So much cool stuff to show you on this trip. Stay tuned. Huge thanks to everyone on patreon. we couldnt have done this video without your help - www.patreon.com/uavfutures
why did no one actually explain things to him/us on camera..? Ste, multiple times you said "not sure what this is.. Not sure what this does.. Some hocus pocus magic..". Dude thats fine. but it left a little more wanted.,
@@Andrew-FKF In his defense, trying to learn how a factory works and all the inner workings in the few hours he's there then condense it down to 14 minutes is extremely difficult. He did the best he could in a short amount of time and did an awesome job at it.
@@EMAXUSA I would be very interested in know which CNC lathes and mills you use. I'm looking to buy a CNC lathe and a VMC from China and it would be nice to know if there are some manufacturers you can recommend.
they were probably told not too. and one did when he asked if he could take a prop for a sec. that and most of them probably dont speak English. Factory workers have a daily quota to fill and it can suck ballz catching up when your behind a large number.
I dont get the haters on this vid, guys Stew did the best to show us the factory, at most places you are not allowed to film sensitive stuff and lots of details. if you want to examine sometin just pause the video and take a closer look. Good work Stew and Cal. cant waitfor the rest of the vids
the video seems jumbled you're moving from place to place not showing steps or explaining how they actually do quality control without saying how or showing how its done .i normally love your videos but this one left me wondering what i was watching and i felt like i didn't learn anything sorry Stew
I was in that factory about a month ago. He probably covered around 10% of the motor making process and went from step 7 to step 2 to step 15 to step 5. There are A LOT of small steps in the process and it was really amazing to see how much effort they put into designing, making and checking each and every one of their products. This was more entertainment than education.
Yep ,i agree . Was this a hired cameraman who didn't understand english ??? You jumped all over that factory and say look at this and look at that ,but that Fcking camera kept your face in focus and we saw jack squat . Now we know how your face look like in a chinese factory that is all we saw.
I LOVE EMAX PRODUCTS! Congrats Stu for getting that exclusive. Great coverage and you shared a ton mate. Keep up the great work. You're quite an inspiration.
there was so much there, it was a great day, plus stay tuned I have a second vid where we go to the main office and check out the first glimpses of a 2s tiny hawk
What a messy video, it's not your best work we could not really see anything and as others have said it was jumbled. A documentary is a different approach to what you are normally doing and are good at.
Great prices for the amount of workmanship that goes into each and every motor. Thank you for the tour Stu and to all manufacturers for making our stuff.
This was a video all about the quality control of Emax VS the actual factory tour and more of a step by step process. Glad to see you spent Patreon money on a Emax quality control tour/vacation. IMO
Wow! That's kinda emotional to see where my BabyHawk-R was assembled. It was my first fast Quad I actually could race and do some freestyle. Well, EMax was part of my Quad flying experience since 2012/2013 with my 450 Flamewheel powered by KK 2.something...one Flight of it still on my channel. Happy flying!
More of a look see of the factory, still amazing but boy just think of how cool a video would have been if able to take step by step tour on motors alone. I could see Stew and Cal were pressed for time and not in the comfort zone. Still all in all , at least we got to see how big this place is and a little idea of how the steps of product are made.
Thanks Stu for showing us all of awesomeness of emax. A question: Parts and quads are cheaper in China if you want to buy one directly there? Ok, no costs of shipping etc, but im interested in the difference. So how much can a chinese FPV pilot save compared to me in Europe or you Stu? :D
Man , awesome tour !! Thanks for sharing we all of us who are on this hobby ! Thanks for all hard work these people do making drones and developing more fun for us !! This is MikeDroneUfo : all the fun with minidrones.
Great video, wish it was more in-depth to what they were actually doing. Perhaps if there was a translator that could have helped and asked the workers!
Loved this vid! I actually work for a company that builds those type of automated production machines! Very cool stuff going on there. I wonder if the need an automation engineer. Thanks Stu! Always killing it!
I've made injection mold tools before they can be very time consuming to make. It takes a lot to make sure they fit together correctly and dont flash extra plastic. those were very small blocks and only produced one or two things but still took a lot of machining time and manual labor to produce a quality mold. The majority of the ones i helped make were large and heavy. you needed a forklift to get the blocks in a CNC mill and flip them around for every milling processes.
9:40 Cal appeared!! Good job Stu. I can tell you were excited but some more close-ups would be nice... you know... for when you go back next year... with Cal AND Trev!!!
Think they only work a two day week. That’s why we have to pre- order our drone is it. I’ve seen more work going on in Mc Donald’s.Looks like quality control are recruiting again, can’t keep the staff, unless they are all outside doing jog-squats.
Wait, are you Aussie? I've been watching you for months now and I didn't even realise your accent until this video ahahah. I'm Aussie too which is probably why I didn't really think about it
I just get the vague feeling that this tour might have been more informative for the viewers if you could have persuaded Bruce Simpson to come along and do a channel collaboration.