How these impossibly thin cuts are made
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- čas přidán 27. 04. 2023
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Wire EDM is an insanely precise manufacturing method. But there's a trick behind this objects that appear to have no seam.
Check out Traveling Wire where I filmed the machines: www.travellingwire.co.uk
This is the metmo cube: www.metmo.co.uk/pages/the-cub...
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"... which, in inches, is... a different number." This short phrase made my whole week. I laughed so hard.
Hehe, I just came to join this particular party myself too.
@@lunakid12 same lol 6:47
Same here. Had to get my phone out just to comment on it, as you can't on the TV app.
i don't even remember what it was in -cm- mm - but i noticed this effing awesome joke xD
It was great , I'm going to steal it 😁!!
5:15: "It does something with it and pumps out deionized water." Once again, Steve Mould lucidly explains a complex process.
Better than pretending to know
Perfectly described, when it is outside the scope of the video
Just to be clear, I loved this; I’m quite sure it was a deliberate deadpan joke on Steve’s part.
007
The real reason why knives can cut things is because they’re sharp, unlike say, a tennis ball. It needs to have a defined edge of a particular sharpness in order to cut, otherwise you’re just left with some sort of tear.
I love how smoothly you recalculated it to inches.
And to eleven decimal places to boot.
They are hiding this knowledge from you so they can keep you as a slave 👉The Connections (2021) [short documentary] 🙌
no one use inches ollolol
@@gabrielv.4358 Did you forget Americans exist?
Ya, at 6:50 "... which in inches, is a different number." lol And that's why the metric system is more logical and precise.
I love how he demonstrates how useless normal razors are by not taking the plastic piece off of the top of it 😂
yes, that was the joke, or am i the stupid one here? :D
@@herczegkristof3963 nah, I'm the stupid one for not realising the plastic was still on and wondering why it was so shitty! I do it all the time irl too bc, stupid, hurpdurp
I'm tried normal/catridge razors they really do suck.
I just got a safety razor and it rocks actually trims the hair.
Thats a lawsuit waiting to be filled
@@alexucon Literally bro lmao💀
Hilarious how you had the plastic cover on the competition’s razor as you shaved with it. I noticed, and I salute your attention to detail and subtle humor. Same goes for the “see it even works on cheese.” I giggled.
"...you first drill a hole in the cheese, we've all done it..."
True precision and intention! 😂
That made me laugh too. I figured it is possibly the best way to sell the product with a bit of humor rather than showing you left cheek and right cheek that look identical. Well done. -- surprised I'm talking about an ad, when I usually skip'em.
"it fits perfectly"
I always appreciate some good stubble humor in my youtube videos
6:50 "A typical wire EDM machine will have a precision of around a 5000th of a millimetre, which in inches is a different number" 😂
I came here to say this but you beat me to it😂
I think he meant 5 thousandths, not 1 five-thousandth.
0.00019685 inches
The length of the right side of his stubble is the same number as the left side. They’re just different units.
I believe the number he gave was "five thousandths", so 5/1000, not 1/5000. If you remember that there are 25.4 millimeters in an inch, you should be able to approximate the conversion in your head pretty easily. (It actually ends up being close to 1/5000 in inches since there's about two factors of 5 in the conversion.)
This must be THE BEST sponsor segment I’ve ever seen on ANY CZcams video.
And I’ve been a CZcams addict for the better part of 10 years. Kudos. ❤
@6:55 "which in inches is another number" - EPIC
I love Steve's commitment to demonstrating everything using cheese.
I am now disappointed that he didn't shave cheese at the end
I really hope Steve becomes England's premier cheese machinist
that’s commitment to the bit.
wait - wrong science communicator.😅
I love Steve's commitment to have half of his face shaved unoted
Just come across this Chanel and now I’m addicted and behind on my latest project! Damn Steve🙄😁
I was impressed by your dedication to the cheese comparison throughout the entire video.
for real. guy IRONED CHEESE. that's commitment to the bit.
I came for the dance music.
I would leave if EDM was played
@@TFHS420MAN SHUT UP!!! 'FORE YOU MAKE ME DO SUM I'M GON' REGRET!!!
I've worked with Mitsubishi Wire Feed edms (FA20S) myself, and I honestly find them very satisfying to work with. I used to primarily program and run the machine for tool & die components, but I loved to find an excuse to whip out the machine for other use cases that conventional machining methods would be difficult. I have far more experience on milling and lathe work now, from anywhere from micro-machining to huge oil and gas components, but its nice to see wire edm in action as it was essentially my roots beginning as a machinist. Thanks for showing off my passion for others to see, I find this stuff fascinating with the history and science of manufacturing, and how it allows humans to make amazing innovations.
A few little tidbits I thought I might mention in case you might be reading this: when referring to the .001's place of a millimeter, it is preferred to say "Microns" as it makes you sound smarter, but also it prevents confusion from the imperial "thousandth's" which is commonly used as it's own term.
The first type of edm you mentioned, the sinker type, was far more common decades ago as wire feed edm was not advanced enough at the time. While the accuracy of a EDM machines is amazing, they are not the only machines that can reach such levels of repeatable precision even down to +-.005 millimeters, however, they are set apart by the unique features they are able to cut as they exert very little cutting forces, and the difficult to cut materials that they superior at dealing with. Modern diamond tooling solutions try to give other machine tools access to manufacturing these types of extremely difficult to cut materials, such as tungsten carbide, but EDM machines are a tried and true method that many shops still rely on for tool & die or other prototyping manufacturing.
Thank you for your informative video, I have not touched a wire edm machine in a year and I honestly miss the joys of working with them, or having your wire break midway through a 18 hour die and accidentally resetting your G54.
I think you meant "down to ±5 microns" 🙂
@@DougWoodrowlook, a useless pedant. its almost like the original commenter was using measurements that are more familiar to the average person, and by the by, +- is pretty good shorthand for someone who doesn't know how or doesn't care to input the actual symbol.
@@logandarnell8946 Try reading the comment I replied to in full. The symbol wasn't my point, I was merely amused that the commenter didn't follow their own "tidbit".
3:55 another benefit of submerging the part is that the liquid reduces how much eroded material gets into the air and, from there, into Richard’s lungs.
old versions were non submerged, but the newest nonsubmerged machine I've worked on was from 1986.
@@jokeassasin7733 they still make them. they are better for speed but less precise, we use one as a bandsaw to cut 3d printed Inconel off build plates at our shop.
In the 1995 World Rally Championship, Toyota infamously used engineering like this to bypass the FIA mandated turbo air restrictor plate and thus produce significantly more horsepower than their competition. There were internal springs that would open an air gap around the restrictor only once the restrictor was fully installed and the turbo was producing boost pressure. It would close when the engine was at idle/when the restrictor was removed for inspection, making it impossible to spot by the FIA inspectors.
Max Mosley, the president of the FIA at the time said this: "It is the most sophisticated and ingenious device either I or the FIA’s technical experts have seen for a long-time. It was so well made that there was no gap apparent to suggest there was any means of opening it.”
I'm always impressed by the ways in which motorsport teams try to use technology to get around bans on certain things. Except when the team I support loses because of it of course.
I wonder if this gave the automotive industry the idea for how to beat diesel emission tests … 🤔🙄
@@rogerramjet8395 and it allowed them to build cars that are difficult to repair so that you are dependent on a mechanic.
And the only reason we know about this is because there was a whistle-blower, otherwise it would have gone undetected for much longer.
@@rogerramjet8395 No that was software. Software is messy and ugly, unlike precision mechanics :D Now what if all the cars had the same controller and software... oh wait, they did and they all cheated, never mind.
I've seen videos of F-22s and B-2s refueling in midair. One of the craziest parts of it is that the port for refueling seems to appear from nowhere. The nature of stealth aircraft is that you really can't have even small ridges otherwise you've compromised your stealth, so the closed port needs to be perfectly hidden with no visible seam. I wonder if it's the same process being used.
Great video. And as a long-time shaver who uses double-edge safety razors, you are absolutely right about Henson Shaving's razors. I have two - AL13 and AL13M - and both are excellent. Extremely good design: if you don't have the right angle, nothing happens. (With most DE razors, if you don't have the right angle, you get a nick.) The Henson Shaving razor is both extremely comfortable and extremely efficient. I do recommend using a good shaving soap and a shaving brush rather than canned foam: that makes a big difference, even with a cartridge razor.
8:51, the difference really is remarkable!! It's almost unbelievable! You would think there must be some user error, but no, it couldnt be that! 😅
To be fair: they are actually horrible to use if you want to shave off more than a stubble...
Hehh, indeed! Good thing he'd shown it up close and slow, so we can exclude that possibility.
is it just me or did he have the security cab on that blade?
@@fabianwhs9891 yea he did
Perfectly normal way to shave. If you're a kid copying your dad.
The occasional "and you can do the same thing with cheese!" really sells me on the whole process.
Right?
Hilarious! That one-liner had me in stitches. It's the unexpected humor that truly brightens our days. I couldn't help but laugh out loud. Keep those witty moments coming, they bring so much joy. 😂👏🎉
6:32 "The grain of the abrasion pattern fows seamlessly across the seam, and so it seems as though the seam can't be seen"
😂 Love it
This has got to be one of the funniest and best episodes you've made so far
Between the perfect cheese analogy, the resin and the water mixing and doing,,, something? to deionize it and the "which, in inches, is a different number" I had my sides splitting
and the beard half trimmed lmao
I gave the like for his brilliant comparison of a Henson shaver and a leading brand shaver on his face! He finished me off with that one!
@@TheOriginalEviltech I had a feeling, when he didn't go into ink cartridges and toners, where profit margins exceed nuclear rod profit margins by far.
I'll stick with my straight razor for single blade shaving, for regular shaving, I'll stick with my only recently introduced to supermarkets 500 blade razor until it starts to dull as quickly as the much more expensive name brands.
Largely, as I do know how to hone my straight razor and the 500 blade model still has cheap and durable blades (as in, they last months for me on a single blade cartridge. With its evil attachment method.
I'll just get my coat...
@@hugodasilva9050 Especially using the razor backwards, with the guard on.
@@spvillano dude you're so high 😳🤯
Steve Mould is legitimately one of my favorite channels, I never know what I'm going to see. Today, I saw him iron cheese.
think he was sanding it lol
He was definitely sanding it. And if you listen to what he's saying as he's doing it, it makes sense.
Not that that's any less strange.
I thought it was ironing, too! "That's a new kind of fondue/raclette!", I thought.
This channel helps preserve that child like curiosity. I'm 35 and for years now I'm always smiling seeing new video.
Part of it is obviously chosen topic but Steve is arguably the most important thing here.
I mean guy's hot wiring a cheese and somehow it's not only incredibly interesting but is teaching a lot.
He's a perfect 90's children science tv program host. And it's 90's specific because back then science programs were actually designed for all ages and in some cases like in my country "health and safety" were only considered when you WILL actually die if you dont use let's say rubber gloves.
Pretty cool. The "tricks" were pretty clear just from looking at the end result. I didn't know about Wire EDM though. I was wracking my brain trying to figure out how they got such precision with a CNC mill.
There's a Japanese Gameshow called Supreme Skills, where they set a challenge to an EDM and a lathe to drill through a 6cm long 0.5mm thick pencil lead. It was impressive as hell.
The most impressive part was the machinist on the lathe used a manual haha
"I don't need your fancy CNC BS"
Sounds interesting!
Is it on CZcams, is there a link ?
@@ashlidotto1605 czcams.com/video/aipLQ2MVp-M/video.html
@@ashlidotto1605 It used to be on YT, but I think only part 1 is up now.
As a machinist (I do CNC work but we also do a lot of EDM work here) and it’s always satisfying when your parts fit together so perfectly and smoothly
I LOVE EDM, especially the drop 🤪
The best is when you get your nominal pin to bounce like a spring in the part
oh hi shulk
@@kalebstover-fb2ll Nah, the best is pulling the pin out quickly and making the pop noise. "Like a finger in a butthole" as a coworker once described it. 😂
0.005 mm = 0.00019685 inches
or 196/1,000,000 of an inch. lol
or >2/10,000 inch
AKA > 2/10ths of a thou ... It's precise
I had a WIRE EDM shop for 18 years. Did this type of work every day. It's been 20 years would love to know what cutting speeds are now. Back then 12 inches an hour was fast.
i think you would know im a mold maker and ran sinker EDMs from the Pacific's from the 70s to the more modern cnc edm the speed increase is night and day
@jacquelinesears1770 I also started out as a mold maker. That's when I began to specialize in sinker EDM. I ran a Charmilles D10. Then, I went to work for AGIE, where I learned wire EDM. Bought a wire machine from AGIE, and the rest is history. My first employee was a woman she could do it all.
Its my wife's account i am a mold maker her husband sorry about that @@patrickturner2788
So you’re telling me the impossibly thin cuts aren’t EVEN made
“The difference is remarkable” 😂
at least he's honest and shows why the difference is so remarkable
Honest about what? We all saw that razor not do its job, right. I know I saw it.
@@SuperRookie95 That's because neither razer could have tackled quarter inch beard hair... period. One half of his face he lather shaved with ... something ... and the other half he tried to dry shave with a disposable. Like a moron.
Completely destroyed any credibility his channel may have ever had.
He just took a sheet straight out of the informercial handbook: Show someone using a different product in a way no human ever would and f*cking it up.
@@JohnJesus More honest if he took the cap off the razor. LOL.
@@JohnJesus just the cap 😂😂😂
Cheese machining is a very underrated pastime. Steve, I salute you for bringing this crucial skill to a wider audience!
it's not for everyone though: some alloys are as hard to work with as they are delicious
Cheese welding is good too, lots of skill and patience required though!
Another muppet on YT that thinks they are a comedian....
"Dang, would you look at the cheesy rims he put on that Caprice? What are those, Muenster truck wheels or something?"
@andyreact That's how one loses half a beard
Great video, even followed up by buying one of the razors you were endorsing. I have a safety razor that cuts if the blade is not angled perfectly. Henson seem to have solved this issue. Thanks Steve
Interesting. I made some things like that as toys during my decades in machine shop. You can hold some pretty close tolerances with conventional equipment if you're careful. Working in a controlled environment I was able to hold .00005" diametric tolerances on a Hardinge Toolroom CNC.
That shot at the beginning is wild. I had to swap to 4k and re-watch it a few times. It must have taken forever to get most of the shot to stay in focus. Thanks for all that effort!
Thank you! Yes, it was a royal pain in the arse to get the timing right. Thanks for noticing
@@SteveMould LMAO
@@SteveMouldLMAO
@@SteveMould LMAO
@@SteveMould LMAO
Steve Mould should make a mould out of mold.
I'll look forward to Steve Mould's moldy mould for a bold Steve Mould made of gold for people young and old to behold and uphold, for future generations to be told the tale of Steve Mould's moldy mould that withstood weathers hot and cold, yet never sold and let unfold the tale of the bold gold Mould cast in Steve Mould's moldy mould.
Steve Mould should make a Steve Mould Mould made of mold and gold
Nowhere near worth the health risks involved.
@@sandasturner9529 there already exists a cheap and eco friendly packaging material made entirely out of fungus so I suppose it's not entirely out of the question.
Steve Mould should make a Mould mold, then full it with mold, so he can have a Mould shaped mold he made with his Mould-mold.
Ol' Moldy Mould we'll call him
@@Mionwang ok but I feel like it's too soon for me and I was referring to the traditional common bread mold and moisture latent mildew.
In the past few videos i really started to enjoy your presentation and personality, keep up the great work
Just a comment from over the canal: You've sold me to Henson. Canada shipping was way too expensive, so I ordered this beast in Germany. Thanks for your hilarious advertising, I think, this was the first time in my life that someone put me into this direction. So, thank you Steve :D
I've been working with 3d printers for the past couple of months and I've really become to admire this kind of precise tolerances only advanced machining methods could achieve. Amazing.
You can make this part with plain milling machine and surface grinder.
@@ansgaryeysymontt7155 🤓🤓🤓
you should have seen this 3D print I did for an etsy order. One square fitting in another and it was a ridiculously perfect fit. Now the edges aren't as sharp so you could still see the outline, but I got lucky on how perfect the squares retained their designated sizes.
@@king_james_official step on me
Unfortunately 3d printing in itself is not accurate when ur talking about .00001 tolerances
As an engineer at rolls-royce who has access to one of these machines. It makes me very happy. I love making these sort of things!
CRF per chance?
0.005 mm = 0.00019685 inches
or 196/1,000,000 of an inch. lol
or >2/10,000 inch
AKA > 2/10ths of a thou ... It's precise
I worked for around a year on wire EDM, almost the same model as Mitsubishi in this video when I started my career (together with CNC mills) and I really like working on that. I made a cube made of four puzzles like that. It's so satisfying.
Must be pretty cool using wild machines to make parts for some of the coolest cars on the planet. Congrats.
wait, you get access to cheese cutters at rolls royce??
Steve. I watched your video because I have always been fascinated by the EDM process. I remember an engineer friend of mine had a 3" cube of metal on his desk. It looked solid but he said look up at it between the ceiling lamp. Sure enough all though it looked solid it had hundreds of holes through it. That was a lump of titanium that had been eroded with EDM rod. Great video but I think it would have benefited from a few pictures of the EDM process where it shows the thousand of sparks going along the wire to best show how the electrical spark generation hits the metal it is cutting. It's an amazing process.
Reminds me of the flying saucer in Day the Earth Stood Still, which had a metallic seamless opening in it. One of the coolest special effects in sci fi film.
I will now start drilling holes in my blocks of cheese. Thanks for the cooking advice as always, Steve
„We‘ve all done it!“
I buy Swiss cheese. It's pre drilled!
Idk why but the “fits perfectly” followed by the look Steve gave the camera at 3:01 made me laugh so hard 😂
So, he is looking for a perfect fit for his cheese dowel?
He lingers the shot just the right extra amount of time.
You know exactly why you are laughing
Don't you?
Thank you for another excellent video. That's really cool!
Took me a while to get around to it, but happy to see your sponsor code still works - thanks !
I like your new half-shave looks~ it fits together nicely as if there were no seams at all!
@Just Looking Damn, I'm melting!
I didn't even notice until I read your comment lol
Haha. Over 7 minutes until I noticed that!
The trick is that he completely shaved a copy of his face, cut it and glued it onto his first face, the n gave it a polishing pass so it looks like a single face.
I was searching whether someone commented this before I do. Now I don't need to comment because it's not just me who thought so🤣
One note about the process, the voltage actually isn't very high. The wire EDM machines we have at work run at around 40 volts. The amperage is quite high however and would instantly overheat and break the wire if it weren't submerged. You can also stick your hands in the tank while the machine is running with no worries of electrocution because the deionized water is such a good insulator.
People really underestimate how much of a resistor pure water is.
this would be a good way to hide stuff. like sneaking things on an airplane
... and it is only 40V, as you just said. Nobody ever was electrocuted with 40 V...
@@Blox117w... what are you planning to do with this info
Would the water stay deionized if you put your hand into it, though. 😂
Have been using Henson Shaving for years: It's a fantastic product.
Quite a bit more advanced than my metal work apprenticeship. Manually machining parts to 0.01mm is fun / therapeutic and also stressful. Looks amazing when you get it right though, invisible interference fit retaining pins etc.
I used to work with EDM machines, there's actually a 3rd non submerged machine for burning pockets and other specific shaped holes in a mould using a carbon electrode, where you basically form a pool with special clay and has a constant stream of coolant pumped into it through very small holes drilled into the electrode that's doing the work to remove particles from the pocket. As well has a steady stream of coolant pumped into the pool to keep the electrode submerged.
Ohhhh small and deep and big and deeep ohhhh yeah omgff
Burning pockets and holes in a Mould? 😨
Is this type a "hole popper" or edm drill? The one at my previous shop had dielectric fluid that was pumped throughout it.
Die sinker EDM. I use to set up and operate that and wire EDM.
@@scottpohl4069same, all part of the toolmaking game. Great machines to operate. Surface finishes you could see your reflection on if needed.
6:56 gotta love this channel. Informative and dry humor
Really appreciate how totally unbiased your razor comparison was with the cover left on the "branded" one... 😏
I wondered the same thing. Thanks for solving the mystery.
Wire erosion _can_ be very accurate, if well calibrated and with the proper settings... I've personally had wire eroded parts delivered well out of tolerance before - it's like any other CNC machine in some respects.
One of the really cool things about wire erosion, aside from the sorts of details and features you can make with it, is you can put very neat cuts through incredibly tough materials that traditional machine tools would really struggle with: hardened tool steel, nickel superalloys, tungsten etc.
it'd be very easy to make stuff like 123 blocks this way too. just grind in one dimension and let the machine handle the rest of it
I mean your first point is literally true for everything.
Nigga who cares
Does anyone know how a brass wire can cut steel?
@@abde4645 Just a guess on my part. But I think the brass wire mostly carries the electric charge which is actually doing the cutting.
"You first drill a hole in the cheese---we've all done it." 😅
I don't recall having done that. 🤔
you should go see a doctor for your memory loss issues
Oh come on. We're all adults here. No need to lie.
I remember when I was a kid, we'd get home from the grocery store and all gather around the table to drill holes n the cheese. Is that not a normal family activity?
@@Teth47 If enough of us do it, then yes, it will be normal! 😉
Rumor has it the Swiss have been doing this for years.
Seriously? Never put a sheet of cheese into the hole puncher? Live a little!
I have one of the Henson razors and they are amazing. Blades last forever.
An immensely satisfying video for reasons I cannot explain.
It’s the voice
Ya know, I just bought a safety razor about 2-4 weeks ago, and after a small learning curve I love it far more than any proprietary multi-bladed razor I've ever used. Glad to see you on the old school train, Steve
i can't get one to shave a single hair off of my mustache lol. it's excruciating. I don't get it
@Nokami Gaming my first guess is angle.
Ps, I'm about yo use one for the first time
It's a bit tricky, but definitely worth it! It sounds cheesy, but combine it with a nice soap and brush and it transforms shaving from a chore into a fun ritual
@@Shadowserpant00did you forget to put the razor blade in the safety razor? lol
@@DesidiosumCorporosumHominis are you asking if i had a blade in it? yeah, that's the part that made it excruciating
In a 'former life' worked on EDM machine that was used to remove broken studs from machine blocks etc. I always thought it was amazing how they could 'bore' out the broken stud, large enough to cut the stud from it's own threads (diameter of the thread root) and yet NOT damage the threads cut into the hole of the machine block. Some very precise stuff.
Not trying to be annoying but why did you stop working with EDM? It seems such an interesting career for me
@@4f52 Maybe he just didn't like it, was tiring, didn't pay well, stuff like that, Mark Rober quit being a NASA engineer to be a youtuber.
Well, one can cut to tighter tolerances, using similar methods. But, then one has to worry about sticktion, the damned thing welding itself while static and assorted other annoyances.
I ran wire EDM machines for over a decade. Good job on this video.
1:49 I love how he went to the effort to drill a hole and feed a wire through the cheese, only for it to split in the corner immediately as he tried to cut it
My dad has worked with CNC machines for years. We always had stuff like this around he made at work. The tolerances they work with can be super tight.
Just what all men truly desire. Beautiful and *super tight* .
Tight, tight, tight!
Yeee, have worked on CNC machines for around 7 years (+ 3,5 years training + 3 years in the office programing for such machines) and some of the tolerances were almost unbearable, especially when it came to things that were hard to work on...like special materials or long and small stuff, like for the production of medical stuff for blood draws and so forth. And even though I'm much more into biochemistry and such these days, it's still fascinating and I love to watch it.
but how was he at slicing cheese?
"Which in inches is a different number" hahaha brilliant!
0.005 mm = 0.00019685 inches
or 196/1,000,000 of an inch. lol
or >2/10,000 inch
AKA > 2/10ths of a thou ... It's precise
@@calholli Ugh. *Decimal inches are an abomination.* If you’re going to use inches, they should at least be proper imperial fractions.
*0.005 mm = 3/16,384 inches*
Worked with both large and small diamond wire saws 30 years ago. They could produce a fairly clean cutline. Don't know if they are used much anymore.
Bravo; one of the most funny sponsor plugs I've seen.
the metal parts were very confusing but the cheese analogies made everything crystal clear.
Crystal clear as cheese.
mmmmm.... transparent cheese crystals.... yum
This is why cheese is considered a universal language
I love that we have footage of Steve (or really, any human) ironing cheese 😂
that's actually a sander. some of them are shaped like irons, presumably so that you can sand the insides of sharp corners
The shape is like that because it's a special cheese-optimised sander, only a fool would use a regular round sander to sand their cheese
@@jamesorendorff2284 Also referred to as a mouse sander, which coincidentally works well on cheese :P But please don't sand a mouse with it.
Specifically, that's a Parkside detail sander from Lidl. Probably the same place he bought the cheese.
hilarious episode, thanks for the laughs!
That was like asmr watching the metal slide. Cool desk toy.
".005's of a millimeter which in inches is a different number" 😂
0.005 mm = 0.00019685 inches
or 196/1,000,000 of an inch. lol
or >2/10,000 inch
AKA > 2/10ths of a thou ... It's precise
I work on wire EDM for living. I'm glad you picked out this topic, those perfect-fit parts are fun and eye-catching. I made one for myself
My coworker uses one, has me run it at times, is a really neat machine, except when the wire breaks mid part... lol
Note that EDM is also a kind of really nice music .
i also came here thinking that Wire EDM was a new musical sub-variant of EDM. dammmmnnn 😥
They are hiding this knowledge from you so they can keep you as a slave 👉The Connections (2021) [short documentary] 🙌
"top secret government job"
Magic dissolved. Thanks.
Nice video shot, thanks for sharing it with us, well done :)
I always thought of the possibility of invisible seams after seeing loads of cartoons on TV as a child where a trap door would open in a metal floor or a door etc. And thought "I wonder how possible it'd be to actually conceal a door in that way." But not with those exact words 😅
You know all those cartoons were based on Chicago's Hotel of Horrors. Look it up. The guy even had paintings with holes in the eyes to watch people.
a true visionary
You did notice those blocks have a wire- brushed surface ? Helps to conceal joint lines.
@@antoniograncino3506 Of course we all did.
The "portable hole" in a bugs bunny cartoon always intrigued me from a young age.
"Which in inches is a different number." Has to be one of my favourite comments on CZcams for at least a few months! XD
Will definitely look back on this video as the point where Mould started spinning out of control with his "everything can be demonstrated with cheese" mental abyss. All the great ones go insane.
Hey man, It works great and without any problems.
1:46 "You first drill a hole in the cheese, we've all done it"
I don't know why but that line & dry delivery made me SCREAM with laughter. Like, we had to pause the video and I had to forcibly calm myself down bc I was starting to scare the cats 🤣🤣🤣
Wire EDM was all the rage in the early 2000's club scene.
Thanks man !
Best CZcamsr advertisement I have ever seen! And I've seen a lot
1:22 "Like when I heard that these were made by a process called "Wire EDM" I immediately got distracted by what I assumed that must mean."
Right! Wire Electronic Dance Music!
"It's like a cheese wire."
Oh...
"Which, in inches, is a different number." Hilarious! 😀 Great video, as always.
0.005 mm = 0.00019685 inches
or 196/1,000,000 of an inch. lol
or >2/10,000 inch
AKA > 2/10ths of a thou ... It's precise
I need to pay respect to your sutil yet deep sense of humor. Amazing and dark. would love to hear you talk about the world out of a censored platform.
Your Channel is Amazing ❤
Genuinely thank you for making a video on machining stuff. We have so few people entering the work force and I hope this video inspires some kids to pick up the trade.
3:13 I had to pause the video here and turn the definition up to the maximum to see that beautiful workshop in all its glory *-* . If I were a really good cartoonist, I'd do a super detailed illustration with every single object you see here, and the man in his work clothes, who, I'm sure, knows exactly where everything is. Oh, and the inevitable WD-40 can, like the Waldo of the shops full of things :)
You made me laugh several times throughout this. Thanks Steve, haha. I watch your videos for comedic relief, but then I also learn random things along the way.
That was an elegantly introduced AND educationally informative sponsor spot.
An amazing video. Quick word to anyone thinking of getting the razor. I bought a safety razor 17years ago and never looked back. 100 blades for about £10 and as Steve showed, you can take off days of stubble on one pass. Took the wife a little time to work out how to do her legs but she's got her own new. Regardless of what brands you buy its cool you can be environmentally minded, have a better product and it's cheaper
Yep. Buy a safety razor, better in every way. Multi stage disposable razors are a masterful display of capitalist innovation.
My dad works with wire EDM at his work, it's amazing to see just how PRECISE the cuts are. Literally within thousandths of a millimetre. In fact, i believe the cuts he makes at his workplace are even more precise than shown in the video. It's an outstanding piece of machinery.
Wow
I don't know if it was mentioned or shown in this video, but I believe you cut out the hole on main work piece. Then, on a separate piece, you cut out the plug, so it will sit super tight
@@jakefriesenjake yeah it’s something like that, im not 100% familiar with the technology but it truly is incredible stuff
I started using Brother HS100 wire EDM in 1985. the boss bought one because he thought it a good piece of kit and told me to find out how to use it in the firm. I worked out how to cut crimper profiles without the use of a computer and programmed the machine typing the code in line by line. I also told the boss it was no use only having one machine as I would be sitting watching it most of the time so he went straight out and got a second one. So while one ran I was changing over the work in the other one.
Well buddy this is the fourth video ive watched trying to figure out how it worked without cutting from rhe edge or drilling a hole and yours is the only plain and simple expanation. Now i want one. How much?
This channel is like therapy, the way you talk is super relaxing, you relay information in a really engaging way for me and the subtle hints of comedy just ties everything together perfectly. Thank you for all the great videos
I didn't know how much I needed to see the end results of a wire EDM until I saw this video on my frontpage. Your explanation of the process really makes it clear that an amazing end result needs an amazing process.
So fascinating.
I love precision like this…..I remember the first time I got to play about with some slip gauges
I was 4 i think when I first got my hands on slip gauges. I still remember it was mindboggling.
I’m a machinist and I’m still wowed by seeing it and I make parts like this all the time lol . 😊
0.005 mm = 0.00019685 inches
or 196/1,000,000 of an inch. lol
or >2/10,000 inch
AKA > 2/10ths of a thou ... It's precise
Interference fits are the worst. You never know and you should not really try either lol. Like if this piece had just a tiny fit, it would never come out.
I saw EDM tech years ago and was also blown away just like you Steve. Went and looked for "how it's made" videos but have never appreciated it as much as I do now. Thanks for the video, always so informative!
I figured this out immediately. we do this kind of thing in fab of wood and fiber glassing parts often.
Great video Steve 😃👍, fascinating technical subject matter presented with humour. I was particularly impressed with your precision cheese machining 😂