Electrician Reacts to Styropyro's🔌AMPS vs VOLTS⚡

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  • Опубликовано: 23 мар 2023
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Комментарии • 568

  • @TekedixXx
    @TekedixXx Год назад +1203

    Hey, I just want to say that you are the textbook example of what a "Reaction video" should be. I know a lot of people rag on reaction content for essentially stealing other youtuber's content, but it's clear you are the star of the show and are doing a fantastic job of bringing context to the content without just ripping the video. Informative, funny, and very entertaining.

    • @thinklist
      @thinklist  Год назад +199

      Mate this means a lot. My intent is never to steal anyone’s work and I’ll admit it’s a fine line. I only want to bring context and educate in a fun way.
      You’re a bloody legend mate 🤙

    • @conorstewart2214
      @conorstewart2214 Год назад +48

      @@thinklist I think the main complaints with reaction videos are aimed at streamers or RUclipsrs that just record themselves watching a video and don’t really add anything to the video, like they are just recording or streaming themselves watching it.

    • @eeeeee8762
      @eeeeee8762 Год назад +21

      @@conorstewart2214 Yep, the kinds of reaction videos people don’t take to kindly to are the ones where the person “reacting” is eating or doing something else that doesn’t add on to the content
      This electrician is absolutely adding on to the content and is very educational at the same time, going more into depth on the topics that are briefly covered in the videos he’s reacting to, truly one of the best reaction / educational channels of all time

    • @zachmiller9175
      @zachmiller9175 Год назад +14

      If you look for reactions from experts in their fields they tend to be much better than most of the random simpletons who post reaction videos, for example most of the best music reaction videos I've seen were by pro voice coaches, pro drum teachers etc

    • @joni.l
      @joni.l Год назад +6

      ​@@thinklist I find I understand drakes content more after watching your videos! You add so much to everything you react to!

  • @RotaryMarx
    @RotaryMarx Год назад +563

    YES ANOTHER STYROPYRO! Thank you! Styropyro and electroboom collab would be crazy!

    • @thinklist
      @thinklist  Год назад +26

      🤙

    • @HrLBolle
      @HrLBolle Год назад +29

      Zeus and Thor have combined less power then these two 😮

    • @thinklist
      @thinklist  Год назад +11

      @@HrLBolle

    • @promethius7820
      @promethius7820 Год назад +17

      If you combine styropyro's risk taking with Electroboom's luck... Bad things would happen.

    • @aaronsouthard8366
      @aaronsouthard8366 Год назад +8

      No. Those two together would be the physical equivalent of dividing by zero.
      Nothing good will come from it 😂

  • @MattSeremet
    @MattSeremet Год назад +334

    Thank you for the breakdown and additional info! Sometimes I get lost when the creators get too technical and this reaction format really helps.

  • @slowdownwereonfire
    @slowdownwereonfire 6 месяцев назад +40

    Styropyro amazes me because he does all this for fun. Like you said, his background is chemistry and I think he's a personal trainer? But casually lobs out knowledge that stuns the pros. That's rad.

    • @dylangabriel2703
      @dylangabriel2703 6 месяцев назад +6

      You can do a lot when your insane

    • @Casperdghost618
      @Casperdghost618 6 месяцев назад +5

      @@dylangabriel2703 theres a fine line between genius and madness

    • @threestans9096
      @threestans9096 3 месяца назад +1

      yeah, i remember a few “wtf kid, how did you get this far not knowing that?” moments watching his videos though

    • @SodiumInduction-hv
      @SodiumInduction-hv Месяц назад

      Lol “that’s rad”

    • @davemccombs
      @davemccombs Месяц назад

      @@SodiumInduction-hv It is

  • @zacharythurgood2704
    @zacharythurgood2704 Год назад +123

    I love styropyro, he's just crazy enough to try my fever dreams, I'm just happy to watch 🤣 I think he's actually a professor and is crazy smart. We should just be happy he's happy, and not a villain wirking against us 🤣

  • @pirojfmifhghek566
    @pirojfmifhghek566 Год назад +28

    I'm glad I wasn't the only person watching Photon explode capacitors while eating nachos in my boxers at 2am. I sat there thinking "wow, doesn't get more niche than that" but damn, he's got some followers.

    • @thinklist
      @thinklist  Год назад +9

      I love his work, such a legend

    • @ATSaale
      @ATSaale Год назад +1

      Agreed, I was kind of blown away to watch a reaction to they video. And it wasn't just a random reaction either, but someone that could actually expound on what's going on

  • @Juni_Dingo
    @Juni_Dingo Год назад +190

    I had the opportunity of playing with a similar tesla coil, with output of about 3A rms. One effect Styropyro didn't tell about is that at those currents, it starts warming your entire arm up by resisitive heating, which is quite an interesting experience x3
    Amazing reaction video as always, thanks mate!

    • @Alienami
      @Alienami Год назад +30

      I'll just use a tesla coil to stay warm in winter. What could go wrong? 😵

    • @Galf506
      @Galf506 Год назад +17

      He does add he doesn't do that often because you risk internal burns, though :D

    • @XcaptainXobliviousX
      @XcaptainXobliviousX 11 месяцев назад +6

      that is more than mildly terrifying

    • @knurlgnar24
      @knurlgnar24 10 месяцев назад

      @@havocodey Careful with Microwaves. Body parts that lack nerves but are poorly cooled by blood are easily damaged. The first thing that usually goes is the lenses in your eyes. You'll go blind before you ever feel a thing.

    • @keylanoslokj1806
      @keylanoslokj1806 6 месяцев назад

      ​@@havocodeyare magnetic heaters the future... ?😂

  • @Bobbias
    @Bobbias Год назад +68

    I dropped out of college 1 credit away from graduating a 3 year degree in electrical engineering in Canada, so while I'm not technically any kind of electrician/EE, I've got a lot of the learning down (but please never ask me to simplify another circuit with a transistor in it, or ask me to write out a karnaugh map ever again). I'm amazed at how well Styropyro manages to explain some of the counterintuitive behavior of electricity.

    • @HDReMaster
      @HDReMaster Год назад +9

      thats so dumb. wtf 1 credit. that must feel like winning 2nd place 1 second behind 1st

    • @omargoodman2999
      @omargoodman2999 8 месяцев назад +4

      ​@@HDReMaster Not even. It's like being in 1st position in a race, and then stopping a couple feet before the finish line and just walking off the track. Or playing football (🏈 not ⚽️) and totally outrunning the defense for the touchdown, but spiking the ball at the 5 yard line.

    • @phenax1144
      @phenax1144 8 месяцев назад +4

      I refuse to belive that anyone would do that

    • @tappajaav
      @tappajaav 7 месяцев назад

      What's a karnaugh map?
      Why did you drop out so close to finish?

    • @Phondrason
      @Phondrason 7 месяцев назад +2

      @@phenax1144 if i had failed one particular exam one more time I would have dropped out at 177/180 credits required for my bachelor's - had written my thesis already. would not recommend! luckily the pressure finally made me actually sit down and study, so I passed and finally got my degree xD

  • @rogerbotting3459
    @rogerbotting3459 Год назад +20

    I was welding one very hot day, my gloves and I were dripping with sweat. When it came time to change welding rods I quickly understood how much power an arc welder uses.
    It's a good job I was young nd healthy and had just gone to the toilet.

    • @thinklist
      @thinklist  Год назад +6

      Oh damn! Yep that can happen

    • @coastersaga
      @coastersaga Год назад +2

      Let me guess: ZAP

    • @jnelson4765
      @jnelson4765 Год назад +6

      Welding leathers soaked in sweat will light you up for sure. Not enough voltage to be fatal, just enough to fuckin hurt.

    • @michaelszczys8316
      @michaelszczys8316 Год назад +4

      The TIG welder I use at my job has high voltage / high frequency start that activates about a second to get arc started without touching the tip.
      My electrode holder was cracked up and I kept it taped up with black tape but one time the tape was getting pretty worn and the arc decided to jump through the crack into my bare hand.
      It is capable of jumping about 3- 4 inches and it made my arm feel like it was going to fly right off.

    • @michaelszczys8316
      @michaelszczys8316 Год назад +2

      On the other hand I was welding in my driveway with a stick welder on rainy day.
      I would shut the welder off with my foot every time I put in a completely soaked electrode then turn it on to make a weld. I wore rubber boots as well and was very careful of what I touched when it was on.
      I didn't have any problems but sure had to pay attention.

  • @Elemental-IT
    @Elemental-IT Год назад +26

    it is hard to not be in constant shock and awe (no pun intended) when mr. Pyro uploads a video. Your face looks much like what I imagine mine did when I watched lolol.

  • @michaelszczys8316
    @michaelszczys8316 Год назад +19

    Years ago at union trade show I saw union electrical lineman doing demonstrations about how people put tons of nails into the lower parts of utility poles and how they had to try not to put holes in their insulating clothing climbing up the poles.
    They had residential type transformer hooked up to run thousands of volts at very low amps. It would arc up to about a foot distance. It was interesting watching young apprentice well insulated carrying a probe with all this voltage throwing this long arc burning hot dogs and setting things on fire.

  • @gregkral4467
    @gregkral4467 Год назад +71

    Styropyro is awesome, he knows his stuff for sure, he would make a great teacher, even though I have quite a bit of experience with EET, bio, and chem, he explains things so easily, great vids. And you are ok too..... hehehe, naw, like yer vids as well.

    • @stgigamovement
      @stgigamovement Год назад +11

      In his 3rd video about a 1933 chemistry book, he begins the video by saying that he had even taught chemistry.

    • @austinpeterson4898
      @austinpeterson4898 8 месяцев назад

      ⁠@@stgigamovementat a university no less (if I remember correctly)

  • @AllAmericanBeaner68
    @AllAmericanBeaner68 Год назад +25

    Appreciate how cool and humble this channel is and definitely enjoy watching him cover Styropyro!

  • @bbs5400
    @bbs5400 Год назад +8

    I'm in college learning electrical engineering, and it's pretty cool to see everything I've been learning out being talked about here. And it's also nice to have heard of everything he's mentioned and know all about it. It's funny seeing "L di/dt" and whatnot

  • @savagesarethebest7251
    @savagesarethebest7251 Год назад +19

    I do not always enjoy reaction videos, but yours are some of them that I enjoy. Even if I already saw Styropyros video a long time ago.

    • @thinklist
      @thinklist  Год назад +4

      Glad you like them mate

  • @randomoldbloke
    @randomoldbloke Год назад +7

    High amperage DC is not to be played with , have been zapped twice first DC welder at 160 amps no glove leaking hand piece straight up left arm and had a burn on right thigh , could not use left arm for about 24 hours. The other one 30kva DC generator 220v blew me over 20 feet cleared 2 marine diesel main engines 3408 cat and put me out of action for a couple of days. I consider myself lucky to be alive after either one . That was about 35 years ago

    • @thinklist
      @thinklist  Год назад +3

      Yep it’s no joke

    • @knurlgnar24
      @knurlgnar24 Год назад +2

      The welder hits hard because of the energy stored in the inductor that allows for very high voltages. It's similar to the coil on an ignition system but can be a lot nastier due to the lower voltage, higher current, and higher joule pulses.

    • @evil17
      @evil17 Год назад +1

      Did you buy a lotto ticket after, I would have.

  • @Wheresmy240
    @Wheresmy240 10 месяцев назад +4

    Great reaction video. Styropyro is a literal genius and has taught me so much. Everything he says is verifiable in my experience researching the topics discussed. Love his videos

  • @Andrew-Kerr
    @Andrew-Kerr 8 месяцев назад +5

    I trained as an electrical fitter. I used to work installing and repairing 11kv transformers and switchgear along with 3 phase 415v distribution boards and I’ve just learned several new things from watching this video!

  • @Sir_Uncle_Ned
    @Sir_Uncle_Ned Год назад +9

    styropyro really knows how to make a great educational video.
    So if the frequency is high enough, you basically can’t be hurt by otherwise lethal currents. The standard 50 and 60 Hz AC from a wall outlet is well below that frequency and is obscenely lethal.

    • @knurlgnar24
      @knurlgnar24 Год назад +9

      Keep in mind that you still have the thermal effects of dissipating that current flowing through your body. A lightning strike, for example, often leads to serious thermal burns even when the victim survives.

    • @evil17
      @evil17 Год назад +3

      @@knurlgnar24another unusual phenomenon regarding lightning strike is that it does not have to actually hit you directly, if my information is correct, & pls forgive the vague details of this story.
      A farmer at work once told me of a friends funeral he had to attend, and that he had died from a lightning strike (technically), I dont believe he died immediately ( some hours or a day later), as he was a shortish distance (10m maybe, not sure) from where lightening had struck ground zero. The hospital staff dont really understand it properly either, but they believe it was like an EMF or EMP type force that was generated in his vicinity and can cause the human body electrical signals to just stuff up & die, and there is not really anything they can do in such rare cases.

    • @X4Alpha4X
      @X4Alpha4X Год назад +4

      at standard American voltage of 120, and even up to 240, the lethality doesn't so much come from the electricity frying you, but actually paralyzing your heart/lungs while the electricity flows through those parts. Deaths from residential power usually come from people GRABBING something thats live and are unable to let go. A brief brush across mains voltage, while not very fun, is rarely life threatening for a healthy adult.

    • @billc2052
      @billc2052 Год назад +3

      ​@@evil17 There was a case where lightning struck the ground in the middle of a football game and although no-one was directly struck, several players dropped to the ground, injured. When lightning strikes the ground, it dissipates in a circular pattern and the voltage between your feet can be over 100,000V. So if you think lightning is going to strike near you even hitting a wooden or metal post, keeping your feet close together may save you from injury.

    • @insu_na
      @insu_na Год назад

      ​@@billc2052 perfect explanation

  • @cteckerman
    @cteckerman Год назад +2

    Love your styropyro reaction videos, always puts a smile on my face.

  • @CircuitDen
    @CircuitDen Год назад +12

    I learned a lot from this video, I love this series

    • @thinklist
      @thinklist  Год назад +4

      Thanks mate 👌

    • @gordonwelcher9598
      @gordonwelcher9598 Год назад

      I have finally discovered "It's The Amps, Not The Volts".
      Such a profound concept.

  • @jimbobbigknob2718
    @jimbobbigknob2718 Год назад +3

    I freaking love your energy bro, very contagious!

  • @maxmyzer9172
    @maxmyzer9172 Год назад +4

    14:21 this actually makes sense based on what I have learned in my Brain Computer Interfaces class -- because of the way the sodium potassium pump

    • @Muck-qy2oo
      @Muck-qy2oo 8 месяцев назад

      It's a certain charge transfered in a specific time period called the cell time constant which depolarizes the cell membrane. For example: a shock of 30 µC feels the same with large contact areas whether it is given with 200 V, 330 V (85 nF) or higher voltages. A shock with 10 µC feels the same at 450 V as it does at 120 V, or at 1000 V.
      So the charge in every half wave depolarizes the cell membrane. So the thresholds will be positively correlated to the frequency. But the energy will be different and therefor heat and other effects will increase.

  • @AgentOrange96
    @AgentOrange96 Год назад +2

    4:24 "For starters" yep, that's what that battery is for!

  • @dancingwiththedogsdj
    @dancingwiththedogsdj Год назад +13

    You are just electrifyingly awesome to watch! Informative and simply fun! I forget how much I love your videos until I see one pop up then I'm like... Uhhhh... OH, I LOVE THIS GUY! Keep up the good work and thank you for being you!! 🍻🌎❤️🌮

  • @pXnEmerica
    @pXnEmerica Год назад +4

    Dudes gonna have an apple orchard in a few years.

    • @thinklist
      @thinklist  Год назад

      😆🍎

    • @The_Keeper
      @The_Keeper Год назад +2

      The best part about it is;
      None of the apples will be that same kind.
      Apple-trees deliver vastly different apples from their parent trees and even from other seeds from the same apple. The only way to have the same kind of apples is through grafting.

  • @ruawhitepaw
    @ruawhitepaw Год назад +1

    There is a video called "listening to radio with grass" that illustrates what's going on here.
    A bunch of bored people break into an AM broadcast antenna site and put plants on the antenna, which is insulated from ground and carries high voltage at high frequency. The plants instantly burn, forming an arc speaker that makes the modulated sound audible. They're wearing gloves, thinking that they're protected from the voltage, but at such high frequencies the gloves just create a capacitor and the voltage goes straight through. They don't instantly seize up and die because of the high frequency (500+ kHz for an AM broadcast), but they soon feel the pain from the heat generated within their body by the current passing through them. So they're being cooked from the inside and I'm going to guess they felt this for a very long time afterwards and may have had permanent tissue damage.

  • @alternate5108
    @alternate5108 Год назад +3

    15:04
    Thanks to you I could actually understand one of his videos 💯

  • @jweebo1463
    @jweebo1463 6 месяцев назад

    Bro. You could legit do a whole series breaking down the electrical dynamics of Styropyro videos.
    I found great value in this video for all the points you spoke on. Made googling some of this stuff way easier.
    ez sub.

  • @peterrhodes2035
    @peterrhodes2035 Год назад +2

    Yes … love it!! Danger ⚠️ high voltage

  • @To-mos
    @To-mos 22 дня назад

    Was at Spencer's as a teen and was enthralled by their plasma globes in the back. I touched it a few times but wanted to carefully brace my hand so I could get closer and closer to see how the electricity tugged towards my finger. Since they had the globe sitting on a metal shelf my now braced hand became grounded and it shocked the absolute shit out of me. A lesson learned that literally sparked my interest in electrical engineering.

  • @KarldorisLambley
    @KarldorisLambley 8 месяцев назад +1

    this vid is amazing. in the past few months i have gone from not knowing the difference between AC and DC, to making function generators, and inverters using 731op amps and 555 and 4047 ICs. last week i finally grasped the concept of transformers. this week i have been learning about calculus and logarithms. a whole world of interesting videos has become open to me, i now understand what this bloke and styropyro are on about!
    if i were to be asked "is it volts or amps that kill?" i would reply -"yes, usually."

    • @tappajaav
      @tappajaav 7 месяцев назад

      Awesome to hear that you've been learning a lot!
      Are you fiddling in electricity just for fun or have you worked towards goals of some sort?

    • @KarldorisLambley
      @KarldorisLambley 7 месяцев назад

      @@tappajaav i decided, out of nowhere, i wanted to make a model rocket with a flight computer in it. i launched one last week with an arduino nano in it, recording acceleration, rotation, pressure, and temp to an sd card!

  • @mikegamerguy4776
    @mikegamerguy4776 10 месяцев назад +2

    Also in his video he says he keeps the touches to the crazy arc short because he wants to avoid internal burns since that kind of thing can heat things up pretty well even if he's not being electrocuted. I don't fully understand the whys and hows of the stuff he does but I've learned to just take his word for it. xD

  • @theEVILone0130
    @theEVILone0130 5 месяцев назад

    Like the gentleman that was reacting to your video it's taught me things i didn't know either we didn't discuss it in my college classes or we skimmed over it but little detail overall. Possibly we might have hit on the subjects if i had been working on a PhD or something.

  • @jinzo457
    @jinzo457 7 месяцев назад

    every time I see this guy upload, my immediate reaction is
    "oh good, hes not dead"

  • @ReasonMakes
    @ReasonMakes 7 месяцев назад

    This was great

  • @throttlebottle5906
    @throttlebottle5906 5 месяцев назад

    a bit over 30 years ago, I landed myself backwards about six feet playing with around 20KV pulsed HV-DC at unknown current potential(large vehicle/racing ignition coil) and leyden jars.
    it blasted through a hand and left leg, which in turn catapulted me backwards from end of bed to slammed against headboard half vertical, which also knocked over the table and made the junk producing the HV stop. it was likely a good thing it was all on a cheap folding table, but then again, it's the metal legs and outer rim that got me.
    likely a good thing I had very strong legs and was skinny from lots of bicycle riding.

  • @jnelson4765
    @jnelson4765 Год назад +2

    I've played with some serious Tesla coils and he's a legit mad scientist with the stuff. Beautiful construction techniques of massively deadly apparatus.

  • @MerlinsDrAgon
    @MerlinsDrAgon 5 месяцев назад +2

    Mate I’m an electrician too (only qualified for 2 years) but some of this befuddled me too. I guess we only really held onto the practical lessons from trade school to use on the job and didn’t go as thorough with the theory. Great video, and nice to know I’m not alone when it comes to my average understanding of the whole electrical field

    • @tools.no.problem
      @tools.no.problem 5 месяцев назад

      Start teaching yourself about radios. Get your Ham license. You will learn so much.

  • @Corn-Pop.
    @Corn-Pop. 7 месяцев назад +1

    I love to stick my finger in outlets and I use steel rods to strike overhead power lines. I hope to get a lot of fresh electrons.

    • @tappajaav
      @tappajaav 7 месяцев назад

      Invest in really long rod so you can touch the high voltage transfer lines.
      Now THOSE should give you many electrons

    • @Muck-qy2oo
      @Muck-qy2oo 2 месяца назад

      @@tappajaav But the problem with AC is that it will take them back every negative cycle. While with DC you have to make sure that you get polarity right.

  • @stevenspmd
    @stevenspmd Год назад +3

    Stryo is awesome! The bit about tossing Ohms Law out the window is funny but a bit miss leading; its more like Ohms law is incomplete.

    • @coastersaga
      @coastersaga Год назад +3

      What he means is that V=IR is for DC, while Ohm's law for AC deals with phase shift and such

    • @Lrofmaulol
      @Lrofmaulol Год назад +7

      "Ohm's suggestion"

  • @peasant8246
    @peasant8246 5 месяцев назад

    I've learn much today about electricity, thanks.

  • @greenaum
    @greenaum Год назад +2

    Volts x Amps = Watts. Watts x time = Joules. Styropyro has a Bachelor's in Chemistry, which outranks an electrician in terms of academic brownie points, though his electrial knowledge is self-taught. But he's a very clever guy, and has pissed about with high-power lasers for years yet still has vision in both eyes! That's a mark of a great physicist (he also did some research into MRI machines blah etc). He knows exactly what he's saying, and he's very good at getting it across to a layman audience, partly because his immense enthsiasm and love for the subject shows through.
    He's also pretty hot.

  • @Expoz3DxSpaRtaN
    @Expoz3DxSpaRtaN Год назад +4

    I usually dont care for reaction content, i'd rather watch the content itself. but you add a nice educational flavor that i can appreciate.

    • @thinklist
      @thinklist  Год назад +2

      Thanks mate. That’s the aim

  • @juanfelipecopete9368
    @juanfelipecopete9368 7 месяцев назад

    Nice video thanks for teach me. Greetings from Colombia

  • @ofrenic
    @ofrenic Год назад +2

    Tbh this is the only reaction content I'll watch. You actually give educated feedback. It makes the videos more interesting. As opposed to the usual "react" content, where its just a streamer who knows as little as i do watching it.
    Also, you know Drake is crazy when he laughs every time he gets a shock 😂

    • @thinklist
      @thinklist  Год назад

      Cheers mate. Yep he is a crazy dude

  • @petevenuti7355
    @petevenuti7355 Год назад +2

    Just like there's different kinds of radiation, if a neutron beam is strong enough, it mostly just passes through you, slow ones won't, but a week alpha source that can be blocked by paper can kill you really fast if ingested. Particle or electromagnetic, neutral or charged, frequency/energy level, what tissue is being exposed... It's not as straight up as one might think.
    Same with electricity.

  • @bj.bruner
    @bj.bruner 8 месяцев назад

    Styropyro has always seemed to me like Anakin Skywalker before Attack of the Clones, but with Revenge of the Sith hair 😂 and that seems to make it even better

  • @nobodistribe6092
    @nobodistribe6092 Год назад

    He's a true RUclips legend. I love his videos.

  • @kadmow
    @kadmow Год назад +1

    With a 240VAC (single or 415V 3P) supply at 50hZ Amps is a good proxy for the outcome - for different voltages and frequencies, the power relationship with the time domain is key...

  • @hishamguess5843
    @hishamguess5843 Год назад +4

    I love this guy. His commentary is so informative and entertaining. He's also very humble, a likeable quality to have with someone with so much knowledge. Styro is awesome too!

  • @tolkienfan1972
    @tolkienfan1972 Год назад

    That was great! Also, shout out to Styropyro!

  • @ivoryas1696
    @ivoryas1696 7 месяцев назад

    6:15
    Bro is caught up on his Styropyro lore 💀
    I hope to see more of your content, dude. 👍🏾

  • @markgohl2660
    @markgohl2660 8 месяцев назад +1

    The secondary of High frequency supplies like Tesla coils tend not to electrocute. The sensitivity of the body to current is frequency dependent with the greatest hazard been around the power frequence range. However the spark is hot and can burn. However the primary of the coil I built was energized with 2000 volts DC and that is DANGEROUS. I made a video on it :)

  • @jameshatton4405
    @jameshatton4405 Год назад +1

    Great review. I'm subbing

    • @thinklist
      @thinklist  Год назад +1

      Thanks for the support mate

    • @jameshatton4405
      @jameshatton4405 Год назад

      @@thinklist no worries bro that was excellent from another Aussie 🇦🇺

  • @Techcensorshipbot
    @Techcensorshipbot 7 месяцев назад

    That dude is forever 20 years old. Its actually really impressive.

  • @dec4dent
    @dec4dent Год назад +3

    What a top tier video to react to, v exciting

  • @dsmtnr95
    @dsmtnr95 7 месяцев назад

    You gotta do one for william osman and backyard scientist playing with high voltage and an xray tube.

  • @nebiros_at9473
    @nebiros_at9473 Год назад

    I still remember having to broomstick a newbie that was stuck to a low volt line when I was still in school for Electrical.

  • @dumbassdemonfoxmk2
    @dumbassdemonfoxmk2 8 месяцев назад

    From my understanding voltage is the thing that leads amps and breaks down dielectric materials, for example if a 1000 volt spark Hits ur hand it easily passes cuz it has no problem with the resistance of skin but in the battery example it's possible to get shocked with wet hands which removes the need to break down the resistive skin layer. Buuuut I'm no expert and my reasoning might be flawed so feel free to correct me

  • @RantGG
    @RantGG Год назад

    You look a lot like Fixit Felix from Wreck-it Ralph! Also, great video mate! styropyro is a legend. 👍👍

  • @dotslash
    @dotslash 7 месяцев назад

    Not sure what it is... but I'd buy you a beer in any pub/bar in the world just to have a convo about anything electricity related with you. I love styro, I love the full bridge rectifier, but you are the only one who makes my brain understand why both of them aren't dead yet. ;) Love ya fam. Thanks for what you do.

  • @barry99705
    @barry99705 Год назад

    Man, I remember as a kid frying my watch by placing it against a plasma globe at the mall. Got in soooooo much trouble for that one. 🤣🤣

  • @SolidCoreBlack
    @SolidCoreBlack 8 месяцев назад

    I love how all sort of professional people coming out of the woodwork to do React Video.

  • @Klaevin
    @Klaevin 7 месяцев назад

    I love how styropyro's videos are so powerful that even professionals reacting to them look like smiling, dumb little boys (me included)

  • @drtaverner
    @drtaverner 4 месяца назад +1

    Teaching guitar the tongue test was the easiest way to test 9V batteries. Pedals and active pickups all use 9V power.
    I once had a student try it who sparked it off his braces. I then stopped doing it in front of students.

  • @pi0neer758
    @pi0neer758 8 месяцев назад

    ElectroBOOM also made a video where he made a pain graph of different frequencies. In his graph, anything above 20kHz would simply not be felt by the nerves, and instead, it _just burns_

    • @Muck-qy2oo
      @Muck-qy2oo 2 месяца назад

      There is no freuency at which neurons stop functioning totally. They are reacting more readily to a specific range of frquencies while they are less responsive to frequencies outside that range. But with high enough currents neurons can be excited, even at high frequencies. Eventhough this ight require currents above the power/energy threshold the body can withstand.

  • @j.c.f.m.2486
    @j.c.f.m.2486 Год назад +2

    4:06-4:19 he reminds me of photonicinduction

  • @ryancox3834
    @ryancox3834 Год назад +1

    Styro is easily one of the most incredible youtubers. Legend

  • @neutronenstern.
    @neutronenstern. Год назад

    4:01 take one of these small (not car battery cause shorting it would burn you heavily) 12V batteries on your tounge, and you will see a flash of light in your eyes. I think it overrides the nerve signals of your eye or something

  • @isaiahtatum
    @isaiahtatum 7 месяцев назад

    I just watched this video earlier this week and the Tesla coil seen gave me a heart attack

  • @gordonwelcher9598
    @gordonwelcher9598 Год назад

    I have finally discovered "It's The Amps, Not The Volts".
    Such a profound concept.

  • @sincereflowers3218
    @sincereflowers3218 Год назад

    One of the most important things an electrician can have is a good "fuck I almost died" laugh.

  • @coopa9822
    @coopa9822 8 месяцев назад

    If I remember right from class, the main concern of any current or voltage source going through your body, is that if it goes through a certain small muscle in your heart your heart will stop. I'm sure the skin effect comes into play in conductive materials but ye don't ever touch live with one hand and ground with the other. Styro was safe because he was grounded.

    • @Muck-qy2oo
      @Muck-qy2oo 2 месяца назад

      Styro wasn't grounded. You don't need a ground connection at high frequencies.
      There is no skin effect in the human body like with first class conductors.

  • @festro1000
    @festro1000 Год назад +1

    Electricity is fun. Personally I love pranking people that try and use those prank gum sticks on me, only for them to try it themselves when I don't react to the shock.

  • @brianl8983
    @brianl8983 Год назад

    It makes me flinch so hard when he touches the battery terminals

  • @spacemaster8661
    @spacemaster8661 Год назад +1

    14:19 Yeah, it’s crazy how you can’t feel electricity at extremely high frequencies. ElectroBOOM actually made a video that was based on pain vs. frequency. In that video, the pain peaked at around 2000 Hz, and dropped significantly at 10 kHz

  • @MarkB-mb8fk
    @MarkB-mb8fk 3 месяца назад

    Dude, I love this what edit software do you use and you and I could make beautiful RUclips videos together signed Professor Boz

  • @pearlslug
    @pearlslug Год назад

    Love the little Ophelia reference! ^v^

    • @thinklist
      @thinklist  Год назад +1

      Such a cute squirrel 🐿️

  • @haydengrows
    @haydengrows 6 месяцев назад

    Great video

  • @RB-nm3ko
    @RB-nm3ko 4 месяца назад

    If an appliance is switched on, the neutral wire has current running through it. So would any risk to touching it depend on how many amps the appliance uses, just as it would be for the hot wire? Thanks

  • @SILVERDANYYYD
    @SILVERDANYYYD Год назад

    Superb

  • @ThatJay283
    @ThatJay283 Год назад

    4:02 all 3 of us licked the 9v battery lol

  • @diablominero
    @diablominero Год назад +2

    Have you seen the electroboom video where he graphs AC frequency versus pain of electric shock?

  • @bcn1gh7h4wk
    @bcn1gh7h4wk 6 месяцев назад

    0:50
    "EXPECTO PATRONUM!"

  • @hito-sama
    @hito-sama 8 месяцев назад

    0:46 he was graduate from Hogwarts
    Sheeesh my brain juice almost can't catch up with his explanation without replay it

  • @seanbarrasin9441
    @seanbarrasin9441 9 месяцев назад

    cool i got one of them instlasion testers it can put out 1000v i tuched the out put leds and it give me a bloody kick😛

  • @GlenPoll-ox2hj
    @GlenPoll-ox2hj 7 месяцев назад

    I'm so glad I found your reaction video
    All the half truths and misinformation this video had was doing my head in
    30mA is just a known figure we know we have to avoid passing through our chests / hearts etc even though there would be multiple conduction paths thru body
    Just incase there's only one path let's limit it to that
    Regardless of what the voltage ,ambient conditions are and resistance of any paths involved are we need to avoid anything that results in 30mA thru body
    If you are in a pool it doesn't take much voltage applied between two terminals one either side of a swimming pool to make you collapse and drown
    Low voltage but it's still just 30mA across chest
    So 30mA is a constant that doesn't change (much) so is the best UNIT to base it and any safety device on
    Take anything in the vid with a grain of salt - I wouldn't trust my life on anything stated in the original vid and throw proven conventional electrical principles out the window !
    Electricity:- it's all fun and games until someone gets electrocuted and dies then it's bloody hilarious !!
    Its all a laugh

  • @NicksGotBeef
    @NicksGotBeef Год назад +3

    Great vid mate. Love drake. Really wish Andy would come back ( photonic )

  • @thomasmaughan4798
    @thomasmaughan4798 5 месяцев назад

    10:00 I wish he elaborated on "hooked up to the Tesla coil". What I don't see is any meter hooked up to the TOP of the Tesla coil. What is the circuit?

  • @gabrielbaez8034
    @gabrielbaez8034 Год назад

    Being the current runs on the outter “skin” will a nano coating of carbon reduce the resistance?

  • @fishingfan1500
    @fishingfan1500 2 месяца назад

    I once heard "everything's a conductor, given enough volts".

  • @MeleeTiger
    @MeleeTiger 3 месяца назад

    I highly recommend his "100 car batteries wired in parallel" video for it's shear insanity and entertainment value.

  • @danielelise7348
    @danielelise7348 9 месяцев назад

    It's funny that he says he's not an electrician,yet he knows more about electricity than most electricians.😆😆

  • @johnd5619
    @johnd5619 6 месяцев назад

    awesome video!

  • @TheTransporter007
    @TheTransporter007 Год назад +2

    Good heavens that birb got freaking *smoked*

  • @benfreeman9717
    @benfreeman9717 10 месяцев назад +6

    I'm so tired of the amps vs volts debate. It's so much more complicated than that. Electricity is like anything else in life. If you don't handle or use it properly it might kill you. If you spray someone in the face with a water hose for a long time and they drown, did they die from the pressure of the water that prevented them from breathing or was it the volume of the water that ended up in their lungs?

    • @Muck-qy2oo
      @Muck-qy2oo 8 месяцев назад

      It is all about the context, not content alone. That's right!

    • @pilsplease7561
      @pilsplease7561 6 месяцев назад

      Same with wine fermentations, Carbon Dioxide will fuck you up, so will hydrogen sulfide.

  • @seanpelletier
    @seanpelletier 7 месяцев назад

    When i was a teenager, u used to cover my plasma hlobes with foil, and used a grounded fork to make the spark jump l, all so i could light a smoke off of it lmao😊

  • @AUSCIPHER
    @AUSCIPHER Год назад +1

    Cool video 👍👍 Subbed

  • @everythingquads
    @everythingquads 7 месяцев назад

    Please do another react video to Styropyro's latest car battery video.