Thanks for showing the entire disassembly of the induction motor rotors. I’ve seen dozens of motor assembly videos but none of them show the construction of the rotors. At least now I’ve seen their deconstructed parts! 👍🏽
Oh...you mean the fact that they are literally walking around in compressor oil, or the fact that you just know...for sure, the ozone depleting refrigerant was definitely recovered responsibly? I mean come on, we do it here at great expense, so they're definitely doing it in India.right????
Those guys are separated by 1 paycheck from "We are now homeless and have nothing to eat", you think they care about some oil seeping into the soil? Would you?
Yea no OSHA so this can happen. Just think if they had all of those CA regulators All this would be landfill material. They are saving the environment Just risking their bodies like we did decades ago.
Squatted down.. all day for God knows how many hours....no glasses, no mask....1 glove. LOL! Man. I wish the best for you all b/c you are working hard.
I've broken down dozens of compressors friend does hvac work. Some of those compressors at start of video that he's moving with rod,weigh almost 80.lbs heavy hard work!!
I repair them here in Argentina.. such a pain to see them destroyed.. I see that pile of compressors and wanna cry. We buy those broken units to restore "as new".. what a pain..
@@Thoreau-e4l we repair two scroll compressors per day (average). We are on the market for 12 years already. Our first repairs still operational, as clients come back for a compressor that costs just 1/2 of a new item. How much does a compressor.. for example a Copeland ZP91 cost in SC?
@@AntonySimkin I have no idea, I'm a plumber, friend of mine who has already retired from a large manufacturing plant, doing their air-conditioning and refrigeration. Last 20 years he does just refrigeration work for restaurants, convenient stores, ice makers etc. I have brass and copper scrap from plumbing and he used to drop his compressors and fan moters off here. There used to be a place in town that rebuilt rewound electric motors years ago mabe 50 years ago, but now most motors are cheap Chinese crap and people just throw them away. I will ask my friend what compressors cost.
@@AntonySimkin ok, I just called him and he said very small compressors like on a water fountain around $150.00 _$200.00 larger ones mabe for 7to 8 ton units around $1000.00 almost all are sealed units, he said large bolt together compressors are still rebuilt sometimes. Almost all that I have scrapped have either no oil, burnt up but mostly the connecting rod for piston has failed.
Sad to say, but I think most of these men will be sick in a few short years. And that is after loosing a hand or a few toes. A picture of an unjust world. Come Jesus and save us from this mess we made.
The only reason western plants have tools is because those tools are cheaper than the people. In developing countries, the people are cheaper than the tools. Unfortunately, in this case they are cheaper than a shovel and wheel barrow.
It is unbelievable that there are so many compressors that need to be recycled. I have an a/c unit in Las Vegas that is 40 years old and works all summer. It’s just the junk that is made now in these same type of factories.
most compressors taken at start of the clip are Bristol 2 ton, copeland compressors etc, made in USA and Danfoss brand. All these should came from western world and GCC countries where there is no recycling facilities, these locals dont use AC.
first though i had when i heard the hissing.. then i realised it was the torch i could hear.. looks like they already have been vented.. but when and how.. no idea.. lets just hope it was done correctly lol.
The men having its fingers under the press at 6:00 shocks me. Ohh my god. I know he owns the lever too, but one lazy or sleepy moment and bye bye fingers.
I always wonder why dont they make some workplace improvements. Like shovel instead of hands. Some containers instead of throwing material onto the ground and then picking it again. Seems like terrible waste of labor
It's like a work for high schools. We always have to throw things in a pile. There's no order. Everything makes you bend over again to pick it back up again to throw it in another pile. The man loading the smelter, he doesn't use a shovel. He has to use his hands. Why you could move a shovel over just as fast as you could move that pot. It's almost like their minds are blocked from thinking of ways to do things easier or more efficiently. I'm not quite sure how to explain it
It's good to see each and every worker wearing their new health and safety approved, open toed slip ons. Makes you wonder what would or could happen, if not wearing them, in such dangerous situations!
Zawsze powtarzam, że Europa szaleje na punkcie ekologii a inne kraje ... widać na filmie, nie tylko tym. Cena wytwarzanych rzeczy w Europie jest wysoka a w Azji nie ponieważ nie ma nakładów na maszyny, ubiory, bezpieczeństwo i zdrowie pracownika. Nawet facet nie ma wygodnego stanowiska pracy, ma młotek, kawał "kowadła" i wali ile sił w ramionach. Inny nawet krzesła nie ma tylko kuca na ziemi i pracuje. Szok i współczucie.
It’s evident that this is tough and demanding work, but it’s admirable that you’re committed to providing for your family. What motivates you to push through these challenges, and are there any strategies you use to make the work more manageable or rewarding?
I thank God for guiding my soul to be born in to a middle class NE TX family in the late 70's (late model Heavy Duty Gen X Deluxe) And thankful for my family not killing me as I was a horrible ill behaved child for no reason that I can remember other then being board all the time. And thankful for being blessed with common since to stay away from collage/military and just join the work force after high school. There is no job I have worked that I can say is close to hell as I have seen in this video and the oil from tires video.
You know the techniques and equipment they are using? All originated in the Western World, this was all done their before the developing world. Every "world" started at this point, no safety, gruelling, boring repetitive labour. Time travel back to any industrialising western state 100's of years ago, and this (and worse) is what you would find.
Everyone has a plumbus in their home. First they take the dingle bop and they smooth it out with a bunch of schleem. The schleem is then repurposed for later batches. They take the dingle bop and they push it through the grumbo, where the fleeb is rubbed against it. It's important that the fleeb is rubbed, becasue the fleeb has all the fleeb juice. Then, a shlammie shows up, and he rubs it and spits on it. They cut the fleeb. There's several hizzards in the way. The blamfs rub against the chumbles, and the ploobis, and grumbo are shaved away. That leaves you with a regular old plumbus.
For those who think most of these compressor came from the U.S. All recycling yards I have dealt with (4) require a hole to be drilled, plasma cut or punched in the outer case and the oil drained out. I see no holes in any of these compressors.
These compressor units are likely shipped to them from countries all over the Middle East and South Asia. (or from anywhere in the world.) I'm guessing this might be an industry in Karachi, Pakistan. The valuable re-processed raw materials are then sold to manufacturers, probably China in particular. Fascinating.
I still have not figured out how they get the aluminum slot bars out of the rotor, as a noodle. The cutting of the steel outer band is obvious, and later the rotor inner laminations come out as steel plates (minus shaft), but where do the aluminum noodles come from.
The die they press the rotor through shears it in the middle of the aluminum bars. The outer laminations break, and the more ductile aluminum is left as the noodles. Not sure what the first machine they put the pieces through is, but the second one with the belts is a magnetic separator to remove the steel. The inner rotors get broken up in a mill, and then separated the same way.
so much for worrying about pollution or the safety of the workers who cares. So the oil is polluting the ground and the burning residue of freon is turned into phosgene gas.
Thanks for showing the entire disassembly of the induction motor rotors. I’ve seen dozens of motor assembly videos but none of them show the construction of the rotors. At least now I’ve seen their deconstructed parts! 👍🏽
Glad it helped
In Argentina we repair all these compressors.. what a pain to see them destroyed. And all the contaminating oil in the ground.. wow...
Those workers work so hard instead of machines
@@loayjasem471
مصانع الموت
@@abdellahzaidi1257
They would die a lot soon if they didn't have this job
I think it's time I stopped moaning about my job that I have ,and just be grateful I have it .. respect to these guys ...
Such a safe and environmentally friendly operation.
Garyh4458: Be carefull. Half of the worlds population (or more) don’t understand irony😅😅
What do you mean? They have gloves, that must be enough.
Oh...you mean the fact that they are literally walking around in compressor oil, or the fact that you just know...for sure, the ozone depleting refrigerant was definitely recovered responsibly? I mean come on, we do it here at great expense, so they're definitely doing it in India.right????
@@Peugeot205-t16 That half probably dont have access to youtube...
Those guys are separated by 1 paycheck from "We are now homeless and have nothing to eat", you think they care about some oil seeping into the soil? Would you?
The amount of Double Handling in this place is mind blowing.
Cheap labor ..
This is why western countries can’t compete on price, no health and safety etc
that's why the country is still a shit hole
Aye 🙄
if it wasnt for cheap labor in these countries all this would be in a landfill. Remind that to CA when they want to change the world.
Everything these guys are doing looks healthy AF to me.
Dont forget safe too :)
Yep, soil is nothing but a graveyard for the next hundred years as well.
Yea no OSHA so this can happen. Just think if they had all of those CA regulators All this would be landfill material. They are saving the environment Just risking their bodies like we did decades ago.
@@frederiquerijsdijk Try thousands!
Hey.....that open blade fan is blowing away all the smoke from the burning oil and torch !! LOL
Безопасность труда зашкаливает 😂
Squatted down.. all day for God knows how many hours....no glasses, no mask....1 glove. LOL! Man. I wish the best for you all b/c you are working hard.
The guy cutting them apart had a fan blowing the fumes away from him.
I'm sure it's a lot safer than you make it out to be
Yup those huge motors with the pulleys exposed are real safe🤦♂️ Them things would chew you up and keep on spinning like nothing happened.
@@JackStraw-s5p That the good part of that company, after the person that gets hurt their replacement can start working with no down time
Compenso vê cada minuto desse vídeo
Parabéns eu gostei de mais valeu 👍👏
I've broken down dozens of compressors friend does hvac work. Some of those compressors at start of video that he's moving with rod,weigh almost 80.lbs heavy hard work!!
I repair them here in Argentina.. such a pain to see them destroyed.. I see that pile of compressors and wanna cry. We buy those broken units to restore "as new".. what a pain..
@@AntonySimkin I'm in SC, nobody tries to repair compressors, I've scraped dozens
@@Thoreau-e4l we repair two scroll compressors per day (average). We are on the market for 12 years already. Our first repairs still operational, as clients come back for a compressor that costs just 1/2 of a new item. How much does a compressor.. for example a Copeland ZP91 cost in SC?
@@AntonySimkin I have no idea, I'm a plumber, friend of mine who has already retired from a large manufacturing plant, doing their air-conditioning and refrigeration. Last 20 years he does just refrigeration work for restaurants, convenient stores, ice makers etc. I have brass and copper scrap from plumbing and he used to drop his compressors and fan moters off here. There used to be a place in town that rebuilt rewound electric motors years ago mabe 50 years ago, but now most motors are cheap Chinese crap and people just throw them away. I will ask my friend what compressors cost.
@@AntonySimkin ok, I just called him and he said very small compressors like on a water fountain around $150.00 _$200.00 larger ones mabe for 7to 8 ton units around $1000.00 almost all are sealed units, he said large bolt together compressors are still rebuilt sometimes. Almost all that I have scrapped have either no oil, burnt up but mostly the connecting rod for piston has failed.
I have so much admiration for this
Smothered in oil. what a way to earn a living. amazing to see thought.
Great point!
Sad to say, but I think most of these men will be sick in a few short years. And that is after loosing a hand or a few toes.
A picture of an unjust world.
Come Jesus and save us from this mess we made.
@al9929 Check out book of revelation chapter 13 and 14.
Cannot imagine all those metal shavings and chips with open toed sandals on????
human body is amazing, your skin gets used to it and hardly get slivers
A few wheeled bins could greatly improve the efficiency and cleanliness vs throwing everything on the ground and picking it up by hand.
They work for $ 2.5 a day. Who needs efficiency? 😂
@@taunteratwill1787 Well cleanliness then.
The only reason western plants have tools is because those tools are cheaper than the people. In developing countries, the people are cheaper than the tools. Unfortunately, in this case they are cheaper than a shovel and wheel barrow.
Excellent insight.
Nice safety sandals
@indiolatino61 bo to sa biedacy niewolnicy co pracuja za miske zupy u kapitalistycznego pasozyda
The ground is completely destroyed, maybe even the groundwater. compress oil all over the place.
I can smell the cfcs through my screen! The recycling process is quite cool though.
GreenPeace смотрит на это сквозь солнцезащитные очки.
Сквозь слезы...
да чел там слепой уже, просто на автомате все делает
يعملون كالعبيد. و كأنه فيلم سينيمائي.
It is unbelievable that there are so many compressors that need to be recycled. I have an a/c unit in Las Vegas that is 40 years old and works all summer. It’s just the junk that is made now in these same type of factories.
And the Western world is to blame...
most compressors taken at start of the clip are Bristol 2 ton, copeland compressors etc, made in USA and Danfoss brand. All these should came from western world and GCC countries where there is no recycling facilities, these locals dont use AC.
@MarkSwaelen lol, is the root of all evil... Ja ja! 😂
You funny dude
The dirty ground is gods table and chair! These guys wont skip a beat after ww4
I just got to get me a pair of those safety toe flip-flops for my birthday 🎂.
Yeah a pair of closed toe shoes and some safety goggles would certainly go a long ways to reducing most injuries and this work place.
Prisoners don't work this hard. GOD bless the hard worker🙏😊🙏
Don't worry they don't live long in those conditions. 😎
@@taunteratwill1787 Yikes! What a thought.....
Jak ekologická recyklace!
And the uk is concerned about cows FARTING 😅😅😅😅
It breaks my heart seeing these guys working so hard in this kind of environment for a few euros a day.
Why? They could be stuck going into public sewer systems to clear human $hit without protection, I think I would rather smelt aluminum.
I have it so good in Canada. These guys not going to live long.
Oh they get good money.......for Indian people
@@blackcat-u9q5e How do you know that?
@@wematanye533 th-cam.com/users/shortsT2bvMaY9QNc?si=BoU6mLKdC-Y0tI3o
Понравился их склад готовой продукции :)
Bell'ambientino salubre!
Look at all the refrigerant going up into the atmosphere. The greenies are having a fit right now.
first though i had when i heard the hissing.. then i realised it was the torch i could hear.. looks like they already have been vented.. but when and how.. no idea.. lets just hope it was done correctly lol.
Gasses were removed before the compressor arrived to this plant.
Yea California would rather put all this in a landfill.....I am sure that is better for ecology. ha ha.
@@MikefngarageRecycling in the U.S takes place in automated plants. These don’t end up in a landfill anywhere unless put in a residential can.
I'm glad the guy carrying molten aluminum has his safety flipflips on
mind blown
Wow look at all this wow
Just amazing wow
Your video editing and explaining the process is awesome, ❤
Thank you!
@@AsianSkillsMediaLocation Bro ??
The men having its fingers under the press at 6:00 shocks me. Ohh my god. I know he owns the lever too, but one lazy or sleepy moment and bye bye fingers.
Kool to watch!!
Миллионеры 👍
安全第一❤
The safety open toe shoes are required!
I always wonder why dont they make some workplace improvements. Like shovel instead of hands. Some containers instead of throwing material onto the ground and then picking it again. Seems like terrible waste of labor
Shovels and other tools are more expensive than labour there
Low intelligence. Sad, but true.
Don't like it? Injured? Feel free to go, there are 1 billion other hungry people who have four limbs and don't complain.
@@hadnoidea2304 workspace improvements equals worker improvement equals more income smartypants.
@@veksu9. Each compressor body is potentially a shovel once cut in half. Just saying...
It's like a work for high schools. We always have to throw things in a pile. There's no order. Everything makes you bend over again to pick it back up again to throw it in another pile. The man loading the smelter, he doesn't use a shovel. He has to use his hands. Why you could move a shovel over just as fast as you could move that pot. It's almost like their minds are blocked from thinking of ways to do things easier or more efficiently. I'm not quite sure how to explain it
I fully agree...
cheap labour
They are prolly making about .30 an hour. They don’t care about speed.
working 12-14 hours for a meal will turn anyone into a biorobot
Not to mention no chairs in site and using your foot as a third hand.
I’m amazed at how the equipment keeps running
It's good to see each and every worker wearing their new health and safety approved, open toed slip ons. Makes you wonder what would or could happen, if not wearing them, in such dangerous situations!
Vous parlez des nouvelles chaussures de sécurité
over there if you want to eat you work unlike the west if you want to live off the govt tit at the expense of others it ok
I’m glad no toxic waste is leaching into the groundwater system of that country. 🙄
17:30 That how your toes look after handling molten metal wearing sandals for a while.
Condizioni di lavoro 😮 in Europa sicuramente ci saranno regole da rispettare sicuramente sfruttamento
Zawsze powtarzam, że Europa szaleje na punkcie ekologii a inne kraje ... widać na filmie, nie tylko tym. Cena wytwarzanych rzeczy w Europie jest wysoka a w Azji nie ponieważ nie ma nakładów na maszyny, ubiory, bezpieczeństwo i zdrowie pracownika. Nawet facet nie ma wygodnego stanowiska pracy, ma młotek, kawał "kowadła" i wali ile sił w ramionach. Inny nawet krzesła nie ma tylko kuca na ziemi i pracuje. Szok i współczucie.
Kya baat kya baat
I freaked out at 6:00 :D
This guy is sure about his ability to operate this press...
some quality al slabs u get there lolz
Good work
My knees hurt just watching.
That's working hard for a meager living right there
This is impressive and heart breaking at the same time.
I love OSHA.
Ecology at its best...
OK Kids, let's play "find the shiny"...,,,
That's the worst thing I've ever seen! Really?
notice the guy recieving the compressors already lost a leg... that reduce the probability of get in another amputation in 50%. wonderfull!
by 20% actually
ФОЛАУТ В РЕАЛЬНОСТИ))
Hope one day recycling becomes a LAW and companies make all products and packages recyclable
This is very hard and dirty work, but we must do whatever to earn a living for the family.
It’s evident that this is tough and demanding work, but it’s admirable that you’re committed to providing for your family. What motivates you to push through these challenges, and are there any strategies you use to make the work more manageable or rewarding?
Eres la dueña de ese negocio ???@@potechhd
Well said my friend 😊
Respect
That guys thumb was a 1/8 inch away from being amputated. Hardcore !
Im never complaining about work again
This is great for the ozone. And here in Canada they punish us with a carbon tax !!!!
Just about done few more to go.😃😃😃😃
I thank God for guiding my soul to be born in to a middle class NE TX family in the late 70's (late model Heavy Duty Gen X Deluxe) And thankful for my family not killing me as I was a horrible ill behaved child for no reason that I can remember other then being board all the time. And thankful for being blessed with common since to stay away from collage/military and just join the work force after high school. There is no job I have worked that I can say is close to hell as I have seen in this video and the oil from tires video.
These countries are an environmental disaster. These guys will be lucky to survive to old age.
dafür werden wir Deutschen bestraft
Emerging countries and economies are improving day by day. Doing it the hard way is the best motivation for improvement
This contamination won't clean up for YEARS...
You know the techniques and equipment they are using? All originated in the Western World, this was all done their before the developing world. Every "world" started at this point, no safety, gruelling, boring repetitive labour.
Time travel back to any industrialising western state 100's of years ago, and this (and worse) is what you would find.
Extremely resourceful I hope at least they have some sort of a decent life outside of this processing.
❤❤❤
The compulsory 'Safety sandals' being worn.
This factory is in Pakistan , I love my Pakistan !!!!!!!
Is this one of the most modern factories in Pakistan?
This looks like the way Amazon would run everything in the future
Building long resistent machines ist better than recycling thousends per day 😢
Это противоречит капитализму 😊
@@antanf7436 Look up ecocide in the USSR.
CRAZY
Everyone has a plumbus in their home. First they take the dingle bop and they smooth it out with a bunch of schleem. The schleem is then repurposed for later batches.
They take the dingle bop and they push it through the grumbo, where the fleeb is rubbed against it. It's important that the fleeb is rubbed, becasue the fleeb has all the fleeb juice.
Then, a shlammie shows up, and he rubs it and spits on it.
They cut the fleeb. There's several hizzards in the way.
The blamfs rub against the chumbles, and the ploobis, and grumbo are shaved away.
That leaves you with a regular old plumbus.
I'm so glad I was born in a real country
Yes, PFOS tastes much better than R134a
Pretty wild that they haven't invented chairs or workbenches in that country.
It would be interesting to have subtitles or something, telling us what they’re doing, and why.
On job applications, no safety boots to be worn, hard working lads there👍, everything on the floor and picked up again and again.
"do you have your safety equipment with you?"
"Yes, I have my wife's slippers on!"
"Okay, get to work"
Throwing everything back onto the ground after each step is apparently a very important part of the process.
For those who think most of these compressor came from the U.S. All recycling yards I have dealt with (4) require a hole to be drilled, plasma cut or punched in the outer case and the oil drained out. I see no holes in any of these compressors.
These compressor units are likely shipped to them from countries all over the Middle East and South Asia. (or from anywhere in the world.) I'm guessing this might be an industry in Karachi, Pakistan. The valuable re-processed raw materials are then sold to manufacturers, probably China in particular. Fascinating.
I'm in complete shock. They're wearing shoes........ :o
I still have not figured out how they get the aluminum slot bars out of the rotor, as a noodle. The cutting of the steel outer band is obvious, and later the rotor inner laminations come out as steel plates (minus shaft), but where do the aluminum noodles come from.
Watch complete video
The die they press the rotor through shears it in the middle of the aluminum bars. The outer laminations break, and the more ductile aluminum is left as the noodles. Not sure what the first machine they put the pieces through is, but the second one with the belts is a magnetic separator to remove the steel. The inner rotors get broken up in a mill, and then separated the same way.
Жесть откуда столько этих компрессоров?😮😳
Now, i know where my cooking pots are from...
I’m sure all the refrigerant was removed/ recovered responsibly 🤣
Whenever I start thinking my job sucks, I watch a couple of these clips and it reminds me that it could be a LOT worse.
Корпуса на iphone!😂
i have so many questions. and i also have so many solutions to so many problems that see in this video.
They guy at the press must be the engineer of the company. He s the only one sitting on a chair and wearing gloves😂
This could be you working in this place. All depends on who put you in this world.
so much for worrying about pollution or the safety of the workers who cares. So the oil is polluting the ground and the burning residue of freon is turned into phosgene gas.
I wonder how many of my compressors jobs are in there🍻
If I sat for more than 5 minutes like that you’d have to call an ambulance
They will be #1 after the collapse.
with all that oil in the ground expect a usa invasion lmao
Who cares...? The western world would be blamed...
Here we recycle responsibly and in this video they show where the ships take our stuff to get recycled...
i can smell the oil from here
I’d like to know if the gas was reclaimed from all those units.
ISO 9001 certified
This is how I imagine hell to be like.
You guys lucky, I don't think AI will never take your jobs...Amen.
Well i remember i couldnt be sure with my White Westinghouse freezer. The compressor was always out.