I know, right? Heck, how many years did it take before we knew he had legs? He stood behind that table and pretended to be dumb. Always knew that was an act. And those glasses make him look very intellectual when he's pounding wood.
ya he sharpens his fan blades to razor blade sharpness. then hangs it up by a thread from a swinging hoook then stands under it and feeds crazy objects into no safety gear... swinging a hammer with JB weld deckout in OSHA gear lol wtf man
I always love when products actually do what companies say they can do. This tape is a prime example. You could maybe test it on steel as well, as steel is known for being very hard for adhesives to stick on.
I think it would depend on the type of damage the steel you're using it on has. This stuff is essentially just fiberglass cast material like you'd use to put a cast on a broken leg or arm. In fact, JB Weld calls it Fiberweld permanent repair cast as per their website.
I don't use tools for a living or fun. I only have one hammer. I have what could be a silly question. Wouldn't it be less trouble and less expensive to just buy a new hammer?
@@ericchism4855 depends on the hammer... if my German roofing hammer (I use for assembling truss and scaffolding) broke, it is harder to replace than a traditional hammer. And doing this could atleast get me through until I get a replacement, if I was on the road or what have you... Though, I would probably defer to my drift pin (and regular hammer) or at worst a regular hammer with 1 cut off pry tine for the interim.
@@mherrmann81687 I have had an idea for a tool show since before TH-cam was a thing. You take someone who has a basic understanding of what tools do. I know what a hammer is. You take them and do "tool" l stuff with them. One episode might be building something. Another episode might be "Can the tool dummy tell the difference between the $20 hammer and the German expensive hammer?" You have a bunch of hammers that are cheap to expensive. You use them, you rate them, and you see what the tool dummy says. I would be the dummy.
@@ericchism4855 tbh, i wasnt 100% honest before... my GRH is metal, and wouldn't break... but I have seen a wooden one before in an old foreman's jobox. I like the GRH bc of it's versatility. The extra long spike is a wonderful and durable drift pin, and carrying fewer tools when climbing around a scaffold to assemble/disassemble it is always a bonus. I have seen guys cut 1 time off of a traditional hammer, but I have also seen those single tines bend or snap with the amount of force we sometimes use. Traditional hammers are not tempered the same. It is a right tool for the job situation imo... If I am just sending home a few nails to hold some boards together then a craftsman, husky, dewalt, or any no-name hammer will do the trick.
To answer why when hammering two handed you only felt the shock in your left hand, it's because your right hand was acting like a pivot point transferring the force to the rear of the handle which you where holding with your left hand.
My socks have actually just been blown off. In addition to his many other skills Tyler is also a very talented clairvoyant who really enjoys bashing his wood.
I imagine there's quite a few ladies and not a few guys who wonder what a Tyler OnlyFans site would be like. Toy time like never before, that's for sure.
For those that may not realize it this stuff is essentially fiberglass cast material like would be used to put a cast on a broken arm or leg. In fact, their website calls it FiberWeld permanent repair cast. This is the reason that it holds up so well.
The first time I saw JB Weld was at a now defunct hardware store called "Scotty's" here in Central Florida, where I worked before enlisting in the Army. A sales rep came by the store with a glass soda bottle. He had used JB Weld to attach a wooden block to each side of the glass bottle and he would stand on the wooden blocks in a display of both balance and the strength of the JB Weld. It was pretty impressive...
Hey neighbor, I live it the Tampa Bay area and greatly miss Scotty's, that was my go-to place for years. But thankfully, there's an Ace Hardware nearby
JB Weld works very well if it is used properly. The problem is that they tend to have a habit of misrepresenting what applications it can be used for and at times the instructions provided can be vague.
@@VoVilliaCorp I miss going to the hardware store and getting nails by the pound in a paper bag and the great customer service of the small hardware stores. The nearest Ace Hardware to me is a pretty good drive. I am stuck with Lowes or Home Depot if I don't want to take a road trip.
You're absolute frustration and disbelief as you literally put everything you had into it is just so impressive you wanted it and I know you did and it didn't give it to you😊
It's the lighting, it's coming from the front of the scene. It's messing with your head because it's not natural lighting. The shadows are all messed up. It's a kind of uncanny valley feeling. You know something is up but you can't put your finger on it.
OK, Tyler... so at 12 inches from the attachment point, you are applying 195 ft-lbs of torque to the joint. at 24 inches away from the joint, that number doubles, and so on, so if that 2x4 was 4 ft long, and you had the joint at the beginning, then stood on the very end, you are applying 195x4=780 ft-lbs of torque to the joint. Granted, the actual application would be a bit less because the joint was approximate 6 inches back from the end, but you get the idea. Dropping the CMU on the end of the 2x4 applied way more kinetic energy to the board, likely around 600 ft-lbs of energy assuming a velocity of 32 ft per second. This is why the 2x4 snapped like a twig with that concrete block (CMU) smashing down on the end. It weighs around 38 lbs but this also shows impact force versus a static load (you sitting). You standing would apply more of a dynamic load as you twist and shift to maintain your balance.
sitting here watching this, knowing that I have two wheelbarrows with broken wooden handles that need fixing. Don't need to search multiple hardware stores,Tyler... just visit some old guy's farm. Plenty of broken stuff to test.
He's saying it right though. Wheel barrels not whatever you said that doesn't make sense... Is like. An apron should not be; it's too extra- it's A nape round... Mic drop
Okay Tyler, Now you need to put it on your scale that is attached to your garage and bring down your garage roof just to see if will...and make sure you put on your black framed glasses...you know, for science.
Well Tyler, After watching all of your videos and all the crazy things you have done and products you have abused. In so many way unintended methods. You have finally done something to make me want a product so much and believe in it after watching the torture test you put that hammer through. You have made me a true believer in this JB Weld Epoxy Tape. I wil now use that in so many ways. I live in remoter bush Alaska. A product like that could save my life or keep a tool or price of equipment limping by till a part or replacement could be acquired. Keep being you and have a wonderful life.
This stuff is amazing. I thought for sure that it wouldn’t work for anymore than a few uses of light duty before breaking again but I was completely blown away. Reminds me of one of those crazy product commercials you see of like knives cutting through bricks or whatever, except this stuff actually works! JB Weld needs to get ahold of you to workout a sponsorship or something
Instead of spending all the money on something like that. Get you a bunch of epoxy and some real stretchy medical rap the stuff that they used wrap around your arm when they take out an IV in the hospital. Make the epoxy some black dye together real well throw in your medical wrap tape. Walla! Then you can make a bunch of it and it'll cost you a lot less
I'm an ER nurse and we actually use a really similar product for bone fractures; it's called Orthoglass, and it's a fiberglass padding that activates with water and hardens in about 20 minutes. Definitely not as hard as steel, but it stabilizes the break; Orthoglass has a cotton sleeve so the epoxy doesn't get all over the patient as it catalyzes, though. The stretchy wrap you put over it actually looks exactly like Coban, another item we use that only sticks to itself to apply even pressure to a wound. I obviously don't know exactly what adhesive JB uses, but I would be willing to bet that the elastic wrap doesn't have to be removed (it'll likely end up coming off on it's own). I also wonder if the fact that the adhesive is exposed to the 'fracture' means it gets into the broken area to help glue it together.
the only thing that would make this better is actually naturally snapped tools, tools do not snap with a perfect slice, and because of this you can fit the wood back together kinda like a puzzle and it would add additional support via friction.
Fun fact we have been using that wrap for years at large manufacturing plants to stop pipes from leaking in a pinch. Keeps the production going without long down times until the next maintenance shut down
@@DinoNucci Pretty sure tyler asked in the cardboard saw blade video if people wanted a follow up and if so suggestions, so his request isn't out of left field, though it is on the wrong video.
Now THIS is what I'm talkin about! I can't tell you how immensely pleasing it was to actually see you read instructions and do things properly. It was 1000x more enjoyable. Good vid, man.
Try this with plumbing. I'm curious if you could rig a psi gauge to the pipe and see when it fails. I'm sure it probably says not for plumbing but that's just a suggestion really.
I was a big fan back when you were just getting like 2-5k views on all your videos a few years back. So dope to come back and see your channel doing this good, hell yea.
It's wheel'barrow' not wheel'barrel' lol. But my mind is blown by the product - you tested it behind any normal usage and it exceeded the strength of the original wood! Awesome review of an awesome product!
22:16 The Law of the Lever is ( E ) ( R ) = ( L ) ( r ) , where E is the effort force, R is the lever arm connected to the effort, L is the load, and r is the lever arm connected to the load. In essence, the product of the lever arm and the force is the same for both the effort and the load. where: E: is the effort force R: is the lever arm connected to the effort L: is the load The lever arms should be measured from the points on the lever arms that are vertically aligned with the centers of mass of the effort and load. The moment action on both sides of a lever is equal, and the formula for this is: F d = F d. In this formula, F represents the effort force, F represents the load force, d represents the distance from load force to fulcrum, and d represents the distance from effort force to fulcrum. The effort force can be calculated by modifying the formula to: F = F d / d, where: m: represents mass a: represents acceleration of gravity A lever calculator can be used to calculate lever effort force, and it can be used for both metric and imperial units as long as the use of units is consistent. You're welcome. I would do the math, but I only know your weight, I don't know the rest if the equation, so that would be an unknown variable.
If you think about that handles don't break that clean and can be put together even better, this is an absolutely great fix when you work in a remote area like a forest or something and need to get back to work
Find a Jackson wheelbarrow. It's the blue ones that the pros use. Ash wood handles, steel tub, etc. I've carried well over 600 pounds in one of them(dozens of times per day). Those things are indestructible(for normal use and mild abuse). You just need to keep the wheel bearing greased and the tire pressure at maximum.
I read this comment directly after thinking that exact same thought 😂 He thinks nerds are just sitting around getting the measurement of hypotenuses on right triangles and sh-t
@Fetidaf maybe if they don't know what they are doing. I'm not sure I'd trust anyone building something if they weren't checking the overall diagonal. And while 6,8,10 will give you a good starting point (much better than 3,4,5), it can still have you off by several inches over the course of say 115 ft.
I would like to see the handles fixed with wood glue added. Just wanna see how good it is with maximum potential Edit: Wow, so the tape is stronger than the wood itself wtf.
Starting to watch. Tyler drives nails. Thinking: Man he must test it harder. Tyler: Goes absolute apesh*t with the hammer, obliterateing the 2X4. Delivered once again!
PET bottles work insanely well for stabilizing such breaks, cut the top and bottom off, push that sleeve on and use a heat gun to shrink it down. It constricts down hard and won't move, and the wood will break before the plastic. BTW you felt the shock in one hand because of harmonics, you likely had the right hand at a low spot of the wave and the lift at a high spot, where the oscillation just battered your hand.
Doesn’t he film at like 3am in a garage? With like neighbors? If so that makes me fucking love this dude even more. Just beating the absolute shit outta some wood and happy as hell just to be doing it. Btw I need to get some of this I got a couple shovels that need some work.
Tyler, you should wrap a shovel handle entirely and torture test it. Or do another shovel, but wrap only the section where the wood meets the metal spade (where it broke on this video) Keep it up! My wife and I love the channel!
What really gives you more power is holding one hand high on the sledgehammer and the other hand low. As you swing down, slide your hand down generating tons of power and speed.
I love when products are so good you have to try so hard to break them 😂 my fav videos honestly. Should build something using this tape instead of nails or screws.
The funny part about the wooden handle wheelbarrow is for 9 yrs that all I've used in asphalt paving and they tank the fuck out of the abuse. Metal handle ones collapse fairly easily. For those who want to know we use the blue Wheelbarrows.
missed opportunities: hitting one sledgehammer at the break point with the other sledgehammer, and testing a handle with a (less secure) straight cut across instead of diagonal
Always look forward to seeing your videos, man. I hardly watch TH-cam anymore, but your videos are the exception. I've watched every single video. Keep it up man 🤙👍
Adding a wood or steel plate from left to right under the wheel barrow basket will get rid of the wheel barrow handle flex, you are getting when you move the wheel barrow around from the wheel barrow basket as the basket keeps the two arm handles together but is made of plastic hence the flex in the handles.
A friend of mine i showed this video to just tell me about a scary story of a guy using this as a cast for his arm. Did not end well. He had to go through some chemical treatment and painful removal of the "veld" to get it of his arm. He didn't loose the arm. Just some little skin.
Damn Tyler, reading instructions, wearing safety glasses, you’re unrecognizable! Nice character arch!
And failing to break the product
He got tired of reading all the mean comments
I know, right? Heck, how many years did it take before we knew he had legs? He stood behind that table and pretended to be dumb. Always knew that was an act. And those glasses make him look very intellectual when he's pounding wood.
ya he sharpens his fan blades to razor blade sharpness. then hangs it up by a thread from a swinging hoook then stands under it and feeds crazy objects into no safety gear... swinging a hammer with JB weld deckout in OSHA gear lol wtf man
Probably still has those classic Gang Gang slides on, though.
The natural contrast of his black attire and the bright green nature gave the tree plank this very comical green screen feel
I thought it was green screened 😂
If it weren't for the fact that I saw his feet were compressing the grass, I would have thought he green screened this
Your face is green screened
@@ThePrufessa I wish. Id put handsome Squidward there.
I wanted to say the same... :D
I always love when products actually do what companies say they can do. This tape is a prime example. You could maybe test it on steel as well, as steel is known for being very hard for adhesives to stick on.
I think it would depend on the type of damage the steel you're using it on has. This stuff is essentially just fiberglass cast material like you'd use to put a cast on a broken leg or arm. In fact, JB Weld calls it Fiberweld permanent repair cast as per their website.
I don't use tools for a living or fun. I only have one hammer. I have what could be a silly question. Wouldn't it be less trouble and less expensive to just buy a new hammer?
@@ericchism4855 depends on the hammer... if my German roofing hammer (I use for assembling truss and scaffolding) broke, it is harder to replace than a traditional hammer. And doing this could atleast get me through until I get a replacement, if I was on the road or what have you...
Though, I would probably defer to my drift pin (and regular hammer) or at worst a regular hammer with 1 cut off pry tine for the interim.
@@mherrmann81687 I have had an idea for a tool show since before TH-cam was a thing. You take someone who has a basic understanding of what tools do. I know what a hammer is. You take them and do "tool" l stuff with them. One episode might be building something. Another episode might be "Can the tool dummy tell the difference between the $20 hammer and the German expensive hammer?" You have a bunch of hammers that are cheap to expensive. You use them, you rate them, and you see what the tool dummy says. I would be the dummy.
@@ericchism4855 tbh, i wasnt 100% honest before... my GRH is metal, and wouldn't break... but I have seen a wooden one before in an old foreman's jobox.
I like the GRH bc of it's versatility. The extra long spike is a wonderful and durable drift pin, and carrying fewer tools when climbing around a scaffold to assemble/disassemble it is always a bonus. I have seen guys cut 1 time off of a traditional hammer, but I have also seen those single tines bend or snap with the amount of force we sometimes use. Traditional hammers are not tempered the same. It is a right tool for the job situation imo... If I am just sending home a few nails to hold some boards together then a craftsman, husky, dewalt, or any no-name hammer will do the trick.
Tyler DOUBLE CHECKED the instructions? Hell has officially frozen over
To answer why when hammering two handed you only felt the shock in your left hand, it's because your right hand was acting like a pivot point transferring the force to the rear of the handle which you where holding with your left hand.
Is he was wearing the nerdy safety glasses at that time, he would have figured that out.
That's exactly what I was going to say.. Power to the pivot. Got to love angles, leverage and etc.
TYLER, DON’T SMACK YOUR WOOD ON TH-cam! YOU’LL BE DEMONITIZED!
Right on dude
We need more videos Tyler! My thirst for your content is insatiable
Something Tyler can't break it's a miracle.
The shovel might disagree lol
@@ralphyboy3636 The tape didn't break at least
My socks have actually just been blown off. In addition to his many other skills Tyler is also a very talented clairvoyant who really enjoys bashing his wood.
I imagine there's quite a few ladies and not a few guys who wonder what a Tyler OnlyFans site would be like. Toy time like never before, that's for sure.
I hope you were able to locate your socks 😢
Like the best of us
For those that may not realize it this stuff is essentially fiberglass cast material like would be used to put a cast on a broken arm or leg. In fact, their website calls it FiberWeld permanent repair cast. This is the reason that it holds up so well.
So much frustration released in this video. He must not have had his dino nuggies this morning
Maybe there was a pickle in his breakfast?
The first time I saw JB Weld was at a now defunct hardware store called "Scotty's" here in Central Florida, where I worked before enlisting in the Army. A sales rep came by the store with a glass soda bottle. He had used JB Weld to attach a wooden block to each side of the glass bottle and he would stand on the wooden blocks in a display of both balance and the strength of the JB Weld. It was pretty impressive...
Hey neighbor, I live it the Tampa Bay area and greatly miss Scotty's, that was my go-to place for years. But thankfully, there's an Ace Hardware nearby
JB Weld works very well if it is used properly. The problem is that they tend to have a habit of misrepresenting what applications it can be used for and at times the instructions provided can be vague.
@@VoVilliaCorp I miss going to the hardware store and getting nails by the pound in a paper bag and the great customer service of the small hardware stores. The nearest Ace Hardware to me is a pretty good drive. I am stuck with Lowes or Home Depot if I don't want to take a road trip.
You're absolute frustration and disbelief as you literally put everything you had into it is just so impressive you wanted it and I know you did and it didn't give it to you😊
"It's completely hard, and not sticky"
🤣😂
We also watched Tyler beat wood for 10 minutes!
Remember… this channel started out by putting white, sticky substances between pieces of wood.
That's what she said!
@@bairfamilyfarm1336 Well, to be fair, he hacked it for a while, too and pulled on it.
Why does Tyler look like he’s in front of a green screen at 17:50? I mean, I know he isn’t, but still… Is anybody else seeing this, or is it just me!?
Thought the same thing. 😆
I posted a comment about the same thing. That entire scene stands out to me as looking weird somehow.
@@fizarak8763ikr like wth
It looks odd for sure. Neither the tree or him casts any shadows. Looks quite funny
It's the lighting, it's coming from the front of the scene. It's messing with your head because it's not natural lighting. The shadows are all messed up. It's a kind of uncanny valley feeling. You know something is up but you can't put your finger on it.
OK, Tyler... so at 12 inches from the attachment point, you are applying 195 ft-lbs of torque to the joint. at 24 inches away from the joint, that number doubles, and so on, so if that 2x4 was 4 ft long, and you had the joint at the beginning, then stood on the very end, you are applying 195x4=780 ft-lbs of torque to the joint. Granted, the actual application would be a bit less because the joint was approximate 6 inches back from the end, but you get the idea.
Dropping the CMU on the end of the 2x4 applied way more kinetic energy to the board, likely around 600 ft-lbs of energy assuming a velocity of 32 ft per second.
This is why the 2x4 snapped like a twig with that concrete block (CMU) smashing down on the end. It weighs around 38 lbs but this also shows impact force versus a static load (you sitting). You standing would apply more of a dynamic load as you twist and shift to maintain your balance.
sitting here watching this, knowing that I have two wheelbarrows with broken wooden handles that need fixing. Don't need to search multiple hardware stores,Tyler... just visit some old guy's farm. Plenty of broken stuff to test.
Yeah but we don't want to hear about how Tyler was trapped in some old guy's barn for 12 months, chained to a radiator or something.
He's saying it right though. Wheel barrels not whatever you said that doesn't make sense... Is like. An apron should not be; it's too extra- it's A nape round... Mic drop
Okay Tyler, Now you need to put it on your scale that is attached to your garage and bring down your garage roof just to see if will...and make sure you put on your black framed glasses...you know, for science.
I've been watching you for years, and this may be the first time I've ever seen you read directions.
Well Tyler,
After watching all of your videos and all the crazy things you have done and products you have abused. In so many way unintended methods.
You have finally done something to make me want a product so much and believe in it after watching the torture test you put that hammer through.
You have made me a true believer in this JB Weld Epoxy Tape. I wil now use that in so many ways. I live in remoter bush Alaska. A product like that could save my life or keep a tool or price of equipment limping by till a part or replacement could be acquired.
Keep being you and have a wonderful life.
This stuff is amazing. I thought for sure that it wouldn’t work for anymore than a few uses of light duty before breaking again but I was completely blown away. Reminds me of one of those crazy product commercials you see of like knives cutting through bricks or whatever, except this stuff actually works! JB Weld needs to get ahold of you to workout a sponsorship or something
Make a wooden shield and wrap a bunch of packs of it around it and see how strong it is.
@tylertube
Instead of spending all the money on something like that. Get you a bunch of epoxy and some real stretchy medical rap the stuff that they used wrap around your arm when they take out an IV in the hospital. Make the epoxy some black dye together real well throw in your medical wrap tape. Walla! Then you can make a bunch of it and it'll cost you a lot less
@@larryloyd2989he happens to be testing a product, not improving it
I'm an ER nurse and we actually use a really similar product for bone fractures; it's called Orthoglass, and it's a fiberglass padding that activates with water and hardens in about 20 minutes. Definitely not as hard as steel, but it stabilizes the break; Orthoglass has a cotton sleeve so the epoxy doesn't get all over the patient as it catalyzes, though. The stretchy wrap you put over it actually looks exactly like Coban, another item we use that only sticks to itself to apply even pressure to a wound. I obviously don't know exactly what adhesive JB uses, but I would be willing to bet that the elastic wrap doesn't have to be removed (it'll likely end up coming off on it's own). I also wonder if the fact that the adhesive is exposed to the 'fracture' means it gets into the broken area to help glue it together.
Probably your best review ever. Good job.
I like how Tyler tried full swinging the nail in the board with the nail-set
And then blamed the "type of nail" 😂
Great great great video. So hsppy to see you return to your roots. More like this, Tyler. Loved iy.
Thank you for what you do. You can never know how much it means to one person, to be treated like a friend even over the internet.
Put wood glue in the split (crack) in the handle, then use JB weld tape.
He's testing a product per instructions
The bounce at the with the cinder block was like Looney Toons Willie E. Coyote type of experiment 😂
When Tyler puts on safety glasses you know it's getting real.
the only thing that would make this better is actually naturally snapped tools, tools do not snap with a perfect slice, and because of this you can fit the wood back together kinda like a puzzle and it would add additional support via friction.
Did anyone else notice that Tyler looks like he's on a green screen during the shovel test?
Yes! My husband said” why is he so blurry around the edges? Is that a green screen?” I thought we were tripping lol
Probably the camera focus
Fun fact we have been using that wrap for years at large manufacturing plants to stop pipes from leaking in a pinch. Keeps the production going without long down times until the next maintenance shut down
You should test the cardboard saw blade up to its limits. Test different kinds of wood, plastics, maybe even metals
You do it
@@DinoNucci Pretty sure tyler asked in the cardboard saw blade video if people wanted a follow up and if so suggestions, so his request isn't out of left field, though it is on the wrong video.
I don’t have a table saw
@@DinoNucci don't have cardboard
even better yet do the cardboard blade wrapped in the fiberweld lol, actually screw the cardboard make a fiberweld blade
Now THIS is what I'm talkin about! I can't tell you how immensely pleasing it was to actually see you read instructions and do things properly. It was 1000x more enjoyable. Good vid, man.
Try this with plumbing. I'm curious if you could rig a psi gauge to the pipe and see when it fails.
I'm sure it probably says not for plumbing but that's just a suggestion really.
I just looked it up and JB Weld actually makes a plumbing cast version of this. I don't think this specific version is meant for plumbing though.
I was a big fan back when you were just getting like 2-5k views on all your videos a few years back. So dope to come back and see your channel doing this good, hell yea.
Petition for Tyler to start putting random items in a single kind of liquid for 30 days again
It's wheel'barrow' not wheel'barrel' lol. But my mind is blown by the product - you tested it behind any normal usage and it exceeded the strength of the original wood! Awesome review of an awesome product!
The neighbors must be like "That precious neighbor kid is now dancing with a fully loaded wheelbarrow".
Yeah lol. Or like making up his own walk the plank dance.
and trying to spilt a log with a sledgehammer lmao
Special neighbor...
I like watching Tyler test "unbreakable" or ultra strong products like this!!
watching tyler beating the absolute shit out of a 4x4 with a hammer is hilarious
The rarest of rare products that meet or exceed their claims even when used by Tyler!
100% would buy!
Tyler, sorry, but you missed something. You didn't pull those nails out. That puts more stress on the handle of the framing hammer.
That's the first thing I thought of when he drove the first nail.
Heck go further and try prying that 4x4 off the table with the framing hammer now.
I doubt it would have broke
22:16 The Law of the Lever is ( E ) ( R ) = ( L ) ( r ) , where E is the effort force, R is the lever arm connected to the effort, L is the load, and r is the lever arm connected to the load. In essence, the product of the lever arm and the force is the same for both the effort and the load.
where:
E: is the effort force
R: is the lever arm connected to the effort
L: is the load
The lever arms should be measured from the points on the lever arms that are vertically aligned with the centers of mass of the effort and load.
The moment action on both sides of a lever is equal, and the formula for this is: F d = F d. In this formula, F represents the effort force, F represents the load force, d represents the distance from load force to fulcrum, and d represents the distance from effort force to fulcrum.
The effort force can be calculated by modifying the formula to: F = F d / d, where:
m: represents mass
a: represents acceleration of gravity
A lever calculator can be used to calculate lever effort force, and it can be used for both metric and imperial units as long as the use of units is consistent. You're welcome. I would do the math, but I only know your weight, I don't know the rest if the equation, so that would be an unknown variable.
Absolutely fantastic camera quality, often taken for granted. It's hard to find videos (even movies) that run the resolution that your videos do
If you think about that handles don't break that clean and can be put together even better, this is an absolutely great fix when you work in a remote area like a forest or something and need to get back to work
JB weld is no joke and never really has been. lol
18:49 - That shovel isn't garbage, by the way. It just needs some more JB Weld FiberWeld and it'll be good as (or, should I say, BETTER than) new! 😊
@18:10 "I'm ready to solve some equations"
Find a Jackson wheelbarrow. It's the blue ones that the pros use. Ash wood handles, steel tub, etc. I've carried well over 600 pounds in one of them(dozens of times per day). Those things are indestructible(for normal use and mild abuse). You just need to keep the wheel bearing greased and the tire pressure at maximum.
Apply the tape around the entire wheelbarrow and it will be the cheapest, completely indestructible wheelbarrow ever 😂
Wheel barrel*
I bet that tape is expensive
@@alexjenkins263 no, it's wheelbarrow. he had it right.
@@DmanProductionsTyler definitely called it a wheelbarrel
@markhardey I forgot, Tyler's a genius.
Bro i want my relationships like this tape
Tyler reinforce the entire wheel barrow with the jb weld and put it through a torture test!!!!!
I love how the height of nerdom to Tyler is someone doing the Pythagorean theorem.. :)
I read this comment directly after thinking that exact same thought 😂
He thinks nerds are just sitting around getting the measurement of hypotenuses on right triangles and sh-t
Or that he doesn't know that construction workers actually use this formula everyday.
@@jasonyeager2718 they don’t really use the formula as just remember “3, 4, 5”
@Fetidaf maybe if they don't know what they are doing. I'm not sure I'd trust anyone building something if they weren't checking the overall diagonal. And while 6,8,10 will give you a good starting point (much better than 3,4,5), it can still have you off by several inches over the course of say 115 ft.
@@jasonyeager2718 regardless they’re just remembering the numbers rather than the actual equation
"This is going to be a disaster" That's why we watch you, Tyler!
I would like to see the handles fixed with wood glue added. Just wanna see how good it is with maximum potential
Edit: Wow, so the tape is stronger than the wood itself wtf.
Tyler naturally showing us how he would survive in a zombie apocalypse
Completely hard, no stickiness! 😂
You just made a great JB Weld commercial. Hopefully they see it and sponsor you.
Starting to watch. Tyler drives nails. Thinking: Man he must test it harder. Tyler: Goes absolute apesh*t with the hammer, obliterateing the 2X4.
Delivered once again!
well it was a 4x4 and also he did t go apeshit I definitely could have swung it harder
PET bottles work insanely well for stabilizing such breaks, cut the top and bottom off, push that sleeve on and use a heat gun to shrink it down. It constricts down hard and won't move, and the wood will break before the plastic.
BTW you felt the shock in one hand because of harmonics, you likely had the right hand at a low spot of the wave and the lift at a high spot, where the oscillation just battered your hand.
He is bashing that wood like it's a videogame and there is a progress bar to fill to construct something.
To make sure the handle never breaks again, i would wrap the whole handel with that stuff. Making an invincible handel 😁.
gets a healty food sponsor and makes junk food with the ingredients lol man i love this channel
Junk food has little to no nutritional value. I would not classify a bacon cheeseburger as "junk".
You need to test this with the pully like you did with the differet types of tape a while back.
Love all your videos ♥️
Tyler cutting down a tree with the blunt side of the hammer. Amazing.
Doesn’t he film at like 3am in a garage? With like neighbors? If so that makes me fucking love this dude even more. Just beating the absolute shit outta some wood and happy as hell just to be doing it. Btw I need to get some of this I got a couple shovels that need some work.
For the first few years, I just assumed he was a legless vampire.
Tyler, you should wrap a shovel handle entirely and torture test it.
Or do another shovel, but wrap only the section where the wood meets the metal spade (where it broke on this video)
Keep it up! My wife and I love the channel!
Why does it look like a green screen lmao
What really gives you more power is holding one hand high on the sledgehammer and the other hand low. As you swing down, slide your hand down generating tons of power and speed.
Tyler is a great tool guy. Larry Haun he is not. 🤣 Does anybody else hear Tyler say "wheel barrel?"
my fav tyler videos are testing the stuff that is super strong
Strange how it appeared as if you were in front of a green screen 😂😂😂
When he was outside? I noticed that as well!
I love when products are so good you have to try so hard to break them 😂 my fav videos honestly. Should build something using this tape instead of nails or screws.
Finally!! Something strong enough to fix my marriage!
The funny part about the wooden handle wheelbarrow is for 9 yrs that all I've used in asphalt paving and they tank the fuck out of the abuse. Metal handle ones collapse fairly easily.
For those who want to know we use the blue Wheelbarrows.
YES
missed opportunities: hitting one sledgehammer at the break point with the other sledgehammer, and testing a handle with a (less secure) straight cut across instead of diagonal
All through that last part, all I was thinking was "arr, walk the plank ye scurvy dog"
Dunno why...
Your left hand on the hammer created a leverage point, which in turn created extra vibration on your right hand. Science.
Seems like a new handle would be easier, they're only like $8. Just me.
Looking at the video, this is gonna last longer than the new handle for sure
I'm impressed. JB weld is great stuff but I did not expect this. I'm buying some now.
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Someone driving by "Tyler should really be using an Axe to split that log" 🤣🤣
This is an (involuntary) advertisement for JB Weld. I bet that they're quite happy with it. Incredible performance.
Howdy you always give me entertainment when I’m bored and thanks for continuing to upload
Always look forward to seeing your videos, man. I hardly watch TH-cam anymore, but your videos are the exception. I've watched every single video. Keep it up man 🤙👍
Tyler is starting to show some self-awareness, which is a man improving. Nice!
Highly recommend wrapping the tape around the hooks of your scale you normally use to pull wood apart to test strength
Adding a wood or steel plate from left to right under the wheel barrow basket will get rid of the wheel barrow handle flex, you are getting when you move the wheel barrow around from the wheel barrow basket as the basket keeps the two arm handles together but is made of plastic hence the flex in the handles.
You sold me on JB Weld well actually I have been using their products for years and work very well, fun video video !
A friend of mine i showed this video to just tell me about a scary story of a guy using this as a cast for his arm. Did not end well. He had to go through some chemical treatment and painful removal of the "veld" to get it of his arm. He didn't loose the arm. Just some little skin.
Not sure if it's true or not. Can't find any news story on the net about the case.
I can't believe Tyler actually has shoes on this time, that's amazing. I thought we would see flip-flops for sure.
12:40 because of the direction you were swinging the hammer, the inertia followed the same direction sending it back into your left arm
I'd love to see the entire shovel handle wrapped in this stuff. See how strong it really is.
That first crack you heard on the sledgehammer when you were slamming it with your foot was your shin cracking not the handle LMFAO
Tyler, for the wheelbarrow test? Get one of your friends to sit in the bucket , and give them a ride in the barrow round the garden/fields.
The jb weld putty that turns into steel works amazing as well, fixed a rim with a cracked on the inside, a big crack, never had issues or leaked air.
Tyler needs to talk to John Malecki and get some Shop Shades.