This is one of the most complete and comprehensive "how it's made" videos I have ever seen on KZbin. Most other channels show two guys talking a lot and showing little. Excellent work!
@jamesrobertson9597Ай бұрын
These things can be fired up to 14 miles, so they have to be precision manufactured to insure consistency. At those ranges, slight manufacturing defects could result in shells missing their targets by hundreds of yards.
@melonetankberry521124 күн бұрын
@joelonderee no "copper jacket is shrunk on" no "spotwelding drilling and thread cutting of the tip". i agree that it is well done. but to say "most complete" is a stretch. you understand how its made but it leaves you with questions. it's fine. 7/10
@Canonfudder25 күн бұрын
Thanks to all the guys and gals doing the work to defend democracies worldwide from tyranny.
@joepeanut682711 күн бұрын
America IS NOT a Democracy, It is a Republic. with a Democratic society. at least for now, if that crazy person becomes president, then America will become a commonest country. TRUMP / VANCE 2024.
@adhesivecookie4 күн бұрын
This makes no sense at all
@stephenmcguire78014 күн бұрын
The insulated robot in Step 2 is worthy of a Hollywood creature.😳
@peterattfieldАй бұрын
I see 'Jonny 5' is still alive and Kicking at 1:40 now working for the military again.
@NewBlacksmithGirl2 ай бұрын
So this is how to craft Artillery Shells. It is carefully crafted and calculated with great precision. It is really eye opening. Thanks for posting sharp, quality videos on youtube. Hope the channel will grow bigger and bigger.
@andersjjensenАй бұрын
A 155mm shell accelerates at about 20,000g to a speed of 5250ft/s or 1600m/s, and it's spinning at 12,000RPM when it leaves the muzzle. It doesn't take much of an imbalance or structural weakness, when such forces are involved, to go from a cannon that shoots to a gigantic pipe bomb that obliterates it's crew.
@defconone1498Ай бұрын
I didn't realize how involved the process was. No wonder it takes aa while to resupply demand.
@oculosprudentium8486Ай бұрын
a few notes here 1) if this is just for 1 production line, then it simply means there are dozens of similar lines in the factory doing the same thing at the same time 2) the artillery shell is just a part of the artillery system as there are the fuses and the propellant bags that are needed for each shell produced.
@jacobjacob5898Ай бұрын
true, the fuses and propellant bags are made elsewhere and then finally assembled on govt property. this whole 15-acre facility in scranton is just to make the metal projectiles for howtizers and mortar rounds. insane if you ask me
@oculosprudentium8486Ай бұрын
@@jacobjacob5898 and imho, those 3 inch-pointed triangle-shaped things called the fuses which are screwed onto the tip of every artillery round, is the most important part of it as it tells the round to go BOOM. Plus they can be set to go off by timer or by impact. During WW2 at the Battle of the Bulge, the Allies used artillery fuses as air burst against the enemy in the forest and it shredded them similarly, the proximity fuses were used devastatingly against the Japanese aircraft in the latter stages when they resorted to suicidal kamikaze attacks. Before the invention of the proximity fuse it took approx. 10,000 rounds to shoot down just 1 enemy aircraft After the proximity fuse was used the numbers dropped to about 800 rounds
@Lone_Star_Proud11 күн бұрын
That one robot wrapped in silver looked like something from the Terminator.
@T.McGarry2 ай бұрын
Didn't see where the fuse well was threaded, nor where the copper driving bands were affixed.
@JanB1605Ай бұрын
Those parts were probably proprietary processes. They also didn't show how the shells got turned to rough and then later to final dimensions. ;)
@michaelroach6546Ай бұрын
Actually, the proper terminology for these are projectile bodies, not cartridge cases.
@clive3490Ай бұрын
it was at this point that I stopped watching
@dingolightfoot882328 күн бұрын
But just like there's ways to say things in a formal and informal way it doesn't matter which way you say it.........
@clive349027 күн бұрын
@@dingolightfoot8823 you are completely wrong, I agree with you entirely
@dustinspivey251927 күн бұрын
I’m pretty sure this guy stayed a motel 6
@Rubeless12 күн бұрын
Cliff claven
@hyperbolicindustriesllc9957Ай бұрын
Since people keep asking about it, The driving bands (brass ring) are installed by machining a partially undercut groove into the bass and then filling/overfilling it with brass wire from a MIG welder. Before it fully cools, it is then machined to dimension before it becomes brittle. There is a full tour of this plant on PCN network, the Pennsylvania version of C-SPAN.
@bosatsu76Ай бұрын
I was thinking just that question... Thx
@Echo22WC28 күн бұрын
Nope, it stays uncut during heat treat, then gets turned down on the finish line with the steel.
@marknederkoorn488518 күн бұрын
Yeah when turning to dimensions while hot then after cooling the diameter will be too small
@ploed20 күн бұрын
Thanks for adding the metric system.
@chrisberlin1552Ай бұрын
So cool such technology. It’ll sure be nice when the same shells are forged into plow shears…once and for all. God bless.
@FreeRojava20259 күн бұрын
I love the fact that instead of making it out of heat resistant materials, the robot near the furnace just got wrapped in tin foil
@davidjohnson9517Ай бұрын
I love watching manufacturing processes. I never saw this before. Thanks!
@pauletxfish4976Ай бұрын
why are they NOT showing the application of the rotation bands ?
@txm10012 күн бұрын
Skipped the part where the brass band ist attached.
@권기훈-v1i2 ай бұрын
좋은 동영상입니다. 하지만 시설이 좀 낡아 보이네요. 생산 공정이 잘 기계화 되어 있지만 생산효율성은 부족하다는 느낌도 있습니다. 프레스 공정은 시간이 많이 걸리니 한 생산라인에 장비를 몇개 더 넣고, 점검 과정은 사람 대신 자동화된 측정설비를 사용하면 시간당 생산효율이 더 올라가지 않을까요.
@kodiak2fitty14 күн бұрын
There are more facilities being built. This one has 70 years of production already.
@jameshartman60312 ай бұрын
Didn't show how brass ring got on there 👎
@scottgalbraith746115 күн бұрын
There are 3 guys actually running the line, and at least a dozen robot maintenence people. That seems like a lot of precise work for an item that only has to function correctly one time.
@kodiak2fitty14 күн бұрын
In order for the round to accurately head downrange and hit the intended target, the weight and shape must be machined precisely. Otherwise you get the inaccurate rounds that Russia and North Korea produce.
@malcdellow13 күн бұрын
But if it doesn't work that one time then it kills everyone in the vicinity or else doesn't do the job.
@scottgalbraith746113 күн бұрын
@@malcdellow I know what I said.
@rrsteamerАй бұрын
This plant, includes the main building (former erecting, machine and boiler work), Blacksmith, Foundry and 5 story Pattern storage now office building formerly owned by the D L & W railroad and primarily used to repair steam locomotives has been in the manufacture of projectiles since its purchase in the early 1950s. There are multiple lines being worked and production is rapid. Consider that the finished product has to meet the material, manufacturing and quality control requirements necessary for the intended service. Contrary to some comments made, it is a very efficient plant and would not be in business to the military unless it could prove its worth. Most military manufacturing plants including those for railroads, ships, armored vehicles, etc., are generally considered heavy industry. Most people now have little understanding of what it takes to make heavy equipment.
@Coecoo28 күн бұрын
Why do they go through all the trouble of using billets, heating and pressing them requiring massive amounts of time and energy instead of using waaaay cheaper steel rolls and welding & pressing those into the desired shape?
@kodiak2fitty14 күн бұрын
@@Coecoo single casting followed by machining will be more consistent and accurate. The rounds need to have their center of gravity exactly in the center of the hole that was punched. Otherwise the round will wobble and miss the target.
@Rubeless12 күн бұрын
Guess that guy doesn’t understand how important accuracy is.
@Buconoir10 күн бұрын
@Coecoo because we're not russian, nor Chinese. We value accuracy, precision in what we hit.
@d33pdarkfantasy17Ай бұрын
GOOD VIDEO
@maon-giku9422Ай бұрын
How is the ammunition belt of the cannonball pressed into the cannonball?
@msumungoАй бұрын
What is the actual artillery grenade shell material? High carbon steel with low hardness?
@anthonydebski5814Ай бұрын
Watched similar procedures at a Royal Ordnance Plant in the Uk, the machining of an external lip at the shell mouth, then pounding it in the round to provide the ogive, with that lip on the inside of the shell, to machine the fuze thread, noisy but awesome!!
@Wuka_016 күн бұрын
What is the cost of single shell?
@bobsmith60792 ай бұрын
When did the brass belt get applied to the base end of the shell? 10:23 the subtitle says they'll get loaded with propellant and explosives at other plants but isn't the propellant placed in the cannon behind the shell if I'm not mistaken and only explosives are placed in the shell. I'm not a veteran, just seen videos from the war.
@the_real_ch32 ай бұрын
There are also rocket assisted projectiles and rounds with a small gas generator placed at the back to help with aerodynamics and extend range so it could be that
@lewcrowley3710Ай бұрын
That is called a Driving Band. Basically it bites into the rifling and seals the propellant charge. These rounds are separately loaded before the propellant charge (which can vary by range.
@ronblack7870Ай бұрын
they made a small mistake calling it propellant.
@Polkem1Ай бұрын
@@lewcrowley3710oh interesting, I was thinking that, like those copper sealing washers you use between bolts.
@andresmartinezramos751323 күн бұрын
@@ronblack7870it can be propellant if we are talking about rocket assisted or base bleed rounds
@olegos55212 ай бұрын
Thank you from Ukraine
@РРр-ч9м2 ай бұрын
М0скальню сейчас жарят такими.
@AKUJIVALDOАй бұрын
Yeah, thank you for the proxy war they caused and Ukrainians are paying with their lives? That takes some of brainwashing...
@АлексейАндреев-й5с23 күн бұрын
Вы действительно хотите, чтобы у вас было больше разных смертоносных штук? Ведь русские сделают и применят В ОТВЕТ в 8- 12 раз больше. Вам реально мало?
@РРр-ч9м23 күн бұрын
@@АлексейАндреев-й5с Кто сделает? Руззкие? Это шо?
@kodiak2fitty14 күн бұрын
@@АлексейАндреев-й5с Keep thinking this as Ukraine eventually gets JASSMs 🤪 Western weapons are way more accurate than the crud produced in Russia and North Korea. Ukraine doesn't need parity on # of rounds.
@joelhodge7914Ай бұрын
Very cool music
@JosuefpradoАй бұрын
How is the number of this cartridges cases in daily production?
@paulgdunsford746928 күн бұрын
Where does the copper driving band come from
@raycaster43984 күн бұрын
Making big boom-booms. Bye-bye bad soldja boy.
@isaacblackman19962 ай бұрын
What model of 155mm is this, it's not an L15 is it?
@EdithRodriguez-db7wc2 ай бұрын
Sembrando muerte!!! Buen negocio
@bighairyfoot121715 күн бұрын
..How Old Is These Robot?..
@robertgibbs73873 күн бұрын
In european factories the workers are supplied with a clean overall every week, so they don't get their clothes dirty . Appears not to be the case in the usa ?
@DuelPorpoiseАй бұрын
you could skip the drying room if you did low temp powder coatings, also save on the amount of paint.
@ronblack7870Ай бұрын
except even low temp powder needs heat and it takes a long time to heat these up and cool them down . powder is better on thin metal.
@james-go1lv2 ай бұрын
製造過程とはまたニッチな 大好物だ
@castiel-io5vu2 ай бұрын
俺もッス。
@自由fi-ranmsansame2 ай бұрын
@@castiel-io5vu 南軍のアイコン、初めて見た。
@castiel-io5vu2 ай бұрын
@@自由fi-ranmsansame そうすか、別に意味は無いんですけど。
@ersikillian2 ай бұрын
You keep using the term "cartridge cases", which I would think is a British term. We would simply call them "shells".
@whattheget2 ай бұрын
언제적 공정을 찍은건지 모르겠지만 천조국이 왜 한국에서 포탄을 사갔는지 잘 보여주는 영상이네 ㅋㅋ
@amay1771Ай бұрын
한국의 포탄 제조와 비교해보면 상대적으로 낙후되었다.
@SirHackaL0t.Ай бұрын
Heated to 2000 degrees C or F?
@andresmartinezramos751323 күн бұрын
Definitely fahrenheit, at 2000C that steel would melt
@Calligraphybooster2 ай бұрын
Absolutely fascinated. 🤣🤣🤣
@andersjjensenАй бұрын
How the brass band was fitted was kind of left out....
@yuripeng1708Ай бұрын
2000 degree means fahrenheit or celsius ?
@andresmartinezramos751323 күн бұрын
Definitely fahrenheit, at 2000C that steel would melt
@スパイダーマン-d7o2 ай бұрын
これを見るまでてっきり鋳造だと思ってた。
@m3ssiah10014 күн бұрын
Where in the process does the shells get the brass at the bottom??
@智順飛田2 ай бұрын
砲弾の外板は何度も熱をかけて成形してくのですね~🐸まさにフルメタルジャケットですね~🐸
@-danR2 ай бұрын
Enter rail-guns: 2025: *How Steel Bars **_Are_** Artillery*
@YaBigDummi2 ай бұрын
Even with a rail gun, you're probably gonna want to have a large explosive warhead for its effects down range. Artillery rail guns won't rely on kinetic energy to cause damage, but will be flinging very heavy explosives a very long distance. Not really different from how a modern tank gun fires a dar different projectile than a modern howitzer. Two different, but similar needs creates two different, but outwardly similar results.
@FulloutPostalАй бұрын
2025? you are VERY optimistic...
@hypercomms200128 күн бұрын
where was the filing step?
@andresmartinezramos751323 күн бұрын
Explosives are manufactured and poured at a different factory
@andresmartinezramos751323 күн бұрын
This one only manufactures casings
@BonesyTucsonАй бұрын
Seems we need a whole bunch more of these plants, eh?
@Blue_Collar_Colonizer_177612 күн бұрын
We do. We just built one in Texas. Or are in the process. I believe with that one we will make about 40k artillery shells a month. But to put that in perspective there's times Ukraine is shooting close to 10k shells a day. No less than 2 or 3k. Imagine what we would use in a near peer war similar to Ukraine's. 50k a month wouldn't be a drop in the bucket of what we would need
@brianszymanski29712 ай бұрын
Thanks to all who strive for freedom, who make the world a better place for all to enjoy. As we are just a little obscure dot In the vast universe. Choose love not hate. Be kind to one another.
@АлексейАндреев-й5с23 күн бұрын
Чудовища из вильма ужасов создают орудия убийства. Здесь есть нормальные люди?
@ronblack7870Ай бұрын
i didn't see any young people in the plant . they looked like 40 - 50 yr olds in there. how do we get the young into manufacturing ?
@Echo22WC28 күн бұрын
When the old retire 🙄
@raymondyee3313Ай бұрын
Hell of a lot of steps left out???
@JeffBilkins28 күн бұрын
a single towed gun could fire these faster then this line produces them
@richleyden68392 ай бұрын
The paint job makes all the difference.
@the_real_ch32 ай бұрын
@@richleyden6839 if you want to store things full of high explosive and then fire them out of guns you probably want to make sure they don’t rust to hell and back
@andresmartinezramos751323 күн бұрын
Prevents rust and it is very important to keep identifying markers to ensure batch defects can be tracked
@임성근-n2q2 ай бұрын
하루에 몇개나 만들어 ?
@kdub659324 күн бұрын
Prior to a 2 day battle during WW1, each side would fire over a million artillery rounds. I wonder if the new technology could keep up with those numbers.
@leonfa25913 күн бұрын
No nowadays we can't really do that, but our artillary is far more precise with a further range.
@salvadorceninza12712 ай бұрын
Excelente trabajo esto es lo que debería tener Colombia para generar trabajo y a la vez defensa de nuestros soldados y policías 😢
@emanwe01Ай бұрын
Wait. They're quenched, but not tempered? Did I miss something?
@saff3356Ай бұрын
maybe they want the shells to be brittle
@andresmartinezramos751323 күн бұрын
Generally you want shells to be slightly brittle in order to help with the formation of appropriate shrapnel when detonating. That means appropriate size and speed. Some shells, although not generally howitzer rounds, come patterned
@derluftwaffe_nicht_nazi2 ай бұрын
Now this ammunitions going Ukraine 😊
@TheRealEtaoinShrdlu2 ай бұрын
Well, no. Older stocks are sent and replenished by newly manufactured rounds.
@LordRambo26 күн бұрын
Ukraine gets the old surplus, maybe these shells will be going to the front lines if the war is still going on 5 years from now.
@rowanarmitage792 ай бұрын
Surely if these are shells, they would only be loaded with explosive & detonator. The propellent is loaded after the shell.
@origamiscienceguy6658Ай бұрын
Explosives are loaded at a separate, specialist plant. Detonators are affixed by the military unit that fires them.
@lewcrowley3710Ай бұрын
They are called fuses. And they are shipped separately and put on before firing.
@andresmartinezramos751323 күн бұрын
Base bleed and rocket assisted shells contain some propellant
@Infamouswolf83Ай бұрын
Robot shows up at 1:15 yes this looks outdated
@defconone1498Ай бұрын
Amazing to see those robot arms in action. Thank you for this educational video - my curiosity has been well fed!
@koriko882 ай бұрын
Steel bars wrapped all around me!
@ИмяФамилия-е7р6и20 күн бұрын
So it turns out that the production of shells for the Ukrainian army helps the growth of the US economy?
@kreaslibya51762 ай бұрын
Fantastic 🫡
@二ー二ー-i3iАй бұрын
そしてウクライナで使われる……
@maeta292 ай бұрын
こうして作られた砲弾は敵に届けられる。
@ファントムドライ2 ай бұрын
「プレゼント・フォー・ユー!」
@mitsukirei2 ай бұрын
ザ・メイキング
@francislematt70792 ай бұрын
支援団体通じて寄付するとメッセージとか名前とかを砲弾に書いてくれるよ。
@Xziriz2 ай бұрын
Ineffcient.
@andresmartinezramos751323 күн бұрын
Suggestions on how to improve?
@자작나무-m8oАй бұрын
그렇게 느린 속도로 하루에 몇개나 만듭니까 다른 방법을 강구해 보세요 10초에 1발은 나와야 수지타산을 맞출수 있습니다
@TheWorldsOkayestUSMarine12 күн бұрын
Artillery shells are outdated and obsolete. America uses rockets and missiles. Towed artillery is WW2.
@hiro-ox6vi2 ай бұрын
砲弾(ミサイルも含む)って精密な使い捨て工業製品なんだなと改めて認識するよ。
@lgdsyugdsfhj4280Ай бұрын
Kinda skipped over the bronze ring part
@hanspetersen-uj6gd2 ай бұрын
Das sind KEINE Patronenhülsen!! Das werden Granaten!
@lonewolfmtnzАй бұрын
At this 'speed' they'd better have several hundred simultaneous production lines running 24/7/365
@CynicalelectricianАй бұрын
Ukrain is shooting them faster than any western nation can make them.
@jacobjacob5898Ай бұрын
they do. they have 5 forge pressing machines, 4 nosing presses, and 120 lathes; which is a crazy ratio of throughput
@markbonner1139Ай бұрын
Typical US---outdated & behind the 🎱!!
@joshshepherd5660Ай бұрын
And we are not even close to a war footing. Not even a hint of it. At least in the manufacturing sector, that I've seen. Shit will go from zero to "oh fuck who else needs so 155??" In a big ass hurry once the time comes.
So in the United States howitzer projectiles are manufactured using three separate heating and cooling cycles, are manually inspected instead of by a machine-based laser system, and are open-air spray painted rather than by electrostatically coating the shells with paint. No wonder production, as compared to other countries, is slow, labor intensive, wasteful, and expensive. The American military/industrial complex seriously needs to modernize.
@Echo22WC28 күн бұрын
Automated or not, would still take 3 heat cycles
@WarHawk-28 күн бұрын
@@Echo22WC - I bet those artillery shells could be cast with a tapered nose and hollow core then machined to tolerance a whole lot less expensively, than forging and machining them individually from solid bar stock. Doing it as a cast would use less energy and involve less post-casting machining and produce less waste material. It would probably even result in more profit for the manufacturer by simplifying the processes.
@Echo22WC27 күн бұрын
@@WarHawk- where you getting the solid heavy base with a cast model? These aren't rockets, they're pointy cannonballs. They have to withstand the pressure, cast is garbage.
@WarHawk-27 күн бұрын
@@Echo22WC - Sure, but I wasn't taking about pig-iron. Yes, compared to forgings, cast IS garbage, but engine blocks and even parts for jet and rocket engines have been cast and used with great success. Casting has come a long way since the days of pewter cups or 'cast iron' lamp posts.
@Echo22WC26 күн бұрын
@@WarHawk- well it's a hollow, 1 piece shell, idk how you're casting it with a single narrow hole in the tip 🤷♂️
@ValdekValdek-gn9jy28 күн бұрын
2000° F?
@andresmartinezramos751323 күн бұрын
Yes, at 2000 Celsius they would melt
@ValdekValdek-gn9jy18 күн бұрын
@@andresmartinezramos7513 Sure).
@AlexanderLehmann-c6zАй бұрын
A saw, 4 presses, 2 drilling machines, a cooling tunnel, several heat treatments - a manageable process flow. Core equipment needs to be constructed for the purpose, which leads to long delivery times. On the other hand, I don't see a reason why the west shouldn't bei able to produce 10 Mio. shells a years. It means just app. 15 of such lines...
@XíJìnpíngc2 ай бұрын
製作行助感謝
@AndrewCampbell-ut6jkАй бұрын
That is painfully slow.
@chriscusick6890Ай бұрын
I guess it is kind of slow but that's the best there is at this time.
@原省治2 ай бұрын
残念ですが、誤訳です。 この砲弾加工工程では、薬莢ではなく、弾殻という日本語が最適ですね!
@mccova62520 күн бұрын
同じく。 見終わったあとに、あれ?炸薬とか信管は?ってなりましたから。まだ、仕掛品ですね、これは。
@akkiiva6658Ай бұрын
私の目からは小松製作所の155生産工程の方が優秀に見える。
@aoqjflr_300Ай бұрын
전세계 최고의 미국 재래식 포탄공장이 의외로 매우 낡았군요. 미국은 첨단 미사일 연구와 생산을 하였기 때문인듯 싶습니다. 우크라이나 전쟁에서 교훈을 얻은것은,재래식 무기도 생산 균형을 맞춰서 비축 해놔야 한다는 것입니다.
@projects4home2 ай бұрын
No Russians were harmed ( yet ) while filming this video.
@AlbertoRossi-rs5dl23 күн бұрын
Beh, a questa velocità, i RUSSI, ne hanno già prodotti 3, di pezzi!
well at least know the shell was well made when your blown to bits..
@bestamerica28 күн бұрын
' better a use hard strong metal pipe... dont need a roll
@Alex-jo9ix23 күн бұрын
Too much manual work, that is why we can not make enough
@geoffkeeler51062 ай бұрын
They are shells, not cartridge cases.
@stevestruthers61802 ай бұрын
They also don't contain propellant, just the explosive. Fuses are attached to the shells in the field and set according to detonate on contact with the ground or at a certain height above the target. The propellant comes in the form of combustible bags, or charges, that are loaded into the breech of an artillery gun after the shell has been loaded. The more charges, the further the shell can travel.
@billmullins68332 ай бұрын
Thank you. I was wondering when they switched to thick walled steel for cartridge cases.
@Echo22WC28 күн бұрын
@@stevestruthers6180glorified cannon balls.
@andresmartinezramos751323 күн бұрын
They technically are shell cases, a few things are missing to make them shells
@SafetyBrieferАй бұрын
I don't care if its 'Take Your Kids To Work Day'. Don't. Just don't.
@CSGATI2 ай бұрын
To slow for real war time.
@rawcadoАй бұрын
How the USA Military Channel writes amd reads numbers from right to left: 14, 13, 12, 11, 10, 9, 8, 7, 6, 5, 4, 3, 1, 😐 Thhis is the UNITED STATES, not some metric Chinese or Arab country, AMERICANS read LEFT TO RIGHT, get your graphics correct.
@diagandr12 күн бұрын
Механизация. А замеряет болванки вручную чувак с бородой. И ещё. С какого хрена болванки подорожали в четыре раза?
@edmiy83952 ай бұрын
Analisado o processo de fabricação e matéria primas, o custo de cada munição acredito que não saí por menos de 5 mil dólares, e vendo a guerra da Ucrânia em que se dispara milhares de cartuchos por dia, se vê a dimensão do custo da guerra
@andydelarue9344Ай бұрын
Gee those metal workers have a foul taste of music.unwatchable