One of my best friends in HS was Polish and I worked with a few in a glass plant. Polish steel is top quality. And if you have the chance to hire someone from Poland, hire him or her. Hardest working people you'll ever meet. They are not lazy and don't appreciate people that are lazy. Geat content
Had a Chemistry professor who had worked in a steel mill while an undergraduate. Told quite a few stories about hazards..., incorporated his industrial experience into his lectures; Chemistry in action!
One of the most remarkable features of the grizzly Ladle is its exceptional heat and wear resistance it achieves this by incorporating additional protective measures for critical structural elements that are subjected to intense thermal and abrasive forces that ensures the Ladle remains in optimal condition. Whewww, I had to stop on that before I choked. I wanna memorize and use sometime during a conversation with someone I don't like. Lol. Have mercy
@@sammylacks4937 it really makes me irrationally angry... just some putz using free tools to regurgitate sales and promotional material, in a completely unedited and un-proof-read form. Like, I get it, use the tools at your disposal to make something worthwhile.... EXCEPT THIS ISNT WORTH WHILE! MOST OF THIS INFORMATION IS INACCURATE, either cherry picked from sales materials for specific make/model machines, or just completely unrelated... LIKE WHY THE FUCK is there a section about a fucking railroad crane at the end??? It just starts launching off about how different countries want to upgrade their "rescue train" capabilities (lol).... wtf? like... @YouCanDo_TV... NO YOU CANT DO FUCKING TV... fucking proof read some shit, fucking listen to how god awful your cheap AI voice translator sounds, and have some fucking pride in your "content." This isnt TV... this is a shitty public access TV ad competing for attention with the lowest possible quality content... all of which was stolen/ripped from other sources under "fair use" (as in you put a poorly translated AI script over completely unrelated stock footage, sales materials, etc.... This isnt to discourage you... if you want to make videos, MAKE videos... dont just strap together bullshit and put a shit "english" AI over it because you want to capitalize on market you dont have access too... Fucking christ on a cracker.
Although i have never worked in a steel mill i toured bethlem steel in lakawana new york. I have a genuine respect for the men and women that work there. One lapse of concentration for a brief second can kill many. God bless and keep you guys
im so irrationally angry with this video, and this is why... its literally AI generated content... i mean the video about steel making was basically different sales presentations for heavy equipment slapped together with stock footage (half unrelated too) a shit AI voiceover and for some fucking reason the video ended talking about countries wanting to improve their rail cranes... i feel like i just broke my fever in the middle of the night and this was my delirious fever dream.
@@mileyt5192 The script and video are similar to the presentations I made as a child when I was forced to in school. Not knowing what is really relevant or interesting about the topic.
I'm ready to buy the slag mover and the demolition robot, but mostly came to see the incredible molten metal spills.....yeah, the machine generated venue bugs me too as who knows if the content is edited, and part of the enjoyment of viewing such videos is hearing actual workers comments....
I worked for some years in a foundry that produced Aluminum Nickel Cobalt 5 magnets (AlNiCo). While it was a relatively small foundry, but I did have the experience of running without thinking! I ran, for the first and only time in my life with no consideration about weather I should run or not! I was standing next to a mold that was filled with white hot metal when it caught on it's track and began to tip over. I could have easily been killed by that metal but instead I ran! I am an old man now but I never again faced such a situation. There was no decision! You run or you die!
I worked with liquid steel for 29 years. One melt 350 tons. The plant produces about 10 million tons of steel per year. In case of danger, always run to the safe side and only then look back at what happened. Sometimes when going to work, an inner voice tells you that something is going to happen at work today... And it does. This is called intuition based on vast experience. At work, like a pilot in a dogfight, you must constantly turn your head and constantly monitor the situation around you. Greetings from Russia
Run to Christ for salvation, or the wrath of God will burn against you eternally, for breaking his commandments and rejecting his way of salvation!!!!!!
I worked in a special plant making the glass for BIG telescopes, the temperatures were very high, and I was constantly monitoring the composition of the glass, we had a safety mentality the prevented problems!😊
Labor safety is an extremely important issue in production. It's nice to know that you have always maintained a safe working environment, with no occupational accidents.
13:33 That accident is the one I tell people about when talking about hot metal accidents. Yes, that is aluminum, as a hot liquid, catching on fire for long enough to black out the exposure control on the camera as it spreads and superheating the air hot enough to burn the insides of lungs. Not very survivable...
I actually worked there. I worked in the blast furnace. They took us on a tour to the Bop Shop and we were on the level where the crane picked up the buckets to pour near where we were standing. It was interesting a terrifying all at once.
My dad's old college roomate worked there back in the 80s as a mechanic. We visited the place a few times and as a young boy it was an awesome place to see. The size of the machinery and vehicles alone was jaw-dropping. I never saw the furnaces or anything inside, but what I saw in the shops was enough to last a lifetime.
Did a similar "self-guided tour" at a lead/zinc smelter in Montana years ago....the sulfuric acid plant was awesome.... Anyone here used to work at that place? East Helena ASARCO plant, closed round 2000...
0:11 Geneva steel in Utah has a foundry pit just like that and I had to use an industrial vacuum for all that slag. When the slag is still hot and you vacuum it up it creates arks as wide as lightning and they would jump from my feet to my arms and up my back, It hurt bad.
I know vac trucks are used in steel mills - but not for hot slag . And I have heard of workers getting shocked - maybe leather gloves would have helped . If this actually happened to you often ; your boss and coworkers were blanking over you .
The " hot metal" from the furnace we call "pig iron" and we call them "bottle cars" not torpedo cars. Worked as a union Boilermaker all over the 9 blast furnaces, 6 oxygen furnaces and assorted electric arc furnaces and their associated pollution control systems in SE Michigan.
In the case of the "torpedo cars" it could be that it's a literal translation from a non-English language. I have heard them called as such in the (stainless) steel plant where I work as an industrial (IT) systems engineer. However, that is only the term used in my native language and dialect, plus I only have my specific plant as a reference. So, likely it's the wrong term in English indeed, since I have never heard the term used in English before while I have heard the term "bottle cars". So my guess is that it was literally translated from some European language. Perhaps, since this was recorded in Poland, they are called "torpedo cars" in Polish as well Endlessly fascinating environment in any case, I could wander around there for days being in a constant state of awe. That said, you do have to have your head on a swivel at all times. And even then, serious accidents will still happen from time to time, though much less frequently than they used to. Everything there is huge, hot, flammable, toxic, under high pressure, at high speed and/or massively heavy, so if accidents happen, the consequences are often proportionately serious. We had a fatal accident not too long ago where someone's sleeve caught on some spinning rollers used for cold-rolling steel plates and he was pulled in.
@@BinaryBlueBull I'm 72 and in my years I've worked with people from all over the world. One thing I've learned is that different people refer to the same thing with different terms. This depends on your country and in some cases your trade. My comment was meant as informational not a criticizm.
@@richardkawucha1232 Indeed, quite clearly, and I read it as such too. My reply was meant as an addendum, also not as criticism. I personally love encountering random snippets of information, such as is the case with your comment. So when I know something, I often try to share it in turn. Kind of a quid pro quo for all the information other people have provided me with
The thumbnail is a little strange here, I don't think 2 guy's are going to be looking over plans in short sleeve business attire while molten steel is pouring all over the place! come on.
RIP those with Epilepsy. Don't see a warning on here. But around 10 minutes in, there's a really intense session of flashes. Even triggered me and I don't even have epilepsy.
I watched the whole advertisment for steel mill related equipment and did not see "Extremely Dangerous Accident Of Molten Metal Ladle". I kinda think that the title was click bait.
In the foundry i worked in i did all the different jobs that involved moten steel. The converters were mounted on the front of a big royal converter truck. The only thing protecting you was a windshield and your gear
Informative, but completely misleading title. You didn't cover any accidents, no footage, yet that's the main promise made. *My mistake folks, there's a whopping 6 minutes of footage of accidents....I skimmed over them by accident because they were so short and all one after another.
Well...less than 6 minutes of accidents in a 40+ minute viddo...Very well, I partially retract my statement, but I still take issue. A) It takes until over 13 minutes to show any accidents, and B) Each of those segments is two minutes long, the last even less, out of a FORTY+ MINUTE VIDEO. If you labeled your food with the strong implication it's made with natural ingredients, then only 15% of the product is actually natural, it's false advertising at worst and ignorant at best. Is there really a lack of video footage, or even investigations into other accidents in the field you could have discussed? Yes, there are tons. You probably should have either made it longer or cut the detailed descriptions of the machinery and focus on the accidents. 15% of a video containing accidents while titled *primarily* as an accident video is deceptive and clickbaity. You could have included something about accidents in the title, but not as the main focus. *I think your lack of likes on this is an implication that many felt the same.
@@davejones9469 Thank you very much for taking the time to comment. Because the title can only have a maximum of 100 words, we also ask for permission to put the content that is considered most attractive to viewers in the title. However, we have also carefully separated each content section/item into timelines (you just need to click on the timeline) to keep track of the sections you are interested in. Please check the video's description.
@@YouCanDo_TV @YouCanDo_TV I suppose it makes sense that you need to maybe stretch definitions for the sake of the algorithm, but I just think there are better ways to do it. Also, if you split it up (metalworking machinery and accidents separately) you could get two videos out of the same script basically. More output and possibly more revenue. The manufacturing videos on YT seem to do extremely well, so I don't think they need to be spruced up at all. Sorry for ranting, but hopefully it's taken as intended; constructive criticism. Don't mistake my bluntness for malice, I just don't like writing things all flowery to protect all the fragile egos out there lol.
Saw a huge pot of molten magnesium overflow once. The aluminum ladder leaning against it literally disappeared rung by rung. Was mesmerizing … like a magic trick…but I ran anyway, lol.
saw an article about roads being built with slag being far longer lasting and able to handle far more weight than usual gravel. they should really use this worldwide. far more useful disposal of it putting into roads and making them last longer.
Hot metal slag is a waste product with toxins most places wouldn't allow as roads today. It cant really be molded, it's more like crushed glass when cooled. It would likely be a good road base material under pavement if allowed. Where I worked at Inland Steel in East Chicago Indiana USA for more than 100 years they dumped it into Lake Michigan. They extended their property by miles into the lake which you can clearly see when looking on a map or satellite image. They would build more facilities right on top of their new real estate what was once lake.
Steel is so basic to modern life and not even that expensive, but what it takes to get it to us is amazing. Even the origin of iron at the surface level is fascinating.
its the video... the problem with the audio is the video... as in the whole video is shit, and has shit audio (that wasnt clipped from company sales materials), with a shit-tier un-proof-read transcript voiced by AI... but bonus points for allowing me to "read along" with your transcript (wtf... this is sad)
We have no links or advertising ties with any business units. Because the content is about those machines and equipment, we need to mention the names and specific technical specifications of those machines and equipment.
@@YouCanDo_TV no you just used free use sales materials and then copy-paste the sales brochure into 11Labs or some similar AI voiceover and BOOM, youve got a "video." Do better.
@@YouCanDo_TV not only is your video uninspired, low effort and repetitive, but so are your "responses" to criticism for your click-bait title and low effort "content." You have responded the same thing like 10 times to 10 people, word for word... "Control+C. Control+V" I mean ive commented like 10 times on the absolutely abysmal quality of the video, and i didnt need to copy paste... Why am I so angry? because you so obviously dont respect your viewers or their time and attention.... You created the cheapest, most low quality and low effort "content" you could, then used SEI and gaming the algorithm to get peoples attention, and make your $$ That mentality is how we got giant toxic slag piles. Short term gains, and consequences be damned.
12:38 - How they dished out detentions at school, back in the year 1921... Here the child had to pull down their pants and trousers, so they had a bare behind; then the steel was poured onto their arse cheeks.
Hi, I'm a musician from County Durham in the UK. I'm creating a music video for a track I've written and wondered whether you'd allow me to use a few seconds from your brilliant video. I would credit you in the video end credits. I should add that I make no money from the music. Thanks John.
14:44 is anyone out there trying to have me believe this UTTERLY STUPID PREMATURE retreat of the crane with the hook NOT FULLY DISENGAGED is human error ?????? It seriously looks like the Operator is momentarily asleep in the cabin...or he's busy lighting a fucking cigarette. That's what i think...
@alexvan5108 I worked with liquid steel for 29 years. One melt 350 tons. The plant produces about 10 million tons of steel per year. In case of danger, always run to the safe side and only then look back at what happened. Sometimes when going to work, an inner voice tells you that something is going to happen at work today... And it does. This is called intuition based on vast experience. At work, like a pilot in a dogfight, you must constantly turn your head and constantly monitor the situation around you. Greetings from Russia
Seems the world's biggest steel producers are: China, India, Japan, US, Russia, South Korea, Germany, Turkey, Brazil, Iran, Italy, Taiwan, Vietnam, Mexico, and Indonesia.
I like how the narrative in this video downplays the toxicities of the steel smelting process to help make the tree-huggers feel better about the environmental impacts that make all that land unusable for anything. After all, even tree-huggers fly in jets, ride railways, drive their cars, enjoy the power delivered to them for their comforts, all for the sake of comforts while involved in active causes. Hypocrisy defines so much of protesting culture, playing all manner of cards that they think will get more attention and action so that the money they get from Soros and other world influencers feel they are getting their money's worth in ushering in a world governance power and economy...with them at the top of the heap, of course!
The narrator is AI. So blame it, And boy You Seem triggered. The video is just showing some interesting stuff How You think there is some undercurrent to make this seem better to enviromentalist is rediculous. Yeah its a conspirisy by AI and big steel to make this seem healthy. we need need more videos of the raw destructive nature of smelting. That will show em
One of my best friends in HS was Polish and I worked with a few in a glass plant. Polish steel is top quality. And if you have the chance to hire someone from Poland, hire him or her. Hardest working people you'll ever meet. They are not lazy and don't appreciate people that are lazy.
Geat content
So...They're like the Mexicans of Europe?
is Polish steel is used to make poles?
@@TheWeepingCorpse 🤣🤣🤣
@@TheWeepingCorpse shut your pole hole lol.
@@Mtnmanmike62 Yes seriously
Had a Chemistry professor who had worked in a steel mill while an undergraduate. Told quite a few stories about hazards..., incorporated his industrial experience into his lectures; Chemistry in action!
Me too
Drove past steel mills a few times. Close as I will ever get.
Artificial voice reading sales material and specs in a language the poster doesn't even understand.
It's sounds more like it has been translated sequentially through several languages of which the poster doesn't understand.
@@bobweiram6321w
One of the most remarkable features of the grizzly Ladle is its exceptional heat and wear resistance it achieves this by incorporating additional protective measures for critical structural elements that are subjected to intense thermal and abrasive forces that ensures the Ladle remains in optimal condition.
Whewww, I had to stop on that before I choked. I wanna memorize and use sometime during a conversation with someone I don't like.
Lol. Have mercy
@@sammylacks4937 it really makes me irrationally angry... just some putz using free tools to regurgitate sales and promotional material, in a completely unedited and un-proof-read form. Like, I get it, use the tools at your disposal to make something worthwhile.... EXCEPT THIS ISNT WORTH WHILE! MOST OF THIS INFORMATION IS INACCURATE, either cherry picked from sales materials for specific make/model machines, or just completely unrelated...
LIKE WHY THE FUCK is there a section about a fucking railroad crane at the end??? It just starts launching off about how different countries want to upgrade their "rescue train" capabilities (lol).... wtf?
like... @YouCanDo_TV... NO YOU CANT DO FUCKING TV... fucking proof read some shit, fucking listen to how god awful your cheap AI voice translator sounds, and have some fucking pride in your "content."
This isnt TV... this is a shitty public access TV ad competing for attention with the lowest possible quality content... all of which was stolen/ripped from other sources under "fair use" (as in you put a poorly translated AI script over completely unrelated stock footage, sales materials, etc....
This isnt to discourage you... if you want to make videos, MAKE videos... dont just strap together bullshit and put a shit "english" AI over it because you want to capitalize on market you dont have access too... Fucking christ on a cracker.
@@sammylacks4937Agreed.. hear..
Watching those molten metal spills seems to justify the title of this episode! Run for the hills, so to speak!!
Although i have never worked in a steel mill i toured bethlem steel in lakawana new york. I have a genuine respect for the men and women that work there. One lapse of concentration for a brief second can kill many. God bless and keep you guys
Welcome to the gpt generated content. This is your future
im so irrationally angry with this video, and this is why... its literally AI generated content... i mean the video about steel making was basically different sales presentations for heavy equipment slapped together with stock footage (half unrelated too) a shit AI voiceover and for some fucking reason the video ended talking about countries wanting to improve their rail cranes... i feel like i just broke my fever in the middle of the night and this was my delirious fever dream.
@@mileyt5192 The script and video are similar to the presentations I made as a child when I was forced to in school. Not knowing what is really relevant or interesting about the topic.
I'm ready to buy the slag mover and the demolition robot, but mostly came to see the incredible molten metal spills.....yeah, the machine generated venue bugs me too as who knows if the content is edited, and part of the enjoyment of viewing such videos is hearing actual workers comments....
I worked for some years in a foundry that produced Aluminum Nickel Cobalt 5 magnets (AlNiCo). While it was a relatively small foundry, but I did have the experience of running without thinking! I ran, for the first and only time in my life with no consideration about weather I should run or not! I was standing next to a mold that was filled with white hot metal when it caught on it's track and began to tip over. I could have easily been killed by that metal but instead I ran! I am an old man now but I never again faced such a situation. There was no decision! You run or you die!
I worked with liquid steel for 29 years. One melt 350 tons. The plant produces about 10 million tons of steel per year. In case of danger, always run to the safe side and only then look back at what happened. Sometimes when going to work, an inner voice tells you that something is going to happen at work today... And it does. This is called intuition based on vast experience. At work, like a pilot in a dogfight, you must constantly turn your head and constantly monitor the situation around you. Greetings from Russia
Run to Christ for salvation, or the wrath of God will burn against you eternally, for breaking his commandments and rejecting his way of salvation!!!!!!
13:20 how do they clean that up after it’s cooled down ?? 🔥🔥🫣
I worked in a special plant making the glass for BIG telescopes, the temperatures were very high, and I was constantly monitoring the composition of the glass, we had a safety mentality the prevented problems!😊
Labor safety is an extremely important issue in production. It's nice to know that you have always maintained a safe working environment, with no occupational accidents.
13:33 That accident is the one I tell people about when talking about hot metal accidents. Yes, that is aluminum, as a hot liquid, catching on fire for long enough to black out the exposure control on the camera as it spreads and superheating the air hot enough to burn the insides of lungs. Not very survivable...
I'm glad I got to see deep inside heavy industry in person. I snuck into a VIP tour in US Steel Gary Works about 45 years ago.
I actually worked there. I worked in the blast furnace. They took us on a tour to the Bop Shop and we were on the level where the crane picked up the buckets to pour near where we were standing. It was interesting a terrifying all at once.
My dad's old college roomate worked there back in the 80s as a mechanic. We visited the place a few times and as a young boy it was an awesome place to see. The size of the machinery and vehicles alone was jaw-dropping. I never saw the furnaces or anything inside, but what I saw in the shops was enough to last a lifetime.
Did a similar "self-guided tour" at a lead/zinc smelter in Montana years ago....the sulfuric acid plant was awesome....
Anyone here used to work at that place? East Helena ASARCO plant, closed round 2000...
"Hot Slag Bucket" thats what i call the old lady.... haha
All i can say is what the duck with an capital F. That is the craziest spit ive never seen. It gave me chills.
The best Three Stooges quote when Mo said to Curly, do you know what that was? He said yeah hot …
12:40 How the heck there is so much liquid metal in that little bucket? That thing looks more like a faucet!
Is it a funnel into the furnace?
My thoughts exactly.
Buenísimo el video por su excelente explicación.
Alemania #-1 in tecnología.
T.y.
0:11 Geneva steel in Utah has a foundry pit just like that and I had to use an industrial vacuum for all that slag. When the slag is still hot and you vacuum it up it creates arks as wide as lightning and they would jump from my feet to my arms and up my back, It hurt bad.
If you ran an internal grounding wire inside the pickup tube, would that cut down on the static electricity?
I know vac trucks are used in steel mills - but not for hot slag .
And I have heard of workers getting shocked - maybe leather gloves would have helped .
If this actually happened to you often ; your boss and coworkers were blanking over you .
imagine acquiring a time machine, going back in time and bringing back a blacksmith from the dark age and showing them this video
Imagine acquiring a time machine, going back in time, and finding out how the pyramids of Giza and the walls of Sacsayhuaman were built!!!!!! :P
FYI, one of those buckets carry 350 tons and are the size of a townhouse.
Best 41 minutes I have spent on YTube in some time.
The " hot metal" from the furnace we call "pig iron" and we call them "bottle cars" not torpedo cars. Worked as a union Boilermaker all over the 9 blast furnaces, 6 oxygen furnaces and assorted electric arc furnaces and their associated pollution control systems in SE Michigan.
In the case of the "torpedo cars" it could be that it's a literal translation from a non-English language. I have heard them called as such in the (stainless) steel plant where I work as an industrial (IT) systems engineer. However, that is only the term used in my native language and dialect, plus I only have my specific plant as a reference. So, likely it's the wrong term in English indeed, since I have never heard the term used in English before while I have heard the term "bottle cars". So my guess is that it was literally translated from some European language. Perhaps, since this was recorded in Poland, they are called "torpedo cars" in Polish as well
Endlessly fascinating environment in any case, I could wander around there for days being in a constant state of awe. That said, you do have to have your head on a swivel at all times. And even then, serious accidents will still happen from time to time, though much less frequently than they used to. Everything there is huge, hot, flammable, toxic, under high pressure, at high speed and/or massively heavy, so if accidents happen, the consequences are often proportionately serious. We had a fatal accident not too long ago where someone's sleeve caught on some spinning rollers used for cold-rolling steel plates and he was pulled in.
@@BinaryBlueBull I'm 72 and in my years I've worked with people from all over the world. One thing I've learned is that different people refer to the same thing with different terms. This depends on your country and in some cases your trade. My comment was meant as informational not a criticizm.
@@richardkawucha1232 Indeed, quite clearly, and I read it as such too. My reply was meant as an addendum, also not as criticism. I personally love encountering random snippets of information, such as is the case with your comment. So when I know something, I often try to share it in turn. Kind of a quid pro quo for all the information other people have provided me with
@@BinaryBlueBull I also enjoyed this as I am of Polish descent.
Yeah and the folks from Bethlehem Steel called them 'subs'. Different names, same thing.
Former Steel Mill Worker 89-09 you Guys Be Careful in the Mill ! ✊🇺🇸✌
Excelent and interesting❤ thanks you!
Glad you like it.
that's one hell of a foundry
The thumbnail is a little strange here, I don't think 2 guy's are going to be looking over plans in short sleeve business attire while molten steel is pouring all over the place! come on.
It´s called clickbait. A common practice here on UA-cam.
RIP those with Epilepsy. Don't see a warning on here. But around 10 minutes in, there's a really intense session of flashes. Even triggered me and I don't even have epilepsy.
What 💩 ?
I watched the whole advertisment for steel mill related equipment and did not see "Extremely Dangerous Accident Of Molten Metal Ladle". I kinda think that the title was click bait.
Please refer these:
13:33. Aluminum Smelter Overhead Crane Accident: A Molten Mishap
15:22. Foundry Worker's Critical Error
This video has audio issues, absolutely hate crackling/interruptions.
My god, no wonder UA-cam wanted me to turn off ad blocker, theres and ad on this video every couple mins
I wouldn’t do anything UA-cam wanted me to
That is how the person who is behind the channel makes their money... they take videos from others, add an AI generated narration, and dumps it out.
In the foundry i worked in i did all the different jobs that involved moten steel. The converters were mounted on the front of a big royal converter truck. The only thing protecting you was a windshield and your gear
Informative, but completely misleading title. You didn't cover any accidents, no footage, yet that's the main promise made.
*My mistake folks, there's a whopping 6 minutes of footage of accidents....I skimmed over them by accident because they were so short and all one after another.
Please refer these:
11:53. Hot slag bucket
13:33. Aluminum Smelter Overhead Crane Accident: A Molten Mishap
15:22. Foundry Worker's Critical Error
Well...less than 6 minutes of accidents in a 40+ minute viddo...Very well, I partially retract my statement, but I still take issue.
A) It takes until over 13 minutes to show any accidents, and B) Each of those segments is two minutes long, the last even less, out of a FORTY+ MINUTE VIDEO.
If you labeled your food with the strong implication it's made with natural ingredients, then only 15% of the product is actually natural, it's false advertising at worst and ignorant at best.
Is there really a lack of video footage, or even investigations into other accidents in the field you could have discussed? Yes, there are tons.
You probably should have either made it longer or cut the detailed descriptions of the machinery and focus on the accidents.
15% of a video containing accidents while titled *primarily* as an accident video is deceptive and clickbaity.
You could have included something about accidents in the title, but not as the main focus.
*I think your lack of likes on this is an implication that many felt the same.
@@davejones9469 Thank you very much for taking the time to comment. Because the title can only have a maximum of 100 words, we also ask for permission to put the content that is considered most attractive to viewers in the title. However, we have also carefully separated each content section/item into timelines (you just need to click on the timeline) to keep track of the sections you are interested in. Please check the video's description.
@@YouCanDo_TV @YouCanDo_TV I suppose it makes sense that you need to maybe stretch definitions for the sake of the algorithm, but I just think there are better ways to do it.
Also, if you split it up (metalworking machinery and accidents separately) you could get two videos out of the same script basically. More output and possibly more revenue.
The manufacturing videos on YT seem to do extremely well, so I don't think they need to be spruced up at all.
Sorry for ranting, but hopefully it's taken as intended; constructive criticism. Don't mistake my bluntness for malice, I just don't like writing things all flowery to protect all the fragile egos out there lol.
@@davejones9469 Not to mention, not a single fatality! Very disappointing. *irony*
I think I lost a few brain cells watching this
Saw a huge pot of molten magnesium overflow once. The aluminum ladder leaning against it literally disappeared rung by rung. Was mesmerizing … like a magic trick…but I ran anyway, lol.
....is a very great process...🌏🌍🌎👁️
I've always wondered why they dont pour slag into rectangular molds and make highway slabs. Japan has long done that with car crushers.
saw an article about roads being built with slag being far longer lasting and able to handle far more weight than usual gravel. they should really use this worldwide. far more useful disposal of it putting into roads and making them last longer.
@@purpleduggy7680Seems like slag would last even longer than the car crush slabs too!
Hot metal slag is a waste product with toxins most places wouldn't allow as roads today. It cant really be molded, it's more like crushed glass when cooled. It would likely be a good road base material under pavement if allowed. Where I worked at Inland Steel in East Chicago Indiana USA for more than 100 years they dumped it into Lake Michigan. They extended their property by miles into the lake which you can clearly see when looking on a map or satellite image. They would build more facilities right on top of their new real estate what was once lake.
Steel is so basic to modern life and not even that expensive, but what it takes to get it to us is amazing. Even the origin of iron at the surface level is fascinating.
Click bait. Just explained the process of forging steel. Not one single thing about extreme accidents
Pleae refer these:
11:53. Hot slag bucket
13:33. Aluminum Smelter Overhead Crane Accident: A Molten Mishap
15:22. Foundry Worker's Critical Error
At 17:55 you measure giant machines in millimeters?
Are you serious?
cat listen to this voice i just cant it gets me so irritated every time.
I worked at WSX for 35 years, I saw several accidents.
something wrong with the audio on this video
its the video... the problem with the audio is the video... as in the whole video is shit, and has shit audio (that wasnt clipped from company sales materials), with a shit-tier un-proof-read transcript voiced by AI... but bonus points for allowing me to "read along" with your transcript (wtf... this is sad)
Click Bait! That slag pot is not ~70 feet in diameter…..those men look like 🐜 ants!
what is all the slag made of? Other metals?
You can't tell me this isn't an AI video
agreed
Where do I get my own slag pot?
Working in a steel factory must be like working in a cookie factory but the factory itself is made out of cookies.
is an informational commercial for selling equipment?
We have no links or advertising ties with any business units. Because the content is about those machines and equipment, we need to mention the names and specific technical specifications of those machines and equipment.
@@YouCanDo_TV no you just used free use sales materials and then copy-paste the sales brochure into 11Labs or some similar AI voiceover and BOOM, youve got a "video."
Do better.
Ladle?? Bullshit that’s a common front bucket with teeth
Many words, little said
They should really look in to creating energy with the Slag and or smelting process
What could possibly go wrong with a molten steel waterfall?
The title is CLICK BAIT - there IS NO accident in the video.
Yes, there was 3, I believe.
Pleae refer these.
11:53. Hot slag bucket
13:33. Aluminum Smelter Overhead Crane Accident: A Molten Mishap
15:22. Foundry Worker's Critical Error
@@YouCanDo_TV not only is your video uninspired, low effort and repetitive, but so are your "responses" to criticism for your click-bait title and low effort "content."
You have responded the same thing like 10 times to 10 people, word for word... "Control+C. Control+V"
I mean ive commented like 10 times on the absolutely abysmal quality of the video, and i didnt need to copy paste...
Why am I so angry? because you so obviously dont respect your viewers or their time and attention.... You created the cheapest, most low quality and low effort "content" you could, then used SEI and gaming the algorithm to get peoples attention, and make your $$
That mentality is how we got giant toxic slag piles. Short term gains, and consequences be damned.
အလွန့်အလွန် မိုတယ်သတ္တုလယ်ဒီ ယောက်ချို
sir where is this company please tell me
Say no to AI generated videos
This video name is misleading. It’s content shows machinery types not so much as accidents being shown.
Hopefully the few seconds of this AI crap that I watched wasn't enough for the channel to get any payment.
so much crappy fluff included. "hot heat" LOL
12:38 - How they dished out detentions at school, back in the year 1921... Here the child had to pull down their pants and trousers, so they had a bare behind; then the steel was poured onto their arse cheeks.
Man, it sure seems like all that waste heat could be used for something.. . . .
i already knew the coke oven shizz extracting the impurities from coal from Minecraft tekkit lol
Who can remember the smell of coke, burning on an open fire?
Try that with windmills or solar.
Next up: Transparent Aluminum!
This how i feel every time i melt my silver ounces to make fine siler fuzed work🥴 in small 4 ounce max crusible by hand😂😂😂😂
Hi,
I'm a musician from County Durham in the UK. I'm creating a music video for a track I've written and wondered whether you'd allow me to use a few seconds from your brilliant video.
I would credit you in the video end credits.
I should add that I make no money from the music.
Thanks
John.
The AI narration ruined the video and caused me to stop watching and give the video a thumbs down.
❤
How do they make the machines ? That make this ? To me it's LAVA !! Molten Metal .. Think I'd rather charge a machine gun next !
i had a fucking stroke trying to figure out what this meant.... is this entire comment section just people using google translate or what?
14:44 is anyone out there trying to have me believe this UTTERLY STUPID PREMATURE retreat of the crane with the hook NOT FULLY DISENGAGED is human error ?????? It seriously looks like the Operator is momentarily asleep in the cabin...or he's busy lighting a fucking cigarette. That's what i think...
@alexvan5108
I worked with liquid steel for 29 years. One melt 350 tons. The plant produces about 10 million tons of steel per year. In case of danger, always run to the safe side and only then look back at what happened. Sometimes when going to work, an inner voice tells you that something is going to happen at work today... And it does. This is called intuition based on vast experience. At work, like a pilot in a dogfight, you must constantly turn your head and constantly monitor the situation around you. Greetings from Russia
Idk fellas?.... I don't think those Kirow's come in a "Tesla" variant? That can't be good for the climate.
@22:58 it looks like a model or toy??
is there a similar video without AI voice over that anyone knows of?
video not very clear to follow - jumps from here to thair
Yes, totally agree but still interesting.
Ya need to change ya channel name to You cant do! Because we dont own a mine or a iron smeltery!
I have to buy a slagtorus.
Be handy at the bar on a Friday night
Floor is molten lava
Boycott AI videos!!
15:29 how can this be an error ??
You think those 2 workers on the left were able to escape the inferno ?
Thumbnail is fake ,
there are no ladles that big
Please refer this timeline for more detail:
8:12. Hot slag bucket
10:26. Arc Furnace Operation
11:53. Hot slag bucket
Thumbnail is still fake . Also
8:12 is not a hot slag bucket
11:53 is not a hot slag bucket
You should be more diversified and offer imperial equivalents.
That’s soo stupid
Why not allow the slag to go into a mole and make something out of it
Because the slag is all shit
Just think. By 2035 Solar and Wind will replace the power needs to create steel... Just toss in some Magic Pixie Dust.
Hell use Li poly batteries
If the energy is consumed or put in planet deep so it go liguid core wooosh your in hot lava.
clips that have been used hundreds of times before and a computer voice. bleaugh
Its bucket not a ladle.
beat me to it. and it's probably just a standard steel bucket, not some "special abrasive resistant steel"
Clickbait. Dislike. Block channel.
Could you please give me a reason?
Where is the "Extremely Dangerous Accident Of Molten Metal Ladle"?
Please refer these:
11:53. Hot slag bucket
13:33. Aluminum Smelter Overhead Crane Accident: A Molten Mishap
15:22. Foundry Worker's Critical Error
Seems the world's biggest steel producers are: China, India, Japan, US, Russia, South Korea, Germany, Turkey, Brazil, Iran, Italy, Taiwan, Vietnam, Mexico, and Indonesia.
Try watching the video
@@YouCanDo_TVhave you ever worked in a steel mill. What you showed is day to day life. Speaking from 30 years in the steel making industry.
Ever been in a mill and witnessed a cobble or any other type of "accident"? People die in mills a lot more than one would think.
Ingress of water
In my Country people are died because of this hell!
Now that’s some global warming in high speed.
Show this video to Greta Thunberg, it will give her nightmares, "how DARE you"
You’re not my friend..!
ESTOS TRABAJOS REKIEREN UN EJERCITO D ROBOTES .NO HUMANOS .DO 😂
Your use of TTS is dogpoo.
So sick of ai
Thanks for your comment, what do you think about the information in the video?
I like how the narrative in this video downplays the toxicities of the steel smelting process to help make the tree-huggers feel better about the environmental impacts that make all that land unusable for anything. After all, even tree-huggers fly in jets, ride railways, drive their cars, enjoy the power delivered to them for their comforts, all for the sake of comforts while involved in active causes. Hypocrisy defines so much of protesting culture, playing all manner of cards that they think will get more attention and action so that the money they get from Soros and other world influencers feel they are getting their money's worth in ushering in a world governance power and economy...with them at the top of the heap, of course!
The narrator is AI. So blame it, And boy You Seem triggered. The video is just showing some interesting stuff How You think there is some undercurrent to make this seem better to enviromentalist is rediculous. Yeah its a conspirisy by AI and big steel to make this seem healthy. we need need more videos of the raw destructive nature of smelting. That will show em
@@jasonwood6570 It looks like your response is also AI...
Accidents ? Ai click bait.
Please refer these:
13:33. Aluminum Smelter Overhead Crane Accident: A Molten Mishap
15:22. Foundry Worker's Critical Error