At a place were i used to work, the manager said i work "miserably slow" and i told her "yeah, but you've never had to go back and fix any of my work, because i do it right instead of doing it fast." never was spoken to about it ever again.
I knew a tester that always got grumbled at for being too slow because he was thorough - also the number of rejects was upsetting the production line staff. He pointed out that no boards he tested ever failed in the field. You would think that was a good thing for a defibrillator but unfortunately it didn't stop them grumbling. I hope Rudi had a long and happy life - such a cool guy.
They say ritual item, which, if it's a something like a gameboy as opposed to some practical device, it technically is. Ritual just means that it's used for any repeated activity that isn't inherently necessary, so stuff like recreation falls under it - toys are labeled as ritual items quite commonly for this exact reason. It's purposefully vague because you really don't have a way to judge the cultural significance of a random knick-knack, it could be a doll or it could be an immensly important idol of a god, who knows. It's not inhrently tied to religious purposes, in fact most ritual items won't be
@svgPhoenix What's cheaper? Paying your worker more for additional time to ensure the product is perfect the first time or having to remake/replace components and/or reimbursing the customer because the worker rushed the job?
My uncle was telling me once about how annoyed he was with one of his employees because he was lazy and worked slow. I asked why he hadn’t fired the employee if that was the case and he told me because he couldn’t because he got as much work done as his other employees in the same amount of time, which naturally confused me. I asked him to explain and apparently the reason he called him lazy/slow was because he used to do as much work as the other employees in half the time. My uncle, in his infinite wisdom decided that instead of giving him a full days worth of work he would only schedule him for half a day and pay him for half a day. Dude even asked to be given more tasks so he could be scheduled and get paid for a full 8 hours. He wasn’t even asked to be paid double and only work 4 hours. He was fine doing twice as much work for the same pay as the other employees. My uncle only wanted to pay him for a half day though. So the employee slowed down to the speed of the other employees as it was the only way he could get paid for a full days work. My uncles one of the scummiest people I’ve ever met.
Please don't mind me saying this but I am glad you were able to recognize such a scum even if he's related to you. Yes, there are people who just don't care to look into the passion and quality of employees rather than faster results and profits.
@@sayLeotardbutsayitChinese Very common in workplaces. Many prefer to fire an efficient guy that complains about useless meetings or unefficient management and keep the dumb and inefficient ones that keep quiet and bring cookies.
Yes I was in a situation like this for years. I was self employed as were a group of my friends. When we worked together we were so efficient that a 10 day job took us only 7 days so our clients told us that they didn’t need us to stay for the final 3 days and therefore billing the total 10 days was complicated. We could have argued that we were booked for 10 days so you pay for 10 days but you only do that once and you get replaced with another team. We learned that the more efficient we were the more you get punished with less pay. I now have a boss and he does the same. We have to be careful because if he puts us on a job for 3 days and it only takes us 2 then the next time he only gives us 2. This is fine if there are no hiccups.
That's how I build all my prototypes. They almost all worked the first time, and if they didn't I already knew it wasn't the wiring that was the problem. That would speed up repair a whole lot.
Having pride in yourself and your professionalism has nothing to do with the payment methodology. If you refuse to work hard at an hourly job, it’s likely the reason you’re not getting the salary or commission job.
@@flipsidelimited6560 As a guy who's worked both hourly and production pay, they're both bad. Hourly you get whipped and production you whip yourself. What makes this bad is capitalism. What we need to do is seize the means of production and the state for the working class.
@@WayStedYoul actually agree with you and finally some one who l found in the comment section that actually has a functioning brain for once and this world actually genuinely needs more people actually like you in this world and you actually couldn't have said that actually any better than me lol ❤😂🎉.
@@CircuitrinosOfficial Yes and no. These wires look awesome, but imagine if a wire under another one has an issue? Not much tollerance or space to remove the faulty wire. Not that wires often go bad though lol
Maybe subconsciously you wish you were more electronically savvy and this feels a empty space that you don't think about very often until some short of the sort pops up on screen 🙂
Nothing more relaxing to a technician, than to open a access door on a piece of machinery and see this. So easy to troubleshoot and repair when a job was done correctly and with respect to detail and quality. Sure don't see this type of precision anymore, new surface mount technology maybe, but nice.
I was working on a high end yacht swapping out battery cells and installing a new inverter/charger system, and man-oh-man, the patch panel was gorgeous... Highest quality work I've ever seen in person. And it was from Singapore of all places.
I used to be in the Aerospace Industry. ISO and AS certified industries and the METLSAW (brand) that I ran , the control cabinet was built like this. Every wire was labeled and ran like this. It was phenomenal and astonishing to view.
Use different colored pex and copper. I know there is at least red, white, blue, black and I think there is one other color. Using white, blue and black together (with , or without, copper) has a nice effect IMO.
@Cryscorde Ya they get on me about my speed at my work at a not gonna name the fast food but I have a bad back, bad ankle, and bad knee and they expect me to move around like someone who has a body who has got no bad parts on their body and carry heavy shit for 15 an hour ya no sorry not doing it while also being able to train new crew members when new crew they hire get a hire base pay than me sorry but no I will work at the pase I work and be accurate and make sure the orders are correct rather than go fast and miss an item I have started to not care about the job and any time I have searched for jobs I could never find any openings near me for livable wages
As one who designs PCBs and builds prototype circuits professionally, this is a thing of beauty. I wish more people took this kind of time. This kind of assembly makes debugging a prototype circuit so much easier.
@@MrSpaceAngel As you can see, there are integrated circuits there. But, you have to have some wiring at some point, to connect all the ICs together along with things like switches, capacitors, resistors, LEDs connectors, etc. You might be thinking a more professional looking circuit board (PCB), like you see with consumer electronics. Depending on what this project is, that might be the next step. Almost all our nice and pretty looking consumer electronics started off as a prototype build, looking very much like what you see in this video.
@@scubaad64I’m also a pcb design engineer but i see this is redundant.. u could just simulate first and then design your pcb rather than doing this wiring.. work smarter not harder
@@Way2go926 I wonder how long you've been doing design. Simulation is fine for many things, but before going to production, you still always build a prototype. More than one enginner has been burned by relying only on simulation, sometimes at tremendous rework costs. Granted, this level of cleanliness probably isn't necessary, and with really complicated, multilayer PCBs, it's not really possible to do a hand built prototype like this, but it's still worth appreciating and not ridiculing.
I would think the person who designed this and assembled it would be the same person troubleshooting. Its awfull pretty and impressive but thats about it.
I worked as an engineer for the Navy. I once was in a communications center under construction and saw the equivalent of this done at football field scale. 100 foot runs of dozens of cables absolutely parallel or sweeping around 90 degree turns in perfectly flat formation, each culminating at EXACTLY the right length to plug into the piece of equipment it was there for. It was breathtaking.
....And then you see one rack, where cables are mixed, and for some reason there are some unique color ones that don't exist anywhere else, because the somebody had gone there and "fixed a problem" and done it with cables, instead with the software.... It is like a electrician coming to work on worksite...
@@carlll6101 You are missing the point. Sometimes some damn system managers go to fix things by changing cables, when it is simply software configuration. When cables are done properly in the first time when the server room is installed, you do not go pulling cables new way across the different places different ways as documented manner, how those are neatly installed. You simply go to configuration and you set the ports properly as required, not a hardware problem. IF there for some reason comes a hardware problem, as in cable connectors or something being the root of problem, you do not pull wires differently but you will install them as neatly as the original, so no one can even see that you have been there. You use the same coloring, you make same lengths, you do everything to be same neat original installation. And even if you would have wrong colored cables etc and for some reason forced to use them, you do not cross connect them differently all over the places as drunken apprentice making some artwork and counting just that no unplug cables is left out. Cable management is not an art, it is about patience, little knowledge and reading capability of the documentation what is where.
As an automation mechanic I would greatly appreciate if every wiring job was this clean. Would make trouble shooting and tracing wires much easier! This is a thing of beauty.
Who needs steel for a chassis when you can reinforce the frame with a million wiring harnesses. They're also going to be daisy chained to every computer and control module so if the BCM detects power loss to a tail light that ultimately leads to the ECM to flip on the check engine light with error codes saying there's no fuel pressure. -German automotive engineers True story, a short in the BCM caused a short in the infotainment module which then caused a short in the fuel pump module which caused the ECM to declare the vehicle was a $80k powerless paper weight. It took around 20 hours going down the rabbit hole of diagnostics whack a mole that revealed the source of the fiasco was a broken seal in a tail light assembly full of moisture that caused multiple components to short as well. You can't make it up lol
@@charlesmckinley29 I don't doubt it at all. You'd think it's ridiculous the first time you hear something like that but it's all too common working in a shop especially when diagnosing anything electrical for pretty much anything manufactured after 2012. Even with the advantage of having the diagnostic software used in dealership/oem manufacturer shops it's still a nightmare. Most times diagnosing isn't even worth the effort, they'll just rip the guts out and replace entire harnesses and assemblies. I recall from the schematics and diagrams there are sensors in the circuit designed to be fail-safes but it's only a fail-safe on paper, and when the fail-safe fails, diagnosing becomes trial-and-error. Not sure what happened exactly with the ford truck haven't seen the video but the BMW I was working on not only had multiple shorts at multiple points in the controller module bus but the original fault had a wicked parasitic drain to chassis ground is probably what fried the sensor that is supposed to talk to the module that would trigger the correct error codes. I wasn't customer facing, but on the reason for coming into the shop was to replace a dead battery that would've taken 15 minutes turned into a week's work repair lol
I once took apart an old Soviet military radio, and that's what the innards looked like. The amplifier circuit wasn't even on a board, it was just a bunch of components soldered directly to each other.
That technique reduces parasitic inductance and capacitance for high frequency circuits, they were pushing the limits of their components, that's how i prototype RF designs today (before laying out a PCB).
„Turns around to solder it, hears cables falling on the table as he flips it upside down.“ (Edit) Because of all the comments thinking im stupid. THIS IS SUPPOSED TO BE A JOKE! I worked as an electrician 😆
Absolutely. I get so sick of the same song on four out of five videos. Nice to see this creator is just as good as film making as they are at making functional wires look like artwork.
As an electronics hobbyist I hate this, because for same time even in house conditions I would create real electronic board - without stupid wires 😂 I need just a) laser printer or marker b) sheet of glossy paper (from any magazine of photopapper) c) iron or fan for hairs d) hydrogen peroxide (from any first aid kit) and lemon acid e) any board with layer of copper (sold everywhere) or any board which I itself will cover with copper (with help of copper sulfate which use any granny for own flowers in garden). 1. Print your board on paper. Put paper on board with layer of copper. Heat it with iron. Remove paper, all paint will left on copper. Or use marker and draw directly on board. 2. In glass put peroxide, add a little of lemon acid, heat this liquid a little and put board inside. In few minutes all copper which not protected by marker/paint will be dissolved. 3. Take board, remove paint - done. You have real electronic board. Whole process took less than 10 minutes.
@@juliap.5375quelquefois il faut un pont pour qu'un fil passe par-dessus un autre fil. Alors il faudra un vrai fil connectant deux points de la carte imprimée maison (homemade). Et souder. Dans tous les cas, même pour les autres travaux (peinture, conduite automobile, faire l'amour...) on peut choisir de faire un truc beau et propre ; ou un truc vite fait qui explique pourquoi nos civilisations ont autant de temps libre, autant de chômeurs, autant de produits dégueulasses livrés de manière abjecte. Opinion.
😂😂😂I love this. I annoyed my Electronic instructor because I did the same thing. I was worried about if I had to trouble shoot, it would be difficult. So I made it very neat and organized. Always worked on the first test. It did take a long time though.
The benefit of bending the wires like this is not only can it look more like the plans you sketch, but also means debugging is easier because you'll be able to better understand if something is bad code or just bad wiring.
You know I found out later that it's built kinda like a circuit board (ME2 hacking) and if you follow the lines from one node, it will almost always take you to the other match. It takes forever until you get used to it but it works
I have worked in the aerospace industry for years. This kind of attention to detail is very important to making a repeatable product. I also note that even with hand-made items, you make jigs for all those wires and a skilled worker can bang them out faster than you could just grabbing loose wires and hooking them up.
No no no, I've seen guys paid by the hour absolute lazy hacks. Given all day to do an hour job it's STILL a hack job. This person is doing things to the best of his ability with all the concentration, integrity and no laziness. I applaud this person for not taking the easy way out and doing a meticulous job. I can appreciate that.
exactly what I thought, this is what someone's work looks like when they're paid by unit AND they're extremely attentive to details. Design each connection, do a bunch of them at a time, then assemble several boards in as little time as possibly with them still being good quality.
I've also seen salaried, and contracted workers also do hack jobs. The amount of, nor the rate of, pay, really matters to someone who enjoys what they are doing. Which is what we need to be encouraging and supporting in this country, if we ever want to be the leaders in anything other than percentage of incarcerated citizens and gun violence..
Perhaps it also takes giving QA inspectors a bonus for every flaw they catch. It's a bit like when GM consulted with Japanese auto manufacturers as to how the Japanese managed their plants. One point was that there was a string that employees were expected to pull stopping the production line if a flaw was spotted, they would then all gather to discuss the flaw and determine how to avoid it in the future and the employee who pulled the string would be rewarded with a bonus. Once the Japanese consultants left, the US management kept the colour coded uniforms and the colour coded stations but reprimanded the employees who pulled the string to stop production even if the flaw noted was an actual flaw. Paying employees by the time they take certainly helps, but it is still a matter of how they are managed and for what exactly they are rewarded for. It needs to be the quality of work that is rewarded not just time spent.
Yeah, I was thinking the same thing. This isn’t likely to be work for pay. Some crazy level of neat! He has me wondering what he’s building with ttl logic chips. 😊
Working at a restaurant recently taught me I needed to find a job where being meticulous was a strength rather than frowned upon. I made less mistakes, but to them it was better to have people fix mistakes most of the time and rush through everything, and they didn't keep me It's not inherently a bad way of working, but I just can't follow. Not a job for me
It’s pretty, and it’s art, but it is also stupid. Would take less time and money to lay out a PCB and have it printed, and end up with a higher quality finished product that will have a ground plane to prevent signal interference and less points of failure that will be difficult to track down.
@Dpowell28 NEC allows for up to 360° of bend without an additional pulling point, most jobsites I've been on have set a cap at 270°. We don't use romex in commercial installs and MC is for hacks 🤢🤮
@@joshmonaco6170 some jobs spec MC. I had a job a few years ago for a new planet fitness that my scope was fire alarm and another company had the power scope. They used MC for literally everything. They had to install a sub panel on the other side of the building and used the biggest MC I had ever seen to feed that panel. I couldn't help but laugh when one of the guys said this was the future of electrical, especially when my conduit runs were the only thing that looked good in that job. MC is for lighting whips and that's it.
I'm probably reading way too much into this, but: really? Skilled tasks are the only thing keeping you from hating humanity? What about acts of kindness? Again, I'm probably reading WAY too much into what is probably a joke-y comment. I've just seen too many people who don't really care about cruelty or callousness, but whose blood boils over at perceived incompetence. Not trying to make direct assumptions about you, I just wince at the wording.
@@calliopeshif7581I felt the same way. He sounds like a psychopath who bought into the harsh critical voice of his perfectionist parents and has already reversed the harsh inner (I'm not good enough) critic into the harsh outer (you're not good enough) critic, and so deserve my contempt/hatred.
@@calliopeshif7581I'm reading it as "so many people go through life doing everything as fast as possible without taking time to add quality to their work, so people who put quality and effort into it makes me thankful there are people who care about what they do" I.E. I'm projecting a lot onto this comment 😂
@@calliopeshif7581 I must say that if a person takes the time to make something with care and precision that person may possibly take such time to do other things with care and precision. And as long as those things are not nefarious evil villain things it could only add happiness and joy to humanity.
@@huzaifazafar6469 I hate to be another joke killer, but this is interesting: they actually used to use point-to-point connections before PCBs. They just kinda threw the components in there and it was quite a rats nest. A nightmare to work on, I'm sure.
@@huzaifazafar6469 They would wrap wires around each component's legs and run them between components. It's simple, straight forward, and an absolute nightmare to ever attempt to troubleshoot.
I normally find ASMR things inane and irritating but this is the electronics equivalent of ASMR and I love the neatness and precision and makes the part of my brain that loves order smile.
Beautiful. This is how I worked when I first got into the electronics field in the early 70s. I worked in discrete components then and a well layed-out board could almost be “read” as easily as a schematic. Those were fun days.
Ya you could still do that in the 90s and early 2000s... then tech exploded and consistently got more complex... Now if you don't have a blueprint good luck tracing something that has 8 layers of traces on the PCB alone.
God, this is satisfying. I love a good cable management job, and this is basically the same thing on a smaller scale. High precision like this is something to be envied and lauded.
These should be given in schools to make engineering fun for kids because this is so addictive placing wires where they need to go until you develop something new
YOU CAN HANG THAT UP ON THE WALL!!!! Beautiful work! So satisfying to watch your detail oriented writing. I used to teach computer building and repair to a mixed class (14-65 years old) and taught them how to origami the flat cables for a better air flow back in the 90’s, it was a hit! Super nice video and will check your channel!
I worked as a supervisor in a config shop for a few years. Moved on to another company doing communications work. One of my employees comes in one day after a call and states he knew he worked on one of the PC's I built, he was certain that no one else but me could have done those cables. :)
This is the only way to build! Back in in the 80's my microprocessor teacher loved every circuit I built because this is exactly what I did. He was brilliant and knew beauty. He told me to read the book: "In Search of Excellence". I did.
@@joelockard7174 The title and artist of music on Shorts recognised by Content ID is shown right below the title, which you can click to view other Shorts that feature it, or save it to your _Sounds from Shorts_ playlist.
Beautiful work. Back in school I was the only one who would do this with my breadboarded prototype circuits while most others did a variation on a bird's nest. Had a second breadboard just for storing components and a collection of pre-formed jumper wires, which I added to as I cut and bent new wires to suit. Troubleshooting was trivial, profs loved it, got my labs marked on the spot. Nice to spot a true craftsperson in the wild.
@@LionKimbro The board and everything already in place is the reference. You figure out where it's going to go, count the holes it crosses, how many bends, ups and downs, then cut and bend a wire to fit.
I use to hardwire bridge crane controls (and later on commercial security systems). I always tried to make them nice like that. It’s very satisfying and the customers are impressed to say the least. My co-workers cabinets looked like festooned Christmas decorations (which worked fine too), but even they admitted if they had to run a service call in the future they hoped it would be one of my cabinets. So they could see what the heck was going on at a glance.
At a place were i used to work, the manager said i work "miserably slow" and i told her "yeah, but you've never had to go back and fix any of my work, because i do it right instead of doing it fast." never was spoken to about it ever again.
Smooth is fast, as someone said. Cheers.
I knew a tester that always got grumbled at for being too slow because he was thorough - also the number of rejects was upsetting the production line staff. He pointed out that no boards he tested ever failed in the field. You would think that was a good thing for a defibrillator but unfortunately it didn't stop them grumbling. I hope Rudi had a long and happy life - such a cool guy.
I like to tell to people when I’m in that situation “I have two speeds, fast or properly”.
@@AndyMk3octhats good. I just tell them I have one speed. My speed.
@@NahuCommNSslow is smooth, smooth is fast.. "Bob Lee Swagger"
Archeologists of the future: "It's probably a religious item."
The Adeptus Mechanicus, "definitely a religious item, let us all speak the litany of wire wrapping"
If i was the gost of that craftsman, wouldn't even be mad
In fact it is lol
A lot of people worship technology nowadays so it's technically true lol
They say ritual item, which, if it's a something like a gameboy as opposed to some practical device, it technically is. Ritual just means that it's used for any repeated activity that isn't inherently necessary, so stuff like recreation falls under it - toys are labeled as ritual items quite commonly for this exact reason. It's purposefully vague because you really don't have a way to judge the cultural significance of a random knick-knack, it could be a doll or it could be an immensly important idol of a god, who knows. It's not inhrently tied to religious purposes, in fact most ritual items won't be
I get paid by the hour, and my boss actually ENCOURAGES slow and steady work to prevent mistakes.
It's oftentimes cheaper to take time and do it right versus having to go back and fix it later.
Where do you work? I would like to apply!
Sounds like you might be one of the lucky few with a sensible boss 😂
@@shred1894 especially if you're a surgeon!
You obviously don't work at Boeing.
"You can have it done fast, cheap, or properly, but not all three."
Once was assembler and achieved all three. Then Yamaha surface mounts replaced me costing millions.
Fast, Cheap, and Correct. Pick 2.
With hour pay,fast and cheap come as one.
So I can have it done right for cheap if it's done slowly? I don't think that's actually how that works...
@svgPhoenix What's cheaper? Paying your worker more for additional time to ensure the product is perfect the first time or having to remake/replace components and/or reimbursing the customer because the worker rushed the job?
The screensaver of windows XP 🤣🤣
3d pipes
😂😂😂
You mean windows 9x!!! 😂
Came looking for this comment
@@PhantomWorksStudiosDiving deeper - Windows 3.11, 3.1, 3! 👍😁
"Wow that's amazing, what inspired you to do this?"
"Windows 98 screensaver"
I completely forgot about that pipe screensavers until you mentioned it now… I used to watch it because there was no CZcams around
Oh my god…..you just beamed me back to my childhood….
Lol why did I find an IMDb page for a minute of that pipe screensaver
@@silvertongue3003 lol
THANK YOU LOOOL vibes
My uncle was telling me once about how annoyed he was with one of his employees because he was lazy and worked slow. I asked why he hadn’t fired the employee if that was the case and he told me because he couldn’t because he got as much work done as his other employees in the same amount of time, which naturally confused me. I asked him to explain and apparently the reason he called him lazy/slow was because he used to do as much work as the other employees in half the time. My uncle, in his infinite wisdom decided that instead of giving him a full days worth of work he would only schedule him for half a day and pay him for half a day. Dude even asked to be given more tasks so he could be scheduled and get paid for a full 8 hours. He wasn’t even asked to be paid double and only work 4 hours. He was fine doing twice as much work for the same pay as the other employees. My uncle only wanted to pay him for a half day though. So the employee slowed down to the speed of the other employees as it was the only way he could get paid for a full days work. My uncles one of the scummiest people I’ve ever met.
Please don't mind me saying this but I am glad you were able to recognize such a scum even if he's related to you. Yes, there are people who just don't care to look into the passion and quality of employees rather than faster results and profits.
Your uncle does not sound very smart
Not only is your uncle scummy, he’s an idiot. What did he think would happen????
@@sayLeotardbutsayitChinese Very common in workplaces. Many prefer to fire an efficient guy that complains about useless meetings or unefficient management and keep the dumb and inefficient ones that keep quiet and bring cookies.
Yes I was in a situation like this for years. I was self employed as were a group of my friends. When we worked together we were so efficient that a 10 day job took us only 7 days so our clients told us that they didn’t need us to stay for the final 3 days and therefore billing the total 10 days was complicated. We could have argued that we were booked for 10 days so you pay for 10 days but you only do that once and you get replaced with another team.
We learned that the more efficient we were the more you get punished with less pay.
I now have a boss and he does the same. We have to be careful because if he puts us on a job for 3 days and it only takes us 2 then the next time he only gives us 2. This is fine if there are no hiccups.
This is not paid by the hour. This is when you want something done right, with passion.
That's how I build all my prototypes. They almost all worked the first time, and if they didn't I already knew it wasn't the wiring that was the problem. That would speed up repair a whole lot.
Agreed. If people are not paid by the hour to live will they live ugly lives?
Passion could have smth do with this, but not necessarily really. Just doing your job right.
If you wanted it done right, you'd get a PCB. This is art.
@@johnwest7993bro just design your circuits digitally and simulate them
That's not a by the hour job , that's a person who actually likes the work
Passion project
Or hates being at home?
They like it cause they're being paid by the hour for the work.
Having pride in yourself and your professionalism has nothing to do with the payment methodology.
If you refuse to work hard at an hourly job, it’s likely the reason you’re not getting the salary or commission job.
And if you take longer than the company finds necessary on an hourly job, they'll get rid of you for someone who costs less.
Bro took the circuit diagram seriously
Stayed for the music. Amazing choice.
yep, heard it the first time and turned it up for the replay lol
No diggity
Да, музыка шикарна.
If only working hourly was actually like this.
Better than working long hours on salary
@@flipsidelimited6560 As a guy who's worked both hourly and production pay, they're both bad. Hourly you get whipped and production you whip yourself. What makes this bad is capitalism. What we need to do is seize the means of production and the state for the working class.
@@ProleDaddy Capitalism as opposed to what?
So china and USSR? That worked out well.@ProleDaddy
@@WayStedYoul actually agree with you and finally some one who l found in the comment section that actually has a functioning brain for once and this world actually genuinely needs more people actually like you in this world and you actually couldn't have said that actually any better than me lol ❤😂🎉.
Employer paying by the hour: "Totally worth it"
But only 3 dollars/hour 😭
Only worth it if he's paid to produce videos. No one looks at the circuit. It just needs to work.
@@Y.Z-Au it makes troubleshooting problems easier when you can clearly see the wiring.
@@CircuitrinosOfficial Yes and no. These wires look awesome, but imagine if a wire under another one has an issue? Not much tollerance or space to remove the faulty wire.
Not that wires often go bad though lol
@rederickfroders1978 this is done on a protoboard....so basically those wires aren't even secured until he solders the bottom.
For a moment... I thought it was a cake
As someone who isn't into electrical technology hobbies, the wiring here is still very pleasant to watch. Hits just right to the OCD senses.
And in one sentence they showed how they have no idea what OCD is 😂
@rhinoboy6603 hahahaha saved me having to say it 😂
Yea, not ocd, just autism.
That isn’t OCD.
Maybe subconsciously you wish you were more electronically savvy and this feels a empty space that you don't think about very often until some short of the sort pops up on screen 🙂
When you cannot make your own PCB but still want to do trace routing:
Need to use PCB-Waaaaaaaay...
while waiting for your PCBs from China...
Or use the ancient technique of wirewrapping
idk, I used JLB and had my 2 layer PCBs in less than a week!
you can acid-etch PCBs at home if you have a laser printer. Multi-layer would be trickier (you would need to hand-layer the board)
Nothing more relaxing to a technician, than to open a access door on a piece of machinery and see this. So easy to troubleshoot and repair when a job was done correctly and with respect to detail and quality. Sure don't see this type of precision anymore, new surface mount technology maybe, but nice.
In Aerospace it's still done. All box builds, PCB's, anything Class III or space.
Now for test builds not for production use? Bring on the rats nest.
I was working on a high end yacht swapping out battery cells and installing a new inverter/charger system, and man-oh-man, the patch panel was gorgeous... Highest quality work I've ever seen in person. And it was from Singapore of all places.
its wholly unfortunate that today hardware mfrs obfuscate these things so that they are irreparable when broken
I used to be in the Aerospace Industry. ISO and AS certified industries and the METLSAW (brand) that I ran , the control cabinet was built like this. Every wire was labeled and ran like this. It was phenomenal and astonishing to view.
As a former electrician and current fire protection technician I AGREE
bro gets paid by the year
and that would be opposite.
"when you got paid by the hour"
his boss: here is your $10
him: thank you
*1 hour later*
his boss: here's your another $10
him: thank you
As i plumber i can relate to this... Wish my pipes were nice colours
As a FST for boilers, I can relate.
Use different colored pex and copper. I know there is at least red, white, blue, black and I think there is one other color. Using white, blue and black together (with , or without, copper) has a nice effect IMO.
Well if you lay down DHW (red insulation), DCW (blue insulation) and AC (black cauchouk insulation) it looks just like this😊
@@odyseuszkoskiniotis9174 Oh, Yeah, Also!
I can relate to this as a Minecraft redstoner. I always forget to dye the wool before I lay down my wiring infrastructure lol.
I used to solder haphazardly, but I watched your video and realized that it’s like art.
And then I got fired cause I was too slow
This video is great for teaching people how cross talk happens.
and a total waste of time
I mean it is art since there is no function to it lmao
Man if it works it works you don't need to win a beauty contest
With this high-quality? Son, take your time.
Everything in this, from the music to the angles to the colours and the caption, is perfect.
This isn't paid by the hour, this is art.
Paid by the piece
@@Efflorescentey piecework never produces anything resembling quality.
Gotta be dwad before you get paid for art.
@@imasspeons I’m sure artists beg to differ 😂
@@Efflorescentey if I placed any value on art, I might agree with you.
Job: we’re paying you by the hour
Also job: hurry up
That’s exactly why. The faster you are, the less money comes out of their pocket.
@@CryscordeAnd people who work quickly and efficiently are also punished with additional work
@@TheCam920 Yep
@@Cryscordefuck ups are more expensive.
@Cryscorde Ya they get on me about my speed at my work at a not gonna name the fast food but I have a bad back, bad ankle, and bad knee and they expect me to move around like someone who has a body who has got no bad parts on their body and carry heavy shit for 15 an hour ya no sorry not doing it while also being able to train new crew members when new crew they hire get a hire base pay than me sorry but no I will work at the pase I work and be accurate and make sure the orders are correct rather than go fast and miss an item I have started to not care about the job and any time I have searched for jobs I could never find any openings near me for livable wages
Bro made the Windows XP screensaver irl
I would genuinely frame this and display it on my wall. Absolute work of art.
As one who designs PCBs and builds prototype circuits professionally, this is a thing of beauty. I wish more people took this kind of time. This kind of assembly makes debugging a prototype circuit so much easier.
But does it really have sense? Isn't integrated circuits better? Less place, less resistance, less temperatures?
@@MrSpaceAngel As you can see, there are integrated circuits there. But, you have to have some wiring at some point, to connect all the ICs together along with things like switches, capacitors, resistors, LEDs connectors, etc. You might be thinking a more professional looking circuit board (PCB), like you see with consumer electronics. Depending on what this project is, that might be the next step. Almost all our nice and pretty looking consumer electronics started off as a prototype build, looking very much like what you see in this video.
@@scubaad64I’m also a pcb design engineer but i see this is redundant.. u could just simulate first and then design your pcb rather than doing this wiring.. work smarter not harder
@@Way2go926 I wonder how long you've been doing design. Simulation is fine for many things, but before going to production, you still always build a prototype. More than one enginner has been burned by relying only on simulation, sometimes at tremendous rework costs. Granted, this level of cleanliness probably isn't necessary, and with really complicated, multilayer PCBs, it's not really possible to do a hand built prototype like this, but it's still worth appreciating and not ridiculing.
I would think the person who designed this and assembled it would be the same person troubleshooting. Its awfull pretty and impressive but thats about it.
I worked as an engineer for the Navy. I once was in a communications center under construction and saw the equivalent of this done at football field scale. 100 foot runs of dozens of cables absolutely parallel or sweeping around 90 degree turns in perfectly flat formation, each culminating at EXACTLY the right length to plug into the piece of equipment it was there for. It was breathtaking.
That level of care for what you are doing just makes me cry. it is so beautiful.
@@protoborg ok furry
@@01hZ bruh what's the problem with furries
which is absolutely lovely until you need to troubleshoot and replace... ffs service loops are critical elements even if they fuck the esthetic.
Shouldn't they have a bit of slack in them to account for the movement of the vessel?
This guy can do my electrical work anytime
"But they are not soldered"
"That would charge you another 60Million"
This is like those photos of server rooms and network closets with impeccable, artful, super-satisfying cable management, just at a smaller scale.
....And then you see one rack, where cables are mixed, and for some reason there are some unique color ones that don't exist anywhere else, because the somebody had gone there and "fixed a problem" and done it with cables, instead with the software.... It is like a electrician coming to work on worksite...
@@paristomustve been an intern
I've wet dreams about it
@@paristo If you changed cables it was cable not software problem. If config is fucked no amount of copper or glass will fix it.
@@carlll6101 You are missing the point.
Sometimes some damn system managers go to fix things by changing cables, when it is simply software configuration. When cables are done properly in the first time when the server room is installed, you do not go pulling cables new way across the different places different ways as documented manner, how those are neatly installed.
You simply go to configuration and you set the ports properly as required, not a hardware problem.
IF there for some reason comes a hardware problem, as in cable connectors or something being the root of problem, you do not pull wires differently but you will install them as neatly as the original, so no one can even see that you have been there. You use the same coloring, you make same lengths, you do everything to be same neat original installation.
And even if you would have wrong colored cables etc and for some reason forced to use them, you do not cross connect them differently all over the places as drunken apprentice making some artwork and counting just that no unplug cables is left out.
Cable management is not an art, it is about patience, little knowledge and reading capability of the documentation what is where.
As an automation mechanic I would greatly appreciate if every wiring job was this clean. Would make trouble shooting and tracing wires much easier! This is a thing of beauty.
If you ever get the chance check out OLD General Electric or Westinghouse switchgear. It is wiring like this writ large.
✨Democracy Officer wants to know your location✨
Who needs steel for a chassis when you can reinforce the frame with a million wiring harnesses. They're also going to be daisy chained to every computer and control module so if the BCM detects power loss to a tail light that ultimately leads to the ECM to flip on the check engine light with error codes saying there's no fuel pressure. -German automotive engineers
True story, a short in the BCM caused a short in the infotainment module which then caused a short in the fuel pump module which caused the ECM to declare the vehicle was a $80k powerless paper weight. It took around 20 hours going down the rabbit hole of diagnostics whack a mole that revealed the source of the fiasco was a broken seal in a tail light assembly full of moisture that caused multiple components to short as well. You can't make it up lol
@@clv603 apparently the same thing happens with Ford trucks. Uncle Tony’s Garage had a video on it.
@@charlesmckinley29 I don't doubt it at all. You'd think it's ridiculous the first time you hear something like that but it's all too common working in a shop especially when diagnosing anything electrical for pretty much anything manufactured after 2012. Even with the advantage of having the diagnostic software used in dealership/oem manufacturer shops it's still a nightmare. Most times diagnosing isn't even worth the effort, they'll just rip the guts out and replace entire harnesses and assemblies. I recall from the schematics and diagrams there are sensors in the circuit designed to be fail-safes but it's only a fail-safe on paper, and when the fail-safe fails, diagnosing becomes trial-and-error. Not sure what happened exactly with the ford truck haven't seen the video but the BMW I was working on not only had multiple shorts at multiple points in the controller module bus but the original fault had a wicked parasitic drain to chassis ground is probably what fried the sensor that is supposed to talk to the module that would trigger the correct error codes. I wasn't customer facing, but on the reason for coming into the shop was to replace a dead battery that would've taken 15 minutes turned into a week's work repair lol
I once took apart an old Soviet military radio, and that's what the innards looked like. The amplifier circuit wasn't even on a board, it was just a bunch of components soldered directly to each other.
That technique reduces parasitic inductance and capacitance for high frequency circuits, they were pushing the limits of their components, that's how i prototype RF designs today (before laying out a PCB).
That's the way tube amps are done
RF is magic. Analog engineers are wizards. We do not question the sorcery.
Sounds like the transceivers I used to build as a kid
Well we know they didn't get paid by the hour. Eventually they were paid in bread.
Mom : he will be a pcb maker
Dad : he will be a plumber
:
this is already on the verge of high art
This is the only way to do it! Back in the 80's, my professor loved this technique. It is elegant and righteous!
and a little less confusing
Not having the wires connected?
@@cpK054L It's a breadboard - the connections go on back.
"righteous"?
When the engineer is also an artist
Im not an engineer but trace solder my pcbs all the time.
@@KordellBrandt that's what most do
Just appreciate the song for a second. Bill Withers is a gift to the soul.
Yes Bill Withers was incredible. He grew up in a community just over the mountain from where my childhood home is in West Virginia
„Turns around to solder it, hears cables falling on the table as he flips it upside down.“
(Edit)
Because of all the comments thinking im stupid. THIS IS SUPPOSED TO BE A JOKE! I worked as an electrician 😆
one sentence horror
Maybe he sliders as he goes
@@skyler9988 I think he does, but that’s what would happen if I would do that xD
Masking tape the top then flip and you're all good
@@skyler9988, or using was spray😊😊
Came for the circuits, stayed for the music
Bill Withers - Grandma's Hands
@@frostty1 absolutely one of the best singer/songwriters ever
Fr
does anyone know any other songs like this? i dont care how old this comment is, if you do, let me know. Here's one : Ridgetop by Jesse Collins
Absolutely. I get so sick of the same song on four out of five videos. Nice to see this creator is just as good as film making as they are at making functional wires look like artwork.
As a commercial & industrial electrician, who takes great pride in running conduit.
This video makes me very happy. 😊
And then ppl wonder why they get replaced by a machine that works for half the price, 10 times faster and with perfect precision....
As an electronics hobbyist i absolutely love it, watched it 10 times already
As an electronics hobbyist I hate this, because for same time even in house conditions I would create real electronic board - without stupid wires 😂
I need just
a) laser printer or marker
b) sheet of glossy paper (from any magazine of photopapper)
c) iron or fan for hairs
d) hydrogen peroxide (from any first aid kit) and lemon acid
e) any board with layer of copper (sold everywhere) or any board which I itself will cover with copper (with help of copper sulfate which use any granny for own flowers in garden).
1. Print your board on paper. Put paper on board with layer of copper. Heat it with iron. Remove paper, all paint will left on copper. Or use marker and draw directly on board.
2. In glass put peroxide, add a little of lemon acid, heat this liquid a little and put board inside. In few minutes all copper which not protected by marker/paint will be dissolved.
3. Take board, remove paint - done. You have real electronic board. Whole process took less than 10 minutes.
You forgot all the time you have to spend drilling through holes... @juliap.5375
@@juliap.5375wow never heard of anyone making their own “printed” circuit board. Sounds fun
@@juliap.5375quelquefois il faut un pont pour qu'un fil passe par-dessus un autre fil.
Alors il faudra un vrai fil connectant deux points de la carte imprimée maison (homemade). Et souder.
Dans tous les cas, même pour les autres travaux (peinture, conduite automobile, faire l'amour...) on peut choisir de faire un truc beau et propre ; ou un truc vite fait qui explique pourquoi nos civilisations ont autant de temps libre, autant de chômeurs, autant de produits dégueulasses livrés de manière abjecte.
Opinion.
@@juliap.5375thank you
😂😂😂I love this. I annoyed my Electronic instructor because I did the same thing. I was worried about if I had to trouble shoot, it would be difficult. So I made it very neat and organized. Always worked on the first test. It did take a long time though.
@DontTouchMyTree No need to curse. It was meant to say trouble shoot.
@dl6405 only takes long the first time. After that you now have template wires for each consecutive reproduction you plan to make.
You can either do a job quickly or correctly. It's good to always choose to do it correctly.
The benefit of bending the wires like this is not only can it look more like the plans you sketch, but also means debugging is easier because you'll be able to better understand if something is bad code or just bad wiring.
That, my friend, is genius. Neat, testable, verifiable, and can be fixed once perfected.
I'm out here with my electrical tape and wire nuts looking like a toddler surrounded by building blocks
That's why you don't get paid by the hour
Hahaha
😂😂 me too!
@@WetDoggo I promise you he does, maybe not as much tho lol
Picking a lock in Mass effect 2 be like....
Lmfao so true
shit so funny 😂
You know I found out later that it's built kinda like a circuit board (ME2 hacking) and if you follow the lines from one node, it will almost always take you to the other match. It takes forever until you get used to it but it works
In the old days, they would build a house, but also incorporate beauty as well as functionality.
My brother in christ this is a circuit board.
I have worked in the aerospace industry for years. This kind of attention to detail is very important to making a repeatable product. I also note that even with hand-made items, you make jigs for all those wires and a skilled worker can bang them out faster than you could just grabbing loose wires and hooking them up.
No no no, I've seen guys paid by the hour absolute lazy hacks. Given all day to do an hour job it's STILL a hack job. This person is doing things to the best of his ability with all the concentration, integrity and no laziness. I applaud this person for not taking the easy way out and doing a meticulous job. I can appreciate that.
If it looks Q.A. Inspector friendly, it usually is.
exactly what I thought, this is what someone's work looks like when they're paid by unit AND they're extremely attentive to details. Design each connection, do a bunch of them at a time, then assemble several boards in as little time as possibly with them still being good quality.
@@JeffDvrx 😊 ผม เองก็ อยากทำแบบนี้ได้ ด้วยตัวเอง สักครั้งใน ชีวิต ครับ และทีเห็น ก็ เป็น สิ่งที่ผมเคย ทำเช่นกันครับ ไฟมันจะ วิ่ง เป็น จังหวะตามตัวโน้ต ของดนตรี
ทุกๆ ครั้งที่ ลำโพง กระพือ มัน จะ ปล่อยแสง ได้ 🤣🇹🇭💐
I've also seen salaried, and contracted workers also do hack jobs.
The amount of, nor the rate of, pay, really matters to someone who enjoys what they are doing.
Which is what we need to be encouraging and supporting in this country, if we ever want to be the leaders in anything other than percentage of incarcerated citizens and gun violence..
Perhaps it also takes giving QA inspectors a bonus for every flaw they catch.
It's a bit like when GM consulted with Japanese auto manufacturers as to how the Japanese managed their plants. One point was that there was a string that employees were expected to pull stopping the production line if a flaw was spotted, they would then all gather to discuss the flaw and determine how to avoid it in the future and the employee who pulled the string would be rewarded with a bonus. Once the Japanese consultants left, the US management kept the colour coded uniforms and the colour coded stations but reprimanded the employees who pulled the string to stop production even if the flaw noted was an actual flaw. Paying employees by the time they take certainly helps, but it is still a matter of how they are managed and for what exactly they are rewarded for. It needs to be the quality of work that is rewarded not just time spent.
Naw, this isn't about getting paid. This is a labor of love.
Yeah, I was thinking the same thing. This isn’t likely to be work for pay. Some crazy level of neat! He has me wondering what he’s building with ttl logic chips. 😊
And taking as long as humanly possible. Remember, they're getting paid by the hour.
Someone who takes much pride in their work. This makes me feel happy inside and so very satisfied
Working at a restaurant recently taught me I needed to find a job where being meticulous was a strength rather than frowned upon. I made less mistakes, but to them it was better to have people fix mistakes most of the time and rush through everything, and they didn't keep me
It's not inherently a bad way of working, but I just can't follow. Not a job for me
I would pay someone by the hour if this is his work
It’s worth every penny
Electrical Pipeline Engineer 😂
I have never been more satisfied by seeing a perf board.
That's just art to me. A real masterpiece of form and function. Beautifully executed.
Workmanship means putting yourself to the board, as eloquent, elegant and graceful.
Yes it’s about the FEEL in quality.
It’s pretty, and it’s art, but it is also stupid. Would take less time and money to lay out a PCB and have it printed, and end up with a higher quality finished product that will have a ground plane to prevent signal interference and less points of failure that will be difficult to track down.
When a pipe fitter becomes an electrician:
Eh, this is more akin to what electricians do already than what pipe fitters do.
As an electrician, we would never put that many bends in a pipe. MC or romex maybe.
@Dpowell28 NEC allows for up to 360° of bend without an additional pulling point, most jobsites I've been on have set a cap at 270°. We don't use romex in commercial installs and MC is for hacks 🤢🤮
@@joshmonaco6170 some jobs spec MC. I had a job a few years ago for a new planet fitness that my scope was fire alarm and another company had the power scope. They used MC for literally everything. They had to install a sub panel on the other side of the building and used the biggest MC I had ever seen to feed that panel. I couldn't help but laugh when one of the guys said this was the future of electrical, especially when my conduit runs were the only thing that looked good in that job. MC is for lighting whips and that's it.
I still remember how much I loved makig circuits, such a chill job
Work of art. Only appreciated by old Electronic Technicians who actually worked on solid state and early IC boards. Just beautiful.
This tickles my brain in the same way that old windows screensaver did. I truly respect anybody with such dedication to attention to detail.
Watching people perform skillful tasks is ALWAYS impressive to me. It keeps me from completely hating humanity.
leaves the title of this clip to foam over, what a piece of vitriol that is!
I'm probably reading way too much into this, but: really? Skilled tasks are the only thing keeping you from hating humanity? What about acts of kindness?
Again, I'm probably reading WAY too much into what is probably a joke-y comment. I've just seen too many people who don't really care about cruelty or callousness, but whose blood boils over at perceived incompetence.
Not trying to make direct assumptions about you, I just wince at the wording.
@@calliopeshif7581I felt the same way. He sounds like a psychopath who bought into the harsh critical voice of his perfectionist parents and has already reversed the harsh inner (I'm not good enough) critic into the harsh outer (you're not good enough) critic, and so deserve my contempt/hatred.
@@calliopeshif7581I'm reading it as "so many people go through life doing everything as fast as possible without taking time to add quality to their work, so people who put quality and effort into it makes me thankful there are people who care about what they do"
I.E. I'm projecting a lot onto this comment 😂
@@calliopeshif7581 I must say that if a person takes the time to make something with care and precision that person may possibly take such time to do other things with care and precision. And as long as those things are not nefarious evil villain things it could only add happiness and joy to humanity.
No strange incidental high freq or inconvenient flux fields. Tight wiring helps keep a clean signal and reduce noise. Well done.
Making conductors look nice is never a bad thing
PCB was invented in 1903,
People before 1903:
What are you saying about people before 1903?
@@sabrepulse817 when pcb wasnt invented, people must be making boards like this
actually they were patented in 1925 by Charles Ducas and created in 1943 by dr. Paul Eisler.
@@huzaifazafar6469 I hate to be another joke killer, but this is interesting: they actually used to use point-to-point connections before PCBs. They just kinda threw the components in there and it was quite a rats nest. A nightmare to work on, I'm sure.
@@huzaifazafar6469 They would wrap wires around each component's legs and run them between components. It's simple, straight forward, and an absolute nightmare to ever attempt to troubleshoot.
As a man who likes arranging circuits and parts in as neat a fashion as possible, I think this is the most beautiful thing I have seen today... ❤😇
ty, yes indeed, sexy even !
❤ Same Bro!!!
I normally find ASMR things inane and irritating but this is the electronics equivalent of ASMR and I love the neatness and precision and makes the part of my brain that loves order smile.
The good non suspicious part of it is that you'll have more time to do your work, and thus can make your work higher quality
Shit you do when the trust funds are flowing, it's so cute you're surrounded by a supportive environment
Beautiful. This is how I worked when I first got into the electronics field in the early 70s. I worked in discrete components then and a well layed-out board could almost be “read” as easily as a schematic. Those were fun days.
Bread boards rule!
Yes! Things are so different now...
Ya you could still do that in the 90s and early 2000s... then tech exploded and consistently got more complex...
Now if you don't have a blueprint good luck tracing something that has 8 layers of traces on the PCB alone.
@@FakeJeep I was trained on diagnosing and repairing sandwich circuit boards. Only had to do it a few times.
This song is either incredibly endearing or INCREDIBLY FREAKY. Thanks Bill Withers for leaving us with this mystery.
At first I thought he said Grandma's Hanes. Seemed a bit off.
What mystery?
What’s freaky about it? It’s about a sweet old granny
@@ihdieselman🤣
its so fitting cause i like the way he work it
Just makes me think of the old windows pipe screensaver
As an Electronics Engineer, wire forming was a big part of our circuit building in the 80s. Very rare to see once multilayered PCBs came along.
This is fucking beautiful. Deadass my brain had been throughly scratched by how pretty this is.
God, this is satisfying. I love a good cable management job, and this is basically the same thing on a smaller scale. High precision like this is something to be envied and lauded.
These should be given in schools to make engineering fun for kids because this is so addictive placing wires where they need to go until you develop something new
That's real! Be taking my time and being very precise with every one of those 😂
Dude deserves to be paid by the hour. This clean af.
Yes this is the kind of videos I like to watch while I'm getting paid by the hour
LOL underrated comment
It’s not a crosstalk, it’s a whole discussion.
Finally someone says it lol. Was scrolling a while before finding anything related to crosstalk.
Nah, this is someone doing amazing work. Hourly paid would do the usual sh!t, but just way slower....
I actually love high this old school circuitry allows you to see the mechanics of an electronic circuit. Really neat!
YOU CAN HANG THAT UP ON THE WALL!!!!
Beautiful work! So satisfying to watch your detail oriented writing.
I used to teach computer building and repair to a mixed class (14-65 years old) and taught them how to origami the flat cables for a better air flow back in the 90’s, it was a hit!
Super nice video and will check your channel!
Yeeep, floppy, IDE, SCSI cables etc. forced your hand basically 😂
I worked as a supervisor in a config shop for a few years. Moved on to another company doing communications work. One of my employees comes in one day after a call and states he knew he worked on one of the PC's I built, he was certain that no one else but me could have done those cables. :)
This reminds me of the primordial pipe generating screen savers on computers back in the days of eld. Shout out to my fellow ancient ones.
Especially the ones that instead of a ball junction they inserted a teapot every once in a while... :-)
I'm only 17 and a half don't make me feel old 😂
This is the only way to build! Back in in the 80's my microprocessor teacher loved every circuit I built because this is exactly what I did. He was brilliant and knew beauty. He told me to read the book: "In Search of Excellence". I did.
Man, y'all are all talking about the work, I'm listening to that absolute banger of a song.
Ben Eater is applauding your work 👏👏
Came here for that comment.
Beautiful music taste 💀💀Finally a video that’s not accompanied by Bobby Caldwell
I can't remember the title to the song for the life of me...but it's a great song.
@@joelockard7174 The title and artist of music on Shorts recognised by Content ID is shown right below the title, which you can click to view other Shorts that feature it, or save it to your _Sounds from Shorts_ playlist.
@@joelockard7174 Bill Withers - Grandma's Hands. It's on his classic album, Still Bill.
@@joelockard7174it says it in the bottom left corner bud
That's someone who takes pride in their work
Reminds me of the large pipe racks that ran along the ground between the different plants in an oil refinery.
even just a dev board, you bent every line perfect and even in 3D! lol.
My dumbass thought this was a cake ..
Luckily I wasn't the only one
Forbidden zappy cake.
Tastes plasticy. Which is the majority of store bought cakes, anyway, so no difference! LOL!
Ahh you know the satisfaction of running conduit in an industrial setting, just on miniature scale.
This is so true!! If it's not fast it's not perfect! And if it's perfect why is it taking you so long!!!
THAT LOOKS SO AWESOME! The way it's so organized with wires formed into bridges to go on top of each other, it reminds me of Tetris!
Beautiful work.
Back in school I was the only one who would do this with my breadboarded prototype circuits while most others did a variation on a bird's nest. Had a second breadboard just for storing components and a collection of pre-formed jumper wires, which I added to as I cut and bent new wires to suit. Troubleshooting was trivial, profs loved it, got my labs marked on the spot.
Nice to spot a true craftsperson in the wild.
How is this done? How are the wires bent to exactly match, without a reference?
@@LionKimbro The board and everything already in place is the reference. You figure out where it's going to go, count the holes it crosses, how many bends, ups and downs, then cut and bend a wire to fit.
@@StarkRG Ah-hah! Thank you! So simple!
Neatness counts.
Impress the client.
I use to hardwire bridge crane controls (and later on commercial security systems). I always tried to make them nice like that. It’s very satisfying and the customers are impressed to say the least. My co-workers cabinets looked like festooned Christmas decorations (which worked fine too), but even they admitted if they had to run a service call in the future they hoped it would be one of my cabinets. So they could see what the heck was going on at a glance.