This helped me build really cool houses with 100 million children and many more. Thank you Edit 1 : omg mom, I'm famous I've never had more than 5 likes omg.
David saved up for 100 years just to buy a 1x1sqm house. not even a coffin could fit! David used galvanized square steel and eco friendly wood veneers and screws borrowed from his aunt
If you dip an already galvanized piece you will warp the time continuum. Same thing happens when you metal detect a metal detector or call a radio station with the radio still on.
Galvanizing is protecting and growing strength. In people and organizations, especially in today's landscapes... integrity is a huge commodity and working process.
Videos like this are useful and interesting. It's usually in the things we see and deal with every day that we really know so little about. This includes steel and the process of galvanization.
I'm a lead picker at the northwest largest galvanizing company I love this process u show we have racks we hang on out 50 foot long but we dip alot of those valmont light polls in this video . Just think it really cool to see your process. Would love to see more
Fun fact. 70s 80s and 90s GM used a higher zinc content in their brake lines and fuel lines so they're less likely to rust over time... unless you park your vehicle in tall grass for awhile LOL. Since Ford used less zinc you're more likely to find rusted out lines I can't speak for Dodge as I don't work on old Dodge stuff
so can someone explain why they don't always do this? For example I watched a video on bridges how they constantly need to add layers of coatings to protect against rust
Galvanizing is done only on certain kinds of parts because you can't weld galvanized steel. When it comes to making bridges, for example, you can galvanize parts of the bridge, but any sections that need a weld, you won't be able to galvanize, meaning those sections need regularly applied protections like chromium paint. Not to mention, while galvanizing significantly increases the lifespan of a bridge, it doesn't last forever. When you get pieces of infrastructure that are really old, it is cheaper (and often times better for the community) to perform maintenance than to shut down said piece of infrastructure to reconstruct