This is one of a new wave of companies. The defining features of these new companies is that you see the software development integrated right next to the manufacturing. The mechanical and mechatronics engineering, the real world factory, and the software engineering are all happening within 10 yards of one another.
@dh20327 ай бұрын
the future, I see the light, world keep with Elon Musk, need a sponsor with very deep pockets, I see making small to only one items, but getting big boys involved , two hours, make car body panel, to replace the big press, must nock then one every 10 seconds or if not faster?
@suharsh967 ай бұрын
The world of mechatronics, aye
@campandcook31187 ай бұрын
@@dh2032like FDM vs injection molding. Customizing and fast design changes vs less time per part but HUGE cost to change anything. Also, it allows small shops to make a LOT of different parts on limited floor space
@vidya0147 ай бұрын
Too slow, how about 10 robotic arms at each side?
@timfisher777 ай бұрын
@@vidya014 they would have to be carefully choreographed
@yannieleftheriadis97553 ай бұрын
I'm absolutely blown away by this technology. As a metalworking with a lot of experience this is just so Sci fi hats off to the brilliant minds behind all this
@stephenziga23193 ай бұрын
It can be used to make 1 or 2 cars. It can't be used to produce anything above 50cars.
@jondonron8 ай бұрын
Homie looks like he just came out of the car repair shop and now building a startup the startup will be super successful because it's actually solving a really big problem
@p19shelt8 ай бұрын
haha ya!
@spvillano7 ай бұрын
I remember a lot that looked, talked and acted like him during the dot bomb era, where the largest number of products were all vaporware.
@aususer7 ай бұрын
“Repair shop homie”…. Only that he ACTUALLY came from SpaceX and helping build and design equipment for aerospace… slightly different
@dronefootage27787 ай бұрын
@@aususer there is so little skill needed to do this, it's clear why he's not at spacex anymore, probably too difficult and/or too much work
@fightwithbiomechanix7 ай бұрын
@@dronefootage2778as a mechanical engineer with half a decade of manufacturing experience I can say that you're statement is unfounded
@KW-ei3pi7 ай бұрын
Not your average KZbin channel. The production quality is at the top .... bar none. Including the top documentary makers on PBS. My only question is: How have I not found this channel before now? Thank you. Regards.
@Barrrt28 күн бұрын
I'm over here scratching my head as well. How'd I miss this?
@Triflixfilms8 ай бұрын
Like the VP of Product said, "I don't want the design power for the things that I use to sit in the hands of probably some of the organizations that might be least ready to design the next thing." This would be great for film sets, outsourcing props building can be insanely expensive. I know a lot of people are sensitive about the use of "AI" and automation in the film industry taking jobs, but if the only barrier between an independent director and Hollywood studio is capital, this is huge! Democratizing the entire filmmaking process lowers the barrier to entry to the point anyone could do it! If it's so easy anyone can do it, it will only be interesting to the people that are passionate about it.
@Lionking-lb5gw7 ай бұрын
😅There are tradeoffs. Basically , if number of people who can do a particular thing decreases, competition increases............
@stin-dog1727 ай бұрын
I dont think this technology will democratise filmmaking by lowering the cost of building sets and props. This looks expensive. Sheet metal is rarely used in the manufacture of props and even less for sets. You can paint cheaper material to look like metal. If you wanted to customise that truck like they have for film, it would be cheaper to attach vac form panel of plastic or a panel made from fibreglass if you needed it to be tougher. I hope if you intend to make a independent film you will consult some professional makers before hiring this company you might save some.
@stin-dog1727 ай бұрын
Money
@Triflixfilms7 ай бұрын
@@stin-dog172 I'd love to hire a maker but dude I live in the middle of a cornfield. According to Production Hub there are only 4 registered prop 'makers' in my entire state. There is no filmmaking industry here... just a multibillion-dollar manufacturing industry. 15 years in this area and I have never met a single 'maker' that works on large set props, yet I know several fab shop owners that would allow me free access to CNC's, lathes, CMMs, and plasma cutters. If they had this equipment and some downtime I guarantee I could trade them some services to get an actually working Sci-fi Mad Max-style truck so long as I cover the material cost and create the CAD myself. Our town is 50,000 people and there is only 1 other media company within 45 miles of us with enough employees (4+) to run a mini-production. Trust me, this is a far more viable solution for rural people than hiring one of the four makers in our entire state.
@quyentran9774 ай бұрын
Gold! Thats democratization mentioned is great in some industry using ton of people (not too much tool) like advertising (youtuber vs traditional tv) , but industry ... 😢 I used to hope myth with 3d printer too
@shushruthmg46308 ай бұрын
Sheet metal stamping is very fast maybe 100000 times than this method.
@gags7307 ай бұрын
Exactly... This company makes one-offs or a very small number of the same part. Why he compares the company to stamped sheet metal parts in cars is ridiculous. Comparing Apples and Oranges. Almost every method is faster than this method but it does have it place.
@l-dog7 ай бұрын
It's a comparison meant to give laymen context about what is being done and why. This video is targeted to the general public. Not just crumudgeony boomers in the comment section.
@gearloose7037 ай бұрын
@@gags730 If the goal it to make one or a few stampings, the die does not need to last millions of parts, so it can also be a lot cheaper. It would be quicker to have this robot cut a die out of plastic and press it than have it form the shape as shown on the video.
@bartlettsbartlett9587 ай бұрын
Just curious. Because my parents happen to be "boomers". Probably your parents or grandparents also; Why is everyone so ready roast them? Have some respect for your elders? Or is that a "boomer" thing also?
@edwardpaulsen10747 ай бұрын
Why yes, stamping the same part over and over with no variations can be incredibly fast.... right up until you need to change for a different part... then it can take up to a week to take out the old tooling, load in the new tooling and tweak it until you can get good parts, then you hope and pray that nothing goes wrong while you stamp out another couple thousand parts... Rinse, repeat... I would also point out that additive manufacturing (also known as 3D printing) is also a comparatively slow process in comparison to injection molding and other similar processes for plastics, although additive manufacturing has been gaining ground in building parts with metal as well, and the field is constantly growing for specialized parts and innovation. Every industry has gone through a phase that was comparatively slow in comparison to the mass production methods that have brought commonly used objects into the realm that users like YOU are able to enjoy without it costing an arm and a leg. There is also a LOT of lead time that goes into creating each new iteration of tooling until they get it all worked out and producing those millions of parts... sometimes a year or more, so that turns your millions of parts into several years in the making. There are many parts of these processes that you obviously do not understand and cannot take into account with such bold claims.... maybe think about it and research a little more?
@rjbaw8 ай бұрын
Look like it is targeting low volume, high end manufacturing. The surface finish still needs work though.
@scooter93308 ай бұрын
That could and will probably be fixed in the near future with rollers and other components.
@egondro91577 ай бұрын
Yeah like an assembly line.
@spvillano7 ай бұрын
Meh, it's a prototype, not a finished product. The only thing I'd consider these for is rapid prototyping using locally generated but easily available parts.
@ismailnyeyusof35207 ай бұрын
I agree completely but scaling up might involve just replicating the robots, that are already an established technology, and advanced machine learning which is what all those fancy new GPUs are supposed to be doing. Factories based on this type of manufacturing can truly be well dispersed and made resilient. The future of sheet metal forming is looking very bright.
@thotmorgana7 ай бұрын
@@ismailnyeyusof3520 I don't think this is supposed to replace high volume high end manufacturing. The steel pressing techniques are very good and efficient for that. The problem is their is no good alternative for low volume high end manufacturing because it is not worth the expenses. This seems to be perfect for that.
@the_under_score94847 ай бұрын
As a high school welding instructor, I will be giving this video to the kids for extra credit next year.
@lcfflc38877 ай бұрын
Well not just that, make them write a paper about it, it's new raising technology that they need to be aware about, ask them which applications they think would be ideal to apply this tech on, among other questions regarding it included in the Essay.
@hwgusn8 ай бұрын
I bet the Navy would love to have these on carriers to print their own repair panels.
@zachmoyer18498 ай бұрын
lol repair panels on a ship is just plate steel
@waynesworldofsci-tech8 ай бұрын
Every navy.
@kamilbro61067 ай бұрын
You expect calm waters when repairs are truly needed? If the vessel is safe enough to start repairs it is just as fast overall to send the parts it needs.
@waynesworldofsci-tech7 ай бұрын
@@kamilbro6106 Yeah, ask the Russians how well that’s working. The Royal Canadian Navy has a ship class these would be perfect for. Our new Repair and Replenishment ships. Odds are your navy has something similar, unless you are a nation on a small sea like the Baltic. I gather you are from somewhere like that, or you’d see the application.
@jtjames797 ай бұрын
@@zachmoyer1849 Repair panels for the aircraft.
@KeithOlson7 ай бұрын
One thing that occurred to me is that you could use traditional stamping to create a 'family-level' part, then use this to finish it for a particular use. That would save an *incredible* amount of time and money for higher-volume parts that still need to be somewhat customizable.
@blakebrown5346 ай бұрын
Well in theory yes but the entire point of this is that it's far cheaper and faster than stamping because it doesn't require the huge investment and time involved in creating the molds etc. that stamping requires. It's best for custom pieces, prototyping, and lower volume (he says in another video by Smarter Every Day that does into the technical issues involved much more that it's competitive in pricing farther along than you'd imagine compared with other manufacturing methods...I think in the low thousands). Here's the link to the other video on this that I think will show you why that's probably not possible: kzbin.info/www/bejne/mnS7pmuAqsSZmrs&pp=ygULcm9ib2Zvcm1pbmc%3D
@spdcrzyАй бұрын
Or the reverse - you could use THIS as the roughing pass and set several hardpoints as references for when the stamping needs to come in, and then the finished surface comes out from using the traditional die. BUT because the dies don't need to be complete until the prototyping is done anyway, you can use the roboforming to help determine the ideal die shapes based on the force feedback the robots collect as they shape the metal. This can then be fed back into the tool and die engineering process to design better dies more accurately and with less waste, because the parts coming in would have stresses built in from the roboforming process itself - helping alleviate a lot of problems with ramping up production and quality control in a traditional stamping plant.
@nehuenesquivel8 ай бұрын
I'm in love with these guys and their vision.
@ziggim12627 ай бұрын
I love this guys. They’re up my alley. I totally understand their vision since I’m on the same path with CNC I am constantly upgrading my machine❤
@bonita7990637 ай бұрын
Any chance of working with you ? i would love to be part of this
@andrej19232 ай бұрын
Thank you, Mr. GT for keeping our hobby alive …. Protect this man at all costs
@Triflixfilms8 ай бұрын
I love the dream idea of being able to customize the body of a car as easily as you can 3D print a unique case for a Xbox controller. Shipping/Delivery will become the next choke point in affordability.
@Autovetus8 ай бұрын
No , it's rather affordability will become the choke point. Period. These guys have deep pockets so they can burn some money now. But earning is a different thing
@Triflixfilms8 ай бұрын
@@Autovetus I'm not talking about this company specifically, no one has a patent on the assembly line. Once it's effectiveness was proven, that cat was out of the bag and every manufacturer was racing to switch to it... The same thing with this advancement in manufacturing. The "last mile" is and has been one of the largest expenses for most product for nearly a century with little innovation. Hand off product, transport, rinse and repeat until product arrives to the consumer.
@westcoaststacker5697 ай бұрын
I picture the old days when Rolls Royce would send out bodies and the Carriage Companies would customize for Indian Nobility etc... I doubt this would be cheap, but with new electric cars basically being skates then custom shops can build on the Skate.
@ValidatingUsername7 ай бұрын
Each major city would definitely have one major car fanatic coop that could afford a printer
@Roobotics7 ай бұрын
@@Triflixfilms Nobody is racing to switch to this, it's slow.. Note how they never elaborate how long a panel takes to make, or any part. That single hood probably took a whole day(maybe longer). Maybe for anyone that's deep in the prototyping and needs field usable parts ASAP, but this will be an absurdly expensive service.
@nasirdar79907 ай бұрын
Really a good thing for REPAIR industry
@traubengott97833 ай бұрын
I dont know - the thing is here in Germany there are still a few tradesmen that can manufacture a stamped steel metal part like a car fender or so by hand. Without expensive tools and i bet even a little faster than these robots.
@Игорь-и1я2з3 ай бұрын
until you compare price with fiberglass
@nelsondolot7 ай бұрын
Good for rapid prototyping and limited productions, not so much for mass production.
@MiguelReynolds-mw2mx3 ай бұрын
Great video! The company and the concept are quite interesting, but what surprise me more was the quality of this video: the script, the editing, and the humour. Congrats!
@HelamanGile8 ай бұрын
This editing is the best I love this video you did a fantastic job on this documentary
@joeybleu663 ай бұрын
we watch a man make parts by hand he is gentle. he goes slowly. he does not drop things he lowers them to the ground gently. we maybe used to another perspective . this stuff is cutting edge great work.
@Darthvanger7 ай бұрын
That texture looks much the 3d-printed parts texture. The process is gonna be refined and we'll see lots of this kind of services in our town. The ability to order any metal part you need is really awesome and boosts creativity and small business. The car companies monopolies are really sad and boring. Back in the days when cars were just starting, there was so much variety and true creative engineering.
@tobyihli94702 ай бұрын
The guy in the beard will be a, “Captain,” of an industry. His company is going to be GIGANTIC. He’s solving a problem many have.
@JamieFisk7 ай бұрын
A few things I can see that would possibly add utility to the process, is a built in induction heater on each arm, a quenching system (coolant, and/or oils for quenching with custom temperature outflow) and a magnetic coil array for manipulating steel magnetically, and/or having multiple contact points for each arm with ferrous "magnetic tools" for the robots to utilize.
@MyBinaryLife3 ай бұрын
all terrible ideas
@nickbassani99083 ай бұрын
You guys just got a new subscriber. This video, these guys, this company just got me SO fired up! I've been reading about this kind of stuff for a while now - "manufacturing" is a big topic this election but there's been an absolute renaissance in American manufacturing in the past 10+ years. The problem is it doesn't involve so many low to mid skilled workers like it used to. That's a problem to be solved, for sure, but people like these guys are building the future and our politicians are talking about competing with China for manufacturing that was old 50 years ago.
@LuisMachado-e7b5 ай бұрын
Thanks!
@spdcrzy7 ай бұрын
For people who have trouble envisioning this, as I first did: imagine that you're a potter with two thumbs, one on each hand, you have the strength of an elephant, and your "clay" is a sheet of INCREDIBLY tough metal alloy.
@spvillano7 ай бұрын
We already do have metal forming and fabrication and assembly robots. This is a small step beyond that, proclaiming non-uniform parts is a good thing because of hand wave. OK, my car fails inspection because of a bad brake, can't pull one from a parts house, gotta special order one to be made. Yay, excellence, exceptionalism, the exceptionalism of the short bus.
@spdcrzy7 ай бұрын
@@spvillano this is different. They're combining cutting-edge materials science with simple, old school trial and error modeling.
@thedubwhisperer21577 ай бұрын
Potters can create a smooth finish though...
@spdcrzy7 ай бұрын
@@thedubwhisperer2157 we are literally in the infancy of roboforming lol. Clay is a LOT more malleable than steel or aluminum sheet. You could easily get a smooth surface finish - their main goal right now is just to get the models physically accurate enough for production. Finishes and surface smoothness is way down the list, and in fact will be a natural byproduct of better forming algorithms.
@nin1ten1do7 ай бұрын
basicly puhs pull 3d modeling on surface
@ironbeagle16103 ай бұрын
this is a good startup. they have an actual good idea behind them and a fully functional version too. these guys are going to see massive success.
@ThisIsToolman8 ай бұрын
This is EXTREMELY interesting technology but it will never evolve into mass production. It will, however, definitely find a niche in one-off, prototyping, or very limited production. I can see Koenigsegg using it. My thought would be that they need to add a tool changer, swapping out end effectors that would progressively take a part from rough to smooth.
@huckleberryfinn65788 ай бұрын
Yeah. It's way too slow and too expensive. When you need a few days or even hours to produce one piece, it will never be as cheap as pressing.
@sneeddeens98957 ай бұрын
it could apply in mass production because of it being distributed system. Like instead of massive highly efficient factory, a lot of small ones and not that efficient, perhaps
@phizc7 ай бұрын
@@sneeddeens9895if you're making millions of a thing, it's always going to be cheaper to make a machine that creates one in a few seconds than thousands of machines that can each create one every several thousand second. One stamping press is expensive, but not more expensive than thousands of robots.
@MH-kj9hh7 ай бұрын
@@sneeddeens9895 You would need a lot, like a lot a lot. A stamping press for big automotive panels runs anywhere from 5-20 strokes per minute, 900 panels in an hour is not a crazy number. Based on "I want 20 of these in 20 days" comment - making like a hood sounds like it takes the better part of a whole day, so even with a generous 4 hours per part estimate you would need 3600 of these machines to match what a single press line can in a typical stamping plant. This will never be useful for mass production, what it will be useful for is prototyping, small batch manufacturing, and super-expensive parts that need exotic materials.
@sneeddeens98957 ай бұрын
@@MH-kj9hh well, the fact that it is, even with generous estimation, 3600 slower in making parts, in itself is not an argument. Because if it is on the other hand would be like x times faster to build and y time faster to pass regulations and what not, then resulting ratio could be 1:1. So i personally think it is feasible for mass production. Also guy in the video was saying it could be built inside city building, so if is true, it probably possible to make it multiple layers. It could also contribute to ratio of 1:1
@hdl72333 ай бұрын
Wow, this will truly be transformational! I love when people don’t limit themselves and get creative!
@nasaeyong8 ай бұрын
kudos for uploading this right after starship4 test launch
@mikelastname7 ай бұрын
This is really exciting. As a maker, I have been thrilled by the ability to now get additive small parts and PCB made by sending in a file and then they arrive in the mail in a couple of weeks. Getting this done for sheet metal will be really nice and foster entirely new industries.
@truepersona68044 ай бұрын
Great for prototyping and creating casts for the final product.
@ryancappo3 ай бұрын
I’m thinking the same thing. Also that car makers need to make plastic body panels like Saturn’s used to have. This could make the forms quickly though.
@varunv.p.71802 ай бұрын
The only things that I can think of, really.... For mass manufacturing, ehhhhh.......
@megairrational7 ай бұрын
Your channel gives me hope for the future! My best wishes to this endeavor
@davidhoracek67588 ай бұрын
Make a fitted suit of full plate armor just from a file. Maybe make it a publicity stunt, but then again, there is a market for those!
@gibrains4 ай бұрын
Everything’s going recursive now ! * AI fixing things using AI, * Robots building other robots, * Automating the automation.
@Hybridog8 ай бұрын
"No I mean it's really heavy" The vast majority of people have no idea how intensely heavy big chunks of metal can be. I've got a 2" diameter stub of stainless roundstock that I use as a meat tenderizer. Two inches around and 2" inches tall and it is shocking how heavy it is to anyone I hand it to. Heavy metal indeed.
@LoganDark43577 ай бұрын
Tungsten cube
@Avaruusmurkku7 ай бұрын
They are not ready for the intensity of their density.
@Johnne0097 ай бұрын
I have a 24k gold meat tenderizer
@LoganDark43577 ай бұрын
@@Johnne009 24k gold _coated_ or 24k gold _only_??
@lcfflc38877 ай бұрын
@@LoganDark4357LOL obviously gold coated.
@FalconDS92 ай бұрын
this is very important tech. with methods like this we can manufacture what we need, when we need it and in only the precise numbers we need. no more very expensive, non-flexible, factories that needs to produce millions of products to pay for itself. products that will be rotting away somewhere because it was already obsolete the moment the factory was completed...
@captaincurd26817 ай бұрын
The metal press is something new to me. Amazingly Awesome 😱
@louisgarcia32357 ай бұрын
Keep getting better. You guys are the future!
@kevmoo7 ай бұрын
You have just the right amount of humor. You are definitely splitting the difference between boring and over the top. Keep it up. I am also hungry
@ze_german29217 ай бұрын
I came across a robot cleaning the floors at Walmart , I hit the E-Stop. I’m taking down one robot down at a time 😂
@douwetjerkstra80427 ай бұрын
Great video. Love the vision of the founder
@santanubanerjee99204 ай бұрын
You are actually building 'Transformers' or functional morphs with robots!This will revolutionize manufacturing.Amazing!How we can use AI and ML to creating rather than disrupting and copy pasting.Great!!!❤
@frankguillen91507 ай бұрын
absolutely mind blowing
@ricosroughnecks12232 ай бұрын
This left me with a ton of questions. What kind of stress is that putting into the metal? Under that stress, how often does that result in damage to the piece? How do all of those stresses react under heat? Does it maintain a homogeneous thickness? How does the quality or grade of metal affect the final product? What are examples of time to completion in relation to size and intricacy. I don’t know, seems super niche and I question durability but I’m also not an expert.
@murrloc18598 ай бұрын
His barber is a robot too btw lol
@nicholaslandolina7 ай бұрын
Nice
@smaggies7 ай бұрын
Technology designing toward the future. Correct topic to discuss and fallow, Outstanding. Big Thanks
@rippingbag7 ай бұрын
Couldn't you put thousands of adjustable "bit heads" in a stamp press and merge your process with traditional stamping? Seems like the best of both worlds.
@crispysocksss7 ай бұрын
Shhhh u
@my-days-co7 ай бұрын
That’s interesting…
@anirudhhhh7 ай бұрын
I think cost will be a big limitation. The bit heads would need to be as tiny as possible, should be able to withstand the stamping pressure and move accurately. Designing something like this would be way more expensive than buying off the shelf robots to do the work. The robot arms provide an easy way to scale up and down the work or part area. Lastly, robot arms can be programmed to handle difficult to stamp metals like titanium. The point is to manufacture bispoke designs much faster and cheaper than a craftsman.
@mikeyjohnson58886 ай бұрын
Tooling and setup costs are factored into manufacturing costs. Thats why things are run in huge batches. A "universal tooling" is a hard sell because while it expands manufacturing capabilities it makes small batches insanely expensive and at that point theres no benefit compared to standard manufacturing.
@FuZZbaLLbee3 ай бұрын
Like an enormous dot Matrix printer
@chadpearson4616 ай бұрын
Manufacturing is an art! Love it!
@mememaster1477 ай бұрын
This isn't blacksmithing, it's panelbeating.
@spdcrzyАй бұрын
Metalworking and blacksmithing only really became separate things after the invention of electricity. Remember, blacksmiths were often also armorers - they did a LOT of panel beating.
@toystorybro3 ай бұрын
I’m so PISSED every damn joke on this clip had me cracking up 😂. I really wanted not to laugh. It definitely told me a lot about my sense of humor. Now that’s top notch production quality!
@caldodge8 ай бұрын
Just as affordable? Maybe for short production runs. For long ones, the cost of hard tooling can be amortized over a large number of units.
@optroncordian7863Ай бұрын
It is called rapid prototyping. This is suitable for small quantities or while designing a product, but is not for mass producing of large quantities. So, there still will be large factories, but some will make room for rapid prototyping plants.
@daveking-sandbox92637 ай бұрын
The dumb jokes don’t make this clip any better, the video is great just like it is.
@BWolf007 ай бұрын
I don't know about that, but 2mins in and I can already tell this video is going to be overproduced. I bet the whole thing could be condensed by 10mins without losing any material information.
@thegoodthebadandtheugly5797 ай бұрын
It is an exciting idea, but also it’s a bit too simple when you don’t delve into the detail of it all.. it took them a lot of small complex innovations to reach where they are right now, and still a lot needs to be done before they fully prove the concept. By the time they do, someone else (likely Elon Musk) will either buy them or will create his own equivalent to blow them out of the water..
@dead_engineer6 ай бұрын
I like the dumb jokes 🫣
@suryakantbrewr3 ай бұрын
Actually they are not dumb 😂😂
@benmaxinm2 ай бұрын
The jokes are actually not that bad 😂
@YoY6646 ай бұрын
The production quality of this video is just brilliant.
@samsuave62547 ай бұрын
I’m not going to point out which one… next clip: I was told you bought this one from eBay loool Excellent editing and storytelling
@p19shelt7 ай бұрын
Ya lol! love FreeThink!
@sceneryj3 ай бұрын
This is fantastic. On a tangent, an interesting thought for discussion would be: in the same way that there are additive manufacturing setups for industry scale projects but also for hobby creators, what does this look like in hobbyist form?
@chem75537 ай бұрын
I watched the Smarter every day video detailing all of this. He does truly incredible work
@xipi45957 ай бұрын
Thank you. Too much fluff on this piece.
@burnerphone72203 ай бұрын
Brilliant! I just came up with a way to do all this with one robot arm. Thanks!
@gopackers24717 ай бұрын
He reacted to a drop of metal like that, guess what kind a boss he is
@HarveyMillstone7 ай бұрын
That and the reaction to his coworkers eBay reference. He's got an "image" to protect rather than just rolling with it and just moving on.
@K-Effect7 ай бұрын
He is much more worried about image than anything, look at the chair he sitting in
@charlieholt18687 ай бұрын
Agreed. I wouldn't work for a guy like this
@Mrtweet817 ай бұрын
Probably comes from his heritage
@3markaw7 ай бұрын
If you say nothing then nothing will improve. Nowadays acting like idiots is somehow to be accepted and praised.
@DarenShipman-s9o2 ай бұрын
Excellent presentation and very compelling content. This really helped me understand the situation better
@jcnash027 ай бұрын
5:05 “This is Michael. No beard.”
@benmcreynolds85817 ай бұрын
This is actually such a genius idea and it has been fantastically achieved thus far. The software & in house creations are very impressive. I really hope we see these advancements take off.
@ManassehDon4 ай бұрын
As an engineer I find this sounds cool. But its slow process, which means it will be expensive, so therefore its suitable for making prototypes only. Its in the same category as 3D printing. Its cool but slow and not for mass production.
@CATANOVA4 ай бұрын
This kind of production would facilitate lightning quick parts to market but not mass manufacture to market.
@pflichtprogramm13 ай бұрын
@@CATANOVA I disagree in case of the car market. The reason? GMP and/or approval procedures will remain a bottleneck, time-wise.
@CATANOVA3 ай бұрын
@@pflichtprogramm1 Hi. In the case of the car market if we are talking about mass manufacture panels and the like then stamping is always going to be the speedier process. When it comes to the bespoke car market and small volume or made to order runs I think the tech would be a very competitive option. One could pretty much make any panel or shape simply by having a building and bolting the robots to the floor and then pressing the go button. In one of my other responses on this video I mentioned custom jet ski hulls with respect to production of stainless moulds. Having done CNC mould work myself I can see a much faster option with this tech than the typical hollowing out of solid material. When it comes to car production and regulations, something which I have no knowledge of, perhaps the tech could be used as a faster route to prototyping for crash testing and similar thus eliminating any potential costly changes with production tooling.
@pflichtprogramm13 ай бұрын
@@CATANOVA Yes, this fast-track early testing makes a lot of sense. I was thinking about the fixed costs of regulation and approval that have to be returned over the number of vehicles produced. Since bespoke designs feature small numbers necessarily, the return (per car) to compensate for these costs (for the series) would be large, wouldn't it?
@pflichtprogramm13 ай бұрын
@@CATANOVA Right now variance is probably large between one piece and another, as with every new manufacturing technique. Might be a nightmare making this GMP conform. Like, you might get a crash test version quickly, but ensuring that any copy behaves similar enough safety-wise would be difficult. When we're talking arts & crafts, it's nice to have unique items, like desks made from natural wood. When it comes to safety and human lives however, legislators demand much tighter variance.
@rightsongsrighttime4 ай бұрын
This video was not only very educational, it was very funny! I'm going to have to watch a few more videos from this channel and probably subscribe.
@yoyo-jc5qg7 ай бұрын
will be good way for robots to make themselves, just 2 machines and code
@tetrabromobisphenol6 ай бұрын
If you actually believe that, then it's because you don't actually know much about industrial robots. They are NOT made from stamped or deepdrawn sheet metal.
@NathanHarrison76 ай бұрын
Awesome video content. The graphics and animations are world-class. Subscribed. And thank you for sharing this start up tech with us. Look forward to seeing how this tech matures.
@wolfgangkranek3767 ай бұрын
Asymmetric Free Form Spinning without a mold.
@MrMaxymoo227 ай бұрын
*Buck
@wolfgangkranek3767 ай бұрын
@@MrMaxymoo22 Sorry, I'm not a native speaker. I dont know this term.
@danielrecon17407 ай бұрын
Around mid nineties in Helsinki University of Technology there was some academic work for similar sheet metal bump processing. Setup was build on 3-axis cnc originally used for woodworking. Obviously using it horizontal and no second manipulator pushing backside. If i remember correctly there was on the underside soft wood or just free space for forming. It was just some basic research on testing usability and for bump manufacturing process. Wasn't part of it so I have no idea of the results and was there any follow-up research done. I would imagine that for small to medium size parts and large production series, stamping is most cost effective and for small series and large parts bump process takes the cake. Instead of two robots pushing against each other it might also work with one robot and a back chamber of liquid and cylinder system to adjust pressure.
@Incommensurableme8 ай бұрын
"I am hungry... When is lunch?" Hahahaha
@jestolmak4869Ай бұрын
Awesome work
@TheRealDagothUr7 ай бұрын
Engineering is about trade offs. High configurability = longer manufacturing. This tech can be good for mvp manufacturing but not mass production
@dannymitchell61317 ай бұрын
So it's perfect for it's intended purpose?
@TheRealDagothUr7 ай бұрын
@@dannymitchell6131 Yeah, but the narration of the video and series in general is about replacement of existing technologies. Creators are using our cognitive bias for their benefit
@dannymitchell61317 ай бұрын
@@TheRealDagothUr Ahh. I see your point. I'd actually seen these guys and their work before...I guess I just don't really consider the actual title anymore.
@TheRealDagothUr7 ай бұрын
@@dannymitchell6131 Danny this was the nicest interaction I've had in a comment section ever. I really appreciate it
@dannymitchell61317 ай бұрын
@@TheRealDagothUr I say that same thing every chance I get (on YT). When people say what I said, it's often read in the worst possible light. If you just assume whatever post is offensive or aggressive, read it one more time but assume the poster is "on the spectrum" or imagine them smiling when they say it...blablabla...communication skills...you get it. I think social media would be much more beneficial if people assumed the best of one another instead of the worst. Cheers!
@jessesmith4383 ай бұрын
This is an adaptation of spin forming. Good application for complex shapes. You just cant build stamps or tooling for certain shapes.
@ChristianBehnke8 ай бұрын
Instead of Send-Cut-Send, it's Send-Form-Send!
@AdvantestInc8 ай бұрын
Roboforming sounds like a game-changer for custom manufacturing. How do you think it will affect job opportunities in the industry?
@tulsaheatersmidstream5 ай бұрын
What an interesting company to keep an eye on.
@thedubwhisperer21577 ай бұрын
A great prototyping tool. The end.
@davepennington35737 ай бұрын
Exactly. Cost per part is WAY higher than stamped parts and when they said otherwise they were LYING.
@MrBluntNose3 ай бұрын
Roboforming vs Stamping is analogous to 3D Printing vs Injection Molding. Both have their places. Very cool technology that will benefit niche/low volume markets.
@chasl36457 ай бұрын
Unbelievable how many great things have spun out of Tesla.
@young2play6 ай бұрын
I can't help but laugh 😂. The voice-over is really stimulating 😂
@shininio8 ай бұрын
Great for (some) prototypes, useless for mass production. Same as 3D printing. It´s very lazy journalism to report this like a huge breakthrough, while in reality is a very fancy, slow and expensive way of doing things, with only a few niche applications.
@samuelbarker7808 ай бұрын
Yep, it’s great if you need a bespoke part in a very particular shape but not good for anything being mass produced
@zachmoyer18498 ай бұрын
its good for "mass production" of lower volume things where the design is constantly evolving so yeah its niche for sure def not for consumer grade applications. But for something like a star link satellite where a few thousand parts are needed and the design is highly likely to change in the next iteration this could make sense.
@aaraspensor7 ай бұрын
Toyota manufactures 2 cars every minute with a lot of formed sheets in each car.
@ulyssis2 ай бұрын
@@zachmoyer1849I second this, the technology here could be used in some high value added area: F1, aviation and personalised manufacturing.
@Hesthegreatest17 ай бұрын
Honestly all they need to do is create a tool head that can over the whole part and smooth over what has been roughed in. Without removing any material. If they do that this could seriously help a lot of manufacturers.
@larrabeetyler3 ай бұрын
0:32 “to keep up with the digital world we need to accelerate the physical world.” Actually no you don’t. That is extremely dangerous thinking. The physical world is real, the digital world is not. We must prioritize real life.
@LucasAveiro-wn8zd3 ай бұрын
Afraid little darling?
@Jonny_7603 ай бұрын
Yet here we on this platform.
@Nexus91183 ай бұрын
That depends on definition of real. The digital world is reflection and product of real world. Money isn't technically real.
@RussiAashiq2 ай бұрын
That's not what he meant
@Baphodintre5 ай бұрын
Dude is a nightmare to be around. He needed like 3 minutes to calm himself in front of media. Behind closed doors, he makes people cry for fun.
@seanomara86417 ай бұрын
So, another guy wants to sit at a desk, not sweat and press an enter key to get work done. I do, however, find this technology facinating. Being a craftsman is a talent and building things that people need crucial for society.
@unskeptable7 ай бұрын
That's the dream yes. Like having infinite energy from nuclear fusion. You want to do unnecessary work ?
@doogs53937 ай бұрын
“I don’t want manufacturering tech in only companies hands, btw our system will cost millions”
@zackcarl78617 ай бұрын
Some Chinese Mfs will steal this technology and make it cheaper
@JoE_Songs3 ай бұрын
this whole video is so funny on a second level!! 😂😂 well done guys, well done.
@tommolldev7 ай бұрын
You can’t call yourself a former SpaceX engineer if you haven’t slept with Elon Musk at least once
@Helixur7 ай бұрын
Just cause you earn your living on your knees and elbows, doesn't mean that's everyone else's favourite hobby smh
@proftrees7 ай бұрын
Manufacturing as a Service, exciting stuff
@jimmyconway80255 ай бұрын
Pretty amazing! These guys are going to be successful! Smart asf!
@jacked-6662 ай бұрын
So many people focused on the immediate situation or task at hand that they are unable to consider broader perspectives or potential future consequences. Humans putting humans out of work, and they say it with enthusiasm.
@sohailzaman2876Ай бұрын
they have spend 1000s of hours to develope post proccessor , the study of 1000 faild movements creates a one right movement, and they faced diffrent tensiles,diffrent material behavours andsuccessfully created an integrated system.good job
@stephanosrey3 ай бұрын
The shaping tip should be more of a tri-tip end. That way one side is pushing on a plane for more accurate shaping. If you can change the extrusion of each tip head it can change the angle of pressure to a plane. you can apply pressure diagonally and would be more accurate.
@danishkhan13 ай бұрын
They are doing great job ❤
@Lucas_Asher7 ай бұрын
This feels like an infomercial for their next funding round lol
@Themosthatedman7 ай бұрын
It's a perfect solution for car manufacturers. They can produce 10 cars per year or they can buy 1 million robot arms for mass production.
@GaminHasard7 ай бұрын
how are these 3d animations so so good??
@benmaxinm2 ай бұрын
I get it. Custom making parts that can be scanned and done within a day. Love it!
@pjp135793 ай бұрын
The only thing I don't see how this can compete is in speed. Standard presses can output several parts a minute, while doing it this way may take minutes per part. Prolly not meant to the mass production market.
@pcigrock58743 ай бұрын
Electricity using on press is might be less than running robot arms for a period of time. It only could used for custom parts and complex form shapes