How does Henrys build a Juggling club | Circus-expert.nl | Henrys Factory
Вставка
- Опубліковано 8 вер 2020
- Domenico shows how he makes a juggling club at Henrys.
Look for Henry's products at www.circus-expert.nl
Presenter: Daniel Simu
many thanks to Henrys for the unique look at their factory.
henrys never fails to provide the best quality juggling equipment :))
Henry, wunderbar dein Werk hier zu sehen! Ich habe es genossen, sie testen zu dürfen... Lang, lang ist's her...
My dream club sponsorship ❤️
I had the chance to do a factory tour in person one time and it was so great!
I love It 😍😍😍😍🇬🇳🇬🇳🇬🇳🇬🇳
Very interesting thank you! I've always wondered how they were made! I didn't expect that much automation to be honest
Very interesting, thank you!
Terrific! I really enjoyed this tour of Henry’s and the club construction demo.
Fascinating stuff! I always wanted to know how the clubs I juggle every day are made.
That is way larger then I expected the shop to be. I also would have thought the body production would be outsourced to a larger plastics manufacturer
When I see the process of how the product is made I find my self changing from "Why are clubs so expensive?" to "Wow, why are clubs so cheap!?"
Superb ❤️🔥
Very interesting. There's a lot more automation and bespoke machines than I would have expected for a relatively obscure product. I'm glad that they don't staple into the dowel any more. The only remaining issue for me is that screws are not designed to go into the end grain of the wood, which is why they often come loose and have to be replaced with a larger screw.
that's interesting about the screws not doing as well in the end grain. What would be better?
@@LARVAMOLT I have experimented with drilling a hole into the side of the dowel a short distance from each end. A dowel of about half the diameter is inserted and glued in place and then shaped to be flush with the main dowel. Now when you screw into the end of the dowel it will bite into the grain of the other dowel. I hope that makes sense. It doesn't change the weight or weaken the dowel (dowels normally break in the middle). It may take a bit longer in the factory, but I don't think it would be too slow with the right tools. The alternative is plastic dowels (Play) or just glue the knobs on (Renegade).
@@peterboneg Ohh I see what you're saying, that makes sense.
Sou malabarista 22anos e melhor clave q já vi e com a alma de polietileno cabeza de martilio
How can i work there??
I'd love that job ha ha
I still use a solid one piece set of clubs, kills your hands, I was surprised that the handle is such thin plastic wound around the wooden dowel. It must be much softer to catch than what I use..