YES PLEASE!! Working my way up to a HAAS!!! I have a mould shop near me that I toured last year and they had 3 GR's running, that was my 1st look at one. Love the factory tours John! It is great they let you film, even of new product!!
This was really neat to see!!! Watching this video, makes me proud to be an American. Mark is a super great tour guide, if you could let him know that, as I have been on tours of other company's, and sometimes, was left with the feeling that the guide just didn't want to be there, now Mark on the other hand, you can really tell, that he loves his occupation, seems to really know the products and the various stages, Thank you Mark Terryberry for your efforts on trying to be the best. NYCNC, you just keep knocking these tours out of the park, Thank you for your efforts as well. As much as I would love to roam this manufacturing facility "HAAS", I don't think that it will happen for me, as I am basically on the other side of the country in Indiana, so you allowing me and who ever else is watching to see this, is really cool! Thank you, Drew.
Awesome tour! I’m a second year machining student in Nova Scotia, Canada and I’m loving all this new technology! I’m excited to tell you that we’ve ordered a new Haas CNC mill.... I’ll fill you in when we receive it!!
Mark is great and does a brilliant job of being a tour guide. Thanks for the tour you guys. Love these bits in between the machining ones. Keep em coming mate!
I toured a aerospace manufacturer over in St. Louis, MO, this summer. They had a lot of *large* gantry mills that they ran titanium parts on - they said they have to change tools (3-4" diameter endmills) roughly every 30 minutes. Insane.
That was my reaction. So next time you're pricing a private jet and wondering why it costs so much, remember how much carbide was destroyed in the making of it... :P
So cool of them to show you a prototype. Transparency is so great in companies. Any other company would have had you under NDA and had that thing wrapped up with a 100m restraining order to cameras.
Eggsr2bcrushed exactly. This is why I recently purchased a umc-750 over a comparable fully blown heidenhain machine. The other company went to extremes to meet the Haas price, but they did. It gives me peace of mind to know that I have a new spindle within a day for roughly 4K. Instead of my recent experience with another machine builder (6 weeks down, 20k repair bill). The transparency of Haas, along with my experience of using them in an earlier job made me purchase Haas again. Looking forward to buy many more of them. Especially after their competitor said something like "Haas only build press drills. They don't make machines." the arrogance of the competitors of Haas is costing them customers.
Chief Machining I believe they did mentioned that at the beginning, about that they just buy the machines they need if they don't make them their selfs. Something in that line. I thought it's a bit on the beginning of the video
@@pjotter0 I've read enough to know that Haas isn't at the top of the speed/accuracy curve. But capability is only as much as your ability to utilize it. For the price of one of the "big" names, it might be possible to get a Haas and a pallet changer. Now who's kicking who's teeth in on cycle time? And if it's a pool/multi-pallet changer, you may have effectively "bought" another machinist and a third shift depending on your usage. It's like all the cats I know who believe they're going to be millionaires because they bought a high-dollar 3D printer. They can't get a sustainable business going because they couldn't afford to pay someone to do sales/marketing, modeling, metrology, and someone to babysit the machine and keep it running. It's just a machine. Do you have a system to fully utilize it? And how well can you recover from when it breaks?
Great tour. The contrast between the Haas and Starrett environment reminds me of a less hurried world. The Haas quality's undoubtably excellent, but it feels like a stressed, hurried and kinda soul-less commercial environment. Modernisation isn't always good for the happiness/satisfaction metrics :)
I absolutely love these Factory tours. The Starrett one, the Berkeley lab. Abom did an awesome tour of Standridge Precision Granite. Tours make for great videos, thanks for sharing! keep up the great work !
Ok,, So the linear ways are bolted to the casting? There is no cast iron on cast or turcite? Very cool tour, haas has a very nice place and a great market. The bald guy, is a great tour host .
Freaking awesome as usual. Just attended HAAS demo day at HFO florida and got to see a lot of these machines in action. Really thinking about an ST15, not sure if I should make the plunge or try a Tormach first..
awesome tour! If you want to see some large machines Come tour Caterpillar in Lafayette, IN. I run a 30 year old horizontal with 26 foot of X travel & well over 6' in Y&Z with a 4th axis trunnion for the 3600 series engine block. Day one I thought I bit off more than I could chew lol. The size is very Intimidating at first! Keep up the videos, absolutely love them
bcbloc02 BURKHARDT+WEBER we have some Gids too just not near as big! you ride in the cabin on the ways on the old Burkhardt Ten tool magazine tree, 95 tool mag pocket, & 25 tool multihead it's a dual spindle machine
bcbloc02 If you ever decide to visit central Indiana hit me up in advance I can get you the all access tour!! We have almost every manufacturers machines from Haas to mazak, ingersoll, okuma, Burkhardt, waldrich, giddings and lewis. We machine up to a 16cyl with a 350 ish mm cylinder v block and 20cyl smaller ones!!
why do you have to touch everything, i know it's tempting to check surface finish and etc., but you are a guest in there! other than that, very great video, amazing factory, just mind blowing size
I was surprised to see the tiny ways on that big VF12, then I pulled up the specs and saw it was max 4000lb part rated. Seems odd to need that much travel on that small parts, guess it must be common for aircraft and things like that vs heavy industry stuff. These factory tours are like crack for machinists!
I miss working there. Hiking from engineering to the lower 40 many times a day got a bit old though. Did provide for a bunch of interaction with, and learning from, the guys making parts though.
NYC CNC design engineer in the VMC group. Handled tool room and mini mills, then did some work with rotary products. Also did a bunch of FEA simulations for proposed casting changes and "customs." First job out of college, so I mostly handled improvement projects. The plasma project (really a 2½ axis development program) was tossed my way b/c I had robotics & Mechatronics experience. That got me a ton of experience as a machinist (I had none when I started) as I was making quite basic proof of concept parts. Really an awesome environment for a budding engineer. But it also spoiled me. Full access to the tool crib of such a large manufacturing environment was awesome! Realizing that wasn't normal after leaving was downright cruel and unusual punishment! LOL
That sounds awesome! I actually just graduated with a Mechatronics Engineering degree, and while I'm excited about my job in the defense industry, the one place I think I would love even more would be working on CNC machine development.
I love this stuff so much. I'm moving my little Tormach shop to LA this year (I hope), and if my startup pays off I'll be buying something bigger like the VM3. So exciting!
16:39 Man that moves slow. The chip-to-chip time must be horrendous on that thing, if a tool is not at the part for very long, and two tools are at the farthest they can be on that chain. One machine I use at work is stupidly slow. Even with pre-calling a tool, the machine has to send the 1st one back, and then while the 2nd is cutting, it's grabbing the 3rd tool. The 2nd has to stay down for a minimum amount of time, otherwise the machine is hanging waiting for the tool to show up in the ready position. One of the draw backs with a 1pod=1tool chain.
Takes a patient man to give you a tour. After incorrectly finishing my sentence twice, I'd grab some popcorn, hand you the rein's, and have you give me your opinion on what's going on.
Bom dia Mark, Estou adquirindo uma DT-1, gostaria de sugerir um video, voce poderia fazer um video mostrando toda sua construção desde o inicio até a sua entrega, ou as partes que forem possiveis de ser documentar, o que acha? aguardo sua resposta, um abraço Leandro Cappellini, São Carlos - SP - Brasil.
GnosisMan50 yes! And you can also give it instructions, something like "move 300mm in x plus direction then go to Z home" of course in different syntax, but he, that would be awesome. We don't even need a manual machine when we can tell it what to do :-)
You can see a big difference compared to the Japanese and Korean builders. On par for the level of engineering and quality you would expect from a Haas.
Your enthusiasm is contagious! Great to see someone still enthusiastic about manufacturing.
Machines making machines and every iteration gets better.
This factory is outstanding and beautiful. I'm blown away.
I understand John, not a machine shop, but 30 years as a firefighter, we toured a fire station on our honeymoon. Nice work! R.J.
It was a pleasure to visit this facility; an amazing place for sure! What an honor to have HAAS use our BISON chucks on their machines :D
YES PLEASE!! Working my way up to a HAAS!!! I have a mould shop near me that I toured last year and they had 3 GR's running, that was my 1st look at one. Love the factory tours John! It is great they let you film, even of new product!!
Another fantastic tour! Thanks to HAAS and NYC CNC! Another look at some existing, day in and day out, American manufacturing greatness.
You've done it again! Another Grail Tour. Thanks for taking us with you!
John, you get to take the coolest field trips, and the best part, you share the tour with us, that rocks, thanks for the ride along!!!
mark is great,once i begin to watch his vedio,I cant stop watching it
I think working as an engineer or machinist in that factory has to be my dream job... looks amazing! Thanks John and thanks HAAS!
John, as a recent graduate of a Tormach to a VF2SS great video!
Love these shop tours, Berkley and now Haas, awesome stuff!
Amazing. If you go back again it would be really cool to see the controls being assembled!
I was in factory in 2004,
Lots of new haas machines builds now
AWESOME... John in another candy store... thank you for sharing and giving me the chance to be part of this mind blowing tour! ;)
This was really neat to see!!! Watching this video, makes me proud to be an American. Mark is a super great tour guide, if you could let him know that, as I have been on tours of other company's, and sometimes, was left with the feeling that the guide just didn't want to be there, now Mark on the other hand, you can really tell, that he loves his occupation, seems to really know the products and the various stages, Thank you Mark Terryberry for your efforts on trying to be the best. NYCNC, you just keep knocking these tours out of the park, Thank you for your efforts as well. As much as I would love to roam this manufacturing facility "HAAS", I don't think that it will happen for me, as I am basically on the other side of the country in Indiana, so you allowing me and who ever else is watching to see this, is really cool! Thank you, Drew.
Awesome tour! I’m a second year machining student in Nova Scotia, Canada and I’m loving all this new technology! I’m excited to tell you that we’ve ordered a new Haas CNC mill.... I’ll fill you in when we receive it!!
Hey John, I've been watching your vids since the taig days. Bet you never thought you'd end up where you have! Amazing tour. Thanks.
Fascinating! Thanks to you and HAAS for providing a look behind the curtain.
Two of the best CNC machinist together that's awesome
Awesome tour. Terryberry knows his stuff but he sure doesn't let up on the sales pitch
Mark is great and does a brilliant job of being a tour guide. Thanks for the tour you guys. Love these bits in between the machining ones. Keep em coming mate!
was his twin also recording?
I think it was his evil clone...
minor-me
7/8 the size, 7/8 more evil
Antonmursid🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏✌💝👌🇲🇨🇲🇨🇲🇨🇲🇨🇲🇨✌💝👌
I toured a aerospace manufacturer over in St. Louis, MO, this summer. They had a lot of *large* gantry mills that they ran titanium parts on - they said they have to change tools (3-4" diameter endmills) roughly every 30 minutes. Insane.
That was my reaction. So next time you're pricing a private jet and wondering why it costs so much, remember how much carbide was destroyed in the making of it... :P
This is a great video to watch along with Titan's video. They both give unique and interesting perspectives into an amazing assembly line.
So cool of them to show you a prototype. Transparency is so great in companies. Any other company would have had you under NDA and had that thing wrapped up with a 100m restraining order to cameras.
Eggsr2bcrushed exactly. This is why I recently purchased a umc-750 over a comparable fully blown heidenhain machine. The other company went to extremes to meet the Haas price, but they did.
It gives me peace of mind to know that I have a new spindle within a day for roughly 4K. Instead of my recent experience with another machine builder (6 weeks down, 20k repair bill).
The transparency of Haas, along with my experience of using them in an earlier job made me purchase Haas again. Looking forward to buy many more of them. Especially after their competitor said something like "Haas only build press drills. They don't make machines." the arrogance of the competitors of Haas is costing them customers.
In all fairness nothing new here.. UMC750 with more travel.. They sure didn't mention that mori seiki pallet pool @ 17:38..
Chief Machining I believe they did mentioned that at the beginning, about that they just buy the machines they need if they don't make them their selfs. Something in that line. I thought it's a bit on the beginning of the video
@@pjotter0 I've read enough to know that Haas isn't at the top of the speed/accuracy curve. But capability is only as much as your ability to utilize it. For the price of one of the "big" names, it might be possible to get a Haas and a pallet changer. Now who's kicking who's teeth in on cycle time? And if it's a pool/multi-pallet changer, you may have effectively "bought" another machinist and a third shift depending on your usage.
It's like all the cats I know who believe they're going to be millionaires because they bought a high-dollar 3D printer. They can't get a sustainable business going because they couldn't afford to pay someone to do sales/marketing, modeling, metrology, and someone to babysit the machine and keep it running. It's just a machine. Do you have a system to fully utilize it? And how well can you recover from when it breaks?
Great tour. The contrast between the Haas and Starrett environment reminds me of a less hurried world. The Haas quality's undoubtably excellent, but it feels like a stressed, hurried and kinda soul-less commercial environment. Modernisation isn't always good for the happiness/satisfaction metrics :)
Your tour is so much more professional than the tour from another *cough* MURCIAN *cough* CNC TH-camr :D
Greetings from Germany
Where do the machine castings come from?
.
OMG Very impressive. Thanks for doing this. 👍
What are the tolerances of a haas mill?
Awesome your John! That's one amazing place!
Ya John ran VF-4 over 20 years, you can put 2 vises and rotory on the side this allows you to machine 3 positions and run thru the night
Great tour, you could spend all day in there for sure!
Great tour! It's great seeing the machine building the machines. Thank you so very much!
Thanks for the video. Great viewing. What a fantastic factory.
Mark not only HAAS the best tips but also his name is fun to say!
I'm super stoked for that UMC1000! I really really want a UMC but its just a little bit to small, the 1000 would be perfect!
I absolutely love these Factory tours. The Starrett one, the Berkeley lab. Abom did an awesome tour of Standridge Precision Granite. Tours make for great videos, thanks for sharing! keep up the great work !
Great Tour John. I think you should relocate to SoCal.
I would realy like to see Hass step up and start implementing grinding and hand skraping into the their manufacturing process.
Ok,,
So the linear ways are bolted to the casting?
There is no cast iron on cast or turcite?
Very cool tour, haas has a very nice place and a great market.
The bald guy, is a great tour host .
Freaking awesome as usual. Just attended HAAS demo day at HFO florida and got to see a lot of these machines in action. Really thinking about an ST15, not sure if I should make the plunge or try a Tormach first..
awesome tour! If you want to see some large machines Come tour Caterpillar in Lafayette, IN. I run a 30 year old horizontal with 26 foot of X travel & well over 6' in Y&Z with a 4th axis trunnion for the 3600 series engine block. Day one I thought I bit off more than I could chew lol. The size is very Intimidating at first! Keep up the videos, absolutely love them
Old big Horizontal is it a Giddings and Lewis?
bcbloc02 BURKHARDT+WEBER we have some Gids too just not near as big! you ride in the cabin on the ways on the old Burkhardt Ten tool magazine tree, 95 tool mag pocket, & 25 tool multihead it's a dual spindle machine
Nice! I would love to see a tour of that machine! :-)
bcbloc02 If you ever decide to visit central Indiana hit me up in advance I can get you the all access tour!! We have almost every manufacturers machines from Haas to mazak, ingersoll, okuma, Burkhardt, waldrich, giddings and lewis. We machine up to a 16cyl with a 350 ish mm cylinder v block and 20cyl smaller ones!!
Any jobs going?
What voltages?
575 v
380 v - 415 v
220 v - 240 v
110 v - 120 v
What phase rating ?
What pin types and number of pins ( earthed centre ) ?
Hey I was wondering when you were going to tour there. Good footage!
why do you have to touch everything, i know it's tempting to check surface finish and etc., but you are a guest in there! other than that, very great video, amazing factory, just mind blowing size
very cool! but the image stabilization on that camera makes it really hard to see when the camera is moving
I was surprised to see the tiny ways on that big VF12, then I pulled up the specs and saw it was max 4000lb part rated. Seems odd to need that much travel on that small parts, guess it must be common for aircraft and things like that vs heavy industry stuff. These factory tours are like crack for machinists!
That was fun to watch! Our HFO tech, Sam, used to work there and was telling me about the place yesterday. Road trip next month?
I miss working there. Hiking from engineering to the lower 40 many times a day got a bit old though. Did provide for a bunch of interaction with, and learning from, the guys making parts though.
NYC CNC design engineer in the VMC group. Handled tool room and mini mills, then did some work with rotary products. Also did a bunch of FEA simulations for proposed casting changes and "customs."
First job out of college, so I mostly handled improvement projects. The plasma project (really a 2½ axis development program) was tossed my way b/c I had robotics & Mechatronics experience.
That got me a ton of experience as a machinist (I had none when I started) as I was making quite basic proof of concept parts.
Really an awesome environment for a budding engineer. But it also spoiled me. Full access to the tool crib of such a large manufacturing environment was awesome! Realizing that wasn't normal after leaving was downright cruel and unusual punishment! LOL
That sounds awesome! I actually just graduated with a Mechatronics Engineering degree, and while I'm excited about my job in the defense industry, the one place I think I would love even more would be working on CNC machine development.
Really Amazing just love it.Thanks for the tour.
When they started Haas what CNC Machine did they use?
As a suggestion. Recording this in 60fps helps when you swing the camera. The image will not be as blurry. :)
I love this stuff so much. I'm moving my little Tormach shop to LA this year (I hope), and if my startup pays off I'll be buying something bigger like the VM3. So exciting!
Rick . . . Leave California ASAP if you know what's good for you
WHOAH! crazy big, crazy complex
Amazing, just the amount of floor space that they have and how much the working machines take up there.
Mega mesin🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏✌💝👌🇲🇨🇲🇨🇲🇨🇲🇨🇲🇨✌💝👌
Holy Cow! That's MASSIVE! 8-)
I like the shop tours.
Love your videos!!!
Can we all request Mark as the guide? lol
16:39 Man that moves slow. The chip-to-chip time must be horrendous on that thing, if a tool is not at the part for very long, and two tools are at the farthest they can be on that chain.
One machine I use at work is stupidly slow. Even with pre-calling a tool, the machine has to send the 1st one back, and then while the 2nd is cutting, it's grabbing the 3rd tool. The 2nd has to stay down for a minimum amount of time, otherwise the machine is hanging waiting for the tool to show up in the ready position. One of the draw backs with a 1pod=1tool chain.
Takes a patient man to give you a tour. After incorrectly finishing my sentence twice, I'd grab some popcorn, hand you the rein's, and have you give me your opinion on what's going on.
Great tour!
In this Same Machines we had in our Company...awesome performance...nce gud finishing
Did they say anything about a new pallet style horizontal?
nice! what a factory! i used to work for ANCA in Australia, you should check out their stuff also ANCA Motion, they run linear motors now. cheers mate
do they have a custom order shop like at Starret ?
awesome job, thanks for sharing this with us
No scraping in the process?
Holy Cow, it's like visiting the headquarters of Apple or Google of the machining industry! Only blue collar!
John- You need to go down to Florence, KY and check out Mazak
Awesome 👍😎🆒😘
Mark is awesome.
Did you say, "That's Haasome!" @23:45
7:54 - 8:15 "There's more to making accurate parts than just hitting Cycle Start."
amazing. thanks JS!
stunning video thank you
What's their power bill like?
Thanks 👍👍
Sweet!
Thanks,
John
Incredible!
14:46 John that part would make an epic Wednesday Widget!
19:05 These are so cute! ❤❤❤
Vid Kok they are cute indeed.. And workhorses for the price!
8:03 If you run a forklift in front of your machine and it changes the casting, this shows how important an inherently ridgid machine bed it!
Just... amazing.
Bom dia Mark,
Estou adquirindo uma DT-1, gostaria de sugerir um video, voce poderia fazer um video mostrando toda sua construção desde o inicio até a sua entrega, ou as partes que forem possiveis de ser documentar, o que acha? aguardo sua resposta, um abraço
Leandro Cappellini, São Carlos - SP - Brasil.
Now that's a tool changer! 16:40
That was awesome
Woooow Man from youtube video "Hello tip of the day"
Thanks John!
There is a 'yo dawg' meme somewhere here with cnc machines making cnc machines.
How to join hass mill?
Did anyone count how many times he said "Amazing" and "Holy cow"?
I wish Haas made manual machines too....I'd buy one.
In theory you could run the CNC as a manual, just select the axis you want to move and spin the wheel.
GnosisMan50 yes! And you can also give it instructions, something like "move 300mm in x plus direction then go to Z home" of course in different syntax, but he, that would be awesome. We don't even need a manual machine when we can tell it what to do :-)
Do i hear him say dddd-drildo at 12:40 ish?
I wish I could subscribe to this channel again...
You can see a big difference compared to the Japanese and Korean builders. On par for the level of engineering and quality you would expect from a Haas.
awesome!!
Great video, only request would have been to mic the gentleman giving the tour. Hard to hear him when he faced away from you.