This one was my favorite so far. I love the sound of the ice cracking under the pressure, and seeing the gas cavities become filled with water. And as always, I enjoy your unique humor. Thanks!
It just keeps getting better! The humor is outstanding! So underrated as far as subs go. Happy to say I been here since the first Video and I love every new Drop!
It would explode, it’s not under a vacuum. It’s under pressure from the inside. Unless you’re talking about the ice itself in the vacuum and not the chamber.
Wow … that’s scary. Challenger deep is twice what your chamber can do, whew. That’s serious pressure. Just researching the ice diagram is amazing. Complex stuff. Thanks for this!
No problem. If the channel takes off later, I was thinking I may build a Challenger Deep version of the chamber if there's any interest. It would be a slightly smaller chamber though.
I’d be interested in knowing how much energy/electricity your chamber consumes achieving these pressures/depths. Is it relatively efficient? Or is it an energy hog?
Are you able to do a video where you show how your whole setup works? Such as what kind of pumps are used to increase the pressure and also how your chamber seals closed. Also, was the hyperbaric pressure chamber made yourself or bought? By the way, keep up the great work. I hope your channel grows because it’s hands down the best channel that I’ve seen for doing these kinds of tests.
Thanks for your support! In episode 15 I talk a bit about it. I'll probably expand on it more when I do an intro video. I designed the chamber, sourced the material and had the parts made at a machine shop.
1:08 Damn, I was just about to crush water into ice VII with my own hands since I lack this machine but your disclaimer stopped me from doing it otherwise, thanks for looking out for us!
I always learn something new from your channel. I’ve heard about the different phases of water but never in the detail you presented. Water inclusions in diamond under such pressure - who would have guessed.
I think I’m schizophrenic. I have never taken interest or Have even known about ice 7. I searched it up for the first time and looked through all of the videos and all of them had red lines through the bottom. I don’t remember watching this at all
Great video! Sorry, but I may not completely understand. But what was the idea, except from displaying something awesome? I imagine that if you had been able to get ICE7, would all the water have been that, so in this experiment did you manage to put ICE1H under the max pressure we can get in the ocean? It could be amazing and world's first if you could put a dead blubber fish under its natural pressure! :-)
Would it be possible to rapidly de-pressure the system without damaging it? It would be interesting to seeif the ice explode from the compressed air inside the cubes.
In Portsmouth England there’s a hyperbolic trials facility where a person can get into a chamber that can raise the pressure much like your dropzone canister. It’s for submarine training.
What if you place a bag of fresh water in the chamber filled with salt water and cool the chamber to the freezing point of fresh water and then release the pressure? Visually, I think it would be an interesting curiosity, especially taking the bag of frozen water out of the chamber.
Not sure if you've ever shown it, but can you please show the inner workings of the pressure vessel's machanics to get such high pressures? Is it a hydraulic press or motor that feeds it?
Couldn't you not use water in around your ice and maybe try using a gas around the ice to test all kinds of things with ice cubes and maybe dry ice in cubes form without water ...
Can a chamber be built that can withstand extreme pressures, instead of using lasers on microscopic samples for microseconds? Is there a pressure beyond which even the walls of even the strongest, thickest chamber would break?
What about dry ice? You should be able to do the same thing with dry ice and see what happens right? It might help to pre cool the water in the chamber first so it lasts longer but it should make for a neat show
Since pigs are analogous to humans, can you put a piece of pork with a bone and see what happens? I’m curious what occurs to tissue/bone under pressure.
@@nickhubble2838 If you knew anything about chemistry, you would know that the solubility of gases dissolved in water is inversely proportional to temperature. Boiling drives dissolved gases out of solution, so that the water can freeze without entrapped air.
Idea for the video: Make a model canister that will be somewhat rigid and transparent, add couple drops of oil or diesel fuel. Will it combust during implosion?
For another engineering challenge, make a chamber that does the opposite and take things to the top of Everest and beyond to make things go kaboom instead of crunch. 😁
Someone else mentioned Dry Ice and I agree. I would like to see it in a glass jar with a waterproof cover on it that will implode (the cover) at around 1/2 mile. The water would leak in and I wonder if it would start to sublimate? Also a second test with a big chunk of the dry ice in the chamber with nothing protecting it as the pressure was increased.
This was definitely an interesting experiment. I could have the pump struggling at around 14,000 feet though. Would be pretty cool if that could simulate the pressures in the challenger deep, but still the depth of the Titanic is pretty cool anyway. Love the experiments.
I really appreciate the science lesson afterwards. It gives real context to the amazing sights you produce in your little death tube! I wonder how many wealthy people have pressurised aquariums with the rarest fish ever seen in them...
@@throwawaypt2throwawaypt2-xp8nx Sonoluminescence happens when bubbles collapse under water. I'm wondering if the pressure might do the same to the gas trapped in the ice.
I always wondered what would happen to the iceberg if it sank instead of the titanic
Same energy as “the tower hit the second plane”
'Under Pressure' and 'Ice Ice Baby' intro is a nice Easter egg.
There is a dad joke in there!
😂
I'm relieved to see we caught on to the subtle nuance of the reference to Vanilla Ice using the sample from Under Pressure to make Ice Ice Baby.
This one was my favorite so far. I love the sound of the ice cracking under the pressure, and seeing the gas cavities become filled with water. And as always, I enjoy your unique humor. Thanks!
It almost looks like its the opposite from cracking .. its the sound of ice crackling together..
By far my favorite (small for no reason) channel!
It just keeps getting better! The humor is outstanding! So underrated as far as subs go. Happy to say I been here since the first Video and I love every new Drop!
Thanks for watching and sticking around! I'll try to pump out content for you guys more frequently.
thought it may implode with that air trapped in the ice
It would explode, it’s not under a vacuum. It’s under pressure from the inside. Unless you’re talking about the ice itself in the vacuum and not the chamber.
@TheDropzoneChannel can you do dry ice?
Yes
Had same thought...yes please!.
Weird I thought water was not compressibel and thought that pressure would generate far more heat.
In theory, ice 7 can be very hot & still be a solid.
Wow … that’s scary. Challenger deep is twice what your chamber can do, whew. That’s serious pressure. Just researching the ice diagram is amazing. Complex stuff. Thanks for this!
No problem. If the channel takes off later, I was thinking I may build a Challenger Deep version of the chamber if there's any interest. It would be a slightly smaller chamber though.
I’d be interested in knowing how much energy/electricity your chamber consumes achieving these pressures/depths. Is it relatively efficient? Or is it an energy hog?
What if you made ice in a pressurized system and then you depressurized it? would the ice be harder? or would it just be regular ice?
How much does the water in the chamber heat up when you are pressurising it? Have you tried measuring the temperature with just water in there?
Ice 7 would probably exist on moons like Europa.
could you explain how you obtain those high pressures please?
I use an industrial pump. You can watch Episode 15 where I explain how it works and take it apart for maintenance.
"Well Clarice can you still here the Screaming of the ICE CUB'S? (sound of air being sucked past the teeth and tung) THIP! THIP! THIP!😈" lol
Good you mentioned Jerusalem where everyone lives in peace. 7:44
Are you able to do a video where you show how your whole setup works? Such as what kind of pumps are used to increase the pressure and also how your chamber seals closed. Also, was the hyperbaric pressure chamber made yourself or bought?
By the way, keep up the great work. I hope your channel grows because it’s hands down the best channel that I’ve seen for doing these kinds of tests.
Thanks for your support! In episode 15 I talk a bit about it. I'll probably expand on it more when I do an intro video. I designed the chamber, sourced the material and had the parts made at a machine shop.
@TheDropzoneChannel
Can the pressure chamber crack a glow stick and make it light up?
Okay. I'll try that next.
This is awesome I love watching these videos every day!
1:08 Damn, I was just about to crush water into ice VII with my own hands since I lack this machine but your disclaimer stopped me from doing it otherwise, thanks for looking out for us!
No matter, l will simply use my teeth.
It's really cool to see the ice become more clear over time
I always learn something new from your channel. I’ve heard about the different phases of water but never in the detail you presented. Water inclusions in diamond under such pressure - who would have guessed.
I think I’m schizophrenic. I have never taken interest or Have even known about ice 7. I searched it up for the first time and looked through all of the videos and all of them had red lines through the bottom. I don’t remember watching this at all
Best intro of the year. Very punny. Cheers 🍻
Great video! Sorry, but I may not completely understand. But what was the idea, except from displaying something awesome?
I imagine that if you had been able to get ICE7, would all the water have been that, so in this experiment did you manage to put ICE1H under the max pressure we can get in the ocean?
It could be amazing and world's first if you could put a dead blubber fish under its natural pressure! :-)
Would it be possible to rapidly de-pressure the system without damaging it? It would be interesting to seeif the ice explode from the compressed air inside the cubes.
9:09 woah! That blew my mind!
Would there be a way to do Dry Ice/Solid CO2?
Watching the air bubbles and channels disappear was fascinating!
Now I'm curious if you froze the water while under pressure how badly it would damage the chamber from expansion. Never mind, don't break the chamber.
This is exactly what I've been wanting to see. Thank you for doing this experiment!
Meooooow
In Portsmouth England there’s a hyperbolic trials facility where a person can get into a chamber that can raise the pressure much like your dropzone canister. It’s for submarine training.
hey. you don't have any way for somebody to contact you. I run 6000m AUVs for my day job and i can fit small containers to squish things.
What if you place a bag of fresh water in the chamber filled with salt water and cool the chamber to the freezing point of fresh water and then release the pressure? Visually, I think it would be an interesting curiosity, especially taking the bag of frozen water out of the chamber.
I started watching this out of curiosity, and it was very interesting. The only problem now is that am craving a Vodka and Ice7
Just learned about Ice 7 and looked up on TH-cam to see if someone was able to create one
Not sure if you've ever shown it, but can you please show the inner workings of the pressure vessel's machanics to get such high pressures? Is it a hydraulic press or motor that feeds it?
That happened because of the untrained air in the ice. Next time, freeze water in a vacuum. Cool that you can get tlsuch cool video of it.
Couldn't you not use water in around your ice and maybe try using a gas around the ice to test all kinds of things with ice cubes and maybe dry ice in cubes form without water ...
How does this channel have only 8k subs? Something is not right.
Hey man you have a great channel!
Can a chamber be built that can withstand extreme pressures, instead of using lasers on microscopic samples for microseconds?
Is there a pressure beyond which even the walls of even the strongest, thickest chamber would break?
1:07 - "Please don't try this at home."
Me: [Puts pressure chamber away.]
What about dry ice? You should be able to do the same thing with dry ice and see what happens right? It might help to pre cool the water in the chamber first so it lasts longer but it should make for a neat show
Since pigs are analogous to humans, can you put a piece of pork with a bone and see what happens? I’m curious what occurs to tissue/bone under pressure.
I hope that deep submersible sitting on your bench isn't made of carbon fiber.
the human triple point is lol
I was originally going to use a photo of the Dome of the Rock, but then I decided to dial it down...
The guy would be capable of crushing ice with those super massive ear.
😱 I have been asking this since 4th grade. In 45 now. Thank yooooooou!!
Oh wow that was very interesting. I did not know any of this about ice.
Who cares about ice 7... oh dropzone, that's an instant watch.
remember folks, do not try this at home with your deep ocean chamber
*please dont try this at home* ahh yes i was going to try this with my very own pressure thingy
The Hydraulic Press Channel wants to create Ice 7 lol.
Dry ice and fill your tank with the cold carbonated water.
I was totally going to do this, but I used warm water, and my ice cube melted 😢
Looks like a good upgrade for a potato launcher 🥔
You're my new favourite channel.
I guess it's melting because the lights are hot
Me when I'm in the core of a Hycean planet
It is possible to make ice practically free of entrapped air by boiling the water first.
What does H2O mean? 2 hydrogen 1 oxygen. Boiling water does not change this structure.
@@nickhubble2838 If you knew anything about chemistry, you would know that the solubility of gases dissolved in water is inversely proportional to temperature. Boiling drives dissolved gases out of solution, so that the water can freeze without entrapped air.
Idea for the video: Make a model canister that will be somewhat rigid and transparent, add couple drops of oil or diesel fuel. Will it combust during implosion?
May be PET bottle blanks will fit the task.
guess that's one way to make clear ice
Ice 9 dropped into the sea
Do you want the end of the world? Because that's how you get the end of the world.
@@Chad_Thundercock yes
Ice 7 up is good too ok I drink
Superionic ice babyyy
He he...that's cool!
Ice cold water?
For another engineering challenge, make a chamber that does the opposite and take things to the top of Everest and beyond to make things go kaboom instead of crunch. 😁
A vacuum chamber only needs a difference of 1 bar. Easily made.
@@Tuck-Shop still, a kaboom would be cool ☺️
2:00 - th-cam.com/video/38EDhpxzn2g/w-d-xo.html
Ice ASMR :)
It melts lol
Ice: crackling away for several minutes with no major change in sound.
The TH-cam auto-captions at 4:08 in the video: this is music.
I wonder about the thermodynamics. Phase change reqires energy but also volume changes which affects pressure...
Interesting video as always❤
Someone else mentioned Dry Ice and I agree. I would like to see it in a glass jar with a waterproof cover on it that will implode (the cover) at around 1/2 mile. The water would leak in and I wonder if it would start to sublimate? Also a second test with a big chunk of the dry ice in the chamber with nothing protecting it as the pressure was increased.
This was definitely an interesting experiment. I could have the pump struggling at around 14,000 feet though. Would be pretty cool if that could simulate the pressures in the challenger deep, but still the depth of the Titanic is pretty cool anyway. Love the experiments.
Fascinating! What if it was "perfect" ice with no flaws that was frozen gradually while being degassed?
Hey, is there any way you could add a timestamp to the timelapse? At least for things like this, where we're also seeing melting make changes.
I really appreciate the science lesson afterwards. It gives real context to the amazing sights you produce in your little death tube! I wonder how many wealthy people have pressurised aquariums with the rarest fish ever seen in them...
Agitation is used to get that über-clear ice used for sculpting. It's available in some areas. That would take the pressure better.
The triple point of humans caught me so off-guard. Your dry deadpan is unreal dude, too funny!
Glad to see my idea, that I posted on the yeti water bottle challenge spawned a video 😊
Random mid-way joke is awesome!
Love your work mate.
Ice crackle sounds like a high pitched fireplace.
👍🐿😎
Ice - Under Pressure
I see what you did there.
🤣
Car toy when?
coolest one yet
very cool 😬
Very cool 👍
Ice melts under pressure...thats how ice skates work.
Do this in the DARK please! I have a feeling the collapsing bubbles will emit light.
Alright. I'll turn off the chamber lights in the next episode.
what makes u think it will emit light?
@@throwawaypt2throwawaypt2-xp8nx Sonoluminescence happens when bubbles collapse under water. I'm wondering if the pressure might do the same to the gas trapped in the ice.
I feel the "crush the sub" thing may seem insensitive to people given the most recent tragedy. Just a thought.
Noted
Can you do a dead cat?
7:46 LOL
We getting copyright struck with this one!! 📢📢📢📢📢🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🗣️🗣️🗣️🗣️🗣️🗣️🗣️💯💯💯💯💯💯💯🔊🔊🔊🔊🔊🔊🔊(ironic)
It's okay because Vanilla Ice got the tunes from David Bowie. Zing!
@@TheDropzoneChannel Wasn't there a lawsuit?