Unfortunately I have missed the disclaimer and have done exactly this at home. Just by accident I have applied 600 tons of pressure to my metal. What shall I do now?
@@yawifeinmedms9438 Sure the Nokia 3310 haved a secred OLED Screen wih Infinitive, collors, Resolution , brightness and 6g you must Only enter the right secred Code 😉
400degF may be still good, but the "fun" starts above 450degC, where the recrystalization starts. Not F, but C. That is not the same. And at 800degC pretty much any construction steel becomes like butter. And common house fires (fueled by carpets, furniture,...) are able to go way above that. The purpose of the heat protection "paint" is to absorb the heat (by decomposing itself) for at least the time needed to evacuate people. But when all the burning things became soaked with kerosene and also burning two floors below, the extra heat make the coating to decompose way faster... Well, we are talking about quite a few mm thick layer by the way, so calling it a "paint" is a bit stretch, but so be it...
@@sheerluckholmes5468 There is a video on this channel featuring a hydraulic press vs. a steel ball (80 mm) at room temperature and vs. a steel ball (also 80 mm) cooled in liquid nitrogen. Guess what? The cooled steel ball not only didn't break, but it shattered the metallic base underneath it in pieces! So no, steel at such low temperatures is extremely hard and not brittle at all.
the thing about steels is once you heat it to above 400c, you've ruined any hardness or tempering properties it had beforehand, even if you allow it to cool back down to ambient room temperature. it will be roughly as soft and malleable as cold mild steel unless you can reharden and re temper it, which for something that big and thick, is really hard to do.
This is the key thing “9-11 truther’s” fail to grasp. It’s entirely possible to hit 450c in a contained fire. You don’t need to melt steel to ruin it’s structural properties, just get it to ~450c/850f. Even 400c would likely be sufficient.
@@geoffstrickler how would the foundation get to 450 degrees if the fire extended to the top floors? And how did building 7 fall from the bottom up when nothing struck it?
It would be interesting to take the same type of nuts and go to the opposite extreme. How much more brittle would they be after immersion in liquid nitrogen?
@@truthhunterhawk3932 essentially, rapid cooling creates stress within the metal's inner structure. This does make it brittle, but it also makes it very hard since the stresses prevent the grains inside from moving
@@TheRatLikerThey’d be harder. But weaker, it will instantly explode once it goes like a few millimetres compressed, heat makes things flexible, cold makes things hard but explosive
“I don’t get a real benefit” from watching this, besides entertainment and learning a thing or 2! But love these videos and almost stop doing anything to watch them 😂! Thankful for all the time, effort and money invested to bring these videos to us! 👍🏼
I would really like to know how the strenght is teperature-dependend. Is there a difference if you heat it up to only 200 degrees ? I think this is a temperature which could happen to a hammer (seldom, but possible) if you work on forging steel.
If there wasn't, why would a blacksmith put his workpiece right into the middle of the hearth and even increase the temperature by pumping air into it?
Alot of metals are strengthened by work hardening, which is essentially where sliding atoms (very simplified explination of dislocations) get stuck and restrict the movement of eachother and make it harder for the material to deform. Increase strength make it less ductile. When you increase temperature these dislocations can defuse and they basically aren't in eachothers way anymore. So effectively you can heat the metal and cool it again and you will get a similar effect. Another factor, significant but not as significant is that each atom has more energy in hotter temperatures which means less mechanical stress (force over area) is needed to be applied for it the dislocations to move and the material to deform
Enlightenment video for all 9/11 conspiracy theorists who believe that a bit of burning kerosene cannot have any influence on the stability of a skyscraper.
Somewhere around 500F is where steels are at their strongest. It goes downhill pretty quick is the temperature rises. Then add in there were beams missing and damaged from the impact, so some beams are being asked to carry more than they expected to.
You're the first yt channel creator to break a sledgehammer I've seen so far. Congratulations. The released every from that was amazing. Well done. Subbed you too.
At 07:55 the color suddenly changes to black... interesting! And one can also see that metal at 800°C, the strength drops dramatically, not only for thrusting, but also bending and pulling forces. Remember something....?
so open air burned jet fuel which is about 1100C … might have had an affect on that something causing that what it supposedly could not and be responsible for the sudden drop in the continuity of ‘being alive’ of those people in there. i am fairly sure that the floors above that point were heavier than 500tonnes… and the weakened structure was able to go downstairs after a while… hmmm its a sad sad event :( may all rest in peace.
Everything, absolutely everything, is compressible. If the compressed thing is still in its springy region, its a spring. The base, workable and press pieces on the table all get compressed. When the victim fails, the springs, well, spring with absolutely massive amounts of energy.
they aren't. You need to repair them regularly, if you use them above certain pressures. Other than that, they are just build out of thick materials and use really strong cogs and transmissions to create the pressure.
Interesting, but more detail would be useful, such as the alloy of the metal, the hardness or temper. This could also be stated as the grade, for bolts & nuts.
This is THE PRESS, beautifull and enchanty power, few things coud resist that. Russian and american quality things, like this giant wrench. Congrats for the wonderfull work, dude!
J'ai le même thermomètre laser et 800°C est le maximum qu'il puisse mesurer... la pièce métallique doit faire bien plus de 800°C dans sa partie basse...
Hello again Chip! Wow those are some big nuts you have there. Not to be trifled with. In the cold press test I could almost hear the nut asking for a nice hard bolt to be wound in. It would probably only flex .2 mm with those threads. The nut would be hard enough not to spread around the theoretical bolt. We could see the paint on your press adaptor plate bubbling from the heat transfer. Was that enough to remove the hardness from it? The small kiln for sure was way over 800 c. Looked like twice that. Nice work, we miss the "Here we go!" Good luck.
I was trying to follow the gauge but didn't get the readngs you gave. Is there some kind of constant or multiplier or other adjustment that has to be applied to the gauge to get the accurate reading?
"Don't try this at home." Yeah, I have some spare change, so I will run to a local supermarket and buy 500 ton hydraulic press and metal furnace. Lidl may have them in their miscellaneous aisle.
Меня всегда удивляет, как пресс не ломается от нагрузок (особенно от динамических: ударов, резких сдвигов вбок) и остается герметичным, чтобы держать адское давление)
0:02 He must’ve stole the nuts, bolts and screws Putin’s nuclear weapons are made with, Koreas nuclear weapons, America’s word war tanks. This guy very likely has an anchor, a scimitar, a machine gun, military uniform in order to get all this stuff o_O And at 1:42 just from cracking that 1st thing, he easily made all the bugs possibly under his floors or within his walls wake up Colorado’s Military saw on their Richter scale a 1.0 lvl noise was just heard.
It's important to indicate the temperature of the experiments in general. Because, hardnesses may be different. Russia and UAE have different temperatures
Unfortunately I have missed the disclaimer and have done exactly this at home. Just by accident I have applied 600 tons of pressure to my metal. What shall I do now?
I did the same thing...at my neighbors house so I wouldn't break any rules.
@@anonymous11011 For how long? 😁
Just stop faking
@@pranavbagrecha3423 It's a fucking joke
@@pranavbagrecha3423 hey, jokes just called. They want their existence back.
Only the Nokia 3310 could survive that
Exactly 🥵🥵😂😂
Nail it bro💯
Those were good phones, nokia should resurect
Do you watch this video with old ass nokia?
@@yawifeinmedms9438 Sure the Nokia 3310 haved a secred OLED Screen wih Infinitive, collors, Resolution , brightness and 6g you must Only enter the right secred Code 😉
"Don't repeat this at home"
Me: Yeah I should keep that hydraulic press back in my pocket.
Repeat it at someone else's home.😁
Yea cuz it wont he at home
Not to mention the means to heat metal to 800°C.
មលលោ៩៨៨៨៩៩៩
I don't even have the hammer
Good you warned me to not repeat at home. I just wanted to pick my 500 ton hydraulic press out of the wardrobe to try it out. You saved my life ;)
These videos are also educational. This is why heat resistant paint is so important for steel constructions.
Need to tell that to 9-11 conspiracy theorists. Steel doesn't have to come anywhere near melting to lose strength and fail.
400degF may be still good, but the "fun" starts above 450degC, where the recrystalization starts. Not F, but C. That is not the same. And at 800degC pretty much any construction steel becomes like butter. And common house fires (fueled by carpets, furniture,...) are able to go way above that. The purpose of the heat protection "paint" is to absorb the heat (by decomposing itself) for at least the time needed to evacuate people. But when all the burning things became soaked with kerosene and also burning two floors below, the extra heat make the coating to decompose way faster...
Well, we are talking about quite a few mm thick layer by the way, so calling it a "paint" is a bit stretch, but so be it...
5:48 That jump scare was better than the ones in horror games and movies 🎬
These videos are so satisfying to watch. I love guessing how things will break
same, i love seeing nuts get squished via hydraulic press
@@lolzhunter same bro
@@lolzhunter that’s what she said
Anyways the sledge broke like Thor’s hammer mjolnir
Same i love gussing hoe many tons it takes to destroy the object
1:51 i like how the other iron bar seems so happy seing his friend sliced 2. Like
"Yaayyy finally, plis do it again"
Are you able to get liquid nitrogen? I'm curious to see the strength of metals at extremely low temperatures.
That be cool
@@xyoungdipsetx quite literally
At −195.8 °C (boiling point) the metal would exhibit extreme brittleness
@@sheerluckholmes5468 exactly 😏
@@sheerluckholmes5468
There is a video on this channel featuring a hydraulic press vs. a steel ball (80 mm) at room temperature and vs. a steel ball (also 80 mm) cooled in liquid nitrogen. Guess what? The cooled steel ball not only didn't break, but it shattered the metallic base underneath it in pieces! So no, steel at such low temperatures is extremely hard and not brittle at all.
the thing about steels is once you heat it to above 400c, you've ruined any hardness or tempering properties it had beforehand, even if you allow it to cool back down to ambient room temperature. it will be roughly as soft and malleable as cold mild steel unless you can reharden and re temper it, which for something that big and thick, is really hard to do.
Were the Twin towers heated to above 400c during 911?
How you know this
@@xyoungdipsetx smithing channels i guess
This is the key thing “9-11 truther’s” fail to grasp. It’s entirely possible to hit 450c in a contained fire. You don’t need to melt steel to ruin it’s structural properties, just get it to ~450c/850f. Even 400c would likely be sufficient.
@@geoffstrickler how would the foundation get to 450 degrees if the fire extended to the top floors? And how did building 7 fall from the bottom up when nothing struck it?
There must be a psychological reason why I like to watch hydraulic press videos
resistance of things
Seeing the ultimate demise of objects as they get slowly crushed to death, with no return of hope.
What
repressed homosexuality
Perhaps you're under tremendous pressure?
Человек любит разрушать - поэтому
Guy: do not try this in home
Me: *hey mom can i buy 500 ton hydraulic press?*
Mom: wth is that thing?
😂😂😂❤
Buy a 600 and make a bigger channel!
It would be interesting to take the same type of nuts and go to the opposite extreme. How much more brittle would they be after immersion in liquid nitrogen?
They would actually become stronger.
@@TheRatLiker really? Whys that?
As soon as the press started imparting energy into them they would rapidly heat up
@@truthhunterhawk3932 essentially, rapid cooling creates stress within the metal's inner structure. This does make it brittle, but it also makes it very hard since the stresses prevent the grains inside from moving
@@TheRatLikerThey’d be harder. But weaker, it will instantly explode once it goes like a few millimetres compressed, heat makes things flexible, cold makes things hard but explosive
I always get a strange feeling when it looks like it's about to break
Want to hide myself
"Don't try this at home"
Yeah sure because I just happen to have an industrial press in my living room
“I don’t get a real benefit” from watching this, besides entertainment and learning a thing or 2! But love these videos and almost stop doing anything to watch them 😂! Thankful for all the time, effort and money invested to bring these videos to us! 👍🏼
Impressive how the sledgehammer able to withstand that much of pressure!
I would really like to know how the strenght is teperature-dependend. Is there a difference if you heat it up to only 200 degrees ?
I think this is a temperature which could happen to a hammer (seldom, but possible) if you work on forging steel.
If there wasn't, why would a blacksmith put his workpiece right into the middle of the hearth and even increase the temperature by pumping air into it?
Alot of metals are strengthened by work hardening, which is essentially where sliding atoms (very simplified explination of dislocations) get stuck and restrict the movement of eachother and make it harder for the material to deform. Increase strength make it less ductile.
When you increase temperature these dislocations can defuse and they basically aren't in eachothers way anymore. So effectively you can heat the metal and cool it again and you will get a similar effect.
Another factor, significant but not as significant is that each atom has more energy in hotter temperatures which means less mechanical stress (force over area) is needed to be applied for it the dislocations to move and the material to deform
So if anyone ever had any doubt about heat affecting steel, I guess now you know.
Thor very much dislikes this video! - Awesome upload, very relaxing watching your experiments
How well does the fire-resistant Steel + Molybdenum used in large buildings perform?
Exactly the same - what do you think big high tensile nuts are made from?
It's my first time seeing something not break under the hydrolic press after a steel sphere
Enlightenment video for all 9/11 conspiracy theorists who believe that a bit of burning kerosene cannot have any influence on the stability of a skyscraper.
Somewhere around 500F is where steels are at their strongest. It goes downhill pretty quick is the temperature rises. Then add in there were beams missing and damaged from the impact, so some beams are being asked to carry more than they expected to.
Such a great visualization of the issue with the "Jet fuel can't melt steel beams" claim.
You're the first yt channel creator to break a sledgehammer I've seen so far. Congratulations. The released every from that was amazing. Well done. Subbed you too.
What were hydraulic presses supposed to do again?
At 07:55 the color suddenly changes to black... interesting!
And one can also see that metal at 800°C, the strength drops dramatically, not only for thrusting, but also bending and pulling forces. Remember something....?
so open air burned jet fuel which is about 1100C … might have had an affect on that something causing that what it supposedly could not and be responsible for the sudden drop in the continuity of ‘being alive’ of those people in there.
i am fairly sure that the floors above that point were heavier than 500tonnes… and the weakened structure was able to go downstairs after a while… hmmm
its a sad sad event :( may all rest in peace.
@@mityaboy4639And visually confirmed to be above 660C by the molten aluminium alloy pouring like water out of the structure just before collapse.
Thank you for the warning not to repeat it at home. But what do you think how many of the viewers have such a hydraulic press at home?
Wow can’t believe how powerful that press is 🤯
Nothing beats the almighty press 😎👊
500 tons is alot thats like putting 30 trucks in one small area on whatever is under it
@@TIMOTHYEET69420thats even scarier cause its concentrated into one small area
@@kingofthegod8983 nokia 3310 🤣
@@TIMOTHYEET69420more like 50-100 tanker trucks.
Great video, what if you heat the compressed steel to 800 degree again and apply the same 500T?
i always wondered why when something fails or get out of the press the support or the base is flying up
Everything, absolutely everything, is compressible.
If the compressed thing is still in its springy region, its a spring.
The base, workable and press pieces on the table all get compressed. When the victim fails, the springs, well, spring with absolutely massive amounts of energy.
I had a thought that the sledgehammer before it broke was basically a Thors Hammer. No one on earth would have been able to move it.
wunba here?? wtf that was unexpected
Yes❤❤❤❤❤❤🎉🎉🎉😂😂😂😅😅😢😢
What the actual frick, WUMBA HERE??!!
I wonder how presses are built so that they don’t break themselves.
they aren't. You need to repair them regularly, if you use them above certain pressures. Other than that, they are just build out of thick materials and use really strong cogs and transmissions to create the pressure.
Good experiment and be safe, also well done
I really liked watching the red hot steel blocks get squished with less weight than the cool pieces!😊👍
It's interesting whatever you press gets damaged except for the press pads. Perhaps you should also try an egg painted in yellow and black.
0:31 this man has unlocked the deez nutz achievement.
Congrats in advance on a million subscribers. Been a fan since day 1. So satisfying to watch.
Prove it
@@Koshanitsu what he gonna prove it with 😂😂
@@Vexxy197 a video
If you said day 1 are you from 100 BC I know the answers probably no
@@JohnM-u7b 100 BC isn't day one.
5:48 I was so scared that I even turned off my phone XDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDD
Now I understand why you don't have any stress and you enjoy going to work
Can you make hidraulic pressure vs hidraulic pressure?
Interesting, but more detail would be useful, such as the alloy of the metal, the hardness or temper. This could also be stated as the grade, for bolts & nuts.
What type of metal is the press made from?
Steel retains less then 30% strength at those temps so this doesnt surprise me in the least.
Out of curiosity, what are those big bolt nuts even used for? Buildings? Vehicles?
This is THE PRESS, beautifull and enchanty power, few things coud resist that. Russian and american quality things, like this giant wrench. Congrats for the wonderfull work, dude!
Tell me pleace what russia produce , wich quality things ??? Death and war???
The one thing that will save us from a robot apocalypse
That hammer exhibited some very nice fine grain, nice steel.
Sledgehammer wins
It destroyed the hydraulic press
Who else shocked when the hammer broke? 😂😂😂
I got shocked when the hammer broke the press 🤣
The guy got a hydraulic press as a birthday gift. Since then he has been pressing anything he can pay his hands on.
wow I was very surprised to see the impact of the hammer which was very fast 🤯
your videos are great, you work hard
Who will be having a hydraulic press in home😂
“Do not repeat this at home” 🤔 oh wait…let get out my 500 ton hydraulic press. 😛
"Do not repeat at home" - like everyone has a "Mr 500 Ton Press" in their kitchen. lol
Из нагретой гайки, получилась прикольная пепельница.
I like the warning at the beginning: "Do not repeat at home...."
Yeah, everyone has a 500ton hydraulic press in the basement :)
"Do not repeat at home"
Damn i was about to pull my hydraulic press and my 800° material out of my pocket
What exactly would a nut of that size be used for anyway?
The long nut might be part of tensioning cables in a suspension bridge.
It amazes me how they pack 500 tonnes of pressure into such a small area
Remember kids, metal becomes edible at 800c
5:48 , damn that jumpscare doe .
Have you tested the 🎯 Captain America Shield ?
It's amazing how something small can still creat such shock waves.
what shockwaves are you seeing? lol
He--Do not repeat this at home
Me--arrey Hydraulic to ho pehle🤣🤣🤣😂
Пора делать пресс на 10 000 тонн.
1:53 What mechanisms make sparks fly ???
He thought it was a normal hammer! And ended up pressing Thor's hammer! Rookie mistake!
!
Wow! I never thought seeing things getting crushed could be so soothing for my evergoing brain. Thank you
How do the foundations of the building hold when 250 tons smashes down against the press platform?
What is this used for? Is it on big ship engines or bridges?
J'ai le même thermomètre laser et 800°C est le maximum qu'il puisse mesurer... la pièce métallique doit faire bien plus de 800°C dans sa partie basse...
How strong the base of hydraulic...🤔
Wow! En serio por la forma curva de las tuercas pensé que no les pasaría nada
I'm wondering how strong you could forge a blade with this thing now....
"Do not repeat at home". OK ,thank you for the advice. I won´t use my personal 500 ton hidraulic press for this purpose.
OMG, it’s just like Thor’s hammer! And it exploded with lightening!
These are Soo satisfying to watch
no joke these have some good jump scares
Hello again Chip! Wow those are some big nuts you have there. Not to be trifled with.
In the cold press test I could almost hear the nut asking for a nice hard bolt to be wound in. It would probably only flex .2 mm with those threads. The nut would be hard enough not to spread around the theoretical bolt.
We could see the paint on your press adaptor plate bubbling from the heat transfer. Was that enough to remove the hardness from it? The small kiln for sure was way over 800 c. Looked like twice that.
Nice work, we miss the "Here we go!" Good luck.
"Big nuts" 💀
I was trying to follow the gauge but didn't get the readngs you gave. Is there some kind of constant or multiplier or other adjustment that has to be applied to the gauge to get the accurate reading?
I´ll be doing it at my Friend´s Home, then.
How do you keep your foundation from cracking or being damaged?
Muito satisfatório
"Don't try this at home."
Yeah, I have some spare change, so I will run to a local supermarket and buy 500 ton hydraulic press and metal furnace. Lidl may have them in their miscellaneous aisle.
Its very dangerous.
what would happen if this press would stand on the first floor of a house? would the ceiling break?
There’s no way that machine can apply 1,000,000 lbs of pressure
Why?
Меня всегда удивляет, как пресс не ломается от нагрузок (особенно от динамических: ударов, резких сдвигов вбок) и остается герметичным, чтобы держать адское давление)
Jesus Christ is Lord, King and Our Savior!
0:02 He must’ve stole the nuts, bolts and screws Putin’s nuclear weapons are made with, Koreas nuclear weapons, America’s word war tanks.
This guy very likely has an anchor, a scimitar, a machine gun, military uniform in order to get all this stuff o_O
And at 1:42 just from cracking that 1st thing, he easily made all the bugs possibly under his floors or within his walls wake up Colorado’s Military saw on their Richter scale a 1.0 lvl noise was just heard.
Amen!🙏
L bozo
Thank you 🙏 i wonder 💭 I never Owen it! ⚒⚒. It is heavy too.great 👍video 🎥keep break-’em 😅
Good hammer. What brand was that. I’d like to grab one. Lol
А почему этого видео не было на основном канале?
The fact that 500 tons of pressure is over 1 million pounds is insane.
هاذولا اغبياء والله مش دار ين أنه يسبب الضوضاء وفقدان السمع علشان الاشتراك والليك لالا. حول الله قوه ال بلله
@@الطوورالنورسالعريقي Wtf
me: there is no such thing as hot metal
videomaker: takes out red metal from fire
me: I stand all corrected-like
It's important to indicate the temperature of the experiments in general. Because, hardnesses may be different. Russia and UAE have different temperatures
4:47 какая симпатичная гаечка получилась👍
0:53 "Maxwell The Cat"
Lol i just dont Realise that😂
The mallet exploding literally made me jump lmao