Have to agree with Pramod. If the staff are trained properly on the lathes it would save time and make a better product. An assembly bench is essential to keep the components clean. Thank you for the video.
These guys will not work on benches. They prefer the floor for some reason? A British company had problems getting them to work on benches in India years ago !
Parts do not need to be interchangeable as the unit is so cheap you just replace the whole thing, also they are using a metal impeller, if their machining was not perfect the unit would explode, and they don't. Their eye will beat your CNC every day of the week.
@@Wonderfullskills start a Patrion Acount so people can donate to you. And sell some stuff you guys make maybe? I wish you would cast small Gears and sell them through youtube hopefully one day. A gear for an RC car sells for 30 40 dollars in America for a gear the size of a Quarter. Lots of ways to make better money. Stay safe .
The guy working the lathe is wearing a mask but no goggles. He will mess up his eyes with metal splinters but at least he won't get covid from the lathe. 🤣
They are eyeballing the location of the holes...that means the flange needs to be replaced might as well throw the whole pump because a chance of finding the flange which holes fit are quite low.
They have all the equipment to make machines and jigs or whatnot to make the production process multiple times faster and more accurate at their fingertips yet they simply do it the way it's been done for 50 or more years? Is that kind of accurate?
and end up like the west, with unskilled college graduates using computers to create a product that costs 20 times as much to produce and lasts quarter as long. lets go Brandon.
There is no way these dude can get an MRI. I bet they get real good at not touching their eyes and face. God the metal splinters and I'm sure they spill some serious blood every now and again. Hard af! Looks like they cast all their own parts and then lathe down the openings and drill and tap the fastener holes.