I was like, "i guess, i'll listen to this old guy before we see the sweet explosions" and then i was enraptured by his easily understandable and amazing explanation of the basic forces at play. You're a fantastic teacher dude
Old guy? This presenter (sorry don’t know your name) proves better than anyone I know, age isn’t much more than a number. I am going to aspire to be this young when I am 125.
@@unlokia Not everything should be told to authorities ether before or after. Less people know, less problems it brings. Blowing balloon for time to time and shaking snow down from roof is just practical use for that energy release. Now i wonder what this would do under water and specially by drilling small hole into ice and sticking balloon with line under it? Would that same amount be enough to brake the ice and further more could these gasses put in pressure vessel like small gas tank, mix and detonated as debt charge?
I am a 61 year old that sincerely appreciates that you present your content in a manner that one can easily get “wrapped” around. Thus allowing us to take something away from it. Thank you
2:1 ratio liquid hydrogen, and liquid oxygen! Smaller device in the centre to mix the liquid HH, and liquid O to the rate where it is 1700x more explosive than TNT! 1 tonne of this mixture is a 1.7 megatonne hydrogen bomb! Place under as much pressure as you can (strong materials). E.g. dyneema ropes, steel, anything that is strong!
You make videos with such thoughtfulness and depth that even when I'm familiar with what you're doing, I always come away with greater understanding and clarity.
@@TechIngredients Me thinking I'm big brain: yea stoichiometry, i know science. Tech ingredients: *produces detailed equation detailing why the ideal gas mixture is actually wrong.
We used to blow lids of garbage bins off the ground with sparkler dust and soda bulbs wrapped in foil.. They used to shoot like 20 feet in the air from the ground..
This guy reminds me of my high school chemistry and physics teacher from the early 90's. Both great educators and my senior year my teacher was scheduled to retire and had a bunch of stuff no longer allowed in schools in his lab. He handed me and my buddy a copy of chapter 4 of "the anarchist's cookbook" titled bombs and booby-traps and a list of items that were banned then sent us to take "inventory" of the lab just to make sure he didn't have anything illegal back there. We blew so much stuff up that summer I'm surprised we survived.
23:10 the inside joke: in 1953 John Wheeler lost some top secret documents related to the H-bomb project called Matterhorn B. They may or may not have ended up in the hands of Tech Ingredients.
I'd also laugh a bit about th connection between Matternhold the mountain and Toblerone, the chocolate. Which ties a little with the chocolate story in the beginning.
Yes, this is definitely in the spirit of what TH-cam should be all about. I love the knowledge and enthusiasm that you put across, to those that enjoy learning and discovering new ideas.
2:1 ratio liquid hydrogen, and liquid oxygen! Smaller device in the centre to mix the liquid HH, and liquid O to the rate where it is 1700x more explosive than TNT! 1 tonne of this mixture is a 1.7 megatonne hydrogen bomb! Place under as much pressure as you can (strong materials). E.g. dyneema ropes, steel, anything that is strong!
Ive been impatiently waiting for the next video so i've done a bit of research myself on this :P. It seems like the effectiveness of shaped charges comes from the detonation velocity and brisance of the explosive. From what i've read increasing the pressure of a hydrogen oxygen mix does not raise the detonation velocity very much. However at 20 atmospheres thats 20x the combustion products to act on the liner, but were still only realistically looking at ~15 grams of explosive in the tube. PS the paper i was reading planned to test initial pressures up to 10,000 PSI but the mixture spontaneously exploded at 4,500 PSI, so dont do that ;)
Your research mirrors mine. The pre detonation pressure is limited to the containment of the plastic pipe. The hemispherical liner we're using is thin at 1.5 mm in order to lower its inertia, but this why we experiment...we don't know what will happen.
Tech Ingredients Exactly, this has not been done before so im excited to see the results! im not trying to knock the idea at all, I think its interesting and clever 👍
It is. The only reason the Air Force and we didn't try xenon was the cost. We're planning to try this again, but at a smaller scale with plastic soda bottles, higher pressures and various surrounding gasses. We have a spectrometer that can pick up some major lines.
You're lucky I'm not your neighbor- I would be over at your place all the time just to watch and learn and experience these fabulous experiments in person!!
Li Li , you are right, the best neighbor you can wish for, also a decent gentleman and helpful person. You can not play that kind of character he shows again and again.
@@NemoConsequentae lol ya *looks out the window across the field.. "yup his house is still there and not flaming, i guess he's ok" lol. I'd be the curious neighbor and go over just to see what he's up to now, haha
Same, though I have a feeling the audio was clipped. Which is a good thing. Just makes the warning less vital (but still appreciated). Oh, also, are you sure the noise was so loud that it shook a building a mile away? I didn't see any mention of it in the video, only the title, so wondering how you found out. Not to mention, which kind of mile did you refer to? I'm assuming nautical, as Scandinavian probably is incorrect? ;) en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mile#Comparison_table
If I taught chemistry the way this channel does, I would have been fired the second day. It’s a nice compliment to this presenter, but unfairly craps on good teachers everywhere.
I had an excellent chemistry teacher who was always able to make it relevant so learning was almost a byproduct. Then we got an academic teacher who just made everything complicated and boring. I was well on the way to doing a career using chemistry. That bloke killed it stone dead.
@@alfredsutton7233 Don't worry they are layman's, most of them grow up to believe in healing crystals and other quackery, then simultaneously complain about their teachers. In reality they just never listened in class or worked on developing their critical thinking skills. I'm in university for my chem degree and have major respect for highschool science teachers. Cheers mate.
One of my favorite things about this channel is how you never know what to expect, anything is possible, from lasers to drones to speakers to brewing and now shaped charges.
2:1 ratio liquid hydrogen, and liquid oxygen! Smaller device in the centre to mix the liquid HH, and liquid O to the rate where it is 1700x more explosive than TNT! 1 tonne of this mixture is a 1.7 megatonne hydrogen bomb! Place under as much pressure as you can (strong materials). E.g. dyneema ropes, steel, anything that is strong!
Tok relatable. Cops never let me have fun with my experaments. My automated robot. They stole. Fucken pricks. All it did was drive with tank treads useing a hydro jumper that could easily allow it to hop fences. They considered it a drone. And said I needed a license. Its literally designed to just keep watch over my home.
@@burntchickennugget191 That is not considered a drone. How high could it jump? How exactly was it automated? Did it leave your property? What is the name of the police department? I will personally call and help you.
@@jonross377 I understand but its been 2 years now and it would be a waist of time. And yea its not a drone but they classified it as one to take it. Honestly I dont feel the need to get it back. Ill just make a better one.
Nearest neigbours see a blinding flash followed by a sonic boom and think someone has created a mini-nuke. Sound of helicopters, and a whole bunch of flashing blue lights quickly follow...
@@keepermovin5906 you're correct. All your doing in that scenario is sqeezing a compressible fluid like a big gas spring until the internal pressure is so high that the container mechanically fails and allows for the rapid depressurization/expansion of the gas. Like you said. not a chemical reaction. Just alot of thermodynamics.
@@Knoxvillemoto the breaking of the sound barrier is another exception to the rule. I also think that although dry ice bombs are technically chemical reactions the actual explosion is caused by the pressure of the increased volume of the substance breaking the container so it does not constitute as a chemical explosive despite using a chemical reaction.
I've made a few acetylene balloons over the years. The last one we added helium and lit the string. It went up 150' and BOOOMMMMMM. Blew some windows out lol
Can't wait for the shaped charge to be demonstrated. Since this video was from 2020, has it been forgotten? Or can we expect the follow-up video this year?😁😁
I really would like to know if it have been stopped in any way like happening to everyone who is a treat for the oilindustri- it's more than a few people who have lost their lives of that...
2:1 ratio liquid hydrogen, and liquid oxygen! Smaller device in the centre to mix the liquid HH, and liquid O to the rate where it is 1700x more explosive than TNT! 1 tonne of this mixture is a 1.7 megatonne hydrogen bomb! Place under as much pressure as you can (strong materials). E.g. dyneema ropes, steel, anything that is strong!
Father in law filled a small trash bag with O2, placing this inside a contractor sized trash bag, filling it with H2, tied it off with cord, lit the cord and let it loose. The "balloon" got up about 500' before igniting up, sound could be feared miles away...
During the slo mo replay, at 27:58 you can see the exact moment that he realised that the resulting explosion literally scared the s**t out of him, and is now gonna have throw those underpants away. However, quickly realising that the video needs to be finished, puts a smile back on his face and soldiers through. True showman!
Oh man your comment: "The resulting explosion literally scared the s**t out of him, and is now gonna have throw those underpants away." made me laugh so hard that I saw stars and thought I'd pass out. Thanks TK! Good Times...
I like the long technical and chemical explanations you give. Of course I like the explosions, but you always amaze me how you can explain in detail why something happens in a special way. I look forward to new videos. Thank you so much. 🙏🏻
best, most informative experimenter on youtube. though when you said "hydrogen and flouride" my brain farted out a terrified NOPE. you shouldve worn a t-shirt saying "Im a bomb technician. if you see me running, try to catch up."
"Hydrogen and flouride" sounds like a pancake. It's fl - u - o - rine. Nice stuff, dissolves almost anything and will _eventually_ save us from CO2 global warming when red hot and bonded to thorium 233 in thousands of LFTRs.
@@tonyduncan9852 worked MIRACL at HELSTF Until shut down. Primarily Deuterium-Floride although different catalysts were used depending on mission...like hydrogen...boom!
Before you said, you have to smile about this, I was already smiling. The big explosion at 27 minutes absolutely was a ear to ear smile, and I had to watch it about 3 times maybe 4. Thank you for the enjoyment you gave me. I've always loved playing with fireworks and I bet when you were a kid you played with fireworks also. Thank you again
I often make the mistake of opening your videos late at night before I go to bed. The problem is that I have a hard time stopping. I can’t seem to just save the video until tomorrow, I have to watch it now. Aside from your videos being fun, I learn a great deal from you. Thanks, Mr. Tech Ingredients & Team.
I wouldn't worry. Everyone's on the lists already. And yes. Very very very very plural. If you include the advertiser based tracking being scooped up as part of the ISP traffic monitoring 'lawful intercept port', there's probably somewhere between 3 million and 30 million lists. Some more inclusive than others. But unless you're a hobo living under a bridge without a cellphone or email address, you *are* on a list somewhere that someone else can acquire.
Hey, some of us worked very hard to get on those government lists. Getting a social security number is *hard*. And lawyers charge money too. Say, did you know, before 1986, certificates of live birth were not a requirement? Some foolish scientologist parents fearing "uncle sam's boot" only made it harder for their kids to be employable members of this modern society. The best list to be on is the Voters register.
Sprave is a hack. He isn't even in same league as this science. If you want to throw a pencil at a board 15 feet away sure he's you guy, but that's where his talent ends.
2:1 ratio liquid hydrogen, and liquid oxygen! Smaller device in the centre to mix the liquid HH, and liquid O to the rate where it is 1700x more explosive than TNT! 1 tonne of this mixture is a 1.7 megatonne hydrogen bomb! Place under as much pressure as you can (strong materials). E.g. dyneema ropes, steel, anything that is strong!
Really fantastic an interesting stuff, especially around the interactions involving shock waves and flame fronts. The stoichiometric vs. optimal mixture was particularly informative. Thanks for producing great content!
This man is a hidden gem. I just came across this channel and he gives headphone warning and tells you where to skip for the good parts...goat in the making. Subbed!
You mean "goddam', 'tis gonna be 'mazing the day that happens!", right? More youtube posts and *without* the disclaimers that prevents me from trying stuff myself.
In my zombie survival fantasy draft you and the team would obviously be my first pick. Humor, Chemistry, Physics, Karate... What else could you wish for. Thanks a million for the hours of flabbergasting, educating and smile invoking content. If you would have been my teacher back in school I'm sure I would have been better at science. Chapeau & thank you Tech Ingredients Team!
The cops showed up at my friend's house way out in the country. He made some homemade tanerite from basically aluminum and stump killer and then attached the softball sized thing to a very large homemade bottle rocket to get it up in the air before going boom, it climbed to at least 500 feet. This was the 4th of July and there was a thick cloud cover around 1000 feet up. The resulting explosion wasn't what alerted the cops, it was the echoing of the blast between the cloud cover and ground that spread outward and outward and outward for miles that got their attention. They showed up within minutes because his property was the only place around with lights blazing from arc lamps in the yard. He was honest and admitted to the blast leaving out some details and they left after he said that he was done for the night. The noise was incredible and it just went on and on and on
@@ernestjones5113 Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory sometimes detonates explosive materials outside of Livermore, CA. i saw the flash from it one night but didnt hear much sound because they only do it when the atmospheric conditions are just right to limit sound travel. so had your friend done that a different night it might not have been heard as far away.
How about the water created by the explosion turning to snow and ice before hitting the ground. At first I was wondering what the white stuff was and where it came from. Then I remembered it was cold and the water froze.
Useful not just as entertainment but also as a way to understand risks/paths to causing catastrophic accidents... I doubt most people watching will need this for that purpose, but it does serve one. Much like how knowing how to make thermite is also knowing how to avoid accidentally making thermite!
@@thecreator2473 It's a reason to keep your bench grinder clean between using it on both steel/iron and aluminum. Not common for it to happen, but I've seen people talk about accidents involving sparks causing the dust mix to ignite...
It makes me very happy, yet very surprised, that the most replayed part of this video isnt the explosions but is actually the chemistry behind it. I still replayed the big explosion a few times to see how far back snow fell off the trees. Very impressive
2:1 ratio liquid hydrogen, and liquid oxygen! Smaller device in the centre to mix the liquid HH, and liquid O to the rate where it is 1700x more explosive than TNT! 1 tonne of this mixture is a 1.7 megatonne hydrogen bomb! Place under as much pressure as you can (strong materials). E.g. dyneema ropes, steel, anything that is strong!
all this time Ive been trying to figure out where the energy in an explosion comes from and you explained it in a couple of minutes and I finally understood it... :) the "double hump and valley" graph was very instrumental during the explanation.
You mean hydroxic acid?! That stuff can act as the vector for a lot of carcinogens. It can turn harmless CO2 into an acid on contact AND its the largest component of cobra venom.
@Loli4lyf Yes. Just not yet. There may be a slight delay of roughly 90 years from birth (give or take roughly 10 years). Make the most of your life while you can, 'cos it won't last forever.
Kevin Bradshaw_exe Not really. A more relevant question would in my opinion be how much Uni honed the process of teaching yourself complex subjects in a fast and fair way.
@@greenveg42 yeah so his five years at uni studying Modern Interpretive Dance obviously qualifies him as an high explosives expert. Because a college degree is only conferred upon those virtuous and responsible in every way and in every capacity...
I enjoy your presentations! They're not only educational, but entertainging, as well. Thank you for sharing your knowledge! I truly appreciate your indepth explenations.
My son showed me your channel. Great stuff! I love that you include the physics and chemistry to explain your explosions. I really also enjoyed your rocket bolted to a 1 ton trailer videos. I liked that you captured the data for the rocket explosions. It lets the viewer see the impact of the rocket on the trailer and then be able to compare the data foot print for each run. Very well done. I will share with my colleagues.
Oh, this brings back memories from high school physics class. We had a very industrious teacher who illustrated so many concepts from falling backwards off a ladder, to illustrate the feeling of acceleration at 2xG, better than simply jumping off a raised object, to slot cars to demonstrate acceleration, to shoiting a monkey falling from a tree (no monkeys were hure, we used a garbage can lid with a monkey image on the face, to everyone feeling the effects of discharging a massive static discharge through all 20 students standing in a circle holding hands and discharging a lyden jar through the circle of students to the explosion of a hydrogen filled balloon. We had a large cylinder tank of hydtogen left over from a lighter rhan are balloon experiment. We created an unverted pear shapped balloon made of tissue paper with appropriately sized and trimmed segments glued together. The herght of the balloon was about five feet and three feet in diameter. We filledcthe balloon with enough hydrogen to get it aloft. We tether the balloon with a two conductor wire with a model rocket igniter up inside the balloon. The balloon rose to a height of about 100 feet where the igniter was heated up and the balloon exploded. There was a shower of tissue paper particles and a large boom. That experiment was a one time event. This was 51 years ago. That was a year of such events.
I like the cinematic choice of having the fire extinguisher in frame lol. One of the best channels around!! From diy coolers , sound transducers too the rapid expansions of die hydrogen monoxide!!! Thank you.
I totally agree with your analogy that people are smiling when you set these things off. When I got to Junior high School I love science and biology classes. The teachers like yourself were some of the most interesting people I've ever met besides some of those I served with in the U.S.Army. I was an automotive mechanic for over thirty plus years and was present to see the evolution of ignition and injection systems on vehicles. You use terms I am very familiar with as far as staciometric efficiency. Computer controlled combustion on internal combustion engines trying to reach a 14.7 to 1 air fuel ratio. Your channel is extremely interesting and you take me back to my youth with your lesson. Note I was a jock played football but got nerdy when it came to science and biology. Two subjects along with history that I still enjoy today. Keep up the great work your doing providing interesting subjects and chemistry experiments for us to all of view.
Love your channel! Professional grade products made from scratch, great scientific explanations, great topics! My son is hooked now too, I caught him watching your video on rocket engines the other day. Thank you so much for what you do!
This is definitely my favorite channel. I've watched every video, many multiple times. You clearly have an incredible amount of knowledge across a wide variety of topics, which is something I aspire to. I am very curious what (in general terms) your occupation/education was, and perhaps what you found as the best way to understand topics deeply (i.e. through conventional education, practical experience, etc). I imagine it must be easier now with all the readily available resources through the internet, but am very interested in your view on this. Thank you very much for making these videos, and by the way, the smiling is still effective across the internet :)
Honestly why not enrich the fuel mixture of a csr useing a hydrogen sprayer in the injection system or carborator. Think about it. If we used an electrolosus tank near the rear of the car that was run directly off the alternator it would theoretically split the hydrogen and oxygen from distilled water and create hydrogen and oxygen in two seperate tanks. Therefore we just mix them in the injection system and allow the car to get a constant fuel boost to help with fuel cutting fuel consumption. This would save a lot of money and energy in the long run. Its kinda like in video games when your driveing a car and somehow the nitrous just recharges out of thin air. But instead its hydrogen and oxygen being split and recombined in the engine block as it gets sparked into releasing its potential energy. Just as he said a 50 50 and a spark will work just fine.
@@burntchickennugget191 - Breaking up water requires energy too. What you gain on HHO mixed into the fuel mixture, entirely lose on the alternator. Conservation of energy. Plus the losses, because there are. So in the end, you gain even less than what energy the alternator uses for breaking up your precious water fuel.
WOW. I'll bet your ears were ringing. We used to do it to each other, under the seat or bench, but with sandwich bags. I did it with an Asda once. I shat myself. I was sure some fucker would hear it and all the engineers and firemen would be over to our workshop. We were on a Coal Prep Plant at a pit at the time.
@Edward Barton: That was my first thought too. Did you notice the slight smirk 😏 he tried very hard to hide too? *crosses fingers* “Come on, fusion reactor!"
@@stevepittman3770 Have you seen Scott Manly series about the history and physics of nuclear bombs? Those devices also use explosive lensing, which was briefly mentioned here. Also one of the best youtube videos.
@@2ebarman I have indeed, and in fact I've been a subscriber of Scott's channel for years (initially for his KSP videos). I've been interested in the subject for decades and have read/watched quite a bit of the internet's available info on the subject over the years, but I was impressed that Scott's videos touched on a couple of things I wasn't aware of despite my long interest.
2:1 ratio liquid hydrogen, and liquid oxygen! Smaller device in the centre to mix the liquid HH, and liquid O to the rate where it is 1700x more explosive than TNT! 1 tonne of this mixture is a 1.7 megatonne hydrogen bomb! Place under as much pressure as you can (strong materials). E.g. dyneema ropes, steel, anything that is strong!
TH-cam also. I fear its too educational and too "dangerous" for them and it will be supressed. Its better to promote some Lele Pons or makeup tutorial for them.
FBI, CIA,... local COPS and MILITARY. . I wonder if the 2nd AMENDMENT could be applied here,... to curtail an overbearing government - as intended. ??? . (Perhaps I am wrong, BUT,...I don't think the term 'ARMS' specifies, defines or excludes ANY form of 'self defence tool'... even a pitch fork. !!! ) . .
@@stevemacbr Explosives are certainly in common use by the military. Hence, the militia (however you want to define it) should have access to same materials.
I am 80 years old and in 1964 I was the foreman / superintendent worked at Yuma Proving Ground ( YPG ) Yuma, Az. We built the gun referred to as the BIG GUN 16 inch bore at 119 feet 6 inches long and it would put a Messel fired with 750 pounds of black powder 86 miles at 88 degrees. Stepped up to 1000 pounds of black powder it just kipped going. So I appreciate the sounds of detonation we would rattle windows up to 50 miles away and in Yuma, Az. This project was called ( HARP ) High Altitude Research Project. I was 20 years old at the time The site Engineer was Roy Kelly and the Design Engineer was Gerald Bull. HBO Movie Who Killed Gerald Bull ( the Israelis ) did because they hired him to build a bigger gun for them and their Engineers told their government israel it would never work so they refused to pay him the 3 Million for engineering. Gerald bull put the project on the market to the highest bidder and Iraq ( Sadat Husain ) said we will take it. when the first stage of the project was successful fired down range 120 miles 36 inch round and landed 20 feet of the target. Figure it out watch 4 clips from 60 Minutes. And HBO movie who killed Gerald bull. He was the fastest made citizen in the United States. 10 minutes in front of Congress to get the project rolling so he had dual citizenship U.S. and Canada. He was a professor at Mc Gill University in Canada. He was a friendly and nice person to work with to bad Israel took that position if you hire someone pay them instead of kill them. Regards; Phillip L. C. Ps. there were 3 other employees ( Frank l. Frank M. and Jerry P. If they want to they can put their last names in the repla comment section. 😎👍
Very interesting. You might not have meant 88 degrees? I think rockets are a better choice to propell large warheads. The support system (mainly the enormous gun) is smaller and the velocity can be much higher.
This video Showed up on my recommended videos and I don't watch science videos. My point it's good to see TH-cam is still pushing your videos if even a small amount still.
You are indeed a very good teacher , love your videos and you have answered so many questions that I have had over the years but haven't developed enough interest to go find the answers myself..I now have the interest and thanks to you . Great content.
Wow! If I would have had a chemistry professor like you I would have had a totally different career path, or vaporized myself a long time ago!
Yea I would've been the guy who stuck his head in the particle collider.
I stay safe by just watching.
Its wrong that I want to blow the snot out of a pile of fluorine and he gave me the idea of it
Me tho lol
@Nybbl er lockout keys?
I was like, "i guess, i'll listen to this old guy before we see the sweet explosions" and then i was enraptured by his easily understandable and amazing explanation of the basic forces at play. You're a fantastic teacher dude
Thanks for hanging in there!
This 'old' guy? lol
more like this overall genius
Old guy? This presenter (sorry don’t know your name) proves better than anyone I know, age isn’t much more than a number. I am going to aspire to be this young when I am 125.
@Smattless Actually I remember when I was 6 or 7 yo people in 7th or 8th grade (13 - 14 yo) were like old pricks to me.
The whole world is smiling with you! Except your neighbours.
Kieran Short my neighbirs called the cops on me. It was so loud that the cops said they was told i was setting off dynamite
I'd think a gentleman of his high calibre would be decent enough to have let them know WELL in advance..
@@unlokia Not everything should be told to authorities ether before or after. Less people know, less problems it brings. Blowing balloon for time to time and shaking snow down from roof is just practical use for that energy release. Now i wonder what this would do under water and specially by drilling small hole into ice and sticking balloon with line under it? Would that same amount be enough to brake the ice and further more could these gasses put in pressure vessel like small gas tank, mix and detonated as debt charge?
My neighbors have grown to like my noise now! Lol
@@unlokia for some things it's easier to ask forgiveness than permission. 😉
I am a 61 year old that sincerely appreciates that you present your content in a manner that one can easily get “wrapped” around. Thus allowing us to take something away from it. Thank you
2:1 ratio liquid hydrogen, and liquid oxygen!
Smaller device in the centre to mix the liquid HH, and liquid O to the rate where it is 1700x more explosive than TNT! 1 tonne of this mixture is a 1.7 megatonne hydrogen bomb!
Place under as much pressure as you can (strong materials).
E.g. dyneema ropes, steel, anything that is strong!
@timothyjones-eg9ll
Sir, this is a Wendy’s…
You make videos with such thoughtfulness and depth that even when I'm familiar with what you're doing, I always come away with greater understanding and clarity.
Thanks!
@@TechIngredients Couldn't agree more AltTab, ^oo^
Reality rules! Clarity is knowing reality. Such a safe feeling. Have a good one!
thats y i keep coming back
@@TechIngredients Me thinking I'm big brain: yea stoichiometry, i know science.
Tech ingredients: *produces detailed equation detailing why the ideal gas mixture is actually wrong.
' throw everything inside before the cops come.' My kind of scientist.
Favorite part of the video
We used to blow lids of garbage bins off the ground with sparkler dust and soda bulbs wrapped in foil..
They used to shoot like 20 feet in the air from the ground..
Makes me wonder how often the police show up.
This guy reminds me of my high school chemistry and physics teacher from the early 90's. Both great educators and my senior year my teacher was scheduled to retire and had a bunch of stuff no longer allowed in schools in his lab. He handed me and my buddy a copy of chapter 4 of "the anarchist's cookbook" titled bombs and booby-traps and a list of items that were banned then sent us to take "inventory" of the lab just to make sure he didn't have anything illegal back there. We blew so much stuff up that summer I'm surprised we survived.
I can relate to that part so much. I’ve been there before hah
23:10 the inside joke: in 1953 John Wheeler lost some top secret documents related to the H-bomb project called Matterhorn B. They may or may not have ended up in the hands of Tech Ingredients.
You're the first comment with the answer.
I'd also laugh a bit about th connection between Matternhold the mountain and Toblerone, the chocolate. Which ties a little with the chocolate story in the beginning.
@@TechIngredients For a second I confused it with Castle Bravo. That test with a little extra yield than bargained for.
@@JohnDobak "a little"?
LOL!
Aha!
Yes, this is definitely in the spirit of what TH-cam should be all about.
I love the knowledge and enthusiasm that you put across, to those that enjoy learning and discovering new ideas.
2:1 ratio liquid hydrogen, and liquid oxygen!
Smaller device in the centre to mix the liquid HH, and liquid O to the rate where it is 1700x more explosive than TNT! 1 tonne of this mixture is a 1.7 megatonne hydrogen bomb!
Place under as much pressure as you can (strong materials).
E.g. dyneema ropes, steel, anything that is strong!
@@timothyjones-eg9ll Nuke. Good. Do make.
2:18 I appreciate the structural formulas framing the clock. It's the little things.
6:00 I appreciate the accidental penis drawing. It's the little things...
The attention to detail is so great in these guys' videos!
Missed that. Now I see it.
Ive been impatiently waiting for the next video so i've done a bit of research myself on this :P. It seems like the effectiveness of shaped charges comes from the detonation velocity and brisance of the explosive. From what i've read increasing the pressure of a hydrogen oxygen mix does not raise the detonation velocity very much. However at 20 atmospheres thats 20x the combustion products to act on the liner, but were still only realistically looking at ~15 grams of explosive in the tube. PS the paper i was reading planned to test initial pressures up to 10,000 PSI but the mixture spontaneously exploded at 4,500 PSI, so dont do that ;)
Your research mirrors mine. The pre detonation pressure is limited to the containment of the plastic pipe. The hemispherical liner we're using is thin at 1.5 mm in order to lower its inertia, but this why we experiment...we don't know what will happen.
Tech Ingredients Exactly, this has not been done before so im excited to see the results! im not trying to knock the idea at all, I think its interesting and clever 👍
@@TechIngredients We are waiting....
@@TheBackyardScientist When is the video!!! I want to see extreme POWER!
I've got a backhoe....where are you? :)
I missed this one when posted. I learned something new with the argon flash. That's pretty cool!
It is.
The only reason the Air Force and we didn't try xenon was the cost.
We're planning to try this again, but at a smaller scale with plastic soda bottles, higher pressures and various surrounding gasses. We have a spectrometer that can pick up some major lines.
@@TechIngredients quartz halide lights work the same way no explosion needed
Nighthawk! You are a pretty good teacher as well.
Brilliant, brilliant, as well as brilliant.
NightHawk You could and should be punished for missing this one without even a note.
You are my favorite “Mad Scientist” and deserve the Nobel Prize in all five distinguished categories!
You're lucky I'm not your neighbor- I would be over at your place all the time just to watch and learn and experience these fabulous experiments in person!!
Li Li , you are right, the best neighbor you can wish for, also a decent gentleman and helpful person. You can not play that kind of character he shows again and again.
"He's at it again!"
I would feel so bad hearing an explosion where I wasn't invited
I'm someone with nothing to do. I'd be willing to do all the busywork for him.
@@NemoConsequentae lol ya *looks out the window across the field.. "yup his house is still there and not flaming, i guess he's ok" lol. I'd be the curious neighbor and go over just to see what he's up to now, haha
Headphones user here, the warnings are very much appreciated.
Oh and, the smiles are contagious too!
Same, though I have a feeling the audio was clipped. Which is a good thing. Just makes the warning less vital (but still appreciated).
Oh, also, are you sure the noise was so loud that it shook a building a mile away? I didn't see any mention of it in the video, only the title, so wondering how you found out.
Not to mention, which kind of mile did you refer to? I'm assuming nautical, as Scandinavian probably is incorrect? ;) en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mile#Comparison_table
I learned more about chemistry in this one video than I did in all of highschool chem class. Thank you
If I taught chemistry the way this channel does, I would have been fired the second day. It’s a nice compliment to this presenter, but unfairly craps on good teachers everywhere.
the schooling co do not want you this smart
Pin his comment 👆
I had an excellent chemistry teacher who was always able to make it relevant so learning was almost a byproduct. Then we got an academic teacher who just made everything complicated and boring. I was well on the way to doing a career using chemistry. That bloke killed it stone dead.
@@alfredsutton7233 Don't worry they are layman's, most of them grow up to believe in healing crystals and other quackery, then simultaneously complain about their teachers. In reality they just never listened in class or worked on developing their critical thinking skills. I'm in university for my chem degree and have major respect for highschool science teachers. Cheers mate.
Don't stop. Science in this format is a great teaching tool for my granddaughter.
Police at door: sir we've had reports of an explosion.
"I popped a balloon"
Brilliant! :)
Cops show up on the 12.26.2020
"Sir do you own an RV camper?"
@@Elfnetdesigns Me: Not anymore
@@chrisleffel5835 someone should cursed comment that
@@chrisleffel5835 I'm laughing but I know I shouldn't be XD
One of my favorite things about this channel is how you never know what to expect, anything is possible, from lasers to drones to speakers to brewing and now shaped charges.
And catamarans! (Soon to be a hyrdofoil cat, we hope!)
2:1 ratio liquid hydrogen, and liquid oxygen!
Smaller device in the centre to mix the liquid HH, and liquid O to the rate where it is 1700x more explosive than TNT! 1 tonne of this mixture is a 1.7 megatonne hydrogen bomb!
Place under as much pressure as you can (strong materials).
E.g. dyneema ropes, steel, anything that is strong!
"So if the cops come there's nothing here" my man, you've earned my subscription.
😘
Just want to say I've had to do that with tannerite. I did substitute some fireworks, and the cops did show.
This video should have a secondary title: How to get on a watchlist 101
Earned my bell.
This guy's unborn great grandchildren are on a watchlist@@johnnycanuck250
That actually was impressive loudness for something ignited in an open space. Did not expect its possible
"Lets bring everything in soon, so if the cops come there's nothing here" - priceless
Story of my life
Tok relatable. Cops never let me have fun with my experaments. My automated robot. They stole. Fucken pricks. All it did was drive with tank treads useing a hydro jumper that could easily allow it to hop fences. They considered it a drone. And said I needed a license. Its literally designed to just keep watch over my home.
Burnt Chicken Nugget demand your worm project back it reduces stress
@@burntchickennugget191 That is not considered a drone. How high could it jump? How exactly was it automated? Did it leave your property? What is the name of the police department? I will personally call and help you.
@@jonross377 I understand but its been 2 years now and it would be a waist of time. And yea its not a drone but they classified it as one to take it. Honestly I dont feel the need to get it back. Ill just make a better one.
The whole part about the argon lamps was crazy interesting
Nearest neigbours see a blinding flash followed by a sonic boom and think someone has created a mini-nuke. Sound of helicopters, and a whole bunch of flashing blue lights quickly follow...
27:54 i like how the shock wave knocked the snow off the tree in the background. Either that or the tree said "holy crap what was that?" :-)
It really startled them trees
Loved the closing statement, thanks you give a very good balance of technical info and street talk.
There are 2 types of explosions, nuclear and chemical:
3:00 "now sticking with just the chemical reactions... for today..."
....but tomorrow.....
I wonder if a pressurized container exploding counts as something other than chemical as it’s not really a chemical reaction
@@keepermovin5906 you're correct. All your doing in that scenario is sqeezing a compressible fluid like a big gas spring until the internal pressure is so high that the container mechanically fails and allows for the rapid depressurization/expansion of the gas. Like you said. not a chemical reaction. Just alot of thermodynamics.
@@Knoxvillemoto the breaking of the sound barrier is another exception to the rule. I also think that although dry ice bombs are technically chemical reactions the actual explosion is caused by the pressure of the increased volume of the substance breaking the container so it does not constitute as a chemical explosive despite using a chemical reaction.
HOW ABOUT PHYSICAL EXPLOSIONS? Deflagration of pressure vessels because of overpressure or structural failure? IE boiler explosions.
Anyone who "commandeered" something to "fabricate an apparatus" gets an automatic like
^
I'm a Kludge specialist if that counts. (look it up.)
I caught myself grinning from ear to ear! I wish I could spend some quality lab time around you! I've always loved things that go BOOM!
I've made a few acetylene balloons over the years. The last one we added helium and lit the string. It went up 150' and BOOOMMMMMM. Blew some windows out lol
I wish I had a teacher like you in high school, I just love the way you explain things. Thanks
27:47 shockwave hitting the snow behind the setup was so awesome to see, it really gives you an idea of how powerful these explosions are!
The look on his face when he heard the crashing sound coming from the direction of his house was priceless.
@@derekhuber3392 haha he was like, *”OH SHIT!”*
I was about to comment the same thing until I saw your comment lol
ye
Wife: can you clean the snow off the roof?
Me: YES
Also Me: *closing TH-cam app with a grin* I'm glad you asked!
AntiSnow HydroBubble Solutions Inc
MOM: I NEED THE JOB DONE IN 1 HOUR
ME: CHALLENGE ACCEPTED
ME, 0.1 SECOND LATER: GOT ANY MORE CHORES?
@@andrewthummel3767 you can do any job with an explosion if it’s big enough
@@ottomakers OMG That had me choking
He is always so serious in his videos. This is a great change in pace and kind of fun to!
Can't wait for the shaped charge to be demonstrated. Since this video was from 2020, has it been forgotten? Or can we expect the follow-up video this year?😁😁
Yeah.. what happened to that one?!
I really would like to know if it have been stopped in any way like happening to everyone who is a treat for the oilindustri- it's more than a few people who have lost their lives of that...
2:1 ratio liquid hydrogen, and liquid oxygen!
Smaller device in the centre to mix the liquid HH, and liquid O to the rate where it is 1700x more explosive than TNT! 1 tonne of this mixture is a 1.7 megatonne hydrogen bomb!
Place under as much pressure as you can (strong materials).
E.g. dyneema ropes, steel, anything that is strong!
😮
The ATF had something to say
“So let’s go ahead and mess around with it”. - Dude that is classic!
LOL......that comment made my day :)
Father in law filled a small trash bag with O2, placing this inside a contractor sized trash bag, filling it with H2, tied it off with cord, lit the cord and let it loose. The "balloon" got up about 500' before igniting up, sound could be feared miles away...
He sounds like a teacher you view as boring but instead gives demonstration as a reward for listening. I like it
During the slo mo replay, at 27:58 you can see the exact moment that he realised that the resulting explosion literally scared the s**t out of him, and is now gonna have throw those underpants away. However, quickly realising that the video needs to be finished, puts a smile back on his face and soldiers through. True showman!
Oh man your comment: "The resulting explosion literally scared the s**t out of him, and is now gonna have throw those underpants away." made me laugh so hard that I saw stars and thought I'd pass out. Thanks TK! Good Times...
hahahaha he maybe misscalculated the amount he put in!
Also that he likes things that go boom
The falling crystalline ice shards sounded so pretty! 😁
I like the long technical and chemical explanations you give. Of course I like the explosions, but you always amaze me how you can explain in detail why something happens in a special way. I look forward to new videos. Thank you so much. 🙏🏻
best, most informative experimenter on youtube. though when you said "hydrogen and flouride" my brain farted out a terrified NOPE. you shouldve worn a t-shirt saying "Im a bomb technician. if you see me running, try to catch up."
F-O-O-F. That is all.
I used to have that T-shirt lol.
protonjinx I’m a bomb technician - if you see me running it’s too late.
"Hydrogen and flouride" sounds like a pancake. It's fl - u - o - rine. Nice stuff, dissolves almost anything and will _eventually_ save us from CO2 global warming when red hot and bonded to thorium 233 in thousands of LFTRs.
@@tonyduncan9852 worked MIRACL at HELSTF Until shut down. Primarily Deuterium-Floride although different catalysts were used depending on mission...like hydrogen...boom!
Greatest TH-cam vid ever. My 4th of July will never be the same again.
My hubby is a Delta Force Soldier so are all his friends, No worries
Before you said, you have to smile about this, I was already smiling. The big explosion at 27 minutes absolutely was a ear to ear smile, and I had to watch it about 3 times maybe 4. Thank you for the enjoyment you gave me. I've always loved playing with fireworks and I bet when you were a kid you played with fireworks also. Thank you again
I often make the mistake of opening your videos late at night before I go to bed. The problem is that I have a hard time stopping. I can’t seem to just save the video until tomorrow, I have to watch it now. Aside from your videos being fun, I learn a great deal from you.
Thanks, Mr. Tech Ingredients & Team.
27:56 it was at that moment, he realized he just made some government list.
Wait, the government has lists? Crap!
Lists, plural, ha ha.
I wouldn't worry. Everyone's on the lists already. And yes. Very very very very plural. If you include the advertiser based tracking being scooped up as part of the ISP traffic monitoring 'lawful intercept port', there's probably somewhere between 3 million and 30 million lists. Some more inclusive than others. But unless you're a hobo living under a bridge without a cellphone or email address, you *are* on a list somewhere that someone else can acquire.
Hey, some of us worked very hard to get on those government lists. Getting a social security number is *hard*. And lawyers charge money too.
Say, did you know, before 1986, certificates of live birth were not a requirement? Some foolish scientologist parents fearing "uncle sam's boot" only made it harder for their kids to be employable members of this modern society. The best list to be on is the Voters register.
The Great Explainer. Love how you started with a stoichiometric mix then explained a rich mixture can have a faster flame front.
"Hello my name is Joerg Sprave and today we will be using balloons to de-ice our driveway.
Let me show you its features. ha ha haaa."
Joerg could get rich if he devised a rubber-band powered snow shovel. HAAAAAA HA HA ha ha...
*laughs in German*
ROFLMAO! I read that with Joerg's accent! AND smile!
When someone mentions one of your subscriptions.
Sprave is a hack. He isn't even in same league as this science. If you want to throw a pencil at a board 15 feet away sure he's you guy, but that's where his talent ends.
Gaseous fuel shaped charge? Now you've really grabbed my interested. I'm looking forward to seeing how this develops.
2:1 ratio liquid hydrogen, and liquid oxygen!
Smaller device in the centre to mix the liquid HH, and liquid O to the rate where it is 1700x more explosive than TNT! 1 tonne of this mixture is a 1.7 megatonne hydrogen bomb!
Place under as much pressure as you can (strong materials).
E.g. dyneema ropes, steel, anything that is strong!
Fascinating!.. I also learned more from you than I did in school.. it's captivating
Maybe you weren't paying enough attention in chemistry classes?
Really fantastic an interesting stuff, especially around the interactions involving shock waves and flame fronts. The stoichiometric vs. optimal mixture was particularly informative. Thanks for producing great content!
I got sidetracked and ended up here... And smooth forgot whatever it was I was actually looking for...
I subbed BTW.
Bang...
It's impossible to NOT smile after those hydrogen/oxygen explosions. Your smile is infectious!
hey smiley, those coals are like fire contained in solid rock , step on a tiny one cooking marshmallows, be cool around fire for life with shoes on
This man is a hidden gem. I just came across this channel and he gives headphone warning and tells you where to skip for the good parts...goat in the making. Subbed!
I swear this man is one bad day away from becoming Walter White. Scary smart man!
God help us all when that day happens.
No he is not breaking bad, he is to good for that!!
Oh, he could definitely go from loveable TH-cam scientist to full-fledged Walter White in just a few days. I guarantee it.
You mean "goddam', 'tis gonna be 'mazing the day that happens!", right? More youtube posts and *without* the disclaimers that prevents me from trying stuff myself.
If he does he will make meth that has no sides.
@Omar Ignacio Silvestrini You sound ignorant to how humans can be
This was a fun day, wasn't it, Dad?
What?
I had fun today.
What?
_I had fun today!_
What?
i love your channel, you refuse to dumb things down, and i love that.
In my zombie survival fantasy draft you and the team would obviously be my first pick. Humor, Chemistry, Physics, Karate... What else could you wish for.
Thanks a million for the hours of flabbergasting, educating and smile invoking content.
If you would have been my teacher back in school I'm sure I would have been better at science.
Chapeau & thank you Tech Ingredients Team!
7 neighbors disliked the video 😂
1400 people further away liked it.
They couldn't help but smile.
The cops showed up at my friend's house way out in the country. He made some homemade tanerite from basically aluminum and stump killer and then attached the softball sized thing to a very large homemade bottle rocket to get it up in the air before going boom, it climbed to at least 500 feet. This was the 4th of July and there was a thick cloud cover around 1000 feet up. The resulting explosion wasn't what alerted the cops, it was the echoing of the blast between the cloud cover and ground that spread outward and outward and outward for miles that got their attention. They showed up within minutes because his property was the only place around with lights blazing from arc lamps in the yard. He was honest and admitted to the blast leaving out some details and they left after he said that he was done for the night. The noise was incredible and it just went on and on and on
@@ernestjones5113 Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory sometimes detonates explosive materials outside of Livermore, CA. i saw the flash from it one night but didnt hear much sound because they only do it when the atmospheric conditions are just right to limit sound travel. so had your friend done that a different night it might not have been heard as far away.
@@ernestjones5113 Must've been ammonium nitrate
Love how the shockwave knocked the snow from the trees in the background! :-D
I loved the sound of the ice on the building behind him shattering and falling to the ground.
Same!
How about the water created by the explosion turning to snow and ice before hitting the ground. At first I was wondering what the white stuff was and where it came from. Then I remembered it was cold and the water froze.
"do not do it yourself"
well you did it for us, so there is no Need.
There may be no need to recreate. However, there is a strong want to recreate.
I guess you have no children... keep watching how they are made ;)
Useful not just as entertainment but also as a way to understand risks/paths to causing catastrophic accidents... I doubt most people watching will need this for that purpose, but it does serve one.
Much like how knowing how to make thermite is also knowing how to avoid accidentally making thermite!
@@Aubreykun see I learnt how to make thermite so that I could melt things... not to avoid accidently making it...
@@thecreator2473 It's a reason to keep your bench grinder clean between using it on both steel/iron and aluminum. Not common for it to happen, but I've seen people talk about accidents involving sparks causing the dust mix to ignite...
It makes me very happy, yet very surprised, that the most replayed part of this video isnt the explosions but is actually the chemistry behind it. I still replayed the big explosion a few times to see how far back snow fell off the trees. Very impressive
2:1 ratio liquid hydrogen, and liquid oxygen!
Smaller device in the centre to mix the liquid HH, and liquid O to the rate where it is 1700x more explosive than TNT! 1 tonne of this mixture is a 1.7 megatonne hydrogen bomb!
Place under as much pressure as you can (strong materials).
E.g. dyneema ropes, steel, anything that is strong!
all this time Ive been trying to figure out where the energy in an explosion comes from and you explained it in a couple of minutes and I finally understood it... :)
the "double hump and valley" graph was very instrumental during the explanation.
"The water certainly isn't toxic"
Hey, can we get a video on the dangers of Dihydrogen Monoxide for April 1st? XD
Hydration
Cody's lab has one
You mean hydroxic acid?! That stuff can act as the vector for a lot of carcinogens. It can turn harmless CO2 into an acid on contact AND its the largest component of cobra venom.
Michael Rueck funny but people r 2 stupid to get it
@Loli4lyf Yes. Just not yet. There may be a slight delay of roughly 90 years from birth (give or take roughly 10 years). Make the most of your life while you can, 'cos it won't last forever.
You are the kind of teacher whos' class EVERYONE wants to be able to attend!
I can't wait to see the shaped charges video it is a very interesting discussion 😊
Great explanation, I wish you had been a Prof when I was in college, I would have paid better attention and maybe change my career path
Teachers: "you have to go to school to learn rocket science"
This guy: *hold my ethanol*
NuclearDuck13 pretty sure this guy have atleast 5 years of uni though...
NuclearDuck13 all it takes is some dish soap in water a battery two electrodes to stick in water
@@greenveg42 But the question is, "How much did university teach him vs how he learned what he knows now?"
Kevin Bradshaw_exe Not really.
A more relevant question would in my opinion be how much Uni honed the process of teaching yourself complex subjects in a fast and fair way.
@@greenveg42 yeah so his five years at uni studying Modern Interpretive Dance obviously qualifies him as an high explosives expert. Because a college degree is only conferred upon those virtuous and responsible in every way and in every capacity...
I enjoy your presentations! They're not only educational, but entertainging, as well. Thank you for sharing your knowledge! I truly appreciate your indepth explenations.
My son showed me your channel. Great stuff! I love that you include the physics and chemistry to explain your explosions. I really also enjoyed your rocket bolted to a 1 ton trailer videos. I liked that you captured the data for the rocket explosions. It lets the viewer see the impact of the rocket on the trailer and then be able to compare the data foot print for each run. Very well done. I will share with my colleagues.
Thanks and welcome!
33:00 Holy crap.. That thing is going to be insane... I can't wait!
"... throw everything inside before the cops come...QUICK!" Love it.
Oh, this brings back memories from high school physics class. We had a very industrious teacher who illustrated so many concepts from falling backwards off a ladder, to illustrate the feeling of acceleration at 2xG, better than simply jumping off a raised object, to slot cars to demonstrate acceleration, to shoiting a monkey falling from a tree (no monkeys were hure, we used a garbage can lid with a monkey image on the face, to everyone feeling the effects of discharging a massive static discharge through all 20 students standing in a circle holding hands and discharging a lyden jar through the circle of students to the explosion of a hydrogen filled balloon. We had a large cylinder tank of hydtogen left over from a lighter rhan are balloon experiment. We created an unverted pear shapped balloon made of tissue paper with appropriately sized and trimmed segments glued together. The herght of the balloon was about five feet and three feet in diameter. We filledcthe balloon with enough hydrogen to get it aloft. We tether the balloon with a two conductor wire with a model rocket igniter up inside the balloon. The balloon rose to a height of about 100 feet where the igniter was heated up and the balloon exploded. There was a shower of tissue paper particles and a large boom. That experiment was a one time event. This was 51 years ago. That was a year of such events.
Lucky you!
I wish I had a teacher that would teach
You had a teacher that showed you aswell
I have one now! Although I'm just viewing
I like the cinematic choice of having the fire extinguisher in frame lol. One of the best channels around!! From diy coolers , sound transducers too the rapid expansions of die hydrogen monoxide!!! Thank you.
This is what makes chemistry great! Love the explanations as well as the enthusiasm!
I think it's the first video I've seen of him smiling so heartily.
Cant stop it when you know that you are going to get in trouble but you are going to do it anyway
A mad scientist at his best
through all the explanations, the safety, and the warnings it all comes down to a really big boom and the smiles it brings.
I totally agree with your analogy that people are smiling when you set these things off. When I got to Junior high School I love science and biology classes. The teachers like yourself were some of the most interesting people I've ever met besides some of those I served with in the U.S.Army. I was an automotive mechanic for over thirty plus years and was present to see the evolution of ignition and injection systems on vehicles. You use terms I am very familiar with as far as staciometric efficiency. Computer controlled combustion on internal combustion engines trying to reach a 14.7 to 1 air fuel ratio. Your channel is extremely interesting and you take me back to my youth with your lesson. Note I was a jock played football but got nerdy when it came to science and biology. Two subjects along with history that I still enjoy today. Keep up the great work your doing providing interesting subjects and chemistry experiments for us to all of view.
Love your channel! Professional grade products made from scratch, great scientific explanations, great topics! My son is hooked now too, I caught him watching your video on rocket engines the other day. Thank you so much for what you do!
Quick question: Did the resulting shock waves not have enough energy to risk shattering your windows?
-100
This is definitely my favorite channel. I've watched every video, many multiple times. You clearly have an incredible amount of knowledge across a wide variety of topics, which is something I aspire to. I am very curious what (in general terms) your occupation/education was, and perhaps what you found as the best way to understand topics deeply (i.e. through conventional education, practical experience, etc). I imagine it must be easier now with all the readily available resources through the internet, but am very interested in your view on this.
Thank you very much for making these videos, and by the way, the smiling is still effective across the internet :)
Reaction following first explosion - “do it again” Brilliant.
We found out who's responsible for the whole "loud boom" phenomenon.
27:23 The efficient way to remove snow from trees and roofs. Hold your ears.
A true scientist from the botom of his heart! Just like Richard Feynman... EXCELENT! 😊👌
You are doing what I needed at school and college... thank you!
"Pulse detonation engine."
That name is epic.
Pulsejet is basically that, only it uses, i think, methane.
Honestly why not enrich the fuel mixture of a csr useing a hydrogen sprayer in the injection system or carborator. Think about it. If we used an electrolosus tank near the rear of the car that was run directly off the alternator it would theoretically split the hydrogen and oxygen from distilled water and create hydrogen and oxygen in two seperate tanks. Therefore we just mix them in the injection system and allow the car to get a constant fuel boost to help with fuel cutting fuel consumption. This would save a lot of money and energy in the long run. Its kinda like in video games when your driveing a car and somehow the nitrous just recharges out of thin air. But instead its hydrogen and oxygen being split and recombined in the engine block as it gets sparked into releasing its potential energy. Just as he said a 50 50 and a spark will work just fine.
@@burntchickennugget191 There are cars that do that, and have no fuel in the tank.
@@burntchickennugget191 - Breaking up water requires energy too. What you gain on HHO mixed into the fuel mixture, entirely lose on the alternator. Conservation of energy. Plus the losses, because there are. So in the end, you gain even less than what energy the alternator uses for breaking up your precious water fuel.
@@user2C47 Hand carts?
We lit a garbage bag full of oxygen and acetylene (from the torch kit) in our shop. Bad decision. Very bad.
Kenny Phillips how bad was it?
WOW. I'll bet your ears were ringing.
We used to do it to each other, under the seat or bench, but with sandwich bags. I did it with an Asda once. I shat myself. I was sure some fucker would hear it and all the engineers and firemen would be over to our workshop.
We were on a Coal Prep Plant at a pit at the time.
One spark of static electricity and boom!
@@rationalmartian What's (an) Asda?
and now you need to replace all the windows, am i right?
"Sticking with just the chemical reactions for today..."
Is this a hint of videos to come?
I didn't even catch that. If I wasn't already subbed I would sub at the promise of discussion of nuclear bomb tech.
"Today on Tech Ingredients we construct a simple Zippe type centrifuge cascade and produce a surprising quantity of oralloy!"
@Edward Barton: That was my first thought too. Did you notice the slight smirk 😏 he tried very hard to hide too? *crosses fingers* “Come on, fusion reactor!"
@@stevepittman3770 Have you seen Scott Manly series about the history and physics of nuclear bombs? Those devices also use explosive lensing, which was briefly mentioned here. Also one of the best youtube videos.
@@2ebarman I have indeed, and in fact I've been a subscriber of Scott's channel for years (initially for his KSP videos).
I've been interested in the subject for decades and have read/watched quite a bit of the internet's available info on the subject over the years, but I was impressed that Scott's videos touched on a couple of things I wasn't aware of despite my long interest.
This was a great video. I liked learning the background theory, but the hands-on was awesome!
Neighbors: "Well, he finally blew the mountain up."
Promote! Science! Entertainment! Knowledge! Learning!
- feeding the algorithm
14:23 "So, with that in mind, let's go ahead and mess with it."
I had a good lol at that 😆😆
RIP Tech Ingredients. you had a good run 😋
The best content on TH-cam there is about science hands down!!! I love watching everything you post thanks for all your time I really appreciate !!
2:1 ratio liquid hydrogen, and liquid oxygen!
Smaller device in the centre to mix the liquid HH, and liquid O to the rate where it is 1700x more explosive than TNT! 1 tonne of this mixture is a 1.7 megatonne hydrogen bomb!
Place under as much pressure as you can (strong materials).
E.g. dyneema ropes, steel, anything that is strong!
I mean, who doesn't like flames and 'splosions?
Hiroshima victims
TH-cam also. I fear its too educational and too "dangerous" for them and it will be supressed. Its better to promote some Lele Pons or makeup tutorial for them.
FBI, CIA,... local COPS and MILITARY.
.
I wonder if the 2nd AMENDMENT could be applied here,... to curtail an overbearing government - as intended. ???
.
(Perhaps I am wrong, BUT,...I don't think the term 'ARMS' specifies, defines or excludes ANY form of 'self defence tool'... even a pitch fork. !!! )
.
.
@@stevemacbr Explosives are certainly in common use by the military. Hence, the militia (however you want to define it) should have access to same materials.
“Now sticking with just the chemical reactions for today...” Your deadpan humor is on point.
If you don't get nominated for Father of A Lifetime Award i would stunned.
I am 80 years old and in 1964 I was the foreman / superintendent worked at Yuma Proving Ground ( YPG ) Yuma, Az. We built the gun referred to as the BIG GUN 16 inch bore at 119 feet 6 inches long and it would put a Messel fired with 750 pounds of black powder 86 miles at 88 degrees. Stepped up to 1000 pounds of black powder it just kipped going. So I appreciate the sounds of detonation we would rattle windows up to 50 miles away and in Yuma, Az. This project was called ( HARP ) High Altitude Research Project. I was 20 years old at the time The site Engineer was Roy Kelly and the Design Engineer was Gerald Bull. HBO Movie Who Killed Gerald Bull ( the Israelis ) did because they hired him to build a bigger gun for them and their Engineers told their government israel it would never work so they refused to pay him the 3 Million for engineering. Gerald bull put the project on the market to the highest bidder and Iraq ( Sadat Husain ) said we will take it. when the first stage of the project was successful fired down range 120 miles 36 inch round and landed 20 feet of the target. Figure it out watch 4 clips from 60 Minutes. And HBO movie who killed Gerald bull. He was the fastest made citizen in the United States. 10 minutes in front of Congress to get the project rolling so he had dual citizenship U.S. and Canada. He was a professor at Mc Gill University in Canada. He was a friendly and nice person to work with to bad Israel took that position if you hire someone pay them instead of kill them. Regards; Phillip L. C. Ps. there were 3 other employees ( Frank l. Frank M. and Jerry P. If they want to they can put their last names in the repla comment section. 😎👍
Very interesting. You might not have meant 88 degrees?
I think rockets are a better choice to propell large warheads. The support system (mainly the enormous gun) is smaller and the velocity can be much higher.
This video Showed up on my recommended videos and I don't watch science videos. My point it's good to see TH-cam is still pushing your videos if even a small amount still.
This reminds me of my time studying chemistry. This is lovely.
When he said "in case the cops come" I really felt that.
Great video. Finally I know why the hydrogen rich explosions are so much louder. Cant wait for the following video. Keep up the great work!
25:35 is that sound that straggles after the explosion someone shitting themselves in slow motion?
I love watching your videos, I find them very fascinating.
27:20 Lol at the second outside explosion. He looks back at the house like "Ah crap, wifes gonna kill me. Oh, she's smiling out the window! Heh heh."
You are indeed a very good teacher , love your videos and you have answered so many questions that I have had over the years but haven't developed enough interest to go find the answers myself..I now have the interest and thanks to you . Great content.