I don't think it was meant to be taken so literally, have you never ever heard of banter and/or shit talking for the fun of it? Like just for a laugh, cynical humour is my thing
It.. didn't surive? Sure, it didn't have a hole burned through it. But he didn't leave it long enough for that to happen. But it definitely isn't safe to drink from. Rocks melt at a higher temp than steel. And that's just stainless steel with a layer of insulation around it.
its not lined with lead. lead (320c)has a much lower melting point than steal(1300c) if it was 100% lead it would instantly burn a hole straight through and wouldnt turn red hot. by the time it turns red hot lead has already melted
@@SpinosaurusStudios_the bottle is made of different insulating layers which are sealed together at the base with lead soldering. this is then covered by stainless steel, that’s the disk on the bottom of the cup, which should prevent any exposure. however if the cup becomes damaged and/or the disk falls off then you should stop using it and get a replacement they use lead solder because it’s cheaper than alternative options and, if the cup remains undamaged, works just as well as lead-free solder
Imagine you forget to bring your solar death ray inside and it accidentally burns down a neighbor's house. This is too much power for one mere mortal man.
I need one of those for my neighbours! 😂 they be watching like it's their job when I'm not doing anything illegal. Be cool to tilt that thing certain ways 🤣
I dont understand though lead has a much lower melting point than steel, lead is 320c and steal being 1300c (2000f difference) unless its not actually lead and just an alloy that contains a small amount of it. but lead wouldnt turn red hot
Only the bottom part of the cup contains lead and only a small amount of lead but the body or shell of the cup does not contain lead which proves the explanation by @I_cant_sneed about the melting point of materials to be correct.
@@I_cant_sneedIts not fully lead. Theres only a lead disk on the bottom, but if that steel cannister is red hot, that shit might be cooking. He mighta been inhaling some lead fumes lol
@@carter_420 I tried researching if Stanley green paint contains arsenic and have found nothing except that it was used to make pigment in the Victorian era so I do not know where you got your sources from so please do not act like a baby and explain why or how you thought that specifically Stanley green paint contains arsenic.
This is a great product review! Ive lost so many steel cups to solar death rays, so I'm glad that I can now put faith in Stanley 😊 Cant say the same for their tools anymore though 😕
If you left it long enough it definitely would have melted through. The steel was red hot, it was building up too the melting point of steel which is very high. But if you let it go longer it could have reached optimal temperature too melt.
The chromium oxide layer that makes stainless stainless has a much higher melting point than the base material it protects. Think of an M&M. Due to this layer, stainless can get bright orange and stay that way for a long time.
@@RedBeardDevelopmentno. There is no layer of chromium oxide. Chromium is alloyed into the steel, it’s in the matrix. I work with stainless steel every day and what you said makes no sense. It’s either martensitic or austenitic stainless. It doesn’t have “a layer of chromium oxide.”
@@RedBeardDevelopmentnot really a chromium oxide layer as you put it. the chromium is part of the stainless steel alloy used for the inner layer of the cup. While it does oxidate in contact with air forming a layer, hence why stainless steel doesn’t rust, it would not provide any sort of protection from heat as you stated. The chromium is part of the material, it doesn’t rise to the surface and form a layer of any kind since it’s incorporated in the crystal structure of the steel. That being said, the melting point of stainless steel is significantly higher than mild steel, which comprises the outer layer, and would prove much more durable to the solar death ray as a result, but the oxide layer you describe has nothing to do with it.
I don't know what the other guys are talking about but red hot steel is still really really really far away from the melting point of steel. Though in theory with a lense that's big enough I guess it could happen.
Fact, I’ve seen a YETI half gallon water bottle survive a house fire. And the yeti even had Ice cubes in it and they didn’t even melt. The ice water was still cold with ice in it. Amazing
Stainless steel oxidises when heated and once oxidized its brittle but resistant to melting at this point. Plus stainless is more thermally conductive than carbon steel.
I got the cup to see what all the hype was. It doesn’t keep ice from melting any longer then any regular insulated cup . The only perks are the size and the handle
Focus this on an element submerged in water and use the steam produces to generate electricity. Could be a fun project. If done well could save on electric bill.
I found out that’s why Stanley cups became viral. A lady’s car was set on fire and her Stanley cup survived. It’s essentially the female version of Yeti TMYK
Bro Stanley gonna uses this as some kind of marketing saying it can survive a solar death ray and say that’s why you should buy it. Like ima drink out of it looking like that
I have a Stanley travel mug that’s about a decade old, and I’m embarrassed to bring it out in public because of this recent Stanley craze. I don’t want people thinking I bought it because of the craze.
Imagine robbing this guy and he pulls out a solar death ray
Just stand there for five minutes
Little does he know I'm packing a Stanley Cup 😮😅
Range: 1 meter.
@@ariesleo7396organic matter would be feeling the heat and suffer burns in just a few seconds the real issue is the range.
I don't think it was meant to be taken so literally, have you never ever heard of banter and/or shit talking for the fun of it? Like just for a laugh, cynical humour is my thing
The lead from the Stanley cup escaping the inside of it: showtime baby.
!!LEAD GAS!!
⋆༺𓆩☠︎︎𓆪༻⋆
Lead genie
Leads melting point is 621°F tho? Steel is 2500°F.
I hate that the cup survived 😂
Same I wanted it to be just another over hyped product but nope Stanleys are the real deal
Same. 😂
Real talk
It.. didn't surive?
Sure, it didn't have a hole burned through it. But he didn't leave it long enough for that to happen. But it definitely isn't safe to drink from.
Rocks melt at a higher temp than steel. And that's just stainless steel with a layer of insulation around it.
Me to lokey wanted to see it fail🫣🤣 just don't like the price gouging!!!
i love the way he says "solar death ray" as if everybody has one
Everybody has an old plasma TV and some scrap wood, so if they put in a few hours of work they can make one.
@@OogaBooga-qs8nsI don't have either of those things.
@@OogaBooga-qs8nslol
@OogaBooga-qs8ns remember go into my closet that conveniently has some scrap wood my lumber jack uncle left behind from his last trip to woods
Did ja want him to say it like a cartoon villain, such as dr doofenschmirts, shredder, dr doom, the joker, etc,
"My daughter donated her Stanley cup... against her will".😂
“Where’s my Stanley cup?”
She probably just found out there's lead in those things
“daughter, the stanley cup was taken by the nhl”💀
10 years later we find out that the material is super hazardous to our health
@@robertoXCXthere’s a small pellet of lead at the bottom of the cup. And the steel has to be damaged in order to expose it.
“Hey Walt, come check out my solar death ray.”
I was looking for this LMAO 💀
Haha, we're rewatching it now so this is great! Lol
Inside is stainless. Has a higher melting temp. Outside is cheep metal painted, just a shell.
One of the only fads that actually lives up to the hype.
No that’s the lead
@@jpatt85YETI just stopped existing huh?
@@cvsopp1738 apparently so. Yetti went viral for their coolers, not their thermos. Those got popular much later
*cheap. Cheep is what a bird does, like a chirp…. From a fire alarm that hasn’t had its battery changed in…certain peoples homes
Thanks for doing this. I’ve been worried for three days that my Stanley Cup would get attacked by The Beam of God one day
That nice lead lining lol
its not lined with lead. lead (320c)has a much lower melting point than steal(1300c) if it was 100% lead it would instantly burn a hole straight through and wouldnt turn red hot. by the time it turns red hot lead has already melted
Congrats you’re stupid.
This lol
i was looking for this comment he just exposed himself to it
Gotta love it
This man is the chillest guy in history
The cup has lead solder. Watch out when you break the seal.
Oh yes, this is true I had forgot. I didn't join the cup craze lol
Just another part of the hype
Why does it have lead
@@SpinosaurusStudios_the bottle is made of different insulating layers which are sealed together at the base with lead soldering. this is then covered by stainless steel, that’s the disk on the bottom of the cup, which should prevent any exposure. however if the cup becomes damaged and/or the disk falls off then you should stop using it and get a replacement
they use lead solder because it’s cheaper than alternative options and, if the cup remains undamaged, works just as well as lead-free solder
@@holyfordusit still test positive for lead even undamaged.
Imagine you forget to bring your solar death ray inside and it accidentally burns down a neighbor's house. This is too much power for one mere mortal man.
wasn’t expecting it to survive 😅
Cup full of lead
@@EOSouthsideI was just coming to say that!😅
I was thinking each time the guy in the video was surprised, 'well lead will do that, well lead will do that..." 😂
....
@@EOSouthside saying full of lead is now just being ignorant
Stanley has been one of the toughest tools on our farm since the 50s. Cool vid.
Still has lead in it too
“The Stanley cup my kid drinks from is full of lead, totally rad!”
love the Butthead tone and connotations 😂
Dude melted a quarter in an earlier vid, Stanley Cup must be using that GS 13 classified space metal they got off that crashed alien ship.
Probably steel. Still nothing special.
@@alix6xgorg839The death ray making it glow orange like that was still really cool. Thing held up quite well even as it reached extreme temperatures.
Yeah that's why they're so expensive 😅😅
@@crestothegecko6279 It's steel. If it didn't hold up, I'd be searching for the switch to stop the simulation.
He just needed too let it go longer. He took it off too early too melt steel.
So glad I have a Stanley Cup, I use it everyday
"Hey Dad, have you seen my cup? "
My daughter “donated” her cup
Seems like something a kid nowadays would do👀
@@Fooma777he probably bought her the expensive pink one as a replacement
I need one of those for my neighbours! 😂 they be watching like it's their job when I'm not doing anything illegal. Be cool to tilt that thing certain ways 🤣
Now do the Stanley Cup
😂 right!
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
👍
Literally
What-
This is all these folks needed to hear
Yeah Stanley’s are legit. The best marketing is when that girls car caught fire and her cup was still chillin with ice in it
Wait what? Is there a video of that cause the cup surviving sounds kinda dope
tht video is seems fake.. watch on youtube someone lighting the stanley on fire, it burns eventually, a flame filled car would def burn it..
@@friabarbie I mean it survived the SOLAR DEATH RAY
@ZynMan hardly. he didn't even test if it would still hold liquid
Bruning it like this isn't good though as they use lead soldering
All the rage and totally rad. Classy :)
Fun fact the stuff it shows when it burns is lead 😀
I dont understand though lead has a much lower melting point than steel, lead is 320c and steal being 1300c (2000f difference)
unless its not actually lead and just an alloy that contains a small amount of it. but lead wouldnt turn red hot
Only the bottom part of the cup contains lead and only a small amount of lead but the body or shell of the cup does not contain lead which proves the explanation by @I_cant_sneed about the melting point of materials to be correct.
@@I_cant_sneedIts not fully lead. Theres only a lead disk on the bottom, but if that steel cannister is red hot, that shit might be cooking. He mighta been inhaling some lead fumes lol
@@arthitpunpinijthe green paint only contains a “small” amount of arsenic, don’t be a baby.
@@carter_420 I tried researching if Stanley green paint contains arsenic and have found nothing except that it was used to make pigment in the Victorian era so I do not know where you got your sources from so please do not act like a baby and explain why or how you thought that specifically Stanley green paint contains arsenic.
"Toyally rad" 😂😂😂😂😂
The large surface area of steel conducts the heat away and radiates/convects it into the atmosphere.
thank you, was looking for this comment
Also shiny, that helps
The only Stanley video worth watching.
Uncle hank doing crazy stuff😂😂
This is a great product review! Ive lost so many steel cups to solar death rays, so I'm glad that I can now put faith in Stanley 😊
Cant say the same for their tools anymore though 😕
If you left it long enough it definitely would have melted through. The steel was red hot, it was building up too the melting point of steel which is very high. But if you let it go longer it could have reached optimal temperature too melt.
The chromium oxide layer that makes stainless stainless has a much higher melting point than the base material it protects. Think of an M&M. Due to this layer, stainless can get bright orange and stay that way for a long time.
@@RedBeardDevelopmentno. There is no layer of chromium oxide. Chromium is alloyed into the steel, it’s in the matrix. I work with stainless steel every day and what you said makes no sense. It’s either martensitic or austenitic stainless. It doesn’t have “a layer of chromium oxide.”
@@RedBeardDevelopmentnot really a chromium oxide layer as you put it. the chromium is part of the stainless steel alloy used for the inner layer of the cup. While it does oxidate in contact with air forming a layer, hence why stainless steel doesn’t rust, it would not provide any sort of protection from heat as you stated. The chromium is part of the material, it doesn’t rise to the surface and form a layer of any kind since it’s incorporated in the crystal structure of the steel. That being said, the melting point of stainless steel is significantly higher than mild steel, which comprises the outer layer, and would prove much more durable to the solar death ray as a result, but the oxide layer you describe has nothing to do with it.
I don't know what the other guys are talking about but red hot steel is still really really really far away from the melting point of steel.
Though in theory with a lense that's big enough I guess it could happen.
"Hey, death ray! Leave those cups alone . ."
The only Stanley Cup worth caring about is the one that gets hoisted up every June.
King of Random, will Never be Forgotten. Grant had showed me this in 8th grade, im 25 now and Its as awesome as ever.
Please do this cup in comparison to competitors under the death ray. Would be awesome and maybe stanley will buy you a new car lol
What a nice Stanley commercial 😊
He tryna get sponsored by Stanley lol
already did, obviously lol. no obligation to tell us what is sponsored and what isn't.
@@JACOBxRL he legally has to disclose it if it's a sponsored post.
@@sinep8008 oh ok
That may be true but it's smart to use a viral topic to obtain more views.
He deserves it. I wanna buy a Stanley cup now.
Wow :o These are *tough* 🤔 Thanks!
Holy moly! That cup is tough!
That’s how they got famous in the first place. The car fire.
@@Jaycommathat was staged but yeah
its the lead
@@walterclements_adds flavor
@@pixoray8823 definitely staged. $500 beater car is cheaper than $1m in marketing hahaha
"No bond, I expect you to die before the solar death ray"
"No no no, I'll talk"
Fact, I’ve seen a YETI half gallon water bottle survive a house fire. And the yeti even had Ice cubes in it and they didn’t even melt. The ice water was still cold with ice in it. Amazing
That video was fake if u can’t separate “REAL AND “FAKE THAN UR TIME IS OVER THIS VIDEO IS SPONSORING HIM
Best advertisement for the Stanley cup
They should sponsor you :)
PLEASE, Please, please do this test again but put some ice water in the cup and let's see if it's still chilling after getting death rayed.
It would evaporate
@kathysouth-ui7ek aren't the layers strong enough to prevent fire from reaching it? Like it did with that car it was in?
@@julianmarco4185the flames didn’t get to the cup there’s another video where someone put one in a grill and the water was boiling
i wanna see that too
That lens is really cool, I gotta get one of those.
Stanley guerilla marketing at it again.
The lead paint holds up really well
That inner steel layer is now known to be Lead 😂😂 totally rad
No. It’s not. God people are dumb
That's just not even close to right...
This is absolutely fantastic!
Well you've now exposed the lead inside.
Lead melts quite easily.
Best Stanley cup commercial ever
Stanley cups are overrated 🤨
Lmao at this point Stanley cup needs to contact you for marketing their product because this is the type of review I need when buying my products
Stanley is literally goated no surprise for me there.
Stainless steel oxidises when heated and once oxidized its brittle but resistant to melting at this point. Plus stainless is more thermally conductive than carbon steel.
Imagine leaving that cup in your car and the sun starts hitting it at that angle. That’d be one hot cup of coffee on your way to work😂
Low specific heat but high conduction. Pretty neat.
Man's working for Stanley now
They are full of LEAD 🗣️‼️🔥
BEST USE OF A STANLEY
This guy is archimedes with that magnifying glass
The cup “sugared” because of the stainless, TIG Welders know what I’m talking about. Pretty cool demo
I got the cup to see what all the hype was. It doesn’t keep ice from melting any longer then any regular insulated cup . The only perks are the size and the handle
The new spokesman for Stanley
He’s just tryna get some free from the company how that one girl did when her car burned ina fire with tht cup 😂😂
"Hank what the hell are you doing outside?"
I clicked in to see a Stanley Cup brought low the solar death ray and I leave both disappointed and highly impressed by the cup’s performance
Finally, an ACTUAL demonstration
Focus this on an element submerged in water and use the steam produces to generate electricity. Could be a fun project. If done well could save on electric bill.
Great solar death ☠️ ray panel on that Stanley cup
“Number 15, Burger King foot lettuce”
You need to do a whole channel of ton of different items and this it would go crazy. Trust me. We want more items melted..😂😂
i love your flow and vibe
totally rad dude😊
That was radical
Dudes smiles like a kid. But then again we all wanted a solar death ray when we kids. At the least most of the boys did. I did.
Bro just released lead into the air
13:46 Chandigarh sweets ka board dekh ke hi samajh aagya. Ye landran road hai. Mera ghar yahi hai
Mordecai out here cooking stanley cups 😂
Stanley, give the man and his daughter a free cup lmao.. this is free advertisement.
I found out that’s why Stanley cups became viral. A lady’s car was set on fire and her Stanley cup survived. It’s essentially the female version of Yeti
TMYK
What was good to know that this company’s cup survived array of the sun
Yeah...that lead does wonders....
Nice ad Stanley, nice one.
Man I miss grant Thompson
RIP
Until now, I didn’t know the Stanly Cups were actual cups, I just thought everyone decided hockey was cool now.
There is lead in the inner layer... Tasty fumes 😂 glad you kept yourself safe keeping your distance.
Thanks for shooting up the prices lol
Bro Stanley gonna uses this as some kind of marketing saying it can survive a solar death ray and say that’s why you should buy it. Like ima drink out of it looking like that
Please get more cameras. Love your content
In the words of astarion; "Well, apparently there's a limit. Somewhere between a nice summer's day and the concentrated power of the sun!"
My 13 yr old daughter asked me about Stanley cups and I was like when the fuk did you get into hockey. She just looked at me.
Homie trying to get to get a sponsorship from Stanley. lol 😂
I made one of these for my 6th grade science project with a friend, it’s fun to make
The cup: *reflects the concentrated light back at the solar death ray
Almost like they’ve been around forever and we’re built on dudes working blue collar jobs 🤣
That one car that burned eith that cup in it will forever be the reason Stanley cups are even known today.
Every time I hear "Stanley Cup", I think of Hockey.
I have a Stanley travel mug that’s about a decade old, and I’m embarrassed to bring it out in public because of this recent Stanley craze. I don’t want people thinking I bought it because of the craze.
"burst into flames" yeah, alright. its not going to burn a hole though it if you keep moving the focus point
This video is another great marketing video for Stanley hahaha