Manufacturing process of a universal joint. If you have: > lathes > Milling > Induction hardening > Broaching > Cylindrical grinding You can make this.

Nov 8, 2025 · 10:04 AM UTC

Replying to @VishakhRanotra
Absolutely love this. Could you tell me what sort of arbor you're using to hold the part at 1:21 - I'm assuming this is expanded to grip the bore of the part? Any suppliers I could look up?
We don’t manufacture this Lindsay. Not our video
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Replying to @VishakhRanotra
Very nice array of processes. My favorite is the forging.
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I love forging too
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Replying to @VishakhRanotra
How about a dremel and a soldering iron?
That works even better. Go for it!
Replying to @VishakhRanotra
Apparently we are subscribed to similar you tube channels
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Replying to @VishakhRanotra
Absolutely amazing watch
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Replying to @VishakhRanotra
@grok where this joint are used and what it used for. what is the market size for this kind of product and is it hard to make it,
Replying to @VishakhRanotra
Curious to know are they used in automotive sector only or some specific industry? We currently are manufacturing these types of components which are just 10x larger for the automotive sector for commercial trucks.
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Replying to @VishakhRanotra
Universal coupling is one of the first "complex" part/assembly I modelled in Solidworks during my B Tech.
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Replying to @VishakhRanotra
You forgot no quality control, safety program, and almost no cost of labor.