1. Unless you are grilling literally everyday, there is no point in using a brush, just use a wet rag. It's better for your grill. Seriously. Also LOL at his "unique" design, chainmail brushes have been a thing forever.
I am an all electric guy (*censored* BC Hydro and liberal green *censored*ers of Canada, srsly), so what do i know? I have heard people even use onion for cleaning grills so there is that. My kind of "grill" is a straight wrought iron bar that goes into an earthen hearth with meat and protein sticking in it. Thats easy enough to clean. That being said, apparently grill brushes are a thing. And people buy them. And Walmart stocks them. So I guess there is some kind of demand for them anyhoo.
2. His approach is mind boggling. He couldn't find anybody to do t&d?
Has he tried Thomasnet instead of just random other youtubers? There is plenty of tool and die capacity here in the states. I can nitpick small points too. Why use imperial screws instead of metric? Literally every relevant industry uses metric which would drive down his costs. This guy really needs a process consultant. Probably many local engineering firms could point him the right direction.
Lemme put it in this way. Had this been China, it would have been trivial to find the right guys and toys. Had it been, India, I could get this done for any quantity of order. There is infinite supply for small shops working on any volume. America? Good luck.
3. American automobiles compete at the highest levels and the lowest levels but I tend to agree that Japanese and especially Korean cars are the best in terms of value (I will die on the hill that the Rivian R1S is both practical and incredibly fun to drive, just horrendously expensive). Honestly, any new car in the US will get you at least 10 Years/100,000 miles with even semi-regular maintenance. I think transmissions used to be the Achilles heel of American cars, but nowadays everyone just uses the same CVTs to make the most sterile souless driving experiences.
Problem is, Americans have this weird kind of arrogance in believing their tools or wares will work everywhere. News flash, they dont. Look at Tesla bringing its stupid cars to India. Have you looked at their ground clearance? Or even cyber truck. Apart from one or two weirdo, there is not much market to this shit in India. Ford was the same. In India we DO NOT need bulldozers dressed as pessenger vehicles. PERIOD. There is a reason why Suzuki is sticking around in India after 30-40 years while ford and rest of american autos folded. Its called humility. A word so anti-americans that last person who said that in Ford boardroom was shot in his head with a NATO 5.56 round out of a AR-15. Because ford can not be bothered to customize their cars for India.
Americans makes tools. Then they go create problems for those tools to be used. Sometimes it works. Sometimes it does not.
I doubt you can fix American thinking in business... they are not going to be able to sell stuff in India the way they try to sell. Not in the consumer space.
4. Don't diss our barrels. But seriously, they are just condensers and for the majority of north America, they are good enough. They aren't as efficient, but they are plenty reliable. It's not like GE, American Standard, and other domestic companies don't make the modern designs for apartments or small modular buildings (this is the fast evolving space here btw if you are entrepreneurial), it's just Mitsubishi specifically is just so cheap.
Trouble is, there is such a thing called "over-capacity" when it comes to heat pumps/ACs. Americans do not notice it because they live in average 2500 sq ft homes. Guess rest of the world does not. I dont care how reliable your barrel is, if it is having overcapacity for my perfectly fine 1200 sqft shack, it is not going to work. Trouble is, American companies will rather kill themselves (with AR-15s no less and this time a Kaltec KSG too!) than to admit that may be they need a different model for that market.
And please! Mitsubishi is not "cheap". Its fukken only thing that works if you are in Alberta. Its so god damn efficient that it can suck warmth from outside even if it is snowing at -29 degree celcius. And do it while being still more efficient than running the current via nichrome. Its a problem that GE et al can not be bothered with. You know, Americanism, they can not afford to say they need a different approach. Even if most of the shit they assemble into unit comes from China no less. Even Lennox can not be bothered with it because America does not need it, so we do not make it. And who cares if rest of the world is not America.
Ultimately, it doesn't matter if low value added manufacturing is done elsewhere. Why do I care if the pipes, screws, kitchen utensils, etc are made in China or India? A lot of manufacturing has left, and there is a lot of food left on the table, but the doom and gloom about industry is hyperbole. There is plenty of tool and die capacity here. Plenty of industrial equipment is made here. Injection molding might be a field where we are falling behind, but if there is a demand a local player will emerge. The US industrial sector is impressive where it does compete and is world class. There is also a lot of highly skilled labor available here.
Ultimately, it SHOULD NOT have mattered. But look at the squeeze Trump was putting, it seems it mattered. For even sectors which had no sense. May be he is a moron for all I care, but this squeeze was certainly not worth the juice.
Problem now for America is, the autos they make are not good fit for India (GM, Ford et al tried and failed, Tesla is about to learn that too). White goods made in America are garbage (no american TV, Washing machine, AC, refrigirator will be able to fit into the Indian environment saturated with choice from South Koreans, less degree Japanese, Some Indian brands and now increasingly Chinese). They are incompatiable, stupid, expensive and arrogantly pushed without any localization.
In defence sector, given how heavy handed American dealing with India has been, I doubt any big ticket items coming from American ANY time some. I do not want my fukken planes to stop flying because idiots in Washington can not supply spares. We all saw how well Tejas is doing with JUST ONE dependency on America. Rest assured, Indians have long memories. And there is no dearth of supplier for India in that sector.
FinTech products are out of question : Americans are behind India in that.
AI is one place where I see a lot of influx of American products, namely GPU, networking and servers for data centers. That being said, I think, AI in the present form is extremely crude (we are still using REAL numbered tensors for weights in ANNs representing knowledge...). How much will this compute edge remain or even be required once more optimal representations are found is something I do not know. Thankfully, most of these purchases will be out of direct investments by American companies. Indian companies still believe renting this compute capability is better than investing in it.
In industrial goods, America will have to compete with China or at times, American or European vendors depend upon Chinese suppliers directly. I remember one tunnel boring machine to be delivered to India for construction of High speed trains was delayed. In China no less. Because American vendor was making it in China. Most likely next time, Indians will just straight on engage with a singaporean firm directly who can deal with Chinese.
In semicons, India is mostly picking up processes that are at least 10 years older. And for good reason. Those are enough for most needs except for most modern GPUs. CPUs and memory that go into mobile or cutting edge server products. For rest, 10 - 15 years old nodes are absolutely fine. And Japanese and Koreans make ample machines for them. Also being joined by Chinese.
As far as Aviation goes, there are only two real big players. Airbus and Boeing. And India will need to work with both to avoid a supply crunch. Even as early as 2023, TATA et al were going to buy a lot of planes from Boeing. It was just repackaged to placate Trump.