That video is trickier than one might think at first sight. It's not as simple as running the whole thing backwards. He has to insert short sequences of "time forwards", like when he was sprinkling the chips onto the insert.I watched this video and was just chuckling to myself through the whole thing. My wife and kids are still wondering if I'm ok...
To make a $2 part with $10,000 dollars of machines and tools from a $5 piece of scrap like the rest of us?He addresses the prime reason I have a shop full of tools.
Well, kinda. When we are talking about making something you can’t buy, how do you assign a price? And even though the Tetris garage is full almost to gridlock all of it was bought used off CL for a fraction of what it was elsewhere. The single machine tool I paid the most for was the Delta UniDrill for $650. The only other American machine is the Atlas 7b I paid $125 for. In machine tools excluding tooling I’ll bet I’ve got way less than $5,000 in it. Being a junkyard dog much of my scrap was about that ridiculously cheap too. I guess when I told the universe I’m broke it finds ways to still tempt me.To make a $2 part with $10,000 dollars of machines and tools from a $5 piece of scrap like the rest of us?
I disagree. Everything he does goes against production “norms”. One of the basic is his time on shot. Notice the opening shot, he stays on that for a loooong time. I think almost 30-40 seconds. Industry std is 6-9sec. Check this out on any tv show.It leads me to believe his day job is in video production
He did in one of his videos for most of the video. Great guy. fine machinist, great videographer/youtube channelHe doesn't show himself
I saw that one, and he stepped out of his persona for it, which humanized him. He seems like the kind of guy we’d all like to have for a neighbor.He did in one of his videos for most of the video. Great guy. fine machinist, great videographer/youtube channel