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Power: Constructing a Car Engine (1930-1939) | British Pathé 

British Pathé
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In this archive demo video from Morris Motors, we see the process of constructing an engine for a car and the different forms of power that allows it to happen.
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(FILM ID:2761.02)
Title reads: "Power" Photographed and Produced by Morris Motors Cine Dept at Cowley.
A fairly technical discussion of how engine parts for Morris cars are made.
VS of water rushing over rocks in stream. Voiceover talks about harnessing power to mans' industry. VS of windmill turning. VS of water mill in action. VS of hydroelectric power stations and dams.
MS of an engine - cut away shots show the different parts of the engine working.
VS of molten metal being poured in a mould. Mechanical hammers are used to shape red hot metal into parts for the engine. VS of ingots of metal pressed between rollers. A crankshaft is cleaned of excess metal. More shots as the crank is finished. VS of gear parts are ground on a lathe. Teeth of the gears are cut in different ways. They are then hardened and ground down. Various shots of connecting rods being made. They are started as rough forged items and then finished by various cutting processes. Lots of drilling and cleaning with duplicate jigs. It is then bored to size for the crankshaft bearing.
VS of metal being cast in a mould. Engine cylinder blocks are cast and drilled. Bearings are bored and reamed. VS of cylinders being bored and rolled. VS of dies for casting of piston heads. The pistons are then cleaned and bored. Multiple drills are used to make holes. A shaving lathe then cuts the piston to shape using a diamond cutting edge. Various parts are rough turned from steel rods using automatic lathes. The parts are then cleaned and polished. VS of screws being made.
VS of Morris motors machine shops where engines are being assembled for cars, vans etc. Shots of an engine being assembled by technicians. VS of engine being tested on a test bed.
VS of Morris car being driven through the countryside.
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12 апр 2014

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Комментарии : 681   
@SlwRpr
@SlwRpr Месяц назад
I was a welder before beginning my machining career in 1983 retired in 2021. Seeing this machining work from 50 years before i started is amazingly similar and to some extent the exact same. Enjoyed the video.
@glenatkinson4066
@glenatkinson4066 6 лет назад
A tribute to the British skill and workmanship of the past. Thank you.
@mantatrip9319
@mantatrip9319 2 года назад
Many countries have it also. I guess you are from Britain.
@pedrolg
@pedrolg 2 года назад
Well this is Morris Motors and it is a British company. Which it doesn't mean they were the pinnacle of the industry but, British it is.
@nobodynoone2500
@nobodynoone2500 2 года назад
During the time, the Brits were among the best on the world. Only the German, American, and French industries could possibly justify a equal or superior claim. Few if any other countries had the industrial scale and engineering advancement then. While Japan, Sweden and a few others had auto factories, they were not yet as advanced as they would be later in history. Remember, this is the 1930's, not post WW2.
@davemis40
@davemis40 Год назад
@@mantatrip9319 Specifically.. this is 1930’s British industry .. what’s your point ?
@altaccaltacc7652
@altaccaltacc7652 Год назад
this is actually mass production. usually skill and workmanship uses hand to assemble it.
@TheRogueX
@TheRogueX 3 года назад
Oh, something to remember: We see a lot of automated machines in this video, that once started, do their own thing. *There were no computers in the 1930s.* All of this was done via analog timing systems. Think of all the gears and such you see in an old clock, only on a much larger scale.
@klaasj7808
@klaasj7808 3 года назад
computer is overrated crap
@daithiocinnsealach3173
@daithiocinnsealach3173 3 года назад
And microprocessors are that on a much smaller scale. Electrical on/off switches. And that's pretty much what we are too.
@contambrah
@contambrah 3 года назад
@@klaasj7808 lmao are you watching this on your analog clock?
@klaasj7808
@klaasj7808 3 года назад
@@contambrah on my wifes vibrator.
@everytoolashammer9427
@everytoolashammer9427 3 года назад
@@klaasj7808 I'm sure she needs one
@laurieharper1526
@laurieharper1526 5 лет назад
Wonderful film and I love the commentary by Mr Cholmondeley-Warner.
@BushGold
@BushGold 4 года назад
Yes Grayson.Lol.
@rsc9520
@rsc9520 3 года назад
The BEST narrator!!
@hubertbanas3333
@hubertbanas3333 3 года назад
This video should be introduced to all mechanical engineering students in early years.
@Twikkilol
@Twikkilol 4 года назад
I'm always amazed when I see quality machinery from the 1930's and up.
@MitchellCH
@MitchellCH 3 года назад
Twikkilol Brown and Sharpe were making and using single spindle automatic screw machines around 1850. Edit: such as the machine at 14:58
@guitarpro248
@guitarpro248 3 года назад
Back when things were made it last! People also forget that there were workers who's sole job was to keep the machinery up and running! They were fittingly called machinists, a gear cracked, or a rod bent, the machinists came and saved the day!
@cartersdad615
@cartersdad615 3 года назад
I believe thats the era 30's-70's when the finest machinery was made! And i do believe that is factual! Alot of blacksmiths only want/use "old machinery" because it lasts and works smoother with less down time VS waiting for a china made pc boards or a fancy magnetic switch etc...(you get the idea lol)
@thejunkyardman2402
@thejunkyardman2402 3 года назад
Stil 10 to 19 years to go
@kierona9212
@kierona9212 3 года назад
@@MitchellCH 1848 the micrometer is made
@bluegtturbo
@bluegtturbo 5 лет назад
I watch this in awe! What great men we had to design such wonderful machines 100 years ago! The diamond finishing at 12.15 is amazing! I could watch this all day without tiring...
@ginskimpivot753
@ginskimpivot753 3 года назад
Pretty incredible. At some point you can imagine a conversation taking place along the lines of... _'We need to design a machine that makes the parts for the machine that makes the parts for the machine that makes the parts for the machine that makes the parts of the engine.'_
@seeriktus
@seeriktus 2 месяца назад
Some argue that the lathe is humanity's most important invention
@jdmjesus6103
@jdmjesus6103 21 день назад
Clipspring's channel in a nutshell.
@glenquagmire4232
@glenquagmire4232 3 года назад
Imagine the trial and error back in the day there were no computers to simulate and assist...the engineering back there was pure genius.... Powerful imagination put into action♥️
@captainplan3t250
@captainplan3t250 2 года назад
Imagination or ALIENS
@nobodynoone2500
@nobodynoone2500 2 года назад
You overestimate what computers ca do. Much of it is still the same outside design and automation.
@hectorortega9131
@hectorortega9131 2 года назад
You are underestimating the Power of Math..
@smith-hot
@smith-hot 11 месяцев назад
O qualidade do aço não era tão preciso e variados, como hoje..! Era duro ou era mole o meio termo não existia.!!
@strietermarinesurvey1415
@strietermarinesurvey1415 5 лет назад
Great video! Think of the machinist who built them machines, that's a genius!
@mechellenoel2498
@mechellenoel2498 4 года назад
Yamaha motorcycle factory assembly line rd350
@adeh503
@adeh503 2 года назад
I wonder what machine's were used to make the machines that make the... and so on
@johncitizen306
@johncitizen306 Год назад
Those
@thiwankaambagaspitiya9264
@thiwankaambagaspitiya9264 5 лет назад
This program explain everything even a little kid can have a idea about the engine.. very precisely
@53kenner
@53kenner Месяц назад
I work at GM Powertrain Engineering World Headquarters in the shop that builds components for prototype engines. It's fascinating to see all these steps being performed by traditional rather than computer assisted machinery.
@jasonmorris2813
@jasonmorris2813 Год назад
Dry assembly of a new motor is wild. I guess the tolerance was a lot wider back then
@paulgilson2347
@paulgilson2347 2 года назад
I was a toolmaker for 15 years, now I'm an inspector and I love seeing these old machines. We still use some really old manual mills and lathes but the problem comes when you can't get parts for repair....I hate seeing them rust away before they're scrapped.
@eUK95
@eUK95 2 года назад
Would it be possible to use your toolmaking skills to make parts for these old machines?
@paulgilson2347
@paulgilson2347 2 года назад
@@eUK95 Yeah definitely but as it was, it wasn't viable...management made the decisions.
@annabellaandrewkingdon7972
@annabellaandrewkingdon7972 2 года назад
Sounds like the place I work. The factory has been there 90 years and some machines are from the 1930s.
@theTF2sniper
@theTF2sniper 2 года назад
@@annabellaandrewkingdon7972 Can you imagine a modern robot/machine running for 90 years? Me neither. The place i work at, the oldest machines still are the most reliable, and if there is a problem its a small fix 9/10.
@porkerthepig
@porkerthepig 2 года назад
Yes same here, where I used to work we had a mill from the early 40s, lovely solid machine. Till a rat chewed through the leather drive belt. Was cheaper for the company to buy billets and me to spend 2 days making new pulleys to suit vee belts plus adding a tensioner arm as they ordered belts to long lol. That company has long gone but I do hope that mill is still cutting metal somewhere
@spalkin
@spalkin 5 лет назад
I've never seen any modern program that goes into this much depth.
@xxxggthyf
@xxxggthyf 4 года назад
If this were a modern program there would be an announcer telling you what you were going to see, telling you what you were seeing and then telling you what you'd seen. Then they'd tell you what was coming up after the break and then they'd show the same thing. They'd easily stretch the 17 mins of this video out over six one hour episodes and throw in some TV jeopardy to sex it it up. "Can Bob change the tool in his lathe in time to get the pistons ready for the deadline? Stay tuned to find out after this word from our sponsors".
@blahblahblahblah2837
@blahblahblahblah2837 4 года назад
​@@xxxggthyf Infuriating right? If it was Australian TV, it'd be half an hour long, with the manufacturing processes acting as filler material (20% of the film) while we explore the hardships of poor ol' John as the Elizabeth manufacturing plant finally closed, his workplace for the past 30 years. We'd hear about how it's affected his family and how he worries for his kids. It'd bang on about the community and there'd be plenty of shots of John looking on into the sunset, across his pool; somberly watering the garden in front of his huge house, with new boat in the driveway. "What we're really doing it tough now, y'know? What we're losing is a way of life, the Australian way. Our community, y'know?"
@xxxggthyf
@xxxggthyf 4 года назад
@@blahblahblahblah2837 And something to so with sharks and some colour footage of Adolf Hitler :-D
@jjeshop
@jjeshop 4 года назад
You are sheltered. Just look around, there's plenty. Modern marvels, megastructures....
@xxxggthyf
@xxxggthyf 4 года назад
@@jjeshop No... They're terrible. Not the worst offenders by a long way but still pretty bad.
@LeftIsBest001
@LeftIsBest001 11 месяцев назад
What I love most is that Morris Motors had their own in house "Cine Dept" for making films!! ❤
@daveys
@daveys 2 года назад
I’m reading old engineering books from this era and just getting onto jig work and multi drilling operations. Really interesting and recommended to have a look if you get chance to buy old books. Many of these machines were specific to purpose and so would have been obsolete once the part changed. Some of the coatings we have for modern engines would have been considered magic when this film was made.
@4418CARLOU
@4418CARLOU Год назад
Lots of machine tools are SPMs (Special Purpose Machines)
@lawrence.porter
@lawrence.porter 2 года назад
The machines that make the engines are more intricate than the engines themselves.
@Ahoderasan
@Ahoderasan 2 года назад
It's amazing seeing these machines working and how messy were the production of these many parts.
@charlescrisp2814
@charlescrisp2814 9 лет назад
this is amazing thank you so much for sharing this with us
@musicfan6575
@musicfan6575 4 года назад
A well done explanation of Automotive Engineering.
@kuladeeluxe
@kuladeeluxe 5 лет назад
amazing how much thought work and maintenance went into the production process
@sorayaluiz4920
@sorayaluiz4920 8 лет назад
Gorgeous,thank you
@mikewalton5469
@mikewalton5469 6 лет назад
amazing video. the level of sophistication is mindblowing
@CatheLeiper
@CatheLeiper 4 года назад
Absolutely. Tracing the engineering and production of the various lathes, drill presses, etc. and their automation mechanics must be just as fascinating as seeing them at work in the factory. The staggering amount of machinery produced in the past 150 years or so is hard to believe--and considering how much of it was produced for military use and subsequently destroyed. Watching this film is like watching a camp fire: mesmerizing.
@JeepBoiFL
@JeepBoiFL 3 года назад
Would love a film of how the machines were made that do this work, they amaze me. How do you start from nothing and build a factory full of these one of a kind behemoths?
@Rk-ne3jr
@Rk-ne3jr 2 года назад
Now the technology has become so advanced that no one can imagine how it all started from starting, and if we/they know how, then won't believe it😂
@harrybriscoe7948
@harrybriscoe7948 2 года назад
This is hard to explain , You need a society capable of supporting industry .
@tootsitroll9785
@tootsitroll9785 2 года назад
Jesus it’s a lath !! That’s how ! Lmao machining tools to build. Geez
@catweasle5737
@catweasle5737 4 года назад
Incredible footage. Great post. Thank you.
@regsparkes6507
@regsparkes6507 5 лет назад
Wonderful film, brought up and shown here on video. Great idea, thanks!
@metalman4141
@metalman4141 4 года назад
Thank you Austin Motor Company.
@josephastier7421
@josephastier7421 5 лет назад
Those machine tools look like they could last hundreds of years.
@rxw5520
@rxw5520 4 года назад
Ironic, the British engines they made in the 30s lasted mere months 😅
@visionist7
@visionist7 4 года назад
@@rxw5520 why was that?
@xxxggthyf
@xxxggthyf 3 года назад
@@visionist7 I think that's a bit of hyperbole to be honest. An engine from that era would be expected to last at least 20,000 miles before a rebuild and survive several rebuilds. Given the low speeds and crappy roads of the day the engine, with a rebuild or two, would likely out-last the rest of the car and even getting to first rebuild time would be a minor achievement.
@rxw5520
@rxw5520 3 года назад
Yeah I was just poking fun at British engines. Truth be told they did not fall behind the standard set by other countries in durability until probably the 70s and the rise of Japanese automakers.
@rushymoto
@rushymoto 3 года назад
I started out on machines not unlike those when I was 20. I am 44 now.
@chasebh89
@chasebh89 5 лет назад
I could watch these videos all day... Absolutely beautiful
@davidforster8654
@davidforster8654 5 лет назад
Engineering at its best, extraordinary piece of film. Thanks for uploading.
@peter-coates
@peter-coates 3 года назад
@You are correct But why did you make a channel with that name just to be a smart ass
@HappyFlapps
@HappyFlapps 5 лет назад
Alright - I'm sold! The next car I buy will be from Morris Motors Ltd.
@frankgutschank4183
@frankgutschank4183 6 лет назад
Unglaublich was für fortschrittliche Maschinen schon damals zum Einsatz kamen. Manche Werkzeuge sehen heute noch genauso aus wie damals. Auch den Filmemachern ein Lob. Tolle detailreiche Aufnahmen. Good Job!!!
@frankgutschank4183
@frankgutschank4183 5 лет назад
Don't understant your answer.
@notonwo
@notonwo 4 года назад
Unbelievable what advanced machines were already used at that time. Some tools still look the same today. Also a praise to the filmmakers. Great detailed shots.
@26TptCoy
@26TptCoy 4 года назад
@@frankgutschank4183 he said Incredible what advanced machines were used back then. Some tools still look the same today as they did then. Praise also to the filmmakers. Great detailed pictures.
@jimsworthow531
@jimsworthow531 2 года назад
Amazing display of machining tools; thanks.
@tuoul481
@tuoul481 4 месяца назад
Incredible levels of dexerity & precision displayed in this video. Now, the machines do most of the work.
@SamEEE12
@SamEEE12 5 лет назад
Those mechanical screw cutting machines are amazing.
@kvarnerinfoTV
@kvarnerinfoTV 5 лет назад
Video quality is simply great!
@michaelzernie7092
@michaelzernie7092 5 лет назад
Wow. That was actually really cool to watch
@ProblemHelfer
@ProblemHelfer 5 лет назад
awesome video, thanks for this one!
@Sanychmann
@Sanychmann 2 года назад
I was surprised. The mechanical principles and kinematics of that old craft machines - is outstanding
@nusior
@nusior Год назад
Fascinating. I could watch this type of stuff all the time!
@gabrieljoson7478
@gabrieljoson7478 Год назад
I’m studying manufacturing processes in mechanical engineering. This is an amazement to see!
@jafaary2614
@jafaary2614 6 месяцев назад
i learn a lot more from this old school videos than from school and all the new videos . thanks for uploading this sir
@johnDukemaster
@johnDukemaster 6 лет назад
Marvelous film!
@tamar5261
@tamar5261 3 года назад
I love these videos, so advanced for the 30s And still the engines would leak oil and only be good for around 10k miles, I bet those guys names were Bert or Harry
@nobodynoone2500
@nobodynoone2500 2 года назад
Nobody misses babbitt bearings.
@haraldpettersen3649
@haraldpettersen3649 5 лет назад
Good video and audio, the good old machines and a kozy narrator. 👍
@alcoholisfreedrink
@alcoholisfreedrink 2 года назад
so good video quality. It is truly amazing.
@Itchyfeet4077
@Itchyfeet4077 5 лет назад
State of the art technology at the time but still being used to produce the Morris Marina 40 years later.
@geoben1810
@geoben1810 3 года назад
@Walter Dumbrowski Which is part of their problem. Making the same exact bike and not adapting to the times. Nice bikes, I had one. But others make a better bike for the money.
@keithhoughton4308
@keithhoughton4308 3 года назад
@@geoben1810 You can still buy a Morgan sportscar built in the same way since the 1930's and you will pay a premium and probably have to wait some time to get one. Horses for courses. I'm not a Harley fan since seeing one throw all it's oil and most of its crankcase into the gutter as it passed by me!
@marymoffatt2060
@marymoffatt2060 2 года назад
@@keithhoughton4308 Wasn't the old adage if a british bike ain't leaking theres no oil in it?
@drscopeify
@drscopeify 2 года назад
@@keithhoughton4308 The thing is that so many owners of Harley modify their ride even the engine that is why they like the design it is easy to change things up.
@derekblake9385
@derekblake9385 5 лет назад
Incredible for the era.
@tinkeringinthailand8147
@tinkeringinthailand8147 3 года назад
I worked in engineering for 2 years in 1981, I was a grinder. I then became a carpenter for 10 years. Then I worked in IT as a computer analyst programmer for 20 years. I am now a masters degree teacher of English in Thailand :) Life can be fun and diverse :)
@kulturfreund6631
@kulturfreund6631 3 года назад
Funny, in anglo-saxon countries craftsmen are called engineers. In Germany only if you have a college/university degree you’re entitled to be called >Ingenieur
@MrShobar
@MrShobar 3 года назад
@@kulturfreund6631 Here in America, too. It is a licensed profession.
@kulturfreund6631
@kulturfreund6631 3 года назад
@@MrShobar Is it? I have the impression every technician in the US is called engineer.
@MrShobar
@MrShobar 3 года назад
@@kulturfreund6631 Any company engaged in engineering must have a license, and a registered professional engineer having a license. Individuals (such as myself) are licensed (by the state) as individuals.
@kulturfreund6631
@kulturfreund6631 3 года назад
@@MrShobar Ok, do you mean by "license" "college degree"?
@montyzumazoom1337
@montyzumazoom1337 2 года назад
14.58 The automating machine making the screw is a cam driven type similar to CVA machines. Machines very similar to this were in use up until the mid 1980's. the company I worked for had about 20 all making small items. CVA were based in Brighton and Hove in Sussex.
@opticschief
@opticschief 5 лет назад
Outstanding !
@jeffyrubio2224
@jeffyrubio2224 5 лет назад
Amazing people back then
@sambrewer2306
@sambrewer2306 5 лет назад
This video is perfect. There are a few others. The 1960 ones
@dasteelerfan1
@dasteelerfan1 5 лет назад
That was awesome and quite fun to watch thanks
@ianrudd9007
@ianrudd9007 Год назад
This is all very impressive, as well as the fact that almost none of the workers are wearing any form of safety gear.
@embahyutub4524
@embahyutub4524 3 года назад
How they build the tool machine. I'm always curious
@poison03218241
@poison03218241 2 года назад
machine tools are producted more precision machine tools...
@ernestbidon5027
@ernestbidon5027 2 года назад
well, the parts a machine tool makes are allways somewhat less acurate than the machine itself. So to make the machine that makes the machine, some things are done by hand (scraping) even today. Also a lot of ingenuity by the engineers.
@hooniganshooter1289
@hooniganshooter1289 4 года назад
Great work 👏
@Kerveros1904
@Kerveros1904 2 года назад
The documentaries are unbelievable! Very technical! Where are such documentaries nowadays ? :(
@AB12896
@AB12896 4 года назад
Simply amazing
@twisterwiper
@twisterwiper 2 года назад
The precision of those machines is really impressive considering how long ago this is.
@kibetbera9194
@kibetbera9194 5 лет назад
Thank you
@screwsnutsandbolts
@screwsnutsandbolts 2 года назад
Awesome video ! 👍
@hellheaven7662
@hellheaven7662 2 года назад
its amazing. there was no cnc machinery but they produced very quality engines...
@pablomonterorodriguez2410
@pablomonterorodriguez2410 3 года назад
Instructivo. Artesania mecanica en estado puro. Aquello nos trajo los adelantos de hoy en día.
@deadfreightwest5956
@deadfreightwest5956 6 лет назад
12:32 - The original Mastercam!
@daan1748
@daan1748 5 лет назад
...but how was _that_ camshaft made?
@andyg3
@andyg3 2 года назад
wonderful British engineering!
@Jim-ie6uf
@Jim-ie6uf 5 лет назад
That was very interesting, see how much improvement now with robots and better machining.
@porkerthepig
@porkerthepig 3 года назад
There probably isn’t as much difference in overall component quality as compared with modern methods as you might think, the main advantage now is shorter set up times on machines and much reduced labour costs
@harrybriscoe7948
@harrybriscoe7948 2 года назад
@@porkerthepig the more operations you can do at one station improves quality . Every time you change fixtures you lose some precision .
@cervantex
@cervantex 5 лет назад
Excelente documental!! ✌
@octaviorm6
@octaviorm6 5 лет назад
Segunda. Guerra mundial
@wellylhakim3619
@wellylhakim3619 3 года назад
This is awesome
@dscott130
@dscott130 3 года назад
Amazing!
@wessmann
@wessmann 4 года назад
I love this
@cameriqueTV
@cameriqueTV 6 лет назад
I imagine that forge operator is stone deaf.
@Baard2000
@Baard2000 6 лет назад
cameriqueTV sometimes within a month complete deaf........
@Kalvinjj
@Kalvinjj 6 лет назад
That's the 2nd thing that came to my mind, the 1st one being "hell yeah 30s work safety!"
@Coltnz1
@Coltnz1 6 лет назад
Eh? What? Speak up!
@jayberry2716
@jayberry2716 6 лет назад
Pardon ?
@tommygunn63
@tommygunn63 6 лет назад
Eye protection. Nah.
@theusher2893
@theusher2893 Год назад
Human ingenuity astounds me. Somebody designed the engine, then someone designed the machines to make the engine, then someone designed the logistics needed to keep that manufacturing going. It's just amazing to me. And God bless those men in the factories, men in heavy canvas and cotton caps, wielding tongs and hauling coal and hammering and riveting and machining everything.
@jerga2002
@jerga2002 2 года назад
So much precision and not a single computer in sight
@jogmas12
@jogmas12 2 года назад
Well they still had shop drawings and those machines still had presets to reproduce the same part with exact measurements over and over again. Computers means that process is more easily done and much quicker
@mistermaster1945
@mistermaster1945 6 лет назад
no cnc machine, it's just amazing.
@emilychb6621
@emilychb6621 4 года назад
Well they just had non computerised mills.
@emilychb6621
@emilychb6621 4 года назад
Just NC mills. Those have existed since the 18th century in automatic looms. Just used punch cards.
@olo198111
@olo198111 4 года назад
Semi automated process
@websitesthatneedanem
@websitesthatneedanem Год назад
11:38 - Very impressive!
@todaywefly4370
@todaywefly4370 5 лет назад
All that effort and all you get is a Morris!
@mrrolandlawrence
@mrrolandlawrence 5 лет назад
these very tools lasted the war, post war with the morris minor even up to the 1970s & 80s when the morris ital was still using the basic minor floorpan & running gear.
@rationalmartian
@rationalmartian 5 лет назад
Didn't the Ital use the parts from the Marina? I also doubt it was these very tools. I seem to recall that Morris, or it could have been Austin, or even Austin Morris, sold quite a number to Japan, as Japan were rebuilding and trying to tool up in the fifties and early sixties. I'm sure Morris and Austin, also Ford and I think everyone else had moved away from Side valve onto Overhead valves during and just after the war. By the late Seventies and Eighties Overhead Cams were pretty well common.
@christopherpoucher483
@christopherpoucher483 2 года назад
I absolutely love watching educational black and white video
@trplpwr1038
@trplpwr1038 6 лет назад
Excellent
@user-bs2sk3qv1q
@user-bs2sk3qv1q 3 года назад
Аж не верится что в то время уже было такое производство супер
@user-su6bs5ko9h
@user-su6bs5ko9h 3 года назад
Сам в шоке
@user-mj3if4co9t
@user-mj3if4co9t 10 месяцев назад
Кто то позаботился, фильм для будущих поколений снял.
@manomyth11
@manomyth11 2 года назад
Excellent learning'
@smithraymond09029
@smithraymond09029 5 лет назад
It's insane that that blacksmith is operating that drop hammer without any eye protection. Crazy.
@porkerthepig
@porkerthepig 3 года назад
Was only a few 5 years ago my work brought in mandatory eyepro on the workshop floor
@ryanthomas2374
@ryanthomas2374 2 года назад
People weren't as stupid as you think back then. I bet he knew his job well
@hatbpto5180
@hatbpto5180 2 года назад
Very nice! 👍
@praveenkumarhota7570
@praveenkumarhota7570 3 года назад
Remarkable 🙏
@mrgrey9584
@mrgrey9584 3 года назад
Proper engineering
@kombikaramujaninja5426
@kombikaramujaninja5426 2 года назад
Magnífico 👏👏👏👏
@binyamdemissie9123
@binyamdemissie9123 2 года назад
Great people with great minds
@sumvs5992
@sumvs5992 3 года назад
I know this is like asking "what came first, the chicken or the egg?", but how in the hell did we figure out how to create these machines?
@tasmaniandevil7610
@tasmaniandevil7610 3 года назад
What was even more astounding was in 1890s, Rudolf Diesel. Invented diesel
@3949zxcvbnm
@3949zxcvbnm 3 года назад
When you go to sleep at night and dream
@killerdinamo08
@killerdinamo08 2 года назад
It's a long time ago we used rocks you know...
@harrybriscoe7948
@harrybriscoe7948 2 года назад
The steam engine was 1st made in the early 1700s. Meaning there was some level of precision machining in the 1600s.
@Abc-qk1xt
@Abc-qk1xt 2 года назад
@@harrybriscoe7948 then how those machines made..
@AmjadKhan-tr6qf
@AmjadKhan-tr6qf 3 года назад
Good job
@peterfenwick2540
@peterfenwick2540 5 лет назад
I was honestly surprised this was pre WW2.
@alexblackburn627
@alexblackburn627 3 года назад
Now you know what japan was so afraid of before ww2
@alexblackburn627
@alexblackburn627 3 года назад
@@aduantasyou’d have to be daft to not see or acknowledge the serious lopsided power balance that the USA held over Japan. USA could at the time produce on a large scale virtually anything needed, The USSR also was able to wager their own production against the axis as well. Germany had a great industrial strength but was very costly and ultimately unsustainable. The hands of the many working men and women of the allied countries supplied the war with a driving force that was superior from the beginning.
@tasmaniandevil7610
@tasmaniandevil7610 3 года назад
With high taxes and government control our great steel mills closed in bidens first 3 years
@ImNotADeeJay
@ImNotADeeJay 6 лет назад
Very good image quality to be so old
@Kalvinjj
@Kalvinjj 6 лет назад
That's film's particle resolution for you! When you think about it, even very old movies can get BD releases nowadays because of that.
@5roundsrapid263
@5roundsrapid263 6 лет назад
35mm film was HD before HD existed!
@malfattio2894
@malfattio2894 5 лет назад
Even super 8 film can be scanned in HD
@5roundsrapid263
@5roundsrapid263 5 лет назад
Malfattio definitely, but it will be grainy. 16mm is roughly 1080p, 35mm roughly 4-5k.
@stephanesonneville
@stephanesonneville 5 лет назад
35mm film is like 4K resolution. Unfortunately it's only 480p here on youtube.
@JungleYT
@JungleYT 4 года назад
Fascinating...
@dont.accept.the.hoover
@dont.accept.the.hoover 3 месяца назад
the morris 1300 A45 engine was used all the way to 1984. the last car was the morris ital in 1984
@apolo917
@apolo917 3 года назад
Amazing
@expchannel4389
@expchannel4389 2 года назад
Memories racing 😍
@marblackout
@marblackout 2 года назад
Fascinant
@douro20
@douro20 2 года назад
I don't think they open die forge crankshafts anymore, but in the wider scheme of things not a lot has really changed in the production of forged and stamped components. Machining of parts is where a lot has changed. Gear production really hasn't changed much, except that companies who make gears now are increasingly milling large gears rather than using gear generating machines for rough processing as it is a much faster process.
@user-bh6ey1ke4n
@user-bh6ey1ke4n 5 лет назад
Astonishing level of automation.
@mrrolandlawrence
@mrrolandlawrence 5 лет назад
not really. the uk at that time lagged significantly behind the usa.
@LCMNUNES1962
@LCMNUNES1962 Год назад
ÓTIMO DOCUMENTÁRIO 👍👍 🇧🇷
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