Très bon travail, de vrais professionnels, c'est un plaisir de les regarder faire. Un bravo aussi pour la cameraman et le montage de la vidéo. Juste les robots qu'il faut pour laisser le travail au hommes et femmes.
very nice workmanship and quality, I was a little surprised by the use of cardboard instead of a covered terminal block for cable connections, it seems a bit dangerous to me 😊😉
Now that was a Great Video. Health and Safety in Place, No Bare Feet, Raggy Garments, Welding Helmets or Ball Bags hanging out of the Workers Pants ! >> Very Nice Clean environment, no Earthen Floor and nicely finished Product as well. ***
That's a strange mixer, more like a big blender. I can't figure out if it's for the construction site or the kitchen? Judging by the way it's painted orange, it's something construction.
it is for mortar: a plastic building material (such as a mixture of cement, lime, or gypsum plaster with sand and water) that hardens and is used in masonry or plastering
@@Theoryofcatsndogs Mortar is not a plastic it is cement minus the rocks. In portland cement mortar no rocks just all the fine particles. It is made with natural things not stuff left over like plastic. I know exactly what it is used for and you calling it a plastic is completely wrong.
@@sithyarael6807 They're actually right to call it plastic...the word is both a noun (referring to man-made polymers) as well as an adjective describing any material that can be shaped when soft but then hardens into a final form
Покраска одним куском это супер. А потом при ремонте берешь шабер и отдираешь всю краску которая мешает или зацепается. Только на прошлой неделе удалял краску с китайского станка покрашенного таким способом - резко стал бесшумным. Хоть бы колеса замаскировали.
Japanese engineers and the technical assembly teams seem to be as one. There is some kind of invisible spirit of making that permeates through each level of production. Its a sort of content beauty. Every scene is calibrated to have certain boundaries of excellence. Very satisfying to watch...
Bạn thật may mắn là 1 người nhật. Việt Nam chúng tôi rất thích những sản phẩm mà người Nhật làm ra. Hiện bây giờ tôi vẫn đang sử dụng hầu hết nhữg sản phẩm xuất xứ từ Nhật dưới dạng rác thải công nghệ.
MIG is not the best process for stainless steel but it's possible. I tried it once on a little machine with flux core. The polarity needs to be reversed because the wire melts too fast and you get no penetration. Even with the polarity reversed it make cold welds. What make you think it's stainless steel in the video? I would say it's not.
@@repairtech9320 the video said it was stainless and used for food etc but I did notice they painted later which suggests it may not be SS. If regular steel then MIG fine.
Very weird mixer. Unless it's designed for some specific mortars in mind. I can't see how all this complexity involved in this machine is better than clasic rotating drum mixer. Cable management is dangerous, and there are lots of dangerous practices observed in the factory. This wouldn't be accessible in other developed countries. I guess Japan is just very special 😂
I'm not surprised that Japan's industry is falling behind since in every video on this channel we can see companies who don't seem to invest in new machines.
They are stuck in the old school ways of doing things. Which isn't a bad thing since old school stuff tends to last longer cause it is built better than stuff now days.
why they need to invest in new machines when the old one is still working adequate for their need. Most of this channel 's video are about small to medium manufacturers for domestic market product. They don't need high volume and low price to compete with cheap chinese one. In most of case, Japanese will prefer made in japan product even they pay more. All they care is quality and they expect it will last a long time.
@@Theoryofcatsndogs Oh I agree that they love quality over quantity never said anything about that. Yet if want to be a leader they will have to change how they do things. That is just common sense. They might sell these for triple the price cause the quality is there yet most will not buy cause it is triple the cost of other things that do the exact same thing. Thus the old school way of thinking I said. Personally I like quality over quantity any day and am always buy once cry once vs buy many cry many. Yet sometimes it is hard to just not go cheap at the time cause that is what you can afford.
@@Theoryofcatsndogs A) because industries can write off production machines every 10 years no matter if your big or small so no reason what so ever to keep them longer, B) newer machines produce better quality faster, C) a competitor will produce better quality faster cheaper and eat your lunch if you stay behind, D) investors are attracted by companies who modernize and you need their money to modernize otherwise see C). It's just how you stay ahead of the competition. smh
@@sithyarael6807 You are right about that in other countries. But this is Japan. They value craftsmanship more than profit or growing the company big. Also, this is solely for the domestic market, as you may know, the Japanese economy is not been the greatest for many years. They don't need tons of products to fill the market. Many of these companies will be happy if they can continue for a couple more generations. Their good old days from the 80's is long gone...