Literally, everything ends up on the ground. EVERYTHING! They spend 3/4 of their life picking things up off the ground only to throw it back on the ground. Make no sense at all.
I worked in machine shops in Australia, castings and forgings were done at companies that did that sort of thing, they would come to us in stillages or on pallets, moved by forklifts and leave the machine shop in stillages or pallets, it took me a while to work out why they do floor storage, it's because they don't have room or money for forklifts, so floor it is.
aaah yes the dirt floor. seems to be the norm in these videos that everything gets the dirt floor treatment at multiple stages in the production process.
you can, they just are not cheap. They would also be made from a known alloy of steel and the hole would be concentric, probably also be heat treated. This stuff would wear out in 2 weeks, dead soft.
@@killerboba When literally everything comes from the third world who even cares about units? Bit of a moot point arguing over metric when the place that invented it doesn’t make anything anymore. In reality this thing won’t last since it’s not even heat treated. It will quickly wear and stretch the chain it’s driving after it finishes dimensioning itself.
@@mysock351C You think your phone and car, are made from people wearing "safety sandals"? You are correct about the production here, with the quality being "less then perfect". Im just pointing out how 72/6589 of an inch is straight braindead. But fitting for a nation that elected a criminal for president again
Men doing good work WITH WHAT THEY HAVE. Yes, crude by your standard and my own. But they get it done to the highest standard possible in the environment they inhabit. Could you? Or are you too spoiled to even try?
I agree. They do so much with so little. Sadly, its so easy to make fun of their methods. I, for one, could do no better with such limited resources. But, jeez ..... why can't they get some better machine tools. We scrap machines that are 1000 times better.
The problem is you can’t buy that type of oil anymore! The best oil ever made for machines of all types ! It had Whales sperm in it. The environmentalists stopped it from being produced and sold in the USA back in the 1980’s I think it was? It was used in farm equipment, transmissions. Basically anywhere there was friction. It took several years to get a decent replacement. Then they charged a very high price for it. But then what do I know?
Literally, everything ends up on the ground. EVERYTHING! They spend 3/4 of their life picking things up off the ground only to throw it back on the ground.
Make no sense at all.
I see the gravity of your comment.
I worked in machine shops in Australia, castings and forgings were done at companies that did that sort of thing, they would come to us in stillages or on pallets, moved by forklifts and leave the machine shop in stillages or pallets, it took me a while to work out why they do floor storage, it's because they don't have room or money for forklifts, so floor it is.
@@SirHackaL0t.Would seem you’re putting this down! But they all seem up beat about it! Madness! There is no meaning to the word….BENCH!
@@nigelparker5886 Yeah, I was thinking just a couple sturdy tables would save so much bending over and lifting.
Now, that is some truly impressive Chonga-Bonga-Wonga!
Well done 👍 great hard work you are doing . Excellent skill ❤
another high quality shop....
Gears and gunky oil.. You got me...
At 0:45 - I recall running saws like that at Wagner Mining, circa 1988-9…
10:33 dude's got moves!
aaah yes the dirt floor. seems to be the norm in these videos that everything gets the dirt floor treatment at multiple stages in the production process.
Can't teach an old dog new tricks!
Chain Gears! neat
Actually they're sprockets
@@clearviewtechnical Correct! Thank you!
Terrorífico el gasto de agua, para refrigeración, pero....buena faena!!
That's a sprocket. Not a chain.
Probably cant get these made in the usa.
you can, they just are not cheap. They would also be made from a known alloy of steel and the hole would be concentric, probably also be heat treated. This stuff would wear out in 2 weeks, dead soft.
I think his tailstock might have a run-out problem .....
😂
It is like 1920's in Europe - dirt floor.
Love how the lathe scene at 4:40 is done by hand. Why are we bothering to use 10,000th of an inch resolution here in the US?
Rest of the world say the same about crap crafted using inches
These are chain sprockets. Eyeballing is accurate enough.
@@killerboba When literally everything comes from the third world who even cares about units? Bit of a moot point arguing over metric when the place that invented it doesn’t make anything anymore. In reality this thing won’t last since it’s not even heat treated. It will quickly wear and stretch the chain it’s driving after it finishes dimensioning itself.
@@mysock351C You think your phone and car, are made from people wearing "safety sandals"? You are correct about the production here, with the quality being "less then perfect". Im just pointing out how 72/6589 of an inch is straight braindead. But fitting for a nation that elected a criminal for president again
толщина зубьев как будто эта звездочка уже пару сотен моточасов намотала, и кто ни будь расскажите им про гильотину, а то каждый пруток пилить долго
Men doing good work WITH WHAT THEY HAVE. Yes, crude by your standard and my own. But they get it done to the highest standard possible in the environment they inhabit. Could you? Or are you too spoiled to even try?
You tell’em bro
I agree. They do so much with so little.
Sadly, its so easy to make fun of their methods. I, for one, could do no better with such limited resources.
But, jeez ..... why can't they get some better machine tools. We scrap machines that are 1000 times better.
PPE has left the conversation...
Shit nuggets...
No Sir.... That's what i do.
At least change the gear oil
The problem is you can’t buy that type of oil anymore! The best oil ever made for machines of all types ! It had Whales sperm in it. The environmentalists stopped it from being produced and sold in the USA back in the 1980’s I think it was? It was used in farm equipment, transmissions. Basically anywhere there was friction. It took several years to get a decent replacement. Then they charged a very high price for it.
But then what do I know?
"Must Watch"? Sure, but not twice or 50 seconds at the band saw.
You're right - the editing does leave a lot to be desired.
Caliber, this unknown 🙂
Lot of slack in the machines.
Downvoted and not watched due to stupidly fake thumbnail.
chain sprocket
1:31 Why's that old dude being mean to the kid?
Сталь пластилин
Зубья под закалку ТВЧ
@RetroDreher 😜