Oh no... It probably should not be made the same color because... If people can confuse a fire extinguisher with a sanitizer dispenser, they can confuse it with hydrogen easily
@@anarcocapitalista3700 nothing would happen hydrogen is the explosive one hydrogen + oxygen make a bigger explosion but oxygen doesn't explode by itself I mean If it did your blood would explode
One of my formative memories of childhood was sitting at the front of chemistry class with my crush, we'd both finished the work our teacher had set us and so both of us and our teacher were just staring at a bunsen burner she had lit at her desk because she was bored. Ridiculously relaxing.
Even more dangerous, and EXTREMELY loud was when I put acetylene in a 10 gallon trash bag and shot it from 30 ft away with a flaming arrow. I couldn't hear a thing for a couple of hours. And the neighborhood thought a household propane tank blew up. And the local LE and fire departments responded accordingly. 😱
I've seen someone ignite a hydrogen balloon in person once, and let me tell you, the loud boom is no joke! No recording can truly replicate the thunderous clap and the shockwave that you feel in your chest. It was so cool!
One of the physics demonstrations we run every semester is an oxy/hydrogen balloon igniting. It's pretty fun. My favourite is still the can crusher, though. Take a big ol' coil of wires in a resin ring, connect it to a cabinet capacitor, put an empty soda can in, and flip the switch. The top half of the can usually gets embedded in the ceiling of the lecture hall.
I had to read this comment twice. I seriously thought you said "ignite hydrogen IN A person"... and the rest of the comment after that became outlandish beyond belief.
I haven’t heard anything of the Hindenburg in years, I live on the Air Force base the Hindenburg crashed in, about a mile off from the memorial plaque and it’s really surprising how little it is mentioned in the town it crashed in other than a small church off base that sells Hindenburg merch and the occasional Hindenburg picture in the local elementary school
I remember as a kid wondering that hydrogen is the lightest element, so why don’t they fill balloons up with them. And then i searched up why, and i always laugh knowing that i would have probably tried that aswell
@@Enaxity They were so confident in the Hindenburg's construction and safety due to the use of hydrogen it even had a smoking room. Some still believe it blew up on it's first flight but don't know that it had more than a full year of successful service with more than a dozen flights across the Atlantic Ocean. No one had any reason to suspect that horrifying tragedy would occur. Sadly it did and serves as a perhaps the foremost example on the severity and danger of hydrogen, dark jokes too.
“This tank is filled with some extremely flammable hydrogen, and I really wanna light some on fire” Is probably the most ‘NileRed’ sentence I’ve ever heard 😂
@Tech Overkill hi dude I am getting obsessed with my stink hole I inhale all of my stink puffs i just blew a fuckin 15 second monster into the bowl and I put my head into the bowl and just inhaled it I love it so much do u do this also
I had a chem professor years ago who did a demonstration involving balloons and fire. He showed what happened when you lit a balloon filled with air, with oxygen, with hydrogen, then as a finale, one with a mix of oxygen and hydrogen. I am not sure how much we actually learned, but it did wake up sleepy students.
My high school chem teacher did the same thing. I could feel the breeze from the mixed H&O balloon when it exploded. Apparently the other chem teacher stopped doing that demo a few years before because he lit the ceiling tiles on fire. This teacher also demonstrated grain silo explosions by adding some sawdust to a big coffee tin, putting a lit candle inside, putting the lid on, and blowing air in through a tube in the side to disperse the sawdust. The lid hit the ceiling and cracked one of the tiles, I think.
I saw the same demo in 5th grade. I don’t know exactly what was in it but it was 10x more powerful than the hydrogen one. I was at the back of the auditorium and felt the shockwave hit me in the chest.
This video made me remember something. When I was two or three years old, an uncle of mine brought a balloon to my grandmother's house, let it loose so it floated up to the ceiling, and lighted it's long cord on fire with a lighter. I remember being seated on the floor, looking up at the little flame going up consuming the thin cord, reaching the balloon, then BOOM, a ball of fire almost exactly over me but far up at the ceiling level. The experience was very interesting and totally unexpected for my young mind. But now that I'm in my early fifties the only thing I can think of is, what kind of idiot does that with a baby in the room?
“It’s extremely flammable and I wanna light it on fire” good to know someone has the same thought process as me. As soon as I found out about caesium in water the first thing I did was search the internet for it. Turns out not easy to find. I’ve done this with a few other things before and now the cia probably has me on some sort of watch list
@@Midaspl Yes, that's why special helium ballons have to be from special (dense) material. In normal rubber balloons it get's lost within 1-4 days (depending on the temperature & rubber etc.)
So back in high school, we did an experiment where we magnesium strips (at least I think it was magnesium) into a tube of solution (don’t remember what) it produces hydrogen gas and the thing was you were supposed to put a match on the lip of the tube to light it. So I did it and nothing happened, so I put it in a little deeper and it worked, creating a loud “THOOMP” sound, which scared the daylights out of me. One of my most fond memories of high school
It was probably a reaction between the magnesium metal and some sort of acid, probably dillute HCl. The result is MgCl2 and Hydrogen gas. The latter of which is quite flammable. ^^ Not sure what it's called in English, but in Germany we call it "Knallgasprobe", which literally means "bang gas test". c:
the solution could be any acid and as you said magnesium or a type of metal you are absolutely correct because when metals react with acids it produces metallic salt and hydrogen gas
I remember our chemistry teacher doing that, it's definitely something in person to feel the warmth from the explosion spread across the whole classroom
My high school’s chemistry teacher did experiments like that, and that was how we found out that the contractors accidentally used regular glass in one of the windows in the lab.
First some general tips : Always destroy opponent’s cc troops, even during normal attacks. Prevents useless waste of troops. Never assume that cc will be empty. I have faced situations where seemingly abandoned base had powerful cc troops hidden. Strategy over strength. Shear amount of troops sent hysterically on a base might not always work. A strategy always does (when executed correctly). Connect your account to a social account to save progress on cloud ASAP. Don’t use gems in anything other than buying builders. Even the 1 gems you need to use initially, can be avoided if you wait for minute or two. Buy builders first. Clans are useful and important. Don’t rush to upgrade town hall without properly upgrading defenses and walls. Some useful tricks based on personal experience: Don’t move the screen while a spell is selected. If you move while keeping the spell selected increases the chance of dropping the spell accidentally. This waste of spell, especially during wars can be truly annoying. A hog or two in army is best to check opponents cc troops. Use 2 lightning and an earthquake to destroy one air defense instead of 3 lightning spells. This saves space for another spell in your army. Wars are amazing source of income for gold. Using healers can save lot of healing spells. Use one or two healers can effectively save 1 or 2 healing spells. Teslas, when placed to surprise opponent rather than usual expected places are more effective. Final word : Patience is key. Nothing is impossible. Those humongous costs of xbow and inferno towers may seem impossible to achieve but believe me, with more time and higher level you will realize it is not truly that big at that level.
@@philipphermann9454 it's not too bad. I did a touring production featuring this, only with much larger balloons. It sounds like a bomb is going off, but that's about it
@@iRrrmanion1 I thought about it, and you are right. From the chemical perspective we should even reduce the overall volume since 1 mol of water vapour is created by 1.5 mol of hydrogen+oxygen which are also gases. Which means the rapid expansion of the water vapour is only release of pressure and expansion due to heat from the reaction, it is very fast, but it's not a huge amount of molecules. Still enough for a shock wave. Compare that to other high explosives in solid state where one big molecule decomposes into many gas molecules, so the volume increases due to phase transition, to heat and to number of molecules. Perfect for shattering windows.
@@8c.16.haganahadam3 im sorry but that was the French not the British learn your history and get it right before you spout history your not quite sure of. I love history and when someone gets it wrong I have to correct them.
I had an instructor once who loved to start his classes with a bang. Literal bang. I think my favorite was nitrogen + hydrogen. I could feel the heat off that balloon all the way in the back. He stopped when he miscalculated the chunk of sodium he decided to toss into a large beaker of water. (Though his breathless squeak of a curse will stay with me forever.)
Yeah once my chemistry teacher popped in a chunk of sodium in water. She immediately covered it and there was a tame little reaction inside so we thought it was over, but as soon as she removed the lid, it blew up and one of my classmates got a hole burnt in her sleeve while one got mild rashes on her neck and almost everyone got splashed by a little bit of warm water. It wasn't too serious but that girl with the singed sleeve was so proud of the hole... I can't help but laugh when I think about it!
Sodium always gets the last laugh, had a professor blow up a beaker of water. I'm glad I was there for the first test, the glass cleanup was rough 🤣 She didnt attempt it again, so 2 years later we had a big chunk of sodium. We dropped that thing in a kiddie pool in a nearby field, that was awesome. Surprised she's still employed TBH 😮
@@GoIdfish I've been breathing hydrogen gas this week. Other people have suggested it would be fatal. Not like I regularly have electrical sparks in my lungs. Yeah, I hear that you're joking, but I'm not.
@@carpediemarts705 it's not fatal because hydrogen gas is fatal, it's because literally any mistake at all in handling the hydrogen gas could well end in a fiery death that takes whatever structure you're in with it
I work at a power plant, and we use massive amounts of hydrogen gas in the generator to cool the rotor. This is quite common for high output generators.
Hydrogen to cool the generator? How the hell does that work? Edit: apologies if this question makes me look like an idiot. As you can tell, chemistry was not my strongest subject in school.
@@Erakius323 before I've been working at the power plant, I didn't know that either. You are no idiot, this is simply not part of common knowledge. It works just as a medium to transport the heat away from the rotor, instead of air. The generator is hermetically sealed and the pressurised (5bar, in our case) hydrogen is being ventilated through heat exchangers that are operated by cooling water. (The stator is being cooled by water.) The benefit is, that hydrogen carries a lot more heat than any other gas.
@@andrebartels1690 That makes a lot more sense. I wondered why hydrogen. Although, how are sparks kept contained? Or is the oxygen level simply kept so low that there can be no ignition? Edit: I assume the hermetically sealed part and the heat exchangers help keep sparks relatively in check.
NileRed: To get the hydrogen out of the tank though, I first need to add a regulator. *NileRed opens the valve* Regulator: It was a clear black night, a clear white moon…
I remember lighting a hydrogen balloon on fire once when I was a kid. Only problem is, I did it while holding it. In my hands. I still have the burn marks on my fingers.
Your parents after you light your house on fire: "Why didnt you use the fire extinguisher?!" Seeing you lit the fire in front of the fire extinguisher lol
I had a chemistry teacher whp used electrolysis to fill a test tube with hydrogen, and then put his thumb over the opening while holding the test tube in his hand. He then lighted a match and quickly moved his thumb away to light the hydrogen on fire.
@@Dryblack1 Chemicals have the warning labels of explosive or dont set it on fire and all that for a reason and they are also poisonous to the body of a living creature, so that means you can make some crazy fire bombs and some mustard gas and all sorts of things
@@Dryblack1 here in Brazil some of us love to mix them and sometimes it releases some mist … I don’t recall what the misture is vinegar with bleach, disinfectant.. detergent, soap…chlorine… etc anything you can imagine and it's for sale at the supermarket
"This is an atom, and I really want to split it."
《I really wanna split this atoms of Uranium 235 in my parents garage》
Jesus christ
at om
@@hydrophobicです "laughs in atomic bomb"
"This is plutonium, and no it doesn't come from pluto"
Lighter than helium? OH this would go GREAT in some kinda airship!
Top 10 moments before disaster
Heheheheheh
_[Sweats in Hindenburg]_
Oh...the humanity
lets call it hindenburg
Imagine confusing that with a fire extinguisher
hey what is that popping
Oh no... It probably should not be made the same color because...
If people can confuse a fire extinguisher with a sanitizer dispenser, they can confuse it with hydrogen easily
Less fire
More fire
I wanna play a game
The valves are completely different
At first I was like "oh fire extinguisher" then I was like "oh fire unextinguisher"
This is the moment when balloons became weapons of mass destruction. We're gonna need some dart-throwing monkeys...
And then BTD began.
Oh my fucking god ik what btd is clash royale was a joke
@@negativeiq9383 what
@@jazybold-5648 dear god it's a bot
@@AngryTrafficCone no wonder gwen's cocktail and WOF are so powerful
Try hydrogen-oxygen ballon in 2:1 ratio...
lol in the ratio of water but it would be very flammable
Explosive! Makes a nice bang.
Ayyee! :)
Sounds dangerous. I know Hydrogen gas is very flammable and so is liquid oxygen.
Detonation! extremely loud
“Damn neighbor is shooting again”
“NAH it’s just Nilered”
Lol
I like to imagine Nile red is a childhood friend of styropyro
I want to see that with a pure oxygen ballon.
@@anarcocapitalista3700 nothing would happen hydrogen is the explosive one hydrogen + oxygen make a bigger explosion but oxygen doesn't explode by itself
I mean
If it did your blood would explode
@@unk4617 oh thanks!
“This is Polonium and I really want to touch it.”
No chemist is ever truly happy unless something is on fire.
There's a little bit arsonist in everyone of us
fire, explosion, or a cloud of noxious gasses
😂😂😂
One of my formative memories of childhood was sitting at the front of chemistry class with my crush, we'd both finished the work our teacher had set us and so both of us and our teacher were just staring at a bunsen burner she had lit at her desk because she was bored. Ridiculously relaxing.
Ah exposed! That's true lol, fire is fun😂
Helium walks into a bar
The bartender says : "We don't serve noble gases!"
Helium doesn't react
Nice
And then He left
Even more dangerous, and EXTREMELY loud was when I put acetylene in a 10 gallon trash bag and shot it from 30 ft away with a flaming arrow.
I couldn't hear a thing for a couple of hours.
And the neighborhood thought a household propane tank blew up.
And the local LE and fire departments responded accordingly.
😱
You've just won the internet... how do we contact you about your award?
lmao!!!
"This silo is full of nukes, and I really want to launch them."
So true, haha!
No no no
Joever
@@JordanBeagletf you mean so true💀
Price, do you copy? The silo doors are open,I repeat the silo doors are open!
Knowing you, I thought you were going to set the entire cylinder on fire and somehow manage to extinguish it too
I've seen someone ignite a hydrogen balloon in person once, and let me tell you, the loud boom is no joke! No recording can truly replicate the thunderous clap and the shockwave that you feel in your chest. It was so cool!
In your case it most likely had oxygen in it too.
As shown here, the balloon just deflagrates when it has only hydrogen inside
💥BOOM 💥
One of the physics demonstrations we run every semester is an oxy/hydrogen balloon igniting. It's pretty fun. My favourite is still the can crusher, though.
Take a big ol' coil of wires in a resin ring, connect it to a cabinet capacitor, put an empty soda can in, and flip the switch. The top half of the can usually gets embedded in the ceiling of the lecture hall.
I had to read this comment twice. I seriously thought you said "ignite hydrogen IN A person"... and the rest of the comment after that became outlandish beyond belief.
@Cristina💦 no
"it's just a prank bro"
The prank: "here take this lighter and balloon"
😂😂😂
Makes them snort it and then smoke real quick
This will land the prakner in real jail though...
1qq
Can we stop with meme formats in RUclips comments? Y'all came over from Reddit and I cannot see how this is funny...
“The power of the Hindenburg, in the palm of my hand.”
- Doc Ock
Hahah that's good
“I’m gonna put some fire in your eyes”
I haven’t heard anything of the Hindenburg in years, I live on the Air Force base the Hindenburg crashed in, about a mile off from the memorial plaque and it’s really surprising how little it is mentioned in the town it crashed in other than a small church off base that sells Hindenburg merch and the occasional Hindenburg picture in the local elementary school
I'm gonna open it without valve and LIGHT THE GAS ON FIRE 😈💥🔥💀
@@DoiInthanon1897 ü
"So I'm on board the Death Star, and I really want to blow up a planet."
“Hindenburg has entered the chat”
Yes the biggest airship ever made.
I remember as a kid wondering that hydrogen is the lightest element, so why don’t they fill balloons up with them. And then i searched up why, and i always laugh knowing that i would have probably tried that aswell
O the humanity
@@arthurhedler you mean the biggest fireball ever made.
@@MADDOG_BC I'm pretty sure the Bikini Atoll hydrogen fusion bomb holds that distinction.
NileRed: “This is dangerous hydrogen gas and I'm gonna light it on fire”
Aaaaand it’s actually _not_ clickbait.
Honestly, I thought he was gonna open the canister and let it explode
is it ever clickbait?
@@poptartmcjelly7054 not with this guy
I guess youre new to this channel
I made the likes from 911 to 912
I know I'm weird. I'll..... leave now-
“This is extremely explosive when near a magnet”
“Let’s bring a magnet near it”
Why, whats the science behind this?
@@Mannequin1235-s4s you didn't got the joke
@@mr.phoenix8012 but what's the science behind it.
@@coronaklledmebot4856 uhhhh, boom?
@@videoessaylover911 good science
Did my man just call Helium a nerd?
Inert* inert gasses don't blow up usually
“This is extremely dangerous Hydrogen gas, and I want to light it on fire”
*-He does everything we all want to do*
@The Joker Don't worry, he has another channel with longer videos.
Search up 'Nilered' on youtube. This is just the place for his shorts.
@@user-zi7eg5ir2xobviously not a thinker.
HANS, GET ZE FLAMENWERFER!
@@mattmarzula That's hateful.
Indoors too. Great example of safety here.
Germany: oh yeah, we're gonna make so much money off of this.
The Hindenburg.
They actually planned using Helium. But america wouldn't sell them said gas so they used Hydrogenm
Oh,, the humanity
Oh yeah forgot about that old disaster
Yeah x)
@@Enaxity They were so confident in the Hindenburg's construction and safety due to the use of hydrogen it even had a smoking room. Some still believe it blew up on it's first flight but don't know that it had more than a full year of successful service with more than a dozen flights across the Atlantic Ocean. No one had any reason to suspect that horrifying tragedy would occur.
Sadly it did and serves as a perhaps the foremost example on the severity and danger of hydrogen, dark jokes too.
“This tank is filled with some extremely flammable hydrogen, and I really wanna light some on fire”
Is probably the most ‘NileRed’ sentence I’ve ever heard 😂
@Tech Overkill hi dude I am getting obsessed with my stink hole I inhale all of my stink puffs i just blew a fuckin 15 second monster into the bowl and I put my head into the bowl and just inhaled it I love it so much do u do this also
I think "This angry looking red liquid is one of my favorites" while the liquid was spewing out vile looking orange gas was my favorite.
oh hey it's actually a nilered clip barely even saw it till reading comments now that I'm watching it like the 4th time i totally reckonize the voice
This man is a pyromaniac, what makes it scary is that he knows chemistry
Still not as much of a pyromaniac as StyroPyro.
I had a chem professor years ago who did a demonstration involving balloons and fire. He showed what happened when you lit a balloon filled with air, with oxygen, with hydrogen, then as a finale, one with a mix of oxygen and hydrogen. I am not sure how much we actually learned, but it did wake up sleepy students.
We had something similar our science teacher put bubbles on our hands an lit it up🤣
What happened to each of those balloons?
@@blackcyklops air balloon: pop, oxygen one: pop, hydrogen: explode like in the video, o2:h2 mix: bigger explosion
My high school chem teacher did the same thing. I could feel the breeze from the mixed H&O balloon when it exploded. Apparently the other chem teacher stopped doing that demo a few years before because he lit the ceiling tiles on fire.
This teacher also demonstrated grain silo explosions by adding some sawdust to a big coffee tin, putting a lit candle inside, putting the lid on, and blowing air in through a tube in the side to disperse the sawdust. The lid hit the ceiling and cracked one of the tiles, I think.
I saw the same demo in 5th grade. I don’t know exactly what was in it but it was 10x more powerful than the hydrogen one. I was at the back of the auditorium and felt the shockwave hit me in the chest.
“I really want to light it on fire” - arsonist
😂
Meet the Pyro
@@30.lehoanggiaphuc61 quite accurate to his pyrovision being all helpful too
Thanks
i love how Nile went from such intense safety procedures it was dorky, to lighting everything on fire. 10/10 corruption arc.
his villain arc has only just begun
He was never safe. He's always been a chaos gremlin of science but now hes just more forward about it.
“This is extremely flammable gas I kind of want to light on fire”
Straight to the point and no sponsors in the beginning. Love this type of content!
"This video is sponsored by Hindenburg Airlines"
420th like AHahHAhahHAhaGAHahHaHhaHAHhHAHahha so funny quirky
That's because it's a Shorts
"And I really wanna light some of it on fire"
Of course you do 🤣
_"This little cylinder is filled with dangerous flammable gas..."_
*AND IM GONNA LIGHT IT ON FIRE*
I got away just by hearing that also my phone's temperature increased when he lighted it on fire.
Same me too i put in a fire pit and run away
Why men live less than woman
“Hey guys, so it turns out it exploded like a can of biscuits. Now I have no face”
Ya but make sure you video it, so we can see what happens.
This video made me remember something. When I was two or three years old, an uncle of mine brought a balloon to my grandmother's house, let it loose so it floated up to the ceiling, and lighted it's long cord on fire with a lighter. I remember being seated on the floor, looking up at the little flame going up consuming the thin cord, reaching the balloon, then BOOM, a ball of fire almost exactly over me but far up at the ceiling level. The experience was very interesting and totally unexpected for my young mind. But now that I'm in my early fifties the only thing I can think of is, what kind of idiot does that with a baby in the room?
Lol
Your uncle apparently
People do dumb crap around/with babies all the time I was used as a foot ball in the parking lot of a mall once by my dad and his friends
@@raithdoom EXCUSE ME WHAT
@@lybasily don’t worry they didn’t drop me
*“This is radium, and I really want to eat it.”*
this is lava, and i really want to swim in it
This is Manganese Heptoxide, and I really want to drink it.
The last guy who said that discovered two elements, who knows how many nilered will discover.
Well today is your lucky day my friend! I just so happen to be a travelling Radithor salesman, could I interest you in a bottle or 3?
@@thedagz6460 I'd prefer the RadUriThor, it's more....active.
“This is an atom made of Uranium 235, and I want to split it.” -NileRed’s Famous Last Words
Uhm actshully, a single atom of uranium ishnt enough to be lethal 🤓🤓🤓
Pull out 50 kg
"This little gas canister is filled with highly flammable hydrogen and I really want to light some of it on fire"🔥 😆😅👌 classic Niles
Mans got the enthusiasm of a 5 yr old 😂😂
yeah thanks for quoting the FIRST FQING SENTENCE in the video. missed it. thanks again.
“this little gas cylinder is filled with extremely flammable hydrogen gas, and I really want to light some of it on fire”
-some famous last words
I read while he said it
Hold my beer…
Why light some when you can detonate all of it at once
These videos appease my inner pyromaniac.
Definition of "Don't try this at home kids"
Next video on Nilered main channel: "So today I'm going to make a zeppelin."
And light it on fire.
"Out of lead"
"...and tomorrow I'm going to unmake a zeppelin."
Oh the humanity
@@TechyBen I see your a man of culture as well!
“It’s extremely flammable and I wanna light it on fire” good to know someone has the same thought process as me. As soon as I found out about caesium in water the first thing I did was search the internet for it. Turns out not easy to find. I’ve done this with a few other things before and now the cia probably has me on some sort of watch list
Imagine a guy is having fun at nile’s Birthday party, and he accidentally pops a balloon.
I don't even think that people would be allowed to look at the balloons
It wouldn't be dangerous. It would immediately mix with the air while the gas raises making it unharmful.
@@cyan_oxy6734 unless there's a static spark.
Birthday candle lits up the balloon
Now I want some hydrogen gas filled balloon on my birthday
Teacher =This is a dangerous hydrogen gas
Nile in school = can I light it on fire ?
I love how he has a fire extinguisher just in case his area caught on fire (again)
Wdym by again
@@nermennashat7000 this isnt the first time
@@nermennashat7000 did he stutter
When was the first time?
I need the sauce
Rubber: *has an existential crisis and ceases to exist*
Helium: "oh okay bye"
HeHe...
BTW Helium and Hydrogen are both so small that they escape through the rubber anyways. Just not all at once.
@@Midaspl
Yes, that's why special helium ballons have to be from special (dense) material. In normal rubber balloons it get's lost within 1-4 days (depending on the temperature & rubber etc.)
I cease to exist sometimes.
@@monsoon2742 you hitting the mushies?
@@monsoon2742 same ngl
So back in high school, we did an experiment where we magnesium strips (at least I think it was magnesium) into a tube of solution (don’t remember what) it produces hydrogen gas and the thing was you were supposed to put a match on the lip of the tube to light it. So I did it and nothing happened, so I put it in a little deeper and it worked, creating a loud “THOOMP” sound, which scared the daylights out of me. One of my most fond memories of high school
might've been the "barking dog" experiment?
It was probably a reaction between the magnesium metal and some sort of acid, probably dillute HCl. The result is MgCl2 and Hydrogen gas. The latter of which is quite flammable. ^^
Not sure what it's called in English, but in Germany we call it "Knallgasprobe", which literally means "bang gas test". c:
@@banisan2035 probably. It was a while ago now
the solution could be any acid and as you said magnesium or a type of metal you are absolutely correct because when metals react with acids it produces metallic salt and hydrogen gas
@@pinkpuff_sfc yep
That stuff's pretty cool, the should try making some kind of airship with it
"This gas cylinder is filled with extremely flammable gas"
"So let's light it on fire" :D
"This tank is filled with some extremely flammable hydrogen, and i really wanna light some on fire!" -Nilered 5 minutes before his death
Would have been funny if the video ended there.
I remember our chemistry teacher doing that, it's definitely something in person to feel the warmth from the explosion spread across the whole classroom
This video down played the explosion sooo much
I rember😃
@@cidio99754 i forgor 💀
good pfp
@@strider5402 yes but mostly since it wasn't very explosive like if there would be oxygen inside
My high school’s chemistry teacher did experiments like that, and that was how we found out that the contractors accidentally used regular glass in one of the windows in the lab.
Hydrogen balloon
Damage: 0
Health: 1
Abilities: explodes dealing 9000 damage to any player in it's radius
+Extra fire damage
First some general tips :
Always destroy opponent’s cc troops, even during normal attacks. Prevents useless waste of troops. Never assume that cc will be empty. I have faced situations where seemingly abandoned base had powerful cc troops hidden.
Strategy over strength. Shear amount of troops sent hysterically on a base might not always work. A strategy always does (when executed correctly).
Connect your account to a social account to save progress on cloud ASAP.
Don’t use gems in anything other than buying builders. Even the 1 gems you need to use initially, can be avoided if you wait for minute or two. Buy builders first.
Clans are useful and important.
Don’t rush to upgrade town hall without properly upgrading defenses and walls.
Some useful tricks based on personal experience:
Don’t move the screen while a spell is selected. If you move while keeping the spell selected increases the chance of dropping the spell accidentally. This waste of spell, especially during wars can be truly annoying.
A hog or two in army is best to check opponents cc troops.
Use 2 lightning and an earthquake to destroy one air defense instead of 3 lightning spells. This saves space for another spell in your army.
Wars are amazing source of income for gold.
Using healers can save lot of healing spells. Use one or two healers can effectively save 1 or 2 healing spells.
Teslas, when placed to surprise opponent rather than usual expected places are more effective.
Final word :
Patience is key. Nothing is impossible. Those humongous costs of xbow and inferno towers may seem impossible to achieve but believe me, with more time and higher level you will realize it is not truly that big at that level.
9000 + Extra fire damage?!
IT’S OVER 9000!!!
It looks like Voltorb :P
Ah, like those traditional JRPG monsters that you think are harmless, and then they self-destruct
Rarity: Epic
I’ve seen the demonstration also with a stoichiometric mixture of hydrogen and oxygen. That’s really a bang!
Same here. Loudest bang I ever heard. But I guess it would blow out Niles windows if did it inside his lab.
Once i mixed oxygen and acetylene at my work
Holy fuck, some windows shattered and i cant hear for at least 2 minutes 😂
@@philipphermann9454 it's not too bad. I did a touring production featuring this, only with much larger balloons. It sounds like a bomb is going off, but that's about it
That's rocket fuel
@@iRrrmanion1 I thought about it, and you are right. From the chemical perspective we should even reduce the overall volume since 1 mol of water vapour is created by 1.5 mol of hydrogen+oxygen which are also gases. Which means the rapid expansion of the water vapour is only release of pressure and expansion due to heat from the reaction, it is very fast, but it's not a huge amount of molecules. Still enough for a shock wave.
Compare that to other high explosives in solid state where one big molecule decomposes into many gas molecules, so the volume increases due to phase transition, to heat and to number of molecules. Perfect for shattering windows.
"Oh look, a balloon! I should light it on fire to ruin a kid's day"
-Idk, but he's probably dead
And now sell balloons filled with hydrogen at a stand...
Marketing them as helium
"This is Washington D.C, and I REALLY want to light some of it on fire"
-The Brits In 1814
Sir, are you british by any chance?
just try to keep the fire from taking out the Smithsonian museums, the only good thing in dc
Nile Green has joined the chat
@@8c.16.haganahadam3 im sorry but that was the French not the British learn your history and get it right before you spout history your not quite sure of. I love history and when someone gets it wrong I have to correct them.
I had an instructor once who loved to start his classes with a bang. Literal bang. I think my favorite was nitrogen + hydrogen. I could feel the heat off that balloon all the way in the back. He stopped when he miscalculated the chunk of sodium he decided to toss into a large beaker of water. (Though his breathless squeak of a curse will stay with me forever.)
probably oxygen + hydrogen
@@__nog642 Probably. It's been a few decades since I saw it and I'm probably misremembering. I was questioning myself as I wrote it
@@cheesemaster07 Yes, they react to form water.
Yeah once my chemistry teacher popped in a chunk of sodium in water. She immediately covered it and there was a tame little reaction inside so we thought it was over, but as soon as she removed the lid, it blew up and one of my classmates got a hole burnt in her sleeve while one got mild rashes on her neck and almost everyone got splashed by a little bit of warm water. It wasn't too serious but that girl with the singed sleeve was so proud of the hole... I can't help but laugh when I think about it!
Sodium always gets the last laugh, had a professor blow up a beaker of water. I'm glad I was there for the first test, the glass cleanup was rough 🤣 She didnt attempt it again, so 2 years later we had a big chunk of sodium. We dropped that thing in a kiddie pool in a nearby field, that was awesome. Surprised she's still employed TBH 😮
Now he's doing all the low-cost material chemistry after that gold accident
Gold accident?
Accident ?
@@gyokeres31 the $5K gold “accident”. Watch he the previous shorts.
( edit )
Fixed “what” to “watch”
What the heck happened?
@@Erakius323 He dissolved a $5k gold bar in acid and then had an "accident" where he stumbled and spilled everything on the floor.
"Here are some very dangerous nuclear missiles, and i really wanna launch it"
"And carefully open the valve"
I was actually expecting Nigel to break it open
Lmao yeah I'm disappointed
Just whips it at the freaking wall
Imagine someone mistakes this for a fire extinguisher
That's a mistake you only make once
At least you don't have to deal with the aftermath of it
oof
This is the kind of chemist I would want to be.
But never would be
@@anotherfoodvlogger2511 awww do you feel bad about yourself buddy?
he isn't a chemist
@Madison Jackson Your name says you are not an American. So I am, by default, better than you. 'Nuff said.
@Madison Jackson I mean, it was just a troll comment to this asshole. I don't think I'm better because I'm an American LOL relax I'm not racist
Now try 30% oxygen and 70% hidrogen
"This is a very deadly gas, let's inhale it"
Hydrogen isn't dangerous.
It has been given in hospital to covid patients who have difficulty breathing.
@@carpediemarts705 it's a joke but okie
@@GoIdfish I've been breathing hydrogen gas this week.
Other people have suggested it would be fatal. Not like I regularly have electrical sparks in my lungs.
Yeah, I hear that you're joking, but I'm not.
@@carpediemarts705 it's not fatal because hydrogen gas is fatal, it's because literally any mistake at all in handling the hydrogen gas could well end in a fiery death that takes whatever structure you're in with it
@@the_undead it takes a significant volume for it to be fatal.
It's like gravity is fatal, but only if you fall farther than a dozen feet.
Nile when typing the title: This is a dangerous hydrogen gas
also him: im gonna light it on fire
Lol😂
Every scientists be like: **Le trollge**
“And I really want to light it some fire”
That is the most villain-like speech I have ever heard
@Cristina💦 sussy baka
Next fill a balloon with 2 parts hydrogen and 1 part oxygen.
"HELIUM MIX OPTIMAL"
-a captain regulating orders on the airship
Kirov reporting
This boom would look incredible in super slowmotion…
The real hovering fireball
"Oh the humanity"
Fall of Hindenburg
Let’s use it to build a blimp.
Engineers that made the Hindenburg: “Write that down, write that down!”
I had a professor who called it "making water from scratch"
You know it’s a good one when he starts with “extremely flammable gas” and “I want to light some of it on fire”
I love how “extremely flammable gas” means “extremely fun.” 😂
Nile: And i want to light it on fire
Me: Of course, of course
xD
I love how his first thought when he has pressurized chemicals is “watch it burn!!! Fire!!!!!!”
I work at a power plant, and we use massive amounts of hydrogen gas in the generator to cool the rotor. This is quite common for high output generators.
Hydrogen to cool the generator? How the hell does that work? Edit: apologies if this question makes me look like an idiot. As you can tell, chemistry was not my strongest subject in school.
@@Erakius323 before I've been working at the power plant, I didn't know that either. You are no idiot, this is simply not part of common knowledge.
It works just as a medium to transport the heat away from the rotor, instead of air. The generator is hermetically sealed and the pressurised (5bar, in our case) hydrogen is being ventilated through heat exchangers that are operated by cooling water. (The stator is being cooled by water.) The benefit is, that hydrogen carries a lot more heat than any other gas.
@@andrebartels1690 That makes a lot more sense. I wondered why hydrogen. Although, how are sparks kept contained? Or is the oxygen level simply kept so low that there can be no ignition? Edit: I assume the hermetically sealed part and the heat exchangers help keep sparks relatively in check.
NileRed: To get the hydrogen out of the tank though, I first need to add a regulator.
*NileRed opens the valve*
Regulator: It was a clear black night, a clear white moon…
“I really wanna light some on fire” -NileRed 2021
Hindenburg moment
"I'm gonna light it on fire"
Well,we expected it!
"ja hans, zat will work perfect in an airship!"
I remember lighting a hydrogen balloon on fire once when I was a kid.
Only problem is, I did it while holding it. In my hands.
I still have the burn marks on my fingers.
not gone lie when i first saw that i was like is that a fire extinguisher💀
Thanks for 168 likes 😊
Close... But it's more like a fire igniter
I thought it looked like the queens royal guard 💂♀️
The ultimate prank
Fire amplifier
Oh, it's burning here, no problem, there's a small fire extinguisher here !
It's just a prank
The prank:here is a balloon *Pops
“This is my son, and I want to see what happens when he falls of a cliff.”
Yo pfp appears to be what you would do after throwing yo son off da cliff lol...
"This chamber here, has a highly unstable fusion reactor, and I really wanna turn it on"
Fusion reactions can't go unstable.
@@onthepalehorse You must be great at parties XD
ya mean fission. bc fusion would just stop if it got exposed to air
@@C-aFilms 🤓
This is literally the stuff I do when my parents aren’t home.
Your parents after you light your house on fire: "Why didnt you use the fire extinguisher?!" Seeing you lit the fire in front of the fire extinguisher lol
@@jeffsorrows stupid noon guy he shared his comment means why involving shameless uncle. In law
I imagine Nile get's up every morning and says out loud "Today, I want to endanger myself"
Nile literally doing something my chemistry teacher would do on the casual
Then NileRed and your chemistry teacher are both mad scientists
I had a chemistry teacher whp used electrolysis to fill a test tube with hydrogen, and then put his thumb over the opening while holding the test tube in his hand. He then lighted a match and quickly moved his thumb away to light the hydrogen on fire.
@@aurelia8028 we did that in class too (with supervision ofc)
*Perfect for making a bloons tower defense in real life*
Flamingo: *gamers*
My chem Professor did this with two comically large Ballons in a lectures hall. Felt like He blowed about a bunch of TNT :')
No one got hurt, right?
@@dfquartzidn6151 uh oh
@@dfquartzidn6151 The professor *sweats profusely*
"This is liquid hydrogen, and i really wanna drink is"
You could do a “série” about house cleaning products and why we shouldn’t mix them
Causing us to mix them
I've never heard of mixing cleaning products being dangerous. I've never cared to mix products, but I'm curious what would make it dangerous
@@Dryblack1 Chemicals have the warning labels of explosive or dont set it on fire and all that for a reason and they are also poisonous to the body of a living creature, so that means you can make some crazy fire bombs and some mustard gas and all sorts of things
@@Dryblack1 here in Brazil some of us love to mix them and sometimes it releases some mist … I don’t recall what the misture is vinegar with bleach, disinfectant.. detergent, soap…chlorine… etc anything you can imagine and it's for sale at the supermarket
@@ronaldomurakami6527 😨
Bro is the embodiment of an intrusive thought
i think he’s getting better tbh it’s the first time he’s said “carefully” and was actually careful
I love how there’s so much technology in this short video but the most impactful technology was long stick on fire!
That’s something I would touch with a 50 foot pole as long as the pole is on fire
“This is an intercontinental ballistic missile, and I really want to set it off.”
The more I listen to you, the more I feel like an alchemist lol
relax, he hasn't talked about merging a girl and a dog _yet._
@@HellJustFroze Getting close to inspection day 👀
"Ow, my face."
-burning splint on a stick