You're doing something invaluable for mechanical engineers like myself and those who take up this field in the future. There is very little content of this quality that's freely available. Thank you for your hard work.
I have a bachelors in mechanical engineering and this by far the best lesson I've ever had in GD&T. You are making a real difference to the next generation of engineers
Iam a Mechanical Engineer and I actually cannot believe that this kind of material is free to watch online with this level of graphics and understanding, for real, you and animagraffs are astonishing, to say the least, thank you for all of this.
15 years in precision machining and working with customers on NPI and DFM, and this is the most concise and clear video I have seen on GD&T...This deserves an award.
I know you probably won't ever read this, but you don't understand how massively grateful and happy I am that I found this channel. I genuinely, no joke, don't think I could do Mechanical Engineering at university if it wasn't for this channel and I just want to thank you for everything you've done and everything you continue to do. You will never understand how appreciated you are and I have told and will continue to tell fellow engineering students how awesome and fun you can make engineering to learn compared to the lecturers I'm stuck with. Thank you so much.
I'm an ME and have taken a few expensive classes for GD&T. This is the best overview I've seen. Love your channel.
you did in 30 minutes what my professor was trying to do in 7 lectures. Amazing work
I’m an apprentice engineer, just coming up on finishing my first year at the company I’m working for, and the other day a guy who works in design (a CAD expert) was helping me with some simple tolerancing, and said “you wait until you have to learn geometric tolerancing.” When I see him next, I don’t doubt I’ll be able to have a decent conversation with him about it, and this video has, at the absolute least, given me a massive step up on the other apprentices when it comes to CAD. Thanks man
This is one of the clearest description of GD&T I've seen. Explains tolerance zones and geometry control tools pretty well. When trying to explain these to new engineers, I tend to use various shapes of pasta, or GD & spaghetti. Every time I saw a drawing with circularity or concentricity, it was because the part designer really wanted position instead. In any case, I heard the concentricity tool has been removed from the 2018 update of Y14.5.
This is, without a doubt, the best educational and well-made video I have ever seen about GD&T! I have been studying Mechanical Engineering for many years now and always had a hard time wrapping my head around some of these concepts still, the way you lay it out in the video is super intuitive! You also have absolutely fantastic animations, they are so clear, and precise and show accurately what is needed to get the point across. This is absolutely invaluable to anyone starting out with this! Thank you so much for all the time and effort you put into this!
This must be one of the best videos explaining GD&T. I started my career on a drafting board and then moved our company onto CAD in the late 80s' and it was a long time before ANSI Y14.5 creeped in and was finally adapted on new designs. We still had a long road a head to train everyone down stream on what these funny looking symbols meant. If we had something like this video way back then it would have been incredibly powerful. Well done. Absolutely love the clarity of the details and colors used to illustrate, the pace and smoothness of the presentation is excellent.
This video is insanely high quality. Learned more about GD&T from this video than while getting my bachelors in mechanical engineering
Where was this video 5 years ago?! This was easier to understand than the courses provided by my job!
This video is an absolute masterclass about GD&T, I've never had anyone cover the topic in such a clear and concise way. The graphics are simply astounding and the overall quality of this video goes beyond professional. This content is gold and this channel deserves huge success for its hard work and ingenuity.
Literally studying for my CAD final exam right now. Saved me hours of quizletting and reading and trying to visualize tolerant zones and whatnot. Bonus tolerance was confusing but this video made it perfectly clear. Thank you
As a mechanical engineer, this video is much clearer than the university courses on the subject. Thank you so much!
You don’t upload often, but when you do the vids are absolute bangers 🫡
I finally have a full understanding of MMC and LMC. I was so confused about the holes being smaller at MMC but rods being larger at MMC. The way that I remember it now is that there is just MORE material at MMC. And LESS material at LMC
Wow, I’m kind of flabbergasted that i’m graduating with an engineering degree in a couple of months and I’ve only been formally introduced to a sliver of what’s been presented here. I didn’t realize how many subconscious idealizations I assumed were true about my models, and this is only scratching the surface? I feel quite humbled
@TheEfficientEngineer