I love that this channel is largely two buddies hanging out and actually following through with things that all guys wonder about and screwing around until something amusing happens..
@@ModernRogue I object. Don't get me wrong, I fucking love your videos. But how about a compromise of 23/7 watching videos, the rest trying the experiments.
Jason Murphy Of course! I aspire to rakeishness, so the Modern Rogue is a good source of entertaining information! Thank you and Mr. Brushwood for doing them.
The freezing works best on higher-end hardened steel locks. You can't get through those with bolt cutters (unless you're using significantly more expensive hydraulic cutters), and, as steel gets more brittle as you harden it, the added brittleness from freezing can actually make shattering the lock viable. Cans of compressed air are also much more concealable than bolt cutters. You can easily toss a can of compressed air and a hammer in a backpack, not so much with bolt cutters.
Requesting this redone with a cup so that the lock can sit in the cryo so it can saturate. I am positive that you would be able to break a lock that is fully cooked with the duster
Haha, I love this channel, it's my new favourite! This was on Burn Notice. They say you're supposed to completely empty the can of spray duster, fully upside down, and then shatter the lock with a hammer.
I am so glad I found this channel, I've been switching between your alcohol/mixer videos and then how to make a gas mask out of a coke bottle and lighter flashbangs... Love it!
You know that Jason is a good friend when he didn't immediately tell Brian "I told you so" for not following his "you should wear safety equipment" advice from a couple of minutes before the injury!
iFarlander like steel wool on fire ? if you put it inside a wiffle ball tie it to rope and spin it it will make a quite a spark show. (extremely dangerous)
Isopropanol and dry ice works fine too. We use it to flash freeze histology samples for storage. At -80 degrees Celsius your fingers will shatter like frozen hotdogs, but I don't know if it weakens metal enough to be able to shatter chinesium brass.
No tools , No Freeze required! You can wreck small padlocks with just a towel easily, not a thick one, but a kitchen towel. Just thread it through the lock so both ends of towel have the same length, then yank both towel ends in one, or with both hands hard down, your small padlock should break at 1st down yanking, guaranteed! But do as much brute force down yanking as needed. Works even on not so small padlocks. We did this all the time, couple times a week, on our army lockers, cause keys were apparently lost quite often, or combinations forgotten, so we got lotsa practice with that technique. Back in the day, Cheers!
"metal doesn't like to stay cold very long too" - ehm nope.. that's just plain wrong. Blowing away the coolant is counterproductive. You need to "boil" the lock in the coolant, as the evaporation (the boiling coolant) removes lots of heat.
"Blowing away the coolant" is the very act of inducing evaporation at a faster pace. It's why wind chill effectively strips your body of heat rather than still air.
No Brian :) You want the coolant to be in contact with the thing you are cooling. You were blowing it completely away. You want to increase the rate of evaporation. Submerge the thing you want to cool in the coolant, and when it stops bubbling (boiling) it has reached its lowest temperature. Basic science.
Wind chill is different to what you're doing. Wind chill introduces more cold air to you, removing the air your body has heated up. You were introducing room temperature air and blowing away the liquid and air cooled around it. It was essentially the reverse of a "wind chill".
mate u clearly dont understand basic thermofluids things cool fast when they have a cold thing moving across them thats why cooling systems use pipes with water moving and high speeds to cool the system faster. science isnt that simple when it comes to cooling things quickly
The title "Shattering frozen rocks" blew my mind so fucking hard I literally HAD to click on the video. Also, I love what you guys do, keep doing it please.
Gresi Lamaj We do not tolerate harassment in the Modern Rogue comment section, please leave as tipx2 MASTER was only referencing the meme of "1000 DEGREE CRAZY KNIFE CUT! WILL IT CUT?!?!?! click bait that was going on at the start of this year.
Okay, to clear the air on this really easy trick... the science behind opening a padlock with a can of cold condensed liquid (like butane or canned air) is that the micro-springs inside the lock are so thin that after unloading an entire cheap a** $1.75 bottle of butane it deep freezes them. Immediately after you have done this (unloading the can upside down into the lock via the key entrance) then hitting or jarring the lock with the stresses on the pins and springs inside the lock will shatter and break leaving you with a handful of dismantled cold lock insides. Much cheaper than a pair of heavy duty bolt cutters and far easier to reach those key holes than getting a pair of cutters around some locks!
>"The cable is the weak point" Seriously? The flexible cable is more brittle than the lock? The made-in-China lock full of tiny moving parts? Also, hammering a metal lock on a soft, particle board table isn't really ideal- put the lock on a concrete floor, or steel tabletop; some surface that won't absorb all the impact. But there's an easy way to pop a cheap shackle lock with two crescent wrenches- or shim it with a coke can.
Honestly, using the freeze it trick is only worth it for the high end locks where bolt cutters and hack saws just don't work well. In those cases, liquid nitrogen is preferred. It's not terribly expensive itself, but the Dewar flask or equivalent can be several hundred dollars.
If you are interested in the topic, here's an explanation of the phenomenon seen in the video. The explanation is simplified because it is aimed to people that don't know anything about material science: ductility in any metal is caused by "holes", that are called vacancies, in the crystalline lattice left by some missing atoms (imagine a big pile of oranges at the market, if you miss a spot inside while building the pile, you have a vacancy). When you apply force to the metal, atoms can move around and occupy these holes, leaving new ones in the sites they left. when enough of these holes have clustered together, the metal deforms visibly. when this happens, we say that these holes "move around", and the more holes you have, the softer the metal is. Now, the number and mobility of these holes depends on the temperature of the metal, so, if you cool it down enough, you have less vacancies and the metal becomes brittle because if you hit it, instead of deforming itself, it breaks. For simplification, i'll say that with less temperature the atoms "vibrate less", so that you have less probability to form a vacancy. This mechanism works only with metals: the mechanism of why a polymer (rubber, plastic...) becomes brittle at low temperature is very different, and requires much less difference in temperature to see the change in properties.
as someone who lived for years in a place where the temperature hangs around -40 for extended periods of time you're not gonna be smashing too many things cooling them with keyboard blower
Pixode Boiling point of difluoroethane is -25C/-13F. It wont go colder than that by evaporating. Only way it can get colder is if I leave it outside in winter.
Modern Rogue and everyone in the comments here has it wrong. Matter has 3 stages. Solid, liquid and gas. The melting point for steel is something like 1500°C. Meaning that steel is in its FROZEN state at under 1500°C. To something like water the difference between 20°C and -20°C is huge, but for something like steel, that temperature difference is minuscule. With nitrogen, which boils at -200°C you might get the steel brittle enough to crack. Even moreso possible with a shitty Chineseum alloy like these locks.
PS guys love the content otherwise. Chineseum joke is widespread on the internet and is more of a poke on low manufacturing standards for cheap products like the ones in this video and definitely not intended as a slight on the Chinese people. #staywoke
From what i can tell on the first padlock you are meant to freeze the bar when it stands up so the liquid drips inside, then no so much try and shatter it, but hammer the bottom of the lock off just by hitting the top of the "cheaper metal" while the bar is being held it should pop right off.
OliOli I work in a warehouse. Shipping containers, the huge steel ones that come in on ships and get loaded on tractor trailers, have disposable bolts on them. They stay locked until they reach the destination, and then we pop the bolt with bolt cutters to unload it. Google "shipping container bolt" or something to that effect. They can be used for odds and ends too, like fence repair, but there are better tools for that. Shipping is the only thing I know of that they're specifically used for.
This stuff is crazy. I found that when I turned the can upside down, a similar reaction occurred to throwing boiling water into the air when it's really cold out. Despite that, a couple of quick squirts froze a hot glue stick rock solid to the point where I snapped it in half easily.
I know i'm late. But i find it kinda funny they mention the bitterant in the can to prevent people from using it as an inhalant. Then they continue to use 4 cans indoors. Then a co2 extinguisher.
Bart Simpson called, he wants his ha- oh...wait. its unreal how many people would comment about your spikey hair in old videos. that constant onslaught of negative, tired and hacky jokes about you're look was even tiresome for me.. I can't imagine how it made you feel. hopefully you shrugged it off. its almost as if TH-camrs are actual real people with feelings! I think most viewers forget that when commenting. y'all are just humans like the rest of us.
The problem with the bike lock is that, regardless of whether it gets significantly more brittle as it gets colder - the metal has both a large thermal mass, and great thermal conductivity - especially if you're focusing on a small part of it, it's going to take a lot to get it chilled.
-13 degrees isn't even colder than it is outside sometimes. I knew when you had the fire extinguisher you were going to use the CO2 to cool a lock, which should work okay, but liquid nitrogen works like a charm.
I'm a police officer at a college and we are actually seeing this issue. Lots of cable or chain locks are being broken with blunt force, righting the combination. No key locks are being targeted. We suspect that a cold substance might be in use as well. The actual internal locking pin is the weakest point and is what's been giving way.
The wood surface is going to help keep the lock warm because of the surface area connected to it. Should have put it in a container so that it would hold the super cooled liquid against the lock. You can do this in the field with a solo cup. hold the solo cup up so the lock is against the bottom (or a side as close to the bottom as possible) and spray across it and into the cup. Not saying it will work, just saying it would have been a better tactic.
You guys should make a CO2 mini "extinguisher" that use 12g cartridges. first spray co2 into the keyway to get the powder inside, then hose it with the airduster to get the liquid inside, then bash it with a hammer. Who knows, might work better. Its not exactly easy to get bolt cutters around a deadbolt body.
Have y’all ever tried to make flame throwers out of glass bottles in a fire? It’s about 1/2 water. 1/4-1/3 motor oil (I use used oil) and the rest air. Set it in a fire and watch after a min-3 min ish. Depending on the fire’s temp. You don’t want it to hot or too cold though. Or else it’ll shatter the glass before it shoots flames out. Idk. Kinda fun thing to do at a party. Just don’t stand “down range” of it lol
I love that this channel is largely two buddies hanging out and actually following through with things that all guys wonder about and screwing around until something amusing happens..
That's exactly what it is.
That makes me so happy and also incredibly jealous, especially regarding the whisk(e)y place.
This is my dream life.
2 dorks, 1 garage
InstaBlaster.
"The Modern Rogue - injuring ourselves so you don't have to"
accurate.
Which episode is the one where he gets hit with a drone?
@@donniereynolds73 I think he did it when he was with his family off screen.
Jaskass - science edition
I hate that my mind read that in Nostalgia Critic's voice.
I'm seriously considering spending the rest of my life watching Modern Rogue and Scam School 24/7
I am okay with this life choice.
The Modern Rogue Brian, is your knuckle okay?
Ben Roberts Already done it.
@@ModernRogue I object. Don't get me wrong, I fucking love your videos. But how about a compromise of 23/7 watching videos, the rest trying the experiments.
@@ModernRogue Brian please help me
"Put your gloves and goggles on Mr. Brushwood." -Jason a minute before injury
this channel is both entertaining and informational,its perfect
I love you. Please help spread the word?
you got it, gonna just post this video into a bunch of discord servers!
Entertaining but not informational. They don't understand physics at all.
Brian sorta does, but I totally agree with you
24pavlo ×##
"OOOOOOOH!!!"
"nothing happened"
"OOOOOOOH!!!"
"nothing happened"
"OOOOOOOH!!!"
"nothing happened"
"OOOOOOOH!!!"
"nothing happened"
"OOOOOOOH!!!"
"nothing happened"
"OOOOOOOH!!!"
"nothing happened"
"OOOOOOOH!!!"
"nothing happened"
"OOOOOOOH!!!"
"nothing happened"
"OOOOOOOH!!!"
"nothing happened"
"OOOOOOOH!!!"
"nothing happened"
"OOOOOOOH!!!"
"nothing happened"
Such a dumbass...
You need a harder surface to hit them on, otherwise that wood is going to spring up and down dissipating and absorbing the blows from the hammer
Always puts a smile on my face when I see an upload from the modern rogue
"Just use the bolt cutters.. .YEAH, like a responsible thief!" - you guys are awesome!
Brian is the reason I watch ScamSchool. But make no mistake, Jason is a damn good reason to watch The Modern Rogue. Keep it up, you guys!
I get so happy whenever a new video comes out from you guys. even when its on something I already know about. Thanks for the great content.
Thanks for watching!
Jason Murphy Of course! I aspire to rakeishness, so the Modern Rogue is a good source of entertaining information! Thank you and Mr. Brushwood for doing them.
The freezing works best on higher-end hardened steel locks. You can't get through those with bolt cutters (unless you're using significantly more expensive hydraulic cutters), and, as steel gets more brittle as you harden it, the added brittleness from freezing can actually make shattering the lock viable. Cans of compressed air are also much more concealable than bolt cutters. You can easily toss a can of compressed air and a hammer in a backpack, not so much with bolt cutters.
10:50 You forgot to yell Crom
"Suffer no guilt ye who wield this in the name of Crom"
Requesting this redone with a cup so that the lock can sit in the cryo so it can saturate. I am positive that you would be able to break a lock that is fully cooked with the duster
"What you can't shatter with a hammer, you can *CRUSH* it with a hydraulic press"
-quote from some random channel with hydraulic presses
Haha, I love this channel, it's my new favourite! This was on Burn Notice. They say you're supposed to completely empty the can of spray duster, fully upside down, and then shatter the lock with a hammer.
I love you guys for translating your weird massurement units for the rest of the world!
:-D
I am so glad I found this channel, I've been switching between your alcohol/mixer videos and then how to make a gas mask out of a coke bottle and lighter flashbangs... Love it!
Every episode ever. Brian "WOW" the end
Absolutely love you guys, Brian's magic, your Nat Geo show, scam school. Brian and Jason, you're fantastic keep it up!
6:48 "a knife into hot butter" haha, dont think you meant that
Edward lmao
haha... I think I like this turn of phrase even better!
Jason Kyi hot knife through butter
Edward
Lol, it fits the metaphor, but it isn't quite the same mental image.
dull plastic knife into frozen butter
You know that Jason is a good friend when he didn't immediately tell Brian "I told you so" for not following his "you should wear safety equipment" advice from a couple of minutes before the injury!
“That hand is invincible now”
Destroys same hand later in episode
Love watching you guys doing all kinds of crazy stuff.
Can you guys make flash powder or a sugar rocket?
Also, I Love the show! Keep up the good work!
We've already done one of those :-)
The only video related to those things that I've seen was the smoke bomb? Or have I missed any?
the smoke bomb was sugar rocket fuel.
Flash Cotten ?
iFarlander like steel wool on fire ? if you put it inside a wiffle ball tie it to rope and spin it it will make a quite a spark show. (extremely dangerous)
Brian's "WHOOAOAAOAOAOAO nothing happened" reactions are why I keep watching these :P
try dry ice and pure acetone. mix until temperature equalizes. then dip your favorite material to see how its propteries change
What better way to start your weekend than with a new episode of The Modern Rogue, and breaking stuff!!!
So this is really "How to least efficiently make a frag grenade"
"It feels hotter than I want it to be" Of course it does, dry ice is so cold that it feels hot
Why don't you use a mixture of Aceton and Dry Ice? (It cools it self to almost -80 degrees Celsius)
Outdoor Freak Pretty sure they made a video on something similar to this
or Dimethyl Ether
Isopropanol and dry ice works fine too. We use it to flash freeze histology samples for storage.
At -80 degrees Celsius your fingers will shatter like frozen hotdogs, but I don't know if it weakens metal enough to be able to shatter chinesium brass.
No tools , No Freeze required! You can wreck small padlocks with just a towel easily, not a thick one, but a kitchen towel. Just thread it through the lock so both ends of towel have the same length, then yank both towel ends in one, or with both hands hard down, your small padlock should break at 1st down yanking, guaranteed! But do as much brute force down yanking as needed. Works even on not so small padlocks. We did this all the time, couple times a week, on our army lockers, cause keys were apparently lost quite often, or combinations forgotten, so we got lotsa practice with that technique. Back in the day, Cheers!
"metal doesn't like to stay cold very long too" - ehm nope.. that's just plain wrong. Blowing away the coolant is counterproductive. You need to "boil" the lock in the coolant, as the evaporation (the boiling coolant) removes lots of heat.
"Blowing away the coolant" is the very act of inducing evaporation at a faster pace. It's why wind chill effectively strips your body of heat rather than still air.
No Brian :) You want the coolant to be in contact with the thing you are cooling. You were blowing it completely away. You want to increase the rate of evaporation.
Submerge the thing you want to cool in the coolant, and when it stops bubbling (boiling) it has reached its lowest temperature. Basic science.
Wind chill is different to what you're doing. Wind chill introduces more cold air to you, removing the air your body has heated up. You were introducing room temperature air and blowing away the liquid and air cooled around it. It was essentially the reverse of a "wind chill".
mate u clearly dont understand basic thermofluids things cool fast when they have a cold thing moving across them thats why cooling systems use pipes with water moving and high speeds to cool the system faster. science isnt that simple when it comes to cooling things quickly
No, metal does lose heat more quickly, that's why it often feels cold to the touch, because the heat is QUICKLY being transferred from your skin.
Why are all you videos so damn cool I binge watched so many when I found you
xoxo
you guys should try this with a liquid nitrogen and much bigger locks
The title "Shattering frozen rocks" blew my mind so fucking hard I literally HAD to click on the video. Also, I love what you guys do, keep doing it please.
shoulda called this episode "-1000 DEGREE LOCK! OMG WILL IT BREAK????" for the clickbait
I think out of everything we do on The Modern Rogue, I'm most proud of our understated titles.
lol
We're also proud of you.
Gresi Lamaj We do not tolerate harassment in the Modern Rogue comment section, please leave as tipx2 MASTER was only referencing the meme of "1000 DEGREE CRAZY KNIFE CUT! WILL IT CUT?!?!?! click bait that was going on at the start of this year.
not that i disagree, but you hardly look like an admin :)
So much for Jason's theory about that hand being immortal now! : D
Try liquid nitrogen.
Okay, to clear the air on this really easy trick... the science behind opening a padlock with a can of cold condensed liquid (like butane or canned air) is that the micro-springs inside the lock are so thin that after unloading an entire cheap a** $1.75 bottle of butane it deep freezes them. Immediately after you have done this (unloading the can upside down into the lock via the key entrance) then hitting or jarring the lock with the stresses on the pins and springs inside the lock will shatter and break leaving you with a handful of dismantled cold lock insides. Much cheaper than a pair of heavy duty bolt cutters and far easier to reach those key holes than getting a pair of cutters around some locks!
>"The cable is the weak point"
Seriously? The flexible cable is more brittle than the lock? The made-in-China lock full of tiny moving parts?
Also, hammering a metal lock on a soft, particle board table isn't really ideal- put the lock on a concrete floor, or steel tabletop; some surface that won't absorb all the impact.
But there's an easy way to pop a cheap shackle lock with two crescent wrenches- or shim it with a coke can.
Plus most cheap locks lack serrated pins, so they are easymode to pick.
You was correct, it is the evaporatiom that reduces it's temperature. Constantly spraying it isn't cooling it because the liquid is at to temperature.
transmission.status=corrupt
redd.it/640x8v for answers and winners
The form is still for the Rogue's Wallet and it won't let me enter my answer:(
found the answer before the page was set up. rip
cc mesich me to, this time it was really easy
The link for the giveaway is pointing to the Rogue's Wallet. Any chance that's a mistake?
We were too fast, they forgot to update the link.
How does this channel not have more subs? Man this world is strange...
5:35 sorry not right, its more cold when liquid.
Honestly, using the freeze it trick is only worth it for the high end locks where bolt cutters and hack saws just don't work well.
In those cases, liquid nitrogen is preferred. It's not terribly expensive itself, but the Dewar flask or equivalent can be several hundred dollars.
Brian, what about your hand and a drone strike? I don't think I know this story and it seems interesting.
instagram.com/p/BOlC1XMBQbF/?taken-by=scamschoolbrian
Luke Sommers dude, gross! Hope you heal fast, like Arnie.
gore content warning for the instagram link btw
Brain: gets excited after using the canned air.
Cold lock: "You dare attempt to defeat me?"
Who came after the latest video?
i did lol
If you are interested in the topic, here's an explanation of the phenomenon seen in the video. The explanation is simplified because it is aimed to people that don't know anything about material science:
ductility in any metal is caused by "holes", that are called vacancies, in the crystalline lattice left by some missing atoms (imagine a big pile of oranges at the market, if you miss a spot inside while building the pile, you have a vacancy). When you apply force to the metal, atoms can move around and occupy these holes, leaving new ones in the sites they left. when enough of these holes have clustered together, the metal deforms visibly. when this happens, we say that these holes "move around", and the more holes you have, the softer the metal is.
Now, the number and mobility of these holes depends on the temperature of the metal, so, if you cool it down enough, you have less vacancies and the metal becomes brittle because if you hit it, instead of deforming itself, it breaks. For simplification, i'll say that with less temperature the atoms "vibrate less", so that you have less probability to form a vacancy.
This mechanism works only with metals: the mechanism of why a polymer (rubber, plastic...) becomes brittle at low temperature is very different, and requires much less difference in temperature to see the change in properties.
You just had Grant Thompson there. Why didn't you try liquid nitrogen?
...
R.I.P.
This is like low budget myth busters, I love it
you guys should have used liquid nitrogen
came here to say this. LN2 would have been much better, and actually provided shatters.
@@yes9421 to freeze metal to the point of total brittleness you need to use something like liquid nitrogen
This is like the opposite of the scene where Heisenberg uses thermite to destroy the lock! NIce
as someone who lived for years in a place where the temperature hangs around -40 for extended periods of time you're not gonna be smashing too many things cooling them with keyboard blower
as someone that hates snow every year even if the snow is like one inch thick and melts in a week, good luck
You realize that these things go way below -40, right?
Pixode Boiling point of difluoroethane is -25C/-13F. It wont go colder than that by evaporating. Only way it can get colder is if I leave it outside in winter.
okay but the more chaotic version of mythbusters
For future smashing vids please get an anvil or atleast a vice with anvil, your table is springy as eff.
+tehOGRE well, sure. Just like whatever chain link fence you're trying to bypass.
I want to buy them a new table, Mailing Address ?
Brian understands basic thermodynamics. That's cool.
Do an episode on homemade booby traps please
I really do want to.
Jason Murphy I agree lol
@jason Murphy Yo you should make some more videos on your channel. Like another series of some sort.
Calcium Oxide and Aluminium Powder and tiny amount of Sodium Metal
I think this is my most fav TH-cam channel and scam school
Modern Rogue and everyone in the comments here has it wrong. Matter has 3 stages. Solid, liquid and gas. The melting point for steel is something like 1500°C. Meaning that steel is in its FROZEN state at under 1500°C. To something like water the difference between 20°C and -20°C is huge, but for something like steel, that temperature difference is minuscule. With nitrogen, which boils at -200°C you might get the steel brittle enough to crack. Even moreso possible with a shitty Chineseum alloy like these locks.
Disliked for loss of credibility with "Chineseum."
It's a perfectly cromulent word.
PS guys love the content otherwise. Chineseum joke is widespread on the internet and is more of a poke on low manufacturing standards for cheap products like the ones in this video and definitely not intended as a slight on the Chinese people. #staywoke
Consider my spirit embiggened.
J Andersen 4 states of matter counting plasma
another great episode guys. I'm going to try this on a Kryptonite lock... the supposed invincible bike lock
Notification Squad! 🙌🏻🙌🏻
**high five**
From what i can tell on the first padlock you are meant to freeze the bar when it stands up so the liquid drips inside, then no so much try and shatter it, but hammer the bottom of the lock off just by hitting the top of the "cheaper metal" while the bar is being held it should pop right off.
What are bolt cutters legally used for I always hear about them being illegally used for breaking locks but never knew the true purpose.
OliOli I work in a warehouse. Shipping containers, the huge steel ones that come in on ships and get loaded on tractor trailers, have disposable bolts on them. They stay locked until they reach the destination, and then we pop the bolt with bolt cutters to unload it. Google "shipping container bolt" or something to that effect.
They can be used for odds and ends too, like fence repair, but there are better tools for that. Shipping is the only thing I know of that they're specifically used for.
OliOli also good in schools for teachers to get locks unlocked if they dot have the combo
OliOli for cutting metal bolts...
It's int he name...
To... cut the bolts...
I knew exactly where this was going as soon as I saw the fire extinguisher, because Brian normally doesn't have any fire extinguishers in his house.
coulda just sprayed with two bottles.. one upside down one right side up.
This stuff is crazy. I found that when I turned the can upside down, a similar reaction occurred to throwing boiling water into the air when it's really cold out. Despite that, a couple of quick squirts froze a hot glue stick rock solid to the point where I snapped it in half easily.
At the beginning, was I the only one that thought he was referring to the T-1000, the Terminator model?
Sharron Perez We absolutely were. :)
Ay! Knew it! (Everybody else probably knew as well.)
Cool of you for replying, Mr. Murphy.
I know i'm late. But i find it kinda funny they mention the bitterant in the can to prevent people from using it as an inhalant. Then they continue to use 4 cans indoors. Then a co2 extinguisher.
Bart Simpson called, he wants his ha- oh...wait.
its unreal how many people would comment about your spikey hair in old videos. that constant onslaught of negative, tired and hacky jokes about you're look was even tiresome for me.. I can't imagine how it made you feel. hopefully you shrugged it off.
its almost as if TH-camrs are actual real people with feelings! I think most viewers forget that when commenting. y'all are just humans like the rest of us.
I love how the injury counter was counting down in the intro
Just had my wisdom teeth out and I think that The Modern Rogue supplemented with kung fu movies is the best treatment for a speedy recovery.
happy I found this channel today
The problem with the bike lock is that, regardless of whether it gets significantly more brittle as it gets colder - the metal has both a large thermal mass, and great thermal conductivity - especially if you're focusing on a small part of it, it's going to take a lot to get it chilled.
You guys will hit 1 million subs by this time next year bet on it
hoping so!
Alex Acosta More like next month
the lock is actually the weakest part, also striking it on a malleable surface like a wooden desk won't get you anywhere either
The Mythbusters finally have worthy competition.
God I love this channel !
-13 degrees isn't even colder than it is outside sometimes. I knew when you had the fire extinguisher you were going to use the CO2 to cool a lock, which should work okay, but liquid nitrogen works like a charm.
It's the expansion that cools the stuff coming out of the can.
I'm a police officer at a college and we are actually seeing this issue. Lots of cable or chain locks are being broken with blunt force, righting the combination. No key locks are being targeted. We suspect that a cold substance might be in use as well. The actual internal locking pin is the weakest point and is what's been giving way.
good intel! Thanks.
The boiling point of difluoroethane is -25 C, but it can cool stuff down much colder than that. I've cooled stuff below -40 with it.
You guys should really make sure that room is super well ventilated!
Not because of solvent abuse or anything stupid but CO2 will kill ya man! :)
You guys should totally keep the "Days since on-set injury" counter on the intro
My spirit animal is Jason Murphy saying "Let off some steam Benett"
6:49 "like a knive into hot butter."
lol 😂
That intro is just amazing
I'm with you. I smile everytime I see it.
I was just thinking about this earlier, now I have the answer awesome!
The first song sounds like CIKI! That is tight!
"That hand may be immortal now"
*_DIRECTED BY ROBERT B. WEIDE_*
This channel should have more subs
When he said he used to play with keyboard cleaner I thought he was huffing that shit😂😂😂
can we please just get a video compilation of every time you guys have reset the injury counter?
[Robot Announcer] The Modern Rogue Suffers A Shrapnel Injury.
The wood surface is going to help keep the lock warm because of the surface area connected to it. Should have put it in a container so that it would hold the super cooled liquid against the lock. You can do this in the field with a solo cup. hold the solo cup up so the lock is against the bottom (or a side as close to the bottom as possible) and spray across it and into the cup. Not saying it will work, just saying it would have been a better tactic.
I love that they put kelvin there
You guys should make a CO2 mini "extinguisher" that use 12g cartridges. first spray co2 into the keyway to get the powder inside, then hose it with the airduster to get the liquid inside, then bash it with a hammer. Who knows, might work better. Its not exactly easy to get bolt cutters around a deadbolt body.
Have y’all ever tried to make flame throwers out of glass bottles in a fire? It’s about 1/2 water. 1/4-1/3 motor oil (I use used oil) and the rest air. Set it in a fire and watch after a min-3 min ish. Depending on the fire’s temp. You don’t want it to hot or too cold though. Or else it’ll shatter the glass before it shoots flames out. Idk. Kinda fun thing to do at a party. Just don’t stand “down range” of it lol
hey brian its still cold without evaporating! the reason it is liquid is because it already evaporated most of it in order to chill the rest!