They're Reimagining How to Build Anything | Hadrian
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- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 1 ก.ค. 2024
- Industrial power is the base of any great civilization and Hadrian is building the future of manufacturing in America. Episode 32 of S³ features Hadrian.
0:00 Make manufacturing great again
2:41 Their current robots
5:00 The software problem
7:09 New robot
7:50 Time to build
9:28 My thoughts + wild week
Chapter titles!!!! & link to season in Twitter reply & LI comment! Also,
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Tony Coffman
Great to see an Aussie doing his bit for America.😊
I will leave your upvote at 69
@@HMuny55it's the one thing that can save us.
makes him an amazing american
Great to see there are still people who care about manufacturing.
There are many of us, a lot more than you might think. We are just behind on PR.
Yes, this is brilliant.
Such a great way to restart US manufacturing 2.0
It’s literally one of the most talked about things in US politics today lol I think a lot of people care about it.
@eblman5218 California did $395bn in manufacturing in 2022, up $75bn from the year before. Texas saw a $15bn decrease those same years--and Texas saw almost a 1m increase in people. These numbers come from NAM who would have absolutely no incentive to underestimate economic output numbers.
@eblman5218China is not going anywhere in terms of manufacturing. Also California itself is a major economy and manufacturing state within the US.
Small aerospace metal shop manager here. All manual setups and a ton of bandsaws. This is absolutely fascinating and this guy has a much needed spirit if this country wants to flourish into the future.
Tactical comment for the algorithm 🫡
Hadrian and Chris are awesome
A true fan.
@@s3_build 🫡
The googly eyes just make all the machines better
Id bet that they named that machine
I'm generally wary about people who talk about the "longevity of the Empire" (1:07) but his heart seems like it's in the right place.
Oh don't you worry, I'm pretty sure the "empire" is circling the drain at this point
Probably attempting to bait or maintain gov contracts or funding... more power to him.
I love this man. I’ve fretted for a long time about the state of manufacturing in the US. I came to the conclusion that to compete with the low cost of labor of China everything would have to be super automated. This guy gets it and is doing it. I can’t say with enough enthusiasm how happy this makes me.
Real wealth is built on climbing to the next level. Once manufacturing is automated with high cost and quality, shipping around the world will be hard to justify.
Things will be mad cheap in the near future
To be fair the US is still the second largest manufacturer in the world (by more than double the next highest country), and the total value of manufactured goods produced by the US is the highest it’s ever been. That said a lot of those goods are final assembly of large systems composed of many parts a lot of which are imported. A lot of simple bread and butter parts are almost completely outsourced, think screws and nails etc. The problem is that most of these industries are not very profitable even in China and other places. No one wants to put their money down on a screw factory and get lucky if they make a tiny return.
Ideally what we should be pursuing is a little bit of everything and incentive companies to maintain the capability to ramp up production if needed. That way if for some reason a country’s government subsidizes something like screw making we can take advantage but still maintain critical industries if and when they collapse or if they happen to sanction us.
Going back in the channel to watch all the videos in order, this channel is gonna blow up! Great editing, very interesting companies!
Awesome video! Thanks for publishing such great content, please keep on.
"For the longevity of the Empire"
Good job, keep up the great work!
love this channel, keep 'em coming!
Awesome, can't wait to see your progress!
Another great video! Looking forward to the 100k subscriber milestone next :)
I work in a pretty small machine shop, we aren't even aerospace focused but damn Hadrian is impressive. Like everyone has too much freedom in the shop inlcuding me and there's little standardization, machines are old and can crash easily and we have decades old tool holders mixed with new ones, like it's an ok place to work but my boss is in his late seventies. Like we've improved but it's so slow, just a different level of operation. Honestly will probably leave the industry eventually.
Another great video. I have been binge watching several just now. Hadrian, Dirac and Chroma. Hadrian is strong on manufacturing, and Dirac on manufacturing for assembly. Dirac has a problem with learning from legacy engineers, and Chroma has an AI solution where they imagine companies might rework their process to have AI learning at the core. They are all strong on the software layer. I think you need a video where you get these 5 people in a room for a brainstorm session and record whatever comes out.
I look forward to these videos every week. Great work, Jason!
It means the world to hear this, I work hard to keep this cadence :)
Extremely high quality content. This channel is very underrated. Keep it up man!
Amazing end to end thought process and execution.!
Great video - I found out about Varda first and from there on in, have been hooked on the developments coming out of places like the Gundo. There's definately a positive vibe shift happening where people are daring to dream in a way they haven't done since the 60's. Perhaps one part of this is that so much momentum came off the back of big programs back then and it's taken several decades for the current reality to catch up of incrimentalism, red tape and lack of vision. Now there's a palpable awakening that we need to be daring and build the future we want to live in.
That was the coolest thing I’ve seen in so long…big things are coming
Keep up the great work! 🙌
Amazing content. Really engaging -- so many cool ideas in the world!!
Great work timmy
Nice.. good production... cheers.
What a clean factory... And i worked in a few before with similar machines(shorts) heh...
Great quality videos; subscribed and sharing 🚀
American Manufacturing with German Made machinery (Heidenhain, Kuka) Great content!
Kuka is chinese now, the Germans sold them.
@@ninefingers6306 Sad, at least most of their workers are still German. It is strange to see so much western tech companies being bought up by Chinese megacorps in the last few years. More recently I'm seeing them grab up smaller American startups before they can even grow
Hermle, Heidenhain, Lang, Kuka, Hexagon (Sweden) Doosan (South Korean) ...but yeah I´s probably hard pulling that off with a bunch of Haases :D
ugh, Kuka being Chinese now hurts my German heart.
LOL agree on pulling it off with Haases. I am judging purely on their F1 "performance" 😂
Amazing video. This is my dream company to work for.
This sounds great for that level of industry.
Beautiful video and great host. Gotta see 2.0 when they run the loader arms
Truly amazing and inspiring. Someone should start a company like this in Holland!
Hadrian is focused on a very important technology. The dude knows his stuff.
Great idea to solve the supplier issues, good luck!
Impressive, I work at a small outfit manufacturing here in the states and it’s not easy. Crew of maybe 5 who really dig into our machines and only been doing it about 3 years so this gives me hope for the future.
This is insanely interesting!!!
This is beyond awesome.
Super hard problem to solve. I worked also as a machinist and CAM admin 🤯🙏🏻🙏🏻
will keep an eye on this
Brilliant vision and work. Hard to believe they’ve managed to build so much already. As someone from the software realm I find hardware startups like playing in hard mode (literally).
"It's not good enough to spin up a bunch of software companies to automate the thing - you really need to build full-stack factories"
Great work
Incredible!
Great content - you'll scale your channel to 100k+ soon enough if you keep cranking these out. I really enjoyed this.
Very goood young man!
Funny how the "experts" tell us the opposite, that outsourcing labor and tools makes a country great.
Love this.
Excellent.
As always great video! Where can i stream the music? The last song was so wild!
This is incredible.
super cool and interesting company. also interesting what they rely on to safe american manufacturing: hermle, heidenhain, lang, kuka, hexagon... :D
This guy is, a genius!!
Awesome
Like I said months ago, technology like this will lead to localization of production/industrial capabilties, which will lead to Brazilian favela warlords (among others) being able to arm warbands of hyper-pirates, who raid the European coastal areas in the 2030s/2040s...
amazing
looks good! I hope they're machining in mm
It’s amazing what you can do with a massive budget !! $$$$
Brilliant
Applying agile principles of fast iterations and automated testing to manufacturing is the engineering we need in such a fast changing world. It's what made me bullish on Tesla, beyond just being car company. It's great to see others taking it to the next level. Next round I want to invest in Hadrian.
I wrote the white paper on the self replicating autofac. Cant wait to work with yall.
Excellent video. I am in manufacturing in the USA and it's difficult at best. Some things definitely need to be made locally but a lot of what we consume is likely better made in lower cost places which have scaled for this type of production. At least for now.
For example China, as much as we in the USA currently bash them, has built out an amazing manufacturing infrastructure. As a USA based manufacturer of B2C products we struggle to eak out a profit competiting with Asia manufacturing. Higher costs and then our products are quickly knocked off. Forget patents. Takes too long and pretty much worthless for most products.
But this looks interesting. Automation across the supply chain may be the change we need.
WOW!!!!
I cannot even begin to perceive how you would automate advanced manufacturing processes. It just seems so complicated and so expensive, I’m not even sure how you could build a business this way
It’s wild how much manufacturing there actually is in southern California.
I like this guy
Hadrian is very impressive
In ma happens to see someone that is not thinking like the rest of the people in the US the issue it's not about complaining it is what you are doing to change the situation at hand yeah I am proud of this gentleman he understands exactly what it takes to build a nation it is not about the Democrats nor it's the are Republican it is mostly what you can do for your country just like Kennedy said. And today we are seeing how manufacturing is coming back due to the fact that the Americans are taking it on to them to make it work.
"It used to be in America such a prideful, important profession in trade that supports the whole base of society... and we just lost that..." Material handler starting pay at Hadrian: $15.16/hr.🤔
Do the google eyes throw off the virtual holder calculations at all?
"Which for the longevity of the empire, is like extremely important." When did we start willingly referring to ourselves as an empire? Also I wonder how this guy feels about Pine Gap as an Aussie?
You need to brand your thumbnails in someway so I know it’s you. Just about missed this amazing video! Even an S3 logo in the top left corner would suffice.
For tha Empire ! Yaaa
This is the low-hanging fruit, which is a good place to start. This concept needs to expand rapidly to harder problems and less high-value-added, short production run parts, to do what it needs to do, which is substitute for human labor throughout manufacturing.
This dude is all over this.
I laughed at "the longevity of the empire is super important"
he sounds super imperial.
Manufacturing defense equipment is super important cause if you have the best gear, but it takes months or a year to make a fighter plane or an aircraft carrier and you lose a couple of those in each battle... you're looking at months or years to replace them. If anything goes sideways and things get worse in the world, we need to be able to crank things out every week, not every month-year.
Yeah it might also help if we STOP GIVING AWAY OUR INVENTORY TO FOREIGN COUNTRIES.
@@censoredeveryday3320 Your average voter or citizen doesn't understand logistics or the nuances around it. Simply put, people don't understand the costs of procuring, decommissioning, or even storing policies placed around equipment. Storages full of 40yr+ old equipment and ammo still have an expiration, and the gov incurs a cost to replace old equipment with (you guessed it) still old equipment with outdated designs. The cost of decommissioning, retrofitting and disposal cost more than the item itself. We often loan and lease inventory that costs more for us to keep and takes up finite space in secure warehouses, while recuperating the cost.
With equipment sent to Ukraine for example, it falls under lend lease. It also allows the US to purge unwanted inventory and allow for newer items without having to build additional infrastructure in storage/disposal alone.
@@oghidden If we are giving Ukraine all of our old stockpiles, why are we giving them an additional 200+ billion dollars?
@@censoredeveryday3320 just do a search yourself, found the answer in 2min. The 200billion figure you’re referring to is a cumulative total of financial, military and humanitarian assets provided to Ukraine from ALL committed countries. The U.S. has provided 70 billion as of Jan 2024. 42bil of the 70bil is in existing assets. (E.g. Tanks, vehicles, missiles, ammo, etc).
dope
What type of company is hadrain
“Doors falling off from planes” 😂
Problem, just not manufacturing.
this seems like the type of factory to spawn the terminator.
Y’all are brilliant
Hi! Did you use some AI software to clear voice? What is that?
As an engineer, where do I apply?
"The longevity of the EMPIRE is extremely important...??"
What he is describes is" low-volume specialized production". For large government programs, maybe, but for actual small to medium business manufacturing this is not the answer. The technology for fully automated production lines has been in place for decades, and that's what they need to invest in, not this 1 %-er garbage that won't be applicable to mass production, while being too expensive for actual prototyping.
Why not both?
First. This transition needs to happen so we can stay ahead at full speed
The last segment about the poster was very much spot on.. 💯
''the longevity of the empire'
Hadrian's perspective is AMAZING!!! Watched an earlier video and the Solve to 80% move on to a new problem and solve to 80% is crucial to success.
It's weird to hear an Aussie give his full throated support of Pax Americana
Oh great
How do I invest
where can we look to invest in companies like these?
Sounds pretty cool! I do wonder how they'll be cost competitive with China, which is why American manufacturing died in the first place.
If it's taken decades and we still can't get printers to work correctly (where digital world meets the physical), I can't imagine how difficult this is and how long it will take to get good-enough.
why CMS quality control and not 3D scanning
Can it fully assemble a Peraves MonoRacer W19A-MRE-130? I assume Hadrian is doing what Arrival LTD (UK) is doing to build its EV's.
A smart Australian serving USA manufacturing
The US needs to bring back it’s industry
how do i, as somone with a software engineering and a lil ee background join yall?
So sick!
dam very defensey