The invention of modern stainless steel can be dated to 1913, and it was done by Harry Brearley in Sheffield, Yorkshire. He was experimenting with steel alloys - combinations of metals - that would be suitable for making gun barrels. A few months later he noticed that while most of his rejected specimens had rusted, one containing 14 per cent chromium had not. The discovery led to the development of stainless steel by a very sharp eyed Brit.
It's nice that a woman's pretty voice can describe the amazing industrial accomplishments that men have produced for the world. Bravo ladies! Keep pumping them out with the kind of loving nurture that only a mother can give.
Great video. I used to drive truck for a scrap metal recycler. Great to see the rest of the processing. Hauled to several ArcelorMittal facilities. LOL, used to use slag ladles to thaw out frozen brakes.
Brings back memories... In the 60's, after finishing my schooling at Institut Emile Metz, I spent 3 years at the ARBED-Belval plant in Luxembourg (Arbed is now part of ArcelorMittal). Great experience, learning all the aspects of maintaining the equipment at the plant, before I went to U of Cincinnati to pick up metallurgical engineering.
Everyone should watch this to understand how stainless steel is made, rather than take it all for granted. People use all sorts of things without any thought of how things are made. Being an Engineer I suppose I’m a bit biased, but as a youngster our family had a set of encyclopaedias and I read them all cover to cover many times whilst growing up. Education in all things is important and films like this give an insight of what goes on to make the materials we all use in our daily lives. I run a manufacturing facility, and I had an interesting conversation one day with a worker from another area who was shaking his head and sighing whilst looking at a swarf bin on a machine producing stainless steel parts. He said “look at all that waste!”. I very quickly explained that it wasn’t and he went away with his tail between his legs after being suitably “educated”. Show this to an environmentalist after they have had a life saving operation aided by the use of stainless steel surgical instruments, that will make them think eh?
@@Guitar101Smasher JUST a nice dusting of process lime and grease on everything. "fallout" lol ... quite interesting places to work. stainless spatter on equipment is like razor blades...
I worked at Titanium Metals in the 70's. We did our melts with electronic furnaces. But wow! This mill is phenomenal. All I could do is wonder how much they spent on the equipment and systems controls. Bet it's more than $50.
Good video I had the opportunity to work for arcelor mital at one of his plants in Anthony Texas in the production of rebar an at the ball mill . A very interesting process From the scrap yard to the melt shop the rolling mill, fabrication and the ball mill. It brought back good met God bless
VERY impressive and thoughly interesting with Clear-concise description all the way through with sutable musicsl bacground that dosen't drown-out the commentary. THIS is how a video should be made. Lije the Stainless-steel, properly done‼️❤️😄 Thanks for a great presentation 👍👍👍
It's a very nice video about the steel making processes. The company though is a different story. Arcrlormittal is a company that didn't treat it's Caribbean workers with respect at all. It's the plant that got mittal his wealth, in the end the workers were treated humanely at all.
I work for the Mill and do the maintenance in one of their Caster’s. It is great to watch the process and see it all happen. When everything goes right! But thing’s can happen fast with steel processes
Most interesting. I really did enjoy that Having visited a number of steel plants both in Europe and the US I can appreciate the skill of the staff here.
Thank you for the video. A question: I don't see mixing or stirring operation to ensure homogeneity? Or does the O2 & Ar sparging (stated for %C reduction) achieve mixing as well?
Wow! that is amazing to see! I sure hope they are doing a lot to use less water and filter heavy metals out before letting that water back into the surrounding streams. That is a lot of water and energy being used right there! I am glad for stainless steel, it is amazing stuff but I am also glad that I do not live downwind or downstream from this plant. I bet those operators are paid pretty handsomely to live and work there though. They are doing important, highly skilled and dangerous work, they should be well paid for it.
Mate, it's in Belgium, pollution got regulated so well there was virtually nothing bad coming out of that plant... which is why it's been closed down almost entirely and production has been moved to Brazil (or replaced by cheap chinese steel) where nobody gives a damn.
Generally speaking the workers and managerial staff at steel mills are very well paid as compared to the other professions and specialities some times amounting three to four times more.
Fascinating process, checking the "mix" of the raw material whilst molten! The commentator's accent intrigued me - Northern England with French overtones?
I was also interested, so I trawled through a library of English regional accents and learnt much in the process. Our narrator is trying to be as clear as possible, and her accent has been heavily modified by education. Nevertheless, even when people are making an effort to speak clearly, they tend to revert to their natural accent when saying short, common words of little import. Things to listen for when assessing an accent include missing "h's" at the start of words, missing "t's" at the end of words, the short "u" being pronounced as in "rook", whether the "a" in words such as "class" are pronounced as "ar" or as in "cat", whether the "r" at the end of words is rolled or pronounced at all, the way "oo" is pronounced, nasalisation of "ing" at the end of words and/or the pronunciation of the final "g", how "i" is pronounced in words such as "hit", pronunciation of the "ay" sound such that "lake" is similar to "like", the rise and fall of the voice during sentences,(lilt), and whether there is a "twang". Our narrator never skips a final "t", always pronounces the "a" in words like "class" as in "cat", never misses "h's", but always pronounces the short "u" in the classic northern English manner, similar to "rook". This combination is common in Lincolnshire, and her strongly northern "u" suggests somewhere north of Boston and probably quite far to the east, inland. Lincoln would be a very reasonable guesstimate, but her accent has been modified by education and the desire to speak clearly!
@@etangdescygnes William - another enquiring mind I see! Living in South Lincolnshire I recognise much of what you say, and agree. I did see some similaritie to a Nottinghamshire accent, suitably "smoothed", as well. In my experience the Boston accent, on teh East side, has a more rural edge with similarities to East Anglia etc. Intriguing that this was the narrator selected by Mittal. I did wonder whether it is someone from Scunthorpe area, where some UK processing plants are situated.
We Aussies used to produce most of the SS we consumed but back in mid 80's it was decided to close the operation down at Port Kembla and import it all. BUT before it happened we produced the material that would eventually go into our 1988 new Federal Parliament in Canberra. If you have never seen the huge four posted flagpole that hangs over the sunken building then do yourselg a favour and check it out....200 tonnes of Aussie's best.
Okay okay, so where did the T1000 unit get destroyed? And what sort of metal would be probably made? Only kidding, video looks brilliant but how do the laboratory testing get the teeny weeny samples from and how?
Wow, been 56 years since i seen this process. Better on UA-cam than in person. You know what happens when you drop the roller too much? Kaboom. Downtime, no bonus
It isn't cost effective to make stainless steel from pure materials alone. Usually melt shops use over 85% scrap for a cast and use as little pure material as possible to keep costs down. The end product will be the same
Wow, just wow! We are the ultimate form of a Universe becoming aware of itself. It all start inside a fat star that belched all the elements needed to grow humans. Wow, just wow!
Mittal will buy your steel mills and restructure them, i.e. cut costs and work force. That is what they do, Vitoria Brasil, East Chicago, IN and others.
Why are the outside bins exposed? Would rain and moisture just mean more energy and longer to get it up to temp? Also, is that chromium dust blowing around in the wind? And the guy looking down into the electrodes and pools. Is that bad to breath day after day?
There's an energy balance. Compressing with such huge forces add heat enough to keep the process going. On the other hand the water keeps the rolls cool enough to perform their job.
I have a question: 1. The maximum roll thickness of stainless steel on the market? 6,8,12 milimeters? 2. Why donot they make the thickness harder? like 15 or 20?
Plastic will burn off. Other elements can be removed to the slag in the AOD by blowing gasses through and turning the unwanted elements into oxides which float to the surface. Also if they're making a 304 grade they will use 304 scrap, they don't just put any old scrap in the mix
Stainless Steel (304) is around $2.75 a lb right now when we manufactures buy it, so 20-30 tons would be $110,000-$165,000 per slab. That also depends on the type of stainless steel: 304 is the most common used for food applications would be about this much.
That truck had 3 big slabs and 2 small slabs, so it was carrying about $715,000 of material, but no one can steal it. It all has to be processed too, so it's not worth that until the work is done.
start using adaptive strip oiling or wiping without any energy, no moving parts, no replacement parts or is exceptionally versatile Equipment which can be easily installed in varied machines and process lines
Ok, I’m going to admit something I never figured I would. I guess in a normal life span we take for granted things are just built. Never in my wildest imagination would I have dreamed there were factories like this. And it’s been going on since before WW11.
nowadays the melt shop melts steel (~200tons per batch) @32 minutes in the QBOP furnace (as compared to their ELECTRIC furnace) and the slab caster is faster .see the ATLANTIC STEEL Corp mill at Cartersville Georgia.
@Oliver Mayo yep but guess who is about to be coming back on line. 2020 Fairfield Works putting new furnace on line. We're coming back hopefully like we were. 2nd only to Pittsburgh in steel production.
Yes. To the narrator she sounds so well , sexy and literate two pluses. Awesome explanation of process. Chatelet, is French for little castle or small house/castle chateau idk?
👨💻💭shame the Rollering process isn't close after the steel is made - like it's already HOT so save $ on reheating it - maybe there's a reason 🤷♂️💲 ITS GREAT VIDEO like these types tech stuff factorys more please
Interesting stuff thanks Benoit, hated the music, maybe some jazz, acoustic guitar or drum & Bass or all 3 next time, they'd go well with the talk and the narrator had a nice voice I use and need this metal for my lime putty mortar and plaster work. Without it You can always use wood but it does make thin repairs so much easier. The film was from 2008, I wonder what improvements have happened in the steel mill since, it would be interesting to see how many employee's are left and whether or not it's still even open.
The invention of modern stainless steel can be dated to 1913, and it was done by Harry Brearley in Sheffield, Yorkshire. He was experimenting with steel alloys - combinations of metals - that would be suitable for making gun barrels. A few months later he noticed that while most of his rejected specimens had rusted, one containing 14 per cent chromium had not. The discovery led to the development of stainless steel by a very sharp eyed Brit.
A fascinating video. I knew the rough process but not the details, also seeing it done on such a massive scale was awesome.
It's nice that a woman's pretty voice can describe the amazing industrial accomplishments that men have produced for the world. Bravo ladies! Keep pumping them out with the kind of loving nurture that only a mother can give.
Great video. I used to drive truck for a scrap metal recycler. Great to see the rest of the processing. Hauled to several ArcelorMittal facilities. LOL, used to use slag ladles to thaw out frozen brakes.
simflyr1957
ua-cam.com/video/hpgK51w6uhk/v-deo.html
Brings back memories... In the 60's, after finishing my schooling at Institut Emile Metz, I spent 3 years at the ARBED-Belval plant in Luxembourg (Arbed is now part of ArcelorMittal). Great experience, learning all the aspects of maintaining the equipment at the plant, before I went to U of Cincinnati to pick up metallurgical engineering.
Excellent experience prior to a theoretical education. I hope you put it to good use.
@rats arsed 😂😂
HOW MANY TIMES DID THE PLANT EXPLODE
Everyone should watch this to understand how stainless steel is made, rather than take it all for granted.
People use all sorts of things without any thought of how things are made.
Being an Engineer I suppose I’m a bit biased, but as a youngster our family had a set of encyclopaedias and I read them all cover to cover many times whilst growing up.
Education in all things is important and films like this give an insight of what goes on to make the materials we all use in our daily lives.
I run a manufacturing facility, and I had an interesting conversation one day with a worker from another area who was shaking his head and sighing whilst looking at a swarf bin on a machine producing stainless steel parts. He said “look at all that waste!”. I very quickly explained that it wasn’t and he went away with his tail between his legs after being suitably “educated”.
Show this to an environmentalist after they have had a life saving operation aided by the use of stainless steel surgical instruments, that will make them think eh?
Awesome plant! That's what engineering is about!
Partly
@@Astrix_Jaeger le monde
What a wonderful voice she has!
Cleanest steel mill I’ve ever seen
You are absolutely right . I have worked in some steel mill departments NASTY! my LORD how I made it?
It is a stainless steel mill!!! stainless!
this had to been filmed the first day of operation
The furnace and the AOD are sealed in big units with extraction so you don't get fume dust all over the shop
@@Guitar101Smasher JUST a nice dusting of process lime and grease on everything. "fallout" lol ... quite interesting places to work. stainless spatter on equipment is like razor blades...
That was concise, clear and great all around!
I worked at Titanium Metals in the 70's. We did our melts with electronic furnaces. But wow! This mill is phenomenal. All I could do is wonder how much they spent on the equipment and systems controls. Bet it's more than $50.
Hats off to the narrator! Her diction, and delivery tie the images of this video together in fine style.
Yes. This narrator is brilliant.
Jibba Ellie today working in the aluminium Farm
Yeah, very high quality cue card reading! 10\10 would fall asleep to again.
That was the thing which sprung to my mind while watching the video. I am a stickler for proper English, too.
She has a really great voice and uses proper English, easy to listen to.
Brilliant! Very concise and informative!😃👍
Really good video. Informative yet easy to watch. Thanks for sharing.
If b
what was so informative? anyone who didn't know anything about the subject doesn't know much more than before.
Good video
I had the opportunity to work for arcelor mital at one of his plants in Anthony Texas in the production of rebar an at the ball mill . A very interesting process
From the scrap yard to the melt shop the rolling mill, fabrication and the ball mill.
It brought back good met
God bless
Beautiful video. What a fascinating facility, the work of great people.
VERY impressive and thoughly interesting with Clear-concise description all the way through with sutable musicsl bacground that dosen't drown-out the commentary. THIS is how a video should be made. Lije the Stainless-steel, properly done‼️❤️😄 Thanks for a great presentation 👍👍👍
Awesome voice and awesome explanation
Formidable and terrifing machinery. The scale is staggering. 👍
James Barisitz
Stagger at this one !
ua-cam.com/video/hpgK51w6uhk/v-deo.html
It's a very nice video about the steel making processes. The company though is a different story. Arcrlormittal is a company that didn't treat it's Caribbean workers with respect at all. It's the plant that got mittal his wealth, in the end the workers were treated humanely at all.
Laxmi mittal. Indian man . happy to see an Indian legendary work.
Beautiful. People, things and processes like this make our lives wonderful.
I work for the Mill and do the maintenance in one of their Caster’s. It is great to watch the process and see it all happen. When everything goes right! But thing’s can happen fast with steel processes
Nicely narrated!
That is simply amazing. WOW!!!!! Who would think it takes that much work to make stainless steel ..
And people wanna convince me that China could manufacture stainless steel worth a damn. Not a chance!
I always thought it's difficult to make stainless steel.
And this was just the surface of the story...
@@DestroyerX61 already has been, broseph
Interesting video. Very well put together
I don't know how I ended up here... But I am grateful I did!!!!
Same way I did... E-A-G-L-E-S 2020!
Most interesting. I really did enjoy that Having visited a number of steel plants both in Europe and the US I can appreciate the skill of the staff here.
Nice narration and video👍👍👍👍👍
wow what a big shop...the technologie is this building is so fantastic... thank's
I look at the size of these machines with wonder. Who designed and who maintains them.
Constructors and engineers they a movers
Yeah. boggles the mind. I can't even imagine starting to design a line like this and I'm a qualified engineer.
really very nice and informative video. thnaks
Amazing video. thanks for sharing .
Thank you for the video. A question: I don't see mixing or stirring operation to ensure homogeneity? Or does the O2 & Ar sparging (stated for %C reduction) achieve mixing as well?
Thank you for this. Its very educational
Wow! that is amazing to see!
I sure hope they are doing a lot to use less water and filter heavy metals out before letting that water back into the surrounding streams. That is a lot of water and energy being used right there! I am glad for stainless steel, it is amazing stuff but I am also glad that I do not live downwind or downstream from this plant. I bet those operators are paid pretty handsomely to live and work there though. They are doing important, highly skilled and dangerous work, they should be well paid for it.
Tom Kelly we know you work at that factory, don't be so obvious...
just go ask for a raise
Mate, it's in Belgium, pollution got regulated so well there was virtually nothing bad coming out of that plant... which is why it's been closed down almost entirely and production has been moved to Brazil (or replaced by cheap chinese steel) where nobody gives a damn.
Generally speaking the workers and managerial staff at steel mills are very well paid as compared to the other professions and specialities some times amounting three to four times more.
7:46 best imagery
Very nice voice and european accent.
awesome video.. the process is very very important to as steel...thanks to explain steel manufacturing.
Fascinating process, checking the "mix" of the raw material whilst molten! The commentator's accent intrigued me - Northern England with French overtones?
I was also interested, so I trawled through a library of English regional accents and learnt much in the process. Our narrator is trying to be as clear as possible, and her accent has been heavily modified by education. Nevertheless, even when people are making an effort to speak clearly, they tend to revert to their natural accent when saying short, common words of little import. Things to listen for when assessing an accent include missing "h's" at the start of words, missing "t's" at the end of words, the short "u" being pronounced as in "rook", whether the "a" in words such as "class" are pronounced as "ar" or as in "cat", whether the "r" at the end of words is rolled or pronounced at all, the way "oo" is pronounced, nasalisation of "ing" at the end of words and/or the pronunciation of the final "g", how "i" is pronounced in words such as "hit", pronunciation of the "ay" sound such that "lake" is similar to "like", the rise and fall of the voice during sentences,(lilt), and whether there is a "twang". Our narrator never skips a final "t", always pronounces the "a" in words like "class" as in "cat", never misses "h's", but always pronounces the short "u" in the classic northern English manner, similar to "rook". This combination is common in Lincolnshire, and her strongly northern "u" suggests somewhere north of Boston and probably quite far to the east, inland. Lincoln would be a very reasonable guesstimate, but her accent has been modified by education and the desire to speak clearly!
@@etangdescygnes William - another enquiring mind I see! Living in South Lincolnshire I recognise much of what you say, and agree. I did see some similaritie to a Nottinghamshire accent, suitably "smoothed", as well. In my experience the Boston accent, on teh East side, has a more rural edge with similarities to East Anglia etc. Intriguing that this was the narrator selected by Mittal. I did wonder whether it is someone from Scunthorpe area, where some UK processing plants are situated.
would you use continue charging Scrap
nice, what makes scrap and where did it come from
Those size of those machines, the work thats been done, maintainance daammnn... those are super massive investments ....
You forgot to include the step where the politicians come in and give it the magic blessing.
Very true.
You mean come in and take their magic blessing that’s due and you’ll pay if you ever want to walk again.
@Anil Jagtap yea buy when you choices are donkey shit and elephant shit, you're eating shit either way.
@@Alex-uy7pc Elephant shit taste better, and is easier to swallow.
@@sonnypruitt6639 well lucky for you it's an all you can eat shit buffet.
Ffs who would even comment that?
Stainless Steel mills are so clean.
The modern ones are.
Great video
We Aussies used to produce most of the SS we consumed but back in mid 80's it was decided to close the operation down at Port Kembla and import it all. BUT before it happened we produced the material that would eventually go into our 1988 new Federal Parliament in Canberra. If you have never seen the huge four posted flagpole that hangs over the sunken building then do yourselg a favour and check it out....200 tonnes of Aussie's best.
can I reproduce this at home ?
Wow man, that's some heavy metal!
Stephan Landry
No HERE’S some heavy metal !
ua-cam.com/video/hpgK51w6uhk/v-deo.html
Okay okay, so where did the T1000 unit get destroyed? And what sort of metal would be probably made?
Only kidding, video looks brilliant but how do the laboratory testing get the teeny weeny samples from and how?
Wow, been 56 years since i seen this process. Better on UA-cam than in person. You know what happens when you drop the roller too much? Kaboom. Downtime, no bonus
Pinnacle of our / human technology
Where this was in syria or lebanon mozambiq???.
I have question: Which is better?? (1) from raw materials (2) from scraps.
It isn't cost effective to make stainless steel from pure materials alone. Usually melt shops use over 85% scrap for a cast and use as little pure material as possible to keep costs down. The end product will be the same
It looks great.
hi sir i need some informations about injection of carbon in eaf
Hats off to the person/mfg units for getting us worthy technical information.
Y esto dónde es?
Very interesting and impressive.
THANKS !! FOR THE VIDEO ( GOOD IN INTERESANT).
Optimal idea to let a female talk instead of a male that actualy work in this job, that makes this video much more attractive to watch!
Gj
I dont know why but I watched the whole thing!
What is 1.5mm stainless sheet used for appliances?
Appliances would be more like 0.7mm or less Not sure the application for these. Probably punched into parts.
Wow, just wow! We are the ultimate form of a Universe becoming aware of itself. It all start inside a fat star that belched all the elements needed to grow humans. Wow, just wow!
you come from a fat star?... rip but i'm different
Why is Martin Solveig making stainless steel? 1:45
I fell in love with the narrator.
She's speak very clear
Vive la France !!!!
This is so cool.
Like watching a sci fi but it's all real :D
Please come over to Australia and set up a mill! Please!
contact with me
david duffy mill for??
We had mills...greedy, lazy unions and their minions made us uncompetitive.
Mittal will buy your steel mills and restructure them, i.e. cut costs and work force. That is what they do, Vitoria Brasil, East Chicago, IN and others.
@@flyingdog1498 and we indians rule 😎😎😎😎
Never knew metallurgists use herbs.
As a joke fine , if u really think like this watch again
Nice, anybody knows how much energy this plant needs to work?
Not exactly. Integrated steel plant of even one million ton capacity would require a power plant as a part of the steel mill.
Why are the outside bins exposed? Would rain and moisture just mean more energy and longer to get it up to temp? Also, is that chromium dust blowing around in the wind? And the guy looking down into the electrodes and pools. Is that bad to breath day after day?
The moisture has no effect given the high temperatures involved - any moisture simply flashes to steam instantly and dissipates.
Soll man dise Aktie kaufen??
Great video very educational
Good video
Wow, I want to see the machines that they use be built. Truly impressive.
mazeed or is tarah ki vdos sheer krdiya kre ee k hwaly sy
I see the iron slabs are passing from rollers and machines pour water to be cooled. Doesn't this lower the temperature of the pre-heated slabs???
There's an energy balance. Compressing with such huge forces add heat enough to keep the process going. On the other hand the water keeps the rolls cool enough to perform their job.
I have a question:
1. The maximum roll thickness of stainless steel on the market? 6,8,12 milimeters?
2. Why donot they make the thickness harder? like 15 or 20?
maybe nobody needs a vessel with such diameters,also the price here is a big factor for some manufacturers of stainless steel vessels
What happens to all the impurities like aluminum plastics and other metals mixed in the junk feed stock
Plastic will burn off. Other elements can be removed to the slag in the AOD by blowing gasses through and turning the unwanted elements into oxides which float to the surface. Also if they're making a 304 grade they will use 304 scrap, they don't just put any old scrap in the mix
О ничеси. В темиртау снимите видео :) ArcelorMittal Temirtau
It is not stainless steel, only stell ... correct your description... Video is very good
What is difference between steel and iron?
Carbon content
about 500 degrees
5:26 how much is one of those slabs worth? $10k? $100k? $2 mil?
$12000
Depending on the formula...
Stainless Steel (304) is around $2.75 a lb right now when we manufactures buy it, so 20-30 tons would be $110,000-$165,000 per slab. That also depends on the type of stainless steel: 304 is the most common used for food applications would be about this much.
That truck had 3 big slabs and 2 small slabs, so it was carrying about $715,000 of material, but no one can steal it. It all has to be processed too, so it's not worth that until the work is done.
Ryan Avery well I bought some stainless sheet metal the other day and my cost was 3.50 per pound
start using adaptive strip oiling or wiping without any energy, no moving parts, no replacement parts or is exceptionally versatile Equipment which can be easily installed in varied machines and process lines
Very interesting. No wonder why stainless steel is so expensive.
Not only the process, but for example nickel makes it very expensive.
Ok, I’m going to admit something I never figured I would.
I guess in a normal life span we take for granted things are just built.
Never in my wildest imagination would I have dreamed there were factories like this.
And it’s been going on since before WW11.
President Trump 2020
ua-cam.com/video/hpgK51w6uhk/v-deo.html
8:20 Does anyone know how much one of those coils of stainless steel sells for?
that would be information. sharing that is frowned upon.
A whole lot less than the individual items the coi ends up as.
Very good quality gi sheet
What a lovely accent this woman has.
Hi, Benoit Huc. How can reduce value of austenite ss technically???
Continuous casting rocks. So do those SMS rolling stands.
Good job
VIVA FRANCE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!from Australia
have you seen france lately its a shit hole even around the Ifel tower theres imagrants sleeping n shitting in the streets its unfking real !
chatelet is not in france, it is in belgium south of brussels
nowadays the melt shop melts steel (~200tons per batch) @32 minutes in the QBOP furnace (as compared to their ELECTRIC furnace) and the slab caster is faster .see the ATLANTIC STEEL Corp mill at Cartersville Georgia.
@Oliver Mayo yep but guess who is about to be coming back on line. 2020 Fairfield Works putting new furnace on line. We're coming back hopefully like we were. 2nd only to Pittsburgh in steel production.
Yes. To the narrator she sounds so well , sexy and literate two pluses. Awesome explanation of process. Chatelet, is French for little castle or small house/castle chateau idk?
very nice brief knowledge
👨💻💭shame the Rollering process isn't close after the steel is made - like it's already HOT so save $ on reheating it - maybe there's a reason 🤷♂️💲
ITS GREAT VIDEO like these types tech stuff factorys more please
The reason I think is they mentioned that they have to grind the flats after the initial roll to eliminate surface defects.
Interesting stuff thanks Benoit, hated the music, maybe some jazz, acoustic guitar or drum & Bass or all 3 next time, they'd go well with the talk and the narrator had a nice voice
I use and need this metal for my lime putty mortar and plaster work. Without it You can always use wood but it does make thin repairs so much easier.
The film was from 2008, I wonder what improvements have happened in the steel mill since, it would be interesting to see how many employee's are left and whether or not it's still even open.
@ 2:11 there is some obvious dust build up on pipe flanges you better get that cleaned up ASAP or we will call CSB on ya.
rat
i seen that CSB video also
Imagine if one of those round bails fell and started *rolling at you*
Yieeeeeeee!