Girls, guys, please take a minute to think about how great this video is. It has the raw sound of the machines, the details and all the realism of the working space without any music. This is simply beautiful in every single sense. Thank you so much for such a genuine video.
liked these videos so much i got myself a ex-bmw kuka kr140 krc2 ed05, have had it 5 years, its a very powerful tool for a workshop, have had it mostly milling but it can also pick up and use a stationary band saw like you would a hacksaw, bolt a 3 phase motor and mount the biggest wood saw you can find and chop trees in to furniture with fine accuracy, all solo my own risks to take not sure how you go about the miles of safety hardware you see in the videos, oh and even just working on an engine block it can hold it and flip it around with ease.
Just remember there is plenty of humans involved in the setup and constant maintenance of these robots. People have to sleep there on call, , High IQ workers only !
NO I would have thought that they would be on 24 hour call two weeks on then two weeks off. I just can't see a company making a sleep come rest room for a maintenance worker's with all of the utilities that intales on the factory premises ! . So when you say high IQ you mean someone with a degree in engineering or equivalent.
@@hindugoat2302 Don't discount all the people it takes to install these production lines. There's entire companies out there dedicated to the design, build out, and installation of these automated processes into plants all over the world. There's huge teams that come in to install and update these lines. That's another one too, product is constantly getting revised. There's a problem, or a way to change the process to reduce cycle time, people are going in to make changes. Add/remove tooling, robots, cabling. There's jobs out there at the facilities that make the cables, the PLCs, the robots themselves, the tooling, the conveyor systems. This production process is the "final product." Don't forget about all the jobs that are upstream to make this all happen, and to keep it going. Pulse encoders go out on robots, there's people on staff to replace it, and it's usually not an engineer that will be replacing it. At my factory, it's an hourly paid, union maintenance tech that goes in to troubleshoot, repair, and PM the equipment.
I'm a Mechatronics student. I just started the program. I'm wondering if I get a job in a company like this, what my responsibility gonna be as a mechatronics technician
All are automatic👍👍. The workers for material handling are replaced by flexible manufacturing system. Include the job for spot weldings are taken over by machine control unit. Are there any workers beside doing maintenance and programming? KUKA is owned by China, right? How about the quality, is it still German standard?
The beauty of using a robot is they are very accurate, precise, fast, works consistently, don't need any breaks (for lunch or toilet) like humans, don't ask for a leave or holiday, never demand a pay rise, don't talk or fight/argue with one another or the boss...the list is lengthy....!!!
I'm curous about the spot welding robots. They need to keep the heads with a decent point for high quality spot welds, which obviously wear down during use. So do the robots self sharpen them or is there a PPM schedual to replace the copper welding rods before they wear out of tolerance.
The jobs are not going overseas any more to Vietnam or Poland, they are being automated out of existence, and not only are there more profits, there is less taxes (income taxes on wages) and less health care and a host of other past benefits.
Kuka. Deutsche Spitzentechnologie und Know-how nun Eigentum der Chinesen.... Zitat: Sie halten jetzt rund 95 Prozent der Kuka-Aktien und haben dafür den stolzen Preis von mehr als 4,5 Milliarden Euro gezahlt....
If you watch closely, you will notice that the head is designed with compliance. Also, the 7th axis servo motor starts the operation by reversing the shaft (and everything attached to said shaft) to get everything aligned, and then driving the shaft in the correct direction. Torque is most likely measured by reading the current that the servo motor is drawing in order to determine when the threaded object is tight enough. The "right position" is more than likely a programmed "point" in the program. With point to point programming, a robot will follow the same path with pretty good accuracy during each cycle. This is a very brief, and not very thorough description, but it should be enough to answer your question...6 months after you asked it.
Position is fixed, products are indexed on arrival at workstation and that'll do for accuracy, a mm play is no problem with right nut form @Alexander Brown, it is not an 7th Axis motor, KUKA drives are not suitable for tightening, its a dedicated tightening spindle driven by its own controls, usually automotive critical bolts are tightened to yield
غير سعيد تماما بإقصاء البشر من الانتاج. هذا مؤشر لازمات اجتماعيه قادمه. Not happy for the absence of human workers. I guess this is the catalyst of close coming of social unrest
@@l0_0l45 صحح معلوماتك ولا تتكلم كمثقف مدعي. الاتمته بدأت منذ عهد الثوره الصناعيه في أوروبا واللتي بدورها جاءت بعد الثوره الزراعيه. ماذا حصلنا بعدها: انا اقول لك حولنا ملاك المزارع لعبيد ومن ثم استولت الشركات الكبرى على مزارعهم ومن ثم بقوا عبيد في المصانع والان عبيد ولكن من دون وظائف او اراض او مال. تعسا للتعسف ونعما لعدل الاسلام اللذي حافظ على مال وكرامة الانسانِ Sorry I disagree with you. Do not talk as if you are knowledgeable, the automation started by the rise of industrial revolution in Europe which by it self started after the agricultural revolution. What did we gain out of this, is simply the enslavement of what used to be farmers in factories and the loss of their land to major companies and recently even the loss of their jobs in fully automated factories and becoming slaves with no land or income. Only the just of Islam that will protect the property of man and his dignity and freedoms.
@@ferashamdan4252 "Do not tall as if you are knowledgable." As if you are. Using an antiquated book 14 centuries old to bolster your faltering points. Islam is not even relevant to automation, it is a religion, it has got nothing to do with engineering. If you tried to see the roots of automation, then we could go back to even further back than industrial revolution where water power was used to automate a lot of lathe work. In my comment I was referring to CNC machines. *I have worked on them.* They are far better than any manual lathe, milling machine, or shaper that I have ever worked on. CNC machines are reducing work cycle time from hours to minutes. Productivity is higher per person than ever. Why would I ever want to go back to a time where I would take 2 hours to prepare a basic 1 m shaft, but now I can do it in 5 min in a CNC Lathe? I would never prefer the past here. Not just machines, but even social progress is up. We have formed better societies, reduced the crime rate, reduced the number of wars, and many more good things. This time is a far better time to be alive in than the past.
Bye bye jobs nobody wanted anyway, always this cry about jobs which, when people are given such mindless jobs they only complain about how mindless it is to do a 0-education job...
Tja, und nirgendwo Menschen zu sehen, die diese immer schneller produzierten Autos kaufen könnten. Sehr schön zuzusehen, mächtige Technik. Aber absolut zukunftsvernichtend!
Girls, guys, please take a minute to think about how great this video is. It has the raw sound of the machines, the details and all the realism of the working space without any music. This is simply beautiful in every single sense.
Thank you so much for such a genuine video.
Nice, oh btw: Good Job German Government for allowing a Chinese Company to buy all this knowledge.
liked these videos so much i got myself a ex-bmw kuka kr140 krc2 ed05, have had it 5 years, its a very powerful tool for a workshop, have had it mostly milling but it can also pick up and use a stationary band saw like you would a hacksaw, bolt a 3 phase motor and mount the biggest wood saw you can find and chop trees in to furniture with fine accuracy, all solo my own risks to take not sure how you go about the miles of safety hardware you see in the videos, oh and even just working on an engine block it can hold it and flip it around with ease.
Could you please let us know how much it cost to get an ex-Bmw kuka robot.?
It’s fascinating and scary at the same time
Now this has production value. I was glued.
Just remember there is plenty of humans involved in the setup and constant maintenance of these robots. People have to sleep there on call, , High IQ workers only !
@Mesophyl Highly trained anyway, you don't let some cheap worker service these robots...
@@someguy4915 10 engineers to maintain machines
replaces 300 workers
NO I would have thought that they would be on 24 hour call two weeks on then two weeks off. I just can't see a company making a sleep come rest room for a maintenance worker's with all of the utilities that intales on the factory premises ! . So when you say high IQ you mean someone with a degree in engineering or equivalent.
man theres always people pissing and moaning about robots replacing jobs
@@hindugoat2302 Don't discount all the people it takes to install these production lines. There's entire companies out there dedicated to the design, build out, and installation of these automated processes into plants all over the world. There's huge teams that come in to install and update these lines. That's another one too, product is constantly getting revised. There's a problem, or a way to change the process to reduce cycle time, people are going in to make changes. Add/remove tooling, robots, cabling.
There's jobs out there at the facilities that make the cables, the PLCs, the robots themselves, the tooling, the conveyor systems. This production process is the "final product." Don't forget about all the jobs that are upstream to make this all happen, and to keep it going. Pulse encoders go out on robots, there's people on staff to replace it, and it's usually not an engineer that will be replacing it. At my factory, it's an hourly paid, union maintenance tech that goes in to troubleshoot, repair, and PM the equipment.
Congratulation the inventor of this robots.
I'm a Mechatronics student. I just started the program. I'm wondering if I get a job in a company like this, what my responsibility gonna be as a mechatronics technician
03:52 someone captured a baby T-Rex. Momma is going to be angry.
Playing hide and seek in this plant would turn you into minced meat.
So efficient without those pesky humans getting in the way.
And the Terminators ???
Where are ???
Robots fitness center 😀.
Fantastic innovation 👌
Looks like a Terminator Scenes
it's nice to see no blue collar human
All are automatic👍👍.
The workers for material handling are replaced by flexible manufacturing system. Include the job for spot weldings are taken over by machine control unit.
Are there any workers beside doing maintenance and programming?
KUKA is owned by China, right? How about the quality, is it still German standard?
Good job kuka
Woww...Amazing...
Germany is crazy...very very smart
Machen die Robots auch die super guten Steuerketten?
That is the future of manufacturing everywhere. Robotics and automation.
Hanzhen harmonic drive gear , robot arm gear , over 30 years experience ,,
The beauty of using a robot is they are very accurate, precise, fast, works consistently, don't need any breaks (for lunch or toilet) like humans, don't ask for a leave or holiday, never demand a pay rise, don't talk or fight/argue with one another or the boss...the list is lengthy....!!!
I'm curous about the spot welding robots. They need to keep the heads with a decent point for high quality spot welds, which obviously wear down during use. So do the robots self sharpen them or is there a PPM schedual to replace the copper welding rods before they wear out of tolerance.
Tom Bowman normally they have something called a tip-dresser- like a spinning cutter. The robot makes a request then enters the tip
@@collinsd70 Indeed.
Sometimes there are tip changer too.
I'm proud to be a "KUKAner" 💪
I would be. if I could be.
ABB, FANUC, KUKA
Genial!!!
Wait tell they get out of the factory and into the public domain! , then you going to see change.
Long way from when Detroit workers would leave their beer cans in the wells.
The jobs are not going overseas any more to Vietnam or Poland, they are being automated out of existence, and not only are there more profits, there is less taxes (income taxes on wages) and less health care and a host of other past benefits.
I was there/1969.
...and what of man?
Helal olsun
dey terk errr... jerbbsss.....
... Automatic - like golden tomatoes of paradise. Robotic the helping arms of LORD SHIVA.
Ein sehr gut video!!
Entschuldigung fur schlect deutch.
Now China owns Kuka, bye bye Kuka i will never buy you.
like you had the money in the first place lmao
Kuka. Deutsche Spitzentechnologie und Know-how nun Eigentum der Chinesen....
Zitat:
Sie halten jetzt rund 95 Prozent der Kuka-Aktien und haben dafür den stolzen Preis von mehr als 4,5 Milliarden Euro gezahlt....
Wenn es Kuka gut ginge, hätte sie sich an niemanden verkauft.
Can anyone describe how the nutrunner head finds the correct position during the bolting operation at 1:03?
I believe the LED-computer vision system verifies the position in 3D, and then everything else can happen blindly.
If you watch closely, you will notice that the head is designed with compliance. Also, the 7th axis servo motor starts the operation by reversing the shaft (and everything attached to said shaft) to get everything aligned, and then driving the shaft in the correct direction. Torque is most likely measured by reading the current that the servo motor is drawing in order to determine when the threaded object is tight enough. The "right position" is more than likely a programmed "point" in the program. With point to point programming, a robot will follow the same path with pretty good accuracy during each cycle. This is a very brief, and not very thorough description, but it should be enough to answer your question...6 months after you asked it.
Position is fixed, products are indexed on arrival at workstation and that'll do for accuracy, a mm play is no problem with right nut form @Alexander Brown, it is not an 7th Axis motor, KUKA drives are not suitable for tightening, its a dedicated tightening spindle driven by its own controls, usually automotive critical bolts are tightened to yield
Itu gerakan tetap yg di ulang , dan sudah di program seperti itu
غير سعيد تماما بإقصاء البشر من الانتاج. هذا مؤشر لازمات اجتماعيه قادمه.
Not happy for the absence of human workers. I guess this is the catalyst of close coming of social unrest
Automation has been around since the 1940's. Social progress has been up since then. No one would like to return to an earlier age than that.
@@l0_0l45
صحح معلوماتك ولا تتكلم كمثقف مدعي. الاتمته بدأت منذ عهد الثوره الصناعيه في أوروبا واللتي بدورها جاءت بعد الثوره الزراعيه. ماذا حصلنا بعدها: انا اقول لك حولنا ملاك المزارع لعبيد ومن ثم استولت الشركات الكبرى على مزارعهم ومن ثم بقوا عبيد في المصانع والان عبيد ولكن من دون وظائف او اراض او مال. تعسا للتعسف ونعما لعدل الاسلام اللذي حافظ على مال وكرامة الانسانِ
Sorry I disagree with you. Do not talk as if you are knowledgeable, the automation started by the rise of industrial revolution in Europe which by it self started after the agricultural revolution. What did we gain out of this, is simply the enslavement of what used to be farmers in factories and the loss of their land to major companies and recently even the loss of their jobs in fully automated factories and becoming slaves with no land or income. Only the just of Islam that will protect the property of man and his dignity and freedoms.
@@ferashamdan4252 "Do not tall as if you are knowledgable."
As if you are. Using an antiquated book 14 centuries old to bolster your faltering points. Islam is not even relevant to automation, it is a religion, it has got nothing to do with engineering.
If you tried to see the roots of automation, then we could go back to even further back than industrial revolution where water power was used to automate a lot of lathe work.
In my comment I was referring to CNC machines. *I have worked on them.* They are far better than any manual lathe, milling machine, or shaper that I have ever worked on. CNC machines are reducing work cycle time from hours to minutes. Productivity is higher per person than ever. Why would I ever want to go back to a time where I would take 2 hours to prepare a basic 1 m shaft, but now I can do it in 5 min in a CNC Lathe? I would never prefer the past here.
Not just machines, but even social progress is up. We have formed better societies, reduced the crime rate, reduced the number of wars, and many more good things. This time is a far better time to be alive in than the past.
Where are the humans?
Programming and engineering automation.
Wait tell Kuka starts to make it where is humans don’t have to work at jobs anymore
Simillar our plant Fiat Serbia
Aws👍
Bye bye jobs!
Bye bye jobs nobody wanted anyway, always this cry about jobs which, when people are given such mindless jobs they only complain about how mindless it is to do a 0-education job...
Star Wars II
does stepper Motors are incredibly strong I wonder how they make the robot chassis is It cast or cnc
It's cast aluminum
Hello I own 5 new KUKA engines, can anyone be interested?
Tja, und nirgendwo Menschen zu sehen, die diese immer schneller produzierten Autos kaufen könnten. Sehr schön zuzusehen, mächtige Technik. Aber absolut zukunftsvernichtend!