This series is going to be extremely cool... and there will be opportunities to physically hold things that are manufactured during the series. The purpose of making these things is to make jobs in America. I would appreciate it if you would consider signing up for the email list. I promise not to spam you. www.smartereveryday.com/email-list
Love you humble approach. By coming genuinely curious and making people understand that you have everything to learn about their topic makes them relax and talkative.
One thing that I love about Destin and smartereveryday is that he shows the exact same amount of interest and respect in everything and to everyone. He treats everyone from ceos down to low level works with the same respect, and give the same amount of attention and interest to stuff as big as rockets to stuff as small as single parts
Dear Destin, I just finished my apprenticeship as a toolmaker a month ago. My profession is to build such tools that you showed us in the very beginning of the video. I am so honored that You shed some light on this field of work! It is incredibly fun and challenging to manufacture pieces in such tight tolerances out of hardened materials that are difficult to machine - there are parts for tools like this that have a tolerance window of just a few 10000s of an inch (0.001mm in metric), and they are to be expected to be perfectly right-angled at the same time.
@@hapnewsom9217 depends on where you live. I'm from Eastern Germany and compared to the US our income is laughably little, but living is also a lot cheaper. I'm making ~35k € per year BEFORE taxes (which translates to ~22k after taxes), which means that at my current costs of living I have ~6k to 7k of disposable income per year.
Just some guy here. I was the kid who would watch Myth Busters and How It's Made for fun. Don't know why I got into IT, because after watching this, I might need to change fields. I'm so excited for more of these! 😃
My favourite thing about this video was seeing Destin's unfailingly polite manner with everyone he encountered, introducing himself and speaking to the people working while this filming is going on around them. I've sat working while someone brought a film crew past me and it was kinda awkward not being engaged fully, but talked about within earshot, feeling like a zoo animal. That and Destin always seems to have the right question to ask next, to distil this person's decades of experience into something the lay person can understand. Great video.
You can't believe how you message touch me. Yess that where also so obvious to my eyes and heart. Destin is a very beautiful soul, those simple gesture of coming, contacting and respecting everyone is for me the human lesson that I will remember for years about this video. I could not have write it better then you. Thank you ClaptrapRapture ! (sorry for my miss spelling I'm speaking French I'm from Belgium)
Spot on! I noticed he achieves this by often starting his interactions by asking them to explain it to him being the dumb person, child or the one that has never touched _this/that_ in his live!
@@smartereverydayAmen. We're going to need it as we on shore manufacturing to NA again. Looks like T&C is well positioned. Great job, looking forward to rest of the series!
@@12jojimboMachinist here, he was talking about scrapping a part or basically either programming it incorrectly and the cutting tool cuts where it isn't suppose to or smashes into the part. Or making something is out of tolerance. 3 in 3 years is actually an incredibly outstanding track record!
I love the way you show up with enthusiasm to people who don't necessarily consider their job interesting. I see it alot in your videos where people seem hesitant to get into the details because they assume it's not that interesting to an audience, but your enthusiasm and engaged questions prompt them in a way that always reveals their depth of passion and knowledge.
Agreed. It's really nice that these people get a platform because you can just see how people like the operator of that press just have their eyes light up when people listen to them.
Yes! I just commented on this. They're like "why are you asking such detailed questions?" Then they drop their defenses and get super excited to answer and share their knowledge.
Easy to stay happy and smiling during a tour, but not when you're operating the same machine day in and day out. Some of these jobs are really boring and mind numbing. But in the totality of the process they're essential. And if they are paid a living wage people will do the job. I hope they're rotated between different tasks though, to keep them happy
@@luukdeboer1974 And sometimes, just having someone want to know what your job is, and what your machine is doing, is a nice way to break up the monotony.
As a mechanical engineering student from Germany it is really interesting to see the production and manufacturing technics of another country. I`m really stoked to see all the kinds of production systems from 3d laserprinting and all the other additive methods to CNC. Really happy about this upcoming deep dive. This already amazing channel got even better :) Greetings from Germany!
in Deutschland gerade im Raum Pforzheim ist die Hochburg von der Stanztechnik in allen möglichen Variationen, es ist trotzdem toll mal zu sehen wie die Amerikaner das machen.
I loved seeing in this video that all the cool new manufacturing techniques all come back to support stamping. It takes CNC, it takes EDM, all of that to create a bent piece of sheet metal.
I'm a CNC programmer, I assign toolpaths to machine parts used in progressive dies such as the ones shown in this video. The average age of our shop is finally going down. We have a lot of old timers reaching retirement. The youngest toolmaker (the guys that put together and test the dies) was 55 until a year ago. Now we have 3 guys under 30. The age gap is crazy.
Not really surprising. As industry moved overseas (because it's cheaper) and all the displaced old-timers took any jobs that *were* available, there weren't a lot of career entry opportunities in the US.
This is a common issue. I was talking about this to a man (in his 70's) who owns a firm that does glass curtain walls. I asked him what the average age of his installers is and his response was 50 years old. I asked him what the average age was 20 years ago and his response was 30 years old.
I'm in a Repair shop and the age gap is crazy. I'm a new hire trained in manual machining while my coworkers are CNC trained. Since we do repair work. It is almost all manual and my boss and I are teaching the other hires manual processes. I plan to go back to the tech school I earned my certs and give a talk on the different fields machining is applied to
How do we bring these jobs back? Between outsourcing and automation, we're going to miss a whole generation of people that will never work in manufacturing.
@@tgi3d881 Your comment should hava at least a 100 likes, You eloquently expressed exactly the problem the west has, all this basicmachine knowledge we exported to Japan, then Taiwan, then China...and then this juggernaut turned its cheaper labour to good work- , as they mastered our (stolen?) techniques and processes. Then the communists, allowed private enterprise and Voilà- China's pent stifled capitalistic ability were released like a virus, and became an economic pandemic infecting all western nations with cheap stuff for decades now! Thank God, we are attempting to "reshore".
I'm not American, but there is something really special about US manufacturing. I like the people and culture, the tools, all of it. Thanks for this series, looking forward to more.
I've been a science teacher for 18 years and I'm beginning to see the movement of students pursuing trades rather than college degrees. This will help educate me, hopefully inform & encourage them, and change mindsets about the value of each kind of education.
You need both for a healthy economy, hopefully they all understand when you buy American you technically create jobs for yourself that pay decent at the same time.
I've been in engineering for 20 years--and I hate to say this, I run into a lot of people who just shouldn't have been engineers. People who just don't have an aptitude for it (or more importantly, a genuine interest--because I believe you can get good at nearly anything you're genuinely interested in.) I sometimes feel like pushing droves of students into STEM is a disservice and ignores a lot of the other needs we have...
@@tychosis Agreed. In my field formal education and certification is often pushed. The problem I see is a lot of people who can take tests but can't think critically. They also seem to be uncurious and cannot find their own answers. They look to others to hand them the answer on a silver platter, instead of thinking critically and using reason.
@@tychosis I've been in it for 14 years and this is happening at my company right now. We're hiring people from all over the world who can barely communicate but worse yet are only doing it because they were book smart and got the diploma because someone told them it was a strong field, but they don't give a flying flip about engineering and they aren't passionate about anything they do. They only care about the fancy job title and the salary. They put in the minimum effort, and what they do put out is constantly full of errors. I just end up doing their work myself because if I don't I'll end up having to re-do my stuff twice anyway coz the info they give me is always full of errors. It is freaking frustrating.
One wonderful thing about Destin's videos, is that he makes a point of actually trying to meet, introduce himself to- and learn the names of every person in the assembly-line - WHILE simultaneously respecting the workers' time and work. I've seen too many documentaries that uses a voice-over while looming over some nameless, faceless worker. Watching these videos I actually get a feeling of how I feels working there. Plus - having Destin asking the "obvious" questions actually allows the workers to show their expertise as both skilled workers but also conveyors of information.
I am a CNC machinist that has returned to school for my mechanical engineering undergrad. This series is extremely exciting. I can’t wait to get back into manufacturing!
YES! We need more engineers that have experience with making parts! Most engineers think if they can draw it up it can be made. That’s not always the case.
@@JoeyRF I work in manufacturing and its amazing how often a design for a part will get submitted that simply can't be made. They don't teach engineers how to make parts, just how to design them.
@@jm2340 Mechanical engineering is about the closest you can get but a ton of his knowledge comes from hands on experience in the workplace. Unfortunately most places wouldn't hire you for his position without a Mech E or Industrial E degree, even if you have years of experience in the hands on experience.
Hey Destin, I’m a Canadian high school student and I have had the opportunity to take many manufacturing classes, our school shop is fortunate to be one of the best outfitted school shops, and I have an amazing teacher who shows the importance of precision machining and being prepared for the future of machining, we learn full CNC, CAD and Plasmacutting operations through immersive projects. Our school also runs a electric race car completely designed and fabricated in house that helps to show the importance of precision and quality in large scale projects. So it’s really interesting to see just how applicable these skills are in industrial manufacturing
I'm 50 and one of the school projects I had was to build a small scale reciprocating steam engine from bar and round stock using a mill and lathe - no CNC as we were using WWII surplus machines and had to thread end caps because nobody would let a 15yr old use a wielder. It was an amazing opportunity I still remember fondly for how we could turn lumps of metal into a working engine.
As an engineer who previously worked as a tool design engineer for sheet metal stamping in the aerospace industry, I absolutely love this video. This is a video that engineering students should watch in college to learn about manufacturing.
Can I have a bucket to puke in? What a bunch of a** kissing.... In Europe it is completely standard to treat all operators like normal people, why you might ask yourself, well because they're humans?
OP might be reacting to the way he's interacting with them. I think a lot of content creators would not involve individual operators, unless they were scripted in. I often think about this when watching SED videos - the interactions are very humane and nice. Really like it.
@nicstroud It's not surprising from Destin (by all accounts, he really is a great human), but it wouldn't have been out of place for nearly any other RUclips host to ignore them entirely. Destin goes out of his way to include them, and I think it's one of the things that makes this channel special.
@@nicstroud I think what he meant is there are some pretty big youtubers who do factory tours, and operators rarely get involved on this level. Most of the time there is a guide who explains the process and that's it. I can imagine that in some cases it is the company policy, but nonetheless it just feels wrong and sometimes straight up disrespectful
My father was a T/D machinist for 35+ years and this brought a tear to my eye, I was in the Navy and the career I found when I got out I have to use a series 1 Bridgeport and a Monarch 10ee lathe, and I can almost hear his voice or hand on my shoulder as I operate those machines. I LOVE THIS SERIES!
I've worked in a steel stamping press plant for twelve years, and seeing the accurate information here gives me even more appreciation for everything else on this channel.
I worked in one for 6 years, and I'm really happy that now there's a good video I can show to people if they're interested in seeing what stamping actually looks like. There's so few good videos out there showing what the process actually looks like from close up.
@@Vinzmannnif you want to know just how insane, search ‘Lego Mini figure factory’, those are the assembly lines I wish I knew the maths to complete my degree to make 🤣
I would love to see more of Destin doing the "dirty jobs" thing but with skilled trades and focusing on how great these people are rather than the undesirable parts
Acknowledging both shouldn't be an issue People shouldn't choose Jobs they like the perks of but those (among the jobs with appreciated perks) who's downside they don't mind I am very glad to have had that advice
My father is a Tool and Dye maker and has been doing it since I was born, I am 33 years old. He was able to provide for his family, be there after work to spend time with my brother and I when we were young (family time), was the greatest role model and made me the man I am today. I never really knew a ton about his day to day activities but knew he was mechanically and over all intelligent and a great problem solver. I remember telling kids when I was young he was a tool maker and people just were confused. This video made me emotional which I never expected. Made me appreciate him even more. Thank you for putting on display your genuine curiosity and kind hearted nature to everyone you come across.
That's amazing how willing the stamping manufacturer to show all the details in the process. I also really appreciate the attitude that Destin holds to a new field which is so enthusiastic and getting to know it step by step. I'm excited about this series!
I work as a senior automated press operator for a short to mid run stamping company in Minnesota. We also make our own tooling in house! I love that you are shedding light on our industry as there really isn’t much out there. Loved the video!
@@Zaku186 machinists are retiring in droves. The majority of my coworkers are close to retirement. It’s difficult to find skilled people to fill positions.
I miss being a machinist.. I'm in a warehouse now distributing stuff all over the world. There's just something so fulfilling about taking a chunk of material and turning in a finished part that my current job just doesn't stand up to l. I was a CNC programmer and machinist along with a manual machinist for almost 8 years. I know we are a dying breed. I hope to one day get back to that passion of creating something useful. I worked for 2 different companies over my short amount of time compared to my superiors... making machines for the mailing industry for folding and inserting paper into envelopes, and then for a Department of Defense contractor. The latter was such and amazing daily challenge that kept me on my grind every day to make sure every part was absolutely in every tolerance. I made stuff for many of the top names in aviation and military jets. I really miss it... I will one day get back to it. For now, I'll enjoy these videos. Glad to see this series start here and hopefully inspire future generations to get into the manufacturing/machinist trade!!!
Thank you for not just showing the process, but spending time with the people behind it, especially discussing how they got there and how they developed their skills. The machines are cool, but It’s the people that make this amazing!
I work at Stamping facility and I can’t even tell you how excited I am to see this video! I’m going to share it with everyone! I love your videos and can not wait to see the rest of this series! Thank you for the awesome work you do!
I got a job in a metal stamping facility, and worked every job from setup, floor lead, toolmaker, and die designer. Such an interesting and pure mechanical trade that I did not appreciate until I was in over my head 😂
I think my favourite thing about your videos is how you portray everything and especially the people doing the job. You are so respectful of their skillset and whether they are just learning, or a seasoned pro, you treat them with the utmost respect.
I am an electronics technician. I would love to see how the dies for crimping tools are made. Especially the ones for small contacts, like the ones in connectors with a pin pitch of 0.1”/2.54mm or less. Similarly, the stamping tooling for those contacts must be wild.
As someone going into computing at uni, the start to this video felt very pointed, however I find there's a really interesting relationship between computing and this. When a programmer writes a program, it's to exacute a certain task in a certain way, with certain efficiencies, bounderies etc. Making tools and dies is almost the exact same process, but in the physical. You could think of the part as what the program has to do, and the die is the program. Even having replaceable tools for ease of maintanence has parallels in programming, seperating tasks into different functions and processes for ease of debugging or monitoring. This subject inspires a similar interest in me. Fascinating video Destin, and I'm eagerly awaiting the rest of this series! Manufacturing is something way too played down for how important it is, this almost feels like the companion series to Practical Engineering's one on infrastructure.
When I first saw the length of the video I thought - there’s no way I’m going to be interested in the stamping process for an hour……..and I was dead wrong. This was super fascinating, thanks for another banger, Destin!
36:15 I love that he demonstrated the "light curtain". Sometimes we can make the mistake of not exercising our failure modes, and he demonstrated that safety feature with absolute confidence that the machine would stop immediately. Incredible. 👏
That impressed me too. My closest to similar job experience didn't have light curtains because we were ordered to put our hands in those places where they could be crushed, cut, or ripped off. It also pleased me to see workers in a well lit, clean, climate controlled workplace where manual labor weight and work speed demands aren't slowly destroying people's bodies for minimum wage. I don't know enough to be sure, but I get the impression the stamp and die plant is a good place to work because management has a conscience. It was also fascinating to see how stamped parts are made. It would have been nice to see a tool and die set made of transparent aluminum recycled from a whale tank so that we could see more of what is going on, but I guess we can't have it all for a few more centuries.
We have light curtains in the greenhouse where I work for our transplanting robots. The problem we have is that being in a semi-outdoor environment, insects sometimes trip them. 😂
Hey Destin! Would you like a tour of a Roll Forming Equipment manufacturer? Its the sister/competitive process to progressive stamping and its very interesting. I have an in at several, including other metal processing manufacturers.
Sister makes sense, but competitor? I should think some projects would work best with progressive stamping, and others would work best with roll forming. Would you say that's not the case, that roll forming can take on all jobs equally well or better that could otherwise be done with progressive stamping?
Going just by the name i assume roll forming works like having the dies on a rotating roll and the sheet metal is fed in a continous movement, the dices roll over and into the steel, pressing it into the forms? It basically takes out the extra step of converting the turning motion into an up&down.
This is so cool. Building real-world products seems the height of prestige to me. I never understood why, as a kid 25 years ago, we were discouraged from going into trades like these. Schools encouraged more hands-off fields, but surely you need be just as smart and creative (if not more) to work in a practical field than to do a desk job. My dad and grandfather worked in shops like this, I think, and they always seemed embarrassed for some reason, never wanting to talk about their work. I sure wish they'd have let me shadow them as part of a bring-your-son-to-work experience or whatnot.
What happened in the 80's that saw the decline? "cheaper" work forces overseas? Free trade theories by Milton Freedman? A choice to move to a "service" based economy? New tech had fallen behind manufacturing? Not enough Material Science degrees? Why go into a field that is being actively chopped up and shipped over seas?
The reason is inflation. Labor cost is much higher in US. Automation used to beat manual work in cost but China has caught up in automation, so they are at the same start line again. Your father and grandfather are correct as you will be competing with workers where living cost is 1/8 of US.
@@xuanchen3434 Labor cost vs. exploiting child labor is...inflation? Creating graveyards of 10's of thousands of cheap EV's is a false sense of equivalence. Greed much? You are SO lost in the sauce of...words? You are lost in the punditry of "alpha" men wearing bow ties for most of their career types. Let me guess, slavery would "lower" opportunity cost? or would you say it "raises" opportunity cost? You got yourself looking a full lemming.
I think a big part of it was also that the American public was tricked into a cycle of buying cheap overseas goods that need to be replaced often due to bad materials and poor workmanship.
I've worked in an automotive steel stamping plant for 22 years now in Canada. That servo press was super cool to see as I had never seen one perform before. If you ever make a transfer die video, I'll definitely check that out. Most of the progressive parts I make are left and right versions so they are mirror image of each other for driver side and passenger side. Our smallest press is 250 tons going up to a 1600 ton press. The sheer size of the large presses are living room sized area's of operation which is mind blowing as well
I spent a few years working in a press rebuilding shop. It was quite a learning experience working on some of those giant presses & seeing them in action at the customer facilities. It's hard to really appreciate them til you see a really big one on person & also see what it takes to either disassemble them, or assemble them and get them running. Many of the the large presses can weigh well over 2 or 300 tons fully assembled, especially ones that that do large area stamping with a deep draw. Sometimes the die assemblies alone can be 20 tons. On one we worked on, the flywheel alone weighed almost 40 tons. Another one had giant tie rods 60ft long and about ~24" in diameter & had a double basement 16t deep. That one had a 3200t capacity.
As someone who always gets sucked into "How it's made" episodes when they come up on tv, I am filled with great anticipation of this series. Like seriously, I LOVE this stuff SO MUCH. Edit: I just finished the video and it was even more amazing than I was expecting and I'm just so excited to see what else you'll cover with this series. Please keep it up. This video was amazing I need to see more!!!
It's so nice to see people making stuff that has a clear purpose, all of the workers seemed cool, down to earth and polite people. How different from a typical office culture these days. Another classic from Destin, thank you for sharing your passion for knowledge!
That's not dissimilar to the military. It can be dangerous, and you gotta know the guy next to you has your back for safety. At the end of the day, everyone wants to go home in one piece and alive. Office culture tends to have people putting others down because the only danger is money/career loss, or stagnating and being bored.
Less than five minutes into this video and I just wanted to say I'll forever be a fan of this channel because you bring things to light that I always wonder about but never have the resources to explore. Been a patron for a few years now and constantly looking forward to your next adventure. Edit: Also, I know Destin puts a lot of effort into choosing sponsors for videos and I just wanted to say thanks for this one. AnyDesk completely just solved a big problem I’ve been having with needing to render intense 3D models and scenes in Blender while away from my home computer setup. Absolutely awesome!
It's important for people to appreciate the complexity of many everyday objects. All the years and old guys teaching young guys stuff that lays behind things we take for granted. Great series Destin!
This is a brilliant video! I'm a toolmaker myself and work on transfer dies producing parts for dual-clutches. We also had a few progressive dies when I started my job and regularly see them in storage, so all of this is quite familiar to me. It's actually a bit emotional. Just like Weston, I also always struggle to explain to others what it is that my colleagues and I are doing 😅 You absolutely have to see and experience it to get an idea what kind of work goes into making even a seemingly ordinary part. I love the combination of engineering, manual labor, analytical work and that touch of artistry 😊 It totally changed the way I look at all the everyday objects around us. Just knowing why so many things in our lives look and/or work the way they do gives you a deeper appreciation for what we as humans are able to make from basically nothing. Just to add to the answer for the question at 12:11 about why that part isn't bent into two 90s in one step instead of two; it's absolutely true that oftentimes you can see an engineer's "handwriting", so to speak, so someone else would use a different methodology. But depending on your desired geometry, oftentimes it'll be impossible to form it in one step. In this case you'd go from pretty much simply bending into drawing. And with those radii, depending on the ductility, the required holding and drawing forces would probably exceed the material's tensile strength. So another way would be form both finished angles but with larger radii and then sharpen them in a second step. Please keep these kinds of videos coming, I absolutely enjoy them! 🙂
Agreed. The metal, if formed too quickly at the 90 degree bend line, could show signs of cracking as well. Unless they could slow that bend down in that area, which isn't possible on that type of press.
@@MajesticByBirth Correct, yes. You'd see the typical thinning and tearing of a tensile test, because basically that's what'd be happening there. It wouldn't be bending, but drawing, and all that material between both right angles would need to flow through the outer radius. I'm not sure doing it slower would be practical, the cross section at the inner radius would need to withstand the force applied by the blank holder and plastic deformation of the flowing material. Assuming that would work, they have that servo press, but then you'd make all the punches and cutters go through way too slowly and production output would obviously suffer. Either way, all of this would needlessly complicate the whole process. So the tool, as it exists here, works perfectly well 🙂 There are countless ways of getting from a blank to a finished part, that's the beauty of it. Yet in my experience, the best solution is rarely the simplest nor most intuitive but the most elegant one. 😉
Hey Dustin! I am very glad to see this series as a CNC Grinding Operator myself. (Who also happens to be 19 years old) Another form of subtractive machining that you slightly covered is CNC Grinding. One thing you may not have ever thought about is how tungsten carbide tools (end mills, non-brazed boring bars, ect.) are made. We use diamond abrasive wheels to grind away at tungsten carbide to form tools which customers buy. Over the past year, I have learned an incredible amount of information working as a CNC Operator at Micro 100 in Idaho. Here is some of that knowledge: There are so many fascinating problems on a day-to-day basis. I have to consider the wear rate of the diamond wheels we use, the grit of the wheels we use, how much coolant is on the wheels, the temperature of the coolant, the ambient temperature of the facility, and other factors while operating my machines. The biggest issue that I run into as a night shift operator is the change in temperature as the sun goes down in the summer. The temperature change can change the size of the wheels just enough to push measurements out of tolerance (which can be a pain). To summerize, I run some of the machines that make many of the tungsten carbide tools that are used in other parts of the industry.
Hey I have a question, is the wear on the grinding wheel significant enough to have to compensate for it during the creation of a single part? Like how much will the wheel shrink from the beginning of a part to the end, and how do you fix the error that shrinkage would create? Do the grinding wheel manufacturers provided standard values for like wear-per-gram of material ground or something?
If the change in temperature is a repeating problem, that may signal that the shop needs to invest in some sort of temperature regulating infrastructure, either something new or upgrading what exists.. Every time an operation stops, that costs money, so preventing that would have immediate effects..
Absolutely thrilled to see you bring attention to manufacturing and skilled trades. I have an associate's in manufacturing processes, currently a CNC machinist, with experience in sheetmetal fabrication, welding and 3d modeling, seeing my bread and butter on your channel is a real treat. And yes, its the great engineers who spend time on the floor, learning and understanding how their decisions affect the process.
I'm a quality engineer in a stamping department for an appliance manufacturer. This was a great video to watch and very well explained! I can't tell you how much I appreciate tool makers. They are some of the most intelligent people IMO. Not only to understand how dies work and the progression station to station but also their machining knowledge. We do both progressive and transfer stamping here, if you are ever in Wisconsin I could probably show you our transfer press. We have two 1500 ton transfer press and a 1000 ton transfer press that make parts that are as big as 27"x34" from 14k lb coils of steel.
Growing up in the 70's, my dad owned a manufacturing plant. His company had a few presses. When that part of the building was being built, they figured out where the presses would be and added concrete to support the weight and movement of the machines. There were switches that had to be engaged to use the machines for safety reasons. Very interesting, I'm sending this to my brother who worked there more than I did. My brother did vacuum molding of plastic sheets.
Love the idea of a deep dive series! I find youtube 'documentaries' are always more fun when they're in depth, because after you get past the basic surface level understanding is where all the fun and interesting information lies
Indeed the white employees are doing the easy jobs the blacks are doing the hard jobs. On a higher level, it really highlights the state of this country.
I am a college educated engineer, who has worked almost exclusively doing calculations behind a desk as well as lecturing, but have always tried to instill in the younger guys I have mentored / taught, respect for the art and skills artisanal engineers. While we cant have one without the other, these guys are in many many ways the heart and soul of many engineering enterprises. Always love seeing these guys lifted up.
I worked in a paintbrush factory for a short time, and what I learned there is that sometimes the real magic isn't in how something is made, but how the machines that make something are made. Those progressive dies are amazing.
I’m an industrial automation electrician. I like watching the processes of machines, especially older ones. Watching the process of a palletizer for example is just amazing to see how some genius years ago took a few simple motions and managed to arrange how the boxes stack on a pallet. Most of the new ones have robot arms which are amazing things in themselves, but they don’t have the same wonder as watching the old machines work.
I've worked in manufacturing my whole career. Seeing you so excited about it and sharing it for the world is great, I'll definitely be sharing these videos with all my family members who have questions.
The electric discharge machining is so cool. As a student I struggle to get within 5 thousandths of an inch on even precision equipment. It’s stunning how far beyond that trained experts can go.
Manufacturing engineer here and I support this message! I started my career in metal fabrication and there is something so satisfying about it! The raw physics behind the equipment and how it’s harnessed to make such intricate at precise parts is amazing. Layer modern technologies and automation on top of it and it’s truly such an exciting industry! Can’t wait for more of this series and thank you so much for putting it together. It’s a forgotten industry with so much opportunity for future workers.
I come from the aviation industry and often times the engineers would ask us the people doing the work how we want it done (engineered) and they would write the documents to match how the work was done. As usual a great video Justin.
As someone who works in manufacturing i’m thrilled for this series and i would be thrilled if you do a true deep dive into how much really goes into everything
I agree, I am looking forward to this. I have worked in factories, tool rooms, machining shops and such all my life. This video pretty much covered everything from my first job, but I was in the window and door industry.
At one point right after WWII, my dad had a job as a press operator at "Crown, Cork, and Seal" (SF), which specialized in beverage bottle capping and the cool new concept of aluminum cans. He worked a press to round the aluminum sheets into the cylindrical cans, and tells the story of the day another press operator got his sleeve (or something) caught in a press. Without hesitation my dad jammed his arm into the press to trigger the kill switch. A "light curtain" would have been pure luxury to those press crews.
Absolutely between Brandon the young apprentice and Boyd the 43 year EDM specialist, they both get a friendly handshake and the opportunity to share their knowledge.
Agreed - as soon as he enters a room he's looking to introduce himself and shake hands (or fist-bump where that's more appropriate), as if to say "I respect you and appreciate you" - what a great way to make a first impression. We can all learn a lot by the way Destin conducts himself! 👍
I don't know how to express my thanks for showing these things. My father was a 30 year machinist and engineer. Getting to see this kind of work again, is truly heart warming I heckin miss that guy. Thanks Destin.
The greatest thing about these videos is watching these workers that could be fairly described as rather hardened and grizzly, just ABSOLUTELY light up when they realize how much you know and care about what they have to say. It’s really wonderful. You show you have a real appreciation and understanding of what they do and it really shows and drives these videos. Loved you for years Destin!!
I just graduated from a 2 year machine tool school program and durring the last 2 semesters I build a very small transfer and progressive die. Loved watching this video and getting to see large full scale versions being used in a production setting making parts and recognising some of the things I learned in my classes. Super exited to see the rest of this manufacturing series. Thanks Destin!
Oh, this is nearly an hour long? I hadn't noticed! Thanks for the video, Destin! I'm really excited for this series! :D Thanks to T&C Stamping as well for allowing you (and us) in!
I'm a hardware engineer (electronics), and have exposure to various manufacturing business (PCB fabrication and assembly, HDD manufacturing, and integrated circuit fabrication and packaging) and it is absolutely fascinating and mindblowing! I love speaking with various engineers (mechanical & manufacturing) and always learn something new. It will fit perfectly in this series and probably require many episodes to fully cover.
This is really excellent. Engineers/machinists don't often get the credit they deserve for figuring all this out efficiently. You can tell, it's almost so complicated it can't be explained in a video. Keep it up and nice job on asking questions and getting them to explain all the cool details.
That was really cool and it started clicking to me seeing the 45 degree bends, I think rather than just stamping all at once for that type of part it actually makes it way easier to understand the process there. Super cool. Big respect to tool and dye designers and workers, you guys have been the backbone of industry for a long time and y’all are a lot brighter than you get credit for.
I work at a metal stamper as a manufacturing engineer for medical components in Wisconsin. The intricacies within the dies constantly surprise me. This is a great series. I am excited to see it “progress”
Started out as a plumber, landed in a tool room as an apprentice for injection molds, worked through my BSMET and now I work on industrial equipment all over the country. Cannot wait for this whole series.
As myself being an Engineer I love being in the shop with the technicians and the like. These guys are very smart and have so much knowledge to share. I have a lot of respect for them.
I am an electrician. I've seen so many consumer products that were clearly designed by an engineer who has never been in the shop or in the field and installed one. Very frustrating sometimes.
@@Ammobucket Most engineers and designers are like that, regardless of industry. Clueless, no practical knowledge, out of touch with reality, yet they are kind of "celebrities" in the tech field. They aspire to be more like "white collar" worker, not dirty blue one. They think they are better than technicians for example (but "blue collars" fix design flaws on daily basis). Long story short, that's how manufacturing works.
I want to thank the manufacturer for allowing SmarterEveryDay into their facility and explaining, then showing us all how those parts are made. I buy something off a shelf as a completed item, like a blender. But never did I ask myself where did those blades actually come from? They come from plants all over the world, everyone adding their pieces to produce things that I just took for granted. I need a new toaster, I now wonder how many people and companies it will take to produce said toaster, when I purchase one? Excellent Series, Thanks to you, I am, if not smarter. I'm definitely more knowledgeable then I was yesterday.
I'm a toolmaker and engineer here in the UK for a gearbox remanufacturing company and have found a lot I can relate to in this video! It's interesting to see the similarities and differences between how I work and how these guys do. Love the content and am really looking forward to this series!
As an I&E technician, I’ve always liked touring other manufacturing facilities to see how everyone uses prox switches, safety switches, transmitters, etc.
"Alright so this is wizardry." I absolutely love how you can instantly be so passionate and engrossed in literally any topic, Destin. It's very inspiring to me, and I'm sure many others. Thank you for taking us along with you for so many of these experiences. I'm looking forward to following this series
As an estimator for a sheet metal manufacturer, and someone who has fallen in love with manufacturing, this series is going to be AWESOME!!! THANK YOU!
I am about to go back to school to learn machining and CNC work at the age of 35. My brother in Christ, you could not have chosen a more fortuitous time to start this new series of videos. Truly, thank you!
I am retired from 43 years of stamping, wire forming, resistance welding, fabrication, machine building, and manufacturing process improvement implementation. So great to see this video. Took me back home. Thanks
Besides the fact that pretty much any complex item of sheet metal is made by stamping, you can always tell how the part is made by looking for the "signature" of stamping on the edge. This is a unique pattern left on by the stamping where half of the edge looks one way, and is a different color, than the other half. The reason it happens is because when the die is punching out a section of the material, it will compress the metal until it reaches about half way into the sheet. At that point the sheet metal will give way and essentially "fracture" as the punched out material rips away from the stationary part of the sheet metal. Stamping is an amazing process that goes back into the 1800s. It essentially enabled mass manufacturing of a lot of goods. The dies were made by hand, and many or even most still are. A die is carefully fitted by a die maker, and then stamps out hundreds or thousands of parts at high speeds. And then they wear out and need to be repaired or replaced. Its been the way heavy industry is done for more than 100 years.
Great overview of metal stamping. Thanks for raising awareness and providing a window for the RUclips community to see the great people, operations, and parts that make up manufacturing in the USA. From one metal stamper to another, we'll done and congrats to the T&C Stamping team on a very nice operation and some very impressive parts!
I used to work for a company that manufactured injection-molded plastics for medical purposes, mostly pipettes and their tips, microplates, cuvettes etc. The process, the degree of automation, testing and quality control and the importance of the people working WITH the molding machines, robots, computers and everything was so insanely interesting to learn! If possible, Destin, you really should try to get into one of those plants!
Watched this with my 5 year old son, and weeks later he was looking at a joist hanger I was installing and said "Dad, this was made on a press" Super proud as a Dad of course, but great job Destin making content that is understandable and memorable!
I am former cnc machinist, sheet and tube laser cutter operator/programmer and currently working as a turret punch press operator so stamping process is familiar to me, but I really like how organized this workshop is. I wanted to see just the beginning and finish it later but I sunk in for the whole video. That's just how entertaining it was. Looking for more Destin!
As a machine operator for a major strut and shock assembly manufacturer. I now understand where all out brackets come from, we have paperwork with numbers for everything and i can’t tell you how excited I am for this series!
Its a small world. I met Roger in SW Missouri a few months before this video was released. He was up here helping a friend with tool and die for his stamping business.
Love that you’re using your megaphone to promote skilled trades, Destin! Your audience is exactly the audience that can learn how technical and creative and interesting these jobs are! I’m a UX designer, and I love my career, but we so desperately need to grow our manufacturing base in this country and have good middle class jobs for people who aren’t going to join the knowledge economy. We really risk losing a lot of the know-how if we don’t start training people up before the folks who know how to do it retire, and that will just make it even harder for us to compete.
Destin! I doubt you'll see this, but this video inspired me to look into manufacturing engineering. I'm a compsci major right now, but I'm not always sure its the right fit for me, as a former electrician. Turns out my college offers a manufacting engineering program with an electronics emphasis. I can't say for sure right now, but this video may have changed the course of my life.
I started as computer programming and ended up in materials and manufacturing. I still write code occasionally but I'm telling you if you like hands on them give it a shot! I love what I do now and I know enough about code I can still water cooler with the other half the company
I've been working in manufacturing a long time now. It's great to see someone with the reach that you have starting to push this stuff in detail. Thank you Dustin, we in manufacturing all owe you a big thanks. Maybe you'll finally help people understand that it's not just push a button and a part comes out.
Thank you for introducing me to the world of metal stamping! It sounds like the manufacturing cost per part can be much lower than other techniques, but the upfront costs of designing/making the tooling means that you have to order a lot before you really start to see those savings. Can't wait to learn more. :)
As a Team Lead in our Mechanical Engineering group, I'm excited to share this series with the people on my team. I was just explaining progressive stamping last week and this is a great follow up. Thanks!
This is the most awesome video you have ever done. I was a Toolmaker and only stopped because the industry in Australia died out to go to the cheap offshore rubbish. I hope everyone learns from this series how important local manufacturing is.
This was a lot of fun and interesting for me. I'm completely ignorant when it comes to manufacturing and, like you alluded to, understand only additive manufacturing. This is a brilliant display of easily digestible information that helped me understand manufacturing stamped materials and the capabilities and facets of the trade. Fantastic job, Destin, thank you! Cheers 🍻
This series is going to be extremely cool... and there will be opportunities to physically hold things that are manufactured during the series. The purpose of making these things is to make jobs in America. I would appreciate it if you would consider signing up for the email list. I promise not to spam you. www.smartereveryday.com/email-list
Love you humble approach. By coming genuinely curious and making people understand that you have everything to learn about their topic makes them relax and talkative.
Mike Rowe would love to meet with you
As a person that is in these kinds of factories every day, I am loving the thought of this series. Thank you Destin
Aussie here. With a humanities degree. Thanks for the shout-out, as there's nothing more dangerous to humanity than...well, a lack of humanity.
@@hoilst265I agree
One thing that I love about Destin and smartereveryday is that he shows the exact same amount of interest and respect in everything and to everyone. He treats everyone from ceos down to low level works with the same respect, and give the same amount of attention and interest to stuff as big as rockets to stuff as small as single parts
Dear Destin,
I just finished my apprenticeship as a toolmaker a month ago. My profession is to build such tools that you showed us in the very beginning of the video.
I am so honored that You shed some light on this field of work! It is incredibly fun and challenging to manufacture pieces in such tight tolerances out of hardened materials that are difficult to machine - there are parts for tools like this that have a tolerance window of just a few 10000s of an inch (0.001mm in metric), and they are to be expected to be perfectly right-angled at the same time.
what kind of yearly income range comes with this skill and training?
Ah, so you “probe with a trode” so to speak. Your job is very important. Take it seriously and do good work!
@@hapnewsom9217 depends on where you live. I'm from Eastern Germany and compared to the US our income is laughably little, but living is also a lot cheaper. I'm making ~35k € per year BEFORE taxes (which translates to ~22k after taxes), which means that at my current costs of living I have ~6k to 7k of disposable income per year.
@@smartereveryday Working on it 😀
In Germany we say "nen schlechter Werkzeugmacher ist immernoch nen guter schlosser"
As a manufacturing engineer, I am very excited about this series
we're really seeing a boom in manufacturing these days
As the grunt who’s spent years pushing the button on the machines, I love this too! 😊👍
As a machinist, I'm also excited. So hard to find people anymore.
Engineer, same here. Unfortunately I don't have the occasion to go see the process. So very nice to see it.
Just some guy here. I was the kid who would watch Myth Busters and How It's Made for fun. Don't know why I got into IT, because after watching this, I might need to change fields.
I'm so excited for more of these! 😃
My favourite thing about this video was seeing Destin's unfailingly polite manner with everyone he encountered, introducing himself and speaking to the people working while this filming is going on around them. I've sat working while someone brought a film crew past me and it was kinda awkward not being engaged fully, but talked about within earshot, feeling like a zoo animal. That and Destin always seems to have the right question to ask next, to distil this person's decades of experience into something the lay person can understand. Great video.
You can't believe how you message touch me. Yess that where also so obvious to my eyes and heart. Destin is a very beautiful soul, those simple gesture of coming, contacting and respecting everyone is for me the human lesson that I will remember for years about this video. I could not have write it better then you. Thank you ClaptrapRapture ! (sorry for my miss spelling I'm speaking French I'm from Belgium)
Spot on! I noticed he achieves this by often starting his interactions by asking them to explain it to him being the dumb person, child or the one that has never touched _this/that_ in his live!
@@parva777 Votre commentaire est également apprécié ( I'm from Montréal ;-)
As a retired technical instructor, I wish I'd had a video of this quality to introduce students to die design and stamping processes. Very well done.
Cody the programmer is an inspiration. Overcoming obstacles, investing in his future, and making a big change after taking a chance.
Totally agree. After talking to him I really wanted young people to see him as an example. American can-do attitude
Also, killing only three parts and three years is a heck of a track record
@@smartereverydayAmen. We're going to need it as we on shore manufacturing to NA again. Looks like T&C is well positioned. Great job, looking forward to rest of the series!
@@smartereveryday What does "killing" a part mean?
@@12jojimboMachinist here, he was talking about scrapping a part or basically either programming it incorrectly and the cutting tool cuts where it isn't suppose to or smashes into the part. Or making something is out of tolerance. 3 in 3 years is actually an incredibly outstanding track record!
I love the way you show up with enthusiasm to people who don't necessarily consider their job interesting. I see it alot in your videos where people seem hesitant to get into the details because they assume it's not that interesting to an audience, but your enthusiasm and engaged questions prompt them in a way that always reveals their depth of passion and knowledge.
Agreed. It's really nice that these people get a platform because you can just see how people like the operator of that press just have their eyes light up when people listen to them.
And as a bonus, they get to find out that their jobs are actually interesting.
Yes! I just commented on this. They're like "why are you asking such detailed questions?" Then they drop their defenses and get super excited to answer and share their knowledge.
Easy to stay happy and smiling during a tour, but not when you're operating the same machine day in and day out. Some of these jobs are really boring and mind numbing. But in the totality of the process they're essential. And if they are paid a living wage people will do the job. I hope they're rotated between different tasks though, to keep them happy
@@luukdeboer1974 And sometimes, just having someone want to know what your job is, and what your machine is doing, is a nice way to break up the monotony.
As a mechanical engineering student from Germany it is really interesting to see the production and manufacturing technics of another country. I`m really stoked to see all the kinds of production systems from 3d laserprinting and all the other additive methods to CNC. Really happy about this upcoming deep dive. This already amazing channel got even better :) Greetings from Germany!
in Deutschland gerade im Raum Pforzheim ist die Hochburg von der Stanztechnik in allen möglichen Variationen, es ist trotzdem toll mal zu sehen wie die Amerikaner das machen.
I worked for Trumpf in Ditzingen in their American division. I hope you get to see or work for them. Outstanding Laser builders amazing technology..
I loved seeing in this video that all the cool new manufacturing techniques all come back to support stamping. It takes CNC, it takes EDM, all of that to create a bent piece of sheet metal.
As a Machinist, CNC programmer, and welder, I am extremely excited for this series
The importance of this video and the coming series cannot be understated! You're doing some great work here, Destin!
_Non compos mentis_
Can't agree more! And it is so nice to see familiar content creators here in the comment section whose work I also deeply appreciate 🙂
Imagine all the side projects this factory has 😂
love your videos
Did the video picture change from orange to blue?
I'm a CNC programmer, I assign toolpaths to machine parts used in progressive dies such as the ones shown in this video. The average age of our shop is finally going down. We have a lot of old timers reaching retirement. The youngest toolmaker (the guys that put together and test the dies) was 55 until a year ago. Now we have 3 guys under 30. The age gap is crazy.
Not really surprising. As industry moved overseas (because it's cheaper) and all the displaced old-timers took any jobs that *were* available, there weren't a lot of career entry opportunities in the US.
This is a common issue. I was talking about this to a man (in his 70's) who owns a firm that does glass curtain walls. I asked him what the average age of his installers is and his response was 50 years old. I asked him what the average age was 20 years ago and his response was 30 years old.
I'm in a Repair shop and the age gap is crazy. I'm a new hire trained in manual machining while my coworkers are CNC trained. Since we do repair work. It is almost all manual and my boss and I are teaching the other hires manual processes. I plan to go back to the tech school I earned my certs and give a talk on the different fields machining is applied to
How do we bring these jobs back? Between outsourcing and automation, we're going to miss a whole generation of people that will never work in manufacturing.
@@tgi3d881 Your comment should hava at least a 100 likes, You eloquently expressed exactly the problem the west has, all this basicmachine knowledge we exported to Japan, then Taiwan, then China...and then this juggernaut turned its cheaper labour to good work- , as they mastered our (stolen?) techniques and processes. Then the communists, allowed private enterprise and Voilà- China's pent stifled capitalistic ability were released like a virus, and became an economic pandemic infecting all western nations with cheap stuff for decades now!
Thank God, we are attempting to "reshore".
I'm not American, but there is something really special about US manufacturing. I like the people and culture, the tools, all of it. Thanks for this series, looking forward to more.
I've been a science teacher for 18 years and I'm beginning to see the movement of students pursuing trades rather than college degrees. This will help educate me, hopefully inform & encourage them, and change mindsets about the value of each kind of education.
You need both for a healthy economy, hopefully they all understand when you buy American you technically create jobs for yourself that pay decent at the same time.
@@MidwestFarmToys "You need both.."
I've been in engineering for 20 years--and I hate to say this, I run into a lot of people who just shouldn't have been engineers. People who just don't have an aptitude for it (or more importantly, a genuine interest--because I believe you can get good at nearly anything you're genuinely interested in.) I sometimes feel like pushing droves of students into STEM is a disservice and ignores a lot of the other needs we have...
@@tychosis Agreed. In my field formal education and certification is often pushed. The problem I see is a lot of people who can take tests but can't think critically. They also seem to be uncurious and cannot find their own answers. They look to others to hand them the answer on a silver platter, instead of thinking critically and using reason.
@@tychosis I've been in it for 14 years and this is happening at my company right now. We're hiring people from all over the world who can barely communicate but worse yet are only doing it because they were book smart and got the diploma because someone told them it was a strong field, but they don't give a flying flip about engineering and they aren't passionate about anything they do. They only care about the fancy job title and the salary. They put in the minimum effort, and what they do put out is constantly full of errors. I just end up doing their work myself because if I don't I'll end up having to re-do my stuff twice anyway coz the info they give me is always full of errors. It is freaking frustrating.
One wonderful thing about Destin's videos, is that he makes a point of actually trying to meet, introduce himself to- and learn the names of every person in the assembly-line - WHILE simultaneously respecting the workers' time and work. I've seen too many documentaries that uses a voice-over while looming over some nameless, faceless worker. Watching these videos I actually get a feeling of how I feels working there. Plus - having Destin asking the "obvious" questions actually allows the workers to show their expertise as both skilled workers but also conveyors of information.
I think you just pinned down what makes his videos so great. They're not just about the machines, science, and engineering. They're about people.
Very much this. The coast guard and submarine videos were really good examples of this.
I am a CNC machinist that has returned to school for my mechanical engineering undergrad. This series is extremely exciting. I can’t wait to get back into manufacturing!
YES! We need more engineers that have experience with making parts! Most engineers think if they can draw it up it can be made. That’s not always the case.
@@JoeyRF I work in manufacturing and its amazing how often a design for a part will get submitted that simply can't be made. They don't teach engineers how to make parts, just how to design them.
What do you need to study in College to have the kind of knowledge Weston does?
Mechanical engineering?
@@jm2340 Mechanical engineering is about the closest you can get but a ton of his knowledge comes from hands on experience in the workplace. Unfortunately most places wouldn't hire you for his position without a Mech E or Industrial E degree, even if you have years of experience in the hands on experience.
Hey Destin, I’m a Canadian high school student and I have had the opportunity to take many manufacturing classes, our school shop is fortunate to be one of the best outfitted school shops, and I have an amazing teacher who shows the importance of precision machining and being prepared for the future of machining, we learn full CNC, CAD and Plasmacutting operations through immersive projects. Our school also runs a electric race car completely designed and fabricated in house that helps to show the importance of precision and quality in large scale projects. So it’s really interesting to see just how applicable these skills are in industrial manufacturing
I'm 50 and one of the school projects I had was to build a small scale reciprocating steam engine from bar and round stock using a mill and lathe - no CNC as we were using WWII surplus machines and had to thread end caps because nobody would let a 15yr old use a wielder. It was an amazing opportunity I still remember fondly for how we could turn lumps of metal into a working engine.
... great, and we didn't even see the inside of such a place. Very cool!
As an engineer who previously worked as a tool design engineer for sheet metal stamping in the aerospace industry, I absolutely love this video. This is a video that engineering students should watch in college to learn about manufacturing.
Tool design is a cool specialty and I've learned so much doing it.
Aerospace to stamped?
Seeing Destin treat all the operators like people is my favorite part of this video!
Great, but why would he do otherwise?
Is that surprising to you?
Can I have a bucket to puke in? What a bunch of a** kissing.... In Europe it is completely standard to treat all operators like normal people, why you might ask yourself, well because they're humans?
OP might be reacting to the way he's interacting with them.
I think a lot of content creators would not involve individual operators, unless they were scripted in.
I often think about this when watching SED videos - the interactions are very humane and nice. Really like it.
@nicstroud It's not surprising from Destin (by all accounts, he really is a great human), but it wouldn't have been out of place for nearly any other RUclips host to ignore them entirely. Destin goes out of his way to include them, and I think it's one of the things that makes this channel special.
@@nicstroud I think what he meant is there are some pretty big youtubers who do factory tours, and operators rarely get involved on this level. Most of the time there is a guide who explains the process and that's it. I can imagine that in some cases it is the company policy, but nonetheless it just feels wrong and sometimes straight up disrespectful
My father was a T/D machinist for 35+ years and this brought a tear to my eye, I was in the Navy and the career I found when I got out I have to use a series 1 Bridgeport and a Monarch 10ee lathe, and I can almost hear his voice or hand on my shoulder as I operate those machines. I LOVE THIS SERIES!
We love this too... and have three Bridgeports and 2 Monarch EEs. Those are considered THE best "Toolroom" lathe America ever made.
I've worked in a steel stamping press plant for twelve years, and seeing the accurate information here gives me even more appreciation for everything else on this channel.
I worked in one for 6 years, and I'm really happy that now there's a good video I can show to people if they're interested in seeing what stamping actually looks like. There's so few good videos out there showing what the process actually looks like from close up.
Oh you're an EVE guy! o7
@@beaverbuoy3011 I was, though not so much any more. o7
As someone who’s main engineering interest is manufacturing, I’m so excited for this series 😊
I agree, as an engineer in training this will be even more interesting of a series than the submarine
yeah as a current welding student I'm really waiting to see what that episode will look like
As someone whose main engineering interest isn't manufacturing, I'm convinced you're insane ;) Anyway I'm also excited.
@@Vinzmannnif you want to know just how insane, search ‘Lego Mini figure factory’, those are the assembly lines I wish I knew the maths to complete my degree to make 🤣
I would love to see more of Destin doing the "dirty jobs" thing but with skilled trades and focusing on how great these people are rather than the undesirable parts
Acknowledging both shouldn't be an issue
People shouldn't choose Jobs they like the perks of but those (among the jobs with appreciated perks) who's downside they don't mind
I am very glad to have had that advice
Could you imagine a Mike Rowe and Destin colab...
My father is a Tool and Dye maker and has been doing it since I was born, I am 33 years old. He was able to provide for his family, be there after work to spend time with my brother and I when we were young (family time), was the greatest role model and made me the man I am today. I never really knew a ton about his day to day activities but knew he was mechanically and over all intelligent and a great problem solver. I remember telling kids when I was young he was a tool maker and people just were confused. This video made me emotional which I never expected. Made me appreciate him even more. Thank you for putting on display your genuine curiosity and kind hearted nature to everyone you come across.
That's amazing how willing the stamping manufacturer to show all the details in the process. I also really appreciate the attitude that Destin holds to a new field which is so enthusiastic and getting to know it step by step. I'm excited about this series!
They need the public to see the process so a new generation of workers will enter the field.
Destin*
If you talk to passionate people about what they’re passionate for you will get great results.
honestly like you couuld go start a million dollar business with this knowledge if you had the know how and funds really...
@@darkrevolution9759 yep, but you need the knowledge and a lot of money... each one of those CNC machines is $100,000 to $500,000.... or more!
I work as a senior automated press operator for a short to mid run stamping company in Minnesota. We also make our own tooling in house! I love that you are shedding light on our industry as there really isn’t much out there. Loved the video!
As a CNC machinist, I’m extremely interested to see the rest of the series. You do such a good job with your videos.
Im almost done with a machine tool tech degree and hearing him talk about skilled trades being in demand is music to my ears.
If DEI gets into STEM, none of this will be possible.
@@Zaku186 machinists are retiring in droves. The majority of my coworkers are close to retirement. It’s difficult to find skilled people to fill positions.
I miss being a machinist.. I'm in a warehouse now distributing stuff all over the world. There's just something so fulfilling about taking a chunk of material and turning in a finished part that my current job just doesn't stand up to l. I was a CNC programmer and machinist along with a manual machinist for almost 8 years. I know we are a dying breed. I hope to one day get back to that passion of creating something useful. I worked for 2 different companies over my short amount of time compared to my superiors... making machines for the mailing industry for folding and inserting paper into envelopes, and then for a Department of Defense contractor. The latter was such and amazing daily challenge that kept me on my grind every day to make sure every part was absolutely in every tolerance. I made stuff for many of the top names in aviation and military jets. I really miss it... I will one day get back to it. For now, I'll enjoy these videos. Glad to see this series start here and hopefully inspire future generations to get into the manufacturing/machinist trade!!!
@@Zaku186 starting college this year for my machine tool tech degree
Thank you for not just showing the process, but spending time with the people behind it, especially discussing how they got there and how they developed their skills. The machines are cool, but It’s the people that make this amazing!
I work at Stamping facility and I can’t even tell you how excited I am to see this video! I’m going to share it with everyone! I love your videos and can not wait to see the rest of this series! Thank you for the awesome work you do!
I got a job in a metal stamping facility, and worked every job from setup, floor lead, toolmaker, and die designer. Such an interesting and pure mechanical trade that I did not appreciate until I was in over my head 😂
I think my favourite thing about your videos is how you portray everything and especially the people doing the job. You are so respectful of their skillset and whether they are just learning, or a seasoned pro, you treat them with the utmost respect.
Destin's respect and humility are hard to ignore especially for a southerner.
I spent years as an industrial electrician. The tool and die guys were in a league of their own. Mad respect for them.
Agree. Modern wizards.
Wizard is about right.
Black smiths bend metal, these guys make ideas reality.
I am an electronics technician. I would love to see how the dies for crimping tools are made. Especially the ones for small contacts, like the ones in connectors with a pin pitch of 0.1”/2.54mm or less. Similarly, the stamping tooling for those contacts must be wild.
As someone going into computing at uni, the start to this video felt very pointed, however I find there's a really interesting relationship between computing and this.
When a programmer writes a program, it's to exacute a certain task in a certain way, with certain efficiencies, bounderies etc. Making tools and dies is almost the exact same process, but in the physical. You could think of the part as what the program has to do, and the die is the program. Even having replaceable tools for ease of maintanence has parallels in programming, seperating tasks into different functions and processes for ease of debugging or monitoring. This subject inspires a similar interest in me.
Fascinating video Destin, and I'm eagerly awaiting the rest of this series! Manufacturing is something way too played down for how important it is, this almost feels like the companion series to Practical Engineering's one on infrastructure.
When I first saw the length of the video I thought - there’s no way I’m going to be interested in the stamping process for an hour……..and I was dead wrong. This was super fascinating, thanks for another banger, Destin!
Exactly the same here. Now it’s almost over and I’m late to bed.
Yeah, it got it’s hooks into me as well despite initially thinking “no way I’ll finish that”
I felt the same. Glad i clicked.
Mr joeseph watts, judging on your picture how could a man with a beard of such not be interested?!
@@unknowncuyler5449😂 I have no beard and still watched to the end. I didn't even had the time to see how long the movie is :))
36:15 I love that he demonstrated the "light curtain". Sometimes we can make the mistake of not exercising our failure modes, and he demonstrated that safety feature with absolute confidence that the machine would stop immediately. Incredible. 👏
And the press stopped immediately, no ifs, but's or maybes!
That impressed me too. My closest to similar job experience didn't have light curtains because we were ordered to put our hands in those places where they could be crushed, cut, or ripped off. It also pleased me to see workers in a well lit, clean, climate controlled workplace where manual labor weight and work speed demands aren't slowly destroying people's bodies for minimum wage. I don't know enough to be sure, but I get the impression the stamp and die plant is a good place to work because management has a conscience. It was also fascinating to see how stamped parts are made. It would have been nice to see a tool and die set made of transparent aluminum recycled from a whale tank so that we could see more of what is going on, but I guess we can't have it all for a few more centuries.
We have light curtains in the greenhouse where I work for our transplanting robots. The problem we have is that being in a semi-outdoor environment, insects sometimes trip them. 😂
you know there was some supervisor on the floor cussing cause the suits stopped the machine.
as someone who's been injured when a light curtain/ safety device failed I wouldn't trust it further than I could throw it lol
Hey Destin! Would you like a tour of a Roll Forming Equipment manufacturer? Its the sister/competitive process to progressive stamping and its very interesting. I have an in at several, including other metal processing manufacturers.
Sister makes sense, but competitor? I should think some projects would work best with progressive stamping, and others would work best with roll forming. Would you say that's not the case, that roll forming can take on all jobs equally well or better that could otherwise be done with progressive stamping?
@@error.418no, you need both.
I'd love to see this!
Going just by the name i assume roll forming works like having the dies on a rotating roll and the sheet metal is fed in a continous movement, the dices roll over and into the steel, pressing it into the forms?
It basically takes out the extra step of converting the turning motion into an up&down.
Sounds neato
This is so cool. Building real-world products seems the height of prestige to me. I never understood why, as a kid 25 years ago, we were discouraged from going into trades like these. Schools encouraged more hands-off fields, but surely you need be just as smart and creative (if not more) to work in a practical field than to do a desk job. My dad and grandfather worked in shops like this, I think, and they always seemed embarrassed for some reason, never wanting to talk about their work. I sure wish they'd have let me shadow them as part of a bring-your-son-to-work experience or whatnot.
What happened in the 80's that saw the decline? "cheaper" work forces overseas? Free trade theories by Milton Freedman? A choice to move to a "service" based economy? New tech had fallen behind manufacturing? Not enough Material Science degrees? Why go into a field that is being actively chopped up and shipped over seas?
The reason is inflation. Labor cost is much higher in US. Automation used to beat manual work in cost but China has caught up in automation, so they are at the same start line again. Your father and grandfather are correct as you will be competing with workers where living cost is 1/8 of US.
@@xuanchen3434 Labor cost vs. exploiting child labor is...inflation? Creating graveyards of 10's of thousands of cheap EV's is a false sense of equivalence. Greed much? You are SO lost in the sauce of...words?
You are lost in the punditry of "alpha" men wearing bow ties for most of their career types.
Let me guess, slavery would "lower" opportunity cost? or would you say it "raises" opportunity cost?
You got yourself looking a full lemming.
I think a big part of it was also that the American public was tricked into a cycle of buying cheap overseas goods that need to be replaced often due to bad materials and poor workmanship.
I've worked in an automotive steel stamping plant for 22 years now in Canada. That servo press was super cool to see as I had never seen one perform before. If you ever make a transfer die video, I'll definitely check that out. Most of the progressive parts I make are left and right versions so they are mirror image of each other for driver side and passenger side. Our smallest press is 250 tons going up to a 1600 ton press. The sheer size of the large presses are living room sized area's of operation which is mind blowing as well
I spent a few years working in a press rebuilding shop. It was quite a learning experience working on some of those giant presses & seeing them in action at the customer facilities. It's hard to really appreciate them til you see a really big one on person & also see what it takes to either disassemble them, or assemble them and get them running. Many of the the large presses can weigh well over 2 or 300 tons fully assembled, especially ones that that do large area stamping with a deep draw. Sometimes the die assemblies alone can be 20 tons. On one we worked on, the flywheel alone weighed almost 40 tons. Another one had giant tie rods 60ft long and about ~24" in diameter & had a double basement 16t deep. That one had a 3200t capacity.
Great series and idea. Appreciate you sharing all the details.
As someone who always gets sucked into "How it's made" episodes when they come up on tv, I am filled with great anticipation of this series. Like seriously, I LOVE this stuff SO MUCH.
Edit: I just finished the video and it was even more amazing than I was expecting and I'm just so excited to see what else you'll cover with this series. Please keep it up. This video was amazing I need to see more!!!
It's so nice to see people making stuff that has a clear purpose, all of the workers seemed cool, down to earth and polite people. How different from a typical office culture these days. Another classic from Destin, thank you for sharing your passion for knowledge!
That's not dissimilar to the military. It can be dangerous, and you gotta know the guy next to you has your back for safety. At the end of the day, everyone wants to go home in one piece and alive. Office culture tends to have people putting others down because the only danger is money/career loss, or stagnating and being bored.
Less than five minutes into this video and I just wanted to say I'll forever be a fan of this channel because you bring things to light that I always wonder about but never have the resources to explore. Been a patron for a few years now and constantly looking forward to your next adventure.
Edit: Also, I know Destin puts a lot of effort into choosing sponsors for videos and I just wanted to say thanks for this one. AnyDesk completely just solved a big problem I’ve been having with needing to render intense 3D models and scenes in Blender while away from my home computer setup. Absolutely awesome!
It's important for people to appreciate the complexity of many everyday objects. All the years and old guys teaching young guys stuff that lays behind things we take for granted. Great series Destin!
I swear Destin always makes the most boring stuff really cool to learn about. Really goes to show having a good teacher makes a world of difference.
This is a brilliant video! I'm a toolmaker myself and work on transfer dies producing parts for dual-clutches. We also had a few progressive dies when I started my job and regularly see them in storage, so all of this is quite familiar to me. It's actually a bit emotional. Just like Weston, I also always struggle to explain to others what it is that my colleagues and I are doing 😅 You absolutely have to see and experience it to get an idea what kind of work goes into making even a seemingly ordinary part. I love the combination of engineering, manual labor, analytical work and that touch of artistry 😊 It totally changed the way I look at all the everyday objects around us. Just knowing why so many things in our lives look and/or work the way they do gives you a deeper appreciation for what we as humans are able to make from basically nothing.
Just to add to the answer for the question at 12:11 about why that part isn't bent into two 90s in one step instead of two; it's absolutely true that oftentimes you can see an engineer's "handwriting", so to speak, so someone else would use a different methodology. But depending on your desired geometry, oftentimes it'll be impossible to form it in one step. In this case you'd go from pretty much simply bending into drawing. And with those radii, depending on the ductility, the required holding and drawing forces would probably exceed the material's tensile strength. So another way would be form both finished angles but with larger radii and then sharpen them in a second step.
Please keep these kinds of videos coming, I absolutely enjoy them! 🙂
Agreed. The metal, if formed too quickly at the 90 degree bend line, could show signs of cracking as well. Unless they could slow that bend down in that area, which isn't possible on that type of press.
@@MajesticByBirth Correct, yes. You'd see the typical thinning and tearing of a tensile test, because basically that's what'd be happening there. It wouldn't be bending, but drawing, and all that material between both right angles would need to flow through the outer radius. I'm not sure doing it slower would be practical, the cross section at the inner radius would need to withstand the force applied by the blank holder and plastic deformation of the flowing material. Assuming that would work, they have that servo press, but then you'd make all the punches and cutters go through way too slowly and production output would obviously suffer. Either way, all of this would needlessly complicate the whole process. So the tool, as it exists here, works perfectly well 🙂 There are countless ways of getting from a blank to a finished part, that's the beauty of it.
Yet in my experience, the best solution is rarely the simplest nor most intuitive but the most elegant one. 😉
Hey Dustin! I am very glad to see this series as a CNC Grinding Operator myself. (Who also happens to be 19 years old)
Another form of subtractive machining that you slightly covered is CNC Grinding. One thing you may not have ever thought about is how tungsten carbide tools (end mills, non-brazed boring bars, ect.) are made. We use diamond abrasive wheels to grind away at tungsten carbide to form tools which customers buy.
Over the past year, I have learned an incredible amount of information working as a CNC Operator at Micro 100 in Idaho. Here is some of that knowledge:
There are so many fascinating problems on a day-to-day basis. I have to consider the wear rate of the diamond wheels we use, the grit of the wheels we use, how much coolant is on the wheels, the temperature of the coolant, the ambient temperature of the facility, and other factors while operating my machines. The biggest issue that I run into as a night shift operator is the change in temperature as the sun goes down in the summer. The temperature change can change the size of the wheels just enough to push measurements out of tolerance (which can be a pain).
To summerize, I run some of the machines that make many of the tungsten carbide tools that are used in other parts of the industry.
Hey I have a question, is the wear on the grinding wheel significant enough to have to compensate for it during the creation of a single part? Like how much will the wheel shrink from the beginning of a part to the end, and how do you fix the error that shrinkage would create? Do the grinding wheel manufacturers provided standard values for like wear-per-gram of material ground or something?
If the change in temperature is a repeating problem, that may signal that the shop needs to invest in some sort of temperature regulating infrastructure, either something new or upgrading what exists.. Every time an operation stops, that costs money, so preventing that would have immediate effects..
@@Melarec Easier said than done. Many shops are large and not well insulated so that can be very very costly.
Absolutely thrilled to see you bring attention to manufacturing and skilled trades. I have an associate's in manufacturing processes, currently a CNC machinist, with experience in sheetmetal fabrication, welding and 3d modeling, seeing my bread and butter on your channel is a real treat. And yes, its the great engineers who spend time on the floor, learning and understanding how their decisions affect the process.
I'm a CNC programmer, my father was a tool and die maker so were both my grandfathers. I'm so happy to see you cover this side of manufacturing.😊
I'm a quality engineer in a stamping department for an appliance manufacturer. This was a great video to watch and very well explained! I can't tell you how much I appreciate tool makers. They are some of the most intelligent people IMO. Not only to understand how dies work and the progression station to station but also their machining knowledge.
We do both progressive and transfer stamping here, if you are ever in Wisconsin I could probably show you our transfer press. We have two 1500 ton transfer press and a 1000 ton transfer press that make parts that are as big as 27"x34" from 14k lb coils of steel.
Growing up in the 70's, my dad owned a manufacturing plant. His company had a few presses. When that part of the building was being built, they figured out where the presses would be and added concrete to support the weight and movement of the machines. There were switches that had to be engaged to use the machines for safety reasons. Very interesting, I'm sending this to my brother who worked there more than I did. My brother did vacuum molding of plastic sheets.
Love the idea of a deep dive series! I find youtube 'documentaries' are always more fun when they're in depth, because after you get past the basic surface level understanding is where all the fun and interesting information lies
Indeed the white employees are doing the easy jobs the blacks are doing the hard jobs. On a higher level, it really highlights the state of this country.
I am a college educated engineer, who has worked almost exclusively doing calculations behind a desk as well as lecturing, but have always tried to instill in the younger guys I have mentored / taught, respect for the art and skills artisanal engineers. While we cant have one without the other, these guys are in many many ways the heart and soul of many engineering enterprises. Always love seeing these guys lifted up.
I worked in a paintbrush factory for a short time, and what I learned there is that sometimes the real magic isn't in how something is made, but how the machines that make something are made. Those progressive dies are amazing.
As an Engineering student turning 20 today, this series is an incredible birthday gift! Thank you Destin 🎂🎂🎂
As Roger says… you better get out on the production floor! Sweep up around the workers. It is a quick way to earn respect through humility.
Happy Birthday.
HB may you have many more constructive years,,, keep your fingers and toes...
Happy birthday, my guy! Peace
Happy bday, good luck with the studying! You *can* do this!!
I’m an industrial automation electrician. I like watching the processes of machines, especially older ones. Watching the process of a palletizer for example is just amazing to see how some genius years ago took a few simple motions and managed to arrange how the boxes stack on a pallet. Most of the new ones have robot arms which are amazing things in themselves, but they don’t have the same wonder as watching the old machines work.
I've worked in manufacturing my whole career. Seeing you so excited about it and sharing it for the world is great, I'll definitely be sharing these videos with all my family members who have questions.
The electric discharge machining is so cool. As a student I struggle to get within 5 thousandths of an inch on even precision equipment. It’s stunning how far beyond that trained experts can go.
Manufacturing engineer here and I support this message!
I started my career in metal fabrication and there is something so satisfying about it! The raw physics behind the equipment and how it’s harnessed to make such intricate at precise parts is amazing. Layer modern technologies and automation on top of it and it’s truly such an exciting industry!
Can’t wait for more of this series and thank you so much for putting it together. It’s a forgotten industry with so much opportunity for future workers.
I come from the aviation industry and often times the engineers would ask us the people doing the work how we want it done (engineered) and they would write the documents to match how the work was done. As usual a great video Justin.
That’s how all good engineers should do it
+
As someone who works in manufacturing i’m thrilled for this series and i would be thrilled if you do a true deep dive into how much really goes into everything
I agree, I am looking forward to this. I have worked in factories, tool rooms, machining shops and such all my life. This video pretty much covered everything from my first job, but I was in the window and door industry.
At one point right after WWII, my dad had a job as a press operator at "Crown, Cork, and Seal" (SF), which specialized in beverage bottle capping and the cool new concept of aluminum cans. He worked a press to round the aluminum sheets into the cylindrical cans, and tells the story of the day another press operator got his sleeve (or something) caught in a press. Without hesitation my dad jammed his arm into the press to trigger the kill switch. A "light curtain" would have been pure luxury to those press crews.
Love how you make everyone in the factory feel seen and worthy. Awesome series Destin!
Absolutely between Brandon the young apprentice and Boyd the 43 year EDM specialist, they both get a friendly handshake and the opportunity to share their knowledge.
Agreed - as soon as he enters a room he's looking to introduce himself and shake hands (or fist-bump where that's more appropriate), as if to say "I respect you and appreciate you" - what a great way to make a first impression. We can all learn a lot by the way Destin conducts himself! 👍
I don't know how to express my thanks for showing these things. My father was a 30 year machinist and engineer. Getting to see this kind of work again, is truly heart warming I heckin miss that guy. Thanks Destin.
I love how this is an hour long video and has 3/4 of a million views in one day. I'm very excited to see the rest of this series!
The greatest thing about these videos is watching these workers that could be fairly described as rather hardened and grizzly, just ABSOLUTELY light up when they realize how much you know and care about what they have to say. It’s really wonderful. You show you have a real appreciation and understanding of what they do and it really shows and drives these videos. Loved you for years Destin!!
I just graduated from a 2 year machine tool school program and durring the last 2 semesters I build a very small transfer and progressive die. Loved watching this video and getting to see large full scale versions being used in a production setting making parts and recognising some of the things I learned in my classes. Super exited to see the rest of this manufacturing series.
Thanks Destin!
Oh, this is nearly an hour long? I hadn't noticed! Thanks for the video, Destin! I'm really excited for this series! :D
Thanks to T&C Stamping as well for allowing you (and us) in!
and what a breathtaking hour it was! when politicians wax lyrical about jobs and stuff, this is the actual meat.
I'm a hardware engineer (electronics), and have exposure to various manufacturing business (PCB fabrication and assembly, HDD manufacturing, and integrated circuit fabrication and packaging) and it is absolutely fascinating and mindblowing! I love speaking with various engineers (mechanical & manufacturing) and always learn something new. It will fit perfectly in this series and probably require many episodes to fully cover.
I have the exact same credentials but with over 60 years experience and i can honestly say that this guy is wrong.
@@travisk5589Wrong about what?
This is really excellent. Engineers/machinists don't often get the credit they deserve for figuring all this out efficiently. You can tell, it's almost so complicated it can't be explained in a video. Keep it up and nice job on asking questions and getting them to explain all the cool details.
That was really cool and it started clicking to me seeing the 45 degree bends, I think rather than just stamping all at once for that type of part it actually makes it way easier to understand the process there. Super cool. Big respect to tool and dye designers and workers, you guys have been the backbone of industry for a long time and y’all are a lot brighter than you get credit for.
*die engineers
Can we call this physical programming? It felt as if looking at a computer program in physical shape. Machining looks pretty cool.
I work at a metal stamper as a manufacturing engineer for medical components in Wisconsin. The intricacies within the dies constantly surprise me. This is a great series. I am excited to see it “progress”
Started out as a plumber, landed in a tool room as an apprentice for injection molds, worked through my BSMET and now I work on industrial equipment all over the country. Cannot wait for this whole series.
This video helped me get into Tool and Die. Started my apprenticeship 3 weeks ago. Super fun and exciting so far. Lots to learn.
Destin is literally the definition of quality over quantity
LeMmiNo
Exactly! And this series is going to be so great, as an engineer in training it will be so interesting like the submarine series
The antithesis of what clickbait sludge the majority of content is now. I hope he inspires many new creators.
As myself being an Engineer I love being in the shop with the technicians and the like. These guys are very smart and have so much knowledge to share. I have a lot of respect for them.
I am an electrician. I've seen so many consumer products that were clearly designed by an engineer who has never been in the shop or in the field and installed one. Very frustrating sometimes.
@@Ammobucket Most engineers and designers are like that, regardless of industry. Clueless, no practical knowledge, out of touch with reality, yet they are kind of "celebrities" in the tech field. They aspire to be more like "white collar" worker, not dirty blue one. They think they are better than technicians for example (but "blue collars" fix design flaws on daily basis). Long story short, that's how manufacturing works.
@@AmmobucketVery true. Good engineers know how to use the experience of technicians throughout the design process. It's not always easy though.
As someone in the manufacturing industry, I’m so happy he’s covering this so people can see how cool it is!
I want to thank the manufacturer for allowing SmarterEveryDay into their facility and explaining, then showing us all how those parts are made. I buy something off a shelf as a completed item, like a blender. But never did I ask myself where did those blades actually come from? They come from plants all over the world, everyone adding their pieces to produce things that I just took for granted. I need a new toaster, I now wonder how many people and companies it will take to produce said toaster, when I purchase one?
Excellent Series, Thanks to you, I am, if not smarter. I'm definitely more knowledgeable then I was yesterday.
I'm a toolmaker and engineer here in the UK for a gearbox remanufacturing company and have found a lot I can relate to in this video! It's interesting to see the similarities and differences between how I work and how these guys do. Love the content and am really looking forward to this series!
I work in a forge and I can confirm just how amazing the manufacturing process is. Super excieted for this series!
As an engineering student, this is maybe as valuable of an education as the classroom- if not more! So pumped for this series! Thank you Destin!
As an I&E technician, I’ve always liked touring other manufacturing facilities to see how everyone uses prox switches, safety switches, transmitters, etc.
"Alright so this is wizardry." I absolutely love how you can instantly be so passionate and engrossed in literally any topic, Destin. It's very inspiring to me, and I'm sure many others. Thank you for taking us along with you for so many of these experiences. I'm looking forward to following this series
As an estimator for a sheet metal manufacturer, and someone who has fallen in love with manufacturing, this series is going to be AWESOME!!! THANK YOU!
I am about to go back to school to learn machining and CNC work at the age of 35. My brother in Christ, you could not have chosen a more fortuitous time to start this new series of videos. Truly, thank you!
Good for you man, wishing you the best!
Best wishes of success to you!
I am retired from 43 years of stamping, wire forming, resistance welding, fabrication, machine building, and manufacturing process improvement implementation. So great to see this video. Took me back home. Thanks
Besides the fact that pretty much any complex item of sheet metal is made by stamping, you can always tell how the part is made by looking for the "signature" of stamping on the edge. This is a unique pattern left on by the stamping where half of the edge looks one way, and is a different color, than the other half. The reason it happens is because when the die is punching out a section of the material, it will compress the metal until it reaches about half way into the sheet. At that point the sheet metal will give way and essentially "fracture" as the punched out material rips away from the stationary part of the sheet metal.
Stamping is an amazing process that goes back into the 1800s. It essentially enabled mass manufacturing of a lot of goods. The dies were made by hand, and many or even most still are. A die is carefully fitted by a die maker, and then stamps out hundreds or thousands of parts at high speeds. And then they wear out and need to be repaired or replaced. Its been the way heavy industry is done for more than 100 years.
Great overview of metal stamping. Thanks for raising awareness and providing a window for the RUclips community to see the great people, operations, and parts that make up manufacturing in the USA. From one metal stamper to another, we'll done and congrats to the T&C Stamping team on a very nice operation and some very impressive parts!
I used to work for a company that manufactured injection-molded plastics for medical purposes, mostly pipettes and their tips, microplates, cuvettes etc. The process, the degree of automation, testing and quality control and the importance of the people working WITH the molding machines, robots, computers and everything was so insanely interesting to learn! If possible, Destin, you really should try to get into one of those plants!
Watched this with my 5 year old son, and weeks later he was looking at a joist hanger I was installing and said "Dad, this was made on a press" Super proud as a Dad of course, but great job Destin making content that is understandable and memorable!
Awesome!
Electronics manufacturer here: It's really cool getting to see how other assembly plants operate! Thanks for starting this series, Destin!
I am former cnc machinist, sheet and tube laser cutter operator/programmer and currently working as a turret punch press operator so stamping process is familiar to me, but I really like how organized this workshop is. I wanted to see just the beginning and finish it later but I sunk in for the whole video. That's just how entertaining it was. Looking for more Destin!
As a machine operator for a major strut and shock assembly manufacturer. I now understand where all out brackets come from, we have paperwork with numbers for everything and i can’t tell you how excited I am for this series!
Its a small world. I met Roger in SW Missouri a few months before this video was released. He was up here helping a friend with tool and die for his stamping business.
Love that you’re using your megaphone to promote skilled trades, Destin! Your audience is exactly the audience that can learn how technical and creative and interesting these jobs are! I’m a UX designer, and I love my career, but we so desperately need to grow our manufacturing base in this country and have good middle class jobs for people who aren’t going to join the knowledge economy. We really risk losing a lot of the know-how if we don’t start training people up before the folks who know how to do it retire, and that will just make it even harder for us to compete.
Destin! I doubt you'll see this, but this video inspired me to look into manufacturing engineering. I'm a compsci major right now, but I'm not always sure its the right fit for me, as a former electrician. Turns out my college offers a manufacting engineering program with an electronics emphasis. I can't say for sure right now, but this video may have changed the course of my life.
I started as computer programming and ended up in materials and manufacturing. I still write code occasionally but I'm telling you if you like hands on them give it a shot! I love what I do now and I know enough about code I can still water cooler with the other half the company
I've been working in manufacturing a long time now. It's great to see someone with the reach that you have starting to push this stuff in detail. Thank you Dustin, we in manufacturing all owe you a big thanks. Maybe you'll finally help people understand that it's not just push a button and a part comes out.
Another Manufacturing Engineer here! I’m going to love this series! Thanks for covering the often hidden side of making things.
Thank you for introducing me to the world of metal stamping! It sounds like the manufacturing cost per part can be much lower than other techniques, but the upfront costs of designing/making the tooling means that you have to order a lot before you really start to see those savings. Can't wait to learn more. :)
As a Team Lead in our Mechanical Engineering group, I'm excited to share this series with the people on my team. I was just explaining progressive stamping last week and this is a great follow up. Thanks!
This is the most awesome video you have ever done. I was a Toolmaker and only stopped because the industry in Australia died out to go to the cheap offshore rubbish. I hope everyone learns from this series how important local manufacturing is.
ahem.... rocket factory
This was a lot of fun and interesting for me. I'm completely ignorant when it comes to manufacturing and, like you alluded to, understand only additive manufacturing. This is a brilliant display of easily digestible information that helped me understand manufacturing stamped materials and the capabilities and facets of the trade. Fantastic job, Destin, thank you! Cheers 🍻