The Greedy Cup Has Become Even More Devious

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 7 дек 2022
  • Ender-5 S1: shrsl.com/3u0px
    Ender-5 S1 Ebay link: www.ebay.com.au/itm/394407668464
    Sonic pad: shrsl.com/3u0q0
    US store: Coupon Code:12ES5, get 5S1+Sonic pad Combo $120 off, only $479
    CA store: Coupon Code:15SE5, get 5S1+Sonic pad Combo Extra Can150 off
    AU store: Coupon Code:AUS150, get 5S1+Sonic pad Combo Extra AUD150 of
    STL file for the devious Pythagoras cup: www.thingiverse.com/thing:123252
    Watch the whole video of the greedy cup emptying in a vacuum: • How To Stop The Greedy...
    Shop the Action Lab Science Gear here: theactionlab.com/
    Checkout my experiment book: amzn.to/2Wf07x1
    Twitter: / theactionlabman
    Facebook: / theactionlabofficial
    Instagram: / therealactionlab
    Snap: / 426771378288640
    Tik Tok: / theactionlabshorts
  • НаукаНаука

Комментарии • 3,2 тыс.

  • @DumbleSnore
    @DumbleSnore Год назад +21104

    If anyone else was curious why the tube in the devious cup has to go all the way around the edge before it goes back down, it's to help prevent a moderately filled cup from draining when tilted.

    • @kavanatanaya
      @kavanatanaya Год назад +391

      Thanks.

    • @JaisimhaAllalghatta
      @JaisimhaAllalghatta Год назад +76

      hmm

    • @Dawnarow
      @Dawnarow Год назад +138

      @@JaisimhaAllalghatta agreed with the Hmm, here.. xD

    • @brandonm1708
      @brandonm1708 Год назад +161

      What if you try to mix up the drink by moving it in a circle? Would that drain it?

    • @kataseiko
      @kataseiko Год назад +256

      But you can still drain it accidentally by swirling the content around like a wine connoiseur..

  • @R.J._Lewis
    @R.J._Lewis Год назад +3641

    My favorite part of the greedy cup is that it can be defeated by just putting a finger over the hole. If you start out with your finger over the hole before filling it, the air pressure keeps the wine out. If you realize too late and fill your cup too full, you just plug it. I've spilled enough wine on myself over the years that this wouldn't even phase me.

    • @nairocamilo
      @nairocamilo Год назад +141

      It's not my lowest point, but surely close

    • @koderamerikaner5147
      @koderamerikaner5147 Год назад +192

      Make the sides of the bottom lower than the exit point, thus making it incredibly uncomfortable to hold the hole closed.

    • @koderamerikaner5147
      @koderamerikaner5147 Год назад +139

      Or, split the exit into two exits. I think it'll still work, but closing 2 holes is harder than one.

    • @r0cketplumber
      @r0cketplumber Год назад +169

      @@koderamerikaner5147 Or a dozen, as long as you're 3D printing it already.

    • @itachi4634
      @itachi4634 Год назад +305

      Or just drink from the bottom

  • @WhIte0NErd
    @WhIte0NErd Год назад +1346

    I love how this guy always finds a way to involve his vacuum box in almost every video he made.

    • @shockmaker1524
      @shockmaker1524 8 месяцев назад +87

      Imagine having a vacuum box and not flex with it

    • @Alex-mv3ht
      @Alex-mv3ht 6 месяцев назад +61

      His wife said "don't buy this piece of junk, you'll never use it", so now he uses it on every video just to prove her wrong

    • @AlejAndro-zg7bz
      @AlejAndro-zg7bz 6 месяцев назад +4

      "ALMOST" vacuum box, judging by the bubbles in the blue liquid...
      That makes me to doubt about the siphon explanation

    • @TheOriginalFaxon
      @TheOriginalFaxon 5 месяцев назад +12

      @@AlejAndro-zg7bz yea you can see on the gauge though that he was at a 29.5" vacuum which is a near complete vacuum, far too low for the pressure of the box's atmosphere to be particularly relevant

  • @HeeminGaminStation
    @HeeminGaminStation Год назад +568

    I have had a syphon explained to me like 12 times by friends, parents and teachers and it only sticks for like 3 seconds... but after watching this video with helpful visuals and thoughtful explanations I can comfortably say and I'm pretty sure it's devil magic.

    • @Laeiryn
      @Laeiryn Год назад +9

      equalization of pressure. Same reason opening the door with a storm outside yanks it out of your hand.

    • @zakmartin
      @zakmartin Год назад +18

      @@Laeiryn Eh, no, that isn't the same thing at all.

    • @matthewmitchell3457
      @matthewmitchell3457 Год назад +4

      Yeah, all that talk about equalizing atmospheric pressure is so unhelpful, don't listen to that. No, the way it ACTUALLY works is way more complicated.
      Basically the gist of this video.

    • @malegria9641
      @malegria9641 8 месяцев назад

      Şaytan deceiving us

    • @alphamaccao5224
      @alphamaccao5224 4 месяца назад

      You're an idiot if you think that's an equivalent comparison. @@Laeiryn

  • @O4C209
    @O4C209 Год назад +4817

    Perhaps Pythagoras could make it like the Devious cup but put the center piece as a warning of "don't go past this point".

    • @pinkliongaming8769
      @pinkliongaming8769 Год назад +370

      I think handing some a cup then calling them greedy for using it is kinda a jerk move, so warning them what will happen is at least a little better

    • @jacobhargiss3839
      @jacobhargiss3839 Год назад +465

      @@pinkliongaming8769 its commonly understood that when pooring wine, you dont full the glass all the way. I dont think something like this was intended for cheap drinks like water.

    • @velazquezarmouries
      @velazquezarmouries Год назад +70

      Or add a fill line like in cup ramen packages

    • @trustytrest
      @trustytrest Год назад +180

      @@jacobhargiss3839 Maybe YOU don't fill the wine glass all the way, because that's a modern hoity toity idea about manners.. Throughout history, that has not been the case. Believe it or not, but people usually make cups intending for them to be used for most of its capacity, not making a gallon jug that you're meant to sip ounces out of. The only reason Pythagoras and others of his time were against "greedy wine drinking" was because they were philosophers, meant to embody wisdom and deep thinking. Which is difficult to do while absolutely plastered. This was not a widespread custom for most common people in Greece at the time, nor elsewhere

    • @jacobhargiss3839
      @jacobhargiss3839 Год назад +31

      @@trustytrest Im not saying it was the norm, but it is the norm now, hence why we dont need the thing in the middle as a warning.

  • @greatPretender79
    @greatPretender79 Год назад +16245

    If someone ever handed me a 3D printed cup, I would immediately think "this is devious"
    Thanks everyone, I could not have imagined this

    • @roneitback
      @roneitback Год назад +574

      absolute delinquent cup

    • @frojojo5717
      @frojojo5717 Год назад +356

      Make it from clay, embedding a tube inside that will burn away when firing. String or even a plastic tube might work.

    • @JaykPuten
      @JaykPuten Год назад +106

      If it was done by someone who was a good 3DP out of a material that hides layer lines well *cough* wood PLA(which you can sand and even varnish) it's possible to not know

    • @wernerviehhauser94
      @wernerviehhauser94 Год назад +97

      @@frojojo5717 I'd use a wax string, that should be easier to handle than a hollow tube. Make outside shell, apply the wax, apply inner coat, dry, burn.

    • @ssifr3331
      @ssifr3331 Год назад +56

      Just check for the hole under the cup and cover it with your finger if it exists.

  • @jaypaymemonay6582
    @jaypaymemonay6582 Год назад +192

    The new cup is pretty good but it could be a lot better. hide the hole at the bottom by instead spreading it out as a thin ring at the base of the cup, with a slight overhang to hide it from view when viewed from above, and make the glass a little taller and more narrow so that you limit the angle that you can look down into the cup with. then you really are unlikely to notice it has a hole in it

    • @CGammer5680
      @CGammer5680 8 месяцев назад +5

      Kind of like a reverse wow cup (a special type of sippy cup)

    • @salil5476
      @salil5476 4 месяца назад +1

      If you can do blender or any 3d modeling please do. Release the files.

    • @garviere
      @garviere 4 месяца назад +1

      Or it could have like a thin ridge in a ring around a slightly raised bottom that hides tiny holes underneath. So when you look in the cup you just see a flat bottom. You would still figure it out under closer inspection but it wouldn't immediately obvious when looking straight down into the cup. a bit like a more disguised version of some shower drains that appear to just have a large silver disc which you step on to open or close the drain.

  • @ninakircher2599
    @ninakircher2599 Год назад +23

    Please remember that 3D printed objects are not foodsafe

  • @thesparklingsalt
    @thesparklingsalt Год назад +2018

    I've made Pythagoras coffee mug few years ago on 3d printer. The hole was hidden under the groove near the bottom.
    Colleagues were pissed

    • @jorgevelasco2694
      @jorgevelasco2694 Год назад +379

      shit id be pissed too if all i wanted was a full cup of coffee only to have it drain onto my shoes

    • @kylanacus2407
      @kylanacus2407 Год назад +78

      😂request for a link to the print file please

    • @foxydatboyplayz1590
      @foxydatboyplayz1590 Год назад +11

      @@kylanacus2407 ben

    • @shadydaemon4178
      @shadydaemon4178 Год назад +79

      I should get that for my brother, always drinking coffee in the middle of the night when he doesn’t need it.

    • @annakaconnelly2807
      @annakaconnelly2807 Год назад +16

      christmas present for your mother in law?

  • @nameismyname6055
    @nameismyname6055 Год назад +8687

    Glad to know that Pythagoras never thought of just smaller cups

    • @Finn_the_Cat
      @Finn_the_Cat Год назад +1053

      He probably did he just wanted to punish greedy people

    • @getgle
      @getgle Год назад +912

      @@Finn_the_Cat The idea that it's somehow "greedy" to fill up your cup fully is laughable

    • @AmyOnhercomputer
      @AmyOnhercomputer Год назад +1065

      @@getgle i mean wine did used to be hella expensive. And maybe Pythagoras just knew a lot of assholes who did shit maliciously

    • @SherrifOfNottingham
      @SherrifOfNottingham Год назад +797

      @@getgle as a wine steward let me give you a little insight into even today's standards of pouring wine.
      Wine changes when exposed to air that's why wine, something that is aged for years, can still go bad. All of this is a balancing act when presenting and drinking wine, reds tend to need to be aerated so you usually pour the wine into a larger container called a carafe so it can "breathe" when poured into a wine glass specifically made for red you pour it at the largest part of the glass as the rest of the red wine glass is designed to prevent that breathing from continuing (since you let it breathe). Even in today's standards pouring past that point is a clear indicator of you being greedy, or more appropriately an alcoholic. White wine glasses are designed to let it breathe slowly over time, resulting in wider glasses, if you pour too much it will aerate too much and start going off in your cup.
      Wine glasses have been designed for hundreds of years to only be filled about halfway up, and generally speaking the quality of the wine you're drinking diminishes if you fill past that point. The "greedy" cup lets you fill well past the line you should fill a wine glass up to so it's not about making smaller cups, it's about the symbolism filling a glass high stands for. These days we don't care about fill heights, especially on white wines, since refrigeration has changed the game so wine fill level has become more about traditions than actual standards, a lot of restaurants that charge per glass of a wine will "overfill" them because the small perception of getting more makes the overpriced grape juice a sense of "value" that keeps customers coming back.
      If you go to a restaurant that will ONLY sell you wine by the bottle, you'll see them pour your wine around the "widest" part of the glass and stop most of the time... though the exact fill point is something wine sommeliers will probably argue about.

    • @SherrifOfNottingham
      @SherrifOfNottingham Год назад +240

      Keep in mind at a party where you would pour your own wine, nobody's really stopping you from getting refills, and somebody drinking 3 glasses of wine wasn't really the target of a cup like this, smaller cups would just make people hang around the carafe like it's the water cooler.

  • @SomeoneCommenting
    @SomeoneCommenting Год назад +22

    You can easily make it with normal pottery and ceramic if you embed a small piece of copper or steel tube inside, bent in the right way. Disguise the hole inside at the bottom of the container as much as possible, maybe with the glaze coloring or some fancy shape, and people will never guess.

    • @rockel83
      @rockel83 6 месяцев назад +2

      Or just using a solid wax (or something similar that has a low melting temperature) "tube", and melting the wax out afterwards.

  • @AverytheCubanAmerican
    @AverytheCubanAmerican Год назад +17

    I always kind of figured siphons worked by way of gravity and the fact that water wants to run downhill. Since the outlet of the hose, tube or whatever has to be lower than the level of the body of water you are siphoning from, that made the most sense to me. Give water a path to go downhill and that's where it will go. As far as how it can go up and over the edge of a container, I would say that has to do with momentum. In order for a siphon to work, the outlet has to be lower than the level of the water which gives it the momentum to make it up over the edge.
    This is neat! Having played with siphons since I was a kid, it is interesting to see the scientific explanations. Making the walls thin and putting the siphon in the handle of a mug would be even more elegant for this. Actually usable. Also to make it really devious, make the hole at the bottom such that it can't be plugged with a finger.

  • @r0cketplumber
    @r0cketplumber Год назад +734

    Easily done with a wax form for the channel, then mold clay around that. Dry it, bake out the wax, then fire as normal- all feasible with 500BC technology.

    • @mistrsportak9940
      @mistrsportak9940 Год назад +51

      It was used in bronze age to make small bronze statues, it's cool

    • @syriuszb8611
      @syriuszb8611 Год назад +50

      Yes. But it would also be very thick and heavy cup. You could design it with just some parts being thicker than usual, and hide it as ornaments, but I'm not sure if it would be light enough anyway, and if centre of gravity would shift noticeably.

    • @dedr4m
      @dedr4m Год назад +16

      Was gonna say something similar, one could even make bits at a time or even make the tubing in-line or the wax method you mentioned, the other would be salt for the bronze/brass and then dissolved out after... Making a glass tube and then embedding into two stacked glasses or have 3x glasses with a lip on the inner one and a channel.... plenty of ways that even the Egyptians could've done.... after all, the Egyptians didn't "need aliens" to know how to use ropes, pulleys and mix in a bit of sand with copper strips to saw granite.

    • @olmostgudinaf8100
      @olmostgudinaf8100 Год назад +3

      The channel doesn't need to go all around, it could go up and down through the handle.

    • @jaymuffinz
      @jaymuffinz Год назад +5

      It also doesn’t have to be round, it can be a flattened tunnel.

  • @OceanBagel
    @OceanBagel Год назад +811

    This cup is still manufacturable through traditional subtractive manufacturing, although probably not as one solid piece. You would need to make three separate pieces and then assemble them together, but with good enough machining, you can still make it look like it's one solid piece once it's assembled.

    • @dragoscoco2173
      @dragoscoco2173 Год назад +138

      Repost cause I am devious too: They could have made this type of complex devious cup quite easily. Make a wax bar in the shape of the channel, add clay to cover and shape the cup. Dry it. Heat it to melt the wax out of the dried clay and go forward with firing it to make it into a ceramic. Lost wax method to the max.

    • @OceanBagel
      @OceanBagel Год назад +20

      @@dragoscoco2173 Oh yeah true, I was referring to machining it though

    • @dragoscoco2173
      @dragoscoco2173 Год назад +42

      @@OceanBagel It surely can be done by machining, and it would look great too. In a way 3D printing is mentioned in the video to plug the sponsor.

    • @coryman125
      @coryman125 Год назад +29

      @@dragoscoco2173 Lost wax is smart! I was thinking make a pipe out of another material (metals are easy to work) and then embed it into a clay pot or something, but your technique would be easier

    • @phizc
      @phizc Год назад +21

      It would also not be hard to make using the original additive manufacturing method: clay.

  • @garviere
    @garviere 4 месяца назад +2

    What wasn't mentioned clearly is one of the most important contributing factors to how a syphon works which is vacuum. Gravity starts it off by pulling down on the liquid in the exit pipe but it is vacuum which draws the liquid up the entry side of the pipe. This is why to start a syphon off you have to suck on the exit end of the pipe to draw enough liquid for the gravity to get a purchase on it and start it moving.
    So the way the Pye' cup works is the overflowing liquid fills up the space between the top of the down tube and the walls of the outer tube thus sealing the out chamber, as it goes down the exit tube pulled by gravity, it starts of the syphon by creating a vacuum in the exit tube and the now connected by seal entry tube.
    Because the main bowl is higher than the end of the exit tube there is sufficient weight in the liquid going out to out weigh the smaller amount of liquid being pulled up by the vacuum enabling the cup to be fully emptied.
    If the end of exit tube was higher than the bottom of the recepticle then there would not be enough weight in the exiting liquid to overcome the gravity of the entering liquid so one would cancel the other and liquid would just sit in both tubes going nowhere.
    You can test this with two containers and flexible a tube. Fill one with liquid and place one end of the tube it (I know, basic syphoning, but just in case there are some people who have never done this) then suck on the other end of the tube (only use a drinkable liquid for this as you will probably ingest some) as soon as the liquid starts to run into your mouth hold the end of the tube lower than the glass, say off the edge of a table, into the other container, it will run freely, but as soon as you lift the end of the exit tube to near the height of the upper glass or container, the flow will slow and as you lift higher and eventually stop.
    If there is still enough liquid in the exit side of the pipe and you lower it back to the other container it will self start, if there is not enough liquid in the exit side to out weigh the liquid in the entry side it will not self start.
    Added to these factors though (gravity and vacuum) as mentioned in the video, you also have surface tension and friction which could effect how readily the syphoning process will self start depending on the size of the tube, type of liquid such as viscocity and strength of surface tension.
    Hope this helps a little.

  • @SupremeLeaderKimJong-un
    @SupremeLeaderKimJong-un Год назад +8

    It starts with gravity pulling the liquid down from the top of the bend of the siphon. Once that starts the movement, the moving liquid has a lower pressure than the stationary liquid (Bernoulli's Principle) and the higher pressure/stationary liquid moves into the lower pressure/moving liquid area. It then keeps moving and falls out the other end of the siphon. More liquid moving through the siphon keeps Bernoulli's Principle going until you run out of liquid in the cup. I'm pretty sure people made much more complex things in the past without 3D printers. What they didn't have, was a 3D printer sponsor. Thank you, comrade Action Lab, very cool. I will prank US and South officials with these

    • @JP-cu4vf
      @JP-cu4vf 6 месяцев назад

      The driver for water flow is (total) head potential, which is made up of an elevation component and a pressure component (velocity head is of second order importance). If elevation head and pressure head are expressed in the same units e.g. metres of elevation and metres of water (or feet, cm etc) , then pressure increases by depth in a stationary water body, (standard cup) but the total head remains constant since elevation decreases, so water does not flow. Put a hole in the bottom of a cup then the pressure outside the hole is zero (or at least atmospheric) and there is a head difference causing the water to flow out of the cup. In a syphon the head is lower at one end than the other, causing the water to flow in the same way as through a hole because the head gradient is maintained in the tube. A syphon only works if the tube can maintain suction, generally for water the limit of suction is about 10m although in practice (e.g. a suction pump) the limit is lower. The vessel containing air is sealed therefore suction is maintained and the syphon continues to work as the total head decreases in the direction of flow either side of the air vessel. The increased elevation head at the jet is compensated for by the negative pressure head in the air chamber. Put a hole in the air chamber and the suction pressure will be lost and the syphon will break down. So no magic and no Bernoulli's Principle required.

  • @westonding8953
    @westonding8953 Год назад +1319

    Let’s acknowledge James’s ability to Macguyver anything in a vacuum chamber! Genius explanations of the siphon effect! I did not realize it was a combination of effects!

    • @HighlanderNorth1
      @HighlanderNorth1 Год назад +12

      ❓Ok, he said that "the siphon effect occurs because of a *combination* *of* *effects* , (ie. the effect of vacuum PLUS the surface tension effect). That confuses me, because the surface tension effect on siphoning _should_ technically cease to exist when an air pocket is introduced into the system, because in order for surface tension to have any effect on siphoning, you'd need an unbroken stream of liquid..
      Introducing an air pocket in the middle of the siphoning stream is the equivalent of removing links in the middle of a continuous chain. When you pull on a chain with missing links, you won't have any effect on the back end of the chain that's been separated by the missing links. Same is true with a stream of water inside a closed siphon system that's separated by an air pocket. Once you've added an air pocket in the middle of the siphon steam, surface tension no longer has any effect on the liquid in the back half of the stream.
      Therefore, if the liquid in the back half of the stream continues to siphon, it's NOT because of any surface tension effect.

    • @jessehunter362
      @jessehunter362 Год назад +2

      surface tension applies to the two individual groups of water

    • @mennovanlavieren3885
      @mennovanlavieren3885 Год назад +4

      @@HighlanderNorth1 He never demonstrated that it works in a vacuum AND having gaps in the stream of liquid. (air pockets/vacuum pockets???) The sample with the empty bottle in between was in normal air pressure. I would be surprised if it would work with gaps in a vacuum. But maybe there is a third effect in play. Liquid helium and mercury also can escape a flask because a tiny layer of the material creeps onto the glass and forms a chemically weak bonded chain. I don't know how that works exactly and what the flow rate would be.

    • @JeppeBeier
      @JeppeBeier Год назад +3

      @@HighlanderNorth1 I think the way you should understand it is he demonstrated that surface tension can make it work in a vacuum if it is unbroken (his vacuum chamber demonstration) and atmoshperic pressure can make it work when there's no surface tension (the broken flow demonstration). This would suggest that in a normal environment all the effects work together and contribute to moving the water.

    • @alspezial2747
      @alspezial2747 Год назад +7

      Nobody found it suspicious that his vacuum contained liquid water that wasnt even boiling?

  • @robotnoir5299
    @robotnoir5299 Год назад +2496

    At the risk of stating the obvious... if you simply whack a handle on the cup, it's the perfect shape to hide the plumbing inside... which means you no longer need to have "suspiciously thick" walls on your cup. I've got a 3D printer and I've made this. Pity I cant post photos in the comments, coz you might like it. Anyway, I call it the "Pythagorean Mug".
    (While we're on the topic... that single hole in the bottom is a design-flaw, coz people quickly look under the cup, understand what is happening, and put their finger over it. What you really want is, inside the base of the cup, you split the flow into six different pipes, and have them split up and drain out from around the edges of the base, instead of one hole in the middle. This results in your victims hilariously trying to plug the leak with their fingers, but quickly running out of fingers, with the liquid spilling up their sleeves for maximum annoyment.)

    • @LockenJohny101
      @LockenJohny101 Год назад +97

      good job, the best comments usually go unnoticed

    • @AAYLV
      @AAYLV Год назад +23

      Can you share the photos?

    • @longnguyenson646
      @longnguyenson646 Год назад +28

      upload the pic somewhere and give us the links, man!

    • @bill447
      @bill447 Год назад +7

      Did you need supports when you printed it?

    • @robotnoir5299
      @robotnoir5299 Год назад +40

      @@bill447 Yep. In a big way. I'm printing with resin, so suction forces are a big problem. Alas, the design of the Pythagorean mug means it's literally impossible to eliminate ALL suction-force. All you can do is minimize it... amd provide lots of support to counter-act it.
      Basically, I was positioning my cup on it's side with the handle straight facing up (or perhaps tilted 15 degrees to either side.) (When I say "up", I mean the handle should be pointing AWAY from the printer-base-plate.) THEN I tilt the cup forwards another 20 degrees, so that the open end of the cup faces slightly more towards the printer-base-plate than the base of the cup.
      This is the optimum print angle I've found (although perhaps there's a better option that I missed.) It might be an idea to attempt printing your cup at 50% size and on a few different angles, just to see what works best for you. That's what I did initially.
      (I mentioned in a previous post that you can already find a few Pythagorean Mug designs at the thingiverse website... but for reasons unknown that comment has been censored. [facepalm] I'm still perfecting my design and haven't made it public yet, so if you don't want to wait for me, have a search on thingiverse. There's some nice examples there. And that's where I'll eventually post my design anyway.)

  • @IwantTrap8273
    @IwantTrap8273 Год назад +8

    1:17 a cup urinating

    • @SpaceGuyTDG810
      @SpaceGuyTDG810 2 месяца назад

      💀💀💀💀⚰️⚰️⚰️⚰️⚰️

  • @FIRING_BLIND
    @FIRING_BLIND Год назад +49

    Be careful! 3D printed stuff often isn't entirely food safe
    It may be at first, but prints are often porous, and thus difficult to clean

    • @Jcktmn
      @Jcktmn Год назад +4

      And when you wash it it'll probably work like your being greedy

    • @The_Moth1
      @The_Moth1 Год назад +6

      @@Jcktmnbut it would clean the “don’t be greedy” tube

    • @Bleepbleepblorbus
      @Bleepbleepblorbus 4 месяца назад

      - You can ask a manufacturer if their filament is food safe
      - *DO NOT* use a steel extruder head, those often contain lead
      - annel the prints in the oven (after you made sure they are clean)
      - chemically smooth the microscopeic pores (then clean again)
      - always always always *ALWAYS* clean out the prints after each use
      Do it even if you just use a print to drink water just to get into the habit

  • @eve_squared
    @eve_squared Год назад +526

    You could easily have made that cup with clay and a tin wire, simply wait for the cup to dry and fire it and all the tin will melt out. It might even be easier than making the original. They probably would have used lead for it's abundancy.

    • @Dragosmom.
      @Dragosmom. Год назад +36

      Wax.

    • @shadydaemon4178
      @shadydaemon4178 Год назад +43

      @@Dragosmom. Bruh, the Google translate said Wax = Something, literally that word.

    • @kadenze6176
      @kadenze6176 Год назад +5

      @@shadydaemon4178it's somalian

    • @Anonymous-df8it
      @Anonymous-df8it Год назад +1

      I was going to ask if it's necessary. Though, I wouldn't be surprised if when you get it hot enough to melt metal, the clay melts as well. Maybe make the siphon first, then put clay around it?

    • @chaos.corner
      @chaos.corner Год назад +3

      @@Anonymous-df8it Depends on the metal. But you could use many things that would work, possibly even wood.

  • @music-oi2br
    @music-oi2br 3 месяца назад +1

    yes finding words to specify what we already know mentally without the verbal informative confusion is wonderful thank you for reeducating us again anyways neat cup.

  • @cymond
    @cymond Год назад +1

    3:10 "just recently it was proposed that a siphon works like a chain"
    That was my intuitive childhood understanding, and it explains why you can suck on the bottom of a tube to start a siphon. It draws the fluid over the brink, then the fluid falls over, and the vacuum draws more fluid behind it.

  • @MrWeebable
    @MrWeebable Год назад +843

    It's definitely possible to manufacture the Devious Cup with classical metal working methods. The cup walls can be made in 2 parts, and the hidden path can be a set of thin curved metal tubes in between the two walls.

    • @gaddielmorales
      @gaddielmorales Год назад +68

      I was thinking similar, but you could put the metal tube into a mould and cast a cup around it

    • @vorshack8968
      @vorshack8968 Год назад +103

      Or you could mold clay around hard wax, which would burn away during the heating process.

    • @ZoeyMari
      @ZoeyMari Год назад +56

      @@vorshack8968 literally came to the comments for this idea, with clay it should be pretty easy, could even be made with a bit of rope through the walls, that would also be able to be burnt out of it. It'd take skill, of course, but we already know the Greeks were pretty skilled with earthenware

    • @crybirb
      @crybirb Год назад +4

      Do it and upload on RUclips or I don't believe you.

    • @ludwigvonhellsing2576
      @ludwigvonhellsing2576 Год назад +54

      Yeah but classical metal working methods did not sponsor this video...

  • @Ste_Brit
    @Ste_Brit Год назад +83

    I didn’t know the standard narrative for the physics of syphoning but I always pictured it like your chain explanation. This was interesting 👍

    • @adampetten1009
      @adampetten1009 Год назад +1

      I'm not a physists but I knew it would work in a vacuum and always thought of it like the chain effect. The open bottle one would still work because as the liquid drains it pulls a vacuum which in turn pulls the water in the tube

  • @MiroslavBaldzhiev
    @MiroslavBaldzhiev Год назад

    I can't believe people actually don't understand how siphon works. It's so simple it can be described with one word: vacuum. As the water leaves on one end die to gravity, the other water follow after it because otherwise a vacuum would be formed so the water just moves in to fill the vacuum. Same goes for gasses. They also move in to fill the vacuum and they also leave vacuum behind them that is filled by more water/gasses. As long as the water and gases are in a closed container when they leave at one end they will create vacuum that will drag more water/gasses. The experiment you did at 3:57 would not work if the bottle with the air is opened so outside air may come in. As the air leaves down the tube the vacuum "pulls" more water. But if the bottle was opened it will just "pull" more air form the atmosphere and the water wouldn't move.

  • @randbarrett8706
    @randbarrett8706 Год назад

    So it’s the exact same thing in a different form factor.
    Wow, so amazing, genius!

  • @austinbutts3000
    @austinbutts3000 Год назад +27

    Loved how you highlighted the siphon effect has more than one mechanism. Even if one part dominates in a specific scenario, that does not mean it explains the whole picture. Good scientific rigor!

    • @night2501
      @night2501 Год назад

      no, surface tension cohesion and atmospheric pressure play basically no part in this, the only important effect here is the negative pressure from the water column due to gravity, and the pipe diameter

  • @Beregorn88
    @Beregorn88 Год назад +53

    This kind of design is actually relatively easy to manufacture, even at Pythagoras times: you start by shaping a copper tube, then mold a cup around it with clay. You just need to think about it more than 20 seconds, but when you have a 3D printer all your problems look like slicing problems...
    Also, I wouldn't say that a cup with a hole in the bottom looks like a normal cup...

    • @olmostgudinaf8100
      @olmostgudinaf8100 Год назад +4

      You can hide the hole by handing the cup to the victim already pre-filled. Then watch with amusement as they try to refill it 😂

    • @sergiocostasrodriguez3731
      @sergiocostasrodriguez3731 Год назад +10

      A copper tube was not cheap. Better to use wax, and melt it after the clay has dried.

    • @peterbonucci9661
      @peterbonucci9661 Год назад +4

      In metal cups, there may be a hole in the stem to lighten the cup. The profile of the hole would be a little odd, but no one would notice.

    • @charlieevergreen3514
      @charlieevergreen3514 Год назад +14

      An embedded copper tube within clay would crack the clay, especially in a thin wall like this. Clay shrinks as it fires, while metal does not. However, other suggestions of a wax coil, rope, etc., which burn out early in the firing phase, would work, so you’re correct that Pythagorus could have made this design.

    • @Anonymous-df8it
      @Anonymous-df8it Год назад +2

      Bruh, no-one looks at the bottom of cups anyways!

  • @kharmachaos667
    @kharmachaos667 Год назад +1

    Forgot about the pressure generated by displacement. As molecules of fluid flow in any direction, the previous location forms a slight temporary negative pressure, encouraging anything "behind" it to move it that same direction.
    One thing I would like to see is if a sideways pythagorean cup worked in a vacuum- a lid on its top and a hole drilled into the side (now the top) to add liquid. I'd assume it would not work due to an air bubble blockage, but...?
    Actually, now that I think about it, the chain analogy still works. It's just that both air and water are fluid. Air molecules still move towards displacement, so that's why your example still works.

  • @vdrhussar
    @vdrhussar Год назад +1

    "Hey, look, a cup with A HOLE IN THE MIDDLE, not even a little bit suspicious hmm"

  • @bowieinc
    @bowieinc Год назад +238

    Just printed one at 200% so about 155mm (a little over 6” tall). My plan is to use it for a Christmas Party game where each person has to sit under the cup and add an ounce of water before the next person’s turn. Should be fun: to see who gets doused:)

    • @ukkomies100
      @ukkomies100 Год назад +18

      Thats fun. Make it a big bool and have everyone stand under and drink it once it starts emptying

    • @thedebater5152
      @thedebater5152 Год назад +13

      Wait then wouldn’t there be not probability of getting doused due to the ounces will fill the bowl at a certain term each time, unless the amount of initial water is random or the amount needed to be added.

    • @jemberlou
      @jemberlou Год назад +4

      How did it go?

    • @bowieinc
      @bowieinc Год назад +8

      @@jemberlou it worked great and was a lot of fun. I used it at a couple different gatherings. Sometimes I just demonstrated it. The kids and a few adults where really interested in how it worked. One note, I found you have to blow air from the bottom through it after each time you “get greedy” when filling because the residual water left in could cause it to evacuate prematurely when you start to pour water in it:)

    • @bill447
      @bill447 Год назад +1

      did you need supports for your print and which way did you have it flipped in your slicer?

  • @BierBart12
    @BierBart12 Год назад +139

    When he talked about the theory that siphons work more like chains that Steve Mould and Electroboom fiddled towards, I immediately thought "Woah, I've seen the lead up to this idea!"
    It feels amazing to watch science happen

  • @ElDuderino999
    @ElDuderino999 Год назад

    In essence: the illustrated „gravity-chain“ does all the tricks simultaneously. As soon as the longer downwards pipe segment contains more water mass than the upwards pipe segment it pulls the remaining water as the reservoir exercises continuous gravitational pressure on the whole system of communicating vessels (reservoir + upwards pipe + downwards pipe).

  • @jamessmithson-br7rm
    @jamessmithson-br7rm 6 месяцев назад

    What’s amazing is that they were able to make anything like the Pythagoras cup with the tools and knowledge available.

  • @secretsausage1
    @secretsausage1 Год назад +75

    Ive often thought of it as a chain. Now I'm thinking it's like a chain that starts off skinny and gradually gets thicker/heavier. It starts to pull more down as it picks up speed/inertia.

    • @borttorbbq2556
      @borttorbbq2556 Год назад

      The chain would do that anyways without getting thicker and heavier because as the chain starts moving it's inertia decreases but it's momentum increases that momentum will carry it through.

  • @Ithirahad
    @Ithirahad Год назад +137

    This looks like you could probably make it with ancient or medieval tech by shaping a metal tube and embedding it in the clay, though I don't know how thermal expansion might affect the firing process. If a metal tube won't work, you can always use a piece of wire covered in wax, I guess.

    • @FebbieG
      @FebbieG Год назад +21

      I'm pretty sure your first idea would shatter the clay; clay shrinks a lot when it fires. Wax might work, I don't know.

    • @danilooliveira6580
      @danilooliveira6580 Год назад +24

      wax is a way to do it, the same way you do molds, the wax just melts away when you fire the cup, leaving a hole behind.

    • @invader_guy1171
      @invader_guy1171 Год назад +13

      You could definitely do it in multiple parts through more standard methods, the real innovation with 3d printers is that it can do it in a single piece

    • @masterpython
      @masterpython Год назад

      A piece of rope imbedded in the clay would probably do it.

    • @FlavienB
      @FlavienB Год назад +2

      Oh hey fellow TSFH enjoyer :D

  • @oops1088
    @oops1088 Год назад +1

    "We could order small cups"
    Pythagoras: " But then, what will they learn?"

  • @mycologygirl
    @mycologygirl 6 месяцев назад

    i hope teachers play your videos in class because you make stuff entertaining while also teaching something neat

  • @baivulcho
    @baivulcho Год назад +10

    If you want to make it less suspicious and thin walled, you could put the syphon in a handle.

  • @official-obama
    @official-obama Год назад +21

    3:57 the air is a part of the chain, it isn't able to be just pulled out to infinity, it's still matter.

    • @Leonated
      @Leonated Год назад

      I had the exact same thought.

  • @DukeofHesse-he7bu
    @DukeofHesse-he7bu 6 месяцев назад

    Glad I watched this. Now I can sleep easy knowing about the greedy cup.

  • @johndododoe1411
    @johndododoe1411 6 месяцев назад

    I learned the principle as "connected tubs", which allows handy demonstrations with garden hoses and buckets .

  • @leonarduxis12
    @leonarduxis12 Год назад +9

    1:03 You heard the man, don't hit the griddy

  • @Dead_Goat
    @Dead_Goat Год назад +46

    That would have been pretty easy to make with clay. Create a cup, wrap the tube around it connecting it to the hole at the bottom create the stem connect the other end of the tube. Apply outer wall to cup.

    • @bernlack
      @bernlack Год назад

      What

    • @tvdvd8661
      @tvdvd8661 6 месяцев назад +1

      Definitely. Clay should be able to do what that 3d printer did

    • @johndododoe1411
      @johndododoe1411 6 месяцев назад +5

      Don't use a tube, just a wax string that melts out when burning the clay .

  • @ThatTieDyeGuy
    @ThatTieDyeGuy 11 месяцев назад

    the trick is in the size of the drain hole. I think what is happening seems to be that when liquid goes over the curve, the difference in pressure (bernolli i think) drags the water down the thin pipes, this leaves behind less dense areas that are filled like a kid drinking pop through a straw until the water in the cup is drained.
    Cool vid, thanks

    • @RabblesTheBinx
      @RabblesTheBinx 6 месяцев назад

      I don't think the size of the drain matters, I'm about 99.9% certain that it's the exact same principle behind how toilets work.

  • @nedimic5271
    @nedimic5271 Год назад +1

    I feel you could make the devious version fairly easily by using a material that dissolves in a liquid or melts during firing. Suspend a wax rod bent in the proper shape in a mold and then slipcast a clay cup. Then, when you fire the clay, the wax would melt and wam bam a devious cup.

  • @GamesNTech
    @GamesNTech Год назад +271

    I think the devious cup design looks like the "holy grail" from The last crusade. Based on that I think you you made the tube out of pipe you could form a clay cup around it and make an authentic looking cup that still has the devious cup function.

    • @Dietscapefilms
      @Dietscapefilms Год назад +6

      That’s what I was thinking if you had to do it in ancient times. Either that or casting.

    • @RaviPatel-lb7uc
      @RaviPatel-lb7uc Год назад +7

      The issue there might be finding a material that could withstand the heat of kiln firing, but not expand enough to crack the cup.

    • @failaquen
      @failaquen Год назад

      ​@@Dietscapefilms I was thinking of doing it in lost wax casting. Especially if you are going for mass production, having a wax/plastic insert that you put into the silicone mold...

    • @failaquen
      @failaquen Год назад +1

      ​@@RaviPatel-lb7uc I think you're looking to add material, but what of removing material?

  • @redgreenblue3033
    @redgreenblue3033 Год назад +24

    I thoroughly enjoy your work. Not only do you explain things well, I can see that you show during the demonstrations you know what you are doing. Well done, sir.

    • @ildarion3367
      @ildarion3367 Год назад

      How ironic considering he can't pull a vacuum or even near a vacuum. The water would be heavily boiling as liquid water can not exist for long in a vacuum.

  • @kamikazegargoyle
    @kamikazegargoyle Год назад

    I like steve mould's videos that explain a similar effect using chains. He did it in a several-storey building to see how far up the chain would go by itself.

  • @norri8ws
    @norri8ws Год назад +2

    0:45 and now we know that their wine was psychedelic, makes it even more interesting.

  • @MrBr3ast
    @MrBr3ast Год назад +4

    now we need a malicious cup and a trolling cup

    • @humanbeing9946
      @humanbeing9946 Год назад

      Malicious cup: a sieve or a tube
      Trolling cup: this cup but explodes instead of empties

  • @Lucius_Chiaraviglio
    @Lucius_Chiaraviglio Год назад +6

    This reminds me of a practical invention that uses this principle: the pipette washing assemblies for glass pipettes that used to be common in life science (and presumably chemistry) laboratories. This is designed like a greedy cup, but has the siphon easily visible on the outside, since it isn't trying to hide anything and isn't supposed to be tipped. It also has a short bit of tubing that you connect to a faucet with a hose; the exit end of this faces down to direct the jet of water downwards. You turn the water on, and it fills up until it submerges the pipettes and shortly thereafter activates the siphon, which drains out the water faster than the faucet can fill it, until the water is gone and breaks the siphon effect. Literally rinse, repeat. These were very low-tech (apart from the plastic used to make them), and they worked with no intervention except at the beginning and end of the rinsing process. On the downside, they used an enormous amount of water, although I have to wonder whether that is truly worse than the enormous amounts of plastic waste generated by the plastic pipettes that almost everybody now uses instead of the reusable glass pipettes. We even had one of these in the lab where I work, but never used it during my time (since November 2003), although I have seen them in use at one or two other labs where I work, during the early to middle part of the time I have been there. They are even still sold for quite a high price (I just checked on Fisher Scientific).

  • @wanglianghong2712
    @wanglianghong2712 Год назад +2

    Never thought the siphon effect was due to atmospheric pressure on one side of the tube. If you think about it simply, the atmospheric pressure also works on the other end of a tube so the net pressure effect is zero. Always thought of it as a chain of water molecules simply being heavier on one side and consequently leading to the heavier end pulling the entire stream over and out.

  • @geoncic
    @geoncic Год назад +1

    Instead of a straight hole in the bottom, could you build into the model an angled hole? so it looks solid when viewing from above, or even at 45 degrees. I'm thinking something like a roof overhang or soffet, if that makes sense.

  • @MultiKingoflol
    @MultiKingoflol Год назад +160

    Well, honestly I feel one of the biggest contributors to the siphon effect is the pressure of the water itself. The water exerts a pressure on itself due to it's weight. The weight of the water would allow it to also drag itself along. There's a lot more to it than that, I know, but I believe that's one of the main contributors.

    • @Reloecc
      @Reloecc Год назад +5

      This would not explain the last example, where we see two containers connected by tube, where the liquids are separated by an air. So you need to add negative pressure created by the water flowing away, sucking water from an another container. Atmospheric pressure is not involved at all.. and honestly I don't get why is author talking here about that "we don't know how it works" .. erm.

    • @paulblanke4087
      @paulblanke4087 Год назад +13

      @@Reloecc Atmospheric pressure is absolutely involved in the last example. Water drains, same amount of air in a larger volume makes low pressure, low pressure pulls water from the tube.

    • @CiaranMaxwell
      @CiaranMaxwell Год назад +10

      There is also a limit to how high a siphon tube can go before it stops working. The answer is 32 feet... because that's how much water equals one atmosphere of pressure. It stops working beyond that.

    • @wardeni4806
      @wardeni4806 Год назад +2

      My first thought was that it's a combined effect, which he did say later in the video. All of these different things, the weight of the water, atmospheric pressure, the link effect due to surface tension, gravity etc. are all putting their own push or pull onto the water, which then starts to move through the tube.

    • @sir-punchalot
      @sir-punchalot Год назад +2

      whoops!

  • @TnT_F0X
    @TnT_F0X Год назад +22

    I'm using the siphon effect to water plants...
    Cool little ceramic spikes with hoses leading to a water bottle. The soil sucks the moisture out like a wick and the tube pulls the water in.
    Makes watering plants easier xD every 2-3 days I just refill and make sure they're still wet and pulling water.

    • @kittenmimi5326
      @kittenmimi5326 Год назад

      So this is how scientists grow their plants...

    • @MsHojat
      @MsHojat Год назад +1

      I don't know for sure exactly what you're describing, but it certainly sounds like you're not using a siphon at all, and instead are relying on capillary action. Very different from this, but yes it is still useful.

  • @vergil2
    @vergil2 Год назад

    Its even more devious when action lab uses the word devious

  • @Mikeymouse1
    @Mikeymouse1 Год назад +14

    Me picking a different cup because that cup looks kind of sus.

  • @Darkond2100
    @Darkond2100 Год назад +20

    I can easily mass produce this cup with ancient clay pottery sculpting methods, using "wax loss", or really yarn, rope, or reed loss to preserve the channel in the cup through the sculpting and firing process. This was also done to create musical instruments out of clay. 3D printing is great, but it it's a new and expensive solution to a problem that was already solved.

    • @Halinspark
      @Halinspark 6 месяцев назад

      The problem it's actually solving is that it's quicker than many of the old ways and is automated.

  • @DividingLeo
    @DividingLeo Год назад

    I gotta admit, I'm jealous. This dude's got a 3d-printer, a vacuum chamber, and a yellow chain.

  • @fourkz
    @fourkz 8 месяцев назад +8

    Also! If you're thinking of printing these cups, be sure to get food-safe filament! 3D printers melt plastic and the chemicals in it could leech into whatever you put in it, making it unsafe to drink. Same with the fumes when printing, so also make sure it's well ventilated.

    • @DatAsuna
      @DatAsuna 6 месяцев назад

      the problem with the design in practical and long term use is that it's gonna a nightmare to attempt to clean the siphon which otherwise is liable to become a complete bacteria trap after a while.

  • @OnTheRiver66
    @OnTheRiver66 Год назад +9

    I cannot believe that a siphon is not nearly as simple as I thought! I always learn something new in these videos.

  • @FreddieHg37
    @FreddieHg37 Год назад +80

    It's so surreal in retrospect to think that we live in a time in which machines like 3D printers are readily available and accessible for people with enough resources to purchase and use them. If this is mind-blowing for someone who has only lived through this century and 6 more years before it, imagine how mind-blowing it is for our parents and grandparents and how amazing it might be for someone even a couple of centuries ago to think this technology exists.

    • @olmostgudinaf8100
      @olmostgudinaf8100 Год назад +11

      I am one of those "parents and grandparents". I remember when 3D printers were in their infancy. If you wanted one, you had to make one yourself. It wasn't even that long ago, less than 15 years.

    • @itoibo4208
      @itoibo4208 Год назад +1

      I am fascinated by the implications of being able to build structures into the material. It is a whole new ball game from the old ways of making things.

    • @Roach_Dogg_JR
      @Roach_Dogg_JR Год назад +1

      Some small ones are pretty cheap actually 180-200 dollars

    • @FreddieHg37
      @FreddieHg37 Год назад +1

      @@olmostgudinaf8100 I know, I remember that as well, I also remember the time before drones became a thing and even back to early RUclips circa 2007-2009 there were videos of models and prototypes of drones and it was to me very cool, I can no longer find most of them and also they started becoming a thing around ten years ago I believe, but still, I'm not even 30 and I feel amazed by how much technology has changed and evolved in my lifetime since the 90s.

    • @FreddieHg37
      @FreddieHg37 Год назад +1

      @@itoibo4208 I know right? I think the first time I came into contact with this concept was when they were developing those 3D pens about ten or a few more years ago. It's really amazing what engineering and science can do with technology nowadays.

  • @PokeMaster22222
    @PokeMaster22222 Год назад

    1:00 "it doesn't empty"
    > promptly proceeds to spill some like a clumsy nincompoop

  • @marley551
    @marley551 Месяц назад

    Pythagoras's face the year putting your finger on the hole in the bottom was invented : 😮😮😮

  • @MrSaemichlaus
    @MrSaemichlaus Год назад +33

    As people mentioned, the devious cup could be made out of clay with a wax or tin inlay that is melted out afterwards, but it could also be build up in layers like a 3D printer does but manually out of clay.

  • @kazumas3369
    @kazumas3369 Год назад +42

    I always thought syphon effects like those worked because of vaccum
    Basically, as the tube slowly fills with liquid as the drink is poured, it pushes air out through the other end.
    When the liquid reaches high enough, it's pulled down by the gravity. However, the empty space that would have been left behind by the liquid is immediately filled by the liquid behind it. And this keeps happening.
    When the cup fully drains, air fills the empty spot. This also stands for the flying droplet syphon. The bottle doesn't want to be voided, so it pulls air from the other end, namely the liquid.
    It's also why, for instance, you can pull liquid up in a straw, block one end of the straw with your finger and then pick up the straw. As long as you keep it perfectly vertical, the liquid won't flow out of the straw, because it would leave a vaccum behind. However, if you tilt it, then the liquid would flow out, because then it allows air to go in and push the liquid out.
    Edit: Tl;dr - Syphon effects work because Nature doesn't like vaccums

    • @arnaldo8681
      @arnaldo8681 Год назад +3

      This kind of reasoning works very well on earth. The problem is Nature is perfectly fine with vacuum, what it doesnt like is pressure
      There is a giant column of air pushing everything in every direction every time in the surface of the earth. The only reason we dont notice anything is because it is (almost) always pushing equaly hard in every direction. So the force cancels out
      If you remove the water or air in one side of a tube there is no longer anything pushing from that side, but the giant column of air is still pushing in the other. Thats where the force comes from. In most cases the final result is the same, but the explanation is backwards

    • @blizyon30fps86
      @blizyon30fps86 Год назад

      Kazuma knows science? Impossible

  • @brianfiggy
    @brianfiggy Год назад

    I can imagine a way to do it with skill and just what ever may have been available at the time. Patient clay work around a frame following the shape of the hollow, either of some flexible metal, a chain or rolled straw that could be pulled or burned away once the clay dries could conceivably work. If you look at cross section images of the cups they've found, they were large and theywerent need precision made so it might not even be so difficult, it would just take someone patient enough to have thought about improving on the idea further.

  • @jasondoeshair
    @jasondoeshair Год назад

    So many things...I can't not watch your videos. Also, love the bun. Thanks for making great content that is entertaining and educational.

  • @knorbie
    @knorbie Год назад +13

    I'm truly amazed at how much work you put into explaining science phenomenons and how comprehensible you make it

  • @sgramstrup
    @sgramstrup Год назад +18

    The vacuum was not 100%, and if you want gravity in the mix, then a split in a solid water column would produce a 100% vacuum, whereby the residual pressure in the vacuum chamber is enough to make the water 'stick' while being pushed out by gravity. So the result should be from both cohesion and pressure. You could check how much water is left, to see if the last water gets pulled out of the system by cohesion, or if drain stops when the last bend is reached and the cup is empty. Or use a fluid with different cohesion. Hope it made sense..

    • @Axel_Andersen
      @Axel_Andersen Год назад +1

      100% vacuum ... I doubt that. Pumps that produce close to 100% vacuum are more complex than split in a solid water column.

    • @quinton1661
      @quinton1661 Год назад

      A water column of 150 mm will still have about 15 hPa at the bottom. It's not the atmosphere that's pushing it into the tube so much as it is the water itself. This is why when a siphon's outlet is at the same level as the inlet it just trickles. It's the difference in pressure from inlet to outlet that determines flow.

  • @eudaenomic
    @eudaenomic 2 месяца назад

    This is used in pondsor small lakes to keep them from muddying during rain.

  • @KindaNoice
    @KindaNoice Год назад

    i used to do this all the time and I just thought that its was because the water is creating a vacuum, but the water behind it is filling the vacuum, thus moving the water forward and continuing the chain.

  • @vincenthaller638
    @vincenthaller638 Год назад +37

    Id love to see the flying droplet syphon in a vacuum, my guess is that the bottom portion would just flow out but the upper portion would stay where it is. Of course you would need a vacuum in the middle 'air' portion as well, otherwise the air pressure would just push everything out.

    • @flummi6966
      @flummi6966 Год назад

      Water does funky things in vacuum, -> tripel point

    • @wardeni4806
      @wardeni4806 Год назад

      It would probably still slowly drain, unless you also removed gravity

    • @LockenJohny101
      @LockenJohny101 Год назад +1

      Yes, this is what would happen.
      Acctually I dont understand why the "chain" explanation is supposed to be incomplete.
      Your proposal is acctually what a "broken chain" would be, the one with air inbetween is in essence a chain with different kinds of links.

    • @mb-3faze
      @mb-3faze Год назад

      Gravity must have a lot to do with syphons. I don't think a syphon would work in microgravity either with an atmosphere (space station) or not. Would it work in artificial gravity like a centrifuge? Syphons will work on Mars but would they work on the moon? I'm not completely convinced by Action Lab's vacuum chamber test. His vacuum might not have been strong enough - even a small amount of air in the chamber would show a pressure gradient in the presence of gravity.

    • @flummi6966
      @flummi6966 Год назад

      @@mb-3faze dude math

  • @0xGRIDRUNR
    @0xGRIDRUNR Год назад +15

    Came for the cool cup, stayed for the phenomenal explanation

  • @douggale5962
    @douggale5962 Год назад

    This reminds me of how wing lift is actually not understood, even though we think we have figured some of it out. We have approximations that work in limited circumstances, at best.

  • @ryugar2221
    @ryugar2221 10 месяцев назад +1

    5:45 Sir I don't think both my kidneys would be enough to buy a 3D printer 🙂🙂

  • @chandir7752
    @chandir7752 Год назад +6

    I've thought about improving the Pythagoras cup and came up with a similar design. I tried to make it work with yogurt pots and plastic straws but it never really worked well. But I knew it was possible and until now I've always been confused why it seemingly wasn't a thing

  • @magic3383
    @magic3383 Год назад

    I love when I hear someone try to explain something with gravity, knowing that gravity isn't real.

  • @LTE18
    @LTE18 Год назад

    One problem is that the water level changes when cup is tilted. so if you tilt and rotate the cup it will still drain. While the original cup doesn have this problem since the drain tube is at the center the level change when tilting the cup is minimal

  • @nickkkkkkk1562
    @nickkkkkkk1562 Год назад +3

    Im so happy to see that outside of old sanitary pad commercials, the blue liquid is still doing its thang.

  • @dannymoneywell
    @dannymoneywell Год назад +3

    Actually if you really think about it the Syphon effect occurs due to the vacuum created in the tube by the falling liquid on the outlet side, that can be understood by going back to the pressure of water depending on depth, it's always dependant on the weight of the water column above the measuring area, therefore the weight of the water column in the siphon and the fact that it can't pull air back through the outlet when properly constructed are what pulls the water column relative to that tube's inlet in the reservoir and anything above both is neutral in total energy (fluid goes up and down the same distance) which also explains why syphons don't work if they are too short, you can also imagine a Syphon that runs on something like a soft sand that is capable of sealing gaps, it would work just the same, now the full show, there is water pressure from the top of the water to wherever the inlet of the Syphon is which comes from the weight of the water, that is pushing into the Syphon pushing the water to level with the reservoir and keeping it at that level with no energy input, making that state a static one and making it so that all you need now is a little pulling on the other end of the siphon due to the weight of the fluid and how it seals the Syphon to backwards flow, what guarantees a Syphon will continue to pull the fluid out when the level gets lower and lower is how long the outlet is, if it's too short it will stop before it empties the container because it will take more energy than the water column in the outlet has due to it's weight and gravity, also it's not as much surface tension that causes the pull as it is the incompressibility of liquids and the fact that it takes energy to push air up into a column of fluid moving downwards.

  • @GK-ee7mw
    @GK-ee7mw Год назад

    Important question- how do you get your 3D print to be water tight? I’ve printed a vase before (on a Creality Ender 3) and water just seeped through it

    • @XxTWMLxX
      @XxTWMLxX Год назад

      Thicker walls and squish the layers enough with thin layers.

  • @yesimrealll
    @yesimrealll 6 месяцев назад +1

    blocking the hole using a finger has left the chat.

  • @unnamedaccount6969
    @unnamedaccount6969 Год назад +4

    1:41 i actidentally paused the video at this time and spent 5 minutes waiting for something to happen to the water

  • @Marhatter24pur
    @Marhatter24pur Год назад

    By what I have seen, heard, and learned, matter will always want to go to it’s lowest energy state. One example I saw was a ball rolling down a lumpy/wavy but steep slope. It has long drops into short pits and repeats. Even though the slope has many pits where the ball can rest, it still isn’t the lowest energy point on the slope. With enough push (energy) behind it, the ball will just continue rolling down the slope. I believe it’s a very similar effect here, but with water/wine trying to get to it’s lowest energy state (outside the cup).

  • @KeKe-bv8qv
    @KeKe-bv8qv 7 месяцев назад

    Best explanation for syphoning I've ever seen

  • @beez1717
    @beez1717 Год назад +4

    You could probably make the cup out of metal if you made the tube via two halves, but it would be extremely hard to make precise enough so yes, 3D printing is the way to go!

  • @dawnsclim4382
    @dawnsclim4382 9 месяцев назад +1

    Those who drink the entire cup before it can syphon half the cup:

  • @chasefluegge8321
    @chasefluegge8321 6 месяцев назад

    One could be made out of clay by making a cup with thick walls, then carving out a deep channel and the hole through the bottom, then just adding a strip back on top of the channel but not completely filling the hole that was made. It wouldn't've been a perfect tube, more like a semi-circle or a crescent, but it definitely would work.

  • @anon_y_mousse
    @anon_y_mousse Год назад +5

    Now you just need to get some clear filament and print it again. Maybe even alter the infill and play with adding dye in layers to the liquid.

  • @BOBOZOOR15
    @BOBOZOOR15 Год назад +4

    In order to prank, I will offer these cups to greedy people for Christmas

  • @latinalexander7301
    @latinalexander7301 7 месяцев назад

    Pythagoras is not a funnel but it closely has some similarities to a funnel but it ships like a cup because when it's full of liquid it drains out at the bottom.
    It's cool that I learned this because I kinda wanna make a concrete version of this.

  • @xenon333
    @xenon333 Год назад

    I guess no one would notice the hole smack in the center of the cup, huh? Truly devious!

  • @leonamuwu904
    @leonamuwu904 Год назад +17

    Pythagoras went through the trouble of designing and engineering a clever cup that punishes you for being too greedy,
    when he could've just bought smaller cups that prevent you from being greedy to begin with.

    • @TRUMP_WAS_RIGHT_ABOUT_EVRYTHNG
      @TRUMP_WAS_RIGHT_ABOUT_EVRYTHNG Год назад +2

      but thats what really really smart people do lol f**k with their friends and enemies evenly.

    • @noepotato9731
      @noepotato9731 Год назад

      @Scott's Precious Little Account Relax, its a youtube comment. If you're so sensitive that you can't just ignore comments like this then maybe just don't look?

    • @rocc9944
      @rocc9944 Год назад

      @@noepotato9731 dude, he didn't mean any harm
      he was saying "but that's what really really smart people do, lol. they mess with their friends and enemies evenly"
      honestly its dumber when you see a comment with a swear and jump to conclusions, along with trying to look cool and sassy

  • @Broockle
    @Broockle Год назад +5

    Tru, tru, I like this explanation. It's a bunch of effects that all contribute to the syphon effect.
    I mostly thought of the atmospheric pressure one too. If you do it in a vacuum chamber I feel like the syphon effect would be weaker
    Would be interesting to see the same setup playout in both 1ATM and in the V-Chamber.

  • @elfwired
    @elfwired Год назад

    Syphon working in vacuum is really interesting, there can't be negative pressure in top point of tube.
    I think, it involves surface tension and inertia.

  • @Reaperman4711
    @Reaperman4711 Год назад +1

    2:08 It seems like it'd be exceedingly easy to manufacture this updated design without 3d-printing--possibly easier than the original model. Two pieces, with the interior as an injection-molded insert would probably be the easiest way.

  • @nerd26373
    @nerd26373 Год назад +18

    Seems like the greedy cup has more uses than any of us could anticipate. These experiments have provided us clarification on matters that need more evidence to prove that it is in fact real or true.