CHAPTERS 0:00 Intro 0:30 The concept 0:56 The design 1:27 The wheels 2:02 The battery 2:42 The battery compartment 3:38 The charging 4:01 The frame 5:45 The cover 5:56 The steering system part one 6:44 Get money 7:35 The steering system part two 8:22 The final assembly 10:35 The motherboard 11:24 The aftermath 12:12 Driving around 12:53 The problems 13:14 Credits and Outro
As a professional programmer and a hobby roboticist learning ROS, I guess I'm part of the 10% that would like to see dat code :) Congrats on the project, the design, presentation, editing were all top notch. I am super disappointed this is the only video on your channel.
Hey man, great job! For a one-person engineering group that not only designed the mechanical part, the electronics, programming, and also machined and assembled everything this is amazing! You're like a swiss army knife!
@@K3rim This is the comment I was looking for. The roles broken down would be relatively easy for any engineer, but to do them all is pretty cool. It is obvious that you have a great future ahead!
That one special instance, where the UA-cam algorithm gets it right and recommends this video to me. Fun to watch, interesting build, nice energy. I subscribed in the hope you will create more in the future. Your ingenuity and perseverance will get you far in life! Good luck!
@@K3rimadvice: upload in smaller chunks. You get a built-in sanity check as you put your thought process into words when you write the script, AND you get feedback from knowledgeable people that might help you avoid bad choices.
Honestly, I think it's an amazing project. The problems you encountered are completely normal to encounter especially while studying, don't be too hard on yourself. Good job and nice work on the video, was really entertaining to watch.
Wow man! Though everything may not have gone the way you wanted it to, trust me when I say you still did amazing. I do understand how something that seems so simple take forever, it's always like that. Mad respect to you and I wish you more success!
As an engineer, I really appreciate seeing such an honest presentation of how a project goes. You've built something cool, and it's totally expected that lots of little things will go wrong. A lot of creators skip past the hard parts and just present the finished version of each step, but your video gives the real flavor of doing engineering work. It's hard, we make mistakes, and with a lot of persistence and frustration we get to a working solution. Then we criticize it, find all its flaws, and start over again. Brilliant job, both with your project and with the exposition.
Dude this is spectacular! Even most engineers can't pull this off on their own. I understand why you got a B not A. Maybe like me, your Prof expected a delivery app integrated and also having autonomous capability. So novelty/impact is a crucial aspect of grading.
I bet you could make a career out of building things and documenting your engineering process online. This was great and I love the look of the finished product!
Every engineering final project should require a youtube video of what went wrong as part of the assessment. There'd be thousands of hours of hilarity produced every year. Instant subscribe from someone who also bit off more than they could chew 👍
I'm very impressed with what you achieved. I manage software projects for a living, and in my opinion the process, the mistakes and the experiences you described is pretty much exactly what every junior developer goes through on their first projects. Now what you did is way more challenging though. Engineering, hardware development, firmware, software, time management, dealing with the consequences of your own choices, you've got all the boxes crossed. That's just an impressively complex project. I wish everyone had the opportunity to do something like this as part of their formal training. Seeing you do this, I'm thinking "That guy has a bright future and career ahead of him." Wishing you all the best, and thank you for sharing this video!
Hey that's fucking amazing, I don't get how you only got 5. And the documentation work too is amazing. It takes so much energy to record everything and make a good story out of it. I want to see what you make next!
@@Dotfo15 So apparently in Switzerland, 6 is Excellent, 5.5 is Very good, 5 Good, 4.5 Satisfactory, 4 Sufficient, 3.5 Insufficient, 3 Poor, and 2.5-1 Very poor. I'm impressed with what he built, but I can see how the professors and others over there would only give it a "good" grade because of all the problems it still had, and how it physically didn't look completely polished and stuff. K3RIM also mentioned that he didn't do well on the writing part, so that must've been a pretty big point eater as well.
@@bustanut4610from my experience, novelty also is a factor. Because ultimately this is an RC car, not autonomous. I honestly understand the pain of how we put so much engineering into it but we don't get the best score because it the use case isn't "unique".
Congrats on the huge achievement! Eine 5 ist "criminally underrated", genau so wie dein Channel ;P So ein Projekt als Maturarbeit umzusetzen (inklusive PCB design, programmieren, CAD, manufacturing, video, etc) ist echt spitze! Häsch uf jede Fall en wiitere Subscriber :)) Keep rocking it, fellow Swiss tinkerer & creator! Love it!
Swiss engineering are its finest. Great job. Don't worry about the grade. Any potential employer you tell about this crazy project will be happy to hire you on the spot.
Man, I'm not too sure that this comment is gonna change anything, but please and just please keep recording and doing this kind of stuff, you have "it" in you and your video is awesome. Just that my dude, I wanted you just say how awesome you are. Keep doing it.
cant belive im here before 4k subs. the trials and agony of being in rnd and designing almost everything from scratch with a tight deadline and low budget. honestly pretty impressive, cant wait to see what else you got in store for us
I work in the area of driver assistance systems and automated driving for more than a decade. You really choose a hard topic. As a hoby I started building some machines. I never trusted my abilities to use metalstructures, I still build wooden frames. Wood is cheap, light weight and easy to handle... as long as changing humidity doesn't bend your structure ;-) Your video encourages me to go back to my workshop and work on my project (DIY pinball machine).
A creative project & wow what wonderful editing + humor! I’m envious of your perseverance. I work for a robotics company (Owned by a rainforest) & they build 1500 package delivery robots costing 25-30k a pop which required a person to open a lid to access their package. It was pretty dumb. Anyway You’re going to do great things, your pitfalls are nothing in the scheme of getting a complex system to work.
As an electrical engineering dropout from half a year ago who got a programming job in order to get some necessary money I needed I feel kind of jealous. The project looks really fun and diverse in the various skillsets put to use. Hope you had fun and good luck with the last years!
The algorithm finally recommended something actually good 🙌 Oh, and show me the code! Need more in depth videos for those 10% I'm apparently a part of.
Man, that was great. As a mechatronics engineering student, let me tell you, i feel your pain. I'm definitely not taking such a huge task for my graduation lol. Definitely interested in more details like the code and the PCB design process. Wish you all the best.
Dang ! The result is a bit underwelming but doing all that stuff by yourself from scratch is just crazy impressive ! Looking forward for your next videos !
dude, this is genuinly awesome. this is the kind of content i think people (myself included of course) wanna see. if you ever have to do another project like this, or something for fun, i and many others would love to see it.
I have ever done something similar to you. I realized how talented I am without sufficient rest. You feel your mind and body can almost work 100% output. Never thought I have that kind of potential. Of course, this is not a good story we should told to our kids but still a memorable time. PS, I get an A luckily.
Doesn't matter what the outcome is, the learning experience you had is extremely valuable. Practical skills learned will carry on to many successful projects. You tried to do the impossible in an impossible timeline. Billion dollar companies haven't been able to make this concept work. I would give you a (A) for the effort and a (A) for the fact you actually made all that at least function to some extent.
That was awesome (very well cut) loved the list of wrong at the end. Laughed a lot (with simpathy) I think I learnt a lot from your mistakes. Thanks for sharing in such a fun, humourous and well presented manner!
I am just amazed at the quality of your Video. I would love to see you could spread out things into more Videos, going into Detail. Continue what you are doing and you are on a great Road to Success.
An extremely ambitious project that mostly worked -- at least by the end of the video. If that was the state it was shown in, I think you deserved more than a 5 -- along with a talk about setting project scope! :-D
Looks like a video from a UA-camr with at least 200000 subs, shocked to see this was your only video and with 3000 subs. Amazing work and quality for the video and the project
I was like: I want to see more of this guy, opened your channel and was surprised to find out that this is your first video. Hope to see more cool content soon
Excellent job and quite an ambicious final year project you have picked there! Thanks for openly sharing all the details of the making, I really enjoyed watching. Keep up the spirit and regards from Germany!
Don't worry... even a natural/bare finish on the aluminum would have needed prep work. At minimum a good cleaning because Aluminum is very sensitive to weld contamination from dirt and oxides. Very cool project, man. You accomplished quite a lot in a relatively short amount of time. 4 wheel steering, too? You are a madman!
Well… welding the aluminium was a little nightmare for itself. Next time I‘m probably gonna go with steel or some materials, that are easier to weld. Anyways it‘s nice to hear that you enjoyed the video! :)
Respekt was du da entwickelt und gebaut hast. Ich beschäftige mich auch selbst mit all den Themen und weiß wie verdammt viel Arbeit das alles ist... Mach weiter so!! :) Ich bin glaube auch nicht der einzige der sich über noch mehr solcher mega Videos freuen würde :)
Holy crap, dude. This project is insanely awesome and you should be damn proud of yourself for pulling it off. Greetings from the middle of Germany, you just gained another subscriber haha
Its so cool to see other students my age building badass things like this! Just a tip for the simple 3d printed parts - 4mm plate steel with spacers in-between could achieve the same effect with much better material properties! (its also much much easier to weld than aluminium and you can just paint it to solve the rust issue). Also, rivnuts!!!
If you're making something with a lot of bends out of square tubing, an easy way to get repeatable "angles" in it, is to mark your bend location on the outer side. Then cut a "wedge" out of it, leaving the outer edge to hold it together. Bend, and weld the 3 sides instead of 4. And junkyards. Get your material from junkyards.
What a cool design! It seems that all nighters and desperate project work seem to be a universal, even across the pond. Even som this thing is impressive for one person in 3 months on such a limited budget. I’ve seen startups withs hundreds of thousands of dollars that have barely even finished the documentation that you did. Excited to see more out of the channel, and you most definitely earned a like from me. Good luck on future projects! -J
Great video, excited to see what comes next from this channel. I can definitely relate to shooting yourself in the foot by making an unnecessarily complex design.
Wow. This was the best video I have seen for a beginner UA-camr. I did not know you could get companies to sponsor your school projects. Could you make a video of what you emailed the companies?
I went to your channel and saw that this is your first video and holy crap the production quality is phenomenal! I'm subscribed and cannot wait to see what you have in store for next! :D
Good job on the project and especially on the video. If it was me, on top of all the manufactoring mistakes i would also fuck up all the electronics multiple time and have to buy the 3x the planned ammount hahahah I`m currently working on a big project myself and i know how it feels overwhelming, even tho it didn`t work the way you envisioned at first, i hope you learned a lot by making it. As a tip and what i would typically do with something myself, and i`m pretty sure you realized this by this point, but try making a prototype first to make sure everything is working and then plan and build the mechanical parts, specially if you`re gonna use steel or aluminium, wich usually mean that once it's done, is hard to fix or remake stuff. I would have 3D printed a half scale maybe just to check everything and do the testing. Good luck o your engeneering carrer and on youtube, and good job mate.
Hey, this is a very cool project, you can also add range sensors to protect it from accidental collisions. For example, an ultrasonic rangefinder, or make a lidar
That‘s actually a good idea, altough it has 6 distance sensors, I just didn‘t have the time to program them. Lidar would be pretty cool, but it‘s sadly very expensive. I‘ll probably make a second video about this car. :)
CHAPTERS
0:00 Intro
0:30 The concept
0:56 The design
1:27 The wheels
2:02 The battery
2:42 The battery compartment
3:38 The charging
4:01 The frame
5:45 The cover
5:56 The steering system part one
6:44 Get money
7:35 The steering system part two
8:22 The final assembly
10:35 The motherboard
11:24 The aftermath
12:12 Driving around
12:53 The problems
13:14 Credits and Outro
Become youtube guy
hello 😂
I am from USA
great vid
All of those pitfalls you struck are so familiar. Welcome to the frustrating and rewarding field of engineering, fabricating, and developing!
As a professional programmer and a hobby roboticist learning ROS, I guess I'm part of the 10% that would like to see dat code :) Congrats on the project, the design, presentation, editing were all top notch. I am super disappointed this is the only video on your channel.
Thank you! I hope to upload some more videos in the next few months :)
@@K3rim would be cool to see your code too :3
@@ericwieland5365 I feel like those statistics don't apply to his general audience
:( me part of 10
Mee toooooo
Hey man, great job! For a one-person engineering group that not only designed the mechanical part, the electronics, programming, and also machined and assembled everything this is amazing! You're like a swiss army knife!
Thank you very much man :)
@@K3rim This is the comment I was looking for. The roles broken down would be relatively easy for any engineer, but to do them all is pretty cool. It is obvious that you have a great future ahead!
@@K3rim the funny thing is this might actually be a little better than others lol
He is following the steps of "Stuff Made Here". Very nice work and experience. Curious how his future projects will turn out!
That one special instance, where the UA-cam algorithm gets it right and recommends this video to me. Fun to watch, interesting build, nice energy. I subscribed in the hope you will create more in the future. Your ingenuity and perseverance will get you far in life! Good luck!
Thank you very much for your comment! I’m happy you enjoyed the vieo and hope to publish some more builds im the future. :)
@@K3rimadvice: upload in smaller chunks. You get a built-in sanity check as you put your thought process into words when you write the script, AND you get feedback from knowledgeable people that might help you avoid bad choices.
Honestly, I think it's an amazing project. The problems you encountered are completely normal to encounter especially while studying, don't be too hard on yourself. Good job and nice work on the video, was really entertaining to watch.
Thank you :)
Yep those kinds of problems are basically universal, especially the time struggle near the deadline 😂
Wow man! Though everything may not have gone the way you wanted it to, trust me when I say you still did amazing. I do understand how something that seems so simple take forever, it's always like that. Mad respect to you and I wish you more success!
As an engineer, I really appreciate seeing such an honest presentation of how a project goes. You've built something cool, and it's totally expected that lots of little things will go wrong. A lot of creators skip past the hard parts and just present the finished version of each step, but your video gives the real flavor of doing engineering work. It's hard, we make mistakes, and with a lot of persistence and frustration we get to a working solution. Then we criticize it, find all its flaws, and start over again. Brilliant job, both with your project and with the exposition.
Criminally underrated. Deserved a sub.
Thank you :)
Dude this is spectacular! Even most engineers can't pull this off on their own. I understand why you got a B not A. Maybe like me, your Prof expected a delivery app integrated and also having autonomous capability. So novelty/impact is a crucial aspect of grading.
I bet you could make a career out of building things and documenting your engineering process online. This was great and I love the look of the finished product!
Loved the editing, nice idea, seemed like little brother of cybertruck :)
More creators must do this type of futuristic builds
Every engineering final project should require a youtube video of what went wrong as part of the assessment. There'd be thousands of hours of hilarity produced every year.
Instant subscribe from someone who also bit off more than they could chew 👍
Bro this is one of the most entertaining projects I've ever seen in my life, keep up the grind man :)
Your popping off man, great video!
I'm very impressed with what you achieved. I manage software projects for a living, and in my opinion the process, the mistakes and the experiences you described is pretty much exactly what every junior developer goes through on their first projects. Now what you did is way more challenging though. Engineering, hardware development, firmware, software, time management, dealing with the consequences of your own choices, you've got all the boxes crossed. That's just an impressively complex project. I wish everyone had the opportunity to do something like this as part of their formal training.
Seeing you do this, I'm thinking "That guy has a bright future and career ahead of him." Wishing you all the best, and thank you for sharing this video!
Hey that's fucking amazing, I don't get how you only got 5. And the documentation work too is amazing. It takes so much energy to record everything and make a good story out of it. I want to see what you make next!
Isn’t 6 the best grade in Switzerland?
@@Dotfo15 So apparently in Switzerland, 6 is Excellent, 5.5 is Very good, 5 Good, 4.5 Satisfactory, 4 Sufficient, 3.5 Insufficient, 3 Poor, and 2.5-1 Very poor. I'm impressed with what he built, but I can see how the professors and others over there would only give it a "good" grade because of all the problems it still had, and how it physically didn't look completely polished and stuff. K3RIM also mentioned that he didn't do well on the writing part, so that must've been a pretty big point eater as well.
@@bustanut4610from my experience, novelty also is a factor. Because ultimately this is an RC car, not autonomous. I honestly understand the pain of how we put so much engineering into it but we don't get the best score because it the use case isn't "unique".
Congrats on the huge achievement! Eine 5 ist "criminally underrated", genau so wie dein Channel ;P
So ein Projekt als Maturarbeit umzusetzen (inklusive PCB design, programmieren, CAD, manufacturing, video, etc) ist echt spitze!
Häsch uf jede Fall en wiitere Subscriber :))
Keep rocking it, fellow Swiss tinkerer & creator! Love it!
Viele Dank :D
Swiss engineering are its finest. Great job.
Don't worry about the grade. Any potential employer you tell about this crazy project will be happy to hire you on the spot.
I don't know if that's a compliment but I haven't seen many Swiss stuff break like a chinese bridge after 5 years so I guess it's positive.
What an awesome project! You did a great job documenting and editing the process. Can't wait to see more builds!
Man, I'm not too sure that this comment is gonna change anything, but please and just please keep recording and doing this kind of stuff, you have "it" in you and your video is awesome. Just that my dude, I wanted you just say how awesome you are. Keep doing it.
cant belive im here before 4k subs. the trials and agony of being in rnd and designing almost everything from scratch with a tight deadline and low budget. honestly pretty impressive, cant wait to see what else you got in store for us
Mad respect for all the effort, finding sponsors, the insane amount of time you put into this and for the memes ;) ❤
Proud. 😤
I work in the area of driver assistance systems and automated driving for more than a decade. You really choose a hard topic.
As a hoby I started building some machines. I never trusted my abilities to use metalstructures, I still build wooden frames. Wood is cheap, light weight and easy to handle... as long as changing humidity doesn't bend your structure ;-)
Your video encourages me to go back to my workshop and work on my project (DIY pinball machine).
It’s crazy this is your first video. I think it’s very well done. Looking forward to future videos man
Absolutely amazing, congrats!! Probably one of the best videos of hobbyists i’ve ever seen.
i think that's the only time UA-cam algorithm works right, good job 👍🏻
Considering that this is the start of your engineering and UA-cam career, I think you good job!
Ur super talented really cool build man. A jack of all trades for sure!
A creative project & wow what wonderful editing + humor! I’m envious of your perseverance. I work for a robotics company (Owned by a rainforest) & they build 1500 package delivery robots costing 25-30k a pop which required a person to open a lid to access their package. It was pretty dumb.
Anyway You’re going to do great things, your pitfalls are nothing in the scheme of getting a complex system to work.
Self landing rocket , something like Falcon 9 or walking dog would be great .
It will make viewers excited and engaged👍👍
As an electrical engineering dropout from half a year ago who got a programming job in order to get some necessary money I needed I feel kind of jealous. The project looks really fun and diverse in the various skillsets put to use. Hope you had fun and good luck with the last years!
The algorithm finally recommended something actually good 🙌
Oh, and show me the code! Need more in depth videos for those 10% I'm apparently a part of.
Classic overengineering for the first prototype... Love it! :)
Man, that was great. As a mechatronics engineering student, let me tell you, i feel your pain. I'm definitely not taking such a huge task for my graduation lol.
Definitely interested in more details like the code and the PCB design process. Wish you all the best.
Congrats on going this far, I mean you made it. Amazing and Unique final year Project. ❤
Dang ! The result is a bit underwelming but doing all that stuff by yourself from scratch is just crazy impressive !
Looking forward for your next videos !
dude, this is genuinly awesome. this is the kind of content i think people (myself included of course) wanna see. if you ever have to do another project like this, or something for fun, i and many others would love to see it.
I'll do my best, but I set the bar to high on myself with this delivery shuttle. :/ So future content may not be this extra.
@@K3rim eh, I think even if you're not making genuine robots it will still be awesome.
This project is beyond impressive. The video doesn't do the time and dedication that went into this justice
Thanks for the inspiration Kerim, I'm planning to build one robot too for my final year project. Keep it up! Subbed.
I have ever done something similar to you. I realized how talented I am without sufficient rest. You feel your mind and body can almost work 100% output. Never thought I have that kind of potential. Of course, this is not a good story we should told to our kids but still a memorable time. PS, I get an A luckily.
You are a good programmer with a lot of passion you will go far if you just believe
This is one of the best individual projects I've ever seen, congratulations!!!!
Doesn't matter what the outcome is, the learning experience you had is extremely valuable. Practical skills learned will carry on to many successful projects. You tried to do the impossible in an impossible timeline. Billion dollar companies haven't been able to make this concept work. I would give you a (A) for the effort and a (A) for the fact you actually made all that at least function to some extent.
PLEASE CONTINUE THIS PROJECT!!!! And make a company from this! A lot of logistics would really want to buy if you sell this.
Amazing video, as someone studying engineering I can definitely appreciate this project.
This deserves many more views, it will probably blow up someday in the future
That was awesome (very well cut) loved the list of wrong at the end. Laughed a lot (with simpathy) I think I learnt a lot from your mistakes. Thanks for sharing in such a fun, humourous and well presented manner!
I am just amazed at the quality of your Video. I would love to see you could spread out things into more Videos, going into Detail.
Continue what you are doing and you are on a great Road to Success.
Honestly amazing editing for a UA-camr who appears out of nowhere! Greetings from the Netherlands🇳🇱
Well done! Happy to be a part of the project.
yo bro thing is awesome i think you deserve more
Very cool and complicated build. Keep up the good work, a lot of engineering is about redesigning.
The Charging system with the pull out battery compartment is really clever 🔥
An extremely ambitious project that mostly worked -- at least by the end of the video. If that was the state it was shown in, I think you deserved more than a 5 -- along with a talk about setting project scope! :-D
Looks like a video from a UA-camr with at least 200000 subs, shocked to see this was your only video and with 3000 subs. Amazing work and quality for the video and the project
The pain will fade, the glory will stay!
Gut gemacht!
Yeah great video mate keep doing interesting projects like that and you will blow up in youtube in no time :)
I was like: I want to see more of this guy, opened your channel and was surprised to find out that this is your first video. Hope to see more cool content soon
Excellent job and quite an ambicious final year project you have picked there! Thanks for openly sharing all the details of the making, I really enjoyed watching. Keep up the spirit and regards from Germany!
good work on that project, even with all the problems it ended up having and hey 1800chf isnt too too bad for what you were able to make
You are making a nice job, don't give up! The world needs more guys like you to make it better. God bless you! Congrats from Brazil!!!
Well done...... even the video itself was entertaining
Good luck in the future.. you obviously have talent and drive
Du sprichst sehr flüssig Englisch. Beeindruckend! Die meisten sprechen mit einem leichten Akzent. Ich fand das Video sehr spannend!
Don't worry... even a natural/bare finish on the aluminum would have needed prep work. At minimum a good cleaning because Aluminum is very sensitive to weld contamination from dirt and oxides.
Very cool project, man. You accomplished quite a lot in a relatively short amount of time. 4 wheel steering, too? You are a madman!
Well… welding the aluminium was a little nightmare for itself. Next time I‘m probably gonna go with steel or some materials, that are easier to weld. Anyways it‘s nice to hear that you enjoyed the video! :)
Respekt was du da entwickelt und gebaut hast. Ich beschäftige mich auch selbst mit all den Themen und weiß wie verdammt viel Arbeit das alles ist... Mach weiter so!! :)
Ich bin glaube auch nicht der einzige der sich über noch mehr solcher mega Videos freuen würde :)
Holy crap, dude. This project is insanely awesome and you should be damn proud of yourself for pulling it off. Greetings from the middle of Germany, you just gained another subscriber haha
Please make a deeper dive video, explaining more about the process, design decisions and the more of the problems faced.
I will.
Thats super impressive you can count another hobby builder to your subscriber list!
> wait 10 minutes for him to talk about the software only for him to skip over it
Its so cool to see other students my age building badass things like this! Just a tip for the simple 3d printed parts - 4mm plate steel with spacers in-between could achieve the same effect with much better material properties! (its also much much easier to weld than aluminium and you can just paint it to solve the rust issue). Also, rivnuts!!!
If you're making something with a lot of bends out of square tubing, an easy way to get repeatable "angles" in it, is to mark your bend location on the outer side. Then cut a "wedge" out of it, leaving the outer edge to hold it together. Bend, and weld the 3 sides instead of 4.
And junkyards. Get your material from junkyards.
10% here! Hearing about the programming would be neat! :D
I'm excited to see more videos, 'cause I know whatever it is will be cool.
What a cool design!
It seems that all nighters and desperate project work seem to be a universal, even across the pond. Even som this thing is impressive for one person in 3 months on such a limited budget. I’ve seen startups withs hundreds of thousands of dollars that have barely even finished the documentation that you did. Excited to see more out of the channel, and you most definitely earned a like from me.
Good luck on future projects!
-J
Well played dude, I really like the video and how you described your errors.
Keep going like that !
Really cool video nice to see a creator from switzerland keep up the work!!
Great job and all but... couldn't you just use tank steering?
Great video, excited to see what comes next from this channel. I can definitely relate to shooting yourself in the foot by making an unnecessarily complex design.
This is such a nice video, gives me stuff made here vibes. Keep up the good work my man. Hope to see stuff from you in the futute 😁
Wow. This was the best video I have seen for a beginner UA-camr. I did not know you could get companies to sponsor your school projects. Could you make a video of what you emailed the companies?
I went to your channel and saw that this is your first video and holy crap the production quality is phenomenal! I'm subscribed and cannot wait to see what you have in store for next! :D
Bro, mega Respekt!! Hättest volle Punktzahl verdient...💯 Fühl den Strucel
For anyone wondering, the 5 he got is equal to a B in American grading system. Great job dude!
Amazing work. Thank you for including all the mishaps and wrong choices, helps to learn for others mistakes.
basically just built an rc car wow good work though
Awsome video! I love to see enginnering at work!
Awesome video! Loved seeing all the hard work
This is actually fun to watch as someone having the same troubles as I did in the past :) Wonderful job! Tebrikler!
This was an awesome video! Looking forward to more!!
I want to be an engineer and am going to be a mechanical engineer, so this is awesome for me
Good job dude I hope we get to see more of you!
This project was honestly quite cool
The video is done so well your channel is too small for this kind of quality and deserves more subs!
Good job on the project and especially on the video. If it was me, on top of all the manufactoring mistakes i would also fuck up all the electronics multiple time and have to buy the 3x the planned ammount hahahah
I`m currently working on a big project myself and i know how it feels overwhelming, even tho it didn`t work the way you envisioned at first, i hope you learned a lot by making it.
As a tip and what i would typically do with something myself, and i`m pretty sure you realized this by this point, but try making a prototype first to make sure everything is working and then plan and build the mechanical parts, specially if you`re gonna use steel or aluminium, wich usually mean that once it's done, is hard to fix or remake stuff. I would have 3D printed a half scale maybe just to check everything and do the testing.
Good luck o your engeneering carrer and on youtube, and good job mate.
BTW, totally subscribed to your channel, i hope to see more videos in the future!
Thank you! It was an incredible experience (both good and horrible) and yes prototyping would have saved me aaa looot of struggle.
Nice Video and nice Robot! You definitely deserved a 6 for yoir dedication. Keep up the great work and dont forget tp have fun. -Nath
Congrats! I am your 1000th subscriber!
Hahaha nice. I was really happy to hit 1k :)
@@K3rim No problem man
This is super cool!!! Even if it wasn't perfect in the end the leaning potential from a project like this is insane.
Also I like the editing :)
It looks good. But I'm thinking one the size of a pallet for transporting large loads over a short distance for warehouse work. Autonomous of course.
Looking forward to this channel rocketing to stardom
Hey, this is a very cool project, you can also add range sensors to protect it from accidental collisions. For example, an ultrasonic rangefinder, or make a lidar
That‘s actually a good idea, altough it has 6 distance sensors, I just didn‘t have the time to program them. Lidar would be pretty cool, but it‘s sadly very expensive. I‘ll probably make a second video about this car. :)