My friend had one of the older Dell Latitude 14 Rugged laptops (4th gen i5). He kept it in his vehicle, and one day he ended up hitting some black ice, rolled the car several times and ended up in a ditch. Laptop was ejected and found 2 days later encased in frozen mud. Based on how it was pressed into the ground, it was likely either rolled over by the car, or by one of the recovery vehicles used to remove the car from the ditch. Still worked after cleaning it out, and aside from replacing the heatsink fins and fan due to rust, it lives to this day in his current vehicle.
I think the DeWalt speaker deserved a 10/10. It survived a 10m drop which is crucial in the construction industry. They had to sacrifice surround sound so it could be rugged. Absolute monster!
Also its got directional sound so doesnt bother people behind the building site only the people working in front of it. 10/10 works perfectly for intended purpose
I really love how straight you are. Like you don't do 15 minutes intro, 2 minutes content and another 20 outro. You go straight to the theme of the video
Did you know Nokia sold off their phones part 2? Another bigger company, from somewhere from the 1960s to 1990s. And now they're less durable. They use it make fix. But they stopped so if you see in ash not with the Nokia that doesn't break when they come down, it's probably before then.😅
My workplace in early 2010s had Olympus waterproof camera similar to the one in the video, I never intentionally torture the thing but I vividly remember how the manual casually said that if the camera is dirty all you have to do is to wash it under running water. That's how confident they're with the product.
Yeah my mom owns a cery similar looking olympus camera too, this one even came with like a little noen green floaty life vest thing that you can attach to the lanyard, that was so ballsy of em but that thing is still working to this day and we have used it underwater for hours upon hours!
It was actually a popular experiment with wired products in the heydays of Kickstarter and indiegogo. That's how you got funding, by embellishing the durability of your products.
It was actually a popular experiment done to wired products in the heydays of indie gogo and kick starter. That's how you secured funding,by embellishing the durability of your products
15:30 These keyboards are so durable because they are the keyboards we use in the control panels we use in food/chemical construction factories. Theyre made to resist steam, boiling liquids, sticky substances, and a lot of vibration
Look up Cortron Inc. Rugged HMI. I used to build keyboards and joysticks there for a few years while I was in school. They go on US aircraft carriers, smaller naval vessels, air traffic control towers, medical facilities, jets, and other aircraft. Some hospitals. They can continue to function normally after blowing up 100 lbs of tannerite next to them, while submerged underwater. Absolute workhorse keyboards, EXTREMELY expensive though, for good reason.
22:00 the nokia didn't die, properly make it dry by disassembling all components and it will work. Earlier nokis were not made to be watter proof, and water is trapped there and its shrt circuitimg obviously , so not turning on. But after drying it will work unlike modern phones
Lol that's exactly what I said when I saw that. I was like naww dry it out and shit will turn right on lol my friend in high-school driving like 25-30 miles and hr and accidently flung it out his car window went back found it put it together and shit still worked
I remember when my dad had his slide up nokia that he accidentally had fall into the pool and then went to bake it in the oven. Shit was working fine right after
Probably right, just needs to be dried out without corrosion but as I watched this, it was obviously for entertainment with little controlled science. Like dropping the iron ball on a compressible tablet vs on a paving slab where likely all 3 would have been pancaked.
I had a OnePlus 1 and it got submerged in a muddy river for several minutes as the canoe I was in capsized. The phone got completely drenched and wouldn't turn on. I took it apart, dried it and cleaned everything with IPA. Worked with zero problems after that. I have a OnePlus 6 now and while it didn't get drenched, it survived years of dogs abuse. I was standing on a ladder recently to remove a fire alarm that was beeping all night and I dropped it from ceiling height onto the stairs and it tumbled down an entire flight of stairs. I do have to give credit to the silicone phone cover, but not every phone would have survived that. OnePlus makes some very tough phones.
just to clarify, the heavy ball test isn't really that impressive because since the watches got inside the very soft table that 13kg were probably halved. You should've tested it in a very hard surface to actually know how resistant they were.
I work as a field technician for Dell in Australia and I have done a few repairs on the rugged series. They are a massive pain in the ass to repair, a motherboard replacement will take 2-3x as long as any other laptop or even desktop. A lot of the io ports are on daughterboards to make them more easily repairable but they are often layered under other boards so they take many many screws to replace. It's worth mentioning that all forms of damage are covered under the warranty for the rugged series which is the main reason they are so expensive. Here they are mainly used by military and public transport construction.
That sucks that is harder to repair but I'm thankful Dell has it all under warranty. The number of times I've dropped mine out on site, I'm bound to kill it one of these days. 😅 These are great laptops though.
@20:28 this test is flawed because the table takes the impact, as per law of conservation of energy. You need a rigid table to test and most likely the watches will be crushed.
Worked at factory that made dyneema ropes, dyneema has a very low melting point, a simple lighter will cause it to melt, other than that it is a very durable material, tensile strength is equivalent to steel but at 1\7 the weight, also the other advantage to dyneema over steel is that it wouldn't slingshot its self when it breaks under tension, the main benefit to wearing clothes made if dyneema is for motorcycles, bicycle, skateboarding, etc.... where the very high abrasion resistance is perfect for keeping yourself from getting all scraped up from when you crash or bail compared to traditional clothing, also unlike Kevlar it is alot more chemical resistant so it can be washed more (kevlar is actually less abrasive resistant the dyneema), also most kevlar clothing has multiple layers where dyneema clothes can be 1 layer with similar benefits, and you can blend it with other fibers better than kevlar thus also allowing it be a single layer. If you want heat resistance you go with kevlar or technora which is what they actually use to line jet engines in planes.
I work at sea, and i know exactly how strong dyneema is, it’s the preferred material for the ropes used to hold 300m gas tankers to berth, 500.000 tons easily held with 8cm diameter ropes, this guy is kind of a clown
I have an old Nokia that i accidentally dropped on the road outside work while on an off-site smoke break. When i realized i had lost it i went looking and found it strewn across a 20-meter road area in 4 parts. I put it all back together and unbelievably it still worked flawlessly.
@@0xN0rmal You don't know if it is really broken by it because the phone already wasn't working from the water. Those phones where famous for separating into pieces and even get a crack or two but still working after put together. That is where the memes came from. I remember people throwing them at each other when in fights etc and then going "OH No my phone!" but when they found the battery and the cover etc and put them together it was working again.
@@SIPEROTH this is a good point actually, it would have been better if there were two phones to conduct seperate tests on, without one affecting the outcome of the other test
600 bucks for a jacket that not only actively catches on fire, but also melts on and thus into your body? That thing needs to be outlawed ASAP, especially with that nigh-on fraudulent marketing... it's a major fire and health hazard.
I was going to agree because it said it was heat resistant, but then I realized it never claimed to be heat resistant. If it did, it wasn't shown to us. Knowing how many types of fabric also melt into your body, I gotta say I'm ok with this.
@@cetomedoI checked what I am fairly sure is the website (Vollebak) for this jacket and their claim is high resistance to tearing and rips. They don't claim fire resistance anywhere.
Big Ass Fans is actually a pretty big company here in the US. They make huge, like 2m to 9m, diameter fans that hang from the ceilings in stores, warehouses, etc.
They exist abroad as well. In the Philippines, my college and even one of the Catholic Church I attended once has it as well though the brand name is not installed for religious reasons.
My school gym used 4 of em for air circulation. They tried removing the branding, but there was still a gloss imprint on the otherwise matte fan body so, still legable.
i had like 5 3310 and 3410s, they were all fun and games until you got them slightly wet, then the buttons would stop working forever, or you hit a specific weak spot over the display and the lcd would crack. otherwise, yeah, mostly indestructible. that's why the US used a couple of 3310s to end WWII. and they both got back in 5 pieces!
Those keyboards were really common here in Germany some years ago. They were used in a lot of public devices like ticket machines or other public PCs. I've also seen them in a library. People break keyboards all the time, so one big investment to never have to change keyboards again is a good idea. Also most of the time those keyboards are built into devices so they can't be ripped out or be stolen.
Banking Terminals usually had these, these are in the self-service areas next to ATM machines and usually opened 24/7 (at night they lock the door and you have to insert your EC card to open it) so you could do wire transfers when the counters were closed and for that you obviously need a full alphabetic keyboard and not just a number pad. You could also print your bank statements with these although some had also specialised bank statement printers for that purpose (a machine with just the card reader and a printer); I remember our bank still had dot matrix printers for those and was printing them onto a third or half (full width but said length) of a A4 sheet while the Deutsche Bank already used laser printers and full A4 pages. These vandalism-proof stuff is also usually found in elevators, public toilets and of course the passenger area of public transport - buses, trams, trains etc. you may damage these things but not with bare hands and feet, you literally need tools/weapons to damage these.
Well, the calculation made isn't just versus having to change the keyboard, it isn't a thing in isolation. The whole apparatus it is hooked up to is disabled if the keyboard does not work, that is what the calculation has to be made for. Not just that, it's never there as just some random ass computer or whatever, it serves a purpose and if the keyboard is disabled, putting say a ticket vending machine out of order, the ticket vending machine not working means no tickets can be sold, hence zero revenue etc. The damage is bigger than that in some cases, because if you can't get a buss ticket for example, you can't make an appointment, which has to be rescheduled and so on, it has a massive ripple effect to the point that a 1000 or 2000 euro/dollar keyboard is really cheap.
30:11 As someone who works on computers, those cases on laptops do more harm than good most of the time. They're hard to get off and so people will rip the case off, and mostly it just destroys hinges, rips top lids from LCDs, even pinches delicate cables. The same thing can happen with drops like this because mostly flex in such laptops is easy, unlike a smaller phone, so a drop like that will cause a similar effect.
People destroying things because they are to ignorant to look up proper disassembly instructions is not the object being destroyed doing more harm than good, that is the user doing more harm than good. PEBKAC exists for a reason.
@@robertsissco2439 fair, lol, but this is mostly school laptops I'm working on. I feel like cases for those things just don't do anything but keep it together a little bit better, and break it more when they try to see what's wrong.
THAT! That right there is how you do ad integration, still giving info throughout about the base video and also name dropping the product and features. I didn't feel overly advertised to and didn't want to skip it.
tbh it's clearly mentioned in description of that wire that it can withstand upto 100 kg of tension but the cars were like 2 tonnes which was obviously too much , btw great video arun.
it was also sad how he went "also the fastest charging on the planet" whilst not the point of the video, would be nice too try BEFORE destroying it (but maybe he did for another video, who knows)@@TheTazyDemon
Yes ofc but he may also hit his monitor or the table. So he wont risk it. And already the baseball bat hits pretty hard. It doesnt need to be tested to the limits. No one will actually hit the keyboard with a bat. He could have dropped it from the crane.. that would have been better.
Yea that was the only part of this video that annoyed me. It doesn't claim to be that strong in the pull direction. He should've tested it for water, scratches, maybe like a knife or smth. (Or get a parrot to chew it lmfao)
It's nice to know that Nokia still makes "indestructible" phones. I put indestructible in quotation marks because there is a limit how much it can take
I absolutely love stone paper. I know it's more expensive, but it's so smooth to right on. Plus it doesn't smudge as easily or wrinkle up if you get it wet.
As someone who works at construction sites, I can verify that Big Ass Fans are used in construction. And yes, they do make REALLY big fans (and their name makes me chuckle when I walk past them)!
The GM garage I used to work in had two Big Ass Fans mounted to the ceiling. They had something like 17 foot blades on them and could push Ludacris amounts of air!
@@tatsatanjaria9789 I agree that rolling a car is different thing. Now let's say the car weighs 1000 kg and the car was in neutral with no break. Now in order to move the car you need to break the initial function, which a normal person usually dose by suddenly pushing with his whole body weight or by using leg strength to slowly apply force and move the car which both produces easily more than 100 Newton of force which is advertised to be the max limit.
Just remember that when people say there no money in social media... There is more than enough to buy new things just to destroy them and you will make it back
31:51 I'm not surprised by the indestructible laptop. I've know professors from biology and geology departments who cannot afford these devices, scour the web for good second hand deals. They'd hand them to researchers for jungle, desert and marine excursions. They can real go through some horrific shit and still turn on. Think dropped in a rain storm during the wet season of a desert where what is normally microscopic red dust is now a slurry of mud... and the old model had dust protection covers for IO ports, but they were opened up, so they slurry of mud found its way inside the case. They had research data they'd collected and didn't want to risk and airmailed it to us. We left it dry, disassemble the case, brush out all the dust with compressed air. We removed the hdd to back up the data (just in case), then reassemble and the computer was ticking along with not a care in the world. Removing each of the keycaps to free the mud is as painful as it sounds, don't recommend... In short, a lot of respect for the Dell and Panasonic Toughbook lines, even the second hand, 10 year old models (despite being extremely slow computers because of their age) were still exceptionally well designed for their purpose.
I did my internship at an auto dealer for my degree in auto repair. They used old Toughbooks for their diagnostic software. The things looked like hell, but kept ticking without a care in the world. It's not the most extreme of use cases, but still a good testament to the durability, imo.
My S3 frontier has been incredible, survived mountains, lakes, drops bashes, being superglued and after all that is still in full working order with not even a scratch to show for it all.
I work as an ISP Field Technician for a company who provides us with those Dell ToughBooks as our field laptops. They are definitely more durable than your everyday laptop and withstand the daily bumps & bangs very well. One of my colleagues accidentally dropped his laptop 15 feet onto concrete and it was completely fine aside from a few scratches. Albeit, its weakest point is the screen. That same colleague accidentally let a metal object from his grasp while on the roof of a customer's house, which tumbled off the roof, fell about 5 feet or so, and smashed onto the laptop's closed lid, destroying the screen. I would bet that if Arun had dropped the laptop the opposite way (lid down), it would've totaled the screen. Also, I have an Olympus TG-4 and it's a durable little camera. I've taken it on two trips to the Philippines and once to Cuba, and went snorkeling with it on each of those trips. It handles the water well. I've dropped and nicked it a few times, but never done anything overly harsh to it. As someone who likes to keep their stuff in like-new condition, I wish the finish didn't scratch so easy, but overall it does live up to its name. I'm not impressed with the picture quality, but I assume that's probably something they've improved on over the last few generations. I don't think I'd buy another one though, I'd rather have a GoPro as its waterproof and that's all I really want out of a camera like that.
11:52 The reason Bluetooth and Wifi have terrible range through water, including high density fog, is because of the wavelength. Water likes to interact with 2.4Ghz, but either absorbing it, or reflecting it. This is why weather radar and microwave ovens often use 2.4Ghz(weather radar will use other bands for other uses, like clouds, dust etc)
I literally loaded this video because I was stunned to see what looked like a proper axe being used on a tech channel in the thumbnail. That looks like a Gransfors Bruk Small Forrest Axe, my favourite ❤ Impressed a techy dude had a legit axe.
eyyy thank you for the recognition pal! I brought it in for the video hoping someone would appreciate the quality low tech engineering on it. You nailed the name of it too, good eye.
The nokia weren't the block shock or the concrete was broken was not as high it They could have dropped it higher it would still be fine then it'll break the brick with the new brick
none of this was thought out much, Burns the Jacket thats suppose to be stab proof, tosses a phone known for durability in water lol, if hes gonna do this at least start small and do proper testing.
23:50 when you test the jacket like a bulletproof vest, its bound to break. The jacket was suppose to protect you under extreme temperatures only as advertised
I just want to say I love your videos and the rickrolling that comes with it. In the future I'm going to make phones in my company fruit and I was wondering in the future if you would want to review them
@akimbo899 The reason I ask is because when you said, "Doubt it," it makes you seem young. I am guessing you're not Gen Z, but maybe Gen Alpha. If you have any experience with older phones such as the Nokia 3310, if drowned in water, it will work. Take the battery out and leave it to dry.
My friend had one of the older Dell Latitude 14 Rugged laptops (4th gen i5). He kept it in his vehicle, and one day he ended up hitting some black ice, rolled the car several times and ended up in a ditch. Laptop was ejected and found 2 days later encased in frozen mud. Based on how it was pressed into the ground, it was likely either rolled over by the car, or by one of the recovery vehicles used to remove the car from the ditch. Still worked after cleaning it out, and aside from replacing the heatsink fins and fan due to rust, it lives to this day in his current vehicle.
That is so cool, extremely impressive!
cool
that's awesome but what use is a bloody 4th gen i5😂😂
@@hardkoregaming886 Apparently it still works great for everyday internet usage, which is what he uses it for.
@@hardkoregaming886 My laptop is 2nd gen i3 and still runs to this day (windows 10)
I think the DeWalt speaker deserved a 10/10. It survived a 10m drop which is crucial in the construction industry. They had to sacrifice surround sound so it could be rugged. Absolute monster!
Integrate both for a 10/10 imo
Yeah, he was rating based on durability, not how the product is but oh well
Also its got directional sound so doesnt bother people behind the building site only the people working in front of it. 10/10 works perfectly for intended purpose
Matt Kenseth go brrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr
10/10 on the directional sound too! you want your music facing you, not bothering the neighbours of private clients
8:39 Buy Cookbook ❌
Cook the book ✅
Read that as a buy chrome book and ,chrome the book.
lol
@@crapchannelbruh I don't know how... But Arun can do that too 😂
he is just destroying right now
Who needs to read when you can consume the information through the flames 🔥🔥🔥
I really love how straight you are. Like you don't do 15 minutes intro, 2 minutes content and another 20 outro. You go straight to the theme of the video
...which is just as it should be! I would log where the titled topic actually begins in my comment, but not needed here! Thank you!
Did you know Nokia sold off their phones part 2? Another bigger company, from somewhere from the 1960s to 1990s. And now they're less durable. They use it make fix. But they stopped so if you see in ash not with the Nokia that doesn't break when they come down, it's probably before then.😅
I have the RUDG cable and it can hold my weight and still work.The claim was for 100kg of tension.The tow a car test was unfair on RUGD.
i agree
Also DeWalt products don't lie
They claimed that it was made out of indestructible materials.
well he tried 1000kg tension with it xD
@@maxz69 if you look at the video it is said clearly that it holds 100kg. And not 1000 kg
My workplace in early 2010s had Olympus waterproof camera similar to the one in the video, I never intentionally torture the thing but I vividly remember how the manual casually said that if the camera is dirty all you have to do is to wash it under running water. That's how confident they're with the product.
Yeah my mom owns a cery similar looking olympus camera too, this one even came with like a little noen green floaty life vest thing that you can attach to the lanyard, that was so ballsy of em but that thing is still working to this day and we have used it underwater for hours upon hours!
NOA
Bro really expected that wire to have any chance against cars 💀
It was actually a popular experiment with wired products in the heydays of Kickstarter and indiegogo.
That's how you got funding, by embellishing the durability of your products.
It was actually a popular experiment done to wired products in the heydays of indie gogo and kick starter.
That's how you secured funding,by embellishing the durability of your products
Yeah, and the fact that it advertised a maximum tension of 100kg, that's what could have been a good point to prove.
some actually does and this one was just a trash one
Dude...
26:02 bro didnt like the jacket so much he didnt even give a rating 💀☠
Lol
cus its a straight up scam lmao
15:30 These keyboards are so durable because they are the keyboards we use in the control panels we use in food/chemical construction factories. Theyre made to resist steam, boiling liquids, sticky substances, and a lot of vibration
but not a hammer to the trackball
@superJK92 Thankfully, Reckless swinging of hammers is not too big of a worry in most factories lmao
@@superJK92they’re not made to stop crazy hammer swinging burglars lol.
Look up Cortron Inc. Rugged HMI. I used to build keyboards and joysticks there for a few years while I was in school. They go on US aircraft carriers, smaller naval vessels, air traffic control towers, medical facilities, jets, and other aircraft. Some hospitals. They can continue to function normally after blowing up 100 lbs of tannerite next to them, while submerged underwater. Absolute workhorse keyboards, EXTREMELY expensive though, for good reason.
I feel like a keyboard that is resistant to sticky substances and a lot of vibration has other uses than just the food/chemical industries…
22:00 the nokia didn't die, properly make it dry by disassembling all components and it will work. Earlier nokis were not made to be watter proof, and water is trapped there and its shrt circuitimg obviously , so not turning on. But after drying it will work unlike modern phones
Lol that's exactly what I said when I saw that. I was like naww dry it out and shit will turn right on lol my friend in high-school driving like 25-30 miles and hr and accidently flung it out his car window went back found it put it together and shit still worked
I remember when my dad had his slide up nokia that he accidentally had fall into the pool and then went to bake it in the oven. Shit was working fine right after
Put it in a bag of rice overnight.
Probably right, just needs to be dried out without corrosion but as I watched this, it was obviously for entertainment with little controlled science. Like dropping the iron ball on a compressible tablet vs on a paving slab where likely all 3 would have been pancaked.
I had a OnePlus 1 and it got submerged in a muddy river for several minutes as the canoe I was in capsized.
The phone got completely drenched and wouldn't turn on.
I took it apart, dried it and cleaned everything with IPA.
Worked with zero problems after that. I have a OnePlus 6 now and while it didn't get drenched, it survived years of dogs abuse. I was standing on a ladder recently to remove a fire alarm that was beeping all night and I dropped it from ceiling height onto the stairs and it tumbled down an entire flight of stairs. I do have to give credit to the silicone phone cover, but not every phone would have survived that.
OnePlus makes some very tough phones.
21:50 you just have to take out the battery and put the mobile in rice, it will start working after few hours ;)
😂
He's right, you have to put your phone in rice. That way, at night, the Asians will come and fix it.
i was looking for this comment
Ya let the rice dry the water and it will be fine🤣
My 3310 fell in the water, had to dry it and get new battery but otherwise it was ok
30:05 I like how that neighbor just walked right past you on top of a lift holding a macbook without even batting an eye
bro was probably tired of some random rich dude trying to destroy electronics
he was probably just like “oh, there’s arun again. destroying expensive stuff. like any other normal day.”
just to clarify, the heavy ball test isn't really that impressive because since the watches got inside the very soft table that 13kg were probably halved. You should've tested it in a very hard surface to actually know how resistant they were.
the most important part is that he tested under the same conditions for all watches, but I agree
should have also properly wacked the keyboard and dropped stuff from the same angle
on the ground
@@jacktramaseur8894 Well, considering the keyboard was pretty much dead and dented after those softer hits, I would say it does not matter that much.
You go buy those same watches and test them how you think they should've been tested then.
I work as a field technician for Dell in Australia and I have done a few repairs on the rugged series. They are a massive pain in the ass to repair, a motherboard replacement will take 2-3x as long as any other laptop or even desktop. A lot of the io ports are on daughterboards to make them more easily repairable but they are often layered under other boards so they take many many screws to replace. It's worth mentioning that all forms of damage are covered under the warranty for the rugged series which is the main reason they are so expensive. Here they are mainly used by military and public transport construction.
That sucks that is harder to repair but I'm thankful Dell has it all under warranty. The number of times I've dropped mine out on site, I'm bound to kill it one of these days. 😅
These are great laptops though.
I imagine warranty doesn't include loss of intellectual property(?).
@@christopherkarr1872 Not having backups is your own fault, mate.
Who asked
N8
Nokia 3310 Didn't Break. It disassembled itself to minimize the damage on the concrete. lol
I remember having trouble to open my nokia
so I just threw it non the ground whenever I needed to acces it
It's the KEDBDS at work.
Kinetic energy dispersion by dismemberment system
i think that's what he's trying to say too in the video.
Although he should went on the drop test first before the waterproof one :)
@@polski_dezerter wow 🤣, well hello genius.
Yeah, you just put it back together and it works. Same goes for water test. You let it dry for some hours then use it again.
@20:28 this test is flawed because the table takes the impact, as per law of conservation of energy. You need a rigid table to test and most likely the watches will be crushed.
Worked at factory that made dyneema ropes, dyneema has a very low melting point, a simple lighter will cause it to melt, other than that it is a very durable material, tensile strength is equivalent to steel but at 1\7 the weight, also the other advantage to dyneema over steel is that it wouldn't slingshot its self when it breaks under tension, the main benefit to wearing clothes made if dyneema is for motorcycles, bicycle, skateboarding, etc.... where the very high abrasion resistance is perfect for keeping yourself from getting all scraped up from when you crash or bail compared to traditional clothing, also unlike Kevlar it is alot more chemical resistant so it can be washed more (kevlar is actually less abrasive resistant the dyneema), also most kevlar clothing has multiple layers where dyneema clothes can be 1 layer with similar benefits, and you can blend it with other fibers better than kevlar thus also allowing it be a single layer. If you want heat resistance you go with kevlar or technora which is what they actually use to line jet engines in planes.
underrated comment
My parents said if I hit 20k they will buy me a ps5 I’m begging you please help😊
I work at sea, and i know exactly how strong dyneema is, it’s the preferred material for the ropes used to hold 300m gas tankers to berth, 500.000 tons easily held with 8cm diameter ropes, this guy is kind of a clown
Who would try burning it?
Thanks that's very helpful to know.
1:30 It‘s German and it says “KTC Tek Keyboard Stainless Steel Industrial Keyboard, Safe against Vandalism” 😂😂😂
Ich wusste, dass ich in den Kommentaren jemanden finde, der das übersetzen wird:D
they used them back in the day at public phone booths and train stations to get your tickets
jaaaa
can be used to vandalize other staff.
Hahahah wenn man erstmal das Problem nicht versteht
I have an old Nokia that i accidentally dropped on the road outside work while on an off-site smoke break. When i realized i had lost it i went looking and found it strewn across a 20-meter road area in 4 parts. I put it all back together and unbelievably it still worked flawlessly.
That's cool. I dropped my 3310 on the Road and now we have a crater.
I’d say the angle Arun dropped it cause the break
Nokia's just built different
@@0xN0rmal You don't know if it is really broken by it because the phone already wasn't working from the water. Those phones where famous for separating into pieces and even get a crack or two but still working after put together. That is where the memes came from.
I remember people throwing them at each other when in fights etc and then going "OH No my phone!" but when they found the battery and the cover etc and put them together it was working again.
@@SIPEROTH this is a good point actually, it would have been better if there were two phones to conduct seperate tests on, without one affecting the outcome of the other test
13:46 from the screen to the lens to the king
missed opportunity to do a controller and throw it as hard as you can at the ground
115 likes and no replies? Lemme fix that
BRO TRUE
600 bucks for a jacket that not only actively catches on fire, but also melts on and thus into your body?
That thing needs to be outlawed ASAP, especially with that nigh-on fraudulent marketing... it's a major fire and health hazard.
Why don’t we outlaw every high priced jacket while we’re at it?
I was going to agree because it said it was heat resistant, but then I realized it never claimed to be heat resistant. If it did, it wasn't shown to us. Knowing how many types of fabric also melt into your body, I gotta say I'm ok with this.
@@cetomedoI checked what I am fairly sure is the website (Vollebak) for this jacket and their claim is high resistance to tearing and rips. They don't claim fire resistance anywhere.
It was so bad he didn’t even rank it.😂
@@cetomedo Dynema is polyethylene so it should not be a surprise to anyone that it melts.
Big Ass Fans is actually a pretty big company here in the US. They make huge, like 2m to 9m, diameter fans that hang from the ceilings in stores, warehouses, etc.
That's the most American name.
Did he test the fan? 🤔
They exist abroad as well. In the Philippines, my college and even one of the Catholic Church I attended once has it as well though the brand name is not installed for religious reasons.
My school gym used 4 of em for air circulation. They tried removing the branding, but there was still a gloss imprint on the otherwise matte fan body so, still legable.
the traxxas xmax is not anywhere close to the fastest rc car the xmaxx only goes 60mph the fastest rc would be the traxxas xo1 that goes 100 plus mph
The fact that the $4,000 laptop only had 8GB of ram is DIABOLICAL
Dropping Nokia 3310 from the sky is what caused the extinction of dinosaurs 🦖
😂😂😂
That's also the reason why horseshoe crab didn't evolved even after millions of years, because Nokia 3310 couldn't withstand water😆
That's why they're called ancient 😮
Is this why Nokia used Totally Extinct Enormous Dinosaurs' song for Lumia's ads?
i had like 5 3310 and 3410s, they were all fun and games until you got them slightly wet, then the buttons would stop working forever, or you hit a specific weak spot over the display and the lcd would crack. otherwise, yeah, mostly indestructible. that's why the US used a couple of 3310s to end WWII. and they both got back in 5 pieces!
18:50 🤣
at which point we can see scratches at level 6 with deeper grooves at level 7
@Mr.Tiger444bruh 💀🙏 its 2024 grow up.
@@gymkid420 don't reply to bots or interact at all, it only encourages it.
s24 ultraa
I literally read it in Jerry's voice lmao
My parents said if I hit 20k they will buy me a ps5 I’m begging you please help
Those keyboards were really common here in Germany some years ago. They were used in a lot of public devices like ticket machines or other public PCs. I've also seen them in a library. People break keyboards all the time, so one big investment to never have to change keyboards again is a good idea. Also most of the time those keyboards are built into devices so they can't be ripped out or be stolen.
Banking Terminals usually had these, these are in the self-service areas next to ATM machines and usually opened 24/7 (at night they lock the door and you have to insert your EC card to open it) so you could do wire transfers when the counters were closed and for that you obviously need a full alphabetic keyboard and not just a number pad.
You could also print your bank statements with these although some had also specialised bank statement printers for that purpose (a machine with just the card reader and a printer); I remember our bank still had dot matrix printers for those and was printing them onto a third or half (full width but said length) of a A4 sheet while the Deutsche Bank already used laser printers and full A4 pages.
These vandalism-proof stuff is also usually found in elevators, public toilets and of course the passenger area of public transport - buses, trams, trains etc. you may damage these things but not with bare hands and feet, you literally need tools/weapons to damage these.
@@kuchenblechmafiagmbh1381 ive been thinking about it being used in banks
Well, the calculation made isn't just versus having to change the keyboard, it isn't a thing in isolation. The whole apparatus it is hooked up to is disabled if the keyboard does not work, that is what the calculation has to be made for. Not just that, it's never there as just some random ass computer or whatever, it serves a purpose and if the keyboard is disabled, putting say a ticket vending machine out of order, the ticket vending machine not working means no tickets can be sold, hence zero revenue etc. The damage is bigger than that in some cases, because if you can't get a buss ticket for example, you can't make an appointment, which has to be rescheduled and so on, it has a massive ripple effect to the point that a 1000 or 2000 euro/dollar keyboard is really cheap.
33:56 Me looking inside a case and finding the legendary egg that when you pick it up it unrealistically shines and makes you wheeze:
30:11 As someone who works on computers, those cases on laptops do more harm than good most of the time. They're hard to get off and so people will rip the case off, and mostly it just destroys hinges, rips top lids from LCDs, even pinches delicate cables. The same thing can happen with drops like this because mostly flex in such laptops is easy, unlike a smaller phone, so a drop like that will cause a similar effect.
…
People destroying things because they are to ignorant to look up proper disassembly instructions is not the object being destroyed doing more harm than good, that is the user doing more harm than good. PEBKAC exists for a reason.
@@robertsissco2439 fair, lol, but this is mostly school laptops I'm working on. I feel like cases for those things just don't do anything but keep it together a little bit better, and break it more when they try to see what's wrong.
Know the song at that time?
@@abz6063 No idea
This man is single handedly keeping dropshippers alive
literally. pretty sure 60% of those products are from aliexpress with +70% profit margin
THAT! That right there is how you do ad integration, still giving info throughout about the base video and also name dropping the product and features. I didn't feel overly advertised to and didn't want to skip it.
I noticed that, as well. While I disagree with some testing parameters, the ad integration (thanks for the term) was seamless.
ads gotta be a separate part of the vid so i can skip them lol
*SEARCH*
*DONALD NATHAN SCOTT.*
tbh it's clearly mentioned in description of that wire that it can withstand upto 100 kg of tension but the cars were like 2 tonnes which was obviously too much ,
btw great video arun.
yeah that was WAY more than 100kg of tension of course its going to break like that
it was also sad how he went "also the fastest charging on the planet" whilst not the point of the video, would be nice too try BEFORE destroying it (but maybe he did for another video, who knows)@@TheTazyDemon
04:40 It only claimed to be able to withstand 100 KG. Not an entire car.
0:36 I think Arun found a way to disguise replacing his scratched apple watch while calling it a business expense xD
True 😂
Ikr
you have to do 1 pull up... yeah thats it your not getting anymore likes mate@kush5582
Same thought that I had😅
Tax write off
9:29 😂 How ironic is it to put a "unbreakable" SD Card in a protective case 😂
32:08 What were those love taps to the keyboard? Come on man, you can hit it harder than that.
So unsatisfying 🤧
Yes ofc but he may also hit his monitor or the table. So he wont risk it. And already the baseball bat hits pretty hard. It doesnt need to be tested to the limits. No one will actually hit the keyboard with a bat. He could have dropped it from the crane.. that would have been better.
18:50 Scratches at a level 6 with deeper grooves at a level 7 😂
JerryRigArun'sThings
Do not translate... भवतः हृदयस्य धड़कनं कतिपयेषु घण्टेषु स्थगयिष्यति, अस्य शापस्य मुक्तिं प्राप्तुं एकमात्रं मार्गं मम चैनलस्य सदस्यतां कुर्वन्तु………….
stop begging @@fantaguyreal
8:54 There is a difference between a small lighter fire and a blow touch flame.
"Omg -30 C?!" As a Canadian my thought was "Oh, is that all it's rated to?"
I was wondering when I would find a fellow Canadian😂
are you ok over there good sir
This man really rated a cable 4/10 because it could not tow a 1000 kg car
Yea that was the only part of this video that annoyed me. It doesn't claim to be that strong in the pull direction. He should've tested it for water, scratches, maybe like a knife or smth. (Or get a parrot to chew it lmfao)
He literally just went,"One,two,three9892" 😊
it can't withstand anymore than 1000 kg so just test lower
Mosts of the tests done are so stupid and make no realistic sense.
I agree. The test was too unfair on the cable
Awesome video! Thanks for including us in your review!🙂 Our OM SYSTEM Tough TG-7 is indeed the toughest 💪
No replies?
😮
wait until the tg-8 its probably gonna have like impossible to break exteriors
31:57 "Safe to say i have sticky keys turned on" LOOOOL 💀
Do not translate... भवतः हृदयस्य धड़कनं कतिपयेषु घण्टेषु स्थगयिष्यति, अस्य शापस्य मुक्तिं प्राप्तुं एकमात्रं मार्गं मम चैनलस्य सदस्यतां कुर्वन्तु………….
bots :))
Didn’t laugh.
@@The_Beefy_Foo fair enough
This is the opposite of clickbait. You expected something, you got it, AND you got more.
The indestructible jacket though 💀💀
It's nice to know that Nokia still makes "indestructible" phones.
I put indestructible in quotation marks because there is a limit how much it can take
When Arun said, "Does this coat make you invincible?" I half thought he was going to wear it and jump from the boom crane
I absolutely love stone paper. I know it's more expensive, but it's so smooth to right on. Plus it doesn't smudge as easily or wrinkle up if you get it wet.
As someone who works at construction sites, I can verify that Big Ass Fans are used in construction. And yes, they do make REALLY big fans (and their name makes me chuckle when I walk past them)!
The GM garage I used to work in had two Big Ass Fans mounted to the ceiling. They had something like 17 foot blades on them and could push Ludacris amounts of air!
That carrying case at the end should get an 11/10 😂
Yeah no way it managed to protect an EGG like that 😂😂😂😂😂
22:15 he's done the impossible. You don't break the Nokia. The Nokia breaks you and your mind with its illusions.
Im surprised that the 3310 didn't survive the water, as a teenager i fell in a lake with one of those in my pocket and nothing happened to it
@@wika1117they put it into 100% water
@@wika1117not algae
@@wika1117 it should still work, but its wet on the inside. When it dries up in a bit of rice it will be fine
Rice don’t do nothing
"That put up no resistance to fire" 30 seconds earlier covering the book in cooking oil 🤣
That charging cable test was so so unfair. 😢 You can't even use a steel cable of that thickness to tow a car.
They did in their advertisement so he did the same.
@@attitudeshorts6413 Oh well, I stand to be corrected.
04:43 to be fair they stated max force of 100kgs😭 and you used force produced by a 1,000kg car
I was thinking the same thing
Rolling the car is different thing...
@@tatsatanjaria9789 I agree that rolling a car is different thing. Now let's say the car weighs 1000 kg and the car was in neutral with no break. Now in order to move the car you need to break the initial function, which a normal person usually dose by suddenly pushing with his whole body weight or by using leg strength to slowly apply force and move the car which both produces easily more than 100 Newton of force which is advertised to be the max limit.
@@Phonixem 👍🏻
@@tatsatanjaria9789👍🏻
32:27 the trackball tho arun did us dirty💀💀💀
It sounds like RickRoll ngl
No surprise on viewership. Going through the video is impossible to stop watching. Glad I subscribed to your channel some time ago.
Watching this man smash and drop and destroy apple products and stuff worth over 600$ actually made me severely worried
Just remember that when people say there no money in social media... There is more than enough to buy new things just to destroy them and you will make it back
@@davep5698absolutely right 💯 maybe he returns or repairs them
Tax deductible doesn’t cost anything 😅
2:21 the too much raining meme is elite 🤣🔥
24:25 talking about crimes in fashion whilst wearing THAT outfit is… bold. 😂 to say the least.
13:47 From the Screen to the Lens to the... 😂
25:10
Balenciaga : Let him cook!
31:51 I'm not surprised by the indestructible laptop. I've know professors from biology and geology departments who cannot afford these devices, scour the web for good second hand deals. They'd hand them to researchers for jungle, desert and marine excursions. They can real go through some horrific shit and still turn on. Think dropped in a rain storm during the wet season of a desert where what is normally microscopic red dust is now a slurry of mud... and the old model had dust protection covers for IO ports, but they were opened up, so they slurry of mud found its way inside the case. They had research data they'd collected and didn't want to risk and airmailed it to us. We left it dry, disassemble the case, brush out all the dust with compressed air. We removed the hdd to back up the data (just in case), then reassemble and the computer was ticking along with not a care in the world. Removing each of the keycaps to free the mud is as painful as it sounds, don't recommend...
In short, a lot of respect for the Dell and Panasonic Toughbook lines, even the second hand, 10 year old models (despite being extremely slow computers because of their age) were still exceptionally well designed for their purpose.
I ain’t reading all that
I did my internship at an auto dealer for my degree in auto repair. They used old Toughbooks for their diagnostic software. The things looked like hell, but kept ticking without a care in the world. It's not the most extreme of use cases, but still a good testament to the durability, imo.
@@racoonman127 yikes, I do wonder how you'll make it past middle school english.
@@racoonman127 All that? Its not exactly a lot of text.... Shesh..
@@majorfender6054I ain’t got the time. I got better things to do after watching this vid
2:22 "Please help me its to much raining"
~Someone
“Bwhwh”
~Someone
My S3 frontier has been incredible, survived mountains, lakes, drops bashes, being superglued and after all that is still in full working order with not even a scratch to show for it all.
I work as an ISP Field Technician for a company who provides us with those Dell ToughBooks as our field laptops. They are definitely more durable than your everyday laptop and withstand the daily bumps & bangs very well. One of my colleagues accidentally dropped his laptop 15 feet onto concrete and it was completely fine aside from a few scratches. Albeit, its weakest point is the screen. That same colleague accidentally let a metal object from his grasp while on the roof of a customer's house, which tumbled off the roof, fell about 5 feet or so, and smashed onto the laptop's closed lid, destroying the screen. I would bet that if Arun had dropped the laptop the opposite way (lid down), it would've totaled the screen.
Also, I have an Olympus TG-4 and it's a durable little camera. I've taken it on two trips to the Philippines and once to Cuba, and went snorkeling with it on each of those trips. It handles the water well. I've dropped and nicked it a few times, but never done anything overly harsh to it. As someone who likes to keep their stuff in like-new condition, I wish the finish didn't scratch so easy, but overall it does live up to its name. I'm not impressed with the picture quality, but I assume that's probably something they've improved on over the last few generations. I don't think I'd buy another one though, I'd rather have a GoPro as its waterproof and that's all I really want out of a camera like that.
Find a partner who looks at you like Arun sees the Olympus camera 27:41
11:52 The reason Bluetooth and Wifi have terrible range through water, including high density fog, is because of the wavelength. Water likes to interact with 2.4Ghz, but either absorbing it, or reflecting it.
This is why weather radar and microwave ovens often use 2.4Ghz(weather radar will use other bands for other uses, like clouds, dust etc)
Any wireless signal has trouble penetrating water. Wavelength is almost insignificant, depending on the application.
@@TacticalLuluneither of us are wrong.
i think this chanel is perfect for people to get into tech, its great
You gotta wait for the old Nokia to dry out 😂 might still turn on in a couple days with some rice even after the damage lol
Was thinking the same!
I literally loaded this video because I was stunned to see what looked like a proper axe being used on a tech channel in the thumbnail. That looks like a Gransfors Bruk Small Forrest Axe, my favourite ❤ Impressed a techy dude had a legit axe.
eyyy thank you for the recognition pal! I brought it in for the video hoping someone would appreciate the quality low tech engineering on it. You nailed the name of it too, good eye.
To be fair, I’d like to have tried that old Nokia in a rice bag for 24 hours and then tried putting the battery in again.
You can acctually tell that this video was faked most likely for advertisement as the concrete wouldve shattered if he accrualy dropped a blokia on it
A Nokia is plastic bro its a meme
The nokia weren't the block shock or the concrete was broken was not as high it
They could have dropped it higher it would still be fine then it'll break the brick with the new brick
21:45 Like no one ever said the 3310 is water proof... so why not do that test last...
none of this was thought out much, Burns the Jacket thats suppose to be stab proof, tosses a phone known for durability in water lol, if hes gonna do this at least start small and do proper testing.
In 7:38, you missed a chance to say "tear-riffic"
FOR REAL
That what i was thinking lol
He has done that one one to many times
27:37 That's what she said🤣
To u;)
12:54 him saying that it's some very real dry ice made me feel like it's actually not dry ice
Apple should use that as an ad for their watches 20:00
23:50 when you test the jacket like a bulletproof vest, its bound to break. The jacket was suppose to protect you under extreme temperatures only as advertised
That thin fabric won't protect you from extreme temperatures.
bruh that jacket aint keeping you warm at -30c
@@maxz69 depends, there's jackets with aerogel that might even keep you warm in -60C and yet look like a windbreaker
24:12 "WORLDS TOUGHEST NUTS"
The old Nokia memes are gone because of this guy 😂
34:12 When Arun said "were having omlets tonight" got me on the floor 🤣
Plot twist: he put in a fake egg🤔
21:55 - FAKE NOKIA
24:13 "worlds toughest nuts"
😂
💀
I just like your content so much. May you get up to 25M subscribers this year
32:20 weakest swings the human race is capable of goddamn
I wouldn't swing a hammer THAT close to a monitor.
His neighbours must be worried, hes just in the backyard wearing a lab coat and is practicing using a flamethrower and a chainsaw on a mannequin. 😂😂
i love the little break when he misses the water, it shows you guys have humor and are able to admit mistakes
WHERE THE TABLET!?
24:24 That stuff isn’t made for stabbing! A good stab will take out any ballistic fiber. It’ll do slashing and bullets though.
The CGI of nokia was impressive..! 22:20
I just want to say I love your videos and the rickrolling that comes with it. In the future I'm going to make phones in my company fruit and I was wondering in the future if you would want to review them
Thank you for breaking stuff most mortals wouldn't be able to do without crying...allot! Brilliant video. and a Eggcellent ending.
The edits just get better
hell ya brotha
FOR REAAAAAL
Ya
"And just because I'm so curious" pulls out an hatchet* 😂
32:41
I love you so much! I recently just found your kislux and i’m in love!! Your videos are so fun and you energy is just MWAH! keep living your life
22:10 I bet the Nokia just needs to be dried out, not totalled of water
Fr
@akimbo899 how old are you?
@akimbo899 The reason I ask is because when you said, "Doubt it," it makes you seem young. I am guessing you're not Gen Z, but maybe Gen Alpha. If you have any experience with older phones such as the Nokia 3310, if drowned in water, it will work. Take the battery out and leave it to dry.
@akimbo899 The question is meant to be rhetorical, not make you uncomfortable.
@@akimbo899 you're not worth relying too due to that comment you just made
22:02 bro should have put the Nokia 3310 in rice first 😒😂
He's an apple user, they don't fix their old stuff, they just buy new ones😂
@@aRUND32123he’s using a s24 ultra
@@akimbo899okay didn't know that, he still does use apple tho
23:09 this is better than any plot twist in any movie ever
So true
Arun was so impressed with the Pelican Air box that he forgot to rate it
Btw where's the fan?
@@AchiragChiragg ohh yeaah i forgot the fan
That pelican box deserves a 11/10
bro bought a fake OG nokia and thought we wouldn’t notice 21:25
How
@@City1Tiger Because we all know that the OG nokia would survive everything even nuclear bomb.
@@rith1829 ur cringe at point
@@moravskebramburkyFound the Gen Z who doesn't understand millenial humour!
@@dazlock4491 i mean the joke is overused to the point where it is not funny