Titan - you sent the right guy for this field trip. You could have told us all about this machine, but only Donnie could have read us this love letter to Swiss machining. Y'all are winning (for us)!
Was a pleasure to watch this video! I was a machinist 20 years ago in Switzerland it‘s incredible the techology has involved since then. Greetings from Switzerland to the Titans!
As a technologist by trade working with software and hardware development my mind gets blown every time I see one of these behind the scene videos. From all of the sensors to precision machining just to bring one of these machines to life is a major feat in itself. The software controlling these machines, the engineers designing the controllers, the programmers developing the software, the machinist machining the parts. Brilliant minds is all I can say. @Titans of CNC Machining once again, thank you for bringing us this behind the scene footage. Donnie, great job on the narration! Much love and gratitude
Very cool indeed! What is perhaps even more amazing is that for the most part of their history Tornos produced purely mechanical machines, without any sensors, electronics or software -- and they still got micrometer accuracy and extremely high production rates, making parts for millions of precision products.
@@cogoid Titan visited one of the Swiss facilities I have worked closely with a couple of years ago. Laubscher Präzision has a museum with older cam operated machines they developed in the 19th century as well as the in house produced micrometers to measure the parts.
As a lifelong student of advanced robotics, there are those rare occasions when a "behind-the-scenes" tour leaves a lasting impression! This is one of those occasions! Amazing!
I just upgraded my 3d printer with klipper and some other parts....I banged my head against my key board for almost a week, with help. I couldn't imagine tuning these machines. this would be a night mare and a dream com true at the same time these are some bad ass machines! glad I found this, this is amazing!
Love seeing the hydro electric application they used to power the factory historically, and super cool that they still use it to power the cafeteria. Awesome tour!!!!
A beautiful symphony of professionalism, organization, electro-mechanical engineering and mastery of manufacturing. To obtain that level of organizational agreement must have taken many generations of goal driven, like minded people.
@@innobius4898 I worked for the 100 year old company Western Gear in California and there was outstanding organizational support. Then the company relocated to Utah and things went south
"Right here is the slotting tool she tells you not to worry about". Thanks Donnie... coffee spilled everywhere. ^^ Thanks again guys for giving some insight in whats goin on behind the curtains. Really enjoy watching those and even tho i worked in the industry for quite some time now its sometimes mindblowing to see how stuff is made. Or as said the machine gets born. EPIC stuff! Keep em coming bois!
I know nothing about CNC machines. I watched this, and now I still know nothing about CNC machines. Except that they're really cool and the machining and manufacturing that goes into these Swiss ones is as stunning as the parts that they produce! Just amazing level of engineering and building! Man, the Swiss really know how to do this kind of stuff!
Really great tour. I have always been fascinated by the immense amount of manufacturing and machining need just to put a CNC machine together. Well done.
I work on the mold making side and we make molds for pipette tips. I have a rotary grinding department and use a 20-year-old Studer S31 and a newer Rollomatic NP50. The tolerances for the most accurate parts of the pieces are -+0.0025mm.
... and... I may possibly use those pipettes that you are partially responsible. Thank you!!! But, the REAL OG of manufacturing, nanomachining in fact, is biological life itself. For example, DNA polymerase replicates DNA, at ~750 nucleotides/sec, and an error rate of ~2 per 10^8 base pairs!!! BTW, double stranded DNA is ~10nm wide. In the 23 chromosomal assemblage of humans, there are ~3.2G nucleotide base pairs per parent... in almost EVERY cell in your body. We, you and me and everyone else, are CONSTANT, 24/7, biofab machines!!! ALL life on this planet, is AMAZING!!!
A 143 year old culture of inventor-developers. Look how happy they are. You adapted well! Every day is an adventure-Swiss. You may wonder what comes next?
Awesome video! The editing and the content are spot on. Donnie's enthusiasm perfectly captures how amazing an achievement these machines and the company that makes them are.
As a watchmaker was curious to have seen what the machines that produce spare parts look like. Was happy to see the balance staff at 1:47 and on the thumbnail. Very cool.
I used to work for Timson printing machines, we used to sell a lot to the US. We had a big 5 axis CNC like the one in the video, Brings back memories. We also had a cylindrical grinder that could hold 2 tons between centres, Rolls Royce had the other sister machine.
That is amazing. It's more amazing to see a yasda machine going through that crazy amount of work and produce top quality parts everyday. Titans need to get a yasda!
So im actually a watchmaker and we still use many old tools in restoration. for example a jacot tool is a small bow driven lathe to burnish pivots that i use in restoration and its probably mid 1800s. Most of the really sought after watchmakers lathes are all manual lathes like the schaublin 70. People forget that people were making clocks in the 1200s, where they would have needed to accurately divide gears and turn pivots and watches were extremely advanced with multiple complications by 1650.
Can remember reading how a USA company sent their extremely small Springs to show off to Switzerland. Swiss returned them with extremely small holes that USA company could not do. Worked on a couple of Swiss made machines. Very rugged & made to.last a long time.
Donnie 1 1/2 😂 you take us on an awesome journey, it is amazing what people can make. We know the accuracy from Japanese and Swiss machines and there are some more manufacturers who making crazy machines.... But it is not the country who makes the machines but a select group of people who have the ultimate drive for perfection in everything they do. So, I am ready for part 2 😊
amazing to watch. I mean the growth of some young guy who is oblivious to the rest of the world and what they can do, and he finally sees that other people do some really clever and interesting things and they have been doing it longer than he has. good on you Donnie. the way to show people how smart you are is by closing your mouth and opening your ears and eyes.
Donnie brings to machining what "physics girl" has brought to physics. Always be true to yourself and let it shine. Shout out to physics girl on TH-cam to show support for the people that keep the enthusiasm fueled for the next generation.
We live in a pretty fascinating world. Imagine how much collective effort has gone into producing and running the tens of millions of machines that produce enormous numbers of uncountably many different components and parts everyday.
I think about that a lot actually. What is even more crazy to me is how 99% of people will never even stop for one second to think about that. Phones, cars, planes just grow on trees to them
Now THAT was super awesome. I loved hearing about all the cool innovation that they have done to produce their machines. Donnie was like a kid in a candy store LOL.
These guys are absolute nuts crazy, last year I worked with some Andre Bechler and Tornos (both were the current Tornos' predecessors) cam lathes, dated back to the 40s and they still deliver thousands of parts daily with tolerances as tight as 0.02mm, no go rate were like 3 over a thousand, across the whole shop. Imagine the productivities of these modern machines. Crazy.
One of the weirdest experiences of my life was transitioning from a heavy maritime and rail repair shop cutting ship screw shafts to operating swiss machines. The fact that a sneeze could lose 40 parts kinda broke my brain the first week.
Amazing precision work ! I would like to see these master machinists tackle , as a challenge, duplicating the antikythera mechanism, or one of the simpler astrolabes.
Yasda is Top End but it is also the other way around, their are Japanese and Asian machine builders who use European grinders, they both go for the best option.
@@ytfan3815 oh, totally,the swiss are very good ,but I don't know if they got big palettized systems for non stop milling.I have never seen Houser or SIP with pallet system.
I worked as a maintenance engineer on Davenport multi spindle bars machines. It’s like the multi Swiss’s grandfather. Those Torino’s machines are next level though.
Потрясающе. Удивительные машины, работаю на корейских швейцарских станках, но некоторые модели Торнос это абсолютно другой уровень инженерии. Мотивирует
i do all the maintenance in a large machine shop in Rochester NY. We use mostly DMG, Mazak, and Haas but i would LOVE to see one of these in our shop. i dont run the machines as a job but i make stuff all the time on my free time and on breaks and what not. Its a beautiful thing having an idea in your head and having access to all the machines and tools and materials to make it a real physical tangible item. i absolutely love it. the stuff i could make on one of these things... maybe ill upgrade my home shop from a couple 3d printers, cos laser, diode laser, 300x180mm router, and a few other small hobby level machines to one of these tornos machines. haha.. (i wish)
It's an amazing video with so much insight into how these cnc are made it would just be nice better if the camera could not change angel so often so we could actually get to focus in what we are seeing. Thanks for all the amazing content to all these at Titan 💥
For me its so cool to see how these parts are Made. I am a hobbywatchmaker and i was so exil as i saw the parts in the video picture. Ballance staffs....
Would Donnie's enthusiasm be great for selling Flex Seal or what? 😁 I wish I had 10% of his enthusiasm and energy level. Incredible machines.... mind blowing 🤯
"Any technology suitably advanced is indistinguishable from magic..." Of course those machines are not magic, they are engineering. But to think they can hit the tolerances as fast as they do with so many moving parts is really amazing. Ill bet those two people who tend the horizontal machine are busy busy busy. Thanks for the video. Charles
I've always wondered if this was possible (and how). Like, how does the metal not bend when it's so small (and thin). The cutting edge would have to be extremely sharp for there to not be too much force/pressure to damage the part.
The Swiss style lathe helps with this. The cutting tool works right at the spindle collet, and the work is moved in and out as required, instead of the tool moving along the work. Another strategy is to have an adjustable support opposite the tool, which could be CNC to move in automatically as the diameter reduces.
Titan - you sent the right guy for this field trip. You could have told us all about this machine, but only Donnie could have read us this love letter to Swiss machining. Y'all are winning (for us)!
Donnie is amazing!
Was a pleasure to watch this video! I was a machinist 20 years ago in Switzerland it‘s incredible the techology has involved since then. Greetings from Switzerland to the Titans!
As a technologist by trade working with software and hardware development my mind gets blown every time I see one of these behind the scene videos. From all of the sensors to precision machining just to bring one of these machines to life is a major feat in itself. The software controlling these machines, the engineers designing the controllers, the programmers developing the software, the machinist machining the parts. Brilliant minds is all I can say. @Titans of CNC Machining once again, thank you for bringing us this behind the scene footage. Donnie, great job on the narration! Much love and gratitude
Very cool indeed! What is perhaps even more amazing is that for the most part of their history Tornos produced purely mechanical machines, without any sensors, electronics or software -- and they still got micrometer accuracy and extremely high production rates, making parts for millions of precision products.
@@cogoid Titan visited one of the Swiss facilities I have worked closely with a couple of years ago. Laubscher Präzision has a museum with older cam operated machines they developed in the 19th century as well as the in house produced micrometers to measure the parts.
I'm with you!
Yes..we as machinists.........we are standing on the shoulders of giants
As a lifelong student of advanced robotics, there are those rare occasions when a "behind-the-scenes" tour leaves a lasting impression! This is one of those occasions! Amazing!
I’m your avg dick head and even I was couldn’t stop watching
I just upgraded my 3d printer with klipper and some other parts....I banged my head against my key board for almost a week, with help. I couldn't imagine tuning these machines. this would be a night mare and a dream com true at the same time these are some bad ass machines! glad I found this, this is amazing!
Love seeing the hydro electric application they used to power the factory historically, and super cool that they still use it to power the cafeteria. Awesome tour!!!!
A beautiful symphony of professionalism, organization, electro-mechanical engineering and mastery of manufacturing. To obtain that level of organizational agreement must have taken many generations of goal driven, like minded people.
You my friend just described why the Swiss make watches.
@@innobius4898 I worked for the 100 year old company Western Gear in California and there was outstanding organizational support. Then the company relocated to Utah and things went south
"Right here is the slotting tool she tells you not to worry about". Thanks Donnie... coffee spilled everywhere. ^^
Thanks again guys for giving some insight in whats goin on behind the curtains. Really enjoy watching those and even tho i worked in the industry for quite some time now its sometimes mindblowing to see how stuff is made. Or as said the machine gets born. EPIC stuff!
Keep em coming bois!
I know nothing about CNC machines. I watched this, and now I still know nothing about CNC machines. Except that they're really cool and the machining and manufacturing that goes into these Swiss ones is as stunning as the parts that they produce! Just amazing level of engineering and building! Man, the Swiss really know how to do this kind of stuff!
As a programmer/operator, videos like this keep me motivated. Thank you.
I've been machining for 30 years manual and CNC and I learn something new every video yall make amazing
proud to be a swiss mechanic, i live 30km from the factory! good vid's guy!
Really great tour. I have always been fascinated by the immense amount of manufacturing and machining need just to put a CNC machine together. Well done.
I work on the mold making side and we make molds for pipette tips. I have a rotary grinding department and use a 20-year-old Studer S31 and a newer Rollomatic NP50. The tolerances for the most accurate parts of the pieces are -+0.0025mm.
I visited Rollomatic entreprise in Bulle yesterday and now i see what id the np50 👌
... and... I may possibly use those pipettes that you are partially responsible. Thank you!!!
But, the REAL OG of manufacturing, nanomachining in fact, is biological life itself. For example, DNA polymerase replicates DNA, at ~750 nucleotides/sec, and an error rate of ~2 per 10^8 base pairs!!! BTW, double stranded DNA is ~10nm wide. In the 23 chromosomal assemblage of humans, there are ~3.2G nucleotide base pairs per parent... in almost EVERY cell in your body. We, you and me and everyone else, are CONSTANT, 24/7, biofab machines!!! ALL life on this planet, is AMAZING!!!
My surname is studer. 😊😊
@@bicicogito989 yeah until the moment we create a fault that causes cancer
A 143 year old culture of inventor-developers. Look how happy they are. You adapted well! Every day is an adventure-Swiss. You may wonder what comes next?
I'm not a machinist at all, but learning about this stuff is cool. I'm glad I subscribed. Because like I said, this is awesome stuff.
Same. I'm just some slub artist and musician but this stuff really gets me going.
Awesome tour of an awesome company, nice job Donnie and Tyler!
Awesome video! The editing and the content are spot on.
Donnie's enthusiasm perfectly captures how amazing an achievement these machines and the company that makes them are.
I knew my ROLEX had some small very precision parts . .....this company is the answer I'm sure.👍👍👍
As a watchmaker was curious to have seen what the machines that produce spare parts look like. Was happy to see the balance staff at 1:47 and on the thumbnail. Very cool.
There's some that say you're not really a watchmaker while you're buying your spare parts >:) Time to CNC the old Lorch
You know, thank you guys for this. We need people like all of you to make machining look cool and interesting so more people get into the career.
You did a great job showing us the TORNOS facility with your energy and expertise WOW I'm impressed 33 motors in ONE machine Amazing !!!
Awesome! One of my favorite videos of Titans of CNC!!
Please moooore and longer!! There is so much content in such an awesome factory!
Amazing video. Donnie seems so excited an knowledgeable an Tornos so happy to show. Such a great presenter
I used to work for Timson printing machines, we used to sell a lot to the US.
We had a big 5 axis CNC like the one in the video,
Brings back memories.
We also had a cylindrical grinder that could hold 2 tons between centres,
Rolls Royce had the other sister machine.
how many donnies
If I had half a percent of the values you say you couldn't even imagine how much it would make my life better
The Swiss are second to none when it comes to machining. Absolutely incredible.
That is amazing. It's more amazing to see a yasda machine going through that crazy amount of work and produce top quality parts everyday. Titans need to get a yasda!
So im actually a watchmaker and we still use many old tools in restoration. for example a jacot tool is a small bow driven lathe to burnish pivots that i use in restoration and its probably mid 1800s. Most of the really sought after watchmakers lathes are all manual lathes like the schaublin 70. People forget that people were making clocks in the 1200s, where they would have needed to accurately divide gears and turn pivots and watches were extremely advanced with multiple complications by 1650.
Thanks for the reminders..thats really priceless stuff we all need to be reminded of.........brings things in to some prespective.
This is very impressive.
Unbelievable precision, quality.
And the facility is perfectly clean.
Thanks for sharing.
You did it again Donnie! The video is perfection and you're passion is contagious.
Loved seeing a swiss turning manufacturer. Thank you for this tour.
Can remember reading how a USA company sent their extremely small Springs to show off to Switzerland. Swiss returned them with extremely small holes that USA company could not do. Worked on a couple of Swiss made machines. Very rugged & made to.last a long time.
LOL ....yeah
Donnie 1 1/2 😂 you take us on an awesome journey, it is amazing what people can make.
We know the accuracy from Japanese and Swiss machines and there are some more manufacturers who making crazy machines....
But it is not the country who makes the machines but a select group of people who have the ultimate drive for perfection in everything they do.
So, I am ready for part 2 😊
Crazy to realise you came to my town. I live next to them !
Geeking on your channel then seeing you geek in my hometown is insane
You live in a beautiful town sir! Everyone there was super nice
amazing to watch. I mean the growth of some young guy who is oblivious to the rest of the world and what they can do, and he finally sees that other people do some really clever and interesting things and they have been doing it longer than he has. good on you Donnie. the way to show people how smart you are is by closing your mouth and opening your ears and eyes.
Donnie brings to machining what "physics girl" has brought to physics. Always be true to yourself and let it shine. Shout out to physics girl on TH-cam to show support for the people that keep the enthusiasm fueled for the next generation.
the conception and engineering of that 1875 machine is truly amazing. thanks for honoring it with the music in that scene
Donnie speaks so nice and clear, and at the right pace. This video makes me want to bring my kid to this place.
Outstanding video Donnie and Tyler!! I really enjoyed it!
BRAVO TORNOS, KEEP IT UP, BUY THE SHARES, THEY CAN ONLY GO UP, I ASSUME???? Regards from the Netherlands.
Absolutely incredible! These factory tour videos are fantastic
This guy made the video more better. He actually enjoyed it more than the viewers
lots of fun was had in the making of this video. Amazing facility you are making all his dreams come true BOOOOM
Thanks!
We live in a pretty fascinating world. Imagine how much collective effort has gone into producing and running the tens of millions of machines that produce enormous numbers of uncountably many different components and parts everyday.
I think about that a lot actually. What is even more crazy to me is how 99% of people will never even stop for one second to think about that. Phones, cars, planes just grow on trees to them
Now THAT was super awesome. I loved hearing about all the cool innovation that they have done to produce their machines. Donnie was like a kid in a candy store LOL.
Amazing! That's so high level that I can't imagine anything else! OMG! Would love to work there!
These guys are absolute nuts crazy, last year I worked with some Andre Bechler and Tornos (both were the current Tornos' predecessors) cam lathes, dated back to the 40s and they still deliver thousands of parts daily with tolerances as tight as 0.02mm, no go rate were like 3 over a thousand, across the whole shop. Imagine the productivities of these modern machines. Crazy.
It’s amazing just how beautiful a machine can be.
Such a good tour! What an amazing company
Great Job Donnie! Your killing it brother! 💪🏾
You couldn't have done a better job. That was perfect. Your excitement WAS contagious 😅
One of the weirdest experiences of my life was transitioning from a heavy maritime and rail repair shop cutting ship screw shafts to operating swiss machines. The fact that a sneeze could lose 40 parts kinda broke my brain the first week.
Might I just say that Jens Thing is one of the coolest names ever.
How amazing are Tornos Swiss Type Machines are? Creation, innovation, total solutions provider, ...it's Tornos !
I work in a company in Switzerland that manufactures such small parts😂😂
Nice Video
Amazing precision work ! I would like to see these master machinists tackle , as a challenge, duplicating the antikythera mechanism, or one of the simpler astrolabes.
12:57 Really love Tornos machines wish our shop could get one! Have you ever looked into Willemin-Macodel? The 508MT2 X1000 looks insane!!!
How cool was that!? Love this type of video. Ciao, Marco.
This factory is one giant CNC making MACHINE!
What a great experience Donnie!
Thanks ma! It really was amazing!!!
amazing insights, hoping for a second part soon.
When you hear,that the Swiss are using Japanese Yasda to make their precision parts,you have to give props to the Japan.
Yasda is Top End but it is also the other way around, their are Japanese and Asian machine builders who use European grinders, they both go for the best option.
@@ytfan3815 oh, totally,the swiss are very good ,but I don't know if they got big palettized systems for non stop milling.I have never seen Houser or SIP with pallet system.
If the Swiss can't make it then it can't be made. Those machines are beyond amazing.
Very amazing machines , thanks to TORNOS❤❤❤
For anyone wondering the banging classical music in the beginning is called 5th season by nono and yes it is on spotify
Interesting to see those old machines from the 1800s that used gravity oil fed plain (journal) bearings before ball bearings became common.
I worked as a maintenance engineer on Davenport multi spindle bars machines. It’s like the multi Swiss’s grandfather.
Those Torino’s machines are next level though.
Потрясающе. Удивительные машины, работаю на корейских швейцарских станках, но некоторые модели Торнос это абсолютно другой уровень инженерии. Мотивирует
Thank you for sharing, this is my favorite Tornos video yet because they let you in so we could see more. I also liked Grizmo also.
I wish I was half as excited about my job as you are about this machine shop.
Donnie has made the best Titans video so far, I'm looking forward to more sliding head vids.
"tip top schwiiz" is a saying in Switzerland - you can not beat them at this game, that is there home turf
The nerd in me loves videos like this. The kid in me wants to kno if anyone has bought Jens and his wife matching shirts that say Thing 1 and Thing 2.
Excellent video. I have always wanted to make most of the components of a watch. I feel that is true mastery of machining.
I almost believed you spoke French. Glad she exposed it. 😂❤
i do all the maintenance in a large machine shop in Rochester NY. We use mostly DMG, Mazak, and Haas but i would LOVE to see one of these in our shop. i dont run the machines as a job but i make stuff all the time on my free time and on breaks and what not. Its a beautiful thing having an idea in your head and having access to all the machines and tools and materials to make it a real physical tangible item. i absolutely love it. the stuff i could make on one of these things... maybe ill upgrade my home shop from a couple 3d printers, cos laser, diode laser, 300x180mm router, and a few other small hobby level machines to one of these tornos machines. haha.. (i wish)
Some serious attention to detail. Mindset. During the late 1800s and early 1900s the Swiss were some of the best Chemists in the World too. Mindset.
An absolutely amazing and incredible company. Wow
It's an amazing video with so much insight into how these cnc are made it would just be nice better if the camera could not change angel so often so we could actually get to focus in what we are seeing.
Thanks for all the amazing content to all these at Titan 💥
John grimsmo did a video tour of tornos a few years ago, its up on his channel. I believe nyccnc did one as well
The girl at 0:35 is really cute. Her eyes, smile, and laugh are just so adorable.
I loved all the machines too, haha.
Making sure the tool is on center is a whole new challenge.
That place is bad ass need more people in the USA willing to do everything in house like this
For me its so cool to see how these parts are Made. I am a hobbywatchmaker and i was so exil as i saw the parts in the video picture. Ballance staffs....
Great video, excellent presentation.
I absolutely love videos like this
Tornos Great Machine ! Mister Job Donnie ~ Great fast faster more faster speaker, i think he show us how much he love his Job!
Would Donnie's enthusiasm be great for selling Flex Seal or what? 😁
I wish I had 10% of his enthusiasm and energy level.
Incredible machines.... mind blowing 🤯
Top video, you have communicative energy ! Thanks and keep the good work 😍
Attention to detail, Donnie your a great ambassador for the Millennial of the future, BOOM ON
I work on a the STAR model of sliding heads and I didn't know you could literally get multi head sliding head machines this is so cool
"Any technology suitably advanced is indistinguishable from magic..." Of course those machines are not magic, they are engineering. But to think they can hit the tolerances as fast as they do with so many moving parts is really amazing. Ill bet those two people who tend the horizontal machine are busy busy busy. Thanks for the video. Charles
HAIL SATAN
I've always wondered if this was possible (and how). Like, how does the metal not bend when it's so small (and thin). The cutting edge would have to be extremely sharp for there to not be too much force/pressure to damage the part.
The Swiss style lathe helps with this. The cutting tool works right at the spindle collet, and the work is moved in and out as required, instead of the tool moving along the work. Another strategy is to have an adjustable support opposite the tool, which could be CNC to move in automatically as the diameter reduces.
Interesting company ❤️❤️thanks for sharing the video ❤❤
What a time to be alive!
Another awesome video from Team Titan
Integrated motor is a great design. That how makino does it. I run an A92 Makino with the 6 pallet changer on it. Runs like a gem.
That is absolutely incredible!
the Swiss are on another level of engineering