I was engineer on a line that cost a million dollars a day to be down. What a job that was. Talk about motivation to keep ahead of problems.
@runthejules916 ай бұрын
that is crazy.
@mefobills2796 ай бұрын
I listened to management kvetch about how the technicians were overpaid. This in a factory that profits were in the millions of dollars per day. Get your MBA and get brainwashed, then export the jobs to China.
@craigmcmeechan58996 ай бұрын
I've worked as a contractor at a chemicals plant doing unrelated maintenance. Day of the maintenance a Pipe needs closed off and the plant looses around £100000 each hour. All maintenance work for that sector isxplanned and choreographed to perfection, every risk foreseeable is planned for and expensive (almost never used) redundancies/workarounds paid for
@letsburn006 ай бұрын
I've been at a place like that too. $7m/day per train and we had 2 trains..when there was a shutdown (called a trip) it would take 24-36 hours to get back to full production.
@tonysheerness24276 ай бұрын
You want to see the panic when credit card clearing ,machines go down.
@rolux48536 ай бұрын
I once was a field engineer for ASML/Zeiss and regularly replaced lenses in those machines. It surely was an interesting time, but it’s only for single people who are willing to travel on very short notice. The good thing are luxury hotels and always a few days paid leave in the country. I personally enjoyed South Korea the most, I was there stationed for 6 months and lived in an amazing hotel in the middle of Gangnam. Now that I have a wife and a house I switched to a job that’s 100% remote. It was a great time and the team at Zeiss was absolutely incredible and gave us the best training imaginable. I will never forget my first time in a fab, deassembling that machine. It felt so surreal!
@morpheusnw6 ай бұрын
What kind of remote job do you do now?
@RsOnTheStreetS5 ай бұрын
What are you doing now?
@chandman4925 ай бұрын
What sort of qualifications you need to pursue a career like that?
@Martinit05 ай бұрын
Did you ever fear "OMG what if I can't put it back together again?"
@osamabama30574 ай бұрын
Cap
@MyLinguine6 ай бұрын
“Right so the computer that makes computers for fixing other computers is broken”
@honor9lite13376 ай бұрын
😮😮😅
@kentroglobalinvestmentllc89216 ай бұрын
“But Have you tried turning it off and on again?”
@bongobrandy62976 ай бұрын
Yes, very much broken like your cat that sleeps in its food bowl, rather than the bathroom sink.
@Tgspartnership6 ай бұрын
don't forget that no machine could get these things up and running. the machines can do the impossible, but only with human help
@Indrid__Cold6 ай бұрын
The ASML field engineer only makes between 90 and 110 grand a year and has to travel all the time, often on short notice (but at least the long flights are business class). The job is really tough on your body, with long hours of standing and moving heavy equipment. And you have to do it all in a clean room environment. But on the plus side, you get to work with the latest and greatest technology.
@aldomaresca99946 ай бұрын
i can understand how they accept the job, many times i've seen that being on the cutting edge or in a job position many would like, turns out this way. Game devs, tho not so cutting edge, have the same overwork/underpay issue
@notanymore94716 ай бұрын
That’s horrible pay! Equipment engineers around here make up to twice that from what I’ve seen.
@myne006 ай бұрын
Now adjust for a country with policies that keep housing affordable.
@nofbi85826 ай бұрын
@@myne00 ahahah holy shit 90 -110 grand is what they made 10 years ago, their wage hasn't changed at all, back then it was a REALLY good job eh
@3800S16 ай бұрын
That's the same pay I had as a former field service engineer working on digital cutters made by the Swiss, mainly in the printing and packaging industry. It's not enough money and yes, I am totally ruined health wise because of it. Started when I was 23 and barely made it intermittently working to my 30s, late 30s now with disability due to many unfortunate events that were all in some way stemmed from my job.
@top6ear6 ай бұрын
I bet you when it goes down there's always that one guy that screams "fuuuuuuccck."
@rydplrs716 ай бұрын
It’s quietly muttered by many, it’s bad fab managers that yell it out. It’s like a power flick in a fab, as the turbo pumps slam back on shaking the building you hear everyone involved in the recovery sighing f::…
@luminousfractal4206 ай бұрын
always a beaker 😂
@clintcowan94246 ай бұрын
Lol
@htopherollem6496 ай бұрын
as someone who suffers from an incurable, painful disease, with no effective treatment, I yell swears all the time (not directed at individuals) . there have been studies (including one released from Harvard University) showing that swearing for pain relief is as effective as opioids.
@thetacokawaii57086 ай бұрын
Yea you're mom
@ic3olate6 ай бұрын
"A wiki of sad times" is such a fantastic quote.
@Lexicon3456 ай бұрын
Agreed.
@RJ.Mangal6 ай бұрын
I liked the quote but couldn't understand it fully. Can you elaborate? 😊
@Mad17236 ай бұрын
@@RJ.Mangal It's a knowledge base filled with issues, so it's a wikipedia page, but filled with only problems. Hence, wiki of sad times.
@nixic_6 ай бұрын
Yeah homie is witty & funny in these masterclasses =P
@masiv10016 ай бұрын
hope u are doing better, noticed you were down last video, dont know what happened (if anything) but just wanted to let you know my (and many many more people) appreciation for your superb content, subtle humor and excellent information! :p
@Kelimion6 ай бұрын
I think we all noticed and worried. He does sound more like his usual self.
@FeriqBV6 ай бұрын
I can't even watch the video right now because I have work tomorrow but I came here to say the same thing This man is a treasure I hope he is ok
@adreto29786 ай бұрын
I think he might of been just sick or tired
@Asianometry6 ай бұрын
I am feeling a lot better. Yeah I’ve been a little sad lately. Thank you for asking
@tomarmadiyer26986 ай бұрын
@@Asianometry It's ok to be sad from time to time. Thank you for sharing. I hope your tomorrow is a wonderful day. You make the day a little more bearable for so many people. And you fill the world with wonder. Thank you.
@eduardofukay6 ай бұрын
I used to work for Hewlett-Packard analytical instruments and one of our customers had to pay a penalty of 25 thousand dollars per day if the report was not filed. We had a lot of pressure to get the machine back in line. I can only imagine the pressure the engineers at ASML suffer.
@ne0teric6 ай бұрын
My work, we have a removed tertiary involvement in wafer production where we have different FSE's on site for our "tools"... there is pressure on them to get stuff back up. (I'm applying it) But they do what they can, get what parts they can when they can, then go home. Me, I oversee the entire building... if we have a total down, I don't have the buffer of being just a paid vendor. The FSE's don't feel the $250K/day loss like I do. Had a few of these days so far this year, let's just say I no longer have a functioning digestive track. While I'd never want to be one of these ASML FSE's, I'd really never want to be the fab manager in charge of that ASML tool... hats off to those guys.
@andrewallen99936 ай бұрын
That's why HP charged 80 dollars an hour for our time. 45 or so years ago.
@mxskelly6 ай бұрын
I worked customer support for warehousing equipment (big sorters, conveyors, etc. for some of the biggest distributon centers you can think of...) and they sure hate downtime. Was on a 14hr long call with one place once. We had to get support engineers from another company on the line, and there were VP-type folks from the company experiencing the downtime on the call. The support engineer said he'd have to escalate the issue to the other engineers on his team, and when asked how long that'd take, said "they guarantee a response within 5 days". I could practically hear the customer's executives' heads almost explode.
@petermuller6086 ай бұрын
Well, that's what support contracts are for
@Legslarsen.6 ай бұрын
I would guess 99% of people have no idea how complex and coordinated (between many companies and countries) making chips is. Thank you for making some of us a bit more knowledgeable. Literally, a bit.
@luesternerlustmolch6 ай бұрын
Sadly though the high iq populations genetically capable of doing this complex endevaour are dying out due to their low TFR's
@Norsilca6 ай бұрын
The overwhelming complexity and size of the body of knowledge always makes me think how fragile our modern world is. These chips are, more than anything, what makes our way of life possible. And the amount of expertise necessary to produce them is mind boggling. Losing just a small percent of these experts would grind it to a halt.
@Legslarsen.6 ай бұрын
@@Norsilca to me, and perhaps Asianomitry might allow, it’s really beyond something that can be taught, or learned. It’s art.
@TheTrig866 ай бұрын
The other 1% make chips
@catcatcatcatcatcatcatcatcatca6 ай бұрын
99 is a really big underestimation in my view. I would guess one in few thousands has a surface level understanding of most of the main steps in production. I am not in that category of people. And I study electronics, something I suspect 99% of people don’t do.
@3800S16 ай бұрын
This hits home hard as a former field service engineer. I worked pretty much exclusively on a Swiss made digital cutter line and it was very much like this too, these machine were always the bottleneck and key equipment in all the businesses that had them, so when they went down it was most often a big deal for the customer, every minute was costing them and their own customer's money.
@jeffg40086 ай бұрын
More complicated than a Stage1 Turbo 6 I'm sure!
@johndoh51826 ай бұрын
When you make die using a lens that's slightly out of focus you get fuzzy logic.
@davidanalyst6716 ай бұрын
0/10 joke right here hahahaha
@lbgstzockt84936 ай бұрын
@@davidanalyst671 Nah, thats a great joke.
@Lisa_Minci966 ай бұрын
@@davidanalyst671 collapsed right into a 0
@danibot30006 ай бұрын
😵💫 Fuzzy logic! Fuzzy logic! 😵💫
@sfodjknfwoa6 ай бұрын
Good one haha
@EdwindeJong06 ай бұрын
As a principal data engineer working on the flow of data coming from these machines, I can say I learned a thing or two from your presentation. Great video and keep them coming.
@Wunderbolts6 ай бұрын
My cousin works at the ford plant and at $40,000/min for downtime, they have a helicopter ready to fly to another plant to get parts if they need it.
@stevebabiak69976 ай бұрын
Ford = Für Opa reicht das That’s German: Good enough for grandpa ;)
@makerspace5336 ай бұрын
Although drilling an oil well may not sound particularly high tech, it is. A dynamically positioned drill ship may be drilling in water 1500 meters deep with a hole 1500 meters or more below the sea floor. All this relies on many things working properly. When somethings breaks, like the systems that keep the ship on station, all hell breaks loose. It's a million dollars or more per day to operate the ship, and the ship may be 200 miles from shore. The technicians on board are the best of the best. They have to be.
@Broken_robot19866 ай бұрын
Bruce Willis used to do that, but they needed him in space and he had to save his daughter's boyfriend and he was the first person to die in space.
@TheOneAndOnlySatan6 ай бұрын
We dont care about that.
@JohnDoeWasntTaken6 ай бұрын
Those dynamic positioning systems are so critical. There was a diving support vessel years ago that got caught in a storm and its DP system failed at the worst moment, began drifting while divers below were still tethered to the vessel. Led to one of them having their gas and hot water lines severed leaving him thousands of feet alone at the bottom of the sea with no air. Crazy story, he survived and was rescued for the record, nobody knows exactly how he survived so long without air. Name is Chris Lemons for anyone who wants to check the story out.
@mithrandirthegrey76443 ай бұрын
Who said drilling for oil isn’t high tech? They have no clue! Oil companies are tech companies. Tech doesn’t just mean computers - oil companies deal in the physical world - mechanical tech.
@thaconaway6 ай бұрын
A Scanner down creates a lot of havoc on the track side as well. It's a rare opportunity to get some work done. Pretty crazy how much info you got in here. It'd be interesting to see what you could say about track dispensing purity and health
@vrclckd-zz3pv6 ай бұрын
Heh I did my undergrad dissertation in Comp Sci on simulating and correcting optical aberrations in human eyes. Made some nice wavefront visualisations based on Zernike polynomials.
@adrian.banninksy6 ай бұрын
Thanks for the ASML video once more. I am a mechatronic engineer and work for ASML for 30 years, so I'd like to follow what is published about ASML. But I was most struck by you mentioning the book of Marc Hijink...who was raised in the same village I am and who wrote an excellent book about ASML. Together with the book by René Raaijmakers, it's the most informative book I ever read about ASML. His way of writing is fascinating imho. And your pronunciation of his name was 100% spot on!
@carstenraddatz52796 ай бұрын
"Wafers per hour" as the one metric is mentioned at 02:24. It was during EUV development the goal to finally get there, starting from "hours per wafer". So a whopping 10 years into it the ASML teams finally made it.
@dante72286 ай бұрын
All the technicians and engineers keeping our world running deserve maximum respect. Being up to the tsak and bearing all the responsibility plus hard work on their shoulders is mind bugling. You couldn't pay me enough to be in that position.
@charlier23456 ай бұрын
i work as a field service engineer and this video has a scary amount of information i wouldnt expect people to know
@leyasep59196 ай бұрын
But do you feel that your work is finallyy being recognised and appreciated ?
@SeeminglyHopeless29 күн бұрын
I thought the same thing. As soon as I heard AOM laser I was a bit concerned.... Apparently he has a source so ASML most likely cleared this to be OK.
@coraltown16 ай бұрын
At the computer chip company I used to work at there were people I regarded as 'million dollar engineers'. They were so exceptional that an entire project/product depended on their ability to debug critical issues. But they were never paid a million dollars.
@AlanJWolfe316 ай бұрын
Thanks!
@lunamiya16896 ай бұрын
Ex-ASML employee here, actually the most pressure came from tsmc, once upon a time there is one machine with down time long as 3 days lol, no one knows how
@nixic_6 ай бұрын
haha is that the record?? only three days? seems like a minor/moderate outage (I mean obviously expensive but three days is pretty good imo)
@lunamiya16896 ай бұрын
@@nixic_ unexpected down time for three days and no one knows how(on CS team, in production), the longest down time I have experienced is in installation phase, unexpected down for about 3 weeks, it was pure pain
@rolux48536 ай бұрын
@@lunamiya1689 the longest downtime that I have ever experienced when I was still working for the chip industry was that little fire that made DDR RAM chips quadruple in price for some time.. You already worked back then?
@scoops20166 ай бұрын
Oh my nightmares are back. Get all the way into the Fab and realise you forget something back at the office. Three hours later you back through and the customer is screaming.
@mitchellcorona86 ай бұрын
Get in the fab , gown , speak to client people solve problem, talk to fab people leave fab , degown go back to desk have an call/email waiting saying they need you back in the fab.
@stevengill17366 ай бұрын
I dunno anything except that 300 wafers/hour is astonishing, incredible, fantastic and amazing and all the other superlatives.... To me it appears that these machines are like the absolute peak of terrestrial technology...
@gs39316 ай бұрын
Imagine something that makes not a single machine, but an entire cleanroom go down. Like a malfunction in the air ventilation system, or a fire alarm that gets triggered. Being a simple maintenance guy at a fab must be insane.
@winstonmatthews68152 күн бұрын
When I build cabinets for furniture 1/1000 of an inch can protrude and creates an uneven surface or a slight shadow line. Its really hard to get rails and styles to line up perfectly and usually requires some sanding or planing to get the surface flat. How a motorized system can make adjustments down to a nanometer is mindbending. Truly amazing! Great video.
@sjfriedl6 ай бұрын
@12:50 "Like a traffic jam on the 405" - that's the 5 freeway right at my exit in Tustin California 🙂
@rpamartin6 ай бұрын
Thanks
@BOMBON1876 ай бұрын
My old company would have been bankrupt if they lost this amount of money per hour. Why? They would waste a whole day trying to find someone to blame first, another day to find someone who has free time to go look at the problem, another day to fix the problem, complain why they lost productivity and finally complain about the money lost.
@Stars-Mine6 ай бұрын
0:27 when you learn an hour is 100 minutes long.
@alexanderbelov68926 ай бұрын
Each hour they have 40 minutes of bonus losses.
@OorZakO5 ай бұрын
Do you even math?? 1.800 x 60 = 108.000, 1.800 x 100 = 180.000 😂😂
@Stars-Mine5 ай бұрын
@@OorZakO The videos can be updated after posting now fyi.
@turboleggy4 ай бұрын
Lol
@raptordriver73406 ай бұрын
It ain't fun being a lead Engineer on support where your task is not complete unless it is 100% rectified, tested, commissioned and signed! Sure the money is great... but the pressure makes one feel life is getting shorter by the second. Glad I'm retired! LOL!
@yaboifet90586 ай бұрын
The money is great?!
@raptordriver73406 ай бұрын
@@yaboifet9058 IT is the irony of it all, that in the end it ain't worth it. Life is to be lived and money has nothing to do with it!
@sergioyichiong72696 ай бұрын
How much money a hour?
@reapzvanreapz96876 ай бұрын
@@yaboifet9058 110k per year in a country with cheap groseries and almost free healthcare.
@brainmuffins60526 ай бұрын
The first rule of ASML club… you don’t talk about ASML club. If this is your first wafer… you have to fab.
@forrestdick21046 ай бұрын
If the foil sticker peels off the welle lens, the fab stops and you have an unscheduled down.
@RC5346 ай бұрын
I remember sitting next to an ASML employee and fellow Dutchman once on a flight from LA to Amsterdam. And even though he was candid about his workplace and I have a mechanical engineering background and an interest in computer hardware in general I didn't get much wiser than that he did something with software for his employer. This was not too long after the IP theft case in San Diego became news, so I could imagine that they were extra careful already back then.
@timthompson4686 ай бұрын
In my younger days, I worked on CD measurement SEMs. The drag with those is there was usually just one per product line, so when it went down, the whole line was down. It felt like all eyes were upon me as soon as I entered the fab. I knew if the problem was in the electron gun, it would take an overnight pump down to reestablish vacuum. I used to think those were fairly complicated systems, but compared to modern litho, they seem simple.
@liliya_aseeva5 ай бұрын
Your channel is a gold mine of knowledge about CPU manufacturing. Keep it up. Thank you.
@root424 ай бұрын
Zernike polynomials look like spherical harmonics, but on a disc. I guess they are simply a base function for disc shaped function. Neat.
@nexusyang48326 ай бұрын
It takes lots of livers. A lot of livers.
@JosGeerink6 ай бұрын
?
@handlemonium6 ай бұрын
Production go Liver me Timbers.
@irasthewarrior6 ай бұрын
@@JosGeerink Being constantly exposed to mental stress, take its toll on the liver. You can end up with cirrhosis that'll permanently damage the liver and even cause death if not diagnosed on time. Stress and alcohol abuse do the same damage to the liver.
@godvonheaven29686 ай бұрын
@@irasthewarrior Did you ever think of combining these two?
@andrewvenor80356 ай бұрын
I'm in field service for semiconductor vacuum pumps. When customer calls saying an EUV tool is logged down for an unscheduled down that tool immediately jumps to the top of the priority list.
@MillersMotors6 ай бұрын
Edwards or UlVac?
@andrewvenor80356 ай бұрын
@@MillersMotors Edwards
@forbeginnersandbeyond60896 ай бұрын
The field engineers for these machines must be being paid in gold.
@brengineering65736 ай бұрын
The sad thing is that they aren't. They are paid decently for hardware engineers, but nothing close to software.
@dougdimmadimsdale95716 ай бұрын
70k/year state side with a bachelor, endless unpaid overtime
@apexaviour6 ай бұрын
@@dougdimmadimsdale9571 Yikes, I hope not in a high cost-of-living state. And unpaid overtime!? I understand for a salaried office-worker but how is that even a thing for an FSE?
@brengineering65736 ай бұрын
@@dougdimmadimsdale9571 Is this current? Because I know that last year they offered 80-85K for new grad production engineers in the northeast US. It's hard to believe that field service would be less than that.
@dougdimmadimsdale95716 ай бұрын
@@apexaviourhigh cost and high taxes. but of course biden claims 6figs without a bachelor, yeah right maybe with 15years of experience
@dcchillin46876 ай бұрын
I'm a cnc machinist studying EE and was hoping to get a fab job. This is super interesting to me, you don't see very much on day to day operations in the fabs. Thanks!
@dosgos6 ай бұрын
My uncle ran an automobile factory. His job was to keep the lines running. Not sure if the stress or chemicals took him down first.
@csours6 ай бұрын
I worked in an automobile final assembly plant. Every minute a vehicle rolls off the line, so when we're down, every minute is one vehicle's worth of profit lost. Depending on the plant, that can be $2,000 or $20,000 or $50,000. So its interesting to me that one machine can capture the same value as one whole assembly plant.
@Martinit05 ай бұрын
The business looses more than just the profit per car. You loose the revenue but you still have to pay the wages and all the expensive equipment keeps depreciating. Only the parts cost are not lost of you didn't make the car.
@t-bone92393 ай бұрын
did your company not have buffers between assembly lines?
@unvergebeneid6 ай бұрын
With such costs per hour of downtime, I kind of would've expected a team being at the ready at all times to jump into "GO! GO! GO!" mode, working at pit stop speeds to change lens elements or whatever.
@xanokothe6 ай бұрын
As D&E engineer, we literally drop everything that we are doing to find the problem, solve it or give a containment. If it reached us, it means it went through 3 or 4 layers of highly skilled smart people (100s of people), there was no one else that could solve the machine down. We feel the pressure to make it right.
@paulmichaelfreedman83346 ай бұрын
What strikes me most is how many different frikkin parallels have been drawn with Interstellar!
@luminousfractal4206 ай бұрын
and how many people think everyone sseen it when its locked to a network.
@nixic_6 ай бұрын
@@luminousfractal420 Bet less than 35% of the US population missed Interstellar.... It's like mentioning the Titanic or something, we ALL watched it lol
@fuckgoogle33356 ай бұрын
How so?
@klausvogler67105 ай бұрын
What? The machine god in your lithographorium is angry? Don't worry. The Adeptus Mechanicus will send its most learned techpriest and the Departmento Munitorum will ship the neccessary parts. The emperor protects!
@carstenraddatz52796 ай бұрын
Extremely illuminating video, thank you! Talk about metrology's role and how important this is for the process. To add to the confusion when confronted with the relevant details, the topography deviation chart at 01:17 is upside down and mirrored, too, making it really hard to understand that effing
@willywonka43406 ай бұрын
12:52 Traffic Jam on southbound 405 at Tustin 😂 Nice find! 😂
@orthoplex646 ай бұрын
48 hours?? Imagine having to lose $5,000,000 to downtime before you can be escalated to level 2 support
@afterthesmash6 ай бұрын
You're playing semantic games here. _This_ level 1 support is any other company sending in The Wolf. _This_ level 2 support involves looping in S. R. Hadden from his penthouse suite on the Mir space station. _This_ level 3 support involves the Space Guild executing space jumps to fetch a dream team from Zarkon 6 from clear across the other side of the galaxy. The correct semantic frame is this one: Imagine _who_ is on the line when you have already lost $5,000,000 to an issue that not even The Wolf working consecutive twenty-hour shifts managed to mitigate or resolve.
@lansleyONE6 ай бұрын
Great video. This push for super efficiency and performance to recoup costs and maximise ROI reminds me of London Heathrow airport. A plane full of passengers takes off or lands every 30 seconds... until something happens (too much wind requiring greater safety distances, a single plane aborting landing and having to go round to rejoin the queue amongst many others). This single exception ricochets through all the flight schedules across European airports as the exception causes a slight delay which causes further delays through the day until the airports close at night and some attempt at recovery can be made overnight. As a seasoned flight passenger, the learned lesson of 'stay at an airport hotel overnight and get the first flight out' is a sure-fire success strategy! Perhaps Asianometry could make a video about the tuning of airport and airspace efficiencies?
@azamatbezhan16536 ай бұрын
How do you think, when forksheet fet with Full bottom dielectric isolation will come. Impact of self heating effect in bottom dielectric isolation is not overcome
@MyLifeOfficial6 ай бұрын
Your videos and information are truly excellent, and I have no idea how you'd do this in your spare time whilst (presumably) holding down your main job. Awesome stuff!
@tim.w56306 ай бұрын
Imagine being the driver for the spare part. You get pulled over by the police and try to explain to them that every second they waste costs 30$. What a fever dream
@Encypruon6 ай бұрын
The illustration used for "de-focusing" at 3:00 does not match the narration as it shows spherical aberration. The thesis titles it "the difference between a perfect lens and a lens with aberrations from digitalphotographylive (2012)", so it's weird to attribute it to the thesis like this. But chances are digitalphotographylive has it from Wikipedia anyway as it was uploaded there in 2008.
@JosGeerink6 ай бұрын
2:25 is there a reason why the machine has to make such fast/jerky motions? Couldn't it just illuminate in a couple of long/broad strokes? Instead of a bunch of tiny squares, do entire lines at a time.
@isettech6 ай бұрын
When an ASML machine goes down, I get paid well. I word in repair. Motion Control repair is a Great STEM field for those who are able to learn and be effective in troubleshooting. The process of overlay is referred to as Registration, where one layer is registered to the prior layers.
@luminousfractal4206 ай бұрын
money pouring down the drain and you get that customer support guy "welll in 48hours we can escalate it..." 😱🤯🤯🤯
@poppatang42166 ай бұрын
That’s when you get your bosses boss to call their boss 😂
@TheOneAndOnlySatan6 ай бұрын
We only talk to line up our ideas and strategies then go to lunch 😂
@0Nofuture6 ай бұрын
An interesting thought is that the iron ore processing hub I work at loses 1 million an hour of downtime which is prehistoric compared to this complexity of these machines
@ronnetgrazer3626 ай бұрын
You nailed Hijink, and another great upload. Thanks!
@CenturyViral4 ай бұрын
I don't think most people can grasp just how complex these systems are or the sheer level of technological advancement they represent-it's absolute madness.
@the_hate_inside10856 ай бұрын
Mostly watch these videos since I got interested, when I was doing research prior to buying the ASML stock. It has turned out to be one of my best investments, and the lithography process is pretty fascinating. I have a history in the medical industry, building machines that sort proteins. The sorting was done using monochromatic UV spectroscopy.
@bnhhad6 ай бұрын
Y'all got any information on the overhead track systems. What the hell goes into scheduling and moving the foups into different process modules. Especially rerouting if a piece if equipment goes down
@jurassicpark1046 ай бұрын
AMHS systems are looped into automation like every other tool. Integrated as such, it's fully aware with which tools are running production.
@wesleymciver45686 ай бұрын
Nice try china
@Matt333186 ай бұрын
Great informative video. It was exciting to watch. :)
@jurassicpark1046 ай бұрын
Now just wait till you hear about wafer scrap. Now that's the real kicker.
@scowell6 ай бұрын
Broke a boat load of 4" wafers at NMOS 4, Ed Bluestein.... too much coffee! Luckily at the 03 level, just added poly contacts.... not as bad as 07 after metallization. Used to run a Leitz wafer microscope, inspect 1000 wafers a night... I think they put meth in that coffee.
@klauszinser6 ай бұрын
Dekujeme. Danke! Thank you! You should have got this money earlier. Not only, but especially for doing the tip to ASML Eindhoven/NL. Maybe even ASML don't want to be talked about, they let you in.
@capn_shawn6 ай бұрын
Amazing info! The "High Tech" machines that I design are both cutting edge and yet 6,000,000 years behind ASML
@SF-fb6lv6 ай бұрын
Inside of machine at 11:01 reminds me of Giger's Alien art...
@IQof26 ай бұрын
what an incredible channel. take care of yourself, it's well-deserved.
@snagglepussrex81086 ай бұрын
Explaining downtime cost to an American: "Imagine 30 burgers a second"
@causewaykayak6 ай бұрын
This channel has as many clever ways with linguistics than the machines it is often describing. The writer is to be congratulated.
@Nolano3866 ай бұрын
it's the only way we can understand
@DaveEtchells2 ай бұрын
An ex-ATI engineer worked for me in an unrelated field for quite a while so,e years back. He’d been the final QC check on mask tapeouts for their most advanced chips and switched fields after burning out from the stress. If he missed _anything_ it was literally a million dollars down the tubes. No surprise, he was the most insanely detail-oriented guy I’ve ever met, by several orders of magnitude 😄
@JohnHLundin6 ай бұрын
Thanks Jon, This gives a whole new set of dimensions to one of my standard quips (when someone wants to jump into a new or untried/untested technology): "Can you fix it when it breaks?" [usually the answer is 'no.']. Thank God for ASML support!
@mhx476 ай бұрын
I was field engineer servicing production printers. Never really liked making decision whether it is time to replace problematic part or try extend its life by servicing it. And stakes were far lower. I woukd not be able to handle pressure making decisions on this kind of machine.
@JoonasD66 ай бұрын
1:10 Why is the picture upside down, though 😅😅
@zpetar3 ай бұрын
I can't imagine there is people who can work in environment like this their whole lives.
@jamesleetrigg6 ай бұрын
It’s mind blowing that this stuff is even possible. Given how fast things are moving and how accurate things need to be.
@WhyInnovate5 ай бұрын
This is crazy! You need a small city of people just to maintain one machine, man
@gatt13373 ай бұрын
The ASML Lithography Machine knows where it is all times. It knows this because it knows where it isn't.
@weedmanwestvancouverbc92666 ай бұрын
A guy invented an.ultra high intensity light source called a Vortec lamp. Basically you have a quartz tubes with Argon gas and water flowing to cool it and an electrical current is passed through and it produces an extraordinarily bright high intensity light source. They didn't find anybody who wanted an area of the size of a golf course illuminated So intense, it was usually used to do heat treatment of metal. A talk show host heard the light from this lamp was intense enough to melt a Volkswagen so of course Mr Letterman wanted it on his show. Is my understanding is it one of the uses for this light source is to anneal silicon wafers
@weedmanwestvancouverbc92666 ай бұрын
What's really strange is there is incredibly little to go on and all I have on it is a newspaper clipping from the 90s
@Tgspartnership6 ай бұрын
its staggering that a single company is so crucial for the modern world. we're all drowning in technology, but it's still amazing to see what is really possible when you put the best technology in the right hands. this stuff is really eye opening; for the rest of us, technology as at most a tool, a distraction, or a toy.
@NatuurYosh6 ай бұрын
Dude just pronounced hijink perfectly and still apologized for it lol
@stoyantsalev31096 ай бұрын
Thank you for the insightful summary at the end, it is 101% true that such complex systems need constant care to keep running.
@KristianDolghier6 ай бұрын
you completely missed the GSC department in the escalation process. I work at GSC illumination and projection (one of 18 WW experts).
@dieselphiend6 ай бұрын
I can only imagine how they have to treat the rigging that they use to move all of this heavy stuff.
@BillyVerden6 ай бұрын
Great Video as Always!.. Would it be possible for you to do a deep dive on how the chips are separated from the wafer and then processed into a finished chip? I've seen a lot of your videos and if I have missed that you have already done a video on that I apologize. Love Your Videos!
@jurassicpark1046 ай бұрын
In the meantime look into the A/T (assembly and test) process. You should find what you're looking for.
@BillyVerden6 ай бұрын
@@jurassicpark104 Cool.. I'll definitely look into that.. Thanks!
@jonathanhong39546 ай бұрын
Thanks for that closing statement! Keep up the great content! 👍
@ChiefBridgeFuser6 ай бұрын
_Focus_ book as "thrilling". We here watching probably agree, but our friends and family will just think us weirdos. Great video!
@tonysheerness24276 ай бұрын
Maybe costly while down, however they earn a lot of money when its working. Before customers had back up computers and only relied on one, IBM used to guarantee to get parts to the customer with in 2 hours if the part is in country and 4 hours if it was not a part that very rarely fails.
@hc3d5 ай бұрын
Great vid. Nice to see some ASML details. Love seeing the overhead robots move around in the fab. These guys really live in the future. This time you actually pronounced a Dutch name correctly! (Mark Hijink). A happy accident. My ears are still bleeding from last time you tried to pronounce a Dutch name 🤭 I forgot which one it was, but you were quite far off haha :)
@Keavon6 ай бұрын
I wonder if there's ever a case for transporting parts by supersonic fighter jet to get parts delivered faster than regular air cargo. (This occurs in the book Project Hail Mary and it's made me wonder if there's ever a time when it makes sense for such costly time-sensitive cargo.)
@tommy2cents4926 ай бұрын
I think it is cheaper to have local warehouses where spare parts are stored.
@tommy2cents4926 ай бұрын
And... the cargo bay of a fighter jet is small and does not meet temperature and shock control parameters...
@gs39316 ай бұрын
I doubt a lot fragile parts can survive a trip like that.
@Martinit05 ай бұрын
Private jet is more realistic. We hear Tesla and SpaceX used Elon Musk's private jet several times to get time-critical spare parts.
@charlesmurphy56446 ай бұрын
6:56 Did you try turning it off and back on?😺
@gerryn23 ай бұрын
If they Expect a _FEW_ long downs per year, why would it mean lost revenue? Surely the revenue is calculated on output per year or something like that, rather than output per minute. In contrast to for example SaaS where downtimes are mostly unexpected - in such a setting yeah you can calculate the service cost or whatever, SLA/SLOs etc. But if you are already expecting a minimum/maximum hour count of downtime per year, in particular where it can take months to get back up to speed - this would have already been calculated into the cost of operations and revenue.
@ВладимирАфанасьев-с8ц6 ай бұрын
This is quite different from when you are servicing a 30+ year-old device, the developers of which no longer exist and if something happens, there are only 2-3 maintenance personnel and those spare parts that are in the next room.
@madcoderz72066 ай бұрын
I just like the fact that on the thumbnail, the dude is using a Lenovo Thinkpad. Not a MacBook or something. 😂
@lakrids-pibe6 ай бұрын
For some reason it makes me think of the old vacuum tube computers and the constant replacement of the vacuum tubes.
@christopherleubner66336 ай бұрын
Yup that EUV takes a lot of energy to generate and is very harsh on optics exposed to it. The lasers tubes that drive it and optics would be consumable at the rate it fires in these machines.😮
@AC-jk8wq6 ай бұрын
Downtime… is a horrible thing if you work in a plant that runs 24/7… Good production management has a method to include scheduled downtime in their plan… Unscheduled downtime is what they work hard to avoid…. Paying more for good quality machinery… pays for itself! Nice work Jon, you sound better today. 😃
@Shinobubu6 ай бұрын
these machines are so unique that their many modes of failures are unknown and unexplored. these machines also becomes obsolete rather quickly so they don't have time to mature and have all the kinks worked out. This will always be the perpetual problems with cutting edge technology. it takes decades or even centuries for technologies to mature to a point where you can just take it to a garage to fix it.
@metaparcel6 ай бұрын
When will Focus come out on Audible, I wanted to download it right away but its not in the bookstore just yet. I definitely am interested in listening to this while and work and when driving through traffic. Thanks.
@dieterwtm89416 ай бұрын
Fixing a computer that fixes computers that fixes computers that produces computers...
@hidennseek14836 ай бұрын
How do you learn so much about ASML? except the book I do want to learn as much as possible about ASML ASAP.