It blows my mind that someone thought of all this, then sat down, made a plan, and made it all happen. Where are all those kind of people in my life???
The part where the molten hot glass rides on a slide and flies into the waiting presser, and a tiny little 'blocker' pops up on the rear end of the presser to prevent it from sliding to far, is pretty much the most amazing thing from me. Like it just feels like bubble gum and paper clips but it works so smooth and reliably XD
I was just wondering how glass products are mass produced. All I know about glass art is that it’s made by hand. I see, mass produced Glass is made from a mold.
I was a mold paster at a 24% full lead glass factory. I put the coating on the inside of the form for the blow machine. That was long ago. The only difference is our blow machine loaded the stem and fused the two all in one process.
Thanks, well done the designers and the engineers who make the product. Using a carousel design machine is very efficient in this type of production, used it myself.
Is it common to get tours of the factories where the goods you're delivering are being made? I've been considering getting my CDL, and this adds further motivation.
How wonderful that was. Thank you, I am always amazed at automation. I think sometimes the process and machinery to produe the item is more fascinating than the item.
I'm the same way, man. Just in awe that these machines can successfully achieve something so delicate as making an incredibly fragile wine glasses by the thousands. I want a How It's Made on how some of these incredible manufacturing machines are designed and made!
That was awesome. I wish it said something about what the prototype is for. It didn't seem to be used later on. They make new molds for the mass production. Maybe the prototype is used for testing? Or maybe they use it to know the exact weight of glass that goes into each part?
Makes you wonder. Who is buying enough wine glasses to necessitate a whole automated factory. Like, do people just smash wine glasses left and right? The only wine glasses i've ever seen have been family heirlooms that never get used. Or "honey we need some wine glasses" type, that STILL never get used.
Thanks for a very interesting article, here are a few more tips for how to make wine… Use the correct equipment. Things like plastic buckets and bins come in different grades of plastic. You must use the food-grade plastic products not the cheaper buckets you might use to clean the floor! If plastic buckets and bins start getting scratched and grazed, replace them. The grazes will start harbouring microbes and eventually you’ll have a spoilt batch of wine. If stirring the must (the initial mix of fruit and water etc.) in a bin, scald the spoon with boiling water first to quickly sterilise it. Fill and top up airlocks with cooled, boiled water - never straight from the sink. Avoid metal spoons and sieves with fermenting wine - i.e. after the yeast has been added. Sometimes they can taint the wine. Avoid wooden spoons, which are hard to sterilise - plastic is far better. Reusing wine bottles is fine, ask friends to save them for you and check with local clubs or restaurants who are often happy to give them to you. Wash out immediately as a clean bottle will be a lot easier to sterilise when you come to use them. Rack your wine to clear it before bottling. That is, using a syphon tube, suck up the wine from one demijohn into another leaving the sediment (called lees) behind. The tubes with a base and valve are cheap enough and a make this easier. Allow the wine to settle for a week and repeat if necessary before bottling Never judge your wine by the taste as you bottle it. Most often you will think it is a disaster. Some wines can take two years to mature. As a general rule, try a bottle after six months. If it tastes harsh, leave the rest for at least another 5 or 6 months. Allow time. Time is the great wine maker and you should never be in a rush. We’ve made wine that was 9 months in the demijohn before bottling and drunk it three years later. The following year it was even better! (Reference: Pavas Grape Plan site )
Actually I don't think it's that wasteful. All the juice gets used, and the grape skins and seeds, etc, get turned into things like balsamic vinegar and other products. Of all the kinds of food production, it's one of the better ones.
@@TheJohnreeves I think you're wrong. Vinegar bad for teeth, the Liver produces Vinegar as the first thing, to start the digestion. Wine clearly is the worst, wasting and not taking advantage of a perfectly good food; Wine is highly ineficient relative to the grapes
uhhhh, ya, this is bullshit. 3mm extra on the radius at the widest part will not overpower the actual taste of the wine itself. Also, maybe some people prefer if this or that doesn't evaporate or come into contact with the air?? I would love to see that taste test with different wine glasses. I got 500 dollars on it that even the best would have no clue which glass was which just from taste alone.
1:25 Someone had a laugh writing that part.
It blows my mind that someone thought of all this, then sat down, made a plan, and made it all happen.
Where are all those kind of people in my life???
Mechanical Engineers :D
EXACTLY what I was thinking
The part where the molten hot glass rides on a slide and flies into the waiting presser, and a tiny little 'blocker' pops up on the rear end of the presser to prevent it from sliding to far, is pretty much the most amazing thing from me. Like it just feels like bubble gum and paper clips but it works so smooth and reliably XD
blueslove61 killed
It is called: MEN
I was just wondering how glass products are mass produced. All I know about glass art is that it’s made by hand. I see, mass produced Glass is made from a mold.
We're all kinds of glassware mamufacturer .Of premium quality and reasonable price.我们的水晶高脚杯全部都是人工吹制的
I never knew that different glass structure matters when drinking wine.
I did but I was too drunk to care.
I was a mold paster at a 24% full lead glass factory. I put the coating on the inside of the form for the blow machine. That was long ago. The only difference is our blow machine loaded the stem and fused the two all in one process.
Thanks, well done the designers and the engineers who make the product.
Using a carousel design machine is very efficient in this type of production, used it myself.
That was amazing! Hail to the great production engineer's of today's world.
The best part about driving a truck was watching things like this be made!
Is it common to get tours of the factories where the goods you're delivering are being made? I've been considering getting my CDL, and this adds further motivation.
these machines are incredible
Industrial Engineering.. pretty amazing
We're all kinds of glassware mamufacturer .Of premium quality and reasonable price.
How wonderful that was. Thank you, I am always amazed at automation. I think sometimes the process and machinery to produe the item is more fascinating than the item.
I'm the same way, man. Just in awe that these machines can successfully achieve something so delicate as making an incredibly fragile wine glasses by the thousands. I want a How It's Made on how some of these incredible manufacturing machines are designed and made!
What a manufacturing marvel! Very interesting.
Fascinating!
That was awesome. I wish it said something about what the prototype is for. It didn't seem to be used later on. They make new molds for the mass production.
Maybe the prototype is used for testing? Or maybe they use it to know the exact weight of glass that goes into each part?
actually learned something i thank you
Perfect all is awsome..
My wine tastes better just from watching this.
I remember a test by experts blind testing wines, a couple of cheap wines were included. No one could pick out the cheap wine. Hahaha
05:38 not too rough for me to drink out of.
Mosht intereshting. Hic!
I love my wine!!! White please sir.
Tyler Hastings this comment is so pure
If the entire manufacturing process is mechanised, what is the purpose of making a prototype.?
We're all kinds of glassware mamufacturer .Of premium quality and reasonable price.
Does anybody know the force of the air which is blowed to make the top of the glass ?
11
well human lungs can do it. how many PSI can the human lungs produce? are they drawing a vacuum at the bottom
just drinking wine and watching the johney depp case and i thought how tf is my glass made?! great video for my thought haha!
a mega pint !
Humans are amazing
Makes you wonder. Who is buying enough wine glasses to necessitate a whole automated factory. Like, do people just smash wine glasses left and right? The only wine glasses i've ever seen have been family heirlooms that never get used. Or "honey we need some wine glasses" type, that STILL never get used.
Ours get used (always my wife's idea), but that's even worse. I get an anxiety attack whenever I have to handle or wash them.
Restraunts
Thanks for a very interesting article, here are a few more tips for how to make wine…
Use the correct equipment. Things like plastic buckets and bins come in different grades of plastic. You must use the food-grade plastic products not the cheaper buckets you might use to clean the floor!
If plastic buckets and bins start getting scratched and grazed, replace them. The grazes will start harbouring microbes and eventually you’ll have a spoilt batch of wine.
If stirring the must (the initial mix of fruit and water etc.) in a bin, scald the spoon with boiling water first to quickly sterilise it.
Fill and top up airlocks with cooled, boiled water - never straight from the sink.
Avoid metal spoons and sieves with fermenting wine - i.e. after the yeast has been added. Sometimes they can taint the wine. Avoid wooden spoons, which are hard to sterilise - plastic is far better.
Reusing wine bottles is fine, ask friends to save them for you and check with local clubs or restaurants who are often happy to give them to you. Wash out immediately as a clean bottle will be a lot easier to sterilise when you come to use them.
Rack your wine to clear it before bottling. That is, using a syphon tube, suck up the wine from one demijohn into another leaving the sediment (called lees) behind. The tubes with a base and valve are cheap enough and a make this easier. Allow the wine to settle for a week and repeat if necessary before bottling
Never judge your wine by the taste as you bottle it. Most often you will think it is a disaster. Some wines can take two years to mature. As a general rule, try a bottle after six months. If it tastes harsh, leave the rest for at least another 5 or 6 months.
Allow time. Time is the great wine maker and you should never be in a rush. We’ve made wine that was 9 months in the demijohn before bottling and drunk it three years later. The following year it was even better!
(Reference: Pavas Grape Plan site )
That's the longest comment I've ever seen
Yeah but this "article" is about glass making.
250,000 a day? Wow.
Could you please tell me the name of the company which makes this video and manufactured the wine glass ?
Muhammad Renaldi well, idk the wine glass factory but this is from a show called How It’s Made
We're all kinds of glassware mamufacturer .Of premium quality and reasonable price.
It only takes 75 to 100 individual grapes to make a bottle of wine.
+Max Scadden OR.....one or two *really big* grapes!
Or 1000 little grapes. Don't forget about those little babies tucked in behind the big ones!
Faaaaaar less. Usually one vine gets a liter or so, from about 10 grapes
doubtful that this was a Reidel factory.... yet could have been. nothing in description.
What factory is this, I’m doing a tech project on wine glasses and need to know what companies mass produce wine glasses.
We're all kinds of glassware mamufacturer .Of premium quality and reasonable price.
@@belicaglassware7371 please send me your company contact
czcams.com/video/d3QEpQ9ozVU/video.html
1958 film by Bert Haanstra
The guy needs to wear glasses to block the light from the glowing glass because that wavelength will be damage the lens in his eyes.0
British !
Amazing Afrikan technology. 🙄
frank ocean > michael jaxon
Wine is so wasteful and I don't like it, I prefer grapes any day
I could never figure out why anyone would let good grape juice go rotten . . .
@@jonathanljohnson Are you being sarcastic? Are you addicted to wine 🍷?
Actually I don't think it's that wasteful. All the juice gets used, and the grape skins and seeds, etc, get turned into things like balsamic vinegar and other products. Of all the kinds of food production, it's one of the better ones.
@@TheJohnreeves I think you're wrong. Vinegar bad for teeth, the Liver produces Vinegar as the first thing, to start the digestion. Wine clearly is the worst, wasting and not taking advantage of a perfectly good food; Wine is highly ineficient relative to the grapes
BS...
uhhhh, ya, this is bullshit. 3mm extra on the radius at the widest part will not overpower the actual taste of the wine itself. Also, maybe some people prefer if this or that doesn't evaporate or come into contact with the air?? I would love to see that taste test with different wine glasses. I got 500 dollars on it that even the best would have no clue which glass was which just from taste alone.