Amazing isn't enough. 99 percent of the population will never understand just how amazing that place is and what is being done there Thank you for sharing. G W
Your right. You would never see their list of parts laying around a Chinese machine shop. I was glad to see this, American enginuity is still alive. I do business with a lot of well equipt machine shops but you don't see this well rounded set up in any of them. Back in the seventies, to be a machinist was a very prestiges trade. before CNC, to be a machinist people knew how to scrape, they knew metallurgy and were engineers. A ten year machinist had more knowledge in their head than a doctor and it was known generally in the population, we made the world and still today anything the world knows as civilization came from right here. It doesn't stop at planes cars and TV's, its everything, a person can just wrap thjeir head around that one for a while, and it is everything, still as of today. CNC equipment dummied up the industry a little and also made those jobs easy to export to china, as bill clinton paraded the GATE areement in in 1996 and thus free trade with china began to rape the American job market. I better stop there or I'll get carried away on the wrong subject LOL. You are completely right, most people, even many machinist today, don't understand the cool factor in that shop. This tell me a lot about you. You would have to know a thing or two yourself:)
I can't believe that people are complaining about the audio and video, this is not a tour at your local museum where crowds are coming through all the time. We are extremely lucky to be given the opportunity to behold such equipment. Damn this place would be impressive if the tour comprised of static photos!
John: "What is the cycle time on that?" Tom: "I don't know, we don't care, as long as the part's good." I've worked one place, a tool and die shop, that I was told that exact same thing on the first day. It allows you to do your best work.
I already had a lot of respect for Tom Lipton but this video just raised it 10 fold. Also I seemed to hear some tool envy in your voice during this video :)
That was one of the best RUclips’s I have seen . I have always been a fan of Mr. Lipton but damn! The guys a walking legend. Impressed to say the least!!!
"No words! No words! They should've sent a poet!" - Jodie Foster in 'Contact' Absolutely astounding! I knew Tom must do sciencey stuff but I never could have imagined this!
It's a great privilege to receive the great wisdom and experience of Tom Lipton, one of the greatest teachers of our generation. He is very humble and very giving, a great example for the rest of us to pass on the gifts that each one have.
This is my 3rd or 4th time watching this and it's a true classic. Between you being so honestly amazed and Tom being himself (both incredibly knowledgeable quietly funny), it's absolutely riveting. Thanks!
This really tears at my soul. I knew a girl who was a machinist in that lab. I had thought about working there, but decided to take another path. In retrospect I feel like I missed out on something great. I've never seen that lab before, so I am most grateful that you shared this .
During my years as an engineer, I have had the opportunity to work with the special metal's used in the Atomic power industry. Everything from Hastelloy, Inconel, and innumerable grades of stainless steel, and have even machined Zircolloy forging's! (lots of coolant needed to stop it catching fire when its being turned!). Its great to see these video's. I'm retired now, but barely a day goes by that I don't think about all the stuff I learned from my year's on the shop floor, Thanks so much for posting this stuff. It makes me happy to see such enthusiasm for these skills.......xx
That is the most interesting and coolest job site I have ever seen or heard about. They do it all, from simple quick and dirty to uber-complicated long form projects. I am actually envious.
Wow!! Never knew Tom worked there. I figured he did something a bit special, but nothing like this. Definitely watching this again. Tom has been holding out on us, some of that stuff is even larger than Abom-size. He seems like such a natural teacher in that environment (even more so than on his channel). Would love to spend a day there. There better be a part 2. I know you got more footage than that lol.
Hi, and THANK YOU! Just sold me on Tom as well. It's a very different set up from the production shops - just as big - my late Dad used to control and where I used to 'play' with one of the overhead cranes on Saturday mornings many, many years ago. Brought back some fond memories. Dad would have loved to see Tom's generous tour. Cheers, Bob.
Wow, this was a great exposé of what equipment goes into an advanced mechanical research lab. We here at Machineco, have supplied equipment to university labs ourselves from general machine tools, to large radial drills and salt baths. In stock we have varied equipment such as was featured here, press brakes, shears,, compressors, welders, wire and sinker EDMs. The only machines we wised we had would be water jets and laser beam cutters, but it's impossible as they gobble up too much room. Again a nice bunch of pics of a great assortment of metal working equipment. Thank you!
What a stunning video!! Talk about a motivational video for prospective engineers - I have never seen such a stunning video and Tom makes an amazing host. Many, many thanks for doing this.
Very cool! I actually work at LBL and have toured the main shops before. I work in another division but It's always fun to visit the main shops. Glad you got a chance to see it and share with us!
+NYC CNC I am a student assistant in the Buildings Technology & Urban Systems Division. I've been working on the FLEXLAB project (flexlab.lbl.gov) which is a test bed for different energy efficiency building technologies. The lab has the ability to change out windows, facades, shading mechanisms, HVAC, and lighting, etc. and has a bunch of sensors to measure the effects the different systems have. I've worked on installing some of the different systems and sensors and have done some CNC mill/ manual lathe work to make some parts for this.
Thanks to Tom for doing that and you for taping/editing/sharing it. As an American, I'm immensely proud of our national laboratories and both the fundamental and applied science they do for our nation and share with the world.
This is such a great video. I think this is the fourth or fifth time I've watched through this. And in case anyone isn't aware, Tom recently started posting more again to RUclips which is awesome
What a lucky guy you are Tom Lipton to work in such an amazing facility. Physics and machining....what a perfect combination. Great tour John...I think as a workshop that will take some beating !!!
Place looks like so much fun? The ideas they can bring to life in that shop are endless. I was a bit surprised at how messy the shop(s) is! Most large scale shops pride themselves on being neat. It looks like this place works more on the philosophy of “if the part comes out right, we are good!” I really enjoyed this. Thanks!!
John, what a great video! I use to work at one of a DOE's facility (as a contractor) and it was such a pleasure to go to work each day! You absolutely had no idea of what or who you may run into each day, and what in the world they may be building! I use to think that I couldn't believe that these people actually get paid to do these things, there are people that would give their "first born" just to be in the presence of things like this, and these people get paid to do it. What a great guy Tom is, what a great video you made of him and where he works! Thanks, really THANKS!!!!!! It brought back a lot of great memories!
+NYC CNC I did Fire Protection systems. One of the things that was cool about it, is that you got to see different places like that. Actually put some system around a couple of accelerators that IBM built. They didn't use them for physics though, they used them to somehow imprint chips.
I spotted a round dial WWII Monarch 10ee at the 2:36 mark, which I just added to my own shop. I was hooked from then on! What a great and rare personal view into an amazing place. Thanks for sharing John, and thank Tom for us too! Your channel and Tom's are two of my few favorite channels on RUclips. I'm glad that you guys were able to meet up.
+NYC CNC No, unfortunately the previous owner ripped out all of the original motor/generator drive parts. This year didn't have the tubes. I'll be installing a 5hp 3 ph motor with a VFD connected to the original gearbox. Once I recover from my 2nd back surgery last week I will be posting a RUclips video. Keep up the great work John!
I must have missed this video somehow- Amazing! My Great Uncle was the director of the Labs from 71-88 Roger Batzel - my dad had a tour once before was even born. Thanks for the video.
2:18 Im from Buenos Aires, Argentina. This machine is a Turri T-300 metal lathe. 2000mm between centers. Great precision machine. I have a 1969 Turri T-190 in my shop (fabrica). Very accured. Some people say that it is one of the best lathes in the world. And is true.
Thanks for sharing, I could have a lot fun there. It's nice to see someones work place. I think Tom has been blessed to be able to work at a place like that. I know I have learned a lot from watching his videos.
Man, that takes me back to my mis-spent youth... I learned to run a Bridgeport mill in the Materials and Molecular Research Division in Building 52 back in the early 1980s... I miss the Rad-Lab, but I don't miss the undergraduate coursework, nor the cramped living quarters of my student days... I'm glad that you got this tour... and, I'm glad to see that they are still doing world class science up on the Hill... Cheers! Eric
Hey John - Thanks! I was a chemistry student on campus, and my research adviser had most of his labs up on the Hill... It was a great place to work, even if no one had the money to hire me after graduation...
Fascinating place to work. It shows that extreme accuracy requires lots more than just a hand-held ruler. My cousin worked on one of the projects that went to Mars, and he had some great times in the state of the art environment.
Tom is my favorite RUclips machinist - I've found the guys who work at those R&D places have the most interesting skill sets, and get to make the widest variety of things. (I used to hang around the Physics machine shop when I was at Stanford, and they were always working on cool stuff.)
i come here just to see the part of the argentinian lathe. well .. and all the video again. its incredible. and thanks for introducing me to tom lipton!
I was planning to see a couple minutes, not really expecting very much. And suddenly the video is ending... The video could have been four times as long and I'd still be watching every minute of it! +NYC CNC, awesome video! Any chance we can see the entire raw video?
Every time I saw pictures of such. I wondered where do they get the stuff. Now we know a little more of what goes on behind the scenes to dream up, assemble, and maintain such intricate and interesting thingys.
they remind me of when I was an apprentice precision engineer at AARHUS UNIVERSITY DEPARTMENT OF PHYSICS AND ASTRONOMY thanks Tom Lipton and John Saunders to remind me of good time
My "Uncle" Bob worked down the road at the NSA as a satellite etc high qual machinist. He was a B-36 Airman Machinist when living with us with "Uncle" Little Box and "Uncle" Coubachek (sp !) We had a very large house near Travis Air-force base and used our large Shop to put their lathes and mills to work on their stuff. Cool guys to grow up with for a couple of years. Got to visit with Uncle Bob in the 90's as he was then with NSA. They taught Dad (Engineering ME) maching and He to them electrical and electronics.
I had seen a few of Tom's videos and enjoyed them. I just became a subscriber. I believe a breadth of experience produces wisdom. Tom has shown that he has that experience. I will listen. Thanks for the video. Very enlightening.
Great video; there's a lot of really interesting stuff there. Its really funny to see the reaction of the little haas owners. So shocked at seeing somewhat moderate sized equipment that I wouldn't call "big". All in perspective I guess. Great video, great shop. Thanks for sharing.
Great tour John. Amazing technology used to support the lab. I was wondering when I would hear any cryo pumps going, and at 39:00 there they were. No vacuum system would be complete without fans and aluminum foil.
There is a lot of this here in the bay area. Vacuum chambers and unusually machined parts from exotic materials with ridiculously tight tolerances. But it is not every day that you see as many of the varied machines and parts in one video. Ok, it actually just this day and only this video!
+NYC CNC and +oxtoolco thanks so much for showing us some of this. I quite literally just geeked out at a machinist level and as a physics junky. Seriously, that was awesome.
Hi mate. I knew that Tom had a pretty important job, but after this, I don't dare to ever write to him again. What I think of, he's forgotten years ago. I must say that your offsider asked some pretty pertinent questions, some that even made Tom sit up a bit. Thanks for sharing this tour.
fishingfool211 I used mine a lot. Earned a fifty millionths indicator, but I have a one thou, five tenths, and tenths indicators too. Got a Cadillac gauge to check against. Lots of tricks and sweeps that I use to verify accuracy.
I was lucky enough to go on a "field trip" in college to see what a professor was doing research on. I forget who it was, but he was working with particle acceleration. He said that he had to use such a strong vacuum pump to evacuate all the "air" before doing the colliding. In fact the vacuum is so strong that he had to use copper for washers to make sure the "path" was airtight. He then gave each of us a washer to have. This has to be at least 20 years ago in the 90's and I still have the washer on my key-chain.
I am simply HOOKED on you shop tour videos John!!....Can't get enough Wanted to get a view of the particle accelerator as i did work on a couple X-Ray multi element arrays mounted on the chamber years ago.....great facility, Thanks John
John, enjoyed and even though I have been there it is just awesome to watch. FYI....I lost count but I had you at 500+ WOWs, 700+ OMGs....LOL, and IMO the place is great, but even greater is Tom who is our friend!
Usually in a lab like this there's never a last person... there's always people who live there;) People who you worry about a little, but it's really their element... Probably the thing that sets these places apart. They end up being a sandbox for the obsessions of brilliant minds. It's so much more raw and awe-inspiring than polished products ready for market. Amazing video! Thanks Tom and John!
drienkm cutting edge of science. Pushing the limits of what the machines can do, and what people can build. I'm grateful to have given 6.5 years of service.
Amazing isn't enough. 99 percent of the population will never understand just how amazing that place is and what is being done there Thank you for sharing. G W
Your right. You would never see their list of parts laying around a Chinese machine shop. I was glad to see this, American enginuity is still alive. I do business with a lot of well equipt machine shops but you don't see this well rounded set up in any of them.
Back in the seventies, to be a machinist was a very prestiges trade. before CNC, to be a machinist people knew how to scrape, they knew metallurgy and were engineers. A ten year machinist had more knowledge in their head than a doctor and it was known generally in the population, we made the world and still today anything the world knows as civilization came from right here. It doesn't stop at planes cars and TV's, its everything, a person can just wrap thjeir head around that one for a while, and it is everything, still as of today. CNC equipment dummied up the industry a little and also made those jobs easy to export to china, as bill clinton paraded the GATE areement in in 1996 and thus free trade with china began to rape the American job market. I better stop there or I'll get carried away on the wrong subject LOL. You are completely right, most people, even many machinist today, don't understand the cool factor in that shop. This tell me a lot about you. You would have to know a thing or two yourself:)
99.99
amen brother
Californian's are so smart they allow Marxist politicians to turn their state into the most expensive shit hole to live in.😮😮 good job liberals 👍
I can't believe that people are complaining about the audio and video, this is not a tour at your local museum where crowds are coming through all the time. We are extremely lucky to be given the opportunity to behold such equipment. Damn this place would be impressive if the tour comprised of static photos!
John: "What is the cycle time on that?"
Tom: "I don't know, we don't care, as long as the part's good."
I've worked one place, a tool and die shop, that I was told that exact same thing on the first day. It allows you to do your best work.
because cycle time would be repeated if the product are bad, is that right?
I already had a lot of respect for Tom Lipton but this video just raised it 10 fold. Also I seemed to hear some tool envy in your voice during this video :)
Absolutely, x 100
That was one of the best RUclips’s I have seen . I have always been a fan of Mr. Lipton but damn! The guys a walking legend.
Impressed to say the least!!!
"No words! No words! They should've sent a poet!" - Jodie Foster in 'Contact'
Absolutely astounding! I knew Tom must do sciencey stuff but I never could have imagined this!
It's a great privilege to receive the great wisdom and experience of Tom Lipton, one of the greatest teachers of our generation. He is very humble and very giving, a great example for the rest of us to pass on the gifts that each one have.
Rewatching this years later and it’s still mind blowing.
Can't believe there´s an Argentinian lathe there! I salute you from the south of Argentina (Chubut), thanks for sharing!
We built a small accelerator for plasma research at Waikato University in New Zealand, a very interesting job. Great video of Berkeley lab..
This is my 3rd or 4th time watching this and it's a true classic. Between you being so honestly amazed and Tom being himself (both incredibly knowledgeable quietly funny), it's absolutely riveting. Thanks!
This really tears at my soul. I knew a girl who was a machinist in that lab. I had thought about working there, but decided to take another path. In retrospect I feel like I missed out on something great. I've never seen that lab before, so I am most grateful that you shared this .
During my years as an engineer, I have had the opportunity to work with the special metal's used in the Atomic power industry. Everything from Hastelloy, Inconel, and innumerable grades of stainless steel, and have even machined Zircolloy forging's! (lots of coolant needed to stop it catching fire when its being turned!). Its great to see these video's. I'm retired now, but barely a day goes by that I don't think about all the stuff I learned from my year's on the shop floor, Thanks so much for posting this stuff. It makes me happy to see such enthusiasm for these skills.......xx
That is the most interesting and coolest job site I have ever seen or heard about. They do it all, from simple quick and dirty to uber-complicated long form projects. I am actually envious.
All i can say is wow, nothing else comes to mind, except wow
+Longrangehunter I second that WOW
Simply breathtaking, I could spend all day walking round just smiling at each individual project being done there !
Tom is the cream of the crop! Thanks for sharing the tour John!
36:32 "Hugh gets pissed when I gotta turn a shaft and gotta move his whole setup out of the way" -- classic Tom Lipton right there.
One of my favorite all-time shop tour video - such incredible stuff!
Wow!! Never knew Tom worked there. I figured he did something a bit special, but nothing like this. Definitely watching this again. Tom has been holding out on us, some of that stuff is even larger than Abom-size. He seems like such a natural teacher in that environment (even more so than on his channel). Would love to spend a day there.
There better be a part 2. I know you got more footage than that lol.
+NYC CNC I know I could have and would have watched the full tour. And judging by the comments I'm not alone....
Hi, and THANK YOU! Just sold me on Tom as well. It's a very different set up from the production shops - just as big - my late Dad used to control and where I used to 'play' with one of the overhead cranes on Saturday mornings many, many years ago. Brought back some fond memories. Dad would have loved to see Tom's generous tour. Cheers, Bob.
Nice Video. I worked there almost 40 years, retired a few years ago. Fun place to work, lots of interesting projects.
Wow, this was a great exposé of what equipment goes into an advanced mechanical research lab. We here at Machineco, have supplied equipment to university labs ourselves from general machine tools, to large radial drills and salt baths. In stock we have varied equipment such as was featured here, press brakes, shears,, compressors, welders, wire and sinker EDMs. The only machines we wised we had would be water jets and laser beam cutters, but it's impossible as they gobble up too much room.
Again a nice bunch of pics of a great assortment of metal working equipment. Thank you!
What a stunning video!! Talk about a motivational video for prospective engineers - I have never seen such a stunning video and Tom makes an amazing host. Many, many thanks for doing this.
Very unexpected, but revealing! Tom Lipton is more then he wants us to see. Nice tour!
Very cool! I actually work at LBL and have toured the main shops before. I work in another division but It's always fun to visit the main shops. Glad you got a chance to see it and share with us!
+NYC CNC I am a student assistant in the Buildings Technology & Urban Systems Division. I've been working on the FLEXLAB project (flexlab.lbl.gov) which is a test bed for different energy efficiency building technologies. The lab has the ability to change out windows, facades, shading mechanisms, HVAC, and lighting, etc. and has a bunch of sensors to measure the effects the different systems have. I've worked on installing some of the different systems and sensors and have done some CNC mill/ manual lathe work to make some parts for this.
I need more shop tours. This is seriously the coolest video I've seen in a while. Thank you John, and thank you Tom for this awesome video.
Awesome tour!! Thanks for taking us along, and many thanks to Tom too!!!
-- Mike
Thanks again Tom for saving all of us Noobs from making avoidable and costly mistakes.
Thanks to Tom for doing that and you for taping/editing/sharing it. As an American, I'm immensely proud of our national laboratories and both the fundamental and applied science they do for our nation and share with the world.
I just learned of Tom Lipton today on the Essential Craftsman podcast. I will be binge watching his channel. As well as NYC CNC. Thanks
This is such a great video. I think this is the fourth or fifth time I've watched through this. And in case anyone isn't aware, Tom recently started posting more again to RUclips which is awesome
What a lucky guy you are Tom Lipton to work in such an amazing facility. Physics and machining....what a perfect combination. Great tour John...I think as a workshop that will take some beating !!!
Place looks like so much fun? The ideas they can bring to life in that shop are endless. I was a bit surprised at how messy the shop(s) is! Most large scale shops pride themselves on being neat. It looks like this place works more on the philosophy of “if the part comes out right, we are good!” I really enjoyed this. Thanks!!
This is the most awesome shop tour ever!! No comparison.
now realizing that there are machines like these, just awesome. fantastic tour guys thanks for being able to share this with us
Number 1 tour without a doubt
That was and absolute amazing tour!!! I will end up watching this many times,
Thanks for sharing, and thanks to Tom!
John, what a great video! I use to work at one of a DOE's facility (as a contractor) and it was such a pleasure to go to work each day! You absolutely had no idea of what or who you may run into each day, and what in the world they may be building! I use to think that I couldn't believe that these people actually get paid to do these things, there are people that would give their "first born" just to be in the presence of things like this, and these people get paid to do it. What a great guy Tom is, what a great video you made of him and where he works! Thanks, really THANKS!!!!!! It brought back a lot of great memories!
+NYC CNC I did Fire Protection systems. One of the things that was cool about it, is that you got to see different places like that. Actually put some system around a couple of accelerators that IBM built. They didn't use them for physics though, they used them to somehow imprint chips.
I spotted a round dial WWII Monarch 10ee at the 2:36 mark, which I just added to my own shop. I was hooked from then on! What a great and rare personal view into an amazing place. Thanks for sharing John, and thank Tom for us too! Your channel and Tom's are two of my few favorite channels on RUclips. I'm glad that you guys were able to meet up.
+NYC CNC No, unfortunately the previous owner ripped out all of the original motor/generator drive parts. This year didn't have the tubes. I'll be installing a 5hp 3 ph motor with a VFD connected to the original gearbox. Once I recover from my 2nd back surgery last week I will be posting a RUclips video. Keep up the great work John!
Thats awesome ! I follow Tom for a long time, and never knew he even had another job than it's own shop :)
I must have missed this video somehow- Amazing! My Great Uncle was the director of the Labs from 71-88 Roger Batzel - my dad had a tour once before was even born. Thanks for the video.
Thank you for the awesome tour. Much appreciated!
That was one of the most incredible videos I've seen. What a place to work at!
wow, thanks for doing the tour with mr. wizard and showing us!
Tom Lipton's play ground everything a guy need's to have a good time really nice to see inside one of these high tech institutions ABSOLUTELY AMAZING.
Wow... Wish Tom could do more detailed tours and deep dive into some of that kit...
2:18 Im from Buenos Aires, Argentina. This machine is a Turri T-300 metal lathe. 2000mm between centers. Great precision machine. I have a 1969 Turri T-190 in my shop (fabrica). Very accured. Some people say that it is one of the best lathes in the world. And is true.
Thanks for sharing, I could have a lot fun there. It's nice to see someones work place. I think Tom has been blessed to be able to work at a place like that. I know I have learned a lot from watching his videos.
Man, that takes me back to my mis-spent youth... I learned to run a Bridgeport mill in the Materials and Molecular Research Division in Building 52 back in the early 1980s...
I miss the Rad-Lab, but I don't miss the undergraduate coursework, nor the cramped living quarters of my student days...
I'm glad that you got this tour... and, I'm glad to see that they are still doing world class science up on the Hill...
Cheers!
Eric
Hey John - Thanks! I was a chemistry student on campus, and my research adviser had most of his labs up on the Hill...
It was a great place to work, even if no one had the money to hire me after graduation...
Fascinating place to work. It shows that extreme accuracy requires lots more than just a hand-held ruler. My cousin worked on one of the projects that went to Mars, and he had some great times in the state of the art environment.
Tom is my favorite RUclips machinist - I've found the guys who work at those R&D places have the most interesting skill sets, and get to make the widest variety of things. (I used to hang around the Physics machine shop when I was at Stanford, and they were always working on cool stuff.)
i come here just to see the part of the argentinian lathe. well .. and all the video again. its incredible.
and thanks for introducing me to tom lipton!
Wow Tom is great at giving tours he knows everything about anything in there
What a fun 45 minutes. Thanks! I have followed both your channels for a long time. Never knew Tom worked at Berkeley. Thanks again!
+NYC CNC +oxtoolco Thanks guys that was an awesome tour!
Who gave 2 thumbs down? That is grounds for a good old-fashioned ass-kicking contest.
That's my beamline at 30:40!!! Dang it, I should've gone to work that day. Glad you had fun at LBL!
I was planning to see a couple minutes, not really expecting very much. And suddenly the video is ending...
The video could have been four times as long and I'd still be watching every minute of it!
+NYC CNC, awesome video!
Any chance we can see the entire raw video?
NYC CNC the good point to invent the camera which connected directly to the brain...
I like that French lathe! their Laguns are a great machine also. Very nice.
Every time I saw pictures of such. I wondered where do they get the stuff. Now we know a little more of what goes on behind the scenes to dream up, assemble, and maintain such intricate and interesting thingys.
Incredible...absolutely incredible. Thank you so much for this tour.
I got to tour this facility in 2014 or 2015. Really great experience, and this video brought back memories.
Pretty neat place! Thanks to both of you guys for taking the time to show this.
they remind me of when I was an apprentice precision engineer at AARHUS UNIVERSITY DEPARTMENT OF PHYSICS AND ASTRONOMY
thanks Tom Lipton and John Saunders to remind me of good time
nånå man finder også danskere her.
What's even more astonishing than all of the machinery is this incredible amount of small stuff just flying around. Microscopes, ratchet kits etc.
My "Uncle" Bob worked down the road at the NSA as a satellite etc high qual machinist. He was a B-36 Airman Machinist when living with us with "Uncle" Little Box and "Uncle" Coubachek (sp !) We had a very large house near Travis Air-force base and used our large Shop to put their lathes and mills to work on their stuff. Cool guys to grow up with for a couple of years. Got to visit with Uncle Bob in the 90's as he was then with NSA. They taught Dad (Engineering ME) maching and He to them electrical and electronics.
I had seen a few of Tom's videos and enjoyed them. I just became a subscriber. I believe a breadth of experience produces wisdom. Tom has shown that he has that experience. I will listen.
Thanks for the video. Very enlightening.
Great video; there's a lot of really interesting stuff there. Its really funny to see the reaction of the little haas owners. So shocked at seeing somewhat moderate sized equipment that I wouldn't call "big". All in perspective I guess. Great video, great shop. Thanks for sharing.
Great tour John. Amazing technology used to support the lab. I was wondering when I would hear any cryo pumps going, and at 39:00 there they were. No vacuum system would be complete without fans and aluminum foil.
Very interesting stuff there. Thank you for taking the time to video the experience so the rest of us could get a look!
I always imagined Tom had an awesome job but this is next level!!
There is a lot of this here in the bay area. Vacuum chambers and unusually machined parts from exotic materials with ridiculously tight tolerances. But it is not every day that you see as many of the varied machines and parts in one video. Ok, it actually just this day and only this video!
Ridiculously impressive facility John... My thank to Tom and yourself for this experience. Some futuristic stuff happening in there for sure!
+NYC CNC and +oxtoolco thanks so much for showing us some of this. I quite literally just geeked out at a machinist level and as a physics junky. Seriously, that was awesome.
Just as I imagined.....unimaginable! Thanks for the tour!
I don't really even have the capacity to respond to this... I'm only 20 minutes in and already speechless...
WOW! Top shelf machinist and science pron all in one. Kick ass!
Hi mate. I knew that Tom had a pretty important job, but after this, I don't dare to ever write to him again. What I think of, he's forgotten years ago. I must say that your offsider asked some pretty pertinent questions, some that even made Tom sit up a bit. Thanks for sharing this tour.
Awesome video John. That place is just astounding! What a pleasure to watch. Thanks very much for sharing.
That was a remarkable video! Thanks for sharing it with us all. Greetings from Arizona.
WOW! I don't know what else to say. Thanks very much John and Tom.
Holy cats! Totally amazing shops and facility! Thank you for sharing.
They really take their surface plates for granite there
fishingfool211 I used mine a lot. Earned a fifty millionths indicator, but I have a one thou, five tenths, and tenths indicators too. Got a Cadillac gauge to check against. Lots of tricks and sweeps that I use to verify accuracy.
...incredible...awesome machining and cutting edge physics - I could probably be convinced to work for free! Thanks John and Tom!
This was life changing just to watch. I can't imagine experiencing it in person
I was lucky enough to go on a "field trip" in college to see what a professor was doing research on. I forget who it was, but he was working with particle acceleration. He said that he had to use such a strong vacuum pump to evacuate all the "air" before doing the colliding. In fact the vacuum is so strong that he had to use copper for washers to make sure the "path" was airtight. He then gave each of us a washer to have. This has to be at least 20 years ago in the 90's and I still have the washer on my key-chain.
I already knew that Tom is a smart cookie .... but WOW
My kind regards to you and Tom for taking the time; I think I understand Tom a little more now.
Very very cool. Thanks to all involved!
Tom Lipton is a fucking legend. Period.
I am simply HOOKED on you shop tour videos John!!....Can't get enough Wanted to get a view of the particle accelerator as i did work on a couple X-Ray multi element arrays mounted on the chamber years ago.....great facility, Thanks John
John, enjoyed and even though I have been there it is just awesome to watch. FYI....I lost count but I had you at 500+ WOWs, 700+ OMGs....LOL, and IMO the place is great, but even greater is Tom who is our friend!
Thanks! This blew me away! Always wanted to see Tom's 'real' shop...
What an incredible shop, that shop is like a work of art!
My freaking mind is blown after watching that. That place is insane.
Mindblowing! last person to go home has to turn everything off lol
why turn everything off when you can cut the main power
Usually in a lab like this there's never a last person... there's always people who live there;) People who you worry about a little, but it's really their element...
Probably the thing that sets these places apart. They end up being a sandbox for the obsessions of brilliant minds. It's so much more raw and awe-inspiring than polished products ready for market.
Amazing video! Thanks Tom and John!
drienkm cutting edge of science. Pushing the limits of what the machines can do, and what people can build. I'm grateful to have given 6.5 years of service.
This is the best video on RUclips. Tom should vlog for LLNL.
Wow, how did I miss this? Never imagined that Tom is working in such a cool facility :)
Same! I've been watching Tom's videos for 2 years now and never had a clue!
Really neat tour! I always like seeing our machines in these videos too.
+NYC CNC DMG MORI, Deckel Maho Gildemeister, Mori Seiki
What a amazing facility. Its fascinating how big it is. Just makes me realize how small humans are.
That was an awesome shop tour. Thanks John and Tom.