La perfección de estas máquinas no podría ser posible sin la intervención del esfuerzo humano. La precisión que logran estas máquinas, después de la calibración, es sorprendente. .. 0 a 7 micras!
That's the flipside of economies of scale for you, smaller the production volumes less sense it makes to automate. As far as I know the only robot manufacturer that automated their own production to significant degree is Yaskawa and that was more for advertisement value than actual economic win in the production process. Global car sales are some 70M units per year, industrial robot sales are ~700k units, something like that, the business case for automation is 100X worse just on that alone.
To answer a few questions, It is far cheaper to paint by hand because of the low volumes produced. If you were to automate the painting, you would need 3 robots and these puppies are not cheap, even to the manufacturer. Why build a an automated line when a prospective customer can be shown a working line that was previously installed. You also have maintenance costs and asset depreciation. In the robot world, repeat-ability is EVERYTHING. The last segment where they bolt a plate to the arm, that is an optical position sensor array. The machine is started and goes through a 12 hour programme of movement, returning to a preset position every certain amount of cycles. This is measured to ensure the repeat-ability. They then start adding increasing weights until they get to the robots max working weight + 20% Many of the components and connections are inside other components and in a lot of circumstances, robots cant do the work. That said, many of the pre assembly work is done by robots. You have to take into consideration that 1 robot is setup and programmed to do 1 task only (sometimes 2)
KUKA is the pride of Germany. That enterprise should be repossessed by the Germans. This is a company that deserves the home and the owners. I hope it returns to the people who elevated such industry.
Apparently you have never worked with kuka robots. They are the cheapest robots (quality wise) I've ever seen and the software feels like it's still in alpha and there was no development in the last 10 years, where every other robot manufacturer delevoped something special, wich was only offered with their robots. In my opinion it's a shame that a german comapny can produce such an unfinished product.
I heard the robots in that factory revolted and turned on the humans. It took three full time terminators to put down the revolt. All the robots involved were shut down, disassembled and sold for scrap. That should teach 'em!
8:30 Those poor caged Kukas :( Don't ever buy from this company!! They are behind the abuse and torturous conditions of almost all living Kukas in existence! Hit these big corporations where it hurts and don't buy any of their Kukas from their massive Kuka mills where they're kept in worse than farm animal conditions and are fed ZERO FOOD and water! Unbelievable!
4:40 al montar ese brazo de fibra de carbono en su encastre, me causa una incomodidad ver el mecanizado del brazo para facilitar ingresar hacía el tapón de aceite no queda alineado con el tapón de aceite.
Eventually it will be robots building the robots and repairing and replacing the robots. And locating the resources, extracting, transporting, processing, distributing, fabricating and recycling.
Looking at the comments It's only worth using robots to make mass produced items, the robots themselves are specialised items and not mass produced hence humans make them.
Yeah but I’m sure that 3years worth of salary of one painting employee is easily more expensive than just using one of their own robots to paint for them.
@@davidswanson9606 Robot probably costs around £100k but there are also ongoing support/maintenance costs on top. The cost of staff is significantly more than thier take home wages. If you have skills then move to something that isn't reliant on mass production but still uses your skills because humans in mass production are pretty much finished. I've worked in industry and am now self employed, adapt and survive.
@@mfx1 100k will cost you the whole cell not a robot with controller. These are pretty cheap this day. You can have 165kg payload Fanuc or Motoman for 25-35k £. The rest is cost of integration to your line few thousand work hours of mechanical and electrical designers, fitters to assembly mechanical and electrical. Then robot and PLC programmers to prepare software, teach patterns and commission the cell. So, as I mention at the beginning, the price of robot is nothing compare to the rest. Smarter robots called CoBots are raising stars at the moment. Some of them are standard robots with awareness of surrounding environment and people working next to them. Many inbuilt sensors and lower speeds. As well as simplified teaching.
Ich bewundere mich fast alles wird manuelle gefertig werden, warum keine robot macht das arbeit sogar fur lackierung? 1:56 ist das fur die achse? 7:50 ist das koordinatenpunkte fur die genau bewegung? Wie viele ist das gewict der gelbe zylinder/walze?
The clip at 3:56 appears to be very massive, but this man is a carrying it with two hands. I thought for sure these parts would be too heavy to carry by hand.
Ya gotta love the irony of a robot manufacturer that uses human labor to build the robots. It just goes to show that the production of goods is a mesh, not a line. It started as a line where every person in that line made a particular thing that was required for the process. Over time specialization got to the point where those making the specific thing used things made by others who specialized in things. Take food production. 1. Humans grow food using their hands or hand-made tools for themselves and their family. 2. A neighboring farmer invents a tool that makes harvesting faster and easier. 3. The inventor offers a trade in exchange for food from the first farmer. 3. Trade is invented when the inventor and the farmer exchange food for tools. 4. Others hear about the tool and offer the tool inventor other kinds of food for the tool. 5. The toolmaker has to raise his prices to cover his increased labor to make enough tools. 6. The farmers have to increase production to afford the tool. 7. A new inventor creates a tool that is better than the first tool. 8. Toolmaker 2 trades the new tool for a slightly smaller quantity of food from the farmers. 9. Toolmaker 1 now must improve his tool or go out of business. 10. Toolmaker 3 makes a tool that makes the first tool work more efficiently. 11. Toolmaker 1 uses Toolmaker 3's tool to increase his production. 12. Toolmaker 2 also uses Toolmaker 3's tool. 13. A farmer discovers that Toolmaker 2's tool can improve Toolmaker 3's tool. 14. Toolmaker 4 starts to sell an improved version of Toolmaker 3's tool. Even just this simple example had a starting point but it ended up becoming nonlinear after only a few cycles.
4:39 no soporto ver ese hermoso brazo en fibra de carbono, con el encastre para el aceite no alineado, duele, duele.... 🤭 Creo es de un brazo paletizador y solo hace de apoyo para mantener horizontal la muñeca cargadora.
They're a robot company though. If anyone has access to cheap automation resources it's them. I would've thought they'd want to automate their production line as much as possible, even if just to show off their technology.
Phok Jiouh some of those robots graduate to becoming painter robots. Found this video in my stream because of watching how cars are made on the assembly line.
Sólo vi un joven , con respeto digo que vi gente ya muy madura creando o haciendo trabajos que pensé eran de gente joven y que estudia la cosas nuevas como mecatronica... ellos sólo ensamblan , realmente las oficinas donde resguardar los inventos está en otro lado...
Robots will take over everything in future, they will be so intelligent such that they will be able to recreate themselves and fill earth. They will end up using humans as their subjects .The will then move from earth after Eliminating everything and take over other planets.
What is the market for automation robots? Given that these robots are not bought by manufacturing companies everyday. One robot may be used up to 15 years.
What is your favorite part of the video?
the part where a robot was not assembling a robot.
That nobody is wearing noise protection.
La perfección de estas máquinas no podría ser posible sin la intervención del esfuerzo humano. La precisión que logran estas máquinas, después de la calibración, es sorprendente. .. 0 a 7 micras!
Great job ;)
The young man was connect the wires, I love to see them doing good job.
I salute the guys who conceptualize, design and manufacture these incredible machines
The entire process is incredibly satisfying.
8:35 looks like in a fitness center
Robots must feel special when they are assembled by humans.
I don't think it'll be pleasant once they have feelings towards us
Kuka Robots paint the cars but human paints Kuka Robots
Kuka robots are not able to paint cars... Fanuc, ABB and Dürr do
Jens Kazmierczak why not?
Jens Kazmierczak kawasaki and yaskawa do.
@@JK-ku2mj So why is Dürr using Kuka robots?
That's the flipside of economies of scale for you, smaller the production volumes less sense it makes to automate. As far as I know the only robot manufacturer that automated their own production to significant degree is Yaskawa and that was more for advertisement value than actual economic win in the production process. Global car sales are some 70M units per year, industrial robot sales are ~700k units, something like that, the business case for automation is 100X worse just on that alone.
It must be nice having everything fit nicely during assembly.
To answer a few questions,
It is far cheaper to paint by hand because of the low volumes produced. If you were to automate the painting, you would need 3 robots and these puppies are not cheap, even to the manufacturer. Why build a an automated line when a prospective customer can be shown a working line that was previously installed. You also have maintenance costs and asset depreciation.
In the robot world, repeat-ability is EVERYTHING. The last segment where they bolt a plate to the arm, that is an optical position sensor array. The machine is started and goes through a 12 hour programme of movement, returning to a preset position every certain amount of cycles. This is measured to ensure the repeat-ability. They then start adding increasing weights until they get to the robots max working weight + 20%
Many of the components and connections are inside other components and in a lot of circumstances, robots cant do the work. That said, many of the pre assembly work is done by robots. You have to take into consideration that 1 robot is setup and programmed to do 1 task only (sometimes 2)
Donde hay capacitacion para programar estos equipos?
1:28 It takes an incredible amount of precision to do that...
8:34 robo gym
haha that's what I was thinking too
KUKA is the pride of Germany. That enterprise should be repossessed by the Germans. This is a company that deserves the home and the owners.
I hope it returns to the people who elevated such industry.
Apparently you have never worked with kuka robots. They are the cheapest robots (quality wise) I've ever seen and the software feels like it's still in alpha and there was no development in the last 10 years, where every other robot manufacturer delevoped something special, wich was only offered with their robots. In my opinion it's a shame that a german comapny can produce such an unfinished product.
@@MrRustyDagger never had problems with them
I find it weird that a robot company does so much by hand.
Andy Brice /what are they supposed to do, use their head's.
@@stephenwilson7118 use their own robot
Machine building is allways done by hand due to low numbers and canging construction on customer demand.
What you say
This one robo is far costlier than a Luxury car.
Hasn't this company heard about robot workers?
Joseph Stokes / yea, and their pretty huge.
@@stephenwilson7118 hows laying off German workers sound
8:58 That is so oddly satisfying!
Robots making robots? This is madness!
SysGhost Humans make humans what's the difference?
Awww, look at those babies learning how to manipulate objects, so cute
The calibration stage at the end is fascinating. Not long now before 2025 rise of the automatic self creating robots
and when one is making a mistake they slap each other :-)
Wauuuu
I never know that even Robots do workout exercise... they are in the gym!!🤩🤩🤩
Thanks for sharing!
Best fun show ever! Manual screwdrivers :)))
alaricy that is the master of all arts
Hand build machines
And then the robot said “thanks dude” to the other robot.
I heard the robots in that factory revolted and turned on the humans. It took three full time terminators to put down the revolt. All the robots involved were shut down, disassembled and sold for scrap. That should teach 'em!
These robots are so graceful!
A calibragem dos KUKA me lembra crianças brincando 🤗
Very beautiful creative and excellent
Long live the creative hands
Irony, robots that paint things, getting painted by humans.
Looks professional
8:30
Those poor caged Kukas :(
Don't ever buy from this company!! They are behind the abuse and torturous conditions of almost all living Kukas in existence!
Hit these big corporations where it hurts and don't buy any of their Kukas from their massive Kuka mills where they're kept in worse than farm animal conditions and are fed ZERO FOOD and water! Unbelievable!
And they electrocute them
Por fin el video en una calidad aseptable, gracias amigos u placer visual que no se imaginan
4:40 al montar ese brazo de fibra de carbono en su encastre, me causa una incomodidad ver el mecanizado del brazo para facilitar ingresar hacía el tapón de aceite no queda alineado con el tapón de aceite.
That s beautiful
Eventually it will be robots building the robots and repairing and replacing the robots. And locating the resources, extracting, transporting, processing, distributing, fabricating and recycling.
Emeğinize sağlık Bu Güzel Makinaları Üretim İnsanlığa Faydalı Ürünler için 👏 👏 👏 👏
Looking at the comments It's only worth using robots to make mass produced items, the robots themselves are specialised items and not mass produced hence humans make them.
Yeah but I’m sure that 3years worth of salary of one painting employee is easily more expensive than just using one of their own robots to paint for them.
@@davidswanson9606 Robot probably costs around £100k but there are also ongoing support/maintenance costs on top. The cost of staff is significantly more than thier take home wages. If you have skills then move to something that isn't reliant on mass production but still uses your skills because humans in mass production are pretty much finished. I've worked in industry and am now self employed, adapt and survive.
@@mfx1 100k will cost you the whole cell not a robot with controller. These are pretty cheap this day. You can have 165kg payload Fanuc or Motoman for 25-35k £. The rest is cost of integration to your line few thousand work hours of mechanical and electrical designers, fitters to assembly mechanical and electrical. Then robot and PLC programmers to prepare software, teach patterns and commission the cell.
So, as I mention at the beginning, the price of robot is nothing compare to the rest.
Smarter robots called CoBots are raising stars at the moment. Some of them are standard robots with awareness of surrounding environment and people working next to them. Many inbuilt sensors and lower speeds. As well as simplified teaching.
Nossa incríveis muito bom 👍👍👍
Let the robots do it, guys...
Good job
Ich bewundere mich fast alles wird manuelle gefertig werden, warum keine robot macht das arbeit sogar fur lackierung?
1:56 ist das fur die achse?
7:50 ist das koordinatenpunkte fur die genau bewegung?
Wie viele ist das gewict der gelbe zylinder/walze?
Beautiful
The clip at 3:56 appears to be very massive, but this man is a carrying it with two hands. I thought for sure these parts would be too heavy to carry by hand.
It almost looked like carbon fiber
@@MrJruta It is.
robots should be assemblong robots, the first assembler looked increibly human! ;-)
My mega dream shop..
Ya gotta love the irony of a robot manufacturer that uses human labor to build the robots. It just goes to show that the production of goods is a mesh, not a line. It started as a line where every person in that line made a particular thing that was required for the process. Over time specialization got to the point where those making the specific thing used things made by others who specialized in things. Take food production.
1. Humans grow food using their hands or hand-made tools for themselves and their family.
2. A neighboring farmer invents a tool that makes harvesting faster and easier.
3. The inventor offers a trade in exchange for food from the first farmer.
3. Trade is invented when the inventor and the farmer exchange food for tools.
4. Others hear about the tool and offer the tool inventor other kinds of food for the tool.
5. The toolmaker has to raise his prices to cover his increased labor to make enough tools.
6. The farmers have to increase production to afford the tool.
7. A new inventor creates a tool that is better than the first tool.
8. Toolmaker 2 trades the new tool for a slightly smaller quantity of food from the farmers.
9. Toolmaker 1 now must improve his tool or go out of business.
10. Toolmaker 3 makes a tool that makes the first tool work more efficiently.
11. Toolmaker 1 uses Toolmaker 3's tool to increase his production.
12. Toolmaker 2 also uses Toolmaker 3's tool.
13. A farmer discovers that Toolmaker 2's tool can improve Toolmaker 3's tool.
14. Toolmaker 4 starts to sell an improved version of Toolmaker 3's tool.
Even just this simple example had a starting point but it ended up becoming nonlinear after only a few cycles.
Very good
"It is confusing that robots are currently being built by humans, when it seems logical that robots could build themselves."
This is crazy,they humans building this and robots to build car🤔🤔🤔
Ignorance is bliss, Jack.
still manually? i think these industrial robots company employees won't their job taken by their own made.
Woww👍👍👍👍👍👍
4:39 no soporto ver ese hermoso brazo en fibra de carbono, con el encastre para el aceite no alineado, duele, duele.... 🤭
Creo es de un brazo paletizador y solo hace de apoyo para mantener horizontal la muñeca cargadora.
KUKA and T1000 painter and technician robots :)
SUPER IRÔNICO! Uma fábrica de robôs, mas não se vê robôs construindo, gostei! Tem que humanizar mais as fábricas, ou estaremos ferrados!
8:23 Ok, robot testing is cool too watch.
I wonder why they paint those robots by hand
Cheaper than building an automatic paint shop.
They're a robot company though. If anyone has access to cheap automation resources it's them. I would've thought they'd want to automate their production line as much as possible, even if just to show off their technology.
Phok Jiouh some of those robots graduate to becoming painter robots. Found this video in my stream because of watching how cars are made on the assembly line.
siemensohm ..worker is cheaper than robots
siemensohm same question here
Why has he given me this medium weights, when he knows I can move the really heavy ones ! ? .
The most advanced mechanical systems assembly facility does not have an electric screw driver
Amazing
Because they use torque specified wrenches, safer and you don’t over torque the joints.
these robots must be crazy.
Man builds robot. Robot takes man’s job. Man builds robot. Robot takes robot’s job. Robot builds man. Man takes robots job.
Robots producing robots. Who produced the robots that produces robots? :P Great vid!
1983henky More robots, of course
owned by Chinese now, not Germany anymore. kuka parent company is midea group. chinese based electronic company
But still Made in Germany ;-)
@@julianreverse And Hungary
garmany best
Sólo vi un joven , con respeto digo que vi gente ya muy madura creando o haciendo trabajos que pensé eran de gente joven y que estudia la cosas nuevas como mecatronica... ellos sólo ensamblan , realmente las oficinas donde resguardar los inventos está en otro lado...
Step motor ve nkodör harika işler çıkarıyor
wow there is also a dedicated robots gym there
👨💻wish i had a small 1 arm bot - no idea why yet just want one desktop small be fun pick up coffee☕🙋♂️
Robots will take over everything in future, they will be so intelligent such that they will be able to recreate themselves and fill earth. They will end up using humans as their subjects .The will then move from earth after Eliminating everything and take over other planets.
Resulta curioso ver como un robot que se utiliza para montaje, es montado a mano y no por uno de ellos.
**Digital work about this intensifies**
This is crazy robots building robots! What's next.....
Free the robots!
A M A Z I N G
Good
Robos doing yoga.. 😆
Woo. Parece un parque del futuro
kuka made kuka
এই কোমপানিটা কোন দেশী
If 100 robots are manufacturing 100 robots in a day, doubling every day,
How many will you have in a year? 🤯
36525
= 2^364 * 100
I wonder when this company will employ more robots to replace human labors.
Meu sonho ter um desse
Amazing..
I like automatization
This in my recommendations after I watch report on chinese company bought out Kuka.
Now they belong to China.
Humans building a robot that would build them a car that would drive them to work so that they can build a robot that will cook food got to live it.
Kali
soo.. two arm, two leg model coming down any time soon?
Why their robots didn't make robots themselves? They should already go into egg chicken paradox
What is the market for automation robots? Given that these robots are not bought by manufacturing companies everyday. One robot may be used up to 15 years.
Gotta replace a robot when it fails.
Wie kann ich da eine stelle bekommen?🤩🤩
So impressive but end up cattle like
And skynet is born.
Funny, KUKA did not use robot for it's factory. 🙂
Isnt there is no more in Germnay now
Made in germany
MADE IN GERMANY,BUT OWNED BY CHINESE MIDEA
You want to bolt to of those together and have an "arm wrestle".
Hanzhen harmonic drive gear , over 30 years experience , robot arm gear ,,
Cool, but where are the ear protectors?
Didn't seem like they needed them.
... KUKA - baut Autos automatisch.
I wonder what that place is like, at night....
Dark.
Yeskava robot is good
It is an exercise gym...for the robots...see end.
How to' i am join robotic company. I am interested in robotics
GERMAN MAISTERWERKE
Some of you guys know what material the robot arms are made of?
The black pieces are carbon fibre.
🤣🤣🤣🤣robot bikin robot gak mau kalah sama manusia🤣🤣🤣🤣
so if the robot is a car builder. the guy would be a car builder builder. and his mom is a car builder builder builder