it looks like they need some smart MIT engineer to come up with a way to automate that tire cutting machine, got tired just looking at that poor guy doing all that heavy lifting, what a job!
The part where he cuts the tyre tread into smaller parts is far from being ergonomically designed. That guy is going to rupture something doing that all day.
@@bobwallace9753 You should design and build a better one and give it to him. You could save a life. Otherwise, you're just bumping your gums to hear yourself talk.
Regarding the tire cutting machine, where the one lone guy cuts the sidewalls first. Why is that machine located outside of the building? That poor guy would be working outside in inclement weather all through his work shift just to cut up old tires. It would make more sense to do this job inside where the worker wouldn't catch polio or pneumonia being in the snow and rain.
That tire cutting machine at the 1:35 mark is about as slow as can be imagined. We have mountains of tires world wide, the power/energy that machine uses as well as requiring a person to operate it is crazy slow. It would take 1000s of those machines 100s of years to even make a dent in all the used tires we have piled up. The Eco-Green Tire Cutter is much better.
Asphalt companies can't spend infinite money, though. And their goal is to make asphalt, not to clean up the world of used tires. In fact, it's not in their business interest that the world's used tires supply be depleted. They wouldn't sell as many of the smaller machines. Furthermore, the rubber of the tires doesn't exactly disappear when you put it into the asphalt. Eventually, they tend to grind that asphalt off so that they can put new down. And I am not sure that piles of rubber-coated rocks is all that great for the planet either. But at least the asphalt can be recycled. But how much of the Planet's land area do you want covered in asphalt? But they are also not the only people consuming the supply of used tires, either. I just recently watched a long strip of floor mat be 'shaved' off of a compressed spool of vulkanized shredded tires. They grind them up with powerful grinders, sift for iron/steel via magnets, etc. And those little pieces of tires are what they put into the huge cylindrical mold when they vulkanize it. Then they spin that huge thing on an equally huge machine that slices whatever thickness desired for the mats.
if you can build a place near a volcano where the lava is around 2500 degrees you can build large containers, containers the size of railroad tanker cars or railroad box cars made out of paper and drop them in to a pool of lava deep enough for them to hold together long enough to sink beneath the lava, then the plastics, that are contaminated or not recyclable, and the toxic gasses will be able to be completely destroyed with out worry of the toxic gasses being released in to the atmosphere and with out the plastics polluting the environment.
Those are cans bottles are glass. There’s tire shredding machines that grind tires into powder. Most if not all cement plants use the whole tire. The cardboard baler has been around since the 1920s
What can we say, errors happen! We have a team, and a small miscommunication or error can lead to something like calling a can a bottle. Hope we didn't cause too much of a distraction :)
They make cans into bottles know. Literally size and all but aluminum. Also seesh man why complain of a simple error. No one complained of you. Be good and safe us hefty instead Trojan. Hefty hefty hefty
Easy on the critiques and hair splitting ! Just glad that recycling technology is evolving. The Southeast Asians, whales, dolphins, etc. will thank us !
@@haroldwilkes6608 People are working on it. I suspect as soon as there's a serious application of AI we'll see a large percentage of trash diverted from landfills. Think about a garbage truck backing in and dumping its load on a long conveyor belt. All that stuff gets spread out a bit and robots, using feeds from cameras, pick out the identifiable pieces. Look at how Tesla's full self driving system is using AI. First a lot of pictures of things are collected and someone labels them. "This is a ketchup bottle, this a bicycle, this a basketball". One of the robots picks up the identified object and dumps it in a chute for ketchup bottles, bicycles, basketballs, whatever. Once in place it becomes a low cost sorting operation. We really need to be moving to a sustainable system where what we don't want any longer can be recycled or composted.
@@bobwallace9753 !00% agree. I have pictured it much as you described. In a small town with limited daily trucks, it might not be feasible yet simply because of cost but a large city with thousands of trucks could make it worthwhile. From trash to cash is technically possible today but the economics of process needs work. I worked logistics once, in the door raw, process, out the door finished. We had very little waste but even that we sold at a slight profit. I do worry a tiny bit about AI though, employment, you know.
@@haroldwilkes6608 We need to face the fact that AI and smart machines are probably going to eliminate the need for human labor. We're now seeing robotaxis hauling passengers around cities, presently at a small scale, with no one sitting in the driver's seat. Most driving jobs are likely to disappear over the next several years. We're seeing AI write media articles, perform surgery, and write legal contracts. We're seeing smart machines cook food and mix drinks. If humans can do it most likely machines can do it faster and better. I don't know how long it will take to make human labor worthless but it's already started. We need to be thinking about how we distribute goods and services once human labor/time has no value. The only idea I've heard about is a universal basic income. We need to be thinking seriously to see if we can come up with something better if we can.
@@bobwallace9753 True, I've read science fiction all my life and frankly, much of it along this line, seems like life would be boring. I'm 78 so the effects on me will be minimal but while intellectually I can see the benefits of AI, I question the value to the human psyche. We may find new frontiers to explore but why would we when AI can do it as well if not better. I think productive work is essential to human growth and the lack would result in stagnation and gradual loss of human dignity along with mental capacity, in effect, devolution. Hopefully, I'm wrong. But if the world ever becomes self-sustaining without human labor, why would we need to exist? As amusements for the sybarites? No thanks.
Here in upstate New York there is a $.05 deposit on all bottles and cans of soda,beer. You don’t see that as waste on the side of the road. Some people do that all day picking up cans and bottles. When I go to other states that have no deposits on the cans and bottles there is a mess all over .
Yep..was all in favor of that NY 'Bottle Bill', woo hoo! Then.. I temped @ BICS-Beverage Industry Collection& Sorting where the.. process* was trial & mostly error:( Plant also stunk worse than any gym or dive bar. Long week.. However, Michigan gets 10 centavos per container; might move back & rake it in:/
burning tires to make portand cement might be another polution problem!!!!?? however I have always wanted to know how to get the water out of tires stored outside with out get all wet!
the baler will never replace the bilge pump on your cargo ship, but it never hurts to have a woman in tight jeans for your demo ad! I personally really like the blast style door and locking mechanism?
Many of these grinding machine's remind me of the first Fargo film . When the guy puts a body in the wood chipper . OH btw like many commenters - the voice over actor and editor should go back to the film and revue the monolog and film adaption . Guess they where too much in a hurry to get something for the world . Result nice quality of product except the correct identification of a can and a bottle .
Charlie is absolutely correct. Your back would be screaming at you after a day of picking bits from the floor. How about a table to catch the pieces as a start?
I think its funny that they call the box baler "Compact" when the compactor for the tires is what is used for boxes that I have seen. I also bet the "Compact" baler is not only 3 times the size but probably 3 times the price.
Damn, could you imagine if the was Military and NASA technology used in a Recycling system? Oh, wait, that's where I work and he uses Optics to sort materials with 90% efficiency. Amazing tech I have at my finger tips.
What can it sort? Is it a regular machine or can e waste go in it to? I'm intrigued on that type technology. Screw the other stuff, if y'all have world saving tech like that. I'd like hear of it. I don't need a rocket or ship. I need that tech/recycling machine lol
3:41 when i was 16 and working at a supermarket, we had exactly such a machine, and that was 30 yars ago!, nothing new, whoever made the video is just a bit world strange.
That first machine, isn't really an engineering marvel there are far older machines with automatic bailing threaders and hydraulic opening and closing doors.
Well, that's a big variable. It's highly regional, with no single "cost" to look at. There's the baseline manufacturing cost, then the "retail" price (which is always in flux, especially from one place to another), then transporting prices (which are quite high), then running costs (which can vary on output and area). That, and it's nearly impossible to get that kind of info for most machines! It's not like going to a dealership and buying a new car; dealers of these machines will give quotes that may factor in anything ranging from add-ons to transport.
Where I work we recycle anything metal we have a 50 ton per hr hammer mill that shreds cars and collects all the steel and non ferrous then we have a Harris press to bale wires and cable that can't be shred and then inside we have a marathon nexgen baler that bales aluminum, cans, copper wire And pipe, radiators it can take a small boat and cut and bale it
I’m sure there’s plenty of homeless people out there that would really appreciate them jackets and other clothes to. Waste waste waste that’s all this country is fit for
it looks like they need some smart MIT engineer to come up with a way to automate that tire cutting machine, got tired just looking at that poor guy doing all that heavy lifting, what a job!
The part where he cuts the tyre tread into smaller parts is far from being ergonomically designed. That guy is going to rupture something doing that all day.
Yes was thinking the same thing
I was thinking the same thing also... that's way too much bending, lifting and pushing.
he's going to rupture a disk...
Yeah his fingers without gloves on
It's an inefficient design. After sidewall removal the treads should be cut without having to carry them to a different location.
@@bobwallace9753 You should design and build a better one and give it to him. You could save a life. Otherwise, you're just bumping your gums to hear yourself talk.
Quite literally, The first step in recycling is to be able to tell the difference between bottles and cans.
What about kitties there bubs
@@AXLAXHENNE kitties aren’t supposed to smell like cigarettes.
Yep. He called cans, bottles
Not a lot of people know that.
@@chrisclarke7828 only stupids don't know what is bottle and can.. its the same as drinking piss and water... you should tell the difference
Regarding the tire cutting machine, where the one lone guy cuts the sidewalls first. Why is that machine located outside of the building? That poor guy would be working outside in inclement weather all through his work shift just to cut up old tires. It would make more sense to do this job inside where the worker wouldn't catch polio or pneumonia being in the snow and rain.
That tire cutting machine at the 1:35 mark is about as slow as can be imagined.
We have mountains of tires world wide, the power/energy that machine uses as well as requiring a person to operate it is crazy slow.
It would take 1000s of those machines 100s of years to even make a dent in all the used tires we have piled up.
The Eco-Green Tire Cutter is much better.
It's for small lot use, there are bigger ones.
Asphalt companies can't spend infinite money, though. And their goal is to make asphalt, not to clean up the world of used tires. In fact, it's not in their business interest that the world's used tires supply be depleted. They wouldn't sell as many of the smaller machines. Furthermore, the rubber of the tires doesn't exactly disappear when you put it into the asphalt. Eventually, they tend to grind that asphalt off so that they can put new down. And I am not sure that piles of rubber-coated rocks is all that great for the planet either. But at least the asphalt can be recycled. But how much of the Planet's land area do you want covered in asphalt?
But they are also not the only people consuming the supply of used tires, either. I just recently watched a long strip of floor mat be 'shaved' off of a compressed spool of vulkanized shredded tires. They grind them up with powerful grinders, sift for iron/steel via magnets, etc. And those little pieces of tires are what they put into the huge cylindrical mold when they vulkanize it. Then they spin that huge thing on an equally huge machine that slices whatever thickness desired for the mats.
if you can build a place near a volcano where the lava is around 2500 degrees you can build large containers, containers the size of railroad tanker cars or railroad box cars made out of paper and drop them in to a pool of lava deep enough for them to hold together long enough to sink beneath the lava, then the plastics, that are contaminated or not recyclable, and the toxic gasses will be able to be completely destroyed with out worry of the toxic gasses being released in to the atmosphere and with out the plastics polluting the environment.
the first machine is what every single grocery store in Finland has and does the same thing on 1/10th scale of that thing.
Those are cans bottles are glass.
There’s tire shredding machines that grind tires into powder. Most if not all cement plants use the whole tire. The cardboard baler has been around since the 1920s
5:45 Look what else they are implying that the machine can be used to shred! OMFG!!!
Not a new idea. See the BBC production “The Honourable Woman”.
To expensive
At another level, they never explained what that level is.
Shredded with the help of a shredder. WOW! I would have never known!
How can someone that makes 3 videos a week not know the difference between a can and a bottle?
What can we say, errors happen! We have a team, and a small miscommunication or error can lead to something like calling a can a bottle. Hope we didn't cause too much of a distraction :)
@@LordGizmo As long as it has beer in it, who cares?
They make cans into bottles know. Literally size and all but aluminum. Also seesh man why complain of a simple error. No one complained of you. Be good and safe us hefty instead Trojan. Hefty hefty hefty
7:16 Geor Ding Machinery. 11:48 commonly known in most industries as a baler or compactor.
yeah he said "geo-riding" several times...like come on dude
Easy on the critiques and hair splitting ! Just glad that recycling technology is evolving. The Southeast Asians, whales, dolphins, etc. will thank us !
That's got to be the slowest cardboard bailer I've ever seen!
Correct, even slower than the tire cutting machine!
I think size is the premium, I worked one in the 70s, three stories high but automatically strapped the same size bales.
Paint makes anything look newer lol
making big things into smaller things isn't recycling, compacting would be a more accurate term.
Good job good luck and good life but safety then quality first 👍☺️🥳
We have 400 acres of closed air base to come build one of those recycling facilities on here in Rantoul Illinois. Come check us out.
Gizmo - take no heed to those who have nothing better to do than to nit pick...keep up a great job.
I would be interested to know what the end product of each recycled material would be. Good video. Well done.
exactly i thought this video would do that but no
@@tusharbhudia9421 me too !
But..... these are not bottles, they are cans ?? Am I missing something here ?
Nope.
Just a lazy creator who couldn't be bothered to edit his own words. Mispronouncing a word in one sentence then saying it correctly in the next.
My wife is jealous! It takes her at least two hours to destroy tires!!🤣🤣🤣
Too funny.
Obviously she's just not trying
Is that first crusher available in politician size? Asking for a friend...
No one gets dirty putting this stuff in?? Amazing......
everything looks so clean ... not like real life jobs
Which machine is best for disposing a body?
06:47 yeah. That’s just wasting clothes to keep the inventory low and prices high.
Doing that job all day long would make me very tyred
i am glad i found this page
All good. But what is really needed is a machine that sorts the trash stream that's headed to the landfill.
Invent that you'll own the world...
@@haroldwilkes6608 People are working on it. I suspect as soon as there's a serious application of AI we'll see a large percentage of trash diverted from landfills.
Think about a garbage truck backing in and dumping its load on a long conveyor belt. All that stuff gets spread out a bit and robots, using feeds from cameras, pick out the identifiable pieces.
Look at how Tesla's full self driving system is using AI. First a lot of pictures of things are collected and someone labels them. "This is a ketchup bottle, this a bicycle, this a basketball". One of the robots picks up the identified object and dumps it in a chute for ketchup bottles, bicycles, basketballs, whatever.
Once in place it becomes a low cost sorting operation. We really need to be moving to a sustainable system where what we don't want any longer can be recycled or composted.
@@bobwallace9753 !00% agree. I have pictured it much as you described. In a small town with limited daily trucks, it might not be feasible yet simply because of cost but a large city with thousands of trucks could make it worthwhile. From trash to cash is technically possible today but the economics of process needs work. I worked logistics once, in the door raw, process, out the door finished. We had very little waste but even that we sold at a slight profit. I do worry a tiny bit about AI though, employment, you know.
@@haroldwilkes6608 We need to face the fact that AI and smart machines are probably going to eliminate the need for human labor. We're now seeing robotaxis hauling passengers around cities, presently at a small scale, with no one sitting in the driver's seat. Most driving jobs are likely to disappear over the next several years.
We're seeing AI write media articles, perform surgery, and write legal contracts. We're seeing smart machines cook food and mix drinks. If humans can do it most likely machines can do it faster and better.
I don't know how long it will take to make human labor worthless but it's already started. We need to be thinking about how we distribute goods and services once human labor/time has no value.
The only idea I've heard about is a universal basic income. We need to be thinking seriously to see if we can come up with something better if we can.
@@bobwallace9753 True, I've read science fiction all my life and frankly, much of it along this line, seems like life would be boring. I'm 78 so the effects on me will be minimal but while intellectually I can see the benefits of AI, I question the value to the human psyche. We may find new frontiers to explore but why would we when AI can do it as well if not better. I think productive work is essential to human growth and the lack would result in stagnation and gradual loss of human dignity along with mental capacity, in effect, devolution. Hopefully, I'm wrong. But if the world ever becomes self-sustaining without human labor, why would we need to exist? As amusements for the sybarites? No thanks.
12:20 this is just a standard baler.. It's not specifically for tires.
When the world agrees to use only 1 material for all metal cans and bottles and 1 material for plastic, or am I just a simple man under thinking 🤔
Aluminum is not in the Earth's crust, bauxite is. This is the mineral that aluminum is refined from.
03:28 The manufacturer of the HSM machine is HSM. Asturalba is only a distributor.
Thank you for pointing this out! Our mistake.
The box baler takes up more room than three regular box compactors. Plus it is more complex to operate.
lol at 5:44 why are we seeing human effigies getting pulverised?
wow I never new that some of these things did this cool stuff ,thank you for sharing us this cool stuff.
Thanks for the kind words! We aim to inform :)
Shredded tyres can be used laying asphalt roads
Here in upstate New York there is a $.05 deposit on all bottles and cans of soda,beer. You don’t see that as waste on the side of the road. Some people do that all day picking up cans and bottles. When I go to other states that have no deposits on the cans and bottles there is a mess all over .
Same in Norway. 👍
Same with metrocards. Once they charged a fee for a new card the waste of metrocards seemingly vanished overnight
Yep..was all in favor of that NY 'Bottle Bill', woo hoo! Then.. I temped @ BICS-Beverage Industry Collection& Sorting where the.. process* was trial & mostly error:( Plant also stunk worse than any gym or dive bar. Long week..
However, Michigan gets 10 centavos per container; might move back & rake it in:/
The video I saw is about crushing glass containers to fine powder. What are all the comments concerning tires, balers and cans?
nifty, but I think recycling is a giant hornswoggle.
Great video
Very interesting. I enjoyed.
that dude should be wearing safety glasses and a respirator mask.....
burning tires to make portand cement might be another polution problem!!!!?? however I have always wanted to know how to get the water out of tires stored outside with out get all wet!
the baler will never replace the bilge pump on your cargo ship, but it never hurts to have a woman in tight jeans for your demo ad!
I personally really like the blast style door and locking mechanism?
lol that guy with the "Ergonomic" tire cutter.. his wrists and back are gonna be fucked after a day the way that thing is set up..
I like the shredder for cloth
bro . Have you got this machine yet?
7:17 Geo Riding Machinery?
Many of these grinding machine's remind me of the first Fargo film . When the guy puts a body in the wood chipper . OH btw like many commenters - the voice over actor and editor should go back to the film and revue the monolog and film adaption . Guess they where too much in a hurry to get something for the world . Result nice quality of product except the correct identification of a can and a bottle .
I do like to see things recycled and not a threat to ecology and the environment.
What about seeing the recycling machines recycled?.
@@chrisclarke7828 Are they being recycled into more recycling machines to recycle recycling machines?
That’s a lot of manual labor on tires.
A machine designed WRONG . Tires per hour is Low . High Labor and Power cost per tire is unacceptable .
Charlie is absolutely correct. Your back would be screaming at you after a day of picking bits from the floor. How about a table to catch the pieces as a start?
well done
I see whoever wrote the script for this video has never seen commercial cardboard and aluminum bailors ...
Except none of these machines are actually recycling but lowering cost and space requirements to dump.
No, they're processing waste materials to make them reusable in production.
That was awesome to see
cutting up those tires looks like a grim life. hard work
I think its funny that they call the box baler "Compact" when the compactor for the tires is what is used for boxes that I have seen. I also bet the "Compact" baler is not only 3 times the size but probably 3 times the price.
So cans and bottles are the same thing in your country?
A body put through that shredder 5.45 would cause a real mess. Once cleaned though there would be no trace..
The guy from Fargo would have liked that...
Millions of homeless and we are destroying jackets? Are these jackets not able to be reused?
Damn, could you imagine if the was Military and NASA technology used in a Recycling system? Oh, wait, that's where I work and he uses Optics to sort materials with 90% efficiency. Amazing tech I have at my finger tips.
What can it sort? Is it a regular machine or can e waste go in it to? I'm intrigued on that type technology. Screw the other stuff, if y'all have world saving tech like that. I'd like hear of it. I don't need a rocket or ship. I need that tech/recycling machine lol
The tyre shredding machine would be brilliant for getting rid of paedophiles.
Perfect destroyer for the zombie vehicles.
3:41 when i was 16 and working at a supermarket, we had exactly such a machine, and that was 30 yars ago!,
nothing new, whoever made the video is just a bit world strange.
45 years ago for me, same machine!
Hey hey people
be extra careful when you cut the bands on those tires!
Nice that's what I call recycling sweet I see all kinds of recycling bins all the time
Well that 17+mins I will never get back
Lord I think your gizmo might be broken!
7:00 we know where he got that jacket from
The tire rack brewkes apart in the sea .
0:41 Hey!! Isnt that a plastic bottle in the center of all those aluminum cans?
WTF??
No. That was just one of those newer fangled bottle shaped cans.
Hey Hey People
Aluminum?? Where's that element in the periodic table??
I saw the "Lord Gizmo" logo about 100 times too many times.
6:50 not so much shredding, more sort of clogging up
Shredding clothing is criminal.
loved it
To *COPE* with recycling needs
That first machine, isn't really an engineering marvel there are far older machines with automatic bailing threaders and hydraulic opening and closing doors.
Recycle solution for the manufacture off the future, low coust, preserve the eco system, good solution an population is grow.
I'd like to see this done here in my area but there are too many nimbys ( not in my back yard )
That goes on in a lot of towns/cities.
That’s why it’s all going to China. Helps their economy.
13:40 Earth True Loaded With Aluminum; Now Documentation Ultimate--Extreme Zen Over All The Universe.
Beautiful.
Imagine falling into the tyre shredder?
worker has to manually push the saw and pick the stuff off the ground.
How much are they ??
Should people know what they cost.
Well, that's a big variable. It's highly regional, with no single "cost" to look at. There's the baseline manufacturing cost, then the "retail" price (which is always in flux, especially from one place to another), then transporting prices (which are quite high), then running costs (which can vary on output and area).
That, and it's nearly impossible to get that kind of info for most machines! It's not like going to a dealership and buying a new car; dealers of these machines will give quotes that may factor in anything ranging from add-ons to transport.
The first car tyre recycling machine was just so painful to watch. Gosh, the paint dries faster...
So, how much did these companies pay you to advertise their products?
Where I work we recycle anything metal we have a 50 ton per hr hammer mill that shreds cars and collects all the steel and non ferrous then we have a Harris press to bale wires and cable that can't be shred and then inside we have a marathon nexgen baler that bales aluminum, cans, copper wire And pipe, radiators it can take a small boat and cut and bale it
So many videos at different levels... which "level" is this actually at? 🤔
it's too bad they didn't make a machine that turns old tires into barbed wire
"At another level" = no way in hell I'm wasting my time on this. Time for a new descriptor.
That tire machine looks like a pretty good workout. That shit is NOT lightweight......
If anyone is interested in tires we have thousands of them we are in new Jersey
Should be called everyday common recycling machines lol
No safety glasses?
Bad design when you cut the tires in pieces you still need human power to bring up and cut
I’m sure there’s plenty of homeless people out there that would really appreciate them jackets and other clothes to. Waste waste waste that’s all this country is fit for
The asphalt industry is fighting the recycling of tires. A real tragedy - what could make a better road material than the titres that roll on it?
your ignorance is mind boggling!