I used to run one of those machines. When the molten aluminum is shot into to the mold, it leaves a hockey puck shaped piece called a biscuit. The worker has to make sure that piece is removed each time before ladling in 1240° aluminum. If not, the ramrod squeezes molten aluminum until it sprays out the side of the mold onto the worker, which is what occurred here. He probably sustained 2nd degree burns. I’ve seen it happen a few times.
Why wasn't the hydraulic old depressed before the die open stage, why wasn't the machine filled with water glycol oil to prevent fires, how was the die allowed to move while the guard door was open, why weren't the hydraulic hoses periodically checked before each production runs for wear, seems to me you asked for this to happen. Too many diecasting companies have very poor maintenance teams and lazy management.
@@hpdcandcnc1718 मैं एचपीडीसी ऑपरेटर हूं सर आईएमटी मानेसर गुड़गांव में अभी जॉब कर रहा हूं ask automotive प्राइवेट लिमिटेड कंपनी में आप कहां से हो क्या पेमेंट लगा रहे हो ऑपरेटर की
All these paid employees leaving their stations. 😅 Hydraulic fluid is corrosive. Dude will have some skin issues. Moisture frim skin and fluid can turn corrosive.