Awesome flesh-burning death lamp. (Germicidal UV)

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  • Опубликовано: 2 дек 2024

Комментарии • 5 тыс.

  • @stevenmckeown3222
    @stevenmckeown3222 2 года назад +624

    I'm 45 yrs old and ruined my eyes when I was just 17yrs old. I was helping out at the scrapyard where my Dad worked and came across a bunch of Metal Cylinders. I unscrewed them to find they contained FULLY Transparent Fluorescent Tubes. After wiring a ballast up and having tested 9 out of the 10 I found, I saw the Warning on the end of the tube whilst I was looking at the beautiful Ribbon shaped Bluey Purple light passing through the Tube!! It said, in Bright Red Letters..."UV-C. AVOID PROLONGED SKIN EXPOSURE. AVOID ANY EYE EXPOSURE. RETINAL DAMAGE WILL OCCUR"!!! Later that night I had a slight headache when I went to bed and at 3am, Pain like I have never known! I spent the next 2 weeks in the house recovering and HAD to wear dark sunglasses AT NIGHT, it was that bad. They're not toys. Don't piss about with them and stay safe around them. My eyesight was irreparably damaged and that diagnosis was from a top ophthalmologist through Private health care! "Never look at UV-C with remaining eye!"

    • @keithsummers6139
      @keithsummers6139 2 года назад +36

      i have been working around high power uvc lamps since i started work in 79 as a school leaver, we used them to cure printing inks. the early machines use to spill light all over the place and were not safe. they used very high voltage lamps that were powerful enough to set light to any material that got stuck inside the drying tunnel. we became very good at putting fires out, some were water cooled with the lamp inside a glass tube surrounded by flowing water and a cooling tower on the roof of the building. the modern ones are all enclosed and shielded low powered LED. i had two lamps similar to the one on show in a uvc pond filtration system. it worked very well.

    • @paolom.6011
      @paolom.6011 2 года назад +27

      I started saying oh no in my head and then aloud within about 3 sentences tbh.

    • @rickmartin6817
      @rickmartin6817 2 года назад +28

      Thanks for the warning. I am sorry you experienced eyesight damage. You only did what many of us would have done, not knowing the dangers.

    • @chemistryinstruments7156
      @chemistryinstruments7156 2 года назад +5

      I flashed myself by accident with one just a second and it scared me

    • @TSteffi
      @TSteffi 2 года назад +16

      Reminds me of the first time I saw someone welding, and it made this same beautiful blue light. I just couldn't stop watching because it was so beautiful.
      And I payed for it with multiple days of sand eyes. Not sure about retina damage.

  • @oaooaoipip2238
    @oaooaoipip2238 6 лет назад +3384

    ultra-violent lamp

    • @markcamacho3152
      @markcamacho3152 6 лет назад +55

      "I wanna make a violet more violent." They buy something cheap, from China, and they never do it again! No.
      Cheap, from China, and they never do it again!

    • @ericsvieo01
      @ericsvieo01 6 лет назад +5

      ok thanks Dr. obvious

    • @uninvestigated
      @uninvestigated 6 лет назад +32

      RIP moth

    • @TheCinderDude
      @TheCinderDude 6 лет назад +10

      best comment

    • @TheCinderDude
      @TheCinderDude 6 лет назад +10

      read it again

  • @hossmcgregor3853
    @hossmcgregor3853 4 года назад +333

    As a welder who has done stupid and burned his eyes, 'sand in the eyes' is the best description I know of.

    • @bottledcat6255
      @bottledcat6255 4 года назад +6

      i had done stupid things as a kid
      its interesting how you can feel the light that strong

    • @johnpotter4750
      @johnpotter4750 4 года назад +5

      Our lot regularly misplace multi-tine fork/shovels to DC, or for variety go and spike the wrong 33KV cable (admittedly the latter also involves some singeing = > )

    • @nathantschetter1264
      @nathantschetter1264 3 года назад +2

      Good description, I've had welders eyes twice ,and once would have been enough , both times it came on at night and first time I dreamed I was working under a pickup and my eye's dribbled full of gravel , it woke me up , that was really bad since then I've heard of a lot of things you can do to stop the pain , such as an eye drop of milk and honey , but I had no clue about what to do at that time

    • @davewolf8869
      @davewolf8869 3 года назад +8

      It's not the sand in the eyes that's an issue. It's the fact that the sand doesn't leave for hours.
      Eyes open
      Or
      Eyes shut.
      Every rest is agony, and so is every blink. It's a hell you do not escape

    • @kameljoe21
      @kameljoe21 2 года назад +2

      @@nathantschetter1264 I have had it a few times as well. I think it was clearly due to the position I was welding and the light coming in under my helmet? Though I have not welded for some years and if I ever do I will only weld with a hood cover.

  • @RaunienTheFirst
    @RaunienTheFirst 3 года назад +681

    "The back of my hand now smells like burnt pork. That's bad."
    As a man who once set fire to his hand, I can confirm that yes, that's bad.

    • @francisbacon4363
      @francisbacon4363 3 года назад +20

      One time I poured boiling oil on my own skin it's been 11-12 years and my burn marks are as clear as day no change in them

    • @Noah-hq5rs
      @Noah-hq5rs 3 года назад +11

      @@francisbacon4363 Why were you boiling oil? I'm curious because the boiling temperature of oil is over the smoke point.

    • @walterengler5709
      @walterengler5709 3 года назад

      Well depends on what you think of burnt pork???

    • @Sanket.vjadhav
      @Sanket.vjadhav 3 года назад +1

      @@Noah-hq5rs 😂

    • @SpiffingNZ
      @SpiffingNZ 3 года назад +1

      I love how casually he said it as if this is normal for him.

  • @SirWolfwoodIII
    @SirWolfwoodIII 4 года назад +430

    I work at a plant nursery and one day i was changing an air filter on one of the a/c units. There was a similar bulb inside the ac unit to kill any unwanted bacteria. I only looked at the bulb for maybe 5 seconds from a distance of 2-3 feet. That evening I woke up in the middle of the night and it literally felt like I had sand in my eyes. I have never felt anything like that before or since, and it wasn't until watching this episode did I understand what had happened. Now I know, it was that d%^* light ! Thank You bigc !!

    • @joshuakuehn
      @joshuakuehn 3 года назад +36

      Is it was an industrial grade hvac bulb out was probably way stronger than the 20 watt bulb he's playing with here

    • @dlaczegotakpowazny1474
      @dlaczegotakpowazny1474 3 года назад +37

      Its generally a good idea to turn off any electrical device before messing with it, and reading an instruction. Most of devices even if are turned off, are still holding a charge.

    • @ws8061
      @ws8061 3 года назад +20

      They are actually becoming common on home HVAC units so beware if you're a DIYer. Should be in an area you won't commonly acess and most units you can just unplug.

    • @amcdonal86VT
      @amcdonal86VT 3 года назад +4

      I've heard of people going blind for a few days

    • @foster7517
      @foster7517 3 года назад

      ino your pain..experiencing it now

  • @LaylaVaughan
    @LaylaVaughan 3 года назад +658

    Ah, the smell of ozone and burnt skin. Nothing like ionizing radiation to freshen up a room. I like to call these chernobyl bulbs

    • @Bobba_raekus
      @Bobba_raekus 3 года назад +53

      Is "Chernobulbs" trademarked yet?

    • @kipling1957
      @kipling1957 3 года назад +5

      Like the smell of napalm in the morning.

    • @BloodyMobile
      @BloodyMobile 3 года назад +8

      Sounds like a marketing pitch. And not even a bad one xD

    • @paulanthonybridge5741
      @paulanthonybridge5741 3 года назад +1

      Maybe a trip to chernobyl will kill the fungus in my bollocks......

    • @LaylaVaughan
      @LaylaVaughan 3 года назад +19

      @@paulanthonybridge5741 There's actually a species of fungi that has adaped to photosynthesize GAMMA RAYS in Chernobyl. Species name Cryptococcus neoformans. Be sure not to get that on your bollocks

  • @5705HU
    @5705HU 6 лет назад +3769

    "The back of my hand now smells like burnt pork,"
    " *_t h a t ' s b a d_* ."

    • @UndeadPasta
      @UndeadPasta 6 лет назад +113

      But it comes with a free frogurt!

    • @wethewitches3322
      @wethewitches3322 6 лет назад +35

      Why does that sound like something from Welcome to Nightvale

    • @ProctorSilex
      @ProctorSilex 6 лет назад +17

      UndeadPasta That's good!

    • @ToxicMrSmith
      @ToxicMrSmith 6 лет назад +22

      Proctor Silex But the frogurt is cursed.

    • @beepboop69420
      @beepboop69420 6 лет назад +8

      dont let slag get on your hand either... im a blacksmith i know the smell and it dont feel good ill tell you that. *BE AFRAID OF THE FIRE AND WATCH WHAT THE BLACKSMITH IS DOIN AND YA WONT GET BURNT TO HELL*

  • @niraea
    @niraea 3 года назад +233

    The allure and beauty of the light reminds me of the Goiânia disaster in which a radiotherapy component from an abandoned hospital was stolen by people looking for scrap and dismantled, with the beautiful glowing blue and highly radioactive powder contained within removed. It was then passed around and handled by several people including a child and a woman who thought it would make for a nice eyeshadow. 4 people died and dozens more were exposed. Can't say I trust pretty glowing blue things.

    • @FLCollection620
      @FLCollection620 2 года назад +5

      Interesting

    • @KClO3
      @KClO3 2 года назад +18

      @Banter Maestro2 no it was Cesium 137 in the form of Cesium chloride

    • @Metaphysician2
      @Metaphysician2 2 года назад +13

      I find it funny that the stereotypical cartoon image for radiation is green. Radioactive death has an actual color, and that color is bright blue.

    • @FerrariTeddy
      @FerrariTeddy Год назад +8

      @@Metaphysician2 maybe they chose green because of tritium illumination is usually green?

    • @draeath
      @draeath Год назад +12

      @@FerrariTeddy Radium, perhaps? What they used to paint watch dials and avionics with?

  • @JungleJayAdventures
    @JungleJayAdventures 5 лет назад +1485

    Oh noo! The memories, I found a bulb like this when i was a kid. Had no idea what it was. We set it up outside to attract insects. Little did we know we had been burning the skin on our eye balls for a couple of hours. Woke up the next day with my eyelids sealed shut! Was out of school for a couple of days.

    • @radiofrog
      @radiofrog 5 лет назад +171

      lol my god, how long until you properly healed?

    • @JungleJayAdventures
      @JungleJayAdventures 5 лет назад +394

      It was about 2 days before that "sandpaper" sensation subsided and about a week for the redness to go away. It was brutal!

    • @JoeBlow-24
      @JoeBlow-24 5 лет назад +303

      @@JungleJayAdventures We call that arc eye in welding.

    • @blackmould
      @blackmould 5 лет назад +38

      Holy shit!

    • @JungleJayAdventures
      @JungleJayAdventures 5 лет назад +108

      I recall someone whom had been working for the ship yard at the time calling it flash burn. but details are hazy from so long ago. Thanks.

  • @pointlessink6084
    @pointlessink6084 5 лет назад +844

    Good thing were sitting behind the safety of our monitor.

    • @onesun8841
      @onesun8841 5 лет назад +26

      He just turns it on and puts it on his hand....

    • @pointlessink6084
      @pointlessink6084 5 лет назад +5

      @Deus Vult I own a banig because bed is expensive and yes it's been weeks I haven't cleaned it up cause I've been busy.

    • @volvo09
      @volvo09 5 лет назад +20

      Speak for yourself shithead!! I got a new QHDR monitor (q is quad for all uv bands + HDR) and I can burn my eyes with this video! it feels like beach sand blew into my eye! You all are too stupid to have it though, I'm going to replay this video all night because you suck!

    • @DylRicho
      @DylRicho 5 лет назад +12

      @@volvo09 "q is quad for all uv bands" ... there are only three though. :p

    • @patrickmalone1373
      @patrickmalone1373 4 года назад +10

      @@DylRicho that's what they want you to think....

  • @guitarbrad
    @guitarbrad 4 года назад +401

    "Oh yes, yes, yes, yes, YES! But also, no." Greatest quote ever.

    • @NPCSN
      @NPCSN 4 года назад +3

      guitarbrad
      I was looking for this comment! 🤣😂🤣

    • @valhar2000
      @valhar2000 4 года назад +7

      Imagine if your girlfriend said that to you during sex.

    • @Catastropheshe
      @Catastropheshe 3 года назад

      @@NPCSN same

    • @MrSgdfga
      @MrSgdfga 3 года назад

      😂😂😂😂😂

  • @TheComputec
    @TheComputec 3 года назад +54

    looks to medical adviser sat four feet away
    "I wonder if there's any way of using these internally to do a sort of cleaning"

    • @AltWrongGamer
      @AltWrongGamer 3 года назад +5

      *Twitter bans legit medical company who developed such a device*

  • @1010minutemail
    @1010minutemail 6 лет назад +94

    I've actually seen one of these used "properly".
    I worked in a lab in Turkey and they had a room that had to be sterile for working with cultures. They had one of these lamps to sterilize the room when it wasn't in use, that you could turn on from the outside.
    I think there was a rudimentary safety system in that you couldn't turn in on if the normal lights for the room were on (i.e. it was occupied) but scary nonetheless.

  • @Bushougoma
    @Bushougoma 6 лет назад +258

    3:36 UV lamp tubes are made of fused quartz which allows the UV to pass through. Standard florescent tubes are made of glass that allows UV to pass but most of it is absorbed by the phosphor coating inside the tube to create visible light. Note any damage to the phosphor coating (this often happens at the ends of the tube) will allow UV leakage.

    • @weeardguy
      @weeardguy 6 лет назад +1

      Was about to say the same thing. We have huge 50 Watt or so UV-C tubes at work for industrial water-sanitizers. It warns about the use of quartz glass on the package (besides a whole bunch of other warnings and logo's)

    • @hermannschaefer4777
      @hermannschaefer4777 6 лет назад +4

      Nope, normal lamps usually have borosilicate glass because of its very low thermal expansion. Soda-lime-silica glass would break due to the high thermal stress.

    • @Mikkel324
      @Mikkel324 6 лет назад +10

      Normal incandescent lamps (the now mostly banned kind) usually have a soda-lime-silica envelope and a lead-potash-silica stem (lower conductivity at high temperature avoids glass electrolysis in the pinch seal). Some larger discharge lamps and other specialty lamps have borosilicate outer envelopes. As far as I know, germicidal variants of normal fluorescent lamps use a soda-lime based glass formulated for low attenuation at the mercury 253.7 nm line, while higher arc loading industrial tubes use quartz envelopes. The easiest way to tell is to look at the glass-to-metal seal, soft glasses (soda lime, lead potash) often use dumet wires which appear red inside the glass, hard glasses (borosilicate) often use tungsten wires which appear brownish or yellowish, and quartz uses molybdenum foil seals.

    • @jfbeam
      @jfbeam 6 лет назад +2

      _blocks any UV not absorbed by the phosphor_ Nope. But thanks for playing. They leak enough UV to bleach anything left under them for prolonged periods. (eg. MM fiber cables in a data room where the lights are always on.)

    • @Mikkel324
      @Mikkel324 6 лет назад +6

      "Germicidal UVC lamps can be manufactured with one of two different types of glass - Quartz Glass or Soft Glass. Germicidal soft glass is a highly refined and pure type of soda lime glass, similar to that which is used to make visible light fluorescent lamps. ", "Transmission of UVC is approximately 9% lower than that of quartz lamps, leading to less initial UVC output.
      Soft glass will not allow the transmission of UVC wavelengths below 200nm and therefore can not be used to produce ozone at 185nm." lightsources2015.wordpress.com/2015/04/02/tips-on-how-to-determine-if-quartz-or-soft-glass-germicidal-lamps-are-best-for-your-uvc-application/

  • @Bisqwit
    @Bisqwit 5 лет назад +647

    That was a _very scary_ long time that you spent with the lamp on next to your skin and eyes, knowing what this radiation does.
    (With regards: A fellow owner of _two_ death lamps.)

    • @153SCORN
      @153SCORN 4 года назад +75

      Also an owner of UVC...It burns in seconds and you won't know it until later.

    • @Edouard16
      @Edouard16 4 года назад +60

      Yes he’s crazy and irresponsible to show this kind of behavior.

    • @153SCORN
      @153SCORN 4 года назад +28

      25watt globe, 15cm from the skin for 30 seconds will case sun burn in that location and skin will peel in a few days. I've done that to myself. The light does burn quickly. Distance is a factor.

    • @raymondk2202
      @raymondk2202 4 года назад +25

      It's not only the power. These lamps put out alot of Ultra deep UV light. That is very harmfull for skin and eyes. Ofcourse in combination with enough power but still, you do not need alot of power for ultra deep UV to damage cells

    • @slytlygufy
      @slytlygufy 4 года назад +2

      Me too

  • @TheBrucifer
    @TheBrucifer 6 лет назад +153

    This reminds me of an incident when an OAP in our family managed to get a hold of these for his garage.. the reason being is he hated frosted bulbs and it was to replace the two clear halogen bulbs.. My ears pricked up as someone mentioned he was moaning about his new ‘energy saving’ lights not working and were ‘weird baby blue’ in colour.. sure as anything they were two germicidal bulbs in E27. No idea where he got them from.. he had been working under them for a good few days (using a bench light). Another ‘trigger’ for me when his son also said they set off his Transition glasses... that’s when I got involved... awhile ago but I do wonder how on Earth he managed to get a hold of them, as he was far from computer literate!

    • @NotSoCrazyNinja
      @NotSoCrazyNinja 6 лет назад +42

      You would be amazed at the kinds of keywords people use when they aren't really sure what it is they're after.

    • @VictorGarciaR
      @VictorGarciaR 6 лет назад +36

      And even more amazed at the descriptions/keywords used by the chinese

    • @dusterdude238
      @dusterdude238 6 лет назад +13

      He's the "Man with the Tan!"

  • @wcemichael
    @wcemichael 6 лет назад +1570

    Put this thing over some red meat for 30 min. I wanna see it cook a steak

    • @marinow2460
      @marinow2460 6 лет назад +227

      I think the meat would get cancer pretty fast if it would still have a metabolism lol....

    • @preytec
      @preytec 6 лет назад +161

      I have a human we could cook

    • @LittleRainGames
      @LittleRainGames 6 лет назад +104

      @@preytec for some reason i believe that to be true.

    • @ghillie4114
      @ghillie4114 6 лет назад +57

      calm down satan

    • @matthias18
      @matthias18 6 лет назад +19

      @@preytec you think you have room for 1 or 2 more ?

  • @160rpm
    @160rpm 6 лет назад +1328

    most shocking part is that it lives up to the 20w rating lol

    • @throttlebottle5906
      @throttlebottle5906 6 лет назад +10

      good point lol!

    • @none.892
      @none.892 6 лет назад +16

      "Shocking," lol

    • @ronaldjenkees
      @ronaldjenkees 6 лет назад +36

      I was actually really surprised when I saw that was accurate

    • @throttlebottle5906
      @throttlebottle5906 6 лет назад +16

      what will we do, the chinesium is improving slightly :))

    • @kumquatmagoo
      @kumquatmagoo 6 лет назад +3

      Oh shit it's Ronald! Hey Ronald :D

  • @JulianKnight-IT
    @JulianKnight-IT 4 года назад +79

    As nobody seems to have mentioned it. I will also point out just how dangerous Ozone is, both itself and in reaction with other chemicals. So please ventilate the room well if using one of these. Also, for those people thinking of using this for sterilising rooms, remember that the UV-C will badly damage plastics, nylon, etc very rapidly. Painted surfaces, silk and other materials will also be badly affected. Don't use if you have cheaper man-made carpets.

    • @raven4k998
      @raven4k998 Год назад

      meh if it burns your flesh that can distract you from the ozone danger you know

  • @kvjqxzz5905
    @kvjqxzz5905 6 лет назад +1184

    'anti-acarien' = French for 'anti-mite' - it kills critters

    • @ropersonline
      @ropersonline 6 лет назад +49

      It would be anti-acarian (with an A) in English, but it's really not a common term.

    • @PandaMan02
      @PandaMan02 6 лет назад +31

      Chocolate Sheep only if they are UV sensitive type.

    • @got2kittys
      @got2kittys 6 лет назад +24

      Like lice bedbugs scabies?

    • @__aceofspades
      @__aceofspades 6 лет назад +70

      Theres a company selling a 4 bulb human sized UCV device that is meant to be wheeled from room to room in hospitals to sanitize them. However I believe they are supposed to run for 4 hours, also the cover on it pops off and doubles as a warning sign, because going into that room while one isnt exactly healthy, it also has sensors to yell at human who are near it while its on before turning off.

    • @slungboston
      @slungboston 6 лет назад +16

      Vampires and Pillar men if you've got strong enough lights.

  • @KitNeedsCoffee
    @KitNeedsCoffee 6 лет назад +383

    "The back of my hand smells like burnt pork. That's bad."
    -He said *calmly*

    • @goodun6081
      @goodun6081 5 лет назад +10

      Shadow kit, was it bad because you don't want to burn the pork before you eat it, or bad because it was his hand being subjected to the burning?

    • @lorddissy
      @lorddissy 5 лет назад +4

      I have mixed feelings

    • @seanwieland9763
      @seanwieland9763 5 лет назад +6

      But it comes with a free frogurt. That’s good.

    • @howitsdonebrav3866
      @howitsdonebrav3866 4 года назад

      i thought that said fork

    • @MichaeljRichter
      @MichaeljRichter 3 года назад

      Need some BBQ sauce?

  • @danxepha4535
    @danxepha4535 6 лет назад +548

    I got arc flashed on my first welding job.
    Didn't feel anything until about 3 hours after finishing. First thought I had an eyelash in my eye then all of a sudden really sharp, gritty pain, my eyes are streaming, hurting so much I can't even open them.
    Spent about 10 minutes thinking I was going blind then it occurred to me what had happened.
    Couldn't open my eyes for 2 hours.
    I did manage to roll a... erm... "herbal cigarette" (for pain relief) completely blind which I was quite proud of!

    • @MacXpert74
      @MacXpert74 6 лет назад +3

      Did you fully recover from it?

    • @danxepha4535
      @danxepha4535 6 лет назад +75

      Yeah. I could open my eyes after about 2 hours and put some eye drops in.
      For about 2 days afterwards I had those white lights constantly in my vision that you normally get briefly from looking at a bright light. Itchy pain for about 3 days.
      Not a nice experience!

    • @12voltvids
      @12voltvids 6 лет назад +57

      Not fun.. Had a neighbor that worked for a lighting company have to work on germicidal lamps used at an animal shelter to sanitize kennels. Call came in because they were not working. While he was working it it the lights came on, and cooked his cornea. He went blind for a few days and said the feeling was like someone threw sand in them.

    • @danxepha4535
      @danxepha4535 6 лет назад +38

      Yep. And every time you blink its like adding more sand.
      Maybe red hot sand.

    • @12voltvids
      @12voltvids 6 лет назад +13

      Right. I was warned about looking at one, so I don't. I have 2, one inside my air ventilation duct, and the other one is in a tooth brush sterilizer I built, and it has an interlock witch so it only operates when the box is closed. Works great for that. Picked up my replacement bulb on Amazon for 10 bucks.

  • @mattypants
    @mattypants Год назад +14

    Back in the beginning of covid I ordered 2 uvc bulbs with ozone. Not sure if it ever really did anything for covid, but once the room is thoroughly ozoned up and you let it dissipate, the room smells super fresh. If you have mold or mildew problems, this will also kill that. But like he said, don't expose yourself, I put mine in a lamp without a shade and plugged it into a smart plug. Then I could leave the to room, close the door, and turn it on/off. Ozone does STINK and takes a hour or two to go away. Keep in mind it may damage other stuff in your room also, even paint.

  • @muh_v8787
    @muh_v8787 6 лет назад +360

    For when you want that Dwemer ruins look

    • @ogfloatzel4025
      @ogfloatzel4025 6 лет назад +53

      Never should have come here

    • @Bucketus.Lord.of.Buckets
      @Bucketus.Lord.of.Buckets 6 лет назад +59

      *carefully navigates traps*
      *follower triggers them, instantly kills you*

    • @festro1000
      @festro1000 6 лет назад +16

      Welcome moon and star, to this place where destiny is made.

    • @kaiser5731
      @kaiser5731 5 лет назад +6

      @@festro1000 take a look upon the heart

    • @mostycat
      @mostycat 5 лет назад +7

      ...arrow to the knee, etc...

  • @northernskies86
    @northernskies86 5 лет назад +150

    I just bought one of these and let me tell you, I could smell the ozone after only 5 seconds of operation. I just disinfected my bathroom for 5 minutes and the entire floor wreaked of ozone. The bathroom had no smell after the disinfection (except for the odor of ozone). Before the disinfection, the bathroom had a very moldy and dirty smell.
    UPDATE: Due to COVID-19, I regularly use the lamp to sterilize my phone, keys, and other common items. Btw these lamps can be found all over eBay.

    • @TradBarbie
      @TradBarbie 4 года назад +3

      Link please?

    • @MichaelClark-uw7ex
      @MichaelClark-uw7ex 4 года назад +14

      Cleaning companies like servepro use ultraviolet ozone generators to kill mold and it neutralizes the burnt smell in houses after a fire.
      Ozone is a disinfectant also, it degrades into O2 and O- which is an ionized free radical, it also forms OH- free radicals when dissolved in water which want to oxidize something badly and organic molecules are their favorite.

    • @rachytony7827
      @rachytony7827 4 года назад +18

      Make sure u keep a window open when doing that

    • @Trid2bnrml1
      @Trid2bnrml1 4 года назад

      and amazon

    • @PanchosPigTaxi
      @PanchosPigTaxi 4 года назад

      Do you run in on 110?

  • @FennecTECH
    @FennecTECH 6 лет назад +92

    "Flesh Burning Death Lamp"? If theres 4 words to make the click those are them

  • @gbear1005
    @gbear1005 4 года назад +35

    For the uninformed.. all mercury lamps work this way, the white coating on the inside (edit: phosphor) is what changes the light frequency from uv to visible...

    • @poison_corpse3140
      @poison_corpse3140 2 года назад +4

      Literally what he said in the video lol

    • @shawn576
      @shawn576 2 месяца назад

      @@poison_corpse3140 True but some of us are just skimming comments. This is a good comment.

  • @lajoswinkler
    @lajoswinkler 6 лет назад +102

    Regular fluorescent tubes have soda lime glass (not borosilicate) which is basically impermeable for any kind of ultraviolet, and these tubes, if properly made, have quartz glass. I say properly, because if the glass fluoresces at all, it's not pure quartz glass.
    UV-C is greatly attenuated in air and it diminishes after several metres. It's absorbed namely by oxygen, and basically spent on creating ozone. Same process as in stratosphere.
    At power of around 20 W skin exposure at 1 m should last for no longer than 30 seconds. Obviously, the closer one is and the more powerful the lamp is, the greater the skin damage. Of course, eyes are much more sensitive than the skin.
    It's a poor way of direct sterilization because microbes in crevices are shaded and will survive. As a generator of ozone, it's ok. Having one installed in the airducts is great for keeping the air clean but *only* if the output air is reacted with a reducer to destroy the ozone. Ozone is an extremely power oxidizer, very corrosive for almost all organic molecules. You don't want to breathe that.

    • @sammamishq7688
      @sammamishq7688 6 лет назад +4

      thanks how can i filter out dust in my room and clean it without dying?

    • @KRAFTWERK2K6
      @KRAFTWERK2K6 6 лет назад +4

      Thanks to the smell of Ozone nobody actually wants to deliberately inhale that. It's just as bad as chlorine smell.

    • @Wowzersdude-k5c
      @Wowzersdude-k5c 6 лет назад

      @@sammamishq7688 You can filter your room with a HEPA air filter. They remove particles as small as 0.3 micron. Some of them come with activated charcoal filters which are good for odor removal.

    • @jeffwolf8018
      @jeffwolf8018 6 лет назад

      Thanks for the great detailed information very beneficial.

    • @jeffwolf8018
      @jeffwolf8018 6 лет назад

      @U K I don't think it's that bad if you're in and out of there but if you take hour-long showers it might be a little worse on you. At least that's my theory I don't have anything to back this up with. I also hope it was some assistance to you and you not quite dead yet

  • @andiyladdie3188
    @andiyladdie3188 6 лет назад +144

    Yeah that blue is stunning, you will find the blue emitted by Cherenkov radiation stunning too.

    • @walkysworkshop1024
      @walkysworkshop1024 6 лет назад +2

      labobo blind? Maybe. But if you are in the presence of that light you are certainly gonna get a high dose of radiation.

    • @walkysworkshop1024
      @walkysworkshop1024 6 лет назад +1

      labobo yup. Gotta love the cancer as well. Lol

    •  6 лет назад +6

      +cptjake 32
      Cancer is just a superpower in disguise.

    • @KRAFTWERK2K6
      @KRAFTWERK2K6 6 лет назад +1

      @ ANDIY Laddie: Put it into Cola, drink it and it makes your pee glow. Call it "Nuka Cola Quantum".

    • @dcaonoek
      @dcaonoek 6 лет назад +1

      Yeah! you don't even have to have your eyes open to see that.

  • @BobDiaz123
    @BobDiaz123 6 лет назад +235

    This begs for a test. Take toilet water or pond water and put a few drops on different Petrie dishes. Expose one at 10cm, another at 20cm, 40cm, ... for 5 minutes. Last of all have one dish with no exposure. Wait a few days and look at the results. How well and how far does the light make a difference?

    • @migette1
      @migette1 5 лет назад +4

      These should only be viewed thru glass as to send kids to sleep you must me joking never heard so much crap kids would go blind and cancers!!!!!!!!

    • @BobDiaz123
      @BobDiaz123 5 лет назад +67

      migette1 I think you responded to the wrong message. The person with the kindergarteners was a few messages down from my message.

    • @migette1
      @migette1 5 лет назад +7

      Sorry about that that was intended for Hagbard Celine it may have been a wind up how can they be so stupid as to subject kids to UV light...sorry again

    • @BobDiaz123
      @BobDiaz123 5 лет назад +23

      migette1 No problem, but my guess is that the joker that said he uses the light for kindergarten kids is likely to be making it up just to get a reaction from people.

    • @migette1
      @migette1 5 лет назад +3

      Thanks

  • @jtveg
    @jtveg 3 года назад +57

    Mushroom clouds look awesome too, but we know the problem with those. I worked for a company that made biological safety cabinets, (fume cupboards) and they had a UV c tube in the conventional fluorescent tube format but they didn't make a blue glow at all. They only made a slight purple glow at each end.
    Anyway these things are extremely dangerous. If you were to turn one on and fall asleep, you'd wake up with a nasty sunburn and potentially skin cancer.
    Thanks for sharing. 😉👌🏼

  • @Cobalt985
    @Cobalt985 6 лет назад +31

    It was very nerve-wracking to see you plug it in lol. Felt like watching someone go into Chernobyl without a hazmat suit

  • @ElementofKindness
    @ElementofKindness 6 лет назад +107

    Looks like a fun thing to have lit in your home when you are away, and a thief decides to break in.
    Might make for nice gifts for porch pirates too!!

    • @phantomflows0
      @phantomflows0 6 лет назад +6

      thats actually something i never thought of, if they dont know what it is they will try to take it because its blue or they will try turn it off

    • @tashalynn29
      @tashalynn29 6 лет назад

      Lol preach

    • @Jaxterstars
      @Jaxterstars 6 лет назад +3

      @MGTOW REVELATIONS dogs wouldn't eat thief scum cmon, Feed then to the recycling bin even though you probably.not allowed to. Lmao 😂

    • @dreggory82
      @dreggory82 5 лет назад +4

      LOL this thread. I'm happy now.

    • @Xclub40X
      @Xclub40X 5 лет назад

      dreggory82
      This thread is a stitch up . . .lol . .

  • @MikeDesertHunterHale
    @MikeDesertHunterHale 6 лет назад +174

    My Father was an Aeronautical Engineer that ended up becoming a part owner of an HVAC company, after the second world war II he came home and sold for this company involved only in commercial HVAC sales. I remember him bringing home a small commercial unit that would dispense ozone. When you switched the unit on the unit would pass a very large stream of ozone and make a large wind going through the unit even though there was no fan, the smell from the first second would make you almost ill. When my sister nearly lost her leg in a motorcycle accident he would turn the unit on while we left the home, when we returned he would turn off the breakers outside to turn the unit off, then hold his breath, go in the home and open the window to vent the home, that would kill 99.9 percent of the germs in the house, she never did get a secondary infection, lol..... Oh well, long story. fun times in the early 60's......

    • @andrewyek
      @andrewyek 6 лет назад +6

      hii,
      can you still locate that device that you were talking about that your dad purchased to kill germ in house when no body around ?
      i am very much interested.
      thanks
      andrew

    • @MikeDesertHunterHale
      @MikeDesertHunterHale 6 лет назад +14

      Sadly this unit has disappeared from my parent's things. Neither of my sisters has any ideas... The unit was about 12"x18"x8", it had a grill in both front and back with a couple of controls, you could adjust the strength of the unit from almost no ozone to a strong wind, the wire would glow from the current to a bright blue, I would love to look at it. at full force (all on) the wind was like you turned a good sized fan on! Dad didn't buy the unit, he owned a company that represented commercial HVAC companies, they gave him the unit. By the way, I'm 70yrs old.

    • @UnbreakableRukawa
      @UnbreakableRukawa 6 лет назад +32

      son, its me your very old dad. I placed it in the fridge under a very large sandwich.

    •  6 лет назад +4

      +Mike Hale
      I gather ozone is bad to breathe in? Think I must open a few windows and yell at my wife.

    • @bly2489
      @bly2489 6 лет назад +9

      There were two second world wars?

  • @chrishutton1458
    @chrishutton1458 3 года назад +46

    Normally the "special glass” for these things is quartz, as in Quartz Halogen car headlights.
    Quartz was also used in the little windows used to erase old style eproms.
    Touching it with your fingers shortens the life of the quartz.
    Frankly I would not have powered that thing up, unless I was in a different room, watching via video link!

    • @mikeepstein9988
      @mikeepstein9988 Год назад +2

      Excellent. I was wondering if anyone was going to pick up on him handling the glass with his hands!

    • @bongmuon
      @bongmuon Год назад +4

      if you clean it off in a spirit before turning it on it will be fine. The oils left on it create uneven heating witch can shorten the life of the light due to micro fractures.

    • @randacnam7321
      @randacnam7321 Год назад +1

      The quartz degradation only happens with lamps that run hot enough for skin oil residue to be soluble in it, which are usually halogen and certain specialist bare arc tube HID lamps. Lamps like this don't get anywhere near that hot. Also, these often use low/no iron glass as that is cheaper.

    • @psirvent8
      @psirvent8 Год назад

      @@randacnam7321 I have a 250W Fc2 metal halide lamp, so the arc tube is enclosed, however the outer bulb still gets quite hot. In fact I wouldn't be surprised if this *outer* bulb was hotter than a halogen one.
      Therefore I avoid touching it with my bare hands and clean it with isopropyl alcohol just in case.
      But would it be as safe as you said in your previous comment to run it without cleaning it first ?

    • @randacnam7321
      @randacnam7321 Год назад

      @@psirvent8 Those double ended halides are a special case as the outer envelope is also quartz.

  • @hippopotamus86
    @hippopotamus86 6 лет назад +81

    I spent a few minutes getting Google Translate app on my phone ready to translate the text on the box at the start, only for Clive to turn the box over and read it in English.

  • @Firefuzz11
    @Firefuzz11 5 лет назад +25

    It is essentially a welding arc in a glass tube. The sand in your eyes feeling is known as welders flash, and the burn pork smell of your skin is a common sign of arc burn from unprotected skin during welding.

    • @psirvent8
      @psirvent8 Год назад

      Well at least the welding arc is bright enough to keep people not wearing protection to look at it for long enough to get a flash.
      Also most people know the hazards and to look away if for example welders are welding in the street or other public places.
      UVC germicidal bulbs on the other hand aren't nearly as bright as a welding arc and one could definitely look at their beautiful turquoise glow for hours and get permanent damage to their eyes afterwards without realizing it at first.
      Much like the sun that is bright enough to keep people from looking at it long enough to get serious eye damage from the UV in itself. (Although it's "only" UVA and B as the UVC is blocked by the ozone layer in *most* parts of the world).
      But there are blacklight tubes for parties that emit lots of UVA and almost no visible light and one could look at them long enough to harm their eyes without realizing it. (It's mostly eye strain and not much "sand" but still not good as it could lead to an increased risk of cataract and/or macular degeneration later in life).

  • @svnhddbst8968
    @svnhddbst8968 6 лет назад +45

    so what you're saying is "if you want to feel like a welder, without the paycheck or self fulfilment, buy a uv-c lamp and stare at it".

  • @DavidJBurbridge
    @DavidJBurbridge 2 года назад +9

    I've used these lamps in microbiology labs before and they really drilled into us to not turn the lamps on while we are in the room.

  • @Lazarus_
    @Lazarus_ 4 года назад +1089

    “This is a delightful item from China, they’ve got all the best stuff.”
    - COVID-19 has entered the chat
    turns light on
    - COVID-19 has left the chat

    • @nobiedupree5916
      @nobiedupree5916 4 года назад +18

      Ordered this bad bug just for that.

    • @redpilled4781
      @redpilled4781 4 года назад +9

      Me too, I have a wearable necklace unit too!

    • @FOXCYBORGNINJA
      @FOXCYBORGNINJA 4 года назад +5

      Ebola too.

    • @eti8
      @eti8 4 года назад +20

      just be careful with these things. A few minutes is enough for eye irritation for the next few days.
      Also for the ozone, if you can smell it, it will irritate your lungs, what you definetly don't want in a time of the corona pandemic (you will be infected easier). BTW I use it in a cardbord box to sterilize everything I buy at the store, also for my clothes, which I wear on the street.
      I don't know how effective is the ozone for killing viruses. Anyone an idea about that?

    • @darylcheshire1618
      @darylcheshire1618 4 года назад +2

      Péter Szőllősi I read about the ozone and it is very effective but the effects are erratic. Good against germs and will also cancel organic smells but chemicals like glue used in carpets is just turned into something else which is probably just as toxic. So don’t rely on ozone on chemicals.

  • @MazeFrame
    @MazeFrame 6 лет назад +426

    I could see myself building some "air cleaner" station that filters dust out, takes humidity down and then passes the stream along one or two of these...

    • @papafrank7094
      @papafrank7094 6 лет назад +65

      MazeFrame Exceptional idea. Probably quite useful to "filter out" odors. The glass on the bulbs would probably have to be cleaned frequently though.

    • @SuicideNeil
      @SuicideNeil 6 лет назад +91

      Some high-end aquariums use a filtration system that includes a UV lamp ( enclosed ) to filter water as it is pumped through & kill algae & other water-borne parasites- harmless to the fish of course. Wouldn't recommend it for an air cleaner unless you only had it turned on for short periods- it gives off a strong bleach smell, hence why Clive said you need to leave the room while it's turned on, then leave the windows open to clear out the smell after you turn it off...

    • @RFC3514
      @RFC3514 6 лет назад +32

      You're probably better off using a normal ozone generator (as seen in a recent Clive video) for that. the point of these lights is to sterilise surfaces, not just the air passing right over them.

    • @erikjohansson1814
      @erikjohansson1814 6 лет назад +20

      SuicideNeil It's not because of the smell although ozone becomes annoying to smell after a while, but because of the UVC radiation which isn't too good for your skin or eyes.

    • @SuicideNeil
      @SuicideNeil 6 лет назад +19

      Eryk- yeah, I did watch the video with the sound turned on- and the previous one he talked about too, but thank you all the same; sitting in a room that smells strongly of bleach wouldn't be any fun was my point. You'd only suffer skin/eye damage if the bulb was exposed- which it wouldn't be if it was enclosed inside of a filtration unit, as implied by mazeFrame.

  • @zecekobold2140
    @zecekobold2140 5 лет назад +74

    "Everything I unbox is undesirable, except in a good way." I feel like you're gaslighting me right now.

    • @NPCSN
      @NPCSN 4 года назад

      Zece Kobold
      😂🤣

    • @bob4analog
      @bob4analog 3 года назад +1

      No, UV Lightning!

  • @jurosmollin7484
    @jurosmollin7484 4 года назад +45

    Little did he know how much this would be handy in 2020.

  • @__aceofspades
    @__aceofspades 6 лет назад +225

    Speak for yourself Clive, I love when my hands smell like burnt pork.

  • @josepheccles9341
    @josepheccles9341 4 года назад +10

    The UV can be reduced by reducing the current through the tube. But the glass still does emit the UV, just in less intensity. If you want a lamp that color, but not so dangerous, you can have one made at a neon sign shop from soda glass. I have a few of them. They are very pretty but don't emit much light.

  • @operationsauce
    @operationsauce 6 лет назад +357

    ever wanted cancer? here's your product!

    • @imoffendedthatyouareoffended
      @imoffendedthatyouareoffended 6 лет назад +50

      Jack Kaminsky finally something more dangerous than cigarettes.

    • @calebbroaddrick2655
      @calebbroaddrick2655 6 лет назад +25

      @@imoffendedthatyouareoffended yeah, cigs are taking too long. And not hardly painful enough :/

    • @SteveAyanami
      @SteveAyanami 6 лет назад +4

      From Spishak!

    • @jeffwolf8018
      @jeffwolf8018 6 лет назад +1

      @No Idol not hundred percent positive but I think it's a little more than just that.

    • @THE-zv7vj
      @THE-zv7vj 6 лет назад +14

      doesnt cause cancer. sunburn maybe. Its for short exposure in the winter to give vitamin D back your body. was used to treat skin diseases . Its safe when used properly. I have an old sun kraft and use it weekly. NO cancer no illnes and my skin looks great

  • @Ganjau
    @Ganjau 3 года назад +64

    We’ve got like these 6ft tall UV lights at the school district I work at. Hospital grade and we use them to kill germs and any illnesses. They work fantastically but you need to be really careful if the teachers have plants or animals in their rooms. A few years ago a teacher had 2 turtles in her room. Light was on for 3 hours and killed both turtles. So ya. This light is potent.

    • @ErokLobotomist
      @ErokLobotomist 3 года назад +15

      In a school? Bizarre. Seems like a recipe for disaster.

    • @blacknoir2404
      @blacknoir2404 3 года назад +2

      Hopefully she doesn't have any children or they might be set up for a similar neglectful fate.

    • @markw9285
      @markw9285 2 года назад +2

      That was just plain stupid!

  • @XxGreyShowsxX
    @XxGreyShowsxX 6 лет назад +106

    If someone pulled a prank and put this in my room, I would LITERALLY die 😂😂

    • @al_kaloid
      @al_kaloid 5 лет назад +4

      Give it a try.

    • @Anvilshock
      @Anvilshock 4 года назад

      @Mr. Leviathan's Mobile Gaming Channel Tooootally.

  • @twocvbloke
    @twocvbloke 6 лет назад +45

    I can just imagine all the people who watched this video thinking it's a great way of getting out of cleaning the bathroom; "Oh but the light is killing all the bad stuff!" - "Yeah, but the bog still has your skids all over it!!!!"... :P

  • @crazygeorgelincoln
    @crazygeorgelincoln 4 года назад +78

    Really glad I watched this ages ago. Being able to nuke a room is a comfort in these times.

    • @bigclivedotcom
      @bigclivedotcom  4 года назад +54

      I've nuked my bedroom with it twice recently.

    • @babs3483
      @babs3483 4 года назад

      Where did you purchase yours? And does it have a timer?

    • @babs3483
      @babs3483 4 года назад

      @@bigclivedotcom where did you purchase yours

    • @crazygeorgelincoln
      @crazygeorgelincoln 4 года назад +3

      @@babs3483 mine came from eBay, China, has no timer .
      I think I have the same as Clive, tho he experienced shipping problems , ordered one nothing shows up. Tried again and gets one. I didn't have any issues, but I don't live on the isle of man. I'm sure some people think it's an imaginary place.

    • @1STGeneral
      @1STGeneral 3 года назад

      @@bigclivedotcom Those working ladies 🚺 are going to get mad .I'll be right back.....Why did you turn that pretty light off smells like chitlins in here

  • @fluffycritter
    @fluffycritter Год назад +14

    Apparently Apefest 2023 was dumb enough to use this kind of lighting and it's ended up blinding and injuring many of the attendees. FUN!

    • @bigclivedotcom
      @bigclivedotcom  Год назад +7

      It does look like that has happened. I wonder if the sign above the stage is outlined in UVC tubes.

    • @fluffycritter
      @fluffycritter Год назад

      @@bigclivedotcom That's what it looks like from the photos yeah. And this incident has also reminded folks of the 2017 fashion show incident you talked about in this video. Too bad none of the Apefest lighting crew remember that.

  • @joeschlotthauer840
    @joeschlotthauer840 6 лет назад +132

    "Something you don't want to be in the room with"
    They should call it the Mother-in-law light bulb...

  • @HennerZeller
    @HennerZeller 6 лет назад +145

    Hypothetically, if you have mosquitoes in the room, would it help convincing them to live shorter ? As in, not anymore when you enter the room 2h later ? Of course, at that point, all colored stuff in that room is also bleached...

    • @bigclivedotcom
      @bigclivedotcom  6 лет назад +65

      I'm not sure how it would affect them. Whether they'd even try to fly to it.

    • @melioristicone333
      @melioristicone333 6 лет назад +68

      Especially since it is the blue Spectrum and combined UVC it is almost instantly deadly to mosquitoes, larvae, beetles, flies pretty much everything. You Couldn't stop warning people about this bulb, kudos for that. This one's dangerous folks. 👌

    • @Basement-Science
      @Basement-Science 6 лет назад +24

      Apparently the ozone will kill most insects after some time. Mosquitoes may fly to it because of the emmissions above the UVC range.

    • @Honeypot-x9s
      @Honeypot-x9s 6 лет назад +3

      I don’t think that It will bleach things. Atleast not a lot. I haven’t noticed it yet with my weaker UV lamps. I need to get one of these, But I’m on 110V I hope I can use it on 110V.

    • @TomSmith-pl3tw
      @TomSmith-pl3tw 6 лет назад +12

      I have one of the old style tubes mounted in a box to erase EPROMS. They have quartz glass.

  • @dustysparks
    @dustysparks 6 лет назад +27

    Quartz based glass passes UV, they use bulbs like that for high intensity photo chromatography when processing certain biologic samples. There will be a broad spectrum tungsten lamp and a UV lamp and a precision controlled prism that will pass certain wavelengths at precision angles, and a photo detector to measure the transmissivity of the sample. The sample holders have to be quartz to measure any UV.

    • @bigclivedotcom
      @bigclivedotcom  6 лет назад +8

      I'm not sure why I couldn't think of the word quartz while I was making the video.

    • @ThomasBurkholder
      @ThomasBurkholder 6 лет назад +1

      Brand-Tech makes plastic, disposable, UV transparent (down to about 230nm) cuvettes which are about $1 each. www.brandtech.com/wp-content/uploads/cuvettegraph.pdf

    • @dustysparks
      @dustysparks 6 лет назад

      Thomas Burkholder cuvette, that's the word I couldn't remember.

    • @DavidRobertsonUK
      @DavidRobertsonUK 6 лет назад +4

      Actually the monochromators are usually based on diffraction gratings rather than prisms. And for UV spectroscopy or UV detectors for HPLC etc they usually use some interesting (aka expensive) types of lamps, e.g. deuterium arc lamps.

    • @dustysparks
      @dustysparks 6 лет назад +1

      David Robertson those diffraction gratings are a BITCH to calibrate, I remember that much. It's been like 10 years since I've touched that kind of equipment. HPLC pistons I also remember being expensive as they were typically man-made Ruby to handle the pressure, and the little windows were man-made sapphire. I'm glad I don't work in that field anymore.

  • @aureliogutierrez9195
    @aureliogutierrez9195 4 года назад +104

    Recommendations: do not touch the special glass
    This video: touch, touch, touch, touch...

    • @Rolldeep
      @Rolldeep 4 года назад +6

      Clean the glass in vodka before use

    • @raymondbergeron3384
      @raymondbergeron3384 4 года назад +2

      Won't matter (to the lamp). It does not get hot like a holigen or tungsten lamp.

    • @kaikart123
      @kaikart123 4 года назад +3

      @@raymondbergeron3384 it lessen the effectivity because your grease reflect the light.

  • @denvera1g1
    @denvera1g1 5 лет назад +22

    I could see this being part of someone's annual house cleaning routine

  • @johnrehwinkel7241
    @johnrehwinkel7241 6 лет назад +39

    I suspect the metal cylinders aren't getters, but "givers": sintered lumps of mercury amalgam, that give off mercury when heated. They're a simple and convenient way to deliver a specific amount of mercury, without having to handle actual liquid mercury. It was interesting watching the mercury propagate through the tube when you had it lit too: the tubing nearest the cathodes/givers had the bright blue mercury vapor look to it, while the tubing farther away showed the paler discharge of just the carrier gas (argon?). I made a tube once with neon and mercury and when I first fired it up, it light the brilliant red of a neon discharge, and I could watch the blue move through the tube and take over as the mercury vaporized. I wish I had filmed it.

    • @bigclivedotcom
      @bigclivedotcom  6 лет назад +13

      They may indeed be a mercury amalgam for controlled dosing. I have a neon mercury tube with a dip in the middle to trap the migrating mercury when the tube is run on DC. It takes a long time, but the residual mercury at the electrodes finally migrates away and the tube then lights more or less half and half red/blue.

  • @pawelbienkowski2899
    @pawelbienkowski2899 5 лет назад +8

    The UVC lamps are common in marine and freshwater aquaristic. I'm using it in my nano-reefs all the time. But they are hidden in black cases obviously.

  • @josephking6515
    @josephking6515 4 года назад +7

    In my younger days I worked in blown film plastic factories and we used a device that put an "arc" across the plastic film to create small pits so when they printed the film the ink had somewhere to pool and set (not technically correct but good enough for my tale of woe). If the film wasn't treated then the dry ink would just peel off when sellotape was applied and removed. One night the pipe that exhausted the ozone to the outside broke. It was a large factory about 75 metres long, 25 metres wide and 15 to 20 metres high. There were two rollup doors that extended more than half way to the top of the building and there was a slight airflow. We had both of these doors open and all three of us (it was on the night shift so minimal staff) got ozone poisoning. It was like the hangover from hell; *VERY* unpleasant and it took a few hours after finishing work for the "hangover" to subside!
    I later became a Network Engineer and made myself a tad unpopular with my employers when I would point out the crisp smell coming from the high volume printers and especially photocopiers was a poisonous gas and proper ventilation of the photocopy rooms was required. Also suggested that the high volume A4 printers should not be sitting next to someones desk but rather a few feet (a metre) away. I really came to hate the smell after my nightmare in the factory.

  • @lohphat
    @lohphat 6 лет назад +9

    Cataracts are a thing. Had to have mine out at age 52. I spent too much time without eye protection around black lights as a youngster also, we didn't know about UV protection in the '70s.

  • @LesKing72
    @LesKing72 6 лет назад +24

    Hospitals have a sterilization light that they wheel into rooms that had patients with particularly nasty infections. Someone posted a picture on Reddit where all of the cabinets in the room were open and the garbage cans were on their side facing the light.

    • @bigclivedotcom
      @bigclivedotcom  6 лет назад +5

      ruclips.net/video/d9uCM_8MfR0/видео.html

    • @jcnash02
      @jcnash02 6 лет назад +2

      therealnightwriter no they are not. However, the patient might die from vitamin c toxicity.

    • @LH782
      @LH782 6 лет назад +1

      Interesting how they emphasise several times that it's "natural" uv-light.

    • @lajoswinkler
      @lajoswinkler 6 лет назад

      It's not sterilization, it sanitization. It brings the level of viable germs to low values, but it will not kill every one of them, as well as their possible spores.
      if this was effective, ethylene oxide and plasma and gamma rays would not have to be used, and they are used.

    • @HeathHunnicutt
      @HeathHunnicutt 6 лет назад

      therealnightwriter just wanted to give you props for being not only correct, but chastised by people who don't know any better. Props to you.

  • @_BangDroid_
    @_BangDroid_ 6 лет назад +67

    *_Unbox Tragedy_* LOL you should make another channel with that name.

  • @TheSonicSegaNerd
    @TheSonicSegaNerd 10 месяцев назад +2

    You're brave holding that thing - I get antsy holding a 365nm blacklight, so you better believe when I turn on my 254nm lamp, I run out my room like a coward

  • @fadingbeleifs
    @fadingbeleifs 5 лет назад +4

    Yeah, I bought one. Love it. Makes my buddy's shop area smell much better... Funny to watch the bugs come up to it... They make it a few minutes... Then they go blind and crash into objects or just die mid-air and hit the floor

  • @zh84
    @zh84 6 лет назад +25

    "Anti-acarien" presumably means "mite-killing", from "acaria", the scientific name for the mite group.

    • @bigclivedotcom
      @bigclivedotcom  6 лет назад +4

      It does seem to imply dust mite ability. Not sure how effective it would be.

    • @chongtak
      @chongtak 6 лет назад

      Anti-Acarien is a very common term in French. The insect that we call "mite" in French, is called moth in English.

  • @gtamonkey3061
    @gtamonkey3061 5 лет назад +188

    Some may say it’s a fleshlight ;)

  • @swagiyo9801
    @swagiyo9801 5 лет назад +20

    You can actually find these in garden/hardware stores, they are commonly used in garden pond sterilizers.
    These lamps are also really good at wiping UVROM's (EPROM) in a matter of seconds.

    • @torinireland6526
      @torinireland6526 2 года назад +3

      @@jamestreese4 Erm, there are legit reasons to want to wipe a UVROM/EPROM - for example if you do DIY electronics and want to repurpose one you harvested from a donor board for some project.

  • @caseymuni4097
    @caseymuni4097 5 лет назад +14

    In some countries it used as a hospital operation room sterilizer

  • @tenlittleindians
    @tenlittleindians 6 лет назад +39

    We had a couple of bag filling machines in the dairy I worked at that each had 4 bulbs in them. The plastic film to make the milk pouches was threaded through the machine with the bulbs on each side of the transparent plastic film. They sterilized the plastic. I never noticed the ozone smell but in a dairy all you smell is milk most of the time.

    • @SquishyZoran
      @SquishyZoran 6 лет назад +3

      Not Cow Shit?

    • @chrissalch693
      @chrissalch693 6 лет назад +8

      Squishy Zoran not in the dairy itself. That would be at the farms.

    • @SquishyZoran
      @SquishyZoran 6 лет назад +1

      Chris Salch Ah I see!

    • @eideticex
      @eideticex 6 лет назад

      On a line they would have exhaust ducts and probably a clean air system. Most likely sealed to make it work better and keep workers alive.

    • @tenlittleindians
      @tenlittleindians 6 лет назад +2

      Alan Hunter Small dairy with less than ten employees. Old school, started in the 40's. We had no fancy air circulation system. The doors and windows open in the summer is all we had.

  • @LMacNeill
    @LMacNeill 6 лет назад +49

    Me: "I need to go to bed."
    RUclips: *Big Clive uploaded a video and the title is "Awesome flesh-burning death lamp."*
    Me: "Who needs sleep?!"

  • @markmyjak7739
    @markmyjak7739 4 года назад +21

    It's an ultraviolet light source. This lamp produces hard ultraviolet light. Electric arc welding does the same thing.

    • @kartoffelwaffel
      @kartoffelwaffel 4 года назад +1

      Thanks cp'n obvious, FYI THE SUN EMITS UV LIGHT AS WELL

    • @bipbong2906
      @bipbong2906 4 года назад +1

      kartoffelwaffel but the atmosphere blocks a lot of it sciencing.com/percent-uv-ozone-absorb-20509.html

    • @kartoffelwaffel
      @kartoffelwaffel 4 года назад

      @@bipbong2906 indeed and welding masks block most of the light produced by welding, but what's your point?

    • @bipbong2906
      @bipbong2906 4 года назад +1

      kartoffelwaffel idk what was yours

  • @mayesip
    @mayesip 6 лет назад +90

    Be careful this uvb ages plastic super fast! So if you leave it on, make some cover or cover plastic items

    • @TanTan-ni4mg
      @TanTan-ni4mg 6 лет назад +20

      mayesip uv.....c.

    • @MiniLuv-1984
      @MiniLuv-1984 6 лет назад +10

      Maybe we need to set some up over the plastic island of rubbish in the Atlantic or Pacific or where that island of plastic garbage is floating?

    • @ZOMBIEHEADSHOTKILLER
      @ZOMBIEHEADSHOTKILLER 6 лет назад +19

      no, uv degrading plastics is already part of the problem, it would just create smaller bits, an chemicals, which are even harder to clean up.

    • @willrobbinson
      @willrobbinson 6 лет назад +1

      mayesip UVC will degrade some plastics also

    • @PSUQDPICHQIEIWC
      @PSUQDPICHQIEIWC 6 лет назад +9

      The UV box I use for curing photopolymer is basically just a naked 175W mercury vapor arc tube in a box with ducted exhaust. It can turn white pvc brown in a few minutes, and the light leaking into the duct makes the hose brittle.

  • @Red_wine
    @Red_wine 5 лет назад +99

    Can I use it as a lightsaber?

    • @passmethesaltplease9350
      @passmethesaltplease9350 5 лет назад +38

      Probably be the slowest deadly fight

    • @realdamageboy
      @realdamageboy 5 лет назад +5

      I think it is more like stick from "Man in Black" movie, it erase Your Eyes and then brains with memory....

    • @arlisbloxer05
      @arlisbloxer05 5 лет назад +3

      Yes, but actually no

    • @Trid2bnrml1
      @Trid2bnrml1 4 года назад +2

      not for very long.

    • @a2e5
      @a2e5 3 года назад +2

      More effective against naked enemies. Darth vader suit is recommended for personal protection. Use ANSI rated goggles.

  • @mentatphilosopher
    @mentatphilosopher 6 лет назад +9

    The socket choice is unfortunate but these lamps are meant to go inside machinery and for food sterilization and preservation.

  • @CAZamianSliger
    @CAZamianSliger 3 года назад +3

    UV causes thymine dimers. This is a strong bond between two or more consecutive thymine bases on same strand. This causes either no production of protein or the wrong sequence of amino acids thus organisms death. Great video!

    • @roberttaylor2328
      @roberttaylor2328 3 года назад

      Just took a look - nothing to fiddle with. Although, I have an application for this photophage....

  • @HappyHands.
    @HappyHands. 6 лет назад +20

    great lamp to put in your AC ductwork in humid climates

    • @sauercrowder
      @sauercrowder 4 года назад +1

      If you want to fill your home with ozone...

    • @kaikart123
      @kaikart123 4 года назад

      @@sauercrowder they do use a bunch of UV light in a commercial HVAC system, it's in a box the air ducts connected to

  • @Fam.Pedersen
    @Fam.Pedersen 5 лет назад +8

    The time of exposure and distance is the critical factor. That 20 w lamp would probably be able to des infected a 20 m^2 room in about 4 hours.

    • @ammlseri5769
      @ammlseri5769 4 года назад +1

      KRH If it gives such a potent ozone smell, ozone might also play a part in it‘s disinfectant properties

  • @basjenniskens8728
    @basjenniskens8728 3 года назад +4

    These lamps are also used in water filter systems. Aquariums use them a lot. To kil of algie and the like and is part of a bigger filter system with active coal and good bacteria.

  • @buckstarchaser2376
    @buckstarchaser2376 2 года назад +8

    I had a bright idea to put the smallest one of these I could find (15W, I think) in the intake duct for my house's HVAC. The air was pretty fresh, and it knocked down the smell of "old people who chronically smoke" that my house came with, but it turned the air filter into dust. I imagine that if you had a screen to hold cooties and dust bunnies in front of the bulb instead of an organic paper filter, you could similarly turn all that stuff to dust too. Unfortunately, that furnace was pretty old, and I think the inner-coating of tobacco tar was the only thing holding it together and I had to replace it shortly after.

    • @psirvent8
      @psirvent8 Год назад +1

      Now you know to avoid the ozone generating ones don't you ?

    • @buckstarchaser2376
      @buckstarchaser2376 Год назад

      @@psirvent8 LOL, hell no... If I was on Mars, I would insist on an ozone and sulfuric acid air scrubber. That would turn pretty much anything that got sucked into the air duct into carbon dioxide, which could be absorbed into a water spray, that collects for direct application to a splendid greenhouse for remediation.
      Ozone is very unstable, and reverts back to diatomic oxygen on contact with water. This would leave an air-stream extremely clean, dust-free, and sterile to a degree that probably outperforms the filters on disease warfare laboratories near you. UV-C is dangerous. Ozone is dangerous, and so is the oxygen you breathe. When it benefits you, it's unlikely you even know it (swimming pools, drinking water, surgical instruments, water parks, sewage treatment, etc.).
      It's only when you naively wake the genie and demand something dumb that it fucks you up. If you go about it with careful deliberation, you can have years without any breathing nor skin allergies... Until your HVAC gets oxidized. I won't be needing any duct cleaning for a while though.

  • @Anaerin
    @Anaerin 6 лет назад +41

    These are quite common in the US - When you have forced-air heating and AC (As is common in US houses), the higher end systems often have a UV bacteria killing "light" in the intake airstream to augment HEPA filters and the like.

    • @andrewfidel2220
      @andrewfidel2220 6 лет назад +14

      Robert Johnston another use in HVAC is in the drip pans, the Liebert HVAC systems in the datacenter I managed had such lamps to keep Legionella bacteria and algae from growing because they were running 24x7 and the room was humidity controlled so the pans were never dry.

    • @Chef_PC
      @Chef_PC 6 лет назад +10

      Also in pools and hot tubs now for sterilization of the water to help take take the place of some of the chemicals.

    • @TheJohn8765
      @TheJohn8765 6 лет назад +6

      I think it's also used (contained) in my supermarket's bulk-water dispense as a final "disinfectant" step.

    • @CDP135Z
      @CDP135Z 6 лет назад +1

      I’ve been thinking about installing one of these on the inside of my AC return duct. Any reason that’s a bad idea?

    • @matthewk937
      @matthewk937 6 лет назад +2

      CDP135Z mabye the ozone?

  • @Professorke
    @Professorke 3 года назад +3

    I have had this lamp for about 2 years and it works extremely well. I am an inveterate pipe smoker and my studio stinks to most people because pipe smoke penetrates deep into the walls. I leave this lamp on for an hour every 14 days and all the smell is gone and the room smells fresh again. Also, I then don't have to deal with pesky insects like fruit flies. I work with a timer and make sure I am far away when I let it start. Safety first :-) I also have miniature UVC/Ozone lamps for in storage cabinets. And also Ozone generator for fruits and vegetables.

    • @alexlifeson8946
      @alexlifeson8946 Год назад

      You dumbass. Ozone doesn't "freshen" anything. It actively deadens your nose smell receptors, and can be permanent. It also damages your lungs.

  • @illuminaughty8451
    @illuminaughty8451 3 года назад +13

    “I kinda like this cuz it’s so bad” so relatable

  • @mehere6865
    @mehere6865 4 года назад +18

    Tell me kind sir when you turned it on did you leave a shadow on the wall behind you after you turned it off again

  • @zakofrx
    @zakofrx 6 лет назад +11

    Always wanted to try one to see if it would kill photographic lens fungus and mold that lives on the lens coatings and etches the glass.

    • @beware_the_moose
      @beware_the_moose 6 лет назад +1

      Mark Wilko might kill but won't remove, so you are still going to need to disassemble and clean!

  • @thatdiyguyraymondmonk1225
    @thatdiyguyraymondmonk1225 3 года назад +3

    This is a very good thing (maybe) if it is used properly and kept in a secure way that it won’t be accidentally used when the room is occupied.

  • @WickedProxy
    @WickedProxy 2 года назад +36

    Lots of welders know that "sand in the eyes" feeling all to well after not realizing how much reflected light was coming in from behind their welding helmet when welding with a nice white wall behind them. Fun stuff.

  • @maicod
    @maicod 6 лет назад +6

    its got a really stunning colour, a bit like an ocean or an aquamarine stone

  • @racookster
    @racookster Год назад +4

    When I was a little kid (early 'sixties), the clothes dryer my parents owned had a germicidal lamp in it. Strangely, it didn't go out when you opened the door. It should have. At least my parents knew what it was and told me never to look at it. Beyond seeing it just long enough to know it was blue, I didn't.

  • @stabssfmgineer1623
    @stabssfmgineer1623 5 лет назад +25

    "The back of my hand now smells like burnt pork. That's bad."

  • @rquance1
    @rquance1 4 года назад +3

    Very interesting video. I have a very large one of those that is probably about 50 or more years old that I recovered from a University trash heap in New York State. Very effective at making ozone and sterilizing a large area. I only use it when I am checking for fluorescence of different materials.

  • @Stigstigster
    @Stigstigster 6 лет назад +80

    I just bought one of these to use periodically in my slightly damp basement. I switched it on to make sure it was working and looked at the light for less than 5 seconds, probably only even 2 - 3 seconds as I glanced at it a couple of times at a distance of about 2 feet. Now I'm shit scared of it and that I have blasted my eyes. Somebody, please tell me I haven't given myself arc-flash in this short time? I need some reassurance and have now put it on a remote switch so I can turn it on from outside the room. Help! I'm still a bit scared!
    EDIT - 24 hours have gone by and my eyes are fine. I was just panicking!

    • @brycetononeal383
      @brycetononeal383 6 лет назад +6

      Stigstigster Good to know lol. I purchased one of these recently to sterilize a room of microorganisms. I will be setting it up soon. I’d like to make sure it works but also plan on normally powering it on/off remotely with the entrance to the room closed.

    • @ironlungs8759
      @ironlungs8759 6 лет назад +8

      How has your damp room fared, Stigstigster?
      Is it still damp/moldy?

    • @williamgallop9425
      @williamgallop9425 5 лет назад +6

      How UV damages eyes, see Snowblindness.

    • @PatrickRatman
      @PatrickRatman 5 лет назад +9

      @@brycetononeal383 Make sure you vent out the ozone, that shit is toxic as fuck

    • @babyplaze
      @babyplaze 4 года назад

      Stigstigster get a grip you fucking attention seeking snowflake.

  • @nickturner4150
    @nickturner4150 3 года назад +3

    I read the title and thought I've gotta see this at quarter to four in the morning. Thanks insomnia.

  • @thomaslevy2119
    @thomaslevy2119 6 лет назад +4

    The commercial filtered water vending machines I used to maintain used high-output UV tubes to sterilize the water coming from the reverse osmosis filter. The lamps looked like long, thin, clear neon tubes. Water passed through quartz tubes close to the lamps for treatment. The assembly was contained inside a stainless box with a door interlock to switch the UV lamps off in case you forget to turn off power to the machine. UV light may not kill all bacteria, but does neuter them with the photons able to punch holes in the bacteria's DNA so they can not reproduce. I believe that is one reason why the device is called a "sterilizer" and not a "killer."

    • @RedScaledKnight1
      @RedScaledKnight1 6 лет назад

      And the water passed the lights pretty quickly I assume? The tube carrying the water probably helped maximize surface area so a decent flow rate could be maintained. That means it really doesn't take long at all to achieve microbial sterilization using the lights, because how might the water react to being hit by the uvc for an extended time?

    • @thomaslevy2119
      @thomaslevy2119 6 лет назад

      RedScaledKnight1: Yes. The water made two circuits through the sterilizer before going into the storage tank. Then it went through the sterilizer again when it was pumped into the customer's bottle in case any bacteria tried to grow in the storage tank. A total of four trips through the sterilizer. Don't know about water being exposed to UV for an extended time. It just might make it boil.

  • @hnobleh
    @hnobleh 5 лет назад +4

    I did an Amazon search for "Germicidal lamp" and came up with hundreds of many price ranges. I saw some which were very similar to yours. They all operated on 120 V .

  • @CheekyMonkey1776
    @CheekyMonkey1776 5 лет назад +11

    I just found a similar bulb at my local “Menards” home improvement store, $8 USD on clearance. I snapped it up. I plan to use it in some yet to be designed nefarious project. Apparently they are used in some of the high end air purification devices.

    • @khalidhebshi5318
      @khalidhebshi5318 4 года назад +3

      Cheeky Monkees They are used in High end WATER purification devices. UVC and UV in general breaks down the air to produce Ozone, which is bad for your health

    • @craigfredryk8205
      @craigfredryk8205 4 года назад +4

      Yes they are. We sell then for hvac units. To kill off growth(mold, mildew, bacteria, ect)
      True story. The installers didnt have a light so they used a uv light. They were out of work for a while.

    • @Patrick-c8x
      @Patrick-c8x 4 года назад

      But Ozone smells so good -- like that ion smell after a rainstorm 🌬️

  • @aaronramsden1657
    @aaronramsden1657 3 года назад +36

    "I can feel it...is it..." It's probably your cells mutating

    • @OooohReally
      @OooohReally 3 года назад +4

      I wonder if my offspring would become super heroes if I use tis light to brighten up my ballsack once in a while

  • @1ManWrenching
    @1ManWrenching 6 лет назад +89

    Didn’t even mention that these would be great for erasing EPROMs. I used to use toothbrush holders with these bulbs in them to erase my chips. Hehe. This would probably erase one in seconds. Hehe.

    • @ucitymetalhead
      @ucitymetalhead 6 лет назад +8

      unaclocker and the uv cured plastics and resins might work well with this too.

    • @ItsMe-ic7on
      @ItsMe-ic7on 6 лет назад +1

      unaclocker what are eproms

    • @bignig123
      @bignig123 6 лет назад +21

      erasable programmable ROM (read only memory)

    • @MiniLuv-1984
      @MiniLuv-1984 6 лет назад +9

      unaclocker, I suppose it will convert EEPROM's to write only memory after it turns the plastic housing into dust? Leave it on for a day and you will see what I mean.

    • @tin2001
      @tin2001 6 лет назад +4

      People still use UV erasable EPROM? I thought everything just used flash memory now.

  • @tanngerin
    @tanngerin 6 лет назад +4

    Key lime pie has an interesting story, supposedly beginning in the early 20th century when refrigeration was scarce. Sweetened condensed milk was used a lot in cooking, especially on fishing boats. Legend has it that the famous pie was created with what the Florida sponge fisherman had on hand: sweetened condensed milk, limes and crackers. Even at sea, there’s time for comfort food.

    • @dtrrtd774
      @dtrrtd774 6 лет назад +1

      Random thought of the day?

  • @loliswat8223
    @loliswat8223 3 года назад +4

    I must have watched this video at least ten times. Every time I see the thumbnail and read the title I start laughing. Always a treat.

  • @arshaghazie
    @arshaghazie Год назад +6

    huh, I wonder why this video gets promoted again in November 2023