I've watched this video a couple of times and the more I watch the more I think western manufacturing could learn from it. The amount of recycled materials used would embarrass the greenest OEM. The design whilst not ground breaking, will outlive ANY modern day transformer I could buy off the shelf. Good stuff my man... Good stuff.
That and i'm pretty sure that this guy has no actual training that deals with these things but the way he wound the wires tells me he's learnt it from someone rather than an official course as it were and those courses can get REALLY complicated lol.
Dunno how you can say that. Cotton covered aluminum wire and cheap iron cores were abandoned everywhere else about 80 years ago and with good reason, they did not last long. Modern transformers are very reliable due to better wire, better insulation, and better core materials.
Environmentalists would shut you down and let you starve... then watch your old videos and say how talented you are. Liberals are the worst people on planet earth.
На мой взгляд монтаж не по мне. Алюминий , контакты алюм и меди без лужения, греться будет быстро, проходные болты через изолятор затяжка?! Так не делается.
@@tzant I'd love to but he's too busy enriching himself, meddling in other countries politics, assassinating perceived enemies on foreign soil, fondling little boys, and making sure he'll rule over you until the day he dies. Maybe next time!
He learned those skills in a factory somewhere before setting up his own shop. This isn’t a backyard tinkerer who just stumbled on how to build a welder.
@@CalmoOmlac The speed, precision of each move, and the movement from station to station gives it away in my opinion. I used to work for my father in a shop rebuilding alternators.
@@CalmoOmlac An assembly line style process is the same whether it's a mom and pop alternator shop or the BMW assembly line. How you got so stuck on the single word "factory" is unknown to me.
Wiring in houses in the usa used to be paper/impregnated cloth wrapped as well. It's called knob and tube wiring. It only really is a problem after 50-60 years when the coating gets brittle and cracks. Other than that, it works just fine.
@@ryan-uu9lj my house initially had knob and tube wiring. Very dangerous to have in a home nowadays. I had to get my entire house rewired in order to pass inspection.
@@BT_Spanky Yeah, it gets what are called point contact shorts. I rebuilt an old row house made college housing in pittsburgh after a fire gutted 2 floors. Not saying it isn't dangerous, it just doesn't really become an issue until the tar and lacquer become too old.
Wow, I love the use of old wrapping etc wouldn't surprise me if he made the laminations the previous day either. The only questionable guy was the tester, bare mains connections and no googles
When you are thrown into the pits and need to make a living the end result is this ! Amazing skills these people have.. If this young man went to engineering school he would teach the teacher no doubt !
@@619guy202 Hence the reason I said 'if'.. We have so many young people around the World so highly skilled and will never get a chance to progress like we have. I pray for everyone to be successful, Ameen.
As an electrical & electronics engineer I must admit I have great respect for the simplicity of this & they way they use the most crude methods, materials & tools to make this.
Whenever someone moans and complains as to why our manifacturing jobs leave for overseas countries I will show them this.....we USED to be like this young man, we used to crank out QUALITY goods at bottom prices, somewhere along the line buying "Made in USA" now means paying more than triple, hiring an American is expensive, we are overregulated, we are strangling ourselves, meanwhile, this Gentleman just made a friggin welder by himself!! Love and respect for this Man.
@@NO-cb7po that's what you guys think. They are not slaves. They are craftsmen. Mostly it's from father to son handed over small business and they make decent living to survive. I was one of them and now i am in your so called first world owning my business but I enjoyed my every moment working along side with my father in that small workshop.
Had no idea what tf he was building until the last 1.5 minutes and no I didn't want to skip through it watched the whole video. We all should note this was shop/homemade not manufactured at some plant! Very creative!
@@Lavletyoung Уважаемый,я бы посмотрел бы ,как такую же работу и с такими материалами сделали бы Вы...Увы но в странах третьего мира ,на мой взгляд не очень то разгонишся на материалах.. Думаю что и такие простые вещи выполняют свою задачу на ура.При случае можно починить на коленке,или изготовить новую.. Так что как посмотреть на этот вопрос. А вот они от недостатка денег делают вполне себе годные вещи..
@@xedos68ful я делал тоже самое лет эдак в 15, ничего тут вообще такого нет. А потом и работал в промышленности связанной именно со сваркой. С чего вдруг меня должно волновать есть там какие-то материалы или нет? Там требуются нормальные электроизоляционные материалы? Требуются. И это не обсуждается.
If you did one thing and only one thing your whole working life, you would probably be pretty good at it to. The skills that these guys have just amazed me...totally!
I don't really love what they are doing, but it is great to see it being documented. All of these back alley shops have techniques that may be useful someday.
@@jameserkel4238 think you're thinking of the "gunsmiths" in the Khyber Pass region, probably the only place in the world that you can get a gun with cast iron parts... Remember, Pakistanis make guns, Indians make welder/cooker combos
In America they tax the crap out of you and regulate you until your business is dead. I'm hoping this fellow doesn't have those problems. Ingenuity and hard work deserve to be rewarded. 👍
I like that they bring in a certified electrician to connect the final bit of wiring and plug. Can't have just anybody (even Malik) do that, that's dangerous!
@@Zari_Ivanov transformer welders are fine of all you do is weld mild steel but if you need to weld aluminum, stainless, mild steel in all positions and control arc strength wave pattern and so on then you need an inverter. In simple terms transformer welders are for novices.
@@rodgers7164 this makes sense. In other words all talk and no practical application... it's easy to memorize things but to use the knowledge to actually do something unique takes crazy intelligence
Это потому,что ты не сталкивался с ремонтом трансформаторов,электродвигателей. Практически те же технологии ,даже оправки для намоток секций электродвигателей как на заводе РЭТО. Помещение не меньше,чем участок в старом месте в Рузе,М.О. Коренное отличие этих ребят от наших в 80х- они трезвые. Когда участок перевели в цивильное помещение,поменялось всё руководство и большая часть коллектива,то сей недостаток сам собой рассосался. Работают,ремонтируют и двигатели и трансформаторы силовые.
Да, кустарное производство. Но... если в мире заводы встанут, то эти ребята будут на вес золота. Как посмотрю такие видео, они там на коленках делают все, что угодно. Молодцы!
а ты никчемный ?? в россии 100 лет назад телевизоры механические и радиоприемники собирали дома на коленке .. трансформатор сделать да по шаблону ничего сложного нет . .. кому только он нужен кроме них самих . ..
And this even creates a good business of making COOL looking welding plant for buyers , since today many are buying customises products ! Regards from India!
Сварочные аппараты были не в каждом доме его бавло не найдёшь и они были не такие а круглые и что то дорогие я отдавал рублей 150 наверно но ево не всякий сделает может на заводе кто то делал и продавали нелегально