HA!!! I used to get side eyed for using the Dollar Store equivalent for pressure/leak testing cable assemblies! The cherry flavor gave a nice bright red bloom and no one asked for an SDS. Nice!!!
Very interesting! It is cool to see that all three exceeded their rating of 1M. I know you are well versed in many things and surely already know this... but I hope you washed the electrolyte chemicals out of your pressure chamber. That is delicious and healthy for us; but it is very corrosive to most metals.
Happy to be the 1% loyal Canuck follower. To be fair the Pelican had a better rating, so I expected it to do well. I think the real place the Nanak would shine is the impact resistance as you mentioned. I’d like to see two similarly spec’s cases (vs perhaps even include a Princess Auto version for Canadian fun). Anyway, a big hello you hoser from Vancouver!
nice, tapping into the projectfarm viewerbase! great idea! (edit: I am not being sarcastic, II actually mean you found a "projectfatm" type test that projectfarm could not have done himself)
I know about vac lock, I have a Baro cooker that uses flameless ration heaters, used it to heat my lunch at work, after heating my lunch I didn't have a place to dispose of the still active heater pouch, not thinking, I snapped the lid shut with the remaining broth from my soup steaming away, got home and couldn't open it, I needed two flat blade screwdrivers to pry the lid off, thankfully I didn't damage it.
I wonder if you could test prop cavitation in regards to increasing pressure. Maybe a prop working fine at two feet is horrendous at 2000 feet or vice versa. You might get some amazing slow motion shots. I suppose a lithium battery in an enclosure would also be subjected to the same conditions.
@ Did you also see my other comment on this thread? Home made micro sub competition. There is a guy who just does fans and propellers on TH-cam but he does not have a pressure chamber.
I would absolutely love you to test a G-Shock Frogman to see how deep it would survive. I wish I had one to spare 😀. Casio tested a GWF-1000 to 1000m and it survived.
Could you model a caisson bends accident in which the water and air mixture is compressed and held at pressure for time, then the pressure is suddenly released showing gas bubbles coming out of the water like bubbles in the blood of caisson divers and scuba divers which causes the bends?
You could try nail g*n blanks. It could be spectacular, but need to do the Math first. If we take .22lr as a reference, it's rated 24,000 psi. If I'm not mistaken, this is a max pressure inside the cartridge, if we take into account difference between internal surface area of the cartridge and internal surface area of the chamber, may it handle the potential cartridge set off?
Jeff, I have seven pressure-sealed wine bottles including a Freixenet Deeper Diver and a Kripta amphora. Add a 50μ 400 psi crush glass microbubble, epoxy syntactic foam ball, d=0.44 g/cm^3. Let's do a crush-fest! I need an address for shipping. My treat, our adventure. *HOW DO I CONTACT YOU?*
@@TheDropzoneChannelMy best flotation bottle recovery is 34 years, North Pacific Gyre (pause) to Okinawa. High Arctic Drop, three Outer Hebrides recoveries. I scored Kwajalein Atoll before Vandenberg Air Force Base dropped a payload. I emailed your Dropzone, including my diamond-saw seal cross-section picture. It avoids common mode failure. Let's set the record for bottle true crush depth. NOBODY has crushed a KRYPTA amphora bottle. I'm an organiker; alcohol is an illusion. Bullvalene is the good stuff.
30 of my time-release messages in bottles to be High Artic-deployed next year, ~1000 meters depth. 216 lb test, fourfold, bonded woven nylon anchor lines. Hydrolytic + erosion failure is ~600 years. Two of *your* messages can greet 2600 AD: crush depth one Wilson Creek exemplar, one Cava Freixenet heavy for a depth record. If you like, it could be up to seven messages for seven bottles crushed. No hard feelings...10 messages.
HA!!! I used to get side eyed for using the Dollar Store equivalent for pressure/leak testing cable assemblies! The cherry flavor gave a nice bright red bloom and no one asked for an SDS. Nice!!!
Another great video with his wicked sense of humor! 👍🏼
That Canada Dry humor...I love it.
Your humor just keeps me coming back!! Love it and been here from the beginning!
I love my Pelican cases. Thanks for explaining how the valve works. It’s a Gortex membrane, not a mechanical valve, so it cannot be used for diving.
I'ma keep buyin me some Nanuk though. Someone's gotta keep Pelican on their toes and they're doin a great job.
Very interesting! It is cool to see that all three exceeded their rating of 1M.
I know you are well versed in many things and surely already know this... but I hope you washed the electrolyte chemicals out of your pressure chamber. That is delicious and healthy for us; but it is very corrosive to most metals.
Happy to be the 1% loyal Canuck follower.
To be fair the Pelican had a better rating, so I expected it to do well. I think the real place the Nanak would shine is the impact resistance as you mentioned.
I’d like to see two similarly spec’s cases (vs perhaps even include a Princess Auto version for Canadian fun).
Anyway, a big hello you hoser from Vancouver!
nice, tapping into the projectfarm viewerbase! great idea! (edit: I am not being sarcastic, II actually mean you found a "projectfatm" type test that projectfarm could not have done himself)
Great Documentary, you can also see it happening live! 😂👍🥲😝🤡
I know about vac lock, I have a Baro cooker that uses flameless ration heaters, used it to heat my lunch at work, after heating my lunch I didn't have a place to dispose of the still active heater pouch, not thinking, I snapped the lid shut with the remaining broth from my soup steaming away, got home and couldn't open it, I needed two flat blade screwdrivers to pry the lid off, thankfully I didn't damage it.
If you like Canadian Dry, you'd love a Kentucky ale called Ale8. I highly recommend giving it a try.
I like the commitment to adding blue plus signs to the Amazon prime tape.
Thanks for the test!
I wonder if you could test prop cavitation in regards to increasing pressure.
Maybe a prop working fine at two feet is horrendous at 2000 feet or vice versa.
You might get some amazing slow motion shots.
I suppose a lithium battery in an enclosure would also be subjected to the same conditions.
Unless there are viewers who want to see who can home make the best micro sub. Not the sandwich.
Now that's an interesting thought... I'm going to have to think about that one.
@ Did you also see my other comment on this thread?
Home made micro sub competition.
There is a guy who just does fans and propellers on TH-cam but he does not have a pressure chamber.
It’s got what cases crave.
Something to consider: can you please test the Pelican 1650 and the equivalent Nanuk cases?
I would absolutely love you to test a G-Shock Frogman to see how deep it would survive. I wish I had one to spare 😀. Casio tested a GWF-1000 to 1000m and it survived.
Yep. Added to the list! I'm sure we'll destroy it.
I don't really like that pelican latch though since I've seen them crack and pop open under impact in my own use.
The 'bar' pressure is wrong on the scale. Sealevel is 1 bar, 10 meters deep is 2 bar, 20 meters is 3 bar and so on........
You're both right. PSIG vs PSIA. Sea level with a 0 bar measurement means a PSIG measurement accounting for 1 bar differential P.
That was surprising. I wonder how those seals deals with humidity?
Good point. Since water vapor passes through Gortex the cases should not protect against humidity. Good to know.
America F Yeah!!!
I like the Nano design wise
You did not plug the pressure equalization holes?!?!?
Sardines in olive oil tin cans pls
Could you model a caisson bends accident in which the water and air mixture is compressed and held at pressure for time, then the pressure is suddenly released showing gas bubbles coming out of the water like bubbles in the blood of caisson divers and scuba divers which causes the bends?
Oh hell yeah so fucking cool.
🙏 do you use a handpump ? Cheers 🍻
You could try nail g*n blanks. It could be spectacular, but need to do the Math first. If we take .22lr as a reference, it's rated 24,000 psi. If I'm not mistaken, this is a max pressure inside the cartridge, if we take into account difference between internal surface area of the cartridge and internal surface area of the chamber, may it handle the potential cartridge set off?
Can you make liquid carbon dioxide and fill a pelican case with that
"Dry Ice" will be quite effective, if it is a boom you are looking for.
Jeff, I have seven pressure-sealed wine bottles including a Freixenet Deeper Diver and a Kripta amphora. Add a 50μ 400 psi crush glass microbubble, epoxy syntactic foam ball, d=0.44 g/cm^3. Let's do a crush-fest! I need an address for shipping. My treat, our adventure. *HOW DO I CONTACT YOU?*
Maybe you should contact A.A. first. They should be able to help you out.
@@TheDropzoneChannelMy best flotation bottle recovery is 34 years, North Pacific Gyre (pause) to Okinawa. High Arctic Drop, three Outer Hebrides recoveries. I scored Kwajalein Atoll before Vandenberg Air Force Base dropped a payload. I emailed your Dropzone, including my diamond-saw seal cross-section picture. It avoids common mode failure. Let's set the record for bottle true crush depth. NOBODY has crushed a KRYPTA amphora bottle. I'm an organiker; alcohol is an illusion. Bullvalene is the good stuff.
30 of my time-release messages in bottles to be High Artic-deployed next year, ~1000 meters depth. 216 lb test, fourfold, bonded woven nylon anchor lines. Hydrolytic + erosion failure is ~600 years. Two of *your* messages can greet 2600 AD: crush depth one Wilson Creek exemplar, one Cava Freixenet heavy for a depth record. If you like, it could be up to seven messages for seven bottles crushed. No hard feelings...10 messages.
Try Rolex DeepSea
Sure thing. I'm accepting donations now.
Put sodium metal in one.
Meooooow
"America… ****** Yeah! * Ep26 "
Spelled "You" wrong.
Any pelican with the clear latch stress fractures after a few months use.