The object itself is 3D of course, but there's nothing interesting happening in one of those dimensions! What I'm saying is, there's a legitimate sense in which the mechanism is 2D. Don't @ me. The sponsor is CuriosityStream: Get a whole year for just $12 by going to curiositystream.com/stevemould and using the promo code stevemould at checkout.
Not something that would work in 2d, but I have noticed lately that lightly stirring (in a repeated pattern,) the water in a pot that's just starting to boil is a neat way of 'seeing' the currents. If you time it where bubbles are forming on the bottom, but not rising yet, because the water above them is still cool enough to act as a condenser, then when you stir, the faster moving currents will carry the heat away from the part of the pot under them faster than the slower moving ones, so you get lines of bubbles where the water is more still, and the heat can build up more. I don't know if there's enough there for a video, but I definitely thought of you when I noticed it.
The "Turd on the shelf" is especially helpful in the medical sector. Its easier to control the stool for blood or something or to get stool samples. But why people (like my parents) decide to install it in their homes is a mystery to me.
Those are basically normal in germany - I'd say that more than 50% of private toilets are like that. You can see a lot of health problems by "inspecting" your poop (more like a casual look while flushing) daily. The pee color is more visible too.
The reason people would get the turd on the shelf at their home, is mostly because people are scared of "splash back". I know a lot of people in europe who wouldn't use a toilet if it's not a "turd on the shelf" one
We first saw that toilet in Austria. We were on holiday skiing, 6 blokes and one poor girl. First breakfast someone mentioned the toilets, then someone said what if you Do a long one, cue 6 boys slowly rising from their seats, the poor girl!
I feel like this would've been very cool to see with two different density fluids. Say water and mercury. We would be able to see a fountain effect without any air.
Spitballing: partially fill the tube, tape or hold the ends together, rotate until your air column is where you want it, pinch closed or put fingers over the ends, and rotate it to demonstration starting position.
Mhm.... there is a easier way hahahaha just think that the tube is a straw... have u ever played with a straw as a kid? well, as a kid, i would suck some juice, then pull the straw out of the juice to suck in air... and then put the straw back to the juice... so there would be air in between juice 😂 i guess u can do the same thing with that tube hahahaha
I remember seeing (and using) the German toilets when I went on tour there with a band in 1984. The sound engineer's theory was that it reduces the incidence of piles because people spend less time on the toilet (find somewhere else to read the paper) and the vocalist's theory was that it was so that you could look at what you had produced and have a greater chance of finding any indicators of bowel cancer (or other disease) there - they eat a lot of meat there. I also recall the same feeling of horror that you did when you see the fill-up-then-empty type. So, what to take away from this comment? If you want to see the toilets of the world, join a band and tour ;-)
From experience with the splash and shelf system, I can tell that you need to use the toilet brush less often. Especially if you put a sheet of toilet paper on the shelf before you start your business, there is rarely anything left at the end.
Ah, fluids. That subject which makes you remember air and void are two different beasts. (Because when you study rigid body mechanics and the likes, you consider everything to happen in a void)
I have built many Heron's fountains, for my children and for my students, using bottles. But I always much separated (a quarter or half a metre) the two bottom bottles, used long pipes with long visible lengths outside them, and topped the top end of the uppermost pipe with a strainer. Results: • The fountain had a surprisingly tall jet, reaching very high over the pile. • Water circulation through the pipes was very visible, at least if some air bubbles were present. Once the top pile is empty of water, just putting the artefact upside down empties the bottom bottle into the upper one, and the fountain is ready to work again once returned to its normal attitude.
In Germany, a young lady told me the poo-on-a-shelf toilet became common 'way back in the day because of parasites; people had to frequently check their stool to know if they were worm-free.
I live in the Netherlands, and I never knew there were other toilets than these “turd shelve” types. Then I took a look at my own toilet and noticed it doesn’t even have a turd shelve. Conclusion: I never really paid much attention to toiletbowl layouts.
this is so interesting!!! the 2d model really helped me understand what was going on, i really appreciate your effort into making this, i can't imagine how much thought it goes behind it. thank you for this video!!
@@Bebop_2962 Indeed, they're common in Austria, particularly in the Alpine regions, where pork makes up a significant proportion of the diet and the incidence of parasites is higher than other places.
1:36 We had that one in our apartment in Bulgaria, but sadly our cousin broke something in the mechanism, and we had to replace the whole thing with a "normal" (UK or US, idk) toilet bowl. Fills me with nostalgia when I see this old design. Never thought I'd cry over a toilet bowl...
I alway thought that type of toilet is really good for hospitals... because there it is likely you have to monitor the looks of patients excrements 🤷♂️
@@trinesrensen560 nope, Georgia (the country). Funny thing is, I've never seen another toilet like it anywhere, even in other places in Georgia (the british style ones are the dominant ones there)
Depends. Air itself contains a concentration of many gases. H2S no. Something about sulfer that really doesn't like to stay in gas and seems to be pretty dence. Have to check the table on that one.
"The type of wire that's in your walls" is dangerously similar to the whole toilet situation. I'm convinced that World War 3 will start when someone asks an American, British and German electrician to wire up a house together.
Yeah but the type of wire they use is irrelevant. The difference between the electrical systems on those countries is related to sockets, voltage and frequency etc. You could wire an american home with british wire no problem (maybe not the other way round because of the earth but you could just use a separate cable of the same wire for that)
@@DOSTalks There's also very different requirements regarding water damage safety and location/routing of the wires - in many european countries you're not allowed to wire horizontally through walls, and all wires must be isolated strands pulled through PVC conduit tubing of a certain diameter, which must be glued into wiring boxes. Putting the "flat" UK cables, or loose 8 inch service loops as is common in the US in a Dutch house would immediately void your fire insurance.
@@DOSTalks I don't think that would work though.. Since US runs on lower voltage, I'd expect them to run higher current, so they would require thicker wires compared to those used in Europe. No?
@@DOSTalks they're bit more complicated and there is differences in wires and wiring. For example in great britain they use ring circuits where other countries don't.
Intentional errors are used to boost comment counts. I assure you, the attention required to produce and edit this video did not miss such an obvious error.
Great video! Personally I would love to see a visualization of a waterhammer pressure wave. We often see the effects of them, but I don't believe I have ever seen someone visualize it well
Despite never seeing or hearing this before, I immediately understood how it works the 2D version in the very beginning of the video, this is awesome work in making it so much easier to understand!
@@lucasanimations8636 Hydrate or dydrate, buddy. I didn’t say _don’t_ drink it. Of course we all wanna drink the Highlighted Hydrodynamic Science Fluid (tm)!
I've moved to the Netherlands and the first time I encountered the poo on a shelf style toilet my first reaction was indeed: WTF... I have my own name for them though, I call them inspection shelf toilets.
I believe "inspection shelf toilets" is a direct translation of the Dutch word used them or so I was told by a Dutch friend. Apparently in the old days it was very common for doctors to examine stool samples from sick people so the Dutch came up with this design to facilitate the sample collection process.
I’ve just retired from building and repairing CT and MRI scanners for 40 years…worked with everything from liquid helium and a variety of thermodynamics to high Tesla magnetic fields, High freq 150kv generators and a variety of radioactive isotopes. Only had 2 years of formal education, but I have always had a fascination with how shit works. I only discovered Steve here about 2 hrs ago on a chain fountain video, that took me to tensegrity, then to heron fountain and I’ve been thoroughly entertained and educated..Totally enjoying your explanations, theories, and demonstrations… thanks!! your kids are lucky to have a father like you, my dad is the one who provoked and nurtured my curiosity…. I liked and subscribed!! (And am making my friends watch your videos cause they are clueless..lol)
You gave me an idea to use this principle for my cat's drinking fountain (cats love fresh, moving water). So I'll give you an idea for a video: Water locks with water saving basins. I'll refer you to look up how the Panama Channel water saving basins work. Water locks may be simple in principle, but Water is such an important resource for the Panama channel they invested billions into water saving basins that save up to 60% of the water used per crossing. Because if it rains too little or they use up too much water, the depth of the cannal may render it impassable for shipping. The way they work is that when a boat has to be lowered, instead of discharging the lock's water into the lower level of the waterway, it instead drains into a separate basin that is at a higher level than the lower channel. The water level at the lock and the basin will level off, at that point the valve between the lock and the basin is closed and the rest of the water has to drain into the lower level of the waterway. When a ship has to be raised, the water from the basin drains into the lock, then the basin valve is closed and the lock fills the rest of the way with water from the higher level. A one basin design can save roughly 20-25% of water (it depends on the area covered by the basin). Panama channel uses 3 basins per lock. each at one height. When one levels off, the valve closes and the next one gets filled and so on. It's a really simple and clever piece of engineering. And I've made one in Algodoo, so I can definitelly tell you it can be made as one of your models. Also, just for curiosity's sake, I calculated how much each cubic meter of water costs to be moved on the panama channel based on how much water is drained and the cost of traversing the whole thing. They charge $60 dollars per empty 20 foot container and $90 for each full container. The largest Panamax class ships can carry 15000 20 foot containers, so based on that, the height of the cannal and the size of the locks (there are six and they're all the same size), I calculated that each cubic meter of water in the panama channel costs between $0.16 and $0.25 if we don't take into acount the water saving or $0.40 to $0.60 if we do. Where I live, the cost per cubic meter of treated tap water is roughly $1.
Here is the link to the Practical Engineering video. He actually has several videos demonstrating hydrodynamic properties. ruclips.net/video/SBvclVcesEE/видео.html
My friend has a cat Titan and he bought one of those fancy cat water fountain bowl things for him which cost like 50 bucks and Titan dumbass just goes to his new watering bowl and proceeds to destroy the whole damn thing within an hour lmao funniest shit
@@riatorg only the the compression of water. The lesser of the two is restricted by the greater only to the point of the greater. Then it becomes mass over volume.
I grew up with the WTF toilet. I'm from Germany and I always assumed it was normal as a kid. Until eventually I got into school and visited other kids and realized that our toilet was kind of unique...
What if we combine the heron's fountain and a greedy cup siphon to create a fountain that retroduces air into the system thus making it go on forever? Don't know if it'll work but seems interesting.
@@YourCRTube not really, it cottons be WAY sneakier if the two fluids were the same color, so then you can't see any change over time other than liquid coming out the top
I think it would be great to fill it up with lots of water, then use a syringe to fill the middle reservoir, then pour mercury on top, which would recreate the effect
Have you ever done a video on the continuous cycle absorption system for refrigeration? It is used in a lot of RV refrigerators. A little pilot light can drive a beautiful combination of fluid dynamics and thermodynamics in one system.
When I used to visit Amsterdam for work and asked about the "poo shelf" in the toilet bowl I was told that it was because folks from the Netherlands like to eat lots of pig based products. Pig based products can be susceptible to worms, and so the shelf allows the poo-er to inspect their delivery for parasites.
i doubt people here actually use it to look for worms specifically, but i do think its quite normal to have just a quick look while flushing to make sure nothing suspicious is going on.
@@nara97 what this person said is incorrect, please stop believing everything you read on the internet. It's in part due to the splash back, and in other parts that the general quick view, that you get, helps with noticing grave medical issues. You will quickly see if you have blood in your stool, which can indicate cancer. Yet it doesn't hurt, so if you never see your poo you won't notice the blood. Which is in part the reason that the death rate by colon cancer is lower in europe than in america. Simply because people notice issues sooner and get checked out sooner, thus having a better therapy outcome.
I want to see a design which chains several reservoirs together so you can change them out on a rotational basis and keep the fountain going without stopping (preferably while using the same water).
that would be impossible since if water continually flows without external energy input, then that would be a perpetual machine and those cannot exist within the laws of physics
With all the "gas is less dense than air" quotes in the comments, before someone else points it out, at 8:37 he meant "half column of liquid, half column of *air* on the right"
I‘m going to be a teacher for science in primary school and just discovered your channel. What i‘ve seen so far has extremly good potential for physics classes :D thank you for the inspiration!
Uk usually aligns with Australia RE plumbing supplies, we have flushomatics if you want to go into some hydrodynamics seen in our toilets. They seemed cool to me, but it was part of my carrer, so that might have helped. Basically the valve breaks an air lock which alows a certain amount of water to pass and flush the toilet, then the airlocked equilibrium comes back and the flow stops again, giving you a flush that doesnt need time to refill between uses, which is ideal for public toilets. The valves are also mostly recyclable, the seals will need changing every so many years, but basically its a similar system to gas bottles, you trade an old leaking one for a refurbished valve, they refurbish yours and trade it on to someone else, you dont pay for a whole new valve, and the majority of it lasts decades before actually becoming waste.
Can you think of an interesting way of combining the principles of both the Heron's Fountain and the Pythagorean Siphon into a single model? I'd like to see what sort of wild contraptions you'd come up with!
Steve Mould is like the cool teacher in school that starts to explain a topic, get's sidetracked but in a way that you can understand the topic better AND manages to deliver the main topic.
1:37 That type is the best for the reason you mention. Every toilet should be built like that. And it's not like you don't have smell with the other designs.
It's not free, it will stop sometime. There's an artist that makes kinetic wall sculptures of wood, he tries to capture all the power so he made them with mechanisms that store the power of the moment. All are without electricity and he became so good in capturing that one wind up movement will keep it's going for up to 48 hours. I can send you a link if you want. Also free energy on earth is all around us. You can't make something from nothing (although I know this is the biggest real paradox of the world, how else can there be a beginning of the universe, so somewhere the laws of the physics as we know them have not been followed ) If you want free energie, a moss panel is great to start. The bacteria and mycelium that live in symbiosis with moss create a current(Recent studies say nitrogen binding plants work the best but moss works always as it's always active, winter and summer, day and night)it doesn't give much although the voltage is steady around 1v and 50 to 100 mah per panel of 35 by 35. We live off the grid and have a bathroom outside. The green roof above the toilet wich houses moss, sedum and tym roof (all hardy, wintergreen and drought tolerant plants. Tyme binds nitrogen and smells nice wich is great for a toilet, sedum holds water creates shade so the water doesn't evaporate and gives protection and isolation in the winter, moss is a always active and stimulates the bacteria year round,9 panels)is also good for lights day and night. It has a 5volt regulator and output so I can even power USB stuff (like a ventilator in summer, a 5v pump for washing hands or a small Bluetooth speaker) or charge my phone (really slow) The green roof actually makes the electricity, carbon negative by far. Even with snow packed on the roof or a dry season (though I gave it some extra water with the 5v pump on their own electricity) it would still give a steady 1v per panel. Maybe you could tweak it? If you want I'll put a link for the diy video. Just say so. There so easy and cheap to make though. I had almost all stuff laying around here already.
m.ruclips.net/video/MHYYUSuHdFI/видео.html Can't find the original vid but here you have a DIY of the the moss panel. They'll test it too. m.ruclips.net/video/ROP45rjvOHg/видео.html This is the kinetic artist. Little big stories also did a story about him. I hope you like it!
@@akzelander I have Dutch friends who tell me that they are quite popular in the Netherlands. Some have even installed them here in their French houses.
I'd love to see a demonstration on primatic cylinders and seeing how they work, where it uses a pocket of air to seperate a primary flow of a liquid from a secondary liquid. I'd assume it would be difficult to show case though
@@protoborg are you maybe confusing 1-D space for 0-D Space? 0-D: just a point, no movement. 1-D: a line. only one “axis” of movement. Movement is still possible back and forth along that one line.
@@haqeeqee The fountain we are talking about is NOT along a single plain. It is based on movement across the second axis. Thus, no this is NOT one dimensional.
@@protoborg that’s technically true. But even the 2-D fountain isn’t _really_ 2-D, it’s a simulation of a 2-D fountain. In the same time way, the heron’s fountain he made from the pipe, _simulates_ a 1-D fountain. Even if it isn’t actually 1-D.
I've lived here my whole life, and I still find US toilets a bit dodgy. If the pipes are even just a bit slow then it multiplies the effect before the water goes down. Have been at other people's house where it filled right to the brim before emptying. /)_-
I'm curious. Could you replace the air with a liquid of different density, such as oil? I would imagine yes, but I'm curious to actually see whether or not it would. That would mean it's not so much "air" but rather a fluid or gas of different density.
I’m a high school science teacher in a high-needs area in Savannah,Ga. I am so glad I’ve found your videos because this is helping me learn how to break down complex interactions into visual demonstrations. I’ve got access to a 3d printer, which helps in many ways for more revolutionary/interesting designs and general manufacturing for class project, but I lack the fabrication process which I am learning from people like you! I appreciate your work so much Justin Kriske
The object itself is 3D of course, but there's nothing interesting happening in one of those dimensions! What I'm saying is, there's a legitimate sense in which the mechanism is 2D. Don't @ me.
The sponsor is CuriosityStream: Get a whole year for just $12 by going to curiositystream.com/stevemould and using the promo code stevemould at checkout.
but would it work with oil and water?
8:24 "gas is less dense than air” that almost slipped passed me. Shouldn't it be gas is less dense than liquid
@@biggjiggins8987
Yup. Wawa be heavier
@@biggjiggins8987 unless the air is chilled somewhat heavily until it's no longer a gas, perhaps?
Not something that would work in 2d, but I have noticed lately that lightly stirring (in a repeated pattern,) the water in a pot that's just starting to boil is a neat way of 'seeing' the currents.
If you time it where bubbles are forming on the bottom, but not rising yet, because the water above them is still cool enough to act as a condenser, then when you stir, the faster moving currents will carry the heat away from the part of the pot under them faster than the slower moving ones, so you get lines of bubbles where the water is more still, and the heat can build up more.
I don't know if there's enough there for a video, but I definitely thought of you when I noticed it.
"The turd on the shelf", precisely the kind of insightful and intellectually stimulating content we come here for. Keep up the good work!
The turd on the shelf is so that you can EXAMINE your poo. Typically to look for worms.
@@MrAndrewBeattie ahh, that makes sense. "Turd on the shelf" cracked me up, though.
We call it "Wurstbalkon" here. (sausage balcony)
That toilet was pretty common in Czechia, but I'm glad to say that they're phasing them out.
i call it the shit on a shelf
Oh look it's Derek!
Cool to see you Here!
If anyone gets lost in this comment section, this is probably a good place to ask for derektions
@@oRitchinal pun patrol Here you're under arrest
@@mikehawk37 Guilty as charged, officer!
@@oRitchinal lol
The "Turd on the shelf" is especially helpful in the medical sector. Its easier to control the stool for blood or something or to get stool samples. But why people (like my parents) decide to install it in their homes is a mystery to me.
Those are basically normal in germany - I'd say that more than 50% of private toilets are like that.
You can see a lot of health problems by "inspecting" your poop (more like a casual look while flushing) daily.
The pee color is more visible too.
@@rasalas91 I am German and 50% of the toilets in our house are built this way :)
The reason people would get the turd on the shelf at their home, is mostly because people are scared of "splash back". I know a lot of people in europe who wouldn't use a toilet if it's not a "turd on the shelf" one
We first saw that toilet in Austria. We were on holiday skiing, 6 blokes and one poor girl. First breakfast someone mentioned the toilets, then someone said what if you Do a long one, cue 6 boys slowly rising from their seats, the poor girl!
@@yesihavereadit can confirm though a long one can get complicated
I feel like this would've been very cool to see with two different density fluids. Say water and mercury. We would be able to see a fountain effect without any air.
it's all fun and games until you got mercury poisoning
a mercury fountain sounds more like something Qin Shi Huang would have come up with
Fountain of youth.
@@andistansbury4366 Because you'll never grow old?
@@skyfeelanjust use cooking oil instead
You heard it here first folks: "Gas is less dense than air" 8:24 (edit: corrected time)
Clearly he said “gas is less dense than hair” /s
Also noticed that lol
@@keco185 /sarcasm?
But steel is heavier than feathers!
@@mathiasplans A tonne of feathers is the same weight as a tonne of steel.
7:46 Let’s all appreciate how he was able to get half air half liquid in the left column of that tube.
Edit: I’ve added a timestamp.
That's actually very easy, just try to fill it all the way and you will get this
@@lol-pk6jj how?
@@aissaouimohammedakram8640 git gud scrub
Spitballing: partially fill the tube, tape or hold the ends together, rotate until your air column is where you want it, pinch closed or put fingers over the ends, and rotate it to demonstration starting position.
Mhm.... there is a easier way hahahaha just think that the tube is a straw...
have u ever played with a straw as a kid? well, as a kid, i would suck some juice, then pull the straw out of the juice to suck in air... and then put the straw back to the juice... so there would be air in between juice 😂
i guess u can do the same thing with that tube hahahaha
8:24 "Because gas is denser than air" I mean, you're technically right, sometimes...
Saved me saying it!
Yes, that confused me! Maybe he meant that air/gas is less dense than water? Idk haha
Yes, I think he meant to say the air is less dense than the water.
Glad someone else caught it 🤣
and thats the best type of right q:
I remember seeing (and using) the German toilets when I went on tour there with a band in 1984. The sound engineer's theory was that it reduces the incidence of piles because people spend less time on the toilet (find somewhere else to read the paper) and the vocalist's theory was that it was so that you could look at what you had produced and have a greater chance of finding any indicators of bowel cancer (or other disease) there - they eat a lot of meat there.
I also recall the same feeling of horror that you did when you see the fill-up-then-empty type.
So, what to take away from this comment? If you want to see the toilets of the world, join a band and tour ;-)
Which band?
From experience with the splash and shelf system, I can tell that you need to use the toilet brush less often. Especially if you put a sheet of toilet paper on the shelf before you start your business, there is rarely anything left at the end.
@@sweetgirl070707 *_THE BAND_*
The Vocalist was right, Thats why some Hospitals still have some of those
The absolute worst part is when it does actually keep rising when it's clogged 😨
“Gas is less dense than air” That had me laughing
As someone famous would probably say: Gas doesn't have to be air, air is gas though. Unless your building a rocket or a quantum computer.
Ah it happens lol
@@graham741 Specific gases might be lighter or heavier than air, but for regular non super complex operations air=gas is good enough.
@@ralexcraft990 and the quantum computer?
@@TheChzoronzon IDK, I’m not a computer scientist
These visualisations and explanations are just fantastic. Keep them coming.
He made me visualise a turd on the shelf perfectly.
@GROHAM official No. Once the blob of air in the system is moved enough, the system reaches equilibrium and the movement stops.
I love that you even made a 1 dimensional demonstration for completions sake
Where's the 4 dimensional version?
@@andrewcraig1074 too hard to explain
A true completionist would've made the 0 dimensional version as well...
It's a 2 dimensional version, you cannot make a 1D Heron's cup
@@p1nkfreud i was referring to the tube demonstration
Definitely wasn’t expecting a 2 minute lecture on different kind of toilet bowls 🤣
It was a shitty opening in multiple ways.
Ah, fluids. That subject which makes you remember air and void are two different beasts. (Because when you study rigid body mechanics and the likes, you consider everything to happen in a void)
When air and friction are not negligible 😔
@@TheDeadOfNight37 actually it has nothing to do with friction, its the air pressure and surface tension
@@wojtekpolska1013 I know I was just making a joke bc most of the time in physics they're usually both negligible or neither are
you mean a vacuum?
I imagine filling that tube with an almost perfect 1/2 water, 1/4 air, 1/4 water took more time and effort than building the 2d heron fountain.
I would hope he had something to pinch it, otherwise it would have taken significant levels of witchcraft
you could just fill it with some water from your mouth, not that complicated lol
@@veganjoy water? You mean orange soda?
submerge 3/4 of one side, then submerge 1/4 of the other, pushing 1/4 out, so u get a 2:1:1
@@WeebdotexeI'm getting jetpack fuel club penguin mission flashbacks
I’d love to see a coffee percolator get the “2D” treatment.
Oh god please don't use that devil mechanism to make coffee, just get yourself a Moka and enjoy
@@morcogbr but it’s more convenient than a pour over. Although a Belgian siphon coffee maker would be fascinating to see as well.
Yes!!!
Wait till you taste properly made coffee
@@beefymcskillet5601 Hope that one day he does
I have built many Heron's fountains, for my children and for my students, using bottles. But I always much separated (a quarter or half a metre) the two bottom bottles, used long pipes with long visible lengths outside them, and topped the top end of the uppermost pipe with a strainer. Results:
• The fountain had a surprisingly tall jet, reaching very high over the pile.
• Water circulation through the pipes was very visible, at least if some air bubbles were present.
Once the top pile is empty of water, just putting the artefact upside down empties the bottom bottle into the upper one, and the fountain is ready to work again once returned to its normal attitude.
In Germany, a young lady told me the poo-on-a-shelf toilet became common 'way back in the day because of parasites; people had to frequently check their stool to know if they were worm-free.
I live in the Netherlands, and I never knew there were other toilets than these “turd shelve” types.
Then I took a look at my own toilet and noticed it doesn’t even have a turd shelve.
Conclusion: I never really paid much attention to toiletbowl layouts.
You don’t give a shit about the layout. You should have noticed the wet ass.
lol
These were a bit of shock when we moved to the Netherlands in the mid 1980s. 😮
I really like the way you transformed yourself into a polistiren cube for the demonstrations with the tubes
Haha, when I read this, I did not pronounce "polistiren" like "polystyrene" but like "po-LISS-terrin". Took me a while ;)
Are you talking about the white cardboard screen?
this is so interesting!!! the 2d model really helped me understand what was going on, i really appreciate your effort into making this, i can't imagine how much thought it goes behind it. thank you for this video!!
1:50 We would call it a "prestatiepot" at home, Dutch for "pot to show your achievement"
It's just insane. Who in their right mind wants to admire and smell their own shit. Totally fucked up!
@@psammiad The design allows you to check for colon problems/parasites.
@@Bebop_2962 Indeed, they're common in Austria, particularly in the Alpine regions, where pork makes up a significant proportion of the diet and the incidence of parasites is higher than other places.
Also there's no risk of splashback, A.K.A. Poseidon's Kiss. They're truly great.
@@psammiad you don’t look at your poo?
“Let’s make a U shaped tube”
Maybe we should call it a RUclips?
Underrated comment
buh dum tss
UTube
RUclips
Human shaped tube if you are human
we actually call them U-tubes in fluids
EX: google U-tube manometer
Get out
8:13 Steve Mould, professional U-tuber.
Funny
Underrated comment!
I don't understand
@@emperor_muaddib9274 from 7:40 to 8:20 he uses a U-shaped tube to simplify the demonstration.
@@Knewman7777 ohhhhh
You know, I actually really appreciate the brief toilet primer. It's always nice to know how one's things work.
The shelf is there So you can appreciate your masterpice in full glory when you're done.
*chef kiss
I usually take pictures of my works afterwards, so my friends can see my brilliant masterpieces and appreciate them as much as I do
If it's big enough to brag about, you'll be able to see it even in a normal toilet bowl.
@@nlb137 True but it's not the ideal circumstance for review
The goal is to fill it up till it kisses your cheeks…
I remember seeing one of those crazy toilets with a platform when i was travelling around europe 10 years ago.
I called it the poop deck
Oh that's good
@@SteveMould I amuse myself sometimes
If WTF is a poop deck wouldn't the others be stool pool?
They used to be really common in Europe some 40 years ago.
A perfect platform for post-mortem examination. 'One poop ex_cav_ation a day keeps the doctor away'. Enjoy.
8:25 “gas is less dense than air” I guess you learn something new everyday
you can also learn something new everyday every day. ;)
I noticed that too
to be fair, certain gasses are less dense than the mixture of gasses in the air at sea level, whereas others are much denser
In the context of talking about toilet bowls seems legit
A kilogram o Steel is heavier than a kilogram o feathers
1:36 We had that one in our apartment in Bulgaria, but sadly our cousin broke something in the mechanism, and we had to replace the whole thing with a "normal" (UK or US, idk) toilet bowl. Fills me with nostalgia when I see this old design.
Never thought I'd cry over a toilet bowl...
I saw this as “Heroin Fountain” and I was like “How the hell is this still on RUclips!?
Same
Same WTF
Because the algorithm doesn't have a drug problem, lol....
I see heroin I click
I mean... it can be...
"The turd on the shelf". i've only ever known it as "Kacketeller", which would roghly translate to "poop plate" :D
The Pu Pu Platter! xD
This very same word in our language would mean someone/something that counts (like 1,2,3) turds.
That earned him my like 🤣
Kacketeller, sounds like poop counting/counter
Which is about right
I alway thought that type of toilet is really good for hospitals... because there it is likely you have to monitor the looks of patients excrements 🤷♂️
I grew up with a "turd on a shelf" style toilet and when I moved to America, dealing with splashes was such a shock
Poseidon's kiss
I'm always putting a piece of toilet paper on the water to get rid of the splashes 🤣
So the Netherlands? I don't think that style of toilets exist anywhere else.
@@trinesrensen560 nope, Georgia (the country). Funny thing is, I've never seen another toilet like it anywhere, even in other places in Georgia (the british style ones are the dominant ones there)
What do u think of zandukeli lemonade
My Dad, a plumber of 40 years' 2 laws of plumbing.
1. Shit always rolls downhill.
2. Water finds its own level.
I read "2D heroin fountain behaves weirdly"... I need to sort myself out.
i was worried i was alone
Same
Same lmao
Yes, sort yourself out.
Please don't string yourself out, lol.
you mean snort yourself out
Steve: *Makes an amazing video*
Everyone: 8:25 gAs iS leSs deNse thAn aiR
this is the best comment about it xD
Best way to get the right answer to a question is to post the wrong answer on the internet.
Depends. Air itself contains a concentration of many gases. H2S no. Something about sulfer that really doesn't like to stay in gas and seems to be pretty dence. Have to check the table on that one.
I can’t watch this in HD, the eyes are too steely blue and seeing into my soul.
As I’m sure you can imagine, the rising of the water in toilets can be quite scary in the US as well if it doesn’t go back down
"The type of wire that's in your walls" is dangerously similar to the whole toilet situation. I'm convinced that World War 3 will start when someone asks an American, British and German electrician to wire up a house together.
Honestly...a video I kind of want to watch now
Yeah but the type of wire they use is irrelevant. The difference between the electrical systems on those countries is related to sockets, voltage and frequency etc. You could wire an american home with british wire no problem (maybe not the other way round because of the earth but you could just use a separate cable of the same wire for that)
@@DOSTalks There's also very different requirements regarding water damage safety and location/routing of the wires - in many european countries you're not allowed to wire horizontally through walls, and all wires must be isolated strands pulled through PVC conduit tubing of a certain diameter, which must be glued into wiring boxes. Putting the "flat" UK cables, or loose 8 inch service loops as is common in the US in a Dutch house would immediately void your fire insurance.
@@DOSTalks I don't think that would work though.. Since US runs on lower voltage, I'd expect them to run higher current, so they would require thicker wires compared to those used in Europe. No?
@@DOSTalks they're bit more complicated and there is differences in wires and wiring. For example in great britain they use ring circuits where other countries don't.
"gas is less dense than air" should be "air is less dense than water"
You sure about that?
@@rpyrat haha yeah tell Roedy Green
Funny thing, "air" in indonesian language (pronounced a-eer) means "water". Thus as an Indonesian his statement is correct. 😅
i notice that to
Intentional errors are used to boost comment counts. I assure you, the attention required to produce and edit this video did not miss such an obvious error.
Great video! Personally I would love to see a visualization of a waterhammer pressure wave. We often see the effects of them, but I don't believe I have ever seen someone visualize it well
Grady over at Practical Engineering has a really good video on water hammer with visual aids
Despite never seeing or hearing this before, I immediately understood how it works the 2D version in the very beginning of the video, this is awesome work in making it so much easier to understand!
I'll admit, as interesting as this was, I was expecting a lot more when I read the title as "Heroin fountain"
Me too...
Indeed my thoughts exactly. I would think that Steve would've been quite the popular guy in the 80s of this was his legacy.
the "turd on a shelf" toilet was invented by Germany.
as a German, I think this is the second worst thing we have ever done.
I would say exterminate them all with fire, but they say 2 wrongs don't make a right...
If that’s the second worst then what’s the worst...
@@labradoor3884 hmmm I wonder
Third worst thing being whatever the heck the H&K G11's mechanism is
@@labradoor3884 worst thing germans have ever done is the creation of gummy bears
I wonder if this could be done with some sort of vegetable oil in place of the air, since it's about density
Maybe, though the density of oil is _way_ closer to water than air is. Oil is what, about 80% the density of water, while air is about 0.1%?
[Looks at toilet designs] OH!!! So *thats* why every other country in the world always gets "floaters" and I've never had a problem.
boy this aint roblox rp 😭
Everyone after watched the video : "wow, that's amazing. Now i understand physics"
Me : "I want to drink that orange syrup"
Not if I get to it first
It is water
@@declantecho1717 r/wooosh
@@lucasanimations8636
Hydrate or dydrate, buddy. I didn’t say _don’t_ drink it. Of course we all wanna drink the Highlighted Hydrodynamic Science Fluid (tm)!
@@lucasanimations8636r/itswooooshwith4os
I've moved to the Netherlands and the first time I encountered the poo on a shelf style toilet my first reaction was indeed: WTF...
I have my own name for them though, I call them inspection shelf toilets.
I believe "inspection shelf toilets" is a direct translation of the Dutch word used them or so I was told by a Dutch friend. Apparently in the old days it was very common for doctors to examine stool samples from sick people so the Dutch came up with this design to facilitate the sample collection process.
I call it the trophy shelf toilet.
vlakspoeler
He still missed it hahaha
Those shelf toilets look like they would be very handy if you were smuggling diamonds or cocaine into a country.
"gas is less dense than air"
"Gas is less dense then air" 8:24
Oh damn
@@SteveMould
didn't even notice it either, my brain somehow made total sense of that xD
@@SteveMould Relax, man - it's just more evidence that you should never let the director edit his own stuff... 😂
Lol
helium gas is, so
I’ve just retired from building and repairing CT and MRI scanners for 40 years…worked with everything from liquid helium and a variety of thermodynamics to high Tesla magnetic fields, High freq 150kv generators and a variety of radioactive isotopes. Only had 2 years of formal education, but I have always had a fascination with how shit works.
I only discovered Steve here about 2 hrs ago on a chain fountain video, that took me to tensegrity, then to heron fountain and I’ve been thoroughly entertained and educated..Totally enjoying your explanations, theories, and demonstrations… thanks!!
your kids are lucky to have a father like you, my dad is the one who provoked and nurtured my curiosity….
I liked and subscribed!! (And am making my friends watch your videos cause they are clueless..lol)
You gave me an idea to use this principle for my cat's drinking fountain (cats love fresh, moving water).
So I'll give you an idea for a video: Water locks with water saving basins.
I'll refer you to look up how the Panama Channel water saving basins work.
Water locks may be simple in principle, but Water is such an important resource for the Panama channel they invested billions into water saving basins that save up to 60% of the water used per crossing. Because if it rains too little or they use up too much water, the depth of the cannal may render it impassable for shipping.
The way they work is that when a boat has to be lowered, instead of discharging the lock's water into the lower level of the waterway, it instead drains into a separate basin that is at a higher level than the lower channel. The water level at the lock and the basin will level off, at that point the valve between the lock and the basin is closed and the rest of the water has to drain into the lower level of the waterway. When a ship has to be raised, the water from the basin drains into the lock, then the basin valve is closed and the lock fills the rest of the way with water from the higher level.
A one basin design can save roughly 20-25% of water (it depends on the area covered by the basin). Panama channel uses 3 basins per lock. each at one height. When one levels off, the valve closes and the next one gets filled and so on.
It's a really simple and clever piece of engineering. And I've made one in Algodoo, so I can definitelly tell you it can be made as one of your models.
Also, just for curiosity's sake, I calculated how much each cubic meter of water costs to be moved on the panama channel based on how much water is drained and the cost of traversing the whole thing.
They charge $60 dollars per empty 20 foot container and $90 for each full container. The largest Panamax class ships can carry 15000 20 foot containers, so based on that, the height of the cannal and the size of the locks (there are six and they're all the same size), I calculated that each cubic meter of water in the panama channel costs between $0.16 and $0.25 if we don't take into acount the water saving or $0.40 to $0.60 if we do.
Where I live, the cost per cubic meter of treated tap water is roughly $1.
Grady from Practical Engineering has a great video on the locks
Here is the link to the Practical Engineering video. He actually has several videos demonstrating hydrodynamic properties.
ruclips.net/video/SBvclVcesEE/видео.html
My friend has a cat Titan and he bought one of those fancy cat water fountain bowl things for him which cost like 50 bucks and Titan dumbass just goes to his new watering bowl and proceeds to destroy the whole damn thing within an hour lmao funniest shit
this is my first video of yours and the bell siphon is definitely how my bong works
It would be interesting to see with two liquids of different densities ie water and oil
This was my thought as well. Does the compressibility of the gas play into the effect?
@@riatorg only the the compression of water. The lesser of the two is restricted by the greater only to the point of the greater. Then it becomes mass over volume.
@@dontneedtoknow5836 water cant compress. Well, liquid water cant compress
Step 1: Cover yourself in oil
@@triste4-21 is there any liquid that can compress?
I grew up with the WTF toilet. I'm from Germany and I always assumed it was normal as a kid. Until eventually I got into school and visited other kids and realized that our toilet was kind of unique...
Jo die nennen es oft auch german toilet.... sagt alles
Sure, false Furry
@@LinKueiDragon wat
same
In dorms we call old "turd shelf" toilets simply "the stage" xD
What if we combine the heron's fountain and a greedy cup siphon to create a fountain that retroduces air into the system thus making it go on forever? Don't know if it'll work but seems interesting.
Thinking the same thing over here
It would be interesting to see this done with two liquids of different density. Of course, it would be very tricky to fill.
It would stop when the liquid of lower density gets the role of pushing the liquid of higher density up
It will spoil it as it will reveal the mechanics. It will be easier to "connect the dots".
@@YourCRTube not really, it cottons be WAY sneakier if the two fluids were the same color, so then you can't see any change over time other than liquid coming out the top
I think it would be great to fill it up with lots of water, then use a syringe to fill the middle reservoir, then pour mercury on top, which would recreate the effect
"Turd on the shelf" Or as I like to call it, a poo with a view.
Poo on the loo! Can’t believe he missed that....
OK can't resist a poo with a view or a poo with a phew
"Elf on the shelf" has some opposition this Christmas.
Crap on a lap?
The shelf is the old style, had to do with being able to inspect the stool to spot illness.
Have you ever done a video on the continuous cycle absorption system for refrigeration? It is used in a lot of RV refrigerators. A little pilot light can drive a beautiful combination of fluid dynamics and thermodynamics in one system.
I like this idea. I'd love to know how a small flame makes my fridge cold.
When I used to visit Amsterdam for work and asked about the "poo shelf" in the toilet bowl I was told that it was because folks from the Netherlands like to eat lots of pig based products. Pig based products can be susceptible to worms, and so the shelf allows the poo-er to inspect their delivery for parasites.
i doubt people here actually use it to look for worms specifically, but i do think its quite normal to have just a quick look while flushing to make sure nothing suspicious is going on.
@@SpiderTNT. or to admire your own work ( ͡° ͜ʖ ͡°)
@@SpiderTNT. if you're regularly getting worms from your pork, you probably don't have a toilet to poop in
I didnt knew this o.O i thought it is for, not beeing too loud when it "plops" xD xD 💩💩
@@nara97 what this person said is incorrect, please stop believing everything you read on the internet. It's in part due to the splash back, and in other parts that the general quick view, that you get, helps with noticing grave medical issues. You will quickly see if you have blood in your stool, which can indicate cancer. Yet it doesn't hurt, so if you never see your poo you won't notice the blood. Which is in part the reason that the death rate by colon cancer is lower in europe than in america. Simply because people notice issues sooner and get checked out sooner, thus having a better therapy outcome.
I want to see a design which chains several reservoirs together so you can change them out on a rotational basis and keep the fountain going without stopping (preferably while using the same water).
that would be impossible since if water continually flows without external energy input, then that would be a perpetual machine and those cannot exist within the laws of physics
@@hontonitai7838 Hence changing out the reservoirs. That's the energy input.
One day i thought ive done perpetual machine with magnets but it turned out that they were loosing their magnetic energy after some time pretty quick
With all the "gas is less dense than air" quotes in the comments, before someone else points it out, at 8:37 he meant "half column of liquid, half column of *air* on the right"
Well, I missed that one as my mind was still on the first mistake :p
I don't think so!
I never knew I wanted to know how a herons fountain worked, until 3am on this fine morning
8:20 "Gas is less dense than air" - Steve Mould, 2020
Maybe he meant by moist air which is wet air is less dense than air of what we breathe which is dry air.
@@michaeljacobdelossantos I think he meant that gas is less dense than liquid, considering the context, but just had a slip of the tongue ;)
I‘m going to be a teacher for science in primary school and just discovered your channel. What i‘ve seen so far has extremly good potential for physics classes :D thank you for the inspiration!
"I've got the whole production process down pat now"
Famous last words my friend.
Uk usually aligns with Australia RE plumbing supplies, we have flushomatics if you want to go into some hydrodynamics seen in our toilets. They seemed cool to me, but it was part of my carrer, so that might have helped. Basically the valve breaks an air lock which alows a certain amount of water to pass and flush the toilet, then the airlocked equilibrium comes back and the flow stops again, giving you a flush that doesnt need time to refill between uses, which is ideal for public toilets. The valves are also mostly recyclable, the seals will need changing every so many years, but basically its a similar system to gas bottles, you trade an old leaking one for a refurbished valve, they refurbish yours and trade it on to someone else, you dont pay for a whole new valve, and the majority of it lasts decades before actually becoming waste.
I was kind of bending my head to the side to find where the water comes from the bottle but your 2D did help to straight my head.
Can you think of an interesting way of combining the principles of both the Heron's Fountain and the Pythagorean Siphon into a single model? I'd like to see what sort of wild contraptions you'd come up with!
Ok so I'm just saying that was the most perfect sound to represent how I feel when ripping off protective plastic.
Peel porn!
yknow heron sounds awfully similar to a certain illegal substance so i read the title as “A 2d heroin fountain”
The fact that he is still using his Pebble Time Steel amazes me, I still use sometimes my two Pebbles too.
"The turd on the shelf" just got me 😂 excellent content as always! thanks!
this explains it ruclips.net/video/rzXPyCY7jbs/видео.html
Steve Mould is like the cool teacher in school that starts to explain a topic, get's sidetracked but in a way that you can understand the topic better AND manages to deliver the main topic.
Wish i had found this video sometime in school so I could explain what you have in this video as a science project of some kind.
1:37
That type is the best for the reason you mention. Every toilet should be built like that.
And it's not like you don't have smell with the other designs.
Just sitting on one and it is great
People who make Free energy videos: WRITE THAT DOWN, WRITE THAT DOWN!
It's not free, it will stop sometime. There's an artist that makes kinetic wall sculptures of wood, he tries to capture all the power so he made them with mechanisms that store the power of the moment. All are without electricity and he became so good in capturing that one wind up movement will keep it's going for up to 48 hours. I can send you a link if you want.
Also free energy on earth is all around us. You can't make something from nothing (although I know this is the biggest real paradox of the world, how else can there be a beginning of the universe, so somewhere the laws of the physics as we know them have not been followed )
If you want free energie, a moss panel is great to start. The bacteria and mycelium that live in symbiosis with moss create a current(Recent studies say nitrogen binding plants work the best but moss works always as it's always active, winter and summer, day and night)it doesn't give much although the voltage is steady around 1v and 50 to 100 mah per panel of 35 by 35. We live off the grid and have a bathroom outside. The green roof above the toilet wich houses moss, sedum and tym roof (all hardy, wintergreen and drought tolerant plants. Tyme binds nitrogen and smells nice wich is great for a toilet, sedum holds water creates shade so the water doesn't evaporate and gives protection and isolation in the winter, moss is a always active and stimulates the bacteria year round,9 panels)is also good for lights day and night. It has a 5volt regulator and output so I can even power USB stuff (like a ventilator in summer, a 5v pump for washing hands or a small Bluetooth speaker) or charge my phone (really slow) The green roof actually makes the electricity, carbon negative by far. Even with snow packed on the roof or a dry season (though I gave it some extra water with the 5v pump on their own electricity) it would still give a steady 1v per panel.
Maybe you could tweak it? If you want I'll put a link for the diy video. Just say so. There so easy and cheap to make though. I had almost all stuff laying around here already.
Thanks fro explaining bro and yes i need link plz🔮
m.ruclips.net/video/MHYYUSuHdFI/видео.html
Can't find the original vid but here you have a DIY of the the moss panel. They'll test it too.
m.ruclips.net/video/ROP45rjvOHg/видео.html
This is the kinetic artist. Little big stories also did a story about him.
I hope you like it!
4:46 nice book you've got there
Why thank you!
It's fun that I think of my name as a really uncommon name but I see that Heron is a really well known math formula and that video's subject
it still looks like magic to me. humans have been innovating many things since ancient times. I'm quite impressed honestly
4:29 The bg music for that perfect peel 😆😂
I want the outro music; dang I know it but can't remember the name or band.
4:28 what's it with that sexy time music ? Should it represent the satisfaction of peeling the sheet? 😂😂
It's because the plastic was stripping...;)
song name?
The music while peeling the acrylic caught me off-guard omg
The "Flachspüler" is German for "flat flusher", I haven't really seen one, even though I am from Germany. We don't use them anymore really.
I’m also from Germany and my parents have one till this day.
@@akzelander I have Dutch friends who tell me that they are quite popular in the Netherlands. Some have even installed them here in their French houses.
My dad imported one from Europe when he built our house!
When he showed us different types of seating toilets I could guess he was trying to hold laughter 😂😂😂😂
I'd love to see a demonstration on primatic cylinders and seeing how they work, where it uses a pocket of air to seperate a primary flow of a liquid from a secondary liquid. I'd assume it would be difficult to show case though
Design note- you may want to use less right angles on your drains, both for this and for the 2d Greedy Cup. Love your stuff.
Please tell me you just censored "shit shelf" because I can't live without the alliteration.
'Turd on a tray'?
“Because I’ve got the whole production process down pat now” well that just earned a like
7:41 in other words, you’ve simplified it even further into a 1-dimensional heron’s fountain.
It can't be one dimensional as that is not possible in a three dimensional universe. Plus, if it was one dimensional there would no movement.
@@protoborg are you maybe confusing 1-D space for 0-D Space?
0-D: just a point, no movement.
1-D: a line. only one “axis” of movement. Movement is still possible back and forth along that one line.
@@haqeeqee Agreed, and by @protoborg's same logic 2-D space is not possible in our universe
@@haqeeqee The fountain we are talking about is NOT along a single plain. It is based on movement across the second axis. Thus, no this is NOT one dimensional.
@@protoborg that’s technically true.
But even the 2-D fountain isn’t _really_ 2-D, it’s a simulation of a 2-D fountain.
In the same time way, the heron’s fountain he made from the pipe, _simulates_ a 1-D fountain.
Even if it isn’t actually 1-D.
what if you fill the entire system with oil and then fill the top chamber with water will it still work?
Am I the only one who realized at 8:31, that he said the gas is less dense than air?
4:29 Warn me next time, will ya? Jeez.
My stepmom thought I was watching porn again!
*Peel it slower*
US toilets scared me the first time I used one, I thought I was going to flood the place. I even took a picture of it to take back home 😅
As an American, I even question American inovation sometimes.
I've lived here my whole life, and I still find US toilets a bit dodgy. If the pipes are even just a bit slow then it multiplies the effect before the water goes down. Have been at other people's house where it filled right to the brim before emptying. /)_-
Congratulations you kind of explaind how Hydraulics work.
I'm curious. Could you replace the air with a liquid of different density, such as oil? I would imagine yes, but I'm curious to actually see whether or not it would. That would mean it's not so much "air" but rather a fluid or gas of different density.
It would be so cool if there were a large Heron's fountain sculpture somewhere where the public could play with it
People will put all sorts of crap in it. Piss, rotting eggs, milk, poison... It'd turn into a public health disaster very quickly.
@@wallabra Good point...it seems like it could be sealed away (and then, e.g., reset by an automatic pump) and still be an active participation toy.
This would probably look very interesting with two immiscible liquids of different density such as water and oil
Yes!
I’m a high school science teacher in a high-needs area in Savannah,Ga. I am so glad I’ve found your videos because this is helping me learn how to break down complex interactions into visual demonstrations. I’ve got access to a 3d printer, which helps in many ways for more revolutionary/interesting designs and general manufacturing for class project, but I lack the fabrication process which I am learning from people like you!
I appreciate your work so much
Justin Kriske