Somewhere else in pakistan someone is making rebar out of knackered hammers.
@polishedturdspeedshop8 ай бұрын
Brilliant!
@anilpatel13988 ай бұрын
Very good information
@amazingtechnology118 ай бұрын
Thanks
@LanoSilva-bv6nd9 ай бұрын
Esses produtos fabricados aí vem pro Brasil ou não e só suas cidades mesmo
@orionoutdoorsandworkshop561711 ай бұрын
it must be so comfortable to work with sandals on. 5:29. every one of these videos show how these people have to work in unsafe environments to feed themselves and their families. no insurance, no retirement, just a life of trying not to get hurt/maimed every day. pitiful. in the u.s the end of the line for junk steel like this IS rebar.
@albertolambach539511 ай бұрын
Inglaterra y EEUU saquearon a la India y a docenas de países, condenándolos a la pobreza y el hambre.
@dennisyoung463111 ай бұрын
You’d think they’d use a simple carbon steel rod with added manganese and silicon, say about 1/2 % carbon, 1.5% manganese, 1/2 % silicon, then “oil quench” at the end of the forging cycle, followed by a draw warm enough for long enough to bake the oil residue into a blackish finish for the metal. (Small amount of linseed oil added to the quench bath, that or a separate dip after quenching) This is a relatively *cheap* alloy steel, by the way - a lower-carbon version of 9260 steel. The result would be very tough and wear-resistant. This would give a *substantially* better hammer head at *minimal* added cost and effort.
@cobre771711 ай бұрын
A lot of the choices and decisions of metal stock is whats available locally there. I don't know what steel is shown in this particular video but Some places make rebar from plate from local ship breaking outfits. They take the plates off with oxygen Lance torches at the beach then take the steel plates inland and shear off sections heatit up and send through a rolling mill with a bunch of dies and finish with rebar dies. So yeah ideally a great alloy it may be for hammers
@nance6410 ай бұрын
Some processes shown over and over and over, yet the grinding of the head and claw not shown at all.
@StihlRunnin23 күн бұрын
Let’s be real here, it’s a bench grinder. I’d bet my last dime.
@rkm974910 ай бұрын
Hammers made from scrap metal are always scrap
@AlRoblesTV8 ай бұрын
Class B or C .Class A if it came directly from mining company
@Lele-my9cp6 ай бұрын
O ferro se reciclado muitas vezes perde a qualidade
@honkie24710 ай бұрын
Rebar is probably the cheapest grade of steel available. There is no blending of steels to get a certain characteristic or sampling of raw material to arrive at a desired end result. You have hammer heads that may split from being brittle or peen outward from being too soft.
@chapiit0810 ай бұрын
Rebar can be heat treated if dunked in brine when yellow hot, but yes it's not the proper steel for a hammer head.
@cobre77178 ай бұрын
This is not true. Most rebar is used in bridges skyscrapers and dams. Its highly controlled and made to very specific specifications made by engineers and codes.
@honkie2478 ай бұрын
@@cobre7717 And there is no mention WHERE the rebar came from.
@cobre77178 ай бұрын
@@honkie247 just because they dont mention what material is being used in the video... you assume its the wrong type. Very few videos on KZbin have any mention of material type.. they gloss over that information. Did they say in the description what kind of electricity was being used.. do you think that is incorrect as well. I can see this rebar has a stamp in it. I can't read it but that stamp has the relevant information such as alloy type and size. Also this isn't being made into bearing for a hypersonic jet engine. Its a claw hammer.. even the worst grade of Rebar is suitable steel for a claw hammer. If the steel can be forged into a hammer without falling apart or cracking everywhere its great. It just needs to drive a nail in. This hammer doesn't need to be hardened. Its just a claw hammer. As long as the claw is bigger than the nail it won't bend.
@cobre77178 ай бұрын
@@honkie247 the rebar was most like reclaimed from train rail or ship breaking. That is very suitable steel for reclaiming much better than most mild steel or a36 structural steel available at a typical steelyard.
@greggminkoff67338 ай бұрын
Rebar is made from scrap steel. There is no heat treating. It is not forged. It is a low carbon flexible steel made from scrap. To make a quality hammer, the steel should be: high carbon, heat treated and then forged.
@cobre77178 ай бұрын
You don't want to use high carbon steel for hammers. You want medium carbon or mild steel depending on the hammer. Some hammers are made out of bronze, brass copper and even lead. A fully hardened high carbon hammer is unsafe to use. The more you use it the harder it gets from workhardening. Eventually it will get so hard it will become brittle and shoot shards of hardened metal off into your body. Lastly You don't heat treat before you forge. That would be totally pointless. You heat treat after the forging.
@cobre77178 ай бұрын
Most Rebar is not made from scrap. It has a highly calculated specification for it's mechanical properties to be used by engineers and codes and inspectors. Most rebar is heat treated. You think the bridges skyscrapers and parking structures are just are thrown together with random materials melted down from costum jewelry? Rebar is indeed forged there is no otherway to make it. You think they cast a 1/2 inch thick piece of steel that is 50 foot long? Rebar is forged through dozens of dies and rollers. Some rebar is manufactured by reclaimed steel, such as ship anchor chain, steel rail and ship hull plate. Those types of steel are reforged into rebar. It is mostly allowed to slowly cool down so its in a semi annealed state meaning it isn't hardened so it retains more flexibility. It isn't scrap. Its used for less demanding concrete work. For small buildings projects.
@TyroneBrown-mz9qi4 ай бұрын
Worked for Iowa steel and wire. Rebar is bottom of the barrel shit steel with a specification.
@WXUZTАй бұрын
Just my thoughts. Thnx
@jamesbond-db9fd4 ай бұрын
Ladies and gentlemen welcome to TEMU sweat workshop 😅
@abhisheksharma40974 ай бұрын
Bhai company ki address to do jo ki purches kar saku
@fadilalek778110 ай бұрын
Cek harga perkodehnya bosq
@davidlagle937911 ай бұрын
You can double your production speed if the second forging dropped to the far guy. He could load the second run while the first guy feeds a new one at the same time.
@dennisyoung463111 ай бұрын
You’d think they’d toss the finished forgings in brine?
@tima776310 ай бұрын
That’s how my great great grandfather made stuff in the late 1800s
@amazingtechnology116 ай бұрын
@Dr.Kraig_Ren made in India
@jpcaretta88473 ай бұрын
Not at all ! Hammers made in the West were of high quality. High carbon steel pieces soldered to bothe end of a soft steel midle block then tempered ! Same for chisel...
@TruthIsLove.3 ай бұрын
I would be interested in knowing how much these workers are getting per day, and whether or not it's even more than a dollar? And where I could send a donation to these workers individually to make up for the sin of taking advantage of the eastern worlds current position in working this way for the western worlds greed.
@RajitSunderani-k8w3 ай бұрын
your gonna fund one billion indians? just be quiet
@TruthIsLove.3 ай бұрын
@@RajitSunderani-k8w excuse me, if you tell me to be quiet again, I will report you for hate speech. What I said is true, and what ever excuses people have for doing nothing about it isn't for me to listen to
@americansupervillain45952 ай бұрын
@@TruthIsLove. How is telling someone to be quite hate speech?
@TruthIsLove.2 ай бұрын
@@americansupervillain4595 if you can't answer that yourself, you're clearly not interested in having a relationship with your own conscience and far more interested in justifying your own unloving behaviour
@MmmHuggles10 ай бұрын
Every hammer is made using a hammer. There is an unbroken line of hammers dating back to when the first human beat metal into submission with a rock, the first hammer.
@ducomaritiem71608 ай бұрын
Mmmm❤ that's a real philosophical approach 😊
@flaminmongrel69558 ай бұрын
lmao "beat into submission" with that profile pic and name is hilarious.
@StihlRunnin23 күн бұрын
Still African guys working that way right now.
@madasamyramasamy629711 ай бұрын
This is not in india....selection of raw material is not good....
@FrankTedesco11 ай бұрын
it's Pak
@jameelattari1578 ай бұрын
Its in India
@amazingtechnology118 ай бұрын
No
@Nexusof917 ай бұрын
this is India i too had visited a factory like this in Delhi 5 years ago... Indian and Pakistani factory conditions are the same in every aspect....
@Khofnaakgaming014 ай бұрын
Ha bhai loha hard nhi h
@PastorJoseCamachoduran-sx4re10 ай бұрын
Saludos desde República Dominicana
@markjohnson496210 ай бұрын
Cripes. Nine cycles of removing the flashing and punching the center hole.
@kevincase620211 ай бұрын
Ha ha those are the hammers you see at dollar tree for 99 cents and fall apart the first time you use them junk
@davidhamm562611 ай бұрын
The 99 cent ones are cast metal....
@christianvalenzuela22511 ай бұрын
This hammers cost a fraction of other more " perfect" hammers. This is an undevelopped country.... people cant afford expensives long duration hammers Workers are smart and efforced... my respects❤😊
@stevo6811 ай бұрын
Depends on what you want out of it I suppose. Some of my hammers cost me around 4 to $500.
@Harishmeraz116410 ай бұрын
@@christianvalenzuela225t😮😅 ko nahi uuh u
@TROdesigns10 ай бұрын
Half the comments on these videos are westerners talking shit on the manufacturing - they get the job done!
@prasadrajadhyaksha28875 ай бұрын
दो मिनट का व्हिडिओ सात मिनिट का बनाया.
@amazingtechnology115 ай бұрын
Ok
@yuriytopolevskiy9016Ай бұрын
Все делается из арматуры - от сверел до молотков
@ProcessMastery863 ай бұрын
amazing
@ikosparintis87428 ай бұрын
🤝🤝🤝🤝🤝👍👍👍
@orangediablo10 ай бұрын
All that could be shown in under 2 minutes.
@TAKFAMILY_CBI_NEWS2 ай бұрын
Nice performance
@paulmark9928 ай бұрын
5:10 this can go wrong in so many ways.
@michaelleong2582QuartermasterАй бұрын
Rebar metal are not suitable for hands tools, There should be some international standard in manufacturing of Tools.
@markjohnson496210 ай бұрын
1000% agreed. Too many repeated views.
@amazingtechnology1110 ай бұрын
Thanks
@shortsmh12339 ай бұрын
Address kya he company ka @@amazingtechnology11
@Kuhumbuwa-h8n6 күн бұрын
Hey 👋
@marcosantoniocava57942 ай бұрын
Nossa sem capacete, luvas , chinelos ao invés de botas e óculos pra proteção , o índice de acidentes deve ser alto nesse país.
@ronaldanderson64814 ай бұрын
the claw on a hammer is almost obsolete in the US
@monsuralrizver57178 ай бұрын
They are should focus worker safty.
@RajitSunderani-k8w3 ай бұрын
speak english sarr
@paulmark9928 ай бұрын
I don’t think that these people care about optimizing production processes. The product needs to be as cheap as possible.
@RajitSunderani-k8w3 ай бұрын
and as shitty as possible
@sydkibweterer271911 ай бұрын
I am thinking why not melt the iron bars in a foundary and pour the molten iron into an hammer head mold and finish it from there on, less process 😊
@davidhamm562611 ай бұрын
Cast iron is too brittle for this use.If you hit an engine block or cylinder head , with a hammer, you will see what i mean.
@cobre771711 ай бұрын
@@davidhamm5626 well yeah cast iron is brittle but why not just melt some meteorite iron with a little 24k gold for added toughness and luster. That would work good. Just melt it in a cast-iron stew pot over a camp fire then pour it out in a open mold like on... game of throns it must be how you make metal things. I saw it on the tv
@davidhamm562611 ай бұрын
@@cobre7717 Okay.....
8 ай бұрын
Cast steel
@cobre77178 ай бұрын
Its a lot less process to reforge a piece of rail steel or chain steel or any steel than to cast a steel hammerhead.
@imranKALO1Punjab11 ай бұрын
Nice
@amazingtechnology1111 ай бұрын
Thanks
@MARCELORODRIGUESMG-UBA-BRAZILАй бұрын
👍
@UDINTROPHYCHANNEL7 ай бұрын
Good"
@amazingtechnology117 ай бұрын
Thanks
@iveter9993 ай бұрын
это плохой молоток
@stiveandersson-w8s11 ай бұрын
جنون
@stormytempest652111 ай бұрын
HEALTH AND SAFETY ANYONE ? DEAR ME.
@mfhmxx2 ай бұрын
this imposible...this not india india only hand no Machines..
@ravindradaundkar990510 ай бұрын
Folks its from Pakistan.
@sagarsaraf8213 ай бұрын
This is not indiam company.
@RajitSunderani-k8w3 ай бұрын
yes it is, dont u see the pile of turd in the corner
@JohnDoe-es5xh18 күн бұрын
The droning in the background sucks.
@prasadvn5249 ай бұрын
This is cheap quality hammer mafe out of TMT steel bars without any quality checks
@dejamehablar198428 күн бұрын
You call this "amazing technology"?
@Alexander_86129 ай бұрын
Кажется кто то зря портит арматуру.....
@amazingtechnology119 ай бұрын
👍👍
@habramtorrealba7927 ай бұрын
Fundaciones y resumen academicos del pais torrelukistrae
@salvadorgaleano85105 ай бұрын
Beleessa
@danielserrano59110 ай бұрын
jed
@sanjayakumar36959 ай бұрын
Not good quality iron
@danielserrano59110 ай бұрын
pay roll
@hasmukhlalshah95134 ай бұрын
this is pakistani
@amazingtechnology114 ай бұрын
Indian
@buckfiden29884 ай бұрын
Those are garbage.
@WXUZTАй бұрын
Most likely Pakistani, not Indian. Hammer head is best made from medium to high carbon steel which has to be heat treated later. Please don't post videos which spread misinformation
@HorseMalone8 ай бұрын
Cheap rubbish.
@DEGENEBABAАй бұрын
😂
@ComradeReally10 ай бұрын
Непонятно, зачем арматуру пустили на молотки, когда из неё можно строить дома
@ЯромирПрокопьев10 ай бұрын
Ну потом с помощью этих молотков и будут строить
@ramprasadsarkar4435Күн бұрын
Is company ka name or phone number di jiye me parches karna chati hu
@amarjeetsonker44437 ай бұрын
Aap ki factory kahan per hai aap apna mobile number send kar