great old film , when men were men & just got on with it , fantastic to hear the old solid diesels growling again , real power .
@hairyairey2 жыл бұрын
I live near this pipeline - so close that I run over it frequently as it's marked on every road it crosses. Twelve weeks is an awesome amount of work. Given the extremes of weather in the Fens though that makes sense.
@charlieward6629Ай бұрын
my great grandad Johnny berry was a welder on the pipelines, tough man. My grandad went out to Saudi for aramco building their oil network and I work at Cadent gas. Interesting to see the work that went into building the infrastructure I now maintain.
@barryrichardson29474 жыл бұрын
These 16mm films I love,especially when shown complete.Please carry on the good work of uploading more,where copyrights permit. Many thanks
@ypaulbrown2 жыл бұрын
I LOVE WATCHING THIS, HAVE PROBABLY WATCHED AT LEAST 5 TIMES....opps, sorry about the all caps, I am excited to watch again.....Paul in Florida USA
@garysoutar4514 ай бұрын
My old man was a welder,who worked on all the new pipe lines from Alaska to Russia and a lot of the middle east countrys in the 60s n 70s. Always remember him saying about how important it was your weld passed the X Ray. Good too see what he ment.
@garysoutar4514 ай бұрын
I worked for Dow bro of Scone on the St Fergus to Mossmorran pipeline 1980s unloading pipes along the trench. Great experience.
@AntarcticaTelevision3 жыл бұрын
Great to see this film in full at last ! Thanks.
@stoufer20004 жыл бұрын
Thanks for posting, nice little film
@stoufer20004 жыл бұрын
Cheers for posting, nice little film..
@ruthbees7214 Жыл бұрын
What cool piece of film very interesting. I wish i had learned to weld when i came out of school big regret of mine. I ended up driving a lorry for thirty years what a waste of time. To anyone coming out of school find something you want to do rather then something you have to do there's a big difference ❤😁
@colinwolters886311 ай бұрын
that fella nearly getting crunched by the second tree at 2:09 oh my.
@manorbleak12 жыл бұрын
That pipeline cut across a wood we owned at Thorney.
@aib0160 Жыл бұрын
Speaking as somebody that used to divert these pipelines, 12 weeks is about the time to divert a short section these days. Despite modern machinery, computers, GPS surveying etc. it would take years to lay 33 miles of 36" pipeline now.
@inverterville8 ай бұрын
The men are there to do it buts not that its the planning, the right of way to be agreed upon. Health and safety and of course the environmentalists would make it go at a snails pace
@aib01608 ай бұрын
@@inverterville Yes agreed, and we're still injuring people and damaging the environment albeit temporarily. Many youngsters don't want to put in a 12 hour shift of hard graft for 6 days a week though.
@beninthewilds4 ай бұрын
@@aib01606 days 🤔 were you part time 😉 you’re right though, we regularly do 14 to 16 hour days especially during summer, the young ones just can’t do it like we used to. They struggle to even turn up on time
@aib01604 ай бұрын
@@beninthewilds Nope, just a measure of how long it takes now. You can't get much of a production line going on small scale jobs. Nothing can be done till the site is fenced off, surveyed and stripped. These guys had surveyors that only needed to be a week ahead of the fencing crew, who in turn were a week ahead of the stripping crew and they a week ahead of the stringing crew and so on. So much of their work could be done simultaneously and not so easy when you can see from end to end of the job and you haven't got the space to flood it with recourses. When you're not working on that scale you're a month doing nothing other than setting up your site establishment, stripping and materials management. It's the same story at the other end when you demobilise as reinstatement and scrap removal takes as long.
@richardmiddleton15484 жыл бұрын
The Man Hammering the stake into the ground is Melvin David Wiles..
@jamescosta11742 жыл бұрын
Was that a old barbergreen ditch machine, painted red
@MrWhothefoxthat3 жыл бұрын
that's the skill we are lacking today, and all those men would have slept in caravans.
@MrHonda7502 жыл бұрын
We did not live in caravans,We went out too site on a bus from Wisbech,I was the clamp operater from Kings Lynn too
@lloydchalke17684 ай бұрын
12 weeks now 12 months +
@simonperry3304 жыл бұрын
No Hi Viz and Few Hard Hats However did they live to tell the tale.
@GenaF3 жыл бұрын
Men were still men back then.
@hairyairey2 жыл бұрын
Probably didn't! This is before the HSAWA and over 1,000 a day died at work
@carot2003 Жыл бұрын
Interesting..
@bampah4 жыл бұрын
Quite a few of the welders looked foreign. Was this a fact?
@bampah4 жыл бұрын
Just seen another video of the operation and it appears that they were French.
@hetrodoxly12034 жыл бұрын
I don't know if there were French welders on the job but i knew English welders who were on it, they advertised for welders in the Sheet Metal & Boiler makers union and newspapers, they had an hut on site where you did a test, pass you got the job fail they gave you expenses for getting there and going home.
@billy4072Күн бұрын
Nice one lads! 🎯
@charlesharrison303217 сағат бұрын
Great video, listening for irish accents,therehad to be a few there. Thanks for putting it up.