I bought a 50th anniversary slinky and I was just playing around with and wondered how these were made so here I am 1am watching a video of the production of a slinky, this is good
Using much of the same manufacturing machinery for over 50 years, and still in business through the china knock offs. I bet we would be very hard pressed to find another company left in the USA who can match that endurance. That can be a new measure of a "great product". You got it right,---the first time. :) Congratulations.
Yea. I have some machine building experience and degrees in manufacturing, and I was thinking "Those engineers must have had some fun designing some of those machines.". They played with the Slinky's, (to see what they can do), as they were designing the machines. :)
' the toy company did the great makeing the metal slinky toys... beautifully metal slinky toys... keep up america make more metal slinky toys... fully = MADE IN AMERICA =
I doubt it. Probably another stolen patent. That was one of the mistakes of the USA, the government is allowed to take the patents of any inventor if it wants. I don't think compensation is a consideration, but I suspect it has happened.
Must be horrible if the average employee has 28 years there. If the saying "Employees quit bosses not jobs" is true. Then they must have great management.
@@Wanderlust1972 most factories require the fan be attached directly above the face via a fixator on the scalp so no matter where the worker moves the fan is blowing air onto their face, this practice is widespread across the USA /s
' the toy company can makeing the color plastic slinky toys... beautifully color plastic slinky toys... keep up america make more color plastic slinky toys... fully = MADE IN AMERICA =