it's a pretty standard design for industrial machinery - the red button is not the normal stop button but an emergency stop, in case it starts doing something it's not supposed to
@@bluebary If I recall correctly, there was a video with him pouring liquid nitrogen into or onto something placed on the floor, and he ended up cooling the floor so much that the floor cracked.
I guess you've no favorite turd because... You've got to be shitting me! Either that or you've been working on becoming a Commodian... Comedians are funny, their humor is witty and everyone not only enjoys their company BUTT pay extra to sit up close and personal! Whereas Commodians on the other...umm... hand? AHA!...seat can't do stand up, have a potty mouth, talk a lotta crap, their jokes stink (or is known/shown upon the walls of stalls), and are usually fulla shit!
I won't lie, with the first chunk it spat out I was getting major Juice Loosener vibes. A tank of CO2 and a bunch of noise for a tiny pellet. Glad it picked up though and actually made a usable amount.
@@SongeLeReveur I didn't think it would produce so little from a single tank, but the awkward cough of a tiny nugget and then a long pause, it was definitely Juice Loosener humour. >3
I work at a medical reference lab and we have the big brother of this. Co2 is trucked in and fills a bulk tank next to the building. We use it to keep samples frozen when they're shipped to us that way. They keep trying to tell us to use PPE for cryo when using the pellets and I keep trying to tell them the difference between dry ice and proper cryogenic fluids (i.e. one is cold, the other means cell death upon contact), and that we can't actually do our jobs with the huge oven mitts on....but I digress lol
@@veccio Just like mixing ice with water gives you a liquid of 0C, a mix of dry ice and alcohol gives you a liquid of -78C. Not as good as liquid nitrogen (-196C), but can still be used to make stuff really cold.
In the 90s, I worked at a grocery store. The guy delivering ice cream would have pretty good size chunks of dry ice that he would just throw aside. The would last for days because that would condense a think crust of water ice on the outside that would act as insolation. I grabbed a few to play with.
They still do that with deliveries of some frozen stuff. I worked in the non frozen department but occasionally I took a grocery bag of dry ice home and no one cares. The heaviest amount I ever took was like 8 pounds.
@2:37 that's how i set off the CO2 alert in all sensors in the whole floor once... first i thought the sensors had conspired against me by failing at the same time... then i remembered the frozen birthday cake that had been delivered in a box with dry ice... 🤤🤤🤤🤤
I've been making dry ice for forty-five years. Only one high tech device required, a cotton towel. Step1. Disconnect the liquid CO2 line from the machine. Step 2. Throw away the machine. Step 3. Wrap a cotton towel loosely around the end of the copper tube. Step 4. Slowly vent liquid into the towel. This will produce perfect dry ice. And when all finished you can give your wife back her completely undamaged towel.
I would agree the machine is good, and thanks a lot for the video! I just wonder the room temperature CO2 tank in the video is 6-8Mpa or 15-20Mpa? I think using a cryogenic liquid CO2 tank(2.3Mpa) or dewar tank(2.05Mpa) and making sure the CO2 pressure 1.6-2.3Mpa for dry ice production is more good!❤
I worked in aviation sheet metal for a few years and we would perform interference fit maintenance which would require dry ice. Instead of this fancey machine we had a big bottle of liquid nitrogen, with a tube leading into a wooden box with vents on all sides and latches to detach the walls, we open the bottle and when we simply spray the nitrogen into the wooden box it would naturally create ice, fill up the box, detach walls, and now we have a cube of dry ice for much cheaper than i assume this machine was lol. He probably needs it specifically pellet sized though..
they need a machine that pulls co2 from the air and puts it into a canister for use in creation of dry ice. be a nice little thing to put in the garage and let do its thing. when you have a party or gathering of any sort you could start showing off. you could charge people you know for the ice based on the power it consumes and reduce your cost as a producer by adding passive energy like solor panels.
i think the water would have to be pressurized and also be at room temperature for it to be proper carbonated water. you could probably just drop a few grams of dry ice in a bottle of water, put the lid on, shake it a bit and have carbonated water. (assuming you don't make a dry ice bomb)
Yes, but not as much as something like a soda. For that you'd need to carbonate it under pressure, which forces more of the co2 to dissolve into the water. Even so, it's nice to use dry ice in things like punch bowls; gives it a little zest and looks cool. Keeps the punch cold too.
@@willemplatt948 it would have to be a glass or metal bottle, so the pressure can build without expanding the container, as that's basically how you can add carbonation to alcoholic drinks, just with yeast as the pressure building source instead of pure CO2. Just have to add a tiny bit like you said as I'd assume that it'd be very easy to over pressurize it
@@thepizzaguy8477You know that SodaStream machines carbonate water in plastic bottles just fine? You definitely don’t need glass or metal. (In fact, people make DIY water carbonation machines using ordinary soda bottles. It doesn’t take that much pressure to carbonate water for beverages.)
I personally know very little of use in chemistry besides "salt is a flavor amplifier on an overpriced fast food burger I can easily make better than any chain. Somehow, I don't know why other than taste" but I find your content entertaining. Keep it up!
There is an implement for liquid CO2 tanks (don't know what it is called in english, maybe a fishing tube?) that allows the liquid at the bottom of the tank to come out trhough the valve. At the valve head, just put a cloth bag that allows gaseous CO2 to escape but retains the solids. Liquid CO2 turns solid instantly when it gets outside of the tank (because of the pressure drop).
I am a waterwell technician and we have wells that feed cisterns, well in some areas there is a lot of co2 that the well is feeding into the cisterns, got in one about 2 weeks ago thought I was going pass out made it 2 steps down my latter and said nope!
You either need a CO2 cylinder upside down, or a CO2 cylinder with a syphon (with a tube going down to the bottom) and you can generate dry ice as many as you want. This is how we made in students lab at the uni. Why do you need a machine for this?
How does this compare to just using a fire extinguisher in terms of yield? What's the price difference between buying a fire extinguisher or a cannister of CO2 and just spraying it into a cloth?
It’s compressing the gas into a solid. Do you have an O2 sensor in there with you? CO2, at least, will let your body know if it builds up too high. Still, though. The oxygen content in the room only has to drop to like 19.5% for hypoxia to start to set in.
To get the most mist for your buck, place the pellets above boiling water. ;) P.S. If I remember correctly, the liquid CO2 goes into the mold under pressure. When you remove the pressure, the dry ice is formed.
Looks pretty fancy, but is there any advantage of this method, other than the pellet shape, in comparison to emptying the CO2 fire extinguisher into the bag? If it's not a secret, can you please share the machine price?
You need a dewar or a micro bulk tank. That small cylinder isn’t going to make very much dry ice. Under good conditions you will only get about a 2.5:1 ratio of liquid to solid, and that is with a much better machine.
"This summer make sure you pick up a goblet of NileRed's EXTRA DRY ICE ICE CREAM! MADE WITH REAL DRY ICE" "Your sure to have a blast after consuming this AWESOME summer time treat!"
Remember that you are not supposed to toss dry ice into the water in badly ventilated area because the amount of vapor it produces can easily suffocate you
Would take over an hour at an industrial ice making place for a single machine to do 250lb. So your machine seems to be to speed. Normally ive seen multiple machines working together so that they dont freeze up.
This is the most stereotypical looking machine: a metal box with gauges and a big red button to stop
and a big orange light when it is done making the thing
@@chris-hayes Only thing missing is the big label, "ACME."
Also the hydraulic pump sound.
it's a pretty standard design for industrial machinery - the red button is not the normal stop button but an emergency stop, in case it starts doing something it's not supposed to
a lot of these factory machines look like this. sheet metal box, e-stop, a few indicator led's. this one has a screen which i haven't seen a lot of
Now you just need a machine to extract Co2 from the air, so you can make infinite amounts of dry ice.
And another machine to liquify it.
@@DanielLCarrierHe has a machine to cool it under pressure.
Even better, he needs a machine to extract the nitrogen from the air and liquefy it.
So carbon capture?
@@do811 Well, the dry ice will sublimate, so it does just go back into the air. Not exactly captured.
Reminds of that scene in Back to the Future 3, where Doc has this massive machine to make one ice cube.
You'd think he'd make a filter while at it, but it still only produced a brown ice cube.
Perhaps it's a trademark, in reference to his name.
@@Yezpahr yeah that was what i was thinking. refrigeration before filtering? really?
@@Yezpahrthat brown ice uses a unique precursor and is 99.8 percent pure.
Yes!
Weird I think there's a similar thing in mosquito coast
As an old man with a hernia, watching the machine strain to push out a few little pellets really spoke to me.
Your comment made me think of Weird Al's "Livin' With a Hernia," so I'm no spring chicken myself.
My butthole is sore as we speak. I have to eat a high fiber diet or things come out in lumps 😂
1:26 that looked like those cartoons where they put an entire tree in some weird machine just for a single pencil to come out
The “push” killed me 💀
the liquid CO2 at room temperature
The first few are the hardest.
3 days after taco bell
Hemorrhoid strain is no laughing matter
Especially since I'm taking a dump. Was quite helpful.
I was prepared for Nile to break his floor again.
he can break my floor 😏
I feel like I have missed a video.
@@nweaselsyeah you did
What did he break now?
@@bluebary If I recall correctly, there was a video with him pouring liquid nitrogen into or onto something placed on the floor, and he ended up cooling the floor so much that the floor cracked.
Watching this om the toilet was.... Motivation
Are you very happy with your new machine? I must know
Push
Pulled out pellets?
Constipation is crappy.........
I guess you've no favorite turd because...
You've got to be shitting me!
Either that or you've been working on becoming a Commodian...
Comedians are funny, their humor is witty and everyone not only enjoys their company BUTT pay extra to sit up close and personal!
Whereas Commodians on the other...umm... hand? AHA!...seat can't do stand up, have a potty mouth, talk a lotta crap, their jokes stink (or is known/shown upon the walls of stalls), and are usually fulla shit!
I won't lie, with the first chunk it spat out I was getting major Juice Loosener vibes. A tank of CO2 and a bunch of noise for a tiny pellet. Glad it picked up though and actually made a usable amount.
"You got all that from one tank of CO2 ?!"
@@SongeLeReveur I didn't think it would produce so little from a single tank, but the awkward cough of a tiny nugget and then a long pause, it was definitely Juice Loosener humour. >3
ITS WHISPER QUIET
its like in back to the future 3 when he has that huge ass machine to make one ice cube
@@YourSweatyUnclecore memory unlocked
In an upcoming video "I needed more dry ice than my machine could make, so I had to buy some" Thud from dropping 5lb block of dry ice on the table
I feel like he'd be like "i didnt feel like waiting"
@@whateverppl1229then at some point he messes up and buys 10 more pounds.
"but that wasnt enough" as he drops another 2 bags of it onto the table
slabs do last longer
@@RoarkCatsyeah, I had to chip off workable chunks from our dry ice blocks with a hammer and screwdriver
"I spent 5000 dollars on a machine that makes dry ice. Unfortunately... *dump truck backs up to the lab* That wasn't enough."
But it’s soooo cool to “make”
Like I run on oxygen, and it’s soooo cool to exhale carbon dioxide (that’s CO2 for you young folks)
That's where he gets the dry ice for the cryogenically frozen army of zombie crab mutants.
No, you're confusing him for The Thought Emporium. A common mistake.
I work at a medical reference lab and we have the big brother of this. Co2 is trucked in and fills a bulk tank next to the building. We use it to keep samples frozen when they're shipped to us that way. They keep trying to tell us to use PPE for cryo when using the pellets and I keep trying to tell them the difference between dry ice and proper cryogenic fluids (i.e. one is cold, the other means cell death upon contact), and that we can't actually do our jobs with the huge oven mitts on....but I digress lol
He can now make poor mans cryo by combining dry ice and alcohol.
@@MalawisLilleKanal how so?
@@veccio Just like mixing ice with water gives you a liquid of 0C, a mix of dry ice and alcohol gives you a liquid of -78C.
Not as good as liquid nitrogen (-196C), but can still be used to make stuff really cold.
In the 90s, I worked at a grocery store. The guy delivering ice cream would have pretty good size chunks of dry ice that he would just throw aside. The would last for days because that would condense a think crust of water ice on the outside that would act as insolation. I grabbed a few to play with.
They still do that with deliveries of some frozen stuff. I worked in the non frozen department but occasionally I took a grocery bag of dry ice home and no one cares. The heaviest amount I ever took was like 8 pounds.
@2:37 that's how i set off the CO2 alert in all sensors in the whole floor once... first i thought the sensors had conspired against me by failing at the same time... then i remembered the frozen birthday cake that had been delivered in a box with dry ice... 🤤🤤🤤🤤
Quite possibly the least unhinged video on this channel to date
2:45 "it's cool to be able to make dry ice"
Yea, the temperature is low, indeed 🤣
It's cool to have rich parents
@@sinenomine7405 He's had a popular youtube channel for years and now has 6 million subs. He is the one making the money silly
I've been making dry ice for forty-five years. Only one high tech device required, a cotton towel. Step1. Disconnect the liquid CO2 line from the machine. Step 2. Throw away the machine. Step 3. Wrap a cotton towel loosely around the end of the copper tube. Step 4. Slowly vent liquid into the towel. This will produce perfect dry ice. And when all finished you can give your wife back her completely undamaged towel.
Jokes apart, is it real though ? Can you really make dry ice with that
he did make dry ice this way in a older video
@@ghosttown5448 100% True and cost effective
@@ghosttown5448 Yes, that's how my physics teacher used to do it in the early 70s - CO2 fire extinguishers, which are filled with liquid CO2.
@@RJTC oh okay
I would agree the machine is good, and thanks a lot for the video! I just wonder the room temperature CO2 tank in the video is 6-8Mpa or 15-20Mpa? I think using a cryogenic liquid CO2 tank(2.3Mpa) or dewar tank(2.05Mpa) and making sure the CO2 pressure 1.6-2.3Mpa for dry ice production is more good!❤
Nice, no crazy scientist lab would be complete without a ton of dry ice smoke.
Well, I’m not a crazy scientist lab but I honestly feel not complete without a ton of dry ice smoke..lmaoo
I love the gigantic emergency stop button... like what could possibly go so wrong with that system that it needs an emergency stop on it?
I guess if it ever started overflowing… or the CO2 line broke off (probably not a good idea to run the machine with nothing connected to it.)
Realy there is nothing that could go horribly wrong.
If something goofs up inside it would just lock out with an error.
ok, so we got this _(smackk*)_ brand new machine
"You got all of that from one bag of oranges?" - Troy McClure
I really like the possibilities for indoor application with this machine! Especially with low ventilation
I worked in aviation sheet metal for a few years and we would perform interference fit maintenance which would require dry ice. Instead of this fancey machine we had a big bottle of liquid nitrogen, with a tube leading into a wooden box with vents on all sides and latches to detach the walls, we open the bottle and when we simply spray the nitrogen into the wooden box it would naturally create ice, fill up the box, detach walls, and now we have a cube of dry ice for much cheaper than i assume this machine was lol. He probably needs it specifically pellet sized though..
I love he just tosses it on the floor because he can just make more
they need a machine that pulls co2 from the air and puts it into a canister for use in creation of dry ice. be a nice little thing to put in the garage and let do its thing. when you have a party or gathering of any sort you could start showing off. you could charge people you know for the ice based on the power it consumes and reduce your cost as a producer by adding passive energy like solor panels.
He don't need it... but, he want it
2:42 is this carbonated water ?
well you would dissolve quite a bit of CO2 in that water given the low temperature, but it would stop from dissolving once the water freezes
i think the water would have to be pressurized and also be at room temperature for it to be proper carbonated water. you could probably just drop a few grams of dry ice in a bottle of water, put the lid on, shake it a bit and have carbonated water. (assuming you don't make a dry ice bomb)
Yes, but not as much as something like a soda. For that you'd need to carbonate it under pressure, which forces more of the co2 to dissolve into the water. Even so, it's nice to use dry ice in things like punch bowls; gives it a little zest and looks cool. Keeps the punch cold too.
@@willemplatt948 it would have to be a glass or metal bottle, so the pressure can build without expanding the container, as that's basically how you can add carbonation to alcoholic drinks, just with yeast as the pressure building source instead of pure CO2. Just have to add a tiny bit like you said as I'd assume that it'd be very easy to over pressurize it
@@thepizzaguy8477You know that SodaStream machines carbonate water in plastic bottles just fine? You definitely don’t need glass or metal. (In fact, people make DIY water carbonation machines using ordinary soda bottles. It doesn’t take that much pressure to carbonate water for beverages.)
I personally know very little of use in chemistry besides "salt is a flavor amplifier on an overpriced fast food burger I can easily make better than any chain. Somehow, I don't know why other than taste" but I find your content entertaining. Keep it up!
That's the machine used to make everlasting gobstoppers
Yo nile, you been hitting the gym! Looking strong my guy, keep it up 💪
I love watching hoar frost accumulate on super cold things like this
Thanks for highlighting how the bottle connects to the machine. I might have missed that.
There is an implement for liquid CO2 tanks (don't know what it is called in english, maybe a fishing tube?) that allows the liquid at the bottom of the tank to come out trhough the valve. At the valve head, just put a cloth bag that allows gaseous CO2 to escape but retains the solids.
Liquid CO2 turns solid instantly when it gets outside of the tank (because of the pressure drop).
I think a bunch of the dry ice is sitting in the outflow tube, in the flat portion just outside of the 'port'
I think it works by pulling a vacuum on a piston. Basically mechanical refrigeration, which is why it's so loud.
Nope
I am a waterwell technician and we have wells that feed cisterns, well in some areas there is a lot of co2 that the well is feeding into the cisterns, got in one about 2 weeks ago thought I was going pass out made it 2 steps down my latter and said nope!
It's apparently for industrial volumes of dry ice. Extremely useful and in a small footprint. Thank you for sharing your new toy!
Yes if you need small amounts or if you are not In a hurry
You can make the same thing with a sock and a fire extinguisher
My thoughts exactly. What is the point?
Not really, but yes you can make dry ice that way
Finally not a out of context video
Sweet! I just found out my local gas supplier sells dry ice and LN2. Fun times coming up in July!
Wow. Awesome pellets. The bubbling brew reminds me of when I was a kid and they had dry ice at the recreation centre to make smoke at halloween. 👍
the comedic timing of this machine is crazy
Looking forward to see what this is for.
"first few pellets are the hardest" sounds like my recent number 2 experience
You either need a CO2 cylinder upside down, or a CO2 cylinder with a syphon (with a tube going down to the bottom) and you can generate dry ice as many as you want. This is how we made in students lab at the uni. Why do you need a machine for this?
url ends with OW0
:3 neat
Finnawy a gud youtwube vibeo uwu
That means it's a village in northern Poland. The South would be -ow instead of -owo.
*notices dry ice* OwO what's this
@@hammerth1421 my russian city ends with -ovo
How does this compare to just using a fire extinguisher in terms of yield? What's the price difference between buying a fire extinguisher or a cannister of CO2 and just spraying it into a cloth?
NileRed is now only buying Expensive Maschines,
instead of making actual videos 😂😂
The parasitic Canadian government would be spending his money if he didn't.
😂
I'm just happy to see the words "future video", cause it's been ages since a NileRed vid ;-;
It's like that bit in The Simpsons with the juicer 😂
It’s compressing the gas into a solid.
Do you have an O2 sensor in there with you? CO2, at least, will let your body know if it builds up too high. Still, though. The oxygen content in the room only has to drop to like 19.5% for hypoxia to start to set in.
Cool pellets 🎉🎉🎉
Nile the crocodile
you should touch the dry ice to a water faucet or metal. it makes a cool noise
I arrived for the punny title.
I stayed for the PUSH!
The hardline just completely hanging free at 200psi is great. Imagine knocking over the bottle lol
To get the most mist for your buck, place the pellets above boiling water. ;)
P.S. If I remember correctly, the liquid CO2 goes into the mold under pressure. When you remove the pressure, the dry ice is formed.
turn the flow rate up on the syphon tube regulator
Looks pretty fancy, but is there any advantage of this method, other than the pellet shape, in comparison to emptying the CO2 fire extinguisher into the bag? If it's not a secret, can you please share the machine price?
Be careful because some machines do not let you directly connect copper as the vibration can weaken
NileRed: "not electrocuting me" while slapping it with rubber gloves on
Then the dry ice machine never saw another action. Machine sat there forgotten until it was broken from boredom. Dusted, rusted and broken.
@nilered extra if you want more liquid flow turn the tank upside down
3:02 It sounded like Nile was being held at gunpoint at the end there by the chinese dry ice machine manufacturers
Isn't the CO2 container supposed to be upside down in order to get it out as an liquid, or is there a tube going to down to the bottom of the bottle?
You should look up the Scilogex dry ice maker. I never got to actually use it, but it's far, far smaller and doesn't even need power.
He already has a video about a similar product
We need long form content 🙏🏾
1:26 When the poop is block and only one tiny poop out
I’m down horrendously for full length Nile red sos lmao
You need a dewar or a micro bulk tank. That small cylinder isn’t going to make very much dry ice. Under good conditions you will only get about a 2.5:1 ratio of liquid to solid, and that is with a much better machine.
Place the liquid co2 cylinder upside down for better results.
"This summer make sure you pick up a goblet of NileRed's EXTRA DRY ICE ICE CREAM! MADE WITH REAL DRY ICE"
"Your sure to have a blast after consuming this AWESOME summer time treat!"
At work we have 3 icejet dry ice machines that makes 750Kg each an houer, they are relly simple and complicated at the same time 😎
Can you make it eject cylindrical chunks out the pipe like a BM?
Nile seems pretty chill about all of this
**slaps the top of the machine** This bad boy can generate so much dry ice!
THE BEAUTY OF CHINESE MANUFACTURING IS YOU WILL NEVER QUESTION IF THE MACHINE IS ON OR NOT.
FACT: Worldwide greenhouse emissions increased by 1% ever since Nilered got his hand on this machine.
Yup
this got extreme overclockers salivating
He sounded so sarcastic at the end lol
I need that and the cryocooler for liquid nitrogen.
i am itching for a main channel video thats 1hr+ long. i love watching your videos
I love lead dry ice
Add a bit of prune juice in there and that thing will be flowing
1:27 - reminds me of Willy Wonka's "Gum Machine" were all that stuff happens for 1 bit of gum xD ahahahaha
I was waiting for you both to pass out from displacing all the breathable air.
Remember that you are not supposed to toss dry ice into the water in badly ventilated area because the amount of vapor it produces can easily suffocate you
Well this is a pretty big space
@@logitech4873 this indeed is, but what of others
@dariaoswald3894 ah yes, this saved me from using my $34,727 dry ice machine in a poorly ventilated cellar
01:31 Sometimes I really have to "push" to produce rabbit pellets, too! 🙃😏
Eating beans sometimes helps, though. 😏🙃😜
Nile has some of the most unique cool toys.
Now he's a real mad scientist
Would take over an hour at an industrial ice making place for a single machine to do 250lb. So your machine seems to be to speed. Normally ive seen multiple machines working together so that they dont freeze up.
Someday I want to bring dry ice to a children's birthday party.
I bet if you put the co2 bottle upside down for a liquid charge, it may increase the machines performance.
Got to get a co2 tank like the fast food places have outside.
Dry ice in soapy water is the greatest thing ever.
Mankind captures co2 from the atmosphere, pressurizes it into a tank, turns it into a solid….drops it in water and returns it to atmosphere
in my old job , we used old sack with a hole in it to make dry ice lol