@@Chien-Tranme quede pensando porque no le pusiste columnas y que usas en el concreto para que sea permeable y no se filtre 🤔 pregunto lo de las columnas porque aunque veo que construyes sobre una placa de concreto los tabiques solo pueden aguantar la presión del agua
@@Chien-Tran yes, PLEASE! lol you can build a hydro electric dam on my retirement property as soon as I get it bought. Self sufficiency please! I'll purchase materials help with labor and you can have all rights to video production!
@@AlejandroOrozco-h2j He's probably from another country so that's probably why he didn't get the joke, but he can thank the person anyways, there's no problem in that.
I love how this guy doesn't really understand what we are saying but still makes his best attempt to thank us in his replies, restores my faith in humanity.
reminds me of that one guy who didn’t understand English so people would comment the most wild things like “my family just died” and he would respond with “ 🥰🥰🥰”
En albañilería también anda justo. En la base debiera haber encastrado la primera hilada y haber hecho 2 contrafuertes donde luego van las rampas de evacuación. ...además el muro debiera haber sido curvo para repartir mejor la presión. En los extremos, no se observa una geología natural fuerte, si no que sigue siendo tierra como el resto. Así mismo los aliviaderos pueden servir también para transformar electricidad, pues pasa agua constantemente a través de ellos. De hecho (en este diseño) las turbinas estarían mejor ubicadas a la salida... La cuestión por tanto es cuánto va a durar... la presa.
the water would only be raisied to the level of the overflow run a string back to see level be4 he ran it.... its not "that high"... also thats why he dug down first to start at a lower point so that the finish at a height as so to not run into the problem u mentioned
How many dams have you built to have relevant knowledge to make recommendations to someone who builds dams, or did you just watch a few TH-cam videos and declare yourself an expert?
@@jaydunbar7538I appreciate you defending the maker of this project, but this is why we have brains. To think through problems to solutions. And water even on a mini construction can exert a huge amount of pressure on any structure.
An aspect I like of this construction, is the way the sluice does not allow the floating debris to flow into the turbine. Allowing water to flow over the spillway means the pressure is constant and generation is constant
It's so satisfying seeing how immaculately smooth the solid surfaces are, and how crisp and straight all the lines and angles are. I'd never guess there were bricks under it if I didn't see them. That's some beautiful construction!
Ie will this collapses. I think it needs to curve towards upstream to transfer the force of the water into the banks. This is the biggest dam we've seen him build.
@nicholaslittle2312 not so sure about that. That spillway is also a buttress so alot more support for weight of water then appears. To me the potential fail point is the original bypass pipes (just a cover hammered in too stopper it)
Youd need a step up sub station for that, then a step down at the house, to reduce power loss. If a direct 240v line was fed to his house, the resistance would be too high and the turbine would stall
@MrRedeyedJedi would be best to have a charger running from the turbine to a battery bank and can set the charger to an ideal output to where it doesn't stall the turbine and provides the ideal amount of power. Then you could pull more power from the bank than is going in (for limited time ofc). Say 500w charger feeding a battery bank consistently which wouldn't stall the turbine, but you could still run a 1100w microwave on the other end because of the battery bank without putting that strain on the turbine. Having this feeding into a battery bank instead of directly into the breaker box of a house would be perfection.
@whatta7793 yes, a pick up in the step up sub station, which kicks in when demand is high, delivering power from batteries through inverter. Could have solar panel on roof also to keep batteries live when water or batteries are low from demand.
@@Chien-Tran I haven't watched the whole video yet, but I watched you to lay every single brick. Then I saw you lay the angled bricks for the angled part, then all of a sudden the angled part is covered. --- What's under the big square angled part? And why didn't you show what's under there?
Used to build dams as a kid with my brother, but we never had any alternators to produce electricity, maybe if we did our father wouldn’t have gotten so mad at us for flooding the yard. 😊
I saw the word “unique” in the title and immediately got skeptical. It took me 30 seconds to realize this isn’t one of the fake hole in the ground vids. Great stuff man.
@@vasianduban9995 that may be true, but I was primarily referring to the construction. He seems to have genuinely hand constructed the dam. I cannot speak for the power component.
@@Siph_Maned_Wolf this is the same thing as the primitive building guys, hes just building useless dams probably in the middle of the jungle for animals to get trapped in
I always keep seeing those fake videos where they build giant water slides and buildings with sandstone and normal sand, Now this, this i believe is real, You did an amazing job! ❤ ✨
Looks like he is dealing with about a 6 foot of head water height, enough for about 3 psi at the turbine blades. The impeller is a high volume, low flow speed type. It will produce enough electricity for a few lights and maybe charge a battery bank up. Good backup source of continuous power.
@@winfordnettles3292 There is no power being generated, it's not a real turbine. It's a model and those motors are being spun from another power source.
i think the wires are water proof, plus, the water would rarely ever get high enough to even touch the wires because the water would overflow over the dam.
@@2012-JAF That's ok, it's doubtful it's 220V Also it's not a real turbine. There's no power being generated here, he has a power source nearby turning those motors
There is certainly energy produced. But no -- the drop/flow isn't going to power a village. But what power it does produce is going to be very stable. (he was only tunning a fan and a string of lights off it) If you want a lot of production you would need to run the full flow of that dam down a singlepipe to a downstream turbine. Those are much louder though.
@@redwolfexr The hardest part in building a perpetuum mobile (and, it seems, the model hydroelectric generator) is hiding the wire coming to the outlet. In theory this design would work. But you can hear there is absolutely no change in sound coming from the generator as he plugs in the load and the generator is not good enough to take 2x light bulbs that easily.
@@maximvoronin1569And that too it seems to be a tungsten bulb which needs to be heated, he used 3 of them with a fan. So, I don't think the generator can power it all of those alone.
I’m an electrical engineer and i say 13:46 is fabricated. You were drawing at least two amps from what seems to be two 40w bulbs and a fan and there was no change in rotational speed of the turbine.
@@Ulexcool That's also impressive, in its own way. These things are a huge amount of work to build, and don't look like they're entirely trivial to demolish.
Great innovation and hardwork, but one flash flood and the Dam is history Edit: The electrical safety on cabling, was real hazardous, hope he uses proper insulated ones later.
It's impressive how easy you can create this. I would recommend to put something more to clean the water too, for also prevent some deseases. I love so much these type of videos you make. Impressive, very impressive, keep going like that.
@@alfrredd "Construction General" I think is the source? Has the exact same video and other videos with the same dogs in I believe the exact same location. That channel could have stolen their videos from elsewhere for all I know. But its likely where this channel stole the video from. What makes me a bit skeptical about the source though; construction general's channel has the video unflipped but has the exact same kind of rolling text saying the channel name at the bottom. I'm not sure how this channel would have gone about removing that rolling text to replace it with their own unless there is another more original source that doesn't have the watermarking at all somewhere.
This idea was pretty awesome just a few aspects that come into question like no water proofing, built out of bricks, lack of levelling, the width of the dam vs the water course, the height of the dam, and the design for the application - I’m doubting this design will last very long as it’s relying solely on bricks mortar and rendering for water proofing that will likely crack especially with that body of water behind it. The width might not hold with lateral erosion to the banks that will soak more than usual amounts of water that may cause small land sliding it seems like there is not enough water flowing through the dam or over the top and as with soo many hydro designs he will be lifting that heavy electric generator/alternator out and cleaning the debris out almost daily I would have tried the water wheel design and concrete reobar support system allows more water to pass through, doesn’t prevent fish from moving upward etc and debris is easier to clean out
sure it is...........220v at 50hz.........more like your powering it with 220v there is no way that generates 220v with a turbine coupled to an alternator....the water has to be very heavy to turn the turbine at a suffice rpm .the water is levels rises and drops many meters to provide adequate thrust .
The advantage of using an alternator is that it puts out constant voltage at variable RPM and power - my guess is that this feeds an inverter in that little box. Assuming both the inlet and outlet of the pipe are submerged, the location of the turbine doesn't matter (this is how siphons work). A head of 2 m requires a flow rate of 10liters/sec to generate 200W(best guess of what those light bulbs draw) - my guess is that there is also a battery in that box.
We don't have public works projects in the US anymore. Build back better was neutered of all value. We spend all our money on tax cuts for billionaires now.
If I'm not mistaken this turbine uses gravity not the speed of the water to acquire kinetic energy to spin. Based of the fan design seen @10:20, water falling along with the force of the water pushing it would transfer power to the turbine, as rotation speed increases momentum kicks in more and more permitting it to speed up to whatever its effective max is(or the max to be expected from that location and model of turbine). The motors you heard when the turbine was spinning up was not for the turbine but for instead using threaded rods to retract the metal sheets which inhibit the flow of water. The higher those gates the more water that gets in. That turbine should have a max flow rate its engineered for which if too much water was passing through it to approach that limit would not ideal. Also, if he wanted to perform maintenance he can shut off the flow to a trickle that way(whatever would leak around the seam) But don't worry about that... There's cute dogs providing pawsential services!
@@ryokkeno d’accord mais cela est censé produire du courant continu. Pourtant, lors de l’utilisation du multimètre il affichait 214 V alternatif. Il y a un truc que j’ai pas dû comprendre , ou soit la vidéo est simplement truqué
@@Zaxley24 I would wager the large orange box you see around @12:57 contains the inverter as well as the filters, and transformers necessary to convert the DC to the AC shown.
See all those mountains/high hills in the area? Let's see how his "dam" copes after 12 inches of rain falls in one day. It looks like a pretty rainy area.
@@VincentVanBro And you're too gullible if you think this is a real functioning project. Great masonry skills and a great montage for TH-cam, but that's it.
@@thelegendaryklobb2879 I never said it was a real functioning skill dipshit. I’m making fun of _you_ for criticizing it like it’s anything more than a miniature hobby project. Long term viability? 😂
Exactly. I expected the turbine to be on the other side of the dam where there is more movement/gravity. I can't figure out what is pushing it when it is basically sitting in a pond.
@@lanceverbose1763 you will have more luck understanding it of you think of it as a horizontal watermill instead of a turbine. The flow into the spillway creates a fairly strong current at the level of the opening in the cage around the turbine. Its based on controlled flow instead of high pressure.
@@lanceverbose1763 Don't bother trying to figure it out, it is fake! I wonder if I leave a comment on the top stating it is fake will it still get a like :)
It's definitely fake. Those motors are spinning (at a steady rate) before the turbine starts to spin in his demonstration. It's funny seeing people in the comments try to sound smart explaining how this is supposed to work, using words like "controlled flow", when it's an obvious fake
Remember folks, always keep your local hydraulic engineers employed! They get bored really easily and YOUR irrigation canal could be next.
Yes,Thank you very much
@@Chien-Tranme quede pensando porque no le pusiste columnas y que usas en el concreto para que sea permeable y no se filtre 🤔 pregunto lo de las columnas porque aunque veo que construyes sobre una placa de concreto los tabiques solo pueden aguantar la presión del agua
Lmfao
@@Chien-Tran yes, PLEASE! lol you can build a hydro electric dam on my retirement property as soon as I get it bought. Self sufficiency please! I'll purchase materials help with labor and you can have all rights to video production!
Lmao
The dog obviously the supervisor. He took the job seriously monitoring all his employees work to perfection
Yes, thanh you so much
usually with me its my cat
😂😂😂❤
It's a Union gig😊
I thought the dog was his lunch.
There's something about watching sped up footage of someone building something that's so satisfying. Wildly impressive construction.
The fact that he built this in under 15 minutes it's just brilliant...
😂
😂😂😂
@@heckingaxle6618it’s actually 14:49, so under 15 minutes. What are you talking about??? /s
@@heckingaxle6618you must be fun at parties!
It was just 15 minutes because the paperwork was only 2,000 pages and the inspector was easily bribed to speed up the inspection.
The two supervisors did a fine job!
Well thank you for your support
@@Chien-Tranhe means the dogs, is a joke
@@AlejandroOrozco-h2jhe knows that lmao
@@AlejandroOrozco-h2j He's probably from another country so that's probably why he didn't get the joke, but he can thank the person anyways, there's no problem in that.
I think there's 3 supervisors. There are 2 all white ones and 1 has black on its head
13:46 "Finally, I'll have light and a fan to keep me cool while I build this dam."
Aren't jokes supposed to be funny?
@@alejandroestrella69 not even the best joke can overcome a poor sense of humor
@@marsh_mallowie his humour is probably something like sigma skibidi type shi. 😂😂
I love how this guy doesn't really understand what we are saying but still makes his best attempt to thank us in his replies, restores my faith in humanity.
Yes, Thank you so much ❤❤❤😀
Such a legend, he is.
That concrete?
reminds me of that one guy who didn’t understand English so people would comment the most wild things like “my family just died” and he would respond with “ 🥰🥰🥰”
@@MFDeimos😂😂😂
The brick and concrete work was fantastic.
I am glad to see the two supervisors approved of your work.
Outstanding build.
Glad you liked it
❤❤❤ 🤑🤓🎉
@Chien-Tr ❤️🧡💛💚💙💜🖤👍👍👍🌻🌻an
there's only one dog!!!
17th
I just love watching talented people work. Just look at the pride he takes in his work here. It's wonderful to see.
Thank you very much!
Great masonry work. Not so much on the wiring job.
Thanks 👍
Nic
En albañilería también anda justo.
En la base debiera haber encastrado la primera hilada y haber hecho 2 contrafuertes donde luego van las rampas de evacuación.
...además el muro debiera haber sido curvo para repartir mejor la presión.
En los extremos, no se observa una geología natural fuerte, si no que sigue siendo tierra como el resto.
Así mismo los aliviaderos pueden servir también para transformar electricidad, pues pasa agua constantemente a través de ellos.
De hecho (en este diseño) las turbinas estarían mejor ubicadas a la salida...
La cuestión por tanto es cuánto va a durar... la presa.
I was thinking the same, could run it through a conduit or something. Otherwise this is genius
Let’s say a bit the weakest link when it comes to construction in South East Asia. Not only Vietnam 😊
I choose to believe he's a giant helping a local village of tiny people have electricity
❤❤❤❤❤😍
Forget the turbine and electronics, that concrete work is the most impressive bit.
I agree Sam. At some point it ceased to be a construction project and became a work of art.
Would’ve been sweet if he put hidden cameras upstream to see the reaction of the neighbors when they find the new water levels
the water would only be raisied to the level of the overflow run a string back to see level be4 he ran it.... its not "that high"... also thats why he dug down first to start at a lower point so that the finish at a height as so to not run into the problem u mentioned
That entire project was nothing more than an expensive footbridge for the pups!!!!! 😆
And one that's lighted and has a fan for the "dog days" of summer. 🙂
Nice one
there's only one pup why you using plural?
@@darkshadowsx5949 Look again. There's a black and white older dog (4:37) and then there's a younger all white pup throughout the video.
Worth it 😄
It's amazing how quickly you can build things when you don't care how long they last.
Perfect! It just needs a model village nearby.
Yes, thank you very much ❤️
An electric train track that makes a loop, one side directly over the dam. Track electrified by the dam!
That mini-dam can supply a full size village.
@@ivanshiek Not happening my friend.
Imagine it's an end of the world scenario and this is your only option for electrical power!
Last of us right? They kept a small hydroelectric plant ON to get some power
omg is that macaco from twitter
@@cabesinhabiking BR?
@@pedrosilva7708 yes brazil i am
That's why im here lol, studying. Who knows when the world may collapse due to global war, famine or pandemic again, gotta be ready
A moment to acknowledge that this is the only creator ive seen on TH-cam to engage with EVERY comment. What a legend.
Thank you very much!
Might recommend anchoring the base deeper with some rebar stakes or just digging it down as well as into the hillside
Thanks 👍
Yea could very easily develop seepage as it is made here. Also missing tons of stabilizing support for the foundation
How many dams have you built to have relevant knowledge to make recommendations to someone who builds dams, or did you just watch a few TH-cam videos and declare yourself an expert?
@@jaydunbar7538lol just a little bit of research would show why supports and anchors are important for a dam
@@jaydunbar7538I appreciate you defending the maker of this project, but this is why we have brains. To think through problems to solutions. And water even on a mini construction can exert a huge amount of pressure on any structure.
About the only free energy video on the internet that is genuine!
I appreciate that!
its ironic because it's 100% fake... lol....
You should check out the guy who runs a generator with a campfire.
@@bwdotaclipsIdk it seems like something I could make with some time, patience, and learning. Only thing would be finding a good spot to make it.
@@uberschnilthegreat22the energy output from such a tiny dam should't produce that much electricity
This is so satisfiying with all the smooth surfaces!!!
Yes, Thank you so much 😀
Somebody’s garden nearby just flooded😂
Not gonna lie, I felt cheated when you skipped to the finished ramp😂 Is it bricked , filled with rubble or empty?
Probably a steel plate.
Maybe even his wife
Stray dogs
Another of his dams, quick cut to the ramp: th-cam.com/video/oLv_sJsDhts/w-d-xo.htmlsi=rYoxvLjBD14jn6Dk&t=353
Filled with dirt with an excavator if i had to guess, probably why he skipped that part
Through the videos of this guy I am really ready to build even my own house
Thank you very much!
If i ever build a Dam, I'm going to name it the Jean-Claude Van
I see what you did there
damn
Build the dam out of vans and you can just call it Jean Claude...
@@Grezza78 You could also build a dam out of clod vans and just call it Jean.
@@losarpettystrakos7687You can also build it in jeanuary up in the clouds out of vans and call it 🤷
An aspect I like of this construction, is the way the sluice does not allow the floating debris to flow into the turbine. Allowing water to flow over the spillway means the pressure is constant and generation is constant
Yes, thank you very much ❤️
If water always flows over the spillway, the design is bad.
Should run 1 solid wire through conduit across the water, every splice in the wire is a failure point. Excellent craftsmanship on the wall 👍🏼
Thanks for the tips!
It's so satisfying seeing how immaculately smooth the solid surfaces are, and how crisp and straight all the lines and angles are. I'd never guess there were bricks under it if I didn't see them. That's some beautiful construction!
Thanks for your support
Some say when a hydro engineer hears running water they instinctively need to build a dam.
Yes ❤❤❤❤❤
😂😂😂😂😂
I thought that's what they say about beavers.
@keithlohmeyer same thing 😂😂😂
he filled it with water himself tho... not really energy efficient I would say
Puppies in the video looks chilled 😊👍
Thank you very much
I’d be interested in the engineering calculations for the load on the brickwork.
Ie will this collapses. I think it needs to curve towards upstream to transfer the force of the water into the banks. This is the biggest dam we've seen him build.
I was expecting him to back fill, also I like the leap to most likely adding a sheet of plywood in the front for the ramp
@nicholaslittle2312 not so sure about that. That spillway is also a buttress so alot more support for weight of water then appears. To me the potential fail point is the original bypass pipes (just a cover hammered in too stopper it)
rebar? what rebar?
@@corytheriault2365that or the banks. I could see rainfall and heavy rains eroding the bank quickly if there isn’t vegetation soon.
Now build a powerline to your house
Well thank you for your support
Youd need a step up sub station for that, then a step down at the house, to reduce power loss. If a direct 240v line was fed to his house, the resistance would be too high and the turbine would stall
@MrRedeyedJedi would be best to have a charger running from the turbine to a battery bank and can set the charger to an ideal output to where it doesn't stall the turbine and provides the ideal amount of power. Then you could pull more power from the bank than is going in (for limited time ofc). Say 500w charger feeding a battery bank consistently which wouldn't stall the turbine, but you could still run a 1100w microwave on the other end because of the battery bank without putting that strain on the turbine. Having this feeding into a battery bank instead of directly into the breaker box of a house would be perfection.
@whatta7793 yes, a pick up in the step up sub station, which kicks in when demand is high, delivering power from batteries through inverter. Could have solar panel on roof also to keep batteries live when water or batteries are low from demand.
@@Chien-Tran I haven't watched the whole video yet, but I watched you to lay every single brick. Then I saw you lay the angled bricks for the angled part, then all of a sudden the angled part is covered. --- What's under the big square angled part? And why didn't you show what's under there?
I love these mini dams 😊 Great work 👍
Thank you! 👍
@@Chien-Tran how many watts are you producing here Chief?
No bad job, you can take more energy using all the water jump.
Meanwhile, there’s a flood in the neighborhood down the road 😂
A very sophisticated dog bridge, i like it!
Thank you very much!
Used to build dams as a kid with my brother, but we never had any alternators to produce electricity, maybe if we did our father wouldn’t have gotten so mad at us for flooding the yard. 😊
I saw the word “unique” in the title and immediately got skeptical. It took me 30 seconds to realize this isn’t one of the fake hole in the ground vids. Great stuff man.
sorry do disappoint you but power generation this plant is completely fake lmao
@@vasianduban9995 that may be true, but I was primarily referring to the construction. He seems to have genuinely hand constructed the dam. I cannot speak for the power component.
@@Siph_Maned_Wolf this is the same thing as the primitive building guys, hes just building useless dams probably in the middle of the jungle for animals to get trapped in
@@andrewkaminskas7721i dont think there was ever a claim that this dam was supposed to be useful. Its just a cool mini dam
@@germanfisch The title says it's a 220V mini hydroelectric plant with a unique turbine.
Btw, those motors aren't 220V lol
Am I the only one who finds that tapping sound on the bricks incredibly satisfying?
I always keep seeing those fake videos where they build giant water slides and buildings with sandstone and normal sand, Now this, this i believe is real, You did an amazing job! ❤ ✨
thank you ❤❤❤
its bullspit the video is playing in reverse, its stolen materiel
See what happens when the wife's leave their husbands alone for awhile!
Thank you so much ❤❤❤
Yup and she thinks he is cheating
They steal their meat clever lol😅
Yep he gets peace and quiet to get his tasks done!
😂😂😂
Hardwork 📈🔝
Respect from mee 📈
Thanks 🔥
4:50 best part of the video 😂
@13:23
@@nananananana10😂
@@nananananana10 don’t cut the opening scene 😂 @ 13:05
@@JoeOrber😂
@@nananananana10 somebody is a fan.
It is amazing to see how water that has no fluid can move a generator at high speed.
The project is very fun.
Well thank you for your support
Looks like he is dealing with about a 6 foot of head water height, enough for about 3 psi at the turbine blades. The impeller is a high volume, low flow speed type. It will produce enough electricity for a few lights and maybe charge a battery bank up. Good backup source of continuous power.
@@winfordnettles3292 There is no power being generated, it's not a real turbine. It's a model and those motors are being spun from another power source.
That power strip is literally inches away from the water. lol
Good thing he can turn it off from shore then :P
i think the wires are water proof, plus, the water would rarely ever get high enough to even touch the wires because the water would overflow over the dam.
@@Sw5pherwe got a professional here, don’t get electrocuted bro
Hopefully nobody gets accidentally electrocuted.
The fishes are happy, no more swimming in the dark... 🙂
Yes, thank you so much
some fish prefer deep dark places around man made structures; like full scale dams for example.
Yup a sure way to been seen easier by predators lmfao 😂
On this note, i think a Miniature Fish and Eel Ladder are in order for Full and Modern Best Practice Compliance!
And they will also have a fresh air! :)
My childhood dream❤❤❤ A mini Dam💪🏻💪🏻💪🏻
Yes,Thank you very much
@@Chien-Tran you are a number one!!! Your videos are amazing!!! Greating from Italy Bro💪🏻
@@colin82do they allow pineapple pizza? (Being serious here)
He’s inspiring me to think of a diy project that I’ll never start 😂
Looks awesome but, better remove that vibration source before cracking begins
Yes, you are right
The dogs are loving their little bridge❤
Yes ❤❤❤❤🥰
👆🩷❤️🧡💛🩷🩷❤️❤️❤️💛💛🩷🩷🧡🧡🩷❤️😘🥰😍
I like such videos, they’re not only entertaining, but informative too 👍
Yes, thank you very much
Can't believe I've watched the whole video through the thumbnail just to avoid ads
Thank you
I especially love the electrical lines 1/4 inch above the water.
Outstanding design and masonry work, but getting "bit" by 220VAC while grounded in that wet environment ----> NOT good!
@@2012-JAF That's ok, it's doubtful it's 220V
Also it's not a real turbine. There's no power being generated here, he has a power source nearby turning those motors
That was shocking
@@christopherbelanger6612 You're so full of it.
@@wenigmehl he thinks the world runs on 110 too.
Very cool my friend ❤️
Better than a mega dam anyday
Thank you! Cheers!
The puppy's are so cute😍🤩🥰
thanks 😍🤩🥰
OMG I LOVE BIG BALLSACS!!!!!!!! thank you so much for the video, it was great!!!!! ❤
So glad!
Its 3 am and youtube recommending me this..
Guess im not sleepin tonight
Thank you! Cheers!
Lol same bro. Wtf?
You are the greatest mini dam builder ever.
Hahaha come back in a week after it has collapsed and see if you feel the same way
This might be officially the worlds smallest hydroelectric dam.
Yes, Thank you so much 😀
So cool, I love the dogs❤
Thank you very much ❤❤❤🥰 🥰🥰🥰
Anyone else trying to sleep?
I was going to sleep But i saw this video😅😅
There is no way you get any energy from that height but thumbs up for the puppies. 🙂👍🏿
There is certainly energy produced. But no -- the drop/flow isn't going to power a village. But what power it does produce is going to be very stable. (he was only tunning a fan and a string of lights off it)
If you want a lot of production you would need to run the full flow of that dam down a singlepipe to a downstream turbine. Those are much louder though.
@@redwolfexr The hardest part in building a perpetuum mobile (and, it seems, the model hydroelectric generator) is hiding the wire coming to the outlet.
In theory this design would work. But you can hear there is absolutely no change in sound coming from the generator as he plugs in the load and the generator is not good enough to take 2x light bulbs that easily.
@@maximvoronin1569And that too it seems to be a tungsten bulb which needs to be heated, he used 3 of them with a fan. So, I don't think the generator can power it all of those alone.
It's not just a dam, but also a bridge. 👍
Thank you very much ❤️❤️❤️🥰
*sees no long winded intro and a sped up video of a long process*
LIKED AND SUBSCRIBED
Thank you very much!
I’m an electrical engineer and i say 13:46 is fabricated. You were drawing at least two amps from what seems to be two 40w bulbs and a fan and there was no change in rotational speed of the turbine.
I came to see the dam engineering but I enjoyed the dog bridge the most.. fantastic.
yes, thank you very much ❤❤❤❤
Truly gorgeous work! I'm not sure how sturdy it would be after a heavy rain (I would love a follow-up video!) but as it is it's a real work of art.
Seeingany of those same projects I guess it is one after another 😀
he wont follow up, these all get destroyed at the end of filming
@@Ulexcool That's also impressive, in its own way. These things are a huge amount of work to build, and don't look like they're entirely trivial to demolish.
Awesome work! I would just suggest you detailed more about the kind of engine/generator that is used, because that we can't build ourselves
@@darthcabs i guess only for a test as 240v is not a joke to wire it like this 😀
More powerful than the will to win is the courage to begin.
This guy should have more than 120k subscribers
Yes, Thank you very much ❤️❤️❤️🥰
Putting this in my "done learnt" playlist. Thank you for sharing.....
Awesome, thank you!
We need a lot of people like him
Thank you very much ❤❤🥰
The quality of the brickwork is superb and very well detailed.
Thank you very much ❤❤❤🥰🥰
You would be such an asset to a school, you would be an amazing teacher. I love your videos
Прекрасная работа, эта турбина выдаст около 1kw электроэнергии.Респект.
Да ну фейк жеж
2kW/h
@@ПавелИванов-в1ж6фтут на самом деле большой вопрос, очень уж много спорных моментов. каменщик он отменный, а вот инженер...
Только теперь с комарами разобраться в болоте которое создалось
вопрос, что с ней будет через год.
I have scratch built a lot of miniature terrain, immediately subscribed. Absolutely amazing work
Thank you very much!
Good, but you need to create a free way for a fish 🐟🐟🐟
Yes, thanh you so much
Well done looks great.
Thank you so much ❤❤❤
This is an awesome video! Great job 👍
Thank you so much ❤❤❤
True master. 👍 Attention to details and finishing quality.
Well thank you for your support
Great innovation and hardwork, but one flash flood and the Dam is history
Edit: The electrical safety on cabling, was real hazardous, hope he uses proper insulated ones later.
It's impressive how easy you can create this. I would recommend to put something more to clean the water too, for also prevent some deseases. I love so much these type of videos you make. Impressive, very impressive, keep going like that.
Thank you very much!
2:40 love the little dogs running around 😊
Little meals before long.
Yes, thanh you so much
Everything is backwards, so the content is obviously stolen from another source and reversed to attempt to hide copyright infractions.
The Multimeter gave that away.
Does anybody know the original content owner?? I feel cheated knowing this is stolen content
@@alfrredd "Construction General" I think is the source? Has the exact same video and other videos with the same dogs in I believe the exact same location. That channel could have stolen their videos from elsewhere for all I know. But its likely where this channel stole the video from.
What makes me a bit skeptical about the source though; construction general's channel has the video unflipped but has the exact same kind of rolling text saying the channel name at the bottom. I'm not sure how this channel would have gone about removing that rolling text to replace it with their own unless there is another more original source that doesn't have the watermarking at all somewhere.
The puppys are awesome.... the dam is pretty good too 😁
Thank you so much ❤❤❤
Very nice, now having a more up to date turbine would be a selling point. Efficiency is key when going small scale.
Yes, thank you ☺️
Wouldn't really change anything
This idea was pretty awesome just a few aspects that come into question like no water proofing, built out of bricks, lack of levelling, the width of the dam vs the water course, the height of the dam, and the design for the application - I’m doubting this design will last very long as it’s relying solely on bricks mortar and rendering for water proofing that will likely crack especially with that body of water behind it. The width might not hold with lateral erosion to the banks that will soak more than usual amounts of water that may cause small land sliding it seems like there is not enough water flowing through the dam or over the top and as with soo many hydro designs he will be lifting that heavy electric generator/alternator out and cleaning the debris out almost daily I would have tried the water wheel design and concrete reobar support system allows more water to pass through, doesn’t prevent fish from moving upward etc and debris is easier to clean out
Yes, thank you very much
Love the skill and dedication and the very lovely puppy ❤
Thank you so much 😀
1:10 Your workmanship is very good
thank you
I couldn’t stop watching! You really know how to keep your audience engaged. 👍
Thank you very much ❤❤❤
sure it is...........220v at 50hz.........more like your powering it with 220v there is no way that generates 220v with a turbine coupled to an alternator....the water has to be very heavy to turn the turbine at a suffice rpm .the water is levels rises and drops many meters to provide adequate thrust .
Yes,Thank you very much
@@Chien-Tran the presurre of the water is about 1.4psi its no where near enough energy to make half a kilowatt
@@Chien-Tran u might be able to produce 3-6 at about .3amps volts dc with a scaled device at that presurre
@@Mr.1.i he's also wasting about half of the available head by locating the turbine up at the bottom of the Inlet gates.
The advantage of using an alternator is that it puts out constant voltage at variable RPM and power - my guess is that this feeds an inverter in that little box. Assuming both the inlet and outlet of the pipe are submerged, the location of the turbine doesn't matter (this is how siphons work). A head of 2 m requires a flow rate of 10liters/sec to generate 200W(best guess of what those light bulbs draw) - my guess is that there is also a battery in that box.
5:36 would have liked to see this part :(
Amazing projcet. I love the puppies playing when you are working
Thank you! 😊
If this was done in a town in the US, it would coat the tax payers 1.5 million dollars lol 😂
It costs 3m in china, and they outsource it to American people for 1.5m.
they wouldnt make a 220 volt brick and mortar dam
Federal 1.5 billion
We don't have public works projects in the US anymore. Build back better was neutered of all value. We spend all our money on tax cuts for billionaires now.
@@kj_H65f is that why i see towns getting facelifts?
you might be spinning your wheels but you arent getting anywhere with those lies.
Superb masonry skills but where is the pressure coming from to spin the turban?
There isn't any. The motor is spinning the turbine lol.
Answer is we need to look at the design of hydro electric plant, it is similar.
The turbine is at the bottom of the tower, keeping a constant head of water above the turbine gives a constant power output
Absolutely brilliant 👍👍👍🇬🇧
Thank you very much ❤❤❤❤
I don't get this. The water isn't moving fast enough to turn the turbine.Seems like the battery is powering the turbine.
If I'm not mistaken this turbine uses gravity not the speed of the water to acquire kinetic energy to spin. Based of the fan design seen @10:20, water falling along with the force of the water pushing it would transfer power to the turbine, as rotation speed increases momentum kicks in more and more permitting it to speed up to whatever its effective max is(or the max to be expected from that location and model of turbine). The motors you heard when the turbine was spinning up was not for the turbine but for instead using threaded rods to retract the metal sheets which inhibit the flow of water. The higher those gates the more water that gets in. That turbine should have a max flow rate its engineered for which if too much water was passing through it to approach that limit would not ideal. Also, if he wanted to perform maintenance he can shut off the flow to a trickle that way(whatever would leak around the seam)
But don't worry about that... There's cute dogs providing pawsential services!
@@ryokkenobeat me to it. Thats what I was gonna say.
@@scottwall8419 Annoying when that happens, when someone beats you to the smarter shit.
@@ryokkeno d’accord mais cela est censé produire du courant continu. Pourtant, lors de l’utilisation du multimètre il affichait 214 V alternatif. Il y a un truc que j’ai pas dû comprendre , ou soit la vidéo est simplement truqué
@@Zaxley24 I would wager the large orange box you see around @12:57 contains the inverter as well as the filters, and transformers necessary to convert the DC to the AC shown.
My daily dose of Zen.
Thank you so much ❤❤❤
Прекрасная работа каменщика! Показал Мастер Класс!
See all those mountains/high hills in the area? Let's see how his "dam" copes after 12 inches of rain falls in one day. It looks like a pretty rainy area.
You watch a 15 minute video of a man making a miniature functional hydroelectric dam and this is your first thought? Long term viability? 😂
@@VincentVanBro It was my thought too
@@thelegendaryklobb2879 bet you’re great at parties
@@VincentVanBro And you're too gullible if you think this is a real functioning project. Great masonry skills and a great montage for TH-cam, but that's it.
@@thelegendaryklobb2879 I never said it was a real functioning skill dipshit. I’m making fun of _you_ for criticizing it like it’s anything more than a miniature hobby project. Long term viability? 😂
Great project. I had never seen that kind of vertical turbine. How does that work?
I mean water appears to fill up the space.
How does it keep moving?
Exactly. I expected the turbine to be on the other side of the dam where there is more movement/gravity. I can't figure out what is pushing it when it is basically sitting in a pond.
@@lanceverbose1763 you will have more luck understanding it of you think of it as a horizontal watermill instead of a turbine. The flow into the spillway creates a fairly strong current at the level of the opening in the cage around the turbine. Its based on controlled flow instead of high pressure.
@@redwolfexr I got my answer when I went back and watched it again. The first time I missed that it was connected to an outlet pipe.
@@lanceverbose1763 Don't bother trying to figure it out, it is fake! I wonder if I leave a comment on the top stating it is fake will it still get a like :)
It's definitely fake. Those motors are spinning (at a steady rate) before the turbine starts to spin in his demonstration.
It's funny seeing people in the comments try to sound smart explaining how this is supposed to work, using words like "controlled flow", when it's an obvious fake
It is a masterpiece of work !!! Gratulation !!
When it help you to produce your own electricity , it is better than anything else in the world...
Yes, Thank you so much 😀