Most places around the world rebuild everything. Like in Mexico you don't buy a new starter or alternator you have it rebuilt. Our culture of buy a new one is terrible on so many levels
@@ISureDont Try east LA. They are still rebuilding alternators starters and transaxles. I saved 3300 from the dealer price on my 88 Saab transaxle. They installed a rebuilt and charged me 300 total. They still old school on Whittier blv.
My paternal grandfather and my dad instilled in me the importance of fixing vs wasting and replacing. It’s served me well throughout the nearly 6 decades I’ve been kicking around on this rock, and I forever try to pass along that ideology and those skills to those who will listen.
@@johnmiller5018sunk cost fallacy applies here as well, as it does to practical repairs - it can reach a point of saturation that you’ve invested far too much into it and will never reap any reward. Know when to cut your losses with your investment. Choose wisely.
Look at their shop and equipment ! You think anyone living there could afford a new starter if one was available within 50- 100 miles ? It is necessity ! I watched my dad put a rebild kit in an alternator , 7127 on a 65 Impala in 68 ! I was 12 and was amazed he could do that !
This is why i respect older people. The knowledge and skills they have from simpler days and beeing around for so long is fascinating and something worth learning
@@jpjay1584 the work that is happening here seems like some of the least harmful that I've seen. Some better protective gear like gloves and goggles would help a lot. Mechanics and machines get dirty pretty much anywhere.
@headbasher1977 at the rate we are going, we won't have the abilities to regress that little. I don't think we would even be up to "stone knives and bearskins" -- Spock from StarTrek.
These people are the best at repairing!!!! It never gets old watching these people do by hand,,,what Americans struggle to do with machines. These people are the real fabricators
These repairing/recycling videos that come out of the Middle East/Southeast Asia are always fascinating; when you don’t live somewhere with so much abundance of whatever you need you learn to keep things running with what you’ve got, and they’re damn good at it
I agree. It's a shame what capitalism does in exploiting the common man's skill and hard work. I'd feel different if the majority of the profits didn't go to 0.001% of the population.
@@thomascampbell7407 Planed obsolescence is going to kill us. Literally. There was a nice quote I saw once that I can't quite remember... Something about us living a disposable existence for the "elite".
I’m pretty sure this is what happens when you buy a new part and they send the core off for your $10 deposit. It eventually ends up in the hands of someone like this and probably eventually reassembled as a rebuilt or off brand part. You might still look at this and say you wouldn’t buy it, because the finished part isn’t as good as the OEM part that it was built from.
It has nothing to do with your kom-E rhetoric. If he had access and could afford the part he'd buy it D.F. Just amazing the monumental ignorance. You really think this third world worker is doing all this to " go green"? You see he's to smart to fall for that BS if he ever even heard it. Unlike you
These skills are dying off slowly, it's a true shame that people are no longer interested in learning these skills and everything is moving towards automation. Truly what a great set of skills this man has, and he should be praised.
He will never get the appreciation he truly deserves from this. This is truly an art. I don’t think people understand how perfect you have to do this or it will be 1ohm off and you’ll have to start all over after just one small mistake.
Worked building up new motor from scratch in the past so I know what this gentleman’s doing is Stirling! 100% my vote. In these days of limited resources we all could learn a lot from these guys. Thanks for the lesson.
@@nayyarrashid4661 Is English not your first language? I can tell. I am referring to addressing the method used, as opposed to "these guys". Now whether they invented you have no clue. Read a bit more of the comments and you will see people claiming they have done the same thing 50 years ago. Anyways, get a clue before insulting someone next time.
Very satisfying to watch. Like an artist. He’s been doing it for so long, it’s like watching a skilled craftsman building a fantastic statue from scrap that most people would simply discard.
Before the 70's there were a lot of shops in small town USA that did this. My dad had a story about a local business where one of the family (who was a little "slow") rewound car generator armatures all day.
Fantastic! What skill. I used to work for a famous company here in the UK that built large electric motors for several applications, so I recognise quality workmanship when I see it. I might have a few suggestions on health and safety here though! Thanks for sharing!
despite the conditions and probably the very little money he makes...this is beyond beautiful to me. I have always loved the idea of repairing electrical components and that's a reason i studied EE. This man looks relaxed, knowledgeable and like he enjoys what he does.
Fiuuuu está buenísimo tuve algunas experiencias cercanas a la renovación de bobinados y motores y recuerdo que era algo muy complicado sin las herramientas adecuadas, está increíble es un hombre muy hábil!!!! Saludos 😯👍👌👀👋
@@ss67camaronutI would pay to watch his artwork on the street, wayyy more amazing than a painted man balancing on a pole. This is real handmade beactifully crafted art that actually works(he tested it) and serves an important purpose, and its CLEAN, soo cleanly built, most people cannot build like this even if they know what they're doing.
@@ItsMeUrDaad couldn't agree more. He actually said "fully recondition a starter motor or generator without leaving any component unchecked"...... Wonder if he would've said the same thing, if he had to use one of the motors in the video...?
@@ItsMeUrDaad Naive? So my knowledge of electrical armature rewinding is limited.. Tell me how you believe that I am naive, but before you do, tell what is your qualification in the study of psychology?
@@Mr-wv1tu sorry genius, I couldn't read the part numbers they were moving so quick. How about you be the good sport and expert you are and tell us all about it.... and don't leave anything out, or some narcissist might come down hard on you!
@rokpodlogar6062 Got endoscoped by an otolaryngologist through the nostril without any anesthesia or preparation, to check on my breathing tube/lungs for any granulomatosis.
Rapaz pra vocês eu tiro o meu chapéu porque vocês aí são pessoas que realmente manda ver nesses equipamentos. Melhor do que aqui do Brasil...😮😮😮 vocês são feras mesmo parabéns...😮😮😮
I have no idea what he’s doing but it’s amazing someone designed that, someone else built it and this dude can take it apart and refinish it!!! Amazing stuff
This is a rotor. This is the spinning part of an electric motor. The non-spinning part is called a stator. The rotor is suspended inside the stator on ball bearings. When electric current flows through the stator, it creates a magnetic field wich makes the rotor rotate. The contacts between the two are offset, to create a continuous motion.
@@SilentMidnightWinter these look like the armature out of a vehicles starter motor, numerous things like exposure to oil or other engine and environmental fluids, excess strain from other engine issues or starter solenoid issues that make the vehicle harder(longer) to start, bad connections, corrosion,etc all can cause the armature to fail.
I am absolutely astounded by the level of ingenuity and craftsmanship in all of these videos of these men from Pakistan. It’s absolutely incredible. They truly are so impressive with how they are so resourceful.
You should see some of the stuff from Cuba... It's not a case of them rebuilding stuff, everything already got rebuilt to death. Now it's shade tree engineering with builds like a 89 Nissan engine going into a 55 Chevy
@@RediTtora With all due respect... Pakistan is a FAR more civilized part of the world than the US or most European nations. Think about it like this. The only thing they lack is infrastructure. The reason they lack infrastructure can be directly traced back to "Civilized" countries occupying / taking over the government. Not for the benefit of the Pakistanis, but for the benefit of whomever took over government. Welcome to the effects of one group of people thinking they're better than the others... And your comment just announced your mindset...
@@nunyabidness674 you can say whatever goofy shit you want, they are not civilized in any way shape or form they have literal rape gangs that's why so many Pakistani and Indian women when they come to the West hate men so much because they have to deal with the Scoundrels in their own countries.
@@nunyabidness674 but good job getting away from the point I made which still stands, it's the West that invented these Technologies I'm not going to congratulate these Stone Age cave people from figuring out how to refurbish the stuff we already invented
Exactly.. I was amazed by an idiot in this comment section thinking he goes through all this to "go green" that guy's probably never even heard that BS
Here you can’t even order the parts necessary to do this type of work… I cracked the housing on my steering motor for my boat trolling motor. I attempted to just by the necessary part to fix the housing, nope… I can only order the entire steering motor assembly. 400 bucks out for a fix that required les than 10 bucks in metal. Going to use JB weld to attempt to seal my current cracked motor and keep it as an emergency back up.
That's because Eastern countries are generally too broke to be able to replace something and Western countries over design things to where it needs to be replaced
Only a few decades ago there were people in every community that could do such work! Mechanics and engineers did whatever was necessary to get the job fixed and functioning.
Somewhere along the way it became cheaper in several nations just to swap out complicated parts instead of trying to fix them. Where this guy is at, labor costs are far far cheaper than new parts.
@@charlessale409i personally wouldnt call them rights but i would say its the old saying the juice is no longer worth the squeeze, young people are waking up and realizing "so youre telling me i have to work fifty years and in return i get twenty at best to retire with?"
@@chrisl4999 The unavoidable part of this is the computerization of modern machines - your old mom & pop mechanic/small engine shop simply doesn't have the skills on hand to correct any complex electronic (note: not "electric") issues, even if it were possible for them to do so, due to the avoidable part of this: the proprietization of the tools and documentation needed to repair things. For the vast majority of electronics and things that contain them nowadays, schematics and reprogramming tools simply are not available because the company that made it keep them under lock and key to force consumers to pay for "authorized" repairs. This part at least is finally, after decades, facing broad-spectrum opposition, from farmers (john deere repair controversy) to computer technicians (apple et. al.) Unfortunately, the Right to Repair legislation that would help dismantle the latter issue is being fought tooth and nail by giant corporations, obviously, who don't want "their" profits going to real people who service their community. AHAM (Association of Home Appliance Manufacturers) is one such group, whose membership includes Stanley Black & Decker, GE Appliances, and Philips Electronics among many others.
Respect to this man. I was a motor rewinder in the USN. After "A" school, they sent me to motor rewind school, then out to Long Beach, CA before Clinton shut down the base. We had to know how to do all this and more. We had modern equipment and machines, so much respect. This is just a small part of the whole restoration procedure, tho'.
Someone needs to compile a vast library of these kinds of videos with people building/rebuilding things by hand old construction techniques that are strong and simple, in the event something happens that destroys a majority of humanity they would have access to information to educate themselves on how to build things back with limited resources/equipment it would really advance our ability to bounce back 🤷🏻♂️🤓
My dad used to repair and refinish antique furniture. He started in a little shed and worked his way up to having several big buildings and people hired to work for him. He made better than a good living. He taught me woodworking and to value good craftsmanship. I always thought my future was set because I had learned a skill that paid really well. It was in the 80s that things started to change. A lot of people I knew back then that were self employed because obsolete. People no longer had money to spend on luxuries like antiques. They got cheap, disposable furniture and it cost much more to fix something than it did to replace it.
En países ricos lo tiran y ponen uno nuevo, por eso no sabrían realizar estos trabajos tan artesanos que hacen estos hombres,, y con pocos útiles, solo los necesarios,, auténticos profesionales
Yes. At a $100+ an hour shop labor rate, fully rebuilding something like that would cost several times the price of a factory built new part. When I was young people would hone and rebuild brake master cylinder, put new bearings and brushes in alternators and starters, and clean and rebuild carburetors. Now, factory built parts from poorer countries are cheap, and few young people have the knowledge or interest.
Not always about rich countries -- its manufactured so it is impossible to fix, the commutator is often warn out, and often impossible to remove without burning or destroying something - its like that with all parts, its made so you almost always end with a broken pile of bits and not able to get parts, or the parts cost more than a new piece. Its nothing about rich people but rich greedy producers and consumers who want "iphones" where its getting harder and harder to fix pr design.
If countries are richer we can buy it new if poorer is more economic to repair if possible. Why fix a 100 phone if the screen repair will be 100, better buy a new phone.
Ótimo trabalho de recuperação e reciclagem de materiais de motores. O mundo todo deveria seguir esse exemplo, ao invés de só extrair e extrair da Natureza.
I remember my Dad soldering and unsoldering starter armatures at the commutator like this man is doing. We didn't replace the insulating paper, but made sure the copper was still insulated from the iron core. We also tested and if necessary replaced the starter motor field coils in the starter motor housing. I learned how to do these repairs with my Dad's teaching and guidance. What this man is doing may be a "dieing art." I haven't seen younger men doing this work.
It is not a dying craft but the craftsman often gets filtered into two very distinct groups: The cheapest, and the best. Everything in between tend to disappear. Not a lot of us left, but the ones who's still working is the best guys in the industry.
It is a dyeing art because of a few things. It is very unhealthy to do (toxic vapours from lead, tin and soot). In most countries it is not worth to repair, because new parts are cheap and professional work is very expensive.
As a UAW electrician, I swapped hundreds of DC and AC motors, robot servomotors, servoamps, never repaired one. We were not allowed to repair any motors, only replace. It was fun, because only the supervisors could pick them up from General Stores. Many times they didn't have the correct motor. " Well, I guess you better keep lookin!"
The older I get, the more I respect and appreciate the work ethic and the toughness of the previous generations. No way you can ask millenials like me to do this type of work. I used to work in an office for nine years but I’m now starting to work in construction and I love it more than my office job.
If he emigrated and tried to get a job doing the same things, they would not even give him a few seconds glance as no qualifications 😂 he will need to go to college and get his high school maths degree etc. get that CV up to date.
Not true. I quite literally work in a motor shop where we repair industrial AC and DC motors. Some of the crew went to collage, most did not and none have a degree even remotely relevant. There are no schools that teach this, if we need more manpower we have to hire someone and train them up from 0. That said we'd flat out tell him no your not using some of those techniques. I dont care if youve done it that way for 40 years we dont want OSHA breathing down our necks.
Not exactly as 20 years hands on experience is more beneficial than a degree to these smaller companies. With these huge companies I would agree with you tho!
I remember 50 years ago there was an automotive electrical shop that rebuilt starters and alternators. I wonder if they rebuilt armatures this way or did they get a supply of used starters and alternators from salvage yards and just clean up the components, test and reassemble?
I work at an electric motor shop and we repair stators and rotors all the time however we use a huge oven because burning the varnish on it releases a lot of chemicals so they need to be filtered out.
Да рукожопы ещё те. По отпускали всю медь, сттатор, железо ротора спалили. Оно же было лакированое. В нормальных конторах это делали печами и станками. А не на костре и зубилом с молотком.
Nobody deserves anything… everything must be earned to have value… the sooner you replace the word deserve with the word earn… the sooner you will find true happiness.
@donaldbrwalleriii9736 Well he earned whatever you get paid for specialist technical labor. Hes a master too, so 60 an hour. He probably got paid 5 bucks. The 1st world works on slavery but we give them a few bucks so it isn technically slavery, but actually it totally is. Dont split hairs.
@@zeroshepard9513if that is what he could be paid for it, he should refuse to do the work unless he's paid more. But he won't, because there are plenty of other people with the same skills who will be eager to replace him, and who won't care to be paid more. Supply and demand. If there's a large supply of the necessary labor, the price goes down. Conversely, let's say he really is extremely skilled, and there's no other labor to replace him, so he sets extremely high prices. Once again, supply and demand. Extremely high prices will reduce demand, because people don't have the supply of money necessary to pay it. So again, prices go down. You'll find that as long as the government isn't interfering, people will usually get paid the most they possibly can.
Barely anyone in the west uses water to clean their junk nor have a built in bidet. So how is it good toilet? And using a toilet paper to clean is no different to using a leaf to clean. So how can the west considered as having a good toilet?
Specifically the rotor part of the alternator. Impressive to me that they repaired all the way instead of just melting it for recycling, there's good metals in there.
That's because typically you don't want to reuse the copper in this type of application, they do it because they have no choice but the resulting part will not be close to New spec.
I'm kind of conflicted on this as well. Most metal just gets recycled and resold then reused, but definitely not all of it. Using a rust removing bath like that does work but if you got a short in between the insulation it doesn't matter how good the metal is it will just fail again. That being said it looks like he tested the insulation, and I know many car parts are just rebuilt and never remanufactured after certain years so I'm on the fence as to whether this is worth the time and effort anywhere you can just buy parts to new specs. Maybe hour by hour this is cheaper but I don't know if it's worth the time spent doing by most people.
@@joewoodchuck3824 any paper will deteriorate quickly with heat and oil/grease on it. At best this 'fixed' part might last six months or so before becoming an electrical fire hazard.
Mi padre hacía ese mismo trabajo,requiere minuciosidad en el proceso,para que las piezas de cobre queden perfectamente aisladas,por eso corta pequeñas piezas de papel grueso. Era una de las muy pocas personas que hacía este trabajo en Argentina hace 40 años atás.
EXACTLY WRONG! HE WON'T BE AROUND! That's the problem with humanity being in such a hurry to rely on automation, electricity and computers! When there's an apocalyptic event or even something less devastating, there will be NO people who have the skills to build stuff, let alone with basic hunting, trapping, farming skills to just survive....
One thing I love about traveling is seeing that the "fix it" economy is thriving. You literally can go into the market to get almost anything repaired. Wish it was like that in the US.
Thank God I live in America. These are insanely cheap to just replace, if they fail at all. These old men are warriors, that true. But, holy cow! They should have come to America.
@cd3949 lol more than 100yrs, but anyway outsourcing is exactly why he can't get a job in America. Why would anyone pay him more to do it in America😅. What's really funny is it looks like he is capitalizing too I saw 2 different robbed guys doing the work.
Someone needs to get these ppl tables and work surfaces. They're always seemingly working while in a squatting position, using torches, welding, you name it. It's like they simply don't have tables anywhere in the middle east
@@trealexander5271Although I'm pretty sure this is filmed in Pakistan, so I can't speak for them. But in the Middle East we don't have to worry about silly things like heart and lung disease or cancers. We are firmly of the belief that the Israelis or the Americans will kill us before any natural disease 😅.
As an american myself, sometimes thats just more comfortable. I personally do a lot of things in the exact same position. Its to the point where i have a workbench that i made specifically to be used while kneeling or sitting on the floor.
Not All People are bad all over the world. Some like this young Man.just works hard to show what non violent people do. Craftsmanship at its finest. Well Done Young Man.
Restoring usable armatures for generators and electric motors is a beautiful thing. Restoring almost anything "usable" is a very good thing. 😎👌
💯
Ist aber halt nur in Indien wirtschaftlich.
@@hanswurst4408 vielen danke
Most places around the world rebuild everything. Like in Mexico you don't buy a new starter or alternator you have it rebuilt. Our culture of buy a new one is terrible on so many levels
@@ISureDont Try east LA. They are still rebuilding alternators starters and transaxles. I saved 3300 from the dealer price on my 88 Saab transaxle. They installed a rebuilt and charged me 300 total. They still old school on Whittier blv.
I wish the whole world would appreciate repairs over replacement.
Especially in relationships. Repair the marriage, don’t look for a replacement spouse.
Yes! Fight together! Fight for each other!@@johnmiller5018
My paternal grandfather and my dad instilled in me the importance of fixing vs wasting and replacing. It’s served me well throughout the nearly 6 decades I’ve been kicking around on this rock, and I forever try to pass along that ideology and those skills to those who will listen.
@@johnmiller5018sunk cost fallacy applies here as well, as it does to practical repairs - it can reach a point of saturation that you’ve invested far too much into it and will never reap any reward. Know when to cut your losses with your investment. Choose wisely.
@@johnmiller5018 Yes!
Its nice to see someone actually recycling instead of just trashing everything as one time use.
Until they sell it back to you as new
Look at their shop and equipment ! You think anyone living there could afford a new starter if one was available within 50- 100 miles ? It is necessity ! I watched my dad put a rebild kit in an alternator , 7127 on a 65 Impala in 68 ! I was 12 and was amazed he could do that !
It's nice to see someone just casually burning sealant so everybody can enjoy it.
This is not recycling. Of the the R's this would be reusing.
Reuse, repurpose, and then Recycle.
Meanwhile down the street…
This is why i respect older people. The knowledge and skills they have from simpler days and beeing around for so long is fascinating and something worth learning
they are in their 20s.
look old because of all the toxic fumes they breathe.
@@jpjay1584 No, they're not.
@@DeaDiabola are you sure? burning and inhaling plastic is exactly what makes you age quickly. they might even be teenagers if they started early.
@@jpjay1584 the work that is happening here seems like some of the least harmful that I've seen. Some better protective gear like gloves and goggles would help a lot. Mechanics and machines get dirty pretty much anywhere.
I’ve rebuilt lots of parts on automobiles, motorcycles, and aircraft but I’ve never rebuilt anything like that before. Very impressive all by hand.
I've heard of rewinding a motor but this dude takes it to a whole new level.
I'm impressed
I don't believe you
@@mp-xt2rg Green M&Ms = Controversial
they do not have these kind of jobs here in the US. But, some day they will.
Sandals, hand tools, open fire pits.... And stunning craftsmanship. Amazing. Big respect to this man.
Unlike America with so many rules and regulations, we can't get any work done here.
@@PaPi0141 yea it's so you can't sue the company/state for fucking yourself up all cause you wanted to cut corners
OSHA on site!!
😂😂
It makes you take into account his mentality, repair instead of replace.
Yeah, Big respect to the Sandals! Without them this repair wouldn't work. 😂
Immaculate craftsmanship, and wonderful reduction of waste. Mad respect
At the rate America is going we're going to have to learn how to do that very soon!
@@headbasher1977we do
@headbasher1977 at the rate we are going, we won't have the abilities to regress that little. I don't think we would even be up to "stone knives and bearskins" -- Spock from StarTrek.
Right I'm sure all of those chemicals were probably disposed of in a proper manner and not just dumped into the ground or down a drain...😂
Bro he's tipping that acid in the gutter afterwards I respect the work but India and waste reduction done normally team up
These people are the best at repairing!!!! It never gets old watching these people do by hand,,,what Americans struggle to do with machines. These people are the real fabricators
These repairing/recycling videos that come out of the Middle East/Southeast Asia are always fascinating; when you don’t live somewhere with so much abundance of whatever you need you learn to keep things running with what you’ve got, and they’re damn good at it
We do this here numb nut
I agree. It's a shame what capitalism does in exploiting the common man's skill and hard work. I'd feel different if the majority of the profits didn't go to 0.001% of the population.
@@thomascampbell7407 Planed obsolescence is going to kill us. Literally.
There was a nice quote I saw once that I can't quite remember...
Something about us living a disposable existence for the "elite".
@thomascampbell7407 and this, precisely, is why I'm a socialist.
You never see that from africans
Man, you gotta love seeing a good rebuild. So refreshing in these modern days of manufactured obsolescence.
I agree
Yup, their call them "embeds".
That's cause those ceos
Are "in-bed" with the devil...😂
you say that till you learn that he probably made 5$ for a few days work. unfortunately they are paid virtually nothing for all that.
@@mickyarson1975 Hail
I’m pretty sure this is what happens when you buy a new part and they send the core off for your $10 deposit. It eventually ends up in the hands of someone like this and probably eventually reassembled as a rebuilt or off brand part. You might still look at this and say you wouldn’t buy it, because the finished part isn’t as good as the OEM part that it was built from.
Reduce - Reuse - Recycle
He's living it. Splendid craftsmanship and just amazing overall. 👍🏻👏🏻
It has nothing to do with your kom-E rhetoric. If he had access and could afford the part he'd buy it D.F. Just amazing the monumental ignorance. You really think this third world worker is doing all this to " go green"? You see he's to smart to fall for that BS if he ever even heard it. Unlike you
Reduce reuse repurpose those are the 3 R’s of recycling
Reduce reuse ecici
@@masterpixel995Recycle is the last R. It means sending a material through the entire production cycle again (what you're calling "repurpose")
The Zero Waste principles! 😊😊😊
These skills are dying off slowly, it's a true shame that people are no longer interested in learning these skills and everything is moving towards automation. Truly what a great set of skills this man has, and he should be praised.
It's not about lack of interest. It's about lack of viability. You cannot do this work in the US and earn enough money from it to survive.
The comments showing the love, respect and appreciation for this kind of recycling and craftsmanship is beautiful to read! Thank you!!!
Definitely a lost art, the one guy I knew how could do this type of work has long passed
He will never get the appreciation he truly deserves from this. This is truly an art. I don’t think people understand how perfect you have to do this or it will be 1ohm off and you’ll have to start all over after just one small mistake.
Worked building up new motor from scratch in the past so I know what this gentleman’s doing is Stirling! 100% my vote. In these days of limited resources we all could learn a lot from these guys. Thanks for the lesson.
Not these guys... this method.
Stirling? 🤷
This is an electric engine.
@@aqf0786 yeah but the guys who skillfully apply a method are who you learn from
@@aqf0786These guys crafted this method dude. What are you on?
@@nayyarrashid4661 Is English not your first language? I can tell.
I am referring to addressing the method used, as opposed to "these guys". Now whether they invented you have no clue. Read a bit more of the comments and you will see people claiming they have done the same thing 50 years ago.
Anyways, get a clue before insulting someone next time.
"TONY STARK BUILT THIS IN A CAVE... WITH A BOX OF SCRAPS" ahh energy.
No expensive equipments, or fancy showroom garage. Just some good old skills, labouring, grit, knowledge and self-reliant. Hats off to you Grandpa 👌
Because he can't afford the equipment. If he could afford to do anything else, he would.
I bardzo dużo wolnego czasu o cierpliwosci
@@LuciusKyrus Maybe. Or maybe he's ballin' as-is. Those could be $400 Jordan sandals.
@@LuciusKyrusThata the point you tard. He cant afford expensive equioment yet is still doing a great job
he's only 33
Very satisfying to watch. Like an artist. He’s been doing it for so long, it’s like watching a skilled craftsman building a fantastic statue from scrap that most people would simply discard.
All ready to be shipped to the USA as OEM genuine parts,brilliant.
Get it at freightliner or volvo dealership 😂😂
It really technically is OEM
I wish we had such guys in the USA. At least there will be some workshops where I would get qualified mechanic service.
@@mlbr2940 We do he just demand 5x the pay of this guy and we refuse to pay him for quality work.
What's wrong with that?
I'm big on fixing or refurbished things that can be fixed or refurbished. Not everything needs to be bought new. I love this
Before the 70's there were a lot of shops in small town USA that did this. My dad had a story about a local business where one of the family (who was a little "slow") rewound car generator armatures all day.
I wish you could be my dad😢
@@JusticeEjike. uhhh what?
@@ryankerins361 ummm..hmmm 🤧.... nothing 🤧
@@JusticeEjike.lol
😂
Fantastic! What skill. I used to work for a famous company here in the UK that built large electric motors for several applications, so I recognise quality workmanship when I see it. I might have a few suggestions on health and safety here though! Thanks for sharing!
despite the conditions and probably the very little money he makes...this is beyond beautiful to me. I have always loved the idea of repairing electrical components and that's a reason i studied EE. This man looks relaxed, knowledgeable and like he enjoys what he does.
Fiuuuu está buenísimo tuve algunas experiencias cercanas a la renovación de bobinados y motores y recuerdo que era algo muy complicado sin las herramientas adecuadas, está increíble es un hombre muy hábil!!!! Saludos 😯👍👌👀👋
Big respect for a functional restoration.
Likely gets a dollar a day for doing this too.
Does reheating copper make it good to use again?
@@ss67camaronutI would pay to watch his artwork on the street, wayyy more amazing than a painted man balancing on a pole. This is real handmade beactifully crafted art that actually works(he tested it) and serves an important purpose, and its CLEAN, soo cleanly built, most people cannot build like this even if they know what they're doing.
@@NEILSMITH-n4v me too.
@@meorpot6924 pienso lo mismo, creo se debilita por cambios estructural dentro del cobre 😮
These gentlemen are angels in that they are able to fully recondition a starter motor or generator without leaving any component unchecked. Brilliant.
You're so naive its not even funny
@@ItsMeUrDaad couldn't agree more. He actually said "fully recondition a starter motor or generator without leaving any component unchecked"...... Wonder if he would've said the same thing, if he had to use one of the motors in the video...?
@@ItsMeUrDaad Naive? So my knowledge of electrical armature rewinding is limited.. Tell me how you believe that I am naive, but before you do, tell what is your qualification in the study of psychology?
@@Mr-wv1tu sorry genius, I couldn't read the part numbers they were moving so quick. How about you be the good sport and expert you are and tell us all about it.... and don't leave anything out, or some narcissist might come down hard on you!
@Mr-wv1tu ill take this old man's work over a 12 year old in China anyway of the week.
It's always great to see skilled people doing manual work.
I watch porn, too.
especially when they are fairly compensated for that work
never been to a proctologist i presume.
@rokpodlogar6062 Got endoscoped by an otolaryngologist through the nostril without any anesthesia or preparation, to check on my breathing tube/lungs for any granulomatosis.
Right? If he does this 10 more times he might be able to afford a sandal for his other foot. One that fits.@@danyukhin
Rapaz pra vocês eu tiro o meu chapéu porque vocês aí são pessoas que realmente manda ver nesses equipamentos. Melhor do que aqui do Brasil...😮😮😮 vocês são feras mesmo parabéns...😮😮😮
I have no idea what he’s doing but it’s amazing someone designed that, someone else built it and this dude can take it apart and refinish it!!! Amazing stuff
This is a rotor.
This is the spinning part of an electric motor. The non-spinning part is called a stator.
The rotor is suspended inside the stator on ball bearings. When electric current flows through the stator, it creates a magnetic field wich makes the rotor rotate. The contacts between the two are offset, to create a continuous motion.
@@JH-lo9ut Would you happen to know how they ended up like this?
@@JH-lo9utthank you
@@SilentMidnightWinter these look like the armature out of a vehicles starter motor, numerous things like exposure to oil or other engine and environmental fluids, excess strain from other engine issues or starter solenoid issues that make the vehicle harder(longer) to start, bad connections, corrosion,etc all can cause the armature to fail.
@thatnotoriouslyrandysample5143 Thank you so much! I had no idea what to even call these things.
I am absolutely astounded by the level of ingenuity and craftsmanship in all of these videos of these men from Pakistan. It’s absolutely incredible. They truly are so impressive with how they are so resourceful.
You should see some of the stuff from Cuba...
It's not a case of them rebuilding stuff, everything already got rebuilt to death. Now it's shade tree engineering with builds like a 89 Nissan engine going into a 55 Chevy
You act like they invented this stuff, are you forgetting about all the people in the Civilized world that invented these technologies?
@@RediTtora With all due respect... Pakistan is a FAR more civilized part of the world than the US or most European nations.
Think about it like this. The only thing they lack is infrastructure. The reason they lack infrastructure can be directly traced back to "Civilized" countries occupying / taking over the government. Not for the benefit of the Pakistanis, but for the benefit of whomever took over government.
Welcome to the effects of one group of people thinking they're better than the others... And your comment just announced your mindset...
@@nunyabidness674 you can say whatever goofy shit you want, they are not civilized in any way shape or form they have literal rape gangs that's why so many Pakistani and Indian women when they come to the West hate men so much because they have to deal with the Scoundrels in their own countries.
@@nunyabidness674 but good job getting away from the point I made which still stands, it's the West that invented these Technologies I'm not going to congratulate these Stone Age cave people from figuring out how to refurbish the stuff we already invented
My sincere respect to these guys. They make do with what they have.
I think maybe it's more like they don't have what they don't need.
Exactly.. I was amazed by an idiot in this comment section thinking he goes through all this to "go green" that guy's probably never even heard that BS
Alhamdulillah
มีฝีมือและความเข้าใจดีมาก. 😊
ปรารถนาดีจากประเทศไทย.😊
Excelente trabajo de recuperación manufacturado 👍👏👏👏🌟👌
The more you go West, the more you see things getting replaced altogether instead of getting fixed. These folks are a delight to watch
Here you can’t even order the parts necessary to do this type of work… I cracked the housing on my steering motor for my boat trolling motor. I attempted to just by the necessary part to fix the housing, nope… I can only order the entire steering motor assembly. 400 bucks out for a fix that required les than 10 bucks in metal. Going to use JB weld to attempt to seal my current cracked motor and keep it as an emergency back up.
they do get recycled, you just dont see it
getting replaced altogether is now getting popular here in the east too. And we don't like it. It is becoming difficult to find people who will repair
Which is typically due to greed followed by laziness
That's because Eastern countries are generally too broke to be able to replace something and Western countries over design things to where it needs to be replaced
Only a few decades ago there were people in every community that could do such work!
Mechanics and engineers did whatever was necessary to get the job fixed and functioning.
Somewhere along the way it became cheaper in several nations just to swap out complicated parts instead of trying to fix them. Where this guy is at, labor costs are far far cheaper than new parts.
The alienation of labor also contributes to this loss
Day by day the rights of the worker are eroded by big business
@@charlessale409i personally wouldnt call them rights but i would say its the old saying the juice is no longer worth the squeeze, young people are waking up and realizing "so youre telling me i have to work fifty years and in return i get twenty at best to retire with?"
@@chrisl4999 The unavoidable part of this is the computerization of modern machines - your old mom & pop mechanic/small engine shop simply doesn't have the skills on hand to correct any complex electronic (note: not "electric") issues, even if it were possible for them to do so, due to the avoidable part of this: the proprietization of the tools and documentation needed to repair things. For the vast majority of electronics and things that contain them nowadays, schematics and reprogramming tools simply are not available because the company that made it keep them under lock and key to force consumers to pay for "authorized" repairs. This part at least is finally, after decades, facing broad-spectrum opposition, from farmers (john deere repair controversy) to computer technicians (apple et. al.)
Unfortunately, the Right to Repair legislation that would help dismantle the latter issue is being fought tooth and nail by giant corporations, obviously, who don't want "their" profits going to real people who service their community. AHAM (Association of Home Appliance Manufacturers) is one such group, whose membership includes Stanley Black & Decker, GE Appliances, and Philips Electronics among many others.
Красота. Очень кропотливая и нелëгкая работа. Просто 👍
Hear the kids......pass this on. Knowledge and experience will keep this world going
Education will keep the world going, but don't tell the far-right that.
This is an incredible thing to restore by hand like this. Our culture unfortunately incentivizes replacement over repair.
Love to see this.
Welcome to capitalism, where there is no profit for corporations in home repair of their products
Viva la jente trabajadora de todo el mundo. Desde mexico
Nos sentimos honrados por ustedes, buenos mexicanos.
@@ساميالراضي-ذ6ج восхищён вашей работой! Многие из вас как древние мудрецы творите настоящие чудеса вашими умелыми руками.
Слава Богу за всё!
All the Glory be to God @@gardener_Alex
Viva.....!!!
Respect to this man. I was a motor rewinder in the USN. After "A" school, they sent me to motor rewind school, then out to Long Beach, CA before Clinton shut down the base. We had to know how to do all this and more. We had modern equipment and machines, so much respect. This is just a small part of the whole restoration procedure, tho'.
Я всегда удивляюсь ихними видео. Они там практически на коленке такие шедевры делают. Великие Мастера!
Мастера,может быть и великие,главное,чтобы этот шедевр не попал в твой автомобиль
@@sergeixardin8614 он и не попадёт. Они для себя делают,у них нет новых запчастей,им деваться некуда,так и выкручиваются.
Они гопстоп мастера 40 лет сидели по тюрьмам там этому и научились.Смотри как тебе эту коленку не всунули в одно место за такой базар.На коленке😮
@@МирВам-к5в😂😂😂
@@sergeixardin8614хуже чем в автовазе не будет
Someone needs to compile a vast library of these kinds of videos with people building/rebuilding things by hand old construction techniques that are strong and simple, in the event something happens that destroys a majority of humanity they would have access to information to educate themselves on how to build things back with limited resources/equipment it would really advance our ability to bounce back 🤷🏻♂️🤓
Hey Hof,
What was it like working with Pam Anderson in Baywatch? Was she a diva, or a proper professional?
@@nevillec5252 sooo . . . . Here's the thing . . . About that 🙄🤣🤷🏻♂️
@@davidhasslehoff4726 No worries, Hof. The mystery's always preferable. 🤷♂️
@@davidhasslehoff4726 No worries, Hof.
Let's keep the mystery going. 🤔
I hope the archive where this things are saved isn’t destroyed with the majority of humanity! 😕
Мастер своего дела! Ремесленник ! Уважение моё!
My dad used to repair and refinish antique furniture. He started in a little shed and worked his way up to having several big buildings and people hired to work for him. He made better than a good living. He taught me woodworking and to value good craftsmanship. I always thought my future was set because I had learned a skill that paid really well. It was in the 80s that things started to change. A lot of people I knew back then that were self employed because obsolete. People no longer had money to spend on luxuries like antiques. They got cheap, disposable furniture and it cost much more to fix something than it did to replace it.
En países ricos lo tiran y ponen uno nuevo, por eso no sabrían realizar estos trabajos tan artesanos que hacen estos hombres,, y con pocos útiles, solo los necesarios,, auténticos profesionales
Yes. At a $100+ an hour shop labor rate, fully rebuilding something like that would cost several times the price of a factory built new part. When I was young people would hone and rebuild brake master cylinder, put new bearings and brushes in alternators and starters, and clean and rebuild carburetors. Now, factory built parts from poorer countries are cheap, and few young people have the knowledge or interest.
I'm not sure that treatment make it to the specified Ohms
Not always about rich countries -- its manufactured so it is impossible to fix, the commutator is often warn out, and often impossible to remove without burning or destroying something - its like that with all parts, its made so you almost always end with a broken pile of bits and not able to get parts, or the parts cost more than a new piece. Its nothing about rich people but rich greedy producers and consumers who want "iphones" where its getting harder and harder to fix pr design.
If countries are richer we can buy it new if poorer is more economic to repair if possible.
Why fix a 100 phone if the screen repair will be 100, better buy a new phone.
Imagine if we did this here. Rebuilt, and reuse. Make things that are repairable. What a concept..........................
These are counterfeit parts of low quality grade. Only third world countries do this crap.
You would need a population willing to do manual labor instead of sitting in an office trying to look busy for 8 hours a day.
@@kazuuukabob8578 REALLY? Because we used to rebuild parts all the time here. By people who knew what thewy were doing too.
Quarterly and yearly shareholder profits are the problem.
This restoration is no good, there will be internal weak points being made when you watch the video.
Ótimo trabalho de recuperação e reciclagem de materiais de motores. O mundo todo deveria seguir esse exemplo, ao invés de só extrair e extrair da Natureza.
What a amazing work 😮😮
I remember my Dad soldering and unsoldering starter armatures at the commutator like this man is doing. We didn't replace the insulating paper, but made sure the copper was still insulated from the iron core.
We also tested and if necessary replaced the starter motor field coils in the starter motor housing. I learned how to do these repairs with my Dad's teaching and guidance.
What this man is doing may be a "dieing art." I haven't seen younger men doing this work.
It is not a dying craft but the craftsman often gets filtered into two very distinct groups: The cheapest, and the best. Everything in between tend to disappear. Not a lot of us left, but the ones who's still working is the best guys in the industry.
It is a dyeing art because of a few things. It is very unhealthy to do (toxic vapours from lead, tin and soot). In most countries it is not worth to repair, because new parts are cheap and professional work is very expensive.
As a UAW electrician, I swapped hundreds of DC and AC motors, robot servomotors, servoamps, never repaired one. We were not allowed to repair any motors, only replace. It was fun, because only the supervisors could pick them up from General Stores. Many times they didn't have the correct motor. " Well, I guess you better keep lookin!"
I love the safety slippers 😊
He was 80 years old..he worked for more than 60 years in this job without an accident...so ?😅
@@donnyprawira9239 I call this a myth 😅
@@donnyprawira9239he must be one of the lucky ones. You are wrong about his working life too, he has worked there for 74 years
Pakistani OSHA requirement to have slippers lol
@@captainnutzlos3816I call this ignorance and simple knee jerk response.
The older I get, the more I respect and appreciate the work ethic and the toughness of the previous generations. No way you can ask millenials like me to do this type of work. I used to work in an office for nine years but I’m now starting to work in construction and I love it more than my office job.
If he emigrated and tried to get a job doing the same things, they would not even give him a few seconds glance as no qualifications 😂 he will need to go to college and get his high school maths degree etc. get that CV up to date.
Not true. I quite literally work in a motor shop where we repair industrial AC and DC motors. Some of the crew went to collage, most did not and none have a degree even remotely relevant. There are no schools that teach this, if we need more manpower we have to hire someone and train them up from 0.
That said we'd flat out tell him no your not using some of those techniques. I dont care if youve done it that way for 40 years we dont want OSHA breathing down our necks.
@@merendell But given where he's starting from you'd probably have him up to speed pretty quick.
A lot of trades still run off apprenticeships.
Not exactly as 20 years hands on experience is more beneficial than a degree to these smaller companies. With these huge companies I would agree with you tho!
If emigrated it would be better than that shithole
Удивительные ребята , у них нет не возможно выполняемых работ
The world needs this mentality. Today all we do is throw away and buy new. Thank god there are people like these in the world.
Great skills showing the youngsters what's up if they choose to learn!👍.
Master piece ❤ ...... Can't imagine..... All work by hand
I remember 50 years ago there was an automotive electrical shop that rebuilt starters and alternators. I wonder if they rebuilt armatures this way or did they get a supply of used starters and alternators from salvage yards and just clean up the components, test and reassemble?
I work at an electric motor shop and we repair stators and rotors all the time however we use a huge oven because burning the varnish on it releases a lot of chemicals so they need to be filtered out.
But ya companies will 9 times out of 10 try to get it repaired because it’s crazy expensive to get a new one
الخبره واضحه علاهاذاالشيخ المحترم
Si
Everything is recycled.
Nothing is wasted.
The only thing that's wasted, is the health of those poor gentleman.
If he's 80, they must not have wasted very much
So they even reused the copper windings? Wild
This is why “they” don’t want you to do this… no $$ in it 😉
@@nz-nz so they are preventing you from doing hard and dangerous manual labor for pennies? I think you might wanna thank them then
Хорошие руки мастера 😊
Руки хорошие,да только делают говно!!!
Херня это все.
Да рукожопы ещё те. По отпускали всю медь, сттатор, железо ротора спалили. Оно же было лакированое. В нормальных конторах это делали печами и станками. А не на костре и зубилом с молотком.
Ohhh. Okay, now I get what I was doing wrong. The sad thing is that these guys aren't getting anywhere near the amount they deserve for this work.
Nobody deserves anything… everything must be earned to have value… the sooner you replace the word deserve with the word earn… the sooner you will find true happiness.
@@donaldbrwalleriii9736much blessings to you brother. 🙏🏾 You said it exactly. 🙌🏾
@donaldbrwalleriii9736 Well he earned whatever you get paid for specialist technical labor. Hes a master too, so 60 an hour. He probably got paid 5 bucks. The 1st world works on slavery but we give them a few bucks so it isn technically slavery, but actually it totally is. Dont split hairs.
@@zeroshepard9513if that is what he could be paid for it, he should refuse to do the work unless he's paid more. But he won't, because there are plenty of other people with the same skills who will be eager to replace him, and who won't care to be paid more. Supply and demand. If there's a large supply of the necessary labor, the price goes down.
Conversely, let's say he really is extremely skilled, and there's no other labor to replace him, so he sets extremely high prices. Once again, supply and demand. Extremely high prices will reduce demand, because people don't have the supply of money necessary to pay it. So again, prices go down.
You'll find that as long as the government isn't interfering, people will usually get paid the most they possibly can.
@@donaldbrwalleriii9736 they’re talking about what they deserve for doing the job, you dingus
Производство Bosch и Makita ничего необычного 😊
Sensacional essa restauração de um induzido....👏👏👏👏
Bravo 👏🏻 that’s great to see the restoration of what were disregarded parts, now reusable
and people say cyberpunk isn't here yet, we got 80 year old man restoring electric motors with no acces to a good toilet....
That’s takes him a week longer than a Chinese guy or manufacturer and He s doing that so he dosnt starve in a gutter. What are you talking about
Haha we are in the world of Neuromancer already
he has access to a good toilet he just chooses not to use it
that's some 40k hive manufactorum shit right there
Barely anyone in the west uses water to clean their junk nor have a built in bidet. So how is it good toilet?
And using a toilet paper to clean is no different to using a leaf to clean. So how can the west considered as having a good toilet?
Allah huma barik lak - skills that are priceless.🙏🥇🏆🌹
Kreatif inovatif hebat....bisa memanfaatkan barang bekas jadi barang bagus dan bernilai ekonomi, mengurangi limbah dan bisa membuka kesempatan kerja
Just curious. What language is this?
من خیلی عشق میکنم این پاکستانیها واقعن استاد کارهای ماهری هستن و کارشون حرف نداره ❤
We call this an impossible challenge if you just watch his skill with his hands ive never seen anyone do this
It will not last. Great skill but poor quality in the end.
@@cokergx3but excellent quality for being made by hand with nothing but wooden tools and a brick lol come on dude have a heart lol 😂
@@scottyelder8351 facts mean more than feelings. I acknowledged the skill.
@@cokergx3 indeed they do
@@scottyelder8351Have a heart? This isn't about feelings.
I really liked repairs over replacement.
There's just something about developing feelings over what you have for a period of time.
Incredible work! Love the thingymabob you just restored there. Well done!
It’s an alternator for a car
Specifically the rotor part of the alternator. Impressive to me that they repaired all the way instead of just melting it for recycling, there's good metals in there.
I've heard of motor rewinding companies but I never imagined including reuse of the copper.
That's because typically you don't want to reuse the copper in this type of application, they do it because they have no choice but the resulting part will not be close to New spec.
I'm not sure it's good as new after this treatment.
I'm kind of conflicted on this as well. Most metal just gets recycled and resold then reused, but definitely not all of it. Using a rust removing bath like that does work but if you got a short in between the insulation it doesn't matter how good the metal is it will just fail again. That being said it looks like he tested the insulation, and I know many car parts are just rebuilt and never remanufactured after certain years so I'm on the fence as to whether this is worth the time and effort anywhere you can just buy parts to new specs. Maybe hour by hour this is cheaper but I don't know if it's worth the time spent doing by most people.
@@princetchalla2441 He did use new paper insulation, but who knows if it's of sufficient quality.
@@joewoodchuck3824 any paper will deteriorate quickly with heat and oil/grease on it. At best this 'fixed' part might last six months or so before becoming an electrical fire hazard.
The most NATURAL and BEAUTIFUL person i ever seen. Her vibes, her eyes smile ✨💗
There were ZERO WOMEN in this SHORT 👀
Um.... What you talkin bout?
@@favoritemustard3542 these bots are losing it 😂
Yup, it's a 🌽🤖 lol
Mi padre hacía ese mismo trabajo,requiere minuciosidad en el proceso,para que las piezas de cobre queden perfectamente aisladas,por eso corta pequeñas piezas de papel grueso.
Era una de las muy pocas personas que hacía este trabajo en Argentina hace 40 años atás.
At least when the apocalypse happens there's people like this around who can do stuff like this! Bravo Sir!
If it did happen, people who can fix things will be very important
EXACTLY WRONG!
HE WON'T BE AROUND!
That's the problem with humanity being in such a hurry to rely on automation, electricity and computers!
When there's an apocalyptic event or even something less devastating, there will be NO people who have the skills to build stuff, let alone with basic hunting, trapping, farming skills to just survive....
The craftsmanship these people have developed to repurpose discarded equipment is absolutely incredible. Props
what do you mean by "these people"? bigot
One thing I love about traveling is seeing that the "fix it" economy is thriving. You literally can go into the market to get almost anything repaired. Wish it was like that in the US.
BeYoutiful workmanship!
Hand crafted refurbishing
This has to be the cleanest street food I’ve seen. ❤❤❤
One of my first jobs out of high school was hand winding fields for 100 hp Lincoln’s and such worked with an old Italian man named Seripheno
Молодцы !трудяги ! Не прападут !
Ну.вот купи такую хуйню .и попробуй пользоваться! Воистину оценишь этих умельцев .сталь откалена .медь отожжона заебись!!!
Un astro 👏🏽... Digno de admiración
ماشاءالله کارشون خیلی خیلی عالیه، در پاکستان همه چیز تعمیر میشود
اگه ایران میبود این قطعه را دور می انداختند و یک نوع میخردنند
Another one of those videos where you're awed. Nothing but respect for a man at his craft.
Thank God I live in America. These are insanely cheap to just replace, if they fail at all. These old men are warriors, that true. But, holy cow! They should have come to America.
Why? They'd be unemployed as we don't do that here.
the reason they’re cheap in America, and those countries are poor is Capitalism and Imperialism
@@yu-yu704 lol the imperial age ended almost a hundred years ago.
@cd3949 lol more than 100yrs, but anyway outsourcing is exactly why he can't get a job in America. Why would anyone pay him more to do it in America😅. What's really funny is it looks like he is capitalizing too I saw 2 different robbed guys doing the work.
@@cd3949 sure kiddo
Someone needs to get these ppl tables and work surfaces. They're always seemingly working while in a squatting position, using torches, welding, you name it. It's like they simply don't have tables anywhere in the middle east
I think it's Pakistan, not middle east
And yet they are healthier than us Americans who have more amenities than we can handle, go figure.
@@themonster7185I wouldnt be so sure about that, this guy is likely to have some serious lung problems and mobility issues creeping up on him
@@trealexander5271Although I'm pretty sure this is filmed in Pakistan, so I can't speak for them.
But in the Middle East we don't have to worry about silly things like heart and lung disease or cancers. We are firmly of the belief that the Israelis or the Americans will kill us before any natural disease 😅.
As an american myself, sometimes thats just more comfortable. I personally do a lot of things in the exact same position. Its to the point where i have a workbench that i made specifically to be used while kneeling or sitting on the floor.
These are the kind of people who will survive the post apocalyptic world.
They already live there.
They'd be lucky to earn $5USD a day.
How the squatter upstairs feels collecting copper from AC units and old appliances.
Главное ручная качественное сборка деталей орегинал
Customer: "Wow you did a such amazing job! here's you 1 dollar and 50 cents"
That's Dumbledore doing magic 🪄
Amazing craftsmanship, especially considering the little facilities they have 👏
Awesome talent. My uncle used to provide thay sercice in the 70's until late 80's. Hes now a millionaire
BS.
@@andrewfields8556actually probably true
Now that's a mechanic, welder and a fabricator!!
No welding..soldering
3 job titles and probably a pay rate of $4/day. I'd call that slave labor.
Да я не удивлюсь что с такими ценами скоро будут появляться подобные наши русские видеоролики 😂
Это и есть путинский "экономический прорыв".
Это и есть путинский "экономический прорыв".
у рюзге , лишняя хромосома,и две левых руки, роликов не ждите 😂😂😂
Такое ощущение что их предки это делали и 300лет назад..🥺
триста лет назад,их предки огнестрел,и боеприпасы к ним мастерили☝️,из говна,и палок 🤫
Not All People are bad all over the world. Some like this young Man.just works hard to show what non violent people do. Craftsmanship at its finest. Well Done Young Man.
young? hes my granpas age
No OSHA in sight. Excellent!! Best way
Yeah, fuck quality control and worker safety!
Osha IS the guy in sight… his name is Osha 😅
Que maestro, me gustaría y me alegraría q fueran así.No tan dependientes.😊