Hey I always wanted to know this but I don't think anyone has tried to investigate a little further. Do you think it could be possible to make a balloon off of the lightest metal and make it float with the lightest gas (which would be hydrogen). ChatGPT kinda says it's possible, but who on Earth would try that, right?
In some places, this isn't even legal. Imagine this car parked by the road and the other road users cannot see the car as it does not reflect the exterior back to the driver.
@@Basics_of_Gameology Never heard that before. Can you cite any laws regulating the exterior color of cars? It seems to me that the regulatory response to ensuring parked cars are visible is to require that headlights and taillights have reflectors built in and requiring parking lights and/or flashers in certain situations rather than regulating the color of the paint.
@@averyalexander2303 It is listed on their website “The Black Market” and here I quote: “Can Musou Black Paint be used as an automotive paint?” “The simple answer is No. Musou Black was never designed to be used as an automotive paint…” “… We recommend to do it solely for display purposes and not for long-term use.”
@@averyalexander2303 I remember seeing a legit law was cited in UK or Germany when BMW released a Vantablack X6 in 2019. If you want to follow the latest news, lawmakers in Japan were pressing their government at the moment due to lack of streetlights in parts of the mountain road and more and more people paint their cars in Vantablack paint. You can follow the thread to it.
I just read an article about that yesterday. They designed a super crazy white to reflect heat. It wasn't even for the white but for the environmental effect but they made it anyway by accident.
I wonder how speed cameras could be affected: if they use lights/lasers they may not get the "bounce back" to enable them to "see" the car. OFC, if they use radio/radar, probably still work.
As someone who can wrap cars with vinyl, I'm fairly impressed! Nice work for the first go Edit: just saw with the flashlight.... Definitely a first try hahaha
@@ActionLabShorts I dare you to use this on a staircase paint would be best i think Or paint various objects and put them in a room painted fully with it and try to walk around with out tripping over them LOL
@@TechNextLetsGoBro, do you just wanna see the world burn? Wtf is this request. I hope you step in a puddle with socks on, and have both sides of the pillow be lukewarm and sweaty.
The Frasnel effect could be another reason that could be causing some extra light reflection at certain angles. It can happen on any object or surface. Basically the larger the angle that light bounces off of an object, the more is reflected. This is why water appears less reflective when looking straight down at it vs a more parallel viewing angle.
The fresnel effect is also why concrete can appear reflective at extreme angles, such as near the horizon on a long road. Basically, more surface is covered by the same area of the view due to the angle.
So like It'd be easier to grab onto a surface that's more horizontal and not vertical? Like on a surface angled less than 45° you'd be rolling down, but more than 45° is falling against a plane. 45° exactly could be either, neither, or one of them.
It kind of reminds me of 3D models before the lighting is implemented, or even some video games with older graphics. Kinda surreal to look at with other stuff in the shot
The jars of "adhesive" sitting in the floor at the 2:48 mark appear to be Grandma's Original Blackstrap Molasses. Is that seriously what you used to stick the fabric to your car? That's hilarious and genius at the same time!
That shot at 4:40 was incredibly helpful. This sort of material would be very ideal for telescope and astronomy applications where light absorption to stop reflections is really important. Telescopes tubes are lined and coated with anti reflective paint and flocking. Off axis light is a real problem and a material light this would be help, but it seems it would actually potentially cause more issues!
Imagine creating an entire building with one giant level and pillars everywhere, and you have to find your way out. But... you are smack in the middle, and it's about 1000 yd in either direction.
Not only is that wrapped car almost invisible at night, but it is going to get infernally hot in the daytime (although the original paint job probably got it most of the way there in that department).
great video and after seeing this id have to say the paint works better from all angles for sure. id like a room made with this material though. it would be a great haunted house addition. you could make all kinds of illusions in there! thanks for sharing!
This channel's videos quality looks like made by guy with small channel but he has more than 4M subscribers! I like it, doesn't feel unnecessary fancy but the humble tone really make you focus on the learning! His cost to make these videos must be a lot lower and high profit margin too!
I think Vanta black is the better material for the inside of telescope tubes. It's darker than this material, but not as accessible, so no DIY options. I think you're right about this material being too reflective at shallow angles.
That was my first thought as an astrophotographer hah. It definitely wouldn't be ideal due to the reflective nature of it with off axis light, which is the biggest problem in telescopes. Not just that, the nature of the material, the surface would like degrade rapidly due to the moisture / dew and heat cycles that occur with telescopes.
@@BBROPHOTO Oh, so the material isn't long lasting. Didn't know that! Back to reflections: i'm guessing velvet is reflecting in shallow angels, no? Probably thats the reason concentric rings are placed in the tube.
@@Sekir80 Tube baffles and knife edge baffles are used for that reason yes. They're very effective as they act like peaks and valleys, similar to how sound isolation material works. I have my newtonian lined with normal velour flocking, it's not *super* black, but the important part is, it isn't totally flat like paint - so light gets absorbed into it. A focuser with knife edge baffles inside the draw tube also helps as the last wall of defence against stray light.
@@BBROPHOTO Ah, baffle, that is the term I couldnt recall. Thanks! There's probably a formula of the size and placement of those which i'm not aware of, but ive never built a scope, yet.
Around 4:00 I guess you are starting to see the moisture in the air, captured by the fabric. So the reflection you starting to see, is not the car, but the moisture on the car.
I'd like to see a car wrapped with something similar to that fabric but an actual wrap material. It wouldn't be that black though. I wouldn't want a car that black. I own a black car and it gets super hot in summer.
i would be worried about other ppl not seeing you. even when your car or train is painted bright and reflective ppl still miss it. theres no chance in a pure black car :O
Looks like something car companies can use to hide their pre production test cars from journalist's cameras instead of that camouflage that still allows you to see every detail about the exterior of the car except for the paint color.
Wow, that is amazing. I love that you were able to attach the material to your car and it would be fun to see a policeman pull you over and not be able to find you if you turn the lights off lol.
It has some Fresnel reflectivity in high exposure (when it's pulling out of the garage and explained at 4:40) but it mostly looks like a missing or bugged material.
In magic, “black art” refers to using the black color to “camouflage” something. It’s useful for a variety of magic tricks. We should try to produce or vanish a car with this material! First, we need a curtain made of Kiwami (or a flock sheet)!
Just wanted to say thanks for your content! I always appreciate how straight to the point and honest your videos are. And I find them really interesting too! I appreciate that wysiwyg as opposed to some other content creators. So thanks! Looking forward to the next video!
I wonder what my R1 would look like with that?🤔 But then again I want to keep living and having a nearly invisible super bike at night couldn’t possibly be very safe😂
The fabric is actually rather absorbent - all the fine fibers trap water pretty well. When wet, it still looks black, but not _as_ black, since the wetness itself is reflective. (Exception: if you're holding the fabric up to a light source right behind it, the wet part will be the darkest, since it's the only part one can't see through the weave.) Getting it wet gives it quite the curl and I really don't recommend trying it beyond a tiny scrap piece. (Speaking from personal experience here.)
So I have to wonder if Musou Black is better. Can you do a small sample that would show each with a buckle or fold such that, when the light hits it, we can see if the buckle or fold shows. Kind of like we can see with the fabric on the car where we can at times see where the fabric was a bit buckled. Seeing something with Musou Black VS the Musou Black Fabric would be interesting. It would help show which is actually better.
I remember reading a couple test results on the most visible car in like the 1970's and they came out with somewhere in the bright yellow or orange. I think one article was in Popular Science or Popular Machanics magazines. At least at night, this would have to be the least visible. Wonder how long befor we see car chases in LA with get a way cars like this one. I think it could backfire on them, the helicopter's lights lighting everything around it, showing a black blob in the center. How would that work on like a sub?
This was interesting. Would actually be scary to drive something like that around at night, headlights notwithstanding. Is it possible to check its radar signature?
Of course. Radar is radio based, so the amount of light this fabric can absorb doesn't matter. Stuff made to not be radar detectable uses materials which absorb radiation regardless of color.
Imagine covering a safe in this material that's hiding inside a darkened room or closet so it's way harder to spot. Could have some good uses for safety like that
I have so much fun with all your videos =) . Thanks for this! As someone who loves colors (i call myself a "chromatophile" =p ), i find the videos with the extreme shades to be very interesting! Keep it up!
2 things, 1 You should have pro vinyl wrappers do this to your car, concept is pretty cool, but you did leave a lot of wrinkles and air pockets and 2, Hows the cars paint after this? that adhesive may be a pain to remove later on....
The darkest car seriously looked unreal! Remember you can get up to 30% off the air quality monitor Atmotube PRO today! tidd.ly/3OqKuMZ
Yes
Get sponsored by some of the blackest blacks I want to try a few experiments with them but they're just kinda out of my budget
Hey I always wanted to know this but I don't think anyone has tried to investigate a little further. Do you think it could be possible to make a balloon off of the lightest metal and make it float with the lightest gas (which would be hydrogen). ChatGPT kinda says it's possible, but who on Earth would try that, right?
Dude ur hair looks ridiculous
*BMW VBX6 left the chat*
Me: "I didn't think he'd have the patience to wrap it that well."
Worlds brightest flashlight: "He didn't."
🤣
Genius 😂
I don't get why wouldn't he go to some profesional guy that does it for life.
That made me lol
@@__Random_user_he’s prolly taking it off
Seems like he hasn’t unlocked this car yet
His graphics is just on the lowest setting possible.
he got negative brightness
Underrated comment 🤣
He's still able to drive it though, must be a glitch
The devs need to fix that soon
Did you notice the car hotter during the daytime? Would be interest to see how that absorbed light converts in heat, specially sunlight. Great video!
In some places, this isn't even legal. Imagine this car parked by the road and the other road users cannot see the car as it does not reflect the exterior back to the driver.
@@Basics_of_Gameology Never heard that before. Can you cite any laws regulating the exterior color of cars? It seems to me that the regulatory response to ensuring parked cars are visible is to require that headlights and taillights have reflectors built in and requiring parking lights and/or flashers in certain situations rather than regulating the color of the paint.
@@averyalexander2303 It is listed on their website “The Black Market” and here I quote:
“Can Musou Black Paint be used as an automotive paint?”
“The simple answer is No. Musou Black was never designed to be used as an automotive paint…”
“… We recommend to do it solely for display purposes and not for long-term use.”
@@averyalexander2303 I remember seeing a legit law was cited in UK or Germany when BMW released a Vantablack X6 in 2019.
If you want to follow the latest news, lawmakers in Japan were pressing their government at the moment due to lack of streetlights in parts of the mountain road and more and more people paint their cars in Vantablack paint. You can follow the thread to it.
Freedom do what you but be smart about it parked i would take precautions unless I didn't want to be seen
Now, paint a car with the whitest white.
That'll be really fun at night. It'll be like getting flashbanged, lol
That needs to be illegal 😂
TKOR painted a car with LIT.
@@carltonlebossaka the high beam repellent
I just read an article about that yesterday. They designed a super crazy white to reflect heat. It wasn't even for the white but for the environmental effect but they made it anyway by accident.
I wonder how speed cameras could be affected: if they use lights/lasers they may not get the "bounce back" to enable them to "see" the car. OFC, if they use radio/radar, probably still work.
Nope it's similar tech to stealth technology
License plates reflect metall reflects so no problem
As someone who can wrap cars with vinyl, I'm fairly impressed! Nice work for the first go
Edit: just saw with the flashlight.... Definitely a first try hahaha
Well no one is going to notice anyways
I’m guessing this special fabric also doesn’t stretch quite as well as normal wrapping foil.
Ha ha!t There is also zero stretch to the fabric, so unless I made cuts and seems everywhere, the wrinkles seemed unavoidable.
@@ActionLabShorts fair enough! In any case, an admirable action!😊
@@ActionLabShorts I dare you to use this on a staircase paint would be best i think
Or paint various objects and put them in a room painted fully with it and try to walk around with out tripping over them LOL
I got to be honest, This isnt what i was thinking when I saw "Blackest Car"
I was gonna say "that's not a Nissan Altima" but... Well...
A grim reaper costume would be wicked cool with that fabric
I like the way you think 😅
Bit once it caught dust or dirt it never work again i guess.
Usable until you wash it
Good ideas for Cosplay at Comicon...would win i bet if done right, especially on the Scythe weapon...
@@dinamiteurdinamiteur2324its more like a 1 day thing anyways
that was a dark thought
"Okay now let's turn this into the world's blackest car"
*Car turns into a Chrysler 300*
*Car turns into a Nissan Altima
*car turns into a dodge challenger/charger
mans made worst nighttime safety hazard - the car that doesnt reflect light
He should wrap a car with retroreflective tape
@@TechNextLetsGothe car crash mobile
@@TechNextLetsGoBro, do you just wanna see the world burn? Wtf is this request.
I hope you step in a puddle with socks on, and have both sides of the pillow be lukewarm and sweaty.
There are worse. One would be covering his lights and _actual_ reflectors.
The car that the popo can't catch
Riding it at night with Lights Off will teleport you to the Afterworld.
The Frasnel effect could be another reason that could be causing some extra light reflection at certain angles. It can happen on any object or surface. Basically the larger the angle that light bounces off of an object, the more is reflected. This is why water appears less reflective when looking straight down at it vs a more parallel viewing angle.
The fresnel effect is also why concrete can appear reflective at extreme angles, such as near the horizon on a long road. Basically, more surface is covered by the same area of the view due to the angle.
Youre talking angle of reflection and range of reception. Thaytsnot the Fresnel effect
Yes that is what causes the Frasnel Effect. The angle and distance. So I'm talking both
Fresnel* and double yes. You could say both causes of reflection are related in a way.
So like It'd be easier to grab onto a surface that's more horizontal and not vertical? Like on a surface angled less than 45° you'd be rolling down, but more than 45° is falling against a plane. 45° exactly could be either, neither, or one of them.
It kind of reminds me of 3D models before the lighting is implemented, or even some video games with older graphics. Kinda surreal to look at with other stuff in the shot
Coming up next: how to clean the world's dirtiest car
The cops will be too confused to pull him over for not having a license plate.
The jars of "adhesive" sitting in the floor at the 2:48 mark appear to be Grandma's Original Blackstrap Molasses. Is that seriously what you used to stick the fabric to your car? That's hilarious and genius at the same time!
That would answer my question on how he intends to get the fabric back off. I assume that would be a water-soluble glue? :-P
@@mike1024. Yep and that way you wouldn't damage the paint underneath if you had to use another solvent.
That shot at 4:40 was incredibly helpful. This sort of material would be very ideal for telescope and astronomy applications where light absorption to stop reflections is really important. Telescopes tubes are lined and coated with anti reflective paint and flocking. Off axis light is a real problem and a material light this would be help, but it seems it would actually potentially cause more issues!
Imagine creating an entire building with one giant level and pillars everywhere, and you have to find your way out. But... you are smack in the middle, and it's about 1000 yd in either direction.
Probably one of The Backrooms level
@@r3dchickenno
sounds like a good mrbeast challenge lol
@BronzedTube Look up Kenophobia!
@@BronzedTube I would like to see mister beast and action lab get together
"I got this from the "black market..."
Pun intended 😂
if you mix the blackest black with the whitest white, do you get the greyest grey?
Yes, yes you do.
😂😂😂😂😂
Probably
Now here’s a man asking the important questions.
Literally looks like you've not completed enough achievements to unlock this car yet
I like how it is SOOO BLACK that your camera's exposure and white balance are going absolutely NUTS to try to make sense of what it is seeing! :D
I’m curious what you used to adhere the fabric, and how difficult it was to clean off.
Always enjoy your videos!
It was on an Altima, he probably just took it to a crusher after this lol not worth cleaning
@@CadgerChristmasLightShowlol
It probably had a wrap on already - some cheap paint protector film I bet.
The adhesive is Phenylborene. It sticks for up to 48 hours before completely failing to stick. It then becomes like putty easy to remove
Not only is that wrapped car almost invisible at night, but it is going to get infernally hot in the daytime (although the original paint job probably got it most of the way there in that department).
"The black market just created a fabric that's darker than anything they've created before"
The black market 💀
Bro just casually disappearing in da darkness
That car looks like it would climb up to 100 degrees in the winter and boiling in the summer lol
great video and after seeing this id have to say the paint works better from all angles for sure. id like a room made with this material though. it would be a great haunted house addition. you could make all kinds of illusions in there! thanks for sharing!
That's sick. Batman would love to buy this car for sure 😂
I was going to say I wonder if batman uses this stuff
@@zerox020 i bet he does. 🦇
Batman wont buy this car. Batman will buy the company who makes this black material.
@@Marv3Lthe1 lol 😂 i forgot, he's hella rich 🤑
😂 Thanks for the laughs.
0:28 hehe... "black market"
XD
Just don't park it in a black hole lol. Interesting video as usual!
This channel's videos quality looks like made by guy with small channel but he has more than 4M subscribers! I like it, doesn't feel unnecessary fancy but the humble tone really make you focus on the learning! His cost to make these videos must be a lot lower and high profit margin too!
I think this is the perfect disguise for police car hiding within the darkness
fr
I'm wondering... Would this material be any good for lining telescope tubes? Or the shallow angle reflections ruins the blackening of the scope?
I think Vanta black is the better material for the inside of telescope tubes. It's darker than this material, but not as accessible, so no DIY options. I think you're right about this material being too reflective at shallow angles.
That was my first thought as an astrophotographer hah. It definitely wouldn't be ideal due to the reflective nature of it with off axis light, which is the biggest problem in telescopes. Not just that, the nature of the material, the surface would like degrade rapidly due to the moisture / dew and heat cycles that occur with telescopes.
@@BBROPHOTO Oh, so the material isn't long lasting. Didn't know that!
Back to reflections: i'm guessing velvet is reflecting in shallow angels, no? Probably thats the reason concentric rings are placed in the tube.
@@Sekir80 Tube baffles and knife edge baffles are used for that reason yes. They're very effective as they act like peaks and valleys, similar to how sound isolation material works.
I have my newtonian lined with normal velour flocking, it's not *super* black, but the important part is, it isn't totally flat like paint - so light gets absorbed into it. A focuser with knife edge baffles inside the draw tube also helps as the last wall of defence against stray light.
@@BBROPHOTO Ah, baffle, that is the term I couldnt recall. Thanks!
There's probably a formula of the size and placement of those which i'm not aware of, but ive never built a scope, yet.
Around 4:00 I guess you are starting to see the moisture in the air, captured by the fabric.
So the reflection you starting to see, is not the car, but the moisture on the car.
Let’s turn this into the fastest T-boned car.
“I didn’t see him!”
The horror of the flaslight screamming at 4:23 😂
I think you should have set the camera exposure manually to avoid the camera over illuminating the streets
I'd like to see a car wrapped with something similar to that fabric but an actual wrap material. It wouldn't be that black though. I wouldn't want a car that black. I own a black car and it gets super hot in summer.
Yea it'd be interesting to see how hot it gets (and how fast), compared to a typical car.
yeah but a car that absorbs 80% or 100% of sunlight won't be THAT different as far as heat absorption goes.
That AC-unit would be working harder then the German ovens during WW2
i would be worried about other ppl not seeing you. even when your car or train is painted bright and reflective ppl still miss it. theres no chance in a pure black car :O
@@user-sf8rc9of9l bro too soon
Looks like something car companies can use to hide their pre production test cars from journalist's cameras instead of that camouflage that still allows you to see every detail about the exterior of the car except for the paint color.
The paint is so dark, that it makes the car very unreal.
The black looks like a portal. I love it ❤
Wow, that is amazing. I love that you were able to attach the material to your car and it would be fun to see a policeman pull you over and not be able to find you if you turn the lights off lol.
The car looks like it isn't unlocked in need for speed💀
Wow, now let's see you do a version of this wrap with all the wrinkles taken out.
Shine the worlds brightest flashlight on it
Now this is why I love this channel! So much creativity!
Is there a fabric that does the opposite? Reflect 100% light? Oh wait, I think that's a mirror!
Imagine touching this car's door in summer. 💀
It has some Fresnel reflectivity in high exposure (when it's pulling out of the garage and explained at 4:40) but it mostly looks like a missing or bugged material.
In magic, “black art” refers to using the black color to “camouflage” something. It’s useful for a variety of magic tricks. We should try to produce or vanish a car with this material! First, we need a curtain made of Kiwami (or a flock sheet)!
Talk about dark arts...
...eehhh? - eeehh? anyone anyone... ... tough crowd...
Anyway, if you want truly trippy materials, look into Vandablack
Don't write nonsense without proof !
“The Black Market just created the darkest material in the world” 🤣
Incredible. It makes your car look unreal
3:38 looks like a sleep paralysis demon.
If it has to be shipped with the roll layers separated to avoid damaging the effect, how long would it last if you kept the wrap on your daily-driver?
Just wanted to say thanks for your content!
I always appreciate how straight to the point and honest your videos are. And I find them really interesting too!
I appreciate that wysiwyg as opposed to some other content creators. So thanks!
Looking forward to the next video!
This could be an idea for those prototype test cars they usually wrap in some psychedelic geometric patterns to "hide" what the car really looks like.
Exactly what i thought
@@svlzy0001 me too
fr
I wonder what my R1 would look like with that?🤔
But then again I want to keep living and having a nearly invisible super bike at night couldn’t possibly be very safe😂
Good time to get your headlight bulbs checked
😂
Always very interesting and educational! Great dedication!
2:35 "the car's texture didn't load 💀"
"You have not yet unlocked this car"
How well does this effect work when the fabric is wet?
i'm pretty sure the fabric is hydrophobic, so you would see the countless water droplets rolling down but the fabric itself wouldnt change color
The fabric is actually rather absorbent - all the fine fibers trap water pretty well. When wet, it still looks black, but not _as_ black, since the wetness itself is reflective. (Exception: if you're holding the fabric up to a light source right behind it, the wet part will be the darkest, since it's the only part one can't see through the weave.) Getting it wet gives it quite the curl and I really don't recommend trying it beyond a tiny scrap piece. (Speaking from personal experience here.)
Note: Kiwami means 'extreme'
That car is going to start rapping soon.
TAL in his day 586 of trying to create a black hole out of paint and clothes 😂
This video title was the world's darkest wrap to the world's worst wrap job😂
The wrap job is barely noticeable though without the brightest flashlight.
They keep one-upping the darkness, huh? I wonder when we'll get close to a true blackbody color?
Maybe we will get dark matter soon! Lol
it's all fun and games until you drive the car in the middle of the night and someone smashes into you
i guess part of the trick is that, whatever light it can't absorb, it simply reflects perpendicularly so it goes away from your eyes
Next time: The blackest black, absorbs 100% of light, but scientists haven't been able to find it.
illegal: no car license plates
It _is_ the world’s blackest car..
i love how he unrolls void in his garage
So I have to wonder if Musou Black is better. Can you do a small sample that would show each with a buckle or fold such that, when the light hits it, we can see if the buckle or fold shows. Kind of like we can see with the fabric on the car where we can at times see where the fabric was a bit buckled. Seeing something with Musou Black VS the Musou Black Fabric would be interesting. It would help show which is actually better.
Musou*
@@AlgebraicAnalysis thank you. Edited.
The car literally looks like a TH-cam thumbnail where the TH-camr got a new paint job or something.
I remember reading a couple test results on the most visible car in like the 1970's and they came out with somewhere in the bright yellow or orange. I think one article was in Popular Science or Popular Machanics magazines. At least at night, this would have to be the least visible. Wonder how long befor we see car chases in LA with get a way cars like this one. I think it could backfire on them, the helicopter's lights lighting everything around it, showing a black blob in the center. How would that work on like a sub?
There are plenty of videos on how submarines (and other stealth craft) are coated. Explore the wonders of TH-cam's "search" function.
plot twist the car is actually a hole
This was interesting. Would actually be scary to drive something like that around at night, headlights notwithstanding. Is it possible to check its radar signature?
Of course. Radar is radio based, so the amount of light this fabric can absorb doesn't matter. Stuff made to not be radar detectable uses materials which absorb radiation regardless of color.
After installing you become invisible to gps and radar
All my prayers go out to the people who encounter this car at night.
that's too risky
it might get shot by the cops
“yes, mr. Wayne, it does come in black.”
Definitely a safety hazard at night, hope you didn't drive it around too much lmao
That's why cars have lights and reflectors... You see the reflectors and tail lights before you see the car.
@@volvo09 WOAHHH REALLYYY??? Thank you clever boy I didn't know that!!
Imagine covering a safe in this material that's hiding inside a darkened room or closet so it's way harder to spot. Could have some good uses for safety like that
Holy crap dude, that package from Japan looks expensive as F. Well done!
$110 a yard!
@@TheZotmeister 110 yard? How much is that in camels per square foot?
It looks like CGI glitching. The texture rendered or the shader pipeline crashed.
I have so much fun with all your videos =) . Thanks for this! As someone who loves colors (i call myself a "chromatophile" =p ), i find the videos with the extreme shades to be very interesting!
Keep it up!
Batman: How can I get that to cover the entire car? I need to be completely invisible.
2 things, 1 You should have pro vinyl wrappers do this to your car, concept is pretty cool, but you did leave a lot of wrinkles and air pockets and 2, Hows the cars paint after this? that adhesive may be a pain to remove later on....
It looks like he used Molasses to stick the fabric on so a little water and it should come right off.
Imagine, in the summer, a meltingly hot day, you are in this car… DEAD 💀
people on the street be like "ok thats it imma submit a bug report"
Sensing some big altima energy
Bro brought a unrendered car and thought we wouldn't notice
The world's brightest flashlight reveals how poorly the world's blackest car was wrapped.
When you want to be that one person in that movie who lost their car because it was invisible:
Next, paint it with the invisiblest invisible color and let us see if we can see it 😆
Fun fact: This is the last video that features Sokka’s hairstyle.
lmao he got it from the "black" market
The black market sounds awesome , LOL 0:27
He turned his car into Night Prowler. Once you go black... Toothless