Will a Model Rocket Motor Work In Vacuum?

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  • Опубликовано: 23 сен 2024
  • To find out I put light some small model rocket boosters in my 50 gallon chamber.
    Link to fire in vac video: • Is Fire Possible in a ...
    Help me make videos by donating here: / codyslab

Комментарии • 3,8 тыс.

  • @scottmanley
    @scottmanley 7 лет назад +899

    As you suggested Rockets do actually produce more thrust in a vacuum. Most designs will have a lower specific impulse at sea level and by extension a lower thrust. This is mostly down to the pressure differential between the combustion and the exit nozzle being lower when there's air pushing back, leading to a lower exhaust velocity.
    Also, I strongly suggest getting a dedicated camera, like a go-pro with a dive housing - would such to ruin your iPhone.

    • @mickelloh257
      @mickelloh257 7 лет назад +13

      hay scott love your video! !!

    • @mduckernz
      @mduckernz 7 лет назад +6

      Scott Manley Indeed, the lower the average molecular weight of the products, the higher the C* value (which expresses the average speed of the products, hence taking the MW into account), the higher this differential will be!

    • @thisisyourusernameondrugs9373
      @thisisyourusernameondrugs9373 7 лет назад +15

      Hullo! :)

    • @scottgauer7299
      @scottgauer7299 7 лет назад +5

      Thrust in atmosphere is lower because you can't expand the gasses as much before flow separation. But also because once the static pressure of the exhaust drops below atmospheric, any further expansion will only cause the thrust to decrease.

    • @juny6073
      @juny6073 7 лет назад +12

      Don't NASA's rockets work by adding the oxygen needed for combustion...

  • @AbudBakri
    @AbudBakri 7 лет назад +1270

    wow the rocket actually worked! you're one step ahead of North Korea

    • @christopherfajardo6447
      @christopherfajardo6447 7 лет назад +8

      Dr.StickFigure I see you every where

    • @NovemberOrWhatever
      @NovemberOrWhatever 7 лет назад +87

      Q: why did the chicken cross the road
      A: to get out of range of north Korea's nuclear capabilities

    • @mrono1910
      @mrono1910 7 лет назад +1

      +Christopher Fajardo maby becaus he and you have the same taste in videos ?

    • @unapologeticasshat9214
      @unapologeticasshat9214 7 лет назад +4

      ppffthahaha

    • @wombat2248
      @wombat2248 7 лет назад +7

      Dr.StickFigure and light years ahead of the flatearthers who deny rockets work in space

  • @El_Chompo
    @El_Chompo 7 лет назад +3

    I learned more science watching your channel than I ever did in school. A lot of people all over the world must learn a lot from you which is awesome.

  • @UncleHonky
    @UncleHonky 7 лет назад +526

    Tapes phone in a vacuum with explosives for science

    • @romosapien9758
      @romosapien9758 7 лет назад +10

      with over 136 million views on his channel, I doubt 1 iPhone will set him back much XD

    • @samcotten5160
      @samcotten5160 7 лет назад +1

      Romo Sapien yea probably true

    • @sprsae9003
      @sprsae9003 7 лет назад +10

      HunterM2100 thats the kerbal way to do it

    • @TheAgamemnon911
      @TheAgamemnon911 7 лет назад +41

      relax, it's just an apple phone. They are not designed to function for long anyway.

    • @potc420
      @potc420 7 лет назад +4

      HunterM2100 you must be new to his channel

  • @shawn5281
    @shawn5281 7 лет назад +286

    nothing like using a power strip in the rain

    • @joerowland607
      @joerowland607 7 лет назад +2

      iraq just the Tim Taylor in Cody showing through lol

    • @fredcaldwell9824
      @fredcaldwell9824 7 лет назад +14

      Probably not as dangerous as wringing out a wet towel in the space shuttle...

    • @stanislaviliev6305
      @stanislaviliev6305 7 лет назад +5

      nothing like using a phone and ducktape for camera and a stand

    • @Road-hog123
      @Road-hog123 7 лет назад +9

      Well, in space the water mostly stays around the towel and the hands in micro-gravity as the strongest force is surface tension (there's a Hadfield video showing this). If you shake the towel, then you'll get droplets flying off, but as there's no gravity to pull the water into crevices, it's actually quite unlikely to get inside the equipment (that same surface tension will make it want to stay in a ball on the surface). And even if it does make it to some circuitry, it'd likely be purified water from the ISS, so unless the towel was particularly dirty it's unlikely to cause any damage (it's the impurities in tap water that allow it to conduct electricity).

    • @michael-gary-scott
      @michael-gary-scott 7 лет назад +2

      I'm guessing it wasn't hooked up to mains, just a local power supply

  • @lochinvar00465
    @lochinvar00465 7 лет назад +2

    A similar technique can be used to assist the parachute ejection charges on high altitude high power rockets. I tested 35 mm film containers over a decade ago when I had a level 2 cert and was active in building and flying these. Black powder charges are notorious for failure at high altitudes due to lack of pressure. Black powder is usually the choice for these.

  • @felixhelix6171
    @felixhelix6171 7 лет назад +28

    The unlit rocket came off because it was still at full weight when the bar was spinning the fastest.

  • @NicolasBana
    @NicolasBana 7 лет назад +118

    Hey Cody ! Will you try making bakelite in your pressure chamber using NileRed process ?

    • @goodfeller2
      @goodfeller2 7 лет назад +21

      Nicolas Bana +1 to that I bet I speak for a lot of people here...I would absolutely love to see a collaboration video between Cody and NileRed. If that isn't possible, at the very least do a spin off/ video based on one of his experiments.
      I know Cody watches NileRed because I saw him in the comments section of Nilered's most recent video.
      Thumbs up so Cody can see. It would be fantastic.

    • @pogogo51
      @pogogo51 7 лет назад +7

      NileRed said he was talking to Cody about it in the comments. Whether or not Cody does it is up to him.

    • @joerowland607
      @joerowland607 7 лет назад +3

      Mitchell G yeah I can get on board with that nile red and Cody would be awesome

    • @pseudocoder78
      @pseudocoder78 7 лет назад +2

      Is it me or does EVERY video on youtube lately have a "you should do collab with xyz streamer" thread? WTF #illuminaticonfirmed

    • @comradegarrett1202
      @comradegarrett1202 7 лет назад +1

      PLEASE

  • @coleadams484
    @coleadams484 6 лет назад +19

    This is actually how rockets work. The solid fuel cells are incapsulated. Great vid as always Cody.

    • @FrancisR420
      @FrancisR420 4 года назад

      They still use solid fuel cells on Rockets? I thought they stop doing that before we even got to space, space shuttles use Liquid hydrogen and oxygen and and other fluids that will ignite on their own when mixed.

    • @sludgut
      @sludgut 3 года назад +1

      @CosmicDamian FALSE. The SRBs detached at 24 nautical miles high. I assure you. It's not a vacuum there.

    • @sludgut
      @sludgut 3 года назад

      Nope terrible video. Lacks understanding of how boosters work on spacecraft. They have their own oxidizer in the chemical mixture.

    • @lanceroark6386
      @lanceroark6386 3 года назад +1

      @@sludgut the problem isn’t lack of oxygen. The problem is a lacking of atmosphere to push against. Ergo, everyone talking about the vacuum. In the previous rocket/vacuum video he showed that the burn pushed against the atmosphere, and the atmosphere pushed the heat back against the fuel source; with no atmosphere, there’s no thrust in the initial burn, with no atmosphere, there’s no back pressure to push the flame into the fuel.

    • @stuartgray5877
      @stuartgray5877 3 года назад +1

      @@lanceroark6386 - So you think that MECHANICAL RECOIL stops working in a vacuum?
      Sorry to break it to you but only those COMPLETELY UNEDUCATED about basic physics think that "Rockets push on air".
      Now try taking AT LEAST high school physics before telling every engineer to have ever lived that THEY are a bunch of morons.
      Rocket engines are MORE EFFICIENT IN A VACUUM!

  • @johnszilagyi2296
    @johnszilagyi2296 7 лет назад +12

    Noticed there was some water still pooling in the bottom of the chamber at ignition. Your vacuum might be also limited because of the boiling/sublimating water bringing the preasure up. Would love to see a large pool of water in the bottom of the chamber get pumped down...

    • @nickauclair1477
      @nickauclair1477 Год назад +1

      Exactly. Ad strange cut screens and pretend it's science. Make a vacuum in your backyard during a rainstorm.

  • @nodustollens9183
    @nodustollens9183 7 лет назад +35

    cody what happened to the methane generator project?

    • @matthiasplus6691
      @matthiasplus6691 7 лет назад +4

      Nodus Tollens It got too cold as the heater failed.

    • @menosgrande1112
      @menosgrande1112 7 лет назад

      I'd like to know the answer, too. :)

    • @nodustollens9183
      @nodustollens9183 7 лет назад

      Matthias Plus how do you know

    • @potc420
      @potc420 7 лет назад +4

      Nodus Tollens I hope Cody doesn't get tied up in the flat earth non sense. Debunking flat earth is just a waste of time tbh. This rocket video falls into the flat earth debate. Maybe flat earthers thing space can't be real and rockets wouldn't work in space if it was real. This video and his last video both are very flat earthish. Not saying I don't appreciate them. I just hope he doesn't spend too much time debunking flat earth

    • @Jesse__H
      @Jesse__H 7 лет назад +7

      I don't know ... Cody's just using basic math and science to talk about natural and man-made phenomena ... most of his videos "prove" something that's already been proven academically. What's fun is watching the way HE does it.
      Using math to measure the friggin Earth is a cool idea. Who cares which anti-science idiots he disproves along the way! These videos are interesting in their own right, imo. (that said, I'm jonesing for some more Cody's Mine or Precious metals vids...:))

  • @BradyT918
    @BradyT918 7 лет назад

    Whats interesting is the ignition and burn for the first and second attempt only lasted for a single frame, were as the third attempt actually showed alot in the first few frames, first frame it ignited, second frame was the pressure build up and in the third frame it burns though the bottle and starts to propel itself. To those that do not know hit < and > when a video is paused to go frame by frame, some videos you have to tap it twice before it changes, all depends on the videos fps.

  • @stokesy887
    @stokesy887 7 лет назад +205

    Just when I'm about to go to sleep. Thanks haha

    • @einname9986
      @einname9986 7 лет назад +9

      Aidan Nina Maybe because its not the same time all around the world?

    • @Vantlash56
      @Vantlash56 7 лет назад +3

      Aidan Nina time zones

    • @TelxGaming
      @TelxGaming 7 лет назад

      Aidan Nina it's only 4:00 PM here. It's because of time zones throughout the Earth

    • @scottjohnson3942
      @scottjohnson3942 7 лет назад +4

      Before clocks were first invented, it was common practice to mark the time of day with apparent solar time (also called "true" solar time) - for example, the time on a sundial - which was typically different for every location and dependent on longitude.When well-regulated mechanical clocks became widespread in the early 19th century,[1] each city began to use some local mean solar time. Apparent and mean solar time can differ by up to around 15 minutes (as described by the equation of time) because of the elliptical shape of the Earth's orbit around the Sun (eccentricity) and the tilt of the Earth's axis (obliquity). Mean solar time has days of equal length, and the difference between the two sums to zero after a year.
      Greenwich Mean Time (GMT) was established in 1675, when the Royal Observatory was built, as an aid to mariners to determine longitude at sea, providing a standard reference time while each city in England kept a different local time.

    • @alexzitnik6606
      @alexzitnik6606 7 лет назад +1

      Harry Ward 10:34 am here in NewZealand

  • @_Andrew2002
    @_Andrew2002 7 лет назад +134

    See how long a RC helicopter can hover as you lower the pressure.

    • @cetyl2626
      @cetyl2626 7 лет назад +12

      AndrewRG10 I second that. My long outstanding request has been to try to hover a quadcopter in Mars air pressure. NASA is investigating this, so it must be plausible.

    • @Rararawr
      @Rararawr 7 лет назад +6

      One meant to fly on earth wouldn't work well. The blades would have too little resistance and spin too fast and mess up the motor. Would need a much larger prop than normally suitable for the motor size, but still the right motors for the size of quad

    • @_Andrew2002
      @_Andrew2002 7 лет назад +1

      And I think we all wan't to see, how it would work if it was floating 1 ft off the ground and then as the pressure decreases, see how what pressure it can no longer stay in the air.

    • @charley6799
      @charley6799 7 лет назад +4

      this has already been done a couple times by other people on youtube and seems like more of a gimmick than anything to repeat this specific instance

    • @daftnord4957
      @daftnord4957 7 лет назад +1

      could start by "overpropping" the motors. i'm sure there are some numbers to determine a general prop size for a given motor in different atmospheres

  • @dannelson8556
    @dannelson8556 2 года назад +3

    As long as the rocket engine contains its own oxidizer then it will burn in a vacuum. All liquid fuel rocket engines have their own oxidizers therefore burn in space

  • @saml7180
    @saml7180 7 лет назад +10

    Can't wait for Cody to get into orbit...

  • @maiqtheliar645
    @maiqtheliar645 7 лет назад +95

    Can a magnesium fire be put out by a vacuum?

    • @Electroblud
      @Electroblud 7 лет назад +27

      Yes. Burning magnesium needs oxygen from the air (or from water). No oxygen, no burn.

    • @Reel-Jimbo
      @Reel-Jimbo 7 лет назад

      M'aiq the Liar well if it gets it from the water thers no need for oxegen in the air

    • @Electroblud
      @Electroblud 7 лет назад +11

      Vacuum = no (or insignificant amounts) of anything around. That includes water.

    • @Electroblud
      @Electroblud 7 лет назад +10

      Temple of the Dog
      Um... Magnesium is an element. It contains only magnesium and nothing else. Look it up on the periodic table.

    • @Electroblud
      @Electroblud 7 лет назад +7

      Oh allright then. No worries, everyone makes mistakes. ^^

  • @flyfaen1
    @flyfaen1 7 лет назад +7

    Usually SRF is very seldomly used in vacuum, and if they operate in vacuum they were usually ignited somewhere in the atmosphere before they passed the karman line, IF they for some reason need to be ignited in a vacuum, there usually is a thin metal membrane in the opening and the inside slightly pressurized, or it is ignited by hypergolic liquids or monopropellants... In almost every case where a light or re-light of a rocket engine is to be performed in vacuum, its allmost allways liquid propellants, and most often Oxygen and Hydrogen, and usually nasty hypergolics as ignition source, in addition to the fact that the propellant tanks are pressurized, so when the gasses expand through the turbopumps and meets the restriction in the pre-burner and in the main combustion chamber, it lights off easily :)

    • @franciscraig8164
      @franciscraig8164 7 лет назад +3

      The most famous rocket that uses solid fuel as a vacuum engine is the ATK's Antares and Airbus' Vega.
      Also, older rockets use solid rocket booster as "kicker stage" on 3rd-4th stages. Examples are the one used to "kick" Voyager Spacecrafts to higher velocity if I'm not mistaken.

    • @franciscraig8164
      @franciscraig8164 7 лет назад +3

      And speaking of vacuum solid motors, most of which have a relatively small nozzle throat and a very large nozzle bells to improve specific impulse. :)
      And from what I read, the reason why solid motors still have a place on space program is that it has a very reliable ignition. And the reliability of solid rocket motors was made possible by the lack of moving parts aside from the nozzle gimbals. Turbo pump-driven liquid fuel engine has a tendency of failing on its own during ignition and while it is running because of the numbers of moving parts like pumps, valves, regulators, etc. that could fail at any moment.
      Aside from turbo pumps, the other way to push fuel into the combustion chamber is by pressurizing the fuel tanks itself. This type of engines are called Pressure-fed engines. It is used in many ACS/RCS engines and many descent engine for smaller spacecrafts when landing on Mars or on the Moon. One example is the descent and ascent engine on Apollo LM. The simplicity of the design is a big plus for improving its reliability. :)

    • @flyfaen1
      @flyfaen1 7 лет назад

      Yes the LEM used a pressurized tank-fed hypergolic fueled engine, and the exhaust is so corrosive they were actually never test-fired before beeing installed in the LEM, as it would deteriorate it too much.

    • @ryanm3749
      @ryanm3749 6 лет назад

      Iirc, another method used for probes, etc, was to light a motor off in a sealed chamber to generate pressure, and valved that pressurized gas out to nozzles for pitch and attitude control.

    • @allangibson8494
      @allangibson8494 5 лет назад

      Gunpowder needs pressure to burn - the burn rate is proportional to pressure. More pressure, faster burning = yet more pressure. Unconstrained gunpowder is hard to burn rapidly at sea level.
      This is not an issue with solid rockets per se but is a problem for GUNPOWDER type rockets in a vacuum. To work properly you need to fit a much smaller throat than is optimal at sea level (in fact if ignited at sea level pressure the rocket may explode). Ignition requires a far more energetic (explosive even) ignition to get to working pressure and hold it there until the propellant grain is burning properly.

  • @shuggg5646
    @shuggg5646 7 лет назад +4

    not what I expected to be honest , I learned a lot from this!

  • @stickman0504
    @stickman0504 7 лет назад +13

    1:50 Bless you Cody!

    • @xNiitro360
      @xNiitro360 7 лет назад

      Lmao glad im not the only one who noticed

    • @Dr.White_PHD
      @Dr.White_PHD 7 лет назад

      Holy Fuzzy Cat that was the kind of sneeze my little 8 year old niece would do

  • @TheRamblingShepherd
    @TheRamblingShepherd 7 лет назад +2

    It didn't sound like the parachute ejection charge went off on the successful vacuum-burn motor. I hypothesize that the 'slow burn' fuel between the boost stage and the parachute ejection charge didn't produce enough gas to keep the combustion chamber pressurized and went out. I'd love to see that motor dissected and see how much did/didn't burn.

  • @teteuscot5098
    @teteuscot5098 7 лет назад +178

    Release the schmoo!

    • @alexv.d.h.7331
      @alexv.d.h.7331 7 лет назад +6

      Matheus ave?

    • @WaveWarrior98
      @WaveWarrior98 7 лет назад +34

      What with the pokey bits goin in the pokey bit receptacle to set off the choocher at subpar atmocylindrical pressures.

    • @majordakka5743
      @majordakka5743 7 лет назад +7

      This JustIn: The Kimes Times is it skookum though?

    • @Mcsticken
      @Mcsticken 7 лет назад +6

      It's pretty farkin' skookum

    • @TuscanSemp
      @TuscanSemp 7 лет назад +25

      skookum as frig

  • @edwardrex6458
    @edwardrex6458 7 лет назад +4

    The failure at 3:56 is not a failure of a rocket motor in a vacuum. It is a failure of the igniter used. Those ignitors do not have an oxidizer, the motor does have an oxidizer.
    You could conduct a test of the igniter outside the rocket motor to verify this.

    • @papalegba6759
      @papalegba6759 3 года назад

      it wasn't in a vacuum. the rising smoke proves it.

  • @GraveUypo
    @GraveUypo 6 лет назад +2

    you read my mind with that clip in the end. that's exactly what i was gonna ask you to do

  • @Kevinegan1
    @Kevinegan1 7 лет назад +4

    I quit using those electric igniters back in the 60's. They have about a 50% fail rate. Now, if you pack a little black powder in around those igniters the fail rate drops to about 10%. For those little Estes motors we always used a piece of Visco fuse. About 1/4" from the the end of the fuse we would bend the fuse over and force that into the motor thrust nozzle. Out of hundreds, we never had one fail to ignite.
    You remind me of myself about 35 to 40 years ago, except you seem to have much more to work with. Growing up in a suburban neighborhood in the 60's it wasn't as easy to set off large explosions and similar attention getting experiments as it would be out on a ranch, but we managed. I remember telling my parents that the explosion that shook the house was from construction blasting somewhere near. I think the best thing I made back then was a Tesla coil. I used Coca-Cola bottles as capacitors and made a rotating stop gap from an old chain saw blade sharpening motor and a dimmer switch. I got 48" continuous arcs out of it. Not bad considering the plans I ordered from Lindsay's Publications came with no illustrations. I had to imagine how each component was made and how it worked in concert with everything else.

  • @gopro25
    @gopro25 7 лет назад +5

    8:33 that sound is priceless

  • @RaExpIn
    @RaExpIn 7 лет назад +1

    I'm always suprized, that so much pyrotechnic mixtures don't work in a vacuum. Nice video as usual!

  • @Abyssic1
    @Abyssic1 7 лет назад +4

    when i saw the video i thought "no, of course not! ...right?" and then i clicked the video anyway ^^ and i'm glad i did!
    i didn't even think about the fact that rockets work in space and was just thinking about if there's no air to push against, it can't produce thrust. so i'm glad you cleared that up.

    • @-.._.-_...-_.._-..__..._.-.-.-
      @-.._.-_...-_.._-..__..._.-.-.- 7 лет назад +7

      For every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction.

    • @Crlarl
      @Crlarl 6 лет назад

      At least you came to the video with an open mind. Some people would just deny the evidence right in front of them.

  • @DiGatsby
    @DiGatsby 7 лет назад +23

    Damn it Cody, you did it again. You linked to an editor page of a video in your description. ;)

    • @theCodyReeder
      @theCodyReeder  7 лет назад +26

      whoops

    • @9rumpole
      @9rumpole 7 лет назад +2

      what does that mean?

    • @brandoncramer4282
      @brandoncramer4282 7 лет назад +3

      Cody'sLab hey it was not fully successful it didn't burn completely because the parachute charge did not go off..

    • @RMoribayashi
      @RMoribayashi 7 лет назад +2

      Brandon Cramer I thought it was a shorter burn.

    • @brandoncramer4282
      @brandoncramer4282 7 лет назад +2

      its was a shorter burn.. tisk tisk cody you didn't catch that buddy

  • @ROBMCKISSOCK
    @ROBMCKISSOCK 3 года назад

    thank God for this video because I was actually starting to think that rocket engines wouldn't work in a vacuum. I would like to see this done when it's not raining.

  • @plains12
    @plains12 7 лет назад +43

    Why dont you try to make a space suit?

    • @Vantlash56
      @Vantlash56 7 лет назад +1

      how is he going to test it

    • @plains12
      @plains12 7 лет назад

      He'll find out :)

    • @Vantlash56
      @Vantlash56 7 лет назад

      Kontrol Kabel how

    • @plains12
      @plains12 7 лет назад

      Vacuum chamber

    • @Vantlash56
      @Vantlash56 7 лет назад +4

      Do you know how much a human size vacuum chamber costs? And if it fails the person inside the suit is going to die

  • @guitarmaniac091
    @guitarmaniac091 7 лет назад +6

    "Let's insert the plug" -Cody'sLab 2k17
    ;)

  • @Nono-hk3is
    @Nono-hk3is 7 лет назад

    Cody you are an experimental genius.

  • @mysteryman7877
    @mysteryman7877 7 лет назад +15

    North Korea ought to take some lessons from Cody. Wait, they restrict their own internet to not include RUclips... I guess they're screwed.

  • @Rohanology27
    @Rohanology27 7 лет назад +4

    Before I see another comment on how " rockets don't work in vacuum ", Just remember these are not designed to work in a vacuum in the first place.

    • @flumblumsummers5068
      @flumblumsummers5068 3 года назад

      So you rely solely on the momentom gained in the atmopshere to get to mars? Or did I missinterpret your comment

    • @Rohanology27
      @Rohanology27 3 года назад

      @@flumblumsummers5068 I mean these hobby motors specifically. Actual rocket engines work in a vacuum. Though given how I worded this it isn’t very clear

  • @RichardBronosky
    @RichardBronosky 7 лет назад

    If you want to continue doing "burning in a vacuum chamber experiments, go to your local vape shop and get some of the wire they use for building coils. I use several coils to light fireworks. With a bench power supply I can get a coil white hot for several seconds and reuse it about 80 times.

  • @ikbendusan
    @ikbendusan 7 лет назад +13

    > filming it with an iphone with that narrow fov

    • @FSXgta
      @FSXgta 7 лет назад +2

      Dušan Pešić sometimes you need to work with what you have!

    • @ikbendusan
      @ikbendusan 7 лет назад +2

      doesn't he have a gopro or something

  • @ThePinkerton1776
    @ThePinkerton1776 7 лет назад +123

    NASA could have done the same test, however, they would spent closer to 30 million dollars to do it.

    • @theCodyReeder
      @theCodyReeder  7 лет назад +40

      probably did

    • @OfficialSlippedHalo
      @OfficialSlippedHalo 7 лет назад +16

      NASA have the largest vacuum chamber in existence, I bet it cost magnitudes more than 30milllion just to build the chamber. It's the unfortunately by product of holding yourself to the highest standard for precise data.

    • @oliverwalters9533
      @oliverwalters9533 7 лет назад

      Anticonny no you are right

    • @OfficialSlippedHalo
      @OfficialSlippedHalo 7 лет назад +8

      They're both huge but NASA is larger by more than double the volume, the largest vacuum area at the LHC is 9000m3, while the Space Power Facility's vacuum area is 22,653m3. EDIT: The confusion may come from the fact that there are actually three separate areas that have to be subjected to vacuum at the LHC, so it might be easier to say the SPF is the largest single vacuum chamber.

    • @IamGrimalkin
      @IamGrimalkin 7 лет назад +11

      The LHC is the longest by length but the NASA one is the largest by volume.
      I don't know if NASA have ever tried igniting solid rocket motors in a vacuum though, as far as I know they've only been used for the first stage/side boosters (so by the time they get to the vacuum bit they're already ignited).

  • @tcmyoda
    @tcmyoda 7 лет назад +1

    Hm. To be accurate, the expanding gas is pushing against the firing chamber (and in this case the enclosing jar) and the only place there isn't resistance for it to push against is the aperture/opening. The gas escapes the aperture, pressing on every other point of contact inside, and the rocket moves in the opposite direction from the gas.

  • @frostfreerunning690
    @frostfreerunning690 7 лет назад +7

    Now try it with a liquid one XD

  • @Mega-tl6bx
    @Mega-tl6bx 7 лет назад +35

    NASA'S rockets work in space because they have an on board oxidizer, usually liquid oxygen.

    • @xavierhorsechode4529
      @xavierhorsechode4529 7 лет назад +1

      Is that so?

    • @IDoNotLikeHandlesOnYT
      @IDoNotLikeHandlesOnYT 7 лет назад +10

      So does gunpowder.

    • @RealReelzz
      @RealReelzz 6 лет назад +5

      and also the point isn't really that it will ignite "which it wont" its that there is nothing for the expanding gas to push off of to give thrust wake up man Nasa is full of shit the truth is coming out there's nothing that will stop it don't be the last to know brother

    • @robgraham5584
      @robgraham5584 6 лет назад +15

      It doesnt need to push off of anything. Its Newton's third law 'For every action there is an equal and opposite reaction'. Action:rocket exhaust is expelled, Reaction: rocket moves forward

    • @paulinadeluca9117
      @paulinadeluca9117 6 лет назад +1

      devin elliott
      How do you think the whole universe is moving... an explosion... the big bang 💥 derff

  • @Fudmottin
    @Fudmottin 7 лет назад

    I was not expecting ignition difficulties. Cool test.

  • @Tomyb15
    @Tomyb15 7 лет назад +3

    2:28
    "let's make sure my CAMERA is okay"
    hmm, so that's nothing more than a camera huh. Looks like them patreons sure do donate! lol

    • @potassium8759
      @potassium8759 4 года назад

      No need to be focused on semantics. He can already see the screens fine and has a phone case that can most likely survive a few sparks, the only thing on that phone that is bare and had no protection against the sparks was the lens of the camera so of course he wants to know if thats ok. This wasn't an explosive TNT test, just thrusts in a vacuum

  • @GoFindAsafeSpace
    @GoFindAsafeSpace 7 лет назад +11

    did you vacuum the air out of that little container that the rocket is in? that just nullified the hole experiment...🤣🤣

    • @01wadder
      @01wadder 7 лет назад +5

      Harlon David How exactly did this nullify the experiment do you even know what an oxidizer is?

    • @SuperSMT
      @SuperSMT 7 лет назад +9

      No, it didn't. The experiment proved that model rockets can _work_ in a vacuum, but can't ignite in a vacuum. They need that initial pressure to start the reaction.

    • @TheByQQ
      @TheByQQ 7 лет назад +11

      Damn, it's almost as if solid fuel rockets were mostly used as boosters during atmospheric flight.

    • @blue_ouija
      @blue_ouija 6 лет назад +1

      Do you really think the air would have time to fill up the vacuum chamber?

    • @FrancisR420
      @FrancisR420 4 года назад +1

      Why don't you explain how it nullified the experiment?
      You know you can't just say it and it's automatically true the guy had a rocket inside of a vacuum to show what a rocket does inside of a vacuum how was it nullified by they're being pressure around the rocket?
      It required a bit of pressure around the rocket to set it off but he was not trying to set off gunpowder in a vacuum. He already did that test.

  • @cogwheel42
    @cogwheel42 7 лет назад

    I predict that it will work because a) the fuel is under mechanical pressure since it's packed together tightly, so the chain reaction is more likely to get started, and b) the rocket provides its own back pressure to drive the gasses out in a single direction.

  • @182-b5j
    @182-b5j 7 лет назад +5

    you shouldn't light the rocket under pressure

    • @zacozacoify
      @zacozacoify 7 лет назад +7

      182 why not? That's how they do it when launching from Earth.

    • @FrancisR420
      @FrancisR420 4 года назад

      How do you suggest he Lights off the rocket?
      The fuel does not ignite in a vacuum.

  • @robertgoff6479
    @robertgoff6479 7 лет назад +3

    Seriously? Whether a rocket produces thrust in a vacuum isn't in doubt; measuring the difference in thrust between atmospheric pressure and a vacuum would have been educational.

    • @badwolfhs7815
      @badwolfhs7815 7 лет назад +9

      "Whether a rocket produces thrust in a vacuum isn't in doubt"
      Unfortunately it is, there's a contingent of conspiracy theorists who claim that thrust in a vacuum is impossible.

    • @my3dviews
      @my3dviews 7 лет назад +4

      +BadWolf HS Mostly flat Earthers, who don't think that space even exists.

    • @shivpalpatine
      @shivpalpatine 7 лет назад

      Difference in thrust between atmospheric pressure and a vacuum is also not in doubt. You can literally calculate these numbers at home on paper.
      Whether a rocket produces thrust in a vacuum isn't in doubt either, but this video raises a lot of questions.
      I dont doubt nasa, or any rocket manufacturer.
      Intuitively everyone thinks all you need is an oxidizer and fuel to create a reaction, which is wrong. Obviously as seen with this video you need pressure, BUT WHY? That is the educational part. And tbh, it is not explained well in this video why you need pressure.

    • @my3dviews
      @my3dviews 7 лет назад +1

      +iwillavenge you Without pressure the gases disperse, so no chemical reaction happens. This is why there is no visible flame from the LM ascent stage after liftoff from the moon. Once the gases leave the combustion chamber the pressure quickly drops and the chemical reaction ceases.

    • @shivpalpatine
      @shivpalpatine 7 лет назад

      So why is pressure needed for the chemical reaction to continue? I mean the necessary ingredients are (or atleast we thought) fuel, an oxidizer, and heat. Which is all there.
      You said without pressure the gasses disperse, but the fuel/oxidizer is solid in this case. Why do we care if the products of the fuel/oxidizer reaction (the gasses) disperse? How do the products of the reaction (the gasses) have anything to do with how the reactants (fuel/oxidizer) react?
      Thanks for your comment, i am still failing to see why pressure is needed.

  • @sajansingh9854
    @sajansingh9854 7 лет назад +1

    Cody, I don't care what you make a video on. Just blow my mind or discover something that no one else has. I don't know...just make it unique

  • @LukeHimself
    @LukeHimself 7 лет назад +5

    it didn't burn after the vacuum hit the fuel if you notice the major difference in burn times.

    • @catsonmeth1
      @catsonmeth1 6 лет назад

      Luke Himself it did, or else it wouldn't have spun the arm around as violently. The difference is that the exhaust can evacuate the rocket much more quickly in vacuum than in normal atmosphere.

  • @stuartgray5877
    @stuartgray5877 Год назад +3

    OR you COULD just watch this weekend's launch of Falcon heavy. The LIVE video had numerous examples of rocket propulsion in a vacuum. If you can't spot the MULTIPLE examples of rocket propulsion IN A VACUUM in that video, just let me know and I will point them out to you.

    • @stuartgray5877
      @stuartgray5877 Год назад +1

      The video is titled "Falcon Heavy From Launch to Landing in 4K! USSF-67" by Astronomy Live.
      It is LIVE video of the launch and booster return and never loses sight of the boosters.

    • @mushmmm1509
      @mushmmm1509 Год назад

      Yea those rockets DID NOT GO INTO SPACE. I watched the vid. They went high in the air like an overpriced bottle rocket but never went to space like you claim. Anyone can easily prove this with the science that’s given. If they went into space then they would’ve instantly left the cameras view as soon as they left the atmosphere as the earth is supposedly spinning at over the speed of sound.... So no... giant bottle rockets going up and coming back down don’t prove anything other than they never left the atmosphere.

    • @stuartgray5877
      @stuartgray5877 Год назад +1

      @@mushmmm1509 - "yea those rockets DID NOT GO INTO SPACE. I watched the vid. They went high in the air like an overpriced bottle rocket but never went to space like you claim."
      Oh REALLY?
      SO YOU know more about this stuff than an actual Aerospace Test Engineer that has been launching things to space since before you were born?
      Sorry, but those side boosters reached 50 kilometers before they separated.
      The atmospheric pressure at 50 kilometers is LESS THAN 1.0 Torr.
      This is ALREADY VACUUM.
      The side boosters then went as high as 120 kilometers where they did some More "propulsive steering" before descending again.
      Stick to topics you are familiar with. This is not one of them.
      And before you try to lecture me on the meaning of the word "Vacuum": I am Also a vacuum test specialist with almost 30 years' experience operating some of the nation's largest thermal vacuum chambers with Billion-dollar defense vehicles inside them.

    • @mushmmm1509
      @mushmmm1509 Год назад

      @@stuartgray5877 if that’s true you of all people should know you can’t get something from nothing... but your stating the opposite by saying rockets can propel themselves off the nothingness of space. It literally doesn’t make sense. When can nothing produce a force to be propelled off of. It simply can’t and doesn’t. As for a vacuum test they’re all flawed, cause the vacuum isn’t a constant it’s a chamber that fills up which is where thrust is possible. There’s no filling the vacuum of space so a rocket would never work. Or y’all can change the definition of what space is to fit the bs narrative, until then “nothing” can’t produce “something” and recoil and propulsion aren’t the same thing. One is an action while the other is a reaction.

    • @stuartgray5877
      @stuartgray5877 Год назад +1

      @@mushmmm1509 - " but your stating the opposite by saying rockets can propel themselves off the nothingness of space."
      I said no such thing.
      For YOU to state the rockets DO NOT work in a vacuum means you don't understand inertia and Momentum.
      When a rocket PUSHES OUT the MASS of the exhaust gas it feels an "equal and opposite" reaction force.
      Per newtons laws, any device that PUSHES ON (Accelerates) any type of MASS MUST exert a FORCE to do so. Any FORCE creates and equal and opposite force.
      No machine can accelerate mass without feeling a RECOIL force.
      Rocket propulsion is the REACTION to pushing on the mass of the exhaust gas.

  • @thomvandervliet5915
    @thomvandervliet5915 7 лет назад +1

    Holy shit you have 1 Mil subs already?! Congrats man I've been here since 20k subs and last time i really looked at your sub count was at 200k and now you've already hit a million! Holy fudge man... Life is so strange sometimes, it feels like it was still yesterday I saw you metal refining video's in my recommended feed and end up subbing to your channel.... I wish you the very best good sir!

  • @connordow7366
    @connordow7366 7 лет назад +4

    this sucked cody. where was the proper testing the good theory's the calculations of volume of air released by the rocket. did you burn the used rocket to see if all the fuel was burned ???. cody i want you to redo this.

    • @connordow7366
      @connordow7366 7 лет назад

      you also forgot a proper explanation of why the rocket wouldn't work without the pressure.

    • @01wadder
      @01wadder 7 лет назад

      Connor Dow " explanation"!
      That pressure was your oxidizer!

    • @FrancisR420
      @FrancisR420 4 года назад

      @@01wadder that is not true. maybe Cody should have been included a explanation to head off people like you that think air pressure is an oxidizer for solid fuel rockets.

  • @Exachad
    @Exachad 7 лет назад +3

    Rockets in space have their own oxygen supply stored in liquid form!

  • @laurenceperkins7468
    @laurenceperkins7468 7 лет назад

    It does need a certain temperature and pressure to ignite. I've got a 1950s rocket manual for amateurs and it includes a section on modifying the design of the igniters for second and third stages so they'll function at high altitudes.

  • @argoscenturian6535
    @argoscenturian6535 7 лет назад +7

    ODD channel had an amazing rebuttal to your experiment on earth curve

    • @argoscenturian6535
      @argoscenturian6535 7 лет назад +1

      I thought he made a solid valid point definitely a theory that could use some testing by more people don't get angry get informed

    • @argoscenturian6535
      @argoscenturian6535 7 лет назад

      I thought he made a solid valid point definitely a theory that could use some testing by more people don't get angry get informed

    • @LukeHimself
      @LukeHimself 7 лет назад +1

      thankfully a smart comment somewhere on the list instead of "oh it worked perfectly the entire time since the burn was started, I accept everything about space now! even the proven claymation astronaut in the 70's spacewalks!"

    • @kristubs4503
      @kristubs4503 7 лет назад

      +Luke Himself They didn't have to use claymation in the 70's they had Kubrick

    • @argoscenturian6535
      @argoscenturian6535 7 лет назад

      makes you wonder why the rocket motor only lit for a fraction of a second and didn't do a full burn

  • @trychan959
    @trychan959 7 лет назад +4

    under 301 club

  • @box420
    @box420 7 лет назад

    Man I work for a crbenfiber company and we do vacuum assisted resin transfer molding and we have got a vac manifold throughout the building that sits at - 27 to - 29 it's kinda impressive

  • @ArcturanMegadonkey
    @ArcturanMegadonkey 7 лет назад +44

    Hopefully the flat earth people will now accept this and shut up.

    • @peterleane6807
      @peterleane6807 7 лет назад +2

      @AM, good point and hopefully give me a break,..P

    • @lajoswinkler
      @lajoswinkler 7 лет назад +9

      They're mentally insane believers. They will certainly not.

    • @texmex9721
      @texmex9721 7 лет назад +19

      "Flat earth" is an emotional thing for these people. It makes them feel good, the reply comments make them feel good. Evidence is not going to make them change their mind because it's not a replacement for those emotions or the attention they receive.

    • @PeterPete
      @PeterPete 7 лет назад +4

      Did you not watch the part when it didn't move? Obviously not!!

    • @texmex9721
      @texmex9721 7 лет назад +2

      Is that a double negative or triple? No! Who are you talking to anyway?

  • @gab31282
    @gab31282 6 лет назад

    Science badass...glad there are people like this guy.

  • @DrSid42
    @DrSid42 5 лет назад +5

    That's silly experiment. The vacuum was compromised when the motors started. This proves nothing !

    • @ThomasKundera
      @ThomasKundera 4 года назад +2

      We don't need such "proof" anyway, Newton laws proves it works.

    • @FrancisR420
      @FrancisR420 4 года назад

      There was still a vacuum, you realize the vacuum was never going to be perfect. This does prove that a rocket produces just as much if not more thrust in a vacuum, if the vacuum negated the thrust then there would have been less thrust than the first test but there's actually more.
      Its Newton's third law as the other guy said. Really should have learned about this in third grade.
      You think the air pressure outside of Rocket is what gives it thrust but in reality that air pressure trying to holding in the pressure in the rocket nozzle and reduces thrust.

    • @DrSid42
      @DrSid42 4 года назад

      @@FrancisR420 It was a joke, man ..

  • @2010invent
    @2010invent 7 лет назад +6

    You cheated. The motor was not in vacuum.

    • @catsonmeth1
      @catsonmeth1 6 лет назад +1

      2010invent it needed pressure to initialize the reaction. After it began, the pressure of the exhaust within the rocket allowed the rest of the fuel to burn.

    • @FrancisR420
      @FrancisR420 4 года назад

      Yes it was.
      It had a pressurized container around it but after that container burst it was just the rocket motor in a vacuum.

  • @BigAirWindJam
    @BigAirWindJam 7 лет назад +1

    HI Cody, Did you think about cutting open the rocket to make sure all the fuel was spent?

  • @mushmmm1509
    @mushmmm1509 Год назад +3

    These vacuum rockets in space tests are all flawed and nobody’s calling it out. These test aren’t in a constant vacuum. As soon as the rocket engine puts out one molecule the vacuum isn’t constant anymore as the exhaust is filling up the chamber which is where it gets thrust. But space is a constant vacuum so there’s no “filling of the chamber” so unless you can calculate exactly what the rocket thrust is and apply the same vacuum constantly while it’s going than your whole test is flawed from the start. The fact that people are using closed systems to simulate a supposed endless vacuum of open space is kinda mind boggling. If space is nothing then you can’t produce something from nothing it’s that simple. Rockets literally break the laws of physics

    • @stuartgray5877
      @stuartgray5877 Год назад +1

      - "Rockets literally break the laws of physics"
      They do no such thing.
      Rocker propulsion is just the mechanical RECOIL of pushing on mass.
      Are you suggesting that RECOIL stops working in a vacuum?
      What would happen if you fired a CROSSBOW into the vacuum? Would you feel a recoil force?
      YES!
      Newton's laws say rocket propulsion MUST work in a vacuum.
      Study the "Law of Conservation of Momentum" then check back.

    • @mushmmm1509
      @mushmmm1509 Год назад +1

      @@stuartgray5877 you said it yourself pushes off of mass. There has to be mass for it to push. There’s no mass in space, so hows it work?🤷🏼‍♂️

    • @stuartgray5877
      @stuartgray5877 Год назад +2

      @@mushmmm1509 - "There’s no mass in space, so hows it work?"
      The ROCKET
      TAKES
      MASS
      WITH
      IT
      TO
      SPACE
      Let me guess, you are one of those morons that thinks that Exhaust gas HAS NO MASS.
      Bless your little heart!
      Let's try completing HIGH SCHOOL, before calling every Rocket Scientist to have ever lived a bunch of imbeciles, shall we?

    • @mushmmm1509
      @mushmmm1509 Год назад +2

      @@stuartgray5877 so where’s the opposing force to create thrust on the “mass it takes with it come from”? Why can’t any you retards answer that? You just keep saying the same thing over and over. If you can’t understand this question you don’t know how thrust is achieved and what’s actually happening when thrust is created.

    • @stuartgray5877
      @stuartgray5877 Год назад +1

      @@mushmmm1509 - "If you can’t understand this question you don’t know how thrust is achieved
      Just so I have this straight: High School dropouts, such as yourself, DO know how Rocket Propulsion works, but ROCKET SCIENTISTS DO NOT?
      Sorry But I have been building, testing, launching and operating earth orbiting spacecraft and deep space science probes since before you were born.
      I tell YOU how this stuff works, NOT the other way around genius.
      Now GO BACK and finish HIGH SCHOOL, then you can try challenging actual engineers about basic physics.

  • @assaultbravo14
    @assaultbravo14 7 лет назад +9

    actually what you did was encase the rocket preserving enough atmosphere to burn the fuel while also giving the rocket something to push off of. So the rocket once ignited pushed off the containment unit. The containment unit went one way the rocket went the other. But that is not what Nasa states that they do. to have rockets like that in space you would have to contain each rocket that you wanted to use. Then once used go out and contain them again for a subsequent use. But The rocket could not fire directly into space. What you basically made was a bullet cartridge. Nasa claims it works like a balloon. You blow up a balloon and have even pressure on all sides. You release the pressure on one side and you watch the balloon go flying around the room. They disregard that the reason the balloon moves is because of the air flowing from the open source and pushing of the atmosphere and instead state that it is because the pressure is no longer pushing at the open source but still pushing in the remaining directions. It is a big leap to state that nasa has figured it out because you figured out how to do it in the way stated above when the way they say they do it is more aligned with your first experiments which failed.

    • @CharlieB1989
      @CharlieB1989 6 лет назад +1

      It's called a combustion chamber.

    • @beaconrider
      @beaconrider 6 лет назад

      Moron.

    • @BonesBroken
      @BonesBroken 6 лет назад +4

      NUCK CHORRIS
      Although 'Live Fantasy' is a bit rude it does not detract in any way from the fact that the OP is indeed an asshat. All flat earthers are asshats as well, in fact thats actually an insult to asshats everywhere.

    • @BonesBroken
      @BonesBroken 6 лет назад

      Live Fantasy
      They (flat earthers) would drive you mad with their stupidity, I agree with you fully. The 'dome above us' people are the worst.
      Bruce Lee used to say that it was unwise to argue with an idiot because onlookers would not be able to distiguish the idiot. He said it better than that but the exact quote eludes me at the moment, but basically he meant arguing with an idiot is idiotic. I stand by what I said however, calling flat earthers 'asshats' is an insult to genuine asshats everywhere... peace.

  • @kitcanyon658
    @kitcanyon658 2 года назад +1

    I like the rotary motion deal. This is the same as what Goddard did in a small vacuum chamber using a gun showing that the gases momentum causes motion even in a vacuum.

  • @connordow7366
    @connordow7366 7 лет назад +4

    im pissed at the poor level of usefull info in this video. he could have made a video entirely on why the pressure gauge didnt go to full vacuum . and maybe another one about how the atmospheric pressure can change from day to day and why it does ? he could have made conclusions based on his observations of the malfunctioning pressure gauge and hypothesized how accurate pressure gauges are. and reflect on all the times he measured pressure gauges to a millimeter to see if he had full vacuum. and say in conclusion it was stupid. and that for all he knew he had half a vacuum. a pressure gauge that can be off by like 20 percent from day to day is useless when trying to measure stuff like .1 percent from full vacuum. among so many other stuff i think this video should be taken down and redone as it is so below codys standards. i watch cody because hes smart and notices stuff like that and then explains them. this video is like what any other "science'' channel could have made. like hydraulic press channels.

    • @FrancisR420
      @FrancisR420 4 года назад

      Rain reduces pressure because it condenses the particles in the air, there are less particles in the air which means less pressure the pressure gauge is completely accurate but reads relative to outside pressure.
      He really did not need a whole video on this
      Also he was never going to have a complete vacuum it's nearly impossible to get one on earth and he did know exactly how much of vacuum he had, the gauge being affected by the outside pressure does not mean he could have been at half of the vacuum he thought he was at you just adjust for barometric pressure. also any amount of vacuum would demonstrate the effect of vacuum has on the thrust of a rocket.

  • @LukeHimself
    @LukeHimself 7 лет назад +3

    great video, sad ignorant conclusion at the end.

    • @CNCmachiningisfun
      @CNCmachiningisfun 7 лет назад +1

      What was so bad about the conclusion?

    • @LukeHimself
      @LukeHimself 7 лет назад +2

      he didn't mention that it went out at the exact moment the vacuum was reintroduced. Yes it was able to start in atmospheric pressure (he's proved that over and over), but it doesn't change anything at all.

    • @CNCmachiningisfun
      @CNCmachiningisfun 7 лет назад +1

      The fact that the rocket motor accelerated the rotor assembly to a great rate of speed, while also producing lots of smoke, demonstrates that the rocket motor did NOT extinguish immediately after the air bottle broke down.
      You are asserting that rockets don't work in the vacuum of space, but I am sure you have not done any experiments of your own in order to prove this.

    • @CNCmachiningisfun
      @CNCmachiningisfun 7 лет назад

      +Scavenger_mi
      So, you are saying that rocket propulsion in a vacuum is impossible?

    • @CNCmachiningisfun
      @CNCmachiningisfun 7 лет назад

      Perhaps so, perhaps no.
      Maybe a bigger vacuum tank, and a bit more testing would be useful here.
      Either way, it is proven that rockets work perfectly well in the vacuum of space :) .

  • @noahdalton8372
    @noahdalton8372 7 лет назад

    You're asking the real questions Cody

  • @robertenator
    @robertenator Год назад +3

    So you proved the rocket didn't work in a vacuum, so you put it in a not-a-vacuum where it did work, and then said it works in a vacuum? Mind blowing stuff.🤦

    • @stuartgray5877
      @stuartgray5877 Год назад +2

      Rocket propulsion works JUST FINE in a vacuum, exactly as the 100-year-old Tsiolkovsky Rocket Equations says.

    • @papalegba6796
      @papalegba6796 Год назад +1

      @@stuartgray5877 the fake equation that nobody uses that was written by a crank? 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂

    • @stuartgray5877
      @stuartgray5877 Год назад +1

      @Pounder - "your arguments are tiresome and lame"|
      Tell me you completed high school and I will kiss your ass.

    • @papalegba6796
      @papalegba6796 6 месяцев назад

      @@stuartgray5877 no aerospace engineer talks like you, chatbot 😂

  • @keith1542
    @keith1542 7 лет назад +3

    any vacuum chamber made on EARTH cannot compare to the absolute vacuum of space. No matter what, it would be too small for experiments. Besides space is WATER. GOD BLESS

    • @blu3flare25
      @blu3flare25 7 лет назад +2

      Space is water? I love how you say a vacuum chamber doesn't compare to the vacuum of space and then pull that out of your ass... Its almost as if your contradicting yourself?

    • @keith1542
      @keith1542 7 лет назад

      My ass, hahaha your stupidly funny. Go figure it out yourself smartboy. Rockets in space have nothing to push against, like air, in space, as they do here ON earth. That's LEO that is. We have no clue what's out there in deep space. Oh but I'm sure you know all about what's out there in deep space. Explain to me why NAZI say's we cannot get past the radiation belts, then in their same breath they talk about Mars and beyond? Really????? I only comment to get responses like yours, you know, the DUMB ones. It just makes me laugh at the ingenuity of people, like you blu3flare25. HAHAHA GOD BLESS

    • @blu3flare25
      @blu3flare25 7 лет назад +1

      Rockets are pushing off the explosion they are creating from expanding gas, like proved in this video.. If they did not it would be a violation of newtons third law.. NASA can go past the van Allan radiation belts the radiation is not enough to kill someone, but enough for radiation poisoning if they are in it long enough.
      I know much more about space than you i have my own telescope and can see Jupiter and its moons clearly, i also have to track it because it constantly moves across the sky from the earths rotation..
      Your just another average conspiracytard that doesn't have a IQ above about 10...

    • @andrewjenery1783
      @andrewjenery1783 7 лет назад

      Could be... Hydrogen and oxygen rises initially all the time for obvious reasons, but the upper layers of the atmosphere (many hundreds of miles up) get colder and colder, so they condense - and you get water again, or something like water

    • @andrewjenery1783
      @andrewjenery1783 7 лет назад

      It is. Messes up a few scientific facts doesn't it ;)

  • @PeterOekvist
    @PeterOekvist 7 лет назад +1

    A question in line with the rest of the comment section.
    Can you put out vacuum with regular air or does it have to be compressed?

    • @FrancisR420
      @FrancisR420 4 года назад

      What do you mean put out a vacuum?
      Also regular air is compressed,

  • @RainbowTreeMusic
    @RainbowTreeMusic 7 лет назад +1

    @Cody It seemed like there wasn't as much smoke after it got lit off the second time. It also looks like your phone was covered in a bunch of gunpowder that never got burned. Could it be that there was quite a bit of incomplete combustion in the vacuum? Like a fair amount of powder lit, but not all of it (which is why there was powder on your phone in the second one but not the first)?

  • @Liamitis123
    @Liamitis123 7 лет назад

    What I mean is like an mma fighter pushing off the cage with his legs while on his back on the ground. The boost would form the "legs" and when it hit the wall, it built a column of thrust that backed up into the rocket and pushed it around your vacuum chamber. This is a possibility, but the traditional concept of thrust in space might be totally right anyway.

    • @FrancisR420
      @FrancisR420 4 года назад

      A "column of thrust" to the wall of the chamber is ridiculous compared to thrust from the particles leaving the rocket pushing off of the rocket.

  • @doomaster4
    @doomaster4 7 лет назад

    the ignitor creates a flame to ignite the propellant. In the vacuum there is no air for the ignitor. Space rockets use electrically fired propellant or a pre-ignition source that will work in vacuum. The shuttle used a chemical based thruster to move around in space and for the main motors.

  • @musaepadumbratus2326
    @musaepadumbratus2326 7 лет назад

    Cody never ceases to surprise. Thought this would be straightforward, but I guess one learns something new every day!

  • @jonesyop
    @jonesyop 7 лет назад

    i appreciate the little zoom transitions you did between cuts on this video

  • @TheFarmacySeedsNetwork
    @TheFarmacySeedsNetwork 7 лет назад

    I knew you were going to make that vacuum chamber fun!

  • @steventennant524
    @steventennant524 3 года назад +1

    Cody I thought your experiment was great. But wouldn't the air in the plastic container allow for the combustion?

  • @donaldparlettjr3295
    @donaldparlettjr3295 7 лет назад +1

    A couple of cool things here. 1) did you notice the water at the bottom boiling off, hard to notice but it was,and 2) the motor works because solid fuel rockets do rely on air as the oxidizer. In vacuum the oxidizer is carried along. You will see these fuels only as a liquid. A really cool vid here.

    • @tadferd4340
      @tadferd4340 7 лет назад +1

      Donald Parlett jr Solid Fuel rockets contain their own oxidizer.

    • @tadferd4340
      @tadferd4340 7 лет назад +1

      Atmospheric oxygen would have a very difficult time getting past the nozzle pressure. There are Solid fuel rockets without solid oxidizer but they use liquid oxygen which is pumped down the center of the solid fuel.

    • @beaconrider
      @beaconrider 6 лет назад +1

      Solid fuel rockets do not rely on the air as an oxidiser. Where did you get that silly idea?

    • @FrancisR420
      @FrancisR420 4 года назад

      Rockets do not run on oxygen from Air.
      I don't think any Rockets have ever done that but certainly not this one.

    • @FrancisR420
      @FrancisR420 4 года назад

      @Adventist pretty sure it's impossible to make a rocket without an oxidizer unless you just use pressure
      How would you get enough oxygen inside ti rocket from the atmosphere to provide thrust?
      It would be extremely interesting to see a design that can do this because if you just put fuel in a tube then it will only burn as it exits into the oxygen around it.

  • @owlredshift
    @owlredshift 7 лет назад

    The video at the end was fascinating!

  • @bigfootandbananaman4746
    @bigfootandbananaman4746 7 лет назад

    Nice paint on the vacuum chamber. It looks nice

  • @noahnadi7678
    @noahnadi7678 7 лет назад

    CONGRATULATIONS ON 1 MILLION CODY! I KNEW YOU WOULD GET HERE!!

  • @FergyA
    @FergyA 7 лет назад +1

    I'm curious if APCP behaves differently in vacuum given that it uses a different oxidizer than either the sugar rockets or black powder rockets I've seen in chambers so far. I imagine setting off an E motor in a chamber would be a bit risky though.

  • @SpeedrunnerG55
    @SpeedrunnerG55 7 лет назад

    the counterweight fell because they both are going through the same amount of change in velocity but the counterweight still has the same mass so it has the greater acceleration forces causing it to separate

  • @mckenziekeith7434
    @mckenziekeith7434 7 лет назад +1

    Thanks for doing this video, Cody! I thought the rocket would work better. Maybe you can fire a .22 blank in the vacuum chamber. The kind they use for setting nails (but without the nail, of course).

  • @christopherhurley2570
    @christopherhurley2570 7 лет назад

    I was about to trip out if it didn't eventually light off, I used to buy packs of hobby rocket motors just to salvage the propellant for makeshift explosives as a kid. Using the included igniter always worked, even in an evacuated 1/4" steel cylinder (like the kind they fill with water and freeze to demonstrate how ice expansion wrecks sealed containers)

  • @moronicpest
    @moronicpest 7 лет назад +2

    The fact alone that the ignitor (which contains a small pyrotechnic charge) burned at the start showed that pyrotechnic materials (rocket propellants or other materials) can burn in a vacuum, whether they are confined or not. When the experiment was modified with the little bottle to build up pressure, heat was transferred sufficiently from the ignitor to the rocket propellant to allow the reaction to continue in a vacuum to completion. If the rocket engine had been configured with a longer and larger diameter nozzle to allow a larger amount of ignitor composition to be used, that would likely have transferred enough heat energy to ignite the main charge, with or without the little pressure bottle used in this experiment. This particular rocket motor with its particularly small nozzle hole configuration wouldn't work in a vacuum without the pressure bottle, but I think that's kind of misleading as to how a properly designed solid rocket motor in general will perform in a vacuum.

    • @FrancisR420
      @FrancisR420 4 года назад

      Not to mention the tiny explosion from the igniter causing that movement is Newton's third law at work,
      it does not require a fluid medium

  • @kuunib7325
    @kuunib7325 7 лет назад +1

    Try a garden sprinkler in a vacuum cause that should have it's own oxydizer that's how it can burn underwater.

  • @spunkyprep
    @spunkyprep 7 лет назад

    Cody's Lab is now Cody's Vacuum

  • @arakieldehoop
    @arakieldehoop 3 года назад +1

    Never saw a rocket with a melting pressurechambre around it.. OMG you guys are so funny.

    • @johnanders8861
      @johnanders8861 7 месяцев назад

      They don’t, srbs aren’t ignited in the vacuum of space much, and if they are, they have a frangible diaphragm allowing pressure build up. For liquid fueled rockets ( Hydrolox, Methalox, Kerolox) they build enough pressure in the combustion chamber from the expanding gasses that they don’t need an external pressure chamber or diaphragm.

  • @JaftenLKA
    @JaftenLKA 7 лет назад

    In liquid fuel rockets, ignition becomes an even more serious issue. Not only is there the problem of requiring the pressurization of fuel and oxidizer within flammability limits, but the method of actually igniting the fuel quickly and reliably becomes a major issue. If ignition is delayed even a few milliseconds, the fuel-oxidizer mixture can be ruined, delta-V can end up being wasted, or worse: the ignition chamber can become overpressurized, which most often leads to a catastrophic failure known as "hard start" or "rapid unscheduled disassembly". Additionally, electric spark ignition is often not reliable enough for many F/O mixtures, meaning that other ignition sources must be used, such as pyrotechnic charges or torches. These are often limited in supply, restricting the number of times the rocket engine can be cycled, and may require some minor maintenance to be used again if the engine has been cut off long enough to go cold.

  • @kyleruiz3855
    @kyleruiz3855 7 лет назад

    I might not be a rocket scientist but did you notice how the rocket didn't burn as long or deploy the chute charge? isn't that because normal model rocket engines don't have an oxidizer? so the reason why it worked the last time is because it had the air from the plastic bottle to burn. but after that oxygen ran out the rocket stopped. but that's just a thought

  • @envisci_bi
    @envisci_bi 7 лет назад

    the thing about space shuttles is that once they've reached space they've generated enough thrust to keep going because objects dont loose energy in a vacuum they can move as far as they need to

    • @FrancisR420
      @FrancisR420 4 года назад

      Yeah but people are more incredulous about the return trips, where NASA just uses systems like this

  • @ChurchOfTheWorld
    @ChurchOfTheWorld 3 года назад +1

    So smoke floats in a vacuum like it does in air,
    As when you popped the lid off the vacuum?

  • @stevemann8374
    @stevemann8374 7 лет назад

    cody, so thats a no right? because to achieve the results you used a mini atmosphere inside the vacuum to feed the rocket oxygen. also noted that the vacuum in the chamber was gaining pressure suggesting that the rocket preformed outside the vacuum. if space expands then lets think of that as the superior vacuum pump and a gain of pressure may not even be messurable. ie nuclear bombs produce no shock waves in space.

  • @justinbayola
    @justinbayola 7 лет назад

    that is the most scientific camera rig i have ever seen

  • @swinde
    @swinde 7 лет назад

    Thank you for extending your experiment to prove that rockets do provide thrust in a vacuum. Most other so called "researchers" that think that rockets can't work in a vacuum would have stopped with the first test and claimed "proof"

    • @FrancisR420
      @FrancisR420 4 года назад

      The thing is the first test still demonstrated Newton's third law just fine, the rocket did move in the vaccum when the igniters went off it just didn't ignite properly
      Also someone literally stole Cody's videos said they were the ones doing the experiment and cut out the last one to claim that it proved Newton's third law is wrong

  • @TechExpertHub
    @TechExpertHub 7 лет назад

    1:51 that countdown was pretty creepy I'm surprised we hear him despite vacuum unless it wasn't full vacuum or the vibrations on the metal enclosure helped transmit it.

  • @RodrigoFernandez-td9uk
    @RodrigoFernandez-td9uk Год назад +1

    Cody, I think you should redo this video with a rocket that shoots water using compressed air, or something like that. There are a lot of flatbrainers using parts of this video to "prove" that rockets don't work in space.

    • @DeputyNordburg
      @DeputyNordburg Год назад +1

      You could, and they would change 0 of their minds.

    • @stuartgray5877
      @stuartgray5877 8 месяцев назад

      @@DeputyNordburg I cannot even convince these morons that a space shuttle main engine's exhaust gas is just PURE WATER.
      They refuse to even "believe in" the MOST BASIC CHEMISTRY IMAGINABLE!
      The Hydrogen and oxygen MAKE WATER!

  • @Hugh.Manatee
    @Hugh.Manatee 7 лет назад +1

    Just wondering, how do hypergolic mixtures fare under vacuum? Would the space shuttle's mixture of Monomethyl Hydrazine and Nitrogen Tetroxide work in your vacuum chamber? Not entirely sure if that's a safe thing to test....

    • @FrancisR420
      @FrancisR420 4 года назад

      Another comment pointed out how they didn't even test that mixture before using it because of how corrosive it is