most of these videos were made to train people (mainly women in ww2) who had never worked in the manufacturing sector before. they had to get the point across clearly and as fast as possible. the result is a good video. I make how-to videos and I've taken many notes from these.
Measuring is what I do for a living, and the tools you see in this video are still in use today as well as computer controlled CMM measuring machines, which I program. When you watch this video, please consider how just a few years earlier people were getting around using horses!! The technology developed fast........
It took a few centuries to get that far , They were making steam engines in the early 1700's That means they had some precision capabilities in at the least the late 1600's Most then were comparative readings , with calipers etc
It was the introduction of Statistical Process Control, a departure from the old GO/NO GO gauging system, which really controlled resultant measurements. Prior to SPC, a hole on top limit could lead to a 'loose' fit when matched with a shaft on bottom limit. Used SPC methods covering various critical components in production engineering.
@@Skullair313 No doubt, but all the car companies were doing this. The fact they are all proud enough to show off the engineering behind their vehicles makes contemporary versions pale in comparison. The narrators are just fun to listen to.
The ending was one of the most charming and adorable things iv'e seen in a while! It's like a little parade of instruments! Precision st. gauge ave. I love it! hehehe!
@@winkfield09 I started trade school in 1970 . retired now from tool work . I never worked to 2/100,000 . Tolerances that close and closer are usually on inspection equipment and they have different equipment than I used . A whole separate section of the trade. Also for that close of tolerances , temperature of the part when inspected will be part of the specifications,
There are so many things to say about this beautiful 1937 series of videos that I don't know where even to start. The tools to create the videos themselves weren't very advanced, yet you see cute marching tools at the end. Someone had to think of that. And if one transcribed the narration, it would forrm beautiful, proper writing. Then there's the perfect elocution of the narrator. And then, of course, the excellent educational subject of the recordings. Who would not be proud to have lived and contributed to that era. One can imagine families gathering around their TV sets or radios to see / hear one of these episodes. They are high quality productions, each beginning with a little story to inspire why the subject matters at all. They never insult your intelligence. And finally, the feats of technology themselves (i.e. the subjects of the recordings): Brilliant! All of these foundational things and pride in them have been lost. (._.) Thank you for these videos uploader. ❤️😊🙂
They say cars have improved since the 30s and Im sure in many respects that is true. I know one thing that has degraded since then and its the ability to produce a well edited, simple to understand, and extremely informative film such as this one. Nowadays Kids think the earth is flat and have no idea how anything works.
Uh... no You’ve obviously never seen Mustard. And it’s not the best effort by a multi-billion dollar company either.. it runs on sponsorship and donations. What’s interesting is... we know more about the time you lived through than you do.. and can spot your bullshit from a mile away. That’s why companies like GM don’t make this anymore. We know that back then they made these to pretend they cared abort the customer. Only a decade earlier, they’d introduced planned obsolescence to fleece their customers of their hard earned cash. Today? The average car in North America is 11 years old because nobody can afford to buy new. They made them well because Consumer Reports and social media will absolutely destroy any substandard quality. And when the profits don’t line up... the car executives spend money where it matters most-in Washington.
@@johndoe-so2ef This is what happens when Republicans in red states cut funding for education to the bone so they can produce stupid people who will unthinkingly vote for Republicans.
This is a chronicle of the "American System" of manufacturing that was pioneered by Eli Whitney and his system of interchangeable parts whose sizes were qualified by master gages. That system was perfected by the gun industry of Connecticut through the 1800's and transferred to the auto industry when GM hired Henry Leland to be chief engineer at Cadillac. If you walk through an inspection department at any manufacturing or engineering facility today, you can still see Rockwell hardness testers, precision dial indicators, and go/no-go gages. This is the bedrock on which America's industrial strength was built. By this system, auto manufacturers were able to build cars at low enough cost that anybody could afford to buy them.
Andy Harman The master standard is still the gage block, shown in the film. One step removed from the uniform system of weights and measures maintained by the federal government, also shown in the film.
They were mass producing things before Eli was born , He did not prefect mass production , Exampled ... rail road wheels and English ship hardware etc He never filled his 1st order for 10,000 guns because of quality control problems, H e had a more advanced concept , but it needed work .
I definitely would have felt very certain of choosing a career path in mechanics or machining if I had been shown films of this type and caliber while in grade school. Instead we had directionless and meaningless curriculum.
In his later days , my grandfather was a security guard at a chemical fertilizer company. I used to go to work with him at night , and we rode around on the golf Cart to go check the buildings and offices. One night , he took me into a huge room , in the main building/office , and it had a scale inside a glass/steel cabinet. It had tubes coming out of it , and some rubber gloves attached to the doors so you could do stuff with the scale , in a controlled environment. My grandfather said it was one of the most accurate scales in the state and that other companies and even state and federal businesses sent stuff there to get weighed/ tested. As a 10 year old, that was one of the coolest things I had ever seen......
I googled "Jam Handy." He was actually an Olympic Swimmer (who lived to age 97) who got into communications later. His professor, at the University of Michigan, lived almost as long.
All of these measuring devices permit mass manufacturing of fairly complicated automobiles within fine tolerances. Of course computers assist with much of this type of work today yet in 1937 this was state of the art in the automobile industry.
Well personally speaking .... I think most people these says frankly just don’t give a fuck how anything works or is made... they just wanna use it and be done with it ... and when it breaks go out and buy another new guaranteed piece of shit
I drove a '48 Chevy for quite some time. It had the 235 Cubic Inch 6. The engine had no oil pump, but got oil from little cups on the bottom of the crankshaft. It worked well with the lower speeds at the time it was built, but as speeds increased, the engine couldn't get enough oil to the engine. In '52, Chevy changed the engine to a more modern oil delivery system.
Both early and late 235s had oil pumps. On the early ones (53 and earlier, but up through 55 in some international applications), oil didn’t go to the rod bearings, only the mains and valve train.
I find it interesting that, even though there were proportionally more people involved in manufacturing, the need for this film shows that there was still a great deal of popular ignorance of practical science, much less theory. One may argue that scientists like Einstein were more renowned then, but I dare say few truly understood their work, just like today. While we may moan over our education system today, the ability to distribute and access this information is much better.
True...but, in the "Good Old Days" you had all those industrial sinecure jobs (coal mining, steel mills, and the auto, home appliance and electronic manufacturing.) NOW-if you can't make it with your "Brains or Brawn" you can join the fifteen million Americans who get paid minimum wage in the restaurant industry.
@@drpoundsign Also, except for the auto repair business, we are a "throw away' society. In "the good old days" we had repair shops that would even repair a $10 toaster. Think of all the jobs that were in the repair business, ALL GONE today!
We did OK in 1937. 1945 and WW2, gained a lot - but loss much over the years. Apollo 11 1969 and this video, only 32 years. Time frame 7:40. Nice. Need to find that newspaper. I am sure it is online somewhere.
This man is likely long dead now but if there is still a part of him that exists, it may help to know that now we have almost reached a point where all of our measurements have reached a point where we can now relate everything to physical laws. Once mass is finalized, we will have the ability to measure everything in relation to the standard model of particle physics meaning we will be able to precisely measure regardless of location in our universe.
They did not. They pretended to care to get the customers’ money. GM had just introduced planned obsolescence to the automobile world a decade earlier... forcing people to buy new cars if they were going to keep up with the times.
@@Bartonovich52 I don't believe in planned obsolesence. I do believe in material wear, i do believe in peoples decisions. The same cars you say as "obsolete"works by years, tens of years without problems when an correct maintenance is done in other coutries beside USA.
At least these were well done. Some TV commercials today after watching you don't even know what they were advertising. Also they are silly, and geared for the teens who don't necessarily buy anyway.
5 yrs later this technology and the advances made in those 5yrs is what we went to WW II with. The knowledge, (along with Von Braun) gained during the war is what led to the America that was the envy and the symbol of freedom and DEMOCRACY to the world post WWII. In the 50's all that cumulative knowledge gave rise to the Industrial Military Complex that Eisenhower warned against. And here we are.......
4:32 The old Argonaut Building in Detroit. From Wikipedia: The , renamed in 2009 the A. Alfred Taubman Center for Design Education (originally the Argonaut, or General Motors Research Laboratory), is a large office building located at 485 West Milwaukee Avenue in the New Center area of Detroit, Michigan, across the street from Cadillac Place. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2005.
Lol. Compared to when this film was made. Literacy rates are higher. High school graduation rates are higher. Degree completion is higher. Kids are learning things in Grade 8 that this generation were learning in Grade 12 if they finished it. If you really want to go back in time as far as education goes... go to rural Mississippi... or Somali.
No, they haven't actually. An American car made in 1937 had a life expectancy of about a decade. My 2004 GMC Sierra 2500 HD Duramax Diesel runs as good as it did the day it was built almost 17 years ago. I've never had to pay for anything beyond regular maintenance.
Adam Kowalski not a single person voted for it and every poll done since mass migration started from the 3rd world has shown the native population has been against it. It’s been forced on the native population. It was not something we ever asked for or agreed to.
@@PibrochPonder Same here in America!!! Houston sounds and looks like Mexico and Mecca!!! Not like the city I grew up in!!! We NEVER HAD A VOTE TO CHANGE OUR POPULATION!!! This was forced apon us and if we objected we were labeled a racist!!! So no I agree with you, we did not do this to ourselves, the POLITICIAN DID!!!
British and European car manufactures in the '30's understood and employed very tight tolerances, the idea that Chevrolet was a leader in accuracy is hilarious.
The only reason you think things like precision measuring are boring is because you had a bad teacher. It takes a real fuckup to get the drama of human history, the highs, lows, the bloody battles and amazing achievements of the human mind and make kids just glaze over because you couldn't do your fucking job.
Now computers CNC machining does all this precision measurments. Unbeliveable just how accurate the computer programming can complete such exacting measurements.
Give me that rope ye piker! I’ll not be cheated of my sesterces. Why this marketplace is full of cheats. I’ll take my business elsewhere if you don’t mind. Where they don’t guild the lily so to fleece me of my coinage. Come on down to Madam Ursula’s common market where you don’t have to barter for a square deal. Our squash gourds are the finest anywhere. Now you’re just splitting hairs. That metal was so thin it only had one side. Small wonder once they put it under a microscope 🔬. The drums of war were sounding, or so it seemed, it was just that little girl.
Call me a documentary nerd but I love this old stuff. Mechanical machining😊 and one precision tool has to be better to make a better precision machining tool down to the tolerance that they are after
I know modern engineering is pretty precise but I think if they still did these checks our cars would be more reliable today that's the difference they used to verify build quality of every part they don't do that now
These were all part of GM's 'mass-selling' technique (there's actually a GM dealer training video on UA-cam which explains it). This films would have been shown in movie theaters, schools, factories and workplaces as genuinely educational short features but they more subtly emphasised all the good qualities of a Chevy and built up the public perception of the cars. So the film about the differential gear is a very good way of explaining why the diff is needed, how it works and what effect it has but makes sure to end by pointing out that the new GM hypoid differential is the best ever and because of it the '37 Chevrolet has a flat cabin floor, or whatever. Very clever marketing!
When a pre WW2 ad turns out to be more entertaining and educational than many modern videos.
most of these videos were made to train people (mainly women in ww2) who had never worked in the manufacturing sector before.
they had to get the point across clearly and as fast as possible.
the result is a good video.
I make how-to videos and I've taken many notes from these.
Man I'm addicted to these old videos!
Measuring is what I do for a living, and the tools you see in this video are still in use today as well as computer controlled CMM measuring machines, which I program. When you watch this video, please consider how just a few years earlier people were getting around using horses!! The technology developed fast........
IronClad292 The thought and origins of the measuring technology is very interesting.
It took a few centuries to get that far , They were making steam engines in the early 1700's That means they had some precision capabilities in at the least the late 1600's Most then were comparative readings , with calipers etc
It was the introduction of Statistical Process Control, a departure from the old GO/NO GO gauging system, which
really controlled resultant measurements. Prior to SPC, a hole on top limit could lead to a 'loose' fit when matched with a shaft on bottom limit. Used SPC methods covering various critical components in production engineering.
"Measure what is measurable, and make measurable what is not so"
Galileo Galilei
And, consider when people wiped their asses with corn cobs. Hope they at least ate the corn first.
“To aid him in determining the extent of his possessions and purchases”. Ah man these videos are truly from another era, I love it.
I also enjoy "forerunner of modern coinage"
I love how stern the narrators were back then, how optimistic they were.
@Take the red pill I'll pray for you.
Don't forget that this is a commercial that aims to generate positive feelings towards chevy
@@Skullair313 No doubt, but all the car companies were doing this. The fact they are all proud enough to show off the engineering behind their vehicles makes contemporary versions pale in comparison. The narrators are just fun to listen to.
This was in the middle of the Depression…
Press esc to go back
The ending was one of the most charming and adorable things iv'e seen in a while! It's like a little parade of instruments! Precision st. gauge ave. I love it! hehehe!
I laughed when I saw it. It was awesome.
Pink Floyd must have watched it.
@@skuula That is exactly what I thought as I watched it.
Watch "Autolite On Parade" It is on You Tube
Back from an era when a skilled Tool & Die Maker was a master craftsmen!
who couldn't hold 0.0002in. tolerance for the life of them
@@winkfield09 those are rookie numbers... try 0.00001
@@winkfield09 I started trade school in 1970 . retired now from tool work . I never worked to 2/100,000 . Tolerances that close and closer are usually on inspection equipment and they have different equipment than I used . A whole separate section of the trade. Also for that close of tolerances , temperature of the part when inspected will be part of the specifications,
I’m 26 and I love watching these!
These old Chevy videos are still gold!
There are so many things to say about this beautiful 1937 series of videos that I don't know where even to start. The tools to create the videos themselves weren't very advanced, yet you see cute marching tools at the end. Someone had to think of that. And if one transcribed the narration, it would forrm beautiful, proper writing. Then there's the perfect elocution of the narrator. And then, of course, the excellent educational subject of the recordings. Who would not be proud to have lived and contributed to that era. One can imagine families gathering around their TV sets or radios to see / hear one of these episodes. They are high quality productions, each beginning with a little story to inspire why the subject matters at all. They never insult your intelligence. And finally, the feats of technology themselves (i.e. the subjects of the recordings): Brilliant!
All of these foundational things and pride in them have been lost.
(._.)
Thank you for these videos uploader. ❤️😊🙂
They say cars have improved since the 30s and Im sure in many respects that is true. I know one thing that has degraded since then and its the ability to produce a well edited, simple to understand, and extremely informative film such as this one. Nowadays Kids think the earth is flat and have no idea how anything works.
Sea Coast yep, that’s what I keep saying. I feel these old videos are far better educational tools than most of the much-more-modern stuff.
Uh... no
You’ve obviously never seen Mustard. And it’s not the best effort by a multi-billion dollar company either.. it runs on sponsorship and donations.
What’s interesting is... we know more about the time you lived through than you do.. and can spot your bullshit from a mile away.
That’s why companies like GM don’t make this anymore. We know that back then they made these to pretend they cared abort the customer. Only a decade earlier, they’d introduced planned obsolescence to fleece their customers of their hard earned cash.
Today? The average car in North America is 11 years old because nobody can afford to buy new. They made them well because Consumer Reports and social media will absolutely destroy any substandard quality. And when the profits don’t line up... the car executives spend money where it matters most-in Washington.
That's what happens when liberals run your education system and school unions....
@@johndoe-so2ef This is what happens when Republicans in red states cut funding for education to the bone so they can produce stupid people who will unthinkingly vote for Republicans.
@@sd31263 Okay democrat garbage.
This is a chronicle of the "American System" of manufacturing that was pioneered by Eli Whitney and his system of interchangeable parts whose sizes were qualified by master gages. That system was perfected by the gun industry of Connecticut through the 1800's and transferred to the auto industry when GM hired Henry Leland to be chief engineer at Cadillac. If you walk through an inspection department at any manufacturing or engineering facility today, you can still see Rockwell hardness testers, precision dial indicators, and go/no-go gages. This is the bedrock on which America's industrial strength was built. By this system, auto manufacturers were able to build cars at low enough cost that anybody could afford to buy them.
Andy Harman The master standard is still the gage block, shown in the film. One step removed from the uniform system of weights and measures maintained by the federal government, also shown in the film.
They were mass producing things before Eli was born , He did not prefect mass production , Exampled ... rail road wheels and English ship hardware etc He never filled his 1st order for 10,000 guns because of quality control problems, H e had a more advanced concept , but it needed work .
I definitely would have felt very certain of choosing a career path in mechanics or machining if I had been shown films of this type and caliber while in grade school. Instead we had directionless and meaningless curriculum.
I didn't know what a machinist was until I was in my late 20's.
In his later days , my grandfather was a security guard at a chemical fertilizer company. I used to go to work with him at night , and we rode around on the golf Cart to go check the buildings and offices. One night , he took me into a huge room , in the main building/office , and it had a scale inside a glass/steel cabinet. It had tubes coming out of it , and some rubber gloves attached to the doors so you could do stuff with the scale , in a controlled environment. My grandfather said it was one of the most accurate scales in the state and that other companies and even state and federal businesses sent stuff there to get weighed/ tested. As a 10 year old, that was one of the coolest things I had ever seen......
Wow, even the arabic bazaar sketch has them speaking proper arabic (at least when they're counting). Attention to detail!
Okay after watching this, Now have to go watch a old machinist film. Seeing them machining things to those tight tolerances by hand is always good.
I googled "Jam Handy." He was actually an Olympic Swimmer (who lived to age 97) who got into communications later. His professor, at the University of Michigan, lived almost as long.
When I worked at Boston Scientific, despite all of the digital instruments, we always used Go/No Go pins to measure the I.D. of the catheters we made.
All of these measuring devices permit mass manufacturing of fairly complicated automobiles within fine tolerances. Of course computers assist with much of this type of work today yet in 1937 this was state of the art in the automobile industry.
This was back in the day when the average Joe would marvel at such technology. Now, we just take it for granted.
Well personally speaking .... I think most people these says frankly just don’t give a fuck how anything works or is made... they just wanna use it and be done with it ... and when it breaks go out and buy another new guaranteed piece of shit
Just think about how amazed those engineers would be now with tolerance in mass production.
The labs at GM look like nice places to work. The factories were hell holes in '37.
Rob Mackenzie people were grateful to be working. The awful taste of The Great Depression was still in most people’s mouths.
I drove a '48 Chevy for quite some time. It had the 235 Cubic Inch 6. The engine had no oil pump, but got oil from little cups on the bottom of the crankshaft. It worked well with the lower speeds at the time it was built, but as speeds increased, the engine couldn't get enough oil to the engine. In '52, Chevy changed the engine to a more modern oil delivery system.
mistertraveler71930 dipper rods
Both early and late 235s had oil pumps. On the early ones (53 and earlier, but up through 55 in some international applications), oil didn’t go to the rod bearings, only the mains and valve train.
@@dougherbert7899 "splash lubrication" like the low end B&S engines
Notice that Chevrolet very carefully does not mention Johanson blocks (A thing associated with the Ford Corporation).
Who is that narrator? He is very motivated. Seems to genuinely like his job. He is talking to the future and he is talking with real pride.
"WHY?!! WHY must MY speech be made shorter?!"
- Guy who put the mud in the water clock to cheat the next speaker
I find it interesting that, even though there were proportionally more people involved in manufacturing, the need for this film shows that there was still a great deal of popular ignorance of practical science, much less theory. One may argue that scientists like Einstein were more renowned then, but I dare say few truly understood their work, just like today. While we may moan over our education system today, the ability to distribute and access this information is much better.
True...but, in the "Good Old Days" you had all those industrial sinecure jobs (coal mining, steel mills, and the auto, home appliance and electronic manufacturing.) NOW-if you can't make it with your "Brains or Brawn" you can join the fifteen million Americans who get paid minimum wage in the restaurant industry.
@@drpoundsign you don't even have to be smart to get a decent degree and job.
@@drpoundsign Also, except for the auto repair business, we are a "throw away' society. In "the good old days" we had repair shops that would even repair a $10 toaster. Think of all the jobs that were in the repair business, ALL GONE today!
16:31 "actually it is the sound of a human heart!"
Interesting to think there was a time when the sound of a heart wasn't universally known.
The stop-actionphotography at the end of the film was quite well done. It was also used in other GM films.
These kind of presentations were on '50s TV often. I still remember some Autolite ads that had "marching" spark plugs.
All the measurements....and not once is the metric system mentioned. :-)
We have the knowledge and technology to be excellent, all we require is the will.
We did OK in 1937. 1945 and WW2, gained a lot - but loss much over the years. Apollo 11 1969 and this video, only 32 years.
Time frame 7:40. Nice. Need to find that newspaper. I am sure it is online somewhere.
Films from the days of success, the whole time feels like we understand and can control our world and material in it.
I was hoping to hear the "half a bees dick " unit of measurement.
I was born too late... This era must have been fascinating to live in. As long as you were a highly educated mechanical engineer...
You would've been a bum back then
Jam Handy films are cool.
Back when we did for ourselves.....
i did myself last nite inda shower, & again this morn.
This man is likely long dead now but if there is still a part of him that exists, it may help to know that now we have almost reached a point where all of our measurements have reached a point where we can now relate everything to physical laws.
Once mass is finalized, we will have the ability to measure everything in relation to the standard model of particle physics meaning we will be able to precisely measure regardless of location in our universe.
I expected one no-go car in the end. But that would've left viewers with a negative taste of course.
You learn more in this video than in 3 months of public schooling, lol.
I love it. simply amazing, and the Arabs at the beginning are actually speaking Arabic.😃😃😃
0:54 Me laughing at these people for the way of measuring things, while also me using a King’s foot to measure all my things.
It's a pretty amazing achievement for that time. At the same time then and today we cannot get body panels to fit correctly.
It's these kinds of films that made me decide to become an engineer.
This video is totally AWESOME! Thank you very much!
The time when a company really care about their customers.
They did not.
They pretended to care to get the customers’ money.
GM had just introduced planned obsolescence to the automobile world a decade earlier... forcing people to buy new cars if they were going to keep up with the times.
@@Bartonovich52 I don't believe in planned obsolesence. I do believe in material wear, i do believe in peoples decisions. The same cars you say as "obsolete"works by years, tens of years without problems when an correct maintenance is done in other coutries beside USA.
How do you know they really cared about their customers? This is a Chevrolet propaganda film!
I liked the little parade if precise instruments at the end.
At least these were well done. Some TV commercials today after watching you don't even know what they were advertising. Also they are silly, and geared for the teens who don't necessarily buy anyway.
5 yrs later this technology and the advances made in those 5yrs is what we went to WW II with. The knowledge, (along with Von Braun) gained during the war is what led to the America that was the envy and the symbol of freedom and DEMOCRACY to the world post WWII.
In the 50's all that cumulative knowledge gave rise to the Industrial Military Complex that Eisenhower warned against. And here we are.......
I think they put mud in the water clock at my grade school.
4:32 The old Argonaut Building in Detroit.
From Wikipedia: The , renamed in 2009 the A. Alfred Taubman Center for Design Education (originally the Argonaut, or General Motors Research Laboratory), is a large office building located at 485 West Milwaukee Avenue in the New Center area of Detroit, Michigan, across the street from Cadillac Place. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2005.
IT turned into the cartoon part from Pink FLoyd The wall there at the end
you tend to think that 1930 technology was stone age but most was as good as today
Thanks for the legit OG aladdin intro
I think GM needs to go back and watch their old ads. Could learn a thing or two .
Especially regarding oil consumption in their engines.
Auto manufacturing and tolerance.
Two words that should never be in the same sentence.
😂 I’ll airbrush “precisely so” on my tail gate after my ls conversion. Single cam engine producing hundreds of horsepower and torque.
Nice
You're 100% correct.
The school system must be changed for the health of the individual and the country.
I hereby say I will do it!!!
seth917 the government does not want that ..... they want brain dead dependent people that are Barely capable of running the machines
Lol.
Compared to when this film was made.
Literacy rates are higher.
High school graduation rates are higher.
Degree completion is higher.
Kids are learning things in Grade 8 that this generation were learning in Grade 12 if they finished it.
If you really want to go back in time as far as education goes... go to rural Mississippi... or Somali.
Very good. I'm glad I didn't live next to this big mouth when he was rehearsing.
That straight 6 is still running today thanks to craftsmanship of those days now they design for brake downs and know when its going to brake lmao
Lord knows the auto industry never tried to cheat anyone, even then.
Muricans now : " So, 8 millionths of an inch.. how small is it compared to a football field? "
USA is great country.
Yeah... not things like genocide, slavery, and land theft.
Thanks to our president, we are making it the greatness we never weren't! MAGA, AGAIN!!!
It was Napoleon who installed the Metric system in Europe.
So archaic. Inches, pounds, ounces.
I have a 37 chevy firetruck built on the 1.5 ton Master chassis
GM has managed to unlearn all this lately...
No, they haven't actually. An American car made in 1937 had a life expectancy of about a decade. My 2004 GMC Sierra 2500 HD Duramax Diesel runs as good as it did the day it was built almost 17 years ago. I've never had to pay for anything beyond regular maintenance.
@@sd31263 Also, what really extended the life of a car is better lubricants. The Chemistry of oil and lube has improved significantly since 1937.
When US manufacturing took pride in their work
Before the UAW, in other words.
@@jshepard152 unions didnt kill manufacturing, bad products did, outmoded designs
Because that High School/Trade School Grad was confident of his destiny, a Home ($6,000), a car...
That first bit looks like some areas of modern day London!! Very sad
Adam Kowalski not a single person voted for it and every poll done since mass migration started from the 3rd world has shown the native population has been against it. It’s been forced on the native population. It was not something we ever asked for or agreed to.
@@PibrochPonder Same here in America!!! Houston sounds and looks like Mexico and Mecca!!! Not like the city I grew up in!!! We NEVER HAD A VOTE TO CHANGE OUR POPULATION!!! This was forced apon us and if we objected we were labeled a racist!!! So no I agree with you, we did not do this to ourselves, the POLITICIAN DID!!!
Yep....Sad... Traitor politicians
Wont be lone till we all are eating gyros instead of burgers
@@mickjones8757 Burger King just dropped Ham out of Hamburger in South Africa so not to offend the Muslims who have decided to MOVE THERE!!!
Around 6 min; that hair was not magnified thousands of times. Maybe 100x
British and European car manufactures in the '30's understood and employed very tight tolerances, the idea that Chevrolet was a leader in accuracy is hilarious.
Well, it was a USA/American patriotic thing. The spirit of positive competition, each proclaims, "I am the best!" - in the end, everybody wins.
They took something as boring as rulers and gauges and made it fun to learn about.
The only reason you think things like precision measuring are boring is because you had a bad teacher. It takes a real fuckup to get the drama of human history, the highs, lows, the bloody battles and amazing achievements of the human mind and make kids just glaze over because you couldn't do your fucking job.
@@sunshadow7XK What I said was a joke, hahaa. Its YT, don't take things to seriously here.
@Ralph Goober no, but thanks for the suggestion
@@GoogleUser-sk5tn It isn't a jab at you, so much as the people who taught you.
@@sunshadow7XK Gotcha. I had one enthusiastic math teacher. He made the subject fun for everyone.
This is incredible for 1937.
Now computers CNC machining does all this precision measurments. Unbeliveable just how accurate the computer programming can complete such exacting measurements.
All without taking a single "sick day".....
These videos are so good 🗿🗿🗿🗿🗿🗿🗿
I’ve watched so many of these I want a Chevrolet
Bloomberg is a skidmark on America's shorts...... And apparently he has no idea how good we're doing in ohio!
You are true manufacturers..
This is from the America our English forefathers intended.
At the beginning of this video I was waiting for the three stooges to show up! 🙈
Interesting Video
Give me that rope ye piker! I’ll not be cheated of my sesterces. Why this marketplace is full of cheats. I’ll take my business elsewhere if you don’t mind. Where they don’t guild the lily so to fleece me of my coinage.
Come on down to Madam Ursula’s common market where you don’t have to barter for a square deal. Our squash gourds are the finest anywhere.
Now you’re just splitting hairs.
That metal was so thin it only had one side. Small wonder once they put it under a microscope 🔬.
The drums of war were sounding, or so it seemed, it was just that little girl.
I would never imagine that this was already going on in 1937!!
Fast forwarding to 2019,surely it be something! am not calling it Shurley lol
That was so awesome.
"They" were better than us.
How much does a pound of feathers weigh ?
Call me a documentary nerd but I love this old stuff. Mechanical machining😊 and one precision tool has to be better to make a better precision machining tool down to the tolerance that they are after
I know modern engineering is pretty precise but I think if they still did these checks our cars would be more reliable today that's the difference they used to verify build quality of every part they don't do that now
Where would these movies be shown back in 1937?
These were all part of GM's 'mass-selling' technique (there's actually a GM dealer training video on UA-cam which explains it). This films would have been shown in movie theaters, schools, factories and workplaces as genuinely educational short features but they more subtly emphasised all the good qualities of a Chevy and built up the public perception of the cars. So the film about the differential gear is a very good way of explaining why the diff is needed, how it works and what effect it has but makes sure to end by pointing out that the new GM hypoid differential is the best ever and because of it the '37 Chevrolet has a flat cabin floor, or whatever. Very clever marketing!
In movie theaters
after all these year,
science film state that facts remains
SEE,we've had advanced tech for YEARS.The USA mang!!!
How can the day starts at 1:00 and there is no astronomical sign?
that libra is the awesomest
I bought a set of Mitoyo calipers while watching this lol
Chevy talks about tolerances... Germany left the room.
GM, Boeing and Grumman talked about tolerances in 1944. Germany was blown out of the room.
@@bigblocklawyer oh, did someone get salty about a little fun? The pain must be huge...
So, what's with the dancing instruments?
two football fields divided by cadillac=standard
Who makes the machines that makes the machines :o
... Could That Be The Scottish Actor "John Laurie" Of 'Dad's Army' & Huggin's Of Films.. The Chap Measuring The Rope…🤔🏴✌️1:05
12 hours, 60 minutes and so on. Did they asked themself who and when in history used a base of 12 or 60 ?
we still use that vase in telling time