I can't think of high enough praise. There exists no better combination of engineering, functionality, storytelling, humor, filmography, editing, ad infinitum. Free on TH-cam. Amazing.
So agree. I can't help to think if not for youtube and before youtube, this kind of talent would never have been seen by the world; maybe left to work for some corporation. Marius could easily find a manufacturer to produce this machine, I'd pay $$$ for this kind of engineering excellence. Hats off to this guy.
100% agree he blows my mind every video and how a major tool company hasn't snapped him up is astonishing. But a chinese take away and a one and half hour of engineering brilliance made my Friday evening
Jour Profile pic gives me soo great flashbacks. The Tevo Tarantula was my first printer, and i was working on fixing it more oftent than actually printing XD
My family’s owned a manufacturing business for 4 generations, and I’ve personally been involved with over 100 companies myself, from product introduction, alpha and beta prototypes, all the way to DFM for mass production. I can affirmatively state that in this one video you’ve done more than many engineers may do their entire career. Very fun to watch as well!
@@rfoline1This is nonsensical I looked up the company ThermoCraft, and they have all current technologies to manufacture this, and obviously they have people who can run those machines. Any of the machinist who run the CNC mills could make this kind of machine. I made a tilting router lift with barely any plan, and woodworking and CAD are not even my main hobby.
24:40: It's a retrofit in the design to comply with DGUV, which says table saws must come to a stop within 10 seconds. I honestly can't find the specific requirement spelled out in 100-500 any more (it used to be, see VBG 7j § 12), but 100-500 references EN 61029-1:2000-02 and EN 61029-2-1:2000-05, either of those should have it.
Nice, thanks! Came to the comments to see if anybody answered because it was a curious thing. Impressed that it didn't even take an hour for someone who knew to answer.
Was just about to comment just this, it isn't some planned failure or whatever people might think, it is about the tool coming to a stop within 10 seconds :)
Was looking for this comment. This is probably the most caveman solution to this problem I can think of. How hard can it be to use the motor itself to break? Crappy electric scooters managed to figure out regenerative breaking
i just realised I just watched an 80 minute video about engineering and building a machine I never needed and will probably never need in my life. But I enjoyed it very much. I very much appreciate you didn't turn this into a 4 episode series of 20 minute videos. Instead you put in all the effort into creating an epic video about constructing an epic machine and the result is one of the best videos that exists on TH-cam. I really hope that making videos and things the right way instead of optimising them for maximum profit or monetisation somehow pays off.
I'm going to be honest, I got to the 1:22:00 mark when you asked "Was the video too long?" and I thought "I didn't think it was too long, really good and dense 30 minute video right?" and saw the time. This was an AMAZING video and really shows all of your skills from the great engineering, the wood working, the machining, etc. Truly keep doing what you're doing and inspiring me and many others!
I started reading the comments just before that part, and had to check the time on the video to convince myself that the video was indeed that long. I was so sure it was 25-35 minutes... Great video, great project, great execution overall !
Quite impressed young man. Not only from an engineering standpoint, but machining as well. I’ve been a toolmaker since 1972 and know good stuff when I see it. I do think you need a small milling machine though lol. I love you added your mistakes ( like thickness of the cut off tool) we ALL do that stupid kind of stuff lol . Nice amount of humor as well. I’d say you’re a master at all the arts. I wish I could have ppl like you in my machine shop. You’re a talent that is slowly becoming extinct . Great job young man 🤙🏻🤙🏻
I checked the comments about the fan blade rubbing thing if someone had the answer. I thought I had maybe watched 10min or so, then I saw a comment abut an 80min video, when I checked the time that I had watched it said 25min, that doesn't happen a lot with youtube videos!
Bravo! I have watched you grow up. From an enthusiastic young woodworker building Mathias Wandels bandsaw, through the years to ever more complex projects. And, now you have become a sincere, articulate, humorous, interesting, educational and informative teacher of engineering concepts and innovation. I think you have made a wonderful transformation of yourself into a master craftsman as well. Not just in the projects, but videography, project planning, technology utilization, and resource utilization. You have turned yourself into a one-man university for autodidacts. I highly commend you and your great parents. You are the blessed son all would want to have. May you "prosper and be in health, even as your soul prospers". Peace be upon you always. And never stop teaching and sharing.
Feedback: This is THE most impressive build video I’ve ever seen. Humor, education, solid narration, an incredible result, seamless Ad integration, and all in 1 video. 😮
coming to a wish ad in two weeks for $17.49 including shipping and batteries but you'll have to rebuild everything as nothing fits or works for more than _five minits._ 😋👌
Just wait until you find the guy who creates custom built audio PLCs in his garage. He converted the garage over the years into a full scale workshop. I stumbled across his TH-cam channel one day and experienced some serious jealousy and amazement. *I'll try and find his channel and post the name
Selten habe ich hier oder überhaupt jemanden gesehen, der derartig gut und vorausschauend entwickelt und arbeitet. Absoluter Respekt für dein handwerkliches können und deine Fähigkeit, so ein Projekt in dieser Qualität umsetzt.
@@dchall8 How It's Made will never go so deep into details as Marius does. so I'll rather watch his videos - although How It's Made is one of my favorite TV shows.
@@dchall8 How its made is good, but its limited by patents and secrets of companies that they make videos about. That's why they will never go into this much detail. Another reason to hate the modern copyright system.
In regards to your fan blade question. Those are anti-static fan blades. A static electric arc discharge could ignite the wood dust in the air around the fan which is highly explosive. The motor is either brushless or induction type to eliminate the risk there as well. As far as the explosion factor the danger zone where wood dust is a significant risk is when the average particle size is less than 200 microns, and where as little as 10% of that contains dust less than 80 microns. So I will leave you with that info as well as my personal recommendation for you to put those contacts back in the fan blades. Hope this helps.
I agree with the majority of the comments below. Your skills are simply amazing. I am 60 years old and am an electrician however my father was an engineer. He would try and explain the function and design of certain machines when I was young and I had little interest. Now I wish I had more time with him after watching your posts. You have a rare gift Marius, and i am sure you have inspired many to use their minds to be creative and productive individuals. Keep it up and thank you for the best content on the tube !!
I’m 13 minutes in, and already really impressed by your explanations and visualizations. Cutting the cycloids drive in half /in real life/ is such a good demonstration.
Marius, I am a woodworker/ furniture maker, and this is the best belt sander I have ever seen, you touch up on every point I dislike on other machines.
While at university I was told we should aim to design items to be made for manufacture and maintenance. I am astounded by the levels of built in features that you designed and how end features also worked for the machining stage. Your filing Jigs are just one example of doing things better and smarter. I have no idea how long all this took but I'm impressed with the whole process being visible in the video and the outcome. Clever engineering and clever video editing. Very well done Marius!
I have no words. You are a genius, Marius. The cutaway view was absolutely insane, I can't believe you went to this kind of trouble to show us how the mechanism works. BRILLIANT WORK!
dude , you put half of your life into it, you didn't only keep up a high standard throughout the project but also in making this video... you have my deepest respect for not giving up and sharing this journey with us, it is a pleasure to watch !
Mr. Hornberger, it has been a treat to watch you grow in both skill and competency. Watching your projects evolve and your engineering skills grow - it's inspiring. There are so many details to your processes now that show a tremendous amount of intersection with hard training and experience. Thank you for your time, and for your videography second discipline. It's a pleasure to watch and to learn. Having your own name in the title block is an honor, and here it is very well deserved. Cheers.
I don't think I ever watched a DIY video (this long) from start to finish at 1.0x speed. 😃 And I can't recall that I ever was this fascinated the whole run. Every solution you came up with seems a perfect fit. There are so many "litle" ideas in every corner, it is just over the top. 👍 This must be the best oscillating edge sander in the known universe - at least until you build version 2. Just keep on creating - I'll follow you for sure! 🤩🤩🤩 Little side note: I own one of these rather generic oscillating edge sanders you get on Amazon and I guess I have to update it with a few ideas from your build! 🤩AWESOME! THANX!
Marius. Du hast sie doch nicht mehr, alle - das ist doch völlig verrückt und total aus dem Ruder gelaufen - und das meine ich im positiven Sinn. In 5min dieses Projektes steckt deutlich mehr Hirnschmalz, als 90% der "Heimwerker"-YTer in ihrer ganzen TH-cam-Karriere auf die Kette kriegen. Selbst wenn du die Baupläne veröffentlichen würdest, würden die meisten, auch gestandenen Heimwerker daran scheitern, da kommt alles zusammen - unfassbares technisches Verständnis, Materialkunde, handwerkliches Geschick, Umgang mit Maschinen, jede Menge Geduld und Ehrgeiz, so ein Projekt auch wirklich fertig zu stellen - kompromisslos. Der absolute Wahnsinn, meinen Respekt. German Engineering ist vielleicht doch noch nicht verloren.
Yeah I am a software dev and I have *some* understanding of complex systems, and a woodworker who loves problem solving and building things to fit a need. This? I would have no idea where to start. There are so many disciplines and so many places where it can wrong
@@polerin Hey, I was thinking of my time as a c++ developer while watching the video. One spends so much time not building stuff, but "building the machine, to build the machine...". I thought that no one would understand until I saw your comment. :) Great video Marius.
Nicht nur der Inhalt is der Knaller, sonder auch wie ihn Marius präsentiert. mega sympatisch und null abgehoben. ich hab hier heute eine echte YT-Perle entdeckt. Etwas was mir neue Motivation für die Eigenen Videos gibt :) Schön zu hören, dass es so ielen leuten auffällt, wie viel mühe er sich gibt!
It's nice to see someone that took on a personal project and actually completed it with this much complexity and patience. 3 years went into the making of this and honestly this personal achievement of yours proves to me, that long-term projects aren't failures. Regarding your designs, they're quite meticulous and your machining skills are impressive. One can only envy you on your accomplishment. Very good job.
My jaw is on the floor, I don't think I've ever seen such an impressive display of design, engineering, storytelling and editing in one package. Absolutely amazing, you've earned yourself a sub.
You are one of few channels I know that can make a 1+ hour video and keep me entertained through the whole process! You create amazing content and always go the extra mile to show us how it all works.
Anything worth engineering is worth over-engineering! You literally thought of everything. I suspect it's only a matter of time until we start seeing your design implemented by other tool builders. 💪🏼
Freaking AWESOME ... concept, problem solving, design, build, problem solving, re-design, re-build, explanation, presentation ... this is a hallmark production. I am simply left speechless.
This video should be required viewing for anyone staring out in any kind of MechE course, the attention to detail in materials selection not only for mechanical properties but also for machining with the tooling available is extremely impressive. That together with the detailed explanation of problem solving make this project easily one of the best I have seen.
Dieses Video ist einfach unglaublich, so hochwertig produziert, mit einer super Erklärung, wieso du dich für bestimmte Dinge entschieden hast. Sich wiederholende Elemente mit Erklärung ausgelassen und dennoch deren Produktion kurz dargestellt, um dem ganzen weiterhin einfach folgen zu können. Ich hoffe, du übernimmst dich nicht zu sehr für dies Projekt, dass du noch eine lange Zeit Spaß an solchen großen Projekten hast. Die Maschine sieht quasi industriell gefertigtes aus! Wobei sie ja „nur“ aus größtenteils Holz gefertigt wurde. Ich bin sehr gespannt auf dein noch größeres Projekt!
Marius this is honestly one of the best build videos that exists on TH-cam. It is unquestionably an incredible build, but your filming, story telling and humour is brilliant. I cannot wait to see what comes next!
Bevor ich das Video anschaue: Danke dass du mir den Start ins Wochenende so versüßt. Deine Videos sind einfach ein purer Genuss. Es gibt nicht mehr viele die solche krassen Videos raushauen! Danke!
You know, you could have done this video in multiple parts to get more content and more ads and what not. But you didn't and that is awesome. Seeing the entire thing in one video was great!
Young man you are truely skilled, i wish I had 10% of that. Your father must be very proud. Its an honour to watch you work, thanks from this 70 year old nerd
This is simultaneously the most inspiring and demoralising project I've ever seen on TH-cam. I can't even begin to imagine how much time and effort went into the full design and assembly of this thing, it's incredible.
youtube just recommended this to me and i must say im impressed by the style of video. you're not just telling us "i made a thing. here's the arbitrary steps i took". you actually went through the logic and design process. an the recap of concepts learned at the end are the cherry on top.
I'm a musician, and see a very interesting analogy between creating a song and building a machine. Keeping with the smallest tolerances, going through moments where you pull your hair out, scrapping hours of work and start over again, but though persistence and sheer will, the end result becomes basically an extension of yourself. Wonderful build that is worthy of getting subscribed to the channel. 80 min. video felt like 8
That's the first Video I saw from you and I have to say it's absolutely worth it to watch. So much talent, precision and honesty. I don't know what else to say than: true art! Thank you for sharing it to the world.
My reconstructed German master machinist teacher showed me this trick using a stamp pad back in the 1950s. Black ink for thick, red ink for thin, blue ink for medium.
I'm pretty sure Robin Renzetti of Robrenz and Tom of Oxtoolco both have videos demonstrating measuring extremely thin layers, and even demonstrated with a sharpie as well.
I was initially shocked by how smoothly everything seemed to be working on the first try. However, your demonstration of the numerous failure-parts at the end was a small relief. What an incredible project! Thank you for sharing!
How?! This video had it all - quality, humor, complexity, creativity, and entertainment value. Fitting for Marius in a 20 minute video. But an hour and a half?!?! To think you filmed and edited stop motion so many times even though the video was going to be so long… Keep up the good work.
Definitely NOT too long. This was an epic build and to show less detail wouldn’t do it justice. Or yourself justice for that matter. To have all that knowledge and be able to apply it so well is just amazing to watch. Thank you for sharing!!
Awesome project, but your video editing skills are getting absolutely incredible. The little touches like the tolerance bars when using a micrometer are just fantastic!
If you put wood in a metal box and heat it for a few hours on high heat that would normally burn it you drive off all the oils and gases and petrify the wood. It basically becomes stone but can be worked still like wood. Like our resin wood plate there. But this wood has a higher strength and burning point that even steel.
In addition to the undeniable genius of Marius, which I have been following for years, we can note that Marius comes from a supportive family that provided knowledge and love for innovation and hard work. Marius often mentions his father, who is probably an expert in his craft. Such a stimulating environment contributed in many ways to enormous development and progress. I hope that Marius, one day, will pass on all that love for innovation to his children.
Beautifully over-engineered! Unbelievably good. I'm a software man and have no clue how many HOURS this took? 3000? 10000? Thank you for making such a detailed video. Inspiring!
Yeah I've wanted a spindle sander with these features for years, but looking at his design? That's a $50,000 tool. Even if he sold the design and a big company started producing it, it'd be one of the most expensive spindle sanders on the market. For good reason. Though I recently picked up a CNC table that can be retrofitted as a CNC router, and this has me thinking....
Because most of the fabrication was automated, shouldn't have been more than low 4 digit hours. Designing probably a few dozen to low hundred hours. Fabrication another several dozen hours. Video production 50-200 hours. So ball park estimate 200-500 hours, assuming he didn't need to research to learn different stuff and everything goes smoothly. Add a few hundred more hours for trial and error and redesigning and remaking stuff.
Men , you are really ingenious. The up an dawn motion with that cycloïdal transmission is great the ability to put things together in your head , is really wonderful. Having your dad helping is also great . The only thing that I didn’t like was the wooden parts. I can’t deal with the fact that most of the woods love to absorb moisture. Or tweest or crack . As a Watch maker I can’t take it.
The amount of haircuts you went through this video gives a clear idea of how demanding this had been for you, bravo. Some of the best content out there!
I'm amazed how precise you are with not precise materials. I mean for builds like this everything revolves around fittings, to tight nothing moves, too lose nothing holds. well done
The amount of different trade/skill sets, drafting, engineering, and programming that you bring to your projects at such a high level is always insane to me. I aspire to reach your level of craftsmanship.
This is a true masterpiece. The overall engineering-process, the details, the explanation, the accuracy of filming and fitting... That might be the most impressing video on TH-cam I´ve ever seen.
My jaw was on the floor the entire time. My projects range from filing down my bike's old V brake mounts because I run disc beakes and painting them with nail polish to using a jigsaw to cut into the pantry door frame because our fridge doesn't fit. Meanwhile you add a few microns thick layer of sharpie to a bearing so it's a press-fit. Unbelievable craftsmanship.
I mentor a local high school robotics team and shared this video with the kids so they get some insight into how the "design for function" concept I've been trying to explain to them works in practical application. Thank you for explaining the steps and thought process as you worked through the little bugs and unexpected "features". Great job!
Marius, your keen eye for ease of use while incorporating advanced features is astonishing. Your editing skills are also very good and makes the viewer not lose interest with your perfectly balanced level of humour of boosting viewer enjoyment without being silly. You discussing your decisions and obstacles you hit and how you overcome them really shows your skill. You're my favourite DIY'er.
Don't get me wrong, designing and building your own oscillating sander is extremely impressive... but I'm blown away by that sharpie trick! Holy cow, this is life-changing.
Modular cubic workshop tools???? And dude... this video was superb. I only realized how long it was when you wrapped up the gearbox, and had so much to cover, knew I was gonna watch the rest already so I got comfortable. It didn't drag at all! Explanations were comprehensive, you weren't redundant with anything but mentioned what was necessary. It was just so much that went into it. Excellent excellent work from top to bottom. Filming it all and conveying the information, on top of a gorgeously designed tool. 10/10
Blown away at your machining skills and ability to communicate complex ideas in a digestible way! I really appreciate having this as one long video with all the explanations, this is fantastic to see.
My feedback on the video is that I started watching this on impulse and it was an hour and 20 minutes later before I noticed how long it was. Very few makers make content this long form and this entertaining to watch.
It's very rare for someone to combine multiple disciplines. In this one project I saw computing, Electrical, 3D printing, mechanical engineering, CAD design and metal work. I was a member of the Computer and Electronics Book Clubs, Life Member of Handyman Club of America and my 30 year JOB was in Electronics and Computer Science. What you've done here is remarkable and I am just a little bit envious. Haven't done much metal work, no CNC. I have memorized schematics, designed super wells for irrigation, access control, consumer electronics and 8 years in the US Navy as a Nuc Weps Comm and Satcom Electronics Technician. A proud day for me was passing a 6 hour board exam from the ETA for Master Certified Electronics Technician. Those days are over and in my past. So God made people like you to challenge my mind and teach me something new. God Bless you. Tim
I just want to let you know how much we appreciate you including when things went wrong. Every single screwup you show us increases both our trust in you--for your willingness to be honest--and the likelihood that we might try something like it ourselves because "If a expert like Marius can get things wrong again and again and again and again yet still keep going, maybe I can, too!" Bravo, good sir!
I am currently unemployed, and I've watched many DIY videos. Since I often watch 2x speed, I have consumed a significant number of TH-cam videos so far. THIS IS one of THE BEST videos I have EVER WATCHED on TH-cam. You show incredible technical understanding, material science, craftsmanship, handling machines, patience, and ambition! Thank you very much for inspiring the world and me personally.
why such a rush to watch vids if your unemployed? you charged on amphetamines or something? 4 windows open watching 4 different videos on 2 x speed about to break out of the matrix?
@@kurtlee3198 when unemployed people do things at normal speed, we get called lazy, when we do things at high speed we get called druggies. cant win smh
I am not an engineer, but I am a research scientist, planetary scientist, and author. I have to say this is the most beautiful mechanical engineering job I have ever seen. Marius is beyond brilliant. I just now found this channel and subscribed immediately. Marius, you should work for RFA! (Rocket Factory Augsburg). All good wishes.
Just a sanding machine but awesomely over engineered, head spinning complicated build. You are a real genius. Rock solid video without any epilepsy inducing memes or irritating background music. That's what I called a legitimate channel which feed the viewers with valuable contents. Thankyou Marius.
I admit that I broke this down into 3 nights of viewing. BUT I have also watched it, and many other of MH video's, over and over. I truly enjoy them. They make me get up and make things.
Honestly this build is incredible combining modern computer controlled machining 3d printing and older techniques. Wood working, metal working and plastic. Insane, Love it!
Between Marius and Jer Schmidt, those are two engineer/fabricators that I could watch their project videos and not get bored regardless of their length. Looking forward to phase 2 of this project.
It feels like you are absolutely blasting through all the steps but it's still 1.5hrs long. Thank you for not making it shorter. I love seeing all the steps and work that goes into this. Great project, great production quality, great personality and narrating. Up there with Stuff Made Here and Proper Printing.
Somewhere there are a bunch of product managers at tool companies smacking their heads and wondering how their teams didn't come up with _any_ of these ideas.
This thing is vastly overengineered, in other words: Expensive. No company spends more than the actual amount of work needed, and Marius likes to design and build such things so its both a combination of his hobby and and actually creating helpful tools for him. But this would not be suitable for mass production.
I love how this dude goes so in depth on showing how things work. Like this is exactly how my man brain learns by visualizing whats happening and not just being told or reading from a book.
@@Shmancyfancy536 To an extent sure but women are able to learn much easier than a lot of guys by reading, taking tests and so on. There is a reason so many more women do good in schooling now days because it's just not conducive to how a ton of guys learn. Its why we could do super poor in an academic learning space but go and excel in things like trade schools
this is freaking insane. I can imagine how much time you spent on designing and building this machine that one can buy in 2 minutes in hardware store. Mission absolutley beyond of common sense :) I am impressed. This huge logo belongs to this machine like nothing else
Mad impressive, had a very good time. Not too long ago I built myself a little router table for a battery powered hand router with no moving parts except for a sliding fence and it was my first try at building something functional for my beginner shop that was a little more than just a jig and it obviously dwarved in complexity in comparison to this but Im beginning to relate to the feeling of pride and accomplishment that comes with building your own shop machinery and this video made me happy!
Absolutely exquisite. The combination of design, materials, process’s, work holding, fasteners and tooling. My serotonin levels are high from watching your work and well presented video! Always a special moment when a viewer finds a gem on TH-cam. This viewer is inspired and very impressed with your talents. Thank you
I can't think of high enough praise. There exists no better combination of engineering, functionality, storytelling, humor, filmography, editing, ad infinitum. Free on TH-cam. Amazing.
So agree. I can't help to think if not for youtube and before youtube, this kind of talent would never have been seen by the world; maybe left to work for some corporation. Marius could easily find a manufacturer to produce this machine, I'd pay $$$ for this kind of engineering excellence. Hats off to this guy.
100%
100% agree he blows my mind every video and how a major tool company hasn't snapped him up is astonishing. But a chinese take away and a one and half hour of engineering brilliance made my Friday evening
Very well said
@@revealingfacts4all seems like this could be a kit sold by his sponsor, no?
wow, epic build. I see why it took as long as it did! Loved the 3d printed gearbox cutaway view
Thanks, Matthias!
He's making you look bad, Matthias! 😂
The protege has become a master
@@mspeir Yeah but in all fairness, Mattias would have built this all out of curb trash...
@@smitcherAnd without CNC, with higher tolerances
When a *German* *engineer* tells you he's over-engineered something, you're in for a real treat!
Funniest comment so far! 😂
so true
If this was a commercial product, it would cost an eye. Imagine this made almost entirely of metal...
And everything have ball bearings! German classic!
Jour Profile pic gives me soo great flashbacks. The Tevo Tarantula was my first printer, and i was working on fixing it more oftent than actually printing XD
My family’s owned a manufacturing business for 4 generations, and I’ve personally been involved with over 100 companies myself, from product introduction, alpha and beta prototypes, all the way to DFM for mass production. I can affirmatively state that in this one video you’ve done more than many engineers may do their entire career. Very fun to watch as well!
what is the name of the company ?
@@xl000 ThermoCraft Engineering / ThermoWave Technologies
@@rfoline1This is nonsensical
I looked up the company ThermoCraft, and they have all current technologies to manufacture this, and obviously they have people who can run those machines.
Any of the machinist who run the CNC mills could make this kind of machine.
I made a tilting router lift with barely any plan, and woodworking and CAD are not even my main hobby.
@@rfoline1 Crazy enough I pass by your company many times. Greetings from Waltham
@@DoriClaudino excellent DC, we are happy to be seen and Thanks for the greetings!
24:40: It's a retrofit in the design to comply with DGUV, which says table saws must come to a stop within 10 seconds. I honestly can't find the specific requirement spelled out in 100-500 any more (it used to be, see VBG 7j § 12), but 100-500 references EN 61029-1:2000-02 and EN 61029-2-1:2000-05, either of those should have it.
It's honestly insane that there is always that one guy in comments who got the answer to that very specific question someone asked.
Nice, thanks! Came to the comments to see if anybody answered because it was a curious thing. Impressed that it didn't even take an hour for someone who knew to answer.
@@Krynn72Same here. TH-cam comments are unjustly maligned.
Was just about to comment just this, it isn't some planned failure or whatever people might think, it is about the tool coming to a stop within 10 seconds :)
Was looking for this comment. This is probably the most caveman solution to this problem I can think of. How hard can it be to use the motor itself to break? Crappy electric scooters managed to figure out regenerative breaking
i just realised I just watched an 80 minute video about engineering and building a machine I never needed and will probably never need in my life. But I enjoyed it very much.
I very much appreciate you didn't turn this into a 4 episode series of 20 minute videos. Instead you put in all the effort into creating an epic video about constructing an epic machine and the result is one of the best videos that exists on TH-cam. I really hope that making videos and things the right way instead of optimising them for maximum profit or monetisation somehow pays off.
Iwould need it. Just goes a million lightyears beyond my capabilities.
Just the best I've ever seen, and; I warch many of these..
I'm about 30mins into the video and just noticed it's an 80min video lmao, it just flows so well.
Well, nobody *needs* this...
I'm going to be honest, I got to the 1:22:00 mark when you asked "Was the video too long?" and I thought "I didn't think it was too long, really good and dense 30 minute video right?" and saw the time. This was an AMAZING video and really shows all of your skills from the great engineering, the wood working, the machining, etc. Truly keep doing what you're doing and inspiring me and many others!
I started reading the comments just before that part, and had to check the time on the video to convince myself that the video was indeed that long. I was so sure it was 25-35 minutes... Great video, great project, great execution overall !
Wut? This was 1h 22m? Damn relativity theory hit hard 😉
It was a long video but the editing was spot on and it delivered the right amount of detail and focus on all the different segments.
Quite impressed young man. Not only from an engineering standpoint, but machining as well. I’ve been a toolmaker since 1972 and know good stuff when I see it. I do think you need a small milling machine though lol. I love you added your mistakes ( like thickness of the cut off tool) we ALL do that stupid kind of stuff lol . Nice amount of humor as well. I’d say you’re a master at all the arts. I wish I could have ppl like you in my machine shop. You’re a talent that is slowly becoming extinct . Great job young man 🤙🏻🤙🏻
I checked the comments about the fan blade rubbing thing if someone had the answer. I thought I had maybe watched 10min or so, then I saw a comment abut an 80min video, when I checked the time that I had watched it said 25min, that doesn't happen a lot with youtube videos!
Bravo! I have watched you grow up. From an enthusiastic young woodworker building Mathias Wandels bandsaw, through the years to ever more complex projects. And, now you have become a sincere, articulate, humorous, interesting, educational and informative teacher of engineering concepts and innovation. I think you have made a wonderful transformation of yourself into a master craftsman as well. Not just in the projects, but videography, project planning, technology utilization, and resource utilization. You have turned yourself into a one-man university for autodidacts. I highly commend you and your great parents. You are the blessed son all would want to have. May you "prosper and be in health, even as your soul prospers". Peace be upon you always. And never stop teaching and sharing.
Feedback: This is THE most impressive build video I’ve ever seen. Humor, education, solid narration, an incredible result, seamless Ad integration, and all in 1 video.
😮
German efficiency 😁👍
coming to a wish ad in two weeks for $17.49 including shipping and batteries but you'll have to rebuild everything as nothing fits or works for more than _five minits._ 😋👌
I agree with everything you wrote, but I didn't even think about the seamless ad integration! Additional points to Marius on that front! 🤌
Just wait until you find the guy who creates custom built audio PLCs in his garage. He converted the garage over the years into a full scale workshop.
I stumbled across his TH-cam channel one day and experienced some serious jealousy and amazement.
*I'll try and find his channel and post the name
I wouldn't even call it an ad, it was like few seconds of it
With something this complex, shortening the video would have been an injustice. Bravo on a magnificent build.
18:22 That sharpie bit is mindblowing!
So cool!
This whole project is incredible!
If it lasts, it's a good tip
It did make my mind go blank, Sharpie to push fit a bearing 😂
Selten habe ich hier oder überhaupt jemanden gesehen, der derartig gut und vorausschauend entwickelt und arbeitet. Absoluter Respekt für dein handwerkliches können und deine Fähigkeit, so ein Projekt in dieser Qualität umsetzt.
This video is why TH-cam exists. There is absolutely nothing on TV as entertaining and gratifying.
Wait! What about "How is it Made?" 😁
@@dchall8 How It's Made will never go so deep into details as Marius does. so I'll rather watch his videos - although How It's Made is one of my favorite TV shows.
@@yngveamundsen5184 The tiny smiley face is hard to see following my comment. But I agree...How It's Made was good...until I saw this video.
Hell yeah comrade!
@@dchall8 How its made is good, but its limited by patents and secrets of companies that they make videos about.
That's why they will never go into this much detail.
Another reason to hate the modern copyright system.
In regards to your fan blade question. Those are anti-static fan blades. A static electric arc discharge could ignite the wood dust in the air around the fan which is highly explosive. The motor is either brushless or induction type to eliminate the risk there as well. As far as the explosion factor the danger zone where wood dust is a significant risk is when the average particle size is less than 200 microns, and where as little as 10% of that contains dust less than 80 microns. So I will leave you with that info as well as my personal recommendation for you to put those contacts back in the fan blades. Hope this helps.
And that’s why you don’t touch things you don’t know what they’re good for huh… 😅
I hope he reads this and put them back on.
@@L1qu1d_5h4d0w I do too.
Interesting!
Thank you for the explanation 👍🏼
Yeah I thought they looked really random but I would've definitely thought they had a purpose. Thanks for commenting!
Holy shit, 1.5 hour video from Marius? Christmas came early!
its 1.23.24
@@nikolas2404Oh no, 6 minutes and 36 seconds missing. Get a life for fuck's sake.
@@nikolas2404 That's an answer from a real Marius Hornberger fan 🙂
Just in time for the Greek church orthodox Easter.
Based on the weather in Western Europe, it is indeed Christmas.
I agree with the majority of the comments below. Your skills are simply amazing. I am 60 years old and am an electrician however my father was an engineer. He would try and explain the function and design of certain machines when I was young and I had little interest. Now I wish I had more time with him after watching your posts. You have a rare gift Marius, and i am sure you have inspired many to use their minds to be creative and productive individuals. Keep it up and thank you for the best content on the tube !!
I started the video thinking, ‘1.5hrs?! Way too long’…..1.5hrs later, I reckon I could do another hour. Marius, you’re a beast.
guess what, i realized it was that long after i watched the entire video and someone pointed that out in the comments 🤣
When this comes out in the Imax theater, I will be the first in line.
I’m 13 minutes in, and already really impressed by your explanations and visualizations. Cutting the cycloids drive in half /in real life/ is such a good demonstration.
Yeah doing the cut version is just above and beyond, totally insane
@@NotQuiteFirst Yeah, when I saw that my reaction was just about "f.. off, you DIDN'T". Such dedication.
Marius, I am a woodworker/ furniture maker, and this is the best belt sander I have ever seen, you touch up on every point I dislike on other machines.
Agree ❤👍👍👍
exactly
While at university I was told we should aim to design items to be made for manufacture and maintenance. I am astounded by the levels of built in features that you designed and how end features also worked for the machining stage. Your filing Jigs are just one example of doing things better and smarter. I have no idea how long all this took but I'm impressed with the whole process being visible in the video and the outcome. Clever engineering and clever video editing. Very well done Marius!
I have no words. You are a genius, Marius. The cutaway view was absolutely insane, I can't believe you went to this kind of trouble to show us how the mechanism works. BRILLIANT WORK!
dude , you put half of your life into it, you didn't only keep up a high standard throughout the project but also in making this video... you have my deepest respect for not giving up and sharing this journey with us, it is a pleasure to watch !
Mr. Hornberger, it has been a treat to watch you grow in both skill and competency. Watching your projects evolve and your engineering skills grow - it's inspiring. There are so many details to your processes now that show a tremendous amount of intersection with hard training and experience. Thank you for your time, and for your videography second discipline. It's a pleasure to watch and to learn. Having your own name in the title block is an honor, and here it is very well deserved. Cheers.
Marius, Ich habe gerade erst deinen Kanal entdeckt, und du bist ein Genie! Ich habe sofort abonniert. Das ist eine großartige Erfindung!
Danke, dass das Projekt ein Video ist, und nicht 5 einzelne 20 min. Episoden. Deutlich angenehmer zu schauen.
Vielen Dank für das tolle Video!
Completely agree! :)
I don't think I ever watched a DIY video (this long) from start to finish at 1.0x speed. 😃 And I can't recall that I ever was this fascinated the whole run. Every solution you came up with seems a perfect fit. There are so many "litle" ideas in every corner, it is just over the top. 👍 This must be the best oscillating edge sander in the known universe - at least until you build version 2. Just keep on creating - I'll follow you for sure! 🤩🤩🤩
Little side note: I own one of these rather generic oscillating edge sanders you get on Amazon and I guess I have to update it with a few ideas from your build! 🤩AWESOME! THANX!
I'll be honest, I didn't even realize it was an hour and a half long video until your comment.
I must say, this video is also BEGGING to also be made into one of those ASMR diy vids. No discussion, just the workmanship.
Just brilliant, and I`m not a brit!
Marius. Du hast sie doch nicht mehr, alle - das ist doch völlig verrückt und total aus dem Ruder gelaufen - und das meine ich im positiven Sinn. In 5min dieses Projektes steckt deutlich mehr Hirnschmalz, als 90% der "Heimwerker"-YTer in ihrer ganzen TH-cam-Karriere auf die Kette kriegen. Selbst wenn du die Baupläne veröffentlichen würdest, würden die meisten, auch gestandenen Heimwerker daran scheitern, da kommt alles zusammen - unfassbares technisches Verständnis, Materialkunde, handwerkliches Geschick, Umgang mit Maschinen, jede Menge Geduld und Ehrgeiz, so ein Projekt auch wirklich fertig zu stellen - kompromisslos.
Der absolute Wahnsinn, meinen Respekt. German Engineering ist vielleicht doch noch nicht verloren.
Yeah I am a software dev and I have *some* understanding of complex systems, and a woodworker who loves problem solving and building things to fit a need. This? I would have no idea where to start. There are so many disciplines and so many places where it can wrong
ich bin einer der heimwerker und handwerksmeister aber lichtjahre von marius entfernt,
obwohl er ganz in der nähe wohnt!
@@polerin Hey, I was thinking of my time as a c++ developer while watching the video. One spends so much time not building stuff, but "building the machine, to build the machine...". I thought that no one would understand until I saw your comment. :)
Great video Marius.
Nicht nur der Inhalt is der Knaller, sonder auch wie ihn Marius präsentiert. mega sympatisch und null abgehoben. ich hab hier heute eine echte YT-Perle entdeckt. Etwas was mir neue Motivation für die Eigenen Videos gibt :) Schön zu hören, dass es so ielen leuten auffällt, wie viel mühe er sich gibt!
It's nice to see someone that took on a personal project and actually completed it with this much complexity and patience. 3 years went into the making of this and honestly this personal achievement of yours proves to me, that long-term projects aren't failures. Regarding your designs, they're quite meticulous and your machining skills are impressive. One can only envy you on your accomplishment. Very good job.
My jaw is on the floor, I don't think I've ever seen such an impressive display of design, engineering, storytelling and editing in one package. Absolutely amazing, you've earned yourself a sub.
A machine which the end user, despite decades of bitching experience and cursing engineers etc etc would love to own and use.
As a professional video editor, it was the perfect combination of complicated and simplified. Didn't know where the time went. Brilliant.
You are one of few channels I know that can make a 1+ hour video and keep me entertained through the whole process! You create amazing content and always go the extra mile to show us how it all works.
Einfach perfekt! Bin neidisch auf deine Ausstattung, das Ergebnis und natürlich die Ideen, welche du einbringst.
Anything worth engineering is worth over-engineering! You literally thought of everything. I suspect it's only a matter of time until we start seeing your design implemented by other tool builders. 💪🏼
That's what I was thinking. I didn't think that the machine (or copies) would be available for purchase, but I figured that the SCHEMATICS might be!
Freaking AWESOME ... concept, problem solving, design, build, problem solving, re-design, re-build, explanation, presentation ... this is a hallmark production. I am simply left speechless.
This video should be required viewing for anyone staring out in any kind of MechE course, the attention to detail in materials selection not only for mechanical properties but also for machining with the tooling available is extremely impressive. That together with the detailed explanation of problem solving make this project easily one of the best I have seen.
Dieses Video ist einfach unglaublich, so hochwertig produziert, mit einer super Erklärung, wieso du dich für bestimmte Dinge entschieden hast. Sich wiederholende Elemente mit Erklärung ausgelassen und dennoch deren Produktion kurz dargestellt, um dem ganzen weiterhin einfach folgen zu können. Ich hoffe, du übernimmst dich nicht zu sehr für dies Projekt, dass du noch eine lange Zeit Spaß an solchen großen Projekten hast. Die Maschine sieht quasi industriell gefertigtes aus! Wobei sie ja „nur“ aus größtenteils Holz gefertigt wurde.
Ich bin sehr gespannt auf dein noch größeres Projekt!
This is the type of engineering I LOVE to see. The video was not too long, boring, detailed, or anything. Please continue to make videos like this!
Marius this is honestly one of the best build videos that exists on TH-cam. It is unquestionably an incredible build, but your filming, story telling and humour is brilliant. I cannot wait to see what comes next!
And yet, fewer than half a million subscribers. I did my part. Thumbs up and subscribe, people!
Bevor ich das Video anschaue: Danke dass du mir den Start ins Wochenende so versüßt. Deine Videos sind einfach ein purer Genuss. Es gibt nicht mehr viele die solche krassen Videos raushauen! Danke!
Ich habe dieses Video inzwischen schon 5 mal geschaut und bin immer wieder fasziniert wie du einfach so eine Maschine selbst gebaut hast.
You know, you could have done this video in multiple parts to get more content and more ads and what not. But you didn't and that is awesome. Seeing the entire thing in one video was great!
as an engineer, cannot believe the hours that goes into the design and manufacturing of the machine. Looking forward to Part II and more. Hats off.
Young man you are truely skilled, i wish I had 10% of that. Your father must be very proud. Its an honour to watch you work, thanks from this 70 year old nerd
This is simultaneously the most inspiring and demoralising project I've ever seen on TH-cam. I can't even begin to imagine how much time and effort went into the full design and assembly of this thing, it's incredible.
The TH-cam algorithm might not like your long-form videos, but I LOVE THEM! This was so great, thank you!
Half million views now, I guess it caught up!
My TH-cam algorithm sure did like it. I am not regretting clicking on this
TH-cam algorithm wants to make us all idiots with an attention span of 30 seconds.
youtube just recommended this to me and i must say im impressed by the style of video. you're not just telling us "i made a thing. here's the arbitrary steps i took". you actually went through the logic and design process. an the recap of concepts learned at the end are the cherry on top.
The recap is what really makes this great, it really is an attempt at sharing useful information
I'm a musician, and see a very interesting analogy between creating a song and building a machine. Keeping with the smallest tolerances, going through moments where you pull your hair out, scrapping hours of work and start over again, but though persistence and sheer will, the end result becomes basically an extension of yourself.
Wonderful build that is worthy of getting subscribed to the channel. 80 min. video felt like 8
creation!
That's the first Video I saw from you and I have to say it's absolutely worth it to watch.
So much talent, precision and honesty.
I don't know what else to say than: true art!
Thank you for sharing it to the world.
ngl that sharpie trick at 18:30 blew my mind
Came here to say this! First time I've ever seen a Sharpie Shim™. xD
Right?!?! I thought he was joking for a second!
Same I'm still blown away by that lol
My reconstructed German master machinist teacher showed me this trick using a stamp pad back in the 1950s. Black ink for thick, red ink for thin, blue ink for medium.
I'm pretty sure Robin Renzetti of Robrenz and Tom of Oxtoolco both have videos demonstrating measuring extremely thin layers, and even demonstrated with a sharpie as well.
I was initially shocked by how smoothly everything seemed to be working on the first try. However, your demonstration of the numerous failure-parts at the end was a small relief. What an incredible project! Thank you for sharing!
How?! This video had it all - quality, humor, complexity, creativity, and entertainment value. Fitting for Marius in a 20 minute video. But an hour and a half?!?! To think you filmed and edited stop motion so many times even though the video was going to be so long… Keep up the good work.
wahnsinnig beeindruckedes Projekt, das verdient auf jeden Fall auch ein so langes Video
.
The amount of work in this project and overall in this video is absolutely huge.
Congratulations !
Definitely NOT too long. This was an epic build and to show less detail wouldn’t do it justice. Or yourself justice for that matter. To have all that knowledge and be able to apply it so well is just amazing to watch. Thank you for sharing!!
Awesome project, but your video editing skills are getting absolutely incredible. The little touches like the tolerance bars when using a micrometer are just fantastic!
If you put wood in a metal box and heat it for a few hours on high heat that would normally burn it you drive off all the oils and gases and petrify the wood. It basically becomes stone but can be worked still like wood. Like our resin wood plate there. But this wood has a higher strength and burning point that even steel.
In addition to the undeniable genius of Marius, which I have been following for years, we can note that Marius comes from a supportive family that provided knowledge and love for innovation and hard work. Marius often mentions his father, who is probably an expert in his craft. Such a stimulating environment contributed in many ways to enormous development and progress. I hope that Marius, one day, will pass on all that love for innovation to his children.
Beautifully over-engineered! Unbelievably good. I'm a software man and have no clue how many HOURS this took? 3000? 10000? Thank you for making such a detailed video. Inspiring!
Yeah I've wanted a spindle sander with these features for years, but looking at his design? That's a $50,000 tool. Even if he sold the design and a big company started producing it, it'd be one of the most expensive spindle sanders on the market. For good reason.
Though I recently picked up a CNC table that can be retrofitted as a CNC router, and this has me thinking....
Because most of the fabrication was automated, shouldn't have been more than low 4 digit hours. Designing probably a few dozen to low hundred hours. Fabrication another several dozen hours. Video production 50-200 hours. So ball park estimate 200-500 hours, assuming he didn't need to research to learn different stuff and everything goes smoothly. Add a few hundred more hours for trial and error and redesigning and remaking stuff.
One of the few channels I always wish their videos were longer, thank you for this.
Men , you are really ingenious. The up an dawn motion with that cycloïdal transmission is great the ability to put things together in your head , is really wonderful. Having your dad helping is also great . The only thing that I didn’t like was the wooden parts. I can’t deal with the fact that most of the woods love to absorb moisture. Or tweest or crack . As a Watch maker I can’t take it.
The amount of haircuts you went through this video gives a clear idea of how demanding this had been for you, bravo. Some of the best content out there!
I'm amazed how precise you are with not precise materials. I mean for builds like this everything revolves around fittings, to tight nothing moves, too lose nothing holds. well done
The amount of different trade/skill sets, drafting, engineering, and programming that you bring to your projects at such a high level is always insane to me. I aspire to reach your level of craftsmanship.
As a quick feedback:
I loved this video, really informative, entertaining and overall just a pleasure to watch!
I love how the tolerance chart goes from "Close" to "Good" directly to "Shit" so true lmao
This chart cracked me up!
When a part is too big you can always remove more material. If it is too small, the part is ruined.
@@elaquen7 until you use a sharpie to increase the size again...
for private projects the chart is correct. for anything for sale in b2b the scale is either good or shit.
@@satakrionkryptomortisThe "close" side is less for finished dimensions, more for "do another pass", I'd imagine.
This is a true masterpiece. The overall engineering-process, the details, the explanation, the accuracy of filming and fitting... That might be the most impressing video on TH-cam I´ve ever seen.
My jaw was on the floor the entire time. My projects range from filing down my bike's old V brake mounts because I run disc beakes and painting them with nail polish to using a jigsaw to cut into the pantry door frame because our fridge doesn't fit. Meanwhile you add a few microns thick layer of sharpie to a bearing so it's a press-fit. Unbelievable craftsmanship.
I mentor a local high school robotics team and shared this video with the kids so they get some insight into how the "design for function" concept I've been trying to explain to them works in practical application. Thank you for explaining the steps and thought process as you worked through the little bugs and unexpected "features". Great job!
Marius, engineer, craftsman, video grapher, entertainer and what not.
simple and plain, impressive.
Marius, your keen eye for ease of use while incorporating advanced features is astonishing. Your editing skills are also very good and makes the viewer not lose interest with your perfectly balanced level of humour of boosting viewer enjoyment without being silly. You discussing your decisions and obstacles you hit and how you overcome them really shows your skill. You're my favourite DIY'er.
Don't get me wrong, designing and building your own oscillating sander is extremely impressive... but I'm blown away by that sharpie trick! Holy cow, this is life-changing.
Modular cubic workshop tools????
And dude... this video was superb. I only realized how long it was when you wrapped up the gearbox, and had so much to cover, knew I was gonna watch the rest already so I got comfortable.
It didn't drag at all! Explanations were comprehensive, you weren't redundant with anything but mentioned what was necessary. It was just so much that went into it.
Excellent excellent work from top to bottom. Filming it all and conveying the information, on top of a gorgeously designed tool. 10/10
Blown away at your machining skills and ability to communicate complex ideas in a digestible way! I really appreciate having this as one long video with all the explanations, this is fantastic to see.
My feedback on the video is that I started watching this on impulse and it was an hour and 20 minutes later before I noticed how long it was. Very few makers make content this long form and this entertaining to watch.
Unglaubilch, wieviel Arbeit du in deine Videos investierst! Das ist ein Meilenstein der Heimwerkervideos. Super unterhaltsam und lehrreich - danke!!
Also "Heimwerker" würd ich das nicht nennen....
@@Heinz76Harald Naja er ist bei sich zu Hause 😂
@@realrebelli0n ja gut, so betrachtet ist Tony Stark dann der wirkliche Heimwerkerkönig
It's very rare for someone to combine multiple disciplines. In this one project I saw computing, Electrical, 3D printing, mechanical engineering, CAD design and metal work.
I was a member of the Computer and Electronics Book Clubs, Life Member of Handyman Club of America and my 30 year JOB was in Electronics and Computer Science.
What you've done here is remarkable and I am just a little bit envious. Haven't done much metal work, no CNC.
I have memorized schematics, designed super wells for irrigation, access control, consumer electronics and 8 years in the US Navy as a Nuc Weps Comm and Satcom Electronics Technician. A proud day for me was passing a 6 hour board exam from the ETA for Master Certified Electronics Technician. Those days are over and in my past. So God made people like you to challenge my mind and teach me something new. God Bless you. Tim
I just want to let you know how much we appreciate you including when things went wrong. Every single screwup you show us increases both our trust in you--for your willingness to be honest--and the likelihood that we might try something like it ourselves because "If a expert like Marius can get things wrong again and again and again and again yet still keep going, maybe I can, too!"
Bravo, good sir!
I am currently unemployed, and I've watched many DIY videos. Since I often watch 2x speed, I have consumed a significant number of TH-cam videos so far.
THIS IS one of THE BEST videos I have EVER WATCHED on TH-cam. You show incredible technical understanding, material science, craftsmanship, handling machines, patience, and ambition! Thank you very much for inspiring the world and me personally.
why such a rush to watch vids if your unemployed? you charged on amphetamines or something? 4 windows open watching 4 different videos on 2 x speed about to break out of the matrix?
@@kurtlee3198 this is the way
@@kurtlee3198 i almost always watch stuff at 2x speed because I have adhd lmao
@@kurtlee3198 when unemployed people do things at normal speed, we get called lazy, when we do things at high speed we get called druggies. cant win smh
@@kurtlee3198 Welcome to being neurodivergent.
Why such a rush to criticise when the OP was nothing but complimentary? 🤔
There are so many useful improvements here, this needs to be a commercial product or something wow.
I am not an engineer, but I am a research scientist, planetary scientist, and author. I have to say this is the most beautiful mechanical engineering job I have ever seen. Marius is beyond brilliant. I just now found this channel and subscribed immediately. Marius, you should work for RFA! (Rocket Factory Augsburg). All good wishes.
1:03. This man is a treasure. Five stars. Would recommend.
Just a sanding machine but awesomely over engineered, head spinning complicated build. You are a real genius.
Rock solid video without any epilepsy inducing memes or irritating background music. That's what I called a legitimate channel which feed the viewers with valuable contents.
Thankyou Marius.
The quality of your videos just keeps increasing with every big project Marius, thanks for all the work you put in to share with us, it's truly a gift
I admit that I broke this down into 3 nights of viewing. BUT I have also watched it, and many other of MH video's, over and over.
I truly enjoy them. They make me get up and make things.
Honestly this build is incredible combining modern computer controlled machining 3d printing and older techniques. Wood working, metal working and plastic. Insane, Love it!
Between Marius and Jer Schmidt, those are two engineer/fabricators that I could watch their project videos and not get bored regardless of their length. Looking forward to phase 2 of this project.
Add Phil Vandelay to your list! And perhaps Cosmas Bauer. And Matthias Wandel of course.
Marius, Jer Schmidt, Phil Vandelay, Cosmas Bauer. These four are the best!
It feels like you are absolutely blasting through all the steps but it's still 1.5hrs long. Thank you for not making it shorter. I love seeing all the steps and work that goes into this. Great project, great production quality, great personality and narrating. Up there with Stuff Made Here and Proper Printing.
Maybe SCM or Felder would be interested who knows. Jessem likes to make durable tools and has a group of engineers.
I thought that the video was too long, the first time I saw the thumbnail. But when I watch it, time flew very quickly. It was very great!
Marius! It is SO great to see you on here again!! You have been missed, sir. Can’t wait to see your over engineered project 😊
Somewhere there are a bunch of product managers at tool companies smacking their heads and wondering how their teams didn't come up with _any_ of these ideas.
Except they already have; an oscillating belt sander isn't a new invention.
Agreed, most companies only care about "value" engineering. Not "real value" engineering.
@@sciencegey man you’re nice
Festool would sell it for 1600 give or take a thousand.
This thing is vastly overengineered, in other words: Expensive. No company spends more than the actual amount of work needed, and Marius likes to design and build such things so its both a combination of his hobby and and actually creating helpful tools for him.
But this would not be suitable for mass production.
I love how this dude goes so in depth on showing how things work. Like this is exactly how my man brain learns by visualizing whats happening and not just being told or reading from a book.
I feel this is how most of us learn.
@@Shmancyfancy536 To an extent sure but women are able to learn much easier than a lot of guys by reading, taking tests and so on. There is a reason so many more women do good in schooling now days because it's just not conducive to how a ton of guys learn. Its why we could do super poor in an academic learning space but go and excel in things like trade schools
@@mech0p Reading will always be important.
Das geht weit über "Genialität" hinaus. Es gibt keine Worte, dieses Werk adäquat zu beschreiben.
Bin komplett bei dir! schön dass es noch (andere) youtuber gibt, die sich so viel mühe machen! hammer Content!
Dear Marius
You are probably a genius
Does it hurt?
I really enjoy your work
Best regards from a Norwegian Woodworker :-)
this is freaking insane. I can imagine how much time you spent on designing and building this machine that one can buy in 2 minutes in hardware store. Mission absolutley beyond of common sense :) I am impressed. This huge logo belongs to this machine like nothing else
Mad impressive, had a very good time. Not too long ago I built myself a little router table for a battery powered hand router with no moving parts except for a sliding fence and it was my first try at building something functional for my beginner shop that was a little more than just a jig and it obviously dwarved in complexity in comparison to this but Im beginning to relate to the feeling of pride and accomplishment that comes with building your own shop machinery and this video made me happy!
Machinists useing metalworking precision✅
Marius useing metalworking precision on woodworking✅
This is the exact reason I watch your channel. You are an amazing engineer and maker. Thank you so much for sharing.
I think the length and level of detail of the video were just right Marius I really enjoyed it, thank you.
Absolutely exquisite. The combination of design, materials, process’s, work holding, fasteners and tooling.
My serotonin levels are high from watching your work and well presented video!
Always a special moment when a viewer finds a gem on TH-cam. This viewer is inspired and very impressed with your talents.
Thank you