For the winter: pile snow on them, then deflate for an instant snow cave. For the summer: inflate it halfway, float it on a pond, sit one person atop it and have another jump on it.
0:19 - This is a German type 11 General Purpose Marine Buoy. 1:27 - That will be the 50 meter by 9 mm anchor rope whit carabiner. (if it had a paper tag then it will be the 25 meter version) 1:38 - A mix of nylon, polyester, rayon and vinyl. 2:50 - yes it does 2:59 - That is a life vest carabiner rope , if there ever is a accident at sea and a lot of people are in life vest , they can clip onto this like and be float up to 24 hour , it can support up to 6 people. 3:03 - anchor point 3:22 - Talcum Powder 3:49 - There main uses are : water maker for boundary definition , life vest support (see 2:59 comment) , mine maker and used in training to make objectives
^ Found the East German spy! Quick, get him! Oh wait what's that the Cold War is over? And RUclips are hiring Stasi agents responsible for the death of thousands of people to head their 'Diversity and Inclusion' board as well as their ... no, their 'Trust and Safety' board too? Mein gott. What twisted hellscape world is this!
We used airbags like this in tractor trailer wrecks to roll them back onto their wheels when the rolled over, there is amazing power in inflating something
6:56 - On the ring is written in German: "VEB" stands for "Volkseigene Betribe" or in english "People's Own Businesses", which was a legal form in the GDR. "HADRA" might be an abbreviation of some sort as a company name or something. It's not exactly a German word. Schwerin is a city in north-eastern Germany. Underneath it says "rope diameter 6.5 mm" Under the hole "TGL" stands for "Technische Normen, Gütevorschriften und Lieferbedingungen" in English "Technical standards, quality regulations and delivery conditions" and the corresponding number. In the last line then "payload per strand 380 kg"
And kp (Kiloponds or Kilogram-force) was an old (non-standard) unit. 1 kp = 9.806650 N (Newton) - details on the Wikipedia article about Kilogram-force Schwerin is the state capital of Mecklenburg-West Pomerania in northeastern Germany (comparable to Austin/Texas or Sacramento/California) Schwerin - Sch is pronounced like sh (shelter etc.) and the I is pronounced like ea or ee at sea or seen TGL 17454 was the GDR (Estern Germany) norm for steel wire slings/sling ropes mode of steel wire - details at katalog [dot] ub [dot] uni-weimar [dot ] de/tgl/TGL_17454_12-1984 [dot] pdf
For only $45 you could build some kind of frame for it and potentially use it for water storage. A 500 gallon tank costs 5x as much in my neck of the woods, and I could built a frame out of scrap wood or metal for next to nothing.
@@robwgeorge He said POTable, not PORTable. Big difference. I'd drink non PORTable water any day of the week, and twice on sundays - not so much for non POTable water...
To the inscription of the rope: VEB Hadora Schwerin. VEB= State owned company Hadora= Name of factory Schwerin= city in the north of Germany On the bottom it says: Payload per rope
You definitely need to get a couple more of those and make a ginormous raft. Then you could make a monster sail out of those billboard sheets you're trying to get rid of. Mount a potato cannon on front and you've started your own navy!
deflate it 60% and i suspect they are pretty loungeable. Could barricade a door with it. Fill someone's bedroom by inflating it inside. Or fill one , connect the two of them together and start piling people on one, while someone sits on the other and is lifted up then they could unpile and lower the other person.
You could use it as a mould to make a bar. Like how you wanted to step inside it. Well do the positive mould, negative mould, bit of tinkering process and you could completely do that.
I came for the usual brilliant improvisations and stayed for the comedy. Great video. Years ago I saw someone build a methane gas generator and used a large inflatable bag for the gas capture tank.
The medaillon basically says the rope is made by VEB (Volkseigener Betrieb, loosely translates as "company of the people" which just means the state ownes it) Hadra (name of the company) which was based in the city of Schwerin. Seil is German for rope, meaning the rope is 6.5mm in diameter. The other side seems to display the "Nutzlast" which probably rates how much weight and such the rope can handle. I believe Hadra still exists as "Hanseatischer Drahthandel", which means "Hanseatic Cable Trader".
How about getting one or two more, using them as pontoons, built a platform on them, attach a small engine, and have the Minnesota government not allow you to register it as a boat? I enjoyed this. BTW - dirigible/Zeppelin was my first thought as well. ☮
That would have some serious lifting power. Have you seen the airbag jacks for cars that use the exhaust gas from the tail pipe to inflate them? Popular for 4x4 off-roading, they are a fraction of that size but can lift a couple of tonnes of car pretty easily.
Dig a hole the diameter of the buoy, plus a few inches. Make it about 3 feet deep with a concave bottom. Insert the inflated buoy. Carefully slice the buoy into two halves. Invert the top half of the buoy and push it inside the bottom half. Fill with water, hot or cold. BTW, I have an old German semi-inflatable kayak that is probably made from the same material. It is remarkably tough.
Maybe you should build a pneumatic air cannon instead. It might be more reliable, although it would take a lot longer between shots. Good time with the wrecking ball swing!
The obvious thought to me is... fix some kind of rims to it and turn them into an amphibious bicycle/pedal boat. It'd suck as a vehicle but probably be a lot of fun.
Some ideas : half filled with water, it will make a good chair/bed :) on a lake/river : you see this game in Canada with tree logs and people trying to keep on it ? :) a bag pipe
Use them as concrete inflatable forms for water catchment, like the airbags used in some monolithic dome forms. Like water cisterns. Or concrete plaster them only halfway up and use as planters /raised beds by laying on side letting cure and then deflating.
You could use those bags as a punching bag for 5 people at once. ? Or you could slide down a snowy mountain with them. Or you could use them as a crash barrier air bag.
Most of the uses i can think of would be using the material. If you cut the top or bottom off then you have a waterproof cylindrical cover for something
You could use them for gas storage if you are interested in a biogas reactor or a wood gasifier project. Maybe you could even have one be the biogas reactor chamber and one be used to store the gas.
1. Giant boxing sack. 2. Sort of (one use only) airbag for felling a big tree over a pathway or something so that the path does not damage 3. If you fill it only halfway up, you can make a beanbag XXXL 4. You can cut it up and make a raft out of it for escaping Alcatraz
Besides buoys or underwater lift bags they look like they can be used as field inflatable air jacks to lift heavy equipment for repairs like trucks or all terrain vehicles.
Make your car amphibious using them as floats. Use them as an air chamber in an expansion vessel for a huge water pistol. Let them be air chambers in a submarine. Make them into an airbag suit that rapidly inflates when you fall.
@@saveitforparts I made a suggestion above but I'm not sure you'll see it. I'd get a pipe bender and bend some tube steel into hoops. Fix those to the three attachment points at either and and it'd basically be a pair of drum wheels like on a steam roller. From there I think it'd be easy enough to add spokes and turn it into a kind of amphibious bike/pedal boat thing.
If you know it is going to snow heavily you could inflate it and let the snow build up and then deflate and have another igloo! But Im sure the air inside would have to be below freezing. Or dig a partial hole and cover them with enough dirt and pack it down so that it will stay once the buoy is deflated
The paintball obstacle sure is a great idea. Or maybe a complement to the burguer king mouse course? Also, nice 1080p 60FPS, the outside shots are great
Emergency, water storage/transportation vessels. The material look stronger than that of a portable backyard pool. Throw one of those on the back of a heavy duty truck, fill with water, transport. Boom sold
If we ever see rain again, that could be handy. I have two 500-gallon water tanks in the back yard and so far this year they maybe have 10 gallons in them 😥
6:50 What the Medallion says: VEB HADRA is the company (or rather the Publicly Owned Enterprise (VolksEigener Betrieb)) that made it. Schwerin is a Place in the east of germany. Probably the location of the company. What follows are "Rope Diameter 6.5 mm", something I can not read and "Load capacity per strand 380 kp", kp standing for "Kilopond" which is a ridiculous old measurement for force that was used in some places before Newton as a unit caught on.
Glue plywood and a bearings to both flat ends and make them giant bicycle wheels, ie need to fabricate giant forks to weld to an old bike frame (may need a periscope and parralel linkages on the steering if you want it not to be a super tall bike.), with the addition of some glued on paddles it would go accross water...
Not sure about the specifics but this might be a decent 'bladder' for a biogas collection system. From there you can use the methane to power other projects and experiments!
Oh, worlds largest bagpipe bag? What about construct a pedal bike around them and use them as floats for a floating bike? Maybe recreate Fred Flinstones car?
@@saveitforparts mwahaha this is brilliant! I actually created a amphibious vehicle in one of my undergrad courses. Have you seen the video of the guy making a vehicle from old battery drills and air mattress tires?! That sounds like something perfect for this channel but with your buoys
Buoy, oh buoy - you were right. It's huge. I bet you could slide it under a car, fill it until the whole car is up off the ground, and leave it as a joke.
You could use them for an unforgettable ride down the Mississippi. Strap the rope around the bouy in a criss cross chainlink type pattern and reenact the barrel riding scene from The Hobbit.😂
You can start recovering sunken boats now with those right? basically anything you needed to displace water. that size would allow you to form to a lot of shapes that are under water. imagine inserting that thing deflated inside a sunken vehicle. it would be enough displacement to at least bring it to the surface potentially. or you could use them as blow molds for stuff... you could spray them with a release agent and use them for making fiberglass mini campers and then just deflate them when the shell is complete.
Game: find a taller thing to hang it from with a lot of clear space under it. The players stand in a ring and throw it around like circular red rover. Or, throw it tangent to the circle and everybody has to try and forward it along as fast as possible until somebody can't hold it in the circle and then it takes several people out. If you watch Hyperspace Pirate he uses a beach ball to collect and shuttle gases between his various science devices. This may be less permeable than cheap beach toy plastic, mainly because it's probably thicker, and it's certainly a lot larger. Might be fun to fill it with different gases to change it's weight. CO2 can be produced pretty simply, not sure if this scale would still be cheap, but CO2 is 50% heavier than air
Fourth of July's coming, you can always fill them up with oxygen and acetylene, or just pure oxygen and propane even.. Use to jack up a large structure first, then ignite and launch sed large structure.. Dorothy won't be in Kansas anymore 😜 On that topic , maybe as a tornado buster, fill it with said gas mixture put in path of the tornado and ignite when tornado hits it, stop the tornado much like they stop burning oil fields...
This metal ring is interesting because it says (VEB), which stands for "Volkseigener Betrieb," a term commonly used in the German Democratic Republic (DDR). So, it says VEB HADRA Schwerin. HADRA was the company, and Schwerin is a location in Germany, formerly in the DDR. The rope should have a diameter of 6.5 millimeters, probably per strand. These specifications refer to the rope itself. As for the inflatable parts, that's a good question. Maybe they were lifting cushions used to lift loads. If there's no information on them, I mean, no manufacturer is mentioned. It could also be used for lifting loads underwater, so we might soon see treasures being raised from the depths of the sea. 🤗👍
Duh! Just attach the carabiner to the buoy and then clip your keys onto it. BOOM. You'll never lose your keys again! Plus, if they get dropped overboard, they wont sink!
East German is actually normal German and it reads:"VER HADRA (I guess it is some company) Schwerin (a city on the north-east of Germany). Seil (rope) the sign for the diameter 6.5 mm. Nutzlast je strang 380 kg. (Allowed load per strand 380kg)" I had to chuckle at that "Schwerin" pun
When folks close their pool at the end of the year. This buoy sits in the middle of the pool so the water runs off the tarp and over the edge of the pool.
Pretty awesome but definitely have no idea what you'd use them for. I like the CodysLab shoutout though! Maybe you could both collab on this? Two of my favorite channels!
For the winter: pile snow on them, then deflate for an instant snow cave.
For the summer: inflate it halfway, float it on a pond, sit one person atop it and have another jump on it.
0:19 - This is a German type 11 General Purpose Marine Buoy.
1:27 - That will be the 50 meter by 9 mm anchor rope whit carabiner. (if it had a paper tag then it will be the 25 meter version)
1:38 - A mix of nylon, polyester, rayon and vinyl.
2:50 - yes it does
2:59 - That is a life vest carabiner rope , if there ever is a accident at sea and a lot of people are in life vest , they can clip onto this like and be float up to 24 hour , it can support up to 6 people.
3:03 - anchor point
3:22 - Talcum Powder
3:49 - There main uses are : water maker for boundary definition , life vest support (see 2:59 comment) , mine maker and used in training to make objectives
^ Found the East German spy! Quick, get him! Oh wait what's that the Cold War is over? And RUclips are hiring Stasi agents responsible for the death of thousands of people to head their 'Diversity and Inclusion' board as well as their ... no, their 'Trust and Safety' board too? Mein gott. What twisted hellscape world is this!
You could lift something that sunk in a lake or river maybe? Tie it to the submerged item and then inflate it with air.
Sell them to paintball fields as obstacles
My first thought, they would work well as cover on an airsoft or paintball field.
Excellent idea 💡💯
This
Good call!!👌
We used airbags like this in tractor trailer wrecks to roll them back onto their wheels when the rolled over, there is amazing power in inflating something
6:56 - On the ring is written in German:
"VEB" stands for "Volkseigene Betribe" or in english "People's Own Businesses", which was a legal form in the GDR.
"HADRA" might be an abbreviation of some sort as a company name or something. It's not exactly a German word.
Schwerin is a city in north-eastern Germany.
Underneath it says "rope diameter 6.5 mm"
Under the hole "TGL" stands for "Technische Normen, Gütevorschriften und Lieferbedingungen" in English "Technical standards, quality regulations and delivery conditions" and the corresponding number.
In the last line then "payload per strand 380 kg"
And kp (Kiloponds or Kilogram-force) was an old (non-standard) unit. 1 kp = 9.806650 N (Newton) - details on the Wikipedia article about Kilogram-force
Schwerin is the state capital of Mecklenburg-West Pomerania in northeastern Germany (comparable to Austin/Texas or Sacramento/California)
Schwerin - Sch is pronounced like sh (shelter etc.) and the I is pronounced like ea or ee at sea or seen
TGL 17454 was the GDR (Estern Germany) norm for steel wire slings/sling ropes mode of steel wire - details at
katalog [dot] ub [dot] uni-weimar [dot ] de/tgl/TGL_17454_12-1984 [dot] pdf
und so nebenbei - gute Augen @DieJackev2 | btw. good eyes
With some rope and a few 2x4's and maybe some netting I could see these being turned into an excellent floating hammock.
For only $45 you could build some kind of frame for it and potentially use it for water storage. A 500 gallon tank costs 5x as much in my neck of the woods, and I could built a frame out of scrap wood or metal for next to nothing.
If they do hold water it would be easier to get them to a remote location than a tank and "maybe" use them to build water pressure?
I wouldn’t consider them to be a potable storage solution.
@@iamgriff Portable in the sense that they could be taken to a location easier than a giant, rigid tank.
@@robwgeorge He said POTable, not PORTable. Big difference. I'd drink non PORTable water any day of the week, and twice on sundays - not so much for non POTable water...
@@gorak9000 😆
To the inscription of the rope: VEB Hadora Schwerin.
VEB= State owned company
Hadora= Name of factory
Schwerin= city in the north of Germany
On the bottom it says: Payload per rope
You should use these as Inflatable Buoys!! I bet they'd be great for that!
Fits perfect into his garden pond.😄
Depending on how strong they are, you could fill them with water and use them as water storage
Mmmm, indeed - I can taste the chemicals from here - yummmm!
You definitely need to get a couple more of those and make a ginormous raft.
Then you could make a monster sail out of those billboard sheets you're trying to get rid of.
Mount a potato cannon on front and you've started your own navy!
Make a wooden boat frame, wrap the buoy around it, secure it with rope, inflate it.
deflate it 60% and i suspect they are pretty loungeable. Could barricade a door with it. Fill someone's bedroom by inflating it inside. Or fill one , connect the two of them together and start piling people on one, while someone sits on the other and is lifted up then they could unpile and lower the other person.
You could use them as a subject of a youtube video
What a fun video. Well done. Eric.
You could use it as a mould to make a bar. Like how you wanted to step inside it. Well do the positive mould, negative mould, bit of tinkering process and you could completely do that.
If it works as drum, it might work as loudspeaker too. Try taping speaker cone to it and test it on the ground and suspended.
I came for the usual brilliant improvisations and stayed for the comedy. Great video. Years ago I saw someone build a methane gas generator and used a large inflatable bag for the gas capture tank.
Attach a disc to each end of both of them and make them giant water wheels , put a platform on top for a cool boat!
Paint them up as molars and park them in front of a local dentist's office. Get into a huge argument with the dentist over the whole thing.
The medaillon basically says the rope is made by VEB (Volkseigener Betrieb, loosely translates as "company of the people" which just means the state ownes it) Hadra (name of the company) which was based in the city of Schwerin. Seil is German for rope, meaning the rope is 6.5mm in diameter. The other side seems to display the "Nutzlast" which probably rates how much weight and such the rope can handle. I believe Hadra still exists as "Hanseatischer Drahthandel", which means "Hanseatic Cable Trader".
How about getting one or two more,
using them as pontoons,
built a platform on them,
attach a small engine,
and have the Minnesota government not allow you to register it as a boat?
I enjoyed this.
BTW - dirigible/Zeppelin was my first thought as well.
☮
Glad to see the grappling hook cannon got some “use”!
Yeah, used it to remove the outer 1/8" of all my facial hair 😅
That would have some serious lifting power. Have you seen the airbag jacks for cars that use the exhaust gas from the tail pipe to inflate them? Popular for 4x4 off-roading, they are a fraction of that size but can lift a couple of tonnes of car pretty easily.
Ironically Axman also gave me one of those to test out! 😂
Dig a hole the diameter of the buoy, plus a few inches. Make it about 3 feet deep with a concave bottom. Insert the inflated buoy. Carefully slice the buoy into two halves. Invert the top half of the buoy and push it inside the bottom half. Fill with water, hot or cold. BTW, I have an old German semi-inflatable kayak that is probably made from the same material. It is remarkably tough.
Maybe you should build a pneumatic air cannon instead. It might be more reliable, although it would take a lot longer between shots. Good time with the wrecking ball swing!
The obvious thought to me is... fix some kind of rims to it and turn them into an amphibious bicycle/pedal boat.
It'd suck as a vehicle but probably be a lot of fun.
Some ideas :
half filled with water, it will make a good chair/bed :)
on a lake/river : you see this game in Canada with tree logs and people trying to keep on it ? :)
a bag pipe
Use them as concrete inflatable forms for water catchment, like the airbags used in some monolithic dome forms. Like water cisterns. Or concrete plaster them only halfway up and use as planters /raised beds by laying on side letting cure and then deflating.
You could use those bags as a punching bag for 5 people at once. ?
Or you could slide down a snowy mountain with them.
Or you could use them as a crash barrier air bag.
Maybe a waterbed or rain water container, you could also cover them in a layer of concrete to make them a more permanent container.
Paintball course is a great idea.
Paintball Fields would love those
Most of the uses i can think of would be using the material. If you cut the top or bottom off then you have a waterproof cylindrical cover for something
OR... you could add a suitable gas outlet and make the World's Largest East German Inflatable Whoopee Cushion for insanely long duration FARTS.
You could use them for gas storage if you are interested in a biogas reactor or a wood gasifier project. Maybe you could even have one be the biogas reactor chamber and one be used to store the gas.
1. Giant boxing sack.
2. Sort of (one use only) airbag for felling a big tree over a pathway or something so that the path does not damage
3. If you fill it only halfway up, you can make a beanbag XXXL
4. You can cut it up and make a raft out of it for escaping Alcatraz
Will they hold water? Water reservoirs!
I like the pumpkin idea.
I didn't realize you were local. Cool.
Besides buoys or underwater lift bags they look like they can be used as field inflatable air jacks to lift heavy equipment for repairs like trucks or all terrain vehicles.
I like so much where this channel is going to. This one was so far the best one I've watched. Please keep going, you make my days so much better!
Make your car amphibious using them as floats.
Use them as an air chamber in an expansion vessel for a huge water pistol.
Let them be air chambers in a submarine.
Make them into an airbag suit that rapidly inflates when you fall.
I thought about the car idea, kinda tempted to try that with one of the junk convertibles abandoned at my work 😅
@@saveitforparts I made a suggestion above but I'm not sure you'll see it.
I'd get a pipe bender and bend some tube steel into hoops. Fix those to the three attachment points at either and and it'd basically be a pair of drum wheels like on a steam roller.
From there I think it'd be easy enough to add spokes and turn it into a kind of amphibious bike/pedal boat thing.
I like the water pistol idea. I also would add some kind of potato launcher.
If you know it is going to snow heavily you could inflate it and let the snow build up and then deflate and have another igloo! But Im sure the air inside would have to be below freezing. Or dig a partial hole and cover them with enough dirt and pack it down so that it will stay once the buoy is deflated
Man I love when a new saveitforparts video comes out! haha if only they were longer
My first thought was, make giant pumpkins for Halloween.
you could recover stuff from the floor of lakes or the ocean, by attaching the buoy to said object and then fill it with air.
Oh buoy, this is gonna be fun
here's an idea: giant s'more sculpture.
The paintball obstacle sure is a great idea. Or maybe a complement to the burguer king mouse course? Also, nice 1080p 60FPS, the outside shots are great
I'm using @Gardenfork's old camera now, it's just a little bit better than my old one :-D
Emergency, water storage/transportation vessels. The material look stronger than that of a portable backyard pool. Throw one of those on the back of a heavy duty truck, fill with water, transport. Boom sold
Suggestion- They just may make a very good/useful rainwater storage balder.
If we ever see rain again, that could be handy. I have two 500-gallon water tanks in the back yard and so far this year they maybe have 10 gallons in them 😥
Cover with foil and turn it into a big high voltage capacitor!
Mount a canoe on top and attach an air pump to each with some control logic for a rough seas simulator!
6:50 What the Medallion says:
VEB HADRA is the company (or rather the Publicly Owned Enterprise (VolksEigener Betrieb)) that made it.
Schwerin is a Place in the east of germany. Probably the location of the company.
What follows are "Rope Diameter 6.5 mm", something I can not read and "Load capacity per strand 380 kp", kp standing for "Kilopond" which is a ridiculous old measurement for force that was used in some places before Newton as a unit caught on.
Great video. I'm glad you didn't hurt yourself.
Glue plywood and a bearings to both flat ends and make them giant bicycle wheels, ie need to fabricate giant forks to weld to an old bike frame (may need a periscope and parralel linkages on the steering if you want it not to be a super tall bike.), with the addition of some glued on paddles it would go accross water...
You could make a boat with just the two of them and stabilize it with outriggers.
Man I will be going to Ax-man to get some adafruits. Thanks for reminding me.
2:15 Duct tape and an old shed in the background. Throw in some relationship advice, and I'd swear I was watching Red Green. 🤣
Think they could be useful in your sandstone cave to cause, prevent for remediate cave-ins?
Perhaps an inflatable drain plug for a man-made lake?
Not sure about the specifics but this might be a decent 'bladder' for a biogas collection system. From there you can use the methane to power other projects and experiments!
8:02 YUS! UPGRADE TIME!
If you paint them they can be decoy hay bails.
Oh, worlds largest bagpipe bag? What about construct a pedal bike around them and use them as floats for a floating bike? Maybe recreate Fred Flinstones car?
Niche, but blocking off broken store doors until a replacement is delivered.
the grappling hook canon LOL :D
“Somebody call codyslab on that one”
Love the reference
Looking forward to the followup on this one!
I kind of want to attach them to a car as emergency flotation, but I haven't found anyone willing to let me drive their car into a lake 😂
@@saveitforparts mwahaha this is brilliant! I actually created a amphibious vehicle in one of my undergrad courses. Have you seen the video of the guy making a vehicle from old battery drills and air mattress tires?! That sounds like something perfect for this channel but with your buoys
Buoy, oh buoy - you were right. It's huge. I bet you could slide it under a car, fill it until the whole car is up off the ground, and leave it as a joke.
You could use them for an unforgettable ride down the Mississippi. Strap the rope around the bouy in a criss cross chainlink type pattern and reenact the barrel riding scene from The Hobbit.😂
University Ave stand UP!
You could make a very large planter if you cut a hole in one of the wide sides
You can start recovering sunken boats now with those right? basically anything you needed to displace water. that size would allow you to form to a lot of shapes that are under water. imagine inserting that thing deflated inside a sunken vehicle. it would be enough displacement to at least bring it to the surface potentially. or you could use them as blow molds for stuff... you could spray them with a release agent and use them for making fiberglass mini campers and then just deflate them when the shell is complete.
Use them as emergency water storage tanks.
@@wb5mct good call. could be low pressure oxygen storage too.
Game: find a taller thing to hang it from with a lot of clear space under it. The players stand in a ring and throw it around like circular red rover. Or, throw it tangent to the circle and everybody has to try and forward it along as fast as possible until somebody can't hold it in the circle and then it takes several people out.
If you watch Hyperspace Pirate he uses a beach ball to collect and shuttle gases between his various science devices. This may be less permeable than cheap beach toy plastic, mainly because it's probably thicker, and it's certainly a lot larger. Might be fun to fill it with different gases to change it's weight. CO2 can be produced pretty simply, not sure if this scale would still be cheap, but CO2 is 50% heavier than air
Fourth of July's coming, you can always fill them up with oxygen and acetylene, or just pure oxygen and propane even..
Use to jack up a large structure first, then ignite and launch sed large structure.. Dorothy won't be in Kansas anymore 😜
On that topic , maybe as a tornado buster, fill it with said gas mixture put in path of the tornado and ignite when tornado hits it, stop the tornado much like they stop burning oil fields...
paint ball course
decorate them as Minions in your front yard :)
That is the greatest t-shirt I’ve ever seen, 😂😂😂. I love that!
This metal ring is interesting because it says (VEB), which stands for "Volkseigener Betrieb," a term commonly used in the German Democratic Republic (DDR). So, it says VEB HADRA Schwerin. HADRA was the company, and Schwerin is a location in Germany, formerly in the DDR. The rope should have a diameter of 6.5 millimeters, probably per strand. These specifications refer to the rope itself. As for the inflatable parts, that's a good question. Maybe they were lifting cushions used to lift loads. If there's no information on them, I mean, no manufacturer is mentioned. It could also be used for lifting loads underwater, so we might soon see treasures being raised from the depths of the sea. 🤗👍
I would suggest a holding tank for biogas using a composter.
After teaching for 25 as 1 of only 3 other guys at my school I realize that You should have been a preschool teacher!
Heavy vehicle recovery drivers could use them when the right rolled over vehicles so they collapse on them and don’t damage the vehicle further.
Gas transfer tanks before compressing to keep with the diy vibe. Methane from food waste, oxygen or hydrogen from electrolysis etc.
Bro I died. "I'm not allowed to do much schwearin on this channel." 😂
Get one, or two more, and make a giant air pontoon boat, with the paramotor on it.
Duh! Just attach the carabiner to the buoy and then clip your keys onto it. BOOM. You'll never lose your keys again! Plus, if they get dropped overboard, they wont sink!
Graft a whoopee cushion to it!
Look up exhaust air jack, those would be awesome for that
Thanks from Eastern Germany, comrade! ;)
East German is actually normal German and it reads:"VER HADRA (I guess it is some company) Schwerin (a city on the north-east of Germany). Seil (rope) the sign for the diameter 6.5 mm. Nutzlast je strang 380 kg. (Allowed load per strand 380kg)" I had to chuckle at that "Schwerin" pun
I wonder if they would work for underwater salvaging operations?
in theory, each one would lift 1,950Kg if fully inflated. would be neat to see.
Cover it with concrete for an instant doghouse. Build a methane generator with the other one.
sell them to paintball places as barriers
Ginormous tetherball!
I'll bet you anything you can lift and move things like a car.
Refloat a sunken boat with them... or take them out to the blasting pit, fill with oxygen and acetylene... well, you know the drill.
When folks close their pool at the end of the year. This buoy sits in the middle of the pool so the water runs off the tarp and over the edge of the pool.
Pretty awesome but definitely have no idea what you'd use them for. I like the CodysLab shoutout though! Maybe you could both collab on this? Two of my favorite channels!
I wonder what would happen if you took one out to sandland, cut a channel into the rock to stuff one in, then inflated it in thr rock crack.
I LOVE THIS SHOW
ME TOO!
First thing I thought when I saw these inflated was "fake wrecking ball"
I might buy one to use for training aerial photographers