Cool video. Good choice of positions to focus the video on, adds perspective.
@اسحاق-ر3د3 ай бұрын
انتم تعملون مثل عمل الملائكة في الارض. فشكرا لكم ❤🎉❤🎉❤
@chrispoeschl75648 ай бұрын
😏 The Florist…🌹
@ismailhotel4038 Жыл бұрын
Good❤❤❤❤❤❤
@IvanildoOliveira-c8j6 ай бұрын
Parabéns pra eu que já trabalhei vc como está a produção de cabos elétricos
@process13146 ай бұрын
Please add WeChat or Whatsapp +86 133 2383 3175 for product consultation and purchase
@CSNingYouKeJi Жыл бұрын
What material is this
@Devi-rq5vq4 ай бұрын
这个牌子的电线 我听的没听说过 只知道溧阳上上电缆跟宜兴远东电缆是大牌子!
@KAlee-b5w6 ай бұрын
玉蝶电缆的工厂也很壮观!
@hoperp1951 Жыл бұрын
I struggled to watch, managed to get to 8 minutes then abandoned. No commentary or description of what any part of the process is.
@process1314 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for watching, we will gradually improve your problems in the future.
@hoperp1951 Жыл бұрын
@@process1314 Thank you. In that case, I will continue to check and watch your videos. Having worked 40 years in aerospace engineering I enjoy watching other machines and manufacturing processes. Good luck in your endevours.
@D-B-Cooper Жыл бұрын
Best vid to put you to sleep.
@lwilton Жыл бұрын
Great. I now know how wire is made. Or do I? I know that a lot of pulleys spin. I know that copper-colored wire wiggles. I know that occasionally copper-colored wire comes off or goes onto spools. It's really obvious that the pulleys are important, because there are so many shots of them. The wiggling bits of wire must be important too, because there are so many shots of them. But I HAVE NO IDEA AT ALL OF SEQUENCE! We see the same thing over and over, in random order. EVERYTHING is an "art shot" of some TINY little bit of SOME machine, doing SOMETHING, (maybe), but God alone knows what it is. Or where it fits in the process. "Process of everything" is NOT "art shots of small details, endlessly repeated, with a two bar music loop". "Process of everything" SHOULD BE showing the PROCESS, not just art shots. We know nothing about what any of the machines do. We have no idea of the order in which they are laid out in the factory, or used. Heck, we don't even know this was all one factory, it looked like it may have been at least two different plants.
@process1314 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for watching and pointing out our shortcomings. We actually knew before shooting that the wire was too thin and the scene was too big, so the introduction scene was not clear. In short, we will find the problem and present a better video to everyone in the future.
@lwilton Жыл бұрын
@@process1314 Long, Medium, then Short. The old rule filmmakers were taught is that you first do a wide establishing shot which establishes the overall picture of things. Then you do a medium shot that brings out more details about a closer view _of something that could be seen in the establishing shot_ . Then, if needed, you start doing closeups. But every so often you draw back for another medium shot to maintain context for the viewer. In this case the plant is large. There is the initial receiving area where raw materials come in. Then there are the wire drawing machines that thin the wire down. Then there are other machines somewhat farther away, and farther along in the process. You need to do an establishing shot for _each_ area or machine, one or more medium shots that bring up some details, and then _a few_ closeups. Doing some pans that follow the process in the direction that it flows could also help. For instance the wire drawing machines: an establishing shot of the building with the machine somewhere in there. Then a closer, but still wide, establishing shot of the entire machine. Then a medium shot of the incoming wire spool, and then a closeup of the wire coming off the spool. Then a wide shot of the side of the machine, if necessary panning from the machine input to the machine output. Then some closer shots, in the order the machines works, showing details of the wire threading around the wheels and pulleys. But avoid detail shot after detail shot, where the viewer gets totally confused about what part of the machine this is, or even if it is part of this machine. Finally there should be some shot of the wire coming out of the machine and either feeding off into the plant to something else, or being put onto spools or coils. The other thing to remember is sequence. Don't back-track in the process, especially with closeups. I hope some of that is helpful.
I hate the Chinese products because they just think about the quantity, not the quality of the products which are produced
@inarinukka7729 Жыл бұрын
There's nothing wrong with that video. Some cry that the processes are not well described - it is not worth paying much attention to, because it is the cry of americans, they do not understand things if you show this processes in video. Their own videos are much worse - for 10-15 minutes video they try to show the big picture (30 or so seconds), then they talk in two sentences (they can't explain complex things in those 2 sentences anyway, and they don't even bother to do it for a long time even though it would be the only possible method to explain a complex process - in short, it's simply not possible!) and then they show 14 minutes some blurry shots (often simply as a photo collage from which you can't get any clarity about the process itself by looking at the photos anyway) in which the highlighted brand logo appears as the process they are trying to describe... What I miss more in this video is a detailed overview, especially of the wire pulling process itself. In one section, I can see how a worker installs a wire in eyelet, but there could be a better overview of the further work process.
@문경지교-y8f Жыл бұрын
외국 기술 훔친 것이다. 중국 실력으로 불가능 하다.
@负零 Жыл бұрын
美国的特高压都是中国制定的标准!20世纪你们是灯塔,但21世纪不是!
@erlingqiericyice1977 Жыл бұрын
저는 중국인이고, 만약 중국이 기술만 훔치는 나라라면, 그런 제품들은 시장 경쟁력이 전혀 없을 것입니다. 왜냐하면 해외에 이미 같은 생산 라인이 있다면, 마찬가지로 인공이 필요 없기 때문입니다. 그럼에도 중국에서 생산한 제품이 더 싸다면 그 이유는 무엇일까요? 전기와 수도 비용이 더 저렴한가요? 중국에서 해외로 배송하려면 배송비도 지불해야 하는데, 그럼에도 불구하고 다른 나라들은 중국 제품을 구매하려 하고 있습니다. 이는 왜일까요?