I love this. Good to see the whole process in the most manual way possible. Much respect to these workers who work so hard to provide for their families! Would like to see what happens to the wire once it reaches the warehouse
Very interesting. Same rolling process you see in vintage movies from western Europe. Wouldn't be surprised if the rolling stands started out in the west. These videos are more accurate if you watch them at .75x speed.
WTF moments; 1. Clay-and-water-soaked trousers dangling over the machinery as part of the safety/production processes. 2. The guy lighting a cigarette off the coils as they are being stacked.
That man really just lit his smoke with the steel lmao right before that dude just casually walked up and chugged down a bunch of water from that hose... and my parents always said dont drink from the hose behind the house
@@krzyska6936 Bonsoir, oui, je comprends tout à fait (je ne suis pas en France mais en Suisse) mais ça fait vraiment bizarre de voir ces travailleurs travailler ainsi. Mais je comprends tout à fait votre situation. Merci de votre réponse. Bonne soirée à vous.
@@covets65 Wiesz, oglądając na Youbute filmy z tego co robią, w pewnym sensie zachwycamy się ich zdolnościami ale to w jakich warunkach i w czym pracują wynika z biedy. W Europie też tak to wyglądało ale maksymalnie może do lat 60tych, w okresie odbudowy po wojnie.
There is nothing wrong with hard work. your grandfathers worked exactly like this so you can have a comfortable life. . Every people or country has the right to work their way up. Or do you want to give them government checks and make them useless drug addicts.
Raw material - most probably a hull of an old ship. Watch documentaries about shipbreakers in Bangladesh. Where the wire is used? In many of the everyday products they manufacture. That is why the price is so low and quality so inconsistent.
😮😮😮😮 They have no time to have a look at the smartphone! They have to be extremely vigilant to avoid being injured 😵😵😵 Let's hope that their working conditions improve 👍👍
Now c’mon think about what you’re trying to say about our learned friends in Pakistan. It’s only the dirt that is giving the clothing some structural integrity! My goodness man if the clothing was washed,, there’d probably be nothing leftover from each piece of clothing. But it’s ok as a lot of clothing is manufactured in Pakistan 🇵🇰, to which when we have done with it, we then sell it back cheaply by the container load.
So much inefficiency. One forklift could replace four workers. They are wasting large amounts of water with that one-pass cooling system. They should just import cheap steel from China.