Thanks so much for spending a day with us Stanley. We're proud of the men and women who handcraft these trailers every single day. Come on back down anytime you want to hang out in Texas. Good luck to everyone who enters the contest!
If the staging of the parts are right, it makes the assembly crews job easier. He does deserve a reward. But I bet he has had lots of practice. They picked the best workers to make this video.
Having a fab team like this would be insane, from the operator, to the helper handing you the tools the proper way, and the fitters and welders working like clockwork.
@@nickpavis3916 gotta understand what these trailers are used for, it’ll be scrap after 5-10 years as they beat the piss out of them. Kind of odd not seeing a square but I’m sure it’s pretty close to “perfect”. Seems kinda inefficient.
They are most likely very valued employees and get payed well enough not to have to do that. That is about a 12k trailer in one day... you would hope these guys are making at least 2k a week pay.
I love how there so in sync with each other. Having a few years working experience together goes a long way. I used to work with a guy for 8 years never spoke a word while working and we were always doing everything like clock work. Bosses and new guys were always impressed with the way we worked.
Actually the part about welding that hurts your eyes the most is uv light. You are correct that your eye lids alone will not protect you, but polycarbonate safety glasses (the plastic glasses they wear) block 99% of uv light which Essentially makes tacking without a hood safer than being outside in the sunlight without sunglasses. I would be more concerned about skin cancer on my face then arc flash to the eyes, which wouldn't be of much concern either because if you have ever done much welding with MIG, you would know that you can welding without a hood all day, you use your gas cup as a way to block the majority of the arc flash and just watch the puddle behind the arc. Do your research before commenting bub
Your guys are truly what America is all about! Hard working individuals that sweat for an honest day of work!! God bless each and everyone of you and I plan on coming to Texas soon to pick up a trailer!! This video sold it for me!! The wife says yes the bank says yes so ill see yall soon
Actually, Texas Pride offers full medical benefits, 401k programs, and training. The pay is also quite good at Texas Pride too. Otherwise, you wouldn't have so many people who have worked so many years in the same company. You should look at their Behind the Steel series on the Texas Pride Trailers channel to see more about the folks who work there.
Mmmm, not true. I worked for a company just the same here in Canada. Pay was good, benefits. It is dirty sometimes hot grueling work but thats what you sign up for.. also most crews are immigrants because they never seem to complain and get it done.
The craftsmanship and efficiency these guys just showed on this job was phenomenal!!! Hands down one of the most skillful insynce crews in the game!!! It's beautiful to watch a crew just work so well and so smoothly together to create a beautiful piece of artwork!! Texas Pride is the perfect name for their company and it doesn't even do justice to the level of service and craftsmanship they provide!!! Well done gentlemen!!
It's great to know there are people this skilled in our country. I was probably most impressed with the forklift operators. It's like watching a ballet.
Its unbelievable what hard work and dedication is done by certain companies. The testing and redesigning that's done to be one of the best. 50k pounds pushing against those doors and they didn't even budge is insane. Will definitely be switching to Texas pride from now on. Amazing job and congratulations to both Stanley and Texas Pride. God Bless
That whole operation is beast mode! Forklift operator, the 2 welder fitters and the paint. 1 trailer in a day thats insane! I'm from Utah but I love the TEXAS PRIDE!!!
Thank you Mr. Stan G and Texas Pride Trailers for teaming up and allowing us, the viewers the opportunity to win such an amazing looking trailer. What an accomplishment for both. Awesome build in just 14 hours, knowing how it’s built is one thing, seeing it built, painted and fully assembled is another. I have been watching other UA-cam channels build their own trailers in much smaller fashion, after watching this one being built it will be hard to go back and watch them take 5-6 sometimes 12 episodes to start and finish a trailer.....who am I kidding, I love watching these kinds of builds. I share them with others through Facebook and Instagram to help spread the word. It only seems right to help someone else that has potentially help me learn something for free, none the less. Keep up the good work, look forward to seeing the next video being posted.
I'm glad you got to witness this trailer build. Must have been a long day for you, though only 21 minutes for us. I'd love to have a trailer like this one.
Thoroughly enjoyed trailer manufacturing and other video delivering a Texas Pride trailer. Missed out purchasing heavy Load Trail dump at super price. Now looking to get awesome trailer at super price. Texas Pride now on my radar. Thank You
Wow! Now, THAT was a labor intensive process! What a beautiful trailer. I hope whoever receives it, uses it in good health and gets MANY good years of dependable service from it. God bless.
Every part of that operation impressed me. The forklift driver, the welders/fabricators, and the painter. I'm working on fixing up an old chipper, and I was definately taking notes. Also, I like the orange color :)
i grew up driving forklifts on a farm only just started doing it in a factory setting these guys like in the video are damn awesome to watch in action they line it up first time with little to no side shift. this guys deserve a reward like some new LED lights for his forklift seriously the ones he has now are shocking what did they get those lights off a 1960s Massey Ferguson 35?
19:23 the painter is arching his paint and causing a weak bond, plus he is not overlapping his paint from front to back. Parallel and consistent pressure and flow creates the best bond. He needs to stay parallel with the surface, no wonder a person below (in the pinned comments) complained about his paint failure. Finally, they should consider reinforcing the door (14:39) uprights / hinge support, I can imagine those bed walls spreading at those locations... = a more rigid top-rail for this trailer with more uprights (14:43 shows no uprights) on the exterior to resist the outward forces; it appears they are depending on the shape of the wall design for reinforcement (the bend in the walls). 14:07 it appears the ''closures'' are installed where the door meets those side panel's design and unless doors seal that area, dirt will vibrate onto the ground as you drive, also note, those ''closures'' will add some strength to the rear of the trailer and door stability. I am guessing I will not get the trailer for free with my comments... But, thank you for posting and for TexasPride for being a good sport (please work on your DTM paint materials and quality control). 15:00 if he was able to distort the welded doors and trailer frame with that pry bar then the trailer is not stiff enough and yes, I notice his spreader bar at the rear while he was welding doors and when he removed the bar, the trailer ''curled inward" and this can bind your doors, he then attempted to pry the walls back out or deform the door shape, one or the other.
As much as I can appreciate their hard work, it could be so much more efficient and automated. Way to much heavy lifting for the workers and the distance travelled by the forklift operator is nuts.
Absolutely. I'm not a welder or anything, just a software engineer. But my job is automating and looking to make things more efficient all day long; so I can see tons of things they could improve with this process.
@@devinjohnson8623 Same, im an Electromechanical industrial engineer with speciliazation in intelligent manufacturing, there is so much room for improvement. I think they should make an internship available for a local university student. It would benefit the guys on the shop floor!
This kind of work still allows for some creativity. I've got a fab/welding shop. If I was forced to use equipment. That would remove any uniqueness of what I was doing. I probably wouldn't do it for very long. I understand time is money and all that. I just think some people doing this work. Would prefer to keep it tougher.
I have an 18' 18k bumper pull dump from those guys. I never imagined for a second it was built in a day! I am always super impressed with the videos that come out about Texas pride, I'm so glad they let us see what's going on in there. Keep it up guys, and I'll keep recommending texas pride to everyone I know! (Seriously, I do that.) Thanos Stanley for getting in there and filming for us as well, I entered the contest, that's a nice trailer!
That is a great color that you dont see that often. It would look great hooked up to my truck to do projects on our small family farm. You can see the quality in the build and the welding looks top notch.
Damn Miguel and his buddy are in unison, like dancers lol. The weld at 14:30 was pretty satisfying and I love the orange. It's just missing the signature DirtMonkey Light bar like you got on the challenger haha.. love the ramps, could load up a mini excavator
Looks like they could invest in a plasma table and automated saw to get all the materials cut to final lengths rather than have to plasma cut everything on the spot. You can’t tell me they’re getting the best fit ups freehanding cuts. That being said I’m sure they know way more about building trailers than I do.
It would be surprising if they didn't have automated plasma cutter for their most popular trailer models. Perhaps for some models that don't have high sales volume they don't have automated cutting of the parts.
50k trailers built and they're still plasma cutting the stuff while they're building it? Think they'd be far past that by now. And all off-the-shelf parts. After building 50k trailers, they should be having clamps made instead of using conduit clamps.
I was thinking the same thing. They could have all the parts already cut to spec and ready to go. Have 2-3 guys cutting parts for the whole shop ahead of time and label for each trailer type/customer. All this team would have to do was weld and done. Basic assembly line 101. They do a pretty good job with what they’ve got though.
Yeah you could have all the stuff in stores ready to go. But 5axis laser cutters are expensive for the tubing. It looked as efficient as it had to be. I want to follow the HiLo operator around for a day. That guy was a whiz with that thing! He also seems to be in charge of the dispatch list for the BOMs.
John Eden I’m not talking a laser, even having a saw operation or plasma table that just cuts your lengths and plates would be faster. I used to work in the fan industry and we had to weld lots of plates, beams and angles together. Everything was cut and processed well before the welder ever touched it. Just saying a little prep goes a long way.
jkhuskies09, No laser no saw no plasma, how in the heck is the ‘team’ supposed to have all this stuff cut? I currently design deposit and filling machines for large scale baking operations globally. I think they are able to compete because they sell a premium product in small batches. With simple building overhead costs.
I didn’t think I’d be able to watch the whole thing with out fast forwarding. That was an amazing operation and very interesting process. Well done to the people that started this business. I’m sure it would of started in some backyard and turned into this.
When you add music to your videos, can you turn the volume down. The volume relative to the background noise and/or voice is really far apart. Love your videos, though!
@@lpdg3438 Except you have to be in perfect timing with the guy across from you then too. They sell a million types of product to prevent arc flash. These guys appear to use none.
@@coupebuilder As long as they don’t stare at each other’s arc I think they should be ok. I’ve seen many welders doing the same thing that these guys do but only a few of them that I know complained about the arc rays but for some reason many of them complained about the hood that makes their neck really tired.
@@lpdg3438 I own a fabrication business, has nothing to do with "staring" into the arc. First time I ever got arc flash was from a big job with people welding way off to the side of me. They make hand held tack shields and many other styles to do this without helmets. If you've ever gotten a case of the flash its misery and you'll do anything to avoid it. Only get one set of eyes to mess with. Also a good helmet weighs just over a pound..mine is 19 oz, I wear one 6hrs a day and they have settings from clear to #2.5-13 so no excuse not to be safe.
Derek Huber middle of the road? Is that from personal experience? The two I’ve seen used by tree guys were garbage. The rear gate hinges rusted and seized up and the paint blew off in sheets like 90’s GM paint on both of them, and the frame cracked on one. I thought they were bottom of the line producers that just advertised and sponsored (gave away) often. I’ve never even owned one tho so...that’s why I ask.
My town was ravaged by wildfire; it's still not 100% contained. This trailer would be a godsend as we all pitch in to help each other out. It looks like it could maneuver our tight mountain roads where we can't get dumpsters delivered.
Our guys didn’t use a tape measure! “ I wouldn’t have said that if my goal was to inspire confidence with a customer. Sorry, a real craftsman uses his tools.
Thanks so much for spending a day with us Stanley. We're proud of the men and women who handcraft these trailers every single day. Come on back down anytime you want to hang out in Texas. Good luck to everyone who enters the contest!
Bad ass!! Seen their trailers take a ton of abuse! I love it! Praying I could be blessed to win this!
When is the drawing for it?
@@andymommsen3848 Hi Andy, we will draw the winner at the end of September.
👍👍
Man guys that was awesome y'all really put your heart and soul into your work and it shows great job
THAT FORKLIFT OPERATOR IS A BEAST! DUDE DESERVES AN AWARD!
If the staging of the parts are right, it makes the assembly crews job easier. He does deserve a reward. But I bet he has had lots of practice. They picked the best workers to make this video.
I could build one
Having a fab team like this would be insane, from the operator, to the helper handing you the tools the proper way, and the fitters and welders working like clockwork.
Its true but u must see ours
As someone slowly building a trailer at home, watching these guys makes me die a little inside.
As long as you did the opposite of everything, you've probably got a really nice trailer. I hope you at least used a square....
@@nickpavis3916 gotta understand what these trailers are used for, it’ll be scrap after 5-10 years as they beat the piss out of them. Kind of odd not seeing a square but I’m sure it’s pretty close to “perfect”. Seems kinda inefficient.
All of those guys were amazing. That forklift operator was crazy precise also. Great video Stan!!
The painting process was the absolute best. That guy is skilled.
Marvin and Miguel should take that Big step a lot of people don’t want to do. Start there own Dump Trailer Shop.
You need capital and sale network.
@@mrtee3477 That is why he said "Big step".
Who’s to say they don’t??
They are most likely very valued employees and get payed well enough not to have to do that.
That is about a 12k trailer in one day... you would hope these guys are making at least 2k a week pay.
I love how there so in sync with each other. Having a few years working experience together goes a long way. I used to work with a guy for 8 years never spoke a word while working and we were always doing everything like clock work. Bosses and new guys were always impressed with the way we worked.
Too bad they won't be able to see when they get older. Closing your eyes isn't good enough.
And no respiratory ppe either
Actually the part about welding that hurts your eyes the most is uv light. You are correct that your eye lids alone will not protect you, but polycarbonate safety glasses (the plastic glasses they wear) block 99% of uv light which Essentially makes tacking without a hood safer than being outside in the sunlight without sunglasses. I would be more concerned about skin cancer on my face then arc flash to the eyes, which wouldn't be of much concern either because if you have ever done much welding with MIG, you would know that you can welding without a hood all day, you use your gas cup as a way to block the majority of the arc flash and just watch the puddle behind the arc. Do your research before commenting bub
@@nathanmiller473 Great answer.
@@rocanroller85 idiots tack without welding masks.
@@ratona007ued the doors are literally open if it was a closed space your comment would make sense
Great trailers, have had one their bumper pull dump trailers for almost 20 years now.
Your guys are truly what America is all about! Hard working individuals that sweat for an honest day of work!! God bless each and everyone of you and I plan on coming to Texas soon to pick up a trailer!! This video sold it for me!! The wife says yes the bank says yes so ill see yall soon
12-14$ hour no benefits 100°+ heat humidity for weeks some times months. A wright to hire/fire state.
God bless Texas!
Actually, Texas Pride offers full medical benefits, 401k programs, and training. The pay is also quite good at Texas Pride too. Otherwise, you wouldn't have so many people who have worked so many years in the same company. You should look at their Behind the Steel series on the Texas Pride Trailers channel to see more about the folks who work there.
Mmmm, not true. I worked for a company just the same here in Canada. Pay was good, benefits. It is dirty sometimes hot grueling work but thats what you sign up for.. also most crews are immigrants because they never seem to complain and get it done.
@@LifeHasLived well said.
Respect to the craftsmen who build the trailers. Solid work
Great video! They really do put pride into their work.
Pride? Maybe.
A level or square?
No, never touched by either.
👌
Jax Turner it should be called texas lazy😂
Derek Huber 😂
Mexican pride
@@jaxturner7288 A pro doesn't need a level or square! When do you see a Pro Chef using measuring cups?
The craftsmanship and efficiency these guys just showed on this job was phenomenal!!! Hands down one of the most skillful insynce crews in the game!!! It's beautiful to watch a crew just work so well and so smoothly together to create a beautiful piece of artwork!! Texas Pride is the perfect name for their company and it doesn't even do justice to the level of service and craftsmanship they provide!!! Well done gentlemen!!
Just imagine the amount of leaves i could haul with that.
Too many
I could haul a lot of heavy air!
I can’t I’m a roofer 🤔
I was thinking how many 'women' I could haul with it.
It sure would be nice to move some brush with lol
My hat off to this guys who start working in the middle of the night , and do this dangerous work for years
An incredibly streamlined operation!
I can't believe how fast that was.
Just in 21min 22sec! ;)
It's great to know there are people this skilled in our country. I was probably most impressed with the forklift operators. It's like watching a ballet.
Love the color. Painter was awesome. Very good looking welds. I’d be proud to have one of those in my driveway.
Right on!
Its unbelievable what hard work and dedication is done by certain companies. The testing and redesigning that's done to be one of the best. 50k pounds pushing against those doors and they didn't even budge is insane. Will definitely be switching to Texas pride from now on. Amazing job and congratulations to both Stanley and Texas Pride. God Bless
Hope he's paying those two guys good money they are helping to make him RICH.....👍👍👍
It was great seeing all the people actually building the trailers from the ground up love that
Trying to start my own business I couldn’t even imagine having this as my first trailer. This is like a dream trailer.
Paul Robinson nah Fam I have to win it.
Great craftsmanship and attention to detail. Whoever wins this or owns one of these trailers should be proud!
Best trailer build video I have watched yet
Migeul and Marvin as absolute badasses, whatever they're being paid isn't enough
This trailer is AWESOME... Love the Craftsmanship and the COLOR.
Orange was the perfect color to pick you guys and the workmanship on this trailer is just amazing
Definitely a color that stands out!! Love the trailer, high sides are a must.
That whole operation is beast mode! Forklift operator, the 2 welder fitters and the paint. 1 trailer in a day thats insane! I'm from Utah but I love the TEXAS PRIDE!!!
That was one heck of a trailer build. Great craftsmen ship from forklift operator, to metal works to welders to paintshop. Great job at Texas pride.
Thank you! We're grateful to have the opportunity to have so many talented people on the team.
Thank you Mr. Stan G and Texas Pride Trailers for teaming up and allowing us, the viewers the opportunity to win such an amazing looking trailer. What an accomplishment for both.
Awesome build in just 14 hours, knowing how it’s built is one thing, seeing it built, painted and fully assembled is another.
I have been watching other UA-cam channels build their own trailers in much smaller fashion, after watching this one being built it will be hard to go back and watch them take 5-6 sometimes 12 episodes to start and finish a trailer.....who am I kidding, I love watching these kinds of builds.
I share them with others through Facebook and Instagram to help spread the word.
It only seems right to help someone else that has potentially help me learn something for free, none the less.
Keep up the good work, look forward to seeing the next video being posted.
God Bless brother and thanks for watching and Good luck!
Dude was a freaking Beast with that spray gun!...wow!
Right.....
They send you a bucket of paint, to get the spots he missed.....😆
He's sloppy. Doesn't look like he knows what he's doing.
@@Drewsky840 then you go paint it then
@@los7890 I paint cars. Not trailers.
I'm glad you got to witness this trailer build. Must have been a long day for you, though only 21 minutes for us. I'd love to have a trailer like this one.
That's one hell of a nice trailer.
Amazing work!
Thoroughly enjoyed trailer manufacturing and other video delivering a Texas Pride trailer. Missed out purchasing heavy Load Trail dump at super price. Now looking to get awesome trailer at super price. Texas Pride now on my radar. Thank You
Wow! Now, THAT was a labor intensive process! What a beautiful trailer. I hope whoever receives it, uses it in good health and gets MANY good years of dependable service from it. God bless.
Hello Mr Robert
Hello Mr Habee
I never would have believed a trailer could be built in a day. Wow
They've got a skilled team building top notch trailers.
Every part of that operation impressed me. The forklift driver, the welders/fabricators, and the painter. I'm working on fixing up an old chipper, and I was definately taking notes. Also, I like the orange color :)
That painter was crazy fast!!!
He is the best of the best!
Very impressive shop at Texas Pride Trailers. Well done. Now hoping for a road trip to Texas.
Im super impressed with the paint guy, looks great and if it was only 30 minutes... WOW
i grew up driving forklifts on a farm only just started doing it in a factory setting these guys like in the video are damn awesome to watch in action they line it up first time with little to no side shift. this guys deserve a reward like some new LED lights for his forklift seriously the ones he has now are shocking what did they get those lights off a 1960s Massey Ferguson 35?
that crew of guys were amazing.and the forklift guy had some skills
Our team really is the backbone of the business. They are a sight to see when they're in the zone. Great work!
Great to see folks who have pride in their work! Awesome!!!
Absolutely!
19:23 the painter is arching his paint and causing a weak bond, plus he is not overlapping his paint from front to back. Parallel and consistent pressure and flow creates the best bond. He needs to stay parallel with the surface, no wonder a person below (in the pinned comments) complained about his paint failure. Finally, they should consider reinforcing the door (14:39) uprights / hinge support, I can imagine those bed walls spreading at those locations... = a more rigid top-rail for this trailer with more uprights (14:43 shows no uprights) on the exterior to resist the outward forces; it appears they are depending on the shape of the wall design for reinforcement (the bend in the walls). 14:07 it appears the ''closures'' are installed where the door meets those side panel's design and unless doors seal that area, dirt will vibrate onto the ground as you drive, also note, those ''closures'' will add some strength to the rear of the trailer and door stability. I am guessing I will not get the trailer for free with my comments... But, thank you for posting and for TexasPride for being a good sport (please work on your DTM paint materials and quality control). 15:00 if he was able to distort the welded doors and trailer frame with that pry bar then the trailer is not stiff enough and yes, I notice his spreader bar at the rear while he was welding doors and when he removed the bar, the trailer ''curled inward" and this can bind your doors, he then attempted to pry the walls back out or deform the door shape, one or the other.
Construction Engineering & Failure Analysis look at this little know it all. You feel better now?
@@jonnyringo2957 , you snowflakes are what is wrong with the World... now get back to your mother's basement.
Those men are hard workers that take pride in their work. The companies name fits and is earned.
agreed.
That crew was pretty amazing the way they worked together.
Love the teamwork right down to the tow motor operator. Guys are on point!
Guys .. me .. and this trailer are made for each other.
Texas Pride great stuff, team work precision on lvl 100!! Keep it up 👍🏾 🇺🇸
You have a nice bunch of guys working for you , treat them with pride.
As much as I can appreciate their hard work, it could be so much more efficient and automated.
Way to much heavy lifting for the workers and the distance travelled by the forklift operator is nuts.
A small swivel crane for each group with a electromagnet at the end would make them SO much more efficient!
Absolutely. I'm not a welder or anything, just a software engineer. But my job is automating and looking to make things more efficient all day long; so I can see tons of things they could improve with this process.
@@devinjohnson8623 Same, im an Electromechanical industrial engineer with speciliazation in intelligent manufacturing, there is so much room for improvement. I think they should make an internship available for a local university student. It would benefit the guys on the shop floor!
This kind of work still allows for some creativity. I've got a fab/welding shop. If I was forced to use equipment. That would remove any uniqueness of what I was doing. I probably wouldn't do it for very long. I understand time is money and all that. I just think some people doing this work. Would prefer to keep it tougher.
Hell they were probably doing it for the camera, I wouldn't be working my ass like that every day unless there are good benefits and pay 🙂
Thanks for all you do! Good luck to all!
I wish I had that for hauling wood (and whatever else) around scout camps.
Unreal craftsmanship and speed
Love the color sure would look good with my truck pulling it back to Georgia 😍
Love these trailers, definitely built with pride, been hauling a Texas pride trailer for 2 years, and love how they built these trailers.
I have an 18' 18k bumper pull dump from those guys. I never imagined for a second it was built in a day! I am always super impressed with the videos that come out about Texas pride, I'm so glad they let us see what's going on in there. Keep it up guys, and I'll keep recommending texas pride to everyone I know! (Seriously, I do that.) Thanos Stanley for getting in there and filming for us as well, I entered the contest, that's a nice trailer!
Great video, That entire shop is so dial in, it's a well oiled machine. How everyone works together to build a superior product.
Great content... Never imagined watching a trailer built would be so engaging👍! Keep it up we appreciate you and your family !!!!
The painter, just wow.
I cant believe that's all done In a day
But it took years & more than 1 man to create it.. not including the equipment
Great way to give back you your people Stanley, love what you are doing
That’s an awesome trailer, glad for whoever gets the chance to own it!
Unbelievable in a Day, Quality Craftsmanship, that trailer would be Great for our small farm! Thanks for sharing!
That many tacks without a shield, I know they must get flash burn at the end of the day
They've been doing it so long they're used to it and doesn't affect them much anymore, also a lot of them close their eyes real quick when tacking.
@@FreaksSociety yea I know they close their eyes. I mean their faces with so many small flashes, it adds up
That is a great color that you dont see that often. It would look great hooked up to my truck to do projects on our small family farm. You can see the quality in the build and the welding looks top notch.
Orange really is the best color. Just need the monkey logo on the back doors.
We loved this color too!
It's so nice of you to get so involved in the products you believe in. I enjoy your videos.
Way To Rock Stanley" TEXAS PRIDE YOU GUYS DO IT RIGHT"" Nice Rig...….
Not one for commenting usually but we'll done Stan great way to give back. Must commend staff at texas pride true craftsmen.
Imagine how many jelly beans I could steal with a trailer like that
Definitely a lot, how about this I’ll build one and we’ll plan a heist
Beauty. Thanks Texas Pride and Stanley!
Damn Miguel and his buddy are in unison, like dancers lol. The weld at 14:30 was pretty satisfying and I love the orange. It's just missing the signature DirtMonkey Light bar like you got on the challenger haha.. love the ramps, could load up a mini excavator
One of the greatest workers i have seen so fast and quality of the job still on the top!👍🏼👍🏼👍🏼
Looks like they could invest in a plasma table and automated saw to get all the materials cut to final lengths rather than have to plasma cut everything on the spot. You can’t tell me they’re getting the best fit ups freehanding cuts. That being said I’m sure they know way more about building trailers than I do.
It would be surprising if they didn't have automated plasma cutter for their most popular trailer models. Perhaps for some models that don't have high sales volume they don't have automated cutting of the parts.
Good fast work.
Would b happy to visit Texas😎
Never saw Marvin, Miguel,painter and electrician autograph the trailer,, just saying
Exactly the artist always put their mark
Yes that’s who I would want signing my trailer. Complete bad asses and American idols
That has to be the best start to finish build and paint on UA-cam!
50k trailers built and they're still plasma cutting the stuff while they're building it? Think they'd be far past that by now. And all off-the-shelf parts. After building 50k trailers, they should be having clamps made instead of using conduit clamps.
I was thinking the same thing. They could have all the parts already cut to spec and ready to go. Have 2-3 guys cutting parts for the whole shop ahead of time and label for each trailer type/customer. All this team would have to do was weld and done.
Basic assembly line 101.
They do a pretty good job with what they’ve got though.
Bro if ant broke dont fix it
Yeah you could have all the stuff in stores ready to go. But 5axis laser cutters are expensive for the tubing. It looked as efficient as it had to be. I want to follow the HiLo operator around for a day. That guy was a whiz with that thing! He also seems to be in charge of the dispatch list for the BOMs.
John Eden I’m not talking a laser, even having a saw operation or plasma table that just cuts your lengths and plates would be faster. I used to work in the fan industry and we had to weld lots of plates, beams and angles together. Everything was cut and processed well before the welder ever touched it.
Just saying a little prep goes a long way.
jkhuskies09, No laser no saw no plasma, how in the heck is the ‘team’ supposed to have all this stuff cut? I currently design deposit and filling machines for large scale baking operations globally. I think they are able to compete because they sell a premium product in small batches. With simple building overhead costs.
I didn’t think I’d be able to watch the whole thing with out fast forwarding. That was an amazing operation and very interesting process. Well done to the people that started this business. I’m sure it would of started in some backyard and turned into this.
I thought I was a good painter, that dude was quick
Fast is not quality. Anyone can be fast when they don't get full paint coverage and spray at the wrong angles.
Very impressive!!! Gotta love workers that are good at what they do!!!
How are they welding with just safety glasses?
Now that guy has some paint skills!! Great work from everyone , can’t believe it was built less than 24 hours ! Good luck to everyone!
When you add music to your videos, can you turn the volume down. The volume relative to the background noise and/or voice is really far apart. Love your videos, though!
True craftsman are hard to come by. Texas Pride has found some great ones! Great video!
Anyone else cringing by the amount of tack welding with no hood? Not sure if orange safety squints work like they think....
You can actually close your eyes once you figured out exactly where to tack weld.
You're still getting hit in the face with arc rays.
@@lpdg3438 Except you have to be in perfect timing with the guy across from you then too. They sell a million types of product to prevent arc flash. These guys appear to use none.
@@coupebuilder As long as they don’t stare at each other’s arc I think they should be ok. I’ve seen many welders doing the same thing that these guys do but only a few of them that I know complained about the arc rays but for some reason many of them complained about the hood that makes their neck really tired.
@@lpdg3438 I own a fabrication business, has nothing to do with "staring" into the arc. First time I ever got arc flash was from a big job with people welding way off to the side of me. They make hand held tack shields and many other styles to do this without helmets. If you've ever gotten a case of the flash its misery and you'll do anything to avoid it. Only get one set of eyes to mess with. Also a good helmet weighs just over a pound..mine is 19 oz, I wear one 6hrs a day and they have settings from clear to #2.5-13 so no excuse not to be safe.
I own 2 Texas pride trailers and there hands down the best built trailers I’ve ever pulled
They make beautiful trailer, I could really use this to help people free of charge of course .
That would be a incredible addition to helping family and friends! Count me in!
Where's the welding helmets at.. There faces got have a good burn.. Worst there eyes , for sure there flashed.
Mexicans are the best working people.Pura raza asiendo las trailas.chingones somos los mexicanos para trabajar
It'd be interesting to know why the crossmembers and rails aren't machine cut to length
Maybe the red whiskers can affect the final measure?
Derek Huber middle of the road? Is that from personal experience? The two I’ve seen used by tree guys were garbage. The rear gate hinges rusted and seized up and the paint blew off in sheets like 90’s GM paint on both of them, and the frame cracked on one. I thought they were bottom of the line producers that just advertised and sponsored (gave away) often. I’ve never even owned one tho so...that’s why I ask.
Derek Huber oh right, I forgot how far down the bottom of the barrel goes. Thanks for the reminder.
My town was ravaged by wildfire; it's still not 100% contained. This trailer would be a godsend as we all pitch in to help each other out. It looks like it could maneuver our tight mountain roads where we can't get dumpsters delivered.
Our guys didn’t use a tape measure! “ I wouldn’t have said that if my goal was to inspire confidence with a customer. Sorry, a real craftsman uses his tools.
If you look at the bottom of the frame you can see markings
You don't need to measure where the cable clips are gonna be lmao
Forklift man is too expert in his job. Good man. Keep it up.
what glasses do they have? I need a pair of them!
Those guys where great never seen a trailer build so fast