Automation is so cool! It's really awesome that these kinds of machines are becoming more available, less time spent making products means more time to make better products!
Thats pretty awesome! Wouldnt it make sense to laser engrave the rubber already while the stick is being cut? And in the final stage "just assemble" it? Could increase production speed :)
@@JackBusseyUKok but then it creates homeless problem! People can’t feed there families cause they can’t find the job that the robot took from people!! Soo thanks for being apart of the homeless problem you are doing good work you dummy🙄🙄🙄
@@JackBusseyUK The movement could be optimized to save time. In mathematics, it's often stated that the shortest distance between two points is a straight line. However, this isn't always the fastest solution for robots. It's important to focus on refining both linear and joint movements.
Abb programming is high precision, time consuming and expensive, I guess this is the future. It would take a full day and a cage to program this on industrial robots. You grab the pipe twice to minimize waste? I would use a slide, would never drop a product. You could fit more in a box and its easier to grab. Can it pick the raw pipe out of the box? What's the name of that cobot?
Definitely the wrong bot for the job. I see a half capper. I would just fill a hopper with pre-cut pipe. Cap one side, drop it into another capper then kick it out into a box.
@@experimenteeer Lot of improvement possible, but this is a very simple, cheap solution and it works. I guess, it doesnt need to be a lot faster. And its very versatile. He worked with the things he already had.
@@JackBusseyUK Genuinely. Machine programming isn't that difficult. If you want to try "getting your feet wet", with the basic ideas, I can suggest games such as "Human Resources" and "7 Billion People". Those are fantastic for introducing various programming concepts.
Up to a certain point. Once the initial investment is recouped by not having to continuously pay someone, the robot is actually cheaper. This may take anywhere from 3 months to a year, but this robot will work at the same pace 24 hours a day, 7 days a week for 20 years, and all you have to pay is a few dollars a day for electricity. Much cheaper in the long run
I really like the fume extractor that also doubles as safety shield for the laser :)
Thanks I appreciated that you noticed 😉😎
Seems like this could be done with a much simpler machine than a robot!
It could but would lots of design work and testing, I felt this was a good option
You can get a robot arm like this for as cheap as 5000€
@@jonasstahl9826from my experience as an automation engineer, I’d say more like $25-50k
@@JackBusseyUK Fair enough! if it works for you great!
@@jonasstahl9826I would like to see one like this that you can find for that price range
That loop edit is great
Automation is so cool! It's really awesome that these kinds of machines are becoming more available, less time spent making products means more time to make better products!
Thanks its so enjoyable too
I want to see this stitched with some couple of Indian guys doing them in batches of 12
Thats pretty awesome! Wouldnt it make sense to laser engrave the rubber already while the stick is being cut? And in the final stage "just assemble" it? Could increase production speed :)
Oh yes great idea, but then id have to make a device to do that I just wanted to keep it simple 👍👍😊
Breaking news: robots work fast, don't take lunch breaks or call in sick...
Exactly! And also can take the boring jobs off people
@@JackBusseyUKok but then it creates homeless problem! People can’t feed there families cause they can’t find the job that the robot took from people!! Soo thanks for being apart of the homeless problem you are doing good work you dummy🙄🙄🙄
in this case the bot works kinda slow, but doesn't need breaks and can work through the night.
What are this pipes used for?
A product we manufacturer
@@alexcorl2247It is for a shop towel roll holder
Sire teach us linear motion with pneumatics. Amen 🙏
It's very simple, what would you like to know
if you want to cut more left me know And i'll program that robot properly.
Tell me what should I improve?
@@JackBusseyUK The movement could be optimized to save time. In mathematics, it's often stated that the shortest distance between two points is a straight line. However, this isn't always the fastest solution for robots. It's important to focus on refining both linear and joint movements.
@@rasmusandersen2007 yes I agree, I'm happy with our current production time, so I stopped to increase it as the production is more than we require
What are they for ?
Paper towel dispensers
Machine makes tube. Also robot drops tube afterwards.
Exactly that
cleean loop
Abb programming is high precision, time consuming and expensive, I guess this is the future. It would take a full day and a cage to program this on industrial robots.
You grab the pipe twice to minimize waste?
I would use a slide, would never drop a product. You could fit more in a box and its easier to grab.
Can it pick the raw pipe out of the box?
What's the name of that cobot?
Definitely the wrong bot for the job. I see a half capper. I would just fill a hopper with pre-cut pipe. Cap one side, drop it into another capper then kick it out into a box.
@@experimenteeer Lot of improvement possible, but this is a very simple, cheap solution and it works. I guess, it doesnt need to be a lot faster. And its very versatile. He worked with the things he already had.
Thanks great comment 👍👍👌
And what are they?
Paper towel dispenser tubes
What are they?
Tubes for paper towel dispenser
Hear me out
As a warehouse worker this scares me... too old to reskill in time too young to retire...
Surprisingly it's very easy to learn to program
Just get autism bro you’ll be learning new shit endlessly
@@JackBusseyUK Genuinely.
Machine programming isn't that difficult.
If you want to try "getting your feet wet", with the basic ideas, I can suggest games such as "Human Resources" and "7 Billion People".
Those are fantastic for introducing various programming concepts.
@@JackBusseyUK its really not
@@lettersandnumbers81 how do you know? 🤔😎
What are these? 🤷♂️
Tubes for paper towel dispensers
Uh... but for the price of that robotic arm you'd probably make more of those with a human, thus driving down the cost to produce them.
Up to a certain point.
Once the initial investment is recouped by not having to continuously pay someone, the robot is actually cheaper.
This may take anywhere from 3 months to a year, but this robot will work at the same pace 24 hours a day, 7 days a week for 20 years, and all you have to pay is a few dollars a day for electricity.
Much cheaper in the long run
It was also a learning experience to create the build cell, and wanted to remove the boring task from a human
Cutting costs cutting jobs
Just removing boring jobs and giving them to robots
Huemon do it way faster N way gooder.
Of course but it's a boring task, would you like to do it all day?