For those wondering what would happen to a finger: Apparently it feels like a small electric shock and will clean dirt and oil out of your skin, so... basically nothing, ha
I put my hand in one once (fishing out a jewelry project that fell through the basket). The main thing was that the water was super hot. But other than that it felt almost like my hand was in a vibrating pot of sand. Like you would swear there was grit vibrating around in there but there wasn’t.
Eh, there are a lot of ultrasound frequencies and amplitudes. The lower ones are keen to stimulate cells to lyse e.g. Alzheimer's plaques and reseal the blood brain barrier where it has become porous to such fibrils. On the other hand you probs don't want to beam a given 40W therapy beam through opportunistic or otherwise narrow pathways and get that cavitation or other emulation of cyngulate gyri disrupting waveforms, in order to not needlessly replicate c.f. Russian mess-u-up box diplomacy results.
Fun fact: a larger much slower version of this, not caused by sound, but by high explosives is what makes torpedoes hit thrice. First they do the obvious boom, then the rapidly collapsing bubble rips the water back in an implosion, and the third hit is due to the rapidly pulled back water shooting upwards after the implosion. Some may take that last one as mere splashing, but for being a tertiary aftershock it carries a lot of punch. For all but the largest and most armoured of military vessels a modern torpedo can extremely cripple, sink, or straight up snap a ship in half with a single hit.
Apply the same physics to divers who use exothermic cutting torches to cut apart platforms at 200+ fsw and they don't properly vent/clear a path for hydrogen and 02 to not make a pocket of gas that gets hit with sparks from a torch. That last thing you hear your friend say is "Make it Hot"
I work in the dental industry and this is highly valued technology in every dental office. One of the primary tools for cleaning teeth( Cavitron) is an ultrasonic scaler. An Ultrasonic cleaner like the one depicted in the video is also one of few steps in cleaning dirty dental instruments. This is also used by jewelers.
TIL the ultrasonic cleaner I used to fix water damaged devices was really just rapid and continuous cavitation, constantly surprised at how often cavitation has an effect in our lives.
@@generalgrievous6648it really would...and that's mostly where the dirt in a "dirty room"bwould already be (ie clothes and shoes). The only additional dirt that might be affected would be the dust on the light fixture or ceiling fan. 😁
It’s a sonicator, no electricity in the water, no pain if you accidentally dip in. Used one of these all the time to help dissolve difficult compounds in solution in the chem labs in my undergrad. Very useful
@@Daniel.Belas1 honestly not super sure, I think that has some validity, but you also have to think about your blood and it would be vibrating you, but they have cercise machines that work solely by vibrating your body super intensely and the obvious adult you lol, so maybe it would just make ya feel good hahah
@@evanstedman7405originally I was just joking but it is possible to kill pathogens using ultrasonic cleaners. Just search online for "antimicrobial activity of ultrasonic cleaners".
For all the people wondering if you can put your finger in and be okay, yes you can! There are therapeutic bathtubs that use ultrasonic waves and are used to help people recover from wounds and bedsores. It works very well. I have seen people with long standing bedsores get healed within two weeks just because they got a daily bath in the hyper sonic bathtub. I'm a retired nurse who worked in long term care.
@@peachymunmagenta not in the way you think but it works by removing dirt an oil from your skin or wounds thus allowing it to heal faster due to less germs and btw I know this is rage bait
We have this at work. I work in a jewelry manufacturing facility and they have sinks with this built into them. We use it to make sure everything comes off the jewelry, before it gets oxidized. Otherwise, the smallest bit of soap will completely ruin the oxidation. That’s basically a whole sink full of oxidation that has to be slowly drained and refilled, which is very time consuming and wasteful. If it was being contaminated with each use, after it was refilled, that would put an insane dent in everyone’s ability to reach their quota for the day. So, yeah. This is a super cool and useful invention. Saves us a bunch of time, since soap can get trapped in creases and holes in the jewelry. Also, working in a jewelry manufacturing facility is the best, for me anyway. It’s great for introverts and artistic people. I don’t have to talk to hardly anyone at all, and I get to make jewelry look beautiful all day. Plus, they train everyone for every station (at my job), no matter what your experience level is. Mine was absolutely zero. I didn’t even qualify for the job lol Idk if it’s like this with every JMF, but it’s definitely a great job to have.
This works extremely well for cleaning carburetors and other small engine parts. I use an unltra sonice cleaner for almost everything that needs to be cleaned.
I used to be a central sterile technician. Basically, any reusable medical instrument would get sent down to the dirty room after a medical operation to get cleaned. An ultrasonic cleaner is one of the essential cleaning implements used to remove any unseen bioburden (blood, tissue, etc) in the instruments. Particularly helpful for cleaning orthopedic instruments and anything with a canula. It does have limits though. It's more of a secondary step as the instruments have to soak in a sink first, then be cleaned with brushes to remove as much of the dirty stuff as possible. Then it goes through an ultrasonic cycle and then into a washer.
@@jumping_beanz6209 Yup, less critical instruments can go through it as well but Orthopedic instruments or specialty instruments always took priority. Mostly because orthopedic instruments were always the dirtiest and a lot of time it's the only set of those instruments we had, so we had to make sure they were thoroughly cleaned. Also, quite often we would need "loaner" instruments from other hospitals and a lot of those times those instruments weren't up to the cleaning standards our facility had. Like some instruments are supposed to be taken apart and they weren't and still had yuckies in it. Not everything necessarily goes through the autoclave, but they do go through another sterilization process. The autoclave uses steam to sterilize the instruments, we ran ours at 272°F, so generally any instrument of a metallic composition would be safe to put through. Anything electronic, sensitive to temperature or delicate would go through a sterrad. So instruments like visual cameras, camera scopes, endoscopes, some ob/gyn speculums coated with nylon, other things I'm probably forgetting would go through the sterrad. The sterrad uses hydrogen peroxide to sterilize and can do so at a much lower temperature than an autoclave. If these instruments went through the autoclave they would be ruined, and they are expensive, like one endoscope camera from Stryker is like $25k+.
@hugofontes5708 the real sound is much higher in pitch. Imagine nails on the chalk board but at the intervals/pace like in the video. I don't find it too and anymore though
@@hugofontes5708 Depends on the frequency of the US cleaner. I also worked in a jewelry store and the one we had sounded fairly similar to this video. Perhaps it's a grating, uncomfortable sound for some but I honestly wasn't bothered and was happy to utilize it after a few hits from the rouge wheel. Nothing like freshly polished & cleaned jewelry 😌
@@smokeybowls187the most uncomfortable parts of the sound are the very high frequency ones. While getting older you loose the ability to hear those sounds. Being exposed to them will speed up the hearing loss too. Could just be that you couldn't physically hear the high pitch sound anymore.
*Ayo Bro… I’m literally having a Batman marathon right now just finished “The Batman 1989” yesterday now I’m just bout done with “Batman Returns with Cat woman and The Penguin Man” 🦇🐈🐧*
Wait, this is the exact application I thought of when I saw this video! I’ve never seen one of these in any of the schools I’ve taught at!! Who’s office do I need to barge into on Monday!? 😃
Just like lava bucket in minecraft but if you drop the bucket into the lava the bucket disintegrate. 😂 Just kidding, idk tho i think the vibrations only in the center to prevent the tray into breaking?
Guys (I'm addressing both of you), the metal he put in was a thin sheet, and that does happen to the bowl but in such a small amount that it's practically inconsequential
@@norman783 I have a cleaning device similar to the device in the video for my retainers. I've had it for at least a whole year and the metal (which I can't remove) and it's lasted longer than the logo light.
I was looking inside the comments to see if anyone knew the song at the end and thought I had finally found it. Disappointed 😩. Edit: found it! "Bitmaster" from "Lupus Nocte" seems to be the song at the end of this short.
You know that extreme high volume, high gain, low bass that happens at the end of a song that instantly turns it into a meme-BOOOOOOMVVVVVRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRR
This decrease in pressure causing water to form bubbles and then collapse is also know as cavitation when caused by a ship’s propeller, slowly destroying it as its used.
This is also a major problem for high speed water craft - it's called cavitation as the low pressure forms bubbles which then explode. Causes severe pitting of propellers, foils, etc.
Isn’t that one of the problems many boats many years ago had? Though the engines could theoretically push the boat faster, the propellers moved so fast I caused cavitation to occur which severely damaged the propellers in turn?
@@johnmcwick1 It was.... and still is, although prop designs have improved to some degree. This also affects hydrofoils when they get to around 50 knots.
@@dimaryk11The Russian "Shkval" torpedo actually uses cavitation to travel in a "bubble" at insane speeds. Info on it's practicality is limited, but it's an interesting read in Wikipedia. 😎
I work with medical analyzers that utilize sonic cleaners to clean cuvettes after running tests on patient samples. Didn't realize the tech has this much cleaning power behind them. Gives me a new appreciation for the technology I get to work with
Ha I’m in medical manufacturing and after making certain tools we also ultrasonic cleaners. I never knew how they work so this is great knowledge and I feel the same way. I have more appreciation for what I work with
Pro tip: Put dirty things in plastic bags with a little bit of liquid in them and put the bags in the cleaner so you don’t have to change all that water every time. Then you can add expensive rust treatments and solvents to the bag without wasting large amounts.
Also some solvents aren’t suitable for use directly in the ultrasonic cleaner. If you watch closely with just water in it you can see it produces a fine mist, now if you have it filled with something volatile then you are creating a fine mist of the volatile substance, so if you use a bag or jar with the solvent in it instead and place that in the water bath it prevents it from getting turned into a mist.
Used these a lot when I was working as a tattoo artist. Ultrasonic cleaner, and autoclave. Both, very interesting pieces of equipment. And..quite expensive. But you’re keeping your clients healthy, and that. Justifies the price 👍👍👍!
Hi, I was looking at one to buy to use for my “tobacco” bowls/pipes. I’ve seen once’s that hold 3 liters for under $100 - is that a fair price?..or are the ones you use for cleaning tattoo equipment different? Thanks
couldn't particles stick back when you were taking it out? unless there was around 91% alc instead of water, that was refilled everytime before cleaning.
I work in a jewelry store, we use Ultrasonic Cleaners when cleaning all of y’all’s gross jewelry. It take the dead skin, body oils, last Thanks Giving’s turkey stuffing, and all the other crud that gets caught under your stones and in metal grooves out pretty quick especially if you mix in a degreaser like Purple. Then we work on the jewelry, clean & polish it, put it back in the cleaner to get polishing soot off and steam the piece clean. If it’s White Gold then the piece is Rhodium plated then rinsed off and steamed one last time before it’s ready to go back to the customer.
Good for you! I am happy to hear that you are doing your job like you should and explaining what everyone is obviously expected to do in the same line of work. I doubt some of them complain though when they are off of work or sound passive aggressive on social media and sounding like said person in a western tone "y'all's gross jewelry" and go on with the specifics.
@@I_am_gods_messenger I concur. The attempt to quickly blunt the disrespect with pseudo intellectuals about a basic job is insulting in it of itself😂 and the use of “y’all”🤢
I work in a wood products industry and use ultrasonic to clean cutting blades of different kinds but firstly we also use metal cleaners mixed with water to give the proccess a boost and chemically aid the proccess but it is only about 95% effective and takes half an hour. Defenelity not how it seems like in the video. Have used the system for other stuff as well like cleaning machinery parts and equipment with similar results.
We use ultra sonic waves in inspection applications in the industrial field. Mainly for checking the thickness of pipes and locating corrosion within. It’s such a cool concept and piece of tech.
@Weezerr420 It is the BEST way to clean your pieces, but they aren't cheap. I used to work at a smoke shop, I couldn't give you the dollar value off the top of my head, but if you've got a couple hundred to spare, it's great at getting into all them nooks n crannies. However, you can get a really great clean with 70-80% ISO n some salt. I like to throw a drop or two of lemon extract in there as well for a good scent. Bang, three things you probably already have in the house that will clean it just as good with a little elbow grease
@@EetbugsI'm interested... so after the process is finished and I take the bong out Does the dirty resin water do anything bad to the "tub/container?" or can I just go outside and dump it in the backyard and the tub is not messed up
@@Eetbugsthey aren't that expensive either. If you get a regular one that isn't advertised towards a special application you will pay about 40-50 bucks. I got a small one the other day for watches, glasses and jewelry that was just 20 bucks at a local store :)
@@Thedoodahman_different type of glass actually, that a “Nail” or “Banger” in the video. Its normally made of Quartz which is different than the glass rig made out of Borosilicate glass normally. Dabbing is fun but it can be seriously addictive and can damage your lungs and throat pretty bad, i lowkey started balding and my dental health declined severely
@@civilizedmonkey1795 probably not necessarily. But I imagine the frequency is so high your eardrum wouldn't even vibrate. Edit: well at least not in a special ear drum kind of way. Your whole face would probably be vibrating, and it might hurt, but none of that is special about your ear.
@@asleepappealSonar and sonic systems on larger ship vessels can be so powerful that they can literally turn the insides of people's heads into mush. And whales can hear it for thousands of miles like a deafening bloop.
Nothing that exists could be experienced or possible without this sound water Cymatic interaction, Which includes matter. There is nothing that has been made that is more advanced or more Hi-Tech than LIFE Itself, and the living Earth Realm we currently necessarily occupy!
Those little fog machines where water sits on top to create fog. I stuck my finger in one of those and it was one of the most painful things I had ever experienced.
@xTiamat I mean it's basically a sound-burn. It's a lot of friction at an ultrasonic frequency so it disintegrates things that are up close. That's why the water is jumping off as steam despite being from temperature. It's the pleasure waves at the microscopic scale. Like a tiiiiiiiiiny pressure cooker reducing the boiling temperature.
I’ve also wondered what would happen if someone did that. Since 70% of your body is made of water (and blood is mostly water), I would imagine touching one of those ultrasonic mistifier could violently agitate molecules inside your finger, causing pain (I wonder what kind of pain) and if left there your blood might start to evaporate… But where would it go? A curious phenomenon
For those wondering what would happen to a finger: Apparently it feels like a small electric shock and will clean dirt and oil out of your skin, so... basically nothing, ha
Thank you. This is exactly what I came to the comments for 😂
Cool I need it
exactly what i was asking
Thx
I put my hand in one once (fishing out a jewelry project that fell through the basket). The main thing was that the water was super hot. But other than that it felt almost like my hand was in a vibrating pot of sand. Like you would swear there was grit vibrating around in there but there wasn’t.
So we basically have a piece of tech that screams at dirt to make it disappear
Sindel from MK aka Mrs Cillet Bang
“DISSIPATE!”
sounds like my mom kicking me out the house
i mean, you're not wrong😂
Ah gawsh 😅 I wasn't ready
Imagine seeing that on a microscopic level.
Bruh. Groovy
would be a spectacle!
what, i thought it was on microscopic level. they make bolts THAT huge?
For those wondering what would happen if you put your heart inside: Nothing, You'd just die before you remove your heart out.
Emo kid: 🎵🎙 I will give my heart to y.....
Thank you. Now I don't have to die trying to answer that question. 👍
Eh, there are a lot of ultrasound frequencies and amplitudes. The lower ones are keen to stimulate cells to lyse e.g. Alzheimer's plaques and reseal the blood brain barrier where it has become porous to such fibrils. On the other hand you probs don't want to beam a given 40W therapy beam through opportunistic or otherwise narrow pathways and get that cavitation or other emulation of cyngulate gyri disrupting waveforms, in order to not needlessly replicate c.f. Russian mess-u-up box diplomacy results.
Davey Jones: hold my heart
Hijacking thread for people looking for this info: "Bitmaster" from "Lupus Nocte" seems to be the song at the end of this short.
"So what's your fave music genre?"
"Acoustic metal"
Rock on!
Hmmm
Autistic metal
You mean Apocalyptica? They have some good songs the old ones lol
Playing One by Metallica on my ukulele
Fun fact: a larger much slower version of this, not caused by sound, but by high explosives is what makes torpedoes hit thrice. First they do the obvious boom, then the rapidly collapsing bubble rips the water back in an implosion, and the third hit is due to the rapidly pulled back water shooting upwards after the implosion. Some may take that last one as mere splashing, but for being a tertiary aftershock it carries a lot of punch. For all but the largest and most armoured of military vessels a modern torpedo can extremely cripple, sink, or straight up snap a ship in half with a single hit.
I’m gonna try this one
There's also the one that explodes under the middle
Apply the same physics to divers who use exothermic cutting torches to cut apart platforms at 200+ fsw and they don't properly vent/clear a path for hydrogen and 02 to not make a pocket of gas that gets hit with sparks from a torch. That last thing you hear your friend say is "Make it Hot"
Mantis shrimp but with an explosive instead of a funky arm
Hmm.
I work in the dental industry and this is highly valued technology in every dental office. One of the primary tools for cleaning teeth( Cavitron) is an ultrasonic scaler. An Ultrasonic cleaner like the one depicted in the video is also one of few steps in cleaning dirty dental instruments. This is also used by jewelers.
We use it to release metal patterns on chip surfaces in my line of work aswell (microelectronics)
TIL the ultrasonic cleaner I used to fix water damaged devices was really just rapid and continuous cavitation, constantly surprised at how often cavitation has an effect in our lives.
“It disintegrates metal!”
My stupid brain: “Can… can I put my finger in it?”
I’m so glad I’m not the only one who thought about this lol
You can actually, it'll clean the Sebum and dirt off your skin
@@justahugenerd1278 if my inner thoughts ever took control, I might not live another 24hrs 😂
@@Nerdmonides good to know! I learned the hard way not to do it with liquid nitrogen but I retracted quickly 😂
My first thought!
Son: *playing heavy metal*
Mom: “I thought I told you to clean your room!”
Son: “I am cleaning my room” 🗿
Ik it's a joke but wouldn't the dirt stuff just settle on the floor?
You must be the mom@@generalgrievous6648
@@generalgrievous6648it really would...and that's mostly where the dirt in a "dirty room"bwould already be (ie clothes and shoes). The only additional dirt that might be affected would be the dust on the light fixture or ceiling fan. 😁
“Heavy metal rock” 💀
@@XxWTFLOLXDxX I am writing this comment so that I can milk your likes
I have always wondered how ultrasonic cleaners worked. This was a great quick explanation.
I needed that when I had bad grades on my report card😂
"oops, wrong frequency"
*destroys oceanic pipeline*
AIN NOTHING NEW. LMAO
Casually causes mass extinction
Did you say oil!🇺🇸
Sounds about right😂
Ah! So it’s like the bowl is filled with thousands of mantis shrimp that all start punching in-unison! Thanks for the explanation
Thats absolutely true... the effect is called cavitation
I immediately thought about it too 😂
*Standing here, I realise...*
My immediate reaction as well
That's an outside the box way of thinking. And I like it gulldurnit.
... so that's how the forbidden Gatorade works
I appreciate that you just let the longer play go with the foil, so I can actually see it myself.
It’s a sonicator, no electricity in the water, no pain if you accidentally dip in. Used one of these all the time to help dissolve difficult compounds in solution in the chem labs in my undergrad. Very useful
So what happens if we supersize it and turn it into a bath tub?
@@Daniel.Belas1 According to another comment, you'd feel like you're being shocked by a bunch of mini electric shocks and become extremely clean.
Sonicator 3000
@@Daniel.Belas1 honestly not super sure, I think that has some validity, but you also have to think about your blood and it would be vibrating you, but they have cercise machines that work solely by vibrating your body super intensely and the obvious adult you lol, so maybe it would just make ya feel good hahah
@@zealousdoggo not shocks but vibrations
Water: **Screams**
Metal: I don't feel so well
🙄
@@RH-uv3og🤫🧏♂️
It's funny but it shouldn't be ☠️☠️☠️
Wait what my comment disappeared
@@Not-Axo i guess I dunno
Asking for a friend; where can I get a human sized varient
"Punch it."
"Kick it."
"Yell at it."
"BREAK!!!"
We use an ultra sonic parts cleaner for industrial applications. Amazing tech.
wtf happens when u stick a 20yo sock in there?
@@Artsie835 idk, looks like I need to wait 20 years to run the experiment. I’ll get back to you after.
Lol(good luck :)
Does it work pretty well to get grease off?
@@Ericm86878 it does. Gets it out of all the small engravings and grooves.
Just imagine what the 0.01% of germs would be capable of after going through this process.
Unless isopropyl alcohol is used as the liquid this equipment has no germicidal effect, at least not that I am aware of.
@@evanstedman7405originally I was just joking but it is possible to kill pathogens using ultrasonic cleaners.
Just search online for "antimicrobial activity of ultrasonic cleaners".
@evanstedman7405 I think the point was a joke about the germs gaining super powers, no?
@@evanstedman7405sonication will absolutely kill microbes.
@@revolucionarioe2123shaking small objects is known to make them special
Waiting for this to be the new way we get ‘ultra clean’ showers.
The gold dust "uhhhhyeahhhh". 😂
So, it basically works via cavitation.
Microcavitation Generator
Yep
@@DonaldDucksRevenge
Engage the micro cavitation generator molecular disruptor in frequency Phase Lock
@@reypolice5231no
@@reypolice5231 A Plasma Rifle in the 40 Megawatt range.
For all the people wondering if you can put your finger in and be okay, yes you can! There are therapeutic bathtubs that use ultrasonic waves and are used to help people recover from wounds and bedsores. It works very well. I have seen people with long standing bedsores get healed within two weeks just because they got a daily bath in the hyper sonic bathtub. I'm a retired nurse who worked in long term care.
Thanks a lot, a professional description has great imporrance. Highly thankfull to you m'am. ❤❤❤❤❤
That sounds awesome
That is very cool. I wonder how common it is for patients to have access to it.
The noisy bath will remove your wounds…..
@@peachymunmagenta not in the way you think but it works by removing dirt an oil from your skin or wounds thus allowing it to heal faster due to less germs and btw I know this is rage bait
We have this at work. I work in a jewelry manufacturing facility and they have sinks with this built into them.
We use it to make sure everything comes off the jewelry, before it gets oxidized. Otherwise, the smallest bit of soap will completely ruin the oxidation. That’s basically a whole sink full of oxidation that has to be slowly drained and refilled, which is very time consuming and wasteful.
If it was being contaminated with each use, after it was refilled, that would put an insane dent in everyone’s ability to reach their quota for the day.
So, yeah. This is a super cool and useful invention. Saves us a bunch of time, since soap can get trapped in creases and holes in the jewelry.
Also, working in a jewelry manufacturing facility is the best, for me anyway. It’s great for introverts and artistic people. I don’t have to talk to hardly anyone at all, and I get to make jewelry look beautiful all day.
Plus, they train everyone for every station (at my job), no matter what your experience level is. Mine was absolutely zero. I didn’t even qualify for the job lol
Idk if it’s like this with every JMF, but it’s definitely a great job to have.
Don't let a cybertronian take a bath in that.
This works extremely well for cleaning carburetors and other small engine parts. I use an unltra sonice cleaner for almost everything that needs to be cleaned.
Yessss sirrrr
Dentures?
Sonice? Are you talking about frozen foods?
If this can clean a banger that has a bunch of rosin built up I’ll buy one
@spencerrichmond5845 it will but gummy organic or water proof stuff is best cleaned with simple green or purple power
I used to be a central sterile technician. Basically, any reusable medical instrument would get sent down to the dirty room after a medical operation to get cleaned. An ultrasonic cleaner is one of the essential cleaning implements used to remove any unseen bioburden (blood, tissue, etc) in the instruments. Particularly helpful for cleaning orthopedic instruments and anything with a canula. It does have limits though. It's more of a secondary step as the instruments have to soak in a sink first, then be cleaned with brushes to remove as much of the dirty stuff as possible. Then it goes through an ultrasonic cycle and then into a washer.
No autoclave?
@@E_A_G_O Didn't feel like going into too much detail :)
@@kidsmooth6549I thought you could just use an ultrasonic cleaner for less critical instruments? Does everything have to go through the autoclave?
@@kidsmooth6549didn't use any ultraviolet to kills bacteria?
@@jumping_beanz6209 Yup, less critical instruments can go through it as well but Orthopedic instruments or specialty instruments always took priority. Mostly because orthopedic instruments were always the dirtiest and a lot of time it's the only set of those instruments we had, so we had to make sure they were thoroughly cleaned. Also, quite often we would need "loaner" instruments from other hospitals and a lot of those times those instruments weren't up to the cleaning standards our facility had. Like some instruments are supposed to be taken apart and they weren't and still had yuckies in it. Not everything necessarily goes through the autoclave, but they do go through another sterilization process. The autoclave uses steam to sterilize the instruments, we ran ours at 272°F, so generally any instrument of a metallic composition would be safe to put through. Anything electronic, sensitive to temperature or delicate would go through a sterrad. So instruments like visual cameras, camera scopes, endoscopes, some ob/gyn speculums coated with nylon, other things I'm probably forgetting would go through the sterrad. The sterrad uses hydrogen peroxide to sterilize and can do so at a much lower temperature than an autoclave. If these instruments went through the autoclave they would be ruined, and they are expensive, like one endoscope camera from Stryker is like $25k+.
My electric toothbrush just started playing the Doom theme
I've never seen brass foil before. It's beautiful!
I used to work in the jewelry industry, I will never, never, miss this noise.
How close is the recording to the actual thing?
@hugofontes5708 the real sound is much higher in pitch. Imagine nails on the chalk board but at the intervals/pace like in the video. I don't find it too and anymore though
@@hugofontes5708 Depends on the frequency of the US cleaner. I also worked in a jewelry store and the one we had sounded fairly similar to this video. Perhaps it's a grating, uncomfortable sound for some but I honestly wasn't bothered and was happy to utilize it after a few hits from the rouge wheel. Nothing like freshly polished & cleaned jewelry 😌
@@smokeybowls187the most uncomfortable parts of the sound are the very high frequency ones. While getting older you loose the ability to hear those sounds. Being exposed to them will speed up the hearing loss too. Could just be that you couldn't physically hear the high pitch sound anymore.
YOUR TOO LATE BATMAN! IVE CONVERTED ALL THE WATER INTO ULTRA SONIC CLEANERS!
so a mini jacuzzi that's only slightly hottee and it cleans oil and grime lmao
This comment is iconic
HOLY TAMALE BATMAN!
RIGHT AFTER GREEN GOBLIN LEGALIZED WEED!?😱😱😱
*Ayo Bro… I’m literally having a Batman marathon right now just finished “The Batman 1989” yesterday now I’m just bout done with “Batman Returns with Cat woman and The Penguin Man” 🦇🐈🐧*
At a tattoo studio I worked out we used to call it the scream cleaner, coz it screams at the dirt to get off 😂
Someone forgot to replace their smoke alarm battery
Hes cleaning his dab rig nail with this in the intro
Lmaoo yes, yes he is 😂😂😂
I literally came to the comments to see if I can clean my dab rig this way 😂
He's just educating all the stoners on how to clean their rigs 😂
Lol
Watch as I clean my rank ass bong. 😂
I just took a break from studying thermodynamics to open my phone and get jumpscared by more thermodynamics
Woe, thermodynamics be upon ye!
It's the same concept as a dog shaking itself dry😂😂 just on a quantam scale. Id imagine it's how Barry Allen drys off after a shower lol
Totally cleaning my dab rig like that next time
we have one of those in my band class to clean the instruments, we call it the instrument deep fryer
Wait, this is the exact application I thought of when I saw this video! I’ve never seen one of these in any of the schools I’ve taught at!! Who’s office do I need to barge into on Monday!? 😃
maybe just call it the deep fryer 😂 let nobody but the band know it’s for instruments..
@@artrdytddI love this
What if a person were to put their balls in it? Would it harm your balls?
@@artrdytdd Yeah
Just wait until someone's gonna try to deep fry a png in it
Finally my day of appreciation as an acoustic person has come
As one themselves, it seems like nothing to relish over.
Utrasonic
Jokes on u I been appreciating myself all along 😈
Intrinsic gang
Notice how the dirt at home cleared when hearing the sound of mom screaming😅
so that's what the noise came from when i took my glasses to the glasses shop for repair
Him: "it can literally eat holes in metal"
The metal dish: 😳
Just like lava bucket in minecraft but if you drop the bucket into the lava the bucket disintegrate. 😂 Just kidding, idk tho i think the vibrations only in the center to prevent the tray into breaking?
Guys (I'm addressing both of you), the metal he put in was a thin sheet, and that does happen to the bowl but in such a small amount that it's practically inconsequential
I'd also take issue with him titling the video "dissolving metal"... disintegrate, sure, but dissolve? Highly unlikely.
@@NoGoatsNoGlory. Huh, hes probably replacing the buckets every experiment
@@norman783 I have a cleaning device similar to the device in the video for my retainers. I've had it for at least a whole year and the metal (which I can't remove) and it's lasted longer than the logo light.
That track is probably an absolute banger
I see what you did ;)
🔥🤘😂
It's probably just a scientific glass set. Stoners stole that tech from scientists haha.
What happens when you put your hand in?
I was looking inside the comments to see if anyone knew the song at the end and thought I had finally found it. Disappointed 😩.
Edit: found it! "Bitmaster" from "Lupus Nocte" seems to be the song at the end of this short.
This is the type of video that gets stuck in my head for months in a row
One step closer to a dubstep blaster
As a dental assistant, ultrasonic cleaners are awesome
Saves tools so they can be sold again 150.000 times at a high price
My man sent that brass sheet to the shadow realm. 💀💀
You know that extreme high volume, high gain, low bass that happens at the end of a song that instantly turns it into a meme-BOOOOOOMVVVVVRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRR
That makes you rethink concerts
This decrease in pressure causing water to form bubbles and then collapse is also know as cavitation when caused by a ship’s propeller, slowly destroying it as its used.
Also what a mantis shrimp uses to kill things.
This is also a major problem for high speed water craft - it's called cavitation as the low pressure forms bubbles which then explode. Causes severe pitting of propellers, foils, etc.
Torpedo
Isn’t that one of the problems many boats many years ago had? Though the engines could theoretically push the boat faster, the propellers moved so fast I caused cavitation to occur which severely damaged the propellers in turn?
@@johnmcwick1 It was.... and still is, although prop designs have improved to some degree. This also affects hydrofoils when they get to around 50 knots.
@@dimaryk11The Russian "Shkval" torpedo actually uses cavitation to travel in a "bubble" at insane speeds. Info on it's practicality is limited, but it's an interesting read in Wikipedia. 😎
science in class: 😐🥱
science in youtube: 🤩🤯
Man's basically teaching us how to cling our weed pieces
I see you with the bong/dab rig banger in the beginning 😂
Hahah that's what I thought but this guy hella smart, it's probably some sort of scientific glassware for reducing gasses or something
it def looks like the bottom of a 90° banger but it’s probably just some scientific glassware. the pieces fit together exactly the same as bongs/rigs
@@surfinbird221 my stoner brain 🧠 sees what it wants prolly🤤
@@s3ct0rxf0ur9 you prolly right, I loves weed tho🤤🤤
I work with medical analyzers that utilize sonic cleaners to clean cuvettes after running tests on patient samples. Didn't realize the tech has this much cleaning power behind them.
Gives me a new appreciation for the technology I get to work with
Ha I’m in medical manufacturing and after making certain tools we also ultrasonic cleaners. I never knew how they work so this is great knowledge and I feel the same way. I have more appreciation for what I work with
I misread "metal" with "meth" and clicked the thumbnail😭
Noise Marines: yes but more
Pro tip: Put dirty things in plastic bags with a little bit of liquid in them and put the bags in the cleaner so you don’t have to change all that water every time. Then you can add expensive rust treatments and solvents to the bag without wasting large amounts.
Also some solvents aren’t suitable for use directly in the ultrasonic cleaner. If you watch closely with just water in it you can see it produces a fine mist, now if you have it filled with something volatile then you are creating a fine mist of the volatile substance, so if you use a bag or jar with the solvent in it instead and place that in the water bath it prevents it from getting turned into a mist.
@@conorstewart2214 That's an excellent point! Using small closed containers should be the standard way to use an ultrasonic cleaner.
This is exactly what I do to clean carbs and other small engine parts! My ultrasonic cleaner looks brand new but has cleaned tons of stuff for me!
Used these a lot when I was working as a tattoo artist. Ultrasonic cleaner, and autoclave. Both, very interesting pieces of equipment. And..quite expensive. But you’re keeping your clients healthy, and that. Justifies the price 👍👍👍!
Hi, I was looking at one to buy to use for my “tobacco” bowls/pipes. I’ve seen once’s that hold 3 liters for under $100 - is that a fair price?..or are the ones you use for cleaning tattoo equipment different? Thanks
couldn't particles stick back when you were taking it out? unless there was around 91% alc instead of water, that was refilled everytime before cleaning.
Me: dunks face in the ultra sonic water.
Avatar series should add this as a sub bending for air benders...lol
I work in a jewelry store, we use Ultrasonic Cleaners when cleaning all of y’all’s gross jewelry. It take the dead skin, body oils, last Thanks Giving’s turkey stuffing, and all the other crud that gets caught under your stones and in metal grooves out pretty quick especially if you mix in a degreaser like Purple. Then we work on the jewelry, clean & polish it, put it back in the cleaner to get polishing soot off and steam the piece clean. If it’s White Gold then the piece is Rhodium plated then rinsed off and steamed one last time before it’s ready to go back to the customer.
Good for you! I am happy to hear that you are doing your job like you should and explaining what everyone is obviously expected to do in the same line of work.
I doubt some of them complain though when they are off of work or sound passive aggressive on social media and sounding like said person in a western tone "y'all's gross jewelry" and go on with the specifics.
@@I_am_gods_messenger I concur. The attempt to quickly blunt the disrespect with pseudo intellectuals about a basic job is insulting in it of itself😂 and the use of “y’all”🤢
Wow, bet you don't have a job@@I_am_gods_messengerjust amazing, u the vigilante of negativity yo
@@I_am_gods_messengercry about it
I work in a wood products industry and use ultrasonic to clean cutting blades of different kinds but firstly we also use metal cleaners mixed with water to give the proccess a boost and chemically aid the proccess but it is only about 95% effective and takes half an hour. Defenelity not how it seems like in the video. Have used the system for other stuff as well like cleaning machinery parts and equipment with similar results.
First thought: What if put my finger in it?
My first thought was what if I put my teeth in... would it work better than a toothbrush?
@@kiranicole2096 lol so true..
I would want to see my enemies placed into a bat of this 😂
“Anyways, now I will put my finger in…”
*_dissolves into just the bone_*
We use ultra sonic waves in inspection applications in the industrial field. Mainly for checking the thickness of pipes and locating corrosion within. It’s such a cool concept and piece of tech.
Called Holiday Testing Machine😂
Works wonders for resin prints
Do you think this is safe for bongs with percolators?
@@Weezerr420 should be fine, they are very gentle
@Weezerr420
It is the BEST way to clean your pieces, but they aren't cheap. I used to work at a smoke shop, I couldn't give you the dollar value off the top of my head, but if you've got a couple hundred to spare, it's great at getting into all them nooks n crannies.
However, you can get a really great clean with 70-80% ISO n some salt. I like to throw a drop or two of lemon extract in there as well for a good scent. Bang, three things you probably already have in the house that will clean it just as good with a little elbow grease
@@EetbugsI'm interested... so after the process is finished and I take the bong out
Does the dirty resin water do anything bad to the "tub/container?" or can I just go outside and dump it in the backyard and the tub is not messed up
@@Eetbugsthey aren't that expensive either. If you get a regular one that isn't advertised towards a special application you will pay about 40-50 bucks.
I got a small one the other day for watches, glasses and jewelry that was just 20 bucks at a local store :)
1990: flying cars in 2030
2030: water screams at rust, rust leaves in a rush 😃
_gif of Incredible Hulk being hit with sound wave cannons_
That was 100% a dab rig at the start 😂😂
I knew I recognized it...
Same type of glass, but he definitely doesn’t use it for dabs, it’s definitely used for science
@Thedoodahman_ pretty sure some pretty fun scientific reactions happen during the whole dab process...
@@Thedoodahman_different type of glass actually, that a “Nail” or “Banger” in the video. Its normally made of Quartz which is different than the glass rig made out of Borosilicate glass normally. Dabbing is fun but it can be seriously addictive and can damage your lungs and throat pretty bad, i lowkey started balding and my dental health declined severely
😢tuuguopfhiig😂hkk
The short version is: "They've got some good vibes going."
Clean sound,yes.
Use this to compress sound waves to print micro processors
I can't let the intrusive thoughts win
Ultrasonic glans cleaner
Apparently it feels like a small electric shock for a finger but idk about… uhhh let’s say more sensitive body parts
@PaperComa if it cleans stuff, they can stick it in. Maybe the wave energy will neuter them.
@@pugorilla8848 worth it to experience 50,000 nanoblowjobs per second
How bad would this be for your ears if you were underwater?
Depends on the intensity. Doesn't need to be all that high to achieve this effect, whereas the ear can withstand some significant decibels.
It's utlrasonic, i.e. higher frequency than we can hear. So probably nothing.
@@asleepappeal if we can't hear it does that necessarily mean it won't physically affect us?
@@civilizedmonkey1795 probably not necessarily. But I imagine the frequency is so high your eardrum wouldn't even vibrate.
Edit: well at least not in a special ear drum kind of way. Your whole face would probably be vibrating, and it might hurt, but none of that is special about your ear.
@@asleepappealSonar and sonic systems on larger ship vessels can be so powerful that they can literally turn the insides of people's heads into mush. And whales can hear it for thousands of miles like a deafening bloop.
Cavitation at its finest
My brain: keep your hand in it
Me two days after submerging myself in a giant ultrasonic tub," I dont feel so good Mr. Stark."
Nah i bet there is a medical miracle here somewhere but the system doesnt actually want us healthy they want us sick.
That's how they get monatomic gold. One word, tetryonics
Idk if it could successfully break off atoms
@@gratefulguy4130 a high enough frequency would..
Could something like this cut stone?
Pressure is equal to force / area. So you can also think about it as large force / small area ratios.
Let’s not forget water in this!!
Water and sound waves have an astounding relationship.
Nothing that exists could be experienced or possible without this sound water Cymatic interaction, Which includes matter.
There is nothing that has been made that is more advanced or more Hi-Tech than LIFE Itself, and the living Earth Realm we currently necessarily occupy!
I'm ready for my sonic shower.
oh no i dropped my EXPENSIVE METAL RING into water
I love this tech its probably the best thing we use in 3d printing and modeling!
When you use water to fry😂
That's metal as hell.
“Extreme acoustic pressure”
They going to keep on until they figure out how the Pyramids were made with sound
Those little fog machines where water sits on top to create fog. I stuck my finger in one of those and it was one of the most painful things I had ever experienced.
ONG is that the same thing?
I was wondering if this was the same thing
@xTiamat I mean it's basically a sound-burn. It's a lot of friction at an ultrasonic frequency so it disintegrates things that are up close. That's why the water is jumping off as steam despite being from temperature. It's the pleasure waves at the microscopic scale. Like a tiiiiiiiiiny pressure cooker reducing the boiling temperature.
@@Iqueypressure cookers work by *increasing* the boiling temperature of water, not decreasing it
I’ve also wondered what would happen if someone did that. Since 70% of your body is made of water (and blood is mostly water), I would imagine touching one of those ultrasonic mistifier could violently agitate molecules inside your finger, causing pain (I wonder what kind of pain) and if left there your blood might start to evaporate… But where would it go?
A curious phenomenon
My dab rig bout to get soooo clean
So on a larger scale...very powerful weapon
Sounds like bro fired a microscopic Cero
Lmao my stoner ass thought that glass thing was the neck of a banger
Worlds longest drop down.
You can bong anything if you're brave enough...
Looked like a glass nail to me, have no idea what a banger is
I was looking for this comment
@@luvsiix_a banger is a style of quartz nail
"This disintegrates metal"
*contains it in metal*
_Thin_ metal. It's not gonna take off of a solid container.
@@Ghostguy693 its a joke dont take it seriously
@@Pines_stuff Sorry man but it's the internet, ya never know.
@@Ghostguy693 its ok 👍
I can imagine a horror book having the villain use this on one of his victims.
Whats that loud noise,
Oh nothing, just cleaning my house
You should video this in slowmo so we can see the light that is emitted when the bubbles collapse from the sound waves
I’ve used those machines at a music shop, they’re really fun. Super helpful