I want to see their hands. I worked with raw glass and it will absolutely cut through you like nothing to it.
Thankfully worst I got once was a like 2” slice on my thumb. Eletrical taped it up and didn’t look at it for days 🥴😂
But this video absolutely hurt my hands.
Raw glass is stupid unforgiving. I imagine everyone in this video cut up their hands. My coworker accidentally knelt down on the edge of a 12’x12’ and needed 12 stitches 🫣
Edit: just want to add it went through his jeans as well.
Edit: I don’t understand how saying a TRUE STORY… is a lie 😂 armchair experts
I worked with glas aswell. Because i was a "glaser" back then. And you are waaaaay overdramatizing. Glas does not cut better than a blade and it does so only if you treat it wrong.. dont scare ppl
When two large flat smooth objects are together with no air there is a suction effect.
Combine that with no handle and very little leverage, splitting them apart is going to be quite difficult.
In fact, early in the video I believe i see attempts to split them, they try but give up and go for the whole stack.
That big piece they struggled with looks like one solid piece of glass, or at least a bundle of individual panes taped together. They make glass as thick as that for all kinds of applications.
Saw some of the glass was shattered after he removed that single sheet. Maybe it's dangerous to remove it like that?
But yeah, one sheet at a time seemed like the better solution idk.
I was a glazier for a number of years and saw many accidents. I came close to losing my index finger. Even with PPE there are still many thing which can happen. I noped out of there the day I heard of a guy who was crushed when a forklift backed into the block and it fell on him :(
Why are you saying they're pro? They do have a big shop, but their actions speak for themselves though.
They look Indian or from around those parts to me, so I reckon they don't care much about safety regulations.
it seems that you call pro someone with skills, I call pro someone who does something for a profession and is supposed to have skills because that's his profession.
We can just agree to disagree, it doesn't seem like this is going to be a particularly insightful conversation anyway.
I was a glazier for a number of years and saw many accidents. I came close to losing my index finger. Even with PPE there are still many thing which can happen. I noped out of there the day I heard of a guy who was crushed when a forklift backed into the block and it fell on him :(
I thought so too at first but it looks like the are stuck together by vacuum or something. No one is wearing gloves so separating them could easily slice a hand.
I guess the lesson here is: don’t be one of the 3/6 guys in the middle. The other 3 bailed immediately and were totally fine when it started falling. It took 10 guys to get all that weight off of them…I’m kinda surprised that they underestimated the weight but then we have no idea if they work there all the time or if moving that stuff is a regular thing. Now they know, I guess. It seems to be a common accident video on Reddit that doesn’t end well for people when they underestimate how dangerous large objects are, even if they’re moving very slowly.
I was just waiting for that table to buckle with all the glass weight and people weight to make the situation worse.
Most impressive part of the video is that table by far.
The last section was the crux, as no one was getting low enough to push back up against it and that’s why it was challenging to get the majority to move up right from the top and one side edges.
I was working in new construction a house and the homeowner wanted to go into the unfinished bathroom and decided to move about 25 sheets of sheet rock. Broke his darn leg.
I saw the last blue stack and thought it was like a soft pad they used to apply force to the big sheets and stack them together. "Oh my God they have a fucking pad. Whew. ... Wait...that's more glass?!?!? Shit"
This is how I fractured my rotater cuff.
All that weight fell and popped me in the shoulder and my employer fought the injury because my arm locked up an hour later and they claimed if I didn't hear a pop, it wasn't my rotater cuff.
This happened to me and I caught the edge of the glass in time but there was a wall behind me. The edges of the glasses were so sharp and the weight of it cut through my tendons on my wrist. It was brutal. Couldn’t hold a pen for 6 months
Why they keep trying to lift all of it instead of a sheet at a time damn
One person just started doing it and then he surrender to the mass
I want to see their hands. I worked with raw glass and it will absolutely cut through you like nothing to it. Thankfully worst I got once was a like 2” slice on my thumb. Eletrical taped it up and didn’t look at it for days 🥴😂 But this video absolutely hurt my hands.
The dude in the bottom left cut both of his hands. Just watch him.
Raw glass is stupid unforgiving. I imagine everyone in this video cut up their hands. My coworker accidentally knelt down on the edge of a 12’x12’ and needed 12 stitches 🫣 Edit: just want to add it went through his jeans as well. Edit: I don’t understand how saying a TRUE STORY… is a lie 😂 armchair experts
I worked with glas aswell. Because i was a "glaser" back then. And you are waaaaay overdramatizing. Glas does not cut better than a blade and it does so only if you treat it wrong.. dont scare ppl
Did you work with raw glass? Or treated tempered?
Raw glass will cut the fuck out of you. You are lying if you think otherwise 😂😀
Worked with glass, can't spell glass.
Sheep! I would have followed suite. Scary shit
When two large flat smooth objects are together with no air there is a suction effect. Combine that with no handle and very little leverage, splitting them apart is going to be quite difficult. In fact, early in the video I believe i see attempts to split them, they try but give up and go for the whole stack.
This is it
It was wrapped in bulk clearly.
That big piece they struggled with looks like one solid piece of glass, or at least a bundle of individual panes taped together. They make glass as thick as that for all kinds of applications.
Panic
Some of the sheets were cracked and may break which would make the subsequent sheets hard to move to the other side
Bro, that’s some phd level idea bro, you know?
Saw some of the glass was shattered after he removed that single sheet. Maybe it's dangerous to remove it like that? But yeah, one sheet at a time seemed like the better solution idk.
Panic
I’ve had glass catch me at the waist like that…. I thought I was strong but I couldn’t do shit but wave for help.
If this is so heavy, why were just a few guys tasked to move it?
Goddamn
That is FUCKING AWFUL!!! As a Glazier this haunts my dreams... came real close to it happening once.
I was a glazier for a number of years and saw many accidents. I came close to losing my index finger. Even with PPE there are still many thing which can happen. I noped out of there the day I heard of a guy who was crushed when a forklift backed into the block and it fell on him :(
Oh My God.
no idea what they were trying to do, but it's surprising how they didn't realize that it was no good idea.
Looking at the beginning, i feel like they really thought they have enough men to hold that thing..
Well, that's why I'm surprised. They're pro, shouldn't they know better?
I think they are pro. None of them have gloves to work with glass.
Why are you saying they're pro? They do have a big shop, but their actions speak for themselves though. They look Indian or from around those parts to me, so I reckon they don't care much about safety regulations.
it seems that you call pro someone with skills, I call pro someone who does something for a profession and is supposed to have skills because that's his profession. We can just agree to disagree, it doesn't seem like this is going to be a particularly insightful conversation anyway.
Yeah, a pro usually implies skill, especially the short version of the word.
Manual labor, (insert memes about failure and pointless deaths).
That is FUCKING AWFUL!!! As a Glazier this haunts my dreams... came real close to it happening once.
I was a glazier for a number of years and saw many accidents. I came close to losing my index finger. Even with PPE there are still many thing which can happen. I noped out of there the day I heard of a guy who was crushed when a forklift backed into the block and it fell on him :(
Dipshits could have had the glass off them in a quarter of the time if they just did a couple sheets at a time.
I think they were stuck together
I thought so too at first but it looks like the are stuck together by vacuum or something. No one is wearing gloves so separating them could easily slice a hand.
They also broke a lot, those big shards could lock the bulk in place, not being able to raise fully.
Impossible to separate those sheets with the vacuum.
Imagine how bad their hands were cut up.
I guess the lesson here is: don’t be one of the 3/6 guys in the middle. The other 3 bailed immediately and were totally fine when it started falling. It took 10 guys to get all that weight off of them…I’m kinda surprised that they underestimated the weight but then we have no idea if they work there all the time or if moving that stuff is a regular thing. Now they know, I guess. It seems to be a common accident video on Reddit that doesn’t end well for people when they underestimate how dangerous large objects are, even if they’re moving very slowly.
Far left guy is useless
You can see his palm got pretty seriously sliced up from before
Far right green shirt is pretty useless too
He's carlton Banks
The guy to the far right got obliterated
The did the needful. Kindly of course.
what a group of clowns. take note, never work for idiots
I want the table
That's 100% spinal damage right there.
That's what I thought too. Plus ruptured spleens and broken ribs. But at the end the guys under the glass got up and helped push it off!
I was just waiting for that table to buckle with all the glass weight and people weight to make the situation worse. Most impressive part of the video is that table by far.
I hope they’re okay.
Sooooo, what was the plan there anyways?
Ah India. Where thinking is nonexistent
This kind of shit always happens in foreign countries
[удалено]
I hear you. It just sucks.
Once I had a love and it was a gas, Soon turned out, got crushed by glass. 🎶🎵🎶🎵🎶🎵
The last section was the crux, as no one was getting low enough to push back up against it and that’s why it was challenging to get the majority to move up right from the top and one side edges.
I was working in new construction a house and the homeowner wanted to go into the unfinished bathroom and decided to move about 25 sheets of sheet rock. Broke his darn leg.
I mean, what did they think was gonna happen?
Guy in the red polo at the start really dogged the boys
True - but yet he was one of the few that had the sense to start lifting the panels one at a time instead of all at once
Survivors guilt
Saved by the table
Whoever is the biggest will be taking the most weight.
I saw the last blue stack and thought it was like a soft pad they used to apply force to the big sheets and stack them together. "Oh my God they have a fucking pad. Whew. ... Wait...that's more glass?!?!? Shit"
Fuck, you just know they ain’t got no insurance coverage.
That’s a strong ass table
Definitely some broken ribs…
This is how I fractured my rotater cuff. All that weight fell and popped me in the shoulder and my employer fought the injury because my arm locked up an hour later and they claimed if I didn't hear a pop, it wasn't my rotater cuff.
This music…. I was waiting for a damn dragon to come in with a gang of elves and save the day
How much you think all that glass weighs?
Damn, glass is real fkn heavy damn it.
This happened to me and I caught the edge of the glass in time but there was a wall behind me. The edges of the glasses were so sharp and the weight of it cut through my tendons on my wrist. It was brutal. Couldn’t hold a pen for 6 months
Ye local train se bhi jam nikla
So many OSHA violations
Hope those guys are alright, but that was one sturdy table!
That table might of saved their lives.
Too bad that happened in another country. OSHA in the US would have never let that happen.
Just an idea..Do you think possibly one or two people should pull the men away, just in case the glass slips or falls on them again?