I am 80 yrs. Old machinist-welder. I have worked with some of these guy and am still impressed with what they can accomplish(with what they have to work with). I think maybe the most dangerous part of their day is getting to work on their bicycle!
А вот здесь я сильно сомневаюсь , на хорошем станке они вообще ни чего не смогут сделать пока не разберут его до такого же состояния , а куда они линейку будут прикладывать а из чудо измерительные приборы ))!!!!
Who else on here wants to just visit these awesome guys, have a nice cup of tea and take in the smells and sounds of this crazy old school workshop? The level of skill here using a steel rule and a pair of calipers is epic. Totally in awe. This is the art of engineering and the art of making YT content - I am hooked on this stuff and watch it every other day. Now on to my own videos... haha😅 I wish my videos were as interesting as this. Well done guys👍🙂
Any young person would be smart to do an apprenticeship under this dude he knows what he's doing for sure. No fancy tools just a caliper chalk and lathe.
That machinist at the lathe gets a huge thumbs up. Props also to the forge workers. Top billing to the camera work and especially the editor. Very hypnotic .
Forging at its truest form! Respect to each person whos vaporized sweat and blood goes into making that steel. I was a tool and die maker, and later Fab lead. We used this steel every day, with few knowing just what goes into the "Real" manual forging process from the last century. Hats off, it might be a bit lacking in skillsets and tools, but makes up for it with shear force of will, weight, patience and tenacity. Git er done! Wooot!
I work in some machine shops here in the US in Seattle and you'd be surprised they don't look much better than this. They are definitely a little better but using old machines from the early 1900's I was building extremely high tolerance high-value hydraulic fittings for hydraulic cylinders
These shops in Pakistan look like this because there really was not much investment after the 60s. It's hard to imagine but Pakistan was the first Asian country to produce a microchip. But then for some reason people just stopped investing in industry and skilled labor moved to Europe and the Gulf Arab countries for more lucrative opportunities. Flooding of cheap products from China also made a big impact.
The thing with those old machines is that given proper maintenance they are as good as any new/mordem machine. Also you can modernize them by adding servo motors and controllers.
In the 1950's and 60's my father did exactly this job at a factory in the UK. Probably the conditions back then were similar to what you see here although these days it's very, very different. I remember that one time there was an accident where one of the billets slipped from the hoist and rolled, breaking my father's leg. He was off work for quite a while but he did get sick-pay as required by law here even then.
@@johnknoefler :D the glasses and shoes will do nothing in an accident. The safety is shit, like Verruca said this is like back in the old days when people didn't know any better.
Konventionelles Drehen in Perfektion. Ein wahrer "Drehmeister". Habe das 1962 auch gelernt. Ein schöner Beruf, den ich mit .75 Jahren noch in Teilzeit ausübe, weil er Spass macht.
It shows that even when things and the workspace look like crap one can accomplish a lot! Respect for these hard-working men that creates parts out of a few lumps of steel. Good teamwork and work ethics make the difference here. I love how he has installed a contra weight on the chuck to balance the load and go easy on the main bearings.
I am always amazed at the manufacturing capability of these guys in the far east. You look at what they have to work with and it is mind boggling what they can do. The acetylene cutting outfit showed a hose attached with a screw clamp in one frame, looking around there is a lot more that western culture would have a fit about, but these guys go right to work and make do.
@@MichaelMantion Automation just makes stuff cheaper and faster - not necessarily better. All the difference is the guy in front of the machine. Also not ever part requires top notch precicion - good enough is the way to go. This is developing world - labor is CHEAP there and the infrastucture to operate modern CNC machines and stuff is JUST NOT THERE. In their environment they HAVE marketable skills. This might go right over your head but i post it anyways, maybe you get it once they compete for you job lol.
WOW 😳 what craftsmanship to turn a hunk of metal into a crankshaft. A master of workmanship and artist. Everyone working together to get the job done. Now that's team work......
@@scorpion2nz Ya im going to say with confidence that they arent better machinists than me lol. For one thing i actually have accurate measuring tools and for another thing im not some 3rd world invalid. Nice "steel toe" sandals theyre rocking though ha ha ha.
Man that foundry work looks like it could put the hurt on you in many different ways! These guys are great at their craft. I love watching these get down and dirty vids!
Total respect from a 37 year American machinist. Great job and risk or not this guy still has all of his fingers. Imagine back in the 30’s and up til the 60’s before numerical control came around, thousands of machinist in dozens of shops making crankshafts in a similar fashion here in the States. Thats even more mind boggling to me. Especially wartime production.
@@Denis383479256 возможно это и не такое надёжное и технология где-то не соблюдена, но ведь известно если негде взять деталь её нужно сделать самому , а я уважаю людей которые могут это сделать сами 😃👍
La capacitá c'é. Purtroppo gli strumenti sono quello che sono. Quella torretta del tornio fletteva di mezzo centimetro. Credo sia un miracolo riuscire ad essere precisi. Credo che tutto sia dovuto al conoscere la macchina, io usavo un tornio che aveva giochi tra una direzione e l'altra ma sapendolo mi adeguavo e non mi facevo imbrogliare 😅😅😅
Aggiungo che forse non producono pezzi da utilizzare direttamente. Per me creano la base per poi essere lavorati in qualche altro paese, anche perché i trattamenti sul materiale ed i bilanciamenti non li puoi fare al tornio. In un paese dove usi robot il tempo é denaro e tenere un robot a "macinare acciaio" é un costo inutile, anche perché solo gli utensili di alta tecnologia costano molto piú del componente. In quei paesi la manodopera costa niente, per loro non é la " l'indice di produttivitá" il problema, quindi possono dedicarci tanto tempo che per esempio, qui dove sono io, quella lavorazione sarebbe costata 20 volte il pezzo 😂
My alleged son watches these videos all the time. I just found this out when he came to visit me this week. As a machinist some of the things they do truly impress me.
@@maccoretti we know who his real father is. He and the mother divorced when their son was 1 and neither wanted him. He came to live with his grandparents who are my neighbors. He followed me around a lot when he was little.
I'm usually not impressed by these videos, but this was actually really good. Machinist used simple lathe and math to make a high grade machine component 👍
Yes the lathe operator has a lot of knowledge to pull that off, goes to show what you can do with a lathe. If the final tolerances, balance and bearings are well done on the shaft it could actually last a long time.
Imposible to get presicion.. The shape is good looking but will not functioning well since low accuracy.. This such part need tolerance until 1/1000 inch, which impossible made by manual instead of CNC
@@ekosantoso4342 I have held tenths on a manual lathe many times, if you don't think you could hold a thousandth on a manual lathe you don't know what your talking about, that said this lathe likely can not hold that tight of a tolerance but most of the time material is left on and the final machining it on a cylindrical grinder. With a bit of sanding using strips of emery cloth and a flat backing bar or file you can get very high precision and surface finish on a manual lathe but for production parts it is usually easier and faster to grind them.
@@phillhuddleston9445 I am sure you can do that with a simple cylindrical or round shaft.. But for a crankshaft, I don't think so since the centre of main shaft is different with journal shaft..
@@phillhuddleston9445 Yes we made precision parts long before CNC came along. It wasn't as easy, but skilled people did it routinely. I'm not seeing a lot of precision skills in this video however. Just hogging out a crankshaft shaped object. I especially liked how he used a carpenters level to set the rotation.
Интересно, что там по допускам? Учитывая резцедержатель, а точнее его состояние, где-то ±1см? Ну и конечно супер точная линейка, а еще божественный способ определения центров.
Похоже это "грубая" подготовка а потом уже где-то доводят до ума как говориться)) хоть и не спец но понимаю что на таком станке слишком большие допуски. Но всё равно было интересно посмотреть как это делают.
@@Jonnycage1111 согласен, посмотреть было интересно, но так или иначе много непонятных моментов: работа линейкой при наличии штангенциркуля; центра- при такой длине и диаметре заготовки погрешность в миллиметр на центре приведет к паре тройке миллиметров на заготовке(а учитывая что он их кронциркулем размечал, то думаю что миллиметр не предел).
@@TheAmd481 Вопрос, скорее не в измерении 2 метров, а в разметке. Да, есть и 2м штангенциркули :) Хотя если колено дальше пойдет на шлифовку - то такая точность на заготовке вполне допустима. В целом - на этом производстве коленвалы будут более долговечные, чем в другом видосе, где заготовки льют из чугуна и отходов штамповки в качестве легирующей добавки.
CADA vez qué Veo los vídeos de estás Personas me asombro de sus técnicas de trabajo tan simples y llenas de exito mucha humildad y sabiduría 🔥🔥🙄🙄❤️❤️ God bless
As a South African i get so excited seeing videos like these these people at least have electricity to do their craft we have gone from Africas industrial super power to the dust bin of history .. im sure these guys in flip flops could build us powerstations in no time
Респект мужики. Работа капитальная. Не надо никаких микрометров и так далее. Всё и без этого будет работать. 👍👍👍 Ещё бы платили этим людям нормально и было бы всё в ажуре. Но к сожалению они только копейки получат. Если бы они в Европе кому нибудь такое выточили, то им бы долго можно было не работать а кайфовать. Какая несправедливость. Дай бог мужикам здоровья.
Точат хер пойми с какими допусками. Как он мерит, то похоже там плюс минус пару миллиметров. 🤦♂️ У нас в пту самые двоечники и то гораздо точнее Тут все чистотна опыте..
@@vitek8760 Да ну?! Думаю большая половина человечества не справилась бы с этой задачей. Да и по времени...похоже довольно много времени это занимает а народ привык за столом на компуктере "работать" )) А тут часами за станком надо стоять, что-то крутить и вертеть постоянно, мерить, проверять.
Тоже как-то не понял про измерения размеров по линейке. Либо он на черновую с припусками по несколько миллиметров. Потом это ещё в чистовую обточить, прошлифовать... Но, вроде из отливки обычно точат, чтобы быстрее.
Тебе приятно , а я чуть не окуел ! Центр не вращается , на масле всё держится . Так шлифуют у нас , до 3х-4х десяток , а тут точат . К такому станку подходить -- нужно с родными прощаться каждое утро .
As astounding as it may seem to turn out a crank on a wornout manual lathe,I'm amazed how all the workmen still had their hands and feet intact wearing flipflops.
There are many of these types of videos on UA-cam of Third world countries doing machine work. Parts of the video get sped up, and the talking sounds like children talking. I can't help but picture children playing around all that dangerous machinery while their fathers are working away.
These men are great, capable of doing the impossible. I have never seen anything like them in my life. With simple means, they make great and important things from iron in industry. You are a great people and your country should be proud of you. How I wish we had people like you in Morocco. All the best to you, great people. You are brave and strong men
Amazing, they are cutting up the crankshaft of a huge engine, probably out of a large ship, to use to forge another small crankshaft. The resourcefulness of these people is amazing and the fact the can repurpose all these materials from ship breaking yards rather than just melting them down and starting over is astonishing.
I like how they describe the workers as expert machinists, then proceed to show them operating a 75 year old lathe with worn gibs. I admit that I am impressed at their materials manufacturing. Melting together who knows what different grades of steel then proceeding to hammer forge it into a nearly perfect round bar, while wearing flip flops no less, is downright impressive!
А вы представьте себе что эти люди смогут выполнить если у них будут отличные ,современные станки. Хотя бы просто станки. А теперь посмотрите как многие ноют ,канючат на работе в более лучших условиях. Нужно просто показывать такие видио. Пускай поучаться. А в валом всё понятно...его дальше будут уже на другом станке шлифовать точно в нужный размер и можно не переживать что будет всё точно.
they didnt melt together anything this time, they cut a chuck of steel off another machine part seeming like an older ship crankshaft lobe then heated it in a forge then hammered it out at least thats what it seems like to me
Despite the age and quality of the machines, the men that operate them are still experts in their craft. Indeed, one may that their expertise is magnified by the poor quality of the machines.
@@Alias-hot Слушай умник , ты тогда им станки с конвееров БМВ или Мерседес, с роботами подгони . Что ты свои помои льешь на работяг ?? Дело не в том что я или они другого не видели, дело в финансовых возможностях и потребителе. Я уверен ,что мужик который выточил колено ,в 1000 раз умнее и образованнее тебя . Ты примитивный человек
Half expected to see a 150Kg frisbee come outta that lathe any second - very glad that didn't happen, however, I wager it has before. Amazes me how this guy can get an accurate cut when his tool post is moving around like a willow in the wind. The Fred Flintstone gang has it going on.
Смотрю как индусы работают и офигеваю! Поразительное терпение у токаря! Всё в ручную, без автоматической подачи! Черновые замеры с помощью линейки и мела!
Just imagine what these men could do with modern machines . Great respect . ps I used to run a WARD 10/13 back in the UK so I know what they are doing ,but oh the flip flops and loose flapping clothes enough to set your teeth on edge EAC
мне, даже с 3м разрядом токаря больно смотреть такое, без СОЖ, по линейке, без штангеля, суппорт ходуном ходит, без нормальной центровки (не дай бог вылетит такая болванка) о мои глаза )))
For better strength, the shaft must be forged in to crankshaft shape, and then done finish turning rather than machining a forged cylindrical shaft. The grain flow will not be in the required shape/form of crank.
@@michaz2074 Not Arabic country, Arabs will pay USA OR England 10X the money . because they got the MONEY!!! the country shown here is PAKISTAN. you guys dont know what you talking about. lol
Вот это работники! Заготовку вертают вручную, и точность изготовления высокая. А сейчас современные так называемые специалисты без компьютера нифига не могут
@@helensisikoff если делают, значит их продукция востребована. Ты похоже тоже из ботанов, которые кроме компьютера и электронного измерительного инструмента не знают ничего
@@АндрейСунцов-в9щ Если бы эта продукция была бы востребована, то ребята обновили бы станки и не ходили бы как чуханы по ноздри в солидоле. Покупают эти поделия такие же нищие за мелкий прайс. Поэтому то, что мы видим - это работа вникуда, пар в свисток. Довольно странная у тебя неприязнь к компьютеру. Что бы делать качественные, худо-бедно конкурентоспособные вещи необходимо освоить абстрактный "компьютер". Это реалии современного мира, увы. Без этого человек обречён работать как эти ребята - всю жизнь в солидоле и без малейшей надежды на улучшение.
Amazing work...I'm wondering how he calculates offsets. The only issue I see is when his chips are long pigtails. Those allow the cutter and material to heat up unnecessarily as you want short chips, necessitating changing your feed speed. That's one main thing I remember when I got my 2 machining degrees.
While that is true in practice thats hard to achieve without (an assortment of) cutting inserts - hand grinding a turning tool is not as easy if you want breaking chips and a tool that lasts a while at the same time.
The result can be so much better (and faster!) if they just learned to grind their toolbits the proper way. I watched a lot of these video's and it's always the same: toolbits with the wrong geometry. Yes, it gets the job done. You are right. But the result can be a lot better.
I suspect these guys are doing the best they can with the equipment they have and likely are not missing out on simple techniques to make better results.
Well, I must say, I am quite pleased to do many of these many actually wearing closed-toed footwear, and even some wearing heavy BOOTS 🥾 Flippy floppies are for the beach and not a factory/forge. Fun to watch then work either way, they aren’t my toes!
Had a giggle myself when I saw the deflection in the tool post. However, indicating the work piece with only what god gave him and a needle, it seems that accuracy isn’t of paramount importance here as he is only roughing in the shaft. Unlike working with a crankshaft that is cast and has its general shape and dimensions out of the block, this gentleman first had to shape the shaft out of a piece of forged material. No way is that the finished product. In relation to the rigidity of the lathe he is using there is an old saying. You can only piss with the cock you got!😂
I am 80 yrs. Old machinist-welder. I have worked with some of these guy and am still impressed with what they can accomplish(with what they have to work with). I think maybe the most dangerous part of their day is getting to work on their bicycle!
Goat knows goat
Afsoos in pr b qarza hai
This is pakistan baby
Сложилось впечатление, если этим парням дать новые станки и надлежащие чертежи, то они смастерят и космический корабль. Однозначно огромный лайк!!!
А вот здесь я сильно сомневаюсь , на хорошем станке они вообще ни чего не смогут сделать пока не разберут его до такого же состояния , а куда они линейку будут прикладывать а из чудо измерительные приборы ))!!!!
Ну да ну да, убивание и без того уставшего оборудования
Ага,весь корабль целиком на токарном станке
это чпу
болт они стелаут ...лайк это да
Who else on here wants to just visit these awesome guys, have a nice cup of tea and take in the smells and sounds of this crazy old school workshop? The level of skill here using a steel rule and a pair of calipers is epic. Totally in awe. This is the art of engineering and the art of making YT content - I am hooked on this stuff and watch it every other day. Now on to my own videos... haha😅 I wish my videos were as interesting as this. Well done guys👍🙂
I thought those same things. ........ to visit!!! Brought me back to days of my youth, a much simpler life. ....... much simpler.
😅😅😅
The smells 🤢 you wouldn't be smelling the workshop trust me
As an American and retired Machinist ( not a programmer or operator) I enjoyed watching this Machinist work!
Talent appreciate talent😊
Amazing Pakistani people✨️
Total respect 👏👍
Greetings from Egypt 💪 🇪🇬 💪
Any young person would be smart to do an apprenticeship under this dude he knows what he's doing for sure. No fancy tools just a caliper chalk and lathe.
those skills all became worthless with computer systems
The entire piece is machined without a worker even touching it. Just press the start button
@@alexg9727braindead comment, cant even think for yourself just have the machine do it for you 😂
That machinist at the lathe gets a huge thumbs up. Props also to the forge workers. Top billing to the camera work and especially the editor. Very hypnotic .
damm, you know nothing about machining! :D
Forging at its truest form! Respect to each person whos vaporized sweat and blood goes into making that steel.
I was a tool and die maker, and later Fab lead. We used this steel every day, with few knowing just what goes into the "Real" manual forging process from the last century.
Hats off, it might be a bit lacking in skillsets and tools, but makes up for it with shear force of will, weight, patience and tenacity.
Git er done! Wooot!
.m
M
M.
M
Mm
M
M;
M
M
الصناعة والعلم هما السر المميز للنهوض الأمم تحياتي لكم من الجزائر 🇩🇿
شفت ناس وش تخدم وحنا شباب طول وعرض مريح يحوس على 60 الف حق حبة ايريكا
@slimouneazize107 الله يهدي شبابنا
I work in some machine shops here in the US in Seattle and you'd be surprised they don't look much better than this. They are definitely a little better but using old machines from the early 1900's I was building extremely high tolerance high-value hydraulic fittings for hydraulic cylinders
These shops in Pakistan look like this because there really was not much investment after the 60s. It's hard to imagine but Pakistan was the first Asian country to produce a microchip. But then for some reason people just stopped investing in industry and skilled labor moved to Europe and the Gulf Arab countries for more lucrative opportunities. Flooding of cheap products from China also made a big impact.
Yeah because these are the grand parents 😅😅
Might have been because of Taliban or political strife@@AliSidTex
The thing with those old machines is that given proper maintenance they are as good as any new/mordem machine.
Also you can modernize them by adding servo motors and controllers.
For the machinery available you men do an incredible job.
In the 1950's and 60's my father did exactly this job at a factory in the UK. Probably the conditions back then were similar to what you see here although these days it's very, very different. I remember that one time there was an accident where one of the billets slipped from the hoist and rolled, breaking my father's leg. He was off work for quite a while but he did get sick-pay as required by law here even then.
Real back in those day's
Bunch of rainbow unicorns now days.
Shoes and safety glasses on this crew. Things are looking up.
@@johnknoefler :D the glasses and shoes will do nothing in an accident. The safety is shit, like Verruca said this is like back in the old days when people didn't know any better.
Difference is quality of the steel and the accuracy. UK had some fine craftsmen back then. Promise you they had a dial indicator.
All that equipment they used was sold to other countries and still used today and these are the guys that use them
Konventionelles Drehen in Perfektion.
Ein wahrer "Drehmeister". Habe das 1962 auch gelernt. Ein schöner Beruf, den ich mit .75 Jahren noch in Teilzeit ausübe, weil er Spass macht.
It shows that even when things and the workspace look like crap one can accomplish a lot!
Respect for these hard-working men that creates parts out of a few lumps of steel.
Good teamwork and work ethics make the difference here.
I love how he has installed a contra weight on the chuck to balance the load and go easy on the main bearings.
skills matter
their precision is pure crap and would be seen as rubbish in most new factories,
@@philippegauthier4525 you have no skills within machining, and you will never get machining skills, if you look up to people like those in the video
Bearings go bad...they just weld em back together.
@@jarniskat
Does the job. If it doesn't they wouldn't still be in bussiness working on a part for days.
I am always amazed at the manufacturing capability of these guys in the far east. You look at what they have to work with and it is mind boggling what they can do. The acetylene cutting outfit showed a hose attached with a screw clamp in one frame, looking around there is a lot more that western culture would have a fit about, but these guys go right to work and make do.
Without distractions you can be very creative
Мужики делают мужскую работу, уважение. 👍 From Russia with love. You're great.
на мою работу не посмотришь))))
Все оборудование ещё с колониальных времен, но удивительно ещё в работе. Конечно о допусках говорить не приходится, но всеравно респект.
Восхищение и только
Наверняка это грубая обдирка.
Это колония до сих пор к сожалению. И видео подтверждает это.
@@-mir-vsem может подскажете чья это колония?
@@ludwig5953 Масонов или рептилоидов
I am absolutely impressed. They do a perfect job.
I wish you continued success and good health.
Many greetings from Germany
Those parts are junk. I wish they would learn marketable skills and automate more of the job.
@@MichaelMantion bullshit. If it's doing it's job and it's enough for customer, it's not junk. Not all stuff have to be made on Kern CNC.
@@Kawka1122 lol what an idiot you are :D you clearly know nothing about machining!
@@MichaelMantion so true!
@@MichaelMantion Automation just makes stuff cheaper and faster - not necessarily better.
All the difference is the guy in front of the machine.
Also not ever part requires top notch precicion - good enough is the way to go.
This is developing world - labor is CHEAP there and the infrastucture to operate modern CNC machines and stuff is JUST NOT THERE.
In their environment they HAVE marketable skills.
This might go right over your head but i post it anyways, maybe you get it once they compete for you job lol.
MashaAllah. It's like stepping into a Victorian era workshop with them brickwork. Just beautiful.
That workshop have a lot of history in it.
Çok muhteşem işçilik bravo Allah yardımcınız olsun inşaallah. Türkiye'den selamlar 🇹🇷
Три раза был в Турции(Кемер,Бельдиби Мармарис) , у вас здорово 👏✊👍 привет из Питера)
WOW 😳 what craftsmanship to turn a hunk of metal into a crankshaft. A master of workmanship and artist. Everyone working together to get the job done. Now that's team work......
Craftsmanship would be doing it well, theyre using fucking dial calipers to measure shit lol.
@@toddpick8007 they are probally better machinists than you .just because it is old school does not make it inferior.
@@scorpion2nz Ya im going to say with confidence that they arent better machinists than me lol. For one thing i actually have accurate measuring tools and for another thing im not some 3rd world invalid. Nice "steel toe" sandals theyre rocking though ha ha ha.
@@toddpick8007 - You have a typo in your name. It’s missing an R.
اللہ تعالیٰ محنت کش طبقے🇵🇰 کو دنیا اور آخرت کی بھلائی اور کامیابیاں عطاء فرمائے آمین 🕋🤲
وش من لغة تتكلم بيها
Man that foundry work looks like it could put the hurt on you in many different ways! These guys are great at their craft. I love watching these get down and dirty vids!
Total respect from a 37 year American machinist. Great job and risk or not this guy still has all of his fingers.
Imagine back in the 30’s and up til the 60’s before numerical control came around, thousands of machinist in dozens of shops making crankshafts in a similar fashion here in the States. Thats even more mind boggling to me. Especially wartime production.
Guero sabe aondi esse trabalho
А представьте в 1941- 1945 года во время войны с фашистами в СССР эту работу токаря делали дети 12- 16 лет.
Even wartime production was not this crude.
Goat knows goat 🐐🐐
Главное, каждый знает, что и когда ему нужно сделать. Очень слаженно работают. Труд адский конечно.
😲 ооо , хорошая работа , специалисты профессионалы , всех вам благ и удачи вам в вашей не лёгкой работе 👍
мужчины эбошат не по детски и поддерживают серёзное производство, в гаражных условиях, почти голыми руками. красавцы, не то слово !
понты. болванка не продет ни каких тестов по сопромату. метал не однороден. такой вал это руская рулетка. разломотся 50 на 50
@@Denis383479256 возможно это и не такое надёжное и технология где-то не соблюдена, но ведь известно если негде взять деталь её нужно сделать самому , а я уважаю людей которые могут это сделать сами 😃👍
Хрюзге завидуют, так как и так сегодня не могут, ахахах.
@@Denis383479256 пофиг год отработает и то ладно для них , новый такой же закажут , а на новый оригинал у них нет денег .
Mind boggling in so many aspects. Love the caliper. Majestic craftsmanship.
These guys deserve respect for the hard work they do
Точность измерительных инструментов просто поражает.
La capacitá c'é. Purtroppo gli strumenti sono quello che sono. Quella torretta del tornio fletteva di mezzo centimetro. Credo sia un miracolo riuscire ad essere precisi. Credo che tutto sia dovuto al conoscere la macchina, io usavo un tornio che aveva giochi tra una direzione e l'altra ma sapendolo mi adeguavo e non mi facevo imbrogliare 😅😅😅
Aggiungo che forse non producono pezzi da utilizzare direttamente. Per me creano la base per poi essere lavorati in qualche altro paese, anche perché i trattamenti sul materiale ed i bilanciamenti non li puoi fare al tornio. In un paese dove usi robot il tempo é denaro e tenere un robot a "macinare acciaio" é un costo inutile, anche perché solo gli utensili di alta tecnologia costano molto piú del componente. In quei paesi la manodopera costa niente, per loro non é la " l'indice di produttivitá" il problema, quindi possono dedicarci tanto tempo che per esempio, qui dove sono io, quella lavorazione sarebbe costata 20 volte il pezzo 😂
А биение резца? Там люфты полуметровые скорее всего изготавливают заготовку из болванки. Здесь явно о точности не слышали
Это не люфты, это повышенный диапазон регулировки
@@Vladimir-lz8fi Все верно. Это позволит изменять зазор подкладыванием фольги под вкладыши)
My alleged son watches these videos all the time. I just found this out when he came to visit me this week. As a machinist some of the things they do truly impress me.
“Alleged” 😂
so he could be mine!!!
Father of the year.
@@maccoretti we know who his real father is. He and the mother divorced when their son was 1 and neither wanted him. He came to live with his grandparents who are my neighbors. He followed me around a lot when he was little.
@@ColKorn1965 Nothing wrong with that
I'm usually not impressed by these videos, but this was actually really good. Machinist used simple lathe and math to make a high grade machine component 👍
Yes the lathe operator has a lot of knowledge to pull that off, goes to show what you can do with a lathe. If the final tolerances, balance and bearings are well done on the shaft it could actually last a long time.
Imposible to get presicion.. The shape is good looking but will not functioning well since low accuracy.. This such part need tolerance until 1/1000 inch, which impossible made by manual instead of CNC
@@ekosantoso4342 I have held tenths on a manual lathe many times, if you don't think you could hold a thousandth on a manual lathe you don't know what your talking about, that said this lathe likely can not hold that tight of a tolerance but most of the time material is left on and the final machining it on a cylindrical grinder. With a bit of sanding using strips of emery cloth and a flat backing bar or file you can get very high precision and surface finish on a manual lathe but for production parts it is usually easier and faster to grind them.
@@phillhuddleston9445 I am sure you can do that with a simple cylindrical or round shaft.. But for a crankshaft, I don't think so since the centre of main shaft is different with journal shaft..
@@phillhuddleston9445 Yes we made precision parts long before CNC came along. It wasn't as easy, but skilled people did it routinely. I'm not seeing a lot of precision skills in this video however. Just hogging out a crankshaft shaped object. I especially liked how he used a carpenters level to set the rotation.
Hat's off to my hard worker pakistani brothers ...how they use old ship scrap to crank shaft. .. simply incredible 👍
Sahi keha veer ji. I also belong to craftmanship family. To see him feels like one of my family members working there.🙏🙂
This is the kind of determination and hard work that got us on the way to the stars.
Интересно, что там по допускам? Учитывая резцедержатель, а точнее его состояние, где-то ±1см? Ну и конечно супер точная линейка, а еще божественный способ определения центров.
Похоже это "грубая" подготовка а потом уже где-то доводят до ума как говориться)) хоть и не спец но понимаю что на таком станке слишком большие допуски. Но всё равно было интересно посмотреть как это делают.
@@Jonnycage1111 согласен, посмотреть было интересно, но так или иначе много непонятных моментов: работа линейкой при наличии штангенциркуля; центра- при такой длине и диаметре заготовки погрешность в миллиметр на центре приведет к паре тройке миллиметров на заготовке(а учитывая что он их кронциркулем размечал, то думаю что миллиметр не предел).
@@farsh_c_chaem чувак, пока ты базарил, оин еще одно колено высрали
@@farsh_c_chaem Как ты будешь штангеном мерить два метра длины? А главное, зачем?
@@TheAmd481 Вопрос, скорее не в измерении 2 метров, а в разметке. Да, есть и 2м штангенциркули :) Хотя если колено дальше пойдет на шлифовку - то такая точность на заготовке вполне допустима.
В целом - на этом производстве коленвалы будут более долговечные, чем в другом видосе, где заготовки льют из чугуна и отходов штамповки в качестве легирующей добавки.
CADA vez qué Veo los vídeos de estás Personas me asombro de sus técnicas de trabajo tan simples y llenas de exito mucha humildad y sabiduría 🔥🔥🙄🙄❤️❤️ God bless
Ети парни лёгких путей не ищут молодцы и большой уважение вам за такой труд
بہت اعلیٰ
دیکھ کر خوشی ہوئی کہ اس طرح کام پاکستان میں بھی ھوتا ھے
❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️
As a South African i get so excited seeing videos like these these people at least have electricity to do their craft we have gone from Africas industrial super power to the dust bin of history .. im sure these guys in flip flops could build us powerstations in no time
Сверхточный способ измерения диаметра и определения центра заготовки 👍
Резец при работе гуляет как дурной.
я тоже посмотрел и думаю , ужас какой)
Ну так результат же отличный, как будто у тебя передовые чпу станки стоят, насмешил)
@@sloo1989 я работаю на станке sn 500, у меня есть микрометр , штангенциркуль , нутромеры .
Завалены стружкой,везде бардак и грязь.
@@jeanlammer8046 Так же само немец видит цеха снг
Skill full Pakistan long live Pakistan Pakistan zindabad
ماشاء اللہ 😊😍
Респект мужики. Работа капитальная. Не надо никаких микрометров и так далее. Всё и без этого будет работать. 👍👍👍
Ещё бы платили этим людям нормально и было бы всё в ажуре. Но к сожалению они только копейки получат.
Если бы они в Европе кому нибудь такое выточили, то им бы долго можно было не работать а кайфовать.
Какая несправедливость.
Дай бог мужикам здоровья.
Это наше будущее!
Ничего сложного там нет - примитивная черновая обдирка
Точат хер пойми с какими допусками. Как он мерит, то похоже там плюс минус пару миллиметров. 🤦♂️
У нас в пту самые двоечники и то гораздо точнее
Тут все чистотна опыте..
@@vitek8760 Да ну?! Думаю большая половина человечества не справилась бы с этой задачей. Да и по времени...похоже довольно много времени это занимает а народ привык за столом на компуктере "работать" )) А тут часами за станком надо стоять, что-то крутить и вертеть постоянно, мерить, проверять.
Тоже как-то не понял про измерения размеров по линейке. Либо он на черновую с припусками по несколько миллиметров. Потом это ещё в чистовую обточить, прошлифовать...
Но, вроде из отливки обычно точат, чтобы быстрее.
Like a scene from Mad Max.
Они этого Макса трубу шатали. И варили кривыми электродами.
😂😂
Mad Max ingeneering
Мастерство кузнецов. Допуски минимальные. Ну и, токарь молодец. Лайк Вам ребята.
Incroyable ils fabriquent des vilebrequins avec peu de moyens!!! Bravo mes chers frères! MachaALLAH.
Мужики, как вы работаете - приятно смотреть!!!!
Тебе приятно , а я чуть не окуел ! Центр не вращается , на масле всё держится . Так шлифуют у нас , до 3х-4х десяток , а тут точат . К такому станку подходить -- нужно с родными прощаться каждое утро .
As astounding as it may seem to turn out a crank on a wornout manual lathe,I'm amazed how all the workmen still had their hands and feet intact wearing flipflops.
its easy they are aware of their sorroundings and dangers they encounter
There are many of these types of videos on UA-cam of Third world countries doing machine work. Parts of the video get sped up, and the talking sounds like children talking. I can't help but picture children playing around all that dangerous machinery while their fathers are working away.
Dam man I hear that Jesus can't believe this stuff
At least it Doesn’t run on steam and a belt
The guys without limbs weren't at work that day.
Parabéns. Vocês são formidáveis em seus serviços. Deus abençoe a todos 🙏🏻🙏🏻. Oxalá
zisim edhe kta PER mongoli daquando....
O caras são feras mesmo 🙌🏼🙌🏼🙌🏼🙏🏽🙏🏽🇧🇷
eles são hindus logo não acreditam em Deuses
@@joycelima3051 Yes they do. Hindus have lots of gods. They are polytheists.
These people are Pakistanis very hard workers.
These men are
great, capable of doing the impossible. I have never seen anything like them in my life. With simple means, they make great and important things from iron in industry. You are a great people and your country should be proud of you. How I wish we had people like you in Morocco. All the best to you, great people. You are brave and strong men
I’m always impressed with these men, and how they can create something from seemingly nothing at all.
Very impressive.
Amazing, they are cutting up the crankshaft of a huge engine, probably out of a large ship, to use to forge another small crankshaft. The resourcefulness of these people is amazing and the fact the can repurpose all these materials from ship breaking yards rather than just melting them down and starting over is astonishing.
No it's actually a crankshaft to the new Ford Pinto🤔😂
@@the_larsonfamily That's a weird model to use in a random comment on youtube.
Do you want to tell story about your Pinto? XD
@@stonedmountainunicorn9532 I was engaging in hyperbole
ESPECTACULAR TRAVAJO, NO MUCHOS SON CAPACES DE ASER ESTO , SALUDOS DESDE ARGENTINA BAHIA BLANCA 👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍
You are a amazing fabricator! America needs craftsman like you.
I like how they describe the workers as expert machinists, then proceed to show them operating a 75 year old lathe with worn gibs.
I admit that I am impressed at their materials manufacturing. Melting together who knows what different grades of steel then proceeding to hammer forge it into a nearly perfect round bar, while wearing flip flops no less, is downright impressive!
А вы представьте себе что эти люди смогут выполнить если у них будут отличные ,современные станки.
Хотя бы просто станки.
А теперь посмотрите как многие ноют ,канючат на работе в более лучших условиях.
Нужно просто показывать такие видио. Пускай поучаться.
А в валом всё понятно...его дальше будут уже на другом станке шлифовать точно в нужный размер и можно не переживать что будет всё точно.
they didnt melt together anything this time, they cut a chuck of steel off another machine part seeming like an older ship crankshaft lobe then heated it in a forge then hammered it out at least thats what it seems like to me
What I find most impressive is that there isn't any sign of an indicator or a drop of cutting oil anywhere.
Despite the age and quality of the machines, the men that operate them are still experts in their craft.
Indeed, one may that their expertise is magnified by the poor quality of the machines.
What amazes me is with all the hot steel and cutting torches not one of their 'overalls' set on fire....😂
Я восхищён вашим трудом и мастерством .Ма шаа Аллах
Я зайдём в авто запчасти говорим вау почему так дороговато 🤷♂️
Чему тут восхищаться?Преметивности? ua-cam.com/video/9dIC0y9e3ss/v-deo.html
@@Alias-hot Они на "коленке" такой коленвал изготовили . Если для тебя это примитив , то да ,я им восхищаюсь.
@@friend6097 Ты просто не видел другого.Скорее всего ты из тех "АналоГовнанет".
@@Alias-hot Слушай умник , ты тогда им станки с конвееров БМВ или Мерседес, с роботами подгони . Что ты свои помои льешь на работяг ??
Дело не в том что я или они другого не видели, дело в финансовых возможностях и потребителе.
Я уверен ,что мужик который выточил колено ,в 1000 раз умнее и образованнее тебя . Ты примитивный человек
Half expected to see a 150Kg frisbee come outta that lathe any second - very glad that didn't happen, however, I wager it has before. Amazes me how this guy can get an accurate cut when his tool post is moving around like a willow in the wind. The Fred Flintstone gang has it going on.
I've calculated that thing in it's raw form is more than 500kg.
I’m sure I must have missed the bit where he used a centre drill for centre. Or did he just jam a dead centre in the end, let it wear itself in?
@@thomascolville9438 it would seem it wore its way in . . . I was expecting the worst.
@@thomascolville9438 Check out 31.05 minutes.
They cant.
super travail bravo à toutes les équipes c'est remarquable .
контроль размеров...техника безопасности..люфт станка,это всё то без чего эти парни отлично справляются!красавцы,респект
Смотрю как индусы работают и офигеваю! Поразительное терпение у токаря! Всё в ручную, без автоматической подачи! Черновые замеры с помощью линейки и мела!
They r pakistanis .not indian
Точность в этом видео зашкаливает....
Особенно на 13:50
Excellent job and interesting team work from expert craftsmen
That back up by donkey was better than many with 8 cameras
Bro your comment is so spot on 😂
he needs a reversing alarm on his donkey
Very tough and highly talented chacha.Patience of youtuber is high.👍
No one can compete Pakistani people 💪🏻😎
Pretty incredible set-up. 👍👍👏🏻👏🏻
Великолепные мастера,высший уровень!!!
Image to have a picture of you doing this 1:07 just with eyes protection and nothing else, damn legend, Good job guys!
Amazing talented people !
Never seen a torch cut that much material. Very impressive work and craftsmanship.
У людей из Индии золотые руки. Привет и пожелания добра из России.
From pakistan
这里的工人非常勤奋,非常聪明,用简单的锤床 车床 加上手工操作 竟然生产出如此精密的曲轴。佩服了!👍
Maestros de maestros.
El conocimiento y experiencia de esos trabajadores no tiene precio.
Ojalá y su legado nunca se pierda.
I got a lot of respect for these guys. Great work. I enjoyed the video
Just imagine what these men could do with modern machines . Great respect . ps I used to run a WARD 10/13 back in the UK so I know what they are doing ,but oh the flip flops and loose flapping clothes enough to set your teeth on edge EAC
Break them 🤣
인도인가요?
성실하게 일하시는 사람들입니다.
멋지십니다.
👍👍👍👍👍
Pakistani people
Άξιοι θαυμασμού οι κύριοι. Μπράβο για το αποτέλεσμα της δουλειάς τους!! Συγχαρητήρια από Κύπρο, 🇨🇾
It's very hard work respect to all
Молодцы ребята! давайте еще такие ролики.
Parabéns com pouca técnologia fazem um excelente trabalho, vcs são verdadeiros artista, parabéns pelo proficionalismo.
Verdade ,nem instrumentos de medições adequados eles tem e ainda usam um ponto fixo.
Без сомнения могу утверждать, что это токарь высочайшего класса!
- Аж СОЖ с экрана потёк!
Nice work ,Proper Old School the best ! No CNC ,young lads today would shit themselves,
Working a Old Lathe ,😂😂😂😂
афигеть как у дядьки в начале суппорт на станке гуляет🤣 сразу видно человек прецизионное изделие делает😂
мне, даже с 3м разрядом токаря больно смотреть такое, без СОЖ, по линейке, без штангеля, суппорт ходуном ходит, без нормальной центровки (не дай бог вылетит такая болванка) о мои глаза )))
that counter weight spinning with nothing preventing anyone from accidentally walking near it was insane. a simple rope could prevent a certain death
They just don't hire stupid idiots
Ну хз. Верная смерть найдет тебя в любом случае
Death was also an imploy
Get your stuff trained and noone will walk into to a counterweight.
Отковали чётко,если бы не торопились,без токарного обошлись.
11:52
I've never seen so many work boots in one of these vids! Movin on up boys! Keep up the good work! 👍
That steel yard at the beginning was crazy! So much huge pieces of used material that’s getting repurposed for new stuff.
Skills these guys have. I wonder have they ever seen a CNC mill turn machine in operation 🤔
Yes they might have seen CNC mechine. In that industrial area they have CNC.
The people who use CNC are dressed much better, make more money and don't work as hard.
Well they are being filmed with some sort of camera, and it's on youtube. So they obviously have access to a least a phone and the internet.
For better strength, the shaft must be forged in to crankshaft shape, and then done finish turning rather than machining a forged cylindrical shaft. The grain flow will not be in the required shape/form of crank.
in India? com on man who would pay that cind of money, proboly make 3 or 4 like that for the same price.
@@benjamindemontgomery6317 Its definitely not in india I would bet for Iran or another Arabic country
@@michaz2074 probably Pakistan
@@michaz2074 Not Arabic country, Arabs will pay USA OR England 10X the money . because they got the MONEY!!!
the country shown here is PAKISTAN.
you guys dont know what you talking about. lol
Omg one of them actually has safety boots on.
شعب باكستان شعب ذكي جدا يدبر اموره علي طريقته لذلك أصبح من بين الدول الكبري تحياتى من الجزاؤر
작업자들의숙련도는
은하계에서최고입니다
Вот это работники! Заготовку вертают вручную, и точность изготовления высокая. А сейчас современные так называемые специалисты без компьютера нифига не могут
Точность изготовления ты на глаз определил?
@@helensisikoff если делают, значит их продукция востребована. Ты похоже тоже из ботанов, которые кроме компьютера и электронного измерительного инструмента не знают ничего
@@АндрейСунцов-в9щ Если бы эта продукция была бы востребована, то ребята обновили бы станки и не ходили бы как чуханы по ноздри в солидоле.
Покупают эти поделия такие же нищие за мелкий прайс. Поэтому то, что мы видим - это работа вникуда, пар в свисток.
Довольно странная у тебя неприязнь к компьютеру. Что бы делать качественные, худо-бедно конкурентоспособные вещи необходимо освоить абстрактный "компьютер". Это реалии современного мира, увы. Без этого человек обречён работать как эти ребята - всю жизнь в солидоле и без малейшей надежды на улучшение.
Amazing work...I'm wondering how he calculates offsets. The only issue I see is when his chips are long pigtails. Those allow the cutter and material to heat up unnecessarily as you want short chips, necessitating changing your feed speed. That's one main thing I remember when I got my 2 machining degrees.
While that is true in practice thats hard to achieve without (an assortment of) cutting inserts - hand grinding a turning tool is not as easy if you want breaking chips and a tool that lasts a while at the same time.
@@billklatsch5058You can still use the same cutter, I’m just saying the cutting speed or rate of advancement of the cutter (feed) would remedy it.
I don't think feed rates matter when the cutting tool is moving about so much....😅
Maybe you should go over there and show them how to do it.
Xin chúc mừng các thầy đã làm ra được tất cả các loại phụ tùng thay thế cho động cơ thật ngưỡng mộ
Cong nghiệp nặng. Nguy hiểm, cac a tho này giỏi rất lanh nghề 👍👍👍
👏👏👏👏this is awesome....big product can produce with small industries ...
Parabéns lindo trabalho 👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏
I love the wet cloths for furnace barrier lol.
The result can be so much better (and faster!) if they just learned to grind their toolbits the proper way. I watched a lot of these video's and it's always the same: toolbits with the wrong geometry. Yes, it gets the job done. You are right. But the result can be a lot better.
This is the best you can get for the price i think.
@@pak3ton I mean you can grind your own tooling
They have no knowledge of such things. This is the way they have done it for 50 years, and nobody gonna show them a better way.
I suspect these guys are doing the best they can with the equipment they have and likely are not missing out on simple techniques to make better results.
True, but that is beyond their skill level. They do not even know why it cuts.
"Amazing how the machine works so precisely! ⚙👏"
Well, I must say, I am quite pleased to do many of these many actually wearing closed-toed footwear, and even some wearing heavy BOOTS 🥾 Flippy floppies are for the beach and not a factory/forge. Fun to watch then work either way, they aren’t my toes!
Качественная поковка получилась. Биение небольшое.
Is that a cosworth crankshaft ?.. 😂🤣😂.. Going by the movement of the toolpost it should be accurate to + or - 0.5 of a hand !! 🤓
Ok mr all American
Nah dude he’s right about the tool post, I’m sure you have no idea what he’s talking about
@@moisesvargas4543 at a glance inbox 📥📥📥📥📥📥📥
Had a giggle myself when I saw the deflection in the tool post. However, indicating the work piece with only what god gave him and a needle, it seems that accuracy isn’t of paramount importance here as he is only roughing in the shaft. Unlike working with a crankshaft that is cast and has its general shape and dimensions out of the block, this gentleman first had to shape the shaft out of a piece of forged material. No way is that the finished product. In relation to the rigidity of the lathe he is using there is an old saying. You can only piss with the cock you got!😂
Bubu
Impressive work, goin old school!!! Love it!