After this season, which components do you want to see get made next? Remember that it can be anything from capacitors to full products like keyboards! We're SUPER EXCITED about this season of our factory tours! To help support our efforts, please buy one of our brand new GN15 Mouse Mats: store.gamersnexus.net/products/15-yr-mouse-mat Or one of our 3D coaster packs! store.gamersnexus.net/products/gn-drink-debug-coaster-pack-4-custom-3d-coasters-100x100mm-4x4 You can also buy a soldering & project mat! store.gamersnexus.net/products/gn-project-soldering-mat Or our 15th Anniversary 3D emblem glass! store.gamersnexus.net/products/gn-3d-emblem-glasses WATCH THE PLAYLIST OF TOURS! ru-vid.com/group/PLsuVSmND84QuVMZuk2HGUtCSYXR7nmC5a
That kinda music was made for that reason exactly 😂 apple will use alot of music in similar BPM to ur heart rate to make u excited without u knowing why 😂
This scratches my itch to watch Science Channel shows from 2006 lol love these "How It's Made" kind of documentaries. Love the style you kept to make yours distinct, great work!
Hahaha I think you’re somehow more dramatic than him 🤣🤣 Steve is a true hero, the best of the Steve’s, risking life and limb. Hope he stays blessed and gets a congressional medal ❤❤
hahaha. Nothing more dangerous than going approximately 6 feet in the air on a stable platform! (although to our insurance company, it's probably the most dangerous thing known to man!)
@GamersNexus i do industrial maintenance... i cant stress this enough, unnecessary risks are a way to an early grave, i was in a similar situation and the chain snapped i only fell 6 ft but shattered a knee, doing somthing that was safeish and Almost routine, all it takes is for one thing to go wrong and its over edit:guy in the video probably isnt worried about the news more about your life, its 50/50 with factories either they want you to be as safe as possible or they dont care if you die, that shot wasnt worth the unnecessary risk, but if you still wanted it, ask them to take you up in a scissor lift or have them let you use a harness, i dont care if its 6ft or 20ft no unnecessary risks.
Oh man, absolutely fantastic work from Steve and the team. Obviously the actual content is great, but I want to give everyone on staff massive props for the production. Everything from the B-roll to the post-production is top notch. This reminds me in all the best ways of the stuff I used to watch on Discovery Channel when I was younger, things like How It's Made. Tremendous work, guys.
yeah already 2 minutes into the video I had to pause and look for the comments about this. pro quality colour grading, which jumped out at me as it's something that's often missing from youtube videos even when the cinematography and editing are good quality. the series of outdoor shots with wildly different lighting and angles from 1:37-1:50 would have colours all over the place on even many youtube channels that have fairly decent production, but here it all looks consistent like truly professional grade work should
The pacing, cinematography and scripting/editing made this video feel like a GN PPV with a steel chair. I hope this takes off and becomes like _the_ staple GN thing. Also, I loved that flat "No" to the roof radiator question.
That speaks to the baseline level of common knowledge throughout the mftring industry of these products. If your competitors know what you are doing and how you do it? It's all positive PR at that point.
I'm actually a welder for arvos, which is a factory that makes hear exchangers for coal power, and now we're movong to wind power that somehow floats in the atlantic. We have tons of old mills, and benders, cutters. It's actually pretty cool for a nerd like me. I actually used a GN solder mat to fix a blown up Allen Bradley controller for one of the machines at work!
We don't have any specialized pressing stamps, but we do have very under wraps roll dies that make corrugated metal for the exchangers, It's actually pretty cool looking, but I was told that's one of the most important secrets in the factory since it would be the most damaging to copy.
Steve, welcome to the ranks of the Forklifted Flying Fools. Definitely a rite of passage when working in a warehouse or industrial setting. Bonus points for what appears to be the lack of using an empty pallet to stand on and instead simply standing on the bare forks themselves. Been there, done that.
Thank you InWin for allowing for us to see all of this! Amazing and sooo interesting! Thank you to Steve and everyone at gamersnexus too - you guys rock for putting these videos out. Happy Holidays to you all.
I am working as a Quality Manager and Auditor in industry myself but somehow it NEVER gets boring to have a look into factories you have not seen yet. Thank you for taking your time and investing money to make these videos.
Its incredible that we the people have the option to NOT consume mainstream TV and instead watch masterpieces like this. Truly fantastic job to Steve and the team, can't wait for the next one.
This series is so dope man. Taiwan is fascinating from a semiconductor POV. You've really outdone yourself Steve! You deserve all the success that comes your way. The quality and depth of your reviews are next to none!
These factory tours are by far my favorite content from GN. It's informative, entertaining, and helps us become better, more educated consumers. Great work!
Every Saturday for a month!! I love that GN has gotten to the point you have "Seasons" of specialty\themed videos. AWESOME. Thanks to the whole team for all your awesome work ♥
It is easy to take all this stuff for granted but it is amazing to realise how much effort is put into what we might take for granted. It is like watching a dance routine how the people and machines interact.
I like these because they relate to me. I've spent 6 years in the manufacturing industry. From press molding aluminum panels into the exterior shape of cars doors, to forging and tempering glass for car windshields, to the careful examination and *_very_* specific physical handling of steering parts for toyota/honda vehicles, and the assembly of hardware and electronics. I wish I knew how to 3D model, so that I could take what I know of the manufacturing process and design a better function-over-form PC case.
theres tons of free learning for that here on youtube... one of the few REAL things you can actually learn for free here on youtube since the "online education" thing promised has not really panned out in the real world
This channel blows all others out of the water. Steve and his amazing team puts so much into these free videos. Thank you guys for entertaining and informative content!!!
The quality of these productions are just great. Because of videos like this people used to say RU-vid is the new TV. More high end content in every subject and it's on-demand. Can't wait for the rest of them. Thanks Steve.
That older factory would be heaven for me. I love the industrial truth of all the pretty pretty tech we have. You can modernize all you want but sometimes, the old ways still work. Love it.
Its the cycle of manufacturing you get paid more for clean precise work but the more clean and precise the more it costs to make in time and rejected parts in a feedback loop until you either go bust or become an IBM and disappear from the general consumer market into the lofty heights of government and too big to fail business.
I love factory tours! Great to see this series is back. I imagine it's lot of legwork to organize these tours. Hard to try to convince a factory to go in there with cameras.
As a professional computer nerd who's been around the block more than a few times, these kinds of videos are really the best opportunity to learn something I otherwise wouldn't be able to learn about these crazy science fiction gadgets we all use.
Congrats on GN for going deep into manufacturing. Most kids these days have no idea how satisfying it can be to be part of any industry that makes things everyone uses daily, so hopefully it inspires young and bright people into pursuing a very fulfilling career.
I build software and simulations for digital manufacturing (high-end stuff like manufacturing electric vehicles, turbines, nuclear parts, semiconductors, etc). "Smart" manufacturing is very different from people's perceptions of smoke-spewing factories and manual assembly lines. With the current instability in the China-Taiwan situation, our smartest move is to move more of that manufacturing into Western countries, even if it is more expensive.
Thank you to Steve and the team at GN for making consistently high-quality, informative and educational videos! That was quite an eye-opener. I didn't know InWin made servers until after watching this video! I still remember using one of their reasonably priced cases years ago for a NAS build.
Fascinating. The older factory with the steel stamping/cutting machines - the tech aspect is in the design of the stamping/cutting dies and the machining of the dies.
In Win makes good products. I am happy to see a video of a factory tour. This is very insightful! Thanks to the Gamers Nexus Team and the In Win team for making this happen.
@@MIK33EY tbh, I wouldn't be surprised if they end up with military contracts in the near future. Kinda like finding out GE does kitchen microwaves and the main gun for the A10 Warthog
I did work in a window factory that was much like the case factory. We had to hang all the metal on the same type of conveyor to get painted and ran through an oven. None of the painting was automated either. Even the washing process with chromate was a manual process. I do not miss it at all. I am so glad I got some IT certs and a much less physically demanding job.
Love these videos. I usually end up watching them on my slow, off production nights at work... like right now. Watching videos and babysitting my induction holding/melting furnaces.
Looks like the type of factories I've worked in. I've made engines, heating and cooling units, and nails. They were all the rough and ready type of factory. I miss factory work. I was always fascinated at the planning that went into it, making everything streamlined and smooth. It's like a giant, complicated dance.
that inwin factory reminded me of a mill I worked in, it was labyrinthine, tight, dirty, and machines went wherever they needed to go and the people had to work around it. I had to inspect every magnet box in the facility, and I climbed into and around every single process line to find these tiny inspection hatches
*Puts coffee down on GN coaster & clicks notifications* HELL YEAH! Christmas came early! Factory tours are back on the menu boys! It's THIS & the investigative journalism that keeps me buying all the merch, the limited run shirts, and forking over money every month on Patreon. I've loved this series since the very first video years ago. That shot of the servers on the upper conveyer was 100% worth the risk. LOL