@@hughjanus6975a lot of the older videos from the 1980's and 90's weren't digitized originally. I think the op meant that the videos are now available on the internet for public use.
I know a lot of people want to see a How It's Made segment about the manufacturing machines themselves, but I can safely say (as someone who works in manufacturing) that the majority of those machines are custom built for the job. In other words they're completely unique. I'm sure there are some high-demand machines they could cover, but those would be hard to find. Edit: Case in point, that tablet press has quite a few uses in both medicine and candy, like what we see with the mints, so that one could certainly get a segment.
One of my clients is an engineer who makes those machines and we were talking about how long it takes to go from idea, to successfully making the product and it's a long process. I feel like any machine would be awesome to see, not just.the ones that have the ability to make multiple items such as the candy/pills one. Btw, I think.its funny that two items that you definitely don't want to mix up comes from the same machine lol .
I think they could do a series. Start with conveyer belts, chain drives, air actuators ect. They have most of the machinery making documented already, it would be a matter of dedicating an episode to each "industry" Chip/ Auto/Food/Alum extrusion ect...
@@jeffreystarks Machines are amazing. My Step Dad was an engineer with RJR. One of the most impressive machines I ever saw was a Cigarette roller. Tobacco in one end, an entire overhead array for incoming paper, fet, glue, foil and cardboard at marriage. Cases of cigarettes out the back packed and ready to ship. It was 500 feet from end to end with 3/4 mile of channel and trai in a 12 ft X 10 ft x 500 ft package. The whole process took 16 seconds and in that time it would spit out 3000 rolled cigarettes for an average of 12,000 per min.. Each machine was Designed and built in Germany by Fauke. The machine was assigned an engineer who would fully assemble the machine on site as it was built. . He then traveled wherever that machine went for the rest of its life of his employment in the field. . My Step Dad destructed, and rebuilt his machine. (FK12k) 5 times in 35 years. Germany to England, England to Winston Salem NC, Wnst to Richmond, Rch to Singapore, Sgp to Jakarta, where it resides today. I still have the Winston Salem Warehouse Brass on my wall. It was a line graph/Sinewave plaque of the frequency of the Building and the two dotted waves the machine was supposed to stay in. The 3- 12 ton rollers/cutter mills turned at 22krpm, so naturally, it roared when at full speed. They were more than impressive though. He once made an adjustment with a 5 foot long allen key that had a dial indicator on in.. A noise I didn't notice, disappeared, the whole room was just different. . He had some stories too. I wish I still had the pictures and video of the "RJR Disaster".. His colleague put off a fix..That resulted in the roller tossing a blade, So-- This 500 foot long machine had pulled itself loose from the flooring anchors. (56- 3/4 bolts) shrunk by 40 feet in length as the roller/cutter box, went full- washing machine with a brick in it, . It took flight and folded up and over the marriage section... it pulled the loading box, the first set of shredders and 30 feet of hopper (+3 tons of tobacco and 25 tons of machinery) along for the ride like a train of destruction behind it. It was all over in less than 10 seconds but, it was still unnervingly slow given the size. Impressive, does not really fit that. XP.
I love to fall asleep to these. I remember when I'd go to my godfathers house I'd always spend super early mornings watching this while intermittently napping until it finally got daylight enough I could get in my 4 foot deep little pool in his backyard. Then in the afternoon I'd watch it while I ate lunch and then I'd take another nap because I was only 7 and a pool made me tired especially after spending 3 hours jumping and splashing and doing tricks
It's incredible to see the step-by-step production process of items we use daily but often take for granted. From medical tape to toothbrushes, each product results from a complex process. This video is super informative and captivating
The tissue segment reminded me of how various paper products used to be available in different colors. Tissues, toilet paper, paper towels-- all came in a variety of colors from about the 1960's until the 1980's. I'm not sure why that stopped.
I had completely forgotten about coloured tissues, etc. When I was a kid, my grandma would sometimes buy me pink Kleenex. The pink tissue was a little luxury that took a bit of the sting out of being stuck with a cold. Thank you for reminding me 😃
@@MaximilianonMars Yes, I suppose. I remember, when I bought my first home that had a septic tank rather than being hooked up to a sewer (in 1987), I was warned not to use colored tissues or toilet paper as they did not break down as well.
This was very insightful, enjoyable and educational.Thank you very much, I really love and appreciate these video's, praying for all those who made this from start to Finnish. Be blessed.
I burned my leg on a motorcycle, and when my stepmom and her mom ran out of actual bandages, they used paper towels and wrapped my leg up with it, and taped it to keep it on. I still have the scar. Never wear shorts when riding a motorcycle.
@rebekahsearcy8986 My uncle used to race bikes in the 70s. He had a thing for wearing polyester underwear and apparently has the scars where they melted into his skin when he had an accident. My grandmother had to try to peel the polyester from his butt
I really enjoyed this video, it's fascinating to see how everyday items are made. However, I can't help but think that using so much plastic in hygiene products is pretty counterproductive for the environment. It would be great to see more sustainable options highlighted in future episodes. What do you all think?
I do find it weird not hearing Tony’s voice while watching these, but they were narrated by different people in each country. I only just learned that How it’s Made was a Canadian programme.
رحم الله شهيد الكويت الحبيبه الطيار النقيب محمد محمود عبد الرسول، هو بذاته و باستشهاده يمثل وسام على صدر كل المسلمين يوحدهم و لا يكفرهم، و لا يفرقهم و لا يضعفهم، استشهد في خدمة وطنه و دينه و اسرته.
Anyone else catch onto the part where packaging those band-aids in air tight packaging doesn't even remotely make them "sterile"? Good to know. I mean the one worker was just feeding the machine with their bare hands. How are these "sterile" if there's already germs on them in the first place?
They didn't say the air-tight packaging was what sterilized the bandages. They were probably sterilized by heat. Sometimes they don't show footage of some steps due to time constraints.
Common misconception.... Brits have the best dentistry in the world, we just don't spend thousands on our teeth like Americans do because we are not that vain
I clicked without paying much attention thinking it was "How is actually made", found the voice a little different but just really noticed when there were no jokes The turn really tables sometimes
lol, no. It’s called Muzak and is just widely available ip copyright music used for lobbys, telephone hold systems, old computer programs, waiting rooms, elevators, tv shows, and restrooms back in the day. It’s like the 90s and older version of lofi mood music and none of it was AI.
@@Dutch.W I know what Muzak is, and in contrast to some of the music used here, it's unobtrusive. Because that's the aim of Muzak, being unobtrusive and not going on one's nerves.
I'm so happy How It's Made has been digitalized. Loads of memories of watching the episodes are coming back; and now in full HD! haha
It's always been an HD "digital" show, I remember watching it on a 720p flat screen in 2009.
@@hughjanus6975a lot of the older videos from the 1980's and 90's weren't digitized originally. I think the op meant that the videos are now available on the internet for public use.
The narrator is worser
Go back to writing class
I used to watch this show with my grandma and my brother when we would visit before bed.
I know a lot of people want to see a How It's Made segment about the manufacturing machines themselves, but I can safely say (as someone who works in manufacturing) that the majority of those machines are custom built for the job. In other words they're completely unique. I'm sure there are some high-demand machines they could cover, but those would be hard to find.
Edit: Case in point, that tablet press has quite a few uses in both medicine and candy, like what we see with the mints, so that one could certainly get a segment.
But it could be interesting to see the whole process of designing then actually building these unique machines
One of my clients is an engineer who makes those machines and we were talking about how long it takes to go from idea, to successfully making the product and it's a long process. I feel like any machine would be awesome to see, not just.the ones that have the ability to make multiple items such as the candy/pills one.
Btw, I think.its funny that two items that you definitely don't want to mix up comes from the same machine lol .
I think they could do a series. Start with conveyer belts, chain drives, air actuators ect. They have most of the machinery making documented already, it would be a matter of dedicating an episode to each "industry" Chip/ Auto/Food/Alum extrusion ect...
@@jeffreystarks Machines are amazing. My Step Dad was an engineer with RJR. One of the most impressive machines I ever saw was a Cigarette roller. Tobacco in one end, an entire overhead array for incoming paper, fet, glue, foil and cardboard at marriage. Cases of cigarettes out the back packed and ready to ship. It was 500 feet from end to end with 3/4 mile of channel and trai in a 12 ft X 10 ft x 500 ft package. The whole process took 16 seconds and in that time it would spit out 3000 rolled cigarettes for an average of 12,000 per min.. Each machine was Designed and built in Germany by Fauke. The machine was assigned an engineer who would fully assemble the machine on site as it was built. . He then traveled wherever that machine went for the rest of its life of his employment in the field. . My Step Dad destructed, and rebuilt his machine. (FK12k) 5 times in 35 years. Germany to England, England to Winston Salem NC, Wnst to Richmond, Rch to Singapore, Sgp to Jakarta, where it resides today. I still have the Winston Salem Warehouse Brass on my wall. It was a line graph/Sinewave plaque of the frequency of the Building and the two dotted waves the machine was supposed to stay in. The 3- 12 ton rollers/cutter mills turned at 22krpm, so naturally, it roared when at full speed. They were more than impressive though. He once made an adjustment with a 5 foot long allen key that had a dial indicator on in.. A noise I didn't notice, disappeared, the whole room was just different. . He had some stories too. I wish I still had the pictures and video of the "RJR Disaster".. His colleague put off a fix..That resulted in the roller tossing a blade, So-- This 500 foot long machine had pulled itself loose from the flooring anchors. (56- 3/4 bolts) shrunk by 40 feet in length as the roller/cutter box, went full- washing machine with a brick in it, . It took flight and folded up and over the marriage section... it pulled the loading box, the first set of shredders and 30 feet of hopper (+3 tons of tobacco and 25 tons of machinery) along for the ride like a train of destruction behind it. It was all over in less than 10 seconds but, it was still unnervingly slow given the size. Impressive, does not really fit that. XP.
filling machine?
I love to fall asleep to these. I remember when I'd go to my godfathers house I'd always spend super early mornings watching this while intermittently napping until it finally got daylight enough I could get in my 4 foot deep little pool in his backyard. Then in the afternoon I'd watch it while I ate lunch and then I'd take another nap because I was only 7 and a pool made me tired especially after spending 3 hours jumping and splashing and doing tricks
Arevyou a female?
U seem just as lonely as I am to fall at sleep only if using How it's made narration
😂 no female can bare that. I Know....youre a male, a used one
@@Davincifier😬😬😬😬
@@Davincifier🤪
Digitisation complete with de-interlacing artefacts. I'm so happy this series is finally making it to UA-cam.
What?
Either I'm high or the bandaid backing track was lit af
I am high and it's definitely lit asf
I'm not high and though it was lit, so is not just you
The music composer went hard for no reason. Sounds like a DBZ track
That whole soundtrack is honestly better than it needs to be. So much extra personality is infused into the segments by the music.
fr it is fire
It's incredible to see the step-by-step production process of items we use daily but often take for granted. From medical tape to toothbrushes, each product results from a complex process. This video is super informative and captivating
The tissue segment reminded me of how various paper products used to be available in different colors. Tissues, toilet paper, paper towels-- all came in a variety of colors from about the 1960's until the 1980's. I'm not sure why that stopped.
I had completely forgotten about coloured tissues, etc. When I was a kid, my grandma would sometimes buy me pink Kleenex. The pink tissue was a little luxury that took a bit of the sting out of being stuck with a cold. Thank you for reminding me 😃
Cost, environmental concerns, dangerous dyes? Just guesses.
@@MaximilianonMars Yes, I suppose. I remember, when I bought my first home that had a septic tank rather than being hooked up to a sewer (in 1987), I was warned not to use colored tissues or toilet paper as they did not break down as well.
I had this memory that I wasn't sure was real of my grandmother having pink toilet paper. Now I know I wasn't imagining it😂
Love having them upload old videos!
Would love to have the sound adjusted for the music turned down.
Bought my Wahl clippers in 2001. Haven't paid for a haircut since and still using the same device!
Raise your hand if you’re autistic and as a child this was one of your favorite shows 🙋🏽♀️
Nah that’s facts😂 my aunt used to watch the science channel a lot and how it’s made always came up. You could never forget his voice 😂💯
Dont need to be Autistic to enjoy this show. just need to be curious of how things are made.
this is true nostagic
Hand 🤚🏽
We need this show to never stop
I love how he said exactly what everybody was thinking. We use them to clean our ears even though doctors say not to.
Doctors say not to put them in the ear canal. Did you not hear what the narrator said?
That circular saw for the tissues is terrifying.
Kind of hilarious to have such a horrifying saw of instant death just to cut tissue paper
Most spinning/rotating machinery can be absolutely horrifying. I’ve seen some of those videos too. Haha.
Loved sitting down with my dad to watch how its made over dinner as a kid. Now I fall asleep to it for nostalgia
Thank you for making a LONG episode!!!! 🥰🥰🥰
The music is so groovy for no reason and I’m here for it😂
I love this show. I haven't seen this one. I'm really glad it's a longer one. So many are less than ten minutes. ❤
Yess, ty for this Science channel, this is on of the best shows on History!
They make 4billion bandages a year and I can never find one when I need it at home.
You’re not doing enough shopping..!!
I'm digin' that groooooovy beat in the tweezer part!!!!!!
I dated a guy who decided to torrent every episode of how its made ever created. The download lasted longer than our relationship.
You must do stand-up.
The backing track at the beginning of the electric shaver segment went crazy 😮
Loved this show growing up love it more now
This was very insightful, enjoyable and educational.Thank you very much, I really love and appreciate these video's, praying for all those who made this from start to Finnish. Be blessed.
Micro-plastics all around, please!
Good to watch this great show again
I want to see an episode that explains how all of these production machines are made
"logs. Lots of birch logs." SIR I CANT BREATHE WHY ARE YOU SO SASSY
Some of those toothpicks falls out before the package get closed! Are they sure there is exactly 650 toothpicks in those closed packages 😛
thats what i was thinking!! so sloppy D;
@@briclinansmith3185 it’s like a baker’s dozen. An extra sacrificial few insure there is exactly enough.
The laying of the cotton pads is a closely guarded secret yet they literally show it😂😂😂
Keep that gauze for those foot blisters a band aid won't cover.
I burned my leg on a motorcycle, and when my stepmom and her mom ran out of actual bandages, they used paper towels and wrapped my leg up with it, and taped it to keep it on. I still have the scar. Never wear shorts when riding a motorcycle.
@rebekahsearcy8986 My uncle used to race bikes in the 70s. He had a thing for wearing polyester underwear and apparently has the scars where they melted into his skin when he had an accident. My grandmother had to try to peel the polyester from his butt
Was that a steak knife in the toothpick machine at the end?
That was awesome!!
People still use twigs to clean their teeth in certain parts of the world.
This and Cartoon Network were the pinnacle of my childhood
Been watching this show since i was 4. Very nostalgic.
Not autistic, but still one of my favourite childhood shows. It still is if I'm honest 😊
Love this show one of the best :)
I want to see a How It's Made on the machines that make this stuff.
I really enjoyed this video, it's fascinating to see how everyday items are made. However, I can't help but think that using so much plastic in hygiene products is pretty counterproductive for the environment. It would be great to see more sustainable options highlighted in future episodes. What do you all think?
The video is realistic and interesting.
Where's Tony Hirst?? He's the one and only 'how it's made' narrator.
I do find it weird not hearing Tony’s voice while watching these, but they were narrated by different people in each country. I only just learned that How it’s Made was a Canadian programme.
Aight buddy. Those twigs are called miswak. Put some respect on it 😂
Goodnight everyone
رحم الله شهيد الكويت الحبيبه الطيار النقيب محمد محمود عبد الرسول، هو بذاته و باستشهاده يمثل وسام على صدر كل المسلمين يوحدهم و لا يكفرهم، و لا يفرقهم و لا يضعفهم، استشهد في خدمة وطنه و دينه و اسرته.
“how it’s made” giving people seizures since 2001
Why would this show give anyone a seizure ?
Dr's recommend what they ate told by companies sponsoring them. I've used cotton swabs for 50 years. No issues with my ears
Yeah, but nobody calls them "adhesive bandages". We call 'em "bandaids".
Bandaid is a brand name, so maybe they didn't have the rights to say it.
Just like Zipper and Velcro.
We call them plasters.
Anyone else catch onto the part where packaging those band-aids in air tight packaging doesn't even remotely make them "sterile"? Good to know. I mean the one worker was just feeding the machine with their bare hands. How are these "sterile" if there's already germs on them in the first place?
They didn't say the air-tight packaging was what sterilized the bandages. They were probably sterilized by heat. Sometimes they don't show footage of some steps due to time constraints.
@@PS-zu5ww except Deinococcus radiodurans which was discovered precisely because it doesn't die
@@dinohall25959
I think the complete and fully packaged band-aids are irradiated before stacking in the boxes.
Ethylene oxide is used to sterilize heat-sensitive items.
Aww man, i thought it was hugbees 😔
damn they got how its made on youtube? sweet
Toothbrushes have coloured bristles for an indication of when to change the brush and not for esthetic reasons.
Bring back Tony Hirst and Lynne Adams to do the narration !
How much paper is used to make lottery tickets, compared to toilet paper?
Tooth brushes were invented in ancient Egypt though. Thousands of years ago
Love how Toothbrush got popular in England 🏴 in the 1700s where teeth stereotypical not good teeth times have changed
Common misconception.... Brits have the best dentistry in the world, we just don't spend thousands on our teeth like Americans do because we are not that vain
Its so weird to watch a serious how it's made video after watching all of huggbees how its made vids 😭😭
Filling 900 holes a minute 😂
Can’t be understood due to background noise.
I clicked without paying much attention thinking it was "How is actually made", found the voice a little different but just really noticed when there were no jokes
The turn really tables sometimes
Did anybody else spot the steak knife in this video?
Not gonna lie it thought you were that funny how it's made dude
Where is the hygienic aspect of bandages being handled by unprotected human hands??? 😮
I want to know how I was made😂
What about toenail clippers and files too? Don't they realize people have toenails? 🤦♂
one direction mentioned
Coverlets aargh! Look away Dr. Gibson!
I can guarantee you that nobody cleaned their teeth thousands of years ago, it's not like it's in the history books or drawn on walls
Why do i hear hugabees?
👍
The music is very annoying
The music under the cotton swabs made it unwatchable
7,217th viewer so random😅
Did you just use an AI voice for the hair clippers portion? Ugh! I don't like that! Thanks for the video.
band-aid's not bandage's
Band-aid is a brand name, that’s why they bandages.
@@sjmaz522it's Stil called a band-aid
Great vid awful music!
The (AI generated?) music drives me crazy. It's not suitable as background music.
lol, no. It’s called Muzak and is just widely available ip copyright music used for lobbys, telephone hold systems, old computer programs, waiting rooms, elevators, tv shows, and restrooms back in the day. It’s like the 90s and older version of lofi mood music and none of it was AI.
@@Dutch.W I know what Muzak is, and in contrast to some of the music used here, it's unobtrusive. Because that's the aim of Muzak, being unobtrusive and not going on one's nerves.
666 likes💀 p.s. I'm the 666th like
i like how one factory will use a band saw to cut small stuff
and then you got tissue paper factory using gigantic 4foot SPINNING blade of death