I always thought that the water jet cutting was actually water induced around a blade to mitigate the warmth from the friction that would eventually bend the blade making it useless... Im quite impressed this was actually water and minerals all along cutting hard materials! Happy to have learned something like this today. thank you
@@christopherbentley6647 So then its diamond thats cutting and not metal? by that logic it could be a ceramic blade or a wooden blade or a plastic blade. Your minecraft comment didnt make sense either friend
@@weebkawi1444 This. Water alone at high pressure will cut, thats why you have videos of dumbasses with power washers slicing their toes, fingers or hands off.
When you mine quartz you don’t break or even touch the quartz, when it’s mined (without silk touch) you get quartz. Basically what I am saying is you just mine the netherrack in the block around the white spots/quartz.
Well, easy. Thats why there are zombies and witches. And a dragon to kill. Oh it might be... because..... let me think........ is A GAME!!! Whaaaat? Whaaat!! Nooo. Yes
hardness does not equal strength. hardness resists scratching, strength resists breakage. theres an inverse corellation between the two, so when one goes up the other goes down. Obsidian may be less hard than quartz but it IS stronger, so it would need a better pick to break.
@@ShyDigi you've got it backwards... Hardness and strength are directly linked, i.e. when one increases, the other also increases. Maybe you're thinking of ductility, typically the harder a material is, the less ductile (meaning it can deform more before breaking).
@@ShyDigi in other words, ductility is the measure of how much a material can deform before breaking, and typically as hardness goes up, ductility goes down, meaning it becomes more brittle and can deform less before breaking. A property closely related to ductility is toughness which is what you may be thinking of as well.
Well, to be fair, imperial does have units that make more sense for daily use over metric. I'd sooner continue to use Fahrenheit, as its a system of feel and actually more accurate than Celsius because its units are actually smaller. The average person is more likely to think "Oh that is unpleasantly hot." if you say its 90 degrees (Fahrenheit) instead of 32.2 C.
@@KainArkanos About the temperature, that makes no sense. People using metric don't the decimal part on day to day use. Absolutely everybody on a metric system will think "unpleasantly hot" if say it is 32 C or 33 C (you can't tell apart 1 degree C of difference, so it's pretty useless to be more precise than that for daily use)
@@KainArkanos When I'm driving, I can see what 5m looks like, 100m looks like and how far is 1km. Not only that, I know how cold is -4°c to how hot 33°c is. I can also tell if it's 2cm - 5cm off an image too
@@KainArkanos the units being larger have nothing to do with the accuracy. If anything it just makes it confusing when you say it's a cold winter day and it's 30°. Instead of just saying oh yeah it's -5 which is literally the scientific term for below freezing...
Its not a 100% correct but about right. Its just much faster with the garnet. But you can cut steel and very hard things only with water. What i still wonder and cant imagine at all is how can the nozzle withstand. If this can cut diamond how can the nozzly withstand all that force or whatever you want to call this 😂😂😂
Never realized sand was added to increase the cutting power but that makes a lot more sense. So does the water jet cut better the more you use it technically, if all those extra hard particles are floating around in there? I suppose it might take a while before you would notice any difference. At the very least would it maybe change the cut quality?
The abrassive is added to fresh (or filtered) water. You can't reuse it, because the edges are wearing off and it can't cut as good as for the first time. The mixing is done in the nozzle right before cutting. The water is then sucked out of the pool and filtered.
@@dan3a I mean, sorry if I came out rude, I didn't mean to, but you stole a top comment wich says the same thing (I understand u can have similar ideas)
questions everyone has 1) Who is the intern? 2) Did you find someone with the magic tongue who can do the lick test or did he learn the magic behind it? 3) How u gonna just spring him up on us like that??
I think its the producers not wanting him to lick things after that pipe. He's the main star of the show. Insurance company goes crazy when he licks things. So to keep the producers and insurance company happy you get someone that can be replaced.
@@vince864 rubber can bend and stretch And if you made your tires out of ceramic, it would be able to support the weight of a car because of weight distribution
I saw waterjet and got excited. The waterjet I work with doesn't use an abrasive. My waterjet trims product that comes by a conveyor with a .008 orifice at 60,000 psi. This was an interesting video to watch!
@@Jeffasaurases You know for a fact I mean pickaxes, axes, shovels, etc... Diamond's atomic structure is not suitable for being made into these things, it just doesn't work. It's not effective at all.
@@БогданБлаговирний I'd take freedom units over metric any day. I can picture a 16th, 2mm, not so much. It's all about what you are used to, and I'm from Canada, not the US.
The ceramic wear tiles are almost certainly sintered alumina. They are the standard wear tile material for abrasive materials handling. Quality varies (of course) but really good ones will be 9.5ish on the Mohs hardness scale.
You guys should try cutting tungston carbide. I work at The Ultra-Met Company and we press tungston carbide parts. It goes into the press as a powder, gets pressed into a solid and then after it goes through the furnace, its almost as hard as diamond.
The waterjet nozzle is made of Tungsten. It will cut it but it will probably take hours for a single inch. Im pretty sure they did a video on this before. Tungsten is some mean stuff.
Diamond breaks easily, it's the hardest, not the strongest. So what is really real here ;) It just bonds between atoms in a crystal, steel could break diamond EZ or just a hammer.
the setting they used for the ceramic was the tungston setting and i couldnt go through, they had to slow it down. so the ceramic is way harder than the tungsten
How would a large ceramic ball bearing fair against the waterjet? I'm interested to see if it's smooth exterior will deflect the jet rather than allow it to cut through. Or, if it does break through the exterior, how long will that take?
The biggest issue with ceramics is once it starts going it just fails immediately, with the vast majority of different kinds of steel this is not a problem.
Isn't the material used in the water jet lower down the Mohs scale than the composite material you were cutting through? Wouldn't that imply softer material is able to scratch harder material?
It's not that one can't scratch another, it's just that one will take more damage. The garnet used is less hard, but is dispersed throughout the water flow and theres far more of it than the ceramic. The garnet powder becomes further destroyed, but it is still able to abrase the ceramic.
To cecil le and other 24 who did thumbs up...Friction = external force. Toughness is the ability of a material to absorb energy and plastically deform without fracturing.
Hey guys, your garnet has always been pretty red. The handful you showed in this video looked more like sand than the previous garnet you've shown. Was that just a camera trick, or have you switched brands perhaps? If so, wanna talk about it and why you switched in your next video? Thanks!
@@averageoutdoorsmannz2015 garnet doesn't really get recycled. You can get a big machine to separate and clean the garnet but it's expensive enough that most people won't bother. It really loses cutting efficency after being used, so it's just not worth the effort.
Yeah, I mean, these guys go through the effort of doing this video and not add bedrock, it's pretty fucking simple just dig down, and do the test. Disliking it and unsubscribing.
None of the materials in this video are dense enough to make good bullets. Tungsten would easily outperform any of them, and we already make bullets with tungsten in them. Just a guess, but I would also wager the ceramic is too brittle to make a good penetrator. Hard does not mean the same thing as strong. For example, tempered glass is relatively hard at about a 7 on the mohs scale, but breaks quite easily.
@@Turing_Test Then what do you think about some Osmium bullet heads ? they are dense enought i think but it's pretty costy Edit : Or we can try with Palladium metallic glass if you think it's dense enought to rezist the blast
@@Panda-ke3iv densest bullets in use are depleted uranium. maybe harder out there, but anything more gets to diminishing returns on penetration, and Extreme costs.
@@Panda-ke3iv I'm not actually familiar with those materials, but honestly I don't think it would matter much. As far as bullet construction goes, the material isn't really the bottleneck at the moment. I dont think there was ever a time where tungsten or, as aleks jones mentioned, depleted uranium, were the limiting factor in penetrating armor. The real key to penetrating armor is velocity (and/or heat). With the materials we already have available and use regularly, we would be better served by increasing our technology in propellants to achieve higher velocities for armor penetration (think rail guns and gauss cannons). On top of all that, we are kind of on the precipice of entering the age of directed energy weapons. That's a whole 'nother can of worms that I won't get into, but the search for better performing bullet materials just isn't a high priority at the world's current technological level.
@@eduardos4574 how so? I work 5 and 6 days a week. I spend time with my wife and kids. The only difference I had was I didn't eat at a restaurant for a few weeks....oh my so hard and life changing. Now I wear a mask when I go to stores and restaurants. Holy shit its the end of the world.... life goes on. If this made your life incredibly hard then you are going to die when something major does happen.
@Crawling Chaos where I'm from, you'd get arrested. Alcohol is illegal to buy, and so are cigarettes and most places have been either closed or operating with reduced staff for months.
@Crawling Chaos you're making some assumptions here. Many people lost loved ones because of the virus and many more will die of hunger because of how some countries are miss-managing the situation.
nothing beats bedrock* dark oak tree roots, jungle tree branches,headless piston,crystal,zombie,nether portal,end portal,dragon egg,bed,crops : that's a fucking lie
So the hardest material on earth is marshmallows and tar. Got it.
That is extra dark chocolate. Forbidden Smores.
Head arrogant humans is hardest ever!
😂😂😂 logic
Marshmallow oreo cheesecake*
I am hurt physically and mentally whenever i see crystals being ruined
Scratches start at a level 6 with deeper grooves at a level 7
Yes
Yes
This is music to my ears
Why is this so familiar?
@@huntersmith4153 its from that one dude who reviews phones
"Obsidian is the softest material that we have" *cries in Minecraft*
Yea
B e d r o c k
I was looking exactly for this comment.
That is actually why obsidian is o hard to break
It doesn’t crack because its tougher but if it was stronger it would shatter way easier
B E D R O C K
The ceramic slice looks delicious
It's weird, right? Almost like the most perfect tiramisu mixed with the darkest chocolate imagineable or something like that. lol
It looks like an Oreo cake
@@javitz8847 true lol
I thought about marshmallows in chocolate coating.
Cursed pizza
I always thought that the water jet cutting was actually water induced around a blade to mitigate the warmth from the friction that would eventually bend the blade making it useless... Im quite impressed this was actually water and minerals all along cutting hard materials!
Happy to have learned something like this today. thank you
@@christopherbentley6647 Metal is softer than this stuff so would it really? ;)
@@christopherbentley6647 So then its diamond thats cutting and not metal? by that logic it could be a ceramic blade or a wooden blade or a plastic blade. Your minecraft comment didnt make sense either friend
@@christopherbentley6647 I will just reply okay you are right since I'm not quite that mad to reply a huge wall of text. Have a good time!
@gab hug water alone does cut. Pure water jets exist. The one in this video is called an abrasive water jet.
@@weebkawi1444 This. Water alone at high pressure will cut, thats why you have videos of dumbasses with power washers slicing their toes, fingers or hands off.
If quartz is harder than obsidian, why do we need diamond pickaxe for obsidian and quartz can be mined with the iron one
*confused notch noises*
The Moh’s scale is based on scratching.
When you mine quartz you don’t break or even touch the quartz, when it’s mined (without silk touch) you get quartz. Basically what I am saying is you just mine the netherrack in the block around the white spots/quartz.
but quartz blocks also can be mined with an iron pickaxe, actually I think a stone one too
Well, easy. Thats why there are zombies and witches. And a dragon to kill. Oh it might be... because..... let me think........ is A GAME!!! Whaaaat? Whaaat!! Nooo. Yes
"the hardest thing we've ever had to cut"
*Cody and his diamond have entered the chat*
Toughness makes it more difficult
@@jacobriddle7230 they were talking about Mohs scale, they've cut a 10 before
Exactly my though: what about Cody?!
They haven’t cut Danny DeVito’s *MAGNUM DONG*
*my pp has entered the chat*
The quartz growing in the quartz is so beautiful, i wonder how long it’s been growing like that
Judging by the size and diameter of it, I would say a few million years. Below 20 and above 5.
@@stylishmusic4012Na man, earth is flat and isn't million of years old
@@SircielNope, the earth is a triangle and older than the universe itself.
@@carbondioxides Nope the Earth is the 4th dimensional teseract, and can exist in infinite dimensions.
I bet you can't cut through Netherite armor
@@gappywalking9008 coconut?
How do you craft if if you cant cut it?
You're here agaiin
@@ammielestioko233 weird looking coconut
@@SimpleMusicProducer
r/cursedcomments
I love that in the middle of a pandemic they make the interns do the lick test
That's sick.
Epic bro
So metal!
I mean its a hint sociopathic...
@@KlintKaras SOCIOPATHISM IS GROOVY
When you've been playing minecraft since childhood and you realize quartz is harder than obsidian:
*_"Years of academy training wasted"_*
well mine i-
hardness does not equal strength. hardness resists scratching, strength resists breakage. theres an inverse corellation between the two, so when one goes up the other goes down. Obsidian may be less hard than quartz but it IS stronger, so it would need a better pick to break.
@@ShyDigi you've got it backwards... Hardness and strength are directly linked, i.e. when one increases, the other also increases. Maybe you're thinking of ductility, typically the harder a material is, the less ductile (meaning it can deform more before breaking).
@@ShyDigi in other words, ductility is the measure of how much a material can deform before breaking, and typically as hardness goes up, ductility goes down, meaning it becomes more brittle and can deform less before breaking. A property closely related to ductility is toughness which is what you may be thinking of as well.
@@tongpoo8985 thank you, had a migraine couldnt think of the words.
“Obsidian is the softest material we have” me: “well you do have your fingers”
yOu:
Shit like this is exactly why the general public doesn't have access to specialized equipment.
Nothing can destroy Dan's and Mitchel's muscular and calloused hands
@@wawazaza1785 god damn right.
@@gnossiennegymnopedie8554 exactly I see so many thing like like me:
This guy:
Me:
It’s so cringe
Great video! Always thumbs up.
The lost comment
Woah
Wow
Girlfriend: *takes her T-shirt off and sits on my lap*
My Mohs scale: 9999
Until your alarm clock goes off, that is
SNAP BACK TO REALITY
*you don’t have girlfriend*
@@convergenceclown2386 OOP THERE GOES GRAVITY.
@@TheRealFraston this dude is on 10.000 mohs, because that didnt even leave just a scratch, that obliterated him
Adam and Jamie had Mythterns, but you haven't really made it until you get to be a Licktern for Mitchel.
Imagine having to use terms like "Sixteenth of an inch" instead of 2mm
Dude its ridiculous. The Lockpicking lawyer uses terms like "1/1000th of an inch" and I just cringe
Well, to be fair, imperial does have units that make more sense for daily use over metric. I'd sooner continue to use Fahrenheit, as its a system of feel and actually more accurate than Celsius because its units are actually smaller. The average person is more likely to think "Oh that is unpleasantly hot." if you say its 90 degrees (Fahrenheit) instead of 32.2 C.
@@KainArkanos About the temperature, that makes no sense. People using metric don't the decimal part on day to day use. Absolutely everybody on a metric system will think "unpleasantly hot" if say it is 32 C or 33 C (you can't tell apart 1 degree C of difference, so it's pretty useless to be more precise than that for daily use)
@@KainArkanos When I'm driving, I can see what 5m looks like, 100m looks like and how far is 1km. Not only that, I know how cold is -4°c to how hot 33°c is. I can also tell if it's 2cm - 5cm off an image too
@@KainArkanos the units being larger have nothing to do with the accuracy. If anything it just makes it confusing when you say it's a cold winter day and it's 30°. Instead of just saying oh yeah it's -5 which is literally the scientific term for below freezing...
2:33 "A garnet abrasive to scratch its way through".
Wow I never knew that. I just assumed the power of the water made the cut.
Its not a 100% correct but about right. Its just much faster with the garnet. But you can cut steel and very hard things only with water. What i still wonder and cant imagine at all is how can the nozzle withstand. If this can cut diamond how can the nozzly withstand all that force or whatever you want to call this 😂😂😂
@@xgumsgnag3525 Agreed it's mystifying
@@xgumsgnag3525 because the garnet is added in the end of the jet.
@@xgumsgnag3525 Its because the nozzle is just redirecting the water, its not being directly hit and actually taking the full impact from it
@@xgumsgnag3525 The nozzles are made out of really hard ceramics too and you do have to replace them often.
Never realized sand was added to increase the cutting power but that makes a lot more sense. So does the water jet cut better the more you use it technically, if all those extra hard particles are floating around in there? I suppose it might take a while before you would notice any difference. At the very least would it maybe change the cut quality?
The material coming off isn't as hard as the grit they started with so each time they cut something the mix is progressively getting softer.
The abrassive is added to fresh (or filtered) water. You can't reuse it, because the edges are wearing off and it can't cut as good as for the first time. The mixing is done in the nozzle right before cutting.
The water is then sucked out of the pool and filtered.
@@knut3339 interesting. In sandblasting we use the same medium but it gets recycled many times before it needs to be replaced.
I'm your 100th liker here & bye.
Can the waterjet cut quantum physics?
It's very very hard.
It's easier than trying to cut the heisenberg uncertainty principle. When you get done, you're not sure if its cut or not.
Good point
Why
you capture it, clamp it down and they will cut it.
Nerd
"yeah it's cut through"
amazing work pretty intern guy
Literally had one line and screwed it up.
The intern thing was hilarious
We get a new character to the water jet lore
The plot thickens...
Who knew that old cake could become so powerful
Lmao u right
"Powerful"?
@@BenjaminGoose When you put cake in a fridge it becomes hard
@@n7kie269 Don’t worry, god’ll fix this in the next update
@@GetRidOfHandles ok finallly
I'm just cringing when they scratch that beautiful price of quartz
"Scratches start at a level 6 with deeper grooves at level 7"
-JerryRigEverything
Yes
Yes
Stolen
@@gabrielflorea8124 from Jerry rig everything ?
@@dan3a I mean, sorry if I came out rude, I didn't mean to, but you stole a top comment wich says the same thing (I understand u can have similar ideas)
My wood that can only be harvested in the morning is harder than that ceramic.
Wait a minute HOL UP WHAT THE FU-
what kind of wood? an atomic size bonsai?
Anyone's morning wood can instantly get to 11 on moe's scale
@Nicholas Indelicato fellow user PogU
@@hamkahamham4681 lmao he doesnt get it
someones gotta tell him what it actually is
“Obsidian is the softest material we have”
Me who plays Minecraft: those bastards lied to me
questions everyone has
1) Who is the intern?
2) Did you find someone with the magic tongue who can do the lick test or did he learn the magic behind it?
3) How u gonna just spring him up on us like that??
I second all of these questions
4) Did Mitchell have to Lick Test the Intern to confirm the Interns Capacity to perform Lick Tests?
5) all the chemists: which ceramic was it?
5) Does Mitchell can communicate with the intern by licks ?
I think its the producers not wanting him to lick things after that pipe. He's the main star of the show. Insurance company goes crazy when he licks things. So to keep the producers and insurance company happy you get someone that can be replaced.
Oh god I’m so tired I looked at the triangle thing and thought about how awesome the pie would taste
Dark chocolate and marshmallow pie mmmmm
@@valthorix7347 forbidden Oreo bark
I dont think its cause youre tired. Its just how your mind works
So I’ve been eating pie more often recently... I think this may have been an influence. Also key lime is the best, no contest, just fact.
@@johnweber4504 preach
ceramic: is hard to break/cut
me: oops, i dropped my mug and now it broke 😢
Ceramic = hard
Me : marshmallows?
@@vince864 rubber can bend and stretch
And if you made your tires out of ceramic, it would be able to support the weight of a car because of weight distribution
Different type of ceramic
Obviously, cutting is different from breaking.
@@rawhidelamp r/woooosh
"My shaft is about 3 inches shorter than normal"
"That's a little exaggerated"
Hahaha
Bogdan Blagovirniy
Send the ceramic piece to Matt at DemoRanch!! I bet that would make an awesome piece of home made body armor!
Except those plates prolly cost about as much as body armor
fadeAway its not the point
Hell yeah
David I don’t think you quite understand Demoranch lol
Some armour plates do use ceramic.
The ceramic: I’m pretty strong
The table: mortal!
You can see the cut mark in the table though
@Raymond Yang Sorry, not quite my taste I guess.
I'm surprised you guys haven't cut a boat in half and repaired it with only flex tape™ yet, come on guys
That's a lot of damage!
we all know that a boat is the natural enemy of a waterjet..
that looks like the ceramics we used in Bullet-proofing on some Desert-Storm mine-sweepers...
Tusk II armour? Reminds me of it since these are ceramics too
One of my first jobs out of high school was a company that manufactured, sold, and installed the 60,000 PSI tubing and fittings.
Not a job where you test for leaks with your hand.
@@NotHPotter oh lord hight pressure injection injury here we go...
*my teacher looking at my work
“It looks terrible but it did it”
*this will be the hardest thing we have cut*,
Me trying to mine bedrock.
that a creepy profile pic lol
WHY DOES YOUR PFP LOOK LIKE BBH SKIN???
@@Zvxers7 what.
I saw waterjet and got excited. The waterjet I work with doesn't use an abrasive. My waterjet trims product that comes by a conveyor with a .008 orifice at 60,000 psi. This was an interesting video to watch!
Magnesite has a Mohs of around 3.5. However, when processed into refractory bricks, I believe it becomes much harder. I wonder how it would survive?
That's a cool demonstration of why you can't cut too fast. I like the rare educational waterjet channel videos lol
Finally, some youtubers who know the difference between exponential and linear!
Me at 10: alright its the weekend, time to catch up on my sleep and go to sleep at a reasonable hour
Me at 3 AM: watr jhet
Whather jehct
“Obsidian is the softest thing we have” “Confused Minecraft noises”
Diamond is not a suitable material for tools or armor.
@@ZoofyZoof tell that to a drill bit
@@Jeffasaurases You know for a fact I mean pickaxes, axes, shovels, etc... Diamond's atomic structure is not suitable for being made into these things, it just doesn't work. It's not effective at all.
@@ZoofyZoof r/woosh
@@Jeffasaurases How was I supposed to know what you said was a joke?
"this material can wear down topaz to a. flat surface"
Me: I wanna eat it.
0:15 when he says all the way to the top he kinda sounds like mordecai from regular show
OMG I JUST REALIZED
Oooh
im pretty sure the 13 year olds who used to smoke outside my college were harder
the little skater kids? that was me, and i was 12 lol
@@popanollie1 I was 10 o-o
I bet there's harder cow turds than them
Imagine having to use terms like "Sixteenth of an inch" instead of 2mm
@@БогданБлаговирний I'd take freedom units over metric any day. I can picture a 16th, 2mm, not so much. It's all about what you are used to, and I'm from Canada, not the US.
The ceramic wear tiles are almost certainly sintered alumina. They are the standard wear tile material for abrasive materials handling. Quality varies (of course) but really good ones will be 9.5ish on the Mohs hardness scale.
I thought it looked like a piece of spacecraft heat shield
Was there an intern showdown that included multiple taste tests? We need footage of this.
DUDE THAT WAS HIGH QUALITY EXPENSIVE QUARTZ.
i thought you could usually get quartz from the nether? (from minecraft)
The machine is probably more expensive than that. Don’t think they’re even care.
Quartz is not that rare and expensive. Also that crystal was beautiful, but they didn't destroy it completely, just trimmed the bottom.
Carbon nanotubes are actually harder than diamond. We've created several materials, which break the top end of the Mohs scale.
You guys should try cutting tungston carbide. I work at The Ultra-Met Company and we press tungston carbide parts. It goes into the press as a powder, gets pressed into a solid and then after it goes through the furnace, its almost as hard as diamond.
The waterjet nozzle is made of Tungsten. It will cut it but it will probably take hours for a single inch. Im pretty sure they did a video on this before. Tungsten is some mean stuff.
So early the obsidian is still liquid
"obsidian is the softest material we've got"
me a minecraft Intellectual: *visible confusion*
Bedrock is destructible in real life :v
@@mrarithefox everything is breakable if you have a black hole
Diamond breaks easily, it's the hardest, not the strongest. So what is really real here ;)
It just bonds between atoms in a crystal, steel could break diamond EZ or just a hammer.
@@swordman-ci8ry wot
The hardest material looks like tasty.
It gives me CAKE vibes......
you mean the um marshmallows and asphalt
Try one of these Tungsten cubes from Midwest Tungsten, Taoufledermaus shot one, and the bullet didnt do much .
the setting they used for the ceramic was the tungston setting and i couldnt go through, they had to slow it down. so the ceramic is way harder than the tungsten
Tungsten is only between 8 and 9 on the hardness scale.
I got some tungsten electrodes from Midwest tungsten, the pigment on the ends aren't great,
Good demo of how the stones for the pyramids were cut.
How would a large ceramic ball bearing fair against the waterjet? I'm interested to see if it's smooth exterior will deflect the jet rather than allow it to cut through. Or, if it does break through the exterior, how long will that take?
The biggest issue with ceramics is once it starts going it just fails immediately, with the vast majority of different kinds of steel this is not a problem.
"Obsidian is the most softest material we have"
Minecraft players: impossible!
@Hank the haybot pppsssssst you can break those with a good gaming chair
5:43 It looks like a slice of delicious forbidden pie.
1:28 Forbidden cake
Why does the water jet have different settings for different materials? What is it change the PSI and feed rate?
Changes the amount of media, feed rate, and accounts for different nozzles.
That lick test was on point
So impressive how resistant is that thing. Thanks for sharing
3am and this pops up. Don’t know about y’all but my recommendations speak to me
Nothing beats binging the fh2 and fm4 soundtrack and some waterjet channel
*when water cuts tungsten and I can’t even break a pencil*
if its any comfort, the water doesn't do shit, just like you
it uses tools, and so should you
Quartz:**one of the hardest materials**
Minecraft players:impossible
5:35 its wild how even the deflected spray just eats through the wood
Intern involvement made me laugh so hard I almost woke up the babies XD
I want to see you try this with just water, I can’t find anyone trying that anywhere, and if water can cut a diamond it would be outstanding
The water jet needs garnet to work
Water alone doesn't do much
Never have I been so interested in relearning about the Moe's scale from Earth Science.
Who's the new intern?
Isn't the material used in the water jet lower down the Mohs scale than the composite material you were cutting through? Wouldn't that imply softer material is able to scratch harder material?
It's not that one can't scratch another, it's just that one will take more damage. The garnet used is less hard, but is dispersed throughout the water flow and theres far more of it than the ceramic. The garnet powder becomes further destroyed, but it is still able to abrase the ceramic.
I've seen this thumbnail for a long time and only now realize thats not a piece of cake.
“ hardness is how much it can withstand friction, toughness is how much it can withstand external force”
To cecil le and other 24 who did thumbs up...Friction = external force. Toughness is the ability of a material to absorb energy and plastically deform without fracturing.
Hardest material: men's hearts when rejected but they don't cry.
A woman's heart... Oh wait that's the coldest material...
For some reason this is what made me realize paper is harder than pencil lead
How do I apply to be a professional lick tester? Can you guys certify me
Hey guys, your garnet has always been pretty red. The handful you showed in this video looked more like sand than the previous garnet you've shown. Was that just a camera trick, or have you switched brands perhaps? If so, wanna talk about it and why you switched in your next video? Thanks!
I'm guessing maybe it starts red and as it is used / recycled it darkens with contamination
@@averageoutdoorsmannz2015 garnet doesn't really get recycled. You can get a big machine to separate and clean the garnet but it's expensive enough that most people won't bother. It really loses cutting efficency after being used, so it's just not worth the effort.
I appreciate the lick test, it was the only way to be sure.
Where’s *Bedrock* ???
Unbreakable in Minecraft, so it must stand through the WaterJet
Yeah, I mean, these guys go through the effort of doing this video and not add bedrock, it's pretty fucking simple just dig down, and do the test. Disliking it and unsubscribing.
2b2t would like a word
How would they GET the bedrock ONTO the water jet table if they can't mine it, forehead??
@@SirRaio Just place the water jet on top of it! Their inventory is clearly not full to carry it down.
It was only made unbreakable on survival to prevent players to mine through and fall in the void
The ceramic composite looks like rocky rode chocolate bar
The forbidden candy.
bro the ceramic looks delicious
"A 16th of an inch" ... Yeah a totally relatable unit for the rest of the world 🤣
it's close to 1 mm
As an American I fully agree. Metric is better.
@@Nerd-Power tbh
How hard is it to just google it?
Its all fun and games till one rock reflects the stream right back into your eye
The lick test at the end made me sub
0:07 looks like an oreo pie to me.
"obsidian is the softest material we have" sounds oddly megalomaniacal
fr fr
the forbidden cake slice
Imagine if he would make some bullets out of this material , wait.....
None of the materials in this video are dense enough to make good bullets. Tungsten would easily outperform any of them, and we already make bullets with tungsten in them.
Just a guess, but I would also wager the ceramic is too brittle to make a good penetrator. Hard does not mean the same thing as strong. For example, tempered glass is relatively hard at about a 7 on the mohs scale, but breaks quite easily.
@@Turing_Test Then what do you think about some Osmium bullet heads ? they are dense enought i think but it's pretty costy
Edit : Or we can try with Palladium metallic glass if you think it's dense enought to rezist the blast
@@Panda-ke3iv densest bullets in use are depleted uranium. maybe harder out there, but anything more gets to diminishing returns on penetration, and Extreme costs.
@@Turing_Test also, I think it must be very light
@@Panda-ke3iv I'm not actually familiar with those materials, but honestly I don't think it would matter much. As far as bullet construction goes, the material isn't really the bottleneck at the moment. I dont think there was ever a time where tungsten or, as aleks jones mentioned, depleted uranium, were the limiting factor in penetrating armor. The real key to penetrating armor is velocity (and/or heat). With the materials we already have available and use regularly, we would be better served by increasing our technology in propellants to achieve higher velocities for armor penetration (think rail guns and gauss cannons).
On top of all that, we are kind of on the precipice of entering the age of directed energy weapons. That's a whole 'nother can of worms that I won't get into, but the search for better performing bullet materials just isn't a high priority at the world's current technological level.
The waterjet can't cut through anyone's life nowadays, cause the pandemic made all our lives incredibly hard
How so? My life hasn't changed a bit.
Chocolate dragon then you aren’t a human
@@eduardos4574 how so? I work 5 and 6 days a week. I spend time with my wife and kids. The only difference I had was I didn't eat at a restaurant for a few weeks....oh my so hard and life changing. Now I wear a mask when I go to stores and restaurants. Holy shit its the end of the world.... life goes on. If this made your life incredibly hard then you are going to die when something major does happen.
@Crawling Chaos where I'm from, you'd get arrested. Alcohol is illegal to buy, and so are cigarettes and most places have been either closed or operating with reduced staff for months.
@Crawling Chaos you're making some assumptions here.
Many people lost loved ones because of the virus and many more will die of hunger because of how some countries are miss-managing the situation.
"Right?"
"Uh, yeah."
Good interview.
Nobody:
Literally nobody:
Me: what about bedrock
Well you need to go down the earth to get it
Fun fact : bedrock isn't that hard irl
I thought the hardest material was dried bran on the my cereal bowl.
honestly watching this for a science project
Try cutting bedrock next we all know nothing beats bedrock
This isn’t Minecraft bud
Nothing beats bedrock
nothing beats bedrock*
dark oak tree roots, jungle tree branches,headless piston,crystal,zombie,nether portal,end portal,dragon egg,bed,crops : that's a fucking lie
Absolutely nothing beats bedrock
Emanuel Gonzalez it could be
no 'scratches at level 6 with deeper grooves at level 7' here, keep scroling
That ceramic looks like a tasty piece of chocolate cake.
"Obsidian is the softest material " my pick axe would disagree