amazing to see how industrial production works. so much hardware is used and steps taken to end up as a product that is then sold in retail for merely $4 a box
In 1910, the first aluminium foil rolling plant, Dr. Lauber, Neher & Cie. was opened in Emmishofen, Switzerland. The plant, owned by J.G. Neher & Sons, the aluminium manufacturers, was founded in 1886 in Schaffhausen, Switzerland, at the foot of the Rhine Falls, In 1911, Bern-based Tobler began wrapping its chocolate bars in aluminium foil, including the unique triangular chocolate bar, Toblerone.[6] The first use of foil in the United States was in 1913 for wrapping Life Savers, candy bars, and gum
Overall informative, but a factual error at the beginning makes me wonder about the care they put into things. Stated the first company (or early one anyway) was “The Reynolds Aluminum company” FALSE. “Reynolds Aluminum “ is the product, the company was “Reynolds Metals company”. I worked there, Richmond VA headquarters, for 2 years. Eventually bought out by Alcoa; but that’s another story. Also, I had been taught the shiny/flat sides of AL sheets were caused by the need to run 2 sheets together for strength; the video correctly discusses strength problems, but I thought attributed shiny/flat to different rollers. Dunno, as I never verified my “teaching”. Notwithstanding criticism here, AL is fascinating and there’s lots of interesting info here.
Your statement of the shiny and dull sides, is spot on. The shiny side, touches the rollers. The dull side is pressed against the other sheet. ( I saw a 'Tube video, said the dull side was against the rollers. Wrong.) steve
I recycle thousands of aluminum cans as well as scrap aluminum pieces (pie pans, radiators, cooking pans ect) every month so it was interesting to see the process for making foil......
I used to work for Davy Mckee who produced the computer control system which controlled the foil mill. My job was hardwear installation. Commissioning Engineer.
You got it wrong how the two different surface finishes come about. The foil is rolled at the final step in pairs of sheets. The outsides end up smooth because of they are against the smooth rollers. The other side is against the other sheet of foil that is rolled at the same time, so it is rougher as it just smashes into the other sheet.
It's only dull on one side - and shiny on the other... because of the way it's rolled ! It eventually gets too thick to roll as a single sheet - so it's doubled over. That's what creates the shiny/dull sides.
That's how you know this is American made. For many of them, history began year 1776. 100 years ago is 2/5 of the entire timeline! For the rest of us, history began sometime 4000 BC.
0:35 "Thermal insulation capabilities". Don't expect aluminum to insulate anything. It is one of the most efficient conductors of heat in existence. But it is true the shiny surface reflect radiant heat.
Buckingham Palace in England used Aluminium knives and forks at banquets during the 1890s. It was rarer and more expensive than gold and silver and was regarded as a “precious” metal because it was so difficult to make.
ομορφο βιντεο, πρωτη φορα βλεπω πως κατασκευαζετε το φυλλο αλουμινιου που χρησιμοποιουμαι στην κουζινα μας. Great video man thx from Greece i share it to my channel
Whilst interesting, I can't help laughing at comments like this; @2:53 It's a relatively ancient process over one hundred years old. years old. Who writes these scripts?
I have to assume it's generative AI writing the scripts, I've never come across a channel with more repetitive scripts 😂 youtube keeps recommending the channel to me, and I (forgetting how bad the scripts are) keep clicking the videos, and then remember two minutes in. it's totally bizarre
How is the myth that the shiny side reflects infrared still a thing? Its not true at all. Both sides function exactly the same and the finish on the sides is just an effect from production.
So if you can put back the right mix and give it the right nutrients you can regrow what you've taken from the Earth. I was talking about this with oil wells and natural gas wells. But this can be for any type of material taken from the earth. If things are done right, it can regenerate that particular molecule molecule again.
Tons of technical errors, like the script is written by a high school student who hates doing it. Zero research. I had to block the channel after a few, just too many errors.
Few mistakes you made: First time Discover it and use for chocolate 🍫 cover and the price of aluminum was expensive than gold the same time 😂. This refinery proccess is 100 year old. But you said aluminum discovered in 1947 😂 then its 100 year old peoccess?
amazing to see how industrial production works. so much hardware is used and steps taken to end up as a product that is then sold in retail for merely $4 a box
it used to be 0.24€ here few years ago now 3€
I always wondered how the aluminum foil was made until I learned from this video WOW that was awesome to see how the aluminum foil was made.
In 1910, the first aluminium foil rolling plant, Dr. Lauber, Neher & Cie. was opened in Emmishofen, Switzerland. The plant, owned by J.G. Neher & Sons, the aluminium manufacturers, was founded in 1886 in Schaffhausen, Switzerland, at the foot of the Rhine Falls, In 1911, Bern-based Tobler began wrapping its chocolate bars in aluminium foil, including the unique triangular chocolate bar, Toblerone.[6]
The first use of foil in the United States was in 1913 for wrapping Life Savers, candy bars, and gum
My name SHAHRUL ANUAR BIN BUANG BINTI LENA,kedut kemek.
Overall informative, but a factual error at the beginning makes me wonder about the care they put into things. Stated the first company (or early one anyway) was “The Reynolds Aluminum company” FALSE. “Reynolds Aluminum “ is the product, the company was “Reynolds Metals company”. I worked there, Richmond VA headquarters, for 2 years. Eventually bought out by Alcoa; but that’s another story.
Also, I had been taught the shiny/flat sides of AL sheets were caused by the need to run 2 sheets together for strength; the video correctly discusses strength problems, but I thought attributed shiny/flat to different rollers. Dunno, as I never verified my “teaching”.
Notwithstanding criticism here, AL is fascinating and there’s lots of interesting info here.
Your statement of the shiny and dull sides, is spot on.
The shiny side, touches the rollers. The dull side is
pressed against the other sheet. ( I saw a 'Tube video,
said the dull side was against the rollers. Wrong.)
steve
I recycle thousands of aluminum cans as well as scrap aluminum pieces (pie pans, radiators, cooking pans ect) every month so it was interesting to see the process for making foil......
Reduce your usage for an eco-friendly future
All that recycling you did ended up in a landfill I can promise you that and thousands of cans a month? You have an addiction to something...
@@amitk3474 Nope reuse is better and safe
@@tylermcnally8232 Nope everyone recycles aluminum and steel you fool. It's economical for corrupt companies.
I used to work for Davy Mckee who produced the computer control system which controlled the foil mill. My job was hardwear installation. Commissioning Engineer.
Ok.... There is no actual useful information here.
You got it wrong how the two different surface finishes come about. The foil is rolled at the final step in pairs of sheets. The outsides end up smooth because of they are against the smooth rollers. The other side is against the other sheet of foil that is rolled at the same time, so it is rougher as it just smashes into the other sheet.
It's only dull on one side - and shiny on the other... because of the way it's rolled ! It eventually gets too thick to roll as a single sheet - so it's doubled over. That's what creates the shiny/dull sides.
Agreed and using the shiny side up or down makes no difference whatsoever
And, this is NOT even mentioned here.
Why?
steve
Beautiful information.
2:50 Ancient process.... Over 100 years old hahahaha
Haha, I caught that too. 1920's isn't quite ancient yet.
That's how you know this is American made. For many of them, history began year 1776. 100 years ago is 2/5 of the entire timeline!
For the rest of us, history began sometime 4000 BC.
0:35 "Thermal insulation capabilities". Don't expect aluminum to insulate anything. It is one of the most efficient conductors of heat in existence. But it is true the shiny surface reflect radiant heat.
Which is how heat radiates. Dip sheet
@@tylermcnally8232 It's how heat radiates, yes, but it's not how heat conducts or convects, the other two ways heat can transfer.
amazing
I'll never complain about the cost of aluminum foil again.
Buckingham Palace in England used Aluminium knives and forks at banquets during the 1890s. It was rarer and more expensive than gold and silver and was regarded as a “precious” metal because it was so difficult to make.
Tell us more about transparent aluminum.
Super profi video. Super
ομορφο βιντεο, πρωτη φορα βλεπω πως κατασκευαζετε το φυλλο αλουμινιου που χρησιμοποιουμαι στην κουζινα μας. Great video man thx from Greece i share it to my channel
عالی
Imagine everyday on your kitchen you are wasting so much resources by using aluminum foil
TEN MINIMUM WELL I WANT TO BUY
Next: How are engine blocks made
wow i never knew the milk water was 95% water 5% oil
Very interesting! Thank you.
You are Welcome! Glad you liked it 👍
Very enlightening video...keep it up.
Thank you!
Wow, I learned something new today but now I feel guilty, we are destroying the beautiful mountain!
and I don't know you but when I was young we were calling it "reynolds paper"
I don't think he used the word Aluminium that much, could have mentioned it a few more times😉
Not a lot of synonyms.
ALUMINIUM
Spoiler alert: Aluminum foil is made from...
Wait for it....
Aluminum!!!
There I saved you 8.5 minutes.
Your next assignment : View video on making carbon paper
*@foxhazhax4845* You didn't save me any minute. You added me 3 seconds because i have watched the video already.
Paper production?
i'm gonna say, and hear me out on this one, aluminum is used
It's not aluminum; it's aluminium.
Ah, yes - good old American aloominim! 🤣
I watched this whole vid to hopefully find out why one side is shiny and the other is not..
Aluminum is used to make aluminum foil. Shocker.
Aluminium
I wonder haw they processed bauxit in the napoleonic era.
Whilst interesting, I can't help laughing at comments like this;
@2:53 It's a relatively ancient process over one hundred years old. years old.
Who writes these scripts?
Notice also how the reader read out 3mm instead of saying 3 millimeters!!
I have to assume it's generative AI writing the scripts, I've never come across a channel with more repetitive scripts 😂 youtube keeps recommending the channel to me, and I (forgetting how bad the scripts are) keep clicking the videos, and then remember two minutes in. it's totally bizarre
Why there is so many dislikes under these videos?
Invented in 1910 in SWITZERLAND, not USA. More research needed! Robert Victor Neher, born on the 2nd of February 1886 in Schaffhausen.
How is the myth that the shiny side reflects infrared still a thing? Its not true at all. Both sides function exactly the same and the finish on the sides is just an effect from production.
How Wood is made. What material is used to make wood???
I think uranium 😅
What Material Is Used To Make Aluminium Foil? Well, I have a guess ...
A-LU-MIN-I-UM
Material? I bet it is copper!
Man made varest metal to kill humans
Name 5 people it has killed
“Jungle bauxite”?
I may not have a degree in gender studies but i think aluminum is a good place to begin
We are such a destructive species… 🤦♂️
BAUXITE
"What material is used to make Aluminium Foil?". Aluminium I would have guessed at.
The only thing we need to find out here is why an Irish lad is calling it aloominum! ;)
Its called aluminium not aluuuuuuminium
That's a problem that only the Greeks have solved, with non-shifted letters: *Αλουμίνιο* (ΑΛΟΥΜΙΝΙΟ), ΝΟΤ *Αλούμινιο*
Newsflash! Aluminium foil is made from... wait for it... Aluminium! Dur.
Isn't floride a biproduct of the production of aluminum?
Aluminum or aluminium? Tomato or tomato?
"Aluminum" is North American stuff. Part of the word was lost in transit...
It's not aluminium??? 😱
No it is, isn't it? And it's just a misleading title...
It’s ….ALUMINIUM
3mm? Lol. Just say millimeter!
A lu mi ni um
This is just EXTRAORDINARILY confusing and wrong.
One ignorant American scientist missed the "i" in Aluminium, now the whole world is suffering 🤦🏿♂🤦🏿♂🤦🏿♂
So if you can put back the right mix and give it the right nutrients you can regrow what you've taken from the Earth. I was talking about this with oil wells and natural gas wells. But this can be for any type of material taken from the earth. If things are done right, it can regenerate that particular molecule molecule again.
I like how they simply refuse to use the correct spelling aluminium.
Aluminum doesn’t exist!
So this is brass?
Tons of technical errors, like the script is written by a high school student who hates doing it. Zero research.
I had to block the channel after a few, just too many errors.
Since you know all, why not create your own page and post what you know... rather than mouthing off
I agree with you. it's like it was plagiarized from a paper making video.
@@Austinemmytube1😂mental
Tutorial on getting cancer
Energy is not stored in the Al.
I wonder...
Few mistakes you made:
First time Discover it and use for chocolate 🍫 cover and the price of aluminum was expensive than gold the same time 😂.
This refinery proccess is 100 year old. But you said aluminum discovered in 1947 😂 then its 100 year old peoccess?
Did you notice that he refered to paper a lot when talking about rollong process?
So sad the pronunciations.
This is terrible. Such good quality video footage by a woeful lack of understanding of the chemistry involved.
Cryolite?
and it causes cancer
Then don't use it????...no one's forcing you
@@BlacKGaminG098
Use of aluminum contaminates the environment which causes cancer in people even those who don't use any aluminum products.
Simply don't use it...than typing sh!t
@@Austinemmytube1
Um it's called a warning
Aluminum foil does not cause cancer!!