The process of making extension cords. Amazing Korean power strip factory
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- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 21 พ.ค. 2023
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#extension cord #power strip #factory #process #asmr - แนวปฏิบัติและการใช้ชีวิต
I like the fact they also switch the neutral through the switch, not just the live. It shows this is a good quality product
depending on the country regulations and usage this may be required.
Why do that manual mounting of parts would be easier with robots doing it. And faster.
There is a reason for this.
In this kind of plugs and sockets (I mean the EU ones) you really can't know which one of the two holes/conductors is the live (L) one and which the neutral (N).
So to play it safe, both of them should be put through a switch.
They switch the neutral and line as their poor quality control is likely to miss the polarity reversed, doing it this way they avoid problems however it compromises the ground / Earth fault detection and is generally none compliant. There is nothing impressive in a person doing a mindless low skilled repetitive task on a dangerous machine.
Korea uses 220v, so they really need it that way. A short circuit doesn't just hurt your finger, it kills you.
I have disassembled countless extension cords and to be honest these in the video are high quality ones.
I like how each plug has it's own cut off switch. Every power strip I have the whole thing is either on or off.
I have some that do that. Computer tower unit and lots of computer things go to another non 6 way one from 1 of 3 switched out on a 3 way block and 2nd moniitor, External USB drive have output 2 and 3. Even got a little red LED on each output on the switched 3 way block. Got other on the AV. Telly kit as a 6 way non switching at all block. All sorts exist but think sometimes switch on each output is nice, I got different sorts of blocks, switched or not or 1 does the lot like your one.
And they cost ridiculous prices, like 30 bucks for a 1m cord with 4 slots.
I appreciate the individual cut-off switches for each plug. Unlike most power strips where everything is either on or off, this one was built quickly, yet everything works perfectly!
The individual socket switches are a requirement by the laws of the U.K. Government. Prison time for no switch.
@@agvulpinebut the label on the kill switch would indicate for a far east target audience
but i wonder if they even have the same "european" plug cee7/7? the sockets are for the german variant though... strange
@@agvulpine No they are not and these are not for the UK market
The cut off switches are there but for the hot wire is still on. It does not make any differences.
But why you need that? Everything you plug in already have it's own switch. You like crawling on the floor for the switch?
Interesting video. In the US no way OSHA would ever allow the workers fingers that close to powered press machines. My heart goes out to those workers sitting all day assembling components. Nice bright clean factory though.
Same here in Germany. BG (Berufsgenossenschaft) would just close down the production line immediately. But still, it is very interesting to see, how it is made.
Looking at the press at 6:07 appears he is using 2 hand switches which is considered the safest method here in the US, and required by OSHA for presses where 2 or more people are working in/under them at a time. Other presses in this process probably are limited enough in their force and clear enough of body parts that 2 hand switches wasn't considered worth the hassle. I am curious about the cord winder at 8:13 though, seems like it is spinning fast enough to give you at least a nice bruise if you get your arm in the way.
From the quality side, the crimping technique at 7:20 leaves much to be desired, you can see some "flyer" strands that escaped the crimp at 7:34, which can cause shorting. If it were my process I would move this terminal crimping process immediately after the plug side is crimped, to minimize opportunity for damage to the stripped ends. Ideally the stripped wires would be checked for any of these bent strands before crimping and then placed securely into the crimp area, not just letting the crimper push it into the approximate area where the terminal is. That would take an extra 10-20 seconds per cable though, so maybe not appropriate to this company's market.
@@lunarmale808здесь используется устаревшее оборудование. Современное оборудование позволяет в один этап произвести операции зачистки и оконцевания. Если мне не изменяет память, GLW, Deutschland, имеет такие машины в своём ассортименте
The alternative view is that OSHA clearly made that country more expensive, thus they are produced elsewhere.
@@Snowsea-gs4wu I agree.
Very good....no added music!
why should i change it after 2 years of usage? in germany they last for decades
Very good . Only thing missing is it should have had a PAT test or equivalent before it’s distributed
I would feel much safer using it if someone went on a 2 day training course to attach a crappy little sticker.
1:00 - I guess rectangular wooden frame to keep all sockets in place together, would make work bit more comfortable. Nice hand work, pleasure to watch :)
A lot of steps, but cheap to buy in shops. Do they also do tests in the factory before packing and shipping?
I'd go nuts doing the same thing over and over again.
Один в один такойже комментарий оставил. Реально с ума сойти можно от повторений движений 😐
Ваш комментарий прям в точности с моим получился, прикольно)
That was a very well done video. Thank you!
Alternate reality plot twist: The entire production of that factory is sent to Beijing where they put "Made In China" stickers on each package before selling it to everyone else!
Excellente vidéo, merci pour le partage !!
Muito bacana o processo de produção. O problema é que quem trabalha assim com trabalho repetitivo, acaba desenvolvendo problemas de saúde e deve ser um trabalho desgastante também. Mas de qualquer forma, achei muito bacana e tudo bem feito, parabéns.
Yes dear this is high cost product buy you can build a quality brand and then people can buy your product only good quality recommend person .
❤ض
No electrical testing for earth bond, shorts or opens . Amazing!
no guard on the press
9:20 test
Cảm ơn bạn đã cho xem clip này chúc bạn dồi dào sức khỏe
Amazing all the hand labor that is being used alongside the automated assembly.
Keep it as cheap as possible!
Is this where my power strips that have the hot and neutral swapped come from?
이 멀티탭을 구매하고 만드는 과정을 보니 참 재미 있네요 손에4구들고 만들어지는걸 보니 억 반이상 공정이 기계고 분해 하기 힘들게 만들어져 있네요 그러니 튼튼 하고 오래 쓸수 있을거 같아요
분해는 전기 조금만 이해하면 쉽습니다. 근데 자동화 과정이 생각보다는 많네요.
The quality is good.
South Korea uses the same plug system as Germany and Austria.
But the European plugs have been slightly modified so that the plugs also fit into the French-Polish system.
The modified plug fits everywhere in Europe except Switzerland, UK and Ireland.
Italy and Greece still have the old domestic sockets and the new European sockets like South Korea
220V at 60Hz. But North Korea uses 220V 50Hz. Both Koreas uses Euro plug system.
iPhone charger from Korea uses 4.8mm thick plug.
Can’t plug Korean iPhone charger in Type L 10A outlet in Italy but 16A outlet could fits.
North Korea also uses Japan Euro outlets. Fix tuned North Korean radios uses Japanese plug but maybe uses 110V or 220V. It’s outlet for North Korean radios are Japanese and Euro 2 pin outlets.
Well made video! Thanks a lot for that!
Sorry, but in this video you only made us see how the various parts are assembled, but not how are created.
Интересно, что коммутируется как фаза, так и нуль. Причем не только на самом гнезде, но еще и на общем. И контакты пропаиваются.
It is very good that not only the Live wire is switching, but Neutral too. And main switch contacts are soldered for stability.
Вилки со штырями 4 мм держаться не будут - цилиндрические гнёзда.
Thanks.
압착단자 하네스작업과정
35년만에 봅니다
예전 부산에서 금성사
모든전자제품 전선납품 하청작업하던 옛날이
생각납니다
Высокие технологии кругом, а без молотка никуда!
Не стоит судить о технологиях по конкретному производству
Я немного удивлён, что в Ю.Корее существуют такие производства, где много ручного труда. По компьютеризации и роботизации Ю.Корея занимает одно из первых мест в мире
We Love You Korea 🇹🇷🇰🇷
We Love You Turkye 🇰🇷🇹🇷
Thanks a lot.
Perfect video no added music
I love that each outlet had its own switch
10:50 다른건 몰라도 멀티탭 사용 안전수칙 가르쳐 준건 진짜 최고...
불 나면 안되잖아요~ 원룸 월세사는데 멀티탭 때문에 자취방 불나서
사람 다치면 안되잖아요~
옷이고 컴퓨터고 뭐고 타버리면 안되잖아요~
게다가 남의 집 까지 타면 안되잖아요~
멀티탭 안전하게 씁시다~
For what reason "~"?
어느 회사나 멀티탭 홀과 홀간의 간격이 왜 그렇게 다 좁은지 사용할 때마다 화가납니다.
결국 4구 멀티탭은 3구밖에, 3구 멀티탭은 2구 밖에 사용할 수 없어요... ㅠ,ㅠ 이 문제 좀 고쳐주세요!!
그건 멀티탭 회사가 아니라 충전기를 코드 꼽는곳 바로 위에 만든 전자제품 회사나 코드 90 도로 꺽어서 만든 정신병자 같은 회사 디자이너들한테 따져야함
Nice video but what is the rationale behind ganging a power strip after two years?
interesting process. Thank you ! 😀
More hand work then I expected to see. Yet the point of most of the connections are press and go was shocking to me...
I am surprised they didn't have robots putting all the parts together
こういった単純作業は技術革新で無くなっていくのかしら?
日本でも大昔に「グリコのおまけ」という産業もありました。
くれぐれも怪我のないように頑張って下さい。
I never knew I’d find this interesting until I watched it! It’s always good to learn things. 😊
what a fast build everything works perfectly ! That's the first time I've seen a power strip with a switch on each socket, it's very convenient.
They are for the European Market.. North America and Canada are still in the electrical dark ages..
3:49 Suggested caption: "Strip the end of the wires." ❤
I edited the subtitles thanks to you. Feel free to comment next time :)
Great work 👍
I like the footwork @4:18 Smile!
Excelente fabricação Parabéns.
самому собрать хороший удлинитель даже порой дешевле, чем купить такой, который только для лампочки подходит.
너무 많은 프로세스를 유지하는 비용은 쉽지 않습니다
Thanx
Excellent
Those poor people doing a repetitive task like that !! I could never work in a place like that would drive me insane !!
Nice job, I like the injection moulded plugs.
Thanks 👍
Mmmm..... that quality check is scary though, it'll never catch a dodgy contact or outright lack of PE. That's a legit fire or electrical shock hazard.
That's one of the arguments for automation, you can do in process quality assurance better than you could in a manual process.
Nice to see how it is done & on first view it looks like quality & I in Germany too would buy them (South-Korean outlets are literally German outlets even used on the same voltage etc. but 60Hz instead of 50 Hz) ...
but the old unearthed nearly non-recessed Soviet style ( = Pre-1930s German style) outlets the factory workers use at 9:23 should really get replaced (what a luck that they are at the source for it) ... please make user rewireable versions of it = repairability & an other way to build a very save travel adapter
In Finland you can see those 2-pin "Soviet" outlets up to the 1970s buildings, while the current Russian type is the same German type.
Philippines uses the same voltage and Hz as South Korea but uses US outlets and Saudi Arabia uses UK outlets (along with US 3 pin 127V outlets). 60Hz used in Saudi Arabia, South Korea and the Philippines.
North Korea uses 220V at 50Hz, Schuko and some outlets are also 110V or 220V. They used Japan Euro 2 pin outlets for North Korean government approved fix tuned radio receivers.
@@Itapirkanmaa2 Actually they were installed still in the 90s. They were banned in 1997 for new installations. In 2023 adding them to even old installations was banned.
That looks great, though lack hand protection at some of machines and of forced ventilation at soldering part is slightly concerning
Je comprends mieux a présent pourquoi les prises ne sont pas aux normes Européenne, il n'y a pas de repérage des couleur de càble, un coup le neutre (bleu) est a gauche et un coup il est a droite.
Much more hammering than I expected.
Olha que tomada bem produzida, bem montada... Dá de 10 a 0 em umas vendidas aqui Brasil com fio fino
Coreano é outro nível!
Deu até vontade de jogar a minha no lixo kkk
Interesting video. I am qualified electrian from Finland and there was one very important thing you did not do. You should have TEST PROTECTIVE EARTH connection before packaging. Also here these type of cords must withstand 3600 W (16 A)in European Union and I’m quite sure that those smaller switches don’t do that. Here those sockets should be 2.5A flat Europlug. Otherwise very beautiful cords.
Those powerstrips are not for the european market, no propper cord retainer. not seen a CE marking.
@@arjanvanraaij8440 they are USA power board
@@podgee7507 Not for USA, USA uses different plug.
@@inothome sorry, my mistake, i should said "European plug"
@@podgee7507 All good.
buen producto ,buena terminacion y buenos consejos ,aca en Argentina no se recomienda el uso de estos productos,se les llama zapatillas de conexion...
Удлинитель классный. На каждом гнезде по выключателю. Работа тяжелая, монотонная, за смену с ума сойти можно.
Работают же люди, а не на рынке перепродают в 3 раза дороже, купленное в магазине- "ПРЕДПРИНИМАТЕЛИ" называются!
Excelente! Aqui no Brasil, a maioria dos hubs elétricos é de péssima qualidade, sub dimencionado e muitas vezes sem componentes de filtragem.
esse não tem nada de filtragem.
日本では使えませんがいい勉強になりました。
Very goooooooooooooooooooooooooood 👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍
Beautiful process
thic cables, inject molding, live and neutral switch, soldered joints, bagged to prevent moisture
these are quality at 9 usd from factory these aint cheap, but worth it prolly around 15 to 20 usd retail
Interesting how many is done manually.
Очень интересно. 👍
Bravo! I watched the video and saw a quality made extension. The good thing is that each outlet has its own switch. They sell some crap here, because of which my kitchen burned down.
Outlets don't need their own switches.
To all works great Job ❤😊
Классные удлинители, не то что у нас...
Not a single electrical (safety) test ? At least on some random sample ?
Best ASMR ever
Niesamowita koreańska fabryka listew zasilających - jak tu wszystko ręcznie klepią ....- no jakby w Polsce nie mogło być takiego producenta - ale przecież się nie opłaca.!!
What does Big Clive say?
So the health and safety for this company's employees is obviously not a priority!
저곳에서 다이소에 파는 멀티탭도 만들겠네요
Can see that all components are sturdy and of high quality made copper plug connectors and are all secured and clipped together. Try to disassemble a "Made in China" extension cord plugs...instead of secured copper connectors, you would find thin wired cables connections and also poorly soldered together. Do not try to save some money, by purchasing low quality made Extension Cords, such electric devices should only purchase "Good Quality" made, which usually not found from "Made in China".
ÇOX MARAQLIDIR, SUPER ❤
04:20 or so, the wiring colors are blue, brown and green. The same color wires that come on most of the lights from Amazon, especially the High Bay- UFO- barn lights that are made in China. Rarely do you get a light with Amerikan colored wiring.
Blue, brown, green/yellow is more universally standard than US colours. Europe, UK, and a lot of Asian and Arab countries use this colour standard.
Hardworking Poeple with nimble Hands 😃👍✌💡
Tolles Video, und die Qualität der Steckdosenleisten sieht sehr hochwertig aus!
For a korean product i would expected better QA testing, like for polarity, insulation resistance, switch functionality and earth resistance. And it should be done right before packaging instead of before another press
Wtf do you mean polarity? It's AC. Oh, live and neutral? Doesn't matter much, I'll be honest - not everything you connect into ye power stripo is metal.
@@danek_hren polarity in an appliance includes the earth pin, dont want that to be live so it should be checked
@@Extra_Mental i hope you see the earth pin. Plus, why would you touch exposed metal?
@@danek_hren the internal wiring can be wrong to make earth become live
@@Extra_Mental maybe. But very unlikely
Super
Vidéo très intéressante.
Working with these machines is torture, you go home and all you hear is click, click click in your head all night....
those crimps are a little scary with the loose wire strands poking out.
So many individual steps but each one is so boring and repetitive. I’m impressed by the hard and fast work of each individual.
Très très enrichissant
Les asiatiques sont les meilleurs pour produire des petites pièces en série mais aussi faire des pipes bien généreuses....
This more hand work than i expected 😮
It's good to have a job - but these employees are taking a job away from a robot.
Nice!!
Imagine that's your job, 8-10 hours per day, 6 days a week.
Semplicemente meraviglioso
Amazing, but what about electric test?
Important thing with 230 V power.
There seems to be a little sprinkle of fairy dust and joy in that factory. 🥺
Sehr schön. Weiter so!
Ce sont encore des chinois qui fabriquent alors les européens seront tous en chômage 😢
That automation creates a very decent demand but not much consumers!
Following tests are missing... continuity testing to ensure proper electrical connections, insulation resistance testing to verify insulation integrity, and high voltage testing to assess the cord's ability to withstand specified voltages. Additionally, visual inspections for physical defects and quality tests.
Вроде и ничего, все на медных шинах, но круглые контакты под вилку... это жесть, хорошего контакта не будет, особенно если вставить вилку тонкую без заземления
Fantastic!
Ха, я тоже как то в электрике работал: простая работа была, но быстро надоедала, прошло время и я стал заниматься тем что реально нравится по профессии, а если вдруг если нужно починить то делаю это для себя и родных бесплатно, а позже понял что починка и продажа лучше, стал совершенно бесплатно собирать разные удлинители, электроприборы и другие вещи: я их ремонтирую и продаю! Разумеется в меру, а то будет много, а продать не смогу😂😂😂
A lot of plastic we generate .Nr 1.Congrats
Excelente video, me gusta el el detalle del video 🎉