Why we still make these dangerous steel coils!!

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  • Опубліковано 21 сер 2024
  • If steel coils are so dangerous to transport, then we do we keep making them?
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    #steel #steelindustry #steelcoil #tatasteel #steelmanufacturing #steelfactory #hotsteel #coldsteel #steelplant #metals #manufacturing

КОМЕНТАРІ • 2,2 тис.

  • @analogludite9575
    @analogludite9575 4 місяці тому +11912

    I hauled coils for 10 years, and I can tell you the reason that coil let go and hit the truck cab is because it was improperly secured. They should be double or triple chained in a coil rack. There is considerable training involved in hauling steel. You can't just throw a chain over it and go.

    • @Trahloc
      @Trahloc 4 місяці тому +320

      Edit: best answer I've heard so far: uncoiling is a greater concern than poor securement. Putting it that way allows it to be secured easily but more importantly prevents explosive uncoiling. If you think loading/unloading them is harder, that isn't the problem of the folks on the road. Their safety supersedes your convenience. The uncoiling argument satisfies the only concern that matters.
      Original: Why don't they transport them flat? They seem like a cube in shape [I don't mean it's a literal cube for people who keep misunderstanding this. A cylinder can be described as a cube / cubic inches / "it goes in the square hole", get it?] or are they taller than wide so they wouldn't fit? I know it's make the loading/unloading slightly more of a pain but then you avoid this whole rolling loose problem. It's easier to handle them in a stable location than rolling down the road with randomness around.

    • @MasterChief0522
      @MasterChief0522 4 місяці тому +266

      Damn, I'm glad we have a professional here. I would have thought it slipped because the driver didn't chant the magical incantation properly.

    • @masafromhell
      @masafromhell 4 місяці тому +102

      ​@@TrahlocI think the main reason why you want them rolled is that it does not have a fixed lenght: you can establish how much of it you need, depending on the work to be done.

    • @Raigosai
      @Raigosai 4 місяці тому +138

      ​@masafromhell I don't think he's debating rolling steel, but transporting the rolled steel on its rolling surface instead of tipping it on its side. I imagine at least one reason is that it seems harder to secure them to the flatbed. Tho with that said you could probably make a specialized pallet for them that you could basically weave numerous chains through, so I don't know.

    • @Trahloc
      @Trahloc 4 місяці тому +34

      @@Raigosai their own weight would secure most of the load imo. I'd imagine two strong chains Xed over would help resist the initial slip and gravity would do the rest. The example video wasn't a truck flipping over, it just braked hard.

  • @anthonyher1953
    @anthonyher1953 3 місяці тому +2232

    As my trainer told me:
    You can over-secure a load as many times as you want, but you can only under-secure it once

    • @Mr.Ekshin
      @Mr.Ekshin 2 місяці тому +28

      Why not lay the coil down flat? Seems a bit daft to chain it down on the round side, such that it wants to roll forward every time the truck hits the brakes!

    • @GoranXII
      @GoranXII 2 місяці тому +56

      @@Mr.Ekshin How would you get it off afterwards?

    • @RichieKrol
      @RichieKrol 2 місяці тому +11

      ​@GoranXII why aren't they rotated so they would roll sideways instead of forward and backwards

    • @GoranXII
      @GoranXII 2 місяці тому +25

      @@RichieKrol Harder to get off. In an 'eye-sideways' configuration, a forklift with a spindle can load them, but a 'eye-forwards/backwards' setup would be more difficult.

    • @RichieKrol
      @RichieKrol 2 місяці тому +9

      @GoranXII makes sense. Would it be safer though, I wonder. And if so would that increased saftey be worth the increased difficulty or even custom machinery. I'm guessing these accidents aren't so common that proper training and chains are good enough.
      As I was typing this I started thinking about the mass of one of those rolls. If it were sideways even a small wiggle from the roll would be enough weight shifting side to side it might be hard to control

  • @jeffwobrak5205
    @jeffwobrak5205 4 місяці тому +494

    I live near Pittsburgh, we had so many of these fall off the flatbeds hauling them over the years that the high school driving instructor would give warnings about driving next to them. We had a horrific accident when a truck carrying 3 rolls lost its brakes coming down a hill. There was a T intersection at the bottom so the driver had no chance, either he was going straight into an occupied building or he could try to make the left turn and know he would flip the truck. He tried to make the left. The truck did flip and took out a few parked cars but the rolls did a lot more damage. The first roll smashed through the cab of truck killing the driver and only stopped when it soft dirt and a concrete wall , the second one buried itself in a building, and the 3rd landed on top of a car that was traveling through the intersection. The woman in the car was was killed and her car was flattened to about 6 inches.
    This was back in the late 70s and I still can't drive near a truck carrying coils without thinking of it. I never drive next to one unless I can pass it as fast as possible. If you get behind a truck carrying coils, pipes, logs, or anything strapped down, look at the straps, if they are loose, call a cop. After working around a lot of different shippers I've found that a lot, not all, of them don't secure their loads properly and they never learn until they are hit with a big fine.

    • @idehenebenezer
      @idehenebenezer 4 місяці тому +6

      JESUS IS COMING SOON🔥🔥🔥 REPENT TODAY AND TURN AWAY FROM YOUR SINS🙏🙏

    • @LateNightCable
      @LateNightCable 4 місяці тому +57

      Don’t call the phucking cops, alert the driver! As a former flatbed trucker myself, I guarantee you he is the one ultimately responsible for securement and would care to know immediately if something is loose.

    • @Koh-Wei-Jian
      @Koh-Wei-Jian 4 місяці тому +3

      I tried to comment something here but ytb seems to block it.

    • @Dr.Montante
      @Dr.Montante 4 місяці тому +29

      Since the risk is death for a bystander, I think losing a license as a punishment is the only way to make sure these are secured properly.

    • @TheTerrorHamster
      @TheTerrorHamster 4 місяці тому +41

      carrying steel coils on these flat bed trailers should be illegal. I am German and did my apprenticeship 3.5 years at ThyssenKrupp and worked there an additional 4 years. And I worked at a city port were they load/unload these coils from river ships to trailers. I have never heard of an accident with these coils. They are always only transportet on special frames that are like classic door stoppers on each side of the coils, if you know what I mean, and the stoppers are welded to the trailer. So they would need to roll up-hill to move. I have NEVER seen them transported on a flat surface

  • @zackpedersen2666
    @zackpedersen2666 4 місяці тому +1014

    I’ve known these to be called suicide coils, for the reason shown in the video.
    I’ve known an owner/op in the industry that hauled a LOT of these. He had bought a flatbed and he personally welded a steel frame on the front of it with angled supports and gusseted t-joints. Then he would have the loaders put the coils on with the first one butted up against that steel frame and each coil butted up on to the next.
    Lastly, everything gets chained down and if I remember correctly, he used G80 - 1/2” chains with a minimum of 4 per coil with 6 used on the coils located on the ends. 4” straps were used to secure any loose chain ends, and were used to help keep the coils tight to each other. Something to do with the fact that the coils manage to do a rotational slide sort of thing sometimes, causing a touch of slack. I don’t know, but that’s what he told me when I asked 6 years ago.
    He also said that he rather go overkill on the securement than getting run over by his load. Did a lot of heavy haul, and moved more coils per load than some drivers were comfortable with.

    • @michaelbamber4887
      @michaelbamber4887 4 місяці тому +71

      Well, in the uk we have trailers with a bid 'v' in the centre running along the trailer, you drop the coils in and strap. Can't roll forward or backwards because they are stuck in the v.

    • @thehulkamaniabrother2.089
      @thehulkamaniabrother2.089 4 місяці тому +26

      ​@@michaelbamber4887I used to think the UK was short for the Ukraine..

    • @DeletedDevilDeletedAngel
      @DeletedDevilDeletedAngel 3 місяці тому +23

      @@thehulkamaniabrother2.089lmao

    • @davidelliott5843
      @davidelliott5843 3 місяці тому +9

      @@thehulkamaniabrother2.089That’s why UK was the first to wake up (still very late) to the plight of Ukraine. We have sites all over the country where refugees were housed after WW2 and later the Iron Curtain coming down.

    • @MrMawnster
      @MrMawnster 3 місяці тому

      Ha only if morons chain bind them

  • @dainbramage9508
    @dainbramage9508 4 місяці тому +4043

    Those spools are insanely heavy, it's basically a solid piece of metal, not to mention the dangers of unbinding them and having the spring out, you can get a good demonstration of this of (and don't try this at home) you were to take a 25ft tape measure apart and dropped the coiled tape out without holding it it will practically explode because it unwinds itself so rapidly

    • @Loothy88
      @Loothy88 4 місяці тому +109

      i operate a heavy gauge level line, heaviest coils i deal with are up to 70k lbs

    • @randylahey2242
      @randylahey2242 4 місяці тому +17

      its not that serious if you aren't a baby about it

    • @Loothy88
      @Loothy88 4 місяці тому +266

      @@randylahey2242 you have to treat them with respect coils will kill you before you even know what is happening

    • @OwThatHurt46
      @OwThatHurt46 4 місяці тому +212

      @@Loothy88no, no… let him do it…

    • @AG-en5y
      @AG-en5y 4 місяці тому +13

      But. My tape measurer only got a laser pointy thing in the front when I digitally uncoil my tape measurer

  • @ETHRON1
    @ETHRON1 4 місяці тому +3033

    I seen a picture of a group trying to steal one...rolled it off the dock into a pickup bed...flattened the pickup...😂.

    • @idehenebenezer
      @idehenebenezer 4 місяці тому +78

      JESUS IS COMING SOON🔥🔥🔥 REPENT TODAY AND TURN AWAY FROM YOUR SINS🙏🙏

    • @therookie5714
      @therookie5714 4 місяці тому +134

      Instant karma

    • @MWG603
      @MWG603 4 місяці тому +316

      @@idehenebenezer oh ya like how soon, lol how many people have you won over with your unsolicited bible thumping?

    • @luc1ferblack
      @luc1ferblack 4 місяці тому

      @@idehenebenezer Wow your pathetic. How stupid are you to assume your god out of the hundreds of religions is the real one

    • @nosepowder69
      @nosepowder69 4 місяці тому +6

      @@MWG603 Its a bot.

  • @John-1984
    @John-1984 3 місяці тому +101

    My brother hauled these for a time. Said one of the most aggravating things was being told he'd have to tarp them only to get the delivery point and seeing all their other coils sitting in the yard rusting.

    • @Couldnt_let_J.Marston_die
      @Couldnt_let_J.Marston_die Місяць тому +31

      That aggrivated me too, until I asked one of the people at the plant I was delivering it too he said the reason they need to be tarped is because the chemicals used in/on roads can weaken the steel on the molecular level. He said the rust on them is only surface level and has no effect on their process, road chemicals however can completely destroy a coil.

    • @brianfitch5469
      @brianfitch5469 Місяць тому +1

      ​@@Couldnt_let_J.Marston_diehow are the road chemicals getting the coil untarped?
      If the final destination is by a road wouldnt it still be near the chemicals?

    • @Couldnt_let_J.Marston_die
      @Couldnt_let_J.Marston_die Місяць тому +4

      @brianfitch5469 The same way after it rains and the road is wet still, you still need to use your wipers to clear the mist being thrown onto your windshield from your vehicle and others. As for the second part of your question... I'm not sure I would imagine that would be the case but it hadn't donned on me to ask that question during my brief chat with the guy.

    • @brianfitch5469
      @brianfitch5469 Місяць тому +1

      @@Couldnt_let_J.Marston_die thanks for the reply

    • @unclejim1528
      @unclejim1528 Місяць тому +2

      @@Couldnt_let_J.Marston_die Yeah, he told you BS, he just wanted it done, and not that guy, the hire ups above him that "do a good job when they do something" regardless if its pointless or not.

  • @North_Of_Nowhere
    @North_Of_Nowhere 4 місяці тому +28

    I work in Shotton steelworks in the UK and we make cold rolled coils, we have very strict strapping procedures that have to be carried out before we let a trailer head out, some of the videos you see including the first one is shocking how poorly some countries secure their loads, a few years ago we had a trailer tip over onto it's side as a driver went too fast around a corner, every coil was still firmly strapped to the trailer despite being on it's side, it's really not hard to put a few extra straps on these coils yet it will probably save your life or other members of the public in the event of an accident

    • @baraka629
      @baraka629 19 днів тому

      Truly a chinese factory worker moment

    • @GegIts-fk9do
      @GegIts-fk9do 19 днів тому

      ​@@baraka629jobs that have a high chance of killing you instantly is considered a job benefit in China

  • @HeyMaruniko
    @HeyMaruniko 4 місяці тому +214

    another "if knives are so dangerous because its sharp, why we do keep making them?" kind of question.

    • @rowjelio
      @rowjelio 4 місяці тому +8

      Seriously it's a question nobody asked

    • @robertlankford4570
      @robertlankford4570 4 місяці тому +7

      if we don't keep having people answer these types of questions, then the knowledge gap will further widen

    • @GMDOCNICE
      @GMDOCNICE Місяць тому +3

      Aristotle 2024🗿

    • @Dogpoundpony
      @Dogpoundpony Місяць тому

      @@robertlankford4570 I’ll widen your gap son ask your grandad about me

    • @Charles-mv7sv
      @Charles-mv7sv Місяць тому

      If humans are so dangerous why are we allowed to reproduce? - Probably Marx

  • @Aaron-fl2iv
    @Aaron-fl2iv 4 місяці тому +421

    Absolutely destroyed that diesel cab. Crazy.

    • @jonf2009
      @jonf2009 4 місяці тому +46

      It's very heavy but that was 100% on that operator. You can see no blocks and no chain on that roll.

    • @vihuynhquang5204
      @vihuynhquang5204 4 місяці тому +7

      Many traffic accidents occured where I’m from due to these not properly tied up during transportation.
      …I can’t ever forget how squishy we are when a cable fell onto our heads

    • @sylvesteruchia5263
      @sylvesteruchia5263 4 місяці тому +10

      I hope that trucker is safe .

    • @Cam-im8io
      @Cam-im8io 4 місяці тому

      Hes dead ​@@sylvesteruchia5263

    • @benjurqunov
      @benjurqunov 4 місяці тому

      Does that crazy defend special homosexual rights ?

  • @Beuwen_The_Dragon
    @Beuwen_The_Dragon 4 місяці тому +946

    'If transporting these coiled sheets of metal is dangerous, why do we still make them?"
    ....
    BECAUSE WE STILL NEED METAL SHEETS.

    • @dobromirgoodpeace23
      @dobromirgoodpeace23 4 місяці тому

      Exactly. It sounds like these YT shorts are made by double digit IQ content creators for sub 50 IQ crowd… 🤦🏻‍♂️🤦🏻‍♂️🤦🏻‍♂️

    • @Shitbird3249
      @Shitbird3249 4 місяці тому +8

      People these days just don’t give a sheet

    • @lllucasm
      @lllucasm 4 місяці тому +75

      bro talks like the problem is the material itself and not the lack of training in the transport department

    • @kryrek
      @kryrek 3 місяці тому +19

      @@lllucasm bro has no idea what he is talking about but it gives him money

    • @FnD4212
      @FnD4212 3 місяці тому +25

      It's the same energy as "if human trafficking is illegal, why there still human trafficking everywhere".

  • @md_vandenberg
    @md_vandenberg 3 місяці тому +3

    Steel coils were recently added to the physics-sim BeamNG. These things were terrifying in a virtual environment. I tip my hat to those that handle them on a daily basis.

  • @skunkjobb
    @skunkjobb 4 місяці тому +134

    Hot and cold rolling has nothing to do with how it's spun into a coil. Even flat sheets are either hot or cold rolled, it's a process of making sheets regardless of the form of delivery.

    • @jarrettdiperna8370
      @jarrettdiperna8370 4 місяці тому +21

      Congrats! You probably know more about steel than the fool who made this nonsensical short. .-.

    • @awlhunt
      @awlhunt 4 місяці тому +19

      Yeah, 10 years in steel manufacturing and I couldn’t help but click on the thumbnail wondering just how far wrong it would go…it didn’t disappoint! 😂

    • @karlpron
      @karlpron 3 місяці тому +6

      Was looking for comment like this :)

    • @h.m.v.
      @h.m.v. 3 місяці тому +2

      ​@@karlpronMe too

    • @JacobP-ly3jr
      @JacobP-ly3jr 3 місяці тому

      Also pickled sheets I haul alot of those

  • @wellfudgethis
    @wellfudgethis 4 місяці тому +65

    Coils are safe to transport IF you strap them correctly, whenever hauling thlse death traps overkill is the norm, use all your chains ( I have used 9 when it required 6 to haul 46,000 lbs coil) then throw a couple of straps,cross them around the front of the coil and take it easy, it is a heavy single item being moved so plenty of caution is required.

    • @PsRohrbaugh
      @PsRohrbaugh 4 місяці тому +1

      And remember not to slow down too slowly. If someone cuts you off that's their problem not yours.

    • @PsRohrbaugh
      @PsRohrbaugh 4 місяці тому +4

      *not to slow down too quickly

    • @stalinmceizn
      @stalinmceizn 2 місяці тому +1

      So.. it's not practical to transport those on the flat side down, because you'd need fancy cranes for that?

    • @fomori2
      @fomori2 Місяць тому

      @@stalinmceizn You would need more intelligent loaders and unloaders, to figure out the center of gravity on them to tilt them, instead of the grunts they are willing to pay.

    • @prisonerofthehighway1059
      @prisonerofthehighway1059 29 днів тому +1

      @stalinmceizn
      Eye to the side is the safest way to transport a coil. If it’s cinched down properly it isn’t going anywhere. The trailer will flip over and still be attached to the coil. Standing up on its side is actually the hardest way to tie it down because you don’t have as much control over forward movement.

  • @ATomRileyA
    @ATomRileyA 3 місяці тому +11

    Build a ramp over the cab that way you can launch it down the road instead :)

  • @placebomandingo2095
    @placebomandingo2095 3 місяці тому +25

    "Think of it like 3D printing filament" made me feel 100 years old..

    • @realMrVent
      @realMrVent Місяць тому +1

      How so?

    • @placebomandingo2095
      @placebomandingo2095 Місяць тому +4

      @@realMrVent it's probably not the first analogy I would have chosen, but I realized it was now a pretty universal reference. Plus I'm most of the way to 100 already..

    • @realMrVent
      @realMrVent Місяць тому

      @@placebomandingo2095 There's no upper age limit to get into the hobby, if you're considering.

    • @panda4247
      @panda4247 Місяць тому +5

      @@placebomandingo2095 I am only about third of the way to 100, but it was still a weird analogy to me.
      I would have expected a cable or a rope in that analogy...

    • @unclejim1528
      @unclejim1528 Місяць тому

      @@panda4247 I'm thinking sawing machine..... I'm half way to a 100

  • @joelbellJB
    @joelbellJB 4 місяці тому +907

    It’s only dangerous if incompetent people are around them.
    It’s never the object, it’s always the people.

    • @walfwalf6002
      @walfwalf6002 4 місяці тому +47

      So, if my ceiling fan with machetes duct taped to it hurts someone, I can say it wasn't the object but rather the person around it?
      I'm gonna use that in court.

    • @joelbellJB
      @joelbellJB 4 місяці тому +141

      @@walfwalf6002 room temperature IQ comment.

    • @walfwalf6002
      @walfwalf6002 4 місяці тому +25

      ​@@joelbellJBFair enough.

    • @tsurugi5
      @tsurugi5 4 місяці тому

      >dan·ger·ous
      /ˈdānj(ə)rəs/
      adjective
      able or likely to cause harm or injury.
      i-it's the people1!!
      dunning kruger in action

    • @monsesh1316
      @monsesh1316 4 місяці тому +40

      ​@@walfwalf6002Your iq rises above room temp for this comment. This behavior is rarer than big foot.

  • @TruckingToPlease
    @TruckingToPlease 4 місяці тому +39

    We haul coils on a regular. Currently gave a 30,600lb coil strapped to the deck for an overnight delivery. Never had a problem with coils. Always over secure the load. This coil has six 5,400lb rated chains, a coil tarp and two 4" straps. She's not going anywhere.

    • @Ass_of_Amalek
      @Ass_of_Amalek 4 місяці тому +2

      obviously that should be manageable, but based on descriptions in these comments of using many chains, I think an issue may be that these many chains are tensioned unequally or become tensioned unequally as the load shifts on such a way that they break one by one.

    • @TruckingToPlease
      @TruckingToPlease 4 місяці тому +8

      @Ass_of_Amalek Thus the reason to do load securement properly then initial load check after 30 miles and every 3 hrs or 200 miles till the destination. If your Binders loosen up after your second check, your doing it wrong

    • @Ass_of_Amalek
      @Ass_of_Amalek 4 місяці тому +1

      @@TruckingToPlease yeah that makes sense, then you're using the shaking of the drive to settle the load. that makes me wonder though: are there automation systems yet that measure and adjust tensions of fasteners on trucks? I imagine it could possibly speed things up and save money if it reduces occurrences of accidental damage to trucks, goods, and personnel. but then again, it wouldn't really be possible to promise such savings to early adopters, and one could certainly imagine giving an electronic system control over the fastening of the load to be a potential point of catastrophic failure.

    • @shannono.5835
      @shannono.5835 Місяць тому +2

      If you improperly secure loading 16 tons, what’ll you get? another day older and deeper in debt

    • @vaulthecreator
      @vaulthecreator Місяць тому +4

      ​​@@shannono.5835shouldn't that be - 'you improperly secure loading 16 tons, what'll ya get? Never a day older and utterly flat' ?

  • @purplekey9330
    @purplekey9330 2 місяці тому +7

    "If steel coils are so dangerous to transport, why do we keep making them?" Is such a ChatGPT question

  • @IANcel
    @IANcel Місяць тому +5

    I worked at a factory that made wheeled tool boxes, ten foot shelves, etc; all made out of sheet metal. Met a guy missing half his hand and parts of his face. He said one of the rolls “blew up” because it wasn’t rolled right. Didn’t know metal could just BLOW UP from its own pressure.

  • @roeb4209
    @roeb4209 4 місяці тому +650

    Instead of asking a stupid question like why do we still make them why don't they figure out a smarter safer way to haul them

    • @fernandomarques5166
      @fernandomarques5166 4 місяці тому +121

      There's 3 ways to transport them, in relation to the flat bed that transports them:
      Front to back
      Horizontally
      Vertically
      What defines they way you transport them is the unloading equipament they have at destination
      Horizontally and back to front positioned coils can be unload with a simple crane and straps or with a "hook" unloader
      Vertically oriented coils (which are the safest way to transport as they wont roll) need a clamp unloader, which is not found everywhere.

    • @Loothy88
      @Loothy88 4 місяці тому +47

      most coils get transported in rail cars, only the lighter coils come in on trucks, and only on trucks to smaller company's that do low volume

    • @KamalaChameleon
      @KamalaChameleon 4 місяці тому +28

      Are you actually implying that the one shot of a truck getting smashed up by a roll happens more than a blue moon?

    • @Loothy88
      @Loothy88 4 місяці тому +34

      @@KamalaChameleon if it's chained badly yes, I'm more saying that trains do the bulk of coil transport, I work on a level line that works exclusively with coil we get 100s of coil cars a year and like 5 trucks in that same time, truck transport is far to pricey and inefficient. A truck brings in one, coil car can bring up to 8 depending on width of the coils, you'll also never see a truck with a coils that has a weight much more the 45k

    • @daanishgupta
      @daanishgupta 4 місяці тому +18

      Because we already have smart ways of transporting them?

  • @EasyModeFishing
    @EasyModeFishing 4 місяці тому +295

    Why wouldn’t the trucker carry the steel loop on its side so it can’t roll?

    • @1495978707
      @1495978707 4 місяці тому +235

      Much harder to load and unload safely. Only safer for the transit stage, and if you properly secure it, it's not an issue. Problem is that people get sloppy or lazy with their loads, and sometimes end up paying for it dearly

    • @maksimb3267
      @maksimb3267 4 місяці тому +99

      Some coils will unroll if their on their side the vibration will break the ties so when WE transport them we have special blocks and do them on the side only but I always put extra chains cuz chains might not fail but if I break hard enough the trailer itself has aluminum hooks that I don't trust had them break on me so I put 3 chains for 13k roll or 5 chains for one 28,700k roll and that's one sketchy roll to transport on a semi you have it tight but after an hour the vibration still loosens the wood inside the coil so you need to stop every 30-45 mins like once or twice until it's forsure not going anywhere especially bringing it down from Ohio or Michigan to Tennessee or Georgia roads 😅 its sketchy and sometimes not even worth the price but beats having some other sketchy load

    • @RSAgility
      @RSAgility 4 місяці тому +17

      I drove forklifts putting these on flatbeds...
      Yeah, they kinda get loaded sideways, much easier to fit more and pick them back up.

    • @jcruz5050
      @jcruz5050 4 місяці тому +20

      ​@@RSAgilitywhat do u mean "kinda"? It's either laid on its side or not

    • @gormster
      @gormster 4 місяці тому +28

      It can still slide, and even in the very best possible circumstances, where the bed of the truck and the coil are both completely clean and free of lubrication, it only takes a braking force of 0.8g to overcome the static friction and the coil will start sliding. That’s a fairly strong braking force but not crazy - you’d expect to experience stronger deceleration in an emergency brake.
      Now consider how much harder it would be to tie down a coil on its side. You don’t have the convenient hole through the middle to attach it, all you can do is add ropes over the top to increase the static friction, or maybe some kind of complicated netting to try to brace it against the bed.
      Now you have a new problem: did you tie it down tight enough? How do you know? If it could roll, you’d be able to tell instantly - it starts rolling when you take off. Its movement is governed entirely by rolling resistance, since it’s essentially already rolling. But on its side? You could not tie it down at all and it won’t budge - until it starts sliding. The static friction is so much higher than the sliding friction, you’re not going to find out if you tied the thing down tight enough until it starts sliding, and then it’s definitely plowing through your cab.

  • @logoseven3365
    @logoseven3365 3 місяці тому +2

    It’s not dangerous to haul.
    It’s dangerous to haul improperly.

    • @nak8269
      @nak8269 3 місяці тому +1

      This is such an #iamverysmart comment. In a perfect world where everybody always does precise work with zero margin for error your comment would matter. Sadly we live in the real world where human error is common and expected.

    • @logoseven3365
      @logoseven3365 3 місяці тому

      @@nak8269
      Redundancy and repetition. When one of these things cuts loose, the driver typically was rushed for some reason. I don’t know how long you worked in any steel mill, but all the ones I’ve been in, safety is third, not first.
      It’s dangerous to haul improperly.

  • @Beniah107
    @Beniah107 4 місяці тому +7

    It’s only hazardous transporting coil if you do not follow the well established safety procedures.

  • @johnkirk6042
    @johnkirk6042 4 місяці тому +59

    UK 🇬🇧 I remember picking up some steel coils when I used to drive HGVs, it was even strapped down with chains and somebody kept break, checking me and the chain snapped crushing the left side of the cab completely locate I survived

    • @rileymcguire4731
      @rileymcguire4731 4 місяці тому +11

      That's horrifying. I've heard similar stories about hauling large round hay bales out where I live. Some folks have zero awareness of how little an 18 wheeler can see for how deadly it is

    • @idehenebenezer
      @idehenebenezer 4 місяці тому +1

      JESUS IS COMING SOON🔥🔥🔥 REPENT TODAY AND TURN AWAY FROM YOUR SINS🙏🙏

    • @johnkirk6042
      @johnkirk6042 4 місяці тому +1

      @@idehenebenezer I’ve got out of driving now eventually it caught up with me. I broke my back my neck, my shoulder and both legs. I’m just lucky to be walking with a stick and not in a wheelchair.

    • @PsRohrbaugh
      @PsRohrbaugh 4 місяці тому

      You have to wonder if that person was an arse whole who knew what they were doing or an uneducated idiot.

  • @Goldhorse87
    @Goldhorse87 4 місяці тому +80

    I do transport the coils with a truck regularly from ThyssenKrupp in germany. It's not a big deal for me

    • @Delta92F
      @Delta92F 4 місяці тому +27

      I'm Italian and work with those coils in a factory and you're right, they are not a "big deal", just pay attention and use the right tools (and some of the people in the video totally DIDN'T use the right tools)

    • @Loothy88
      @Loothy88 4 місяці тому +9

      some of the coils i work with are to heavy for most trucks, we have to get them by rail. Coils in my heavy gauge level line are up to 70k lbs, one rail car can bring in 5 of them and we get 40 railcars a week.

    • @AG-en5y
      @AG-en5y 4 місяці тому +9

      The issue is that the workers in those shitty countries like in first clip aren't cared for and don't have workers rights 😊

    • @Mizz.Person
      @Mizz.Person 4 місяці тому +1

      My dad hauled these in the 90s and 2000s in Canada and the US. Great memories. 😊

    • @MatzeMaulwurf
      @MatzeMaulwurf 4 місяці тому

      Hart like Krupp-Stahl.

  • @deusexaethera
    @deusexaethera 3 місяці тому +6

    Seeing that sheet metal flying through those assembly line machines gives me instant terror of deep arterial lacerations.

    • @briebel2684
      @briebel2684 2 місяці тому +2

      I worked on a line that made metal door skins out of these coils. The line itself had a light curtain so you couldn't do that, but you still had to be careful when feeding a new coil or clearing a jam. One slip and it's like the gloves weren't even there. I contemplated getting chain mail gloves after slicing my fingers several times.
      Instead I just found a different job. Stuck between two women operators that hated each other on 1st and 3rd shifts sucked more than the metal itself, and cleaning the press plates never felt safe.

  • @Dunamis_010
    @Dunamis_010 4 місяці тому +4

    I hauled a coil recently. 47,950 lbs. It had 12 chains and two straps tying it to my deck. I never felt in danger while I took it from Dearborn MI to Lebanon TN.
    Fun times.

    • @briebel2684
      @briebel2684 2 місяці тому +1

      That's a big boy. When I worked a coil line for door skins, I never loaded one over 25k. Most were more like 15-18. The 25k one barely fit on the loading lift 😂

  • @linuxguy1199
    @linuxguy1199 4 місяці тому +14

    Imagine if instead of loading these on trucks, we put them on hundreds of flatbead trailers connected together with a giant engine in front, then we took that special vehicle and made special steel roadways for them, and isolated them from areas where they can do significant damage as well as giving them special crossing zones.

    • @jakefalcons
      @jakefalcons 4 місяці тому +1

      Now imagine they already do this.

    • @rentokawaii1216
      @rentokawaii1216 2 місяці тому +4

      they already did, but not all factory that needed this close to a railroad station

    • @airplanemaniacgaming7877
      @airplanemaniacgaming7877 Місяць тому +2

      @@rentokawaii1216 funny thing.....my factory is close to some rail lines, but they are not used.
      gotta love how my city is the "railway city" and yet there's only 1 singular train that goes through here.

    • @Turamwdd
      @Turamwdd Місяць тому

      Now imagine if the factory is not on the railway line. We often call this intermodal transportation. Read up about it.

  • @Onio_Saiyan
    @Onio_Saiyan 4 місяці тому +11

    Those spools are insanely heavy. They’re only a danger if they’re not secured properly.

  • @playanddisplay3636
    @playanddisplay3636 4 місяці тому +4

    Hot and cold rolled steel can both come in any thickness. Both exist for different applications, not for different thicknesses. You can get cold or hot rolled bar stock.

    • @kipclifton9403
      @kipclifton9403 4 місяці тому

      I think its more a generalization that cold rolled is the finishing line, where it is down to our customers specs.. hot band straight off the hot strip is definitely thicker but not trough the finishing process.

    • @playanddisplay3636
      @playanddisplay3636 4 місяці тому +2

      @@kipclifton9403 Been a steel worker and machinist for over twenty years. I am correct. I order and use the stuff every day. Lots of differences between hot and cold rolled steel.

    • @thora8624
      @thora8624 Місяць тому

      ​@@kipclifton9403 what the hell are you even saying that just sounds like babbling gibberish

    • @kipclifton9403
      @kipclifton9403 Місяць тому

      @playanddisplay3636 man... I didn't know we had to list our experiences before commenting, okay 3 years at the BOF 7 years at research and development for ak steel. The past 8 in raw materials. So hot strip is when you get the slab down from big to workable it's annealed cold rolled is more in the finishing side... when it's you know workable.

    • @kipclifton9403
      @kipclifton9403 Місяць тому

      @thora8624 shit I sometimes forget we have the best engineers from Colorado School of Mine here.

  • @danielvroom2949
    @danielvroom2949 4 місяці тому +2

    Yes there are some videos of coils breaking loose, but considering the millions of coils transported only a very few ever break loose. Like asking why we allow cars, buses, trains or air planes because they crash.

    • @thetowndrunk988
      @thetowndrunk988 2 місяці тому

      Thank you. Reading the comments, you’d think this happens every week. The truth is they will not ever move on their own, no more than a gun will shoot itself. It is always driver error, and in the industry, we have done a fantastic job of teaching proper securement for hauling metal coils.

  • @theredspringtrap.7256
    @theredspringtrap.7256 4 місяці тому +21

    They are not being properly secured

  • @beverlyhilburn2293
    @beverlyhilburn2293 4 місяці тому +7

    ​​​​Where I work, we work with mostly 35 ton or less, coils. Typically painted or glum, that's 24GA or less, for making panels for roofing and flat sheets for "trim" like gutters, flashing, etc. We re-coil after slitting the coils down to 40-42" for the panel lines, and re-sell the waste. We are like 8 months now with no incidents (knock on wood).
    On another note, hot roll and cold roll is how the sheets are made, not how it's wound onto the spool. It should be called hot press and cold press instead of rolled, it makes it confusing for some people. Rolling is shaping the steel, not coiling it.

  • @mikethorntonr1
    @mikethorntonr1 3 місяці тому +2

    Cold rolled steel tolerance dimensions is much more accurate than hot rolled pipes and everything

  • @mattpaul840
    @mattpaul840 4 місяці тому +2

    I always hated hauling 35-40,000 lbs coils. Not only does the thought of someone pulling out in front of you constantly on your mind while loaded, but when it does happen, those chains could break and go straight through the cab like in the video😂😂😂

    • @Coladudetje
      @Coladudetje Місяць тому

      Well at some steel mills there is demands that you transport those coils in lowered truck beds.

  • @Geri_crs
    @Geri_crs 4 місяці тому +6

    Hardend steel coils are Dangerus AF, they are like a 30t 3km long coilspring rolled in 1,5m ready to explode

    • @trevort910
      @trevort910 Місяць тому

      I haul occasionally what I bieleve to be sheet steel probably stainless for wine making equipment (coils). Not often and not too heavy but curious to learn more from you of the difference in that, and "hardened steel". I also have a basic understanding of the dangers of a coil spring. Please elaborate.
      Thanks.

    • @Geri_crs
      @Geri_crs Місяць тому

      @@trevort910 if hardend stell ist rolled to a coil its under extreme tension and wants to be flat, like a 1500m steel sheel with coil with and that is Dangerous af. If the packaging bands or welds snap it springs to a flat...

  • @Zer0kbps
    @Zer0kbps 4 місяці тому +2

    They are safe to haul when done correctly.

  • @FurryWrecker911
    @FurryWrecker911 4 місяці тому +1

    Like most things in life, it's only dangerous if handled incorrectly.

  • @fko3143
    @fko3143 2 місяці тому +2

    In heavy industry work they say a simple rule of thumb: "Use your head or lose your head."

  • @phild8095
    @phild8095 4 місяці тому +3

    I was on I-90 in eastern Ohio back in '99 when a truck miles and miles ahead dropped a coil on the highway.
    We spent the night in Toledo. It took us three hours just to get to an exit with a hotel.

  • @gabesisneros136
    @gabesisneros136 4 місяці тому +8

    Transport them better. Thats why vudeos like that truck getting demolished by one its carrying exist. U have to better secure them

    • @doobybrother21
      @doobybrother21 4 місяці тому +1

      that's a genius idea!

    • @Loothy88
      @Loothy88 4 місяці тому

      id say the majority of coils comes on trains, trucking them is way to expensive, the ones on trucks are locally sold from one company to another for various reasons. the place i work at buys them from competitors selling them cheap cause of defects that wont for them but might work for us

    • @chiefusb465
      @chiefusb465 4 місяці тому

      ​@Loothy88 the company I work for ships coils on trucks all over the country

    • @Loothy88
      @Loothy88 4 місяці тому

      @chiefusb465 still more expensive then railcar, I've also never seen a truck transport a 1/2in 96 wide coil that can weigh up to 70k

    • @chiefusb465
      @chiefusb465 4 місяці тому

      @Loothy88 that wasn't the point, you said the ones on trucks are sold locally. I was just saying that's not always true. But yeah its cheaper to ship in bulk by rail

  • @greensun1334
    @greensun1334 День тому +1

    If secured right, it's not dangerous to transport.

  • @Cassius365
    @Cassius365 3 місяці тому +1

    Next metal to cover:
    Modern day usage of lead. Where it’s applicable and where it shouldn’t be used.

  • @brucejedwabny3473
    @brucejedwabny3473 4 місяці тому +5

    Typically one roll weighs 80,000, reason you typically only see one on a large semi trailer going down the road. With blocking and multiple chains to secure.

    • @cshairydude
      @cshairydude 4 місяці тому +1

      80,000 what?

    • @brucejedwabny3473
      @brucejedwabny3473 4 місяці тому +3

      My mistake, sorry. Large Rolls are 40,000 pounds, that’s 20 ton on one loaded semi trailer.

  • @vexed832
    @vexed832 4 місяці тому +4

    I will absolutely never work with steel coils ever

  • @cy2cri
    @cy2cri 2 місяці тому +1

    Worked in a stamping factory for 5 years as tool and die, if we didnt have stamping, we wouldnt have the majority of products you see today. All the non moving metal components of a vehicle are stamped, and still even some of those are stamped, fuel tanks, air compressor tanks, chaor parts, your AC unit is housed in a stamped box. Any bracket you pick up is guaranteed a stamped part.

  • @tomr9661
    @tomr9661 Місяць тому +1

    The coils are not dangerous, it's how you handle them.

  • @hvnterblack
    @hvnterblack 4 місяці тому +2

    On railroads coils are always locked in cradles. There is no way it can roll, both sides, front and rear are sloped. Heavy coil has very limited ability to climb, also lock holds it in position. Drive slower, like with hazmat, secure it proper way and everything gonna be ok.

  • @mlangham179
    @mlangham179 4 місяці тому +2

    They aren't dangerous. The coil that exploded was a high strength grade that was further processed cold and they are known to have a lot of stored energy. Hot rolled coils that aren't cooled excessively to make properties don't explode like that. Truck is the worst way to ship coils, but a lot of product manufacturers don't have the infrastructure or location to have the coils barged in or brought in on trains.

  • @hobbyhermit66
    @hobbyhermit66 Місяць тому +1

    Cold rolled and hot rolled steel does not refer to the way it is rolled into a coil. It refers to the way that the steel is processed. Either can be made into sheets, rods, bars, and other shapes that aren't necessarily coiled for transport. T posts, for instance, are rolled from larger pieces of steel.

  • @thehandleiwantedwasntavailable
    @thehandleiwantedwasntavailable 3 місяці тому +1

    I was 16 and working in a sheet metal factory where rolls of steel like this would be delivered. They ranged in weight based on the thickness - between 1-3,000 kilograms. The foreman (my 16 year old friend - no joke!), would use the very tip of the forklift to raise them and install them on the press. Wild.

  • @astpttmn
    @astpttmn 3 місяці тому +1

    I install and troubleshoot coil processing machinery that turns the coil into cut straight flat sheets for sheet metal processing, and let me tell you they are no joke. The edges are razor sharp, and on our machines the coils are 15,000 lbs. Cutting the bands to release the coil is the sketchiest part lol

  • @kaiserindustries5567
    @kaiserindustries5567 Місяць тому +1

    i worked in steel company in production! (voest alpine) the coil the first clip weighs around 30 tonns

  • @tapioca8574
    @tapioca8574 7 днів тому

    For those who seem to keep asking why they're loaded like this instead of on their side, 1: easier to load and unload and less likely to damage the coil and 2: it is a lot easier to properly secure a coil loaded eyes to the side because you can run chains and straps through the eyes. I've hauled coils eyes to the sky and honestly trying to secure them kind of just felt wrong and I felt a hell of a lot more comfortable when I could just run the chains right through them and know for damn sure they'd be as secure as could be if I did my job right.

  • @lawrenceklein3524
    @lawrenceklein3524 Місяць тому

    I worked in a plant that used these coils.
    I unloaded them from trucks and then loaded them into presses; machines that formed specific items. Never once had an accident. Totally professional.

  • @LateNightCable
    @LateNightCable 4 місяці тому +2

    The question is not why we still make steel coils, but rather why we still load them on trucks phucking suicide coil style. I’ve hauled coils among many other things on a big rig, steel and aluminum. And despite best efforts to secure them, the binders do pop loose from time to time. Those are the pieces used to put tension on the chains. Without secure binders, you have no securement.

    • @trevort910
      @trevort910 Місяць тому +1

      Have you tried screw binders? Or screw sintches as we call them on west coast of Canada. They screw tight and unscrew to loosen. No "pop"

  • @captaincooool
    @captaincooool 16 днів тому

    All of a sudden UA-cam has me running in the opposite direction of steel coils, my feed is full of this

  • @kevinhatfield441
    @kevinhatfield441 4 місяці тому +1

    I worked manufacturing for 17 years I can't tell you how many times I seen this happen I watched 2 coils come off the truck on way too work wow what a mess

  • @SargHWP
    @SargHWP 2 місяці тому +1

    I worked in a steal coil plant for 3 days and they threw me away for nothing

  • @mikeoxlong3391
    @mikeoxlong3391 4 місяці тому +1

    Steel coils are dangerous af, also some may look cold but still be scorching hot

  • @gregorystone1439
    @gregorystone1439 3 місяці тому

    I work for a company in south carolina that makes everything from panels to trim with the coils. It's fascinating process.

  • @Lee-hq6tf
    @Lee-hq6tf 2 місяці тому

    Can you make an eight hour version of this video? I can't get enough of this subject.

  • @moleculemagician8616
    @moleculemagician8616 Місяць тому +1

    Why doesn’t the steel industry have a base crate designed and built for those rolls to reduce accidents? They could be stackable so that a number of them could be returned to the mill in a single trip.

  • @kaenryuuart543
    @kaenryuuart543 3 місяці тому +1

    “If it’s so hard to transport, why do we keep making them?”
    Because we need them

  • @Ultragamer63
    @Ultragamer63 3 місяці тому +1

    "Cold rolled steel is made from a hot rolled steel sheet."

  • @corentinjourdan5739
    @corentinjourdan5739 3 місяці тому

    i work at a firm using such coils in packs (some are about twenty centimeter large,some are 8centimeter) and the dangerous part of those coils is nearly only the inaproppriate securing for transport.second danger from these is if they get unwrapped in stupid ways.if those are secured properly,both for the wrapping and the securing on transport,it's perfectly fine.some of our providers using two to three plastics straps to secure them from unwrapping ,along with a strong scotch to stick the external end of the coil.some use metallic straps which are much more resistant as the plastic ones tends to get cut by the side of the sheet while moving them.the only decision behind these straps is the cost of metal straps.it's just someone thinking it's too expensive,just like the appropriate supports to transport such coils.most often they're just strapped to the trailer instead of having anti-roll blocks between them

  • @federicoesparza1930
    @federicoesparza1930 19 днів тому

    It's not why we still make steel coils.
    THe real question is why they keep violating transportation regulations of these.

  • @daveal3d
    @daveal3d 2 місяці тому

    Wow what a genius you are... Just figured out what we already knew for almost 2 centuries

  • @corneliusvanstrien1863
    @corneliusvanstrien1863 Місяць тому +1

    The transportation of steel coils has always been dangerous.
    I never understood why they do not make a trailer that has a pocket where the coil is secured and literally becomes part of the trailer.

    • @Coladudetje
      @Coladudetje Місяць тому +1

      Not all trailers have them but some steel companies demands those lowered truck beds but they wanna cheap out on cheap truck drivers cheap trucks cheap transport. And then wondering why they dont have workers anymore...

    • @carrotandturnip
      @carrotandturnip Місяць тому +1

      We use them in the UK - both trucks and trains. I worked for an automotive manufacturer at the pressing plant. All our steel coils were delivered this way from British Steel (and this was over 30 years ago)

  • @Dannysoutherner
    @Dannysoutherner 3 місяці тому +1

    On highway 31 near where I live, years ago, a roll broke off a truck and punched 3 big holes in the `bridge over the creek and one broke loose on I-65 making many holes in the road. Really glad no car was under them when they went.

  • @WesleyAPEX
    @WesleyAPEX Місяць тому +1

    Why wouldnt they stack the coils on their side so they cant slide like that?

  • @adawg3032
    @adawg3032 11 днів тому

    Worked milling metals for 5 years, was the lead operator when I got laid off a year ago. A job I miss.

  • @sanchezking6188
    @sanchezking6188 21 день тому

    Not a trucker, so real question out of curiosity: Why dont they put coils on their sides when placing them on a trailer? Damages or deformations at the edges of the sheet should be very minimal and would most likely be irrelevant anyway due to further processing that follows.

  • @gargoyle7863
    @gargoyle7863 Місяць тому

    When handled poorly these coils are true killers.

  • @GOGOSLIFE
    @GOGOSLIFE Місяць тому

    I was the GM for manufacturing company that used large coils for our product. A piston on one of the tow motors let go and the coil fell to the floor. It's amazing how badly it rattled a100,000sq ft building. It felt like a bomb went off! The driver got shot in the face with the hydraulic fluid, but was ok. They are VERY dangerous.

  • @OliviaDawson-wb9ri
    @OliviaDawson-wb9ri 9 днів тому

    Not only are they dangerous to transport, but they are also very dangerous to make, my mom’s boyfriend makes steel coils for a living and has literally seen people get cleanly decapitated by a coil coming loose.

  • @higgzzy
    @higgzzy 3 місяці тому +1

    A single coil weighs around 8-10 Tonnes

  • @thelonecabbage7834
    @thelonecabbage7834 2 місяці тому

    1)Unless I'm mistaken, steel sheets are just cut/formed from coils somewhere else, so if you can do that in house, it'll save money.
    2) Cutting steel into sheets creates a lot more waste. Think about cutting 45" parts from a 100in sheet vs a 1000ft coil. every sheet will have ~10in waste (100in total), whereas the coil will just have 10" at the end.
    TLDR: Coils save big businesses money.

  • @heinsy707
    @heinsy707 3 місяці тому +1

    They see me rollin.. they hatin..

  • @ViVazVo
    @ViVazVo 4 місяці тому +1

    Just use a specialized trailer like Krone Coil Liner with "Coil troughs" and the transport will be no problem

  • @wolfietigerstripes3248
    @wolfietigerstripes3248 3 місяці тому

    1 Reason why they are still made is because the other option is useing premade blanks, and those slow down the process of stamped metal machining. Coils are more continuous and therefore speed up the manufacturing process.

  • @biscuittechnician
    @biscuittechnician 4 місяці тому +1

    that only happened because the driver forgot to flick the straps, and say that's not going anywhere.

    • @trevort910
      @trevort910 Місяць тому

      Haha. Only truckers will get this humor. So true. But yea chains required here.

  • @ironman4do
    @ironman4do 3 місяці тому +1

    Why they don't just transport the rolls with heavy duty chocks?
    The means to stop round things from rolling have been around basically since the invention of the wheel. Chocks are a stupidly simple, absolutely effective, and dirt cheap solution that's been used...forever.

  • @ryanstone3311
    @ryanstone3311 3 місяці тому +1

    I loaded and unloaded these coils for 10 yrs,You definitely gotta respect the weight! Sied note our coil came straight from China, after processing them i put the made in USA sticker on them😅!

  • @thoughtful_criticiser
    @thoughtful_criticiser Місяць тому

    Coils weigh 20 t each when full, in the UK we have special trailers for transportation. The coil is placed in the bed which is channel running the full length of the trailer, the core points forward. They still secured but that is to hold them if the vehicle tips over. Braking and cornering doesn't allow them to move. One of the worst RTCs I ever saw was a coil that broke free, it rolled through the cab, removing the driver's arm. Onto the road and the rear of a car, the engine block stopped the coil. The driver and the four passengers didn't slow it down. The recovery was not easy.

  • @JamesSmith-pc6bh
    @JamesSmith-pc6bh 3 місяці тому +1

    I've hauled those, I was always very careful when securing them. They can kill you easily.

  • @IAmLeutrimTopalli
    @IAmLeutrimTopalli 3 місяці тому

    Most shippers will not allow rebar, coils and other dangerous items to be transported unless a headache rack is installed! I had a trucking company with my dad so I personally came across this issue when they refused to load rebar on his flatbed until we got a headache rack. Thankfully we found one for $500 on Facebook marketplace years ago.

  • @BadConeja
    @BadConeja 11 днів тому

    When the algorithm decides forcing me to become obsessed with Steel Coils

  • @memesh0rts9876
    @memesh0rts9876 19 днів тому

    steel coils are probably the most dangerous material to handle

  • @t0aster_b4th
    @t0aster_b4th 2 місяці тому

    We still make them because they're incredibly useful and convenient. When things go wrong, it's because people screwed up, just like anything else. I worked in metal fabrication for a decade, and any time anything went wrong with coils or flats, it was because the person handling them (often with a forklift,) did something stupid. The steel isn't trying to kill anyone, it's the operator or handler taking shortcuts that get people hurt.

  • @Razornuke
    @Razornuke 3 місяці тому

    These coils are what my job uses to make large metal culverts to irrigate water for all sorts of construction. Those coils are dangerous, but necessary for everyday life.

  • @Hiatus-Humanus
    @Hiatus-Humanus Місяць тому

    I worked in a factory that painted these coils, I stuck around for almost 2 months, which looking back was about a month and a half too long.

  • @catmand5h
    @catmand5h 3 місяці тому

    Steel coils are not "dangerous" to transport. It's incompetent people that make it dangerous.

  • @thecan8460
    @thecan8460 3 місяці тому

    That clip with the steel coil unwinding like that definitely shows just how high the tension is when wrapped up like that. ABSOLUTELY INSANE! 😬

  • @tomc9453
    @tomc9453 16 днів тому

    Transporting steel sheets is WAAAAAY more dangerous

  • @Lolbama2012
    @Lolbama2012 Місяць тому

    That first guy definitely forgot to slap the last coil and say that it's not going anywhere. It's basic science...

  • @fares_games
    @fares_games Місяць тому +1

    Why not leave it so the inner hole is vertical? You can also add a pole to the truck to hold it

    • @Cattefish
      @Cattefish Місяць тому

      they do that, but not all of them does, it’s also expensive to buy a specific trailer just for that so a lot of people carry them suicide.

  • @SolusDarkcoat
    @SolusDarkcoat 3 місяці тому +1

    Why transport them on the round side? Lay them down on the flat side, that way they dont roll.

  • @omarmorales6437
    @omarmorales6437 Місяць тому

    They’re pretty useful and play a big roll in making tanks for storage. I work in asphalt containment and we build your large tanks by rolling the sheets out with a roller and welding them into shells. We then put those shells together on a large fit up machine and weld them to create the body of the tanks.