How Wind Turbine Technicians Risk Their Lives to Keep Blades Spinning | Risky Business

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  • čas přidán 26. 02. 2022
  • In Portugal, technicians risk their lives every day to repair the wind turbines that provide energy across the country. They rappel down from turbines as high as 360 feet with only climbing rope and a harness keeping them safe.
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    What It's Like To Climb A 400-Feet Wind Turbine | Risky Business

Komentáře • 1,8K

  • @InsiderNews
    @InsiderNews  Před rokem +75

    If you would like us to cover/profile a risky business or industry in your area, please reply to this comment with your suggestions.

    • @DestroyAllDemocrats
      @DestroyAllDemocrats Před rokem +7

      Do a report on how inefficient wind energy is vs the cost and how they are powered by diesel generators when the wind isn't blowing. Also discuss the dead bird graveyard at the base of windmill farms. The worst of the fake green energies

    • @kylear6120
      @kylear6120 Před rokem +5

      I’m a cell tower climber in upstate NY

    • @boohere2
      @boohere2 Před rokem +4

      I would have like to seen how they put one of these up. Like how they are assembled

    • @elye3701
      @elye3701 Před rokem +3

      Repeat this but for offshore wind turbines.

    • @elye3701
      @elye3701 Před rokem +5

      The cameraman who filmed this. That's got to be a risky business.

  • @dariussmith9846
    @dariussmith9846 Před rokem +304

    Truck driver here and I'm so fascinated with the drivers who haul these windmill blades. They usually travel in groups of 3. Much respect for these guys. I love driving thru windmill farms during my daily travels 💪💪💯💯

    • @lrn_news9171
      @lrn_news9171 Před rokem +5

      I've seen that while living in Ontario canada when a wind farm was being built. Trucks transporting pieces of these massive things were going by everyday. They're bigger than they look

    • @lrn_news9171
      @lrn_news9171 Před rokem +8

      Btw being a trucker is much more dangerous than this job, even though it doesn't look like it

    • @TroopsofDoom666
      @TroopsofDoom666 Před rokem

      @@lrn_news9171 fatique is scary...

    • @ahmeddhere1154
      @ahmeddhere1154 Před rokem +2

      @@lrn_news9171 you’re insane

    • @lrn_news9171
      @lrn_news9171 Před rokem

      @@ahmeddhere1154 Why?

  • @CJ-kw8vc
    @CJ-kw8vc Před 2 lety +102

    Just got my contract, waiting to find out which wind farm I’ll be heading to end of this month cannot wait!!!!!

    • @dani.mughal2438
      @dani.mughal2438 Před 2 lety

      How u apply

    • @lukekennedy6394
      @lukekennedy6394 Před 2 lety +2

      Good luck mate you'll love it! What firm you with?

    • @dani.mughal2438
      @dani.mughal2438 Před 2 lety

      Where

    • @lukekennedy6394
      @lukekennedy6394 Před 2 lety +9

      @@dani.mughal2438 A lot of companies won't accept people without previous experience or the right certification. You may need to self fund these first. Many guys in the industry are self-employed

    • @honesty_-no9he
      @honesty_-no9he Před 2 lety

      Thank you !! ABC ! Always Be Careful.

  • @a9s2w5
    @a9s2w5 Před rokem +95

    Dang, I have climbed up various broadcast towers and things like that, but nothing like this, even in decent shape you don't realize how difficult it is. If you don't do it all the time or even if you do….your legs go. Your hands quit functioning. It's a rough go. It seems so simple and easy, it's not. Nothing but a lot of respect for people like this.

    • @mirandahotspring4019
      @mirandahotspring4019 Před 11 dny

      Easy job. I did it for years, sitting in a comfortable Petzl Podium and charging a great per hour fee.

  • @darel2911
    @darel2911 Před rokem +167

    Glad we have these kind of people who risk life and limb for this kind of work, I install roof framing on houses just 5-6 meters and at times I get light-headed when I'm on the edge of the roof frame.

    • @m0r73n
      @m0r73n Před rokem +10

      It's just what you are used to, I was the same as you in the beginning, 5-6 meter was scary, but I eventualy ended up working up to a few hundred meters above ground.

    • @daveyjoseph6058
      @daveyjoseph6058 Před rokem

      the only people who actually risk their lives are the ones dumb enough to not ensure their safety

    • @lexbeltran1354
      @lexbeltran1354 Před rokem +5

      It looks like a fun job, better than being in an office or warehouse 😅

    • @Ballen1182
      @Ballen1182 Před rokem +2

      And these don't have edges though, which for me is super scary

    • @habesha6883
      @habesha6883 Před 5 měsíci

      Men*

  • @Fractal227
    @Fractal227 Před 2 lety +171

    I could never do this, i dont even want to look over the edge from 6'th floor and feel my stomack "sink".
    Respect to those who can.

    • @fredfreddy8684
      @fredfreddy8684 Před rokem +5

      Very scary stuff for me too. I don't mind some things that drive others bonkers, but heights are tough.

    • @highimshadow6367
      @highimshadow6367 Před rokem

      @@repentandbelieveinjesuschr9495Will Jesus fap with me?

    • @believer1056
      @believer1056 Před rokem +1

      @Repent and believe in Jesus Christ Allah is one

    • @alasiri2275
      @alasiri2275 Před rokem

      with time you get used, personally hated this job now am an engineer working relatively the same thing

    • @victorjatogetherijusthadto2701
      @victorjatogetherijusthadto2701 Před rokem

      Same here 😅😂

  • @brittenyevans1101
    @brittenyevans1101 Před rokem +208

    I would be scared as hell to do this, much respect to these men .

    • @bitcoinisfreedommoney.fckt2663
      @bitcoinisfreedommoney.fckt2663 Před rokem

      it's not a job for non-males then again neither is any job that requires bravery, intelligence or keeping civilisation ticking over. Non males are only capable of make-work jobs like HR, primary school teaching and admin

    • @Grimmes12
      @Grimmes12 Před rokem +29

      Hey Britteny where are all those strong empowered fearless feminist women like AOC to do these jobs to keep green technology running

    • @brittenyevans1101
      @brittenyevans1101 Před rokem +2

      @@Grimmes12 lol 😭😭😭

    • @aadixum
      @aadixum Před rokem +10

      @@Grimmes12 i aM a sTrOnG iNdEpEnDeNt wOmAn

    • @Grimmes12
      @Grimmes12 Před rokem +2

      @@aadixum where are you and women like you to do these kinda jobs???

  • @laurenescamilla2529
    @laurenescamilla2529 Před rokem +12

    I live in suburban illinois and rural illinois is like 1-2hrs away from where I’m at. When you drive down these 1 lane roads, you see HUNDREDS of wind turbines in the fields. So many of them were broken and I couldn’t help but worry for the people who would have to climb up there to fix them.

  • @AmandasAmazingAdventures
    @AmandasAmazingAdventures Před rokem +189

    I do cell phone tower work, pretty similar to this. I’m curious what you’re research would bring up on this career.
    Top hand is my title. Thanks for the informative videos. Keep showing kids you don’t have to go to college to get great paying jobs. Instead of money you just need a lot of blood, sweat, tears and overtime.

    • @atlien4030
      @atlien4030 Před rokem +3

      Tower Dawgs Lead the way 💪🏾

    • @susiekim5728
      @susiekim5728 Před rokem +3

      What is your salary? Which state are you employed at?

    • @b_bogg
      @b_bogg Před rokem +20

      Susie lookin for a step daddy lol

    • @susiekim5728
      @susiekim5728 Před rokem +9

      @@b_bogg Lmao are you accepting?

    • @dakotaautosales9673
      @dakotaautosales9673 Před rokem +25

      What part of him saying that he is a mechanical engineer did you not catch🧁😂😂

  • @mtiedemann11
    @mtiedemann11 Před rokem +377

    Much respect and appreciation for tower workers!

    • @Grimmes12
      @Grimmes12 Před rokem

      You mean the men who risk their lives for green technology because those strong empowered women like AOC ain't trying to do these types of jobs

    • @mountopia77
      @mountopia77 Před rokem

      screw them.

    • @locochang6533
      @locochang6533 Před rokem +1

      No need. They get paid.

    • @tommytheshimigami
      @tommytheshimigami Před rokem

      turbines rarely break, yeah right there are thousands if not tens of thousands of dead broken ones. this is such media propaganda

    • @the.communist
      @the.communist Před rokem +4

      You should have appreciation for cleaners n fast food restos attendants. They have really grim.

  • @pk-fb2yr
    @pk-fb2yr Před 2 lety +141

    They don't get paid enough to be risking their lives like this .Bravo to all the brave hard working men .

    • @tasiociafancelli9912
      @tasiociafancelli9912 Před 2 lety +7

      @John Clemens The think is that this job is safer than driving your car on the street IF things are done right all the time, without never ever overlooking the safety aspects. One of those aspects also is that the company and bosses have to do everything for the safety of their workers, and in Spain and Portugal these companies take advantage of the workers: they pay less for the same job than in northern european countries, put you in distress and hurries, don't check the mandatory safety equip revisions, etc. It's a pity cause in spain for what i have seen the workers are really strong and go above and beyond in safety issues also creating a sense of community, but hey who could tell that capitalism tries to lowkey kill the workers...

    • @heliumfreak5364
      @heliumfreak5364 Před 2 lety +5

      They dont pay the portuegues enough thats for sure, at least when compared to say UK techs, cause portugal is actually really poor. UK blade techs earn in 3 months what they earn in a year

    • @nobull772
      @nobull772 Před 2 lety

      @@heliumfreak5364Can’t you move to another country in the EU for work?

    • @randomly_random_0
      @randomly_random_0 Před 2 lety +4

      All for "safe, environmental friendly" energy source

    • @bigetnt
      @bigetnt Před 2 lety +10

      They aren't risking there lives..... The death rate of this job is nothing compared to a welder. Or refinery worker. Your more likely to die in your car. Then on the job here

  • @joshuabaughn3734
    @joshuabaughn3734 Před rokem +30

    They deserve respect! I don't understand their job but I do understand the amount of work they have to do. Michigan has pretty crazy wind and weather due to the Great Lakes. One moment it's a calm day and the next you're holding on to your hat for dear life.
    There's a lot of wind farms along the coastlines of the lakes because of this.

    • @CFox.7
      @CFox.7 Před 9 měsíci

      Respect ? for what ? I guess you dont realise how many people there are out there that love heights and risky work - especially when it pays so much.
      I used to rock climbing and abseiling down was my favourite part. Imagine getting paid big bucks to do something you love - there are many many many ppl like me

    • @goingberserker505
      @goingberserker505 Před 5 měsíci

      @@CFox.7Respect to anyone who’s willing to take a risky job, goofy ass it went over your head.

  • @DavidBrocekArt
    @DavidBrocekArt Před 11 měsíci +6

    This is one of those jobs that you would never even think exists, but when you see it, it makes total sense.

  • @jamesbilalourenco448
    @jamesbilalourenco448 Před rokem +12

    I am from Angola and I am mechanical engineer.I am in Portugal since 2020 and don't not have residence yet.I speak English and French fluently beside portuguese. I expect to work in this area as soon as possible.I am just waiting for my residence and some courses that I have to get as BTT and BST from GWO.
    I wish you guys a great job.

    • @rodrigoteixeira4795
      @rodrigoteixeira4795 Před rokem +1

      nao sei se andas à procura de lugares para fazer o gwo mas 1 sitio onde fiz foi no jorge lozano em queluz quanto ao btt acho que encontras na area do porto

    • @ACL617
      @ACL617 Před rokem

      Good luck to you! Much respect

    • @nareshaggarwal3230
      @nareshaggarwal3230 Před rokem

      How much KW/MW is the output of one wind turbine and generator of this size.

    • @danny_racho
      @danny_racho Před rokem

      Maybe get yourself the same GoPro like this guy in the video and put your work on CZcams and TikTok, you'll earn much more than 30k$ a month

  • @franciscoduarte1925
    @franciscoduarte1925 Před rokem +16

    Parabéns João 🎉🎉 seu trabalho é dose elevada de adrenalina, medo, atenção, controle, satisfação,....o sangue fica diferente.....Tem mesmo que ser muito bem compensado 💰💰💰

  • @babybecz
    @babybecz Před 8 měsíci +1

    My brother works on wind turbines ❤ much respect to you guys this looks so difficult!! Stay safe out there.

  • @nicholashaindl7940
    @nicholashaindl7940 Před rokem +20

    Pretty cool job, I used to work as a commercial diver, diving in water towers/tanks. Didn't have to climb up more than 200 feet, but respect what these guys do, anything with heights involved isn't easy.

    • @Kylewraps
      @Kylewraps Před rokem

      Wait commercial diver? What all did that entail and how do you get into that line of work?

    • @nicholashaindl7940
      @nicholashaindl7940 Před rokem +1

      @@Kylewraps I had just graduated college in 2020, probably the worst time with covid and all. Saw an ad for underwater welding on facebook and ended up taking the plunge for commercial dive school. It was a 6 month program in NJ where I got a feel for being/working underwater.
      Got a job a month out of dive school and it was cool for awhile. Did the tank diving because it paid a little more for green beans in the industry and it was close to home. Diving water towers/tanks is physically demanding, climbing up 175 at the most and then hauling up all your dive gear/equipment with ropes/pulleys is tough lol. I dove the tanks for cleaning sediment/other crap on bottom, Inspections of the insides, and occasionally repair work say if there was a leak or something like that.

    • @Kylewraps
      @Kylewraps Před rokem

      @@nicholashaindl7940 how much was dive school?
      I’m a high school dropout 26 years old and trying to find something to do with my life. Thinking about wind turbine technician classes but I need to conquer my queasiness with heights which idk if it’s realistic
      Gonna jump out of a plane this year I think to see if that helps my fear

    • @nicholashaindl7940
      @nicholashaindl7940 Před rokem +1

      @@Kylewraps anywhere from 10k-35k, their usually around the same time, 4-6 months of training. Morgan city college in Louisiana is the cheapest and DIT in seattle WA is probably the most expensive. There's also a couple in Texas, Arizona, and Florida.
      Theres a lot of possibilities with dive work depending on your work ethic/skills, having a mechanically lined aptitude helps. A lot of guys go offshore to work in the GOM after school. There's inland work all over the place, from dams, nuclear power plants, potable diving, salvage, general construction. Lots of options.

    • @Kylewraps
      @Kylewraps Před rokem

      @@nicholashaindl7940 nice I’m in Houston Texas
      I’m not handy or mechanical so I feel like I would get discouraged rather quickly and quit
      Maybe I should try electrician trade school, I thought about Tulsa Welding school but then I realized I would have to buy a diesel truck and financially it makes no sense to buy a diesel truck to make like $60k per year

  • @teguharifandi3489
    @teguharifandi3489 Před 2 lety +55

    Palm sweating, heart pounding, feet tingling, this is too intense even watching this while seating on the ground

  • @sarahs7489
    @sarahs7489 Před 11 měsíci +1

    I love this mans positive attitude and passion for his work!

  • @smartguyray3372
    @smartguyray3372 Před měsícem

    I just completed a Capstone course and I wrote on wind turbines/wind farms. This is great for Portugal!

  • @lisianemuttimutti4220
    @lisianemuttimutti4220 Před rokem +7

    Muita coragem, parabéns pelo trabalho!!

  • @TechFreak51
    @TechFreak51 Před rokem +3

    These folks deserve a tonn of money and respect !!!

  • @sergiopolanco9073
    @sergiopolanco9073 Před rokem +4

    This is really nice Joao, I leave in chicago USA and I use this equipment to wash windows in the high rises building. Tu trabajo es muito bom, cuide-se.

    • @itachi1165
      @itachi1165 Před rokem

      Never doing that

    • @eligreg99
      @eligreg99 Před rokem

      Respect. That’s an even scarier job than this I feel. I’ve seen window washers with nothing but a scaffold to stand on.

  • @keelancrowder8946
    @keelancrowder8946 Před rokem +10

    Brother been doing this for 4 almost 5 years. As I told him they really need to give them some type of parachute or something. Can't always trust a harness

    • @LiveFaustDieJung
      @LiveFaustDieJung Před rokem

      Can’t always trust a parachute. Adds more riff raff having a pack to get caught and tangled in. In order to be safe almost putting yourself in a more risky space to “feel safe”. Nah. I could see my parachute killing me rather than saving me. That’s my luck. 😂

  • @StaggerLee68
    @StaggerLee68 Před rokem +41

    Rope Access is actually quite safe and in many ways, relaxing. Ask any very good rope tech and they will tell you, every minute on the ground outside of work is far more dangerous. it's people on the ground that make this world unnerving and risky. Inspection and fiberglass repair work is pretty chill with a good team and experience. Saving turbines one blade at a time, it's good work for old big wall climbers with technical composite skills, for sure. I call it Arts & Crafts with big air under your heels. Cheers to Rope Techs around the world, Go man, go!

    • @jb6712
      @jb6712 Před rokem +1

      I believe it. When one is up in the air, as long as there are no morons around to play stupid games with the ropes down below, nobody can really do much to the person up there.
      If I was young again, I'd love to learn how to do this job, and would willingly travel wherever I was needed in order to do it. Maybe they don't want women, though. I'm far too old now to find out.

    • @StaggerLee68
      @StaggerLee68 Před rokem +4

      @@jb6712 I've trained and do work with women although they are clearly the minority in this trade. This goes for all dangerous or blue collar (dirt collar) industrial jobs. They are normally every bit as good as their male counterparts. I've a new dear friend and workmate who was thrown into blade repair unknowingly after her 47th birthday. She's become a team lead in two years. Never underestimate your ability when inspired correctly.

    • @notastone4832
      @notastone4832 Před rokem

      @@StaggerLee68 lol... on average they cannon do the same job men can do.. thats why they are the minority in any industrial setting (the only women where i work are in the office.. they only work with documents.. yknow like paystubs)

    • @StaggerLee68
      @StaggerLee68 Před rokem

      @@notastone4832 In the U.S. the women ARE at least as masculine as any man! In fact, it's a;most impossible to classify them as female anymore. Haha. It is absolutely true that the vast majority of industrial jobs are performed by men. In the U.S. at least, the women are far too entitled and prefer to be paid by men to do nothing but shop and drink wine with other pampered slobs.

    • @m.m.m.m.4648
      @m.m.m.m.4648 Před rokem +4

      I am a female working as rope access technician in London and looking forward to do my GWO soon 🙂 This is my dream job.

  • @aoyamaprivacc
    @aoyamaprivacc Před 2 lety +31

    Here i am in my room, watching this video on a phone in portrait mode and my hands are sweaty just from the opening scene. Even being watched in a small resolution, the idea of men dangling on a rope at that height is still intimidating.

  • @Miltonfrank39
    @Miltonfrank39 Před rokem +2

    These guys are awesome and don’t get enough credit insane job👍🏼👍🏼

  • @NunoFlyer
    @NunoFlyer Před rokem +6

    Fantástico, um orgulho ver tugas nestes videos.
    Um sonho, um desafio esse trabalho!
    Parabéns, somos fortes, somos uma equipa!

  • @bushlovesska
    @bushlovesska Před 2 lety +21

    Omg pay these men more money. I swear I almost threw up just watching this. If I made it to the top I'd be so scared I'd probably just launch myself off of the dam thing.

    • @nascarbilly2424
      @nascarbilly2424 Před 2 lety +4

      Wind techs makes quite a bit, especially blade techs like this. They can make over $50 an hour, plus a $150 ish per day perdiem. They can easily clear $4K in a 2 week period.

    • @kape28s
      @kape28s Před 2 lety

      @@nascarbilly2424 who told you that? 😂

    • @lukekennedy6394
      @lukekennedy6394 Před 2 lety

      @@kape28s it's true especially in the US where you work on the more extensive damages or hold a higher qualified blade cert level and rope level (yes there are levels to your certification 🤣)

    • @kape28s
      @kape28s Před 2 lety

      @@lukekennedy6394 i work as rope access technician

    • @lukekennedy6394
      @lukekennedy6394 Před 2 lety +1

      @@kape28s So do I and I was earning $44 an hour and $65 after 40hrs. So what William above said is more than possible....like I said a blade D, irata lvl 3 can earn £34 plus!

  • @lebassdesign4850
    @lebassdesign4850 Před rokem +61

    A couple of weeks ago I've been inside and on top of one of these. It was quite an experience and very interesting as well.

  • @themasklessraccoon8266
    @themasklessraccoon8266 Před rokem +2

    So excited to start working on wind turbines. I go to school in a couple months to become a technician

    • @TacSav253
      @TacSav253 Před 4 měsíci +1

      Did you graduate? Hows it going? Also how old are you?

  • @zulfikaregzikutor5561
    @zulfikaregzikutor5561 Před rokem +1

    This is fairly very safe job as a structural ironworker i erected many wind turbines , very nice work...

  • @someguywithamustache7235

    Respect 🙏 I'm scared of heights,
    Watching this just gives me anxiety

    • @jogmas12
      @jogmas12 Před rokem

      The only anxiety I feel is when they are at the top outside and I see no guard rails

  • @chrisbranton1290
    @chrisbranton1290 Před 2 lety +22

    I work on these and i feel his pain climbing them ladders 🙈🤣

    • @esevicho
      @esevicho Před 2 lety +4

      Hell yeah brotha! Fellow wind
      tech here.

    • @tannerchew2033
      @tannerchew2033 Před 2 lety +2

      Where do you start to get into this kind of work!? I'm graduating soon with a ME degree and I climb so this seems like a dream job!

    • @honesty_-no9he
      @honesty_-no9he Před 2 lety

      Thank you for all you do !

    • @rawlvee
      @rawlvee Před rokem

      How do I apply

    • @TacSav253
      @TacSav253 Před 4 měsíci

      How old were you guys when you got into this work?

  • @isaiasguerrero2047
    @isaiasguerrero2047 Před rokem +2

    I used to work on wind turbines, it was a good experience the view never gets old

    • @Shaman196
      @Shaman196 Před rokem +1

      They're a waste of time......

    • @isaiasguerrero2047
      @isaiasguerrero2047 Před rokem

      @@Shaman196 agreed

    • @Shaman196
      @Shaman196 Před rokem

      @@isaiasguerrero2047 I honestly believe that they have been put in place to satisfy the minority and their agenda.
      The big picture is this..........
      "You Will own nothing and be happy."
      ~ Klaus Schwab ~
      The World Economic Forum

    • @Shaman196
      @Shaman196 Před rokem

      @@isaiasguerrero2047 It's like saying..... "Let them eat cake".

  • @semperfi210
    @semperfi210 Před rokem +7

    I used to climb 300 ft towers but this is a whole different level much respect

  • @jacobdykstra8499
    @jacobdykstra8499 Před 2 lety +74

    Great video, but what is 4.8 MW/Hr? We've got to finally understand the difference between energy and power as we move into electric everything. I see lots of videos still stating charge rates in KWH and battery capacity in KW.

    • @IvanKuckir
      @IvanKuckir Před 2 lety +11

      I agree, I think we should stop using Watts alltogether. For average people, it is even more confusing than a lightyear ("omg he must be a million lightyears old"). We should only use Joules (kJ, mJ, gJ) for energy (capacity), and Joules per hour for power. We already do it for distance (km, km/h) and data (MB, MB/s). Anybody will be able to compare a phone battery without a calculator.

    • @falsemcnuggethope
      @falsemcnuggethope Před 2 lety +19

      @@IvanKuckir Watts aren't confusing at all, they are just joules per second. What's confusing is that watts are sometimes converted to energy by integrating with time in hours. So you end up with something other than joules for energy because converting between hours and seconds is too difficult. To fix the root cause, we should get rid of seconds, minutes, and hours. Now imagine that happening.

    • @doujinflip
      @doujinflip Před 2 lety

      Batteries are usually measured in ampere-hours (Ah) or milliampere-hours (mAh). To find the total energy capacity you also have to multiply by the cell's voltage, which is often like 1.2V for NiMH, 3.7V for lithium, 12V for lead-acid, etc.

    • @IvanKuckir
      @IvanKuckir Před 2 lety +1

      @@doujinflip I undrestand how phyiscs work and how to calculate everything. I am just saying that it is too confusing for 90% of people. If the capacity was always in Joules, and the charging / consumption speed was in Joules per second, it would be so much clearer for everyone. I mean for all batteries, no matter what the size or the voltage is.

    • @retrogamer2503
      @retrogamer2503 Před 2 lety

      Megawatt per hour i think

  • @steveperry1344
    @steveperry1344 Před dnem

    i worked as a lineman for a municipal power company for 42 years and our poles only ranged from 30ft to 60ft but these things are mega huge.

  • @petracollins8623
    @petracollins8623 Před 14 dny

    Fantastic job you guys do. Safety first a priority at all times. Amazing.

  • @wallacesouza2678
    @wallacesouza2678 Před rokem +18

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    • @montserratherrero782
      @montserratherrero782 Před rokem

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      $58,300 bi-weekly profits with her trading
      program.

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      @Simeonsaater Před rokem

      I'm enjoying working under a platform that
      brings good return in my life. I've been making
      my weekly return's without stress all in crypto
      currency.

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      @marinefernandez3166 Před rokem

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      @carolineknudsen5306 Před rokem

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    • @antoniaprieto5390
      @antoniaprieto5390 Před rokem

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  • @HalfWarrior
    @HalfWarrior Před rokem +14

    These guys are awesome! I worked on wind turbines for Bonus Wind turbines in Tehachapi,CA. in 1988-89. Not a good job if you’re afraid of heights;thankfully I wasn’t.

    • @ATLTraveler
      @ATLTraveler Před rokem +5

      No one is afraid of heights, they are afraid of falling.

    • @William971
      @William971 Před rokem +1

      insane blood you have, im in the fetal position watching this vid

    • @henryc1000
      @henryc1000 Před rokem +1

      My question is… what kind of money did you make?

  • @adog3129
    @adog3129 Před rokem

    those drone shots of the guys on the tower are so cool, good stuff!

  • @dieterrolf
    @dieterrolf Před 3 měsíci

    Very interesting and clearly explained. I have never seen a system like this before.
    One can only hope that more people are interested in building such systems

  • @TomTom-xp2jb
    @TomTom-xp2jb Před 2 lety +3

    I knew they were tall but 35 stories! Wow. Good viddy. Thx. 👍

    • @cyrusol
      @cyrusol Před 2 lety

      Offshore ones are reaching almost 300m in height, taller than many skyscrapers. Over 100m length of the blades.

  • @houstoner
    @houstoner Před rokem +9

    Rappelling down the blades looks terrifying, but I would be totally content working in/on the nacelle. I love heights, but the dangling part would be where I draw the line. I've thought about going to build them, or be one of the guys climbing towers to change bulbs and whatnot. I would love it. I just need my feet planted on something to feel safe.

    • @japark85
      @japark85 Před rokem

      In my experience, there is a rigging system that is specifically designed to access the blades. Either this video is really old or these guys are taking unnecessary risk by accessing them like this.

    • @browningchris3
      @browningchris3 Před rokem +1

      ​@@japark85 Nah Mate. We still use ropes to access blades when platforms and lift trucks dont make make sense to for various reasons. The two rope system is very safe. Possibly more safe than a lift truck.

    • @japark85
      @japark85 Před rokem

      @@browningchris3 I’m not talking about equipment. I’ve seen it done using a system involving ropes and a box platform thing to stand in. I can’t remember the name of the company we hired, but they were there specifically to touch-up the rotor paint after install. It was cool.

    • @japark85
      @japark85 Před rokem

      @@browningchris3 I’ve used the system shown in the video. What I’m talking about looks a whole lot more comfortable.

    • @browningchris3
      @browningchris3 Před rokem +1

      @@japark85 Yeah Ive worked around those types of platforms but not on one. They kinda cool I guess but I wouldnt say theyre safer. Id honestly rather be in my harness and work seat than those because Im in way more control of all the variables.

  • @shadowfilm7980
    @shadowfilm7980 Před rokem

    Nice video. Nice narration too. Well done.

  • @Landmasters
    @Landmasters Před rokem +1

    I'll stick to flying my Alta drone for inspections, thanks lol
    Props to these brave souls

  • @JohnSmith-zv8km
    @JohnSmith-zv8km Před 2 lety +6

    I would be too scared to do this sort of thing but as long as you are harnessed it should not be a dangerous job.

  • @ihtesham_emon
    @ihtesham_emon Před 2 lety +4

    Dangerously Beautiful! ❤️

  • @superrrnova1986
    @superrrnova1986 Před 13 dny

    I have a job interview in a few weeks to become a wind turbine technician. I currently make the metal buckles you see on the safety gear of harnesses etc. I'll be measuring every bit of the buckle to make sure its safe. lol

  • @WLMan
    @WLMan Před rokem +25

    Respect ! I did some simple rock climbing in the past but nothing like 300 ft. 4.8 mW energy generated in an hour is like 385 W x 26 solar panels in 165 days for my home ! That’s a lot of energy in an hour.

    • @krystalstarrett6760
      @krystalstarrett6760 Před rokem

      Oversized unsafe garbage that kills bird, and Eagles. Hazard on the road by rude drivers getting there.

    • @ashotofmercury
      @ashotofmercury Před rokem +7

      @@krystalstarrett6760 Hazard on the road? What??.... 🤔🤨

    • @krystalstarrett6760
      @krystalstarrett6760 Před rokem

      @@ashotofmercury You drive coast to coast much? I did, 30 years, USA Canada and Mexico. The wasteful wind mills are large hazards on the roads, with rude drivers.

    • @krystalstarrett6760
      @krystalstarrett6760 Před rokem +1

      @@ashotofmercury Have a safe day!

    • @ashotofmercury
      @ashotofmercury Před rokem +3

      @@krystalstarrett6760 Hey, you too! As a pro tip - not every other person on the internet is from the US! 😉

  • @mrkokolore6187
    @mrkokolore6187 Před 2 lety +9

    All that risk for a few megawatts. Nuclear power plants are way safer to work in while producing gigawatts of power.

    • @honesty_-no9he
      @honesty_-no9he Před 2 lety

      WRONG ! Wind Energy in the UK produces more than twice as much energy as nuclear for far less money and is far safer to the public.

    • @drefrazier4266
      @drefrazier4266 Před rokem +1

      That's ridiculous. You're talking one guy falling to his death vs the potential for something like Chernobyl. Not to mention all the waste these plants create.

    • @mrkokolore6187
      @mrkokolore6187 Před rokem +2

      @@drefrazier4266 1. Chernobyl according to the WHO caused about 4000 deaths due to delayed action taking and poor health care in the Soviet Union. Over 60-70 years of operation nuclear energy is therefore still the safest energy source there is. 2. What about the waste? There is not a single person who has died from nuclear waste.

    • @lordbucketheadiii3435
      @lordbucketheadiii3435 Před rokem

      @@drefrazier4266 Think of where technology was in the 80s and where it is now… we can definitely expand nuclear energy. Look at France for example

  • @Nikkk6969
    @Nikkk6969 Před rokem

    Awesome! Thinking of applying

  • @dannymccann1775
    @dannymccann1775 Před měsícem

    On my final GWO blade repair course, halfway through hopefully get a start somewhere soon

  • @TheDrumminguy
    @TheDrumminguy Před 2 lety +14

    4,8MW per hour... come on people, thats not a thing...

    • @vincesmith1906
      @vincesmith1906 Před 2 lety +1

      It’s very real. The latest in onshore plants are capable of 6MWh. Some offshore units can produce upwards of 15MWh. Of course that’s only in full production winds. Between 11-14 m/s or approximately 35-38 mph and start producing as low as 3.5 m/s or 8 mph. The ones I work on are smaller and make only 1.65MWh. They generate millions of ft lbs of torque. Truly amazing machines

    • @polterp
      @polterp Před 2 lety +4

      @@vincesmith1906 MW is a unit of power. MWh is a unit of energy. MW per hour is not a thing, that's what Robert was pointing at

    • @akyhne
      @akyhne Před 2 lety +1

      @@polterp That totally doesn't make sense, as MWh (or more correctly MW/h) is the same as MW per hour.

    • @polterp
      @polterp Před 2 lety +1

      @@akyhne MWh and MW/h are very different things, I suggest you look it up

    • @akyhne
      @akyhne Před 2 lety

      @@polterp OH really? I'm sure you can tell me what the difference is.

  • @AsaNole
    @AsaNole Před 2 lety +7

    I could've sworn I watched this yesterday 🤔

  • @nicky9589
    @nicky9589 Před rokem

    Respect. That is some crazy work.

  • @fariaemportugal8057
    @fariaemportugal8057 Před rokem +5

    Trabalho em uma fábrica de pás eolicas, já fiz reparações e hoje trabalho com as movimentações das pás. Gostava de saber como trabalhar dessa forma.

    • @alisandetavares2102
      @alisandetavares2102 Před rokem +1

      Eu também vou trabalhar no mesmo e podes te inscrever no centro de formação onrope

    • @gkdj395
      @gkdj395 Před rokem

      Se você fizer o curso de irata vai te abrir muitas portas!

  • @samsonsoturian6013
    @samsonsoturian6013 Před 2 lety +22

    I worked making wind turbines for a week but ditched that trash. I believe the term for it is "crunch culture" where there were six 12-14 hour days and the nearest town was 30 minutes away. People were threatened with their jobs for asking time off or slacking off and Christmas was literally canceled for these guys. Work progressed at a snail's pace because everyone was as tired and cranky as you'd expect. Needless to say, they were constantly understaffed (only 8 out of 25 positions were filled when I got there) and ridiculously over budget and behind schedule.
    No idea if the guys in the video worked that way.

    • @mikecharvat4325
      @mikecharvat4325 Před 2 lety

      Zt,,,,,,,
      ,,,& Bn

    • @EliasProbst
      @EliasProbst Před 2 lety +18

      Unlikely, as they're in Europe where most countries have decent worker protection laws.

    • @TomCat13461
      @TomCat13461 Před 2 lety +14

      @@EliasProbst And stronger unions.

    • @zedrhyx1788
      @zedrhyx1788 Před rokem +6

      you must be working in the US then?

    • @kingshit420w
      @kingshit420w Před rokem

      wind turbines aren't the future

  • @dennisconrad6124
    @dennisconrad6124 Před 18 dny

    People might not like seeing these wind turbines. But you have to admit, they are impressive.

  • @aemiliadelroba4022
    @aemiliadelroba4022 Před rokem

    Wow 🤩
    Breath taking job !

  • @Tresla
    @Tresla Před 2 lety +38

    Only $36k for that? I'd expect at least $100k considering they're putting themselves in harms way on a daily basis.

    • @danielemerson6833
      @danielemerson6833 Před 2 lety +9

      That's worth 100000 plus in local economy. Like Idaho to downtown NY city. 18.00 big mac.

    • @Xdarkstar07X
      @Xdarkstar07X Před 2 lety +10

      36k Euros in Portugal. Average salary in Portugal is ~17-18k. Cost of living there is cheaper.

    • @honesty_-no9he
      @honesty_-no9he Před 2 lety +1

      I agree.

    • @louiearmstrong
      @louiearmstrong Před 2 lety +5

      @@danielemerson6833 Mcdonsalds app 6/13/22: Big Mac in Times Square: $5.59, Big Mac in Boise: $4.29. I'd love to know where these mythical $15+ BigMacs are that (mostly anti-min wage increase conservative) complain about

    • @ratadedallas1
      @ratadedallas1 Před rokem +3

      @@Xdarkstar07X True. They said that is the average salary for that job in Portugal, but he makes more, I am guessing 2x the $36x is still a hard NO for me. Heck NO!

  • @SeattlePioneer
    @SeattlePioneer Před 2 lety +6

    I still remember an early rock climb. I was belaying someone traversing the rock below me.
    I was anchored into a rusty piton someone had pounded into the crack on a rock some indeterminate length of time before.
    My heels were on a flake of rock. Between the insteps of my boots, I could see the first place I would bounce if the climber I was belaying fell, which would pull me off and we would be hanging by that piton. It was about 500 feet to that first place we would hit below.
    We did that for FUN!
    An amusing byproduct of rock climbing skills was the ability to climb most building exterior walls. Just walk up to any old building and climb as high as you wished ----easy peasy, mostly.

  • @ThisIsGers
    @ThisIsGers Před rokem

    CZcams has been throwing me these amazing vids in the suggestions lately and i Couldn’t be any happier I’ve been watching a lot of missile silo explorations too just cuz 😂💀

  • @noluck33
    @noluck33 Před rokem +1

    You have to be crazy to do that work, but we thank you for doing it!

  • @farright118
    @farright118 Před 2 lety +7

    The average wage in Portugal is €18,000? Im shocked its so low.

    • @MAKRON66
      @MAKRON66 Před 2 lety +9

      It is low, but the cost of living is a bit lower than average iirc.

    • @athanassioszotos1713
      @athanassioszotos1713 Před 2 lety

      Mine is much lower..

    • @AlldaylongRock
      @AlldaylongRock Před 2 lety

      average is actually more like 1500/month or something. Lots of minimum wagers, and a few big ones .. These dudes clearly on the higher side... While having a job that shouldnt have as high demand as it has, but Portuguese politicians are dumb

    • @ValentinG23
      @ValentinG23 Před 2 lety

      In mu country of Romania is 5000€ per year!!!!

  • @xFlyingFlip
    @xFlyingFlip Před rokem +3

    I work for a company that manufactures the gearboxes inside the turbines.
    I work with some of the cats who go up in the towers to inspect & repair, they're a different breed altogether.
    I just work in the office doing the logistics side... much safer, much less cool.

    • @A_78939
      @A_78939 Před rokem

      Safer? Those level of dread and stress gotta be tough though

  • @silverjay4455
    @silverjay4455 Před rokem

    All my respect towards these guys serious. To have a job that youre not sure you can return home in one piece isnt for everyone 🤗🤗

  • @valseyer4486
    @valseyer4486 Před rokem

    These men have guts, my respects homies!!!

  • @martijnvisser5164
    @martijnvisser5164 Před 2 lety +18

    Good job windmill technicians!!

  • @PiyushAgade
    @PiyushAgade Před rokem +6

    Great video. Two issues:
    1. 4.8 MW / hr is not an appropriate unit. You should just say "4.8 MW, sufficient to power ..... homes". The unit of Watt is 'Joules/sec'. There already is a '/hr' embedded in a unit Watt.
    2. As the unit Watt is defined as 'Energy/time', you saying 4.8 MW/hr energy is absolultely wrong.

  • @adrianrodriguez9569
    @adrianrodriguez9569 Před rokem

    Awesome thanks for letting me know
    That was great

  • @atomix2933
    @atomix2933 Před 5 měsíci

    I would LOVE this job! Doing maintenance work is awesome! I will do this when I am older. 👍 👍

  • @user-jh1hc3vp6e
    @user-jh1hc3vp6e Před rokem +4

    이런 높은곳에서 설치 및 공사를 하는 전문가가 전세계에 많이 있다는 것이 놀라울뿐.

  • @greenergrassgames
    @greenergrassgames Před rokem +4

    I am often surprised with having to run to the toilet in the worst situation. I always wondered how people that work in these type of jobs deal with that.

    • @13Gangland
      @13Gangland Před rokem

      You're either holding that crap and piss or it's coming straight down to your pants, nothing else to do.
      Maybe that was the "accident" the guy was talking about.

  • @resscasey2313
    @resscasey2313 Před rokem

    My aunt is working with truckers who deliver wind turbines inside the USA. She directs the traffic when they have to make those wide turns.

  • @RxTerps
    @RxTerps Před 11 měsíci

    Absolutely AMAZING!

  • @lepilot8329
    @lepilot8329 Před 2 lety +6

    If you state that the job is very dangerous even though the technician said it's save you have to show some statistics to prove the point!

    • @wesleyrm
      @wesleyrm Před 2 lety

      You don't need statistics. There is a tangible risk to die.

    • @wesleyrm
      @wesleyrm Před 2 lety

      He says it's safe because he's trained

  • @foundingtitan7
    @foundingtitan7 Před rokem +6

    Hats off to him and his team 🙌🙌🙌

  • @ogolakay
    @ogolakay Před rokem +1

    Sometimes when I see these documentaries, I ask myself what have I contributed to the world before I exit.

  • @garethbaus5471
    @garethbaus5471 Před rokem +1

    I have been thinking about switching from my current job to wind energy, the pay is good, and I don't fear heights.

  • @mrorganic13
    @mrorganic13 Před rokem +5

    this man has been working for 20 years, i wonder how many homes hes been able to power in his lifetime, we trades people dont get the resepect we diserve especially the people closer to the source of everything such as wind turbine operators

  • @robertf1720
    @robertf1720 Před 2 lety +22

    8:21 need to work on units my friend. 4.8 MW in an hour is actually not an electricity generating rate. 4.8 MW is an electricity generating rate, 4.8 MW-hr /day is an electricity generating rate, and 4.8MW-hr per hr is... 4.8 MW. Not sure which one they meant.

    • @augustus331
      @augustus331 Před 2 lety +2

      Comes down to the same thing. A 4.8 MW capacity turbine produces 4.8 MWh per hour, as 4.8 MW stands for 4.8 MWsecond. Idk what the problem is?

    • @Ripcode2233891
      @Ripcode2233891 Před 2 lety

      @@augustus331 na that's not it

    • @thunderb00m
      @thunderb00m Před 2 lety +3

      @@augustus331 Bruh, she said "4.8 MW of energy in an hour"
      MW is unit of power, not energy

    • @xnademolicious
      @xnademolicious Před 2 lety

      @@augustus331 4.8MW works out to 4.8 megajoules per second, but MW does not have a time component - it's only an instantaneous measurement of power. The peak power of a common static electrical spark is measured in the kilowatt range but for a very short period of time. The power might be expressed as 4.8KW. It does not express 4.8 KWsecond of energy.

    • @honesty_-no9he
      @honesty_-no9he Před 2 lety

      Yes I live in north Manchester UK, my 4.9kW Solar energy system delivers to my house energy measured in kWh that can do in Spring and Summer anywhere from 7kWh (crappy day) to 14kWh (good day) to 24kWh (exceptional day).

  • @jeremy28135
    @jeremy28135 Před rokem +2

    Question: would ever consider doing this if you could name your own price? Or is there no amount you could ever be offered to start training to do this?

  • @abravocl
    @abravocl Před 9 měsíci

    thank youu so muchhh dudee

  • @tm9184
    @tm9184 Před rokem +4

    They improved the landscape with 30 story windmills!

  • @zimjammin6330
    @zimjammin6330 Před 2 lety +7

    This is my job, and we don't risk are lives lol 😆 its actually very safe if your trained properly 👍

  • @austinmoore5481
    @austinmoore5481 Před rokem

    Great respect to you my friends keep it lit 🇨🇮

  • @henryc1000
    @henryc1000 Před rokem +2

    My question is… what kind of money do these guys make?

  • @tooreal8968
    @tooreal8968 Před 2 lety +41

    These folks more than earn their pay. This is something only a few would be able to do. The fear is too much for me.

    • @Menga213
      @Menga213 Před rokem +3

      they get paid 36k that is not a lot of money

    • @henryc1000
      @henryc1000 Před rokem

      @@Menga213 : how do you know this?

    • @susiekim5728
      @susiekim5728 Před rokem

      @@henryc1000 Watch the video lol

    • @garethbaus5471
      @garethbaus5471 Před rokem +2

      @@Menga213 the average gross salary in Portugal is is less than $25,000, so in that region $36,000 is good money, roughly analogous to being paid $100,000 annually in the US.

    • @walterwhite4200
      @walterwhite4200 Před rokem

      ​@@Menga213 for Portugal that's good

  • @galfisk
    @galfisk Před 2 lety +4

    That looks fun, at least in good weather.

  • @Millo0812
    @Millo0812 Před 6 měsíci

    Amazingly dangerous and risky!
    Respect to this workers!

  • @linin7446
    @linin7446 Před rokem

    looks very hard but id be willing to give something like this a try

  • @chrischan001
    @chrischan001 Před 2 lety +7

    To put that (4.8MWh) into perspective, I use about 7kWh of electricity per day. So 1 hour of generation would be enough for me to run my home for 1.88 years.
    1 person household, faily efficient appliences, no solar panel unfortunately

    • @WLMan
      @WLMan Před rokem

      I use 16 - 22 kWh per day. 4.8 mW can last me 220 - 290 days. How do you manage 7 kWh per day ?

    • @chrischan001
      @chrischan001 Před rokem

      @@WLMan I live by myself. How many people live in your household?

    • @chrischan001
      @chrischan001 Před rokem

      @@WLMan 16-22kwh should be the energy consumption for a 3-person household. If you live by yourself then really have to look at where the energy was being "wasted".

  • @hugodias2449
    @hugodias2449 Před 2 lety +6

    Portuguese are the greatest in wind turbine technicians worldwide 👍

  • @lenk1432
    @lenk1432 Před rokem +1

    I read an article where two wind turbine engineers were stuck on top of the turbine because it was burning and they were going to die so they just hugged until they died

    • @bourbondrinker4828
      @bourbondrinker4828 Před rokem

      If it’s the same article. One jumped and the other tried to climb down. They both lost there lives, unfortunatly.

  • @KainMalice
    @KainMalice Před 10 měsíci

    I am glad someone can handle doing this work. I absolutely could not do this. Hell, I dont even like ladders.

  • @LiborTinka
    @LiborTinka Před 2 lety +14

    Wind and nuclear are relatively safe in terms of deaths per TWh (both WAY safer than e.g. black or brown coal, oil or even biomass), with the wind taking bigger toll on the life of engineers and inspectors (fires, blade failures etc.). It's a dangerous job and that is something to be considered when going "green" since the term is multifaceted and throws so many shadows as well, that are often not mentioned by the proponents (like huge amount of non-recyclable waste from decomissioned turbines/blades). Not judging, it's just something that needs to be said and considered, because the downsides grow with the number of power plants.

    • @platin2148
      @platin2148 Před 2 lety +1

      Yep so do nuclear reactors have waste that is even worse and doesn’t have a storage place yet. If that thing exploded nothing would happen if a explosion of hydrogen happens in these nuclear light water reactor you get a area inhabitable and that for several thousands of years.

    • @I_Got_NoRegs
      @I_Got_NoRegs Před 2 lety

      @@platin2148 lmao Fukushima was a modern example with no instant deaths and we can just burry the nuclear waste

    • @platin2148
      @platin2148 Před 2 lety

      @@I_Got_NoRegs Good then you can go over there and say to them just burry it. Saying this is basically showing that you seem to not understand what kind of waste we are talking about. But have fun where ever you are with that thinking.

    • @jaycweingardt11
      @jaycweingardt11 Před 2 lety +4

      @@platin2148 All of the nuclear waste ever made is a fraction of the mass of the waste produced by wind, and the nuclear waste is sitting in a parking lot on site, instead of having to make vast landfills for turbine blades.
      And we can recycle nuclear waste from old plants and reuse it in new 4th gen plants, and then continue to refine it after use and reuse what wasnt until all of the U-235 is split and no longer high grade nuclear waste.

    • @platin2148
      @platin2148 Před 2 lety

      @@jaycweingardt11 How many of these 4th generation plant’s are online? Seems to be near Zero. For the waste sitting on site works only for a limited amount of time as it piles up it gets more dangerous. That little waste seems to be a very real pain compared to Glasfiber Compounds just being realistic here. Also it makes basically no one independent just look from where most of the nuclear fuel comes from. On the long term scale something like Evor is way more sustainable than nuclear.
      Not saying i’m strictly against Thorium Sodium reactors but is see these as a last resort maybe a more secure stop gap to fusion.

  • @johnellis5828
    @johnellis5828 Před rokem +3

    Fun fact: It takes about the same amount of energy to make a windmill this large as the windmill is expected to produce over it's lifetime.

    • @janhuygen2229
      @janhuygen2229 Před rokem +1

      No, it takes only 3 months

    • @TheAmericanCatholic
      @TheAmericanCatholic Před rokem

      The wind turbine does use a lot of coal to produce the steel, make the fiberglass ,carbon fiber and other materials but it pays for itself in months easily.

  • @clydenevetv
    @clydenevetv Před rokem

    Hi am a rope access tech level 1 and we used to clean the whole turbine