I'm so happy you didn't try to cut off or finish sentences for the guy that stutters. I've had that same problem all my life and it's always infuriating, embarrassing, and demoralizing when someone gets impatient and starts suggesting words.
I thought he was trying to convert the language in his head to english, or struggling with pronunciation. It didn't sound like english was his first language.
@iansandusky417 Thank you for doing what you do and inspiring so many machinists. I now have a bunch of places to visit on my bucket list, The American Precision Museum is at the top for sure!
Great tour! I'm glad they let you in the door! Fascinating! I didn't know they made such big stuff, wow! It's nice to see a company like this that is so focused on solving customer problems. You can easily see that all of their tools are born out of a desire to meet customer needs; even to the point of making one-offs and intimately involving the customer at every step. This is clearly a partner company that everyone will want on their team! These guys are bending over backwards to help their customers to succeed. Wow! Thanks for this groundbreaking tour! Simply amazing and inspiring!!! 😊
I run 12" & 4" Sandvik facemills in my milling machine. Great to see the factory. Sandvik is quality tooling 👍🏻 I want one of them trendy yellow jackets.
I did do my Ex.job at Sandvik Coromant, Gimo, Sweden 1989. some years later i visit same facility, and I saw how they drilling the holes in -Uborr. In the facility in Gimo they also produce the inserts.
Would not take much to do surgery in that plant it's that clean, smooth operation no drama. Would have liked to have seen 40" tooling up close. Great tour. Ray Stormont
I had run a Cincinnati 18 ft. Planar Mill with 2 hand ground tool steel bits in an over arms on a gantry. Had to machine two freight train rails at once clamped side by side on the 18 ft. long parts bed. Which ran back and forth on a 36 ft. foundation table. A machined cut stroke was the entire length of both rails on top and both sides. The precision metal equivalent of a saw mill operation, yet no less dangerous. A tooling vendor showed up one day and brought in some tool holders with Carbide inserts, replacing our primitive tool steel blades. We kept cranking up speed and feed until the Carbides ripped 1/4'' chips that shot like glowing bullets! Although I'd used carbide on CNC lathes before that time, no one thought old school planar would function under those loads. It did and we ran rails on that turkey like a Formula 1 car. That was 1978 in Menomonee, Falls Wisconsin at CRO Messer Griesheim Co.
Man, I want a tour just to see "HOW" they do things. How are the tools boxes organized, how do they manage coolant for all the machines, how often do they qualify the machine for volumetric error/spindle deviation etc..
Ive seen some interesting uses for Y axis turning, specifically Y axis parting off. Apparently they can be ran 3x faster than traditional parting tools with better finishes
it is not my country treat Tesla in this conflict, it is a specific workers union (IF Metall). And it is not criminal, two parts who can not agrees about to have agreement between company and union.
I'm so happy you didn't try to cut off or finish sentences for the guy that stutters. I've had that same problem all my life and it's always infuriating, embarrassing, and demoralizing when someone gets impatient and starts suggesting words.
I thought he was trying to convert the language in his head to english, or struggling with pronunciation. It didn't sound like english was his first language.
does it matter if he is not speaking spontaneously?!
@@P8ntbaLLA56correct, English is not his first language
Yea, English is my second language and I also shudder on both languages, add to is pressure of the camera and all just add to the stress.
@@artsemfitsner2809 You presented well. No worries!!
This is a beautiful facility, Sandvik should be very proud of what they have created!
I agree completely! Thank you very much for checking it out!
@iansandusky417 Thank you for doing what you do and inspiring so many machinists. I now have a bunch of places to visit on my bucket list, The American Precision Museum is at the top for sure!
Great tour!
I'm glad they let you in the door! Fascinating!
I didn't know they made such big stuff, wow!
It's nice to see a company like this that is so focused on solving customer problems.
You can easily see that all of their tools are born out of a desire to meet customer needs; even to the point of making one-offs and intimately involving the customer at every step.
This is clearly a partner company that everyone will want on their team!
These guys are bending over backwards to help their customers to succeed. Wow!
Thanks for this groundbreaking tour!
Simply amazing and inspiring!!! 😊
Some customers hang on because of good product and excellent service.
If no service then maybe the tool is not worth the money.
My father use to be a salesman for Sandvik back in the 1980's. Neat.
That's definitely a world class shop. I'm not surprised since Sandvik is such an innovative company.
16:50 we implemented/still implementing CPTS. helped a lot. going more into sandvik tooling overall so it will only get better
Again very nice to get a look inside of such a great company. Thank you for that!
Thank you very much for checking it out!
I run 12" & 4" Sandvik facemills in my milling machine. Great to see the factory. Sandvik is quality tooling 👍🏻
I want one of them trendy yellow jackets.
Haha so do I man!
I did do my Ex.job at Sandvik Coromant, Gimo, Sweden 1989. some years later i visit same facility, and I saw how they drilling the holes in -Uborr. In the facility in Gimo they also produce the inserts.
Wow ! Great company tour video. Thanks
Thank you very much for checking it out!
Man that place has changed a lot from when I worked there 20 or so years ago.
Would not take much to do surgery in that plant it's that clean, smooth operation no drama. Would have liked to have seen 40" tooling up close. Great tour. Ray Stormont
Thank you very much for the kind words!
I had run a Cincinnati 18 ft. Planar Mill with 2 hand ground tool steel bits in an over arms on a gantry. Had to machine two freight train rails at once clamped side by side on the 18 ft. long parts bed. Which ran back and forth on a 36 ft. foundation table. A machined cut stroke was the entire length of both rails on top and both sides. The precision metal equivalent of a saw mill operation, yet no less dangerous. A tooling vendor showed up one day and brought in some tool holders with Carbide inserts, replacing our primitive tool steel
blades. We kept cranking up speed and feed until the Carbides ripped 1/4'' chips that shot like glowing bullets! Although I'd used carbide on CNC lathes before that time, no one thought old school planar would function under those loads. It did and we ran rails on that turkey like a Formula 1 car. That was 1978 in Menomonee, Falls Wisconsin at CRO Messer Griesheim Co.
Amazing how the industry has evolved since my days in the 80s & 90s programming Mazak T1, CAM T2, and T32-2 Controls.
Thanks for visiting Ian! I hope you enjoyed your time at our facility and feel free to stop by any time.
Amazing Ian. I am hoping to go visit my Daughter this spring in NC. Will they allow me to visit if I schedule ahead. Awesome tour thank You so much
Man, I want a tour just to see "HOW" they do things. How are the tools boxes organized, how do they manage coolant for all the machines, how often do they qualify the machine for volumetric error/spindle deviation etc..
Wow I’m impressed
Wish I could see it in person
It was indeed incredible!
Great video! 🤩
THANKS
Sandvick are good but to expensive in zimbabwe
They actually had a documentary where Galileo was in there main place and showed the whole company + there systems.
I'm sure they hid all the important things before you got in.
Wow first time hearing about Y axis tooling..... noob move bro
Ive seen some interesting uses for Y axis turning, specifically Y axis parting off. Apparently they can be ran 3x faster than traditional parting tools with better finishes
This is a Swedish company one of the many companies are boycotting. The way sweden is treating tesla is criminal.
Okie dokie
it is not my country treat Tesla in this conflict, it is a specific workers union (IF Metall). And it is not criminal, two parts who can not agrees about to have agreement between company and union.
@ollejansson7237 yup and we have the right to boycott them.. last year we spent 27000 on their tooling through november.