Another thing is he probably works with his workers along the whole production line, and works longer than his employees If i was a boss of a company thats how id run it
@@Y2Kvids why? Elon wouldn't even bother! This swamp cooler is just a bandaid solution to Indias lack of infrastructure. EDIT: even their manufacturing process is so far behind modern times due to the low cost of labour.
@@Ken-nv2hl BURN! you Westerns are coming with the same idea which we have been using for years to save environment..ex- leaf plates, cups etc. I think you people are the worst humanity has to offer. Not talking about all westerners.
Saw his TED talk in 2012, back then it was really tough start for him. Glad to see he is doing great now. Idea's & products like these need to be marketed more & more.
@@moonlighmax Do you know if they can be purchased from Europe? The fridge would be an excellent addition to where I live, oddly we have a freezer but no fridge, and this would be an excellent, and very useful, addition.
This man made a healthy work environment, invented sustainable products, employed the use of both machine and man, and managed to preserve traditional pottery techniques combined with the efficiency of the modern day world.
I guess great minds think alike because around the same time I took it a step further and invented a similar air conditioning system that works on the same principle. It even works outdoors! It's called a bucket of water. You dump it on yourself. Please try and curtail your praise I get embarrassed.
@@vijayshah6887 Well I don't normally drink, but when I do I get the juice straight from the doo doo river. That's the good stuff. I take a dump on a hill in the back yard, then after a big rain I go for a swim in the river. Pure brain food. That's how I invented outdoor plumbing.
White cotton shirt, in reality is very easy to maintain. Also as someone else have already mentioned, the weather is very hot. White cotton is the only suitable option.
Staff will do, no need for staffs, staff is a collective noun like sheep, so no staffs and no sheeps. English is an odd language; people is also a collective noun but you can say peoples, as in the peoples of the world; no wonder some struggle with English, in particular Americans that simply cannot speak it.
Let me get this straight: 1. He combines modern technology with traditional craft. It's ingenious. 2. He has blended primitive technology with a high concept and has beat all metrics for environmental efficiency and effectiveness. It's simple. 3. This man is not a national treasure: he is an international treasure. This is THE WAY ...
Yeah, we need good people like him, who understand that 'business' is not about making tons of money....business is about providing a great and reliable service to your society ...not greedy businessmen who look upon societies and 'markets' . What do you think?
About the refrigerator: well it works on the principle of evaporation the way sweating keeps mammals cool. But just like sweating, it works in hot, dry climates the best. If you live in cool area, it might not provide even one degree of difference.
@@hidum5779 because cooling food is much more, than keeping your drinks refreshing - it's primarily about preserving it. and even in cool areas the temperature isn't THAT cool, at least not year round. but even if it is, it means you'd have to keep it outside. not very convenient. although, our grand-grandparents in rural areas did use a similar technique: they dug a hole in the ground, outside a house, and made a dome on top. give it little door, and it'll make a cellar of some sorts, which makes food last longer. not nearly as good as a modern electric refrigerators though.
@@kabyzdoch I get the point about preserving. The food cooled in these non electricity fridges lasts for a week as they said. If it gets 8 degrees cooler, then in cooler areas I'm guessing the temperature already goes beyond 8 degrees since this fridge can't cool it, so why would we further need cooling anyway?
@@hidum5779 well, the cooler it gets, the longer it stays edible. not all food needs it, but, for example, there's meat and vegetables in my freezer, laying there for almost a year, waiting to be unfreezed and cooked at any time. quite convenient. also, talking about colder areas. if it's cold outside, people usually trying to keep themselves warm by warming their houses. some folks have a cold, non heated part of their house reserved for storage - vegetables, canned stuff and even some prepared food can be stored there quite effectively. but this type of storage rooms can be found mostly in single-family houses. living in apartment building, on the other hand, do not provide such benefit, so when heating your living space, you loose that bonus of keeping your food fresh for longer because of natural temperature in the area, and without an electric refrigerator your only option would be to eat something that doesn't spoil easily, which is dried food, salt food, sweet food and canned food. one could definitely live on such a diet, but given the options, it's rarely the food of choice, at least not on a daily basis.
@@hidum5779 Where I live, in scandinavia, northern europe, Before refrigiators, people would have a wooden box inlaid with hay in which they would keep a big block of ice. On top of this they put a plank and then the food items needed to be kept cold. For dairy products and vegetables, folks would have a small cupboard made from wire net to hang on the outside of the house in a shady place. You can still find these around in use by elderly people having grown up with them.
When I was a kid and we were poor, we didn't have a refrigerator, or a actual stove, no hot water, and sometimes no electricity. We cooked on a charcoal brazier. We kept water cool in a clay vase. The evaporation of the water through the clay provided the cooling. The water tasted a bit like clay but we didn't mind.
If the clay vase or the ghadaa is a proper cooked utensil, it's a great one to have. It will not have a lot of smell, but will assimilate properties to water which are beneficial for health, along with reasonably cooling effect(chilled water is actually not good for health, leads to many problems, especially Thyroid issues). The best taste and deal you can have...most middle class homes in India still pour water they get from RO+UV filters to these ghadaas for that taste and feel, especially in the tropical summers of India, which is getting hotter every year due to global warming. Sadly, many people are getting too accustomed to fridge water and AC which only exacerbates the issue of Global warming and acts as a positive feedback loop. Only with more vegetation and sensible sustainable lifestyle can the issue be handled!
@@chipmunk4928 I was born in the US, but my mother moved us down to Mexico in my childhood. At first it was hard because she was an artist and wasn't selling many of her paintings. Then she started making enough money for us to live on. She sold 11 of her paintings to the actor Vincent Price and some to the Time-Life magazine company (to decorate their office building in Chicago) and was invited to the Friends of Mexico art show in New York City. A couple of weeks before she was in the art show she died. We had returned to the US shortly before she found out she was dying. Living in Mexico was the best part of my childhood. Growing up in the US after she died was the worst time of my life. I still miss Mexico, but Mexico has changed a lot since I lived there. Not for the best. I would love to go back sometime. I really miss the food there. I better stop writing otherwise I will get really hungry thinking about the food there. I loved the people there too.
Indian ingenuity, resilience, pride in the old customs but mixed with a modern process. Just one of the many reasons I admire India’s people! Much love and respect from Idaho, USA. 🙏🏽🙏🏽
I mean, he didn't invent it, refrigerators and swamp coolers of exactly this design have been around hundreds of years, so I dunno about the ingenuity... But he looks like he works hard and is a good business man.
This is what a true humanitarian looks like. He's empathetic and a problem solver. He could have easily just threw some money in the way of donations but instead he used his brain to try to help people, to think from the people's perspective and what would truly help in their situation. That combined with his ingenuity. He helped so many more people than just the catastrophe victims that his products were created for.
This man has done much for his community, family, and the world. Thank you, sir. You give me hope. Awe and respect from the Manitoba Interlake, Canada. You are an inspiration.
@nofurtherwest3474 Evaporation. Water can hold a huge amount of energy (i.e. it has a high specific heat.) The inner chamber of the fridge is watertight, and there is a water chamber that surrounds the food. The outside of the fridge is porous, so it allows the water to slowly evaporate, which pulls heat away from the inner chamber. It's the same principle as sweating. It will never get down to the 35ish degrees of a regular fridge, but it will cool enough to preserve produce and other items. One disadvantage is that these work wonderfully in dry environments, but with higher humidity, the water has a harder time evaporating (again, same as why your sweat doesn't cool you off when it's humid.) So these are great in inventions but region specific. You can actually build something similar by putting a small vessel inside of a larger unglazed flower pot, filling the space between them with sand, wetting the sand, and adding a lid.
Using earthen pottery is nothing new in india. I am glad that insider is showcasing this . Very proud moment for indians. This is more like "traditional solution to modern day problems". ❤️❤️❤️
This guy is a legend bringing back all the traditional work mixing with the machinery work and kudos to carrying their family work and making environment friendly products
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This is a very interesting video and the owner of this business seems to be not only a smart businessman but an ethical man as well. The mini fridge is a brilliant idea and must be a godsend for those poorer people who have bought one. What a fantastic, thoughtful invention.
The "invention" is called an icebox, and has existed for thousands of years. It's what everyone had before refrigerators. It's the exact same thing you use to keep your beer cool at a picnic, you can go and get one at Walmart for 15 bucks.
@@merjemvr india doesn't have only real poor people ....here most of the population belong to middle class nd a $40 small fridge can easily be affordable by large section of the society
I think he is a brilliant businessman, he gave all those people jobs by combining machine work with labour work ,he saved many people 'a life from being jobless and poor, the refrigerator idea is great even if it doesn't freeze food ,at least it keeps the food safe in a very hot climate, well done 👏👏👏👏👏
No he destroyed a culture of hand made items, made many lose their jobs and almost completely destroyed his own company. He survives by making something expensive that should be made from clay by the people who need it. It's a damn clay storage locker. You should never buy a thing like that but make it yourself if you;re in those conditions - otherwise you buy a regular fridge. This is for upper class Indian hipsters - who spend money on trinkets like this instead of supporting people in the slums.
@@agnidas5816 So what if they spend it on trinkets like this? its their money and they're in no obligation. Besides he's actively making a fortune for him and his employees, saving ceramic culture and creating something both eco friendly and cheap for the mass to afford. Yall are mad for nothing lmao.
It helps that he has been the worker himself and that his family started the business. I think employers who have had to go through the working conditions too are much more likely to care about their workers. Love his clay fridges. We had a small cooler in a caravan once that worked like that with cloth panels but it was not clay which I think would be far superior.
@@lunix3259 Yes and no? They clay part helps since they can sustain temperature, but for the fridge, it's simply just the water evaporating by getting the heat from inside the fridge. It's the same as regular fridges except it uses water. The only reason most western (and eastern) fridges don't use water is because they're larger and also need to be able to freeze (for meats, but also so we can make ice cubes). Just using water wouldn't help you create ice, but it can at least cool a small fridge like that, which is enough for people in certain places, especially if their families are small.
In earthen pot there are tiny pores which slowly release water in the outer surface. Water molecules takes energy from the surrounding molecules and evaporates.this continuous process cools down the water inside the pot and outer surface water layer act as a insulator which do not allow the surrounding temperature to maintain the same temperature in the pot.
People like him makes their country proud by reinventing the things their fore fathers used to do a modern way and to show case the culture of India to the world. Hats off to him
I watched this video at least four times and paused it to read the closed-captioning. The Mitticool fridge is available on Amazon and I will probably buy one very soon. I believe it will be extremely handy as the situation deteriorates with the global unrest and global warming.
Fantastic!!!!! Such types of documentaries should be made by our Indian media houses also!!! They always cover nonsensical topics. Even having the money and power, they don't make this type of content and that is one of the reasons for such a low rank to the Indian media!!!
This is a good business man. Uses human hands AND machines. Invents appliances for non electric homes. Other videos we see on this channel are idiots who don't want to use machines, don't want to change their ways, don't want to adapt, they just struggle and complain.
Sorry but I don't agree with your statement. Don't call them idiots. There is an emotional value attached to goods that are made entirely by hand. A shawl or carpet made almost entirely by machines might be cheaper, but it is nothing infront of a handmade Iranian carpet or Kashmiri shawl.
@@去他妈的中国共产党 I don't value carpets enough that I need a handmade one. I don't value pottery on whether it is handmade or machine made. At the end of the day it doesn't matter. I want people to grow, learn and evolve. I want them to spend time with there families instead of slaving away working on handmade things when a machine would allow them to feed their families and be with there families.
Wow, he should ship his refridgerators world wide. I mean I wouldn't mind having one of those in my room. Plus, since I don't need electricity I can put it anywhere. Don't need to whip out that extension cord.
For me India is such a thriving, bustling and INSPIRATIONAL Country, I quickly clicked on the video and so glad I did, Made in India and good on people's health and the environment! Jai Hind!
Hello. Its such a innovative eco friendly idea 💡 and I believe he should get all incentives for export. This would work wonders worldwide. He is a genius. Lots of love ❤ from Mauritius 🇲🇺
Hats off to this entrepreneur. He deserves all the praise and appreciation. Yes rich or middle class will also buy fridge as it saves costly electricity
Saving atmosphere from harmful effects of Green House gases (CFC's), handkrafted refridgerator with No electricity shows how sustainable this product is....
Shouldn't we focus more on taking responsibility for watering plants and perennial trees on a regular basis instead? Like.. actually plant perennial trees and nurture them = helping the environment
@@skylark1848 the ozone layer was restored because the focus for responsibility was on the producers in the past. Climate change isn't gonna change now because now the responsibility has shifted to individual consumers.
Impressive man. I really like the modern redesign of an ancient idea. Perfect for extending the life of fruit and vegetables and eggs and such items. the affordable price and the reason for his decision to make this evaporative cooler is an honourable one that truly deserves the reward of success. We use to make them in outback Australia using Hessian bags for the the wet sides of a box we could hang in a tree, but like all evaporative coolers they only work in a hot and dry environment.
@@KoDeMondo No! No! WRONG! 100% "WRONG" Don't make comments if you have absolutely "NO IDEA" of what you're talking about. And never waste my time again...
@@KoDeMondo Why would evaporation require electricity. Do you honestly believe that when you hang your towel up to dry after a shower it is getting dry by electricity? Airflow can help speed up evaporation but that's something nature is not bad at providing if you pay attention.
@@dandaniels851 Clearly it was a misunderstanding because our usual electrical fridges DO need electricity for their evaporators to function. No need to be absolutely ridiculous about it really.
This is such a great coincidence, i read about this company in my book a few days ago and now randomly this video showed in my youtube feed. And this happens to everytime, everytime i read or learn about something(sci) , i start noticing it in the real world. This is awesome, i must put in my diary. 🥳
Few days ago i was talking to my family about something then i started getting ads abouy it. Probably our phone can hear us through microphone what we talk and it also reads our searching history.
Depending on costs and availability, I can see this being a viable product in the future. As someone who enjoys city life, I found that I actually prefer to shop more often and for less food. While I still see myself needing a freezer, This could be a viable solution that uses no electricity and would definitely be enough to keep produce fresh for a couple days. Especially in a more temperate climate.
Absolutely wonderful most of the time when someone invents a new product They don't sell it at a reasonable price. They come up all sorts of reasons of why they have to sell it at a very hight price. Good for you for being so thoughtful and generous. God bless you for not allowing greed to take over. Best of wishes.
He didn't make a fridge. He made an evaporative cooler. 72F isn't going to keep anything fresh, the cooler will just keep things from becoming dried out.
It would be nice if they explained how the "fridge" supposedly works, I'm guessing it's using water evaporation but that wouldn't do much and would likely develop mold
In this time of war in Ukraine, sanctions on Russian super-rich oligarchs and India's stance on Russia - you may be interested in this historical story about how Britain's industrial revolution and wealth was directly correlated with the British looting, pauperization and deindustrialization of India [and the creation of the 'First' and 'Third' world] which I have been telling the British [where I live]: Robert Clive returned from Bengal with his 'loot' [the Hindi word for plunder] as the richest [non-monarch] man in Europe (Open University online estimates his 'loot' at £100 million at today's rates). His East India Co. mafiosi henchmen became the new super-rich 'nobs' (from nawabs/'nabobs') and often bought up parliamentary seats - the Pitt family made their fortune looting India. Meanwhile, 1/3 of the population of Bengal Province [inc. modern Orissa and Bihar] - some 10 million died in the Great Bengal Famine of 1770 due to the rapacity of the Brits. Richard Becher [relative of William M. Thackeray] had predicted this 'Ruin of Bengal' which had been the richest province in Mughal India [which had 27% of global GDP before British occupation]. The Ruin of Bengal also led to economic crisis in Europe as dozens of banks collapsed in days as looted Indian wealth dried up for a while and Adam Smith had to delay his 'Wealth of Nations'. As research published by Columbia UP showed in 2018, the British stole some US$45 Trillion from India over two centuries which financed the Industrial Revolution and much else in Britain and its white settler colonies [see Jason Hickel's article on Al Jazeera online which also discusses how Britain lies about this history]. They also killed tens of millions of Indians by exporting India's foodgrains for British Food Security and profit including the setting up of Death Camps which gave less starvation rations than Buchenwald for hard labour to victims of the 1877 Madras Famine killing 94% of inmates - 7 million in total died [whilst record amounts of exports of Indian foodgrains lowered prices for Westerners]. George Orwell wrote (The Road to Wigan Pier) that 100 million Indians must be forced to the edge of starvation so that the British can live the way that they do. The last of these famines were due to the war crimes of Winston Churchill in Bengal in 1942-3 [including stopping Food Aid from other countries reaching Bengal after British cover-ups were blown -- even Nazis allowed such food aid in Greece in 1941]. Yet the British [including Churchill worshipping historian and journalist Dominic Sandbrook points to Stalin's famine in Ukraine [causing death by starvation] as an outrage - as if the British never did the same and many times over 200 years]. The British also deindustrialized India which had dominated manufacturing exports in textiles. H.H. Wilson wrote in 1853 that Manchester and Paisley could not have risen, even with steam power without the systematic elimination of competition from cheaper and superior Indian handloom cottons. This included the breaking of weavers' fingers and the cutting off of thumbs of weavers of Dhaka Muslin [a highly-prized elite cloth which which cost many times the price of silk] as well as tariff barriers and creating a Captive Market for British goods. Governor General William Bentinck wrote that the plains of India are bleached with the bones of her weavers. In the 1790s English experts declared Indian Wootz the best steel in the world and Sheffield copied its techniques but Indian steelmaking was stifled to suppress competition. India had been a major shipbuilder and continued to be in the early British-rule - the oldest seaworthy ship in the Royal Navy is HMS Trincomalee built in 1817 by an Indian company in Bombay of superior Indian teak. But soon afterwards, British shipbuilders stopped shipbuilding competition in India. As Shashi Tharoor tells us in Inglorious Empire, Indian engineers showed that they could design and build locomotives and thus the Brits stopped such manufacturing as well. Even during the 1939-45 war [when British Empire admirer Hitler wanted to make Ukraine and Russia Germany's 'India'], the British refused US plans to make aircraft factories in India (to fight Japan) as they did not want an independent India postwar to compete. After the war the British [and the postwar USA - following George Kennan's strategy of holding Asia down as poor compared to the West - whilst giving Marshall Aid to redevelop Europe] refused to help India build a steelmill at Bhilai saying stick to your traditional raw materials! The Brits created the First World/Third World schism and tried to maintain it. It was the USSR that stepped in and helped build Bhilai. They also helped build India's first Institute of Technology at Kharagpur and an antibiotic factory etc. This - not arms sales is what led to the strong Indo-Soviet and then Indo-Russian partnership and friendship! In 1971 the USA and UK sent warships to support the Pakistani dictator perpetrating the largest genocide since 1945, killing 3 million in East Bengal. It was the Soviet Navy that warned off the USS Enterprise and Soviet threats to attack China stopped Mao from attacking India in support of Pakistan.
i wish nothing but the best for him. growing up poor i remember when we’d have weeks without power and all our food would go bad so this issue is near and dear to me
I applaud your hard work and success. Don’t forget the poor! It’s good that the rich are buying the fridge to help the environment, but make sure the fridge remains affordable and available to the poor. It’s a daily life necessity for them!
@@h3x3 my grandparents used to have such refrigerator , not exactly the same but similar, fruits , vegetables and dairy products can be stored for a week....
@@h3x3 Naa, It only works in hot and dry climate. The Indian state in which it is made is known for that kind of climate. Even in India it isn't common to have that unless you come from a hot region.
6:09 Definitely this should be the top 50 inventions of the decade or century. It saves energy as no electricity is needed. It is cheaper. It is very very eco-friendly. No risk of leaking gases which happens in electric refrigerator and which are made with a high amount of carbon footprint. But this fridge probably has Negative carbon footprint as it is storing lot of carbon or atleast is carbon neutral or very small amount of carbon footprint. This gives more employment as more it is hand made as compared to other electric refrigerators.
I'd say the fridge is probably carbon-negative, if you factor in how much electricity isn't being used through its lifetime. Plus it'll probably last decades. Regular refrigerators are replaced, what, every 15 years? I could see one of these in a college dorm or studio apartment in the US
Hats off to गुजराथी people. Very ingenious and wise.nature friendly, helping the skilled labor. Out really gelps our India.. both the industry and the labor. I will buy the fridge now.
This owner's view is the very definition of the word circumspect, and his products, his business, his employees, his country and the planet are all better for it.
Fantastic. Mansukbhai you are awesome. You not only stayed in the business , you gave livelihood to so many women and also helped the poor . Great service. God bless you. Jai Hind
@@Robert-cu9bm yeah. he caused the problem by making his pottery unwanted - people wanted hand crafted objects but he fucked it up. and the swamp cooler fridge isn't a new solution nor is it practical - poor people in villages are better off making one out of clay themselves. This item is for rich hipsters. There is not going to be any one with this fridge who doesn't already have a regular fridge. Also look at how tiny it is. What will you keep there? One sack of potatoes would fill it up...
@@agnidas5816 he solved the local problem tho he said that his regular customers didn't have electric fridge... I think it's a good idea for rural places where people could rarely afford real fridge ...i mean people do keep water in clay pots to keep it cool but this is more improved version and people can store anything they like..
No idea how a fridge works without electricity and able to keep things cool, but this is really useful and good for the environment is all I know if want it for 😩
This is what you call a smart CEO. He keeps up with everything.
No only that, but he also went the extra length to build a safer working environment for his employees.
Another thing is he probably works with his workers along the whole production line, and works longer than his employees
If i was a boss of a company thats how id run it
@@florians9949 Elon should take not
@@Y2Kvids why? Elon wouldn't even bother! This swamp cooler is just a bandaid solution to Indias lack of infrastructure. EDIT: even their manufacturing process is so far behind modern times due to the low cost of labour.
@@Ken-nv2hl BURN! you Westerns are coming with the same idea which we have been using for years to save environment..ex- leaf plates, cups etc. I think you people are the worst humanity has to offer. Not talking about all westerners.
Saw his TED talk in 2012, back then it was really tough start for him. Glad to see he is doing great now. Idea's & products like these need to be marketed more & more.
I want to know where you can purchase one.
@@waynejennings7046 Flipkart (owned by Walmart) and Amazon India.
@@moonlighmax Thanks
Yes yes! I want one for my off grid location! I have been watching him too
@@moonlighmax Do you know if they can be purchased from Europe? The fridge would be an excellent addition to where I live, oddly we have a freezer but no fridge, and this would be an excellent, and very useful, addition.
Respect from Canada. This man is an example to us all.
I thought they filmed this in Canada.
@@fuzzyschwartz This is Ontario.
Respect from America as well.
This man made a healthy work environment, invented sustainable products, employed the use of both machine and man, and managed to preserve traditional pottery techniques combined with the efficiency of the modern day world.
Is he not inspired? 12322
I guess great minds think alike because around the same time I took it a step further and invented a similar air conditioning system that works on the same principle. It even works outdoors! It's called a bucket of water. You dump it on yourself. Please try and curtail your praise I get embarrassed.
@@ipissed stop drinking. if you can't be sober and nice, keep away from keyboard.
@@vijayshah6887 Well I don't normally drink, but when I do I get the juice straight from the doo doo river. That's the good stuff. I take a dump on a hill in the back yard, then after a big rain I go for a swim in the river. Pure brain food. That's how I invented outdoor plumbing.
Literally did everything right. Dudes awesome
This man is brave, launching a new product like that and also wearing a white shirt in such a dusty environment 😀
Gujarat is a Furnace for 8-9 months of the year, you won't find anyone wearing black shirts it's scary xD
White cotton shirt, in reality is very easy to maintain. Also as someone else have already mentioned, the weather is very hot. White cotton is the only suitable option.
@@mihirmewada2085 kabhie south aajao....sooraj jinda pakadega..hamare yaha lungi me ghoomte hai iswajah se..
@@lightboi9752 kaha se ho
Man this is cultural stuff!! I from that place ! Most of the time man wear white clothes only!!
He is promoting livelihoods and Indian culture at the same time. Hats off to you Sir!
I been to his factory.
He is a down to Earth man.
He is loved by his staffs,
That says how humble he is.
thanks for sharing =]
In which district of Gujarat???
its at Rajkot Pansara if my memory is correct
Why does he have a mask 😷 but not his employee’s???
Staff will do, no need for staffs, staff is a collective noun like sheep, so no staffs and no sheeps. English is an odd language; people is also a collective noun but you can say peoples, as in the peoples of the world; no wonder some struggle with English, in particular Americans that simply cannot speak it.
Let me get this straight:
1. He combines modern technology with traditional craft. It's ingenious.
2. He has blended primitive technology with a high concept and has beat all metrics for environmental efficiency and effectiveness. It's simple.
3. This man is not a national treasure: he is an international treasure.
This is THE WAY ...
Yeah, we need good people like him, who understand that 'business' is not about making tons of money....business is about providing a great and reliable service to your society ...not greedy businessmen who look upon societies and 'markets' . What do you think?
This is The Way...
Although it runs on normal water or one can say Gujarat home curd keeper.
a fckin legend entrepreneur
there is no modern tech involved, evaporation is a natural phenomea and used since centuries
Such a blessing that this company is still going. To keep such things as this company alive is a necessity to preserve history.
About the refrigerator: well it works on the principle of evaporation the way sweating keeps mammals cool. But just like sweating, it works in hot, dry climates the best. If you live in cool area, it might not provide even one degree of difference.
and why would people want to cool food in cool areas?
@@hidum5779 because cooling food is much more, than keeping your drinks refreshing - it's primarily about preserving it. and even in cool areas the temperature isn't THAT cool, at least not year round. but even if it is, it means you'd have to keep it outside. not very convenient. although, our grand-grandparents in rural areas did use a similar technique: they dug a hole in the ground, outside a house, and made a dome on top. give it little door, and it'll make a cellar of some sorts, which makes food last longer. not nearly as good as a modern electric refrigerators though.
@@kabyzdoch I get the point about preserving. The food cooled in these non electricity fridges lasts for a week as they said. If it gets 8 degrees cooler, then in cooler areas I'm guessing the temperature already goes beyond 8 degrees since this fridge can't cool it, so why would we further need cooling anyway?
@@hidum5779 well, the cooler it gets, the longer it stays edible. not all food needs it, but, for example, there's meat and vegetables in my freezer, laying there for almost a year, waiting to be unfreezed and cooked at any time. quite convenient.
also, talking about colder areas. if it's cold outside, people usually trying to keep themselves warm by warming their houses. some folks have a cold, non heated part of their house reserved for storage - vegetables, canned stuff and even some prepared food can be stored there quite effectively. but this type of storage rooms can be found mostly in single-family houses. living in apartment building, on the other hand, do not provide such benefit, so when heating your living space, you loose that bonus of keeping your food fresh for longer because of natural temperature in the area, and without an electric refrigerator your only option would be to eat something that doesn't spoil easily, which is dried food, salt food, sweet food and canned food. one could definitely live on such a diet, but given the options, it's rarely the food of choice, at least not on a daily basis.
@@hidum5779 Where I live, in scandinavia, northern europe, Before refrigiators, people would have a wooden box inlaid with hay in which they would keep a big block of ice. On top of this they put a plank and then the food items needed to be kept cold. For dairy products and vegetables, folks would have a small cupboard made from wire net to hang on the outside of the house in a shady place. You can still find these around in use by elderly people having grown up with them.
When I was a kid and we were poor, we didn't have a refrigerator, or a actual stove, no hot water, and sometimes no electricity. We cooked on a charcoal brazier. We kept water cool in a clay vase. The evaporation of the water through the clay provided the cooling. The water tasted a bit like clay but we didn't mind.
Thats the best water to have.
Very healthy properties to drinking water from clay vase including making the water alkaline
If the clay vase or the ghadaa is a proper cooked utensil, it's a great one to have. It will not have a lot of smell, but will assimilate properties to water which are beneficial for health, along with reasonably cooling effect(chilled water is actually not good for health, leads to many problems, especially Thyroid issues).
The best taste and deal you can have...most middle class homes in India still pour water they get from RO+UV filters to these ghadaas for that taste and feel, especially in the tropical summers of India, which is getting hotter every year due to global warming. Sadly, many people are getting too accustomed to fridge water and AC which only exacerbates the issue of Global warming and acts as a positive feedback loop. Only with more vegetation and sensible sustainable lifestyle can the issue be handled!
I hope you are in a good part of your life right now!
What is your country name?
@@chipmunk4928 I was born in the US, but my mother moved us down to Mexico in my childhood. At first it was hard because she was an artist and wasn't selling many of her paintings. Then she started making enough money for us to live on. She sold 11 of her paintings to the actor Vincent Price and some to the Time-Life magazine company (to decorate their office building in Chicago) and was invited to the Friends of Mexico art show in New York City. A couple of weeks before she was in the art show she died. We had returned to the US shortly before she found out she was dying. Living in Mexico was the best part of my childhood. Growing up in the US after she died was the worst time of my life. I still miss Mexico, but Mexico has changed a lot since I lived there. Not for the best. I would love to go back sometime. I really miss the food there. I better stop writing otherwise I will get really hungry thinking about the food there. I loved the people there too.
It is so unfortunate that Indian media ignored this great innovation and foreign media are first to interview and recognise their work🤗
I had seen it on Indian media years ago. Just because you didn't see or were too young and not interested in news, doesn't mean it was not covered.
Indian ingenuity, resilience, pride in the old customs but mixed with a modern process. Just one of the many reasons I admire India’s people! Much love and respect from Idaho, USA. 🙏🏽🙏🏽
why is he not adding holy cow dung to the mitti ?
🙏🙏
@@優さん-n7m we do ... !!
@@優さん-n7m We do
Most pottery in India is made of Cow dung
Which is sifted , and baked
We are eco - friendly
I mean, he didn't invent it, refrigerators and swamp coolers of exactly this design have been around hundreds of years, so I dunno about the ingenuity... But he looks like he works hard and is a good business man.
He progresses and cares his workers safety... Hats off to this Entrepreneur
This is what a true humanitarian looks like. He's empathetic and a problem solver. He could have easily just threw some money in the way of donations but instead he used his brain to try to help people, to think from the people's perspective and what would truly help in their situation. That combined with his ingenuity. He helped so many more people than just the catastrophe victims that his products were created for.
But he can't even provide his workers some proper work attire, like masks.
I just love how he keeps talking about trying to benefit not only the people around him but the earth and preserving nature around him
HOW DO BUY HIS FRIEDGE INTERNATIONALLY?
This man has done much for his community, family, and the world. Thank you, sir.
You give me hope.
Awe and respect from the Manitoba Interlake, Canada. You are an inspiration.
This clay fridge should go mainstream on online and offline stores and everyone should have easy access to it.
How does it work?
@nofurtherwest3474 Evaporation. Water can hold a huge amount of energy (i.e. it has a high specific heat.) The inner chamber of the fridge is watertight, and there is a water chamber that surrounds the food. The outside of the fridge is porous, so it allows the water to slowly evaporate, which pulls heat away from the inner chamber. It's the same principle as sweating. It will never get down to the 35ish degrees of a regular fridge, but it will cool enough to preserve produce and other items. One disadvantage is that these work wonderfully in dry environments, but with higher humidity, the water has a harder time evaporating (again, same as why your sweat doesn't cool you off when it's humid.) So these are great in inventions but region specific. You can actually build something similar by putting a small vessel inside of a larger unglazed flower pot, filling the space between them with sand, wetting the sand, and adding a lid.
It's technically more like an icebox, which were the predecessors to the powered refrigerator.
It can't substitute a real fridge and is just meant for fruits and vegetables and milk. It doesn't get cold enough for meat
@@elaexplorerI would love one, cause I don't have any meat in my fridge
Using earthen pottery is nothing new in india. I am glad that insider is showcasing this . Very proud moment for indians.
This is more like "traditional solution to modern day problems". ❤️❤️❤️
Yeah but it has never been seen as 'Bussiness', Rather people see it mererly another way to earn 'bread and butter'!!
"Modern problems require traditional solutions."
@@danielawesome36 the comment I was looking for. 👌
pottery is used in all parts of the world. not only India
It is not new to any part of world.
There is something that elevates the taste when cooked in earthenware.
That pulav at the end seemed very delicious, with the right gravy of course.
thats fake news
Bullshit!
This is true
@@BlackMamba-lt8oe why tf you're spamming 💩
Absolutely, Biriyani cooked and served in earthen pot is pure Love
This guy is a legend bringing back all the traditional work mixing with the machinery work and kudos to carrying their family work and making environment friendly products
Of course trade format active key.
🔑 format E.78.46
Report code UN A0 reg (88-52) of paragraph 17 AQ
1-10R* 🇲🇦 code (mustashfayat)
Field review of guard code
Code =( hashish)
A0 UN central ,& KY7
UN pass (52942)
Purple pass ( perils)
🔑 release SR E.78.46
F of guard = 🔑 ( almost done)
Arm license code ( Castillo +)
(Es)paco 34 OF E.78.46=(imad)
F UN A0YO =( 🤴 Y has woken up)
This is a very interesting video and the owner of this business seems to be not only a smart businessman but an ethical man as well.
The mini fridge is a brilliant idea and must be a godsend for those poorer people who have bought one. What a fantastic, thoughtful invention.
And that is alot of people in India 🇮🇳 🙄
I think real poor people cannot afford $40 anyway for a small refrigirator. Rich people started to buy them....
I think real poor people cannot afford $40 anyway for a small refrigirator. Rich people started to buy them....
The "invention" is called an icebox, and has existed for thousands of years. It's what everyone had before refrigerators. It's the exact same thing you use to keep your beer cool at a picnic, you can go and get one at Walmart for 15 bucks.
@@merjemvr india doesn't have only real poor people ....here most of the population belong to middle class nd a $40 small fridge can easily be affordable by large section of the society
I think he is a brilliant businessman, he gave all those people jobs by combining machine work with labour work ,he saved many people 'a life from being jobless and poor, the refrigerator idea is great even if it doesn't freeze food ,at least it keeps the food safe in a very hot climate, well done 👏👏👏👏👏
Nice to see people employed! God will give you more success.
LONG way from freezing! it said 8 degrees cooler
No he destroyed a culture of hand made items, made many lose their jobs and almost completely destroyed his own company. He survives by making something expensive that should be made from clay by the people who need it. It's a damn clay storage locker. You should never buy a thing like that but make it yourself if you;re in those conditions - otherwise you buy a regular fridge.
This is for upper class Indian hipsters - who spend money on trinkets like this instead of supporting people in the slums.
@@agnidas5816 what the hell are you talking .
@@agnidas5816 So what if they spend it on trinkets like this? its their money and they're in no obligation. Besides he's actively making a fortune for him and his employees, saving ceramic culture and creating something both eco friendly and cheap for the mass to afford. Yall are mad for nothing lmao.
It helps that he has been the worker himself and that his family started the business. I think employers who have had to go through the working conditions too are much more likely to care about their workers. Love his clay fridges. We had a small cooler in a caravan once that worked like that with cloth panels but it was not clay which I think would be far superior.
This man is a genius to get his way around the traditional problems and come up with ideas to innovate
It's called an ice box, it's been around forever.
A man true man, with the mind of the present and the future. The world needs more real people like this CEO. Super brilliant 👏👌
I cannot help but admire the people behind this workshop. And also the workers.
I have actually drank water from this on a scorching day and the water was cold!! I don't how it works but it is amazing.
It work on principle of evaporation
by principle of perspiration, just like how sweating cools down a person on a hot day.
Isn't because it's made out of clay? I drank from a stone cup and it's cold
@@lunix3259 Yes and no? They clay part helps since they can sustain temperature, but for the fridge, it's simply just the water evaporating by getting the heat from inside the fridge. It's the same as regular fridges except it uses water. The only reason most western (and eastern) fridges don't use water is because they're larger and also need to be able to freeze (for meats, but also so we can make ice cubes). Just using water wouldn't help you create ice, but it can at least cool a small fridge like that, which is enough for people in certain places, especially if their families are small.
In earthen pot there are tiny pores which slowly release water in the outer surface. Water molecules takes energy from the surrounding molecules and evaporates.this continuous process cools down the water inside the pot and outer surface water layer act as a insulator which do not allow the surrounding temperature to maintain the same temperature in the pot.
People like him makes their country proud by reinventing the things their fore fathers used to do a modern way and to show case the culture of India to the world. Hats off to him
I watched this video at least four times and paused it to read the closed-captioning. The Mitticool fridge is available on Amazon and I will probably buy one very soon. I believe it will be extremely handy as the situation deteriorates with the global unrest and global warming.
I respect this man, I love the fact he created a environment that is healthy for his people and his country.
Hats off to you sir.
❤❤❤❤Gora kumbhar reborn
These ceramics are beautiful works of art and I can think of many uses
Fantastic!!!!!
Such types of documentaries should be made by our Indian media houses also!!!
They always cover nonsensical topics. Even having the money and power, they don't make this type of content and that is one of the reasons for such a low rank to the Indian media!!!
Man, the way you can just feel the pride he exudes from his work is so heartwarming. He knows he's done something great..
Mansukhlal sir is presidential award winner for innovation.
@Salahudeen owner ceo
Poo In the loo
@Creeper 😂😂He/She is that poo.
@@ThisIsGoogle bruh you still live in 2014 i guess
Hello i am studying english online
be my friend
Thank you for working so hard and contributing to India's GDP. India needs people like you.
In like the fact that more people are are adopting these earthenwares, either out of curiosity, need or just for the sake of novelty.
This is a good business man. Uses human hands AND machines. Invents appliances for non electric homes.
Other videos we see on this channel are idiots who don't want to use machines, don't want to change their ways, don't want to adapt, they just struggle and complain.
Will said, technology must be embraced to succeed.
So true.
Is it mostly the Americans or is it just everyone in general
Sorry but I don't agree with your statement. Don't call them idiots. There is an emotional value attached to goods that are made entirely by hand. A shawl or carpet made almost entirely by machines might be cheaper, but it is nothing infront of a handmade Iranian carpet or Kashmiri shawl.
@@去他妈的中国共产党 I don't value carpets enough that I need a handmade one. I don't value pottery on whether it is handmade or machine made. At the end of the day it doesn't matter. I want people to grow, learn and evolve. I want them to spend time with there families instead of slaving away working on handmade things when a machine would allow them to feed their families and be with there families.
His dedication to a healthy working environment is admirable.
Wow, he should ship his refridgerators world wide. I mean I wouldn't mind having one of those in my room. Plus, since I don't need electricity I can put it anywhere. Don't need to whip out that extension cord.
Problem is… It will be heavy and hard to ship!
@@PoliticalMatter very fragile too and won’t cool a lot
@@aryaaswale7316 Have you used one? Because I do. It keeps things astonishingly cool.
Yeah cool but it won't work in humid and coastal region.... Dry climate is what it needs... Just like electric cooler
@@roman5782 that depends on your climate if uts really hot it will work perfectly in cold areas may not be one degree difference
that man deserves a holiday
Ha ha . We need to learn to from him.
Yes he has Holidays on during festivals like Holi, Dusherra, Janmastami etc.
His workers deserve it more
@@studydesign2071 his workers would be nowhere if it wasn't for him
@@arjunarun9147 And he would be no where if they leave
For me India is such a thriving, bustling and INSPIRATIONAL Country, I quickly clicked on the video and so glad I did, Made in India and good on people's health and the environment! Jai Hind!
So proud to see the success and recognition of my old country. Brings tears of joy!
Marvel of India 👏👏
Wow! What can I say?! Intelligent man, brilliant craftsmanship, beautiful history, and amazing products.
Hello. Its such a innovative eco friendly idea 💡 and I believe he should get all incentives for export. This would work wonders worldwide. He is a genius. Lots of love ❤ from Mauritius 🇲🇺
Hats off to this entrepreneur. He deserves all the praise and appreciation. Yes rich or middle class will also buy fridge as it saves costly electricity
May this man continue to be bless. The work he is doing is much needed for the people and also the environment.
Saving atmosphere from harmful effects of Green House gases (CFC's), handkrafted refridgerator with No electricity shows how sustainable this product is....
CFCs haven't been used in fridges since the early 90s
@@MG2-_- modern refrigerator uses HFC,it effects are less still have some
Shouldn't we focus more on taking responsibility for watering plants and perennial trees on a regular basis instead?
Like.. actually plant perennial trees and nurture them = helping the environment
@@sigmameme2762 modern fridges have switched to R600a, it’s hfc free, non and non ozone depleting…
@@skylark1848 the ozone layer was restored because the focus for responsibility was on the producers in the past.
Climate change isn't gonna change now because now the responsibility has shifted to individual consumers.
That's so innovative and helpful for many families! Congratulations on your hard work paying off!
Living a better life in the present than in the past by keeping nature, environment and culture in mind is called modernity.👍
Impressive man. I really like the modern redesign of an ancient idea. Perfect for extending the life of fruit and vegetables and eggs and such items. the affordable price and the reason for his decision to make this evaporative cooler is an honourable one that truly deserves the reward of success. We use to make them in outback Australia using Hessian bags for the the wet sides of a box we could hang in a tree, but like all evaporative coolers they only work in a hot and dry environment.
But his fridge don't use electricity while to use the evaporative method you need electricity anyhow..
@@KoDeMondo No! No! WRONG! 100% "WRONG" Don't make comments if you have absolutely "NO IDEA" of what you're talking about. And never waste my time again...
@@KoDeMondo Why would evaporation require electricity. Do you honestly believe that when you hang your towel up to dry after a shower it is getting dry by electricity? Airflow can help speed up evaporation but that's something nature is not bad at providing if you pay attention.
@@dandaniels851 Clearly it was a misunderstanding because our usual electrical fridges DO need electricity for their evaporators to function. No need to be absolutely ridiculous about it really.
This is such a great coincidence, i read about this company in my book a few days ago and now randomly this video showed in my youtube feed. And this happens to everytime, everytime i read or learn about something(sci) , i start noticing it in the real world. This is awesome, i must put in my diary. 🥳
Nope... g👀gle is watching you.😂
@@Balwierie I read that in my textbook. And google don't have access to that. 😎
Me too, read about it on a Sunday magazine few years back
Few days ago i was talking to my family about something then i started getting ads abouy it. Probably our phone can hear us through microphone what we talk and it also reads our searching history.
No such thing as coincidence anymore bro. Google is watching & hearing you non-stop, left, right and centre
Depending on costs and availability, I can see this being a viable product in the future.
As someone who enjoys city life, I found that I actually prefer to shop more often and for less food. While I still see myself needing a freezer, This could be a viable solution that uses no electricity and would definitely be enough to keep produce fresh for a couple days. Especially in a more temperate climate.
For working well, these clay fridges need a very high rate of evaporation of the water, so the most convenient climate is rather hot and very dry.
This fridge won't keep food fresh in an equatorial climate.
Water in mud pots taste great especially in hot places like chennai
I miss the cool water I get from a pot!
The refrigerator is a amazing invention. I would love to buy one but I'm guessing the shipping alone would cost way more than the item.
No bro won't be much
Also would pollute more than an electical refigzrator
@@Lrripper What? You do know that electrical refrigerators need to be shipped too and have tons of rare earth materials used in its components?
@@baumi8125 yeah true
Check at "Patel brother" near you.
Absolutely wonderful most of the time when someone invents a new product They don't sell it at a reasonable price. They come up all sorts of reasons of why they have to sell it at a very hight price. Good for you for being so thoughtful and generous. God bless you for not allowing greed to take over.
Best of wishes.
In India everyone have a earthen pot for water, we prefer drinking from pot rather than refrigerator
That’s not true. Don’t spread this bullshit.
@@X_VSN it's true
Same here.
My parents prefer drinking water from earthen pot most of the time
@@X_VSN it's true
@@X_VSN he is taking about common Indian not angrez Indians
Got to love this man's energy. I hope he can continue his success.
He didn't make a fridge. He made an evaporative cooler. 72F isn't going to keep anything fresh, the cooler will just keep things from becoming dried out.
22 Celsius.
His move on the innovation is great ✨
I wouldnt call it innovative
@@IceWotor no one cares about your opinion
@@IceWotor yup
This is eco friendly and nice. Best way to protect environment from degradation.
It would be nice if they explained how the "fridge" supposedly works, I'm guessing it's using water evaporation but that wouldn't do much and would likely develop mold
I love ceramic product and this video is really satisfy to watch
This is so awesome!!! What an incredible innovator and passionate CEO who obviously also cares about his employees as well as his products.
Good for you Sir, you have keep your family business alive, employ many people, helped the poor plus the environment!
I absolutely love this man's invention it will save so many from getting sick from spoiled food because he cared about his people.💗
He is the real CEO. Building things and working on the ground.
Not like the CEOs whose only focus is money/shares making, by hook or crook.
This should be appreciated, people like him inspires many youths to contribute in nation building while making things sustainable and less polluted.
So inspiring , he has taken his family business to extreme level of hope ..
Wow! Much admiration and respect from Australia.
I hope Mr Mansukhbhai and his family and workers have great success.
A WIRELESS PERPETUAL ENERGY fridge/freezer would make EVERYONE AROUND THE WORLD HAPPY.
BUILD THAT.
Excellent video production & showed how ceramic industry can thrive even with industrialization. Brilliant CEO.
This entrepreneur is so inspiring . India should give him an award .
It's so amazing that Indians with their minds & Jugaad are ruling everywhere.
In this time of war in Ukraine, sanctions on Russian super-rich oligarchs and India's stance on Russia - you may be interested in this historical story about how Britain's industrial revolution and wealth was directly correlated with the British looting, pauperization and deindustrialization of India [and the creation of the 'First' and 'Third' world] which I have been telling the British [where I live]:
Robert Clive returned from Bengal with his 'loot' [the Hindi word for plunder] as the richest [non-monarch] man in Europe (Open University online estimates his 'loot' at £100 million at today's rates). His East India Co. mafiosi henchmen became the new super-rich 'nobs' (from nawabs/'nabobs') and often bought up parliamentary seats - the Pitt family made their fortune looting India. Meanwhile, 1/3 of the population of Bengal Province [inc. modern Orissa and Bihar] - some 10 million died in the Great Bengal Famine of 1770 due to the rapacity of the Brits. Richard Becher [relative of William M. Thackeray] had predicted this 'Ruin of Bengal' which had been the richest province in Mughal India [which had 27% of global GDP before British occupation]. The Ruin of Bengal also led to economic crisis in Europe as dozens of banks collapsed in days as looted Indian wealth dried up for a while and Adam Smith had to delay his 'Wealth of Nations'.
As research published by Columbia UP showed in 2018, the British stole some US$45 Trillion from India over two centuries which financed the Industrial Revolution and much else in Britain and its white settler colonies [see Jason Hickel's article on Al Jazeera online which also discusses how Britain lies about this history]. They also killed tens of millions of Indians by exporting India's foodgrains for British Food Security and profit including the setting up of Death Camps which gave less starvation rations than Buchenwald for hard labour to victims of the 1877 Madras Famine killing 94% of inmates - 7 million in total died [whilst record amounts of exports of Indian foodgrains lowered prices for Westerners]. George Orwell wrote (The Road to Wigan Pier) that 100 million Indians must be forced to the edge of starvation so that the British can live the way that they do. The last of these famines were due to the war crimes of Winston Churchill in Bengal in 1942-3 [including stopping Food Aid from other countries reaching Bengal after British cover-ups were blown -- even Nazis allowed such food aid in Greece in 1941]. Yet the British [including Churchill worshipping historian and journalist Dominic Sandbrook points to Stalin's famine in Ukraine [causing death by starvation] as an outrage - as if the British never did the same and many times over 200 years].
The British also deindustrialized India which had dominated manufacturing exports in textiles. H.H. Wilson wrote in 1853 that Manchester and Paisley could not have risen, even with steam power without the systematic elimination of competition from cheaper and superior Indian handloom cottons. This included the breaking of weavers' fingers and the cutting off of thumbs of weavers of Dhaka Muslin [a highly-prized elite cloth which which cost many times the price of silk] as well as tariff barriers and creating a Captive Market for British goods. Governor General William Bentinck wrote that the plains of India are bleached with the bones of her weavers. In the 1790s English experts declared Indian Wootz the best steel in the world and Sheffield copied its techniques but Indian steelmaking was stifled to suppress competition. India had been a major shipbuilder and continued to be in the early British-rule - the oldest seaworthy ship in the Royal Navy is HMS Trincomalee built in 1817 by an Indian company in Bombay of superior Indian teak. But soon afterwards, British shipbuilders stopped shipbuilding competition in India. As Shashi Tharoor tells us in Inglorious Empire, Indian engineers showed that they could design and build locomotives and thus the Brits stopped such manufacturing as well. Even during the 1939-45 war [when British Empire admirer Hitler wanted to make Ukraine and Russia Germany's 'India'], the British refused US plans to make aircraft factories in India (to fight Japan) as they did not want an independent India postwar to compete.
After the war the British [and the postwar USA - following George Kennan's strategy of holding Asia down as poor compared to the West - whilst giving Marshall Aid to redevelop Europe] refused to help India build a steelmill at Bhilai saying stick to your traditional raw materials! The Brits created the First World/Third World schism and tried to maintain it. It was the USSR that stepped in and helped build Bhilai. They also helped build India's first Institute of Technology at Kharagpur and an antibiotic factory etc. This - not arms sales is what led to the strong Indo-Soviet and then Indo-Russian partnership and friendship! In 1971 the USA and UK sent warships to support the Pakistani dictator perpetrating the largest genocide since 1945, killing 3 million in East Bengal. It was the Soviet Navy that warned off the USS Enterprise and Soviet threats to attack China stopped Mao from attacking India in support of Pakistan.
A hard working man is admirable. Salute to you sir.
i wish nothing but the best for him. growing up poor i remember when we’d have weeks without power and all our food would go bad so this issue is near and dear to me
A very wise person. The world needs people with this attitude.
I applaud your hard work and success. Don’t forget the poor! It’s good that the rich are buying the fridge to help the environment, but make sure the fridge remains affordable and available to the poor. It’s a daily life necessity for them!
I'm always amazed at their humbleness and hardworking culture.
Damn, i want a ceramic fridge. Thats dope.
When u post these kind of videos u should post their ph no or any shopping links it would be helpful for us to buy.
Kindly tell how to purchase
Just google the name.
So great to have these kind of traditional businesses to get international exposure.
The fridge without electricity is pure genius! How can we purchase it?? Amazing guy!
What an incredibly brilliant businessman he is!
He made sure his family business didn’t merely survive-but THRIVED!💖👍
Wait a min-
Gloryhole?
We had that refrigerator in my home 😎😎
Was it good? It sounds useful to use anywhere in the world to save energy!
kaise khareed sakte hain?
@@h3x3 my grandparents used to have such refrigerator , not exactly the same but similar, fruits , vegetables and dairy products can be stored for a week....
@@shravan5376 that's Great. I wish we had it in Germany. Why waste electricity especially in these times
@@h3x3 Naa, It only works in hot and dry climate. The Indian state in which it is made is known for that kind of climate. Even in India it isn't common to have that unless you come from a hot region.
What an absolute legend. You can guarantee his legacy will live on for generations to come.
It's all about moving ahead and he has worked hard at getting his ideas into production ..great work .
6:09 Definitely this should be the top 50 inventions of the decade or century.
It saves energy as no electricity is needed. It is cheaper. It is very very eco-friendly. No risk of leaking gases which happens in electric refrigerator and which are made with a high amount of carbon footprint. But this fridge probably has Negative carbon footprint as it is storing lot of carbon or atleast is carbon neutral or very small amount of carbon footprint. This gives more employment as more it is hand made as compared to other electric refrigerators.
I'd say the fridge is probably carbon-negative, if you factor in how much electricity isn't being used through its lifetime. Plus it'll probably last decades. Regular refrigerators are replaced, what, every 15 years? I could see one of these in a college dorm or studio apartment in the US
@@spooniesarah hmmmm.okk.
@@spooniesarah top 50 😂😂😂😂 good joke
@@BlackMamba-lt8oe how insecure are you lmao commenting everywhere
@@shayon8012 not insecure i am telling whats the truth 😂😂😂😂,looks the thr person in the video is ur father
Hats off to गुजराथी people. Very ingenious and wise.nature friendly, helping the skilled labor. Out really gelps our India.. both the industry and the labor. I will buy the fridge now.
This owner's view is the very definition of the word circumspect, and his products, his business, his employees, his country and the planet are all better for it.
God bless you.. I really loved how hard so many people work together to make such beautiful products.. 👌👌
This is wonderful what he has achieved for people, their work and working environment 🙏🏻🥰
Back to back 2 videos made on India! … what I’m I missing here?
Views. 🇮🇳
That's fantastic! Using evaporative cooling to "power" the fridge
Fantastic. Mansukbhai you are awesome. You not only stayed in the business , you gave livelihood to so many women and also helped the poor . Great service. God bless you. Jai Hind
This man deserves whatever success comes his way.
I love how entrepreneurs keep solving our problems. If we had more of them we would have no problems!
Humans will always have problems, If they dont have any they pick up a few
Isn't it entrepreneurs that cause problems too?
@@Robert-cu9bm I think if the entire world would be made up of entrepreneurs it would be paradise.
@@Robert-cu9bm yeah. he caused the problem by making his pottery unwanted - people wanted hand crafted objects but he fucked it up.
and the swamp cooler fridge isn't a new solution nor is it practical - poor people in villages are better off making one out of clay themselves.
This item is for rich hipsters. There is not going to be any one with this fridge who doesn't already have a regular fridge. Also look at how tiny it is. What will you keep there? One sack of potatoes would fill it up...
@@agnidas5816 he solved the local problem tho he said that his regular customers didn't have electric fridge... I think it's a good idea for rural places where people could rarely afford real fridge ...i mean people do keep water in clay pots to keep it cool but this is more improved version and people can store anything they like..
No idea how a fridge works without electricity and able to keep things cool, but this is really useful and good for the environment is all I know if want it for 😩
It only keep food cool but won't help in making ice cubes
This palace called wankaner city I am from this palace thank you for making this video...