REALLY AMAZING 👏. THOSE WHO invented...various machines for the various jobs ARE REALLY.....GREAT. THEY DESERVES all of our.....applaud and APPRECIATION.
Each step is amazing thanks to all the workers who made our life simple and its really a dangerous place and hard working process...Thank you all from my heart and now i will order 1000 box for ur great work .
This match making factory is Located In Industrial Estate Hayatabad , Peshawar , in The province of Khyber Pukhtoon khwa @ KPK , Pakistan,, Huge respect for these Great workers
Fico maravilhado com a tamanha complexidade e engenhosidade que é uma fábrica. Começando desde o desenvolvimento do Projeto, Maquinários, ajustes e sincronização, e treinamento das pessoas que irão trabalhar nelas. 👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼
That machinery is probably all older than you are. That's the common theme for all these Pakistan production vids, they get the equipment not second or third hand, but when nobody else has any use for it anymore, it's scrapyard salvage.
@@aleksandersuur9475 exactly, Im baffled by the amount of waste in this video. Just looked at a video from a match factory in 1970. It blows my mind how in 50 years the production of matches has regressed. Guess thats the price we pay for cheap labor...
@@Arjonko It's perfectly possible to make matches as a modern efficient manufacturing, Swedes still have a matchmaking industry for example. But they have it because they have had it since 19th century when they invented the modern safety match and had a worldwide monopoly of it. But today that industry is running from inertia, nobody in their right mind would start such industry in a developed country anymore. It's a declining industry, new investments in it make no sense. Matches used to be an essential everyday consumable not so long ago for everybody, but that time is gone. I personally don't remember when I last used a match but probably not this year, even if I do need to light something I'm more likely to find a lighter than a match.
@@aleksandersuur9475 Thats not the point. those factories from 1970 became obsolete and their equipment was sold off to developing countries in which the use of matches is still increasing. You would assume that they would eventually meet the standard from those factories but yet 50 years later they are not even close to the efficiency and safety of western match factories from 1970. It shows how far countries like Pakistan are behind the west in terms of development.
“Dangerous”??? That’s why most of the middle class well paying manufacturing jobs moved out the USA. Now we complain about? About lack of well paying jobs. ✌️
The thing that amazes me is that who came up with the idea to build such complex machines that would transform a wood into matchsticks. These machines might have been built by another complex machines and who's idea was that. It's really fascinating.
It is very rare when a technological process is shown exactly as a technological process, and not as a stupid show for underdeveloped children. Respect.
I was quite surprised ,the process looked fairly sophisticated. An enormous amount of matches produced, I cannot remember when I last used a match. Bet they get a few fires, all that fast moving mechanical kit, and loose matches finding their way into the gears etc. Thanks, very interesting.
@Paul Frederik: While your assumption may be grounded in common sense (and I too think a fire hazard clearly exists), it seems to be proven wrong when you look at the old machinery and the fact, that it does not appear to have suffered any fire damage.
The wood looks like it was pretty fresh (wet) at the start of the process, so I doubt they have much of a risk until later in the process as the matchsticks rapidly dry off.
@@tforever5700 the same could be said for any manufacturing company. However grain dust from grain elevators or flour mills is far more hazardous than the chemical from matches. With the right air to dust mixture any ignition source will cause an explosion!
Fascinating. How these machines are designed to do each step of this procedure is amazing. Its lovely how honorable men work hard to provide for their families. BTW their matches burn far better than what we get in Australia.
Exactly... Is not easy to do anything at all...even if it as small as lice. Imagine a lot of stress those workers are passing through before they can produce these boxes of matches.
@@FrozenHaxor Hahaha,why am i not surprised at all,the man from the "developed" country thinks the world revolves around them and cant even think that the person who wrote the comment might be from the country the matches are made in. All that development goes into tech i guess
Worked at a match factory in the early 70's in Australia . The process in the video is nearly identical to how we did it with the exception we used a debarking machine to debark the billets
Wow, what a huge effort that was. I was surprised at the very end to see the guy manually taping the boxes after everything else was pretty much done by machine. The box taping system is the only system I have seen used in real life before.
Just look at that machinery, I wondered who on earth created the blueprints and produced these machines. This is an impressive process that I see for the first time in my life. The manual part of this process is very simple but hard labor. It is the machinery that is astonishing.
Un imaginable. Look at the elderly person wow how active he is equal to the other youngsters . Hard work 💪 always pays. I don't know which part of the country is this workshop located. Any way hats off to all those people.
Correct me if I am wrong. From what I saw in this video, I understand that they managed, within 10 minutes, to supply all the consumption of matches all over the world for the next twenty years.
aye, you're assuming that all the countries in the world are 1st worlds who doesn't use matches that much when the majority would be 3rd world countries.. just sayin'
Wow! What a great long process before achieve these matchboxes. So this is how it goes. The Matchbox Companies across the globe, their workers And those that covered the events are so Weldon for this👆. Whenever I'm using matches now I will be using it judiciously and also be praying for the companies to be progressing. Because they're doing great for us to make fire...
Oh man, that looks like a very dangerous workplace.. on half of these machines it takes just one small slip and you lose a finger or two... Anyway, very good video!