like pouring Acid from a water jug and boiling lead in a wok.
The hard part is inventing the first or improving the process of creating the tech. Once it's out, mechanics and those who service these things can usually repair the most advanced tech using pretty rudimentary tools.
Lead acid batteries are (ignoring the plastic housing and paper separators) basically 100% recyclable. Wish the same could be said for all battery technology.
Lead acid is inferior to lithium ion. Can't even compare
@@phillyd2018 the only place they lose out is upfront costs and, as demonstrated above, user serviceability :)
@@phillyd2018 So why don't we use Li-Ion in cars and just everywhere? Because Li-Ion has pros and cons about it. Same as Ni-Cd batteries.
@@CitarNosis317 li-ion has less cranking amps I think mainly.
@@phillyd2018 In terms of energy density, yes, but it's bad engineering to dismiss them solely on that. LiPo batteries cannot compete in terms of current output. Not only that but lead acid charge/discharge characteristics are very forgiving, they won't blink at a dead short. Also, Lead acid likes to be stored at 100% charge, meaning they are ready to go when you need them. Try that with LiPo and you'll be doing damage to them.
Merci de cet vidéo c’est incroyable de voir des gens comme lui recycler du matériel comme cet batterie,Mise à part le manque de détails concernant les matériaux utilisés, comme les isolateurs de chaque côté des plaques
I really love to be trained by this man if I have the chance,then it can be taken to the next level,there is a great opportunity in their skill
Love the fact the materials are being reused. This man has serious skills. Love it I worry about the lead contamination he might get. Stay safe !
If you never know about lead. Lead can’t kill you.
@@ezmony19 Children and adults can get lead poisoning by breathing or swallowing dust that contains lead. Once absorbed, it affects almost every organ and system in the body. Even a little lead can make children slower learners. Very high levels of lead exposure can cause coma, seizures and death.
Yeah lead fumes are extremely dangerous
@@ezmony19 how can you be so confident to tell someone that they're wrong when you dont even know what you're talking about
@@apolloxlix679 He was just being humorous making a joke.
Просто на улице. Человек- фабрика, 🏭 не торопясь, без суеты и оглядки, криков и многословия...... Браво!!!!! 👍👏👏
У нас раньше немец ремонтировал батареи в совхозе. Уехал в Германию какая у тебя профессия аккумуляторщик . что это батареи ак делал . наин такой профессии не бывает это вредно для здоровья🇰🇿
они выживут и на марсе потресаюше.
Проблема в том ЧТО аккумулятор получается из ДВУХ неисправных на это уходят (кажись) минусовые пластины а поскольку обмазка минусовых пластин не такая как у плюсовых то и мощность аккумулятора почти в два раза ниже ЭТО знает любой аккумуляторщик.
Скоро в рФии
Это так пойдет, но стартер тянуть не будет......
У них так всё красота получается и есть надежда что всё будет работать отлично 👍
Big up from Jamaica this man is a true engineer
I sometimes complain about my life and look at things like this and feel humbled and privileged for what I have although I don’t like my circumstances. I respect this man all the way.
I think this guy would be amazed to know his work is being viewed worldwide on KZhead.
Nope..you're thinking from an American perspective. If your living day to day just surving, the value of people watching on the internet would mean nothing to you.
He thinks it’s just work but we see him saving the planet if he was living in a modern country he would probably get a government grant for a company to do that
It is a pity the filmmaker is earning much more money than the starring.
@@sko1beer He lives in a modern country. lol
@@zereimu sure he does them roads and shops are cutting edge
Its good to see when such masters do his job and reuse what they have
Honest work of an honest man
With the exposure to lead, acid and exhaust fumes, this man will not get old...
Probably die before getting old
Dermatologists hate him! Find out how this man stays young with this one simple trick.
@@ulisesr614 Death.
Sadly but either this or starve to death.
You sound like the system already shove it up your rear end 😉
Respect to the man doing what he needs to do to provide for his family. You are what we need in this world to make it a better place. A man who work hard to make a honest living. A man who work hard to provide for his family. Such a honorable way to live. Salute to you !!! 🙌🏽🙌🏽🙌🏽
Cannot work hard when boss takes half your earnings for himself, how is that "honest" the man may work hard and be honest, but he lives under a dishonest system.
@@SMGJohn : sometimes those are cards that you are dealt with.. a smart man will learn the trade and go right across the street and open his shop. We all have to eat a crow in life .. if you have not so far .. You will In future
@@jayhaviv4286 In dream world where he gets paid enough to buy a building to open a shop or has enough money saved up to quit his current job to open his business maybe. But in real life you wont be able to unless you have someone bankrolling you while you start your business.
@@Brian-iz9sh : How do you think his boss open the shop. You rent the shop ( no need to buy a building ) over there you don’t need the whole store, like many business owners just rent a portion of a shop.
LOL
Show de bola muito bom, quanto conhecimento.Deus te abençoe sempre.
faveila louca speaking
Que obra de arte. Y que profesional. Eso si faltaba ver el resultado de cargarla.
Great example of real recycling. I do hope though as his business picks up that he will look into and invest into some good safety gear and procedures. Dish gloves, as those appear to be, aren't rated for acid. I wonder how many chemical burns he's endured. Also, he works so close to the fumes of the job. It won't take long for metals and fumes to take their toll. Then there's the spilling of old battery contents on the ground, which over time will have a detrimental effect on the area. I applaud the guys ingenuity and expertise. I also feel bad for him and the surrounding area because of the long term toll doing things that way will take on him and others. We here in supposedly advanced countries have learned from the pain and suffering of others that safety requirements and standards are needed. It looks like he's an entrepreneur and not an employee, so if anybody knows him, maybe help him to find online the meds sheets for the chemicals and metals he's working with. It's wouldn't take much to get acid rated gloves and some sort of respiratory gear. Also, he may get some energy savings if he enclosed the burner with bricks. I would hate for us to applaud him and in not too long he starts to feel the effects of metal poisoning or have organ damage from absorbing toxic metals and chemicals over time.
His buisness won’t pick up , he will do that until someone cheaper comes along or he dies from lead poisoning
@@paulbackhard6315 This is the reality.
Exactly what I was thinking. I was cringing very hard when he was cleaning the old battery waste and washing it with water on the ground. It must be disposed properly as it can slowly seep into ground reservoirs and potable drinking areas. I also applaud his work though. I would recommend wearing protective gear when he was soldering, especially considering lead fumes can have a serious detrimental effect to your health with respirated. I’m pretty sure this took place in Bangladesh or Pakistan so I am not familiar with their environmental laws.
@@benyseus6325 even if you gave him protective gear he would sell it as it would be worth a few months wages to him
@@benyseus6325 if anything we should export to the world, it should be safety standards. How many toxic sites have we had to clean up. How many preventable illnesses and deaths on the job have we seen. We've learned a lot of tough lessons and we really should be helping these countries to benefit themselves. I love to see such amazing talent and ingenuity and at the same time cringe at the thought of the long term impact. I saw a video a number of years ago out of Indea where men were fluffing Asbestos with something like rakes in nothing but their underwear. No breathing masks, no eye protection, no ventilation. By now, everyone in the video is most likely dead. In another, I saw videos of hits in shoes and shorts taking acetylene torches and cutting ships into pieces. One guy blowup because he started cutting a fuel tank that someone hadn't emptied and aired out.
There is no million $$ government grants here... Just a skilled worker putting in a days work and keeping the land fill empty. Nice work
Suco de groselha com pupunha menino
He doesn't give a hoot about any landfill. The return on selling that is a lot more than the material he put in and his time, as sad as that is. Pompous westerners man.
@@derekv6479 His time has no value to us pompous westerers. He'd be lucky to earn $50 a week. Our landfill, on the other hand... now that has value
Yup... That's the kind of work most people would be doing without government regulations.
Practice makes perfect and it surely shows. Regretfully the job is hazardous, but a real artist in his work. Recycling at it's best.
Amazingly competent tradesman working under difficult conditions.
Seriously, he IS amazing (as well other workers who refurbish, repair or restore nearly everything).
Amazing he hasn't lost his vision with no safety glasses:D
The real art of repairing things. My deepest respect to this man. I lived in India for some time, love it dearly and adore its nice people. Great job done, a real JUGAAD at its best. Regards!
Actually, this is in Pakistan. You can tell from the dress style, urdu writing, phone numbers car license plates etc. Not that in India "informal" i.e. Not under pollution regulations, does not take place. There are large unauthorized recyclers, about a 1000, in India that smelt the lead at low cost because of hoodwinking of pollution standards, but the lead supply chain then goes into battery manufacturers plants. Once you have the lead, manufacturing can be done on a large scale with semiautomation with much better efficiency and low cost. Sitting on the sidewalk and poring melted lead by hand and plastic welding by lighting the plastic on fire is inefficient, although requiring high degree of skill and necessary when you don't have alternatives. Pakistani people show the same jugaad as Indian people, but most of the fruit of their sweat is skimmed off by the Army and extraordinarily corrupt polity, even by south asian standards.
Pakistan
Indian bro, if you have kept your political rhetoric aside in this video of entirely different genre. It would have been much better. Porus chan-nee can't accuse lota for a hole.
Круто... , но я бы такой аккум не купил...
The man works. Props to him.
My grandfather was a heavy machinery mechanic in Eastern Europe from the 60s on. These were routine procedures in Europe too when there was a scarcity of almost everything. Instead of the molten plastic they’d use molten asphalt as it’s easier to work with.
very interesting thanks for sharing
Bakelite was the name of the material and it was very easy to weld and repair...
Долгих лет жизни Вам и Вашим родным, Вы мастер своего дела!!!
да, это пожелание ему наиболее актуально. жизнь в постоянной атмосфере кислотно-свинцовых паров долгой не бывает.
Repent to Jesus Christ “Search me, God, and know my heart; test me and know my anxious thoughts. See if there is any offensive way in me, and lead me in the way everlasting.” Psalms 139:23-24 NIV
@@user-yc5ee9ji7w 😞🥺
Это ирония была?
@@user-lz1bd3jd6o нет, нравится как человек делает свою работу.
To all the hard working brothers and people in the world, I wish you and your family all the the best and luck!
Excelente reparación de baterías saludos desde Ecuador bendiciones.
This is absolutely insane, where would someone even learn to do that? On the side of the street of all places! Absolutely amazing what these people achieve and do considering how little they have to start.
He worked at the battery factory down the street
@@AngelTorres-pm9yl who are you responding to?
@@AngelTorres-pm9yl I'm not going to argue but the pound is worth much more 🤷 Doesn't mean I can't respect his hussle on the side of the street literally rebuilding batteries. I'm also not talking shit about 3rd world countries, it's just a fact that they don't have the same resources open to them as us and they still achieve amazing things like this guy.
@@AngelTorres-pm9yl cope
@@AngelTorres-pm9yl He's not wealthier than me, and I work far harder in my life than he does. Not everyone is lazy like you.
It's nice to see this progress how it should work... But when I was in India, especially in Kalkutta, I saw many of those "shops" and it was just terrible. Nobody ever had any kind of protection like gloves... They worked bare handed and with bare feed in shops completely covered in lead and acid. Their arms and legs were black and corroded by the acid. Most of them were kids.... I already told a lot of people that this is what I remember of being the worst thing I have seen in all of India (and I have seen a lot of crazy shit over there). I hope they will improve general health conditions for those workers.
I mean this video was of a Pakistani not an indian so yeah.
@@dncdnc7447 yeah...huge difference....right?
@@indy1869 It's a fact that shouldn't be overseen, the video is in Pakistan not India.
It's an environmental nightmare. He handles hazardous and toxic substances as if they were flour and sugar. There's nothing brilliant about it. Just looking at the end: That's sulfuric acid and not apple juice that he's spilling around with.
@@gokusan1015 come on...really...white privilege? Health, safety and environmental protection becoming a white privilege? People who are not white are just allowed to destroy the environment? Can't think of more?
Блестящие мастера своего дела👍👍👍👏👏👏
Thanks for this video it will serve me well.
Неожиданно, гениально. Человек понимает технологию. На коленке реабелитировал. Like a Bos :)
Что понимает? Что реабилитировал? Не будет он работать!
Буду ждать с нетерпением следующее видео "Блестящая методика восстановления атомного реактора" )))
ЧАЭС
Смех смехом но так живут люди в ебенях
Да хуйня наждачкой шлифанет промоет и в путь
так собрал же один чувак ядерный реактор дома в сарае. В Америке кажется. И тот работал. Правда чувака потом посадили за это
@@steelmetal8038 Странно, что вроде все цивилизованные страны хотят улучшить экологию, а один и самых сильных уронов по ней - аккумуляторы разных типов и я думал, что они реально не восстановимы, а оказывается, что вполне себе. И вот тут то и странно, зная технологию и изобретательность Европы и Америки, они так и не наладили восстановления АКБ, чтобы спасти природу, как-то не обычно, не находишь? Ну зато доллар по 150, хоть тут у них есть положительный результат, видимо ничто не остановит их от "добрых дел".
What a amazing knowledgeable man he impressisers me a lot.
I've spent a lot of time in the Philippines, you see a lot of the same ingenuity and resourcefullness there. When you're dirt poor nothing gets thrown away, everything can be reused somehow.
A post nuclear war, these guys would rebuild a city from bits of scrap metal, old tyres, an old computer. Truly masters of ingenuity.
What a skill, hard labour, humble and productive existence! My hat is off to him 🙏
Bravo to all those who works hard and humble to save his family.
Świetna robota i akumulator jest jak nie nowy pozdrawiam twórcę tego filmiku 👍👍👍👍👍👍
no zdrowia mu zycze zeby raczyska nie dostal
Внимательно смотрю и запоминаю. С новыми санкциями скоро прийдется тем же заниматься.
Мастерскую также придется оборудовать... И ремонт производить строго на кортах сидючи...
с чего-бы ради? против нас что, Китай санкции введёт?))) даже то-же ифоны в Китае делают) так что без электроники мы точно не останемся)
@@google5355 как ты говоришь ифоны, только ифоны это американская компания, и если компания обьявить санкции, то клепать-то они будут в китае, а приезжать не будут
@@HaroshijParen ага, только вот санкции она не объявит, эпл не монополист на нашем рынке, и если они вдруг перестанут продовать, А ещё лучше вырубят свои смартфоны на территории РФ(да они могут), то их тупо вытеснят с рынка другие производители, свято место-пусто не бывает! и потом хрен они его обратно отобьют! а это немалые бабки. и хрен они так сделают) максимум отсрочка релиза новых моделей)))
@@google5355 я тебе говорю не об эпл, а в целом, замечание на аля все делается в китае и эпл тоже, только это американские фирмы. а ты мне втираешь какую-то дичь.
إنه إنسان كباقى البشر لكنه أبدع من فكره ما لم تهتم به الدول المصنعة. الحاجة أم الاختراع. برافو.
I had no idea. What a craftsman.
Besides the health concerns -- how good are the remanufactured batteries? I have somewhere in the back of my mind the idea that "dead" batteries are bad because both the anode and the cathode have changed into lead sulphate. What does it take to reverse that change?
You can't really reverse it. It's a chemical change. Soft of like burning wood and it turning into ash. All you can do really is scoop it out and replace it. It's really simple if it wasn't for all the lead.
This battery wallah is tops. Every locale on this planet needs such innovative individuals to operate in this way. From boot makers to computer repairs. We all have to become local self sustaining communities. Great vid. 👍
What's wrong with recycling centers, and rebuilding new ones in facilities where employees don't have to be exposed to acids, heavy metals and dangerous fumes? I think you have it backwards. It's better for people to get out of poverty, than to admire how poverty makes ends meet. This is what people are trying to escape. He's not doing it because he's a craftsman, his wages are probably horrendous and he would take another better paying job if there were any.
@@bradleyakulov3618 Totally agree.
@@bradleyakulov3618 those truck batteries go for $200 USD. Sell one, and you have a day's pay. Imagine having a full out shop that would do everything to repair a truck. You won't get rich, but you'll make a good living. Nobody sees what his home looks like.
@@danieljones317 Only, he's not the one who gets that $200 USD. He'll see $3.50 of that (cost of labor). Someone rich is getting richer, and it's the owner. Someone who's going to expose himself to poisons isn't the same person who's going to acquire materials and manufacture the molds and all that. In third world countries, there's no middle class. There's the ultra rich and there's the poor and that's it.
Мужик, конечно умелец 80-го левела, но самое поразительное, что он работает с КИСЛОТОЙ в почти белом х/б наряде и без дыр !!! Интересно , а сколько они там живут, при такой работе и в таких условиях ???
Думаю долго, смотри у него даже седых волос нет
@@olegbaklagan зря так думаешь, средний возраст 45 лет
@@olegbaklagan они красят волосы
He has neither dyed hair nor the average age is 45 here. This video is from Pakistan. Its a land of hardworking people :) average life is 60+. People generally like to stay happy here
@@parayshanbacha я рад что ошибся)
In awe of the skills. 👏
Well done great job. Really seen real life and that guys skills.
I have just seen a true craftsman at work in the most humble working environment, It brings me back to my young days working as a motor mechanic (as we were called then) when we would repair a lot of car and engine parts, but then we were overtaken by cheaper replacements. this man is saving a lot of plastic being dumped by reusing the battery shell. Enjoyed watching this thanks for sharing. Carl-UK👍
He's also saving the atmosphere from most of the pollution generated by melting the plastic and metal by using his lungs to filter it out.
In the West, car batteries are made in a closed loop manufacturing process and almost all of a scrap battery, including the case, is re-used to make new batteries.
He ain't saving anything. Look at this mess, lead everywhere--this would be a hazmat site after a few years in the West.
@@TruckingVideos That‘s true although this also means it’s a closed profit loop.
Dude, why do you think there is a core charge on all car batteries here in the USA? Its because we do the same thing just using safer methods.
Crazy amount of respect. Dude goes above and beyond to just have a bit more then survival and I love how he does it. The combed hair for presentability it’s important for what he’s trying to do and I love it and the fact he has to use jumper cable grips to hold it still to weld it’s crazy and mad props cause he’s making it work
God, without any eye protection too... and just Marigolds (Gloves)
You know what's amazing is imagine if this guy came to America there is no telling what he could do. These are the people that have to wait in line to become American citizens they can't sneak across the border like everyone else coming through our southern border. Well they could but they would have to fly to Mexico. These people are the immigrants we want. Not someone just to take up space and vote democrat!
@@joeybod68 the immigrants already doing most of the basic work for lazy americans xd.
LOL
@@joeybod68 you know the Democrats are the ones who came up with the skilled visa program and have pushed green cards for years, and it's the Republicans blocking poorer immigrants (eg: the Indian guy in the video) with crap like the " public charge" rules implemented by Trump, right? You know what Trump says though, "I love the poorly educated", he means you - low information voters.
Absolutely brilliant
Главное по технике безопасности, чтобы помещение хорошо проветривалось!))
This is really something to see. He makes it look so easy. Like he's already done hundreds of these. Fascinating. But I doubt I could do this on my own. Hats off to this man
Probably thousands
@@Letsgobrandon827 Yea he probably does a hundred a week
He's also going to die from lead poisoning and cancer.
@@Bismuth00 small price to pay for the millions of dollars saved by his developing country thanks to him and people like him.
@@titanium4167 yes death is a small price to pay. Give your head a shake. Money is not more important than someone's life. If that was the case we would still be using slaves.
A lot of us talk about recycling, but he's actually on the front lines, DOING it - absolutely amazing!
You would be doing it too if it was your means to your income.
Recycling isn’t the same as refurbishment. Just simply sorting bulk recyclable materials is a whole lot more complicated than people realize. And product impurities means not everything can be made from recycled waste
@@nadlug9199 the vast majority of “recycled” stuff just gets shipped to china & stuffed into a landfill & the American government is so generous with our money there’s millions in kickbacks leftover for those same politicians
Practically 100% of car/truck batteries get recycled. They’re a notable exception to the “ship it all to poor countries” of most recycling. In wealthy countries the recycling is performed very differently (via shredding and then separating the materials by flotation), but it’s done because a) the lead is so easy to recycle b) car batteries are expensive to ship because of their weight, and c) they’re not allowed in landfill or incinerators due to the lead.
Not amazing at all as it was mentioned this make huge harm to environmelt as all the servis and spill vill be washed to soil or river with first rain. Not mentioning danger for the person himself. And Im doubfull that acid and derbis washed from old battery is properly handled and destroyed. I understand its simply done because of needs but it is great example how it must not be done.
Seeing many videos of late where impoverished communities have become increasingly important in the world of manufacturing disciplines, which might have been lost, if not for the necessity of the product. Those in the West had better pay attention, as these craftsmen who utilize the old ways of manufacturing and production may be the way of the future!
Need more people like him!
Хорошо они работают ! Трудолюбивые люди , знают что надеяться не на кого
А из какого материала белые прокладочки?
@@user-ek2ul2hg1w любой диэлектрик подойдёт, который имеет пористую структуру, чтобы пропускать электролит. В некоторых современных аккумах эти пластины заменены пластиковыми сетками.
Вспоминаю себя в детстве! Раньше валялись аккумуляторы прям на улице, а сколько кислоты вылили от баловства, ломали их кирпичном доставали эти пластины, отбивали палками и переплавляли в битки! И также ни очков но и перчаток небыло, и как никто не пострадал даже представить не могу!)))
Раньше аккумуляторы были разборный, банки меняли
@@user-fv5iy5zw5c раньше гудрон битум был залит сверху в текстолитовую, или как там ее называли дымовушку, я написал не про то что было разборное или нет, мы ломали аккумуляторы из пластика белые были аккумуляторы от грузовиков.
@@Ramazanovich от того из какого материала сделан корпус, не меняет его содержимого, тот же свинец и раствор серной кислоты. Хотя сегодня есть какие-то геливые аккумуляторы, был у меня такой - замерз зимой...
@@user-fv5iy5zw5c ' ' . . ' ' . ' . ' .
@@user-fv5iy5zw5c .
Very useful for our environment. Thanks to this awesome professional.
So nice of you.
This kind of battery rebuilding was once common everywhere automotive batteries were used. The battery cases were designed to be disassembled and individual garages could order plates, separators, terminals etc from the suppliers. So this guy took some old batteries apart, but there must have been some new materials obtained? Those separators looked brand new for example. I wonder where he got them from?
This is how may father use to make batteries 20 years back, usually we use to prepare 2 batteries per day, nowdays very less peoples involved in preparation recondition Battery process, Happy to remember those days by seeing him. Thanks
Dude's literally sacrificing part of his life to continue his local society. Noble.
What are you talking about? This is probably his job.
@@Pharizer .....woosh
Dangerous fumes/metals he coming into contact with its his Job but over time he will be poisoned hence sacrifice
Not much more than the rest of us prob. Toxic world.
@@Skribblez_Entertainment if you expose yourself to molten lead, fumed plastics, and fumed metals all day... I feel for you.
That was impressive. A master of his craft!
This is how life will look like when Mad max comes. This guy is brilliant. In the other end, he meets no health or environment standards. Inhales lead, plastic and acid, as well as contaminates his environment too with these. Wish the good industrial solutions may be affordable everywhere!
Офигеть, думал там будет какой-то колхоз. а нет.. он просто взял в ручную и перебрал аккумулятор. Индусы не перестают удивлять. Жалко только их, не самая "полезная работа" для здоровья. P. S не думал, что это Пакистанцы, спасибо что поправили. Но уж очень у них все похоже😀
I think he is from Pakistan not India. I observed the Truck Decoration Art, which is very popular in Pakistan.
На Красной площади
He is from Pakistan a different nation
@@bilalshera1110 Yes, it’s Pakistan. The writing in the back is urdu which is mainly used in pakistan.
учитесь,скоро мы начнем так же работать
Чувак реально крут. За его работой можно глядеть не отрываясь... Я думал так только мы можем, но я видимо сноб.
Такой работой от бедности занимаются.
Skoro Russkie budut na kajdom uglu takoy xuyney zanimatsya
@@kidzeezy0112 сгинь, охломондер!
You got to love those pink kitchen gloves and why all the work has to be done on the floor and there's not a workbench
Much respect to this guy and admiration for his skill. There's absolutely no way he will escape the long-term health effects of lead poisoning, however. 😵💫
@biyukia The solder may be lead-free, but that's about it. There is no lead-free lead.
I was thinking exactly the same thing, really I can only imagine the hardships. At times he’s wearing just one glove. Also no respirator he’s definitely got high levels of lead in his blood.
Damn man all he needs is an n-95 and that should stop most particles:/
@biyukia Yea? He got lead free lead acid batteries too, numpty?
@biyukia No, but he's certainly breathing it in(particularly when melting it), and touching it every day. I have no idea whether or not that's worse than all the traffic fumes he's breathing in from the street though.