I wonder why we don't see more people use 3D wall art? Oh yea, because it gets dust on it that will likely collect in the creases when you try to clean it
bro really went from saying wood and aluminium is bad for the environment while talking about plastic forms for concrete and how plastic is sustainable, and a few minutes later saying how sustainable wood is when talking about the big wooden beams? lmao
The first one, the "roof lift" I don't get, that's something that's been in use for almost 100 years and it's on an electric motor, what's "revolutionary" about that?
That was my first thought. It is environmentally friendly for the user. Just not for the African children who mined the raw material for the batteries.
28:22 we are losing 160 carparks to make way for a new bike lane in the CBD, the local business's are pissed, nobody rides to an Indian restaurant to carry a family meal home
My dad used the metal in between wood rafters in 1975! He made the metal and used 2 x 4 wood beams upper and lower! And he made it better because he was going to put second floor!
PVC board is not ideal because if your house is on fire, you're burning plastic. Bad for the environment and bad for you as well if you inhale it. It's also bad for environment when rain washes off micro plastic into the ground.
The carbon footprint to produce a lithium ion battery is pretty well known for the major producers (Samsung, LG, Tesla, etc). It's roughly ~100 kg of CO2 for every kWh of batteries produced (more recent chemistries and manufacturing processes are achieving even lower CO2 emissions). These Tranzsporters can run on (2x) 9 Ah Dewalt batteries, which at 20V is about 360 Wh, so producing those batteries would emit about 36 kg of CO2. To charge them, average US electric grid CO2 emission is about 0.5 kg / kWh of consumption (even cleaner in places where we don't use coal). So the battery version of the lift has this CO2 profile: *36 kg to produce the batteries + 0.18 kg for every 8 hours shift of operation (full charge cycle)*. The engine version of the Tranzsporter uses a Honda GX120 motor (shown in the video), which if you search online uses about .29 gal of gasoline per hour of runtime at 3600 rpm. This is about 2 gal per the same 8 hour shift of actual loaded work. Each gallon of gasoline emits about 8 kg of CO2 to atmosphere. So the CO2 profile of the Honda motor is: *XX kg to produce the motor + 16 kg for every 8 hour shift of loaded work*. 3 work shifts and you've leapfrogged the battery pollution.
I like the Tranzporter ladder to haul ply, shingles, bags, gyprock sheets, up to a higher level..if not use a Winch 60$ and some duct tape, a few rivets , a few straps, a few good hooks.
That is old technology. When I was working as a carpenter in the mid 1970s, the roofer had a gasoline powered one. Is was a real back saver. This was in the USA.
There is a weakness in metal braced 2x4 trusses. Metal rusts. Today, a few minutes from now, I will be tearing out the old leaking water heater and replacing nearly everything around it. Leaks in houses are normal to ubiquitous. Most are tiny and go unnoticed. A tiny drip onto a structural metal brace will eat it.
Iron & steel rust without proper treatment, but not all metals. I don’t know all of the answers, but would bet you would not be replacing a stainless steel water heater of the same age. Up front costs play into my decisions more than long-term ones, so I don’t have stainless either. I just thought there were some wildly creative products shown in this video, and have a 30 year old joist in the center of my house that has cracked from a knot in the original construction. It is conveniently located near the main electrical panel, between 1) the water main and almost every water use, 2) the gas main and half of the gas use, 3) between the HVAC system and bedrooms. A replacement beam that already has room for all of those utilities without being weakened is VERY attractive. I also had experience with a joist on a roughly 100 year old house (originally coal heated) that previous owners didn’t mind notching out for large pipes or vents, then nailing on a 2x4 “for support.” As a new homeowner it took me a while to understand why the living room floor had a gentle 2” slope up towards the middle and down at the sides. This isn’t a rant at you, just the messed-up things I’ve had wrong with houses that might have been avoided with better designs. Or not. None of these new products fix stupidity or (more generously) ignorance.
@@firstmkb I have seen a copper water heater (ancient, tore that one out in the 1970s. I have never seen a stainless steel water heater. They probably exist,, and choose the correct alloy,, last a lifetime. Was not talking stainless. The formed steel braces that make up the flat truss,, that steel is neither thick nor stainless,, might have a zinc or cad coating, likely neither (as you said , cost) The steel, if subjected to a chronic leak, will rust through. The structure needs a long term outlook.
@@Sailor376also I looked at a “condensing” gas water heater maybe 15 years ago that was amazingly efficient. As I remember, combustion happened in a spiral tube inside the water, and cold water came in from the top to cool the exhaust gas enough to condense water out of burned natural gas. Very interesting but it cost several times as much as a standard glass lined one. Details are fuzzy - I’m getting older!
@@firstmkb You remember well Still available today. The water heater du jour is a heat pump. Water is heated, cold air exhausted into the utility space. Wonderful for AZ less wonderful for MI I just installed the newest version of a water heater last week. Electric, straight resistance, but electronically controlled. Blue tooth, WiFi you can program your electric hot water heater to warm water just before you get home from work or an hour before you need to do laundry,, BUT It was a Rheem Gladiator (?) I installed, POS, and I had to install it twice, the factory did not tighten one of their connections. Also some glaring engineering gaffs,, aside from the fact,, Including electronics in a steam environment? The auto shut off shut it off twice in the first 24 hours. Automatic leak detection,, It sensed the factory mistake, and the wet floor. I have no expectations on a long life for that unit. Installation instructions were woefully incomplete. Also,,, yes, I can program it to my phone to get the work done,,,, What the Heck do I want to have a customer's water heater slaved to my phone. Yeah,, call your water heater up and tell it you are on vacation. Stupid, stupid, stupid. Thanks for letting me vent.
This is exactly why new housing has no soul. Wooden push fit walls dry lined and taped, spray painted, trussed roofing with a breathable barrier & plastic tile sheets & push fit plumbing. Everything is made so it’s like a giant Lego kit. I’ve been in the building industry for over 50 years and seen all the trades go from highly skilled status to diy projects. Me and the other apprentices served our time over a 5 year period. Now you can become fully qualified in some of the trades over a weekend. But I suppose that’s “ progress “. 🤣🤣🇬🇧👍
WTF, is this an infomercial? Untreated wood and basic steel is are not environment friendly, NOT plastic. I sopped watching video from that point. And registered poster's name, so I dont watch any from same source. Junk…
I wonder why we don't see more people use 3D wall art? Oh yea, because it gets dust on it that will likely collect in the creases when you try to clean it
probably made of plastic it burns better!!!!!!!!!!!!!
bro really went from saying wood and aluminium is bad for the environment while talking about plastic forms for concrete and how plastic is sustainable, and a few minutes later saying how sustainable wood is when talking about the big wooden beams? lmao
Wood is sustainble in a controled environment.
The first one, the "roof lift" I don't get, that's something that's been in use for almost 100 years and it's on an electric motor, what's "revolutionary" about that?
Thinking that because it's battery powered it's friendlier to the environment is naive.
That was my first thought. It is environmentally friendly for the user. Just not for the African children who mined the raw material for the batteries.
It keeps the social media trolls employed...
Yup what the fuck else would we do?
@@nicholasm2254 the progressive climate cultists call that an inconvenient truth, disinformation, bad speak, and punishable by cancellation.
@@banjax80 you mean the Marxist communist, bottom up scum?
28:22 we are losing 160 carparks to make way for a new bike lane in the CBD, the local business's are pissed, nobody rides to an Indian restaurant to carry a family meal home
Are those support-less structures really that impressive?
My dad used the metal in between wood rafters in 1975! He made the metal and used 2 x 4 wood beams upper and lower! And he made it better because he was going to put second floor!
PVC board is not ideal because if your house is on fire, you're burning plastic. Bad for the environment and bad for you as well if you inhale it. It's also bad for environment when rain washes off micro plastic into the ground.
"Combat climate crisis".
HAARP!
how do we know the electric version is more environmentally friendly, how were the batteries mined and where did the electricity come from.
The carbon footprint to produce a lithium ion battery is pretty well known for the major producers (Samsung, LG, Tesla, etc). It's roughly ~100 kg of CO2 for every kWh of batteries produced (more recent chemistries and manufacturing processes are achieving even lower CO2 emissions). These Tranzsporters can run on (2x) 9 Ah Dewalt batteries, which at 20V is about 360 Wh, so producing those batteries would emit about 36 kg of CO2. To charge them, average US electric grid CO2 emission is about 0.5 kg / kWh of consumption (even cleaner in places where we don't use coal). So the battery version of the lift has this CO2 profile: *36 kg to produce the batteries + 0.18 kg for every 8 hours shift of operation (full charge cycle)*.
The engine version of the Tranzsporter uses a Honda GX120 motor (shown in the video), which if you search online uses about .29 gal of gasoline per hour of runtime at 3600 rpm. This is about 2 gal per the same 8 hour shift of actual loaded work. Each gallon of gasoline emits about 8 kg of CO2 to atmosphere.
So the CO2 profile of the Honda motor is: *XX kg to produce the motor + 16 kg for every 8 hour shift of loaded work*. 3 work shifts and you've leapfrogged the battery pollution.
@@jonrhaider I swear some commenters think we haven't got google for their ill-thought-out comments and red herrings.
I like the Tranzporter ladder to haul ply, shingles, bags, gyprock sheets, up to a higher level..if not use a Winch 60$ and some duct tape, a few rivets , a few straps, a few good hooks.
That is old technology. When I was working as a carpenter in the mid 1970s, the roofer had a gasoline powered one. Is was a real back saver. This was in the USA.
There is a weakness in metal braced 2x4 trusses. Metal rusts. Today, a few minutes from now, I will be tearing out the old leaking water heater and replacing nearly everything around it. Leaks in houses are normal to ubiquitous. Most are tiny and go unnoticed. A tiny drip onto a structural metal brace will eat it.
Iron & steel rust without proper treatment, but not all metals. I don’t know all of the answers, but would bet you would not be replacing a stainless steel water heater of the same age. Up front costs play into my decisions more than long-term ones, so I don’t have stainless either.
I just thought there were some wildly creative products shown in this video, and have a 30 year old joist in the center of my house that has cracked from a knot in the original construction. It is conveniently located near the main electrical panel, between 1) the water main and almost every water use, 2) the gas main and half of the gas use, 3) between the HVAC system and bedrooms. A replacement beam that already has room for all of those utilities without being weakened is VERY attractive.
I also had experience with a joist on a roughly 100 year old house (originally coal heated) that previous owners didn’t mind notching out for large pipes or vents, then nailing on a 2x4 “for support.” As a new homeowner it took me a while to understand why the living room floor had a gentle 2” slope up towards the middle and down at the sides.
This isn’t a rant at you, just the messed-up things I’ve had wrong with houses that might have been avoided with better designs. Or not. None of these new products fix stupidity or (more generously) ignorance.
@@firstmkb I have seen a copper water heater (ancient, tore that one out in the 1970s. I have never seen a stainless steel water heater. They probably exist,, and choose the correct alloy,, last a lifetime. Was not talking stainless. The formed steel braces that make up the flat truss,, that steel is neither thick nor stainless,, might have a zinc or cad coating, likely neither (as you said , cost) The steel, if subjected to a chronic leak, will rust through. The structure needs a long term outlook.
@@Sailor376also I looked at a “condensing” gas water heater maybe 15 years ago that was amazingly efficient. As I remember, combustion happened in a spiral tube inside the water, and cold water came in from the top to cool the exhaust gas enough to condense water out of burned natural gas. Very interesting but it cost several times as much as a standard glass lined one.
Details are fuzzy - I’m getting older!
@@firstmkb You remember well Still available today. The water heater du jour is a heat pump. Water is heated, cold air exhausted into the utility space. Wonderful for AZ less wonderful for MI I just installed the newest version of a water heater last week. Electric, straight resistance, but electronically controlled. Blue tooth, WiFi you can program your electric hot water heater to warm water just before you get home from work or an hour before you need to do laundry,, BUT It was a Rheem Gladiator (?) I installed, POS, and I had to install it twice, the factory did not tighten one of their connections. Also some glaring engineering gaffs,, aside from the fact,, Including electronics in a steam environment? The auto shut off shut it off twice in the first 24 hours. Automatic leak detection,, It sensed the factory mistake, and the wet floor. I have no expectations on a long life for that unit. Installation instructions were woefully incomplete. Also,,, yes, I can program it to my phone to get the work done,,,, What the Heck do I want to have a customer's water heater slaved to my phone. Yeah,, call your water heater up and tell it you are on vacation. Stupid, stupid, stupid. Thanks for letting me vent.
If you have money don't waste time on these quick fixes, buy some logs and get them cut at a local mill,far better for the environment
😆 you can clearly see at 0:26 it cuts away just before the weight of the load lifts the ladder off the ground.
We could use some of that tech in our business. Good stuff 👏
i know about 10k people guilty of impostering which wearing silicone suits is considered impostering
The AI voice has a hard time with a lot of the words.
Thật may cho tôi khi...tôi không biết tiếng Anh !
4'58" 😂😂👌👌
مع احترامي البيت ما يصلح إلا للهدم وبناءه تعبان جدا اكو هوايه بيوت قديمه بس بناءها وخارطتها حلوه وبعدين البيت صغير وحوله منقطعه
I like the trick bricks. They're truly cool. I want a house and furniture out of these trick bricks.
Have these videos always been narrated by a robot? Can't watch these anymore. 😢
Some or most of these complex machinery can become useless as 3D printed houses and steel construction becomes more ubiquitous
I have a Tranzvolt. It’s AMAZING! So easy to use. Jobs are much more efficient. Great product!
I can't watch this. There are so many wrongs in this video that I don't even know where to start.
This is exactly why new housing has no soul. Wooden push fit walls dry lined and taped, spray painted, trussed roofing with a breathable barrier & plastic tile sheets & push fit plumbing. Everything is made so it’s like a giant Lego kit. I’ve been in the building industry for over 50 years and seen all the trades go from highly skilled status to diy projects. Me and the other apprentices served our time over a 5 year period. Now you can become fully qualified in some of the trades over a weekend. But I suppose that’s “ progress “. 🤣🤣🇬🇧👍
Shorts and tennis shoes, why bother with a Hard Hat?
บล็อกพาสสติกถ้าอยากให้ทดใช้ทนๆใช้งานนานๆควรเอาถุงพาสสติที่ออกแบบให้พอดีกับรูปทรงบล็อกพาสสติที่ทำงาน เวลาถอดบล็อกปูนก็ได้ไม่ติดบล็อก
how can the video have 47k views and only 1 comment?
Cause it is ALL whatever AI makes it to be!
Those bricks make a good fire im sure.
a pulley on a jacked up 4 wheeler with tire off works as winch as well to roof or elevate . Or tractor or car or whatever .
Great construction design & innovation newer built homes may possibly Survive any TORNADO hit
What's the website for the T-Works formwork prop please?
How about safety in the ground?
Lose the AI click bait
Construction and technology is an oxymoron.
Plastic formwork is dumb, wouldn't get planning approval here, you can't just use a heat gun to fix damage, it will distort
WTF, is this an infomercial? Untreated wood and basic steel is are not environment friendly, NOT plastic. I sopped watching video from that point. And registered poster's name, so I dont watch any from same source. Junk…
COST FOR THAT CULTD BE USED FOR CONC FORMWORKHS TOO THANKS
22:04 boo! jobana rusnya!
ON THE LADDER PRODUCTS THANKS
PVC FORMWORK TOO
wood for highway, can ?
PROVIDE EQUIPMENTS MARKETINGS STORES QUICKLY W/ PRICES
Robot voice, not watching
your audio has an annoying booming
Đoạn khoảng 12:10
Làm khuôn bằng nước đá ?
This horrible video is last level
Hell tech and other technologies, some leak..manufactured without taper...lol
6:18 ))
💲💲💲💲💲
👍🙂
Consider termites ?
Some of the tools that you demonstrate are very nice. But USA doesn't use the metric system!!!!😠😠😠😠