Yeah, its amazing. I worked at a foundry in the early 80's for a while, so know what goes into making a casting. and to see these guys, making moulds in the floor, no runners or risers...barefoot...no safety glasses...no gloves..no hearing protection, and yet they get the job done.
Босиком лить чугун - это конечно сильно.. Хотя, с другой стороны - от голой ноги быстро отскочит, а если капля попадает в ботинок, тут уже горе горькое - прожжет до кости.. Так что ,может они и правы и это безопасней.
Fico impressionado com o Profissionalismo dessas pessoas, trabalhando sem um mínimo de recurso de SEGURANÇA e aspirando esse ar POLUÍDO gerado por essa caldeira. Trabalha nessas condições, porque precisam realmente.
@@NeoFotistos62 что ж они до сих пор не ушли вперед? Хотя о чем я, тут же главное написать свою тупую мысль с дивана, аналитики мамкины. Уроки иди делай или так же будешь босиком ходить и разными металлами в одном котле гомножелезо варить и в земляные формы заливать. А если будешь учиться, то и про домны узнаешь и про пресс формы и про обработку не напильником
@@СИГИЗМУНДТПРУТПРУТПРУЕВИЧ Не зачем оскорблять если сам диванный аналитик. Индия из развивающихся экономик по темпу роста занимает первое место. Если этого мало то по размеру ВВП на 3 месте после Китая, США. И по всем прогнозам экономистов она обгонит Америку к 50-му году, а Китай к 70-му. Почему же такая грубая Индия с низкой безопасности и бедностью настолько мощная. Все дело в огромной дешевой рабочей силе и огромном населении, где выгодно строить заводы другим странам у которых рабочая сила по оплате золотая. Так что на сегодняшний день по размеру экономики они ушли далеко вперед. А то что мы видим на ролики не государственное предприятие, а частное как единственный способ прокормить семьи, в стране с высокой конкуренцией за хорошую работу.
Я в сталелитейном работаю,у нас формы на встряхивающих машинах набивали раньше а теперь автоматическая линия.Тут же метод ещё 34 года когда на площадке с землёй набивали.
رووووووووعة لا حول و لا قوة إلا بالله و الله رائع اللهم صل و سلم على نبينا وحبيبنا وشفيعنا وقائدنا وقدوتنا محمد صلى الله عليه وسلم تسليما كثيرا وسبحان الله وبحمده سبحان الله العظيم.💘🍃💝🌾💚🌺❤🌻💙🏵💞🌱🧡🍀💓💐🌼🌷💙🌿💕
Con estos videos de trabajadores artesanales de la India he aprendido mucho de los principios de fabricación. Mi total admiración y respeto para todos esos grandes maestros.
Absolutely, I have learned a lot watching Indi and Pakistan manufacturing with simple tools. It’s quite different from the robotics and automation we use here in the US…
@@prikirale Вот и посмотрим кто и как будет дальше жить после очередной мировой войны, которая скоро будет. К стати, 200 лет назад технологии были круче чем сейчас в мире имеются.
@@NeoFotistos62 200 лет назад ты бы помер от болезни, которую сейчас вылечат за 7 дней. А, точно, ещё 200 лет назад компьютеры были куда лучше, чем сейчас
This should be played as a motivational tool at the next Twitter all employee meeting when they complain about being pressured into working more than 4 hours a month.
It never fails to amaze me that so many of the men working there are doing so in open toed sandals and flip-flops. I can understand the wearing them when making the molds but when they are working around the furnace and or pouring the molten iron/steel that to me is insane because even the most modern foundries have pour accidents starting with the crucible failing or tipping over. Never mind when a critter falls in a open mold before a pour which if not found will cause the molten iron metal to explode out of the mold. And I am not even going to mention the lack of the most basic PPE that is not being worn.
If you have ever wondered why products from sources like this are so much cheaper, or you've heard a western manufacturer complain about a labor union's demands for wages and safety, this video explains a lot. In addition to wages that might be as low a 1% of an American or German worker of similar skills might make, look at the conditions. Every motion is filled with high risk of permanent crippling or even death. Pouring molten metal in bare feet. Repetitive lifting while bending over or crouching. Jury rigged furnaces. Hand loading of fuel. What could possibly go wrong? What iss the cost in human lives to make these castings?
All the manhole covers in my city say ‘made in India’ and I always wondered how it could have been cheaper to buy manhole covers from India, shipped around the globe, then ones made in America. Now I know. The poor guy who made them had zero safety equipment.
You also have to remember that they have a job and can feed themselves. With all our PPE and safety rules people are still maimed and killed. I’ll guarantee these guys are more careful than us.
It is amazing to see the foundry casting in India or Pakistan as the country is not stated to visit them. Personally. May God bless them. Ranjith. Srilanka..
Fantastic skills by these craftsmen. I had to smile at 5:55 when the man standing on the left has to skip away when a molten spark hits his foot. That will teach him not to be barefoot when everyone else is wearing flip-flops.
@@frank6842 the more transsexuals there are in the West, the weaker the West is!!! All your men need to have operations and turn into women, give each one a cucumber, let them have fun ...!!!
cultures where squatting is common, is areas where it is hard to find a clean place to sit down. so in order to rest while not soiling your clothes, only option is to squat.
From how the sand dude jumps you know he's caught a couple of BBs before but still is wearing sandals. I'm probably just not understanding this kind of poverty but surely there are *some* kind of closed toe shoes which could be had. Even rags wrapped around the feet would be something.
As someone who works at a metal forge, I'm horrified that they are not wearing any PPE, and I have seen instances of combustible clothing easily catch fire and get out of control when you get flowing air. Obviously these people know what they're doing considering that they are wearing open toe shoes while pouring forbidden orange soda. Keep up the amazing work and stay safe.
Если не заметил, вбивал эталон глубже он по всей поверхности, а потому если ты по горизонту выставил, а потом забил на 2 сантиметра, то там он всё равно оно будет по горизонту стоять. Отследить равномерную глубину в пару сантиметров на глаз легче, чем выставить на глаз по горизонту.
Кому-то может и удивительный. А в моё время литейка была в каждом профильном ПТУ, причём лили не из такого говна - использовали стандартные чугунные чушки.
@@davidjacobs8558 That's the most pointless argument ever... That you don't see an accident in this video doesn't mean that it doesn't happen. I'm pretty sure it does happen. Humans become on average 80 years old, in such third world country probably only 60 or so. After that a new generation is required who has to discover the feeling of molten steel on their toes themselves.
@@Engineer9736 average life expectancy increased, not due to reduction in work place death. But due to vast reduction in death during child birth, and reduction in infant death, and malnutrition, epidemics. Medical management of diseases like hypertension, diabetes, and antibiotics contributed a lot.
Вот именно у них все условие техника безопасности на свежем воздухе проверено а у мего заводов всё в срок быстро надо успеть работаем 12часов вентеляцые нет по телеку показывают все Тб исправно нет токого понятия Тб ты должен похать на все 100 выжумат из тебя все соки и попробуй доживи до пенсии диваный эксперт
Там и крыши нет; может, и стены не все 4, а воду из речки ведрами таскают; босые, без перчаток и спецобуви; людей не берегут: этого ресурса в Индии много :) Ужас!
Working with molten metal and wearing flip-flops is ridiculously dangerous and irresponsible, what's unbelievable is the total lack of safety for those people.
Had video cameras been around hundreds of years ago they may have recorded something like this. Maybe with huge bellows instead of electric air blowers, but apart from that nothing has really changed.
Flip Flops for footwear in a metal casting facility... It's even crazier to know that right next store to that facility is a Cobbler making the worlds strongest shoe. That is really Wow Things...
Looking at these videos i'm wondering how the organization structure looks like... like one of these guys in pyjamas and flipflops is possibly the owner of the whole thing, people walk in 'hey can i help' and get response 'yea sure ask bob over there how thing work', then they start helping, at the end of the day they get some coins. I guess asking for anything except the money at the end of the day will be asked too much...
Look at how well laid out their system is. They just use the floor instead of flasks. Central furnace - someone in that shop is or was very organized. Amazing work! I think, after watching many of these videos, we may have lost something in the west. We've gotten fat and lazy. We did all the things these men are doing to feed our families. Up until some time in the 60's-70's. I see men building and fixing machines. Little is thrown away - it's all used up then made into new things. The recycling system in these countries work better than ours. We collect our recycling, pat each other on the backs and then bury the results. Because it costs less to use new materials. I see comments about flip flops and repairs that are obviously 'done wrong' and dirt floors etc. Smug comments about how much better we would do all the things and how far we've come compared to these men. That the west is 'better'. It's not better. It's just easier in the west because we waste everything. Our recycling guy asked us not to put plate glass in the blue box because they have to sort it out and send it to landfill. And yeah, it's obvious some safety glasses and a pair of work boots could go a long way. And a bucket to catch used solvents and oil - that stuff is good fuel for the foundries. And I know there are very poor people there as well who have to work their asses off to put rice on the table. I figure we need something between the wests system and theirs.
lmfao, a "western" (as you say) production line could produce hundreds of these to better tolerances AND with less waste in the time it takes him to get set up. Perseverance in the face of deprivation is admirable, but to romanticize this man's skilled and undervalued labor is also to insult him. I guarantee he would trade his low-paying job for better tools and material and never look back.
@@imogen1 " I figure we need something between the wests system and theirs." My terrible spelling. Sorry. Yup, you're right. Pretty much any guy working in this video would jump at a clean, safer, and better job. Duh. I laud their work with what they have, I don't envy them. It's not romantic, how hard these men have to work. I do feel the western work ethic is in the crapper. Try and hire a field hand to help with the hay. You need to hire from Mexico. These men deserve respect for doing a crap job to feed their kids. And you literally just: "Smug comments about how much better we would do all the things and how far we've come compared to these men..." I do hope you're trying to troll. You're quite bad at it. Otherwise, you're just obtuse. The only insult here is yours - to these men and me. Well done, two birds with one stone. Go have a glass of sherry, perhaps put your feet up. You look tired.
Trabalhei com fundição e nosso calçado era tamanco de madeira , o mais apropriado . calçado de borracha é inflamável devido os respingos de produtos derretido . E vejo esse homem trabalhando descalço ! Meu Deus , o que quê é isso ? INADIMISSÍVEL !