\
  The most prestigious law school admissions discussion board in the world.
BackRefresh Options Favorite

rate this story of how Yamaha was founded

• be Torakusu Yamaha • the son of a low-ranking s...
fatty nigger
  03/21/26


Poast new message in this thread



Reply Favorite

Date: March 21st, 2026 2:43 PM
Author: fatty nigger (✅🍑)

• be Torakusu Yamaha

• the son of a low-ranking samurai astronomer in 19th-century Japan

• obsessed with Western machines, you make a living repairing watches and medical equipment

• 1887: a local elementary school has a broken American reed organ. Nobody in the small town knows how to fix it.

• you take it apart, realize it’s just two broken springs, and easily repair it

• but instead of just handing it back, you realize: "If I can fix this, I can build it."

• you draw a blueprint of the inside of the organ and build the very first Japanese-made reed organ from scratch

• you show it off. People tell you it sounds terrible.

• most people would quit. You sling the heavy wooden organ over your shoulder on a bamboo carrying pole.

• you physically carry it 160 miles (250 km) on foot, trekking over the brutal Hakone mountains just to reach the Tokyo Music Institute to get real feedback from experts

• the professors play it. They tell you the mechanics are brilliant, but the tuning is completely wrong.

• you don't get defensive. You stay in Tokyo for a month, sitting in on university music theory lectures, holding a single tuning fork to your ear until you completely master the mathematics of sound frequencies

• you walk 160 miles back home

• you build a second organ. The professors test it and declare it "as good as those from abroad."

• you found Nippon Gakki Co. (which later becomes Yamaha Corporation)

• you decide to make your company logo three interlocking tuning forks to remember the pain and discipline of learning music theory from scratch

• decades later, your company uses its piano woodworking expertise to build wooden airplane propellers in WWII

• after the war, the company uses its new metallurgical expertise from the airplane engines to build motorcycles

• you accidentally create a timeline where repairing a broken elementary school organ directly leads to the creation of the Yamaha YZF-R1 superbike

• absolute, relentless horizontal integration based purely on figuring out how things work

The ultimate testament to reverse-engineering reality.

https://x.com/jgreyfriend/status/2034975351516864602?s=20

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5848276&forum_id=2)#49759565)