Most manufacturing videos follow the same pattern — factory shots, moving machines, and technical narration. The Hitachi film from the Tsuchiura “mother factory” starts there but gradually becomes more engaging, like a structured walkthrough a skilled video production company might design.
The scale is clear: mini excavators to massive mining machines, wide factory floors, welding sparks, and synchronized assembly lines create a rhythm of engineering.
The film also reveals efficiency — 53 excavators produced daily and 120 variations from 32 base models.
If this were a movie, the factory itself would be the main character.
The Strengths:
The biggest win of this film is clarity of process. The video works best when it leans into process explainer video production.
The assembly line is shown step-by-step: welding, painting, swing bearing tightening, track frame assembly, engine installation, hydraulic tanks, cab mounting, and final inspection.
For anyone curious about how an excavator is actually built, the video works almost like a visual documentary.
Some standout moments:
- Automatic tightening of the swing bearing – a surprisingly satisfying mechanical sequence.
- Lower roller installation – the synchronized multi-bolt tightening shows industrial precision.
- Upperstructure and undercarriage connection – visually communicates the engineering scale.
Camera-wise, the film relies mostly on wide industrial frames and functional angles, which makes sense for documentation. The sparks during welding and the rhythmic factory sounds create an unintentionally cinematic feel.
Where It Feels Flat:
Despite the strong subject matter, the film sometimes feels too instructional.The narration explains the process clearly, but it rarely builds emotional engagement. There are moments where the video simply shows machines doing their job without visual storytelling.
A few areas where it could improve:
- More dynamic camera movement (tracking shots, crane shots, or close-up mechanical details).
- Human element — operators, engineers, quality inspectors. Right now the people behind the machines feel invisible.
- Stronger narrative arc — the journey from raw components to a finished excavator could have been dramatized more.
The repeated “heat” audio cues and long music segments also feel slightly disconnected from the visuals.
If This Were a Film Critic’s Verdict
Think of this video as a well-shot industrial documentary rather than a cinematic brand film.
It excels at process clarity and engineering credibility, but stops just short of becoming a powerful brand story.
Prediction:
Manufacturing films like this are evolving. The next generation will likely combine factory documentation with stronger storytelling — mixing human insight, product performance, and immersive cinematography.
If this video were remade today, it could easily become something closer to a Netflix-style industrial documentary rather than a traditional corporate walkthrough.
Final Rating
Engineering Documentation: ★★★★★
Visual Storytelling: ★★★☆☆
Engagement: ★★★☆☆
Overall, it’s a fascinating look inside one of the world’s most important excavator factories — even if the storytelling still leaves some cinematic potential on the table.