Trip Through Time The Ford River Rouge Plant
Автокөліктер мен көлік құралдары
In this video, I provide a high level overview of the historic Ford River Rouge Plant and the Moving Assembly Line that Henry Ford and his engineers perfected. While Olds did actually invent the assembly line, Ford, maximized it for the production of his famous Model T and put the world on wheels.
This video shows historic film footage of many aspects of this massive facility including, its steel foundry, glass making, steel fabrication, and assembly line work to eventually build a complete vehicle.
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I toured the Rouge plant with a group of boy scouts and saw the 1949 car being built. We started at a chassis and the complete car was waiting for us at the end of the tour! We were told everything in the car was made there except the tires! It was an awesome experience! John Hicks
@kensmithgallery4432
Ай бұрын
I bet that was really something to see first hand! Thanks for sharing!
@trainliker100
Ай бұрын
When I was in the Boy Scouts (Chicago area) we visited a Dial soap manufacturing plant. Better yet, we then visited the Mars candy plant. And we were each given a box of candy bars (I think they were Milky Ways). Of course, nothing as immense as the River Rouge plant.
@JTA1961
Ай бұрын
Sweet...@@trainliker100
@dave1956
Ай бұрын
I toured the Rouge plant in 2005. I was amazed at how clean the place was. The last I had toured a car factory was 1973. I couldn’t believe the difference.
@raymondszybowicz7597
Ай бұрын
Use to deliver and pickup at Ford Rouge Plant am awesome experience .
Now we make virtually nothing. A society of computer people and service workers.
@kensmithgallery4432
2 ай бұрын
We definitely do not have that type of industrialization anymore.
@yankeedoodle1963
2 ай бұрын
@@kensmithgallery4432And people like us who spend our spare time commenting about it on social media
@Robbie-sk6vc
Ай бұрын
The sad part is that you can't build such an outfit today in America! Too much government regulation, as well as the the envirocreeps. Then we cry about the lack of good jobs! Bring the jobs home! Nope, can't do that because they can't build that kind of plant here anymore. That kind of plant used to be a matter of pride for a city to have.(jobs, taxes, infrastructure) But today, they like to talk about not having such a place in their city! Like it's some kind of disease to build a factory. These same folks then complain about not having jobs in their town! Really? Then build the factory! Nope, the enviros won't allow it! Then just who runs things? The city father's? Or the worthless bunny huggers? Tell the bunny huggers that they have to pay for each job they just cost the city! It comes out of YOUR pocket! Then we'll see just how much they love their furry friends! Just a thought.
@yankeedoodle1963
Ай бұрын
@@Robbie-sk6vc Lack of corporate responsibility and government regulation is precisely what gave us the East Palestine, OH disaster, champ. Same goes for the oil industry’s multitudinous oil spills ( Exxon Valdez, Deepwater Horizon, Colonial Pipeline), tens of thousands of deaths and much more to come from asbestos, and lest we forget - leaded gasoline that poisoned the air until 1998… the idea that “enviros” and government are the reason we don’t have manufacturing jobs like we did 50 years ago is absurd; it has more to do with corporate boardrooms pushing trade agreements like APEC & NAFTA that allow them to outsource manufacturing overseas or to Canada & Mexico. Why not go after trade unions while you’re at it, since you’re wrong about everything else you’ve posted already
@matzrat5006
Ай бұрын
@@Robbie-sk6vc Sure we can, if people will take 5 bucks a day to work there.
This makes me want to cry. As a machinist in the 90s and 00s I watched industry die all around me. I lived in Dayton Oh. It was the #2 or 3 center of industry, invention, machining and mfg for the whole country. Big GM town. Delphi, Wright Patt airforce base. National cash register. The list is almost endless. Its a mere shell of its former self now. We make nothing anymore. I watched NAFTA put a real hurting on our industry too. Great video. Thanks for sharing.
@kensmithgallery4432
Ай бұрын
We were a manufacturing giant at one juncture. Now? I see good things with tech but many jobs are gone forever.
@stuartjohnston4353
Ай бұрын
A country that makes nothing won't last. We as a nation are done and nobody even cares.
@Adirondack_Gimp92
Ай бұрын
Absolutely agree. We rely way too much on foreign countries for what we need. Especially China. That's crazy. It's so very sad when you think about what we once were in manufacturing. 😢
@daviddunn773
Ай бұрын
NAFTA and Deregulation sucked the U.S Dry like Ross Perot said it would ........
@daviddunn773
Ай бұрын
@@stuartjohnston4353 Could have not said it Better my self ..........
This is when our country was a manufacturing king, those days are long gone it's a shame we can't do that anymore Somewhere we lost our way.
@kensmithgallery4432
Ай бұрын
We were a manufacturing giant back then.
@SunriseLAW
23 күн бұрын
Since about 1980, USA over-produced attorneys which caused all else to be under-produced. "Regulatory overburden" feeds the ever-growing hordes of attorneys while killing America.
@enzos711
22 күн бұрын
A Single Plant Employed "80,0000 men" Now a Plant has a couple thousand .. Robots & Computers .. You dreaming of a past world ..
@GMCTIM
20 күн бұрын
Yep ! Politicians for there Greed *ked us ALL & our Country !
@lutemule
11 күн бұрын
I think we lost our way when a lot of those engines only lasted 60 to 70 thousand miles then the tolerances were .001. Then the Japanese started using tolerances of .0001 and the engines started lasting 200 thousand miles. Took some time for America to catch on.
Iron ore in one end. Finished cars out the other. Simply amazing.
@kensmithgallery4432
Ай бұрын
Couldn't agree more!
@robc8468
28 күн бұрын
The Japanese were amazed when they first toured the Rouge plant.they "borrowed" their JIT just in time concepts from the Rouge plant. What you also see in the video is a very high level of gaging and metrology used. As well as very advanced automation for the time,
@somedudeRyan
21 күн бұрын
Literally making things from dirt
@dennisyoung4631
10 күн бұрын
Vertical Integration!
This film must have been done in 1938. The '38 Ford Deluxe is what was being built on the assembly line when filmed. The grill is quite distinctive for that year.
@kensmithgallery4432
2 ай бұрын
I believe you are correct as it sure does look like a '38 Deluxe.
@noimagination99
Ай бұрын
Thanks! I was trying to find when this was filmed.
@williamlatimer1070
Ай бұрын
Detroit could build anything for 😢
@JTA1961
Ай бұрын
Thanks
dear viewers, don't let that music fool you! i work in a steel mill and i can tell you the noise level hovers from 60 to right around 110 decibels. when that furnace drops a charge into the furnace the rumble and noise is a exhilarating experience if youve never been close to it and that sheet steel rolling through the mill roars like constant hammer on a sheet metal table. its just unreal how much noise these production processes make!
@kensmithgallery4432
Ай бұрын
I am sure the noise was near deafening!
@doublecutter
Ай бұрын
@@kensmithgallery4432 What?
@kensmithgallery4432
Ай бұрын
🤣🤣🤣@@doublecutter
@fairfaxcat1312
Ай бұрын
Did you or your plant catch on fire or get burned?
@tomsteve3804
Ай бұрын
back in the mid 70s our class in middle school( i'll say 6th grade) took a tour of the plant. i still remember the heat and the sheet steel part.
Put off watching this for 2 weeks. I have visited the Rouge (don't go, it will make you cry) and read just about everything about it. Thought this might be nonsense. The footage is excellent, and narration is perfect. If the Boys at the Rouge could go back and watch an Egyptian Pyramid being built, OR, a good group of Egyptian engineers could come forward and observe a day at the Rouge? Who do you think would be more impressed? Don't hate it, because it is American. The River Rouge Ford Plant at full operation was an astounding human achievement. For all mankind, like the Apollo moon landing. It inspires you to think we can do anything! Humans are just incredible. (the lunch wagon footage was new to me. Fantastic!)
@kensmithgallery4432
Ай бұрын
Excellent comment! Thanks for sharing and watching!
All that equipment must have been state of the art then , so high tech , so much work just to make the factory to start with .
@kensmithgallery4432
Ай бұрын
It was state of the art back in its day!
Wow even for todays standards that plant even in the 30s was way ahead of it time. How in the hell did they engineer all those machines to build products in a massive scale with no computer just pure intelligence a pen and a draft table. Just blows me away and all American made ! Having been a auto tech and working in the dealer ships flat rate this job would flat wear your body out and turn you into a crippled old man quick. I bet by the time they were in their 40s the body was shot ?Love the video the way things were and they way things will never bee again American made with Pride and Craftsmanship
@kensmithgallery4432
Ай бұрын
Glad to hear you enjoyed the video!
@HandFromCoffin
Ай бұрын
"no computer just pure intelligence a pen and a draft table"If you knew how to design things you'd know you do it exactly the same with.. but with "digital" drafting tools... the concepts, design, and how to area all the same. A computer is not some grand enabler in designing something..
@madmanmechanic8847
Ай бұрын
@@HandFromCoffin Sad all that Old School intelligence is long gone never to be back went out with Honor and Integrity
@robc8468
28 күн бұрын
The plant was state of the art at the time, look at a late 1930s GM plant and it is very crude by comparison.
@AdullFiddler-ez7tm
27 күн бұрын
It was called a slide rule, a compulsory tool for any engineer, technician, or scientist until the 1970s. Logarithms were used a lot in those days along with scientific notation. Electronics have made people soft. It was the Golden Age of pocket protectors and horn rimmed glasses. Spreadsheets, actual ones. And rows upon rows of drafting tables with well trained professionals in white shirts and black ties. And cigarettes and coffee. And armies of cheerful secretaries. 🙂I'm in awe too. Building the skyscrapers and big dams and American Industry in that Art Deco era. They wore cool hats too and dressed better in general.
Today the government won't even build a power plant or update the electric grid.Traitors everywhere.
@kensmithgallery4432
Ай бұрын
I understand how you feel. Thanks for watching!
@togowack
11 күн бұрын
We didn't build these plants to begin with. They are very old. They were very old before colonization even began. We don't build it because we've never built any of these cities. They are looking for easy money only
@dennisyoung4631
11 күн бұрын
That’s “more” true in some parts than others. Infrastructure expenditures (which are very needed) tend to be unpopular in those areas previously mentioned.
@togowack
10 күн бұрын
@@dennisyoung4631 That will all change with the introduction of the Amero.
@rogerthornton4068
7 күн бұрын
You are nuts and need help.
I took the full tour of this plant when I was 12 years old in 1964. Henry built every part of his cars. All the glass had Fomoco etched on to it too. At the time I had no idea what that meant till I took this tour.😮 Fords were literally made like baking from scratch. Only Ford grew the wheat, the yeast and everything else it took to do it.
@kensmithgallery4432
Ай бұрын
It is pretty amazing when you think about it! Thanks for commenting and watching!
@dennisyoung4631
Ай бұрын
Vertical integration…
@markfryer9880
Ай бұрын
@@dennisyoung4631Well before that was a business school catch phrase.
@robc8468
11 күн бұрын
That is about the time I went through the Rouge plant. they were making 1st generation Mustangs at the time.
When you got off work, you know you put in a good day's work.
@kensmithgallery4432
Ай бұрын
Yes indeed!
@theguythatcouldfly
Ай бұрын
Working at that plant would have been horrible.
@inevitable178
23 күн бұрын
@@theguythatcouldfly nah at the time it was state of the art facility probably a great job for the time...back then ppl werent as soft as they are now lolol
@glenchapman3899
17 күн бұрын
@@inevitable178 Depends. In the 20s it really was cutting edge. By the 40s conditions were terrible and pay had not increased in a decade.
@inevitable178
16 күн бұрын
@@glenchapman3899 well yeah 40 years after it opened lol
This is what helped win WWII....
@kensmithgallery4432
2 ай бұрын
It sure did!
@lebaillidessavoies3889
Ай бұрын
yep , GPW's came out of this plant by hundreds of thousands.
@johnsmith7676
Ай бұрын
Nodody won WWII... Except the bankers, whom engineered it all, as always. ALL wars are bankers' wars. Wise up, folks.
This was fun! I worked there in the 70's & loved every minute of it. Iron ore going in one end & new Mustang 2's going out the other.
@kensmithgallery4432
2 ай бұрын
I'm glad you enjoyed it!
@FrederickHopkins-xb6me
Ай бұрын
Did a commissioning on a press there. Wall full of all the car frames made there on the wall. They were don9ing a foundation for one of the 800-ton presses, every hour they'd lift the backhoe in the 30 foot deep hole because it kept sinking, Rouge plant was built on a swamp.
@joegreene6250
Ай бұрын
I'm sorry your legacy involves the Mustang II. :( At least the rack & pinion steering racks were used later in hotrods!
@Michael-fl1tm
Ай бұрын
You mean you slept for Ford. UAW, U ain't working
@showboardguy6048
Ай бұрын
Mustang II was a waste of good steel.
The '38-'40 Ford Coupes were some of the most beautiful mass-produced cars ever built. Edsel Ford doesn't get enough credit for saving Ford in the 30s.
@kensmithgallery4432
21 күн бұрын
Those sure are beautiful cars! Thanks for watching and for commenting!
@srose9810
Күн бұрын
My favorites are the 1933-1934 Model 40 V8s
All that knowledge and experience. ....gone forever.
@kensmithgallery4432
9 күн бұрын
SO true!
@Chris-de2qh
2 күн бұрын
The River Rouge plants still operates today. Ships deliver ore almost daily. Today it produces Ford F series trucks.
One of the nine big "Gasteam" engine/generators they used is now on display at the Henry Ford museum. 82 feet long, 46 feet wide, 750 tons. If you like the industrial stuff you see here, you will VERY likely enjoy visiting that extremely large museum.
@kensmithgallery4432
Ай бұрын
It is a great museum and I did a video on that too! Thanks for commenting and for watching!
those iron ore cranes are called huletts we had them here in cleveland ohio
@kensmithgallery4432
2 ай бұрын
Wow! Thanks for sharing that information!
@lebaillidessavoies3889
Ай бұрын
yes and the operator is inside the bucket
That definitely was an all in one manufacturing facility. That’s quite the documentary.👍👍
@kensmithgallery4432
Ай бұрын
Thanks for commenting and watching!
The most MODERN design, manufacturing and machines available (from about 90 years ago) These are the people, engineers, workers and factories which built much of the USA... It's sad to see how much industrial capability has been Lost in the US, as the country's businesses have focused on High-tech & computers, while dismantling or abandoning heavy industry.
@kensmithgallery4432
Ай бұрын
I completely understand how you feel. Thanks for commenting and watching!
I took a tour of this plant in elementary school . We walked on cat walks, watched them pour molten steel, and then press it. We saw the whole process from ore in one end to cars coming out of the other. No way could you do that today. It was so cool.
@kensmithgallery4432
10 күн бұрын
I bet that would have been something tosee!
@user-jq5xe3wm8f
8 күн бұрын
I was on a school trip there once back in the 60's, I got caught in line on the cat walk over the steel line, the white hot ingots passing under the cat walk had my sneakers ready to melt before we moved on with the tour, I'll never forget that !! and this whole process could be done today, but out sourcing today allows better returns for stock holders, this new day and age of profits over quality with EVERYTHING from this to fast food, it is what it is !! The 21st Century way !! 🙂
@Batterybus
8 күн бұрын
@@user-jq5xe3wm8f There is no way in hell a bunch of elementary school kids are getting on a catwalk in a steel mill these days. 😆
@user-jq5xe3wm8f
8 күн бұрын
@@Batterybus this was back in the middle 60's, that would surely never happen today 😁
I grew up seeing those stacks from my house in the 1960’s. What an exciting time to be a kid. Now Ford has scaled down that amazing plant into something not easily seen from my old home in Dearborn.
@kensmithgallery4432
Ай бұрын
I'm sure you have seen lots of changes over the years there. Thanks for sharing and watching!
I just flew over the Rouge plant yesterday coming home from Northern Michigan….quite a sight it was…😊.
@kensmithgallery4432
Ай бұрын
Oh wow!
Back in the day when the man could work and support a large family. How did we get where we are today?
@kensmithgallery4432
Ай бұрын
You have to wonder 🤔
@holysmokes9813
Ай бұрын
Oh I know…. Libtard Democrats…. That’s how
@70ixlr86
Ай бұрын
Government?
@acdii
16 күн бұрын
We went from a frugal society to a must have the latest and greatest society regardless of cost. The only form of home entertainment back then was a good radio or phonograph. Many relied on public transportation instead of buying a car. Watch the Honeymooners, that was how majority of workers lived, in a small apartment.
I'd like to remind all the folks who are "sad" and want to "cry" that there are currently forty-five auto assembly plants in the U.S. There are eleven GM and eight Ford plants alone. Maybe you won't find blast furnaces or molten steel casting works in any of them (they don't need them anymore), but they are still cranking out millions of cars every year.
@kensmithgallery4432
Ай бұрын
Thanks for watching!
That was beyond awesome. Henry Ford was a truly amazing man. I’m not sure how people survived working on the line for years, but thankfully robotics do a lot of that work now. But for this era, everyone really came together to do outstanding work. Really amazing. Thanks for posting this.
@kensmithgallery4432
Ай бұрын
Thanks so much for subscribing, commenting, and watching!
@JTA1961
Ай бұрын
Rotating tasks...
I grew up on Grand River and Shaefer , went on school field trips to River Rouge, Fisher Body and American Motors Assembly.
@kensmithgallery4432
Ай бұрын
That sounds awesome. Thanks for watching!
I can't believe they actually had their own complete steel mill!!!😮
@kensmithgallery4432
Ай бұрын
I know!
@handyandy2112
Ай бұрын
Still do. Only now it's owned by Cleveland Cliffs Company. I work at the Blast Furnace. Been here 26 years.
@robc8468
11 күн бұрын
And they made glass as well. It took only 40 hours to turn raw iron ore into a finished Model A.
@curbstomp3126
3 күн бұрын
I just picked up coke their the other day at the Cliffs plant.
To the best of my knowledge, this is the most mind boggling single industrial complex ever. It’s a slight exaggeration, but largely dirt in one end, finished autos out the other, and everything in between produced on site. Unlike anything else I ever heard of.
@kensmithgallery4432
Ай бұрын
I would have loved to seen it in person. Thanks for watching!
@user-jq5xe3wm8f
8 күн бұрын
I do believe that it was called one of the seven wonders of the modern world at its peak, it was at a time where America was making world history, MAGA !!
Thank you for sharing, I’m 52 years old and I loved this
@kensmithgallery4432
Ай бұрын
My pleasure! Thanks for commenting and watching!
Nothing much changed in the production of cars. Apart from humans have been replaced by computers and robots. Thanks for sharing.
@kensmithgallery4432
Ай бұрын
You are most welcome and thanks for watching!
@darrellmortensen9805
Ай бұрын
Three generations of my family where employed there.
@7890klop
11 күн бұрын
Those are 2 big changes.
That is such an amazing and interesting video highlighting what the US was capable of. It literally was on another level in terms of achievement. I never want to be the “glass half full” type of person however I can’t help but think of 1999 powerhouse explosion at this same site and how the leadership of this once great company had degraded from when this video was made. Thank you so much for sharing this historic, inspiring and rare film gem.😀👍
@kensmithgallery4432
Ай бұрын
Times have certainly changed for sure but yes, it was still amazing for its time! Thanks for watching and commenting!
We there with my folks for a tour, probably late 60s. Incredible thing to see - never imagined it would end.
@kensmithgallery4432
2 күн бұрын
I bet it was amazing to see in person!
Just look at all the diversity that was required for these monumental feats!
@kensmithgallery4432
8 күн бұрын
Great observation!
@davidmcnair1455
7 күн бұрын
I see what you did there.
Absolutely incredible and not a computer in sight🤠👍
@kensmithgallery4432
Ай бұрын
I know! Amazing to see!
@user-jq5xe3wm8f
8 күн бұрын
A computer was called a slide ruler back then with a human brain as the hard drive 😜
Proud and angry, that’s how this video makes me feel. Proud that we were once a great nation that could do something like this, angry that greed and politicians have destroyed this country to the point where which this is impossible.
@kensmithgallery4432
8 күн бұрын
Right there with you!
Unbelievably awesome...If you think that the Model T or Model A is piece of mechanical genius, the whole Rouge plant is a machine designed and built by a genius ~ HENRY FORD! Now that's a fantastic machine!
@kensmithgallery4432
Ай бұрын
Well said! Thanks for watching!
@Torquemonster440
Ай бұрын
Absolutely, the scale and scope of this entire operation is mind boggling !.. I honestly can't fathom the engineering and labor involved to bring a facility like this into fruition. Truly amazing.
I used to haul black iron steel coils out of the mill there every day in the 80's, Mustangs were made there, car frames, had its own rail yard (Ford locomotives) massive place. Even the industrial overhead pictures of Detroit show the Rouge plant. Left Detroit 30 years ago all the auto industry gone now sad.
@kensmithgallery4432
Ай бұрын
I bet it was amazing to see in its day!
Said this before, think of a car, then build a machine to make the car,machines making machines. Awesome.
@kensmithgallery4432
3 күн бұрын
Like the movie Terminator of I Robot...
My great grandfather worked there in the steel division until the early 60s
@kensmithgallery4432
Ай бұрын
That's awesome! Thanks for sharing!
Whats amazing is seeing those round circles of usage loads on paper charts. We had those even up to 2000 in the water pumps for public water. It gave use a record of the PUMP running and how far down the water draw was in casing. Great information on recording water and pump usage in 24 hour periods. That and the GMP total pump time on the huge pumps we used to fill elevated water storage tank.
@kensmithgallery4432
26 күн бұрын
Amazing!
Ford even made their own glass and it amazed me it was laminated as well. Maybe that was for the luxury models, because my first 3 Fords Taunus/Cortina in the '70s all had hardened glass. Had one broken once, what a mess it was. Thank you for this upload, it was a joy to watch.
@kensmithgallery4432
Ай бұрын
I was amazed at his glass manufacturing as well. Glad you enjoyed the video!
@WhiteTrashMotorsports
Ай бұрын
Only the windshield is laminated on most older cars. The side and rear are tempered safety glass that is designed to break into thousands of tiny pieces
I got a live tour in the 60,s it was amazing to see
@kensmithgallery4432
2 ай бұрын
I bet that was awesome!
Thanks for posting this, I remember watching something similar in school back about 1960...
@kensmithgallery4432
2 ай бұрын
You're welcome! Thanks for watching and for commenting!
And what about the people who designed the building, the tool, people who made the tools, the assembly line order,method of assembling the parts, the order in which way to join the parts together, the maintenance and tool makers to keep the machines running, the office staff and so on.
@kensmithgallery4432
Ай бұрын
Absolutely! There is no way to fully mention the complexity of this massive facility. Great talking points! Thanks for watching and commenting!
I put an assembly line in for ford truck plant in Louisville. I was amazed at the size of that place. It would take an hour just to walk to the zone I was working in.
@kensmithgallery4432
8 күн бұрын
I believe it!
those hulett unloaders moving is like a ballet...
@kensmithgallery4432
Ай бұрын
It sure is!
@davidwhitten3596
6 күн бұрын
Started using auto unloader conveyors on the ships in the 70's
The ultra modern River Rouge complex has 5 plants on it today! Amazing. Can tour parts of it.
@kensmithgallery4432
3 күн бұрын
So cool!
A testament of American industrial might!
@kensmithgallery4432
19 күн бұрын
Absolutely!
Great historic video.. Love it! NOTICE that No one wears Gloves wile doing this work! Today everyone on U Tube wears gloves to do anything.? Says something about how tuff we used to be..
@kensmithgallery4432
Ай бұрын
Indeed it does!
I dont think Ford could have done this today with all the regulation, taxes, and red tape we have now.
@kensmithgallery4432
Ай бұрын
I agree!
@curbstomp3126
3 күн бұрын
Sad isn't it
I toured this plant in the late 70's when I lived in Clinton Twp, MI. It was amazing. I can still remember watching the slabs of steel being turnined into rolls of sheet metal. Watched Mustangs and Carpris going down the same line..
@kensmithgallery4432
Ай бұрын
I bet it was amazing to see and hear!
@petestahnke175
Ай бұрын
The American built Capri was discontinued in 1959. From 1968 to 1986 they were brought back, but imported from Europe. I had a 1974 Capri and it was assembled in West Germany. It was 100% metric. It was a great car except for excessive oil leaks and it rusted faster than any other vehicle I've ever owned before or since. It had a 2.8 liter V6 motor and could really scoot. Four on the floor manual tranny. I drove it for eight years and put over 120,000 miles on it.
@MrArtVendelay
17 күн бұрын
@@petestahnke175 Hmmm. so what did I see going down the line simutaneously with Mustangs. Mavricks? Pintos? I may be confused. They were assembling two different but similar cars when I was there in 78 or 79
@petestahnke175
17 күн бұрын
@@MrArtVendelay Just an initial quick Google search indicates it may have been the Cougar (believe it or not). I just got your reply notification, I'll look harder this evening.
@petestahnke175
16 күн бұрын
@@MrArtVendelay My apologies. From 1979 until 1986, they would have indeed been Capris. They were imported from 1970 until 1978, NOT from '68 -'86. They continued to be made in Europe until '86, but only for the European market. The Capris built from '91 to '94 were made in Australia and also not imported. Sorry to have caused confusion. Your memory is very good.
My Grandfather was a tool and die man there. Worked 3rd shift his whole time there..
@kensmithgallery4432
Ай бұрын
Thanks for sharing!
I was there on a field trip, I think it was the 7th grade from Point Place Junior High, in Toledo, OH, and the most prevalent memory was the white hot raw steel coming out of the furnace! Nothing like it in the US anymore, it was awesome, raw materials entered one end, then complete automobiles emerged from the other, not quite, but close enough!
@kensmithgallery4432
Ай бұрын
Thanks for sharing and for watching!
Absolutely unbelievable. I’ve toured the current Dearborn Truck Plant but it’s nothing like the old days. Proud to have owned Mustangs built at the old Dearborn Assembly and trucks built at the new plant.
@kensmithgallery4432
Ай бұрын
Nice! Thanks for watching!
Cool I was listening to Elon musk say why he was able to make electric cars more affordable than all the other people is because he had adopted Ford original design of in-house manufacturing, and he said this was what was making him excel above all all other electric car makers, This was a really cool video to watch. Thank you very much.
@kensmithgallery4432
2 ай бұрын
I am so glad you enjoyed it!
@pathtopeaceministry6777
2 ай бұрын
@@kensmithgallery4432 yes thank you very much I appreciated it
@markfryer9880
Ай бұрын
@@pathtopeaceministry6777Those giant forges that Tesla use are amazing. They combine aluminium die casting with high pressure forging to produce front and rear ends with fewer parts, welds and fasteners. Reduces manufacturing time, materials used and overall weight. No other manufacturers are doing anything like that at all. Mark from Melbourne Australia 🇦🇺
All these men working together in unison building together with a sense of pride and accomplishment. Robots can never replace that. Everything today is crap compared to what we could do. Greed
@kensmithgallery4432
3 күн бұрын
I get it!
My Grandfather worked there for 39 years. I worked at the Wixom plant for a minute after I got out of the Army.
@kensmithgallery4432
26 күн бұрын
Thanks for sharing!
I'm happy to see so much manufacturing starting to move back to the US now!
@kensmithgallery4432
18 күн бұрын
Me too! Thanks for watching!
@drugfwpmed
12 күн бұрын
Please cite examples?
Great video, thanks for sharing. Imagine how much today's renewable energy it would take to power this machinery. Somehow I don't think it would get anywhere close? 🤔
@kensmithgallery4432
Ай бұрын
Great point!
Heny Ford would not recognize nor believe his eyes in Dearborn, Michigan today!
@kensmithgallery4432
7 күн бұрын
Probably not!
The assembly line waits for no one.
@kensmithgallery4432
Ай бұрын
It sure doesn't!
Henry ford was absolute genius
@kensmithgallery4432
22 күн бұрын
He sure was!
We have parts for a car made in 10 different countries now. They make them so we have no hope of fixing them without removing the bodies first, or having a way to drop an engine out the bottom. We are better off now how? Spare us the ,"oh they last longer" are more fuel efficient bs. The modular efficiency of resources brought to one plant and being finished there to an end product, saved so much in transportation and logistic. Being able to repair is Eco friendly.
@kensmithgallery4432
Ай бұрын
Thanks for watching!
Thanks for posting. If you're able to edit sound, consider turning it up. I had to turn my volume up to hear the video, then down for each of the ~12+ commercial breaks.
@kensmithgallery4432
Ай бұрын
Thanks for the feedback. Not sure why it does that but I am unable to adjust the sound.
awesome-
@kensmithgallery4432
2 ай бұрын
Thanks 🤗
@jimsworthow531
2 ай бұрын
@@kensmithgallery4432 MERIKA!!!!
Grew up in River Rouge through the late 70s through 1990, Ann visger elementary school
@kensmithgallery4432
14 күн бұрын
Awesome 👌
@davidwhitten3596
6 күн бұрын
Dunn Tigers
@Dropdead313
6 күн бұрын
@@davidwhitten3596 fun growing up over there, nothing like it used to be😕
Loved it.
@kensmithgallery4432
Ай бұрын
Thanks so much!
I considered myself to be a hard dedicated worker. I MIGHT HAVE LASTED ONE HOUR HERE! This country is nothing short of HANGING ON BY A TREAD!
@kensmithgallery4432
8 күн бұрын
Like you, I consider myself a hard and dedicated worker and yet I lasted only 2.5 days at US Steel Gary works with a job removing slag from a blast furnace with a shovel. I probably would not be alive today if I stayed there.
Great video
@kensmithgallery4432
10 күн бұрын
Thanks!
@oiygfdxssfgg
10 күн бұрын
@@kensmithgallery4432 I never realized Ford was making its own steel, amazing man.
People worked with pride back then
@kensmithgallery4432
26 күн бұрын
Indeed they did!
Looking at what they had to do to build a car back then, no machine aids to lift parts, or all the automatic screw drivers and ratchets, everything was done by hand. They worked hard back then. Todays car workers haven't a clue what it was like to build a car. Stick them back in that time and they would have a melt down and quit. It was amazing how Ford created everything for their cars, Ford even had rubber farms to make the tires and hoses with. I doubt there would be any car company today that could do all their own components with all the electronics in them. Looking back, it is understandable why engines didn't last as long, they were basically all hand made, today they are pretty much all done by computers and machines, and they last 3-4 times as long if not longer. My Ford Flex has 176,000+ miles on its 3.5 Ecoboost and it runs just as good as it did when new, and it is 10 years old, not a drop of oil burned, and lots of power. Ford pioneered the assembly lines, and this video shows it all.
@kensmithgallery4432
15 күн бұрын
Some great talking points!
Amazing
@kensmithgallery4432
10 күн бұрын
Thanks so much!
Back when we made things
@kensmithgallery4432
2 ай бұрын
indeed!
Those were the days!
@kensmithgallery4432
Ай бұрын
Indeed they were!
@kensmithgallery4432
Ай бұрын
Indeed they were!
People talk about "America doesn't build things anymore" and it sounds hollow, just something that is said with a shake of the head. Well, here's America actually building, and It impresses me more every time I see it. Unbelievable that ore and coal and sand and dozens of other raw materials arrive continuously, and cars flow out the other end continuously. Lots of brainpower to make it all work, and work efficiently. So many different skills learned and used. And of course, human muscle. At the same time, we can understand what a hellscape it was: the iron and steel furnaces, casting, rolling mills, forging stations. Some the dads would be proud if their sons also got a good job at the Rouge; others wanted their sons to get an education so they didn't have to work in that hellscape. In the end, many of the next generation got an education and a desk job. Now the Chinese and other Asian countries are working the dirty jobs.
@kensmithgallery4432
Күн бұрын
It certainly was an amazing facility and equally amazing to probably witness it in real time.
Watching this old film footage reminds me of the Chaplin's brilliant satire "Modern Times."
@kensmithgallery4432
7 күн бұрын
What an awesome movie!
Ford outsourced everything now
@kensmithgallery4432
Ай бұрын
Unfortunately true.
The Ford automobile was named after Mr. Henry Ford of Detroit, Michigan who pioneered the assembly line method of automobile manufacturing.
@kensmithgallery4432
Ай бұрын
Indeed it was!
@emmgeevideo
Ай бұрын
This was the first I heard of this. You should start your own KZread channel. It was really named after Henry Ford? BTW, I've always wondered who is buried in Grant's Tomb. Do you know who that is?
Love the Huletts
@kensmithgallery4432
Ай бұрын
Me too!
At one time they had coal, iron, rubber and wood coming in one end and model T's rolling out the other. ❤
@kensmithgallery4432
17 күн бұрын
So true!
The absolute greatest time for the majority of Americans
@kensmithgallery4432
21 күн бұрын
It sure seems that way! Thanks for watching!
You should add the beautiful Charles Sheeler photos and Precisionist paintings.
@kensmithgallery4432
Ай бұрын
His work was amazing!
At 14:27 this is the example of the term BLUE COLLAR worker and WHITE COLLAR supervisor.
@kensmithgallery4432
2 ай бұрын
Indeed!
@curbstomp3126
3 күн бұрын
Nearly all white collar guys started out working the line.
Been through there many times
@kensmithgallery4432
Ай бұрын
Nice!
Brand new for 38. Handsome automobiles
@kensmithgallery4432
Ай бұрын
Indeed they were!
They forgot the touchscreen airbags battery pack and electric motors!
@kensmithgallery4432
Ай бұрын
And the heated seats and mirrors! Thanks for watching!
Without the great lakes it wouldn't be possible to build there cars there .The materials were from the lakes the white sand to mold the engine blocks .
@kensmithgallery4432
12 күн бұрын
The great lakes were a huge part of the access and delivery of those materials!
What a shame how far we've gone backwards
@kensmithgallery4432
Ай бұрын
Different time for sure.
I work for Nicholson dock and terminal and went to the Ford River rouge plant for work on there of Ford's ship's the Benson the Henry and the breach were there name's. That was back in 1979.
@kensmithgallery4432
Ай бұрын
Thanks for sharing and for watching!
Love these old shows with that music. Lots of automation here which really is just the forerunner for robots for all the people bitching here.
@kensmithgallery4432
Ай бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it. Thanks for watching!
Turning the earth’s resources into comfort and convenience for an ever-increasing number of humans. How long could that be continued?
@kensmithgallery4432
Ай бұрын
Thanks for watching!
My family bought Fords for decades. I broke the tradition because in the late 1970s I found another company, Toyota, made modern cars that were just as good and more reliable - ones that I could afFORD, maintain, and repair myself. I've never bought a Ford, and never regretted it. My grandparents and mother continued to buy new Fords and spent thousands getting design and manufacturing defects repaired in engines and transmissions, overly-complicated tailgates, etc. Supposedly, back in the olden days, Ford designed and built cars vertically and efficiently. Now it assembles parts built by independent companies who require a good profit and have many other customers who are Ford's competitors. Multi-tier profit-taking is one reason why Ford can't compete with companies having greater vertical integration and the efficiency that greater management control over their supply chain and manufacturing gives them. Ford vehicles sold in NA have less than 50% NA content. Imo, The other reason is that the company uses "good enough quality" as its metric for parts, managers, engineers, designs and manufacturing.
@kensmithgallery4432
3 күн бұрын
Thanks for sharing your thoughts!
I worked there for a spell in the late 1970s. It’s good to know that the car companies dumped quality control for Quality Assurance. Smart move.
@kensmithgallery4432
Ай бұрын
Thanks for watching!
Can you imagine the size and scale of that place.
@glenchapman3899
17 күн бұрын
Could you imagine the cost of maintaining everything in working order lol
@kensmithgallery4432
17 күн бұрын
Its amazing to think about it! Thanks for watching!
@kensmithgallery4432
17 күн бұрын
Unbelievable!
@user-jq5xe3wm8f
8 күн бұрын
My brother went there and got lost in the plant on a school trip back in 1965, they still haven't found him, but he was noticed wandering around a couple of times over the years, it's that big !! 😜
@thyslop1737
8 күн бұрын
@@user-jq5xe3wm8f Do not doubt it. He went in as an 8 year old. By the time theu found him he was 40.
The Charles Sheeler photographs record a more impressive view of the Rouge complex.
@kensmithgallery4432
19 күн бұрын
Thanks for watching!
Incredible video. But what mind numbing repetitive work. Can you imagine working there for 30 years?
@kensmithgallery4432
Ай бұрын
I'm sure it was mind numbing. Thanks for watching!
I can't imagine that the engine block casting procedure is much different in 2024.
@kensmithgallery4432
Ай бұрын
Other than more automation maybe. Thanks for watching!
2:30 Hulett ore unloaders in action.
@kensmithgallery4432
29 күн бұрын
those are awesome!