Wow! I was worried at the beginning of the video but after seeing the whole process i am totally impressed by the final result. This is almost a work of art! Truely amazing!
This is a Great Idea and skills Lost . This man is doing a great service for ones, that don't have a lot of money for a new tire. The Side wall's of these big tires do not have the Pressure that the Tread has. I have a large Tractor Tire with a tear this size, and plan to stitch it with Kevlar, which is about the strongest twine available. I would like to find that Peal and Stick Rubber Roll, but so far haven't found it yet. I have a boot on order and Industrial cement for the inside. Old Tire Repair shop's used to vulcanize with rubber strips, and a heat cap that was lit, which heated the underside. This Man has developed a similar way to vulcanize, by using a crude, but effective under the tire heat. Thanks for good old people that still will work. I'am 80, but still can move about to get things done. Any comments will be apreaciated. Thanks
I have ordered from a supplier called Acme Rubber in the past when doing repairs on tires like this. You should email them and inquire as to whether they'd sell you a smaller quantity. They typically do wholesale, but if you ask nicely, they're willing to ship out smaller amounts for a small fee.
Very resourceful and very environmentally responsible to recover such a large badly damaged tire . Such knowledge and skills involved with basic equipment. Absolute Respect .
The name is poverty and lack of resources. They would love to buy a new tire, but kids from rich countries look at this and say "Oh, look how beautiful, the poor man with environmental responsibility..."
Respect & love from the USA friends! These guys are awesome! I love watching them turn scrap or damaged parts into refurbished & usable again! Amazing talents! 😇
Fantastic, these people are the true recycling experts. Nothing is beyond them. What they lack in modern machines they overcome with pure ingenuity and hard work.
@@deflash A lot less pollution than making a new one. His carbon footprint in work is next to nothing compared to an average Western worker who drives to work, has every appliance under the sun and eats take away. All while spending most evenings watching Netflix, farting and moaning about the state of the planet while the third world dig out and graft to make a pittance but are happy many with a smile.
After watching the man repair the sidewall on the tire, it all makes sense. The cleaning and prepping throughout the whole process as well as attention to detail on joining surfaces. The using of heat to vulcanize the patch is something I remember as a child.
Эта покрышка на выброс, дурачок. Она запросто может кого-нибудь убить при её разрыве. Дикари, вы скоро туалетную бумагу с презервативами стирать будете. Отсутствие у таких людей мозгов именно об этом и глворит
Then this sidewall explodes on the mountainside. The truck crashes and kills dozens of people. The savings from the consequences of such repairs will never be justified.
@@marshalkindo you honestly think they're doing this because they're trying to cut corners instead of ordering a new one off of tire rack or something? You sir / madam are a complete and utter tool... This is sheer necessity as there is no access / availability for a new tire thus making do with what is in hand. Pure craftsmanship & ingenuity... Furthermore I'd wager a new one of these tires is well over $1,000 if not five times that much. Which the driver would not be able to afford, again making do with what is available... And even brand new tires from reputable manufacturers have blowouts, tool...
@@marshalkinyou obviously have no clue as these types of repairs have been done for Decades and their failure rate is significantly lower than you think.
U guys don't get it they work the same amount as any other manufacturer labor or repair labor The difference is in the perceived and actual amount of resources in the area. In America our perceived resources are very high. But in real reality America's has just about the same resources as India or Pakistan or Germany or bulgaria
Я пака смотрела на видео, так жалко стало этого человека. И представила себя как он устаёт на работе. Ишо не дай Аллах дома жена варчун, сила тебя кормилец семьи и здоровье.
@@aristonia1991 For sure it's not a road used tire It might be use for a shovel truck working off road in a crusher area or building site or so. Even the shovel truck wiil not move in a long distance range in the site. It will stay working in the same area loading or unloading So it's not for road speeding purposes so I think it's safe They will keep on repairing it until it's all gone So even this repair does not stay for long it will not harm anyone when it get damaged
@@aristonia1991 with a little common sense? Perfectly safe. Just don't stand near the repaired tire when it's under load, then it if goes boom, no one gets hurt. So long as no one is hurt by a rapid decompression, it is simply an annoyance getting the earth mover/truck/whatever machinery uses this tire out and into the repair shop on just three wheels. A tire like this would be around $2500 USD, so even if refurbishing it means more safety precautions must be taken on the jobsite, it is still worth it to repair and use until it's worn out.
@@sparklesparklesparkle6318 sounds like a skill issue to me. Just be careful and you won't get hurt. Should tell your friend/uncle to stop drinking on the job.
❤❤❤❤ wow wow wow and wow the amount of work involved is incredible 😮 him teaching his kids is awesome 😊unbelievable beautiful work and for his age I'm old too and man my tires on my truck are pain to move around lol and they are smaller lol I'm impressed thanks for sharing his awesome skill. 😊
@@bssukru3934 Doesn’t really meter if they can’t afford a new one and the old one works for an additional week. Don’t judge them with western standards.
@@Wyomingchippewaits not a steel belted radial, its not even a steel belted. Its a bias ply tire that uses nylon cords. The only steel in the tire is where the bead is. Besides, even steel belted radials use nylon in the sidewall, many use it in the belts as well.
True,You guys are focused too much on materialistic things and fake news about country. You always think you guys are the best,because of the Dollar. God bless you guys.
Its great! What a skill! I highly appreciate the person who is doing his work so sincerely & precisely! Unbelievable! Whoever & wherever he is hats off to him. I love to see this kind of work. Wonderfull skill.
Like the rest of you guys , who watched this video....I have seen many amazing things on YT... But this one...I can truly say , is one of the most incredible I've had the pleasure of watching . Such a lot of labor...wonder how long this process actually takes ? And his attention to detail , on every step , is impressive .... Wow !
Probably takes 4 - 5 days. There seems to be a lot of material drying processes, which take up a lot of time. I also imagine this one project makes this guy about the same money a Mc Donald's cashier makes in one shift. Or probably even less. 😥
These badly damaged sidewalls would never be attempted here in America .... they'd toss it in the trash and buy new ... industrial or agricultural. Not these ppl tho. Some of these guys even finish detailing them out to make them more presentable. This is one if the most fascinating things I've found in YT.
I watch every one of these that I can. The pride of workmanship, skill and determination to do the job right is something many could learn from. Such craftsmanship is to be commended... Kudos to this man on his hard work ..... and I'm sure it IS demanding. Congratulations on work well done. P.S. Many questions, such as exactly what is the painted-on material, as well as the adhesive-backed material? Im assuming vulcanizing paint and vulcanizing rubber sheeting. It's all very interesting to watch being applied.
sir you and your grandson just recreated the strongest tyre on the loader it came off, the psi pressure will hold that in place alone, forget the adesieve, a great video, a great channel, if you make we will watch, 🤝👍💑.
@Blasphemous Sadly over their our ideas of age are not easily found. Too us that's clearly his grandpa, but to them alot of our parents look like they'd be our siblings. Their life is just so much harder that a 50year old man from the west vs from the middle east is just not comparable.
Is it? Instead of going to school to be a doctor, an engineer or a teacher (etc), those children are learning a manual task, which will pay next to nothing, in order to survive. Please, stop romanticizing poverty.
I don't think people who have never worked with a tire can appreciate how strong that man is the way he was moving that tire around. A tire that size probably ways 200-250lbs, easily.
I’m a tire tech. And I think he did a good job. I was more concerned about the safety of that. I know they have a thing where they will weeks tread to larger semi tires?? But this just comes off as dangerous to me.
Salute to Uncle and kid, usually with someone who has these roadside skills it's problematic that we Indo Pakis always bargain with them and never know the honest effort in making this scraping tire work for long and the confidence with you about the patch that gets repaired as newly updated as newest. Respect for work is truly appreciated by not having mentioned safety gear as usually they do.
I noticed the lack of anything that could protect feet fingers and eyes 👀. That was a worry especially when he used the spinning grinder and tiny chunks of rubber and materials went flying. Amazing job!👍
My salute to this man even the lovely child helped him in the best ever way possible. May the Almighty (S.W.T) give him the prosperity he deserves. Ya MALIKULMULK ham teri kis kis nemat ko jhutlaayien.
Perhaps it is father and son working together to repair the tire, the father being a true specialist in his field and the son eager to learn the craft. Nice video.
Great work. A very good repair with just hand tools. You are a champion. I think it was disappointing he didn't wipe it down with some water in the end.
Just give this the money he asks for this job.. do not bargain.. this is incredibly hard work and to do with such perfection.. I'd rather give him a little extra than what he asked just as an appreciation for the hardwork alone 🙌
My brother is NOT old, he's very active, mobile and clearly working. Skilled labor would have been a better title. I bet he would run circles around most teenagers #RESPECT Bless up from Brooklyn NY
Is this kind of repair really better than getting a new tire? Is this cost better because it’s cheaper to repair? And yes this is very tough work and he has excellent control.
Back here watching tbis onecagain, and this mans pride of workmanship is truly amazing. And the younger one, right there with him, learning tge skills of this awesome trade (more work if art), by taking something like a badly damaged tire (injured beyond use) and turning it back into useful condition. Work that many wouldn't even attempt, but this man performs as a professional. Many wouidnt find this at all interesting, but to me it's fascinating. Ive watched such videoes of the 'higher tech' operations, repairing badly injured tires from the huge front-end loaders used in mining and quarries, and their materials are of state of the art air tools, used for skiving etc, on up to ore-measured boots and patches .... in the end, this msn and others achieve the same outcome .... they use the same techniques, vulcanizing cements, cushion gum, stitching methods, but doing the repairs at a fraction of the cost.
Here's the deal everywhere he saved between 2 to 5 thousand dollars and will not get paid $300 at least they always want miracles but will not pay even a fraction of what it saves
craftsmanship and skills! the only problem here is the safety of the driver who will use that tire and the people might involve in the accident. Strong old man! GOD bless!
When a new tire this size can cost new in the thousands it is probably more expensive than the entire old tractor its going on. Trippy to see the caveman style vulcanization process but man this has got to be a life saver for some farmer or construction company in that part of the world. Cheers!