I worked for the Schlitz can company later Strohs. He left out all the colors on the can are put on at the same time. You can put up to five different colors on each can. Before it leaves the decorater while that ink is still wet it also applies a coat of varnish on it. Think about the clear coat on today's car, serves the same purpose. That machine could run 960 cans per minute. After leaving that machine it went through an oven to dry the outside. It then went through a spray unit to cover the inside like he said. It then went through another oven to dry the inside. Then to a necking machine and finally to the palletizer where I worked. It was fed by two decoraters. Our shifts were 12 hrs a day. Our work days were 4 one week and 3 the next. Unless some issues arised I would place over 1,000,000 cans on pallets for shipping every 12 hours. There was at that time 3 palletizers. From what I understand now they have increased the production and added another palletizer. The plant was sold some years ago and I'm not sure who owns it now. It was at that time the second largest can manufacturering plant in the US. Only the Coors Brewing Company in Golden, Colorado was larger.😊
Interesting read. I just started working for Ball beverage in the uk a few weeks back as an engineer. Yeah the video misses out the oven drying processes, the million checks that are done via camera systems and operators lacquer thickness tests plus many more. We make loads of coke products and only make it up to the necker/flanger so seeing the lid being put on was a first.
@@paulbateman81 What we called advanced tech then would be laughed at today. I went to work there in 1979 and was laid off when they moved the end production, lids, to a Texas plant in 1987. I probably wouldn't recognize the place now. It's amazing how many people they displaced with the technology in this plant over what we had. In the front end where the initial can was made each pair of lines had at least 3-4 people. There was a person maning every two spray banks, each decorator had it's own operator and drying oven. Each pair of spray banks had their own drying oven. Then those two lines went through the necking process, anywhere from a single neck to a triple neck. Then went through another machine to check for pinholes and finally it came to me. There was one person making sure each pallet was strapped down for shipping. Then you had at least two-three fork lift drivers putting them in the warehouse. Not sure how many was in, quality control. I believe we had either 3-4 ET support and a couple mill rights. All of this was per night shift. Day shift had even more people. In this video it looks like about 50 percent of the people may have been replaced with automation. Probably increase productivity at a lower cost. I remember that they told us we were the most expensive part of the can of beer. At that time they told us it cost 7-8 cents to produce one can.
@@paulbateman81 I think Ball might be the company that bought the can plant when Strohs was sold. It's in Winston Salem NC home of RJR tobacco company before it was sold. I'm sure you could look at their world wide plants because I know there's many in the states.
Kita mengagumi pabrick Coca cola sebuah technology Fersy tercanggih saat mesin bekerja adalah di kagumi banyak orang saat melihat rekaman camera di industry pabrick
Not how it's done in Canada or USA. The cans are made at Crown Cork and Seal. They make all the aluminum cans including automotive ones and many others.
Late 70's to 1987 I worked for Schlitz then Strohs can plant. At this plant we made the several different breweries cans plus about any kind of beverage can you see on the shelf. We were at that time the second largest can manufacturing facility in the US. I was on a palletizer, the final stage of a two leg production line. Most 12 hour shifts I would place up to a million+ cans ready for shipping on a pallet. Coke distribution centers have their own name and location on every can. Those cans also have a code on them that tells you exactly what machine created the can, which machine put the label on the date down to the shift. That's all there in case there's a product problem down the road. Not sure who owns it now but after I left it was sold to Ball manufacturing and still making beverage cans.
Hello Nehaa singh such coca cola aluminum can manufacturing factory 10000000 nos for you please accept. I love you Nehaa Singh (Rani, jaan)Radha Krishna bless you.
What's a k-n-end. Do you mean "can end". Doesn't anyone ever proof-read or proof-listen to the finished product?? And is it so labour intensive to get a real person to read this 9 minute script. And why are the kids in charge?? The topic is interesting but thankfully, like most youtube topics, there are many, many other videos on the same topic so you get to watch the good ones, and THUMBS DOWN the bad ones, like this.
would have been better if you had an actual person narrate this instead of a text to speech.
Exactly. Canends? Canbodies? Stupid
People are getting lazy.
Sounds fine to me not like those tiktok automated ones
I agree. It sounded terrible!
Or at least a person properly editing things so it sounds right.
Interesting manufacturing. The computer voiceover needs a little work - can ends, not cannends, etc.
It's actually good. I don't see anything wrong with it. It's just you. That's all
I agree
@@RobertoHernandez-cx4yt4:27 it says the same thing twice in a row
Amazing how it is all so automated.
Good 👍very good thanks 👍very much
Fascinating! Thank you! I will be watching more!
I always loved aluminum
Glass is my fave 😅
@@makin_eng I love both
Recycling is a very good mathod to resolve the problem of matter
Nice piece ❤❤
recycling is a good practise to save our environment
great invention
wow , what an educative manufacturing process
This is such a high-quality video, the filming and editing are on point, highlighting every detail of the process
🥰🥰🥰
Absolutely amazing. Technology has come a long way
Coca-Cola is the best
Great product can be seen in every country
Alcoa aluminum great
Great recycling idea
even the announcer is automated
I wish my country Ghana would think towards this great direction
Impressive 😮
Very nice thought and production methods
Very nice thanks for posting didn’t Cans were born in the 1960s
Oke salam
Kenal dari Palembang 🙏🙏
Nice processing and recycling
I love coca cola. My favorite flavor is cherry
Aluminum cans are always more popular
Anyone else think of Wall-E seeing those blocks of cans 😂😂😂😂
What type of conveyor transfer the aluminum cans vertical?
Vacuum conveyors!
@@BragaNetoAtipico Ok thanks
Excellent video.
A fascinating Produktion Process
Love coca- cola
Nice 🎉
Beautiful presentation how coca-cola manufacturer their products.
Juicing: Extracting juice from fruits by pressing or centrifugation.
I worked for the Schlitz can company later Strohs. He left out all the colors on the can are put on at the same time. You can put up to five different colors on each can. Before it leaves the decorater while that ink is still wet it also applies a coat of varnish on it. Think about the clear coat on today's car, serves the same purpose. That machine could run 960 cans per minute. After leaving that machine it went through an oven to dry the outside. It then went through a spray unit to cover the inside like he said. It then went through another oven to dry the inside. Then to a necking machine and finally to the palletizer where I worked. It was fed by two decoraters. Our shifts were 12 hrs a day. Our work days were 4 one week and 3 the next. Unless some issues arised I would place over 1,000,000 cans on pallets for shipping every 12 hours. There was at that time 3 palletizers. From what I understand now they have increased the production and added another palletizer. The plant was sold some years ago and I'm not sure who owns it now. It was at that time the second largest can manufacturering plant in the US. Only the Coors Brewing Company in Golden, Colorado was larger.😊
Interesting read. I just started working for Ball beverage in the uk a few weeks back as an engineer. Yeah the video misses out the oven drying processes, the million checks that are done via camera systems and operators lacquer thickness tests plus many more. We make loads of coke products and only make it up to the necker/flanger so seeing the lid being put on was a first.
@@paulbateman81 What we called advanced tech then would be laughed at today. I went to work there in 1979 and was laid off when they moved the end production, lids, to a Texas plant in 1987. I probably wouldn't recognize the place now. It's amazing how many people they displaced with the technology in this plant over what we had. In the front end where the initial can was made each pair of lines had at least 3-4 people. There was a person maning every two spray banks, each decorator had it's own operator and drying oven. Each pair of spray banks had their own drying oven. Then those two lines went through the necking process, anywhere from a single neck to a triple neck. Then went through another machine to check for pinholes and finally it came to me. There was one person making sure each pallet was strapped down for shipping. Then you had at least two-three fork lift drivers putting them in the warehouse. Not sure how many was in, quality control. I believe we had either 3-4 ET support and a couple mill rights. All of this was per night shift. Day shift had even more people. In this video it looks like about 50 percent of the people may have been replaced with automation. Probably increase productivity at a lower cost. I remember that they told us we were the most expensive part of the can of beer. At that time they told us it cost 7-8 cents to produce one can.
@@paulbateman81 I think Ball might be the company that bought the can plant when Strohs was sold. It's in Winston Salem NC home of RJR tobacco company before it was sold. I'm sure you could look at their world wide plants because I know there's many in the states.
@@donaldsink8115 Hello! Where are you from?
@Samdiscoverystudio Winston Salem, NC
I love my COKE in glass 🥤 😅
Can ❌
Canan ✅
“Can end”
3:46 how do you get into such job?
Wonder why they can't make aluminium shopping bags and water bottles. It will be light and recyclable ♻️
Alluminium cans also contain plastic though
Wow❤
Beverage cans don't have "lids" they have "ends". A "lid" can be removed and refastened. An "end" is permanently fixed to a container.
and it is aluminium.
Yes of course
Anybody else notice the cans with Sam's Cola labels at 6:42?
Yeah I thought they tasted similar.
This factory might just be making the cans for Sam's. I know that some name brand dairies that make their own jugs also make jugs for other companies.
We want more
very educative
And this is why we pay a 5-cent recycling fee ..... I get it
Kita mengagumi pabrick Coca cola sebuah technology Fersy tercanggih saat mesin bekerja adalah di kagumi banyak orang saat melihat rekaman camera di industry pabrick
นามอร่อย ดี ค่ะ
Thanks
Wow so nice
Not how it's done in Canada or USA. The cans are made at Crown Cork and Seal. They make all the aluminum cans including automotive ones and many others.
Late 70's to 1987 I worked for Schlitz then Strohs can plant. At this plant we made the several different breweries cans plus about any kind of beverage can you see on the shelf. We were at that time the second largest can manufacturing facility in the US. I was on a palletizer, the final stage of a two leg production line. Most 12 hour shifts I would place up to a million+ cans ready for shipping on a pallet. Coke distribution centers have their own name and location on every can. Those cans also have a code on them that tells you exactly what machine created the can, which machine put the label on the date down to the shift. That's all there in case there's a product problem down the road. Not sure who owns it now but after I left it was sold to Ball manufacturing and still making beverage cans.
Hello Nehaa singh such coca cola aluminum can manufacturing factory 10000000 nos for you please accept. I love you Nehaa Singh (Rani, jaan)Radha Krishna bless you.
Cutting way too fast to allow the eye to see the process. This isn't a car chase!
Kinneds? Is that some sort of computerese voice ???
Haha, I broke out laughing at that point. I guess we’re not quite there in our AI tech just yet, lol.
Just as automated as the voice on this video
May I know whether you made the video with InVideo, Pictory, or Filki?
Well, now there's a can of coke right now
More on transport. Henry Ford's main Detroit plant had iron smelting at one end and new cars rolling out at the other.
Did I missed it or wasn't it included - plastic inner lining process?
It's done at the same time the paint is applied; it's in the video.
Wow nice
Great
❤
Chill 🎉
Can has to be coated so it don't rot out. What about my stomach what keeps it from rotting out?
Poison sugar water.
Respectful
why does the music slap so hard?
The material is presented too fast, it doesnt have time to sink in.
Impressive manufacturing process, it's just a shame they fill the cans with that disgusting crap.
am i the only one that hates this "youtube automation with AI voice"?
❤👍
Coca Cola any day
Cool
4:54 bar pushes the what? Something like canhens
That is the biggest waste. Not having the candline next to the filling line.. They have to transfer their cans hundreds to thousands of miles is it
interesting
it is easy to see why aluminum used to be more valuable than gold
Why have the aluminum smelter 900 miles (km?) from the can-creating company. Transport will become a larger issue in the future.
I noticed one section showed Sam's Choice cola cans.
Would have been nice if it was actually educational, using appropriate terminology, etc
Why so serious?
👍
I love recycling because it eliminates waste and you get 5 cents for each container you recycle.
Very educated
It would have been better for me to maybe not watch this educational video. After I saw the employee filling up the caps without gloves 🧤😬
but not as tough as steel.
🍗🍗🍗🍗🍗
Coca-Cola or Pepsi.
What do you prefer, I am for Coca-Cola, anytime day or night
This isn’t the best video I work for a company that makes them and it’s missing the rim coating stage and lacquer spray machine stage out
desk top computer
Pepsi
I don't bother with AI narrations.
You can't use real people anymore it's against the law
why is that?
i just started working there as an operator
I am so da** sick of AI voice.
Ca nans, Poor AI.
se spala wc-urile 😂
Packaging customisation, factory direct sales, welcome to enquire.
No coke - they woke. Boycott
I saw how water was made one time. I think you should boycott it.
Nope - you a dope.
Any channel that uses automated narration should be blocked, it sounds absolutely awful
What's a k-n-end. Do you mean "can end". Doesn't anyone ever proof-read or proof-listen to the finished product?? And is it so labour intensive to get a real person to read this 9 minute script. And why are the kids in charge?? The topic is interesting but thankfully, like most youtube topics, there are many, many other videos on the same topic so you get to watch the good ones, and THUMBS DOWN the bad ones, like this.