For those who don't know, Japan is SERIOUS about recycling. Residents needs to properly sort their recycling into MANY different categories (i.e ferric metals, non-ferric metals, glass, PET bottles etc) often need to be treated prior (i.e labels and caps removed from PET bottles and washed) and are put out in specific days. All this means when it arrives at the recycling plant, it arrives all pre-sorted and ready for processing. From what I've heard, there's a LOT of cost involved with sorting mixed recyclables, and apparently in countries that use mixed recycling, a lot of it just gets burned due to said cost. This is probably why recently, a lot of PET bottles in Japan now have "made from 100% recycle PET" on them. It's not financially-prohibitive to do this, as there's a plentiful source of recycled PET available.
As a tool & die maker and owner of a custom cnc shop this level of speed and perfection of all that equipment amazes me. Hip-hip-hooray for the tooling and manufacturing industry.
This is not something that has been pulled out of a hat but rather 300 years of trial and error. Still a lot of improvements that can be made such as casting the pieces to be much thinner slabs (the median barriers would also help the aluminum to cool off faster) and switching production to produce square cans instead. (8-12% better space utilization, far easier to mass produce and stronger containers)
И най-вече, всичко това може да се рециклира. Трябва да бъдем по-отговорни и винаги да отделяме на правилното място. За един по-добър и чист живот. Уважение, към всички работещи. Със Здраве.👍❤️
I love the overhead cranes in the aluminum re-foundry playing Beethoven as the warning siren. It alerts you to the movement of the machine that is different from the generic beeping of fork lift trucks and other vehicles.
US uses these too, its simple songs that catch your attention. When you have a bunch of static sound and machines working, its chaos and usually requires hearing protection due to prolonged exposure. A song stands out in this background noise when you have this hearing protection instead of just having to create an even louder blaring sound.
@@Kenneth_James spend many drops creating a well on the right side, go into a dry streak then have to cover up the hole only to find out your straight piece is coming up next: 5:53
In a Suzuki plant I visited, they sounded different classical music pieces to tell technicians, who were on bicycles, where they were needed. Total respect to the Japanese for innovation.
So that's what these sounds are between the background music? It looked like a notification when a crane was moving, similar to when a big truck is reversing.
@@herrpaukAlso, these are vastly different sounds than "factory sounds". Your brain eventually "mutes" noises you hear a lot, so the music is louder than you think because it's so different from "beep, errrr, fzzzzzz, doot dooot doot" that you hear normally on the floor.
5:06 - the best warning chime I've ever heard! Also I wonder what kind of milling machine they've had to use to surface those slabs before rolling. Must be huge ones.
Cant agree with you on the chimes, but you're talking about the milling marks at Roughly 7:52 yeah? Must have been a huge one by the look of the radius.
They're very common in Japan. We have one big industrial machine made in Japan that plays a generic Super-Mario-Like chiptune when the high voltage interlock panels are opened up. Gets a laugh every time it goes off.
Afffff, o viralatismo de parte do povo brasileiro é deprimente. O Brasil é um exemplo pro resto do mundo em reciclagem de latas de alumínio e esse povinho babando ovo pra gringo. Vão estudar!
A RECICLAGEM EM GERAL,FAZ PARTE DA VIDA DO PLANETA! EU NO BRASIL SOU RECICLADOR,TENHO ORGULHO DE VER AS PESSOAS AJUDAREM COM SUAS CONSCIÊNCIAS DE RECICLAR! PARABÉNS A ESSA GRANDE FÁBRICA JAPONESA,EU QUERO MTO CONHECER! ABRAÇOS...
I continue to be so impressed with the conservation efforts of Japan, its people and workers. I'm sure other countries have (or should) have studied your practices to duplicate them back in their own countries. Heartfelt thanks to everyone who participated in making this video!!!!! Watching from North Carolina, USA. ❤❤❤❤
Novelis aluminum does the same thing I worked there for 44 years where we produced aluminum into ingots then roll them down to a lot of different gauges for cans to rolled aluminum for boats and cars many other products
After all these years of faithful beer drinking I thought the tab on the top was riveted. After watching this video I didn't realize it was just pressed in place by a small button indent pressed in the lid that was flattened afterwards. I then peeled back the lid of the beer I was drinking to check. Lo and behold there was no rivet. Amazing. My beer can seems like a smart invention! Guess I'll have another beer and celebrate! 🍺🥳
Wait till you find out the engineering behind the tab, it actually changes its pivot point as you pull back on it to first let any excess air out the can and then the pivot changes to pull the can open fully. Cans are actually incredible, there is a full 11-minute video out there on it if you're interested that goes into detail
Por demás, interesante! Me gusta saber el origen o proceso de los objetos que simplifican la vida. Muchas gracias por brindarnos conocimiento y cultura. 👌🙌
I am a senior now, born and raised in western Canada. 67 years ago I was 8 years old. The first girl who fell in love with me at just 8 years of age was a Japanese girl whose family name was Tomiyama. The Tomiyama family was very large. (Google translate does not translate that name properly as the family pronounced it). I believe there were 12 children. They were incredibly good gardeners and had a very nice small acreage down by the river. They grew tons and tons of wonderful vegetables that they sold in our town. That was probably the healthiest food I have ever eaten. Then, when my family moved to a bigger city I met more Japanese children my age. I really liked all of them. They were so easy to become friends with and most of them were very good athletes... especially baseball. And the girls were pretty. I played baseball too and I usually had at least one Japanese team mate. There was also a famous Japanese judo teacher in my new city (Lethbridge, Alberta) and his name was Yoshio Senda. He taught Judo to Canadian kids for probably 40 years. I tell you these things so that you can understand why at a very young age, I loved Japanese people. I also saw 3 or 4 instances that proved that it was not smart to provoke a Japanese boy into a fight. They were very tough when they had to be. Although they never started a fight they usually finished it. At all other times they were very polite. People like that are so easy to respect. Now, about this video. What I see in this video reminds me about why I loved Japanese people even when I was an innocent child. In this video I see Japanese people who are very careful, very competent, very tidy with their work and very innovative. What a wonderful factory. We do have some amazing factories in Canada too, but I just wanted to express my high respect for Japanese people, both in Japan and in Canada. Thank you for creating this video. It was wonderful to watch. 💗
@@Ittou-Ogami Да да да как я вас понимаю всё не так и всё не как там . Вот недавно я сам убедился как у нас всё плохо . Относительно недавно все ругали Россию за козырьки на танках Противокумулятивный экран . Все кричали мангал сетка от кровати такое только в России могли придумать . И вот такая защита появляется на танках Меркава и все гак один запели . Вы путаете пушистое с мягким там технологии это разрабатывали ученые это шедевр ну и всё в таком духе . Одним словом вы не понимаете это другое .
Anybody else cracking up at the ice cream truck music used as warning sounds on the machinery? (Best example is 5:10, with lots of disjointed bits after that). It’s so familiar, but hearing it a few notes at a time just made me laugh! 😂
I wonder if they have to smooth the outside of the I got to make sure they get a smooth and even finish when rolling it. You’d think rolling it would smooth it out as it’s rolled out
The Japanese are so efficient Im surprised the manufacturing of the can and bottling plant are not under the same roof. I imagine the transportation of the empty cans is a delicate process to avoid any damage from shipping.
They are different factories, and most likely different owners. Besides, it's better to spread out anyway. To have 3 different processes under one roof, could be incredibly inefficient. What if the oven, that melts the aluminium has a day of downtime, due to difficulties? The other two processes would come to a hold.
Hundreds of cans that put together are quite durable and pretty light. Usually cans are transporting to packers on a regular trucks without any damage.
It's because in the past, it is a long supply chain to get something like this done. And then what happened is that, the entire end to end processing, came under the same bank. So then it becomes an entire "kereitsu"... or something like that. And then the buy and sell between Group A to Group B happens. This is why Japan is so efficient, cos they share and spread things out etc. And always monitor their production volume as well etc etc. And the rate of production etc etc. Well.. they managed from a mere 50 million people into a 100 million people today. So..... Similar to the UK too. Whereas everything was nationalised, and then different region made different components and then finally assembled at the end point. So everybody was and is in work etc. We have now moved on from that, but similar now but with "government work"... i.e. Food, education, healthcare, governing taxes etc.
アルミは「電気の塊」と言われるほど、ボーキサイトからの精錬にはエネルギーがいる。だから、こういうリサイクルは本当に大事だし素晴らしい仕事だ。
その通りですね!
日本の航空機産業にも寄与できる技術力ですね!
日本の技術力は素晴らしい😂 😂
厲害!令人欽佩 💪
😊
We are very happy that our proud company was featured on UA-cam !
Great! I work in a two piece aluminium can manufacturing company.same process
Amazing work. Fantastic to watch.
Recycling Aluminum is a big deal
It was fun to see, greetings from the Netherlands. 😀
Happy to be a witness to what you do.
リサイクルに携わる方々のおかげで、豊かで便利な生活が送れています。どうもありがとうございます。
逆だと思いますね、アルミはまだいいとして一般的なリサイクルはエネルギーや電力の無駄使いですよ。 リサイクルはエネルギーを3倍から5倍ほど無駄に使用してるので日本はいつまでたっても豊にならない
@@翼銀-j4h
先ず。日本は「充分に豊か」です。金銭的じゃないところも含めてね。
「一般的なリサイクルはエネルギーや電力の無駄使いですよ」の「一般的な」とは、どういう種類のものですか?教えてください。
リサイクル事業の採算が合わないのは当たり前の事ではわないかと。
それ故、リサイクル事業には補助金、その他も優遇されています。
リサイクルはエネルギーを3倍から5倍ほど無駄に使用しても、使った分の金払えばいいんじゃないの?そのための「補助金」なんだから。
あと、壊れた「機械」や「おもちゃ」を修理してして再利用するのも「リサイクル」といいますよね。儲かっているらしいですよ。
いずれにせよ、リサイクル事業は「国の基本方針」なので、国策は無視できませんよね?
@@翼銀-j4h様へ
リサイクル工程に於けるエネルギー使用量はそんなに非効率、なのでしょうか
?🙄。私は文化系なので良く解らないのですが
、出来ればどのくらいの割合か
?🙄教えて👂️
頂きたいと思います。🤔😕!
@@翼銀-j4h 資源は無限だと思ってるのか?この調子だと「必ず枯渇」する。
ま、アホな外国人には日本の考えや技術など一つも理解出来ないよね😂
畑で作物育ててる農家もこういう仕事もそうだけど「本当に社会に必要な仕事」だなって思います。
今年アルミ缶作る会社、それこそここに出てくるような会社に入社したんだけどさ、
研修でこういうとこ全部見せて貰ったのね。
すごいでしょ!すごいでしょ!って見て欲しかったから、こうやって動画になってるのすごい嬉しいです。
ほんとすごいわ、感動。これからの仕事も頑張ってな。
自分はアルミ缶作って10年目くらいです。
日々トラブルの対応や機械保全、オペレーター作業しています。
なんだかんだやりがいありますので頑張って下さい!
リサイクルがどれだけエネルギーを余計に消費してるか教えてほしいですね
圧延スラブで重さどれくらいなんやろ
缶ビール飲みながら視聴したのですが
缶ビールに更なる愛着が湧きました
значит ты пивной алкаш
機械は渋くて…作られる物は美しくて…このギャップがたまらん
製品を作る機械も凄いがそれを造る人や機械も本当にすごい思う。
普段の生活の中で何気なく買っている商品や道具等が数多くの人の手で作られていることを
改めて認識しますね。「ご安全に!」
For those who don't know, Japan is SERIOUS about recycling. Residents needs to properly sort their recycling into MANY different categories (i.e ferric metals, non-ferric metals, glass, PET bottles etc) often need to be treated prior (i.e labels and caps removed from PET bottles and washed) and are put out in specific days. All this means when it arrives at the recycling plant, it arrives all pre-sorted and ready for processing.
From what I've heard, there's a LOT of cost involved with sorting mixed recyclables, and apparently in countries that use mixed recycling, a lot of it just gets burned due to said cost. This is probably why recently, a lot of PET bottles in Japan now have "made from 100% recycle PET" on them. It's not financially-prohibitive to do this, as there's a plentiful source of recycled PET available.
They're serious about that, but then it comes to overfishing.....
@BornIn1500 yeah recycling is good for the environment. Harpooning whales not so much
@@Peas_and_Carrots and Fukushima nuclear water waste too
はい、私は東京に住んでいますが、ごみの分別はとても複雑です。
分別を間違えるとゴミは収集されず、近所の人に迷惑をかけることになります。
さらに東京のように予算がある街より、地方の小規模な街のほうが分別が複雑になる傾向があります。ゴミの処理予算を削減するためです。
Only the americans are not serious about recycling. The rest of the world are moving ahead.
素晴らしい!見入ってしまった。
ほぼほぼ機械化されているが、最後にビニール袋かけてる人がいてちょっとホッとした。
それにしても、こんな機械を作る人間の知恵ってのは改めて感心する。
特に日本では、手作業がオートメーションとプロセスに見られる機械部品に置き換えられました。そうでない場合、アルミニウムの投与量を得るために何千人もの労働者が同じプロセスを実行しなければなりませんでした。
As a tool & die maker and owner of a custom cnc shop this level of speed and perfection of all that equipment amazes me. Hip-hip-hooray for the tooling and manufacturing industry.
再利用することの美しさを感じた✨
フォークマンが荷台にアルミを綺麗に載せてくのがいい!
下のアルミにぶつけない様にフォークを抜く瞬間なんか感動する。
吊るしアームで綺麗にアルミを降ろしていく所もいいね!
フォークリフトは慣れると数センチ単位で細かい作業ができますよ
日本の技術が、この分野で大きく活かされてほしい。👶👶たくさん海外から、原材料を買って、輸入する。大変なこと。😌😌限りある資源、次の世代に。🎉🎉
使用済み缶をリサイクルして新しい缶に変える経験を共有してくれた Boss Qu に感謝します。これは本当に素晴らしいことです。
戦士には常に成功が与えられます...
装置産業っていつ見ても惚れ惚れする。
工場見学は何時観ても飽きないなぁ。
こうしてアルミ缶は私たちの元に届けられる。
こういう工場を設計した人すごすぎ。
有難う
And all people involved in the process of creating and developing. 🎉
AQ pernah kerja disini alumindo dan sekarang bangkrut
このプロセスを見ていると
関心と有り難さを改めて感じました。
いつもただただ凄いなぁ…と思うばかり。
アルミ缶のリサイクルはとても身近で子供の頃から廃品回収で集めていたもの。こうやって集められた物がどうなるのか知れる機会があると、とても嬉しくなりますね。
Hello
Cudownie to wszystko skonstruowane te maszyny podziwiam tych ludzi co to wszystko wdrożyli i uruchomili 👍
They should show this to kids in all schools. It would seriously encourage recycling.
私の工場は6割ハイボール、1割ビール缶作っとるから全国のアル中さんの為に日夜頑張ってます。
たまに未発売の新作フレーバー柄も流れてますよ〜
It just amazes me, the people who build these machines and actually put them together and how smart and mechanically inclined they are. INCREDIBLE!!!!
This is not something that has been pulled out of a hat but rather 300 years of trial and error. Still a lot of improvements that can be made such as casting the pieces to be much thinner slabs (the median barriers would also help the aluminum to cool off faster) and switching production to produce square cans instead. (8-12% better space utilization, far easier to mass produce and stronger containers)
@@Runefrag Welp, sounds to me that you have some designing to do to make it happen. Good luck..
You need to know that the process of making this machine started from the time of the prophet Adam... understand🫵🏿??
I can just about tie my shoelaces.
like every aluminum recycler? Wow
この機械を作り出してるのが凄い
5:08圧巻
8:21すごい圧延
こうして作られていく工程を観ていると感動します
本当にとても印象的でした
И най-вече, всичко това може да се рециклира. Трябва да бъдем по-отговорни и винаги да отделяме на правилното място. За един по-добър и чист живот. Уважение, към всички работещи. Със Здраве.👍❤️
アルミや鉄とかの鉱物資源は外国から買うしかない国なのでもっとリサイクルで有効に資源活用する事は大事です!
全ての機械が生き物のように動き、各工程を円滑に進める様は圧巻ですね…
ビールや飲み物飲んだ後も✨大事にリサイクルしなければと思いました 凄い技術ですね
Even their waste trucks are clean.
I love the Japanese culture 🗾
I love the overhead cranes in the aluminum re-foundry playing Beethoven as the warning siren. It alerts you to the movement of the machine that is different from the generic beeping of fork lift trucks and other vehicles.
Has Zojirushi expanded from singing rice cookers? Zojirushi Heavy Industries? :)
Beethoven would be amazed.
And still would die by the burden off overwhelming sound waves.
Козловой кран. Мостовой ходит по рельсам вдоль спроектированной на нужной высоте конструкции здания, отсеков машин, комплексов.
Only in Japan where you hear a warning alarm thats musical
Sounds like a nightmare
The creapy musical you hear seconds before Pennywise floats you away.
US uses these too, its simple songs that catch your attention. When you have a bunch of static sound and machines working, its chaos and usually requires hearing protection due to prolonged exposure. A song stands out in this background noise when you have this hearing protection instead of just having to create an even louder blaring sound.
should be Tetris music
@@Kenneth_James spend many drops creating a well on the right side, go into a dry streak then have to cover up the hole only to find out your straight piece is coming up next: 5:53
見入ってしまいました。面白かった。貴重な映像ありがとう。
In a Suzuki plant I visited, they sounded different classical music pieces to tell technicians, who were on bicycles, where they were needed. Total respect to the Japanese for innovation.
So that's what these sounds are between the background music? It looked like a notification when a crane was moving, similar to when a big truck is reversing.
@@herrpaukAlso, these are vastly different sounds than "factory sounds". Your brain eventually "mutes" noises you hear a lot, so the music is louder than you think because it's so different from "beep, errrr, fzzzzzz, doot dooot doot" that you hear normally on the floor.
@@herrpauk I thought the same. A beautiful song to remind workers that death awaits the unwary.
Dam, I thought they just used Mozart music to help focus more while using it as a reverse signal or when something is done. Interesting
That was quite impressive! It's amazing just how smart these people are who come up with the machinery that does this. Respect is in order here!
機械のリズムが母親のお腹にいた時の心音のようで落ち着きます☺️💞
5:06 - the best warning chime I've ever heard!
Also I wonder what kind of milling machine they've had to use to surface those slabs before rolling. Must be huge ones.
I see no evidence of milling on those slabs.
Cant agree with you on the chimes, but you're talking about the milling marks at Roughly 7:52 yeah? Must have been a huge one by the look of the radius.
@@--Zook--Well spotted! Thank you for the correction. Didn't expect such a gigantic radius.
They're very common in Japan. We have one big industrial machine made in Japan that plays a generic Super-Mario-Like chiptune when the high voltage interlock panels are opened up. Gets a laugh every time it goes off.
It's called a scalper. All ingots are scalped before they are rolled. At least that was the way it was done 20 years ago.
コメント欄の国際感は凄くて嬉しいです。
本当にどの工場でもエリーゼのために流れてる
流れてないけど
AGVとかに代表されるような動く装置にはかなりの確率で警告音代わりに採用されてますね
5:06
@@RN-xx7qfうわーお前みたいな奴だるいなぁ
Tremenda inteligencia del hombre. Extraordinario. Ojalá se ocupe más inteligencia para alcanzar la Paz en el mundo.
Japão é o maior exemplo para o resto do mundo, parabens ao povo japonês por reciclagem ♻️ 👏
O Brasil é o maior reciclador de latinhas do mundo, e o Japão usa o nosso alumínio 99% para confeccionar as moedas de ienes.
А у них вариантов нет 🚫один бамбук и то не везде 😅😅😅😅
Afffff, o viralatismo de parte do povo brasileiro é deprimente. O Brasil é um exemplo pro resto do mundo em reciclagem de latas de alumínio e esse povinho babando ovo pra gringo. Vão estudar!
I would guess that aluminium is the most recycled material on the planet!
A RECICLAGEM EM GERAL,FAZ PARTE DA VIDA DO PLANETA!
EU NO BRASIL SOU RECICLADOR,TENHO ORGULHO DE VER AS PESSOAS AJUDAREM COM SUAS CONSCIÊNCIAS DE RECICLAR!
PARABÉNS A ESSA GRANDE FÁBRICA JAPONESA,EU QUERO MTO
CONHECER!
ABRAÇOS...
Great process as always! This coverage is half the best I've ever seen!
I adore the cute warning sounds Japan uses for everything, so much style.
I believe the melody alarm the crane is using is a PATLITE EWS-xMH
Я живу на Урале. Изучаю Японскую философию. Японскую культуру. И не перестану восхищаться вами!🙏
не по скрепному не по путински ты себя ведешь
..а что такое путин? не пояснить, чтец?@@josephlagrange9531
Zа тобой уже Vыехали
Исчезни! Позорище МИРа!@@5gdtDm
Восточная философия очень далека от нас
見入ってしまった‥様々な工程の技巧(簡潔な美)にただただ感心!
Fantastic video! Thanks for sharing! Learned a lot and had many of my unanswered questions resolved. Superb production. Thanks again.
I continue to be so impressed with the conservation efforts of Japan, its people and workers. I'm sure other countries have (or should) have studied your practices to duplicate them back in their own countries. Heartfelt thanks to everyone who participated in making this video!!!!! Watching from North Carolina, USA. ❤❤❤❤
Novelis aluminum does the same thing I worked there for 44 years where we produced aluminum into ingots then roll them down to a lot of different gauges for cans to rolled aluminum for boats and cars many other products
After all these years of faithful beer drinking I thought the tab on the top was riveted. After watching this video I didn't realize it was just pressed in place by a small button indent pressed in the lid that was flattened afterwards. I then peeled back the lid of the beer I was drinking to check. Lo and behold there was no rivet. Amazing. My beer can seems like a smart invention! Guess I'll have another beer and celebrate! 🍺🥳
Wait till you find out the engineering behind the tab, it actually changes its pivot point as you pull back on it to first let any excess air out the can and then the pivot changes to pull the can open fully. Cans are actually incredible, there is a full 11-minute video out there on it if you're interested that goes into detail
@@MrPesht link to it?
@@kramler @MrPesht is likely referring to the Engineer Guy video.
Now I am interested, and will have to conduct research of my own!
Какое прекрасное сочетание работы ума и рук. Спасибо за видео.
めちゃ素晴らしいです👍
シェアしていただき有難うございます♪
こいう会社は一般の人には見られないので、嬉しいです☺️
日本の素晴らしいことは製品が完成するまで色んな会社の人に渡って完成するを見られて本当に素晴らしいです。
ほかの国だと我は我と、このようなシステムがないかも知りませんね。
このシステムがあれば地域の発展だけじゃなく国そのものの発展につながる。
皆んな学びればいいのに………何か残念な気持ちになります。私みたいな人が何処かの国の台とになったら絶対日本の様々な文哉を取り入れます。🤭
残念な事にそ言うのは慣れないから悔しいです!
كلامك على صواب ، اليابان قوة إقتصادية و صناعية ، و أتمنى أنه في يومٍ ما أن نصبح مثلكم ، تحية كبيرة لك و لكل اليابانيين ، أخوكم من المملكة المغربية.
Lovely comment. 😊
🙏
自分アルミ缶ですが、毎回ザオリクしていただきありがとうございます
Por demás, interesante! Me gusta saber el origen o proceso de los objetos que simplifican la vida. Muchas gracias por brindarnos conocimiento y cultura. 👌🙌
いやーホントにすごいなぁ。大阪の西成でも東京でもアルミ缶を自転車やリアカーで集めてくるおっちゃんのモノがこんな感じでリサイクルされるんだ。でも、それにしてもすっごい手間だなぁ。缶の塗装まで高温ガスで除去する工程まであるとは思わなかった。ドロドロに溶かした缶がそのまま金型でアルミ缶になると思ってたが違ってたわ。いろいろと手間がかかってお店で買うんだなぁと思った。これでもう缶の中に片づけと思ってゴミやつまようじを入れられないですね。途中で高温で燃えるのかもしれないけど、本当に全工程ごくろうさまと言いたい。ペットボトルもあったら見てみたいですね。
これらのマシンはクリエイティブな人々によって作られています
Industrial Engineers are the unsung heroes that make our standard of living possible. Great video.
Even in on the factory floor, the respect for a clean and tidy environment is evident. Should definitely be proud of their work here
Дорогая Япония, я восхищен тобой. Вы великие люди. Люблю вас бесконечно. 🙏🙏🙏
А как же путен и расея матушка
@@josephlagrange9531 А с чего ты решил, что я с ним?
идиот
操作ミスや機械トラブルでの損失がやばそうなのにフルオートではなく手動操作な部分も多いのが見てて凄いなと。尊敬しますね
リサイクルに出したアルミ缶がどうなるのか気になってたので、知れて良かったです。
同様にペットボトルなんかも行く末が知りたいです。
最近じゃペットボトルからペットボトルへのリサイクルを促進される法律が制定されたのもあって、ペットボトルtoペットボトルへの流れが強くなってます。
動画検索したら色々ありますよ?
Don't worry. Be happy.
こやって循環するのいいよねー
アルミの巻き取り、美し過ぎますね。
貴重な動画ありがとうございます。
見入ってしまいました。
アルテミラ株式会社に賛辞を送ります。
有難う御座います。
頭の中で中島みゆきの地上の星が流れてたよ♪
Sensacional, parabéns. Que Tecnologia. Muito bom 👍 Petrópolis-RJ Brasil
I am a senior now, born and raised in western Canada. 67 years ago I was 8 years old. The first girl who fell in love with me at just 8 years of age was a Japanese girl whose family name was Tomiyama. The Tomiyama family was very large. (Google translate does not translate that name properly as the family pronounced it). I believe there were 12 children. They were incredibly good gardeners and had a very nice small acreage down by the river. They grew tons and tons of wonderful vegetables that they sold in our town. That was probably the healthiest food I have ever eaten.
Then, when my family moved to a bigger city I met more Japanese children my age. I really liked all of them. They were so easy to become friends with and most of them were very good athletes... especially baseball. And the girls were pretty. I played baseball too and I usually had at least one Japanese team mate. There was also a famous Japanese judo teacher in my new city (Lethbridge, Alberta) and his name was Yoshio Senda. He taught Judo to Canadian kids for probably 40 years. I tell you these things so that you can understand why at a very young age, I loved Japanese people. I also saw 3 or 4 instances that proved that it was not smart to provoke a Japanese boy into a fight. They were very tough when they had to be. Although they never started a fight they usually finished it. At all other times they were very polite. People like that are so easy to respect.
Now, about this video. What I see in this video reminds me about why I loved Japanese people even when I was an innocent child. In this video I see Japanese people who are very careful, very competent, very tidy with their work and very innovative. What a wonderful factory. We do have some amazing factories in Canada too, but I just wanted to express my high respect for Japanese people, both in Japan and in Canada. Thank you for creating this video. It was wonderful to watch. 💗
I love the fairground music when the guy is playing UFO catcher with 100 tons of metal
Well done and for whats its worth highly impressed. What a facility. Turning what was waste into product. Thank you.
おっちゃんたちに感謝。
自宅に居ながらの工場見学 面白かったです。
見ていて気持ちがいい
Japan does everything so right, so good. I really admire the Japanese and their way of life. Tom in America.
人間ってすげえな
よくこんなん作るなあ
木の耐久力すごい
日本ではゴミさえもとてもきれいに整理されている👍🏻
Đáng khâm phục và kính nể, những người đã thiết kế và chế ra những cỗ máy tuyệt vời nhìn mà mê ly, không biết bao giờ đấy nước tôi có nhà máy như này
chừng nào cặn bã xã hội k còn tồn tại may ra
There is something absolutely gorgeous about those huge aluminum slabs
圧延コントロールセンターがかっこ良すぎるやろ!
Спасибо за видео.Нам есть чему поучиться у Японии в плане культуры переработки отходов.
А вы не в курсе что Япония перерабатывает маленькую часть отходов а остальные просто сжигает .
Сжигать отходы могут все и учится нечему .
@@Ittou-Ogami Да да да как я вас понимаю всё не так и всё не как там .
Вот недавно я сам убедился как у нас всё плохо . Относительно недавно все ругали Россию за козырьки на танках Противокумулятивный экран . Все кричали мангал сетка от кровати такое только в России могли придумать .
И вот такая защита появляется на танках Меркава и все гак один запели .
Вы путаете пушистое с мягким там технологии это разрабатывали ученые это шедевр ну и всё в таком духе .
Одним словом вы не понимаете это другое .
@@Ittou-Ogami А воду радиоактивную сливать можно то другое она отчищена .
@@simferopol58 ну что вы такой писимистичный 🤔..курортный сезон не удался ??🤔все наладится
Excellent production. Clear video and happy soundtrack. Thanks!
凄い設備ですね
I enjoy watching you all work truly awesome much love and respect ❤ remember progress daily
すばらしい技術だな。涙が出ない程度に感動した。
Automated to perfection, illuminating human errors, improving quality and recycling, love it, I use to drive forklifts, miss it.
Anybody else cracking up at the ice cream truck music used as warning sounds on the machinery? (Best example is 5:10, with lots of disjointed bits after that). It’s so familiar, but hearing it a few notes at a time just made me laugh! 😂
Recycling aluminum cans helps us reduce waste in the environment. I like this factory.
Người Nhật tận dụng tối đa, Những lon bia đã qua sử dụng, Tái chế lại.. OK 🇯🇵👍.
These machines are the unsung heroes of modern infrastructure. Truly remarkable
It appeared that the large cast ingot was milled prior to rolling, that would be interesting to see that process as well. Thanks for the video
I wonder if they have to smooth the outside of the I got to make sure they get a smooth and even finish when rolling it. You’d think rolling it would smooth it out as it’s rolled out
@@notreallyme425 You have to remove the external scale prior to rolling
*I also dream of opening a waste recycling plant. tell me how?)* 😊😊😊
Japanese has been doing well in recycle industry, and environment protection
Great recycled products. I didn't think it was made like that
これらの機械を作る機械があるとか考え出すと
夜しか眠れなくなる
By far, the best video I've seen regarding aluminum recycling. Thank you!
마음이 편안해진다
As someone who works in a can plant in the UK I always wanted to know how our coils were made! We also use stolle for our die set!!
The Japanese are so efficient Im surprised the manufacturing of the can and bottling plant are not under the same roof. I imagine the transportation of the empty cans is a delicate process to avoid any damage from shipping.
They are different factories, and most likely different owners.
Besides, it's better to spread out anyway. To have 3 different processes under one roof, could be incredibly inefficient. What if the oven, that melts the aluminium has a day of downtime, due to difficulties? The other two processes would come to a hold.
Hundreds of cans that put together are quite durable and pretty light. Usually cans are transporting to packers on a regular trucks without any damage.
It's because in the past, it is a long supply chain to get something like this done. And then what happened is that, the entire end to end processing, came under the same bank. So then it becomes an entire "kereitsu"... or something like that. And then the buy and sell between Group A to Group B happens. This is why Japan is so efficient, cos they share and spread things out etc. And always monitor their production volume as well etc etc. And the rate of production etc etc. Well.. they managed from a mere 50 million people into a 100 million people today. So..... Similar to the UK too. Whereas everything was nationalised, and then different region made different components and then finally assembled at the end point. So everybody was and is in work etc. We have now moved on from that, but similar now but with "government work"... i.e. Food, education, healthcare, governing taxes etc.
スゲェ…
世界は誰かの仕事でできている…って実感する
何気に飲んでた缶ジュースも、こうやっていろんなプロセスを経て俺の手に届いてだよなぁ…
Người Nhật, Làm như vậy rất tuyệt vời. Tận dụng tối đa để có thu nhập..🇯🇵👍.