Thanks, such a lot of work to make this everyday product. Plenty of manual tasks, I note the presses have two handed operating buttons for safety, very good. All in all looks a very clean well organised production process and about as much automation as is sensibly possible.
The video and music is so smoothing especially after a stressful day. These products are for JDM and I covet them here in USA. Whenever I visit this beautiful country I bring back as many cookware like this back. In fact, I even entertain shipping a lot of them back in a shipping container.
Such a contrast to the horrible conditions and quality of the pakistan manufacturing videos. Sure a lot of hand work and attention to detail shown here.
My first thought was: "Why are they so slow? Why isn't a lot more of this automated?". Still, its great to see many human hands go into the manufacturing process.
Wire mesh is not as predictable as sheet. The really labour intensive part of picking out strands from the trimmed edge would require one of the most advanced process machines available. Other stages could be more automated at the cost of more complex machinery. The spot weld could be done on the forming machine, but adding a weld stage to that would more than double the complexity.
You’ll pay twice the price as a cheaply made one with plastic holding it together. But, it will last a quarter the time, or less. And it will irritate you much, much less. It’s nice that you can still buy stuff that is mass produced, but decent quality.
You produce the best factory videos on RU-vid. Good combination of close up and wide shots, enough time showing each step so we can really see the process.
The process is much more manual than I would have expected. I sort of felt sorry for that one man who was either tall or low counter but he had to bend over quite a bit to do his work. I bet his back aches by end of day.
El colador se puede ver muy bello, gracias al trabajo de los operarios, lo único malo es las horas de pie que tienen que trabajar, observe un muchacho alto casi encorvado de pie, cuando perfectamente podría estar sentado, cuidando su columna, y su salud, cuando será el día que los empresarios piensen que la salud de las personas es primero que sus billeteras.
Oh my what a boring job but still I'll bet they are really nice products. The only thing I couldn't understand is what cut the excess mesh in the original shaping press, I couldn't see any blade but there must have been
Only thing I found interesting is the truck at the end. So glad I never had a job were you sit in the same place doing the same thing hour after hour, day after day, for years .
I'm so impressed by how the ring was made. I thought it was made by punching but it turns out a whole different process. That's very interesting. But does anyone know why the rings were made by the customized machines?
same reason they have 10 people making them baskets all together, if it was in US Europe, theres machines that prob are run by single person and pump out 10 times in a day, they put in extra in quality, basically every stage checked and controlled, checked for error or damage, while everyone else would rather pump out 10k a day and write off whatever hundreds defects there would be, vs jap approach that every is like hand made.
ну и молодцы ! хорошо устраивать инвалидов на такую работу . у китайских же сит, из-за тонкого металла обечайки недостаточно жёсткости , сетка вылезает из опрессовки эдак через год
That had to be for video purposes only! I'm talking about that last shot of the pallet being loaded on the truck! No way the boxes made it to the next destination still on that pallet! No shrink wrap, no taping the boxes together, nothing....just loose boxes on the pallet! I have a few years experience in shipping/receiving and trucking, both local and long haul....no way that pallet made it very far loose like that!
дуршлаг в виде дырявой кастрюли с ручкой,появился в то время,когда сетки не было и в помине. сейчас есть сетка,и какая разница,через что ты отцедишь воду,через дедовский дуршлаг или вот через такой?
This is what you called quality made in Japan. Even the delivery truck also have a quality loading bin with hydraulic doors.... Not like Indian factory where they all work on the dirty floor and dirty factory....
@@DNS.911 , у них это у кого?... пвх изоленту придумали американцы. Это теперь у американцев такие узенькие маленькие глаза? А х/б изоленту с клеем на основе сырой резины вообще в россии выдумали.
Așa o fabrică există și la Brașov Se numea I.M Brașov și era în cartierul Bartolomeu Făcea și cuști ptr păsări ornamentale Strecurători în mai multe mărimi.Exporta inclusiv în China,de Anglia Italia,Germania să nu mai vorbim,Pe atunci cele de ceai erau vândute cu prețul de aprox.5Dolari1/2de duzină iar în Ro costau 3,75 Lei!!!!! atât Laszlo din TimișoaraPS am uitat,în Timișoara erau fabricate de Coop Progresul,de asemenea se fabricau site cu văcălie de tablă cositorită,tabla fiind importată din Japonia!
Just large enough to hold the intestines and the heads of all of the workers who had to commit seppuku for dishonoring themselves for missing a day's quota. Japan : Good Products, Unreasonably Insane Work Ethics. Insane in the bad way, not the RU-vid click-bait insane.
Oddly, Japanese companies are regarded in North America for their safety and ergonomic work practices. However in this video I saw; people standing hunched over, people not wearing basic safety equipment like protective glasses, and they loaded a pallet with no visible straps or wrap to keep the product on the pallet for shipping. Just to name a few.
3:07 i watched a video once and the person asked why does he have 2 buttons to press is it not wired up right and it took me forever to explain that if he has to press 2 buttons at the same time his hand cannot be in the press area it is a safety thing SMH
Ако някой не е виждал как по цял свят се изразходват ресурсите на планетата може да види на клипчето. За преработката на отпадъците ще се загуби повече енергия отколкото за изработката на продукта.