 Hi, this is Rob from Jack's Abbey, here at my friends at Electric Time, and this is another episode of Shipping Out. Tom, thanks for having us. Why don't you tell us what's Electric Time? What do you do here? We're a Massachusetts manufacturer. We make power and street clocks, and we ship them all around the world. We've been doing this since about 1928. We started by an MIT engineer who had a patent on the first electric self-starting clock. We grew out of a firm called Telechron that was based in Ashland, Massachusetts. Now we have since moved to this art current. Manufacturing facility in Medfield, which is about 50,000 square feet. What sort of special sauce will Electric Time, what do you do that's different? What makes you special? One thing is to be a manufacturer in Massachusetts, which there's very few of us, right? We're very proud of what we do. We have great staff, both operations, engineering, manufacturing staff that have been here for, in some cases, almost 40 years. We make pretty stuff that is very public, and it's sort of fun to go visit, too. We actually have a clock in every continent. Someone actually managed to put one in a Coast Guard cutter, and it is now in a common room and an art cut. You mentioned one of the special things is you're running a manufacturing plant here at Massachusetts. What does that mean to you? It is a challenge. It's a very easy place to ship stuff all around the world. And you're doing mostly custom pieces. You have some that are repeated with a lot of custom pieces. What is sort of the steps of making a clock just in a brief synopsis? We offer a bunch of standard products at three o'clock here when we do custom projects. We usually start with a client who sends us a drawing or expresses an idea through us. It's then passed to our engineering department. Try to come up with a final design after the client approves it, depending on what the product is, a fairly standard product, a CAD design would be sent out through the water jet cutting machine, which you saw earlier. That product, if it was a simple metal product, would be formed on our press grate and welded up. And then it would go into our finishing department for painting, and there it would pass into assembly. And then the clock dials, beforehand the clock dials, which you saw also, get applied. And it's very, very satisfying to see a project if you've worked on something really concrete. It's not nebulous. And there's a lot of history to your business, and a lot of history to time pieces. Let's look forward to that. What are you most excited about in the future of your project? The future projects are fun. Whatever somebody is going to come up with a new sketch, someone will send us a sketch and they want us to build it. And it's become the challenge. It's been a great tour. It's really amazing to see what you do here, unexpected. And I look forward to seeing the clocks out there. And Tom, thanks for having us. Well, thank you very much. Cheers.