As an employee here for 2 years now, this video and the comments that followed gave me a new sense of pride I have working at this company. Thank you all so much!
The smudge on the lense is driving me nuts. Keep wiping my phone thinking it is a smudge on my screen. And now I cannot stop thinking of Rick & Morty. "Some say he looked like a smudge."
I haven't seen a quality hi-end operation like this since I worked on the B1B, VLS, Titan projects at Martin Marietta, Middle River back in the early to late 80's. Impressive. @24:15 the cans on the pallets are actually sections of the VLS (Vertical Launch System) and when we made them back then (80's) Martin's had a purpose built machine that held assembled sections of the can for all at once machining! The ram was 30' long with multi-spindles running 2 facemills 90' to one another and it just rotated to hit all the surfaces of the guide pads internally. Pretty cool and vert accurate. I miss big machining... :( One of the best tours yet!
Wonderful amazing tour. As a machinist I started on big gear but in New Zealand our big plants closed down. Huge shout out to Major Tool and Machine for granting access so you could put together this really enjoyable and mind blowing look inside the facility.
Major tool and machine was my first job out of trade school as a tig welder in 2005. I saw some of the most amazing things I’ve ever seen in my life there!........ very talented group of people.
Hi John, First time I've seen such massive and precise machining. Thanks for taking the time in making the video and thanks to Major Tool for allowing the video.
This should be required watching for all our representative in congress so they can understand the importance of generational learning and training necessary to stay competitive in our modern world. I'm from the semiconductor industry and am shocked how little people understand the level of engineering and expertise that goes into advanced manufacturing. Thanks to Major Tool & Machine and NY CNC!
It's a shame none of that means anything now. The kids these days all want to be "influencers" and "creators" instead of being actual influencers and actual creators.
If only I could persuade my wife that we all would have more fun with a walk in CNC machine than a walk in closet, just think what great school projects the kids could make with it😁
I owned a 5-10 employee Precision Sheet Metal job shop for 30 years and can't fathom managing one with 400 employees. The investment risk involved is monumental and rarely understood by most people that only see the successful results.
@@marianocardenas3440 Start a youtube channel. If we can see what's happening, we can offer advice on things we know about. If we don't know what is going on, we can't offer much that will be helpful. Good luck to you.
@@jasonmead9907 Right lol. What a clown. Someone needs to make the parts. If you have the drive and want to be that person and get those contracts, its there for the taking.
Wow. What a great "Job Shop". I've been a CNC machinist/programmer for almost 35 years. My first CNC in 1986 was a Mori Seiki MV-40. I thought it was the coolest machine in the world. I've never seen anything this big, and fancy. Man have they evolved. The most impressive system I've ever seen was a 4 machine Toyoda horizontal cell with the pallet shuttle system. Can't remember the models, but they were 50 taper spindles. This place blows that away. At 25:42, It looked like someone lost a limb in that roller. Kinda freaked me out at first glance. 😱
This place is a realistic wet dream, the things I'd do to get an entry level position with this place! After 4 years in the trade this video shows me how truly green in the trade I am.
My display glass is cracked and it matched with the smudge so I thought it was a weird problem from a cracked glass, but I realized it was just a shitty lens
i like that they have an apprentice program , also the fact that every machine has it specialization and most of them are fully spec'ed . It shows that there really was a tought process building the company. The size of the machines makes me moist :D
Astounding and tremendous!! Have to say I am blown away by what I have seen here. Television programs like "Engineering Marvels of the World", "Greatest this that and the other" are mostly just hype and blather compared to this production. Why? Because John of NYC CNC knows what he is looking at, knows what he is talking about, understands what the shop guys are saying - they are all on the same page. The love and enthusiasm is real and shared and infectious. Kudos to Mike Griffith and Major Tool and Machine. Terrific work. Thank you!
As a retired Aerospace Machinist, this is a kid in a candy shop tour! A pinnacle of Conventional and CNC employment. An MIT and JPL of CNC Programming.
That is what I am talking about. This is real work. Small machine with small parts is not fun. Here one mistake can cost a lot. The satisfaction of getting the job done with these machines is like no other feeling.
When that lathe operator was stuttering numbers, I was just like “that things huge and flying I NEED SFM” 1600sfm!! 👌🏻 that big I thought it was gonna lift off!
the program we use at my job for thread milling is a single sub program with macros. you can make any thread, with a few macro changes. the program itself calculates everything as if it were conversational. never need cam or actual conversational with it. our programmer is an absolute master with his macro programs.
I went to the McDonald Douglas plant closure auction for their plant that had been working since WWII in Torrance, ca. They made the parts for the DC-10 there and then shipped them down to the Long Beach assembly plant where they also closed that plant after finishing up the C-17 production run. The Torrance plant had heat treat, drop forge, plating, machining. Not much sheet metal. They had a CMM in a Plexiglas enclosure that was huge. About 80' square by 60' high. The "banjo" machined part was a solid machined part for the vertical stabilizer that had a hole in it for the 3rd engine.The CMM was used on it.
This place is pretty awesome. I worked for a Machine tool Company in Los Angeles, California...1971-1980...Burgmaster..they were pretty big, made some big 2-3 axis turret drills and gantrys, then added VTC tools...they closed up in 1986...I was not there, but sorry to hear about it...Nice decent clean place, good machinery, top quality NC stuff...right as the CNC was coming out....the CNC machines themselves aren't really all that....What's new is the computer and software... Burgmaster could build a Gantry with up to 120 FEET of X travel, 120" Y and 60" Z....2, 8-tool turrets...they also built the 'Secret' Hughes Dual-center.....A huge Hughes machine with a big rotary table on 'Y' and 2 spindles at 180 degrees from each other on 'Z'... Burgmaster ran the old punched tape, but could perform 5 axis work....slowly. Many G-codes... I looked all over the youtube for Burgmaster stuff....all I could find was a few guys with their tiniest (but excellent) 6 spindle table-top drill/tappers...but, there is a video from a news article in the early 70's describing how Fred Burg and his brother started the company.....mostly a lot of talking, not enough of the machinery...Fred Burg came from Yugoslavia, very sharp guy, smart business and good machinist.... Fred Burg was another guy that started in a very small garage/shop....
this is the top of the foodchain if cnc machines 😮im waiting on my first own cnc and i think thats not bad at 17 years old 🤟we do a bit og cad and cam at my school (htl , only found in austria i think ) and i absolutly love it , mecatronics was definitly the right choice (more versitile than machinebuilding) but mine cost 3.2k and i couldnt afford more , but 3 axis is a good start i guess next stop is probably a pocket nc v2 but thats still a long way , short term will be a prusa mini for even more ropide prototyping small size is because i hae to carry the stuff down in my parents basement (big shoutout to them for allowing me to use it 👍)
I used to work in a place like that for 2 years, it was awsome working on giant machines that were 2 stories tall. You typically only made 1 part a day on most of the machines also they had cranes that were stong enough to lift a train car and then some.
Hats off to them having an apprentice program! The threadmilling conversational section was interesting to me, and I think it's because I'm not actually in the industry so probably missing a lot of context here: Why is it preferable to train "shop floor" folks to use conversational/pre-canned cycles to get the job done instead of teaching them CAD/CAM to generate the toolpath? Seems almost as easy and they get experience with the CAD/CAM side. Win-win? I guess it might be a bit slower, or difficult if it's a part that hasn't been modeled already. Dunno, as a homeshop hobbyist it's strange to hear that there are "programming guys" and "floor guys". :)
Because they don't want to Machinist programming basically they have engineering/cam department to do it - but they do see the need for some simple stuff to be done on the floor
Breaking Taps - A one off item/operation is very expensive to program whether programmed by a novice or an expert. In addition, understanding basic setup and machine configuration is key to a successful career in the business. If that’s not well understood, then a person can’t reliably setup the machine and the work item for a successful run. If the person ultimately wants to be a CAD/CAM programmer the company probably has a training program and a path to join that team if desired. There is a combination of economics, skills, capabilities, desire, etc to make for a good candidate for every job. For example, in context, not everyone wants to learn CAD/CAM programming but is a great machinist on the floor ensuring the CAD/CAM program has the best chance for a successful run by ensuring they get the local environment configured properly and monitoring the progress which both require incredible levels of skill. Every person in the place is smart and learns something new every day is my bet.
I was there about 15 years ago. I know you were just focusing on CNC, but they had a flat stock roller that had a capacity of 6in thick and a plasma cutter that could do 12in thick. The company name definitely matches what they do.
Very good video we need apprenticeship programs down here in the south I’m in Birmingham Alabama we have Steward machine Co got one of the best programs I’ve seen in a while as far as apprenticeship manual machine and I think they have CNC also. I appreciate your videos very informative I love big big equipment I have a 22 foot diameter table I ran in mobile it down south Alabama ... I enjoy machining 5e large things lol
As an employee here for 2 years now, this video and the comments that followed gave me a new sense of pride I have working at this company. Thank you all so much!
You should be, mate. To be able to operate those expensive machine in itself is a pride.
Absolutely great company. Wow. Would move to work there...
You’re in a great place Jason.
That looks like a super nice place to work, simply incredible what some places are capable of!
It looks like a great place to work! Very clean and organised.
The smudge on the lense is driving me nuts. Keep wiping my phone thinking it is a smudge on my screen.
And now I cannot stop thinking of Rick & Morty. "Some say he looked like a smudge."
Makes me feel at home.
Half the time my safety glasses are smudged.
Same here!
Thank you
I kept rubbing my screen
Wierdo focus on the video
THAT WAS FOR NATIONAL SECURITY PURPOSES SOME OF THE ITEMS ARE CLASSIFIED
I haven't seen a quality hi-end operation like this since I worked on the B1B, VLS, Titan projects at Martin Marietta, Middle River back in the early to late 80's. Impressive. @24:15 the cans on the pallets are actually sections of the VLS (Vertical Launch System) and when we made them back then (80's) Martin's had a purpose built machine that held assembled sections of the can for all at once machining! The ram was 30' long with multi-spindles running 2 facemills 90' to one another and it just rotated to hit all the surfaces of the guide pads internally. Pretty cool and vert accurate. I miss big machining... :( One of the best tours yet!
Wonderful amazing tour. As a machinist I started on big gear but in New Zealand our big plants closed down. Huge shout out to Major Tool and Machine for granting access so you could put together this really enjoyable and mind blowing look inside the facility.
Great to see such large and productive machines here in the US
Major tool and machine was my first job out of trade school as a tig welder in 2005. I saw some of the most amazing things I’ve ever seen in my life there!........ very talented group of people.
I love shop tours anyway, but this would be the largest I’ve ever been through. Wow.
Hi John,
First time I've seen such massive and precise machining. Thanks for taking the time in making the video and thanks to Major Tool for allowing the video.
Thank you for the shop tour a rare and special treat !
This should be required watching for all our representative in congress so they can understand the importance of generational learning and training necessary to stay competitive in our modern world. I'm from the semiconductor industry and am shocked how little people understand the level of engineering and expertise that goes into advanced manufacturing. Thanks to Major Tool & Machine and NY CNC!
It's a shame none of that means anything now. The kids these days all want to be "influencers" and "creators" instead of being actual influencers and actual creators.
This is off the scale of SIZE your best shop tour yet, just in awe. That tool shop WOW, cheers from OZ.
Well we're hiring if you're looking to locate!
American craftsmanship at its finest
That smudge will be with me forever... Glad they are using Siemens great system. Some really cool stuff Thanks
Excellent video! Large scale metal working, nothing better! 😊
Great to see Siemens controls implemented. Very nice upgrades
I don't even know this type of machine tools exist! It is amazing!
Hi John, WOW, that was quite impressive, thanks for taking us along!!
The enthusiasm between the two of you geeking out is phenomenal 😊😁
🤔 Good blend of talent and tooling
Geeking out? Seriously?...
Great video! Enjoyed watching the incredible machinery and the work that they do at that company. Very impressive indeed.
This shop tour makes me proud we still have the level of machines and the workers to run them !! GOD BLESS THE USA!!
Hey, as an employee of Major Tool, that made me feel really good. Thanks!
NYCNC THIS IS YOUR BEST WORK AND YOU ARE PERFORMING A NATIONAL SERVICE - YOU ARE A GREAT GUY AND A PATRIOT
WOW!!! This can only happen in America.
I am so impressed.
Great shop. Great video. Absolutely great company.
This shop is very very impressive , big parts being machined with very accurate machines!
I just love this type of video!!! Thank you so much, and can't wait for the next one!!
If only I could persuade my wife that we all would have more fun with a walk in CNC machine than a walk in closet,
just think what great school projects the kids could make with it😁
Walk in CNC closet? Has a robot arm that grabs and stores clothes for you?
@@ShinyMajor Man with a brain right there. Have your cake AND eat it too!
I am stunned! What a great shop! Thanks for the tour!
Thanks for these shop tour videos. They give me hope that the United States might at least retain some of its manufacturing expertise.
Just Love this shop thanks for the tour.
I owned a 5-10 employee Precision Sheet Metal job shop for 30 years and can't fathom managing one with 400 employees. The investment risk involved is monumental and rarely understood by most people that only see the successful results.
Any tips on owning a shop with 5 employees???
@@marianocardenas3440 Start a youtube channel. If we can see what's happening, we can offer advice on things we know about. If we don't know what is going on, we can't offer much that will be helpful. Good luck to you.
@Миодраг Здравковић Said the Russian who knows "so much" about American manufacturing laws...🙄
@@jasonmead9907 Right lol. What a clown. Someone needs to make the parts. If you have the drive and want to be that person and get those contracts, its there for the taking.
Very impressive shop!
You could add BIG too your description cheers.
Wow. What a great "Job Shop". I've been a CNC machinist/programmer for almost 35 years. My first CNC in 1986 was a Mori Seiki MV-40. I thought it was the coolest machine in the world. I've never seen anything this big, and fancy. Man have they evolved. The most impressive system I've ever seen was a 4 machine Toyoda horizontal cell with the pallet shuttle system. Can't remember the models, but they were 50 taper spindles. This place blows that away.
At 25:42, It looked like someone lost a limb in that roller. Kinda freaked me out at first glance. 😱
This place is a realistic wet dream, the things I'd do to get an entry level position with this place! After 4 years in the trade this video shows me how truly green in the trade I am.
Hey, if you're willing to locate, they'll probably take you on. We have guys there greener than you
Amazing John! Thanks for a fantastic tour(and of course, Thanks Mayor ;-)
best shop tour I have seen - impressive capabilities
That's an incredible setup! Pretty sure this is my favorite of the shop tour videos now. Hope you are well - Tom Z
At first I thought the blur was for protecting proprietary things in the video, then I realized it was just a smudge on the camera lol
I’m pretty sure that there were plenty of intentional blurs too.
John Smith yup, 24:03
My display glass is cracked and it matched with the smudge so I thought it was a weird problem from a cracked glass, but I realized it was just a shitty lens
That place is incredibly huge! What a huge tool crib too! Wow!
another great tour, such unique machinery in this shop holy crap
I'm fascinated by this shop, even though I only understand a fraction of what they're talking about. Thank you.
Lubię takie maszyny. Dobra robota.
What an amazing place! I would love to work there, Thanks for the walk through!
i like that they have an apprentice program , also the fact that every machine has it specialization and most of them are fully spec'ed . It shows that there really was a tought process building the company. The size of the machines makes me moist :D
Astounding and tremendous!! Have to say I am blown away by what I have seen here. Television programs like "Engineering Marvels of the World", "Greatest this that and the other" are mostly just hype and blather compared to this production. Why? Because John of NYC CNC knows what he is looking at, knows what he is talking about, understands what the shop guys are saying - they are all on the same page. The love and enthusiasm is real and shared and infectious. Kudos to Mike Griffith and Major Tool and Machine.
Terrific work. Thank you!
Absolutely! You eloquently summed up everything i found myself thinking after watching this mind blowing video!
And this isn't just one big giant product placement video either.
Super super great video. Thank you so much!!!
I used to work in the fabrication and assembly department there. They do some absolute awesome projects!
Current employee there! Glad you still have pride in the work you did for Major!
that first machine is mindblowing holy heck
As a retired Aerospace Machinist, this is a kid in a candy shop tour! A pinnacle of Conventional and CNC employment. An MIT and JPL of CNC Programming.
As Jon said....WOW!!!!....thanks for sharing
I work for massive die form (magna ). Our shop has huge gantry machines like these. Nice tour John
That is what I am talking about. This is real work. Small machine with small parts is not fun. Here one mistake can cost a lot. The satisfaction of getting the job done with these machines is like no other feeling.
Absolutely eye opening! Puts my Hurco VM3 into perspective 😩
These guys make my shop equipment look small!!
When that lathe operator was stuttering numbers, I was just like “that things huge and flying I NEED SFM”
1600sfm!! 👌🏻 that big I thought it was gonna lift off!
And I’m dreaming of start with a manual 8x16 mini lathe! Now we know where big things are.
the program we use at my job for thread milling is a single sub program with macros. you can make any thread, with a few macro changes. the program itself calculates everything as if it were conversational. never need cam or actual conversational with it. our programmer is an absolute master with his macro programs.
Very impressive tour!!!
Amazing Shop! wow!
There are some big shop with big machines in my area but this shop is a whole nother level
I went to the McDonald Douglas plant closure auction for their plant that had been working since WWII in Torrance, ca. They made the parts for the DC-10 there and then shipped them down to the Long Beach assembly plant where they also closed that plant after finishing up the C-17 production run. The Torrance plant had heat treat, drop forge, plating, machining. Not much sheet metal. They had a CMM in a Plexiglas enclosure that was huge. About 80' square by 60' high. The "banjo" machined part was a solid machined part for the vertical stabilizer that had a hole in it for the 3rd engine.The CMM was used on it.
NYCCNC / Protolabs shop tour would be the coolest thing ever.
Damn I'm sure your beating yourself up over the smudge. This was a great video nevertheless, one day maybe I can own a shop like this haha.
All you need is billions of dollars in funding.
@@MrUltracoin Thats actually the third or forth thing you need. You need the will and drive and want to do it first. Then you need the knowledge.
That place is so fricking awesome can't believe it. Saved it to differently see it over and over may have missed something. Great Video Thanks!!!!L
Fun to watch talking shop in a shop like this 😁
Brian is watching and drooling over the size of machines
This place is pretty awesome. I worked for a Machine tool Company in Los Angeles, California...1971-1980...Burgmaster..they were pretty big, made some big 2-3 axis turret drills and gantrys, then added VTC tools...they closed up in 1986...I was not there, but sorry to hear about it...Nice decent clean place, good machinery, top quality NC stuff...right as the CNC was coming out....the CNC machines themselves aren't really all that....What's new is the computer and software...
Burgmaster could build a Gantry with up to 120 FEET of X travel, 120" Y and 60" Z....2, 8-tool turrets...they also built the 'Secret' Hughes Dual-center.....A huge Hughes machine with a big rotary table on 'Y' and 2 spindles at 180 degrees from each other on 'Z'...
Burgmaster ran the old punched tape, but could perform 5 axis work....slowly. Many G-codes...
I looked all over the youtube for Burgmaster stuff....all I could find was a few guys with their tiniest (but excellent) 6 spindle table-top drill/tappers...but, there is a video from a news article in the early 70's describing how Fred Burg and his brother started the company.....mostly a lot of talking, not enough of the machinery...Fred Burg came from Yugoslavia, very sharp guy, smart business and good machinist....
Fred Burg was another guy that started in a very small garage/shop....
Im half way through, this an Incredible shop tour woweeeeee.
this is the top of the foodchain if cnc machines 😮im waiting on my first own cnc and i think thats not bad at 17 years old 🤟we do a bit og cad and cam at my school (htl , only found in austria i think ) and i absolutly love it , mecatronics was definitly the right choice (more versitile than machinebuilding)
but mine cost 3.2k and i couldnt afford more , but 3 axis is a good start i guess next stop is probably a pocket nc v2 but thats still a long way , short term will be a prusa mini for even more ropide prototyping
small size is because i hae to carry the stuff down in my parents basement (big shoutout to them for allowing me to use it 👍)
I used to work in a place like that for 2 years, it was awsome working on giant machines that were 2 stories tall. You typically only made 1 part a day on most of the machines also they had cranes that were stong enough to lift a train car and then some.
these are parts you don't want to scrap
Another great shop tour!
The tool crib are is bigger than 4 out of the 5 machine shops I’ve worked in .
Looks an amazing place to work
Great video. John, I think you new a big shop.
Thanks for the walk along.
Now that make me happy seeing USA quality craftsmanship go USA
Fantastic video! Quite the operation.
I live 2 hours from there. I have always wanted to go see it
This facility is extremely advanced!
This is insane!
Great shop.
We need more of this.
Bring back manufacturing from China. I'm trying to help a company do this.
Fives Giddings and Lewis machine are built in Fond du Lac, WI. 160 years and still going strong.
Чётко организовано производство, везде идеальный порядок, приятно посмотреть
Hats off to them having an apprentice program! The threadmilling conversational section was interesting to me, and I think it's because I'm not actually in the industry so probably missing a lot of context here: Why is it preferable to train "shop floor" folks to use conversational/pre-canned cycles to get the job done instead of teaching them CAD/CAM to generate the toolpath? Seems almost as easy and they get experience with the CAD/CAM side. Win-win? I guess it might be a bit slower, or difficult if it's a part that hasn't been modeled already. Dunno, as a homeshop hobbyist it's strange to hear that there are "programming guys" and "floor guys". :)
Because they don't want to Machinist programming basically they have engineering/cam department to do it - but they do see the need for some simple stuff to be done on the floor
Breaking Taps - A one off item/operation is very expensive to program whether programmed by a novice or an expert. In addition, understanding basic setup and machine configuration is key to a successful career in the business. If that’s not well understood, then a person can’t reliably setup the machine and the work item for a successful run. If the person ultimately wants to be a CAD/CAM programmer the company probably has a training program and a path to join that team if desired. There is a combination of economics, skills, capabilities, desire, etc to make for a good candidate for every job. For example, in context, not everyone wants to learn CAD/CAM programming but is a great machinist on the floor ensuring the CAD/CAM program has the best chance for a successful run by ensuring they get the local environment configured properly and monitoring the progress which both require incredible levels of skill. Every person in the place is smart and learns something new every day is my bet.
I was there about 15 years ago. I know you were just focusing on CNC, but they had a flat stock roller that had a capacity of 6in thick and a plasma cutter that could do 12in thick. The company name definitely matches what they do.
Amazing video!
A great video John, thank you :)
I ran a Cincinnati 10HC for years, I miss it. It was a little bigger though, 100" in X
We have a 3 10HCs (one is 100”) that we recently retrofitted with a Siemens 840D and upgraded the spindle to a 20HP. They are solid machines!
Thanks for the tour!
When I heard 400 employees for a job shop, I about pooped myself. That’s an insane number for a job shop.
What an amazing shop
Great tour!
What a dream job I miss machining
Is that teal machine @31:05 a vacuum? I thought it was a compressor at first glance
Very cool!
John you need to see how gear boxes and gears are made! We have many SIPs
Very interesting, thanks.
Italians are the best when it comes to custom machine tools.
No. They're good but not the best. They are just as good as the rest of us advanced countries.
Very good video we need apprenticeship programs down here in the south I’m in Birmingham Alabama we have Steward machine Co got one of the best programs I’ve seen in a while as far as apprenticeship manual machine and I think they have CNC also. I appreciate your videos very informative I love big big equipment I have a 22 foot diameter table I ran in mobile it down south Alabama ... I enjoy machining 5e large things lol
Milacron and General Tool would also be cool to see videos of IF they would allow you to film in there.
To bad i didn't know about this place 37 years ago. Would be living in Indiana now.
Too much fun! 👍