I can't get over the fact that the "worker" stood there for over 3 minutes filming this instead of pushing it on up the belt. Wonder how much he gets paid per hour?
I'm glad you said this as that was my first thought! Then as I was typing this I thought about how someone might have to document a problem so that the process engineers could see that there was a transport problem and it would not clear by its self. How to fix it so that it doesn't happen again?I can't get over the fact that the "worker" stood there for over 3 minutes filming this instead of pushing it on up the belt. Wonder how much he gets paid per hour?
It's probably just super light. The speed of the belt, combined with the incline and the very light box caused it to roll.Can you say set up!!! 3min and only one box plus I think the box must be weighted specially to do that. But very funny anyways.:biggrin:
Assuming that it is somewhat rare for that belt to not have anything sent up it for three minutes, I wouldn't much worry about it. The next item up the belt is going to disrupt the roll and get the box back on track.I'm glad you said this as that was my first thought! Then as I was typing this I thought about how someone might have to document a problem so that the process engineers could see that there was a transport problem and it would not clear by its self. How to fix it so that it doesn't happen again?I can't get over the fact that the "worker" stood there for over 3 minutes filming this instead of pushing it on up the belt. Wonder how much he gets paid per hour?
Assuming that it is somewhat rare for that belt to not have anything sent up it for three minutes, I wouldn't much worry about it. The next item up the belt is going to disrupt the roll and get the box back on track.