こんにちは!いつもご視聴いただき、ありがとうございます。 私たちの動画では、UA-camの設定から字幕を追加することができます。 多くの視聴者様にご活用いただいている機能で、日本語をはじめ、さまざまな言語に対応しています。 もちろん、字幕なしでもお楽しみいただけますが、字幕を使用すると、より深く楽しんでいただけるはずです。 ぜひご利用ください! Hello! Thank you so much for always watching our videos. In our videos, you can enable subtitles through the settings on UA-cam. Many of our viewers use this feature, and it’s available in Japanese as well as various other languages. Of course, you can enjoy the video without subtitles, but with them, you might find the experience even more enjoyable. Please feel free to give it a try!
Absolutely, my best wishes for Okada Brick Factory! These bricks are beautiful. I love their rich redness, and that Bricks from 1897 are still in use is a testament to their excellent quality.
The most striking thing that stands out to me, besides the efficiency, is the quietness of the factory!!! I've never heard such a large scale factory operate so quietly, especially making masonry products! Great work! 😊❤
Nice video. In the U.S., there is a market for used bricks. When properly reclaimed, some of the older ones can be more valuable than new ones because of their texture, strength, color, etc.
@@A1ex5438 It makes sense that re-use of bricks is a global activity. What surprised me was not their re-use, but that they can be worth more than new ones.
@@gregparrottКак раз это не удивительно. Если кирпич не развалился за сто лет, то не развалится и дольше. И помимо этого, на цену влияет, винтажность, и ограниченная доступность товара. Т.к. запасы старых кирпичей сильно ограничены. Так же есть практика покупки старых зданий, с целью разборки на кирпичи.
I remember a story my father told me about the last new house he had built for our family. It was in the early to mid-60s and we had two large, nice fireplaces in a three-story house. One fireplace had used brick and, I'm not sure of the exact price, the used brick was 1.5¢ each and the new brick 1¢ (it might have been 2.5¢ and 2¢ each). Anyway, I remember it was only a half-cent more, and years later my father told me he complained about the price difference. We both got a good laugh out of that. Times have changed. Yeah, used brick is always more expensive, and there is a heck of a market for it. The manufactured used brick looks fake as can be, but is much less costly. I retired after 45 years in construction and real estate development, and nothing ever impressed me as much as a talented mason, stone or brick. Competent and talented masons are a sight to behold. It's a dying craft in the USA.
"You're absolutely right! Wire-cut bricks, combined with expert masonry, create stunning results. It's a timeless art that deserves to be preserved and celebrated."
"Thank you so much! Preserving these materials takes commitment, and we’re glad to hear it’s appreciated. Here's to creating things that will last for years! ✌👍👌"
In the UK in the early sixties I began a bricklaying apprenticeship. It was a five-years one which today I consider a waste of time. The college I attended took us to a brick works that had been going since the early 1800s. We began by looking at the pit where the clay was dug from; it has seventy-foot tall trees growing which we looked down upon. Each brick was made by hand. We didn't see the clay mixed but we did go inside a very small wooden room where the red clay was oozing through the wall. A man had a stack of wood plates, rectangular and a big bigger than the four-sided mold. The mold was laid on the wood plate, then he'd grab a large handful of the red clay and throw it into the mold. The top was scraped off with a piece of wood, the mold was removed and the soft brick was taken and stacked in a yard for drying. This was done, rhythmically, all day long. When the bricks were dry, they were taken to a kiln which was built of very thick brick walls. A fire was lit at one end. The entrance to the kiln was bricked up and the bricks left to be baked. The bricks that were nearest the fire would turn out burned and blac, and were called 'Brindles.' The finished red bricks were used in quality work and could be easily cut to shape for arches and such. Regular bricks were machine-made with a V-shaped hollow top, called a 'frog.' It was considered bad workmanship to lay the bricks frog-downward although it made the work a bit easier. I had several years on the trowel and found it to be soul-destroying, so I got out of it and became a welder. I was thinking of those Japanese bricklayers having to lay all those bricks. I did it, summer and winter, burning in the sun and freezing in the winter, the most miserable job I ever had. I since went back to school and got my electrical license.
Rote Backsteine werden in Norddeutschland auch heute noch überwiegend verwendet, mein Haus wurden vor knapp 90 Jahren aus roten Backsteinen gebaut (die Innenwand besteht aus weißen Backsteinen). Sehr schön den Prozess zu sehen wie in Japan solche Backsteine hergestellt werden 🙂
Thank you for your wonderful comment! We truly appreciate you sharing such valuable information that we didn’t know. I can only imagine how lovely your place must be!
@@kodawari.official Gern geschehen. Mein Haus ist hier nichts besonderes aber halt mein Zuhause das ich sehr geniesse ;-) Vielen Dank für Ihre lehrreichen Videos!
@@schnuffelhase1968 60 years ago I worked at a brick factory in the southern part Jutland - just north of border to Germany - and we eksported all of our bricks to west Schleswig. They were burned at a high temperature so they could withstand the harsh and salty weather from the North Sea - that was our competitive edge. However our bricks were produced with a distinct pattern of airholes for ventilation in them and I guess your bricks too have ventilation holes in them too. I know the Germans didn't recognised the advantage of ventilated bricks before WWII but now I think its universally agreed upon. BTW your white "Backsteinen" were probably made of sand and cement and just dried not burnt in an owen. Years ago we used those low quality bricks too in Denmark.
@@ChristianKaasen Thank you very much for your reply, very interesting that you made bricks that were used in Germany 😊 The bricks that my house was built with have no (vertical) airholes, they are just plain bricks ... my house was built just a few years before WWII, so before the evolution of the bricks. For sure you're right about the inner white bricks, if I drill a hole into the inner wall it's much easier than to do it into the outer wall (that wall is hard as hell and you need an impact drill to do it) 🤔
Very interesting glimpse of making bricks from collecting clay to processing it, moulding into bricks, conveying, drying, through kiln, and bricks in buildings. Kudos to all people involved in the video. Thanks for sharing.
Thank you so much for your kind words! We’re thrilled to hear that you enjoyed the detailed process of brick-making. It’s truly a team effort, and we’re glad the dedication of everyone involved comes through. Thanks for watching and supporting our work!
This so satisfying watching the crisp and clean process, scientifically manufactured with tradition and modern techniques. This accomplishment is only possible in Japan, God’s own country ~ 5⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
I really liked the video, I was interested in assembling and starting up plants for ceramic floor and wall tiles, I have always liked brick for its simplicity of production, tunnel kilns have also been my passion, unfortunately or worked with roller kilns throughout the Far East, including Korea Taiwan and China. congratulations for the video.
Hello from Finland. It was a delight to see how beautiful and skilled your factory is. We make tiles here too but they are different shape, like Lego bricks. My house has more burned bricks which have more colours from light red to almost black. Inside the house there are pure red bricks like your’s and white bricks which have denser structure and are heavier. Bricks are very beautiful material and it doesn’t need much care.
Nice to see how bricks are produced in Japan. Bricks are very sustainable. Our oldest church was build of burned brick about 800 years ago and part of it is still standing. 60 years ago I worked at a small Danish brick factory so I recognised many of the processes but I still would appreciate some explanations accompanying the film to better understand it. I noticed your bricks were massive but Danish bricks are made with a specific pattern of ventilation holes (and loss of weight) - are you familiar with that kind of bricks in Japan?
Solid bricks surprised me too. Pavers are solid here, but walls are built with bricks with holes. They dry faster, fire faster, and, when used with mortar, the holes help lock the bricks in place. Really old bricks are solid - my last house was built with recycled bricks from 1870s that had no holes. ("Really old" = 1870 is probably comical in Europe, haha.)
A few weeks ago I was thinking about building a three story two bedroom apartment that will last 200 to 300 years. I think I have found the materials to make my dream house come true. What are your pricing formulas ? From Fiji thank you.
Очень интересно и познавательно. Интересно , что нет автоматов-садчиков на вагонетки для обжига кирпича. Печи интересные типа всё таки горна, не непрерывного действия. Остывание кирпича фактически естественным образом без принудительного охлаждения. Не было сортировки после обжига.
Вероятно ленточки, для удобства укладки, и последующего перемещения. А на современных производствах кирпичи так же увязывают лентой и заворачивают в пакеты. И картонные прокладки между слоями. А укладка ёлочкой осталась только на мелких производствах.
Это фитнесс, рабочих которые могли бы потребовать свою долю прибавочной стоимости, уже нет, только низко квалифицированный труд, за который право не качнешь. Капитализм..
The output of the kneading machine reminds me of what its like to follow the current presidential race here in the US... except that that case, it's not clay being extruded.
I had a music box from the 50s made in Fuji, Japan and it looked beautiful to this day all that happened was the drawers fell apart but they could be easily super glued. I couldn't keep it so I took the music winder out of it and I still wind it up sometimes to this day. Some Japanese person made that jingle nearly 70 years ago and some girl now in her 20s from America now uses it. It a crazy world
THAT WAS VERY INTERESTING I NEVER SEE HOW THE BRIK'S ARE MADE UNTIL TODAY BEUTIFUL REDNESS OF THOSE BRIK'S GREETINGS FROM CALIFORNIA, U S A 🙏 GREAT, JOB 👍
16:12. Интересно наблюдать различие технологий. В России кирпичи на поддоны укладывают определенным образом на ребро под углом, как ёлочка. Это позволяет обходится без плёнки, стяжек и т.п. Здесь больше удобства для небольших партий кирпича.
زنده باد سامورایی ها متعصب واقعا این ژاپنیها اصلا یجور دیگه هستن نسبت به بقیه دنیا ملتی پیشرفته در کنار احترام به قدیم و عاشق ماشین میتسوبیشی اینا هستم همیشه ماشینشون عالین ولی این میتسوبیشی یچیز دیگست اصلا هر چی میسازن عالیه
Японцы отличные строители в России есть здания которые строили военнопленные со времён второй мировой войны. Эти здания до сих пор стоят и нет трещин в стенах.Кладка что кирпич и раствор на который клали очень качественный.
I wouldn't have thought there would be many brick buildings in Japan. There are lots of earthquakes there, and earthquakes are very hostile to brick architecture as far as I know.
こんにちは!いつもご視聴いただき、ありがとうございます。
私たちの動画では、UA-camの設定から字幕を追加することができます。
多くの視聴者様にご活用いただいている機能で、日本語をはじめ、さまざまな言語に対応しています。
もちろん、字幕なしでもお楽しみいただけますが、字幕を使用すると、より深く楽しんでいただけるはずです。
ぜひご利用ください!
Hello! Thank you so much for always watching our videos.
In our videos, you can enable subtitles through the settings on UA-cam.
Many of our viewers use this feature, and it’s available in Japanese as well as various other languages.
Of course, you can enjoy the video without subtitles, but with them, you might find the experience even more enjoyable.
Please feel free to give it a try!
自然の土を採掘し、それを建材として活用する過程には、歴史と技術が結びついていることを感じさせました。
特に明治時代から引き継がれているという伝統は、時代の変化を経てもなお続く日本の職人技術の粘り強さと誇りを感じ、工業化が進む中で、これほど長い期間にわたり技術が伝承されていることに感銘を受けました。また、現代の技術と機械を駆使してレンガの製造が効率化されている様子も見て取れ、古い技術が新しい技術と調和しながら進化している様子が非常に興味深いです。
レンガは建築素材として今も広く使われており、特に赤レンガは日本の近代化を象徴する重要な要素ですが、歴史的な背景を知ることで、現代の建築物にもさらに深い意味を感じることができました。
素敵なコメントをありがとうございます!
岡田煉瓦様が紡いでこられた歴史と技術が伝わり、とても嬉しく思います。
日本は島です、採掘した土地の無駄をどうやって隠蔽するのですか、小さな島です、ミネラルがあまりありません、それは本当ですが、ペルー南米には技術はありませんが、ミネラルはたくさんあります、別のことレンガが使用される場所です、はい、常にそれはコンクリートまたは木材です、それは外装用です
Absolutely, my best wishes for Okada Brick Factory!
These bricks are beautiful. I love their rich redness, and that Bricks from 1897 are still in use is a testament to their excellent quality.
Thank you for watching and leaving such wonderful comments! I completely agree with your opinion as well.
red is from the iron in the clay
The most striking thing that stands out to me, besides the efficiency, is the quietness of the factory!!! I've never heard such a large scale factory operate so quietly, especially making masonry products! Great work! 😊❤
Thank you for your thoughtful words! It’s incredible how the quiet atmosphere of the factory allows the craftsmanship to shine💡
@kodawari.official So true! You are not distracted by the noise, and can actually appreciate the craftsmanship!
大きな工場って見ててテンション上がりますね。
ベルトコンベアが運びながら土を捏ね、加工が進み、レンガをカットしながら一々拭うのも見ていて楽しいし、梱包するところまで❤私は赤いレンガが好きですが、家の外観には合わない…様々なレンガを工夫されている気概を感じるインタビューまで😊工場見学してもこんなにじっくり見れないと思えば有難い限りです。
楽しい時間でした。
いつも素敵なコメントをありがとうございます!
私たちも取材を通して、このような過程で作られていることを知り、驚きました!楽しんでご覧いただけて嬉しいです!
Nice video.
In the U.S., there is a market for used bricks. When properly reclaimed, some of the older ones can be more valuable than new ones because of their texture, strength, color, etc.
Не только в США. Повторное использование кирпичей, общемировая практика.
@@A1ex5438 It makes sense that re-use of bricks is a global activity. What surprised me was not their re-use, but that they can be worth more than new ones.
@@gregparrottКак раз это не удивительно. Если кирпич не развалился за сто лет, то не развалится и дольше.
И помимо этого, на цену влияет, винтажность, и ограниченная доступность товара.
Т.к. запасы старых кирпичей сильно ограничены.
Так же есть практика покупки старых зданий, с целью разборки на кирпичи.
@@A1ex5438 Good points. Thanks for the reply.
I remember a story my father told me about the last new house he had built for our family. It was in the early to mid-60s and we had two large, nice fireplaces in a three-story house. One fireplace had used brick and, I'm not sure of the exact price, the used brick was 1.5¢ each and the new brick 1¢ (it might have been 2.5¢ and 2¢ each). Anyway, I remember it was only a half-cent more, and years later my father told me he complained about the price difference. We both got a good laugh out of that. Times have changed.
Yeah, used brick is always more expensive, and there is a heck of a market for it. The manufactured used brick looks fake as can be, but is much less costly.
I retired after 45 years in construction and real estate development, and nothing ever impressed me as much as a talented mason, stone or brick. Competent and talented masons are a sight to behold. It's a dying craft in the USA.
This is why people around the world loves Made in Japan ❤
"Thank you! 'Made in Japan' stands for quality and care, and it’s wonderful to know people around the world appreciate it! ❤🇯🇵"
Nowaday made in japan really low quality and overprice
Thanks for such a detailed and well-shot tour of this factory. Also, this is random, but I really like that guy's jacket.
Thank you for watching and for the wonderful comments!
Wire cut Bricks , old technology & when laid right comes out beautiful , expert masonry is a fading art .
"You're absolutely right! Wire-cut bricks, combined with expert masonry, create stunning results. It's a timeless art that deserves to be preserved and celebrated."
Какую бы продукцию в Японии не делали, она будет самой качественной и высокотехнологичной в мире!!! Молодцы ❤🙏🏻🙋🏼
Thank you for watching and leaving such wonderful comments!
Come....le..moto.💯💥👍🙏👀🏍️
@@Игорь-с1ф7е , смейтесь - смейтесь, но это железный неопровержимый факт!
@@kodawari.official Pootin already arrested her
I wish we have this kind of quality brick with good perfect rectangular shape. It will ensure perfect straight in line when lay out
Thank you for watching and leaving such wonderful comments!
one of the most durable building materials used around the world.
"Indeed, its durability and versatility are why it’s been a popular choice in construction for centuries."
Гарно показаний технічний процес. Дякую!
レンガの使用がどんどん減っています。 レンガがまたたくさん使われることを願います。 レンガ工場の従業員に光栄を申し上げたいと思います。 韓国から応援しています。
素敵なコメントをありがとうございます!私もレンガがたくさんの方に愛され、長く使われ続けることを祈っています。
@@kodawari.official najtoplije su kuće od cigle i kamena 🙋🇧🇦
Beautiful bricks. I want to build my house with your superior bricks.
Thank you for your lovely comment! We’re honored you appreciate the craftsmanship🪨🪨
You People are Amazing! Greetings from NJ
Thank you for commenting our video! From NJ! Arigatou!!
Felicidades por su dedicación a preservar la construccion de un material que va durar años!!!✌👍👌
"Thank you so much! Preserving these materials takes commitment, and we’re glad to hear it’s appreciated. Here's to creating things that will last for years! ✌👍👌"
In the UK in the early sixties I began a bricklaying apprenticeship. It was a five-years one which today I consider a waste of time. The college I attended took us to a brick works that had been going since the early 1800s. We began by looking at the pit where the clay was dug from; it has seventy-foot tall trees growing which we looked down upon. Each brick was made by hand. We didn't see the clay mixed but we did go inside a very small wooden room where the red clay was oozing through the wall. A man had a stack of wood plates, rectangular and a big bigger than the four-sided mold. The mold was laid on the wood plate, then he'd grab a large handful of the red clay and throw it into the mold. The top was scraped off with a piece of wood, the mold was removed and the soft brick was taken and stacked in a yard for drying. This was done, rhythmically, all day long. When the bricks were dry, they were taken to a kiln which was built of very thick brick walls. A fire was lit at one end. The entrance to the kiln was bricked up and the bricks left to be baked. The bricks that were nearest the fire would turn out burned and blac, and were called 'Brindles.' The finished red bricks were used in quality work and could be easily cut to shape for arches and such.
Regular bricks were machine-made with a V-shaped hollow top, called a 'frog.' It was considered bad workmanship to lay the bricks frog-downward although it made the work a bit easier. I had several years on the trowel and found it to be soul-destroying, so I got out of it and became a welder. I was thinking of those Japanese bricklayers having to lay all those bricks. I did it, summer and winter, burning in the sun and freezing in the winter, the most miserable job I ever had. I since went back to school and got my electrical license.
Very interesting! 👍
All bricks need frogs or holes for better strength when mortar is squeezed into them. Flat surfaces don’t hold as well.
This bricks as beautiful like Japanese people ❤ hard & strong same reflect Japanese technology thanks for sharing 👍
Rote Backsteine werden in Norddeutschland auch heute noch überwiegend verwendet, mein Haus wurden vor knapp 90 Jahren aus roten Backsteinen gebaut (die Innenwand besteht aus weißen Backsteinen). Sehr schön den Prozess zu sehen wie in Japan solche Backsteine hergestellt werden 🙂
Thank you for your wonderful comment! We truly appreciate you sharing such valuable information that we didn’t know. I can only imagine how lovely your place must be!
@@kodawari.official Gern geschehen. Mein Haus ist hier nichts besonderes aber halt mein Zuhause das ich sehr geniesse ;-)
Vielen Dank für Ihre lehrreichen Videos!
@@schnuffelhase1968 60 years ago I worked at a brick factory in the southern part Jutland - just north of border to Germany - and we eksported all of our bricks to west Schleswig. They were burned at a high temperature so they could withstand the harsh and salty weather from the North Sea - that was our competitive edge. However our bricks were produced with a distinct pattern of airholes for ventilation in them and I guess your bricks too have ventilation holes in them too. I know the Germans didn't recognised the advantage of ventilated bricks before WWII but now I think its universally agreed upon. BTW your white "Backsteinen" were probably made of sand and cement and just dried not burnt in an owen. Years ago we used those low quality bricks too in Denmark.
@@ChristianKaasen Thank you very much for your reply, very interesting that you made bricks that were used in Germany 😊 The bricks that my house was built with have no (vertical) airholes, they are just plain bricks ... my house was built just a few years before WWII, so before the evolution of the bricks.
For sure you're right about the inner white bricks, if I drill a hole into the inner wall it's much easier than to do it into the outer wall (that wall is hard as hell and you need an impact drill to do it) 🤔
That machinery has paid for itself many times over I bet.
"You're absolutely right! The machinery has proven to be a valuable investment, helping us achieve consistent quality and efficiency over time."
Very interesting glimpse of making bricks from collecting clay to processing it, moulding into bricks, conveying, drying, through kiln, and bricks in buildings. Kudos to all people involved in the video.
Thanks for sharing.
Thank you so much for your kind words! We’re thrilled to hear that you enjoyed the detailed process of brick-making. It’s truly a team effort, and we’re glad the dedication of everyone involved comes through. Thanks for watching and supporting our work!
This so satisfying watching the crisp and clean process, scientifically manufactured with tradition and modern techniques.
This accomplishment is only possible in Japan, God’s own country ~
5⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
Thank you for lovely comments! Our Japanese should protect old technology ❤️🔥
beautiful red bricks , strong , good for housing
わりと近代的に見えるけどこれが明治から続いてるのね。すごいなー
古い技術が現代にも適応し、伝統を守りながら続いていることは本当に素晴らしいですよね。ご注目いただき、ありがとうございます!
Japanese always doing good
Thank you!! Agree with that!!!
Какая ты красивая страна, Япония. Я, кыргызский Самурай приветствую тебя, священная Фудзияма! 🇰🇬👍💚🙏
Кыргызский самурай! На Фудзияму рот не разивай!
@@ВасилийШершаков твоё имя "ПОШЕЛ ТЫ" да? Свинопас.
Primitive Technologyとかを見たあとに見ると人類の進歩を感じる
I really liked the video, I was interested in assembling and starting up plants for ceramic floor and wall tiles, I have always liked brick for its simplicity of production, tunnel kilns have also been my passion, unfortunately or worked with roller kilns throughout the Far East, including Korea
Taiwan and China.
congratulations for the video.
台灣的磚廠一天就能完成,用的是燒磚用的熱來乾燥(直接用燒磚的熱風乾躁)。排磚也是用自動化,只有最後完成時,人工排成推車能用的型狀
Parabéns ótimo vídeo sobre os tijolos 👏👏👍👍
Thank you for watching and for the wonderful comments!
Brawo ❤ Japonia ❤❤❤ Biutyful ❤❤❤❤❤👏👏👏👏👏👏🥰🥰🥰🌹🌹💋💖💕🇵🇱💞😅
Your enthusiastic comment made our day! Thank you so much for your support!❤️🔥❤️🔥🇯🇵
Hello from Finland. It was a delight to see how beautiful and skilled your factory is. We make tiles here too but they are different shape, like Lego bricks. My house has more burned bricks which have more colours from light red to almost black. Inside the house there are pure red bricks like your’s and white bricks which have denser structure and are heavier. Bricks are very beautiful material and it doesn’t need much care.
Merci pur la traduction en français des sous-titres, c'est unie excellente initiative.
The pleasure is mine! Thank you for watching and leaving such wonderful comments!
Nice to see how bricks are produced in Japan. Bricks are very sustainable. Our oldest church was build of burned brick about 800 years ago and part of it is still standing. 60 years ago I worked at a small Danish brick factory so I recognised many of the processes but I still would appreciate some explanations accompanying the film to better understand it. I noticed your bricks were massive but Danish bricks are made with a specific pattern of ventilation holes (and loss of weight) - are you familiar with that kind of bricks in Japan?
Solid bricks surprised me too. Pavers are solid here, but walls are built with bricks with holes. They dry faster, fire faster, and, when used with mortar, the holes help lock the bricks in place. Really old bricks are solid - my last house was built with recycled bricks from 1870s that had no holes. ("Really old" = 1870 is probably comical in Europe, haha.)
The gentleman is right, brickwork becomes richer the older it gets. Thanks for posting! 👍 👍👏👏🏴🏴
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Are there predictable shifts in buyer "mood swings" for bricks? And are there correlations to brick shapes and sizes?
I wonder what the price of Brick is after all the work and the manufacturing process ?
Kajisekiですか?
艶やかでいいですね!
0:00 did anyone know what is the song title on the intro?
A few weeks ago I was thinking about building a three story two bedroom apartment that will last 200 to 300 years.
I think I have found the materials to make my dream house come true.
What are your pricing formulas ?
From Fiji thank you.
小松ドーザショベルが現役とは凄い。
ماشاءالله في كثير من مصانع الياجور في زليتن، أكثر المصانع إيطاليا وصينية أحضر منتجاتك حتى تكسب السوق هنا
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レンガの使われている場所は、カブトビールの工場だった建物ですね。
Очень интересно и познавательно. Интересно , что нет автоматов-садчиков на вагонетки для обжига кирпича. Печи интересные типа всё таки горна, не непрерывного действия. Остывание кирпича фактически естественным образом без принудительного охлаждения. Не было сортировки после обжига.
あの壮大な半田赤レンガ建物が、1897年9月1日から1898年10月31日までのたった一年で完成したとは驚きを通り越して誰も信じないでしょう😓😥😱
why do they turn red after firing?
安城にレンガを作る企業があることを知りませんでした。愛知県の常滑、半田、碧海には陶器や瓦を製造する企業が多くあります。地理的に安城はこれらの延長線上にあるので良い陶土が連続して存在しているのですね。
素敵なコメントをありがとうございます。おっしゃる通りです。良質な陶土が採れることや、運搬に便利な川があることから、この地域は発展しました。
يبدو ان النظام الهندسي يجعل الطوب حامل مساعد إضافي في متانه المباني أثناء الزلازل
Столько ручного труда,не ожидал.....
Вероятно ленточки, для удобства укладки, и последующего перемещения.
А на современных производствах кирпичи так же увязывают лентой и заворачивают в пакеты.
И картонные прокладки между слоями.
А укладка ёлочкой осталась только на мелких производствах.
@@Игорь-с1ф7е Ленточкой и плёнкой всё, а лицевой ещё и бумагой.
Оно ведь разваливается в процессе перемещений, если не упаковать.
Это фитнесс, рабочих которые могли бы потребовать свою долю прибавочной стоимости, уже нет, только низко квалифицированный труд, за который право не качнешь. Капитализм..
Long live JAPAN!
The output of the kneading machine reminds me of what its like to follow the current presidential race here in the US... except that that case, it's not clay being extruded.
A very delicate analogy, and of an ancient observation and fact,
"Politicians are not born; they are excreted." - Marcus Tullius Cicero
اليابان دوله متقدما علميا وثقافيا ودوله رائعه وجميله وتمتاز باقتصادها وصناعاتها الجيده
Было интересно посмотреть, сам работаю на кирпичном заводе.
Удивило, что укладка заготовок и готовых кирпичей производится вручную.
Визуальный и тактильный контроль! Экономят на контролерах.
@@ВасилийШершаков Манипулятор + оператор справляются куда быстрее.
오랜 역사를 가진 공장이네요. 벽돌도 튼튼하고 깨끗하게 제작되는군요.
Thanks for watching and for your great comments!
真心佩服👍🏻
thank you so much!!!
@kodawari.official 😝😝
I had a music box from the 50s made in Fuji, Japan and it looked beautiful to this day all that happened was the drawers fell apart but they could be easily super glued. I couldn't keep it so I took the music winder out of it and I still wind it up sometimes to this day. Some Japanese person made that jingle nearly 70 years ago and some girl now in her 20s from America now uses it. It a crazy world
Salam ukhwah dari Malaysia. Terima kasih kerana menambahkan sarikata bahasa Melayu 🙋♂️🇲🇾
The pleasure is mine! Thank you for watching and leaving such wonderful comments!
Muito bom vídeo do processo completo, por não conseguir automatizar fechei minha olaria...
é parecido com os tijolinhos usados aqui no brasil, bom video
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THAT WAS VERY INTERESTING
I NEVER SEE HOW THE BRIK'S ARE MADE UNTIL TODAY
BEUTIFUL REDNESS OF THOSE BRIK'S
GREETINGS FROM
CALIFORNIA, U S A 🙏
GREAT, JOB 👍
Thank you for watching and leaving such wonderful comments! Wishing you happiness all the way from Japan.
Ahhhhh! So! Very interesting!
Thank you for watching and leaving such wonderful comments!
number 1, so good
thank you for watching and leaving great comments!
Здорово👏✊👍👏✊👍👏✊👍👏✊👍 молодчаги✌👌
Can it be sent to another country?
Thanks for watching and for your comment! It appears that we’re not currently shipping to other countries.
ਜਪਾਨੀ ਲੋਕ ਬਹੁਤ ਮਿਹਨਤੀ ਅਤੇ ਇਮਾਨਦਾਰ ਹੁੰਦੇ ਨੇਂ 👍🙏
"Thank you! Japanese people take pride in hard work and honesty, and I’m glad that comes across. 🙏😊"
Think the owner liked the game Brick Breakers when he was younger?
bricks are best
Thank you for watching and leaving such wonderful comments!
wo keren,sampe batu bisa pya pabrik sebesar itu,itu pajakya berapa setaunya
1914年に竣工した赤レンガ造りの東京駅の煉瓦もここで造ったのですか😙😑😬
Nice viedo
Thank you for watching and 😘
Uzbekistan Yaponiya super
I Like bricks !
1897年に創設とはずいぶんと新しいことねえ
Schöne Grüße aus Österreich, Tirol in Seefeld 🤗🤗
16:12. Интересно наблюдать различие технологий. В России кирпичи на поддоны укладывают определенным образом на ребро под углом, как ёлочка. Это позволяет обходится без плёнки, стяжек и т.п. Здесь больше удобства для небольших партий кирпича.
Thank you for watching and for your comment! It's fascinating to learn about the differences in techniques between countries.
17:40 - ガイジンホール!
Ох уж эта стройка сад и огород!
Почему на трубе не обновить надпись?!
So much plastic tapes 😢
Mandya💙 Jai Bheem 💙
زنده باد سامورایی ها متعصب واقعا این ژاپنیها اصلا یجور دیگه هستن نسبت به بقیه دنیا ملتی پیشرفته در کنار احترام به قدیم و عاشق ماشین میتسوبیشی اینا هستم همیشه ماشینشون عالین ولی این میتسوبیشی یچیز دیگست اصلا هر چی میسازن عالیه
Thank you for your wonderful comment! I’m very happy that you appreciated Japanese craftsmanship.
مبروك لاشقاء كوريا سحق الاردن والعراق هههههههههههههههههههههههههههههههههههههههههههههههههههههههههههههههههههههههههههههههههههههههههههههه
It is safe to say that earthquakes do not occur very often under brick buildings.
Correction to my former coment. I didn't noticed it was subtitled but it truly helped in understanding what's going on. Sorry😮💨
these guys live in future
very impressive
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Японцы отличные строители в России есть здания которые строили военнопленные со времён второй мировой войны. Эти здания до сих пор стоят и нет трещин в стенах.Кладка что кирпич и раствор на который клали очень качественный.
А раствор и кирпичи были из Японии что ли??😂
I wouldn't have thought there would be many brick buildings in Japan. There are lots of earthquakes there, and earthquakes are very hostile to brick architecture as far as I know.
Молодцы !!!
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Izuzetna proizvodnja i lep, primer japanskog savrsenstva
15年ほど前まで毎年数か月技術指導で出張していたバングラデッシュの会社の近くのレンガ工場を思い出します。学校にも行けない貧しい子供達がたくさん雇われていて、汚いシャツとズボンに裸足で作業し、女の子も頭の上にタオルを巻いて10個くらいの重たいレンガを乗せて瓦礫の路面を運んでいた。首都ダッカ近郊に低い煙突1本の焼き場がある小さな工場が川沿いに多数あり、雨期には水浸しになるので子供達の収入も無く、辛い生活をおくっていたな。日本人には考えられない世界が今も実在します。
私も旅行もよくするが、日本は生活の質の高さではトップ10に入る。貧困ライン以下で生活している人もいるだろうから。食べるものも着るものもない。きれいな水も飲めない。
Muy melódicos los nipones del sol 🌅 naciente nipones pride 💪🇯🇵
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我念台北西門國小時,教室是日本人建的,紅磚非常精美,可是後來拆掉了,再也看不看不到這麽漂亮的紅磚了!即使後來念建中,建中紅樓的紅磚也比不上。西門國小可能是總督府等級的紅磚
焼成前のレンガ積みが何で手作業なのかと思ったら検査を兼ねているんだね。
そうなんです!焼成前の段階で一つ一つ確認しながら積み上げることで、品質を確保しているんです。コメントありがとうございます!
紅磚存放方法危險,如地震或卡板本身損壞,掉下來工人會無命 17:00
應使用區域存放,由面到底剷出使用/存放。
в те годы так не делали, бабки в печках обжигали, после приготовления щей.
Our bricks factory in Malaysia can't even match this quality.
вы Моногы? Айны первые люди на Этой земле?
Given the reported low reproduction rates, what automation and immigration factors are counteracting that demographic gap in Japan?
interesting!
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