process of making super-large hex nuts and bolts. Korean metal factory

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  • Опубліковано 20 лют 2023
  • process of making super-large hex nuts and bolts. Korean metal factory
    Company homepage and sales site: www.google.co.kr/maps/place/(...
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 474

  • @ggmergues6144
    @ggmergues6144 Рік тому +86

    I prefer without music, only mechanic sounds

    • @ragnarocks9121
      @ragnarocks9121 Рік тому +5

      My thoughts exactly.

    • @ford1546
      @ford1546 Рік тому +9

      Totally agree with you. when I watch these types of videos or wood turnings, I like to hear the sound of the tools and machines, not music!

    • @Dankboi420
      @Dankboi420 Рік тому +2

      The workers prefer music

    • @ragnarocks9121
      @ragnarocks9121 Рік тому +2

      @@Dankboi420 But they probably don’t care about music in videos.

    • @MattBorgardt
      @MattBorgardt Рік тому

      No hate on classical music...

  • @Andreas-du7eg
    @Andreas-du7eg Рік тому +4

    Ich glaube, das ist ungefähr der Stand an Arbeitssicherheit, den wir in Deutschland 1960 hatten.
    Die Arbeiter arbeiten hart und sind talentiert. Sie haben einen besseren Schutz verdient.
    Ich finde es schlimm, dass Menschen heutzutage noch unter diesen veralteten Bedingungen schuften müssen.

  • @shaneclee5512
    @shaneclee5512 Рік тому +3

    We used to have factories all over Melbourne making all this sort of stuff, with Australian made machinery.
    This is exactly the type of factory you could see in Dandenong, Moorabbin, Cheltenham, Braeside, and the list goes on and on across Melbourne, and indeed, across Australia.
    Then our politicians sold us out, with lowering and then eliminating tariffs that protected Australian jobs against the difference in labour and currency exchange.
    Now you get to watch the industries we used to work in on YT, and what was once our kids employment future, being done in China.
    Our factories are now warehouses for Chinese imports, and owned by Chinese.
    I love watching and indeed doing this type of work, however, it also breaks my heart to see it on YT now as a historical record for us.
    It wasn't only the factory workers that had work, it was the Receptionist, the BookKeeper, the Sales guy, the delivery driver, the cleaner, maintenance people, the local lunch shop that employed that extra Mum for the lunch rush, it was the flow on effect of making those nuts, that gave people purpose, employment, wealth and pride, knowing they were probably going into an Australian made ship, bridge, crane or even exported for our high quality standards.
    Manufacturing was the lifeblood and pride of our country, the little fish in a very big pond, we were big hitters for our size, till our politicians, as I said earlier, sold us out to foreign interests for their own personal gain.
    Australia had absolutely nothing to gain from it, only the politicians, corporations and banks had wins out of it.
    I worry for our kids future, as we've lost so much more than jobs.
    These were the factories where you could prove yourself, gain self respect and respect from others, learn new skills, be rewarded for your efforts, we developed lasting friendships, we met girlfriends, sometimes even wives, we had community in those workplaces.
    Now we grapple for part time/casual meaningless jobs, where we can be moved on at a moments notice, reliant on online dating apps to meet people, and buying online crap because you can't get it locally anymore, as it's all imported now.
    It's only one spoke in the wheel of this story though...

    • @trailfork7815
      @trailfork7815 6 днів тому

      so the australian government is pro capitalism and free trade?

  • @tv-iz8yp
    @tv-iz8yp Рік тому +7

    기초가 무너지면 미래가 없습니다 이런 중소기업 들의 노고가 담긴 유튭 항상 응원합니다

  • @TheyForcedMyHandLE
    @TheyForcedMyHandLE Рік тому +5

    Nice video. One suggestion would be to turn the music down a bit. I reckon that people that watch manufacturing videos are more interested in the process noises than the music.

  • @concreteblockmakingmachine
    @concreteblockmakingmachine Рік тому +18

    nice job. different sizes of these bolts and nuts are used in almost all the devices. one of the biggest inventions of humankind

  • @randominternetprofile8270
    @randominternetprofile8270 Рік тому +1

    Saved me 18 min. You showed me the process in the first 20 sec.

  • @Faelen_furry
    @Faelen_furry 9 місяців тому +2

    classical music over factory is the most beautiful thing i've experienced

  • @yoeycrack1
    @yoeycrack1 Рік тому +25

    6:53 i like how they use their own nuts to make things work

  • @alperrin9310
    @alperrin9310 Рік тому +20

    "Sir? We need a new carrier to transport the nuts and bolts." "Aw, just cut an old barrel in half. That'll work." And it does! Cool.

    • @TomokosEnterprize
      @TomokosEnterprize Рік тому +1

      It has to have the holes flame burnt/cut as a drilled or sawn hole will tend to start tearing far sooner.

  • @padoelec
    @padoelec Рік тому +1

    너트나 볼트 만들때 재료를 먼저 톱으로 자르는데
    먼저 가열하고 프레스로 절단하면 안될까요.
    공정과 공정사이 모든 작업을 손으로 옮기는데 힘도 많이들고 사람도 많이 필요 할것 같음.
    달궈서 가공한 반제품을 자연 냉각 시키는데 그열을 원재료 예열용으로 쓰면 어떨까 함..
    돈 많이 벌어서 좋은 시설에서 작업했으면 좋겠네요.
    애국

  • @Triffid96
    @Triffid96 Рік тому +7

    >Working with overhead lifting equipment without hard hats.
    >Working with open face ovens without face shields.
    Because what could possibly go wrong, right?
    >Wearing cotton face masks just for... reasons, you know.

    • @KlausL300
      @KlausL300 Рік тому

      I was thinking the same thing

    • @Chip_in
      @Chip_in Рік тому

      I'm not mad about it ⛳

    • @userbill3236
      @userbill3236 Рік тому

      this is slavery. freedom peoples should not work like this. terrible env, low eff., old equipment s.

  • @user-bn2mt6cl9e
    @user-bn2mt6cl9e 9 місяців тому

    I love watching Korean factory videos with very hard working people.. It's nice to see the nuts and bolts of the operation! .

  • @backho12
    @backho12 Рік тому +11

    Hard-working Koreans! They're getting the job done! Looks like the guy making the socket head bolts on friction screw press has the hardest job. Kudos to him!

    • @iiredeyeiiredeye1569
      @iiredeyeiiredeye1569 Рік тому +3

      I want to buy the gut @14.22 a pair of safety shoes.

    • @Patrik6920
      @Patrik6920 Рік тому +1

      ...i guess ther no shortage of workers in Korea lol.....
      is this North korea?....
      i doubt many ppl at this factory can spell to safety...

    • @realemonful
      @realemonful Рік тому

      @@Patrik6920 Spelling as in like your spelling?🤣🤣🤣

    • @user-yb5uz6tu2v
      @user-yb5uz6tu2v Рік тому

      @@Patrik6920 в Северной Корее о безопасности рабочих заботятся гораздо больше.

    • @Patrik6920
      @Patrik6920 Рік тому

      @@user-yb5uz6tu2v ..ya its just small details of not being able do what u want, being free, choose ur own path etc...minor details... if the gov say jump - u better jump or u will end up in a factory stamping nuts for the next 25 years...
      ruskie on the fast track to becoming the new north korea...

  • @user-xy4xr2fu8g
    @user-xy4xr2fu8g Рік тому +2

    중소기업의 무궁한 발전을 기원합니다! 안전사고 예방의 기본 원칙! 안전장구 착용을 생활화 합시다!

  • @ford1546
    @ford1546 Рік тому +2

    Why music? When I watch these types of videos or wood turnings, I like to hear the sound of the tools and machines, not music!

  • @user-kq9fh3oj4g
    @user-kq9fh3oj4g Рік тому +2

    주당 69시간씩 일 하는 자랑 스러운 대한민국
    주당 120시간 일시키는게 목표인 대통령. 멋지다

  • @jacobbranker159
    @jacobbranker159 Рік тому +18

    Outstanding video. I use some of these larger nuts (for 1-1/4 size rod) and It's great to see exactly how they're made. Thanks for sharing

  • @benwherlock9869
    @benwherlock9869 Рік тому +9

    It's nice to see the nuts and bolts of the operation! 😁

    • @user-lf3jp9gf7d
      @user-lf3jp9gf7d 9 місяців тому

      부산 사상구 감전동에 있는곳이네요~

  • @DMPB-fi2ir
    @DMPB-fi2ir Рік тому +9

    the slugs they are hitting in the forge are not the same small slugs they show cutting off , they mixed different operation lines in video

  • @user-kj8qo7rc7o
    @user-kj8qo7rc7o Рік тому +1

    집진 시설좀 설치합시다

  • @paulocesarhenriquesmachado3135
    @paulocesarhenriquesmachado3135 11 місяців тому +2

    Que Engenharia maravilhosa estão de parabéns

  • @IsleOfFeldspar
    @IsleOfFeldspar Рік тому +5

    I understand the reason for rounding over the edges on bolt heads and nuts but it’s sometimes overdone. I’d rather have a very slight roundover for better grip even if it limits off-angle driving.

  • @user-dm9zr9ud7p
    @user-dm9zr9ud7p Рік тому +20

    Трудоемкий процесс.Интересное видео.Благодарю!

    • @com97anche
      @com97anche Рік тому +6

      Древняя технология, устаревшее оборудование, мелкие партии метиза среднего размера...

    • @victbass4792
      @victbass4792 Рік тому +2

      @@com97anche - согласен насчёт размера, а вот оборудование не УСТАРЕВШЕЕ, оно рабочее и соответствует выполняемой работе и требуемому качеству. Для самолетов конечно гайки не поточишь здесь...

    • @com97anche
      @com97anche Рік тому

      @@victbass4792 Просмотри еще раз... Единственно что там более-менее - револьверный (с кнопочками ПУ).
      Вообще-то для этого в СССР стояли автоматические линии. А такие мелкие партии метиза производились на вспомогательных производствах, примерно на таких же станках - 50 ЛЕТ НАЗАД!

    • @guffych1103
      @guffych1103 Рік тому +1

      @@victbass4792
      Это скорее всего для всяких мостов и других металлоконструкций, там не требуется очень высокая точность.
      насчет оборудования соласен, оно выполняет свою функцию и это нормально.
      А избыточная автоматизация тоже не есть хорошо, людям работать надо, а где им работать если 99% работы будет делать автоматика ?
      Да и слишком дорого будет стоить такая автоматика.

    • @user-gd6gs8po2x
      @user-gd6gs8po2x Рік тому +2

      @@victbass4792 Паровоз тоже выполняет свою работу. И "Запорожец" едет...

  • @vitalpellet
    @vitalpellet Рік тому +1

    a great factory thanks for the video

  • @user-gk7zx2ks5h
    @user-gk7zx2ks5h 9 місяців тому

    Трудоемкий процесс.Интересное видео.Благодарю!. It's nice to see the nuts and bolts of the operation! .

  • @greenlover247
    @greenlover247 Рік тому +5

    Great camera work 😀

  • @user-zu7bt7sf4b
    @user-zu7bt7sf4b Рік тому +1

    крупные семечки. сверхтехнолгоичное производство со старыми бочками в качестве контейнеров для пф и гп. плАчу от зависти.

  • @Kineon_
    @Kineon_ Рік тому +6

    i don't know who has the more exciting job at 5:40. the guy that is handing over the parts or stamping guy. tough decision man, both so fulfilling

  • @user-ew6be2cw5z
    @user-ew6be2cw5z Рік тому +3

    знаменитые японские роботы

  • @claytonsimplot9554
    @claytonsimplot9554 Рік тому +4

    How many rips in the barrel before they get replaced,14:30 and is he putting in a center hole at 16:00?

  • @lilblackduc7312
    @lilblackduc7312 Рік тому +1

    Very good! Thank you...🇺🇸 😎👍☕

  • @user-ys5tg9dj1g
    @user-ys5tg9dj1g Рік тому +1


    보구
    가내유...^^

  • @chuchuruss
    @chuchuruss Рік тому +1

    대학교 시험기간 입니다. 너무 재미있습니다.

  • @robertmceuen3630
    @robertmceuen3630 Рік тому +4

    It's interesting how threads are "rolled" onto bolts, but cut into nuts.

    • @Sickmonkey3
      @Sickmonkey3 Рік тому

      Easier access to the surface means you can apply more force in a specific manner. Rolling external threads it is more efficient because you lose less material and can make more bolts with the same amount of stock.
      Truly manufacturing has become a game of stacking efficiencies.

    • @robertmceuen3630
      @robertmceuen3630 Рік тому

      @@Sickmonkey3 Rolling threads also is much stronger than cutting them on a lathe.

    • @Sickmonkey3
      @Sickmonkey3 Рік тому

      @@robertmceuen3630 I've heard that before from my old beard predecessors but I haven't come across actual data for that claim.

    • @robertmceuen3630
      @robertmceuen3630 Рік тому

      @@Sickmonkey3 Ha. I guess I am an old beard without the beard. Rolling the threads instead of cutting them is akin to forging. Cutting interrupts the grain of the steel. My opinion of course. Appriciate you responses. Good to see folks interested in the same as me.

  • @sysghost
    @sysghost Рік тому +2

    Holy moly! That's nuts!

  • @Lone_Star_Proud
    @Lone_Star_Proud 10 місяців тому +1

    Why the music? The natural noise of the manufacturing process is all you need.

  • @stacksmalacks8826
    @stacksmalacks8826 Рік тому

    The music ruins it but its a very fascinating video. I would have loved to only hear the sounds of the machinery and work.

  • @DenisIMMORTAL
    @DenisIMMORTAL Рік тому +2

    Я реально залип на процесс и досмотрел до конца

  • @pr1sm55
    @pr1sm55 Рік тому

    12:50 makes me want to play Frostpunk... eerie feeling to it with the music playing.

  • @thetazva
    @thetazva Рік тому

    Could do without the background music, the machines are music enough!!

  • @kamilZ2
    @kamilZ2 Рік тому +1

    & t=14:26 proof that several accidents did happen in this factory. Maybe welding or inserting two flat rings to barrel can prevent this. Anyway, respect for people doing real work.

  • @lm-usmc
    @lm-usmc Рік тому +1

    Good, honest living. Great job!

  • @hootinouts
    @hootinouts 6 місяців тому

    This is so satisfying to watch. I was a machinist by trade so I fully appreciate all this.

  • @executive
    @executive Рік тому +1

    wow they machine each bolt manually by hand

  • @brucemartini2288
    @brucemartini2288 Рік тому +1

    I'd like to have a few of those

  • @rbhxtd4413
    @rbhxtd4413 Рік тому +3

    Северная Корея судя по обстановке.Перчатки и метчик это супер. Затянет и никто не поможет пока не размотает на куски медленно.Лучше без перчаток кусок кожи оторвет пальцы поломает но рука останется.У нас на заводе шестигранный пруток в станок ЧПУ и он делал такие гайки по 1000 штук в смену. Резцом нарезал сам мерял и корректировал оператор тока прутки в магазин ложил.Метчиком нарезать такую резьбу в массовом производстве не выгодно метчик быстро сядет. 200+- деталей и новый надо.У работников нет очков защитных от ИК лучей. Катаракта гарантирована всем после 5 лет такой работы.

    • @nike16384
      @nike16384 Рік тому +1

      Тоже так подумал. Много ручного труда, какие-то ржавые мятые бочки вместо контейнеров, домашние бытовые вентиляторы - особый шик..

    • @user-nb5fw2eu7t
      @user-nb5fw2eu7t Рік тому

      На 10:20 понравилось, пластмассовый ящик, по углам проволока прикручена. Этим поднимают металлические заготовки.

    • @copystarter
      @copystarter Рік тому +2

      да уж... мало чем отличается от пакистанских видео. пыли только поменьше. А на ТБ и корейцы забили. Тащит краном рваную бочку кг на 100+ и ноги под неё суёт в кроссах. точно пальцы на ногах лишние. Где обувь, очки, беруши (TWSы не в счёт), спецодежда? перчатки... это надо показывать у нас на заводе в качестве примера "как не надо делать"

  • @aversany
    @aversany Рік тому +1

    This video reminds me of having made steel bolts and nuts with a lathe in 1978.

  • @adnanshaukat2656
    @adnanshaukat2656 Рік тому +3

    Very interesting informative video, Loved it all the way, beautiful background music..
    All the very best regards and Love from Pakistan.. ❤❤❤

    • @jgrosch94709
      @jgrosch94709 Рік тому

      The music at the 7 minute mark is Still Life by Adrian Berenguer

  • @dl2818
    @dl2818 11 місяців тому +1

    Бочки прям топ. Мне интересно сколько раз они рвались и содержимое падало на сотрудников...

  • @user-fs9vn2zt2w
    @user-fs9vn2zt2w Рік тому +1

    Jh테크가 제 첫 직장이라 감회가 새롭네요 노병만 반장님도 보고싶고 ㅎㅎ

  • @no-or-man7000
    @no-or-man7000 Рік тому +4

    I am surprised by how much human labour is used instead of robots and automatic machines. A lot of it is repetitive and could easily be mechanized.

  • @user-bq8he2xt2w
    @user-bq8he2xt2w Рік тому +3

    7:32
    Почему одни гайки нарезают метчиком,а другие на ЧПУ?😲

  • @briananders323
    @briananders323 Рік тому +1

    Thank you for the video, but I already know the process of having big nuts. 😊

  • @TheStuffMade
    @TheStuffMade Рік тому +1

    Very interesting, just a shame there is music on many of these videos.

  • @slabslayer258
    @slabslayer258 Рік тому +1

    I could use just the nut blank with no threads , I use them for my jugs/noodles fishing they fit neatly on the end of my PVC pipe and stay well organized, I use the nut for my anchor to hold my
    jug/noodle stationary . But seeing as they are 13 dollars a nut in my area if I don’t find them used from a local mill doing a shut down and changing out things I can’t get none

  • @eltonbaldwin6680
    @eltonbaldwin6680 Рік тому +1

    Love the video, cool to see how those are made. However osha would have a field day in that place.

  • @davidmcguerty8405
    @davidmcguerty8405 Рік тому

    Once those violins kick in, you know some serious manufacturing is being done....

  • @stuegg7554
    @stuegg7554 Рік тому +10

    Man this video was totally nuts👍

  • @yvandelaserge7435
    @yvandelaserge7435 Рік тому +1

    I see that water is poured over the white-hot pieces of round metal when they are forged into hexagonal parts. Why doesn't this produce a big cloud of steam?

  • @drbill50
    @drbill50 Рік тому +5

    The music is horrible!

  • @PavelKralKafeman
    @PavelKralKafeman Рік тому +1

    I would never have thought that the bars were cut with a saw. I thought she was cutting herself with scissors. The cost of operating the saw must be at least 10 times higher than the cost of dividing the material by cutting with scissors.

  • @rogerdildeau7507
    @rogerdildeau7507 Рік тому +1

    Very interesting!

  • @jcmee91
    @jcmee91 Рік тому

    Seeing these after playing Ratchet and Clank hits differently lol. I need to find some markets that take these instead of cash.

  • @srussert28
    @srussert28 Рік тому +1

    Holy Crap! This is Just Nuts!!!!

  • @boelensds
    @boelensds Рік тому +1

    Great bold made with broken tap. must be 100% quality

  • @samrichards8251
    @samrichards8251 Рік тому +1

    Imagine some of those guys probably do the same job 8 hours a day for 30 years.

  • @user-rq7sz4oo2e
    @user-rq7sz4oo2e Рік тому +5

    Does South Korea still produce in such all-era factories?
    It's like looking at a factory 50 years ago.

    • @dudeonbike800
      @dudeonbike800 6 місяців тому

      Most of that equipment was probably sold off from American factories 50 years ago and shipped abroad.

  • @voongnz
    @voongnz Рік тому +1

    So cool, I want one.

  • @ZygmuntKiliszewski
    @ZygmuntKiliszewski Рік тому +13

    An interesting process for the production of large-sized hex and hex head nuts and bolts. This specific copper hammer is for display, but if it's effective, it's in its place in production. The process of upsetting steel is also interesting, greetings 😀.

    • @ZygmuntKiliszewski
      @ZygmuntKiliszewski Рік тому

      Thank you for the many likes 😀.

    • @huyked
      @huyked Рік тому +1

      16:12 Yeah, that copper hammer was interesting. I wonder what the purpose is for? Perhaps not to mar the steel as I suspect copper being softer? Softer and less impact on the human using it? No spark? Interesting.

    • @frischerfisch2528
      @frischerfisch2528 Рік тому +3

      I was wondering too. But after seeing the next step, I realized what he was doing. He is setting a centering point on the other end of the bolt, to center the bolt in the lathe.

    • @huyked
      @huyked Рік тому +1

      @@frischerfisch2528
      Hi. Oh, I understand the center point for the lathe. I was just curious why use a copper hammer instead of a steel hammer. That's all.

    • @baggismtoday
      @baggismtoday Рік тому +2

      @@huyked Copper hammers are commonly used when a non-marking hammer is required but hide or plastic isn't heavy enough.

  • @djbillye4943
    @djbillye4943 Рік тому +1

    when its made in Korea,you know its QUALITY

  • @Shreki_of_Universe
    @Shreki_of_Universe Рік тому +1

    CNC로 하는거랑 탭드릴로 하는거랑 차이가 뭔가요?

  • @SebastianBlix
    @SebastianBlix Рік тому +2

    I enjoy watchng these videos but dang does that look like a crazy dangerous place to work.

  • @fridaycaliforniaa236
    @fridaycaliforniaa236 Рік тому +2

    This is nuts 😁

  • @EricESteward
    @EricESteward Рік тому +2

    I enjoy these videos, but it would be nice to hear only the machines without the background music.

  • @denispol79
    @denispol79 Рік тому +3

    There are three things a human can watch forever:
    the burning fire, the flow of water,
    and other men working. )

  • @user-gp9td4lt5f
    @user-gp9td4lt5f Рік тому +1

    대단해다

  • @_Dwarkin
    @_Dwarkin Рік тому +1

    What about hardening? I wonder what class of nuts and bolts they did, it seems it was not more than 5.8
    And what about galvanization?

  • @1DesertPirate
    @1DesertPirate Рік тому +7

    I love videos like this, but this one makes me wonder if creating the steel and then forming it into 1" or so rods and then cutting the rods and once again melting those cut pieces so as to make big hex nuts could not be made with only one melting. I also like how each nut is tested on a threaded rod, something I know is not done for the small size nuts and bolts I buy, some of which simply do not thread properly.

    • @jakeharris9075
      @jakeharris9075 Рік тому

      So from a steel mill (with a rolling mill) you can get bar stock, billets, rod (like this), sheet, plate and rebar. With those, you can make thousands of things.
      They just don’t make enough of these to put the factory near the steel mill to have hot rod ready, and it’s not efficient for this factory to make their own rods.

    • @concreteblockmakingmachine
      @concreteblockmakingmachine Рік тому

      yes right. sometimes they are not thread properly. when I need one I always buy two!

    • @teebosaurusyou
      @teebosaurusyou Рік тому +1

      What country is making the low quality product?

    • @1DesertPirate
      @1DesertPirate Рік тому +1

      @@teebosaurusyou, I don't know where exactly. We're talking ACE Hardware and Home Depot, so my guess would be China.

    • @professorg8383
      @professorg8383 Рік тому +2

      @@jakeharris9075 There's a lot more to this than meets the eye. The metallurgical properties are very important to making nuts and bolts that can meet the specifications for strength.
      There is a big difference between "melted steel" and steel formed when it is red hot. In a rod mill, they start with molten steel cast into billets. Typically these are square shapes formed anywhere from about 6 inch square to somewhat larger or smaller. But these are cast, and formed directly from molten steel.
      The billets then get reheated to red hot and are "rolled", meaning that they are stretched, elongated and compressed under shaping rollers using high pressures. The rolling process is key because it aligns the molecules within the steel, which greatly improves the overall strength. This is a continuous process and a 20 foot by 6" billet will be squeezed down to form the round bar you see in the video. As the billet gets squeezed down and shaped it becomes longer, so at the final stages, that round rod is flying through the machinery at high speed, while the billet may still be in its original shape and moving much more slowly. It's pretty amazing to watch this red hot "spaghetti" zooming along a long roller track. In some cases that rod may be coiled up, but in this size they are usually sawed off to length as they are moving down the line.
      Once in this rod shape, they are often heat treated to adjust the hardness and other properties. Also very critical is the exact formulation of the molten steel with different alloys. Very small fractional percentages of various metal alloys will make a huge difference in the metallurgical properties. (Steel is not a generic material)
      As the rods are cut into slugs, reheated and forged into the basic shape, the temperatures and amount of displacement in the forge, are all important variables that add up to the final metallurgical properties. As the threads are cut, a form of "cold forming" takes place, which also contributes to the final properties. The process itself is highly engineered to achieve the final desired properties that meet the specifications. Again, much more going on here than meets the eye.
      You can make nut that look just like this, but I wouldn't trust them on a big structure. You can find videos of Indian, Pakistani and other countries described as "How nuts are made", but they look nothing like the process you see here. Typically, they are some little "mom and pop" shop using chucks of rebar or junk steel. They heat it up in a very much uncontrolled fashion and then get handed to the next guy who stamps it in a big hammer forge. Then they cut the threads by hand. The trouble is that side by side, you probably can't see any difference. But one is a real, high specification nut and the other is a piece of shit!!
      4 or 5 guys working in one of these little shops can probably make several hundred or more nuts in a day. But if you want to buy the high grade 2" nut produced in this video, you'll pay around $30 each. Those 4 or 5 guys combined don't even make $30 together for a long day's labor. And their processing costs are some gas to fire their small reheat furnace, some scrap steel and some 100 year old forge they bought at scrap prices. So I think you get the picture. The little shop probably makes a nut for 50 cents, maybe a dollar, but passing it off as the real thing has a huge profit margin.
      If you are doing some little shelving project using 1/4 -20, grade 2 bolts, you probably wouldn't know the difference. But imagine putting a bridge or building together with this cheap shit!!! And in big lots, there are millions of dollars to be made selling the low quality, counterfeit fasteners. It's a serious problem. Ironically, in their home countries, they use this cheap, sub-standard shit every day.
      We really shouldn't allow these third world countries to even participate in this market. But because of the money involved, somebody would find a way to cheat the system. With many large contracts today, the contractor may be assigned to supply the fasteners and some dumb ass bean counters who are supposed to watch it, may never catch it. Well engineered projects must have measures in place to ensure the quality of the materials meet the specifications.
      So, in answer to your question, you don't want to shortcut the processes involved without fully understanding the implications. That is essentially what these third world shops do.
      The Koreans, (South), have some excellent engineers and large industrial processes. Most of what they learned and the technologies they use, came from Japan. Koreans are very good at steelmaking and have good quality control. But they have some people in business who are no beyond looking for easy profits. Not so long ago, some Chinese steelmakers were shipping cheap Chinese steel to Korea to essentially be rebranded, as a way to get around tariffs on some steel products. I have little doubt that some very large steel consumers may have been involved in the ruse or at a minimum. looked the other way.
      Steel can be pretty forgiving and it's an inherently very strong material. But certain applications rely on the engineered material properties being what they are supposed to be. Years ago, many things were overbuilt to a large degree. That made sense when the materials used were not precisely made. But in modern times, designs take advantage of the very specific material science and the properties associated with them. The very high performing materials need to be made to exacting specifications. But by using these, the total amount of material can be much less. Lots of advantages to using less of very high performing materials. But the materials need to meet the specs or the design may be compromised. Critical structures are still over engineered, but to a much lesser degree than they once were. Modern engineering tries to build redundancy into designs and avoid single point failures. But assemble a bridge or building with substandard fasteners and you can create multiple failure points that may well go unnoticed.

  • @onesiogomes1431
    @onesiogomes1431 Рік тому +1

    Óleo solúvel a base de água, é muito bom para retifica, para fazer roscas e serras o bom e óleo mineral

  • @davidtwining4059
    @davidtwining4059 Рік тому +2

    I love watching Korean factory videos with very hard working people.

    • @nialldaly7108
      @nialldaly7108 Рік тому +1

      Yes but using 1/2 tar barrels to lift such weight without any strengthners where the lifting holes are is mad. I see one such barrell which had torn thru and still in use with new holes, Also the guys moving the cranes about are walking over obsticles as they work. Really safety needs to be improved a bit. A tidy of the floor, Proper containers not tar barrels, and I see one person walking on top of rounded steel at height. It wouldnt cost an aufuff lot to make the workplace a whole pile safer, while still using the same procedures.... Just safer

    • @Rihardololz
      @Rihardololz Рік тому

      @@nialldaly7108 i see your point but theirs something else to it, my guess is that method is more convenient?

  • @desinfector
    @desinfector Рік тому +4

    what would they do without these old oil barrels?

  • @veleriphon
    @veleriphon Рік тому +1

    I may only have mild tinnitus, but I feel this entire video.

  • @ninjagoat.
    @ninjagoat. Рік тому

    verre nice!!!

  • @nexslevell22
    @nexslevell22 Рік тому +2

    Seharusnya pabrik seperti ini harus dibangaun di NKRI

  • @user-lj3ie1de6l
    @user-lj3ie1de6l 8 місяців тому

    Бочки в качестве тары на современном производстве это нечто.

  • @chrismowat6519
    @chrismowat6519 Рік тому +4

    This is where Automation makes perfect sense. There is simply too much handling of each piece over and over again. Even just to put a little stamp on each nut makes no sense when it could have been stamped when the nut/hex was first formed. The steel shot cleaning wouldn't have adversely affected any stamp marks.
    There is just too much repetitive manual handling that could easily be eliminated with the proper machinery. It would still require humans to maintain the equipment so few would lose jobs in the long run but the automation would make these nuts much faster and more accurately. I say the latter after watching the Threading which was often on an angle (not perpendicular to the nut face).

    • @yak-machining
      @yak-machining Рік тому

      Yeah, it also wondered me that they still use a manual lathe instead of a more faster cnc machine

    • @jessiepooch
      @jessiepooch Рік тому

      Really? Genius.

  • @a000007653ify
    @a000007653ify Рік тому

    저희 회사랑 거래하는 업체입니다. 이런 영상도 촬영 했었네요 ㅎㅎ 신기합니다.

  • @sergejusvasiljevas6943
    @sergejusvasiljevas6943 Рік тому +7

    Красиво !!!

    • @leonidk5822
      @leonidk5822 Рік тому

      Старый советский завод в селе "хуевокукуево" во сто раз более красивый и технологичный.

  • @miatatommy2000
    @miatatommy2000 Рік тому +1

    That's just plain nuts!

  • @mayurireddy8196
    @mayurireddy8196 Місяць тому

    Amazing process of making hex nuts and bolts

  • @ASRvw
    @ASRvw Рік тому +2

    Non hardening, no tempering ... interesting.

  • @petrvolkov1501
    @petrvolkov1501 Рік тому +4

    40 лет назад и я так работал. Только у нас с техникой безопасности получше было: тара для деталей была стандартная, регулярно проверялась на грузоподъёмность и вместо чалок проволока не использовалась. Не было ЧПУ, но и не было таких архаичных прессов и станков. И уж, конечно, таких рваных бочек не было. Иными словами социализм плюс феодализм равно корейский капитализм.

    • @victbass4792
      @victbass4792 Рік тому

      Суажи кому что 50 лет назад станков с чпу в ссср было больше чем ву США -не поверят..... А они как инопланетяне в цехе рядами стояли.... Непривычные по виду...

  • @miguelisturiz8936
    @miguelisturiz8936 Рік тому +1

    What's that tool that looks like a Cyclop for?

  • @Byrlak65
    @Byrlak65 Рік тому +4

    Что то я прям залип при просмотре видео. Завораживает процесс......... А присмотришься всё как и у нас, в России. Те же бочки обрезанные под продукцию, те же лица работяг (только чуть прищуренные глаза) и тот же лютый оскал капитализма. Пролетариат он и в Корее, пролетариат.

    • @SergeyLinkov
      @SergeyLinkov Рік тому +3

      И такие же похеристы, 6:40 работают сломанным метчиком. Да ничего же страшного )

  • @MrDemonKing21
    @MrDemonKing21 Рік тому +1

    Man... I get nervous power tapping a 3/8 inch or even 1/2 inch... so much so I rarely power tap at all. I just use a Jacobs Chuck and hand tighten the tap in the chuck, start it, then loosen the chuck, and hand tap it with a crescent wrench or a tap handle. Never mind these guys power tapping everything from a 1 inch to 2 inch I.D Hex Nut. I can just imagine the SNAP sound of one of them breaking and the sinking feeling of "DAMMIT!" when that happens.

  • @katemdegrood4580
    @katemdegrood4580 Рік тому

    Howdy and Great Vid.... DEEZE NUTS

  • @komuto-herovato
    @komuto-herovato Рік тому +2

    👍Тяжёлый труд

  • @richardwills7768
    @richardwills7768 Рік тому

    This answers the question of which cane first, the nut or the bolt...

  • @luboschovanec5744
    @luboschovanec5744 Рік тому +2

    pracujem tiez v strojarstve. konkretne CNC obrabanie. obavam sa, ze bezpecnost pri praci v tejto firme asi velku prioritu nema.