Extreme skill ! If you had the means of Western countries, you would do even better. But it is the genius of your workers that is the best. I wish you good health and great... great financial health. Good luck. (Algerian)
at 17 minutes no keyway, then they spin it at 18 minutes and magically there what looks to be four or more 4" x 20" keyways. Would have like to see how that was done....
How could you control the Vibrations for such a long heavy shaft, I assume your Lathe is a very good Lathe for a heavy duty work. Good Work, I keep watching & enjoying your good skill.
Guys you are doing a good job with limited amount of resources; I guess the life must be cheap in Pakistan as safety gear is non existent - machinist working without safety glasses!!!!!!!!! Loose your eye and the owner gets a new worker - cheap.
At least these guys look like they take care of their equipment, most of the places are outdoors in the dirt and the equipment isn't taken care of very well.
You’re being a little sarcastic here methinks!? Right tho! Amazing is an overstatement, but they do well when you consider the infrastructure and open air conditions! Cheers
Một trục kim loại to lớn có chất liệu thép rất cao, để tiện được thành sản phẩm giá trị cao, thật sự là một thách thức trí tuệ,qua biểu tượng nâng niêu của các bạn cuối cùng bóng sáng,cho thấy các bạn phân kim rất giỏi và rất thông minh, đó mới là trí tuệ ánh sáng, cảm ơn video chia sẻ của bạn rất hay và ý nghĩa, chúc các bạn sức khỏe hạnh phúc thành công.
I often would stack 1 inch carbide cutters when ruffing out pieces like these and spend the day on a grain shovel shoveling chips. Ahh, the good old days eh.
I hope people watching this will understand the cost of the steel material alone that the shop owner has invested in this part. Plus many hours of labor to have it machined correctly. It only take one wrong cut by the machinist to make this into a huge piece of scrap metal. Then the shop owner has to replace the steel and start machine work over again. If this was a 15 ton part to start with in the US thats around $30k or more worth of steel. More if its an alloy. This looked like mild steel forging.
yeah, it doesnt look like the chain is large enough to carry such an immensely heavy object...it also depends on the grade the chain has, if it is grade 100 or 120 , of course it will hold much heavier objects than a ordinary grade 80 chain, but if i had to guess, the Indians dont get to use such high grade chains due to the cost, a grade 120 chain, is just much much more expensive than 80 grade....to be able to lift a 15 ton object, i think at least the chain dia should be more than 16mm , preferable 20mm or more...its hard to tell wht diam., chain theyre using here....
@@GamingStarslegends01 Do you know if there is a video that shows from the mining of the stones (raw material) to the finished product? It would be interesting to see from stone to steel (or whatever metal) product.
In this case and that goes for many steel products in Pakistan, it's mostly salvaged parts from oceangoing freighters/ cruiseschips etc. It says in the title something about a shaft from a ship so that would be the propellorshaft. So then you would have to back to the late '70's or the '80's to first see the ore being mined for this shaft, then being forged and hammered in (probably) a European shipyard and conclusively turned on an even bigger lathe then this😅. Then after 30/40 years sailing across the world the ship's a write off; gets beached on the Pakistani beach and scrapped. And there you have your shaft here in this movie...