The52dodgem37
The52dodgem37
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Pneumatic trailers taught EZ by my Boss
Bulk cement pneumatic trailer
zhlédnutí: 97 093

Video

Thunderstorm in Sun City Arizona July 27 2014
zhlédnutí 96Před 10 lety
Thunderstorm in Sun City Arizona July 27 2014
Thunderstorm in Sun city July 27 2014 1105pm
zhlédnutí 78Před 10 lety
Thunderstorm in Sun city July 27 2014 1105pm
Thunderstorm July 27 2014 around 11pm
zhlédnutí 92Před 10 lety
Thunderstorm July 27 2014 around 11pm
Thunderstorm July 27 2014 Sun city az
zhlédnutí 142Před 10 lety
Thunderstorm July 27 2014 Sun city az

Komentáře

  • @brucecopeman9107
    @brucecopeman9107 Před 2 měsíci

    Good teacher how it is done.

  • @biggbossman1130
    @biggbossman1130 Před 5 měsíci

    That’s a boss he explained it simple and the the point

  • @SICILN
    @SICILN Před 10 měsíci

    The first thing he should’ve told his student was to never get on top of the trailer without make sure the pressure valve. The blow by valve is open.

  • @commonsense6423
    @commonsense6423 Před rokem

    Forgetting to mention what builds pressure Duncan…gotta open airrators

  • @shelbyGT40
    @shelbyGT40 Před rokem

    I learned nothing. Idiots

  • @Trux3d
    @Trux3d Před rokem

    Great video thanks

  • @88Jupiter
    @88Jupiter Před rokem

    Top air didn’t 😢say anything about that

  • @ml1712
    @ml1712 Před rokem

    Can you load product such as cement from a guppy storage silo into the truck trailer and if so, what would be the process?

  • @dano8613
    @dano8613 Před rokem

    We haul lime to the gold mine and the only thing I would disagree with is the part about only opening the product valve partially. We build the pressure, open line valve, then open product valve fully. Then when the pressure drops to about 6 we shut product valve off then line valve to build back up to 12.5 then open the next product valve. Repeat until you finish all 3. (Edit) so I started hauling cement to a 2nd gold mine and I stand corrected! With cement our jet line is only partially opened because of how fine it is compared to lime.

    • @melvinrexwinkle1510
      @melvinrexwinkle1510 Před 10 měsíci

      Yep, every product and every place to unload requires different product valve settings

    • @dano8613
      @dano8613 Před 10 měsíci

      @melvinrexwinkle1510 so it's been almost a year, and I have unloaded about 300 bulkers in that time frame. Here is what I learned. Lime being the way it is will unload like plastic pellets and certain grains. Everything else, like sand and cement, ect, is easier to unload, easier to unplug, but definitely don't want that jet line open very much lol. If one can unload the heavy pellet like loads then you can unload anything. Lastly, the customer should have a good bag house for better unloading lol. So in summary, I am humbled and admitting how much MORE I learned in this last 11 months of doing this boring good forsaking type of hauling almost daily lol. (We haul everything here so the bulkers are only a fraction of what we pull)

    • @melvinrexwinkle1510
      @melvinrexwinkle1510 Před 10 měsíci

      I unloaded activated charcoal (ground up, or powdered charcoal, from a wood fueled electrical powerplant on Samoa Island, just off shore from Eureka, California) at a city water treatment plant in Tempe, AZ. This powdered charcoal is very light, we had some 2000 cube trailers, with those, might get 33000lbs net weight, that's all. I had learned to not open the vibrator air to pressure up the tank, only pressured up the tank with top air valve open to about 6 psi, and then open the hot line valve(the valve that either sent the air into the tank, or down to the product line and out the back thru the hose) only opened 1 notch one the valve. I'm saying by doing this would be trying to plug up the product line, all the air pushing down on top of your product, with as small amount of air going to the product line as possible. Well, when I got to the rear product valve opened, I had lost too much tank air on the third valve open, and the product line plugged. The man who overlooked the trucks in the plant was unhappy and said we can't unhook the hose and spill product. I told him that I could suck the product out of the hose but I would have to release the air from the tank, but I could do so very slowly, which would make very little black dust into the atmosphere. So it took about 20 minutes to let the tank pressure out even though it only had about 3psi. The fellow overseeing told me "now I want you to do it my way now, pressure your tank up to 10 psi and then shut down you blower and then open up your product valve all the way and finish unloading" That was enough air in the tank to unload the 4th hole and to clean out the three cones in front, all with the truck engine shut off. I saud all of this just to demonstrate that there can be very extreme differences in the density, and the flow ability, of different products. I hauled perlite from Hodgkins, IL. To Minnesota, a couple loads to a plant buildings double walled cryogenic tanks for LNG, they pulled a vacuum on the wall spacing, just like a giant thermos, and that way vacuumed the load off the trailer. They had a sight glass in their line going into the top of the tank, so I could see the product. I had met another driver who had delivered the first load in the process of filling the double walled vessel, and he said it took 14 hours to unload, so the next morning when I arrived, I told their supervisor, who said he didn't know how to do it, so I said let's get it going and I will get on top of the tank and open a lid so I could see inside the tank and when I saw the cone was about empty(and was about to suck a bunch of air) i would holler for him to close the product valve, thus not losing their vacuum, which was in a vessel that was 110feet long and 14 feet in diameter. We were unloaded in only two hours! I hauled two loads of that perlite, which is the little round balls that you might see in potting soil. If you see one someday day, inch one between your thumbnail and fore finger to break it and you'll see that it is I tiny hollow ball, made from a certain kind of sand, dropped through a torch flame that pops the sand into a popped hollow ball that is a mineral, which means that the ball is temperature proof for cryogenic tanks like liquid nitrogen at -319f or in refineries, etc up to about 2500F Good luck pulling one of them blow wagons, if you ever get stumped, well just reply and I'll try to help

    • @melvinrexwinkle1510
      @melvinrexwinkle1510 Před 10 měsíci

      @@dano8613 where do you run? Nation wide?

    • @dano8613
      @dano8613 Před 10 měsíci

      @melvinrexwinkle1510 I use to but I sold my truck and moved to Alaska, more money up here than anything down there

  • @markbarnett7498
    @markbarnett7498 Před rokem

    I unload my tanks the same way I wipe my ass, from front to back

  • @soulbrothertx
    @soulbrothertx Před 2 lety

    Really should let that pump cool off before shutting it off.. I know he's teaching for sand hauling but he never showed using tank pressure via top air or aerators or a combination of both

  • @normamatta6122
    @normamatta6122 Před 2 lety

    His making it to Complicated

  • @roman_empire24_79
    @roman_empire24_79 Před 2 lety

    Great job and quick

  • @kthmrr4750
    @kthmrr4750 Před 2 lety

    Why don't I do the steps and stop flapping your mouth. Lazy demonstration boy

  • @youcantrailer2648
    @youcantrailer2648 Před 2 lety

    salute

  • @domingoalmanzar2942
    @domingoalmanzar2942 Před 2 lety

    It’s easier when you’re actually doing it…..

  • @domingoalmanzar2942
    @domingoalmanzar2942 Před 2 lety

    What’s are you guys hauling?

  • @surgelottomusic1468
    @surgelottomusic1468 Před 2 lety

    From my experience. This process takes about 1 hour to unload.. let’s say you do 3 loads in a day for 12 hours.. you’ll be working 3 hours and the rest of the 9 hours would be sitting down in the A/C

    • @somewhere-n-Texas
      @somewhere-n-Texas Před 2 lety

      yup ..I just started hauling cement and fly ash 4 days ago with no experience. today I got almost 14 hrs in just getting 2 loads from the plant and taking it back to our plant. sometimes it takes 45 minutes to blow out all the material and sometimes it's about an hour.either way I really like the job and hours!

    • @morganlevesque1179
      @morganlevesque1179 Před rokem

      @@somewhere-n-Texas same here took only two load to get my 14hours

    • @ldbwa1050
      @ldbwa1050 Před rokem

      Y’all drive far for the loads? We do 4/5 loads in 12 hours. The place is about 10 miles away though.

    • @AmericanMadeUSA
      @AmericanMadeUSA Před rokem

      I like your analogy 😊

    • @totoperez1
      @totoperez1 Před 9 měsíci

      @@somewhere-n-Texaseasy peezy, what part of Texas

  • @040119863842
    @040119863842 Před 2 lety

    If you’re in the Jacksonville area, Bulkmatic is looking for some pneumatic drivers. Saw an add for it earlier today.

  • @samueltidwell3377
    @samueltidwell3377 Před 2 lety

    Different cans like different methods. Also depends on what your blowing.

    • @The52dodgem37
      @The52dodgem37 Před 2 lety

      Yep absolutely I've worked on some took 30 min to blow off and worked on some took 3hrs to blow off so depends on trailer and plant

  • @kinggkongg9694
    @kinggkongg9694 Před 2 lety

    I blow sand at 15 all day and if you clog you can create a vacuum to suck it back if you close the product and bang open the blow down

    • @The52dodgem37
      @The52dodgem37 Před 2 lety

      Very true....this was a video a few years ago just kinda half ass refresher course lol

  • @engagefirstinc.troyandlind1335

    Bad teacher

  • @robertdaniul4390
    @robertdaniul4390 Před 2 lety

    My company doesn’t have the fluffed on our lime trailers.

  • @ROwyoCO
    @ROwyoCO Před 3 lety

    Great. Good start to the future job!

  • @Randomthings321go
    @Randomthings321go Před 3 lety

    Wanna plug up? Listen to this guy🤦‍♂️

  • @MrBigR928
    @MrBigR928 Před 3 lety

    Would've been nice for the camera to show everything the guy was pointing to but appreciate the effort 👍🏿

  • @singaporeghostclub
    @singaporeghostclub Před 3 lety

    I am from Singapore and I work as a cement tanker driver part time - my tank is a meagre 35 ton max weight. Anyway, it’s awesome to see different tank variations from around the world .

    • @Trux3d
      @Trux3d Před rokem

      Keep on truckin 🤙🚛

  • @iamdatnigga100
    @iamdatnigga100 Před 3 lety

    Serious question can I do this in my auto truck

    • @The52dodgem37
      @The52dodgem37 Před 3 lety

      Do you mean you select shift truck? If so yes you can. As long as you have a pto and a blower you sure can!

    • @iamdatnigga100
      @iamdatnigga100 Před 3 lety

      @@The52dodgem37 yes that’s the plan, I want to take my truck to the sand fracking business

  • @melvinrexwinkle1510
    @melvinrexwinkle1510 Před 3 lety

    Safety issue, always leave a product valve open after opening blowdown valve, and then step on discharge hose to check pressure in the discharge hose. before disconnecting the hose.

  • @melvinrexwinkle1510
    @melvinrexwinkle1510 Před 3 lety

    I don't start unloading at the rear cone, I start at the front and work towards the rear, for only one reason. If the back cone is empty and for some reason the product valve can't be shut completely. or perhaps there is some problem with the rubber seal, that allows the tank air pressure to escape, then you can't maintain tank pressure and consequently you can't unload any cone forward of the non functional product valve I have had this happen to me once in about 20 years of pulling pneumatic tanks. Once also, a friend called me with that problem and asking what to do. So in 20 years experience. Its happened 2 times. But. Why not start unloading at the front and work toward the back? No reason not to do it. The time I had a problem was unloading frac sand. Started at the front, front hole emptied and the valve would not shut. Was obstructed by something, so I immediately opened second hole product valve, slowly built tank pressure and continued to unload trailer. I could unload that way because the product was behind the not able to close product valve. When the trailer was empty, looked in the top and there was a 4lb. Hammer. Handle down in the front product valve.

    • @elijahmoon21able
      @elijahmoon21able Před 3 lety

      If for whatever reason you can’t complete unloading, and you’ve got to leave the location with a partially loaded trailer, you don’t want all the weight at the very back of the trailer. Unload from the back, first. Always.

    • @melvinrexwinkle1510
      @melvinrexwinkle1510 Před 3 lety

      @@elijahmoon21able it'll get ya doing that some day

    • @domingoalmanzar2942
      @domingoalmanzar2942 Před 2 lety

      I did this type of work many moons ago with a company called Foodliner. I pumped the Silo of Wonder bread now out of business, in New York and Philadelphia.

    • @MultiCrusher2
      @MultiCrusher2 Před 10 měsíci

      I always start with the center pocket then front and then rear and go back to the center.

  • @donniehodge2548
    @donniehodge2548 Před 3 lety

    I unloaded one of those for 36 years

  • @dannyb4286
    @dannyb4286 Před 3 lety

    Worse explanation literally

  • @semiretired6033
    @semiretired6033 Před 3 lety

    ugh!!

  • @Wakko0o
    @Wakko0o Před 3 lety

    Easy way to fail if you ask me. I see the good intention but wayyy to fast. Maybe that’s why he recorded it 😆 so he can slow it down at home 🤪

  • @alanibarra9435
    @alanibarra9435 Před 3 lety

    The camara man is a dumbass

    • @The52dodgem37
      @The52dodgem37 Před 3 lety

      Alan I filmed it. It was just a simple video for notes I apologize if it wasn't to your satisfaction. However I really don't care what you think or say. This was just a refresher course for me. Been doing that for 4 years now and not a problem yet.

    • @alanibarra9435
      @alanibarra9435 Před 3 lety

      @@The52dodgem37 just kidding. Well explained though

    • @The52dodgem37
      @The52dodgem37 Před 3 lety

      It's confusing but since I was rusty the boss decided to go over it with me. I normally run belly dump however you know how it goes if you got a class A your doing anything and everything! I've ran a service truck hauled equipment done end dumps and flatbed as well as step decks....jack of all master of none!!!

  • @freddyfreddy42
    @freddyfreddy42 Před 3 lety

    So what happens if you get a clog?

    • @elijahmoon21able
      @elijahmoon21able Před 3 lety

      Shut off product IMMEDIATELY. See if your pressure will clear the clog. Up to 15 psi maybe a little over. If that doesn’t clear it, snap your main pressure valve open and closed, this creates a suction and can clear the clog. You may have to play with it for a while alternating between pressuring up, and snapping that pressure relief open and closed. Bottom line, just don’t get clogged up. Aka don’t be fucking around on your phone not paying attention and letting your pressure get too high, over 15 basically. If anybody is honest, it’s the only way they ever get plugged up, by being distracted.

    • @melvinrexwinkle1510
      @melvinrexwinkle1510 Před 3 lety

      1 close product valve 2 close top air valve 3 close vibratory off putting all the air on the discharge line and hose. 4 open blowdown valve letting tank depressureize. 5 open a empty product valve of you have one empty. Open the rear product valve if all cones have product. If air blows up into tank from discharge line, then you know that discharge line is empty. If not then you have to go to the next product valve toward the front. May have to go all the way to the front, if it plugged when unloading the front cone. If all the cones have product it will.still work, but works better if one cone is empty. When the blower pressure relief is popping off open the product valve all the way quickly and count 1 and 2 about as fast as you can say it and close the product valve quickly. Sometimes on an empty cone you can hear the product come out of the line and going up and hitting the top of the tank and on air ride trailers it will bounce up and down even when there is product in the cone. What happens is that when the blower pops off the pressure at around 15 , 16 or 17 psi air will go into the air spaces between the particles of product, wherever the plug is in the hose or line, and when you release the pressure forward of the plug the air will rush toward the front to the open product valve and drag some product with it back into the tank. Some products like potash fertilizer that's fairly coarse you can hear it moving thru the discharge line and you can tell it takes about 2 foot out of the line and back into tank every time you open and close product valve. I know it sounds crazy, all we can do is blow air toward the hose, but it will work , you can suck that product right back out out of the line and hose and put it right back in the tank, but you have to move that product valve pretty fast, close it ,blower pops off, open it, trailer bounces up and down close the product valve. It happens about as fast as you can say it. Some products can be really expensive, consequently it can be costly to dump the hose on the ground. And sometimes can be a chemical spill on the soil or in a watershed area. So you ought to try to suck it out of the discharge hose and not dump it on the ground I have only experienced 2 reasons why I could not suck the product back into the tank. One was because there was wet product, and the other was because the silo was full and the pipe was full and air could not come into the line on the far side of the plug

  • @timmyo3162
    @timmyo3162 Před 3 lety

    Getting ready too start Monday orientation running pneumatics so I truly thank y’all for this.

    • @dominick253
      @dominick253 Před 3 lety

      Just keep an eye on it at all times. As soon as you look away or go to grab your coffe, BAM, lines clogged. Really sucks especially when they need that cement ASAP.

    • @brickbreaker9581
      @brickbreaker9581 Před 3 lety

      Unclogging can be pretty hard and dirty so be careful and watch your pressure’s.

    • @jeff7764
      @jeff7764 Před rokem

      It’s a nightmare job

  • @jmdiaz6018
    @jmdiaz6018 Před 3 lety

    When the first dude explains it, he explained that whole process beautifully and perfectly, I understood it right away, and quicker than I've ever understood it watching any other video, BUT, AS SOON AS, the second guy starts talkin, He instantly made it confusing. You just need to watch it a few time to get what he is talking about.

  • @thegravy42
    @thegravy42 Před 3 lety

    This is definitely not how you unload plastic

    • @melvinrexwinkle1510
      @melvinrexwinkle1510 Před 3 lety

      Yep, none of them talking about how different products behave in the tank

  • @kgeganjrify
    @kgeganjrify Před 3 lety

    No talk about the flow cones

  • @kennypurvis5208
    @kennypurvis5208 Před 3 lety

    Never close your bottom air never

  • @melvinrexwinkle1510
    @melvinrexwinkle1510 Před 3 lety

    He left out a lot? Imo

  • @shaicarter1
    @shaicarter1 Před 3 lety

    He teaching him too much at once to be a beginner. Hook hose to silos. Make sure all 3 pods and the line are closed. Leave pressurize open so it can build once you engage PTO. Hook up hot hose to your blower. Cut on your PTO and watch pressure build. Once at 12, cut off pressure then open line valve followed by opening whichever pod you prefer. I unload the middle first because that’s always the fullest then the last because that’s the next fullest then the front. Front always has less. Keep pressure on tank and lines at 12 and relax. High pressure will clog your line or burst your hose. A 20 foot clogged line is a bitch to disconnect and dump out by yourself. Once a pod gets low and you can feel it. Start cracking the next one. Once their all empty depressurize the line(open valve) Cut off PTO then disconnect your hot hose from the blower then disconnect from the silos. Job done, another load in the bank.

  • @chris-ij4vc
    @chris-ij4vc Před 3 lety

    You open full(90 degrees)the product valve full not 45 degrees. I drive these trailers.

    • @melvinrexwinkle1510
      @melvinrexwinkle1510 Před 3 lety

      You are just as incorrect as the video

    • @MegastarKaran
      @MegastarKaran Před 3 lety

      @@melvinrexwinkle1510 his wording is but you need to have the product valve all the way open because all the product needs to get out without force

    • @elijahmoon21able
      @elijahmoon21able Před 3 lety

      Always open the product valve all the way.

    • @MegastarKaran
      @MegastarKaran Před 3 lety

      @@elijahmoon21able well its open but 45 degrees is when you don't want to lose pressure

  • @haithamal-baghdadi9968

    I am a truck driver and practicing more than 35 years and holds a license for heavy trucks market in 1989 and until now I am practicing. . I am looking for work in any country, and I was born in 1963 and live in Iraq. Please e-mail me or call on the phone (07706447069) My name is Haitham Karim. /Greetings to all

  • @keepyourjobkeepyourjob7530

    Confused asssss fuck

  • @rickbrown6337
    @rickbrown6337 Před 4 lety

    Lost me

  • @Minyin3737
    @Minyin3737 Před 4 lety

    I’d love to see his first time doing it

  • @9891BR
    @9891BR Před 4 lety

    Thanks. You guys are great. Thank you.

  • @bertnl530
    @bertnl530 Před 4 lety

    No earthing?