Ask Adam Savage: Was the Food Cooked with Alton Brown on MythBusters Edible?

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  • Опубликовано: 22 окт 2022
  • Was the food Alton Brown, Jamie and Adam cooked on the car in MythBusters edible? In this livestream excerpt, Adam answers questions, including this one, from Tested members Grog Vaughan and Adam Schumacher. Thank you for your questions, Grog and Adam! Join this channel to support Tested and get access to perks, like asking Adam questions:
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Комментарии • 602

  • @tested
    @tested  Год назад +19

    Thank you for your questions, Grog and Adam! Join this channel to support Tested and get access to perks, like asking Adam questions:
    ruclips.net/channel/UCiDJtJKMICpb9B1qf7qjEOAjoin
    Records of the Medieval Sword: amzn.to/3yv3wJR
    Disclaimer: Tested might earn a commission on items purchased through this link.
    Watch MythBusters on Discovery+ www.discoveryplus.com/ph/show/mythbusters-discovery-channel-ph

    • @marveld.c1420
      @marveld.c1420 Год назад +1

      Love❤ from India🇮🇳.

    • @robertillston2350
      @robertillston2350 Год назад +2

      For Medieval Armor: The Armour of English Knight, by Dr Tobias Capwell, vol 1 is out but limited editions left, vol 2 is out now, vol 3 coming out end of 2022/start 2023. It includes inscriptions by modern armourers on how pieces may have been constructed and fitted together, plus full body line drawings of full harnesses.

    • @Circle14
      @Circle14 Год назад +1

      The button would be ideal for a safety cut off switch for equipment.

    • @elcorado83
      @elcorado83 Год назад +1

      I feel like the question on the EMP switch was actually asking about features such as sound fx, lights etc so that when used it would be more of an experience-just as how the ghostbusters proton packs usually have sound fx and lights built in....

    • @Pygar2
      @Pygar2 Год назад +1

      How about a SAFE knife switch that looks Frankensteinian, but is safe low voltage, operating a 120 VAC relay or something?

  • @grogvaughan5649
    @grogvaughan5649 Год назад +252

    The reason I asked Alton Brown about the food was because at the time I was a heavy equipment operator and spent 12-16 hours a day running everything from 100 ton cranes to bulldozers and would often use the engine bay to cook my food on. I even made several stainless steel containers that fit specific places depending on the amount of heat. Glad you enjoyed the question.

    • @Rottwiler44
      @Rottwiler44 Год назад +18

      In the entertainment lighting industry, the PAR can pizza is a staple amongst us lampies.

    • @grogvaughan5649
      @grogvaughan5649 Год назад +2

      @@Rottwiler44 thanks

    • @greggv8
      @greggv8 Год назад +4

      Gordon Ramsay did a video where he cooked a whole picnic dinner for his family under the hood of a car, on the way to their picnic.

    • @grogvaughan5649
      @grogvaughan5649 Год назад

      @@greggv8 I'll have to go back and look for it. Thanks 👍 😊

    • @HalmarkCreates
      @HalmarkCreates Год назад +3

      As a glassblower we like to use our kilns! Super fast cooking😂👌🏾

  • @Tattooedfay
    @Tattooedfay Год назад +79

    As a librarian I so desperately want a through look of Adam’s maker library.

    • @LoreBeast
      @LoreBeast Год назад +4

      Same I need a full tour!

  • @tonycosta3302
    @tonycosta3302 Год назад +138

    The Ford Model T had an amazing number of bolt-on accessories, including a small oven that attached to the engine. It was precisely for what Adam described, but it couldn’t hold a modern turkey.

    • @snoopu2601
      @snoopu2601 Год назад +16

      I have a 1947 Chevy and it has over 200 add on's I don't have any of them but I have a book that shows all the extra accessories you could have ordered when buying the Car new. Some people will pay big money to have that extra add on if they are looking for it.

    • @thecloneguyz
      @thecloneguyz Год назад +2

      We cooked a FULL CHICKEN in our TINY SAILBOAT FIREPLACE
      24' Ranger boat

    • @jamesbarisitz4794
      @jamesbarisitz4794 Год назад +8

      Antique turkeys are available, but not safe for consumption. 😉

    • @thecloneguyz
      @thecloneguyz Год назад +1

      @@jamesbarisitz4794 did you know 99% of people have never eaten a fresh turkey for Thanksgiving?
      Pfffffftttbwuhahahahaha

    • @lordcantiismyname
      @lordcantiismyname Год назад +1

      @@snoopu2601 those accessory catalogs are the best time capsules to look through.

  • @Incandescentiron
    @Incandescentiron Год назад +94

    I've never seen you do any blacksmithing, but "recipes in iron" by Francis Whitaker is still talked about as one of the most important blacksmithing books out there. Francis Whitaker while being an amazing blacksmith himself established a school in Carbondale Colorado.

    • @beavismount
      @beavismount Год назад +8

      "The Forging Handbook" was also a good read, even though it is more of a textbook for a factory manager than a maker's manual. How different forges and furnaces work, chemistry in the atmosphere of a furnace, rules for supporting and upsetting work, and even cost engineering were all interesting.

  • @Radm0bile
    @Radm0bile Год назад +20

    I am particularly fond of the Ashley Book of Knots. Full of more than I could ever hope to learn about knots, splicing, weaving, etc.

    • @allwaysareup
      @allwaysareup Год назад +2

      Came here for this. Glad you beat me to it.
      There's just the right amount of madness to that book. I had more written here, but I'll leave it was that.

  • @tench745
    @tench745 Год назад +96

    For the EMP button, it would be easy enough to add sound to add that extra level of immersion. If you were to integrate it into the shop, it should only turn the lights off, not on.

    • @NickK1291
      @NickK1291 Год назад +12

      I was gonna suggest the button is only good for tripping all the breakers in the shop, but I guess turning off all the lights would be fine too.

    • @billdecat855
      @billdecat855 Год назад +24

      I agree that it should only cut power. I suggested to use it as an E-stop for the big tools.

    • @tench745
      @tench745 Год назад +4

      @@billdecat855 I had that thought too , but it's hard to just hit it in an emergency.

    • @johnderoy916
      @johnderoy916 Год назад +9

      It needs to be made into a "...portable enticement snare', without the chloroform of course, with a label that says "do not touch", and then when someone cannot help but activate it the lights in that room go out and a klaxon starts to sound.

    • @steveschritz1823
      @steveschritz1823 Год назад +1

      This, plus a sound box with some shutting down sounds. And use it to entertain yourself at the expense of anyone who hasn’t been in your shop before lol

  • @Crime_Meat
    @Crime_Meat Год назад +23

    It's super cool to see you have Oakeshott's book. You should come visit Minneapolis sometime and see those swords in person. You wouldn't think his collection would be in Minnesota, but it sure is. The owner of Arms and Armor in Minneapolis was friends with Ewart Oakeshott. The swords are now held in trust by the Oakeshott Institute in Minneapolis. They are super rad and bring swords out to local sword fighting events and classrooms and let people hold the swords, with special gloves of course. They're also experienced crafters, historians, and fencers.

    • @Khronogi
      @Khronogi Год назад

      Thanks for the recommendation.

  • @thethoughtemporium
    @thethoughtemporium Год назад +4

    "Building scientific apparatus". Maybe the most useful reference manual I've ever seen.

    • @Brandon-zo9ly
      @Brandon-zo9ly Год назад

      i have this book! I think on a recommendation from your channel. I recently picked up a book called "Laboratory Apparatus and Reagents" from Arthur H Thomas Company. It has lots of great drawings of apparatus and has helped me figure out the names of a few things, and discover some new ones.

  • @bryannorris8049
    @bryannorris8049 Год назад +13

    Based on the comment Adam made in an earlier video about treadle tools, he might be interested in the Foxfire Series for collection of older making documentation. I inherited one of my grandfather's, but I think my father has the full set. It is a collection of articles on Appalachian life including many preindustrial household making activities. The volume I have has an article on furniture making.

    • @DannyBeans
      @DannyBeans Год назад +2

      Seconded. I inherited the first four volumes from my grandma, and they're great. Especially impressive because it's all compiled and written by highschoolers. (And the magazine is still running!)

  • @adamberry8182
    @adamberry8182 Год назад +5

    A maker book that I found really interesting was "Structural Packaging: Design your own Boxes and 3D Forms" by Paul Jackson. Great reference for designing strong and beautiful boxes and the 2D templates to make them.

  • @theothercasper
    @theothercasper Год назад +11

    “The Anatomy of Nelson's Ships” by C. Nepean Longridge. Back in the 90s I was really into Patrick O’Brian’s Aubrey/Maturin series and started buying related biographies and histories. Written for model makers, “Anatomy” is an incredible reference on how 18th Century warships were made and how to reproduce them at a much smaller scale.

  • @bullclan
    @bullclan Год назад +8

    Hidden doors are cool. My dad built one in the house I grew up in. The face of friends/guests was priceless as you appeared through the hidden door of the wall of books that they had obviously spent time looking at.

  • @PotentiallyAndy
    @PotentiallyAndy Год назад +30

    Mine favorite maker book is one of the first I ever bought. It’s the “Handbook of Model Rocketry” by G. Harry Stine.
    It took me from seeing a model rocket fly one time and wanting to have a go myself, to fully understanding the science of rocketry in all scales. The author was quick to point out that this is a small rocket your making, not a toy rocket. It’s the real thing.
    It answered many questions I didn’t know I needed to know… for example, why does a weather vane point into the wind and now with the wind. Excellent beginner to expert book and very well written.

    • @Bigrignohio
      @Bigrignohio Год назад +2

      Oh man, memories of my childhood there.

    • @popguy2815
      @popguy2815 Год назад +2

      Knew Stine, such a wonderful person to talk to. Read any and anything by him.

    • @PotentiallyAndy
      @PotentiallyAndy Год назад

      @@popguy2815 oh that’s really cool :)
      I can imagine he would be great to talk to

  • @soulbound11
    @soulbound11 Год назад +20

    I would love to see you build a big Frankenstein electric switch. I am intrigued by how you would make it safe and usable in your makers space.

    • @JanTuts
      @JanTuts Год назад +6

      You could make the big visible throw switch close a low voltage DC circuit, which then activates a mains power AC circuit via a relay. That way, the exposed contacts of the switch always remain generally safe to touch.
      If you don't like the idea of an exposed and active circuit (which could also accidentally be closed by anything conductive, not just the throw arm) you could instead embed a magnet in the throw arm, and hide a reed switch or Hall effect sensor in the switch body, and activate the relay that way.

    • @moshrom
      @moshrom Год назад +1

      Place a normal AC pushbutton switch in one of the the gaps in the on position that is pushed by the handle. Colour matched it won't be visible. Or a switch with a lever that extends into one of the hinges.

    • @donovangallagher962
      @donovangallagher962 Год назад

      I just wanna see it cuz it’s goofy as hell😂

  • @rollovaughan
    @rollovaughan Год назад +17

    When I worked for Michael Whitely the prop maker in London he had a tonne of National Geographic covering years and years. There were photos of almost everything on the planet in at least one of the copies. Might have taken a while but I’d always find something for reference there.

  • @TransTess
    @TransTess Год назад +52

    I like the idea that you and Alton just have very different ideas of what is "Edible" :P

  • @kevinvodka9808
    @kevinvodka9808 Год назад +6

    You asked about a tome we own for making. I was a Boy Scout and for most of my childhood a friend’s copy of “The Ashley Book of Knots” was the end-all be-all of books for a Boy Scout. Could i have made it to Eagle without it, sure, but having more knowledge was great.

  • @elizabethw.6154
    @elizabethw.6154 Год назад +18

    I would absolutely *love* 😘 an Adam Savage Maker's Library video!!! I need a new list of books 📚 to hunt down for Christmas and my birthday for myself. 😆

    • @Brandon-zo9ly
      @Brandon-zo9ly Год назад

      yeah unfortunately like The Backstage Handbook they'd all become suddenly hard to find.

  • @fwkb2
    @fwkb2 Год назад +4

    The Museum of London has a great series on medieval artefacts. My two favorites are "Knives and Scabbards" and "Medieval Dress Accessories". They are mostly catalogs of finds from around London but also have some fantastic commentary about trends, methods, etc., from curators and researchers. Everything has measurements and materials and where they were found and estimated dates, with methodology for how they determine those things.

  • @nicholewarren4229
    @nicholewarren4229 Год назад +4

    The "patterns of fashion" series (started and largely written by janet arnold) is an astonishingly detailed resource for historically-informed costumes!!!! There are 5 in the series (i believe...they may already have announced 6?) but they're all HIDEOUSLY expensive and several are hard to find

  • @rwms71
    @rwms71 Год назад +3

    I did a BA hons (in the UK) in faux finishing, so the reference book I got at the time was “The Art of Faux” a lot of the techniques, tools and materials used would be transferable to distressing and ageing in your makes. Who would have thought stale beer would be good binder for pigments…

  • @jasprops
    @jasprops Год назад +8

    I am a theatre prop master with 30+ years in the business. My list of "maker books" is as long as my arm, but I was thinking about a few of the more obscure ones: The Wood Book by Hough, Roemyn Beck (a book with hundreds of pictures of different types of wood), Figure Making Can Be Fun?!?: A complete guide to making a professional ventriloquist figure. by Michael Brose (This is a great intro to a lot of concepts like simple hand operated automations and casting,) Decorative Draperies & Upholstery by Thorne & Frohne (a hard book to find in good shape and not a lot of $$$, but a great book for research.)

  • @wayn3w
    @wayn3w Год назад +5

    HENLEY'S FORMULAS, RECIPES AND PROCESSES -- this and the FOXFIRE volumes were books I frequently borrowed from my local library when growing up. Very much "maker" books. Also loved Forrest Mimms' books he wrote for Radio Shack, too.

    • @dwall0
      @dwall0 Год назад

      I second the recommendation for "The Engineer's Notebook" by Mimms (and all the mini-notebooks). I had lots of fun breadboarding those circuits as a kid.

    • @RowanHawkins
      @RowanHawkins Год назад

      @@dwall0 the mini notbooks are just the chapters of the big book separated out. Of course I didn't realize that until I got it after I had all of the minis.

  • @michaelsteinbach
    @michaelsteinbach Год назад +4

    I would wire the EMP button to kill the shop lights (only for like 5 seconds). Use an OMRON A2W wireless/batteryless switch and receiver (or similar kinetic powered switch) so that when you have guests, you can show off the button and even hand it to them and when they press the seemingly inert switch, it kills all the lights.

  • @Zjefke86
    @Zjefke86 Год назад +8

    I highly suggest "The Ashley Book of Knots" from 1944. That's to this day THE reference book for everything rope related.

    • @iandeare1
      @iandeare1 Год назад +1

      LOL I just did, before reading the comments 😉 as have two, or three, others 🤣

    • @Zjefke86
      @Zjefke86 Год назад +1

      @@iandeare1 Looking at your suggestions it seems like we have a little more in common. I build guitars.

    • @iandeare1
      @iandeare1 Год назад +1

      @@Zjefke86: Qualified as an Orchestral String, and Brass Musical Instrument Technician, Edinburgh, over 35 years ago...

  • @phillipheslin8329
    @phillipheslin8329 Год назад +8

    As someone who once lived in an old house with glass fuses and a knife switch for the mains power supply reaching for that switch in the dark when you've dropped and broken your flashlight is terrifying.

    • @campkohler9131
      @campkohler9131 Год назад +2

      My grandfather's farmhouse five miles outside Nacogdoches TX was electrified by the ERA in the 30's. The entire house was fed through a small knife switch and two glass Edison-based plug fuses. When a thunderstorm neared, they would open the switch to prevent lightning damage. Of course when lightning wants in, a tiny 2" gap is not going to do a thing to save you. In the end, the place was not done in by fire, but the inevitable economic pressure of expanding residential suburbia.

  • @joslobo5944
    @joslobo5944 Год назад +2

    Favorite maker book is Swedish Carving Techniques by Wille Sundqvist. A fantastic reference for anything related to carving/whittling (especially whittling spoons). Goes over common tools of the trade, tool maintenance (especially sharpening), and various techniques one can use when whittling a variety of objects. A book that inspired many others.

  • @L0ngfang
    @L0ngfang Год назад +3

    I wouldn't be surprised if you already have a copy but the first thing that comes to my mind for old maker's books would be the "Mechanick Exercises: Or The Doctrine Of Handy-Works" written by Jospeh Moxon in the 1680s. It's mostly on woodworking and carpentry iirc but there's also a section on blacksmithing.

  • @FRXable
    @FRXable Год назад +11

    My favorite makers book is "On divers arts" written by Theophilus around 1120AD. Not just as a historical resource, but the way it's written, it makes it a very enjoyable read on it's own. Particularly the chapter dedicated at describing in full detail the horrors you will face if you want to be a bronze caster is fantastic (and very recognizable;)). Also, on one hand it's written as clear and practical instructions that you can understand as a maker, there are parts where he goes off in ludicrous mythical directions, where I have suspicion that the Theophilus is just having a laugh.

    • @fwkb2
      @fwkb2 Год назад

      Quite a decoding process to that one! Kinda needs a reference book to understand the reference book ;) But so interesting.

    • @danmiller3348
      @danmiller3348 Год назад

      People like this often wrote things from sources that were not firm. Herodotus in one chapter concludes a long section with something like "but I don't believe it"

  • @starhawke380
    @starhawke380 Год назад +3

    ebay and amazon must LOVE it when you do episodes like this...
    "Hey, we just had a major run on 'maker' books."
    "Yeah, Adam Savage did an episode on books..."

    • @tymmezinni
      @tymmezinni Год назад

      I've seen multiple tools mentioned here get a cost spike on Amazon shortly afterwards. Similar with sites like America's Test Kitchen and other big channels making recommendations/etc.

    • @starhawke380
      @starhawke380 Год назад

      @@tymmezinni Every time someone does a video featuring a tool from Harbor freight, that tool disappears from their stock for a several weeks. hard to hold it against Adam though... All the other guys, sure! But not Adam.

  • @pingu99991
    @pingu99991 Год назад

    My favourite maker book is the exercise book my great great grandfather used when learning how to become a rigger for fighter planes in the first world war. Such lovely diagrams and details into the world of a maker from that period of time. I was fortunate enough to be able visit his collection of diaries in the reading room at the RAF museum in London to take measurements, reference images, and have all his diaries and this exercise book scanned so that I could create a set of replica books to distribute amongst my family. One of my most satisfying projects to date!

  • @Arkferret
    @Arkferret Год назад +3

    you could always build a Matrix themed desk lamp an have the EMP switch to turn it on an off

  • @peteroneill3993
    @peteroneill3993 Год назад

    love the channel , i love hard work I could watch it all day ! .all the best to you and yours from Liverpool

  • @Scoots1994
    @Scoots1994 Год назад +2

    Laura Kampf made a power switch for her shop that turned power on when she hung her keys from a hook y the door, and turned everything off when she took her keys. I suspect she has a 2nd set of keys if she ever needs to use the keys and have the shop powered up at the same time.

  • @LoftyPursuits
    @LoftyPursuits Год назад

    John Louis Feirer
    Cabinetmaking and Millwork, Fifth Edition
    5th Edition
    Clearly the best book on woodworking tools. It will show you ways to use major power tools in ways you never thought.

  • @ernestvenn8291
    @ernestvenn8291 Год назад +3

    my favorite book is " The Methods of Glass-blowing and of Working Silica in the Oxy-gas flame"

  • @belg4mit
    @belg4mit Год назад +3

    It might not be something you' need often, but a CRC (Chemical Rubber Company) Handbook is a beautiful reference. Chemical properties and compatibilities, mathematical formulae, etc. And for a more fanciful interpretation of the question, consider "How to Invent Everything" by Ryan North.

  • @danawheeler6517
    @danawheeler6517 Год назад +1

    The first book that came to mind was The Amateur Scientist (C L Strong) As a teenager in the 60’s the Amateur Scientist was where I started each Scientific American issue. I loved that it covered so many different areas that I interested me. When I discovered there was whole book collecting these projects I checked it out from the library so many times. I’m sure you know this one but I had to share.

  • @ShadowDragon8685
    @ShadowDragon8685 Год назад +1

    Listening to the library thing makes me think of something you could do if you wanted the "fake door with books" aesthetic, but didn't have enough space to hide a secret room:
    Make the secret door basically hinge out and open all the way, such that you shut the front face of the bookshelf onto the front face of the bookshelf next to it (and vice-versa). On the inside is another bookshelf; this gets you extra book-storage space in a relatively compact place, and it has the "Oh yeah! That's great!" of a hidden doorway, only it's a hidden bookshelf behind another bookshelf. Possibly you could even make it so that both shelves hinge out onto the other in that manner.

  • @dustinhollis
    @dustinhollis Год назад +1

    Adam, I would absolutely love to see you do a vid where you bring out and briefly review your favorite Maker books, plus a list of any others on a page on Tested. I am always on the hunt for good books.

  • @richardwilloughby1325
    @richardwilloughby1325 Год назад +1

    There is a book that was published by locomotive engineers that detailed how they cooked on the trains. The original was for steam engines. A later version was for diesel electrics. Had instructions of where in the engine compartment to put it and for how long based on the throttle setting (notch # I believe is the term)

  • @peta7032
    @peta7032 Год назад +6

    My favourite and most useful book is "Fabric for Fashion: The Swatch Book" by Amanda Johnston and Clive Hallett. It's full of real fabric swatch samples.

    • @elizabethw.6154
      @elizabethw.6154 Год назад +1

      I have this book! It's so helpful for beginners to know and touch a bunch of fabrics.

  • @GeoffreyToday
    @GeoffreyToday Год назад +1

    I'm not sure if this technically counts as a "maker tome" but here goes: How to Draw Comics the Marvel Way by John Buscema and Stan Lee.
    I know there are literally millions of books that teach drawing, and hundreds of thousands of them are almost certainly held in higher esteem, but this was the book that provided one of my first "Eureka!" moments as a young artist.
    It was written in language that was easy to understand and also energizing and motivational for the reader (at least I found it so). I practiced the lessons in it constantly, and for some time I was frustrated, because even so, my results weren't what I was hoping for. But then when I was 17, our art class had a live model for the very first time. The moment my brain applied all those lessons to a live model standing in front of me, it was like all the tumblers in the lock that was preventing my progress suddenly aligned. Everything suddenly "clicked".
    I still give that book out as a gift whenever I meet a young artist at the beginning of their journey. I've easily bought over a dozen copies of that book in my lifetime, gifting them to nieces, nephews, and friends' kids.

  • @thedoctor4269
    @thedoctor4269 Год назад

    To answer Adam's question, one of my go-to reference books as a maker is The Cosplayer's Essential Guide: Volume One: The Monster Maroon. It's a reference guide for making a replica of the maroon uniform worn in Star Trek II thru Star Trek VII. While it's not written by a sewist so the sewing instructions aren't perfect, it does offer an incomparable source of the designer-intended and community-accepted measurements for all the details of the uniform along with examples of the customizability of division colours and other insignia.

  • @zrob8228
    @zrob8228 Год назад +8

    I'd love to see a secret door build!

  • @nanacondia
    @nanacondia Год назад

    I remember enjoying "The Nature of Design" and "The Nature and Art of Workmanship" from David Pye. Also unrelated to making, but I would recommend "Rimowa: An archive since 1898", I've never seen the book, but while working with them they sent all the archival images for reference. Some of those suitcases have been in a plane crash and never been open since recovery (so I've been told). That weathering really pops in those beautiful archival pictures, good inspiration for when you need to design an object that would gladly show its age.

  • @jaydee5156
    @jaydee5156 Год назад

    My grandparents were in an Airstream travel club. My grandfather once baked beef roast in the engine compartment of his GMC pickup during one of their trips. I didn't have the opportunity to taste for myself, but they were pretty impressed.

  • @Kinkajou1015
    @Kinkajou1015 Год назад

    As for a maker book, dunno if you would count it but one of my most treasured possessions is a Popular Mechanics Do-it-yourself Encyclopedia. It's like 20 volumes and honestly I've always treasured the one with instructions on how to build a Pool Table. I will never have the space, skill, or tools to build one, but I still treasure those directions.
    As for the EMP button, maybe build a companion electromagnetic plate with a hovering widget and wire up the button so when you press it the plate loses power and the widget drops.

  • @chrisjaentsch7162
    @chrisjaentsch7162 Год назад +1

    I would love a video of your top ten or 20 favorite reference books/tombs. I remember another video you did about a stage hands technical book or something to that nature. Would be great to have one video with a listing of them all.

  • @Telamon8
    @Telamon8 Год назад

    While not maker-related, my favourite book for semi-obscure knowledge is my grandpa's old binder full of all of his notes and the manuals he kept from when he was an electrical engineer for the US Army. My favourite oddity inside it is the service manual for a Motorola television.

  • @brianspenst1374
    @brianspenst1374 Год назад

    I know that I am a few days late to the party. My favorite maker book is just call Wood Carving. Printed by Sunset publishing back in the 1950s and reprinted into the 1970s. I have my grandfather's copy and a backup I found somewhere. It has some of the clearest images for teaching basic chip carving and whittling. It also has a great list of woods that gives a description of the grain structure and possible uses for woodworkers. It has been immensely helpful in my decades of creating in wood.

  • @zutrong
    @zutrong Год назад +2

    EMP button could make all the ceiling lights flashing

  • @tobermory-womble
    @tobermory-womble Год назад +1

    The maker book that got me into engineering was "Boomerangs - making and throwing them" by Herb A Smith. I must have bought a copy around 1978. It was privately published, but Herb's widow allowed a scan to be uploaded and you can download a free copy from the flight-toys website.
    About 10 years ago I wrote my own maker book about paper hot air balloons. The publisher loved it, but sales for maker books were really low! It was the best gig I ever had though. I work in engineering design, but I never get quite as much of a kick out of designing a new microscope widget as I did writing about tissue paper balloons!
    Clive Catterall

  • @wesleyrussell8386
    @wesleyrussell8386 Год назад +1

    I mean, not quite a maker book, but Brian Froud's artbooks are beautiful and fascinating. Faeries, Trolls, Goblins of Labyrinth

  • @anthonysharp9136
    @anthonysharp9136 Год назад

    My fave maker books are quite specific: The Rocket Mass Heater Builder's Guide by Erica and Ernie Wisner, and Earthbag Building by Kaki Hunter and Donald Kiffmeyer.

  • @JacksonSubNScaleModelRailroad
    @JacksonSubNScaleModelRailroad 2 месяца назад

    I am a model railroader. The book that I considered to be the Bible on my railroad is called "Track Planning for Realistic Operation" by John H Armstrong and published by Kalmbach. It has taught me so much on how to build a railroad to emulate realistic running. I know it is nothing in your realm of making, but it is something that I have found to be of great value to me.

  • @DETHMOKIL
    @DETHMOKIL Год назад

    The crossbow by Sir Payne-Gallwey (1903)
    It's the classic victorian source for the construction of medevial crossbows. His sources for details have that wonderfully vague gentlemanly sense of "oh I found it myself". He includes super useful blue prints including the Chinese repeating Crossbow that I'm sure was referenced on Mythbusters. Great book, super practical.

  • @fwkb2
    @fwkb2 Год назад

    Tim McCreight's The Complete Metalsmith. Jewelry oriented but useful for so many things. There is a "how to" element to it, but there are tons of useful charts and lists. Traditional and modern symbological meanings of different stones, phase temperatures of many alloys, alternatives for expensive tools (e.g. how to de-gas molds without a vacuum system), lists of techniques with basic explanations, so much good stuff packed into a super practical spiral bound book meant for the workbench rather than the bookshelf. He also wrote Practical Casting, also excellent, mostly about small scale (jewelry, etc) metal casting, but other materials as well. He was a jewelry teacher and a lot of the info is perfect for a student or hobby level practitioner who can't go out and invest in industrial scale jewelry equipment right away.

  • @peterw8400
    @peterw8400 Год назад +1

    Dunno how much they can be considered 'maker' books by current definitions, but in the woodworking mold: "Ingenious Mechanicks" by Christopher Schwarz. It's a super cool retrospective of old work holding methods for woodworking. The second is perhaps one of the oldest sets of 'maker' books: L’Art du Menuisier (The Art of the Carpenter) by Andre Roubo.

  • @maximillianzorn6085
    @maximillianzorn6085 Год назад +2

    Sounds like you need to increase your maker library by making a door with a bookshelf on it.

  • @Willys1961_aka_Khyri
    @Willys1961_aka_Khyri Год назад

    As a model railroader, Track Planning for Realistic Operation by John Armstrong is my primary go to reference.
    I'm on my third copy of the book because I use it so much I've worn it out twice.

  • @Amanda-xo5tl
    @Amanda-xo5tl Год назад

    I do a fair bit of cooking and some home food preservation, and a lot of the books I wind up being interested in are quite old, the modern translations of the De Re Coquinaria from sometimes in the 5th century AD, The Practice of Cookery by Mrs. Frazier from 1791, really any of Amelia Simmons works, The Forme of Cury from 1390, and really anything I can find about pre industrial food preservation as often these same books had recipes for things like soaps, candles, cleaning substances, or instructions on how to maintain or clean certain things. The Modern Housewife from 1849 is a more recent example of this, but there are so many others.
    I've seen a fair few of these books referenced even by historical cookery youtubers, which is always quite exciting.

  • @JonasHamill
    @JonasHamill Год назад +1

    What beautiful timing. I was just thinking yesterday I would like a massive knife switch, but had no idea what it was called.

  • @washinthewind
    @washinthewind Год назад +11

    I can't imagine that you don't already own them, because I know you like cooking, but Harold McGee's "On Food and Cooking" is spectacular and "The Flavor Bible" (authors names escape me) is indispensible for coming up with fun food flavor combinations and general understanding of how flavor pairings work.

    • @13nillo
      @13nillo Год назад

      The Flavor Bible is fantastic

  • @iandeare1
    @iandeare1 Год назад

    A bit specific to my trade:
    Violin-making, as it was and is : being a historical, theoretical, and practical treatise on the science and art of violin-making, for the use of violin makers and players, amateur and professional / by Ed. Heron-Allen. Published 1884 (Not always appreciated by the critics, but when I was a student, it was about the nearest thing to a practical guide)
    I also highly recommend a volume you may well posses:
    The Ashley Book of Knots is an encyclopedia of knots written and illustrated by the American sailor and artist Clifford W. Ashley. Published 1944

  • @iamagreatgoldengod
    @iamagreatgoldengod Год назад

    For the EMP button: Wire a remote switch into the main overhead lights and wire the remote inside the EMP button housing. That way the switch would appear to serve its desired function but leave all the auxiliary lighting alone. The switches are like $30 on Amazon.

  • @sleepib
    @sleepib Год назад +2

    I do want to make a knife switch for my lights.
    Thinking about what my requirements would be:
    It must be an actual knife switch, not just a fancy handle for a normal plastic light switch.
    Has to look dangerous without actually being dangerous.
    I think I'd hide a relay and low voltage DC power supply behind the knife switch's base plate, so the electrical contact of the knife switch actually does something. Maybe add some capacitors so that it sparks when you close the contacts.

  • @denniss1830
    @denniss1830 Год назад +1

    You could turn the wall in front of the toilet into a bookcase and the toilet door itself into a secret door. Making a secret door between the work space and the sitting space where the cabinets with the collections are wouldnt work that well because you would keep it open most of the time so it defeats the point of the secret door.

  • @larrystuder8543
    @larrystuder8543 Год назад

    Most useful reference I have even seen is called The Handbook of Ornament, by a guy named Hoffman, I think. It's Victorian, illustrated in Woodcuts. Dover has a reprint. It has just about every design motif, achitectural feature, or period hand prop anybody could ever want. Have you ever done a video on your maker's library? We'd love to see one...

  • @mikesamson5339
    @mikesamson5339 Год назад

    For reference manuals as a woodworker I have to say Robert W. Langs Shop Drawings for Craftsman Furniture (complete set of 4 books) as well as Popular Woodworking Magazine from the early 2000’s up until 2010 we’re really good.

  • @savage1764
    @savage1764 Год назад +1

    Bittersweet Country by Ellen Gray Massey and her students is one of my favorites. Its a excellent record of making in the early 19th century Ozarks.
    "This is a large collection of personal recollections, stories, and records of how people in the Ozarks lived several generations ago. These are first hand recollections, most of the people recorded in this work are no longer with us. This is a story of wisdom, how-to-do-it on nothing and more."

  • @jamesmatthew01
    @jamesmatthew01 Год назад +1

    I always find diving into the Makers Mark ...leads me into amazing feelings and thoughts. Taking in the Makers Mark at night not only helps my creativity but also helps me sleep.

  • @phoenixsoren
    @phoenixsoren Год назад

    Sir Ralph Payne-Gallwey's "The Crossbow" is a great book about the construction and medieval history of crossbows and siege engines

  • @double-h-farms
    @double-h-farms 19 дней назад

    A couple of my favorite books are about the ford tractors and farming attachments from the 40's-60's, amazing enginuaity and mechanical engineering

  • @greggv8
    @greggv8 Год назад

    "The Prop Builder's Molding & Casting Handbook" by Thurston James. Published in 1989, much of the content covers 'old school' methods and materials but all of it still works. What's "missing" is of course information on newer materials that have replaced some of what's covered in the book.
    TV and movie productions don't use candy or sugar glass anymore because it has to be heated, takes time to cool, can't be allowed to get wet, can attract ants, and despite being considered "safe" can still break with edges sharp enough to cut. The reusability aspect (sweep it up and remelt) is outweighed by the convenience of urethane resins formulated to break. There are resins that easily break into small chunks with dull edges, yet are waterproof and strong enough to withstand handling. There are also resins that stay soft like rubber yet can easily be crumbled to look like shattered tempered glass or crushed ice, and completely safe for actors to walk on barefoot or roll around on. A couple of products are from Smooth-On, Smash Plastic and Rubber Glass. Smash Plastic also has an advantage over candy glass in that it's possible to cast it into sheets and objects as smooth and clear as real glass so that it looks exactly like glass, especially with just a tiny bit of green dye.

  • @marktodd6187
    @marktodd6187 Год назад +2

    One of the maker books that started me on my journey as a kid was the Star Trek TMP Make your own costume book I checked out from my local library in first grade. As a cosplayer I go for screen accuracy these days, but I still couldn't resist tracking down a copy of that book!

    • @KougajiCalling
      @KougajiCalling Год назад +1

      I had that one! That's what started me on costumes too!

    • @marktodd6187
      @marktodd6187 Год назад

      @@KougajiCalling Its so good. I still have the delta badge I made following the instructions in that thing. I remember hoping they'd put one our for Wrath of Khan when I was kid.

  • @cleverusername9369
    @cleverusername9369 Год назад

    My favorite "maker" book, if you can call it that, it's "Ship Models from Kits: Basic and Advanced Techniques for Small Scales" by David Griffith. If that's your lane like it is mine, model ships, it's invaluable as a reference. Well written, densely packed with tips and tricks, tons of photographs, 10/10 would recommend.

  • @Nameless2131
    @Nameless2131 Год назад +2

    I know its a long shot, but it would be spectacular if we could get a list of Adam's Maker Library in his Adam Savage's Tested Amazon Profile. I'd spend days just going through the list and looking for books that would make my eyes light up with ideas.

  • @DaHaiZhu
    @DaHaiZhu Год назад +1

    The EMP button needs to function as intended: to immediately CUT the power to a device or machine. So having it as an emergency cut-off switch to the lathe, table saw, etc. might be a good use for it.

  • @bryanmoregunn8098
    @bryanmoregunn8098 Год назад +4

    My favorite maker book is starfleet technical manual by Franz Joseph. It is a must have if you want to make props and costumes from the original star trek series

    • @ericdietz1795
      @ericdietz1795 Год назад

      Ah! I'm afraid I steal someone's thunder here, but I follow his daughter Karen Schnaubelt, who's a big name costumer. I wouldn't bet against Adam having met her at some point.

  • @itirado68
    @itirado68 Год назад

    Could you please make a video about the all the books mentioned in this video? Thank you for your work.

  • @crispincain9654
    @crispincain9654 Год назад

    40 years ago I was hitchhiking the West Coast when I was picked up by a older man in an older Chevy pick up truck with a camper. Driving from Santa Rafael to Eugene, he asked if I was staying for dinner! Somewhere north of Garberville, maybe at Weott, he stopped. Under his hood he had a pressure cooker sitting in a bracket attached to the engine! Perfect beef stew, piping hot!

  • @chrislewis6178
    @chrislewis6178 Год назад

    A couple of book suggestions you may not already have for guitar building. First, Electric Guitar & Bass Making & Marketing by Leo Lospennato, and pretty much every book by Dan Erlewine. Dan also has a number of great video tutorials.

  • @Wolf-Odonnell
    @Wolf-Odonnell Год назад

    It's less of a true "Makers book" but the book I have that has helped me think outside the box is "How Things Work in Your Home (and what to do when they don't)" circa 1977 from TIME Life books. Between learning how home stuff works and the inner workings of more advanced items like washers \ dryers it's helped me think abstractly through cosplay problems

  • @deetgeluid
    @deetgeluid Год назад

    Leo Beranek, he wrote a brilliant book about the acoustics of concerthalls. Being a soundengineer that book still gets me.

  • @jollypixie7889
    @jollypixie7889 Год назад

    Too many years ago, I worked with LASER cutting machines which requried extractor fans. The safety power switch for the extractor system was very similar to your EMP switch, just mounted to the wall and way less cool.

  • @zerooverzero
    @zerooverzero Год назад

    I always like the first tractor beam lever Kenobi flips in A New Hope. Looked like it had some friction to it.

  • @WTDoorley
    @WTDoorley Год назад +1

    The book on paper airplanes you mention is The Great Paper Airplane Book. It was published by no less than Scientific American magazine based on the results of their paper airplane contest. I don't remember the exact year it came out. I used to have a copy, but whether I lost it in one of many moves since then or it's languishing in a box in the attic. I should go have a look.

  • @highoctanehotrod
    @highoctanehotrod Год назад +4

    To me you and Alton are kindred spirits and I swear I was just thinking this a few days ago. Both makers..just different things made but with a very similar approach!
    Uncanny you would post a video referencing Alton so soon after my recent thoughts about y’all 😂.

  • @hohnigans
    @hohnigans Год назад

    I also share an affinity for old books, usually revolving around old textbooks and technical books as I have found them to be more thorough in detail. If you're looking for old "tomes" in making, I would propose "Ingenious Mechanisms for Designers and Inventors". I have Vol I & II from first edition, third printing ~1935, currently displayed on my bookshelf.

  • @ML-bx9sw
    @ML-bx9sw Год назад

    When I was 12 I discovered a well-worn copy of The American Boy's Handy Book by Daniel Carter Beard. It was first published in 1882 and was full of amazing illustrations and schematics and instruction on a myriad of subjects like making fishing poles, Tom Sawyer rafts, telescopes, a perfect snowball and snow fort, and even homemade fireworks!
    I acquired a reprint in the 1990s, and still occasionally use it. Highly recommend it.

  • @spamalot2099
    @spamalot2099 Год назад

    I've got two books that might qualify: vintage copies of The Art of Animation and How To Keep Your VW Alive.
    And also started collecting old cookbooks because they're awesome.

  • @jeffburns1092
    @jeffburns1092 Год назад

    Not necessarily a “makers” book, but a book that was my dad’s, then he gave it to me when I was 16 is the 1977 or 1978 “Reader’s Digest Fix-It-Yourself Manual” How to repair, clean, and maintain anything and in and around your home. It’s served me well even though it was 20 years old when I got it.

  • @CarboniteDreamer
    @CarboniteDreamer Год назад +1

    i loved the dishwasher lasagna that you folks did. it was funny but intriguing. As far as the EMP button how about making it the emergency stop button for the shop or one of the pieces of equipment.

  • @Fenchurche
    @Fenchurche Год назад

    Not sure if this is exactly what you're looking for, but when I was three or four years old, my parents bought me the Bookshelf For Boys and Girls (published more than a decade earlier) and the volume "Things to Make and Things to Do" totally shaped my childhood. It's where I learned about shadow puppets and rudimentary origami (just called "paper folding") and, with my dad's help, I built things like a rubber-band powered wood boat following instructions there. It had a section on making a telegraph device and another on making your own doll furniture. It seriously had a little of just about everything and any time I felt a bit bored, I'd pull that book out and try something new.

  • @anarchessthorson3556
    @anarchessthorson3556 Год назад

    As weird as it may seem, I'm a big fan of the Elder Scrolls and the props from there, so the physical copy I have of the Improved Emperor's Guide to Tamriel is one of my favorites to flip through for ideas

  • @DannyBeans
    @DannyBeans Год назад

    My favorite maker book is "Working Wood: A Guide for the Country Carpenter" (1977) by Mike and Nancy Bubel. It's a practical guide to design and construction using found and salvaged materials. Dunno how useful it would be to you (the focus is on tools and buildings, which suits me fine here on the farm), but it's an entertaining read in its own right.

  • @TheReal008Zulu
    @TheReal008Zulu Год назад

    How about the handle "time switch" from Back to the Future? Rig it up to be the light switch to the shop, included with it is an LED panel that shows the time and date?

  • @codyunczur7527
    @codyunczur7527 Год назад

    Brilliant idea with the maker library. Not sure if this is up your alley at all, but there are some excellent books with regards to tying fishing flies that are constantly on my desk. An old, but gold reference book is How to Tie Salmon Flies: A Treatise on the Methods of Tying the Various Kinds of Salmon Flies, by Captain JH Hale. Publish originally in the 1890s, it is a wonderful reference and guide to the materials and techniques use in constructing full dress salmon flies, with really great illustrations and plates. Of course there are a good number of other books and authors from the same era (Kelson, Blacker, Pryce-Tannatt, Francis, Tolfrey, Hardy, etc.), but Hale is my most used and referenced. Not many old copies around, but readily available online via OpenLibrary or modern reprintings.