Why The US Military Spends Millions Reverse Engineering Their Own Planes

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Jeremy Fielding

Jeremy Fielding

Күн бұрын

Пікірлер: 409
@phillupson8561
@phillupson8561 10 ай бұрын
I used to love taking stuff apart as a kid, my mum would give me broken things, she said she was amazed when one day she gave me a broken VCR and a few days later I gave it back to her working. When kids see enough items over time they'll begin to get an intuition at an age where they're a sponge.
@JuniorJunison
@JuniorJunison 10 ай бұрын
Exactly, I loved taking things apart as a kid too. I just loved figuring out how they worked, and like you said, give us enough broken things and we'll start handing you back fixed things.
@DavidLee-cw6ci
@DavidLee-cw6ci 10 ай бұрын
My mum used to do the same thing with my brother until he got electrocuted by a capacitor. I miss him.
@nasonguy
@nasonguy 10 ай бұрын
Dude my mom can attest to how much I loved taking apart every electronic thing in the house. As far as I remember I had a 100% success rate of getting it back together and it still worked. We were well off enough to have a VCR that my parents would let me touch, but I LOVED taking apart 4 track tape players and radios. So much mechanical and electronic complexity melded together.
@shantanupawar3609
@shantanupawar3609 10 ай бұрын
​@@DavidLee-cw6ciwhat 😢
@orderlyhippo1569
@orderlyhippo1569 10 ай бұрын
You must have the knack
@Toastmaster_5000
@Toastmaster_5000 10 ай бұрын
As someone who also broke my toys and took everything apart as a child: I strongly relate to Jeremy and support his notion of letting your kids figure things out. I would even go as far as to say give them something broken with the challenge of fixing it or figuring out what's wrong with it.
@Sikorsky66
@Sikorsky66 10 ай бұрын
preferably with the capacitors pre-discharged
@Perennial_Curiosity
@Perennial_Curiosity 10 ай бұрын
​@@Sikorsky66No need to bubblewrap their world. Just show them what a capacitor is and what it can do. Then they will be careful.
@kkrobertson1
@kkrobertson1 10 ай бұрын
@@Sikorsky66 LOL!!
@conorstewart2214
@conorstewart2214 10 ай бұрын
@@Perennial_Curiosity making sure they are relatively safe when handing them power electronics to poke about with is not bubble wrapping their world. It only takes one mistake to have life long consequences.
@zenginellc
@zenginellc 10 ай бұрын
@@Sikorsky66 Good god, what are you giving them?!... A microwave?!...
@simonilett998
@simonilett998 10 ай бұрын
I was one of those kids, I was always curious how things worked so I'd pull things apart to find out. Consequently, a few things didn't go back together, but I learned a lot from it. Now nearly 48, I actually still have one or two those things I pulled apart as a kid, still in pieces in a box in the cupboard somewhere waiting to be put back together one day. Today I'm a self employed mechanical/electrical/electronic repair and dignostic tech covering many industries, and have several related trades under my belt. Definitely doesn't hurt to nurture their interest when the kids are young😁👍
@Orca_Blacksail
@Orca_Blacksail 10 ай бұрын
After watching ur vids I was able to make a space ship from a treadmill. Dirt cheap. Thanks Jeremy!
@charlesmckinley29
@charlesmckinley29 10 ай бұрын
I work for a company that rebuilds mostly medium voltage breakers and switchgear. Taking LOTS of pictures is a must because most of the time drawings and wiring diagrams just aren’t available. Thankfully the company has been doing it for a long time and has built up a lot of information in house. It may be an interesting video for you.
@ottodidakt3069
@ottodidakt3069 10 ай бұрын
As a sparkie, I'd like to see that !
@ConnorHolland
@ConnorHolland 10 ай бұрын
It's a great skill to have. Many of the 'Broken' electronics I've seen have just had one wire come loose, so when you solder it back on, everyone thinks you're a genius
@Just_Sara
@Just_Sara 10 ай бұрын
Seeing your shop tools made out of salvaged parts is RIGHT up my alley! I'm a gal who loves to make things out of things I already have. I don't have a very orderly memory, so taking things apart is about as far as I get with things and getting them back together would not be easy, but nevertheless I found myself in my parent's garage more often the older I got. Some of my best memories of my Dad are when I was working in there, and he would just end up in there with me, both of us quietly working away, or him showing me how something worked. Thanks for reminding me to remember him!
@georgedreisch2662
@georgedreisch2662 10 ай бұрын
Having worked on military aircraft, the biggest issue, is dealing with subsequent changes, MWO’s (modification work order), that deviate from original plans, schematics, and manuals, usually applied by civilian contractors, and resulting incontinuities in the installations, aircraft to aircraft. This resulted in daily conundrums maintaining military aircraft.
@Skank_and_Gutterboy
@Skank_and_Gutterboy 9 ай бұрын
Fact is, OEMs come and go and they don't always sell their data when they get bought out or go out of business. I've had a few contractors utterly abandon their product with no explanation. Honeywell has been doing this a lot lately, which tells me that their company might be in trouble (or at least their military division). I saw this happening with Goodrich, was told that I was crazy, and within two years they were gone.
@arthurswanson3285
@arthurswanson3285 8 ай бұрын
@@Skank_and_Gutterboy Sounds like the government needs to start adding supplier contract clauses to provide revelant documentation in those circumstances.
@Skank_and_Gutterboy
@Skank_and_Gutterboy 8 ай бұрын
@@arthurswanson3285 For commodity items, that doesn't work. There's a lot of very complex components in mechanical systems. Even if you had drawings, just throwing them to a manufacturer and telling them, "Here, build this," would be a major nightmare because a new source isn't going to know its quirks, how to troubleshoot it, and would have to spend millions just to produce a test stand that will test it. Just building it isn't good enough, it has to pass acceptance testing before it can be sold to the government. If you just threw that to a random contractor, you'd be waiting years to get a decent product out of them and a good portion of your fleet would sit grounded-awaiting-parts. They would have to invest so much time and money to get anything out the door that it would quickly become cost-prohibitive to them, they'd walk away and say, "We're out, we'll take the penalty for defaulting on this contract. It's less headache and cost than producing this pig, this workload is bleeding our division dry."
@NEW_INSITE
@NEW_INSITE 10 ай бұрын
Ever since I was a little kid I've enjoyed taking things apart. I used to take my toys apart and finally got to where I could put them back together. Even though I'm retired now, I still enjoy finding the odd bit of Machinery or electronics and taking them apart. I often Salvage them for electronic components such as transistors capacitors and potentiometers and save them for future projects. Thank you for your video take care bye
@BrilliantDesignOnline
@BrilliantDesignOnline 10 ай бұрын
Same here. Taking apart is good, but doing it non-destructively so it can be re-assembled is key. Today, I can take anything apart, usually without damage, and put it back together again; yesterday's project while I was cleaning it, was a Oticon Ruby2 rechargeable $2500 hearing aid, now clean AND still works 🙂. I was one of those kids: sewing machines, power tools, lawn mowers, bikes, boats, cars and now I am a design engineer.
@oliverer3
@oliverer3 10 ай бұрын
This is why I have a grudge against whoever invented ultrasonic welding. Ultrasonically welded plastic cases are the only thing I've yet to figure out a reliable way to take apart without damage.
@beachboardfan9544
@beachboardfan9544 10 ай бұрын
First time I learned about capacitors, I was 12, and took apart my parents desktop monitor, it wasn't plugged in but I still got one hell of a shock! 😅
@wrongtown
@wrongtown 10 ай бұрын
Heh damn I just left a comment about discharging caps 😅
@jwhite1016aol
@jwhite1016aol 10 ай бұрын
Doesn't seem like it was that long ago when there was only 10k of us subbed to this channel now you're almost to 1 million subs. Much deserved my man.
@checkedoutchris
@checkedoutchris 10 ай бұрын
I've always appreciated your laid-back attitude and seemingly effortless communication style. You make it look easy while communicating complex and challenging concepts. I know that behind all that is years of education, training, and experience. Well done!
@hanlines
@hanlines 10 ай бұрын
I agree, Jeremy is spectacular at communicating and the King of Chill!
@sjsomething4936
@sjsomething4936 10 ай бұрын
Also, his passion for the subject really comes through in how he speaks, and as a viewer you can tell that he really is into his subject. It makes his videos very engaging.
@samTollefson
@samTollefson 10 ай бұрын
That's great Jeremy! I was one of those kids, recently I bought a $2 broken electric pole saw at a garage sale it needed a new chain, and oil lines, and was missing the bar tensioner. I had a polished 6mm steel rod from an old printer I had scrounged that was the right diameter and was able to drill, tap, and make the new part. Yay, the saw works great now! $11 total cost.
@simonilett998
@simonilett998 10 ай бұрын
Electric pole saw, that needed fuel lines??😁
@samTollefson
@samTollefson 10 ай бұрын
Thank you for catching that! I meant the oil lines for the automatic oiler.@@simonilett998
@Roy_Tellason
@Roy_Tellason 10 ай бұрын
@@simonilett998 Oil lines is what he wrote. Even an electric chain saw needs bar oil...
@simonilett998
@simonilett998 10 ай бұрын
@@Roy_Tellason Sure, oil lines makes sense, however 12 hours ago when I wrote my reply, it said fuel lines. Given that it now says (edited) at the top of the text, I assume he edited it before you read it😁👍
@robinmorritt7493
@robinmorritt7493 10 ай бұрын
Me too! I took apart my toys, couldn't put them back together again and threw them behind the shed. I'm 72 years old now and I've been told my patent application is due to be approved on Nov 8th.
@ferrelljohns545
@ferrelljohns545 10 ай бұрын
Love the channel. Very informative and easily understood. Keep up the excellent work.
@QuintBUILDs
@QuintBUILDs 10 ай бұрын
Excellent point about scans not being the same as a part model. So few people know this!
@edmarks688
@edmarks688 10 ай бұрын
My dad was an electrician and used to bring home all kinds of things for me to take apart. I still enjoy it today and watch for anyone giving something away or things sitting by the curb.
@SirCarlosMusicBMI
@SirCarlosMusicBMI 10 ай бұрын
You’re an awesome person and it shows. I wish that I grew up with a father like you. Blessings to you and your family, Carlos ✝️🙏❤️😊🇺🇸
@TinyMaths
@TinyMaths 9 ай бұрын
Yep, as a lot of people mention here; I was one of those 'take everything apart' kids. It's like an unstoppable curiosity. I didn't really grow up with purchased toys; we made our own when I was very young, and then in my teenage years I gravitated towards opening up old radios, VCR's etc. I didn't know what I was doing and was hardly ever able to fix stuff. Now, in my early 50's I'm getting into Arduino and basic mechatronics (after spending a couple of years learning to code), and am getting that child-like enthusiasm back again; but this time I'm gaining the knowledge to support the curiosity.
@just_saw_dust
@just_saw_dust 10 ай бұрын
Taking things apart and breaking them is the how I learned to repair them. Once you can repair something, you can modify, improve or just make your own thing. I made my off grid home, workshop, tools and so much more from recycled, reclaimed, repurposed, re-invented, materials. If I hadn't been born 30 yrs too early I would have done so much more but the resources and information was so much harder to find in the 70s, 80s and 90s. Nowadays I can research, design, calculate, redesign, order and build without leaving my home. And if I get stuck on something there's literally thousands of people who can help me within a few hours of asking a question. When I was a kid, most questions I asked just annoyed people because they didn't understand what I was asking let alone have an answer.
@Roy_Tellason
@Roy_Tellason 10 ай бұрын
I too have been taking things apart since I was a kid, and yeah, that did start with toys, and progressed on from there. In those days you could pick up old TV sets on the street. I'm still at it, at 72. :-)
@brianm.595
@brianm.595 10 ай бұрын
My man Jeremy, you never let me down.
@harryhamilton298
@harryhamilton298 10 ай бұрын
Great job explaining one of the major maintenance problems the military faces today. And great job relating it back to your own work. Keep it up.
@hejasverigeee
@hejasverigeee 10 ай бұрын
The used 'window' in a washing machine is actually a salad bowl or an oven-safe bowl in disguise. 😎 Greetings from Stockholm Sweden Europe 🇺🇸🇸🇪❤️
@dalsbury1979
@dalsbury1979 10 ай бұрын
Very interesting. Never knew this sort of facility existed, but it makes tons of sense that it would. My 4 year old son takes the wheels off all of his toys. Drives me crazy. I like your idea. I’ll start having him take broken things apart.
@evanlane1690
@evanlane1690 10 ай бұрын
Honey!!! He dropped a new video!!! 🎉🎉🎉🎉
@margaretpollard2179
@margaretpollard2179 10 ай бұрын
Love your enthusiasm! It is incredibly infectious!
@PeterLee-zn3jl
@PeterLee-zn3jl 10 ай бұрын
Curiosity and understanding...recycled , repaired and rehabbed...inspection for use , abuse and imorovement..ingenious construction from old...and use of component in a new way ...bravo
@pibyte
@pibyte 10 күн бұрын
The B1 is one of my favorite aircrafts. Such an incredible piece of engineering.
@joelance3327
@joelance3327 10 ай бұрын
Wow, those hand drawing video. Definitely bring back memories…. You had to really love this profession to get into that doing my days of hand drawings
@owenmayes2128
@owenmayes2128 10 ай бұрын
Thank you Jeremy. Your love and enthusiasm for what you do is positively infectious. 👍🏾
@W1RMD
@W1RMD 10 ай бұрын
Everything about aviation is SO secretive, right down to not disclosing ANY info on the location of RCAG sites!
@grottyboots
@grottyboots 10 ай бұрын
Yes indeed! Let the kids take anything apart. Show 'em how to be safe, how to use a few tools, and let them at it. Taking things apart is as fun as putting things together. Cheers!
@cloeducationtv
@cloeducationtv 10 ай бұрын
Thats amazing how they scan large parts like that and informative video..
@thomaswilkerson9961
@thomaswilkerson9961 10 ай бұрын
Mom told me I started taking apart everything in the house around 6 years old. 53 years later I still haven't stopped. Burry me with a screwdriver just in case.
@nicholasyoungers2624
@nicholasyoungers2624 10 ай бұрын
It’s a cool place for sure! I’m an Engineer with Hyspeco and get to work with them on hydraulic systems
@magfal
@magfal 10 ай бұрын
We have a policy in my house: anything big and/or repairable that's broken gets investigated together with the kids as long as it's safe enough. It's only disposed of if repair is not practically possible. If we can, the kids are involved in the repair work to hopefullly adopt a good perspective and some skills. We also design repair parts in openscad together and print them on my 3d printer.
@efeilaz
@efeilaz 10 ай бұрын
This modeling is very important when working with planes defined by hand drawings. Hand drawings often have some issues such as drafters trying to use as few veiws as possible so they don't have to redraw the part too many times and thus craming in as many little details as possible into every view. This can lead to cluttered drawings, which are tolerable untill the drawings are later digitized into a resolution so bad that it makes hard to tell 5 from 6 in some places. Also, sometimes there are mistakes in complex parts, such as some features not getting drawn in every view they should be drawn in (this can cause quite the headache when trying to understand complex internal geometry). However, this is not to say modern computer drawings are necessarily better. Due to additional veiws being only a mouse click away, modern drawings tend to scatter numerous views and cross sections across multiple pages with little ryme, reason, or forethought. Oh that feature is dimensioned in veiw AJ on page 6, which is a cross section of view BB, which is on page 3, which is itself defined on page 2 as a ... (I've personally seen this go 5 veiw layers deep on a single part). With modern drawings it can be a guessing game as to where any particular detail is defined and where in the world the drafter decied to put a particular veiw. Ultimately both modern and older drawings tend to have flaws that make them harder to decipher due to the pressures to reducing the time and effort engineers spend making them.
@christianmontagx8461
@christianmontagx8461 10 ай бұрын
After 60 Years there is often no hand drawing left anymore :) Rotten away over time.
@kkuenzel56
@kkuenzel56 10 ай бұрын
Great Video Jeremy! That's how I got started over 60 years ago. I got a tool belt with real metal tools for Christmas when I was in Kindergarten. I didn't become an Engineer but a Dealership technician for 30 years. I took a lot of things apart, repaired them , and put them back together.
@kencobbley5548
@kencobbley5548 10 ай бұрын
Recently removed, cleaned, reassembled, reinstalled the 4 carbs in a 1986 Honda Magna. If I had not taken a ton of pictures, it would still be in pieces today. Very complicated with a lot of parts and linkages. Photos are a must.
@appliancedude63
@appliancedude63 10 ай бұрын
I been taking things apart and putting them back together for 48 years. Tinkering is my favorite thing to do.
@PhG1961
@PhG1961 10 ай бұрын
Tearing apart, salvaging parts! That's exactely what I've been doing for several decades. You have no idea what valueable parts there are inside (large) laser printers/copiers, washing machines, cars, dish washers, etc... Excellent video!
@BrilliantDesignOnline
@BrilliantDesignOnline 10 ай бұрын
It makes me SICK seeing the stuff that is thrown away, especially considering the cost of all the perfectly good components within if you had to buy them new.
@PhG1961
@PhG1961 10 ай бұрын
@@BrilliantDesignOnline Indeed! On the other hand... I've expanded my workshop already twice and have now reached them maximum which is legally admitted. If only I could afford a small wharehouse... ;-)
@Roy_Tellason
@Roy_Tellason 10 ай бұрын
Actually I think he has a pretty good idea...
@PhG1961
@PhG1961 10 ай бұрын
@@Roy_Tellason I defenately need a (small) wharehouse...
@jml_53
@jml_53 2 ай бұрын
Let then take it apart! Absolutely! You got my sub right there. I remember disassembling my dad's old lawn mower. No digital camera back then, so reassembly didn't go so well. But I sure learned a lot.
@ericcox6764
@ericcox6764 9 ай бұрын
I remembered my mom cutting the power cord off of many old appliances and letting me disassemble them. I learned so much about how things work by doing that.
@christinehill8326
@christinehill8326 10 ай бұрын
I totally love your channel ❤️ Your knowledge and presentation and overall totally awesomeness is always worth watching and subscribing to. I wish I could get my family to understand that parts are important enough to keep around 😂❤
@russellanderson3901
@russellanderson3901 10 ай бұрын
This example problem with the plane is exacerbated by the gov't contracting process. Intellectual Property and data rights all cost extra since the company making the item has assigned a value to allowing the gov't to have the information tgat describes the parts and/or how the parts are produced. It is a fine line the gov't and the contractor try to strike between giving the gov't all the information and the contractor retaining as much as possible to ensure the company stays as profitable as possible. Great video, as always.
@Raggzzaug11
@Raggzzaug11 9 ай бұрын
I wish I had had a father like you growing up. I have been taking things apart since childhood and most of the time getting them back together and fixed or working better. lol
@Omri.Collects
@Omri.Collects 10 ай бұрын
You’ve such great content. I learned so much from dissembling things when i was a child. My drive to know how something worked, helped to make me the engineer I am today.
@colbertbd
@colbertbd 10 ай бұрын
Awesome! At the beginning of the 'vid lock downs my youngest was climbing the walls. I had a non-functioning HP scanner/printer (wouldn't scan because it ran out of ink... talk about a lame business) that I decided wasn't worth purchasing ink for. I tasked my child to take the thing apart (to get the motors and anything else that might be fun). He loved it!
@hellzbellz1234
@hellzbellz1234 9 ай бұрын
super duper related to this, my dad bought me and my brother a whole are to take apart when we were 5, has definitely stayed an interest throughout my life
@jonanderson5137
@jonanderson5137 10 ай бұрын
My little brother would take things apart and I would put them back together. Encouraging curiosity is great, rewarding problem solving is important too. Both are very valuable skills.
@Slotcarking
@Slotcarking 10 ай бұрын
Took son to junkyards at age 15 after buying him a wrecked 94 Integra in order to remove fenders, hood & front end to rebuild his 1st car. Took 6 months of sweat equity. Fast fwd a decade later & he’s designing stuff at SpaceX but interned at Tesla Design while in college. Lesson to other parents - Let them rebuild their first car. Don’t ever give them anything.
@carscoffee5263
@carscoffee5263 10 ай бұрын
You should your subscribers how to tear down and harvest component's on PCB boards for recyclable precious metals like gold, copper, aluminum, titanium etc.. Not to mention all the high voltage start/run capacitors, fuses, transformers, transistor mosfets.
@mxcollin95
@mxcollin95 10 ай бұрын
Wow that’s a crazy, crazy way to document and repair old aircraft. By the way, did you ask them if they’ve gotten a chance to reverse any UFOs yet??? Lol! Please do a follow up video there when that happens! 👍
@Friedbrain11
@Friedbrain11 10 ай бұрын
I used to take things apart too when I got the chance so I could see how they worked. Putting them back together was usually no big deal but it was boring. Once I figured out how something worked I didn't really want to have anything else to do with it unless I got an idea to try and make it work better. Glad your curiosity led you to Utube though. It is a joy to watch you do your thing.
@999knives
@999knives 10 ай бұрын
Loved this video, probably the best justification of digital twinning I've seen
@TotallyGlitch
@TotallyGlitch 9 ай бұрын
I used to do this kind of work at a different base. It was one of my favorite jobs i ever had.
@injoelsgarage3934
@injoelsgarage3934 10 ай бұрын
Jeremy thanks for the ride brother that was very interesting!
@turnipsucks6416
@turnipsucks6416 5 ай бұрын
You're just fun to hear and watch as you explain your passion!
@hanlines
@hanlines 10 ай бұрын
I want to share a funny story from my earliest days of tinkering. I got a nice RC car for Christmas from Radio Shack as a kid. I believe it was the year nineteen hundred eighty-eight. It seems so long ago spelling it out haha. I'm sure it was a significant purchase for my mom at that time. The first night I had it in my room alone, I took the engine out. My goal was to make a propeller engine, but I didn't make it to the propeller. I ended up breaking it by making long power leads and sticking them in the wall socket. It was over quick, with a blue flash, a loud pop, and the smell of burnt electronics in my dark room. Thankfully, the breaker tripped, and I learned a good lesson. The experiment earned me a good butt spanking from my mother using her go-to item, the fly swatter! The toy was not ruined for me; I enjoyed learning how things like the steering worked. I never got another engine for the car, but I had a lot of fun with it even without an engine. Fast-forward to today; I'm still disassembling things and enjoy collecting scrap electronics and components. I just got my first Raspberry Pi.
@tyronefrielinghaus3467
@tyronefrielinghaus3467 10 ай бұрын
You're so enthusiastic.... Great....
@icepick_method3439
@icepick_method3439 10 ай бұрын
I recently acquired a used cerac 2 dental cnc Mill from University surplus for $40 for the express purpose of taking it apart and seeing what was inside. German made, Japanese and Swiss stepper motors, American made coolant pump, a bunch of L298n motor drivers, etc. 95% of it was assembled using only 2 metric screws sizes, built like a brick, very impressive.
@TheGarrison89
@TheGarrison89 10 ай бұрын
Love watching your videos Jeremy !
@rsc4peace971
@rsc4peace971 10 ай бұрын
Just an incredibly interesting video for various reasons. We (I mean tinkerers like us) are curious to know how and why things work or eager to repurpose salvaged parts. I am like the many who broke just about every toy or gadget after only a few days of playing with them to find out what makes it tick. Certainly that helped me to be able to fix just about everything later in my life. Anyone can learn a lot from your videos as they are very thorough and interesting not to mention very useful
@Alacritous
@Alacritous 10 ай бұрын
I used to work at an electronics recycling company. We used to tear down Xerox machines under contract and there are MASSIVE amounts of reusable parts in them. We'd do other stuff as well that came in from assorted asset management contracts. Machines of all sorts and sizes. I got very good at spotting how to take things apart. Motors, power supplies, steel rods from printers and scanners, electronic components and on and on. Just your average multifunction printer/scanner/fax has several stepper motors, position sensors, a power supply that may or may not be a seperate component. I have a 36 volt DC power supply that I pulled from an Epson multifunction printer that is running a variable power supply on my bench. There's SO much that can be reused in electronics and appliances these days if you know what to look for.
@StephenTack
@StephenTack 9 ай бұрын
I recommend taking apart old projectors (both 3LCD and DLP), they have a lot of fun (magic looking) components inside, and lot's of fans. Cheers!
@CHAZAGE
@CHAZAGE 10 ай бұрын
JF, this maybe one of your best Vids ever...or certainly in the Top 10! Mega interesting! You helped me to learn something today....and as my family will attest...that ain't easy!😀
@G5Hohn
@G5Hohn 10 ай бұрын
I was stationed at Dyess in the 1990s and have wrenched on the aircraft in the thumbnail. Thanks for the nostalgia.
@anditgoesneat11
@anditgoesneat11 4 ай бұрын
I'm watching your videos.. and as I age, I keep realizing how I have the basics to be an engineer, besides the knack to be an engineer. Wishing I took this route instead of business. Getting curious and trying to find answers more as I age.
@lowkey213
@lowkey213 10 ай бұрын
4:24 that pinup is 🔥 death hand overhead
@ArvinMistry-bs1jx
@ArvinMistry-bs1jx 9 ай бұрын
Very excited I love challenging Electrical, Electronics,Software, and Macanical Practical work, Thank you Excellent explain
@EngineerMikeF
@EngineerMikeF 10 ай бұрын
Check out Ian Davis who used 3D scan to make a prosthetic hand socket. The point cloud- was not perfect because a hand stump changes slightly volumetricaly as the scanner rotates around the hand. He also need to adjust the model for a bit of compression on his hand/wrist stump for a solid fit for strength of the prosthetic in grasping & manipulating objects. Definitely reasons that scan & go doesn't produce a true fitting replica
@charlesmckinley29
@charlesmckinley29 10 ай бұрын
“Footless Jo” has done a few videos on having new prosthetics made.
@wrongtown
@wrongtown 10 ай бұрын
Maybe a minor caveat but I think it's important if anyone is going to take stuff apart which includes electronics; you've got to know how to recognise and safely discharge capacitors 😅
@scottcates
@scottcates 10 ай бұрын
I use my tongue.
@hughmaseko9780
@hughmaseko9780 8 ай бұрын
​@@scottcatesIf you did that with a fully-charged capacitors,you would not be commenting right now.
@rogermccaslin5963
@rogermccaslin5963 10 ай бұрын
My mom used to tell a story about me when I was 4 years old. I took apart her nearly new Mixmaster (something that was a real splurge for her because we didn't have a lot of money and it was fairly expensive). She was so mad and threatened me with extreme bodily harm if I didn't get it put back together. Well, long story short, I did get it put back together with only one leftover screw. Thing worked for another 30 years, even without that screw. In my adult life, I became a boat builder and designer and later, a composite product designer for a telecom company so maybe Jeremy is on to something.
@davidbrookes8470
@davidbrookes8470 7 ай бұрын
I used to love taking things apart also. I remember taking my small toolkit on-board a BOAC Trident ( before security checks in those day's). I don't know why some of the elderly passengers were nervous? Lol
@johnsharples6641
@johnsharples6641 10 ай бұрын
To say "I was one of those kids" would be a gross understatement. At 84 I still am one of those kids. I still get to pull things apart and find out what's wrong with them. Most of my younger friends, don't have too many older ones, bring stuff to me to see if it can be resurrected. I love being one of those kids. I have watched a few of your videos and would like to thank you for telling it like it is. Thank you. John
@halfbubbleout
@halfbubbleout 10 ай бұрын
I hope you enjoyed your visit to Wichita!
@thomaswilkerson9961
@thomaswilkerson9961 10 ай бұрын
You always inspire me to expand my abilities. Thank you
@hgbugalou
@hgbugalou 10 ай бұрын
I was also a disassembler as a kid (sometimes to my parents dismay). I still remember when I completely dissembled my bike down to individual components. My dad day it and just shook his head. 🤣 He never got on me too bad though because he knew I was learning things.
@geraldstephens8791
@geraldstephens8791 10 ай бұрын
Yes,yes,yes! Now that's the content i have been missing.
@billymania11
@billymania11 9 ай бұрын
Most of the jigs used to build the warbirds are scraped or lost at some point. In other cases, the dimensions of smaller components are unknown. It used to be the planes were put into boneyards and slowly rotted away. With modern technology, the warbirds can be refitted and made air-worthy once again. It's really amazing. This scanning process has been taking place for a couple of decades now. The Airforce has been pulling B-52's out of the boneyard in Arizona and putting them back into service.
@VernonSwanepoel
@VernonSwanepoel 10 ай бұрын
Wow, great channel. I love the educational slant you take.
@MrTXForester
@MrTXForester 10 ай бұрын
In the podcast Bringing Back Bronco they talk about scanning the Gen1 Broncos and how far out of symmetry they were because they were made back in the hand drawn days and interpreted by machinist and builders. How they had to clean up and redraw to get good info they could design off of.
@RazorRoo1989
@RazorRoo1989 9 ай бұрын
I love doing what ur doing. As a Kid my Grandmom called me Tinker cause all i did was Tinkering. I fix her fan at 5rs old among anything i was alot to do and put it back. Im a mechanic today and like u i can fix almost anything. Kinda like a jack of all trades. I race RC cars as u can see on my profile i have to do alot what ur doing addind power making it faster with different spurs and pinions. I love doing that gotta be quick and mcGiver like. Lol keep putting this context out so informal. Thank Fielding.
@danapatelzick594
@danapatelzick594 10 ай бұрын
Reverse engineering a part. It's one thing to duplicare geometry, but heat treatment, surface coating, all those things that go into a functional part. That is one thing about counterfeit parts, they may look correct but you have no idea if they are truly functional. The process you show will provide the 3D model as well as the technology (from the drawings and other documents) so you don't have to worry that your vehicle will horribly fail. Thanks for a well thought out video.
@gde90
@gde90 9 ай бұрын
MacGyver in reverse. Lol. I saw the show for the first time love it I love the idea of suggesting adults put broken appliances tools toys etc. in the box so little kids boys and girls are encouraged to play with it take it apart. Love it
@user-jv8qs8qd1l
@user-jv8qs8qd1l 10 ай бұрын
Very interesting and informative. Well done
@lukasethan6429
@lukasethan6429 9 ай бұрын
Wow! Thats where I used to go. Thats awesome you went there.
@anthonyortiz5479
@anthonyortiz5479 8 ай бұрын
Man I wish you lived in Dallas and you were my neighbor I would have a lot of fun taking things apart as I did when I was a kid and still a kid heart heart
@eliporter3980
@eliporter3980 10 ай бұрын
As a kid I always liked opening stuff and taking it apart too. Fast forward 40 years and I'm a cyber security consultant. I got into tech just because I thought it would be cool to build my own computer lol
@RayMrRobert
@RayMrRobert 10 ай бұрын
Undoubtedly you are brilliant. Kudos
@slowerpicker
@slowerpicker 10 ай бұрын
What a treat! A great video, and a passionate subject for you.
@stevenbrowningsr1144
@stevenbrowningsr1144 10 ай бұрын
Reminds me of the early '90's when I got my first introduction to 3D modeling. We were working with oilfield production xmas trees and production manifold equipment to be installed and operated at 2300 feet under the Gulf of Mexico. The tolerances were not nearly as accurate as they are today and we actually did a live surface test of some of the equipment to confirm the interfaces and manipulations of the installation. Good thing as we found a major issue with a flow line attachment that would not have cleared a flange on the manifold. Saved us several millions of dollars and paid fully for the surface test.
@TheVoidSinger
@TheVoidSinger 10 ай бұрын
I imagine NIARs process also gives them a wealth of information on stress warping and buckling, giving them targets to update the part requirements and tolerances, and even suggest stress relief changes that will improve the wear time.
@EitriBrokkr
@EitriBrokkr 10 ай бұрын
I'd be way more abt to believe that's the sole reason. Unless they are reverse engineering other countries aircraft. Otherwise his explanation is extremely fishy...or the biggest waste of tax dollars I've ever heard of.
@TheVoidSinger
@TheVoidSinger 10 ай бұрын
Don't underestimate it. Having built things from blueprint, and from CAD, the latter is infinitely easier to both understand and to translate into machining workflows for anything but trivial parts. Being able to see the part not just in it's finality, but also within the environment that it lives in, and how it connects (never mind the ease of finding said part) is a game changer on so many levels. It pulls design manufacture and maintenance tighter together, and lowers the skill bar for all three
@EitriBrokkr
@EitriBrokkr 10 ай бұрын
@@TheVoidSinger They went to the moon with slide rules. The only point you're making is exemplifying the incompetencies plaguing these professions.
@stevenhughes1254
@stevenhughes1254 10 ай бұрын
you are great. being able to design on your own terms is important.
@richardbrobeck2384
@richardbrobeck2384 10 ай бұрын
this is a Cool video Jeremy and as a kid my folks allowed me to take stuff apart too. I still do as an adult .
@klrmoto
@klrmoto 10 ай бұрын
Thanks for making this video. Very interesting.
@CoopKeith1
@CoopKeith1 10 ай бұрын
I've suggested this idea to my current company that I work with now. It is frustrating how slow the process is.
@erniecamhan
@erniecamhan 10 ай бұрын
Love your channel 👍🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿
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