I have seen hydraulic presses been defeated many times, small ones usually gives up before you get the bearing out of that piece of shit you are working on. That said, a small 4-8 ton press is a rally good thing to have in the garage.
Well, yeah it is much stronger thsen steel. But when steel is overloaded, it deforms. When carbon-fiber is overloaded it instantly and without a warning breaks. So choose the application carefully.
The test isn't representative of the strength of a tubular structure with an air space in between. In this test the carbon fiber was supporting itself in the vertical direction. I'm pretty confident that if the submersible Titan were a solid block of carbon fiber, it could have survived hundreds of descents to titanic. But then no passengers would have been able to come.
What they demonstrate here is unidirectional force Under the sea u will feel pressure from all sides This video never can be exact evidence of failure point
@@ummaisumigualdois7761 "let's recognize all the fibers who donated their carbons to science" however they are still fibers of carbon so they didn't really have to donate anything to begin with. You see how the joke doesn't necessarily need to be true for you to understand it?
Actually carbon fibre is surprisingly dense. The reason carbon fibre parts are lighter than metal parts is that due to carbon's stiffness and strength you don't need a lot of it. Not because carbon fibre itself is super light.
@@dimosfakiris8914 According to google carbon fibre has a density of 1.55g/cm3, with Aluminium being 2.7g/cm3 and steel 7.9 g/cm3, so that's not really true, you need less of it because it's stronger but it's also a lot 'lighter' than comparable materials too.
@Leo Thomas I never said it's not a lot lighter. But it's still surprisingly heavy, which why we don't make structures out of solid carbon fibre, but we make sandwich panels which place the carbon fibres in tension, which uses the carbon finber in a more effective way. This creates disproportionaly light parts which can be less than half the weight of comparable aluminium parts (in my case I make race car components and we make some parts weigh 1/4 of the weight of a comparable aluminium part, not half). So yeah carbon is light, but carbon fibre parts aren't as light as they are, based solely on carbon being less dense than other materials, but also because of how carbon fibre parts are designed using sandwich structures
@@punker4Real that’s a ridiculous thing to say, nearly nobody would be able to afford those homes. a 1 bedroom apartment would probably cost a million alone.
Carbon fibre itself is not too expensive (around $20AUD per kg) however the process of making and using it for let’s say moulding parts for cars is very hard and requires a lot of skill. I would say around 65% of the price comes from the labour that went into making it and that 35% of the price comes from the actual materials used to produce the carbon fibre. There are also different weaves of carbon fibre and this could also dramatically increase the price. The weave you see in the video is I believe a twill weave and it’s is one of the more common weaves of carbon fibre.
Gotta be honest, wood is an amazing material. Strong, light, easily manipulated, and it grows out of the ground for free. How wild is that? Imagine life without trees…seems impossible. Wood for fires, fruits and nuts from its branches, wood for houses…every tree really is The Giving Tree.
The submarine that imploded near the Titanic was made of carbon fiber. After this video it gives you some perspective how insane is the pressure under the ocean.
@@timber72 Um what!? The carbon fiber almost certainly did fail. That or the porthole window possibly. Whilst very unorthodox, the parts bought from "local hardware stores" are not what failed. You're presumably talking about the game controller or the lights from camperworld or the landing struts from an old building site... these things had nothing to do with the Titan's demise. It was either the carbon fiber or the porthole window. The carbon fiber would've had stress fractures from the strain of 15 or so previous deep dives (as demonstrated in this video as a matter of fact). Carbon fiber becomes fatigued over time. And the window was not rated for those depths. It was reportedly only designed for depths of ~1500m. Not 4000m which OceanGate wanted to use Titan for! The likeliest scenario is the carbon fiber failing. Especially knowing that previous passengers on Titan had heard "cracking" and "popping" coming from the hull. Tell-tale signs that it was growing fatigued and was going to fail in the near future.
The problem is that they didn’t cook their carbon fiber. It needs to be cured in an autoclave. On top of that, they never checked it’s structural integrity. Something planes have to check every single time they fly
Isn’t damaging carbon fiber like that extremely dangerous? Cutting it (or especially exploding it like in this video) could produce tiny splinters or airborne microscopic fibers that would be very dangerous to your body if inhaled or pierced into your skin.
No danger for your skin. You will itch and hate it but skin will reject it like it does with other fibers like glass and such. Problem is with your lungs as carbon will penetrate tissues deep and probably stay there
@@abelgl You could not be more wrong. Carbon fiber bodies are lighter weight than your average car chassis and that means better power to weight ratio and as the video just demonstrated, stronger so your ride isn't a flimsy death trap.
@@abelgl some cars even have a full body and chassis made of carbon fiber. including hood/trunk hinges, sometimes even the air intakes are carbon fiber. the weight savings are so insane that instead of adding more weight for traction, they use more spoilers to get downforce for traction
@@benhernandez1065 One such good example I saw of that the other day was the McLaren Senna. I watched that episode of The Grand Tour where Jeremy Clarkson drove one and it got the top lap time when they took it to the track.
I like how the video ends with the press crushing two blocks aluminum and titanium. It's as if the owner wanted to sheer up the press after it was embarrassingly defeated by carbon fiber.
But actually it's for a comparsion, for people to feel that force this press applies is absolutely no joke, and it crushes TITANIUM that is really tough like it's literally nothing
@Reggie Magan exactly. i loved that they showcased it. I realize that 100 tons is a lot, but is it really that much? Aand when you see titanium just being liquified by that press, you know that that press is effing strong.
Diamond: Who are you? Carbon fiber: I am you, but cheaper. Edit: Thanks for the 2k likes! And what the hell happened to my comment section? It has some racism in it. Edit 2: Thanks for the 3k likes! After some time, the comment section is beginning to calm down.
I enjoy that there's no extra fluff that's added to make an unnecessarily long video like some other channels are known for. Pretty much right to the point. 👍
Yes it is. But it's not as durable as metals or alloys. It's main advantage is that it's very light but provides great durability compared to other materials in its weight category. See Formula cars just grazing each other, parts of the car will break off for sure.
i was going,"Dude what the fuck does that even mea...." then i went "shit, what IF tho...." and i pretty much trailed off with the whole machine exploding
If we can manufacture it cheaply it might replace Steel in construction, allowing us to build higher and stronger buildings. I believe it’s already widely used in aviation in certain parts of of the wings.
He should have put the glasses on that carbon fiber cube at the end after the press gets up, with the joint too, and with the music it would have been perfect
@@a_random_innocent_personxd2396 Ohh, I guess it might be a great idea. I have one in my BDSM Red Room. Greetings. Miguel M. Flores. Business Developer & Sales Manager.
When something is impressively strong we sometimes lose track of it's weaknesses. While carbon fiber is structurally strong, it burns and melts quickly. That's something we learned the hard way with engineered lumber. Wooden I-beams used as floor joists were stronger and straighter than the dimensional lumber they replaced. But fireman unfortunately found out that they burn through more quickly and lead to a rapid floor collapse.
Carbon wheels on bicycles disintegrate from the tiniest force.They are scary but Alumunium wheels need JUMPS and POOR Landings to deform them enough to break.
@@kudosbudo I guess it depends on the kind of carbon. F1 and race cars are built from carbon and rock solid, you basicly cant destroy a monocoque with a normal crash.
@@toby2581 Not when you’re considering, for example, construction where one of the biggest concerns is the safety of a building in the event of a fire, and how long you can contain a fire in one part of the building before it spreads. In this case you cannot justify the tradeoff for safety with the material simply being “stronger” - at least not nowadays. I can’t speak for heat resistant sheathing.
I work with carbon fiber all day long and it’s really not as tough as you think it is. Most items are 3-6 layers thick compared to 10x that of the one found in the press. Once bended carbon is like glass and the resin inside snaps easily.
@@DutchDiederik What? It's not because it's strong, it's because it's light. It can't be indestructible because if it was, cars would have no crush zone and you'd die If you rear ended someone at 50mph.
Friendly FYI: You should know that carbon fiber dust is quite dangerous for your health, you may want to use proper protections and dispositions next time
Beware, if that block ever breaks under some 100+ tons of pressure it will be like an explosion of carbon fiber razor blade shrapnel in the room. So it's basically a bomb. Hope he has a good safety barrier.
For a little bit of perspective, the m1 abrams is around 60 tons. That Square held up the equivalent of a heavy tank in such a small space. As for the second square a super heavy tank is classed as 120 tons. A small category that holds tanks such as the Maus.
The neat part about carbon parts is the strength and the breakage. Driveshafts of it are amazing. If they break it turns to dust hardly hurting a vehicle
I think it was microscopically cracking and delaminating from the very first dive? Repeated cycling did it in...The carbon fiber hull should have been replaced after every deep dive?
@@someguy5035 I remember he showed in another video that carbon cube left a print in steel. By the way, he just built a 500 ton press and destroyed that cube at over 120 tons
I'm SO GLAD you did the carbon fiber test with the fibers going in both directions! I'm normally getting so frustrated with these videos where people do things like that, and only test the item one way ...and it's usually the weakest way. So you STILL don't know what the real capability is. THOSE videos are a waste of time. But YOUR video, was spot on! Well done!
Actually, they should worry, because, if they think their car has now gained additional structural strength, they will be disappointed when they'll crash it into a tree or wall.
funny how the press starts shaking when it's about to max out just like humans do when they aren't strong enough haha. Thought that thing was about to explode lol
The fun thing is carbon fiber was originally made to have absolutely amazing tensile and shear strength, it just happens to be insanely good in bulk (compression) as well
One thing I'd love to see added to these videos is a thermal imaging camera. Showing the temperature of the blocks as they get compressed.
That would be really intriguing to see.
It wouldn’t change that much under monotonic compressive load. If it was cyclic loading then you’d see a temperature increase.
@@gaijinhakase1575 lol right what an idiot
That's crazy you said that when I watched the horn I'm thinking that thing must be transferring so much heat that helps the crushing process
There is only one way to know - Perform the experiment.
"do not repeat at home"
*sadly looks towards hydraulic press and carbon fiber block in the room*
What are we supposed to do with our 100 ton hydraulic presses now?
And my buffalo horn
Ayn kardisim
Xd
@@inowake aaa profile bak cok hos yerim seni insta versene
I knew carbon fiber would be impressive, but this is absolutely insane.
90 fucking thousand kilograms, what the actual
@@rackneh 100*
@@shukishan no that was 100 imperial tons which is 90.7 metric tonnes (90700 kg)
@@dyslexicsoap7605 Either way that's insane, the 10.000 kg difference doesn't seem that big xD
@@dyslexicsoap7605 thanks for the info! I dind't know that
HYDRAULIC PRESS VS CARBON FIBER : "Warning: Do not try this at home"
OceanGate: "Hold my beer".
Hold my CEO
Hold my ps2 controller batteries
Titan had about 20 deep sea exploration with same submarine before last one as part of testing.
@@xfirewolfy even some bigger ship uses game controller, so don't fall for media hypocrisy, they knew what they are doing
Technically they didn’t try it at home, they tried it 690km under the ocean
This is the first time in my entire life i see an hydraulic press being defeat
It also got defeated bay Nokia phone
I saw it get beat by a stack of paper
@@California2008 same
I have seen hydraulic presses been defeated many times, small ones usually gives up before you get the bearing out of that piece of shit you are working on.
That said, a small 4-8 ton press is a rally good thing to have in the garage.
This is a hidraulic press. It's a cheap Chinese knockoff.
Hydraulic press : finally a worthy opponent
Yes indeed
Jiren vs Goku.
More like
Carbon fiber: finally a worthy opponent.
our battle will be legendary
sagat vs ryu
Dude: places carbon fiber layers perpendicular to direction of force
Carbon fibre: call an ambulance, but not for me
Nah, in this case you need to call engineer.
😂😂😂😂
@@อาจารย์แดง-ฒ9ต "I told ya not to touch that darn thing"
-Engineer-
@@duongminhtrung1701 dayum bruh, how ya wrote engineer with slash cutting it. Fire.
@@chaitanyakumud5936 you type a dash before and after typing a word. Works everytime.
Thanks for this! Looks pretty strong.
Should hold up nicely for my deep sea submersible.
And underwater volcano base exploration. It should hold up fine with a little glue.
🚗😭😎
@@Dragon-Slay3rI diagnose you with emoji syndrome.
Lol
“I, hydraulic press, declare you the strongest”
Is that a motherf*cking naruto reference
Uchiha Madara??
th-cam.com/video/c7cEI282XHM/w-d-xo.html w
@@leboi4253 so is it bothering you
@@beastgamerrudra634 not in the least
It's impressive how strong is the bull horn though, imagine that was produced by a cellular process fuelled just with grass and oxygen.
It's just keratin, same as what we have in our hair and nails, except it's really densely packed
Its a buffalo right?
Wait, that was really a bull horn? I though it was some kind of wood that named bull horn
That can't be true, you need to eat meat to be strong even if it's just the horn 😯
@@Relaxing137 what
i had no idea how much i respect carbon fiber
You'd be hard pressed not to
@@ediotism gtf outta here!
Bruh
Well, yeah it is much stronger thsen steel. But when steel is overloaded, it deforms. When carbon-fiber is overloaded it instantly and without a warning breaks. So choose the application carefully.
I don't really even know what carbon fibre is ima look it up
James Cameron was correct, carbon fibre would eventually fail catastrophically. Even when it passes this “test,” it’s starting to fail.
You skipped the end part with the Ti block.
This video is not exactly science, but it makes a fair demonstration.
@@jerrylouis8930 difference is what happens when they reach their limit, the titanium bends, the carbon fibre breaks.
I didn't realize carbon fiber could handle that much pressure. Even so, you can see cracks in it afterwards.
The test isn't representative of the strength of a tubular structure with an air space in between.
In this test the carbon fiber was supporting itself in the vertical direction.
I'm pretty confident that if the submersible Titan were a solid block of carbon fiber, it could have survived hundreds of descents to titanic. But then no passengers would have been able to come.
What they demonstrate here is unidirectional force
Under the sea u will feel pressure from all sides
This video never can be exact evidence of failure point
"Don't try this at home"
*Sadly puts away hydraulic press*
😂
Best YT comment I’ve seen for a while 👏🏻
Well there go my Wednesday plans
You made m'y night xD
"Don't try this at home"
Firstly, removes younger siblings head
Sadly puts away hydraulic press
Immediately points at siblings chest
Asks what's this?
Flicks siblings nose!
The world fell silent as the hydraulic press was finally defeated...
😢................................
think of titanium..
@@biscuitdelicious5410 not nearly as strong as carbon fiber in this sense
@@BrendonCap Indeed
@Casey From TLC mechanical press break at 80 tones ? are you sure my man ?
Can we just take a minute to recognize all the brave carbons who donated their fibers to science?
)))))
I love the name lol
carbons don't have fibers to donate.
Fibers have carbons.
@@ummaisumigualdois7761 "let's recognize all the fibers who donated their carbons to science" however they are still fibers of carbon so they didn't really have to donate anything to begin with. You see how the joke doesn't necessarily need to be true for you to understand it?
@@musstta01 I understood enough to see that isn't true.
Ok, I know that I am a boring person.
Sorry....
3:55 and then 4:51 the result of this is what killed everyone on that sub. Composite fatigue and failure.
Wow!
Thanks for a warning, I was about to try it to my head.
-_-
@@Kadrimos neutral response
Lmao
I actually did cause the head press because the warning yeah
Oof
Yes, this is why my bicycle is carbon fibre to cope with my excessive body weight
I feel attacked
@Daniele R lockdown has been hard
Do take note that only *FULL* fibers are going to withstand high pressure and not the hollow ones,but I think you'll be fine 😂
@@raynic1173 yes, it was a joke.
I find this comment offensive as I am also abundantly proportioned.
It's even crazier when you take in consideration the small weight of that carbon fiber cube!
It’s not weight, it’s mass
Actually carbon fibre is surprisingly dense. The reason carbon fibre parts are lighter than metal parts is that due to carbon's stiffness and strength you don't need a lot of it. Not because carbon fibre itself is super light.
@@viswajitbala7924 density
@@dimosfakiris8914 According to google carbon fibre has a density of 1.55g/cm3, with Aluminium being 2.7g/cm3 and steel 7.9 g/cm3, so that's not really true, you need less of it because it's stronger but it's also a lot 'lighter' than comparable materials too.
@Leo Thomas I never said it's not a lot lighter. But it's still surprisingly heavy, which why we don't make structures out of solid carbon fibre, but we make sandwich panels which place the carbon fibres in tension, which uses the carbon finber in a more effective way. This creates disproportionaly light parts which can be less than half the weight of comparable aluminium parts (in my case I make race car components and we make some parts weigh 1/4 of the weight of a comparable aluminium part, not half). So yeah carbon is light, but carbon fibre parts aren't as light as they are, based solely on carbon being less dense than other materials, but also because of how carbon fibre parts are designed using sandwich structures
Hits different in 2023
Now I understand why carbon fiber are so expensive.
houses should be built from them in earthquake country
@@punker4Real yes let’s see how much it costs
@@punker4Real that’s a ridiculous thing to say, nearly nobody would be able to afford those homes. a 1 bedroom apartment would probably cost a million alone.
Carbon fibre itself is not too expensive (around $20AUD per kg) however the process of making and using it for let’s say moulding parts for cars is very hard and requires a lot of skill. I would say around 65% of the price comes from the labour that went into making it and that 35% of the price comes from the actual materials used to produce the carbon fibre. There are also different weaves of carbon fibre and this could also dramatically increase the price. The weave you see in the video is I believe a twill weave and it’s is one of the more common weaves of carbon fibre.
@@dogeytrain3287 you would be correct. Carbon fiber isn't that expensive, most people confuse carbon fiber with carbon nanotubes.
Hydraulic press: “So how many tons can you withstand?“
Carbon fibre: “yes”
yes fibre can
@zeuffy bruh
@zeuffy yep
100
@zeuffy Yes, although Fiber just feels much smoother.
Gotta be honest, wood is an amazing material. Strong, light, easily manipulated, and it grows out of the ground for free. How wild is that? Imagine life without trees…seems impossible. Wood for fires, fruits and nuts from its branches, wood for houses…every tree really is The Giving Tree.
Not only that, but in all the vastness of the entire fucking Universe, there's only one place that has it.
@@DiegoMartinezCoria one place that we know of
How about oxygen? xD
@@danielnathandean1407 oxygen is S tier gas
@@mgkcjk Good point. It's not like we've been many other places.
The submarine that imploded near the Titanic was made of carbon fiber. After this video it gives you some perspective how insane is the pressure under the ocean.
The carbon fiber didn't fail. The jury-rigging on the rest of the craft is what failed.
Dude bought parts at his local hardware store.
@@timber72 Um what!? The carbon fiber almost certainly did fail. That or the porthole window possibly.
Whilst very unorthodox, the parts bought from "local hardware stores" are not what failed. You're presumably talking about the game controller or the lights from camperworld or the landing struts from an old building site... these things had nothing to do with the Titan's demise.
It was either the carbon fiber or the porthole window.
The carbon fiber would've had stress fractures from the strain of 15 or so previous deep dives (as demonstrated in this video as a matter of fact). Carbon fiber becomes fatigued over time.
And the window was not rated for those depths. It was reportedly only designed for depths of ~1500m. Not 4000m which OceanGate wanted to use Titan for!
The likeliest scenario is the carbon fiber failing. Especially knowing that previous passengers on Titan had heard "cracking" and "popping" coming from the hull. Tell-tale signs that it was growing fatigued and was going to fail in the near future.
The problem is that they didn’t cook their carbon fiber. It needs to be cured in an autoclave.
On top of that, they never checked it’s structural integrity. Something planes have to check every single time they fly
It worked, but was ultimately destroyed by material fatigue and bad practices. Giving carbon fiber a bad name
Carbon Fiber: I'm not locked in here with you, you're locked in here with me.
Good one! 😁
Haha yeah!
*Street Fighter announcer voice*
Perfect!
No it is Dr strange voice
Underrated comment!
Good move testing both grains. That was what I wanted to see
dude wtf u doing here? xd
@@infinitexgg You dont know who this guy is.
@@sceplecture2382 pkmn youtuber lol
@@infinitexgg i dont allow you to know who he is. Forget.
@@tesvn4254 im just fucking with him. Look at my other comment. We commented at the same time.
“Help me Iron Man!!!”
Iron Man : “Actually it’s carbon fiber man now”
😂😂😂
Smort
Just imagine what carbonfiberman will sound like when moving around, he will probably sounds like a plastic storm trooper
he actually used that to fight Magneto once
@@dannyliu6196 what, where?
Isn’t damaging carbon fiber like that extremely dangerous? Cutting it (or especially exploding it like in this video) could produce tiny splinters or airborne microscopic fibers that would be very dangerous to your body if inhaled or pierced into your skin.
Exactly. Hopefully they have a shield between them and the press, and also some sort of mask.
Yes. Any fibers hurts tbh and it dont even need to be carbon fiber. Learn from my experience lol
No danger for your skin. You will itch and hate it but skin will reject it like it does with other fibers like glass and such. Problem is with your lungs as carbon will penetrate tissues deep and probably stay there
Hydraulic press: Squeezes and sweats
Carbon Fiber: I’m going to end this man’s whole career
Lol 😝
Man? You mean "this Hydraulic press whole career"
@@cayden2744 no bro. hyraulic press is called he
@@onurozdemir2898 did you just assume its gender? Be careful it's dangerous nowadays 😂
20.8 k wasnt it? Along..across did nothing
And this is why carbon fibers are a blessing especially in the motorsport world.
😂 fuck that. Aerospace is where it’s needed all it’s used for in auto is for looks
@@abelgl it is certainly not used just for looks.
@@abelgl You could not be more wrong. Carbon fiber bodies are lighter weight than your average car chassis and that means better power to weight ratio and as the video just demonstrated, stronger so your ride isn't a flimsy death trap.
@@abelgl some cars even have a full body and chassis made of carbon fiber. including hood/trunk hinges, sometimes even the air intakes are carbon fiber. the weight savings are so insane that instead of adding more weight for traction, they use more spoilers to get downforce for traction
@@benhernandez1065 One such good example I saw of that the other day was the McLaren Senna. I watched that episode of The Grand Tour where Jeremy Clarkson drove one and it got the top lap time when they took it to the track.
I like how the video ends with the press crushing two blocks aluminum and titanium.
It's as if the owner wanted to sheer up the press after it was embarrassingly defeated by carbon fiber.
But actually it's for a comparsion, for people to feel that force this press applies is absolutely no joke, and it crushes TITANIUM that is really tough like it's literally nothing
@Reggie Magan exactly. i loved that they showcased it. I realize that 100 tons is a lot, but is it really that much? Aand when you see titanium just being liquified by that press, you know that that press is effing strong.
@Reggie Magan yeah I think the funny thing is putting it AFTER the carbon fiber.
Its called aluminium
@@NoName-md5zb Not in the US
"warning do not try this at home"
Oceangate : of course not, I will try this at the bottom of the sea instead.
ayy can i come with you? I'll pay you a stupidly large amount of money for the privilege, and you can tell everyone I'm a water astronaut or whatever
Diamond: Who are you?
Carbon Fiber: I'm you, but cheaper.
and lighter
...and also darker.
diamonds are dirt cheap and not rare at all btw.
@@rattlehead999 true
@@rattlehead999 my life has been minecraft
Hydraulic press : * crushes with 100 tons pressure *
Carbon Fiber : " *Harder daddy* "
Hydraulic Press: "What??..."
Carbon Fiber: "Huh?, what?"
😂😂😂😂 can I get a " ooooh yeah!"
😂
xD
🤣🤣🤣
Diamond: Who are you?
Carbon fiber: I am you, but cheaper.
Edit: Thanks for the 2k likes! And what the hell happened to my comment section? It has some racism in it.
Edit 2: Thanks for the 3k likes! After some time, the comment section is beginning to calm down.
Daimond said stf up nigga
@@kurmana_sampath Toxic, I wish you a bad day. Now goodbye.
@@jow03 dude, rude!
Diamonds are brittle though
@@kurmana_sampath lmfao
News about The Titan led me here...
I enjoy that there's no extra fluff that's added to make an unnecessarily long video like some other channels are known for. Pretty much right to the point. 👍
Idk man i actually did like seeing it compared to other material
LOL
Yeah but putting the thing mentioned in the title last. Not that good
@@StefanReich No need to be pessimistic, now...
_God only knows how long and drawn out most videos are..._
What? Title says carbon fiber but there is lots of stuff before that and with really stupid music.
Nokia: "Ah yes, a worthy opponent."
Imagine a nokia phone being made out of carbon fiber !!
@@Young_Sachi Unbreakable...
@@Young_Sachi nokia is made by alien made meterial
Underrated comment 😂👌
444 :'(
Carbon fiber is insane. Especially considering how light it is.
It's easier to break everything using momentum than weight force
It’s dark tho
Yes it is. But it's not as durable as metals or alloys. It's main advantage is that it's very light but provides great durability compared to other materials in its weight category.
See Formula cars just grazing each other, parts of the car will break off for sure.
@@vaishnav_mallya it's carbon against carbon, like you can only cut diamond with diamond
@@kayak4773 You have a point there
This is probably the video that inspired Stockon Rush
time to replace my heart with carbon fiber so she cant break it anymore.
😁😁
Oof
Lol so you keep making her break ur heart, a true fool.
Missed opportunity to say 'crushed' rather than 'break.
Dude, you ok?
That's why Formula one teams and aerospace companies love carbon fiber so much
Almost Every motorsport Using This Material As Their Vehicle Chassis
@@korbangabut5767 Plenty aren't.
@@Larcona_ Carbon fiber is ubiquitous in racing, "plenty arent" is absolutely not true.
@@marxthesocialist5231 itl always be true no matter what your talking about lol
Use it as an f1 front wing and it'll break like glass
"Don't try this at home" because everyone's got a hydraulic press and carbon fibre just lying around the crib
I wish 😔
😂
I have a carbon fiber bike frame and sorta have a hydraulic press soooooo
He has small press you can get for not that much, and carbon fiber is cheap. Carbon fiber products aren't.
You don't?
Oceangate CEO watched this video
"Don't try this at home" as if I had a fucking home.
He's telling you not to do that outside then
That was dark enough to make me lol. Thank you!
@@Hatchet80 Saying you're homeless isn't dark humor lmao
I wasn't expected that xDDDDD
Lmao
Others: "Balls of steel"
Carbon fiber: "Am I a joke to you?"
balls of carbon fiber doesn't sound as good
He approached the man with a gun in hand and balls of carbon fiber, ready to pulverize his oversized opponent if necessary.
What kinda retarded joke is this
@@animalcollection6969 the kind you come up with while laying in bed for 12 hours straight
Nokia 3310 : *fbless you*
When you have to back out from 100tons because your test subject might have an Uno reverse card
i was going,"Dude what the fuck does that even mea...." then i went "shit, what IF tho...."
and i pretty much trailed off with the whole machine exploding
@@Mousey91 yeah, agreed!
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
@Casey From TLC man, I believe, even 40 tons can do a lot already, isn't it?
@Casey From TLC right
this was 100 lbs/square inch. Pressure at the Titanic depth is 6000 lbs/square inch. The ocean pressure is 60 times greater.
This was 200000 lbs/square inch wtf are you talking about 100tons =200000 lbs
its 100 tons lil bro. 100,000 KG. not 100 lbs. it clearly says on the meter. you blind?
Do Not Try This At Home. Oh ok, guess I'll put my hydraulic press back in the closet
My hydraulic press only goes to 9 tons anyways, so.
Haven't seen this comment before Kappa
Yep
😂
You only got one?
I guess this just shows how strong carbon fiber really is, despite being lightweight
If we can manufacture it cheaply it might replace Steel in construction, allowing us to build higher and stronger buildings. I believe it’s already widely used in aviation in certain parts of of the wings.
@@juice7136 the entire Boeing 787 is made out of carbon fiber; fuselage, wings, tail are all carbon fiber.
@@xxxBradTxxx I work at Boeing, can confirm, the new 777x also is mostly composite and aluminum
@@juice7136 airbus made their plane from carbon fibre,every part of the plane
@@pham3383 no they don't
Never thought I’d see the day where a hydraulic press can’t hydraulic press something. I can die in peace now
Lmao
@0 0 lmfao nice
He should have put the glasses on that carbon fiber cube at the end after the press gets up, with the joint too, and with the music it would have been perfect
Not less you have Jesus.
loool
RIP to the Titan crew
"Don't try this at home" as if I had a fucking hydraulic press at home
You don't have a hydraulic press at home? You sure must be A random innocent person XD.
@@miguelmflowers think I'm gonna have to add one to my CBT Red Room
@@a_random_innocent_personxd2396 Ohh, I guess it might be a great idea. I have one in my BDSM Red Room.
Greetings.
Miguel M. Flores.
Business Developer & Sales Manager.
I will disassemble mine and reassemble at school cuz he told me not to try this at home
Truth: i don’t have one
“Business developer & sales manager”
Casually mentions a bdsm room, to _no ones_ surprise
When something is impressively strong we sometimes lose track of it's weaknesses. While carbon fiber is structurally strong, it burns and melts quickly. That's something we learned the hard way with engineered lumber. Wooden I-beams used as floor joists were stronger and straighter than the dimensional lumber they replaced. But fireman unfortunately found out that they burn through more quickly and lead to a rapid floor collapse.
Carbon wheels on bicycles disintegrate from the tiniest force.They are scary but Alumunium wheels need JUMPS and POOR Landings to deform them enough to break.
Also brittle
@@kudosbudo I guess it depends on the kind of carbon. F1 and race cars are built from carbon and rock solid, you basicly cant destroy a monocoque with a normal crash.
@@OutriseLP Its a matter of quality control. A small blemish in the molding becomes the weak point.
@@toby2581 Not when you’re considering, for example, construction where one of the biggest concerns is the safety of a building in the event of a fire, and how long you can contain a fire in one part of the building before it spreads. In this case you cannot justify the tradeoff for safety with the material simply being “stronger” - at least not nowadays.
I can’t speak for heat resistant sheathing.
Hydraulic press: almost choked
Carbon fiber: you fool. This isn't even my final form
*proceeds to lie down*
I mean graphene Q is basically just fancy carbon fiber. Still requires resin to make more than one layer.
His power level is Over 9000!
Stockton Rush brought me here.
“We run the whole thing with this game controller “
“Do not try at home” I was about to cut my buffalos horn there
Lol
Legend
😂😂😂😂😂
😂
Hope u didn't do, buffalo can cut ur horn there.
"I almost die, you bastard" - Hydraulic Press to Carbon Fiber
You cheeky bastard you could have crushed me the carbon fiber cube exclaimed loudly
Madara Uchiha 😁😁😁😂
I, Hydraulic Press, declares you the strongest
Naruto reference 🥲🥲🥲
Nice Naruto reference...!!!👍
My wallet is made of carbon fiber and yet I'm broke...
Well you spent all your money on your wallet
@@luke_sv6702 bruh.
Haha! Good one mate! Better your wallet than your heart! 😎😎😎
in russia, the carbon fiber wallet breaks you
Because you're broken from the inside
“Do not repeat what you saw in this video”
OceanGate: Nah, Ima do my own thing
Hydraulic press : "i have 100 tons pressure"
Carbon Fiber: "and that gives you power over me?"
in Bane´s menacing voice😂
are you challenging me?
I didn’t realize that carbon fibre is so strong. Like I knew it was strong but damn far surpassed my expectations.
I work with carbon fiber all day long and it’s really not as tough as you think it is. Most items are 3-6 layers thick compared to 10x that of the one found in the press. Once bended carbon is like glass and the resin inside snaps easily.
It entirely depends on the orientation of the carbon fiber sheets. If you do it wrong, it's not much different than plastic.
They make supercars out of this stuff for good reason.
@@DutchDiederik What? It's not because it's strong, it's because it's light. It can't be indestructible because if it was, cars would have no crush zone and you'd die If you rear ended someone at 50mph.
@@joshblack269 wrong they use it because its both otherwise we would have paper cars "because its light"
Friendly FYI: You should know that carbon fiber dust is quite dangerous for your health, you may want to use proper protections and dispositions next time
Oak 0:05
Iron woon 0:23
Buffalo horn 1:15
Carbon fiber 3:16
Carbon fiber two 4:38
Carbon fiber three 5:27
Your welcome 🙏
2:32 karbon fiber
Thanks m8
@@soham_12715 XD
Tnx mate
Karbon jajaja
ありがとうございます
Press: "I will crush you"
Carbon Fiber: "so you've chosen death"
Lol
*When an unstoppable force meets an immovable object*
From where do i know this from?
@@mentalist417 Blob vs Juggernaut
@@abhishekjanjalkar9074 thank you.
Minecraft. Piston vs Bedrock. (Piston is stopped sadly:
@max marrero rip bozo press you won’t be missed 😹😹😹😹😹
Titan brought me here.
How did you survived?
Press: Such a tiny cube. I shall cru…
CF: you’re not that guy, buddy.
reactions to this bs is truly marginal...
@@JohanChristensen_ what’s bullshit?
@@JohanChristensen_ what's bs with knowledge? Narrow minded fool...
Press: Are you?
CF: Absolutely.
@@JohanChristensen_ pal
Carbon fibre: "I'm about to end this man's whole career"
Finally I know what the Nokia 3310 is made of!🤣
Gauging the strength of an N3310 is impossible. It's just legendary.
Lmfao
Hydraulic press vs nokia 3310
N3310: You kidding me
LMAO Soo True😂
No shit, nokia 3310 can be broken with some little force
Watching this because I heard the Seagate Titanic submersible was made of carbon fiber. Prayers be with them. 🙏
Prayers won't help them.
"It is easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle, than for a rich man to enter into the kingdom of God." Jesus Christ
@@lc5176they have souls: they should still be prayed for
Beware, if that block ever breaks under some 100+ tons of pressure it will be like an explosion of carbon fiber razor blade shrapnel in the room. So it's basically a bomb. Hope he has a good safety barrier.
Safety barrier wasnt enough for that you have to be like get outside of the house and run like 30M to be safe
@@laxsdd lol
Очень хорошее замечание, многие недооценивают технику безопасности, - они думают что это смешно.
He's got to be a professional. Look at all the yellow tape. Plus he's a youtuber. Totally legit
Gosh I wonder if he knew that
For a little bit of perspective, the m1 abrams is around 60 tons. That Square held up the equivalent of a heavy tank in such a small space.
As for the second square a super heavy tank is classed as 120 tons. A small category that holds tanks such as the Maus.
Um. No. It held up 20 tonnes. Not sure where the 60 tonnes came from.
@@nickpagano3570 4:50
@@jonomoth2581 you are correct. Forgive me good sir
Maus weighs 188 tons, and thus is much heavier than 120 tons, by about the weight of an Abrams
I’m sure surface area would play a big difference
My respect for Carbon Fiber has intensified.
Yeah you see it flop to 60 tons of pressure and then you realize that was it's weak side
@@themodernshoe2466 60 ton is still way too much man. Even carbon fibre's weak side is stronger than most metal. I was quite surprised.
Well, people who are here now have a curiosity about carbon fiber under enormous amounts of pressure
Meanwhile in dark web videos: "hydraulic press vs my annoying neighbour"
This comment is seriously underrated!! 😂🤣
Thanks for the mafia torture imagery
@@bishopp14 thx man XD
@@revimfadli4666 you're welcome, lad
The NYC dot Com
Is NOONE gonna talk about the 2015 youtube music? Its really nostalgic
No
Considering your profile, yes
Yeah it kinda was
@@Shadows-RC ye
@@Shadows-RC Nobody writes "no one". Not anyone. Nobody intentionally writes no one, as noone either. We do, however, write 'no-one'. 🙂
The neat part about carbon parts is the strength and the breakage. Driveshafts of it are amazing. If they break it turns to dust hardly hurting a vehicle
but expensive to make.
i can't imagine how expensive a carbon fiber driveshaft would be lol
But they break without warning
@@PanduAsli not much warning when a steel shaft breaks either.
@@floody79 and it’s typically a lot more violent
Thats so strong and Titan had 5 inches of carbon fiber all around it...yet it imploded wow the immense pressure of the waters....
If you watch the first piece they tried to crush it actually had a little damage. That crack would get bigger every time.
I think it was microscopically cracking and delaminating from the very first dive? Repeated cycling did it in...The carbon fiber hull should have been replaced after every deep dive?
Forget the carbon fiber; someone tell me what holds up that metal table the hydraulic press pushes on? 😅
I wondered the same thing. What metal is used on the head of the press?
@@someguy5035 I remember he showed in another video that carbon cube left a print in steel. By the way, he just built a 500 ton press and destroyed that cube at over 120 tons
@@borghorsa1902 Wow. CF is some strong stuff.
Best point made in this entire comments section.
Carbon fiber table
I'd like to see a block of graphene go under the press.
@@dariomarkovic7091 i know what is that
@@dariomarkovic7091 Oh well, except for the both of us😏
You do know that graphene is really thin like 1 atom.
@Crantox Yep but i think making cube of it is stupid because you will get graphit.
@@dariomarkovic7091 i know that dont worry!
When Carbon Fibre is under pressure, it plays a drum roll.
I'm SO GLAD you did the carbon fiber test with the fibers going in both directions!
I'm normally getting so frustrated with these videos where people do things like that, and only test the item one way ...and it's usually the weakest way. So you STILL don't know what the real capability is.
THOSE videos are a waste of time. But YOUR video, was spot on! Well done!
Nokia phones: Finally, a worthy opponent! Our battle will be legendary
Crashed in 15 kg pressure
Funniest comment
Maybe they are made of carbon fiber
I bought one Nokia made with this carbon fiber😏
@Henrique Ribeiro haha sim
Him: Do not repeat at home.
Me sadly looking at my Hydraulic press installed in my bedroom: T.T
Nice bro
Cringe
T - T
@Nooby stfu
pajeet
We're all here for the same reason lol
Carbon Fiber be like: *"More power you use, more powerful I am"*
The fact that it survived 100 tons is just insane..
it seems like it’s the only thing that can survive a hydraulic press
@@KeyPeele1 yea it's insaaaaane
@@KeyPeele1 .
@@KeyPeele1 .
@@KeyPeele1 whats scarier is that a material exists, whose dust particle is equal to a skyscraper.
Don't worry kids, that tape that looks like carbon fiber you put on your cars isn't the same thing.
😂
Actually, they should worry, because, if they think their car has now gained additional structural strength, they will be disappointed when they'll crash it into a tree or wall.
@@tekknorat no kid will drive a car
@@yamenezziddin8019 come to brazil and see kids driving cars and motorcycles
@@GetMellowed what
What I am most impressed with in this video is that you were able to cut the material that straight freehanded with a hacksaw
hydraulic press : you can't defeat me
buffalo horn : i know, but he can
(carbon fiber in the background)
😂
Nailed it😂😂😂
Nice one
LMFAO 🤣🤣
I made the calculations: if you managed to balance perfectly 23 public fucking planes all on top of that block, it still would not break NOR squish
Like a Boeing 747 or like. A smaller plane
Thats like 23 cessna’s coulndt handle a single Boeing
@@benwildschut5287 probably it could an empty 747
No passenger jets weighs 5 tonnes dammit.
It will do damage because I don't think that there is a commercial plane that is only made with carbon fiber and has 5 cm thick carbon fiber layer
The carbon fiber was like, "Nah I'm good."
I kind of sort of half guessed at the outcome. Very interesting video. Thanks
funny how the press starts shaking when it's about to max out just like humans do when they aren't strong enough haha. Thought that thing was about to explode lol
wat u mean humans do?
@Vishal Mishra Hehe...
@@JungleToes Yeah they do... 😏
@@thek2despot426 Lmao
The fun thing is carbon fiber was originally made to have absolutely amazing tensile and shear strength, it just happens to be insanely good in bulk (compression) as well
It's closest to a miracle material we have got.
Yeah then you look at the price
*thats why they use at car hoods and spoilers*
@@MilesOconner7161 Well... sorta. It looks good and is lightweight. Strength is just a lucky biproduct for those car nuts.
@@Meteor2022 torsional rigidity
Carbon fiber be like: did something just breathe on me?
Must have been the wind.
@@SamuSeen there's some prowlin' 'round here
NICE
I have completed the objective do not ruin it please
Now we know why they build houses out of wood
@Hey Girl I Like Your Kitchen Romania forever I hate kids
This is way better than just crushing different plastic toys and stuff over and over