This is an example of excellent work done in primitive conditions, by proud men who are earning a living in a physically demanding job in order to put food on the table for their families. I just hope their eyesight is ok when they get older.. Can you imagine living in those apartments behind the shop? good job guys from California , USA
Ive done exactly what they are doing and quite frankly they make a very hard job look easy. They work well together which is 75% of the job. Guy is a master with that torch ! As far as the sandals... fire rolls off of a bare hand... but gets stuck in a glove 🧤.... these guys are master craftsmen
Fire or sparks from the torch or welders are the least of the problem with them wearing sandals! Sharp steel edges don't "roll off" a foot, get the picture?? I completely agree that they work very very hard in primitive conditions for very little pay. Their safety standards are very poor. They don't have to much regard for people. If someone gets hurt, they push them off to the side & get someone else. There are plenty waiting to take their place.
@keithameerali9474 you don't understand what I'm asking Mr. AllCaps. I've watched quite a few of these from this part of the world. I know that a ⅛" 7018AC rd has the same tensile strength as a ⅛" 7018DC rod. I'm not saying there's anything wrong with AC Welding. I was just wondering if there was a reason why out of all the Welding clips I've seen from that part of the world I've not once seen a DC rod burned. I thought maybe it had something to do with the electricity grid over there or the machines or rods they had access to. I am genuinely curious. We only use AC for 60 series rods. Don't have a heart attack because I was curious. Everyone is different. We have different experiences.
@@solidrock6524 I understand your reply but DC is commonly used as you may not get electrocuted as with AC. Likely carelessly resting your electrode with AC will energise surrounding metal. Finally these guys may do a lot of work OFF GRID. Vehicles are powered by DC after AC is converted.
I ADMIRE THEM ,WITH MY HEART. JUST TO SEE THESE MEN WORKING ,DOING A GREAT JOB, BUT THE OWNERS WONT GET THEM SAFTY EQUIPMENT. IM A WELDER. EVEN WITH GEAR I STILL GET BURNS. GOD BLESS THEM. FK THE OWNERS
@@thepubliceye I'd rather say "careful and watchful", and then SOME PPE could (and SHOULD!) be used here (safety googles and ear protectors) but they cost money, so... Just recently I finished welding some steel rack/ stand for palette container - no biggie, just under 2 m high, 1 by 1.2 m wide/ long, 3 inch pipes as legs, 60 x 90 x 5 mm angle iron as the main frame plus some miscellaneous small pieces, all MIG welded - and I did it all, from cutting to prepping, to welding to painting in t-shirt, old trousers and SANDALS. I have regular "CE certified" working shoes with steel toes, I could use proper clothing too, but since the temperature outside was just under 30°C i decided I'd rather accept small occasional burn (or localised "welder's tan") than be sweating like a pig in all these clothes. And I got it all - UV light "burn"s on my forearm "between the end of glove cuff and beginning of T-shirt sleeve" and on my under-chin "between the mask and the T-shirt neck opening", plus some minor pinprick burns from these tiny balls of molten metal jumping around, but that's nothing to cry about - a minor discomfort, a trade off, if you will, for a greater overall comfort. But regardless of all this folly I always used safety goggles, welding mask, ear protection and gloves - I've learned the hard way, many years back, what a single, small speck flying off the grinding disc can do to your eye. (Spoiler alert - no fun at all.)
@@thepubliceyeThey are what? Smart enough to NOT use safety gear? No, they are not RICH enough to use them. You are talking completely nonsense. Incan assure you that would use them if they could. And also, there is no such a thing as „western safety shoes“. Everyone who can afford them, uses them.
You mean this CAD part? (CAD = Cardboard Aided Design). Probably some rejected sheets from some print house doing printing for some French company - maybe some typo, smudge or missing/ mismatch colour - they (the printing shop) can't send it to customer, it's no longer good for any printing, so they sell it for pennies for another uses - like this one. In this part of the world hardly anything goes to waste - I've seen a paper bags (small ones) in India (this here is Pakistan, so "close enough") being made from old newspapers, connecting strips in electric heaters being made from old tins cut to strips, and all sort of other "upcycling".
This is an example of excellent work done in primitive conditions, by proud men who are earning a living in a physically demanding job in order to put food on the table for their families. I just hope their eyesight is ok when they get older.. Can you imagine living in those apartments behind the shop? good job guys from California , USA
Nice to see they all have their steel toed sandles on !!
You mean "sandals", right? ;-)
Ive done exactly what they are doing and quite frankly they make a very hard job look easy. They work well together which is 75% of the job. Guy is a master with that torch ! As far as the sandals... fire rolls off of a bare hand... but gets stuck in a glove 🧤.... these guys are master craftsmen
Fire or sparks from the torch or welders are the least of the problem with them wearing sandals!
Sharp steel edges don't "roll off" a foot, get the picture??
I completely agree that they work very very hard in primitive conditions for very little pay.
Their safety standards are very poor. They don't have to much regard for people. If someone gets hurt, they push them off to the side & get someone else. There are plenty waiting to take their place.
I agree about the guy with the torch, he did a beautiful job cutting the steel.
Love to see the kids working wish it was like that in the west
Amazes me so little equipment with the basic welding and cutting gear to produce great work, Marvellous 🇬🇧.
Parabéns, ficou ótimo. 👍👏👏👏👏
I Love there workingshoes😂...wonna have some...😊
They all make a good team, in fact they all look alike, it seems like it's just one person doing all the work. Like willy Wonka factory
There is no use of any safety equipment, so why not be afraid for yourselves
Ótimo trabalho!!
These lad's are so good at one handed welding. I couldn't do it, i shake too much.😂❤Ruth
Молодцы, класс. Кто они по нации с какого континента кто знает?
Пакистан
Pakistan.
these guys eat up with flash burn. i think i've seen 1 glove the entire video
Parabéns pelo trabalho tão importante
Ich habe viele Laderschaufeln repariert nur wenn ich die Sandalen sehe wird mir Bange um meine Füße.
Sicherheits-Flip-Flops!!👍
Đẳng cấp đó bạn ❤
👍
How do I contact these people? I really want to connect with someone
Chin. On. Knee. 🤔
I do wonder why its always AC only machines.??? Never DC???
YOU NEED AC GENERATORS TO PRODUCE DC FOR ARC WELDING. LEARN !
Simple, cheap - good ol' buzzbox. Gets the job done on a budget.
@keithameerali9474 you don't understand what I'm asking Mr. AllCaps. I've watched quite a few of these from this part of the world. I know that a ⅛" 7018AC rd has the same tensile strength as a ⅛" 7018DC rod. I'm not saying there's anything wrong with AC Welding. I was just wondering if there was a reason why out of all the Welding clips I've seen from that part of the world I've not once seen a DC rod burned. I thought maybe it had something to do with the electricity grid over there or the machines or rods they had access to. I am genuinely curious. We only use AC for 60 series rods. Don't have a heart attack because I was curious. Everyone is different. We have different experiences.
@@solidrock6524 I understand your reply but DC is commonly used as you may not get electrocuted as with AC.
Likely carelessly resting your electrode with AC will energise surrounding metal.
Finally these guys may do a lot of work OFF GRID. Vehicles are powered by DC after AC is converted.
These lads are very good at one handed welding. I couldn't do that I shake too much.😂❤Ruth
I ADMIRE THEM ,WITH MY HEART. JUST TO SEE THESE MEN WORKING ,DOING A GREAT JOB, BUT THE OWNERS WONT GET THEM SAFTY EQUIPMENT. IM A WELDER. EVEN WITH GEAR I STILL GET BURNS. GOD BLESS THEM. FK THE OWNERS
Where the
He'll is osha..
Тб на 0 не пер рук очки при работе с болгаркой не слышали про обувь слов нет
Мастира своего дела.
All that dirt 😮...gross...!!!
No regard for safety!
Haben doch alle sicherheitssandalen an😢
They are smart enough to get by without Western safety shoes. I'm 100% sure they could use them if they needed them.
@@thepubliceye I'd rather say "careful and watchful", and then SOME PPE could (and SHOULD!) be used here (safety googles and ear protectors) but they cost money, so...
Just recently I finished welding some steel rack/ stand for palette container - no biggie, just under 2 m high, 1 by 1.2 m wide/ long, 3 inch pipes as legs, 60 x 90 x 5 mm angle iron as the main frame plus some miscellaneous small pieces, all MIG welded - and I did it all, from cutting to prepping, to welding to painting in t-shirt, old trousers and SANDALS. I have regular "CE certified" working shoes with steel toes, I could use proper clothing too, but since the temperature outside was just under 30°C i decided I'd rather accept small occasional burn (or localised "welder's tan") than be sweating like a pig in all these clothes.
And I got it all - UV light "burn"s on my forearm "between the end of glove cuff and beginning of T-shirt sleeve" and on my under-chin "between the mask and the T-shirt neck opening", plus some minor pinprick burns from these tiny balls of molten metal jumping around, but that's nothing to cry about - a minor discomfort, a trade off, if you will, for a greater overall comfort. But regardless of all this folly I always used safety goggles, welding mask, ear protection and gloves - I've learned the hard way, many years back, what a single, small speck flying off the grinding disc can do to your eye. (Spoiler alert - no fun at all.)
@@thepubliceyeThey are what? Smart enough to NOT use safety gear? No, they are not RICH enough to use them. You are talking completely nonsense. Incan assure you that would use them if they could.
And also, there is no such a thing as „western safety shoes“. Everyone who can afford them, uses them.
ou donc a t'il eu un carton pizza écrit en français?
You mean this CAD part? (CAD = Cardboard Aided Design). Probably some rejected sheets from some print house doing printing for some French company - maybe some typo, smudge or missing/ mismatch colour - they (the printing shop) can't send it to customer, it's no longer good for any printing, so they sell it for pennies for another uses - like this one. In this part of the world hardly anything goes to waste - I've seen a paper bags (small ones) in India (this here is Pakistan, so "close enough") being made from old newspapers, connecting strips in electric heaters being made from old tins cut to strips, and all sort of other "upcycling".