... and they are not feared to take a large cut at that end. I liked the idea of making a horizontal boring machine from a lathe with the saddle removed. No sure about the finish, or how they managed to get the successive 90° turns done accurately.
Please don't start "improving" your videos by adding special wipes and visual effects. Professionals almost never use those, especially in instructional videos.
Instructional video?.....this is like watching a harbor seal mate with a channel bouy. Nothing to learn from anything here other than how we need to appreciate what we have a hell of a lot more than we do.
Yup that's right, and they've passed the skills down father to son and will be doing the same for the next few generations whereas most of you will be serving or flipping burgers at McDonalds, KFC or Burger King talking about the good old days.
Yep, and after spending 42 years welding when I saw that guy cutting heavy steel with a torch and not wearing any eye protection it made me cringe as well.
This is the first video that I have seen where someone is actually using Western style PPE clothing. Hopefully that catches on with the rest of these people.
I hope it doesn't. That PPE depending on the area might cost them a months salary. For you to put your nose into other peoples situation while being unaware of the wages is immoral.
@@Metalheadmachine24 no, that's not the issue. the avg pay in these countries is 20x less than what your salary is. you need to have your frontal lobe checked if you think people choose not to have protective gear.
@@XxLeCaptainxX The cost of living is also 20x less. It’s not realistic to compare the USA to third world poverty. Maybe the boss will make a buck off this channel. Will his employees benefit ?
Mind you, but your dial indicator is totally useless in getting the center of an uneven surface at least with the use of a surface gauge you can easily estimate the nearest center.
@@DiomedesDelfin😂 what? You don't understand that a dial indicator is much better at finding center of a cylinder? As well as truing, and centering work... What do you think a wire can do that a wire with a micrometer scale can't? 🤦
My number one "complaint" is how disrespectful ALL the workers were with respect to protecting the lathe's "ways". Dropping things on the ways and dragging chains over the ways. EVERY "impact" .....metal-on-metal .....can leave a dent or scratch. Considering the condition of the entire plant ......this is the culture. The surface slag/swarf condition of the piece at the very beginning, can typically contain very hard and brittle materials. This material needs to be either removed in a timely manner or covers used to protect the ways. Considering this being an older machine, the ways are probably NOT hardened. The beauty is, these guys are working with what they've got ....and they know what they're doing. They might not do the job the quickest, but it will get done ....and let's hope ....to specifications. .
Yeah. Probably they are rich and can afford new ways often. Shop floor sand, stones and chips... So wrong... Clean environment is paramount for quality.
Look after the weekend. The part is rusted the lathe ways are rusted the 3 foot pile of chips if rusted. I'm pretty sure you can find some free used motor oil in a ditch somewhere close by to wipe it down on Friday afternoon. They just don't give a shit. That's what makes the difference in first and 3rd world. Pride in workmanship.
India is Americas new partnership so they don’t rely on China lol 😂 I get stuff brought in by China every week and it perfect 😍 recently went back to India because the shipping costs were up so much and were now longer due to Yemen crisis blah blah blah , everything I have received is sub standard and I can’t sell on 😡 back to China 100% China has a bad reputation due to people who don’t know all your iPhones and laptops are actually made there 😂 their engineering now is on par with the Germans at a fraction of the cost , if your a business we’re are you going ?
@@ako5bcv Most things nowadays are made in China & you get good & bad depending on where you buy from. I have been buying stuff for years from over there & rarely had any complaints
It's much older than that. Lathes technology is thousands of years old. Only difference is electric power and much better tooling. The basic technology is quite old though.
I hope those pinion shafts don’t have to be machined to close tolerances because I’ve not seen anybody measure anything with a micrometer or even a tape measure for that matter!!
No, they have stand around and watch the lathe slowly rotate, or sit and wallow in the filth rather than manning a broom for once in their lives. Work in filth, live in filth, become that filth.
Time proved old machines still doing their thing with help here and there and time proved skills past down and still taught in some parts of the world with no college or universities involved. Great watch and hats off to the lot of them as engineering tradesman they are. Great shame in the UK few if any have the same approach, skills or able to work as a team.
It might be "hundred year old" technology, but it's still effective and still just as much in use. Green sand casting.. manual machining.. all quite effective. 👍🏻
First time I have seen a welding helmet used. How did they find the center of that shaft to weld that nut for the dead center to engage? This is a casting, complete with green sand from the mold which one man was brushing off onto that piece of tin to keep it off the ways.
The sand came from when they put the red hot forging into a sand bank to slow down the cooling process. They didn't want it hardened by air cooling it too fast and prolly don't have a computer controlled oven to carefully step the temp down.
Good question. After you Endo the part I would think you put an indicator on the tail end with a steady rest and drill a hole for a live center or dead center. Maybe?
Przecież to średniowiecze i niewolnictwo . Czy nie widzisz stanu maszym , które nadają się na złom. Praca tam zagraża zdrowiu i życiu pracujących ludzi. Jeżeli to określasz słowem fantastycznie to albo się nie znasz na obróbce metali. Co gorsze popierasz te nieludzkie warunki pracy.
MY GOD!! Talk about working in a PIG PEN!!! THAT SHOP IS A MESS!!! TAKE A LITTLE TIME TO CLEAN UP SOME!! Get rid of those metal chips so you can walk around the lathe without tripping!!!! Pick up the scrap laying around!! GEEZES!! A little house keeping goes a long way!! Those guys are a bunch of SLOBS!!
It's all a question of priorities. The invention of the broom is firmly planned for the next millennium. Before that, workbenches, tables, chairs and even toilet bowls have to be invented.
we were taught at boys tech in Milwaukee never wear long sleeves in a machine shop , also why didnt he just drill a hole in the end with a center drill for a center .
Greetings from Milwaukee's Southside... Tech is just down the road from me, I live on 41st & Morgan. About a 10 minute drive away. Cheers from da sout side, ya know hey.
I wonder how accurate these old clapped out lathes are. They must have slop in the chuck, tail, tool post, and the ways probably have worn spots too. Are we even in the realm of working in thousandths?😮
Glad you enjoyed it! These skilled machinists put in impressive work, though they're not building anything quite that high-stakes-just tackling heavy engineering projects with incredible skill!
Hi!...My name Is Jack. I'm the occupational safety inspector. No?...well ,let me explain what that means. Let's start with the sandals,...that loose clothing, the outdated dangerous machinery, the overhead crane use, my God, THE DIRT FLOOR!, the piles of swarf,...say, how much time do you have anyway?....oh, and those exposed motor terminal boxes,...I'm going to need more paper I think.
The last inspector to survey the operation suffered a cerebral stoke and coronary thrombosis trying to record all the problems and then an overhead crane dropped a heavy forging on him and he was done for the day..
How to move 150 years back, to the late 19th century industrial revolution in Europe. Some workers seem skilled, but the total disregard for health and safety is shocking, and this shop looks like a pig pen.
Im wondering how the lathe still work, you can see how strong and difficult the wheels goes on. Terrible, but they have nothing else better as that old mashine. 😢
What in the heck, that boring bar is so bent it can't possibly be making a proper cut. At least straighten that boring bar if you can. Being it's old tooling I doubt that boring bar is brittle, so you should be able to straighten it.
Made me nervous, instead of welding the nut at the end. They should have used a steady rest, then drilled a center hole. You can see the nut is off center. I will watch the rest of this video, just for laughs.
The main issue is the lack of housekeeping. Not only is the floor covered in trip hazards, the same hazards are going to bite you when you trip! And people moving heavy workpieces using cranes are going to trip with floors like that and a workplace congested with machinery.
@@RayWint-od9ujYou don’t have to be an idiot to have an accident now and again. It would just be nice to sweep a little bit. If your machine is running at that low of a feedrate, then you have more than enough time to clean the area a little. It could save you from a potential hazard
After 36 years doing machine work and many of those on a lathe I find so many things wrong with what I see. I know things are done differently in other countries but give me a break. There is the right way and there is the wrong way and this is so wrong in so many ways. I am sure they will get a good acceptable part out of it but Lord knows how...
They should have used a steady rest on the large dia. Then end for end it to do the other smaller dia . Indicate the smaller dia that is in the 4 jaw chuck. They sure dont care about safety
I cannot stand the fact that our post ww2 western nations practically gave all of our wartime machinery like lathes and mills to these third world countries, just to be abused and not appreciated for what they are. What i would do for these machines! But here, we have to pay upwards of 50k dollars for a lathe of that size. 😢
That lathe is so old and clapped out, no one in the USA would use it in their business. We now have CNC lathes that will make that shaft in 1/4 the time and be 100,000 time more accurate.
What a mess, do they ever clear up and clean their gear, looks like it hasn't been wiped down in 100 years. Seriously they treat the machines and equipment appallingly, the ways on that lathe must be a total mess.
Okropność. Tokarka w opłakanym stanie. Imak nożowy bez kompletu śrub. Zamiast nakiełka przyspawana nakrętka . Gdyby się urwała wypadek lub zniszczenie maszyny. Zwykłe narzędzia skrawające . Brak płytek skrawających . Pracownicy ubrani w stroje nie do tej roboty. Włosy , brody oczy nie osłąnięte. W każdym cywilizowanym kraju BHP natychmiast by zamknęło zakład , a właściciel otrzymał by taką karę łącznie z zamknięciem zakładu. Po co to pokazujecie .Nie ma się czym chwalić. Uczyć się trzeba i to natychmiast.
Ale dramatyzujesz. Chcacemu nie dzieje sie krzywda, sa odwazni, cos robia, najwyrazniej dostatecznie dobrze skoro tylu ich robi i gitara. Co do tokarki i narzedzi zgoda (choc znowu chcacemu nie dzieje sie krzywda), a co do bhp to od pierwszej stycznosci z ludzmi od bhp w "pierwszej" mojej pracy mam nie po drodze i lamie i lamac bede te glupie przepisy w kazdej pracy, bo ich sie nie da nie lamac z reszta
@@A_Stereotypical_Heretic well, so am I (when it comes to free speech). F.e. (one of many in my life) if you think you can weld in almost upside down position WITH a helmet on - while being bent like a zigzag because welding has to be done in the thicket of reinforcing bars (where you barely can even fit your helmet lol) 80 cm from ground than you should def became a construction manager or bhp guy... I'll remain a regular engineer despite everything, doing things that others are afraid of even thinking of
"As Forged" surfaces right next to toleranced cuts... If I presented a work piece with as forged surfaces intact after the roughing, I'd like get laughed out of the shop!
4:02 Why would you not use a steady rest? You think a live center will keep such weight centered when the tooling makes contact?...🤦 Build a steady rest for crying out loud.
That was a Hell of a trust in that welded nut for the live centre .
realmente, eles tem muita confiança mesmo.. eu jamais faria isto.
... and they are not feared to take a large cut at that end. I liked the idea of making a horizontal boring machine from a lathe with the saddle removed. No sure about the finish, or how they managed to get the successive 90° turns done accurately.
The nut job.... :)
That live center looked to be the newest thing in the shop
That was my first thought
I wish my wife had on me the same faith these men have on that welded nut.
Your nuts loose?
Cambia de esposa!!!
Please don't start "improving" your videos by adding special wipes and visual effects. Professionals almost never use those, especially in instructional videos.
Agreed, it does nothing for the video
They aren’t professionals.. they showed it in thier latest video
NOTHING professional to see here anyway...Lol
I totally agree with you! I stopped playing the video the moment I saw that weird wipe, lol.
Instructional video?.....this is like watching a harbor seal mate with a channel bouy. Nothing to learn from anything here other than how we need to appreciate what we have a hell of a lot more than we do.
anybody else remember that these guys were taught maxhine work by the British back in Colonial historic times?
without british interference and oppression they would be far more advanced
And they haven't inched forward a bit since then.
While we have inched backwards several...
Yup that's right, and they've passed the skills down father to son and will be doing the same for the next few generations whereas most of you will be serving or flipping burgers at McDonalds, KFC or Burger King talking about the good old days.
@@jhvorlicky In the US, the process would be 100% CNC...done in a immaculately clean shop..... th-cam.com/video/Dv_G_yc5uB4/w-d-xo.html
As a machinist, I cringed when I saw that guy drop that I-Beam steal onto the ways of the lathe. I bet there are actual gouges in those poor things.
That was the most horrifying pat of the video for me😂
Yep, and after spending 42 years welding when I saw that guy cutting heavy steel with a torch and not wearing any eye protection it made me cringe as well.
I cringed when he drug that chain across the ways, I bet those ways have dings and nicks up and down the entire length.
@@KenPen-fm3ng It would be a huge challenge trying to scrape the ways. That could take days to do.
@@SteveAumann It doesnt matter,,,in this countries its normal
This is the first video that I have seen where someone is actually using Western style PPE clothing. Hopefully that catches on with the rest of these people.
I hope it doesn't. That PPE depending on the area might cost them a months salary. For you to put your nose into other peoples situation while being unaware of the wages is immoral.
@@lightning9279 definitely, safety is lame. 🙄
@@Metalheadmachine24 no, that's not the issue. the avg pay in these countries is 20x less than what your salary is. you need to have your frontal lobe checked if you think people choose not to have protective gear.
He had boots but no goggles when cutting with a torch
@@XxLeCaptainxX The cost of living is also 20x less. It’s not realistic to compare the USA to third world poverty. Maybe the boss will make a buck off this channel. Will his employees benefit ?
I use a $250 dial indicator they use a piece of wire
Mind you, but your dial indicator is totally useless in getting the center of an uneven surface at least with the use of a surface gauge you can easily estimate the nearest center.
@@DiomedesDelfin😂 what? You don't understand that a dial indicator is much better at finding center of a cylinder? As well as truing, and centering work...
What do you think a wire can do that a wire with a micrometer scale can't? 🤦
@@A_Stereotypical_Heretic Am speaking of uneven surface, a dial indicator is good only in a polished surface.
Concentricity, run out. These are a few of our favourite things...
No more pricey Interapid indicators for me! I’m going back to a coat hanger!
My number one "complaint" is how disrespectful ALL the workers were with respect to protecting the lathe's "ways". Dropping things on the ways and dragging chains over the ways. EVERY "impact" .....metal-on-metal .....can leave a dent or scratch. Considering the condition of the entire plant ......this is the culture. The surface slag/swarf condition of the piece at the very beginning, can typically contain very hard and brittle materials. This material needs to be either removed in a timely manner or covers used to protect the ways. Considering this being an older machine, the ways are probably NOT hardened.
The beauty is, these guys are working with what they've got ....and they know what they're doing. They might not do the job the quickest, but it will get done ....and let's hope ....to specifications.
.
ever see a broom?.. i will never understand why you would work in such filth , no one know how to clean?
Yeah. Probably they are rich and can afford new ways often.
Shop floor sand, stones and chips... So wrong... Clean environment is paramount for quality.
Look after the weekend. The part is rusted the lathe ways are rusted the 3 foot pile of chips if rusted. I'm pretty sure you can find some free used motor oil in a ditch somewhere close by to wipe it down on Friday afternoon. They just don't give a shit. That's what makes the difference in first and 3rd world. Pride in workmanship.
Смазки направляющих станины станка я не увидел😮, они наверное думают что и не надо смазку...
@@mermtu1171the grease from their hands works
as a American welder....GOD bless those guys
पाक की इस होनार को सलाम करते 👌 pak. Will become biggest manufacturing hub among the middle East region ❤❤❤
Wait a second, is that one fella wearing work boots?!?!?!
Haven't you heard of these new 'safety sandels'? They are all the rage over there
😂
India is Americas new partnership so they don’t rely on China lol 😂 I get stuff brought in by China every week and it perfect 😍 recently went back to India because the shipping costs were up so much and were now longer due to Yemen crisis blah blah blah , everything I have received is sub standard and I can’t sell on 😡 back to China 100% China has a bad reputation due to people who don’t know all your iPhones and laptops are actually made there 😂 their engineering now is on par with the Germans at a fraction of the cost , if your a business we’re are you going ?
@@ako5bcv Most things nowadays are made in China & you get good & bad depending on where you buy from. I have been buying stuff for years from over there & rarely had any complaints
@@colinremmer2417 exactly that 👌 they have engineering firms to rival the Germans 💪
It may be 100 year old technology
But it was cutting edge in it's day
It's much older than that. Lathes technology is thousands of years old. Only difference is electric power and much better tooling. The basic technology is quite old though.
@PorkChopAChunky Quite right
A lot of tools we use now have the roots in the past
The best thing is, none of the cuttings are wasted, they are taken next door to the yummy treats n snack factory next door for recycling.
In the land, where manpower is cheaper than a carbide insert that would cut the machining time by a factor of 5...
They can’t spin it fast due to the weight offset. What they’re doing is working.
I hope those pinion shafts don’t have to be machined to close tolerances because I’ve not seen anybody measure anything with a micrometer or even a tape measure for that matter!!
I agree. I guess they will use it for plowing a field.
The end result is fine or they wouldn’t make the effort.
It’s a special shop. Freehand. Takes years of experience. Like sushi.
Just because the video did not show a micrometer does not mean they don't have any. Also, the piece is no where near finished.
.
You are wrong. I saw one man measuring with actual vernier calliper at 28:30 😊
The forging was extremely concentric. Fantastic.
😂
It is really nice to see that some people actually know what they’re looking at. Nice casting, wasn’t it?
That 'live end' nut he welded on had to be at least an inch off center!
Парни, берегите себя! Удачи ВАМ!
Good job, wish you good health and success...greetings from Indonesia
A most excellent video 👍👍
I can see why they want all those scrap ocean liners and trawler ships.....thats where they get all their workable material
Flintstones manufacturing inc.
Just a small thing but do they have a " Clean up " Friday at the end of the week and whose turn would it be to shovel the floor ???
No, they have stand around and watch the lathe slowly rotate, or sit and wallow in the filth rather than manning a broom for once in their lives.
Work in filth, live in filth, become that filth.
They miss some nerds with cleaning-OCD
Those metal chips could be recycled into new steel. An electromagnet could easily clean the floor.
@danielcobbins8861 they do recycle, just not often.😂
Should be up to the operator to clean his machine once a shift
When the older gentlemen threw the chain over the material it almost landed on the other guys foot. Steel toe boots would come in handy here.
Time proved old machines still doing their thing with help here and there and time proved skills past down and still taught in some parts of the world with no college or universities involved. Great watch and hats off to the lot of them as engineering tradesman they are. Great shame in the UK few if any have the same approach, skills or able to work as a team.
I’d like to see a video that specifically focused on the different machines and how they work. Outstanding work gentlemen from 🇺🇸
Wait a minute!!!! Who set that steady rest?!?!
It might be "hundred year old" technology, but it's still effective and still just as much in use. Green sand casting.. manual machining.. all quite effective. 👍🏻
First time I have seen a welding helmet used. How did they find the center of that shaft to weld that nut for the dead center to engage? This is a casting, complete with green sand from the mold which one man was brushing off onto that piece of tin to keep it off the ways.
This is forged steel
The nut defines the center, is not at the exact center at the time it is welded.
The sand came from when they put the red hot forging into a sand bank to slow down the cooling process. They didn't want it hardened by air cooling it too fast and prolly don't have a computer controlled oven to carefully step the temp down.
What makes me think that all these guys are wearing flip flops ?😂😂😂😂🇬🇧😂😂😂😂
How do you know 'what is the center of the shaft on both sides' ?
Good question. After you Endo the part I would think you put an indicator on the tail end with a steady rest and drill a hole for a live center or dead center. Maybe?
They dont
Don't need to.
I definitely appreciate there skills and team work
Excellent
Pakistan, the Land that PPE forgot.
Ha that’s exactly what one was thinking
Este pessoal é fantástico, com ferramental básico fazem verdadeiras maravilhas, parabéns a todos!👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻🇧🇷
Przecież to średniowiecze i niewolnictwo . Czy nie widzisz stanu maszym , które nadają się na złom. Praca tam zagraża zdrowiu i życiu pracujących ludzi. Jeżeli to określasz słowem fantastycznie to albo się nie znasz na obróbce metali. Co gorsze popierasz te nieludzkie warunki pracy.
I need to get me one of those "Dial-A-Wire"............
MY GOD!! Talk about working in a PIG PEN!!!
THAT SHOP IS A MESS!!!
TAKE A LITTLE TIME TO CLEAN UP SOME!!
Get rid of those metal chips so you can walk around the lathe without tripping!!!! Pick up the scrap laying around!! GEEZES!!
A little house keeping goes a long way!! Those guys are a bunch of SLOBS!!
Especially with that feed rate, plenty of time to clean up!
Who says you can’t be a machinist and a snappy dresser!!
It's all a question of priorities.
The invention of the broom is firmly planned for the next millennium.
Before that, workbenches, tables, chairs and even toilet bowls have to be invented.
In my shop the operator is responsible for cleaning his unit at the end of the work shift
High-precision fast machining at its finest... ;-)
Always astounded by need 🖤 🇦🇺
we were taught at boys tech in Milwaukee never wear long sleeves in a machine shop , also why didnt he just drill a hole in the end with a center drill for a center .
Operator---- What is a center drill????
@@johnnyholland8765 its a popular drill shaped with a specialm needle like point on it
Greetings from Milwaukee's Southside... Tech is just down the road from me, I live on 41st & Morgan. About a 10 minute drive away. Cheers from da sout side, ya know hey.
@@Paul-zz8lu mr steuck was my teacher in the machine shop 1964 January
Great Job,,n ggod Welder too,,
nice sallamaleikon
ABSOLUTELY NO DIFFERENCE FROM TODAY ,if making one or two , just nicer and cleaner workshop !!
There's a lot of heat building up in that part
I wonder how accurate these old clapped out lathes are. They must have slop in the chuck, tail, tool post, and the ways probably have worn spots too. Are we even in the realm of working in thousandths?😮
+/- 12.0
Great vidio about making parts for Pakistans latest nuculer reactor.
Glad you enjoyed it! These skilled machinists put in impressive work, though they're not building anything quite that high-stakes-just tackling heavy engineering projects with incredible skill!
I wonder if they guys ever heard of way oil? Judging by the huge linear grooves in the back way, I'd say probably not...
Hi!...My name Is Jack. I'm the occupational safety inspector. No?...well ,let me explain what that means. Let's start with the sandals,...that loose clothing, the outdated dangerous machinery, the overhead crane use, my God, THE DIRT FLOOR!, the piles of swarf,...say, how much time do you have anyway?....oh, and those exposed motor terminal boxes,...I'm going to need more paper I think.
There is nothing wrong with the machinery, it's solid, it's the operators...
The last inspector to survey the operation suffered a cerebral stoke and coronary thrombosis trying to record all the problems and then an overhead crane dropped a heavy forging on him and he was done for the day..
These guys are rookies. They have shoes on.
The real OGs don't wear shoes.
Trabajan muy bien y no sé porque le llaman tecnologia vieja, felicidades
u fellers are masters at what u do
these dudes are putting the rough in to rough in...
And the award for WORLDS SHITTIEST STEADY REST goes to.....
It had 3 different ends on those arms!
ich glaube ich muss den jungs mal einen besen schicken 😂😂😂
How to move 150 years back, to the late 19th century industrial revolution in Europe. Some workers seem skilled, but the total disregard for health and safety is shocking, and this shop looks like a pig pen.
18:00 а в чем смысл делать большую заготовку , если потом все равно срезать приходиться?
There is a video on another channel that shows that spindle blank being hammer forged.
The hammer forging part used to be my job for 30 years. ATI Ladish Forging in Cudahy Wisconsin.
Wny do they all wear dresses?
This is practical clothing as the toilets are outside in a hole.
I think it's pajamas man! Its a 24/7 pajama party over there
You’re embarrassing me with your rude comments about local dress and ideas. Show some class people.
they dressed up for the video....
@@louiscraddock9853? It's a legitimate question. Can you answer it?
"Millimetres short of inch-perfect... " ! ):-)
技术很好啊
Im wondering how the lathe still work, you can see how strong and difficult the wheels goes on. Terrible, but they have nothing else better as that old mashine. 😢
I've turned shafts like this on a Puma 250 in 6 hours
Люнет прикольный, главное работает😅...
I think i heard one of those guys say its close enough for government work! Lol...
What in the heck, that boring bar is so bent it can't possibly be making a proper cut. At least straighten that boring bar if you can. Being it's old tooling I doubt that boring bar is brittle, so you should be able to straighten it.
Just think.... if they had some JB weld ,,,what they could do....
Made me nervous, instead of welding the nut at the end. They should have used a steady rest, then drilled a center hole. You can see the nut is off center. I will watch the rest of this video, just for laughs.
From where this video is shooted and from which company and country
For all the piss taking about lack of PPE I wonder just how many accidents they have.
As rare as PPE kit users
The main issue is the lack of housekeeping. Not only is the floor covered in trip hazards, the same hazards are going to bite you when you trip! And people moving heavy workpieces using cranes are going to trip with floors like that and a workplace congested with machinery.
@@johngraham245 Maybe they are not stupid and molly coddled like we are in the west and realising the issues take extra care.
@@RayWint-od9ujYou don’t have to be an idiot to have an accident now and again. It would just be nice to sweep a little bit. If your machine is running at that low of a feedrate, then you have more than enough time to clean the area a little. It could save you from a potential hazard
They are wading through swarf. Maybe the boss can organise a Sweeper Wallah.
What do you think they made after recycling/melting down all the chips? Lol
After 36 years doing machine work and many of those on a lathe I find so many things wrong with what I see. I know things are done differently in other countries but give me a break. There is the right way and there is the wrong way and this is so wrong in so many ways. I am sure they will get a good acceptable part out of it but Lord knows how...
I’m surprised that they still have a full set of digits.
What brand is that wire indicator? I need to get a few of those for my shop
It's literally just a piece of wire...held on by a bolt clamp.
@@A_Stereotypical_Heretic that was a joke!
Oh, and CARBIDE INSERTS!!!!
Thats a funny looking dial indicator.
That's a certified wire
@@Paul-zz8lu ?
A dirt floor third world rat shop at it's finest! I love that indicator they're using to check runout!
Dial-a-wire
Horror turn, Wrong turn!))
Royal Enfield bullet crank. They get there eventually,👍😏
27:21 bit is off balance
Then it matches everything else they do
You don't know what you're talking about. It's supposed to be like that.
They should have used a steady rest on the large dia. Then end for end it to do the other smaller dia . Indicate the smaller dia that is in the 4 jaw chuck. They sure dont care about safety
I wouldn't like to be wearing them clothes near a lathe
!Aaaay me quedó mas pequeño jefe..!
Consider where that lathe came from. Probably scrapped out of an old American or European factory decades ago. A Swift -Sentinel, I must look them up
Destined to a life worse than death.
It is probably from the British era...
It's WW2 machinery, given to these jerks to abuse and ruin.
@@A_Stereotypical_Heretic yes painful to watch
don't they ever clean the machines ,that whole place is a disaster area
You really think it matters, Eddy?
@@Billsbob to me it does
I can envision an OSHA safety inspector watching this while downing a fifth of Bourbon.
Das beste Werkzeug ist dieser Fühler (Drahtspitze)
Ausgezeichnet!
Very interesting but lose your toybox. It's very amateurish.
CEE would get a kick out of this video. Crazy how they walk around on all that swarf. Never make it in the US.
I commend you for hard work.
However your working environments to be tidy up for safety.
Metrology?.....AHHAHAHHAHHHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAH!...oh man,..that one made me cry!...
I cannot stand the fact that our post ww2 western nations practically gave all of our wartime machinery like lathes and mills to these third world countries, just to be abused and not appreciated for what they are. What i would do for these machines! But here, we have to pay upwards of 50k dollars for a lathe of that size. 😢
That lathe is so old and clapped out, no one in the USA would use it in their business.
We now have CNC lathes that will make that shaft in 1/4 the time and be 100,000 time more accurate.
Sie sollten eine Lünette darauf setzen, sie ist sehr schwer, das Teil für den Kontrapunkt
I won't have anything said agains crocs. You'll be saying you wear safety equioment next...:) :)
3tons??l?
What a mess, do they ever clear up and clean their gear, looks like it hasn't been wiped down in 100 years. Seriously they treat the machines and equipment appallingly, the ways on that lathe must be a total mess.
👍👍
Sollte das Alu Guss sein? Oder was ist das für ein Material?
Looks like cast aluminum. May be some real cheap steel alloy, but probably aluminum
Aluminium, rusting? It's steel.
Probably carbon 1045
@@BB-sm8eyI'm pretty sure that's a forging I don't see any casting parting lines anywhere on the shaft
Okropność. Tokarka w opłakanym stanie. Imak nożowy bez kompletu śrub. Zamiast nakiełka przyspawana nakrętka . Gdyby się urwała wypadek lub zniszczenie maszyny. Zwykłe narzędzia skrawające . Brak płytek skrawających . Pracownicy ubrani w stroje nie do tej roboty. Włosy , brody oczy nie osłąnięte. W każdym cywilizowanym kraju BHP natychmiast by zamknęło zakład , a właściciel otrzymał by taką karę łącznie z zamknięciem zakładu. Po co to pokazujecie .Nie ma się czym chwalić. Uczyć się trzeba i to natychmiast.
Ale dramatyzujesz. Chcacemu nie dzieje sie krzywda, sa odwazni, cos robia, najwyrazniej dostatecznie dobrze skoro tylu ich robi i gitara. Co do tokarki i narzedzi zgoda (choc znowu chcacemu nie dzieje sie krzywda), a co do bhp to od pierwszej stycznosci z ludzmi od bhp w "pierwszej" mojej pracy mam nie po drodze i lamie i lamac bede te glupie przepisy w kazdej pracy, bo ich sie nie da nie lamac z reszta
@@Fil-es8cdyour comment needs reported for its immense amount of ridiculousness...lucky for you I'm a free speech absolutist.
@@A_Stereotypical_Heretic well, so am I (when it comes to free speech).
F.e. (one of many in my life) if you think you can weld in almost upside down position WITH a helmet on - while being bent like a zigzag because welding has to be done in the thicket of reinforcing bars (where you barely can even fit your helmet lol) 80 cm from ground than you should def became a construction manager or bhp guy... I'll remain a regular engineer despite everything, doing things that others are afraid of even thinking of
Well, guys, this was not a nice work: the forged surface has remained visible at several points in the end....
"As Forged" surfaces right next to toleranced cuts... If I presented a work piece with as forged surfaces intact after the roughing, I'd like get laughed out of the shop!
4:02 Why would you not use a steady rest? You think a live center will keep such weight centered when the tooling makes contact?...🤦 Build a steady rest for crying out loud.