Analog Hygrometers - how?
ฝัง
- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 7 ก.พ. 2025
- It's a simple one this time. Simple! Simple!
So simple, even, that this descriptions is mostly blank. But here's the usual links 'n stuff.
Technology Connextras (the second channel that stuff goes on sometimes):
/ @technologyconnextras
Patreon:
/ technologyconnections
I ran some basic tests on the hygrometers to see if the linear scaling would be a problem. A link at the end takes you to a Twitter thread with pictures. The result was... mixed. It seems clear that the high end humidities are never attainable on the Taylor model nor the clock. They don't seem capable of reading past 80%. However, on the low end they were in better agreement with the other models.
It may be that the linear-scale hygrometers are built so that they behave more linearly but I'm personally doubtful of that. I would personally avoid dial-hygrometers with linear scales.
twitter.com/TechConnectify/status/1387791666183032834
Hello there! 🌈
I have no clue what you're talking about. Huh.. guess it's easier when you say it out loud to us.
Could you do a video on how water softeners soften water? I think I looked at 20 different diagrams and I still don't understand how the water doesn't get salty or how the limescale soaks into the salt
I use a Fischer hygrometer at home. It is linear and quite accurate.
Is that the same 'Taylor' as in the new McDonalds soft ice cream expose' ?
How about those cheap digital hygrometers?
"Aaand then it snowballs in to a 5 part series..."
*CED playlist card pops up*
I think this is the only channel on TH-cam that uses that corner card as a comedic punchline.
And his heat pump video (1st) had so many references he made my favorite joke with the "Another plug?" as he pulled an extension cord into view
The CED videos killed me.
Not literally... but it was the last video I watched before I died.
But unlike CED, they brought me back from the dead.
Alec even made the background tv’s various pictures of RCA and CED stuff. Well done trolling.
Hint: Even if you do understand english, turn on the Subtitles.
And uses it well
The power of buying two will never get old.
So what's the square root of that?
well one is none etc.
Agree!
It's like putting something in the oven amd just minute later the cook pulls out an already done version.
Why buy one when you can get two at twice the price?
"If we take this thing apart through the magic of buying two of them" makes me laugh every time
That gag will never get old.
Same, I love it
Literally sent me
me to. one of my favorite bits of his
Sucked in by the junk shop twice.
That rant about googling fahrenheit is the maddest I've ever seen you lol
he's been madder, but you don't want to see that.
@@mrShift_0044 yes I do. Titles and/or links please
Yeah, people that complain that "celsius is superior" gets really old after awhile.
@@SimulatedGoat or being an ass about it is what gets old real quick, and that might be the reason behind his lil rant.
And it unnecessarily makes requests... and consume electricity, etc. We should all use Kelvin... would be way easier... maybe.
"Through the magic of buying two of them" will never get old for me, even if you try to just casually sneak it by without emphasis this time.
“This website I found...”
and it’s Wikipedia .
Thanks for the tremendous laugh, that was neat!
its always wikipidea
Wikipedia is tight
Good tie-in to his search engine rant lol.
Not the first time he's made that joke. But I can remember exactly which other video he used it in.
Blatant product placement.
No music or credits, but he still graced us with a blooper. Alec, we don't deserve you!
The panning closeup shot at 0:33 could straight up be out of an "how it's made" episode.
I thought I was the only one that thought the same for most of his episodes
I was legit just thinking this channel is like How It's Made but really How It Works, then I saw this comment.
True
thats not a pan thats a tilt
How It's Made does love the panning Dutch angles, huh
Whenever someone says "bimetallic", I never know whether they mean "twice a metal" or "once every other metal".
This comment really made me laugh and agree at the same time.
Yes.
Well, the solution is in the wards itself, bi means two, nothing else, biannual is two + yearly (annual means yearly, or every year), so the two mean every two year mettalic means made of a metal, so bimetallic means made of two metal
Clearly bimetallic is 'two metals', otherwise it'd be fortmetallic to be 'once every other metal', duh! :P
That's why you should use "fortnickelly"!
The one case in which a TH-camr went *below* 10 minutes on purpose. What a time to be alive.
Well last summer TH-cam lowered the mid roll ad qualifying video time from 10 minutes to 8
I see someone's been watching Two Minute Papers as well 😂
"What a time to be alive" is the catchphrase from that channel, after all!
EDIT: I see now that the reason I keep getting replies is because the word "the". To clarify:
① There is a well known English phrase: "What a time to be alive".
② The "Two Minute Papers" TH-cam channel host Károly Zsolnai-Fehér says this phrase very often.
③ Károly Zsolnai-Fehér did not make this phrase. Its use predates 1994, and was seemingly popularized by a Simpsons Episode from 1998.
@@PhotonCrasher i hope you know it's just an english idiom idioms.thefreedictionary.com/what+a+time+to+be+alive
@@PhotonCrasher I'm not sure where "what a time to be alive!" originated, but another place it was popularized was on a Simpsons episode from 1998. (I had to look it up, never watched Simpsons but I saw the meme)
I'd like to think it was quoted from Two Minute Papers, though.
I still remember when it was impossible to upload a video greater than 10 minutes. lol.
The level of snarky humor on this channel is truly masterful.
Oui! J'adore!
I never realized what the smooth jazz meant to me...
until it wasn't there v_v
deeply smooth jazz
@@Laurabeck329 incomprehensibly smooth jazz
@@gracedreifuerstcaptions should’ve said “absently smooth jazz”
what the heck no music? I never thought I'd be fully Stockholm'd by that sweet sweet sax, but here we are.
Edit: Fixed (th-cam.com/video/C9lMKLpmRUg/w-d-xo.html)
Here we are.
Here WE are
Just do what I do and listen to it in your head
Yeh, where did the music go? Did he loose it? Did it run away? I feel empty inside now.
We are here
"I start writing the script at the beginning -- it seems to make sense to do it that way"
Love ya Alec.
"But this one is actually a bimetallic strip tease." I had to pause the video and question my life choices.
As a child in the 1950s, I read about what was considered the “gold standard” of humidity for use by professional meteorologists, the wet-bulb dry-bulb hygrometer. This consisted of two well calibrated mercury thermometers mounted side by side on a board, with the mercury bulbs hanging off one end. One of the thermometers had an uncovered (dry) bulb (perhaps protected by a metal screen), while the other was wrapped in a small piece of cloth, like a shoelace. The meteorologist would soak the cloth around the dry bulb in water, then use a cord attached to the other end of the board to swing the board around in a circle for a prescribed amount of time, in a shaded and rain-protected outdoor shack. Then they would take both readings and look them up in a table, giving the relative humidity.
Today they probably have two thermocouples mounted on a centrifuge and a microprocessor does the table lookup.
The wet bulb registers the dew point - a temperature based way to represent the absolute humidity. The chart would cross reference the dew point opposite the ambient temperature (which puts a hard limit on maximum absolute humidity) and the intersection would be a percentage of actual to maximum absolute humidity - or the relative humidity.
A "sling psychrometer"
wet bulb is not actually used any more? good grief why doesn’t the news report on things such as this. i’m just a lowly physicist with basic knowledge of the world.
@@shibasurfingyou can make hugrometers without needing a temperature sensor at all, there are materials that react strongly to the change in humidity and you can use them to change capacitance or resistance to pretty precise numbers. At least as precise as a thermistor, dunno about a thermocouple
@@shibasurfingwhich is why OP acknowledged that they probably use thermocouples now? For a physicist your reading comprehension is pretty dogshit.
The sax music is still playing in my head as i'm typing this comment.
But there wasn't any...
@@Chocomint_Queen it plays on in our hearts
Is it copyrighted or something? Why one this time 😣
i did not hear the sax music until i read your comment, thankyou, i was missing it.
@@calebstg5279 Most likely it was Creative Commons (CC) licensed so he didn’t have to pay to license it. TH-cam creators can find tons of free music to use in their videos that doesn’t require a license fee to use. As to why he left it out this time I think it was so he could label this as a truly simple quickie video.
"So, if we take this thing apart through the magic of buying two of them"
Alec!!! LOL
I laughed so hard at that!
I love the magic of buying two of them!
Yes to simplicity, yes to turn-y things, yes to jokes.
We're here for all of it.
Also, these videos have given me the additional benefit of realizing that I have been calling something by the wrong name for a long time.
My grandfather was a Special Agent in the Alcohol, Tobacco, and Tax service (as it was then named) back in the 30s and 40s.
While most of the stories we heard about were from his time during prohibition, a great deal of what he and the others did was enforce basic regulatory things such as proof standards for distilled liquor.
We still have some of his tools and accessories... including the lead shot filled long glass instruments that would use specific gravity to measure alcohol content. I had long referred to these as hygrometers and only now when googling did I realize they are actually called hydrometers.
The more I know! 🌈🌟
How does this work? This video is only up 8 minutes
And you commented 23 hour ago
@@rogervanbommel1086 i snuck in early... lockpicking and all that, you know. 😉👍🔓
@@rogervanbommel1086 Content creators will often upload a video as unlisted and share the link with their friends/patrons/twitter followers, etc. The notification goes out when the video is switched from unlisted to public
@@DeviantOllam So there is co-viewership between Technology Connections and LockPickingLawyer??
I just wanna say that the shot at 0:33 (a common framing on this channel), reminds me soooo much of “how it’s made” and i love it
I thought the same!
Damn, that's a perfect parallel. They are the same framing and motion, and you know what? It's probably one of the many little things that make both so fun to watch.
only 9 minutes?
I was hoping for an epic 26 minute hygrometer epos.
I extra put on my brown corduroy pants
Don't you mean your 'orange with context' pants? 😉
In Finland we regularly go from a room heated to 100 degrees C and jump into hole cut into a frozen lake (0 degrees C). So the celsius scale is actually quite appropriate to measure comfortable ambient temperatures.
It all depends on what you're used to using.
Heating a room up to 100°C is quite an achievement, unless it happens to be a walk-in oven (that would be 212°F). I’ve know those that would do a Polar Bear run from a 100°F (37.8°C) to a 0°F (-17.8°C) winter day… Blessings to them…
@@allenwiddows7631 it's a sauna.
maybe the walls or the heat source is 100°C, but the actual ambient air temp being that high would be in "cooking food" territory, i don't see it
(edit: looks like i'm wrong though :) )
@@walterw2 sauna
Always hyped for these videos
I care.
our pfps are eerily similar
Please make a video on the gorillaz discography!!! Ill implode!
your name triggers me
Low quality comment from a check mark. I wish adblocker dealt with these.
In Spain we have some pretty interesting old hygrometers, we call them "fraile del tiempo" or weather friar. It's a cardboard image of a monk, usualy sitting on a study, with an articulated arm and hood.
The arm moves reacting to air preassure and humidity and points towards different weather predictions, and when it points towards rain the hood pops up.
These remarkable and mystifying little devices prove really simple when you turn them around, as they are moved by a single strand of horse hair.
Fíjate... No tenía ni idea. Gracias!
Nunca he visto uno, pero suena como el dispositivo ideal para explirar en este canal jaja
"No music or credits" he says, as though our minds didn't all launch right into it
🧠🎷🎶
[Disappointing lack of smooth jazz]
Maybe this video had no support from patrons
Right? I was seriously waiting on something like "aridly smooth" or "swampy jazz"
Na na na naah na n-naaaaaah...
You are one of the reasons why I am glad to live in this day and age. Where people like you can do what you do. Thank you.
Amen to that.
He's literally the reason i started my own channeI
@@DyslexicMitochondria Sweet channeI you got there bud
This day and age is the worst to live in. TH-cam doesn’t fix that.
@@MikehMike01 relax covid will ( for a lot of places) be a largely solved problem by the end of this year, as long as the anti vaxs nuts get shut down and don't convunce to many people. Ok maybe we'll need a yearly booster shot otrit might just become the yearly flue, anyway we will be able yto largely return to the pre covid normal. Ok wether rtgat sucked or not is ofc another depate IMHO it far from sucked but you milage may wary
How does one get to be this snarky without becoming terminally ironic. I don't know but I love it. The fact that you came back from the blackout to essentially make a joke calling out the blackout and then blacking out mid sentence. *Chef's kiss*
I've only ever seen one person use "Chef's kiss" before, haha.
"sorry, this is a tangent now"
I fucking love it lol
1:43 You know it's more fun to just imagine you're in a 60 degree C room with absolutely no sign of discomfort or alarm.
Eh. He's from the Midwest. That's just a typical summer to us...
@@mattandsarahaschan Literal highest recorded mid west temp is a 50C in North Dakota... maybe you were going for hyperbole, but went a bit too far trying to shoehorn in typicality for an entire season... and you still lose to Arizona (53C) ;)
Or it could be the conversion thing, again :P"
Also, while I'm conversing with someone about the mid west, been meaning to ask... how does that work when the vast majority of the land encompassed is in the eastern half of the continental United States?
@@damien4197 considering that once upon a time, the region now known as the upper Midwest was known as the Northwest... it really isn’t that odd at all. 🤷🏼
Now, if I had the time, I’d include a Hamm’s beer comercial from my childhood “.... the beer that grew with the great northwest. The Hamm’s brewery was in Minneapolis if I’m remembering my childhood correctly. (Maybe St Paul)
@@tanya5322 But it IS odd. Because that area was only ever "west" OR "mid" at any one time... sure, it was "the northwest" when the eastern seaboard was all else... but when the west expanded out to the western seaboard, it was no longer west, it was mid... I get there's a little bit of, ahem, history in the way of just being "the north"... but "central states" works just fine, no?
East, Mid West, West is as silly as if South Dakota split into two states and named themselves Mid South Dakota and South Dakota :P
Of course, then the state of Mid South Dakota located in the Mid West region of the country that claims the name United States of America despite it not at all including every state on either continent bearing the name America... would confuse some Eldritch being into thinking an ancient prophecy had been fulfilled. It's just that silly :P
@@damien4197 The midwest was named as such because America acquired land to the west and intended to colonize it, but the majority of the population existed in the "normal" part of America (now called the east coast). The midwest was easily accessible barring the part of it being pretty far from everything, which is still much easier than getting over the giant rocky mountains in order to get to the real west. The stories of how the west coast and midwest were colonized are different, the people that were sent to colonize them were different (for instance, until the world wars, the primary language spoken in your average household in Nebraska was a German or Scandinavian dialect, not English). All of this from the perspective of the East Coast. America didn't have any major cultural centers outside of the East Coast until Hollywood came along, so the historical memory of America in those days was written by people in places like New York and South Carolina.
I can't wait for no-effort November so we can get back to those 5 parters!
This is Alec's entry for Couldn't-Be-Arsed April...
How about *Meh* Effort May?
6:02
"This website I found"
Oh Alec, I breathe and live for these jokes.
I know right? I'm still giggling at this XD
And yet he didn't include a link. Pretty sloppy.
Hes such a delight lol
@@f.eugenedunnamiii9452 your comment makes you come off as a whiny child.
I would suggest Rolingmetal, that's one l, he is the epitome of one making fun of one's self.
My dad made a hygrometer using human hair that hung in his shop. It was a bike spoke, attached to a circular piece he turned on the lathe. The hair was stretched from the top and wrapped around the aluminum piece at the bottom which was on a bearing, and the spoke was slightly off center of its center of gravity and provided the tension. It was also the pointer. He would occasionally ask my my mom for one of her hairs, if the hair needed to be replaced. It worked pretty well.
love the idea of devices made from human body parts
@@9600bauds😏
Did he drink?
I ask because he obviously knows things, so if drinks and knows things. (Tyrion Lynnister quote) Old school dads should all drink and know things :)
As I age I realize that my joints: elbows, ankles, knees, wrists... Are as accurate as a metal strip tease device at measuring humidity.
What I'd like to know is... How does the humidity get into the joints, and how is the accuracy not completely destroyed by all the water-based fluids already in there? It's not like a hygrometer works from inside a water tank
@@nthgth My guess is that our joints are barometers rather than hygrometers. I live in a very dry part of the country and a storm will come in and I'll feel like crap. But the humidity at the ground doesn't change much.
@@nthgth the joints have some fluids in them, which is by need balanced with the outside environment, and the movement of your bones inside that fluid makes it bubbly, producing lots of tiny bubbles, the bubbles collapse, and generate a small "explosion", when you crack your fingers or whatever, these bubbles what you hear. These explosions are giving you lots of data to the very sensitive receptors inside your body, and in time you learn to compare the data to useful information, like humidity, temperature, weather forecast and so on.
@@christophers.8553
Exactly right. I have bad arthritis in my shoulder after 10 operations and I can always tell within 24hrs if it's going to rain with about 80% reliability.
I started to notice pain in my shoulder was relative to barometric pressure either rising or falling as I have a barometer in my watch.
As the shoulder (and other joints) are a sealed fluid filled cavity it makes sense that atmosphere pressure can cause those joints to expand or contract causing pain.
Dude your sass is amazing.
@@HankPanky I misread it after reading your comment. Does that count? lol
Why not both?
Gotta love misreads
Why not all?
rofl
This bi-metallic strip tease isn't at all what I thought I was paying for!
Best line ever
Really? Because it got me a damp hot mess. :P
@@onijester56 Relative humidity reading? xD
ya we can all watch the video you know. no need for you to write alexs dialog like you are on to something
@@lordjaashin I didn't say exactly what he said. He just called it a bi-metallic strip tease. I added my part, insinuating I thought it was going to be some kind of bisexual robot stripping or something.
I woke up this morning to the only local friend I had saying they no longer wanted to be friends.
All I have wanted to do since then was your videos. I opened TH-cam and there you were. 3 minutes in and I'm back in a good mood.
Than you - you will never understand the impact you have had on my life.
Just in case the other 100 people who mentioned the same thing weren't enough - I missed the music. And I love your snark haha. Thanks for being awesome!
Here is the music th-cam.com/video/CBwxeSYtQH0/w-d-xo.html
1:53 Can’t we all just get along? Well, we can at -40 degrees! 😄
I'll leave you to that one, too darn cold for me.
Been there. Was not amused by the synchronicity.
I see what you did there!
No I need Kelvin to understand
@@danelfernandez6571 Rankine kicked the crap out of Kelvin and took his lunch money
I just wanted to say I discovered your channel two weeks ago and I've been watching all of your videos, everyday I learn something new. I absolutely love it. Keep up the good work. I couldn't be more subscribed.
I forgot how much I enjoy the magic of buying two of them. This is, like, your channel's trademark at this point.
I love the mentions of boosting engagement as well
I made a human hair hygrometer for a science project many years ago. Asked a friend with really long hair for a strand or two, so it was really a two-person effort, haha.
I did that also, in 7nth grade. It worked quite well!! The Teacher gave me a B+ grade! 🍀🌈🆒🌸🐺
I really like the mix of shorter and longer content. Like sometimes it’s nice to just quickly get to the point of how something works, and sometimes it’s nice to see stuff like how TVs work that go more in depth.
Love the videos...keep them up. As a physician I got used to using both F and C and both lbs and kgs. I could convert them with sufficient accuracy in my head. The only gripe I had was that between freezing and boiling in F there are 180 degrees and C of course has 100. When doing body temps, one was always having to use decimals. The degrees are "fat" so you had to get an impression in your head that 38.3, which is only a bit over 1 degree is 101 in F. Which is nearly 2½ degrees F and a significant fever. I trust that the younger physicians are more mentally comfortable with it. Of course.... I came along at a time when older guys will still calling for 1/8 grain morphine in the ER. Try converting that in your head!
Finally somebody pointing out that the °C scale is too damn narrow
Yes! When will we strike back against these C° rabble rousers?!✊🏾🤨😒
Had to hit pause at "bimetallic strip tease" that was priceless
"Hey y'all, I got a bit of metal. Now I'mma put some hair on that thing and tell y'all about the weather."
It's amazing that after watching this channel from its early days to now.....the quirky knowledge and humor still fit.
Your "why i think in Fahrenheit" tangent is half the reason I subscribe to this channel
Can't wait for the next 4 parts of this video
Hahaha totally. We're all here for it.
Once again, I really enjoyed your video and strongly agree with your conclusions! I am a Merchant Marine deck officer and have been making weather observations (Fahrenheit for the log and Celsius for the weather service). I've used a variety of analog instruments: barometers, baragraphs, thermometers, etc. Now, the weather service has given us some amazing devices that sit out on the bridge wings and report by wifi to an interior device. The older devices had more character, but the new ones do a better job.
As a Brit who grew up in the 60s and 70s I am happy for you to use Fahrenheit or Celcius, feet and inches or metres and centimetres, pints, quarts and gallons (UK preferred to US) or litres and millilitres, and all other variations for things like torque, fuel consumption, or whatever. So just keep on doing what you do best. Incidentally, I happen to have a hair hygrometer that I inherited about 40 years ago, made in Germany by Fischer - it still works. I guess it dates from the mid 1950s - 1960s, so I found this video very interesting. Thank you.
"I get 40 rods to the hogshead and that's the way I likes it!"
I have watched so many of your videos and had no need to know any portion of it. However, today is the day it actually mattered as I'm restoring an old cigar box. God bless you sir
"And then it just snowballs into a five part series."
-Suggested: The CED (RCA Selectavision Videodisc)
Nice.
"to explain how these little guys work, we first need to understand the refrigeration cycle..."
LATENT HEAT
Truly the "First, jack up your car" of this channel.
I will say this, I am more than happy that some of your "simple" ideas turned into multi-part videos, you have no idea how much I have learned thanks to you and other TH-camrs like Techmoan. Not to mention I have had some great chuckles here and over at Aging Wheels :)
I'm going to keep complaining until we all start using Kelvins for temperature
We don't even need "temperature" units. Just apply Boltzmann constant to all of them.
I occasionally say to my friends: "Oh, boy! It's hot today, over 300 degrees!"
why would we do that, when the Rankine scale exists?
@@AkademiaFlirtu Kelvin is NOT any kind of "degree" it is Kelvin or K in short, it is temperature unit, so you would not say "300 degrees" you would say "300 kelvin"
@@ukko1998 it is possible, in my native language, polish, it is acceptable to say "Kelvin degrees". :) Thanks for correction. :)
My dad has been a weather "nerd" for a very long time, as well as having an appreciation for old tools. One of his favorite finds was a wet bulb hygrometer. It is 2 mercury thermometers, where the bulb of one is kept wet by the capillary action of a cotton wick that has one end in a long "J" shaped glass tube (modern ones seem to just have a small horizontal reservoir). That tube gets filled with water, and then the *latent heat* of evaporation causes the wet-bulb thermometer to read a lower temperature. You can then look up the relative humidity on a chart - which is distinctly non-linear. It's not super practical because you need to fill the tube every couple days, but it is supposed to be very accurate.
I love your shots that slowly circle-strafe the object like they do in the intro of How It's Made episodes 😃
I’m sure that’s the correct term photographers use 🤪
"I'm going on a tangent"
*Proceeds to spend half the video going on a tangent about F to c conversation*
I'm all here for it.
Cool video, thanks. Few years ago I learned something very interesting about how they measure air humidity at airports. For the flight operations it's more important to know at which point pilots need to expect fog, clouds or icing. Because of this they give the humidity by telling you dew point (temperture at which the water will condense). You can calculate the dew point from relative humidity, but often the dew point is directly measured by cooling a mirror until you see condensing water. I think this is a strange way to measure humidity :-)
Dew point is interesting very much more relevant/critical. Especially if you live in areas of moderate climate. I have (or am working on ) a logic controller for my HRV unit - which normally serves to remove humidity in winter, but which I use to remove CO2 in summer. The logic will check the outside dew point, and if it is greater than 10C, it will reconsider running the unit since a dew point > 10C will result in an indoor relative humidity > 50% which is not what I want.
Or dry bulb and wet bulb like inlearnt at shcool
A how-it-feels celcius poem:
_30 is hot_
_20 is nice_
_10 is cold_
_0 is ice_
A how-it-feels Fahrenheit poem:
_32 is cold as ice_
_but halfway up the scale is nice_
_three quarters up is getting warm_
_over a hundred can do you harm_
_going down the other way_
_one quarter up is a brisk day_
_below zero you should use caution_
_wear a coat or freeze your bottom_
30-40 🥵
20-30 😎
10-20 🙂
0-10 😑
-10-0 🥶
< -10 🧊
Kelvin or bust!
That sounds more like a four star rating system, not a temperature scale.
@@Sunlight91 Notice how that scale doesn't get up to 100 and drops significantly below 0.
If only there were some alternative where the weather fit more between 0 and 100...
A good follow-up to this if you want to really delve into humidity is talking about how ASHRAE psychrometric charts work (wet bulb, dry bulb temps, dew point, the works). Just an idea 😉
I would love to see this!
You're a wizard, man. You cast "Buying Two Of Them" so often.
In college, we used a "wet bulb thermometer" (a thermometer with a damp little cotton sock on the end), that you spin around in the air for awhile, then read the temperature. Then you compare that with the dry temperature, and use some equation which I don't remember to get the relative humidity.
1:45 That wasn't even my first thought. That was "holy cow, that's a huge thermometer!"
Had one for years as a kid. For posting to a tree a couple dozen feet from the house, in shade, to be seen from a window. Works perfectly. Meanwhile my wife installed an electronic sensor/transmitter thermometer.....right next to the house, where it does NOT read the actual environmental temperature, because the signal is too weak to survive through the walls.
I love your videos, they feel like a public access series or like how it's made. Soo soothing. Always look forward to your knowledge I gain from it!
Greetings from the city Farenheit was born in! We use Celsius here.
Fahrenheit is better for people, celsius is better for water.
Kelvin is good for stars.
Anders Celsius was born in Uppsala, Sweden, so I guess they use... no, they use Celsius too.
Cool! Did you know that Farenheit didn't use the Farenheit scale?
@@PanAndScanBuddy People are mostly water, so what's your point?!
@@PanAndScanBuddy I can get behind the larger unit size, but I still want my 0 at freezing. I'd actually like a 2C scale best. So 20C = 40(whatever) ~= 70F
I don't know what it is about this guy. I won't watch a 5 minute video of somebody doing something I think should be a 2 minute video, but I can listen to him talk about the super weird and complex ways in which a doorknob works for a full on hour and still want more.
Don't know if it is the cadence of his voice, the snarky humor or the interesting subject matter but whatever it is keep it up, youtube needs more of it.
Glad to see you actually managed a low-effort video!
And it's not even No Effort November!
"This website I found"....Wikipedia LOL
Wait how did you post this a day ago
@@mustashnob patreon, members get to watch earlier, sometimes up to a week. same applies to lgr and techmoan
@@SupaPhly0 oh that makes more senes thanks
@@mustashnob special powers and a time travel machine. 🤣
Actually, I’m a Patron, so I get access to the videos 24 hours earlier than their public release.
You might be new here.
Last time I was this early I was uneducated about brown.
You mean ORANGE!!!!
0-100 is a hot day scale for you . 0-100 is a ice block to boiled water for us . lol great vid :)
"Those humans. So clever."
Alec is an alien confirmed.
That would also explain how "they" (2:53) are aware of the silliness of imperial units - because _americans_ never seem to be!
Everybody watch this one twice to keep his watchtime ratings high.
I watched 2x
Twice?
Those are rookie numbers.
You gotta pump those numbers up!
I'm gonna run it on loop in my sleep
@@letsdosomething806 me watching it 420 times
@@mrmatt2525able if you watch it at 2x he actually only gets half the watchtime
Anyone else remember that specific Scotch VHS tape cover on his shirt? I want that shirt now.
Yes, Scotch used that logo design from the mid 80's to early 90's.
I still have the VHS tapes and sleeves!!!
I'm prety sure if I dug the old boxes of VHS tapes from when I was a kid out of storage I'd find a few of those dust covers in there.
@@jgildert Me, too! And some older!
You're the first person I saw to call out everyone who always cries about Ferenheit. Good on you!
The bimetallic strip wasn't something that really clicked until this video. So cool!
When Alec described the bimetallic "strip tease" we were schooled for humidity application! LOL
Its more bimaterial since its not 2 metals
How did you comment 23 hours ago when the video was posted like a half hour ago?
@@-JonnyBoy- I mean 1:23, where it is
You can always just make one:
th-cam.com/video/5fI-El2kipE/w-d-xo.html
That lack of credits just mean one thing... Part 2 confirmed
well he said 5 parts so..
Hunny! I am LOVING your hair. It is becoming my almost favorite thing about your videos coming in second right after your videos.
One video. Just one video...you gotta style that beast into something wild!
Commenting to help the algorithm.
I have nothing meaningful to add, you’re doing a great job. I couldn’t say anything to make your show better. I’ve been watching for awhile now and My two small boys (3&9) watch your videos because my older boy wants to be an engineer.
Loved the "this website I found" hahah
"You have a smart phone right?"
*Me watching the video on a smart phone* "I might"
*looks away from hand holding phone to search the room* "Where did I put that thing?..."
Not me!
"...with other means. Other means? What other means?..." Trying to figure out whether he scripted this into his teleprompter script for fun or just decided to let his personality come out while recording. Regardless, I love it!
I'm never going to get old of these videos, I don't even care what technology he's talking about anymore. I'm sure this guy could get me excited about drying paint at this point
I’m helping out your watch time because I’m watching it twice.
I’m watching it twice because I usually listen instead of watching, and I got distracted the first time.
You are a shining example of the old saying, "One can always write more."
The credits music played in my head anyway.
Yup.
Love the shirt. I had instant flashback to bookshelf in our living room in the 80s filled with VHS tapes recorded over dozens and dozens of times.
Just incase you wanted more reassurance as to why not doing credits or music was entirely the right decision: watching this video took exactly the same amount of time as it took me to eat a supermarket frozen pizza. Absolute perfection.
This has to be added to the robust imperial measurements system; 9 minutes and 35 seconds should now and forever be known as @Haydn's pizza time. 1 Haydn for short.
@@RolandoGarza hey can you do this for me, it should only take 2-3 Haydn's.
Oh boy, i can't wait till you cover wet/dry bulb hygrometer.
“Who cares about hygrometers.” - me
“Interesting…” - me 9 minutes later
I have to say your comedic timing is getting better and better
Thank you Alec for mentioning the range of 0-100 as a usable temperature range for reference by which Fahrenheit was meant to emulate.
I did a deep dive into how and why the Fahrenheit system is the way it is back when I was in my early teens. The effort was admirable by him. I wonder if we could achieve a true 0°=freezing and 100°=human body temp with more modern liquids and techniques...
I wonder what advancements will be made for temperature monitoring in the depths of space when we begin sending humans into those bleak distances...
I love how half of this video is a rant on how easy it is to look up unit conversions and to stop bugging you about it. :D
Came for the science, stayed for the snark! Literally, that earned my subscription.
That first sentence should be on a T-shirt that he sells.
A really good approximation that works well in normal temperature atmospheric temperature ranges and is easier to calculate is F = 2C + 30 or C = (F-30)/2. It's not exact of course, but is much easier to do the math in your head, and gives you a good feeling if you are used to one unit system vs another.
My uncle who fled to Canada in the 80s after a…”snow storm in southern South Carolina…” uses that, I’m pretty sure, on the rare occasion I see him and temperature is brought up in conversation.
*Goes on a rant about Celcius vs. Fahrenheit*
Me: The colonies are getting uppity again.
I don't think I've ever felt so validated about liking Fahrenheit than when Alec says exactly what I think about it
Its just a unit convention. You should never feel bad about using the one you find most useful.
I can't imagine ever using Kelvins.
@@rakino4418 kelvin is the simple if you understand celsius.
The snark in this episode pleases me. Thank you for your excellent work!
You were not kidding about the stats tanking. I appreciate you making it anyway even knowing that.
I really enjoy your content, big and small.
I found from your toasters and have been hooked since. I kind of like that I found you late just because it means you already had so many videos that I always have a few to watch. Which is great, because I really like watching several in the same day.
Thank you for all the amazing content. I have learned so much researching further into a lot of the things you’ve talked about. 💜🐿