This needs and deserves more views!! Do more projects at different levels. Suggestion, do some step by step instruction videos of some projects. Have different aged children participating in the project.
@@Flykit-KyleZeng Name your price, add shipping to Alaska and let me know. The artists in my family are in love with this idea, as they all do various artsy fartsy things. My mom is going to buy one from InvenTABLE, I'd love to buy one of yours. I'll even toss up a video of the comparison, and still gladly pay for the product.
@@kytastrophe- hi, I'm going to shoot our video in a few days. The 3D molding is ready. We'll put it up and test it. It is estimated that the goods can be shipped in April.
I can't wait til you guys launch, I'm definitely getting one for me, the fact my son get's to use it too is a bonus lol. this is a crafters dream come true! Kids and parents are already loving it. you're about to make a lot of money. yay!
This is exactly what my son 9 is in need of. He calls himself the inventor. Excited for this product. Does it plug in? Excited for the possibilities and a monthly box is a great idea.
1:18 I believe I see a cord off to the right in this a a few other frames. Very good question though. I sure hope it is corded and not battery powdered.
Not a bad start. I like where you're going with the full concept of integrating a community behind it and the whole collaborative aspect. Now just redesign it so it isn't so loud and lower the price by about $150 and you might be onto something here. I'd do it soon too because now that the idea is out there, it won't be long before some 17 year old uploads free 3D models and links to all the electronics to build it yourself for about $50.
Yup, nothing more than that. Way too loud for kid's use inside of a house at 80 decibels. They could have designed it to be almost quiet, but are apparently repurposing off-the-shelf components.
@@khelek100 Wrong, this idea has been out for many years. There are videos and an instructible showing a DIY version of this. Just search for "kids table saw". Same 2mm capacity, the same noise level, and nothing innovative.
They say it's 80 decibels. That tells me they have no clue how to design a product like this. At a $230.00 retail price, this is a ripoff, yet they have over a million in pledges for it. I could design a near-silent mechanism, make it variable speed and have a better product for under $100 retail like it should be, in about 24 hours. This is essentially a sheet metal nibbler mounted to a table. Nothing really new here at all. 80 decibels is way too much.
@@khelek100 This is a glorified nibbling tool mounted to a table, nothing more. The issue with the noise is the drive system that is typically used in machines designed to cut sheet metal. It is similar to how a reciprocating saw works, but driving a punch. The decibel output of this machine tells me there was no design work done on the actual mechanism and looking at the head, they are repurposing widely available parts. There is a different approach that can be used without the chatter in a lighter-duty application such as this that doesn't need to be able to power through stainless steel, though it still would be able to. That would actually require tooling new parts though. Maybe with the Million pledged, they will actually do that. If you would like to commission me to spend 24 hours designing a better, quiet version, I will be happy to show you a prototype and how to put together better mechanics. Anyone with half a brain and mechanical skill could build an equivalent to what is being demonstrated here for well under $80 and likely $50 with standard off-the-shelf parts at retail cost purchased on Amazon. There is nothing revolutionary with this product, only people who are clueless when it comes to mechanics and available tools. Sorry!
@@btestptest4627 Pay me and I'll be happy to show you a better design. With a million pledged, I'm not going to give a better design away to them for free, however simple the solution may be.
This needs and deserves more views!! Do more projects at different levels. Suggestion, do some step by step instruction videos of some projects. Have different aged children participating in the project.
I look forward to seeing this on shelves in stores in the future!
I can design and manufacture mass-produced products cheaply, using batteries. The cost is very low.
@@Flykit-KyleZeng Name your price, add shipping to Alaska and let me know. The artists in my family are in love with this idea, as they all do various artsy fartsy things. My mom is going to buy one from InvenTABLE, I'd love to buy one of yours. I'll even toss up a video of the comparison, and still gladly pay for the product.
@@kytastrophe- hi, I'm going to shoot our video in a few days. The 3D molding is ready. We'll put it up and test it. It is estimated that the goods can be shipped in April.
I can't wait til you guys launch, I'm definitely getting one for me, the fact my son get's to use it too is a bonus lol. this is a crafters dream come true! Kids and parents are already loving it. you're about to make a lot of money. yay!
In fact, I've already designed it. It's produced in two or three months. It can be recharged for only $50. There's no complicated design.
Yes, I think tens of dollars are more acceptable to consumers. But plugged-in tools aren't toys anymore.
Yet another thing I'd want if I had kids.
I'm 55 .. I want this for ME .. safe enough ..
Very cool! Great job on this. Good luck, I'll definitely be a looking for this when it hits the market!
Just saw you on Shark Tank! Congratulations!
This is exactly what my son 9 is in need of. He calls himself the inventor. Excited for this product. Does it plug in? Excited for the possibilities and a monthly box is a great idea.
I have the same question. Does it plug in or is it battery powered?
1:18 I believe I see a cord off to the right in this a a few other frames. Very good question though. I sure hope it is corded and not battery powdered.
I can design and manufacture mass-produced products cheaply, using batteries. The cost is very low.
@@calvinvaillancourt1398 I can design and manufacture mass-produced products cheaply, using batteries. The cost is very low.
In fact, I've already designed it. It's produced in two or three months. It can be recharged for only $50. There's no complicated design.
This is awesome!!! I will be watching for it on Amazon!!!!
This is awesome!!!!!!
This Looks So Useful and I want one
Would this be ok for 3 yr olds just for fun? I’d love this for daycare.
Please make one for foam core board!
Would love this for my son!!
When will you guys launch? For Christmas 2023? 😅
I am very interested in the idea of recycling card board by using it to build with especially with in our school system.
Good luck! Would love to have one of these for our kids.
I can design and manufacture mass-produced products cheaply, using batteries. The cost is very low.
Not a bad start. I like where you're going with the full concept of integrating a community behind it and the whole collaborative aspect. Now just redesign it so it isn't so loud and lower the price by about $150 and you might be onto something here. I'd do it soon too because now that the idea is out there, it won't be long before some 17 year old uploads free 3D models and links to all the electronics to build it yourself for about $50.
Is this available in the Philippines?
Kids? Heck I would want this. Using scissors is a nightmare.
VERY cool.
This looks like a nibbler that is used in sheet metal working.
We were inspired by the way a nibbler works, but designed this tool ourselves to be better suited for cardboard and safer for kids!
That was my first thought as well. A nibbler can go through sheet metel like butter. It just makes sense to use the same concept to cut cardboard.
It's exactly a nibbler head, it even has the same standard 2mm capacity
Awesome!
Why you don't make it portable on batteries to take it outside?
How loud?
Please don't let China cheapen it up, maybe make it quite, awesome work.
Where can I get one? This is AMAZING!
I can design and manufacture mass-produced products cheaply, using batteries. The cost is very low.
@@Flykit-KyleZeng contact?
Can this cuts foam boards?
It's small nibbler put in a little benchtop table?
Yup, nothing more than that. Way too loud for kid's use inside of a house at 80 decibels. They could have designed it to be almost quiet, but are apparently repurposing off-the-shelf components.
Except there is no other product that does this is and it is about as loud as a vaccuum.
@@khelek100 Wrong, this idea has been out for many years. There are videos and an instructible showing a DIY version of this. Just search for "kids table saw". Same 2mm capacity, the same noise level, and nothing innovative.
Where can I buy one?
*can’t wait to buy one.
I can design and manufacture mass-produced products cheaply, using batteries. The cost is very low.
It is a shame it can only cut 2mm cardboard
$100, Yes. $200. No. $230, Definitely not.
They say it's 80 decibels. That tells me they have no clue how to design a product like this. At a $230.00 retail price, this is a ripoff, yet they have over a million in pledges for it. I could design a near-silent mechanism, make it variable speed and have a better product for under $100 retail like it should be, in about 24 hours. This is essentially a sheet metal nibbler mounted to a table. Nothing really new here at all. 80 decibels is way too much.
And where is your quieter cheaper product I would like to see it?
Well it's only been 20 hours, he said it would take 24 hours, I'm sure he's almost done
@@khelek100 This is a glorified nibbling tool mounted to a table, nothing more. The issue with the noise is the drive system that is typically used in machines designed to cut sheet metal. It is similar to how a reciprocating saw works, but driving a punch. The decibel output of this machine tells me there was no design work done on the actual mechanism and looking at the head, they are repurposing widely available parts. There is a different approach that can be used without the chatter in a lighter-duty application such as this that doesn't need to be able to power through stainless steel, though it still would be able to. That would actually require tooling new parts though. Maybe with the Million pledged, they will actually do that.
If you would like to commission me to spend 24 hours designing a better, quiet version, I will be happy to show you a prototype and how to put together better mechanics. Anyone with half a brain and mechanical skill could build an equivalent to what is being demonstrated here for well under $80 and likely $50 with standard off-the-shelf parts at retail cost purchased on Amazon. There is nothing revolutionary with this product, only people who are clueless when it comes to mechanics and available tools. Sorry!
@@btestptest4627 Pay me and I'll be happy to show you a better design. With a million pledged, I'm not going to give a better design away to them for free, however simple the solution may be.
If its only 24hrs of your time why not donate it and put it up on thingyverse, prove the world right.