ROBOTS are NOT going to steal your job | Ram Air Intake
ฝัง
- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 7 ก.พ. 2025
- This is a full day worth of machining a ram air intake for the townpumpcnc. Programming a simultaneous 5 axis part in Fusion 360 is very difficult. The post processor is only half baked for 5 axis Haas.
Music Recording is Public Domain performance by USAF Heritage Band. Composition by Gustav Holst. The Planets, op. 32, is an orchestral suite by Holst, written between 1914-16
musopen.org/mu...
is this proof that the robots will take our job or not?
Definitely maybe.
Will
they will, i think the video is trying to show us that a lot of jobs can be easily replicated
Won’t this is a machinist showing that robots are more trouble than they are worth
@@matthewestep3946 yeah but he picked parts that are super complicated. And models that would purposefully crash the systems. Most machine parts are simple. Most of the time shop guys can plug in a bunch of points and watch the machine work. Sure some complex parts are gunna need hand crafting but very expensive. And automation is just starting to take off. China is focusing more on fine motor skills and we are focusing more on large scale manufacturing.
Warner Music Group has *mistakenly* claimed this VJO infringes their music copyright. The Planets, op. 32, is an orchestral suite by Holst performed by the USAF Heritage Band, it is public domain.
Sorry. I'm jumping through the youtube hoops. Should be resolved in a month.
Most people don't realize Gladiator has a lot copied from Holst's Planets.
classic youtube infringement system
fucking bit snatching corporate whorematics, I came down here to say that I felt like I was listening to selected montage themes from The Jetsons, A Bridge Too Far and The Dirty Dozen and this is the kind of crap I read instead of the usual snarky jackassery? You're going to appeal yeah? Fuck'm, call Leonard if need-be.
I hope this doesn't disappear
I was a machinist for 6 years this is highly accurate especially on nights.
Only thing missing is forklift racing
What would you do with the materials if you made a mistake? Would you be in a LOT of trouble?
I want to touch a moving part
EchoHelix you scrap it and move on
@@danilovieira2791 boy oh boy.... Once you see that thing spinning you'll think twice
I can hear my supervisor saying "you did nothing all day, where is the part"
As a supervisor, I once ask a similar question:
"Why do you make only 5 parts?"
The answer:
"You have to count 10 more that I screwed up"
And I totally understand this :)
"sorry I was doing a TH-cam video"
Lol
LMAO 😂😂😂
yeah right? but still probing and stuff just takes forever and wooosh your shift is over without a single part...
Even robots are too smart to *want* to steal my job.
Just takes 7 or so programmed robots to run a McDonalds ( and robits dont have feeling )
Bro... not even homeless people want YOUR job... Give it to a robot...
Just a joke btw... Sad I gotta say it but yeah... 2019 I guess....
I was homeless and sure didn't want your job, back then, lol
But the 1% want machines to take our jobs. After all, robots don’t need to be paid, or take bathroom or lunch breaks or vacations, or take medical leaves.
If someone asks me how long it will take for me to (manually) machine something, even if it seems simple, I'll show them this video if they don't accept my 4-10 hours answer. There's so much mroe to any operation than people think.
But I know someone who can do it in half that time and pay me for the privilege. ;)
The proper answer to that, of course, is "Then why are you bothering me instead of having him do it?"
I had a boss say, about welding, "You're just sticking metal together."
My standard response for any job is "when it's done".
I was a welder/fabricator before I became a Toolmaker and remember one day I stayed a couple hours after closing to fabricate an oil pan. Next thing I know it's 6 hours later and the pan isn't finished. I didn't realize how long things takrle even though I was the guy doing the work.
I was a machinist for 42 years and that enabled me to also build spacecraft for 25 years. Made a ton of money and built things that I'm proud of. Lasting things.
I went to a machinist academy in a machine shop and didn’t end up getting a job in the field. Loved all the little jokes around the shop. This video is very accurate. Especially the not giving a crap about everybody else stuff from the previous shift.
I have no idea what is happening and I have no idea what a machinist is.
So you must not have worked at NASA or a NASA contractor for one single day.
Watching this as an adult is exactly the same as watching Disneys Fantasia as a kid. Loud orchestral music, stuff that looks cool but not a frickin clue what's going on.
never forget to kick your scrap pail during startup, lots of people forget this very important step
Unless it's shift change 1st to 2nd. THEN you leave the table and ALL the interior area FULL of chips and shmoo. Oh yeah DO NOT dump the chip barrel out, and forget about adding fluid. Ahha 2nd counts 1st shifts "good" parts it all evens out.....
If it moves an inch titanium, half inch aluminum.
I always like when one of our CNC faults, it reads 'contact your dealer'. That can be read a few ways ...
This gave me a good laugh
That's priceless LOL
Nice
lol
consensual non-consent?
You should move your mouse nervously, it makes it boot faster,
Geez man grab an ssd you won't regret lol
@@rbnhd1976 I got into Fusion360 after I got an SSD and never knew it took so long to load up
I don't have an ssd and fusion starts up super quickly
@@t-rexfpv2653 what's your definition of super quickly?
But whats more important you should slap that space button as hard you can, it will even more increase boot time
This is great! Been a machinist for 25 years and sometimes I wonder why I stay. Then I look at all the nut sacks that come and go and I know that a least I'll have a job till the day I die. A Walmart greeter seems like a great job tho. Seriously, good vid. Keep the faith.
...but you'll never get rich. Ask me how I know. It gets old knowing that fucking plumbers and electricians earn way more than you ever will! 38 years of bullshit and bosses that don't know their ass from a hole in the ground.
I can imagine 50 years ago: "Don't worry lads! Machines ain't gonna take your jobs. We still need 80 of you to run this company"
I mean, they didnt, they took some jobs but the vast mayority was left intact
@@carso1500 it's quite simple really. Robots and computers are designed and programmed by humans, do they are as inefficient as humans. I have witnessed the birth of a few innovative IT systems, and they were always a reflections of the organisations that built them. The guys informing the programmer about what's necessary are usually some hierarchical levels and years removed from actual production work and that shows. In one VERY special case, I was in a unique team of hands-on workers and the software company had really great people gathering out needs and desires. It took just a few weeks to hammer together a fully functioning, unique and niche system. We were doctors, nurses, social workers, civil servants, and the system was designed to allow a maximum of cooperation, with a lot of care for privacy and ethics issues, safe and structured communication between organisations, unlimited access for the clients and patients etc. It was incredibly useable and was used very successfully in a trial. Of course, instead of adopting it, the collaborating organisations commissioned a new "real" system, designed with input from higher up in the organisations. It happened, but it took years to arrive and years to debug.
Gaining any efficiency from automisation is exceptionally hard. You don't het it by trying to let a computer do what middle management thinks is what workers do.
@@IvoTichelaar yeah fair, imo there are many problems with the usual depiction that many people have of "robots will take all our jobs" that has been popularized by sci fi, but you do put a good point i havent really through about
Automation is still pretty new all things considered. Robot take over is inevitable, but maybe not as close as some think.
Right it's not like it eliminated a large portion of jobs in the car industry or really any type of factory setting
No clue what’s going on or why this is in my recommended but I found it amusing for some reason lol
He is secretly dwarven. They call him "fabby". He even has a goat like any respectful dwarf would.
Same here lol a year later and this video is at it again!!
He's showing you how complex a cnc is and why humans are always going to be needed to run them.
@@twsdlbh in his opinion.
@@MmMerrifield na, I work at a fabrication facility and I've seen those machines run a program a 100 times and then all of the sudden something goes wrong and they have to reprogram where the tool holder is and that can take a little time depending on how many inserts or milling bits where broken. They are very sensitive machines and it doesn't take much to throw them off course. Even a piece of metal that is a few thousands off can cause an insert to break and need reprogramming.
And after the cad drawing is made, nc code generated, all the errors are corrected, potential crashes mitigated, inefficient travel optimized, tool maintenance caught up, material prep finished and dry run looks good, you stand there, almost paralyzed thinking;"Should I push the button? '
Nope, sing another bar of " paranoia' , run through each step again ,then pat yourself on the back for saving a $couple thou and sing the modified " paranoia baled my ass out" .
Take a deep breath, reset the program, take a slug of cold coffee, inspect the tool, the material, then ask yourself: "Should I push the button?
A couple more loops of the prior sequence then Go ahead! Push the button! Do it! Push the button!
So push the button and run like hell. After lunch you return and it's humming along happily and everybody else in the shop hates you cause the machine does all the work and you get paid the same as them having to drive screws all day.
CNC machining gave me OCD like 30 years ago and it's getting worst with newer technology...
You forgot the part where you check the vice for the 50'th time to see if it's tight
I've been a machinist for less than a year and I can't describe how accurate this is.
Damn you LaserFlexr. Don't go describing my life like that. You DON'T KNOW ME! ;)
But seriously, you'd think we'd learn to trust the simulation but the more you know about computers... the less you trust the simulation.
Thats a good day, usually it still just slaps the tooling into something it shouldn't.
Watching this on break in a machine shop that also does injection molding.
Why did I just waste my break?
Masochism, the same reason you entered this field in the first place (:
After serving 20 years on CNC machines, I became an engineer. The thing I miss most is being around machinist, especially since, you know, they have a sense of humor.... Engineers... Not so much.....
That's why I gave up automotive engineering and became a mechanic. You gotta need the right fuckwits to work with
There are times when I wish I could have put left hand thread on everything.
@@obsoleteprofessor2034 I nearly stripped out the lugs on my box truck driver side before I realized they were reverse threads. Why they do that? Smh
@@FGuilt Dodge/Chrysler did that alot in the 50-60's, as I remember changing tires as a kid. I guess they thought the rotation would keep the nuts tight. Fan clutches are that way too.
100%. I'm an engineering student who came from a few production jobs... Boy has my experience with my peers, professors, and factory engineers been... boring and autism-heavy. I hope to land a job that lets me visit the production floor regularly lol
"ROBOTS are NOT going to steal your job"
Well, the wife disagrees with you on that one.
She has one that takes out the trash?!
Up to the top!
Well, we gonna have some nice sex robots so women would die out naturally.
Paweł J thats not how it works but ok.
@@thecombodeluxe3109 r/woosh
Thank you. I no longer regret not becoming a machinist, messing around in the school mechanics shop was enough for me.
Amén to this!
I like how you purposefully show errors machines can and will make without human intervention. 😂
This is very very different to my daily grind as a CNC machine code monkey.
I programme about 40 to 60 tonnes of steel a day. I don't have to do any of the machining tho. That's left to the guys on the machine floor... who always get through it all, so I'm guessing there experience is also quite different, they always look very tired.
Holy moly! An artistic short film on machining. Jaw on floor!
The biggest library of knowledge you build on these types of things is the library of what they can't do. Which makes sense, because what they CAN do usually fits in a 4 page sales pamphlet (read:pdf) with snazzy pictures and cybertronian fonts.
7:15 in and you've already lost an eye. Dangerous work you're doing.
That's nothing. At 0:43 he kicked the bucket
Engage safety squints
How could anyone not like this? Joy, pain, sorrow, triumph, and tragedy. Eat your heart out Meryl Streep.
If there is a robot invasion, then there is probably some engineer somewhere with no sleep sweating in frustration among them
... All I was trying to do was making a sex-bot.
More like an army of technicians trying to fix all the engineers mistakes to get the robots running in the first place.
And a Metrology Tech tearing his hair out trying to figure why the goddamned things won’t hold calibration.
How to basics hard working older brother.
I really was expecting him at some point to just start yelling
If we Just see one egg then they are related
"hard working" lmao
I fuckin knew this felt familiar
He took a dump with his pants off, do you really need more proof?
Many days troubleshooting and not cutting a damn thing... Struggle is real.
Haha on night shift where no managers or bossman around worth it
I got asked give me three reasons how come you been on this job for three pdays and not a single chip..
Answer
Programming.. programming.. programming
He just walked away
thing is... the moment you manage to cut *one* thing... you are ready to cut basically as many copies as you want.
Like programming.
It might take days to write a program, but once it is written, it can be used by many many people.
@@GeorgeTsiros true
This video captures the reality of me trying to use my Haas Minimill in uncomfortably accurate detail.
The flute is plenty long enough! It's like I tell the wife: "You don't need a larger tool, you just need to rotate the part so the tool reaches the intended spot!" Or you can approach from the other end of the hole, or, through a different hole.
They always object the different hole theory
@@RJ1999x guess I have a defective one
@@md4luckycharms or maybe not🤔
As a fellow machinist, I salute you. This is the greatest youtube video ever made.
LOL "The tool flute isn't long enough" - that's what SHE said! :-)
It's not the length of your flute, it's something else.
Then just the tip it is!
It's not the length of the flute. It's how deep you put it in the collet.
She NEVER said that... Neva! 😊
Dwight!!!
i work as a rigger for 3d animation, and my day is exactly the same as yours.
*i have been thinking about this video the entire day*
*weight paints every bone*
“Ah it seems it’s working fine*
*leg bone contorts the torso into a lovecraftian creature*
I'm a generalist, rigging is gotta be my least favourite thing
*sobs in trying to learn 3D*
I am a machinist and I love it. In all seriousness though. I went to college to become an English teacher and wish i never wasted my time, because now I’m doing what I love, and that’s being a machinist.
There is a something soothing about cutting metal and watching the chips fly. Especially on a complex part.
If you hadn’t trained to be an English teacher you could have been an engineer. You know the spelling thing.
I always knew uncle Bumblefuck would kick the bucket in one of these videos. didn't know it was going to be today.
Seriously, THIS video is a masterpiece. You are genius man. Thanks for your hard work.
As an owner of a small CNC shop, this video is 100% spot on...made me laugh out loud a few times. I can't tell you how many times I have given the controls...Mastercam...cutting tools...email...etc the finger!
"Not to be operated by Fuckwits"
Where can I get this sticker!? I died when I saw it
You can purchase it on amazon, idk if its exaxtly the same but looka exactly the same.
And then he slaps googley eyes on it
*AUDIBLY WHINES FROM LAUGH*
@@Error-5478 Pretty sure he said there is 3 dif ones available at his etsy store.
I know right! As soon as i saw it i wanted one for the laser. Might as well get one for the brake as well.
AvE has an ETSY store. They among many others are sold there...
As a professional enginerd I have plenty of respect for the guys (and gals) that put up with our stupid designs and run these machines.
Oh thanks wanna change jobs i cant stand the retardness of these machines no more...
Yea I'm pretty new to cnc. I was just operating our haas tm1 yesterday. I had to put the vise in the front slot for this small part. After the program ended, it homed the table right into the fuckin door, shattering the glass. Luckily my rapid was only at 25percent. I swear they don't check these important precautions when they're built
Y'know I clicked this to be regaled with Canadian mechano-babble on my 10min drive to work, but got serenaded with classical music and 'dude in a shop' noises.
A surprise, but a welcome one to be sure.
So you watch video while you drive?
Where in Canada do you have manufacturing? I thought all of those jobs were in America. I am a machinist myself and planning to get my post graduate in Canada. Any guidance?
@@pierrebe4492 I don't watch. I listen.
@@amirpatel9988 Manufacture is a pretty key part of the infrastructure of any nation, so I hope they do. I am both an American and not a machinist, so I got no clue. Trade school is cool though.
@@Nickademus77 Sorry, but I had to be this guy. I see way too many ppl watching their phone while divine.
Such a gentleman. Turning on the fan in the loo after use? Downright patrician. BTW- Absolutely love the "Not to be operated by fuckwits" label. Gotta order me a couple of those. My grandson can practice his reading while grandpa runs the power tools!
Brian Garrow lol
Where can I get some of those labels? Best safety label ever.
@@fortj3 Amazon has them, for what it's worth.
Is he a tech jockey?
Calling your grandson a fuckwit? Well you know what they say the apple doesn't fall far from the tree.
Cold Iron / Rudyard Kipling
Gold is for the mistress, silver for the maid,
Copper for the craftsman cunning at his trade."
"Good!" said the Baron, sitting in his hall,
"But Iron, Cold Iron, is master of them all."
So he made rebellion 'gainst the King his liege,
Camped before his citadel and summoned it to siege.
"Nay!" said the cannoneer on the castle wall,
"But Iron, Cold Iron, shall be master of you all!"
Woe for the Baron and his knights so strong,
When the cruel cannon-balls laid 'em all along;
He was taken prisoner, he was cast in thrall,
And Iron, Cold Iron, was master of it all!
Yet his King spake kindly (ah, how kind a Lord!)
"What if I release thee now and give thee back thy sword?"
"Nay!" said the Baron, "mock not at my fall,
For Iron, Cold Iron, is master of men all."
"Tears are for the craven, prayers are for the clown,
Halters for the silly neck that cannot keep a crown."
"As my loss is grievous, so my hope is small,
For Iron, Cold Iron, must be master of men all!"
Yet his King made answer (few such Kings there be!)
"Here is Bread and here is Wine, sit and sup with me.
Eat and drink in Mary's Name, the whiles I do recall
How Iron, Cold Iron, can be master of men all!"
He took the Wine and blessed it. He blessed and brake the Bread.
With His own Hands He served Them, and presently He said:
"See! These Hands they pierced with nails, outside My city wall,
Show Iron, Cold Iron, to be master of men all."
"Wounds are for the desperate, blows are for the strong.
Balm and oil for weary hearts all cut and bruised with wrong.
I forgive thy treason, I redeem thy fall,
For Iron, Cold Iron, must be master of men all!"
"Crowns are for the valiant, scepters for the bold!
Thrones and powers for mighty men who dare to take and hold!"
"Nay!" said the Baron, kneeling in his hall,
"But Iron, Cold Iron, is master of men all!
Iron out of Calvary is master of men all!"
That notepad taking a leap of faith in the intro is just too relatable lmao
Yeah, robots are coming to take our jobs, meanwhile they can't get the chilled water filter system at work to function for more than a week at a time.
When the robots take your job, they won't _need_ the chilled water filter system for puny fleshbags.
@@MonMalthias But then where will they gather to share pointless gossip files?
I built many robots.
This video is a work of art amongst your others. 10/10 will watch again immediately.
Aaaah yes, back to where it all began for me, and the very first video I saw of this channel. Funny how it's in my recommended again after about 2 years.
That is legitimately the cleanest shop I’ve ever seen
Or opening the cabinet and finding broken taps in with drills, having a meltdown because someones messed all the setup, moved everything because they like it so.
Adam Bousfield seems like a lot of work just for a single video. Knowing how lazy a lot of machinists can be, that’s not likely, this guy is just a special case. At the same time, aerospace shops can be cleaner, but that’s only because they HAVE to be
And the award for the best short film goes to you, my good man!
Watched this as I sat at my desk in the middle of the shop. Got through the whole ten minutes without one of my guys asking where their material was, how to set the chuck clamping path, telling me the part came out of the chuck or the conveyor is jammed. It was actually relaxing. After 19 years of machining I'm hoping my mobile tire business takes off.
5:55 *Her: its my first time*
athi jinx most underrated comment
Uhhhhh my ocd
LMAO
my 5axis Kern EVO with the Haidenhain controller yells at me in German error messages...Die Werkzeugflöte ist nicht lang genug
Error messages in German somehow sounds more serious than in English, even if you know what they mean.
@@alf_1779
When you get warnings yelled at you in German, you take them seriously.... unlike my 20something "boss" attempting to tell me how to walk on ice while his voice is cracking.
Ich kanne. Es ist nie lang genug.
I guess you need to be german to fully understand whats their deal and fully use them without errors. Maybe we germans think too complex when designing these machines. Cant tell tho. I fix confusers for a living
FEHLER: FÜHRER NICHT GEFUNDEN.
This is the most epic rendition of what I imagined working as a machinist would be!
Pushing space harder speeds up the pc
Tappy tap tap
There are programs which actually go faster with more taps..
right click refresh on the desktop makes your pc fresh
Just visit the ctrl alt deli
They have a special on the menu.
Everyday, every single fackin day.
Me: "Good morning CNC machine." c:
CNC Machine: "I do not want to work today." c:
Me: "lel" c:
"This is a full day worth of NOT machining a ram air intake for the townpumpcnc."
- Now we are talking.
It all pays the same...
As a fellow electchicken I feel it is irresponsible of Dew Claw not to have "free and unlimited use of labeling supplies for any purpose " as part of his contract!
I remember when I was little and had vastly less of an attention span as I do now, my dad sometimes brought me with him early in thy mornin to watch him work as a machinist. If I was as old as I am now I might've liked it more. I knew it was difficult on him and he was usually pretty frustrated with the machine but got a decent bit of parts out every day. I wish I'd appreciated those moments with him more. I was about 6 and it was 3am most times with him so I wasn't the happiest camper to have been drug out of bed. I'm not sure why he brought me with him, I don't remember much of it other than hearing music playing from his radio and about 20 drills going at any one time. He did try to teach me some but I didn't grasp it that well.
Might of been the only time he could spend time with you. If he was up at three I'd imagine him being pretty tired when you would get out of school. Or when he got home. Especially if he was putting in 10-12hr days like most mechanics and tradesmen do.
@@8Maduce50 Yeah, he was dog tired when he got off, temperatures in that shop reached up to 120 in the summer. They didn't have AC and he put in about 80 hours a week. He worked for Belvac before that hellscape of a shop, he might've gotten laid off, it was around 2008 when he stopped working there. I don't remember much of it now. He doesn't talk much about it when I ask.
@@BreadManMike He realized what a mistake he had done with his life being a machinist instead of a business owner.
Being a machinist myself, I know the feeling. It sucks. Never worked with F360. I've been using Mastercam. But they want your first born and your left nut. Keep at it. She'll Chooch for you brother
This is quintessentially the definition of being a machinist.
Far more Interesting than the fooseball game !
Did our team score a thing?
@@arduinoversusevil2025 unfortunately both teams didnt lose ..
It's a poor crapsman that first anthropomorphizes his tools then flips it the burd.
I've been a machinist for over 10 years. I really hate manufacturing and especially machining. This video has almost every reason why. Thank you🙂
i never knew Holst ripped this from John Williams, I won't be able to listen to this piece again.
This video perfectly captures how at least 5/7 of my days go. ;)
Omfg!!! The joys of being the only 5 axis mill guy in the shop! This is me all the time!!
Loved the VJO, uncle. I had a glimpse of G code in 1993, in high school, never to see it again. Here in Brazeel we have this this thing called technical high school. You learn a bit bit of everything and including workshop dumbassery, It's kind of kindergarten engineerding where you break stuff instead of just calcuguessing stuff.
I'm so proud of you AvE. You didn't use 1 cuss word. Wait, you didn't use any words...
I didn't expect to enjoy this that much. Great music choice as well 👌
You need to get that machine some safety goggles asap before he loses his other eye!
All this high tech stuff is just there to impress the stock holders. When the company needs something in a hurry, and it has to work the first time or else, they call Old Tom out of retirement to fire up his 1940's lathe and mill. He'll be done before its time for the first coffee break.
Seriously.
I work on a high def plasma cutter, they bought two lasers for cutting small parts from thinner steel, and still bought a refurbished mill lathe that has the 1940's green paint on it.
That's what they do with my dad. All manual machines. He gets it done right
@@themonolithian Try telling anyone under thirty that every piece of machinery used in WWII was essentially made by hand, and watch the blank look on their face. Just because technology always marches forward doesn't mean the tools of the past should be forgotten or gather dust.
It depends on the part, if you need something with super small tolerances sometimes you need a cnc machine, but usually you can do this stuff by hand and it's faster, although there are some things that a 3 axis cnc router is just great for, like making water blocks and reservoirs for custom computers
High tech tools are going to useless right up until those bastards really do invent AI
My son was a machinist and this makes perfect sense it's absolutely ridiculous.
What he's performing is a setup and it takes for ever.
Looks like the Shop Steward will be having a few words with Dewclaw
Finally an AvE video where I understood every single word he said
It’s comforting to know that even though our shops may be producing different things, there are others out there who share the same slog.
0:01 ... “ up is ok ... locked “ . Anything to remind you, you locked the door .. I made too many trips back to the shop just to check the door
At my diesel engine shop we make new, and remanufacture locomotive engines. 8 to 16 cylinder, 11" bores, 15' cranks, turbocharged 60,000 pound diesel engines. The company spend a million dollars on robots for the sole purpose of just deburing the parts I machine. Three robots in total, one to pick up and hold the parts plus rotate them to certain angles, the other 2 that debur and change heads as needed. They do a very specific job and only on a single part out of the thousandths of parts in a loco engine. They eliminated zero jobs, and after 2 years sit mostly idle. Even running as intended a person still must change tooling in the heads constantly throughout the day, and the clean up of chips is incredibly hard to keep up with. The limit switches get gummed up with coolant and debris, the robots themselves glitch out all the time and sometimes literally crash into each other and drop brand new castings 6 feet onto the floor, they hit slag and break tooling all the time, they are useless. They are made by motoman (sp?) Which is a leader in robotics I think out of Japan. They are nowhere near being able to replace skilled laborers, and nowhere near affordable.
@someone else
It's time for CyberSyn, brothers of the Internationale!
@someone else yep, which is good. because managers represent a large amount of inefficiency in humans.
robot managers also don't hold grudges or have superiority complexes
Could you do the de burring with a file?
What did you do before the robot? did it by hand? I'm assuming you previously ended up with lots of sub par parts that had to be scrapped because of quality control? is that the reason for the robot?
@someone else You discarded fanuc robots? Send me one next time !!
Uncle Bumble the production quality of your videos has reached new heights. Keep up the good work
So I have no idea what the heck is happening, but I just wanted to say your comedic timing and the sarcastic signs in your shop are fantastic
I know it's been a year, but he's effectively showing the day-to-day struggle of machining a new part, and the frustration that one can run in to with troubleshooting problems.
Looks like that project is on Holst.
These are the best. Nice editing and musical score.
When you start your career as a machinist apprentice then discover you have accurate meme videos about your job
Not really. Note the use of the CNC to find the length and diameters of the tools as well as finding the fixture with a tool which enters all your locations and heights, makes offsets automatically too If the tool it sees is a little smaller from wear. Note the use of the CAM program. These all represent jobs taken away from people. Note that there are shops where machines check the tools every so often and a robot loads and unloads parts. Then what? A machinist pushes carts of stock to the machine and finished parts away and checks fluids and listens to noises. So far from operating a knee mill. Learn, and be prepared to learn more as the years go on. You'll be fine if you can maintain interest and not get bored, which can be dangerous. And always remember that it's the other guy in the shop that's dangerous. Right now this could be you!
Truly appreciate the Gustav Holst. You sir have it.
Holy
Holst always cheers me up
Love how this video is edited, lotta funny tidbits 👍🏼
Nice "vulva" brand welder you have there.
Needs time stamp
I knew I wasn't the only one to see
6:09 I knew I wasn't seeing things. Lmao!
I missed that. . .
Watching this video was like watching an easter egg hunt.
did you notice anus tho?
I feel like I’m watching HowToBasic’s less weird uncle right now 😂
I feel like I'm in an airline commercial! Love Holst, so does every sci-fi music coordinator.
When he gave the goat a hair improvement I lol'd tehe
Who else went back to read the note in the shitter?
The proletariat will rise again!
The best part of the video!
“The needs of the many surpass the needs of the few” right Comrade
@@MonMalthias We have nothing to lose but our chains!
@@thrasherx7890 And our minds...
I was really impressed with whatever the heck you were doing
Have you tried yelling at it
And In the correct language I use to swear at my nissian during repairs then I realized it couldn't understand a dam word of learned to cuss at it Japanese no more check engine light
Or hitting it with a hammer?
perhaps turn it off, and back on, but real fast
threatening it occasionally works for me.
I don't understand everything that happened here, but I feel like I know more than I did yesterday.
Plot Twist: This video will be used for Machine Learning. A future robot thanks you : )
Hey he's getting good at doing things one handed, must be from all those late night computer sessions...
Goat's life will be Dramatically improved.
Great to watch and really great to listen to Gustav Holst's Planet Suite. Written only about 25 miles from where I live. Written in Thaxted Essex in good Olde England lol
Man, having to give up and leave is the worst. Especially on a Friday. Happened to me just 2 days ago and I spent this whole weekend wondering what else I could do. Oh well. I'll be back at it Monday morning.
In a similar vein, staying late because you're in the zone and finally making some good progress and being told to go home....
I enjoy the self hatred the most out of this process
@@thecrikster start your own shop and going home home will not be a problem. Because it ain't gonna happen
Good to know I'm not the only one.
Look, it's not the robot's fault...
You're using Fusion... I feel for you...
as someone that has worked with cnc and a 5 axis haas , I appreciate this and your humor.
This is the CNC gods telling you to make that thing on a lathe!
For what it's worth, we did quite a bit of CFD on one of these "ram air" things a few years ago. Despite the extensive scholarly literature on the topic (on the ricer forums), there is about a five-times greater effect due to the subtle geometry of the lip (radius, length, and converging angle all play a significant role) then there is any "ramming" of the air. Consider your garden variety Civic (numerous stickers mandatory) cruising down a Louisiana road at 60 mph. The dynamic pressure (due to the "ram air") is only about 0.06 pissys. Inlet geometry changes had an effect of over 0.25 pissys for in-cylinder pressure in the geometries we studied.
Science >> Forums Q.E.D.
I knew the lips were the greater factor all along!
The Coanda effect in action.