How Raw Steel Are Transformed Into Truck Wheel Stud || Hexagon Nut Manufacturing Process in Factory #productionprocessofnutbolt #hexagonnutmanufacturing #howboltaremadeinfactory
5:01 my favorite part where the guy throws the molten steel (without really looking) at the dude on the phone standing right beside the spinning fly wheel and open gearing.
10:21 "That smell? Oh that's Abdul - he tripped over the studs you tossed on ground and he's been buried under the swarf for weeks! Buckets? For parts collection? GTFOH!"
That is one mighty impressive pile of swarf behind that machine. Love the pothole he has worn in the floor from throwing them studs on the ground at 11:13 min.
It never ceases to amaze me how squalid these videos are. It’s like something out of a Charles Dickens novel. Most of them don’t even have a concrete floor. The words health and safety are unknown!
@@DiHandley That's a very recent notion though. Only once everything else is going smoothly, do you get things like worker safety and wellbeing. At least they're industrious.
What would be the cost of cleaning up after yourself, thtoe away the waiste and sell the scrap. I know what the gains are, productivity, quality, safety and agood reputation. It looks like these guys hate the good life they could have if they got things organised.
@@nicobogaard2315 For the owner labor is cheap, there is also a caste system in Pakistan (like in India), every caste has it's allocated type of job, these guys will never go any further in life and they live on the breadline (average wage about USD 6 to 10 per month), so what do they care to improve their working conditions and the owner for sure does not give a dam, all he is interested in is the profit.
I agree, Bernd; I'm a machinist in the USA. Not a CNC button pusher. A real machinist, 65 years old. I set up everything that gets worked on in my shop and do it all by the crank dials. My lathes and mill are much newer than what these guys have to work with. I can read my dials, I use modern metrology methods and all my machines are well oiled. Seeing what these guys do and what they have to work with, all I can say is Much Respect, fellow humans! Heck of a way to make a living. No safety. No boots. Dirt floors. Respect!
Wheel studs are grade 8 or higher high carbon steel. Can anyone guess what these are…nope! In the next video we have 800lbs of tire and rim rolling away from the truck destroying everything in way.
More likely the truck and its passengers careening off the side of the mountain plummeting screaming to their death, because one of these butter-soft studs popped its threads and all 4 tires and rims go their way plowing through other vehicles and their passengers traveling at breakneck speeds on the twisty mountain roads.🥺🥺🥺☠️☠️☠️
Most of the comments on here are from people who have no clue. Nice bit of forging and use of power hammer. Lathe work really good. Great surface finish got those depths of cut and feeds just right to get a mirror finish like that.
Dlaczego za każdym razem po obróbce rzuca się na ziemie?, NIE DAŁO BY SIĘ TEGO NP. DO KOSZA KŁAŚĆ. Odeszło by ciągłe zbieranie, deptanie, potykanie i obijanie się.
Man, they throw those White Hot pieces all the way across the room...and very accurately I say. I believe they would be better off if they didn't throw the parts on the floor and have to pick them up about 10 times, but do as you see fit. That dambuilding must have been built in the Middle Ages.
It is strange to see how they make things hard on themselves. I bet that there must be a factory that makes cheap protective equipment in Pakistan. Also, why thrown everything on the floor? Being poor is not an excuse to be dirty and messy.
Não sei se é na Índia, Paquistão ou outro país asiático, mas o trabalho, embora seja perigoso, é digno de admiração !!! Lá a garotada tem que trabalhar, por isso acho que não existe tanta FEBEM ( jail )como existe por aquí !!! Nos anos 60 trabalhei em condições semelhantes fazendo peças para tratores com 13 anos de idade e nada tenho a reclamar, fiz meu pequeno patrimônio e aprendi tudo que sei hoje e ainda faço com 73 ...
Única coisa que não gostei foi da falta de cuidado com a peça, depois da rosca pronta, joga se no chão, em cima de outra, assim danifica as roscas de uma e das outras!!! Do resto parabéns a Eles. 🇧🇷
I wonder how much these people especially the kids get paid? In a modern factory, this product would be made in half the time and take less steps. But I bet you it’s still cheaper to buy because it’s made in these cheap countries that have no safety standards.
4:38 A red hot steel stud lands 10mm close to coworker’s bum. 5:00 A dance of red hot studs flying around between the coworkers in a beautiful harmony starts. One of them is even talking on the phone while catching and throwing back red hot billets. 11:00 Possible child labour.
11:15 I wonder if he is going to lift that heavy pile using his legs...never mind. Back strain is the least of your worries around there. LOL. Such a different world. Very interesting to see. So hard to believe that these shops are profitable but I guess that says something about the cost of labor. ?
заебись пластилин стругают, закалка уровня лапши альденте, понятно нафига им их так много, после каждой протяжки такую резьбу будет вытягивать и каждый раз шпильки будут лететь в помойку, это еще опускаем тот факт, что они без покрытия, и будут гнить у них в мастерской на полу, жаль поцана, ходит по стружке улыбается в камеру, сколько десятков заусенец он вытащил при этом, и столько не вытащил яхз
What a bad job. Incredible the dirt of the place. The men work squatting or sitting on the floor, wearing filthy clothes. Mechanics repair engines and equipment by throwing the parts on the dirty floor, there's garbage everywhere ... Mechanics don't wear protective gear. What a tragedy: children working with dangerous chemicals and equipment.
I wonder when RU-vid will ban videos that normalise child labour? If the conditions were safer i wouldn't have an issue with it, they all need to eat, but having them in those conditions is wrong by most peoples standards. They are nothing but cheap, controllable and expendable labour.
I can appreciate what these folks do with limited resources but the final product is still of lesser quality! And there's no allowance shown for quality control. Rather that be for the final metal composition or the specs on the final product!
Also this is not a rich country and expectations are less than in the western world they plod along making and scrapping a living together. They seem fairly happy with their lot.
Li limano di precisone poi li buttano a terra uni sopra l’altro e la filettatura va a remengo, butta per terra poi un’altro raccoglie… come nelle strade in Italia , 🤷🏽
Great video but in this video I saw something so disgusting how can the owner of this company let little children work in that type of environment he should be held against child endangerment in child abuse this makes me sick and all these little children can do is smile at the camera. ✝️✝️✝️
They don't see it like that. Dad working with son. Son would much rather work with Dad than go to school. Used to be like this in Britain and the USA until fairly recently.
@@codprawn you are right, farming is the most dangerous profession. I am second generation, Dad was one of those adoptions. The stories I have heard, still it's a good life. 👍