Tesla Manufacturing: See how the Cybertruck HFS Panels are Blanked, Bent, and Built!

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  • Опубликовано: 1 фев 2025

Комментарии • 2,3 тыс.

  • @rogerdsmith
    @rogerdsmith Год назад +1270

    What other manufacturer would allow Sandy Monro this level of access?
    This is exactly the right thing for Tesla to do .

    • @1flash3571
      @1flash3571 Год назад +63

      There are experts out there that they can hire, but who would pay them to create a new, or improve upon the already used processes which costs money, and time, AND new machines which costs money also big time. Tesla is one of the FEW in the world that does this and they are not a manufacturer of parts. They are a Car company which is different from all the other car companies. Tesla is a Tech Company which can create a new manufacturing processes or methods. All of this is EXPENSIVE which others are afraid to do, but Tesla does it.

    • @malax4013
      @malax4013 Год назад

      @@1flash3571In a long term all of this research and developent and pushing techologies will pay of with huge numbers. And Tesla is playing the longest game while even smashing the short game🎉

    • @danr1920
      @danr1920 Год назад +36

      We saw nothing. Two guys hand stacking panels, 1922!

    • @GlitterGuru
      @GlitterGuru Год назад +18

      @@1flash3571it’s impressive for sure, but we only know about it because Tesla is public about everything. Who’s to say there aren’t others doing equally impressive things? BMW’s carbon fiber i3 frame was just as groundbreaking, so was Toyota/Lexus’ carbon loom for the LFA (now used for other parts). And this was over a decade ago.

    • @capslock9031
      @capslock9031 Год назад +39

      . @GlitterGuru Why did BMW stop with the i3 manufacturing methods and materials? Because they were a dead end and not fit for mass manufacturing at cost. Same goes for Audi A2. Also brilliantly ahead of its time with the full aluminium body. They all lack execution at scale and the will to drive innovation in manufacturing to the point where Tesla has gotten with it, sadly.

  • @jdez095
    @jdez095 Год назад +1349

    Good to see my sector at work (Cybertruck Stamping) being shown to the public like this for the first time. Been an operator on the Hot Press for a while now.
    And this is just the beginning

    • @dennisschlieckau8723
      @dennisschlieckau8723 Год назад +54

      Thanks for your great work in helping produce an incredible vehicle. I’m curious though, can you say or do you what type 3xx of SS is used in stamping the inner door panels? Clearly, it’s not the same as the HFS outer skin. I totally understand if you cannot say anything though.

    • @BongoWongoOG
      @BongoWongoOG Год назад +34

      Thank you for being part of such an inspirational vehicle and company.

    • @NilsFrederking
      @NilsFrederking Год назад +35

      Crazy, what you are doing there, my greatest respect, I worked with stainless steel for over 20 years.

    • @kennyg1358
      @kennyg1358 Год назад +22

      I'm kinda jealous.

    • @thewaysh
      @thewaysh Год назад +21

      Thank you for your service to humanity.

  • @adastraglobal
    @adastraglobal Год назад +85

    Thank you Sandy and thank you to all the Tesla workers who stayed late to demo it for us!

  • @jrb_sland
    @jrb_sland Год назад +333

    Aging [75] Canadian man here. My specialty before retiring was designing/manufacturing electronic instruments for the geophysics community. Tiny production volumes, mostly hand assembly, but high value. Here I see the flip side of modern tech - high volume providing max manufacturing efficiency to make cost-effective vehicles for the masses. Great to be alive to see this! Many thanks to Mr. Munro & his team. We live in a time of true miracles.

    • @JDB-ru4lp
      @JDB-ru4lp Год назад +6

      The only miracle is that God came down to save us from hell in human form. Jesus Christ is God

    • @F_JoeBiden-tu6cl
      @F_JoeBiden-tu6cl Год назад +1

      Good thing you retired! 😂

    • @Ban00
      @Ban00 Год назад +5

      You mean thanks to Elon and Tesla team

    • @GeneralKenobi69420
      @GeneralKenobi69420 Год назад +9

      A $100k 3 ton pick up truck isn't exactly what I'd call a "vehicle for the masses"

    • @i_smoke_ghosts
      @i_smoke_ghosts Год назад +2

      ​@@GeneralKenobi69420*semantics

  • @LUKE390425
    @LUKE390425 Год назад +89

    This is insane, Sandy being given access to this is a blessing for all of us.

    • @idolshrubs2728
      @idolshrubs2728 Год назад

      he sucked elons dick just long enough. what a blessing!

  • @Mulderfactoring
    @Mulderfactoring Год назад +305

    I have to admit it's fun to see Sandy speechless.
    I love a guy who has as much experience as him. He was undeniably impressed.
    He just takes it in, quietly processes what he's seeing and hearing. This is why we all rely on Sandy!

    • @aussie_al
      @aussie_al Год назад +21

      Agreed , i think he was speechless most of the time because he'd never seen or heard of some of the processes that Tesla has either invented or improvised. Once Sandy has gathered his thoughts after this and the coming walk through series, i think we will can look forward to an explosion of praise and admiration.

    • @billhanna2148
      @billhanna2148 Год назад +17

      I am no Sandie but I have seen countless videos of car parts being fabricated but NONE had micron level precision, red hot stamping, all stainless steel construction on one floor and shown in side of 30 minutes. I know that they are truly only limited by the batteries at this point and again that is also a matter of time.

    • @teodor4ik183
      @teodor4ik183 Год назад +5

      I think he is speechless, cos he knovs how to do something, but time after time he see somethng different and stupidly "easyer". Most genious things looks easy and you thinking "why everyone dont do it?".

    • @cengeb
      @cengeb Год назад

      Admitting ya come from Ford, shows not exactly knowing what you are doing. ford has the highest recall of any maker around the world. so much for more plastic snaps...clueless

    • @mohmmedtolba
      @mohmmedtolba Год назад

      I cannot reveal too much, bt yea I've been using a coach ' 'and through his guidance, I've been able to make approx. $24,000 in dividends on a monthly basis, it is pretty straightforward, not as complicated as it used to be,

  • @aMerricanAdventours
    @aMerricanAdventours Год назад +587

    So cool that Munro is a key player in exposing a vehicle to the world that I believe he always wanted to see, and that he truly loves

    • @JustWasted3HoursHere
      @JustWasted3HoursHere Год назад +32

      Sandy has given Elon many tips - constructive criticism - over the years on improving their products, many of which have been implemented. I imagine that Elon told the Cybertruck crew, "Okay guys, I'm sending Sandy Munro to you guys today. Show him everything he wants to see. Impress him. But most importantly, _listen_ to what he says."

    • @Byronseto
      @Byronseto Год назад +22

      @@JustWasted3HoursHere it's so cool to see their relationship benefit each other - and for us to be able to take a back seat in it all

    • @N_g_er
      @N_g_er Год назад +1

      Exposing is the wrong word nigga

    • @David-zl3bi
      @David-zl3bi Год назад +3

      EV VEHICLES ARE *FINNISHED*
      WILL BE REPLACED BY HYDROGEN VEHICLES

    • @grahammonk8013
      @grahammonk8013 Год назад +19

      @@David-zl3bi First, the CT could be EV, Hydrogen, even freakin' ICE if they wanted, so what does your comment have to do with anything on this video? Second, to use hydrogen is *SO* much much less efficient, it just makes most hydrogen applications a non starter. There will be, (actually already is in some areas) some applications for hydrogen, but in the mainstream vehicle market no, won't happen.

  • @robkeshav800
    @robkeshav800 Год назад +297

    One of your best videos I have seen of a manufacturing plant. The factory is so clean and pristine. Sandy got unprecedented access to the most advanced auto manufacturing plant in the world. Mind blowing!

    • @BTSflyer
      @BTSflyer Год назад +9

      Once the vehicle is outside it is a dust storm. That will change as the construction site gets finished. They do wash the vehciels before they are driving on to carriers.

    • @rollingstone70
      @rollingstone70 Год назад +4

      This plant is pretty typical for a Japanese auto plant.

    • @Bob-Jenkins
      @Bob-Jenkins Год назад +8

      The Porsche construction factory is practically a hospital. Everyone looks like they're going to a crime scene, booties, hair nets, soft white coveralls. It seems like overkill, but if you're going to do it, do it right, right!

    • @boostav
      @boostav Год назад +26

      @@rollingstone70 No Japanese auto plant is cold working ss, laser blanking it and then air bending it...

    • @rollingstone70
      @rollingstone70 Год назад +2

      ⁠@@boostavno Japanese plant would use thick ass stainless sheet for car parts. Why? Carbon steel sheet in structure is stronger and lighter. It is completely unnecessary. Cyber truck is $100k pointless truck. A vanity vehicle for the top 5%. No one in Kansas or Iowa is going to buy this truck. I think the Cybertruck plant will go the way of Airbus’s A-380 plant. Great engineering achievement but will cease production due to lack of demand.

  • @wobjebn1
    @wobjebn1 Год назад +4

    Tesla is really not afraid of the competition. “Make sure you get the camera in there!” They know just how hard it was to create. No way legacy could replicate this.

    • @chrisbraid2907
      @chrisbraid2907 6 месяцев назад

      I believe Elon when he says he’s happy for good competition, but I don’t see him giving it all away. I’d really like to see Jim Farley offer to collaborate in producing EVs that Americans and the world would enjoy … I think American has lost its way in litigation and patent rights forgetting what is best for America in their race for more Dollarbucks …

    • @DanDeGaston
      @DanDeGaston 6 месяцев назад

      In all honesty, why would you want to replicate this?

  • @jfridel
    @jfridel Год назад +78

    For all the 10 years that I have been working in Japan as an engineer with electronic manufacturers, I never could see more than a second of an assembly line. This tour is just so deep and amazing! Thanks!

  • @ollyb7570
    @ollyb7570 Год назад +367

    I’m loving this series, gives my How It’s Made vibes. Makes me appreciate Tesla and the Cybertruck all the more. Thanks Sandy.

  • @Hartmania21
    @Hartmania21 Год назад +35

    teslas transparency is as refreshing as it is unprecedented.

    • @michalsalaj
      @michalsalaj Год назад +4

      they are 100% confident nobody can do that. And they are right

    • @cathyk9197
      @cathyk9197 Год назад +1

      @@michalsalaj And Tesla WANTS others to follow their leadership, because it supports their mission: to accelerate the transition to sustainable energy

  • @dorhocyn3
    @dorhocyn3 Год назад +174

    This place ain’t no joke, these are serious machines making serious trucks. Thank you SpaceX for your contributions.

    • @mattwill63
      @mattwill63 Год назад +1

      CYBERTRUCK=FIRST GENERATION HONDA RIDGELINE IT'S A POOR DESIGN THE CAB AND BED BEING ONE PIECE=CRAPPY DESIGN SECOND GENERATION HONDA RIDGELINE UNIBODY ON FRAME IS FAR MORE UNIQUE THAN ONE PIECE BED/CAB UNIBODY WITH SOME CRAPPY BOLTED ON GIGACASTINGS WITH INFERIOR TOWING RANGE AT THAT

  • @BekTesfa
    @BekTesfa Год назад +107

    The respect given to Sandy by the entire Tesla team is amazing to watch… great job guys!

    • @idolshrubs2728
      @idolshrubs2728 Год назад +2

      with the amount of free publicity and butt kissing he is doing, they are happy to spend their time with him. Its not respect, its sales

    • @igorz3551
      @igorz3551 Год назад

      ​@@idolshrubs2728-_-

    • @oggyoggy1299
      @oggyoggy1299 Год назад

      Haha! Wow!!

    • @billymitchell8203
      @billymitchell8203 Год назад

      Qeeeeèeèeèeeeeee​@@oggyoggy1299

    • @idolshrubs2728
      @idolshrubs2728 Год назад

      Treating a paid advertiser with "respect" is what's really happening here. Who the fuck is this Sandy guy anyway and what credibility does he lend to this auto? I would be much more impressed if the thing was given to people who needed their minds changed before liking it.

  • @jeffpicken5057
    @jeffpicken5057 Год назад +29

    I thought the episode with the engineers was going to be tough to top, but this one is even better. It’s awesome to see the inside of the factory and how things are done. Can’t wait for the next one.

  • @michaelfloyd8583
    @michaelfloyd8583 Год назад +198

    Been following this channel since very beginning.
    Oooft, the level of access has gone through the roof!
    This is an astounding level of access from Tesla here.
    Brave new World.

    • @MunroLive
      @MunroLive  Год назад +37

      Thanks for watching!

    • @Hippida
      @Hippida Год назад +10

      Yeah, it's like Koenigsegg. We don't mind showing you, because you couldn't copy us if you tried

  • @retiredbitjuggler3471
    @retiredbitjuggler3471 Год назад +145

    I can’t believe the amount of access that Tesla affords to Sandy. What a great relationship! Thanks to Tesla and thanks to Sandy for another great tour! Amazing technology!

    • @Jkeys-ov1mw
      @Jkeys-ov1mw Год назад

      I’m not sure how to break this to you but Sandy owns Tesla stock….like legit not an index fund common single stock. Of course he’s going to say great stuff about Tesla, of course because it’s his money involved. And yes I know he did initially say bad things about QC

    • @RsOnTheStreetS
      @RsOnTheStreetS Год назад

      Other people would call it free advertisement 😂

    • @PinchOfLuck
      @PinchOfLuck Год назад

      @@Jkeys-ov1mw disregarding the stock comment, but do you have anything against what you have seen here? Seriously?
      Do you even realize how far behind other manufacturers are?
      Go have a look, and you will find better appreciation for this.

    • @repentantrevenant9776
      @repentantrevenant9776 Год назад

      If one of the foremost experts in the world, who had initially criticized their manufacturing, ends up being so blown away by their manufacturing that he goes all-in on the stock… what does that say about the company?

    • @repentantrevenant9776
      @repentantrevenant9776 Год назад +2

      It’s not “Sandy says nice things because he owns the stock.” It’s “Sandy owns the stock because he has nice things to say.”

  • @TheKevlar
    @TheKevlar Год назад +103

    Finally, we get to see a ramp-up of new manufacturing tech as it happens. Everyone in the video has worked intensely and smiled with pride at this world's first accomplishment...

  • @glademaster
    @glademaster Год назад +28

    Is it just me or is this an unprecedented level of openness?

    • @Bamamarama
      @Bamamarama 10 месяцев назад +1

      Not really, there are lots of automotive factory tours.

  • @jonathan_careless
    @jonathan_careless Год назад +62

    16:15 is the best moment of this entire awesome video. Love Sandy's reaction, "This is aluminum-bronze?!?! And you can stamp with it?!" Great stuff.

    • @kateebameer5477
      @kateebameer5477 Год назад +2

      can you explain the situation happened there

    • @Half_Finis
      @Half_Finis Год назад +1

      @@kateebameer5477 aluminum and bronze are both very soft metals so he's surprised u can mold these hard steel panels with it :)

    • @ssnoc
      @ssnoc Год назад +5

      And he’s right too - that die won’t hold up. Which means every time it’s used, the result degrades. Not very encouraging.

    • @SamPinchesMakerShop
      @SamPinchesMakerShop Год назад +3

      @@ssnoc It sounded like it was just an aluminium bronze coating on the die. If not, that's what they should be doing.

    • @pabz2ray
      @pabz2ray Год назад +2

      Sandy has his doubts, listen to his tone of voice and statement again

  • @TinyHouseGuy
    @TinyHouseGuy Год назад +38

    All I can say is WOW! This is some of the best PR Tesla has ever done IMO.

    • @aussie_al
      @aussie_al Год назад +2

      Agreed but the problem is that there are still millions of potential buyers who don't know what a Tesla or CT is. Hopefully that will turn around quickly and they can ramp quickly.

    • @catbert7
      @catbert7 Год назад

      @@aussie_al No point attracting more customers until you have the production to meet the demand. Tesla has been production-constrained until now with the 3 and Y. Cybertruck will be too, for years to come.

  • @vermontsownboy6957
    @vermontsownboy6957 Год назад +185

    I love how freaking smart, competent, and articulate Lars is, indeed the entire Tesla leadership team.
    Also, this was great Munro content. Sandy did more listening and little talking, let the experts speak. The video of the process was splendid. RUclips Gem Quality.

    • @spe007
      @spe007 Год назад +3

      Yes, exactly my thoughts

    • @InformedKiwi
      @InformedKiwi Год назад +11

      Lars is very much smart, competent and articulate and MODEST no arrogance here. Btw love the Tesla Vest but even more so the safety helmet. So cool .

    • @feedbackzaloop
      @feedbackzaloop Год назад

      Such a contrast to the other guy whose name we didn't have a chance to hear. But you can clearly see, who's living at the plant and who's a talking head

    • @cathyk9197
      @cathyk9197 Год назад +1

      @@InformedKiwi Suggested Lars put copies of that Hard Hat for sale in the Tesla Shop

    • @greggerypeccary
      @greggerypeccary Год назад

      @@cathyk9197Hard-hat looks like the ones SpaceX gave the workers at Starbase.

  • @rickdc3
    @rickdc3 Год назад +89

    Oh my God! Gives a lot of insight into why prototypes are easy, but production is hard! All the massive equipment required to make this stuff in large numbers is truly mind blowing.

    • @aussie_al
      @aussie_al Год назад +13

      Makes us appreciate why CT was 4 years in the making. So many problems to solve and techniques to invent.

    • @jamesbizs
      @jamesbizs Год назад +2

      Prototyping is not easy either lol

    • @alanlight7740
      @alanlight7740 Год назад +7

      @@jamesbizs- it's a relative things.
      There are doubtless dozens, probably hundreds, and possibly thousands of shops in the U.S. that could make a decent prototype.
      There's only a handful of shops that can do mass manufacturing on this scale.

    • @mini2nut67
      @mini2nut67 Год назад +5

      I blown away that all of this was accomplished in only 4 short years. I was shocked to hear that the doors inner shell is also made from SS. I Love watching manufacturing!

    • @saff226
      @saff226 Год назад +5

      ​@@aussie_alit actually didn't take 4. They designed the truck twice. The first one was to big and musk didn't like it and made them redesign the entire thing again a bit smaller. Pretty crazy that they got it together so fast when you take that into consideration

  • @Indy_at_the_beach
    @Indy_at_the_beach Год назад +1

    The CT build system is amazing in the sheer number of manufacturing innovations needed to build it. Tesla must be an engineers paradise while the legacy makers worship accountants.

  • @balaji-kartha
    @balaji-kartha Год назад +16

    Amazing that Tesla has opened it all out to Sandy (he does not have to do a tear down!). And so uplifting to watch the enthusiasm of the people who work there. That is an beautiful factory! ❤

  • @daveoatway6126
    @daveoatway6126 Год назад +68

    No risk of any Legacy OEM catching up! Engineers run the company - not lawyers, accountants, and business majors! New materials, new processes! Micron precision! Robots! Incredible planning! And very competent and nice people working together!

    • @rqdtv
      @rqdtv Год назад +4

      You left out unions.

    • @jasonengland2357
      @jasonengland2357 Год назад +2

      It’s how Porsche used to be before the take over, they touted being ran by engineers and not accountants.

    • @lustfulvengance
      @lustfulvengance Год назад

      ​@@jasonengland2357Also Boeing, before McDonald Douglas.........

    • @Francis-yc9nc
      @Francis-yc9nc Год назад

      you know from where Schuler, Kuka, Triumpf has it's HQ? All high quality Production technology comes from Germany. they even use item profiles. for a new building it looks dirty.

  • @George2647g
    @George2647g Год назад +52

    Amazing that Tesla is so far ahead they're not even afraid to show all this to potential competitors because they know they have the lead that can't be caught..

    • @NilsFrederking
      @NilsFrederking Год назад +3

      Exactly!

    • @ken-mb5cp
      @ken-mb5cp Год назад +2

      They make it look easy but it’s not. A ton of work and $$ went into this. It seems it’s paid off.

    • @Shytot-1
      @Shytot-1 Год назад

      Far ahead? I don't understand what that means.

    • @NewCastleIndiana
      @NewCastleIndiana Год назад +2

      Everything to help humanity become multi planetary .

    • @jamesbizs
      @jamesbizs Год назад +2

      Lol it’s not even about being far ahead. No one else is even planning on doing this. That’s why he doesn’t care. He can get more costumers out of showing off the production, than he’d lose from competition stealing ideas.

  • @phenomagator
    @phenomagator Год назад +98

    It feels like Tesla is the only American company building for the future. The engineers at Tesla are really world class and you can tell just by looking at their workspace and listening to their passion.

    • @countryman032
      @countryman032 Год назад +8

      Don't forget SpaceX.

    • @spiritlevelstudios
      @spiritlevelstudios Год назад +4

      Don't forget Sandy trashing their panel gaps 😅

    • @crossroads670
      @crossroads670 Год назад

      LOL what. They don’t even have union workers. They are paid poorly. GM and Ford have things in a better direction.

    • @idrisddraig2
      @idrisddraig2 Год назад

      Other non legacy (but much smaller)voem's. Lucid, Rivian etc. In Canada there is Edison and others also

    • @mullholand
      @mullholand Год назад

      They are in a way lower league - you can't compare them to Tesla's lingering might.@@idrisddraig2

  • @eeblatter
    @eeblatter Год назад +27

    This is SUPER interesting to see. I love to see new techniques employed and challenges met. The US used to much more about this and it's great to see it still happens somewhere -outside of the defense contractors. Big thanks to Tesla and Sandy for showing this. I've briefly worked as a laser and press brake operator and love to see state-of-the-art processes.

  • @chimerawizard5639
    @chimerawizard5639 Год назад +8

    So awesome to get to see a tour of the factory with people who actually know how to answer questions; as well as someone to ask good ones.

  • @hedleyfurio
    @hedleyfurio Год назад +24

    What a wonderful time to be alive and have the privilege of seeing top notch engineering and production . I’m now 67 , but this is so inspiring for me and hopefully any young artisan or mech engineering student - huge thanks to all 👍

  • @ichthyander45
    @ichthyander45 Год назад +171

    We would love to hear Sandy's thought at length once he processed all these info for himself.

    • @MunroLive
      @MunroLive  Год назад +115

      Good idea!

    • @aussie_al
      @aussie_al Год назад +25

      ​@@MunroLive Really sad that Cory missed this opportunity to see a real car company under the covers. Unfortunately he chose to go elsewhere to a company which will soon be belly up. Shame

    • @ken-mb5cp
      @ken-mb5cp Год назад +2

      @@aussie_alHe’ll end up at Ford I think.

    • @wadafruit
      @wadafruit Год назад +11

      Lucid needs a tub of help, maybe Cory can help them. Sandy will take Cory back anyway.

    • @aussie_al
      @aussie_al Год назад +9

      @wadafruit it's my understanding that Cory went to Lucid. What was he thinking FFS ???

  • @Derpy1969
    @Derpy1969 Год назад +110

    What I learned:
    1.8 and 1.4mm thick exterior panels (not 3mm)
    The entire door shell is stainless. No rusty door seams, ever!
    Door rings are powder coated. And made of boron steel.
    Bent panels are not scored. Outer door panels handle 75% of the crash load (that sounds like exoskeleton to me).

    • @-JustHuman-
      @-JustHuman- Год назад +10

      It's kinda impressive they got it to be so strong that they went from 3mm to 1.8 and 1.4, makes you wonder how strong would 5 or 10 mm be.

    • @rogerstarkey5390
      @rogerstarkey5390 Год назад +17

      ​@@-JustHuman-
      As mentioned, you couldn't bend the radius without cracking at 5mm.

    • @rogerstarkey5390
      @rogerstarkey5390 Год назад +30

      And, dropping to 1.8 for the doors/ 1.4 for other sections effectively halves the volume of HFS and therefore the weight.

    • @-JustHuman-
      @-JustHuman- Год назад +3

      @@rogerstarkey5390 Not about bending it, just how strong it is. There are more ways you could form the sheet, like a laser cut bend or hydro forming it.

    • @jamesengland7461
      @jamesengland7461 Год назад +15

      I believe the 5mm refers to the radius of the bend, not the thickness of the material.

  • @kizzik
    @kizzik Год назад +2

    OMG, just OMG! 🤯
    I had imagined the air bender was some kind of super humongous complicated press. Tesla manufacturing solutions are so elegant and straightforward. The best part is no part. The best process is no process.

  • @JoshBoggsexposedhomes
    @JoshBoggsexposedhomes Год назад +9

    This is just absolutely unreal! I used to work in an aluminum foundry up north and just watching this is like seeing WAY into the future from what I used to see and within heat treatment plants. Wish it was possible to see this in person for tours. Can't wait to put my hands on my own cybertruck! I'm in absolute awe at the technology and specs of accuracy here! Well done!

  • @LoveForTheTruthTV
    @LoveForTheTruthTV Год назад +123

    I watched this twice which is rare for me. I’m impressed with the simplicity of the manufacturing process of which “experts” said would be impossible. Well done Lars, Rich, Elon and the whole Tesla team. Thank you Sandy for giving us a glimpse of the new standard in manufacturing.

    • @LoveForTheTruthTV
      @LoveForTheTruthTV Год назад +3

      Stay tuned. This disrespect is noted.

    • @catbert7
      @catbert7 Год назад +6

      Reducing the complex to the simple is what's hard.

    • @theflew
      @theflew Год назад +4

      It's simple because it's a simple design. When there are no curves, just bends things get a lot simpler.

    • @PinchOfLuck
      @PinchOfLuck Год назад +1

      @@P.J.McLaughlin You clearly missed the title of this video, didn't you? :D
      They will show more later. this was just one vid.

    • @Nphen
      @Nphen Год назад

      I want to rewatch it but I'm waiting for my brother to be over for Christmas Eve. I want to share the magic!

  • @EnlightenedSavage
    @EnlightenedSavage Год назад +12

    You know that they are showing cool stuff when sandy is quiet and soaking in the experience.

  • @geirmyrvagnes8718
    @geirmyrvagnes8718 Год назад +7

    If I understood correctly, the door inners are made of the same material, just thinner so it can be stamped while hot. And then just not painted. Laser welded with enough precision not to make marks on the outside. Tiny imperfections on the inside fixed with another laser. It is all frickin laserbeams! No chemicals, no water, no solvents, no paint, no internal steel beam to resist side impact placed exactly where the crash test hits, no door handle. Just door. Tough door. Corrosion resistant door. The end. Chef's kiss, or whatever the engineering equivalent is!

    • @AntaniusX
      @AntaniusX Год назад +2

      They are not made of the same finished material. They are made of SS but not HFS SS.

    • @geirmyrvagnes8718
      @geirmyrvagnes8718 Год назад

      @@AntaniusX That would make sense, but I wouldn't put it past Tesla to have formulated another special steel (optimal for hot stamping) just for this.

  • @wallyrogers2371
    @wallyrogers2371 Год назад +4

    I love how Sandy is holding himself together and not giggling like a school girl the whole time! This is amazing to see a process before it's fully automated. I hope he gets to go back in a year or more to see it basically put one together without people manually moving parts around. Hell by then we may have tesla robots doing the work in between!

  • @AustinFerguson
    @AustinFerguson Год назад +42

    Best. Video. To. Date. Well done sir - insanely cool to have Tesla allow anyone to see this stuff.

  • @nerdwatcher4273
    @nerdwatcher4273 Год назад +94

    Sandy has had such amazing access to the Cybertruck process that the teardown is almost going to be redundant 😮

    • @ronaldlenz5745
      @ronaldlenz5745 Год назад

      Exactly my thoughts.

    • @ronaldlenz5745
      @ronaldlenz5745 Год назад

      Exactly my thoughts.

    • @jedi_mapperp4073
      @jedi_mapperp4073 Год назад

      I sense Tesla gave him the deep tour because he wouldn’t understand or appreciate some of what he was looking at, or the process that makes the parts. Saved the life of a CT and we learned more.

  • @DPCcars
    @DPCcars Год назад +28

    Sandy Munro's deep dive into Tesla's facilities is a testament to Tesla's confidence in their innovation and openness. It's rare to see such transparency in the auto industry. This not only showcases the advanced tech but also the strong work culture at Tesla. Kudos to the team for maintaining such a pristine environment and pushing the boundaries of automotive engineering. It's exciting to see industry veterans like Munro genuinely impressed, providing an authentic perspective on Tesla's impact in the industry. What do you think will be the next big innovation from Tesla?

    • @joewiley6927
      @joewiley6927 Год назад +2

      Elon already told us, the new manufacturing lines they are building at Giga Texas for the economy model they are developing. He says it will be the most advanced manufacturing of vehicles, by far. Some are thinking some Tesla Bots will be working the line alongside us humans.

    • @toddwilliams5905
      @toddwilliams5905 Год назад

      HVAC heat pumps for home and commercial buildings

  • @rickadams6605
    @rickadams6605 9 месяцев назад +1

    The camera operator is exceptional. Smooth, slow movements that allow us time to take in what we’re seeing. Versus fast swing shots. Well done

  • @RichardLapointe-x8g
    @RichardLapointe-x8g Год назад +5

    I am truly grateful to have been able to visit parts of the Giga factory with Sandy. Way to go, Sandy.

  • @Arpin_Lusene
    @Arpin_Lusene Год назад +94

    This video will definitely open many people's eyes to the amount of effort and love that actually went into cybertruck. Thank you as always Munro team for bringing high quality videos.

    • @adamriese3610
      @adamriese3610 Год назад

      i think these morons of teslaq and others dont want to see it or just don't get it. But we can be happy to see it!

  • @virgilwhetsel5289
    @virgilwhetsel5289 Год назад +41

    The best show ever for this old tinner. So much insight on how Tesla is working with stainless steel. My experience with 304 and 316 SS taught me that it's really tough on the tools. Love the innovative solutions that Tesla uses. Thanks Sandy.

  • @darylfortney8081
    @darylfortney8081 Год назад +39

    Exclusive and best of coverage always here with Munro... Cheers!

    • @MunroLive
      @MunroLive  Год назад +10

      Much appreciated!

    • @darylfortney8081
      @darylfortney8081 Год назад +19

      ... you can also clearly see how much love the Tesla production team has for producing these things at ridiculously high quality standards. It's not just a job for them, it's passion and pride. Sandy is clearly blown away by what they are pulling off.

  • @mmanjin
    @mmanjin Год назад +1

    Considering what Tesla accomplished in 4 years from concept to production in bringing the CT to market is next level and absolutely amazing. I'm glad Tesla is allowing the world to get a good look behind the curtain and for us to begin to get an appreciation and sense of what state of the art vehicle manufacturing looks like in building a 21st century state of the art and technological tour de force vehicle. The legacy competition is still building vehicles within the confines of outdated 20th century thinking and manufacturing modus operandi.
    No doubt the CT will begin to dominate the pickup truck market within the next few years as Tesla continues improving on and ramping up production which they can and will do to meet the insane demand for this vehicle.

  • @eibronmonde1275
    @eibronmonde1275 Год назад +7

    MY family and I had a tours in several auto manufacturers in the US like Ford, Honda, Toyota, BMW all of them prohibits you to take a pictures or videos inside thier plant. Meanwhile, TESLA is sharing thier techniques on how to build a magnificent EVs to all these long time players.....and they are still behind TESLA. BRAVO TESLA BRAVO👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍

    • @jamesengland7461
      @jamesengland7461 Год назад +2

      I feel like the other manufacturers don't actually have anything innovative enough to hide from the naked eye; they're just piecing cars together in the same old way. Nothing to be proud of or top secret.

    • @lumtavon1952
      @lumtavon1952 Год назад

      Agree, you are not allowed to make any picture of their ancient technology demonstrating they have zero innovation intentions. This type of culture will simply be washed away

  • @Hotspur37
    @Hotspur37 Год назад +9

    I used to work in metal stamps years ago and there used to be oil and grease all over the place. I love how clean it is there.

  • @shandyashley3259
    @shandyashley3259 Год назад +20

    That was a very impressive tour. Thanks for the video!

  • @DessieDoolan
    @DessieDoolan 7 месяцев назад +1

    For followers of the GT construction videos from Joe Tegtmeyer, Jeff Roberts, Brad Sloan, Airwave Dynamics etc.
    0:09. Enter Stamping 2 extension through the west drive-through door.
    Lars, “so this is our stamping building, we have three 5 stage tandem presses. 2 transfer presses, first of our 2 hot-stamping presses.”
    Lars points north to their first of the 2 hot-stamping presses. Press is in the west side of Stamping 2. A press is visible at 0:21 as the camera swings around. Presumably this is the hot-stamping press.
    0:21. Sandy, “so are you bringing in plate stock?”. Lars, “we’re bringing in coils, and I’m going to show you how we straighten it”.
    0:23. Pass by the central line of columns, now in east side of Stamping 2.
    0:48. Scrap bins. This particular area we saw having screw piles installed.
    0:54. Looking east out through the drive-through door.
    1:35. Straightening-line in the background. Central line of columns are behind the straightening line.
    1:57. Straightening-line Lead Engineer, “this is the first of its kind laser blanking-line…….this is a special development as well, this is something that is primarily used in mills”.
    2:46. Stainless steel is 1.8mm thick for the doors, everything else is 1.4mm. Presumably “the sails” are the rear quarters.
    Precast panels of what was the outside wall of the original Stamping building visible past the braced columns.
    3:30. Straightening-line lead Engineer, “then it’s going into the laser booth”. Which we can’t see yet.
    3:45. Straightening-line Lead Engineer talks about the accuracy, “it cuts up to 30micron and it’s the first laser of its kind to do that, typically these machines cut at 1mm (1000micron), this was a special development between Tesla and Schuler”
    4:55. Door to laser booth. Lots of laser warning symbols.
    4:57. Lars. “this is one of our transfer presses, smaller one, we just make small parts,
    we actually in-sourced 70% of stamping form Model Y and Cybertruck”.
    Not sure what “in-sourced” means.
    6:34. Second press visible to the north.
    14:17. Still in the east side of stamping 2. Lars, “this is our die storage area……..the inner panels are also stainless”.
    14:42. Dan, “this is our front door inner, 2 out die”
    15:04. Dan points to the second press that is being used to stamp out stainless steel door inners.
    15:22. “front door inner like Lars stated, dual”. Stamps 2 inner panels per die.
    15:27. Die lower half.
    15:35. Die upper half.
    16:18. The whole die is aluminum bronze.
    17:45. Dan. “do you want to see hot stamping from ground level?”
    18:20. Made by AP&T. Second one coming to be installed west of this current one.
    18:33. They turn west back past the row of central columns into the west side of stamping 2.
    20:53. Hot stamping. Door ring/passenger side. Lars, “what are you doing now inners or outers?”
    Dan, “we’re doing inners”.
    21:06. Looking north.
    21:23. Dan, “body side inner”
    21:50. Dan, “we supply body shop right over there” Body shop is west again. Part of GA.
    22:25. Level 2 of Stamping 2/High Bay. Facing west.
    22:41. Lars. “We actually have the body shop on the second floor here”.
    22:50. Lars. “Least number of parts now, down to just over 100”. I take it he is talking stamped parts.
    23:11. Level 3. Column rows M5.69. Not sure what the 5 means, but this would be M69.
    23:22. Door outer on the rack. This seems to be Cybertruck BIW.
    23:29. Door outers to the left and right. Column L70.
    23:44. Cybertruck front assemblies.
    23:51. Lars “Mainline goes this way and then is transferred to our powder coating that does the black coating over there”. Not back to Paint is my interpretation.
    24:00. Sandy “You don’t use L-PO?”. Lars, “whats’s that”. Sandy, “you dip the whole car in”
    Lars continues, “its a soft e-coat with a powder for that black area, we only have one oven”
    Seems they don’t dunk the bodies in a bath.
    24:51. H75. Trumpf Tru-bender. Lars, “one for each panel”. Suggests up to 10 Tru-benders. 4 doors, 2 rear quarters, 2 front fenders, tailgate, trunk lid. Seems a lot.
    28:57. Door panel check jig. Marked Everest.
    30:47. Exterior door panel. Lars, “takes 75% of the side impact load”.
    31:09. F75.
    32:47. F79. Diagonal external wall in the background.
    32:51. Door assembly. Inner and outer laser welded together. There goes my adhesive theory.
    33:35. Lars, “laser ablation” to clean up the laser welding marks. Ablation (Latin: ablatio - removal) is the removal or destruction of something from an object by vaporization, chipping, erosive processes, or by other means.
    34:06. E80. Doors on elevated jigs. Saw these through the loading platform opening.
    34:47. Lars, “2 brillo pads”
    35:13. Completed door.
    37:05. Dan has a ‘Giga Texas Melt Center’ shirt on.
    37:27. Sandy, “Keep watching, because there will be more”.
    QPC. Quantity Per Container.
    E-Coat also know as Electrocoat , electrophoretic paint, EDP or electro-deposited paint.

  • @trixdropd
    @trixdropd Год назад +137

    Smartest move tesla made touring Sandy through. The legacy companies are jaws dropped right now, bet...

    • @sparksmcgee6641
      @sparksmcgee6641 Год назад +12

      One of the reasons other manufacturers cut production targets for 2024 in half.

    • @jasonmugridge
      @jasonmugridge Год назад +12

      you can imagine everyone of them is watching this

    • @mennol3885
      @mennol3885 Год назад +14

      And a couple of thousand extra job applicants of ambitious young people. With next to zero advertising costs.

    • @mrebholz
      @mrebholz Год назад +13

      I'm German and I love what I see there being done in Austin, Texas. Well done 👍🏾, really. The equipment that has been invested in makes my guess easy that Cybertruck won't be the last of its kind coming from this factory, it's just the beginning !!!

    • @teodor4ik183
      @teodor4ik183 Год назад +6

      This tour is free and perfect advertising.

  • @markemiller1234
    @markemiller1234 Год назад +19

    sandy i am amazed at the access you were granted! Impressive. Tesla never fails to amaze

  • @pnketia
    @pnketia Год назад +104

    Regardless of what you might think about the looks of the CT you have to appreciate and respect the levels of manufacturing and engineering that went into developing it and I have much respect for the Tesla employees. Truly next level manufacturing!

    • @Incomudro1963
      @Incomudro1963 Год назад +2

      My thoughts exactly.
      I had and still have no interest in ever owning one of these things.
      But I often admire when someone takes a different approach to the design and manufacturing of something.

    • @MQuinn-si4tp
      @MQuinn-si4tp Год назад +2

      Basically every advanced machine in that building is made in Germany/EU.
      Just saying

    • @oggyoggy1299
      @oggyoggy1299 Год назад

      Oh so much respect.

  • @matthewbellamy486
    @matthewbellamy486 Год назад +25

    As a Tesla customer and investor based in the UK I really appreciate seeing this level of detail and the willingness of the Tesla team to share it. I was concerned the CT production capability still had some way to go, but I can see what stage you're at and I remain impressed.

  • @catbert7
    @catbert7 Год назад +1

    Absolutely wild how much access Tesla allows. These guys are truly bringing the whole industry (kicking and screaming, in many cases) along with them. Love it.

  • @michaelchownyk5255
    @michaelchownyk5255 Год назад +37

    Thank you very much sandy for showing us this amazing factory.
    You’re a very special person to be granted access to such a high profile operation .

  • @3750wi
    @3750wi Год назад +15

    The Cybertruck appears to be a complete limited production run.
    Tesla may seem slow, but it has achieved advanced production technology and overwhelming quality that have made it a reality.
    Absolute faith in the Cybertruck has increased.
    I really enjoyed the VIP tour.

    • @ken-mb5cp
      @ken-mb5cp Год назад +3

      I believe now they can produce 100k in 2024.

  • @Mathis218337
    @Mathis218337 Год назад +21

    Woah. More content. Super cool of Lars to show you around the factory!

  • @beaconterraoneonline
    @beaconterraoneonline Год назад +2

    Production is hard. Breathtaking how this plant has come together in such a short time, and having to visualize, plan, design, build, assemble, test, document, train and execute. This is a pure example of why Tesla is unstoppable and will not be beat for a time. Great job.

  • @nickfosterxx
    @nickfosterxx Год назад +26

    How many years have we been waiting to see this stuff... and wow it does not disappoint.
    Mind blowing commitment, skill and determination.
    Thanks to all involved.

    • @eloymarquez4783
      @eloymarquez4783 Год назад +2

      and they pulled together during COVID... just saying

    • @theflew
      @theflew Год назад

      Flat body panels with a couple of bends are mind-blowing?

    • @DBLewisOrlando
      @DBLewisOrlando Год назад +2

      @@theflew Yes, because no one else can do it. Not with the hardness of the stainless steel that Tesla is using that is. 14:48 26:40

  • @TheOlvan
    @TheOlvan Год назад +14

    The Machine that talks about the Machine that builds the Machine. Munro is the man! Love this stuff!

  • @geirmyrvagnes8718
    @geirmyrvagnes8718 Год назад +11

    Dreamy voice: "Magnificent..." 🤩 The Elon interview (in front of the Cybertruck in pieces) makes so much more sense now. These are all the things we "boys and girls" were screaming at the screen to ask Elon about, but you did it right: Show, don't tell! All the thumbs up!

  • @andr0373
    @andr0373 Год назад +4

    Huge props to Tesla, the Workers, and Elon on this one. No other manufacturer would let you in like these while they are still developing the process. 'We're a relatively open book, if you can do it better, go for it.'

  • @jamesmihalcik1310
    @jamesmihalcik1310 Год назад +5

    Special thanks to all involved to make this happen. All the people that stayed late! The innovation, teamwork and pride... Amazing, truly next level!!!

  • @JoelSapp
    @JoelSapp Год назад +23

    unprecedented access! Great job Sandy and team.

    • @MunroLive
      @MunroLive  Год назад +7

      Thank you kindly!

    • @nathanthomas8184
      @nathanthomas8184 Год назад +2

      Looks like where Steve Austen was Built, we have the technology We have the know how, we can build a bionic scrambler meat wagon

    • @cathyk9197
      @cathyk9197 Год назад

      @@nathanthomas8184 Wait till we see the line to build Optimus Bots!

  • @tomwalker3553
    @tomwalker3553 Год назад +22

    Seriously an insane amount of access. I loved the worker comment we are ready for full production. I worked at Toyota Georgetown and the difference is amazing. The place is amazingly clean. Thank you Elon.

  • @mode3fpv931
    @mode3fpv931 Год назад +6

    Very cool.. I think Sandy was blown away by quite a few things he saw here! I'm pretty impressed that Tesla don't seem to be trying to hide anything here - seem pretty happy to show Sandy whatever he wants to see!

    • @NilsFrederking
      @NilsFrederking Год назад +1

      Others will not copy it for quite a while 😎 they prefer staying in the comfort zone. Tesla took huge risk, but the outcome is mind boggling.

  • @brois841
    @brois841 Год назад +4

    Seeing the level of engineering required to produce the CT as well as the enthusiasm of the employees makes me want the truck that much more. Can't wait! The Foundation Series should be arriving in a few months... giddy!! :)

  • @Yippydog
    @Yippydog Год назад +2

    Just amazing! When I was a young buck in 1985, saw a prototype machine that assembled radiators for Harris radiator. It had rfid tags for each radiator to track the product, it was 150ft long and capped to and bottom ends to the cores, pressure tested the radiator in about 38secs. We thought this was amazing in those days. What Tesla is doing in 40 second cycle time laser welding door structures /assemblies and other factory automation is phenomenal! Thanks Sandy and Munro Live

  • @DatHandle
    @DatHandle Год назад +26

    This was an incredible video. I wish it kept going! Love Munro and Tesla. ❤

  • @russmartin4189
    @russmartin4189 Год назад +5

    Amazing tour. Tesla is not afraid to take Sandy on this tour because they know nobody else will ever be able to do it, even if they handed them an instruction manual. It only makes me more impressed with the level of technical expertise at Tesla.

  • @thomasidzikowski1520
    @thomasidzikowski1520 Год назад +83

    Seeing this level engineering, I'm betting the OEM's C-suite sphincters are puckered. As you pointed out in the video, Tesla is maximizing the equipment ROI and the line's not even breaking a sweat speedwise, with room to get under a minute. It's genius Elon gave you this level of access, shot's fired!
    Can not wait to see the next video!

    • @Gr0gansm1th
      @Gr0gansm1th Год назад +1

      I think a lot of the other OEM's are laughing at how overly complicated this line is!!! Don't get me wrong it's incredibly impressive, but super complicated and hard to see how this will scale. 150 stampings before reworking?! Laser cut panels?

    • @thomasidzikowski1520
      @thomasidzikowski1520 Год назад +1

      @@Gr0gansm1th I disagree. We saw 6 machines which weren't running anywhere near capacity. Plus, no paint shop. Paint shops alone are more complex than what was shown on the tour.

  • @cisco6926
    @cisco6926 Год назад +1

    That factory is mind blowing!!!

  • @StewartMidwinter
    @StewartMidwinter Год назад +4

    Two. Thumbs up to Sandy Monroe for the incredible level of technical detail, he is bringing to us to see. I'm very impressed with what Tesla is doing here. They even developed their own steel alloy to get the right characteristics they wanted!

  • @ILikeDoritos456
    @ILikeDoritos456 Год назад +13

    What stood out to me was how few people there were attending those machines. Tesla is closing in on perfecting the alien dreadnought concept.

    • @priteshpatel9952
      @priteshpatel9952 Год назад +4

      I could see Optimus filling in some spots in the future

    • @PygKLB
      @PygKLB Год назад +5

      They were filming during an idle shift.

    • @1flash3571
      @1flash3571 Год назад +2

      @@PygKLB There wont be that many more with all those machines doing most of the work. Only few places where the workers place the pressed parts onto a laser welding station and anywhere they have to handle the parts manually is where you would see the most of the people working.

    • @darwinboor1300
      @darwinboor1300 Год назад +5

      Would you be willing to pay the price if production was limited to human speeds. You saw what it took just to move parts a few feet using two human power. Can't have your cake and eat it too. Tesla is bringing you tomorrow's technology today. There are better, safer things for humans to do.

    • @blob22201
      @blob22201 9 месяцев назад

      Yeah he just fired them all so he can get his $56 billion payday

  • @jamesrose1191
    @jamesrose1191 Год назад +23

    Sandy always such great info on your show no matter where you are. Way to go.

  • @jaydeister9305
    @jaydeister9305 Год назад +28

    Wow! Another impressive video by Sandy Munro/Munro Live! These are some of the billion dollar questions that makes everyone scratch their heads trying to figure out how it was done! Tesla is still at least 10 to 15 years ahead of legacy automakers.1.8mm stainless steel is very impressive!
    Epic tour for engineers and machinists! Great job recruiting tour for Tesla!

  • @dkgong
    @dkgong Год назад +12

    This is amazing! I was looking forward to seeing the air-bending of the HFS. It's definitely a lot simpler process than I thought it was going to be.

    • @andrewashmore8000
      @andrewashmore8000 Год назад +1

      Yeah , thought the same. Was expecting a bigger tool , doing all the bends in one hit. Removing the plate and turning it and then rebending introduces the possibility of having tighter tolerances and repeatability issues. But yes it's simpler and cheaper to do the way there doing it.

  • @benediktfreude
    @benediktfreude Год назад +1

    I've never seen Sandy so quiet 😄 That was a lot of information to take in and process!

  • @42bill
    @42bill Год назад +27

    Sandy, this is likely my favorite video you have ever posted so far. What an amazing factory. This truck is no joke!!

  • @kaasman78
    @kaasman78 Год назад +4

    I heard quite a few 'we had to develop that', 'one of a kind', 'never done this big' and a couple of 'micron precision'. And this is on top of all the new wizzbang stuff already in the CyberTruck like....bespoke stainless steel alloy, gigantic castings, 48V, drive by wire, inhouse cell and structural pack production, 800V system with dual 400V charging.
    Not even talking about the 'legacy' stuff like the octovalve, heatpump and HEPA filter system, totally integrated with heat scavenging.
    This thing is an engineering monster. It should scare the hell out of everyone.

  • @jonasgranlund4427
    @jonasgranlund4427 Год назад +12

    What a GEM, absolutely fantastic to see, a little over 20 years ago I went from constructing elevators and lines for robot systems to software deveopment, I never regret that transformation but if I would have been at Tesla instead I have a strong feeling that I would have stayed put with my Mechanical engineering roots. :)

  • @cmosarch5285
    @cmosarch5285 Год назад +2

    Tesla appears to have hired Sandy Munro as a publicity agent. Sandy has uploaded a couple of super fluffy CyberTruck marketing videos, and Tesla has him in several others.

  • @paulkazjack
    @paulkazjack Год назад +4

    The company that made the machines are the geniuses.

    • @6XCcustom
      @6XCcustom Год назад

      good machines are needed. Teslat quality when it comes to assembling the body has been lousy
      and they don't seem to have any follow-up checks because they release cars that should never have left the factory
      this does not make a good impression on Tesla's quality

  • @linuxmill
    @linuxmill Год назад +8

    this is just incredible. a masterpiece of engineering fused with art

  • @capslock9031
    @capslock9031 Год назад +16

    The informational AND entertainment values with this were through the roof! Such fun watching Sandy getting his mind blown at every corner of his way through the factory. Keep 'em comin', boys and girls!

  • @andremalcolm_studio
    @andremalcolm_studio Год назад +5

    This presentation was amazing. All of that production in under 1 minute!?! At the 16:16 mark that reaction from Sandy says it all.

    • @Kr0N05
      @Kr0N05 Год назад +1

      Except his enthusiasm was a little suppressed when he heard that those Aluminum/Bronze stamps only had a life time of 50 to 100 stamps, and then they are either reworked or recycled ..... but still if Tesla is doing that then there still must be a cost benefit advantage for doing that I reckon.

    • @saff226
      @saff226 Год назад

      ​@@Kr0N05they have a die shop on site so they rework them themselves. They said all dies get rework when they change the dies out. That could mean as little as a Polish or reapply the coating.

  • @formytots0128
    @formytots0128 Год назад +2

    Thanks Sandy for posting your Cybertruck factory tour. I am now even more convinced of the engineering talents at Tesla are the best in the industry. Lars Moravy is an amazing engineer. :) Learned a lot from this video and vicariously toured the factory. Please keep it coming

  • @draco_2727
    @draco_2727 Год назад +4

    This is DOPE 🤯🤯🤯 congrats to the Muro team that has worked their way through to be able to get this level of access and insight 👏👏👏

  • @DannyWelch
    @DannyWelch Год назад +35

    Incredible coverage and thanks to Tesla for sharing!

  • @commuterbranchline8132
    @commuterbranchline8132 Год назад +4

    Wow, its like i'm Charley visiting the chocolate factory. Thanks for the Golden Ticket!

  • @j1000a
    @j1000a Год назад +13

    This is great. It's just one big demonstration of efficiency. And the reduced waste... it's just win after win.

  • @bradcavanagh3092
    @bradcavanagh3092 Год назад +3

    This is freakin' amazing. Mad props to Tesla for letting us see (although I suspect it's really about recruiting engineering talent) and to Munro bringing this to us.

  • @Jomitheelf
    @Jomitheelf Год назад +2

    That Texas Tesla hard hat is something else. Tesla should sell those!

  • @dougk5456
    @dougk5456 Год назад +4

    WOW!!!! Absolutely awesome!!! The thing that isn't mentioned is the fact that with stainless you can eliminate painting and all the EPA stuff associated with it. Great tour!!!

  • @robertsnyder6982
    @robertsnyder6982 Год назад +4

    Wow-very cool to see how this works. Thanks to you guys at Tesla for letting Sandy bring this to us!

  • @gipnor
    @gipnor Год назад +175

    Is his helmet the equivalent of the gold storm trooper armor? 😂

    • @malax4013
      @malax4013 Год назад +5

      For the looks😂

    • @spacebound1969
      @spacebound1969 Год назад +29

      Gotta know who the boss is 😂

    • @codyshields3797
      @codyshields3797 Год назад +3

      you know it

    • @metalbonsai
      @metalbonsai Год назад +8

      "And over here is our All Terrain Armored Transport prototype. We call it an AT-AT for short."

    • @jurczakc
      @jurczakc Год назад +9

      Lars is great he's my favorite. I've seen him in several videos I really like they way he delivers the content.

  • @trevorkplatt
    @trevorkplatt Год назад +1

    It’s amazing to see this level of access to how everything is built. For all the people complaining about why it took Tesla so long to start building the Cybertruck, this is why. Just look at all the robots and machines involved, having to program all of it, it’s impressive.