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The patent for first braiding machine (20:18) was granted in 1748 in Manchester, UK, at the beginning of the industrial revolution, almost 250 years ago! The technology hasn't changed all that much since.
20:20 The first braiding machine was patented in 1748 in Manchester, UK, at the start of the industrial revolution. Remarkably, its technology has seen little change in nearly 250 years.
It's an electromagnet that pulls nails from beach sand, not a hydraulic magnet...But thanks for sharing a lot of fascinating processes that most people don't get to see in their lives.
Thank you for the update, Trending Machine..!! Time flies fast when I watch Trending Machine's videos. 🤣 Amazing compilation video of awesome tools..!!
This (and similar) videos would be nice, if there was no music, no narration (except maybe an intro nad/or outro), and the original sound and noises from the machines. Like this, it's maybe a 1 out of 10.
Thank you for the effort making these videos. I like them very much! But if you ask me, you don't need to force yourself in commenting every single clip. This results in many statements that are simply inaccurate. The music alone would do it sufficiently.
These awsome machines are great, I just wish they would spend a little ,ore time on the segaments you don't hardly have time to really get a good look,
Pause; hit settings; change video speed for desired segment; change back to normal when desired segment is over, & watch fast through segments you care less about.
9:22 I'd never seen bread being made in a factory...and I still haven't thanks to being shown a single process of the bread being mechanically kneaded. What happened to the rest of the "instructional" video? 13:10 Hey! I guess the guy that used to do this while he slept lost his job! I'm not the only one who's seen that fella flip these whatchamacallits am I? 37:23 How could you ask us if the new kind of metal grinder has met its match with the sledgehammer? You don't show us it catching on the hammers or see any part of the grinding itself. And this is definitely not the only clip you folks do this to; we probably see less than half of the ultimate resolution of these items. I hate how you cut off the ends of the clips. I can't possibly be the only one who feels this way. I don't suppose there's any chance that you folks will stop the monotonous computer voice yakking throughout these videos. We know how we feel about what we're seeing. We don't need you to tell us *what* to feel...
25:20 reminds me of high school metal work, besides making smoking implements we found out the brass rod could be cut into perfect $2 coins. We cut it up then went to the local video game store and had fun. I can only imagine when they opened the cash box only to find cut brass rod. The teacher flipped his lid when he found out. He said the brass itself is worth more than $2 per cut. We also worked out you can take a heater electric starter and shock the video game machine into giving free credits.
Watching this makes me so glad that I was not born to the life of a factory worker. The monotony of having to stitch an endless line of reflection tape on vests, stacking pencils or holding feathers for a shuttlecock makes me thank God that I was able to get a secondary education. I feel so sorry for those who don't have access to higher learning. I became a nurse because I *could.* I hope that someday, things like education or economic status stop hindering people from this kind of a life. (I'm disabled now and on a cheap-azz fixed income so I can truly relate to the people who live in poverty, since I do too now; I just can't work anymore to improve my status)
Love these videos. The narration is just awful though. Between the mispronunciations of basic words and the nonsense descriptions its almost enough to justify watching it on mute, but every so often there is a morsel of information that I didn't know or a description of what is happening.
Buddy, come on now, you got so much wrong there. They're not cleaning garbage out of the water, they're harvesting seaweed, that's not a laser cutter, it's a plasma cutter and that's not wire they're wrapping it's plastic pipe.....you got all that wrong in the first couple minutes.
Es frustrante que no se puede ver el resultado final de algunos artículos o piezas. Definitivamente termino por poner silencio a los videos, porque es desesperante estar oyendo la voz.
The so-called cheese cutter is not a cheese cutter, but it’s actually cutting ice cream. Probably going to be in ice cream sandwiches and that is the center. Also asking for subscription and to push the like button prior to even seeing what you have to offer is pretty ignorant in my opinion. And yes, I’m entitled to one. Let us watch what you have first before asking for it because that is when anyone would push the like or subscribe button is depending on your content. It’s not starting out very good for you when the AI voice can’t get half of the descriptions, correct.
Think you need to do some research on what you're doing commentary on or better yet, just don't talk and let me watch the video. It annoys me when you're saying loads wrong when you don't need to be talking at all.
Your bolted connections are all wrong. I built F16 aircraft 30 years ago Your hole is bad. The grip length wrong. No proper preparation of surfaces. ETC.
2:28 ...yes, a stream of water loaded with garnet abrasive or oterwise. 2:40 are you fucking kidding me? "The sea will never become dirty" lmao. Dont know why the tubes suggested me this.