I feel like the glow sticks in the giant blender was a fantastic idea but needs another try with the bigger version of those glow sticks. Run another experiment with the chonky ones! (and put some kind of triangular things in the corners to help create a vortex.)
I love that these guy get right to the action. No clickbait, no yapping for 45 seconds about pointless nonsense and then a 45 second manscaped ad. love to see it.
I just wanted to say thank you guys on your positivity. Every time I watched your videos, I don't ever see any of you guys act negative in any way. Positivity is infectious, God bless you guys.
Night shoots always just have a totally different vibe that I love, but these ones especially are just phenomenal. The fire, sparks, and glowsticks just look absolutely stunning
The glow sticks were beautiful especially the above shot, but i think the fatter ones would blend better. The above shot of the fire was beautiful too, as soon as the advert passed by and I backed it up to watch it all at once. Excellent video! ❤️🔥
In a real blender, the container is shaped in a way that ensures a vortex forms that sucks the material under the blades, back up through the blades as they spin. You need to have some sort of cup shaped thingy underneath the blades, and corner rounder-offers in the four corners.
I'm surprised the deodorant cans didn't start the fire. With the flammable aerosol contents, and metal fan blades slicing up metal cans, there's so much potential for sparks to ignite
To be brutally honest, I don't think it would have. . . It would have more likely been an explosion. The oxygen to aerated fuel igniting would have caused a MASSIVE explosion in my mind if it caught and the metal to metal wouldn't have been an issue tbh Iron to Iron is spark, I haven't seen aluminum throw sparks because its too soft compared to iron, but the heat from the motor could've done it. (Quick edit) If Aluminum to Iron would throw sparks and anyone has proof I'd gladly be proven wrong!
Love you guys' channel. I noticed that it is colder weather down under. A lower ambient temperature will slow the reaction in the glowsticks and they will produce less light than they would if they were warmed first. You could try soaking them in warm water first, or wait until the weather gets hotter to have your best chance at brighter glowsticks.
I think the blender has the potential for a wicked fire tornado if you added flammable gas at the corners that released slowly and continually. Would look insane
@Editor Jack, I am really sad that when Gaunson started explaining why he thought the blades got hot was because they hit new flames, there was no “Science with Gaunson” bubble 😢
He’s so almost completely right rather than just mostly. The blades spinning generates friction heat against the atmosphere, hitting particulates. The bursting cans are throwing more particulates into the air, making the atmosphere denser. Denser atmosphere, more particulates for the blades to hit, more heat. Just how a prove or space craft does during re-entry. I love it.
It’s well-known that in a moving matrix (in this case, flaming air relative to the blender blades), heat transfer through convection is more efficient.
Gaunson science is truly one of my favorite things in this channel. The difference between liquids and solids, thermodynamics, it doesn't matter. I love how he "explains" it all.
What Scott says makes perfect sense. In heat transfer, there is a mechanism called forced convection. The heat transfer coefficient needed to calculate heat transfer by forced convection depends on the flow velocity of the fluid or gas relative to the object the heat is transferred to. In your case, the flow velocity is determined by the speed of the rotating blades. The faster they rotate, the more heat is transferred to the blades. P.S.: Your videos are awesome. Please keep up the good work. Greetings from Germany
Remember the propane in the balloons vs. the arrow with sparklers? The surface of the blades is probably where the flammable liquid mixes fastest and most completely with oxygen from the air. That should create the same effect as an oxy-acetylene torch.
This is the first time that "Science with Scott" actually made sense. And if you want to test it. Redo the same flaming cans of deodorant, but use an optical thermometer to check the temp. of the tips of the blades compared to the center parts of the blades. If you had an optical camera, like on some cell phones you could even see the differences on screen.
“May I just say”… One of the best things I enjoy about your videos is your affection for each other which is always evident. May God continue to bless you and your charitable cause for all of His children.
The blades are heating up really fast from metal on metal friction. I remember, someone dropped a lock from a shipping container, under the container. We happened to be moving the container that day, the lock got dragged maybe 5 feet by the container, the guy without thinking picked it up, and got immediate 2nd and 3rd degree burns on his hand.
That not nearly enough friction to heat up the blades that much. You could throw in 100 empty cans and it wouldn’t change the temp of the blades by even a fraction of a degree. It’s the fire and the blades moving would only make it less hot.
@@LC-sh6wd Air can totally cause friction or rather, an effect similar to friction which is compression. An object moving through the air at high speed does have wind resistance, yes, but that doesn't actually cause much friction, it causes the air to compress, compressing things heats it up so the blades are compressing the air in front of them which causes the blades to absorb that heat. It isn't significant, the fire is defiantly doing more to heat the blades than the heat caused by the compression along such relatively small surface areas, but it is there. Occam's Razor, though, says the blades are mostly just hot because you lit them on fire.
Nice discussion guys. As for it not being fast enough, or enough metal... The example I gave was for a reason... a pad lock.. approximately 1.5 inches by 3 inches by 1/2 an inch... was dragged by a shipping container, for approximately 3 seconds, at a pace of about 1 foot per second. That padlock reached temperatures in excess of 1000F, and held that temperature for several minutes. While we laughed at the guy who grabbed it, the truth is he held it for a fraction of a second and took over a month to recover from the burns. And that is because of something that one of you touched on... Temperature is not really associated with friction, it is associated with pressure. As pressure increases, volume decreases and temperature increases. The pressure caused by the blades is very high, that high pressure needs one of the other two parts of the triangle to be controlled for the third to change. If the container was open, volume was able to change on it's own, the force of the blades dissipating into the air, then it would balance out the pressure and temperature would not change. But... it isn't open, at least not enough. So the blades build pressure, the enclosed environment limits volume, the only other part that must change is temperature. And this is the basis of every cooling system we make, just in reverse. Without the metal, the blades and the air, will still get hot. But with the metal, you have an added conductive material. That material is making very short contact, but is doing it a lot, at a very high speed. In this case, the metal on metal is greatly increasing the pressure back against the blades. Where normally the pressure does push out, this pushes a lot of it back, and concentrates the pressure, thus concentrating the heat, near and inside of the blades. Now... for the fire... fire works by combustion and convection. Heat will transfer to objects that are either combustible or in proximity to the convection. As stated, the blades are basically a big fan. So they very effectively move air away from themselves, which greatly reduces convection, and being metal they have no combustion at this level, not until you get much, much hotter. So no matter how hot the flame gets, it is in a terrible position to actually heat of the blades. In fact, I would challenge you, in a safe environment, place a fan, above a fire, and test how long it takes to heat up the fan while it is running. You may find that the fire is extinguished by the fan moving air away from it, long before it is able to heat up from any form of combustion or convection. Conclusion, the heat from the fire is negligible, the heat caused by the pressure increase and transmitted by the high conductivity of metal is greater. To test, check the temperature of the blades before and after experiments with similar amounts of conductive and non-conductive materials. I will not be testing this large scale, but I have tested it small scale.
And where would they put all the waste paint, that lender would hold an tonne if it was full. Great idea, I do like the thought of seeing paint creating a marble cake type effect but I don't think it would be practical, unless they sell the blended mix on the website?
I didn’t read this until about 13:00 minutes in and it’s funny haha now I’m thinking back into the video like the chips and underwear and where I am right now 😂
hey i absolutely love this video i just wanted to comment to make sure this was taken into account, dry ice being used all at once like that produces massive clouds of gas that will kill anything in it for too long due to the lack of oxygen. it looks like this was done in a big open field which is great! but i dont know if there is any forest near by where any animals could potentially get harmed, or how long it actually takes these clouds to dissipate or how far they potentially could travel before dissipating to a safe degree. im not sure if you already have, but i highly recommend consulting someone who WOULD know these things.
You should not have activated the glow sticks before! I feel like the blender would do that once its starts hitting them, that would surely give a nice effect seeing them turning on bit by bit!
To be fair, the reaction of the glow sticks lighting up requires them to be tightly packed together which is why if u hadn’t activated them it would have simply done some glow in the dark splatter which would be quite dim or just not glowing at all. The light comes from the reaction of the two chemicals inside mixing, and the blades would just split them up before they could mix and create light
If you did it with like 20x as many glow sticks and positioned the slow mo cam just right above the blender it would make for a really good screensaver ngl.
Mad respect to whoever was responsible for closing and securing the door, during the night shots. When the door pin didn't go in right away on the 1000 sparklers blend I was genuinely scared for whoever was doing that job.
@@AidanMcDowell-ez1ny i mean, have you ever tried to shut a door that big within a small time margin? its easier when you have more time. but when youre against the clock, things seem to be harder to do
The blades heated so quickly because most flammable liquids like gasoline or most solvents burn hotter than a regular flame from wood. The jet fuel burning from 9/11 is what took the towers down. It melted the frame of the building because it burned so hot.
The content is good but honestly you blokes seem like a good group to hang around. You have a genuinely good time together, real laughter and good times. Good for you. I'm sure we're all enjoying it on this end vicariously through you.
get a UV light set up where the go-pro is on top of the blender and dump UV paint into the blander (idk what the UV liquid actually is just something like that)
Loved the night filming. I don’t think we have seen that since you stayed overnight at the tower in a little house where you pranked Heron for being late. You dropped glow sticks from the top and it looked awesome.
Is it me or was the camera work on another level in this video? The walking from out of focus to in focus, night shots, etc seemed extra good. Not sure if there's new cameras or what but it was excellent 👌
So as a photographer I’d be very interested in doing or seeing some long exposure still shots of the sparklers or glow sticks. I think it could cause some cool effects kinda like a fire work sort of look, being able to track specific sparklers and glow sticks as they move through the blender.
I think that newheat is potentially a small factor in the heating of the blades, since it does technically get closer to more hot particles. but I doubt it did much, steel( as all metals) is a pretty good conductor, so it absorbs heat quite quick. also, it being 4 cm thick doesn’t matter too much, because you were only feeling the heat on the surface, it was probably a little cooler inside. Those flames will have easily got to over 1000 degrees C , for about 5 seconds, that’s quite a lot of heat they’re baking in. Awesome
Scott putting his hand on a thick metal piece and concluding it has heated all the way through is like my grandma putting a whole frozen chicken in the oven on broil for 3 minutes and concluding that it's perfectly cooked. Also sure the rotation speed of the fans can assist with the overal heat transfer throughout the metal, but not only did it not sustain the spinning long enough to matter for the heat applied and the thickness of the metal, but it also did not add any "New Heat" like scott is implying. Convection is a method of retaining and circulating existing heat, not a method of generating heat. It could at most contribute to the metal retaining some heat from the fireball, but the fans rotating would not add any substantial heat, and certaintly not 40%. The obvious most important contributor to the heat would be covering the metal in a liquid based fireball for a minute
This video made my inner pyromaniac very happy. Also, fun fact: the stuff inside glowsticks is the same stuff used by crime scene investigators to expose blood residue on evidence and at crime scenes. Its called luminol. Stay safe and stay awesome 💜
For me out of this whole entire blender series we seem to be getting, nothing will beat blending that fridge man I laughed for days after seeing that man well done lads
that was one of the most enticing thumbnails I have ever seen, and God knows HR will deliver on it! It's amazing how far this channel has come, MrBeast has nothing on you guys. Love!
@@rastaboy_gamesnstuff7778 Not a chance with how Australian gun laws are. They would have to go to America to do it... If they're willing to do a gun video at all
The glow sticks look cool but nothing beats the glow sticks from the tower on the tiny house! Oh man. Derek's reaction to getting stuff thrown on him in the middle of the night was almost as funny as the boys laughing at the top. Oh the old days! 🤣🤣🤣
Watching your new videos has become something of a tradition for me and my 7 year old son. We both love everything you guys do, and for the record, he roots for Herron in every contest like he's rooting for our home football team. Thanks for being awesome boys. ❤ P.S. - I ordered him a Rexy for Christmas and I think it'll be his favorite gift
This was one of your best videos in a while and not just because the ideas were good. I've always enjoyed the videos where you include more of your banter and conversation the best even if the "content" wasn't great that day. Please put more of your conversations and debates over Gaunson-science in your vids.👍
Convection is the quickest form of heat transfer, it's why stirring things as they cook helps heat them up. By constantly cycling the fluid (air, water, etc), you are always replacing the colder boundary layer fluid with warmer fluid.
You guys save me so much in destruction therapy. I appreciate your desire to destroy. With such humor, cleanliness and joy inducing cheer. Thanks. Your 45 year old fan.
I don't know if you read my comment or if other people also said the same. But I appreciate you toning down the frequency of the editing cuts! Makes it much more enjoyable! ❤ Or should I say.....thank you Editor Jack?! ❤
The blender acting as a fan introducing more oxygen to the fire creating a flaming tornado with its base being the blades seems like a reasonable explanation for the increased heat. I do like new heat as well though.
What a video! Truly entertaining 😂 I'd love to have been a fly on the wall when one of you thought to add fire to the blender 😂😂Your faces when the first flame went off were priceless! And the flowsricks!!!! Awesome
great video guys , the vibe and different shots at night is great ... you guys should keep doing the night videos and maybe have challenges aswell ... but i wanted to suggest glow sticks with dry ice it would look really good
Epic videos with this blender. Totally loving them. You guys should try to match the shutter speed of one of cameras to the rpm of the blender it could look trippy as hell 😂
Engineer here, 'new heat' is definitely a thing. Although it's not called that. It's like wind passing through you on a cold day vs. the same temp, no wind. You extract more energy because of the moving air. The blender is the same, but hot. It's called Alpha in laws of convection.
That top down slow-mo with the glow sticks and even the sparklers... I feel like you could put those on a loop and sell those to advertisers or something for short animations for their brand or something. Pretty awesome shots!
Ah! My grandparents used to bring those to us when they came to visit….back in the early 70’s. We, as little kids, would toss them into the fireplace. Such good memories.
I'm on team #newheat - The introduction of convection into the heat, is the same reason that a fan oven heats up faster than a conventional oven. The heat will exponentially increase, the more oxygen is added to the fire. This is why you get flashovers from house fires where as soon as oxygen is introduced, the whole lot goes up like a bomb. Gaunson is right on the nose with this one.
I feel like the glow sticks in the giant blender was a fantastic idea but needs another try with the bigger version of those glow sticks. Run another experiment with the chonky ones! (and put some kind of triangular things in the corners to help create a vortex.)
I second this!! Chonky glow sticks for the win 🎉
they need a round blender to get a vortex that doesnt get stuck in the corners
Yes. The glowing liquid would be cool to see it mixing. They would need almost 100,000. Go guys.
i agree@@bappyplays
I was just going to comment this
I love that these guy get right to the action. No clickbait, no yapping for 45 seconds about pointless nonsense and then a 45 second manscaped ad. love to see it.
I just wanted to say thank you guys on your positivity. Every time I watched your videos, I don't ever see any of you guys act negative in any way. Positivity is infectious, God bless you guys.
I second this; even if someone loses a challenge, they always keep it a good time.
i third this.. have a great day
Night shoots always just have a totally different vibe that I love, but these ones especially are just phenomenal. The fire, sparks, and glowsticks just look absolutely stunning
Honestly that double door blending was 1000% more satisfying than I thought it would be
Pharaoh's curse
@@ToughestHentaiMasterwhat pharaoh curse? is it 1 of the band members name from the band three doors down?
@@shaneconlon5116 the inside of the blender when they blended the doors looked like a sand storm. The Pharaoh's curse is a meme
Turned the double doors to kindling and wood chips! Maybe you should hire your BIG BLENDER as a wood chipper! Will it take tree trunks and branches?
@@rexoliver7780or possibly mulch for your garden
The glow sticks were beautiful especially the above shot, but i think the fatter ones would blend better. The above shot of the fire was beautiful too, as soon as the advert passed by and I backed it up to watch it all at once.
Excellent video! ❤️🔥
In a real blender, the container is shaped in a way that ensures a vortex forms that sucks the material under the blades, back up through the blades as they spin.
You need to have some sort of cup shaped thingy underneath the blades, and corner rounder-offers in the four corners.
💯
« Corner Rounder Offers » ❤
first sentence: Bill Nye
second sentence: Science with Gaunson
I think it is a much bigger issue that air is a much thinner fluid than anything you put in a blender.
I think it may have been a purposeful design as a last hope of not getting absolutely destroyed by the blades if they turned on while you were inside
I'm surprised the deodorant cans didn't start the fire. With the flammable aerosol contents, and metal fan blades slicing up metal cans, there's so much potential for sparks to ignite
To be brutally honest, I don't think it would have.
.
.
It would have more likely been an explosion.
The oxygen to aerated fuel igniting would have caused a MASSIVE explosion in my mind if it caught and the metal to metal wouldn't have been an issue tbh Iron to Iron is spark, I haven't seen aluminum throw sparks because its too soft compared to iron, but the heat from the motor could've done it.
(Quick edit) If Aluminum to Iron would throw sparks and anyone has proof I'd gladly be proven wrong!
@Shad0wLeviathan NO WAY THAT USED TO BE MY PROFILE PICTURE THATS COOL
@@demithevampireking4285iron and aluminum can definitely throw sparks, it's called thermite 😛
Aluminum sparks? I didn't think soft metals could create sparks upon impact
Thermite is a reaction of iron Oxide and Aluminum oxide. @@willowmoon7
Love you guys' channel. I noticed that it is colder weather down under. A lower ambient temperature will slow the reaction in the glowsticks and they will produce less light than they would if they were warmed first. You could try soaking them in warm water first, or wait until the weather gets hotter to have your best chance at brighter glowsticks.
I think the blender has the potential for a wicked fire tornado if you added flammable gas at the corners that released slowly and continually. Would look insane
This would indeed be wicked.
@Editor Jack, I am really sad that when Gaunson started explaining why he thought the blades got hot was because they hit new flames, there was no “Science with Gaunson” bubble 😢
Because he was right for the first time.
He’s so almost completely right rather than just mostly.
The blades spinning generates friction heat against the atmosphere, hitting particulates. The bursting cans are throwing more particulates into the air, making the atmosphere denser.
Denser atmosphere, more particulates for the blades to hit, more heat.
Just how a prove or space craft does during re-entry.
I love it.
I get the distinct feeling gaunson is a secret genius and just playing a goofy clown. I know a thinker when I see one.
It’s well-known that in a moving matrix (in this case, flaming air relative to the blender blades), heat transfer through convection is more efficient.
Gaunson science is truly one of my favorite things in this channel. The difference between liquids and solids, thermodynamics, it doesn't matter. I love how he "explains" it all.
Does the phrase "Bellshill baffles brains" mean anything to you, I think it might be appropriate lol
For "bellshill" Read bullshit baffles brains (soz didn't spot the spell checker change)
@@martinmeasures829 no, what is that?
We need more How ridiculous at night, totally different vibes!
Totally agree 😂
Yerrrrrrrp
08:30 name that tune ???
Beer and Cocain combo it seems 😂
Totaly
What Scott says makes perfect sense. In heat transfer, there is a mechanism called forced convection. The heat transfer coefficient needed to calculate heat transfer by forced convection depends on the flow velocity of the fluid or gas relative to the object the heat is transferred to. In your case, the flow velocity is determined by the speed of the rotating blades. The faster they rotate, the more heat is transferred to the blades.
P.S.: Your videos are awesome. Please keep up the good work.
Greetings from Germany
Remember the propane in the balloons vs. the arrow with sparklers? The surface of the blades is probably where the flammable liquid mixes fastest and most completely with oxygen from the air. That should create the same effect as an oxy-acetylene torch.
In summery, new heat 😆 🤣 ❤️
It's also the fact that metal is conductive.
ty for saving me the typing lol
This is the first time that "Science with Scott" actually made sense. And if you want to test it. Redo the same flaming cans of deodorant, but use an optical thermometer to check the temp. of the tips of the blades compared to the center parts of the blades. If you had an optical camera, like on some cell phones you could even see the differences on screen.
“May I just say”… One of the best things I enjoy about your videos is your affection for each other which is always evident. May God continue to bless you and your charitable cause for all of His children.
cool?
The blades are heating up really fast from metal on metal friction.
I remember, someone dropped a lock from a shipping container, under the container. We happened to be moving the container that day, the lock got dragged maybe 5 feet by the container, the guy without thinking picked it up, and got immediate 2nd and 3rd degree burns on his hand.
That not nearly enough friction to heat up the blades that much. You could throw in 100 empty cans and it wouldn’t change the temp of the blades by even a fraction of a degree. It’s the fire and the blades moving would only make it less hot.
@@LC-sh6wd Air can totally cause friction or rather, an effect similar to friction which is compression. An object moving through the air at high speed does have wind resistance, yes, but that doesn't actually cause much friction, it causes the air to compress, compressing things heats it up so the blades are compressing the air in front of them which causes the blades to absorb that heat.
It isn't significant, the fire is defiantly doing more to heat the blades than the heat caused by the compression along such relatively small surface areas, but it is there. Occam's Razor, though, says the blades are mostly just hot because you lit them on fire.
Nice discussion guys.
As for it not being fast enough, or enough metal...
The example I gave was for a reason... a pad lock.. approximately 1.5 inches by 3 inches by 1/2 an inch... was dragged by a shipping container, for approximately 3 seconds, at a pace of about 1 foot per second.
That padlock reached temperatures in excess of 1000F, and held that temperature for several minutes.
While we laughed at the guy who grabbed it, the truth is he held it for a fraction of a second and took over a month to recover from the burns.
And that is because of something that one of you touched on... Temperature is not really associated with friction, it is associated with pressure.
As pressure increases, volume decreases and temperature increases. The pressure caused by the blades is very high, that high pressure needs one of the other two parts of the triangle to be controlled for the third to change.
If the container was open, volume was able to change on it's own, the force of the blades dissipating into the air, then it would balance out the pressure and temperature would not change.
But... it isn't open, at least not enough.
So the blades build pressure, the enclosed environment limits volume, the only other part that must change is temperature.
And this is the basis of every cooling system we make, just in reverse.
Without the metal, the blades and the air, will still get hot. But with the metal, you have an added conductive material. That material is making very short contact, but is doing it a lot, at a very high speed. In this case, the metal on metal is greatly increasing the pressure back against the blades.
Where normally the pressure does push out, this pushes a lot of it back, and concentrates the pressure, thus concentrating the heat, near and inside of the blades.
Now... for the fire... fire works by combustion and convection.
Heat will transfer to objects that are either combustible or in proximity to the convection.
As stated, the blades are basically a big fan. So they very effectively move air away from themselves, which greatly reduces convection, and being metal they have no combustion at this level, not until you get much, much hotter.
So no matter how hot the flame gets, it is in a terrible position to actually heat of the blades.
In fact, I would challenge you, in a safe environment, place a fan, above a fire, and test how long it takes to heat up the fan while it is running. You may find that the fire is extinguished by the fan moving air away from it, long before it is able to heat up from any form of combustion or convection.
Conclusion, the heat from the fire is negligible, the heat caused by the pressure increase and transmitted by the high conductivity of metal is greater.
To test, check the temperature of the blades before and after experiments with similar amounts of conductive and non-conductive materials.
I will not be testing this large scale, but I have tested it small scale.
Maybe you should try making the blender and the enclosure waterproof and hold water. Blending items like paint cans in a whirlpool would look amazing
I was thinking the same thing
@@therealdeal-uh4zhabsolutely impossible with this blender
@@noni9pr33 then they should make a separate blender and have a water buffalo on standby. It's not impossible, just more intricate
@@therealdeal-uh4zh yes, a different could maybe do it 😁
And where would they put all the waste paint, that lender would hold an tonne if it was full. Great idea, I do like the thought of seeing paint creating a marble cake type effect but I don't think it would be practical, unless they sell the blended mix on the website?
Are my guys stoned? 😂
I would be.
no theyre australian
As an Australian I can vouch for that
Usually
I didn’t read this until about 13:00 minutes in and it’s funny haha now I’m thinking back into the video like the chips and underwear and where I am right now 😂
I don't understand how ya'll aren’t sponsored by GoPro. Almost every video is a commercial for what they can withstand. 😂
They would be ricchhh
GoPros are real monsters
Ikr
They provide GoPro with a decent chunk of profit. 😂
Nighttime fire-blending, the new best thing I didn't know I needed until now :D
hey i absolutely love this video i just wanted to comment to make sure this was taken into account, dry ice being used all at once like that produces massive clouds of gas that will kill anything in it for too long due to the lack of oxygen. it looks like this was done in a big open field which is great! but i dont know if there is any forest near by where any animals could potentially get harmed, or how long it actually takes these clouds to dissipate or how far they potentially could travel before dissipating to a safe degree. im not sure if you already have, but i highly recommend consulting someone who WOULD know these things.
You should not have activated the glow sticks before! I feel like the blender would do that once its starts hitting them, that would surely give a nice effect seeing them turning on bit by bit!
To be fair, the reaction of the glow sticks lighting up requires them to be tightly packed together which is why if u hadn’t activated them it would have simply done some glow in the dark splatter which would be quite dim or just not glowing at all. The light comes from the reaction of the two chemicals inside mixing, and the blades would just split them up before they could mix and create light
@@ethandoyle4522I'm not convinced. Perhaps a scale test in a regular blender. 🤔
@@robertthompson3447 perhaps you should be less rude and just look it up for yourself 🫤
@@robertthompson3447 and I don’t want to make my blender toxic…
@@ethandoyle4522 Sounds more like youve explained away your own science.
You should try powdered coffee creamer and sparklers in the blender. You can get some really impressive fireballs with it.
i’ve seen the creamer episode on myth busters. it would be fantastic to see in the blender!
Fuel air bombs are not to be played with. They are the second most explosive type of explosives after nukes...
If you did it with like 20x as many glow sticks and positioned the slow mo cam just right above the blender it would make for a really good screensaver ngl.
Mad respect to whoever was responsible for closing and securing the door, during the night shots. When the door pin didn't go in right away on the 1000 sparklers blend I was genuinely scared for whoever was doing that job.
it cant be that hard to shut the door 💀
@@AidanMcDowell-ez1ny i mean, have you ever tried to shut a door that big within a small time margin? its easier when you have more time. but when youre against the clock, things seem to be harder to do
@@AidanMcDowell-ez1nymaybe **you** try quickly shutting a door that’s 10 times your size 💀
Was having a very crappy day. But, when Herron left a tushy print on the glass, I howled! Thanks for your wonderful insanity! God bless!
The blades heated so quickly because most flammable liquids like gasoline or most solvents burn hotter than a regular flame from wood. The jet fuel burning from 9/11 is what took the towers down. It melted the frame of the building because it burned so hot.
Those shots from the top of the blender were everything - especially the glow sticks!
In my opinion the glowstick slow motion from above is probably one of the best slow motion captures on this channel
Not a chance.
You must be new to this channel xD
That was my favorite shot of this video. But I do feel like the footage in this video is some well done stuff.
@@RolandSchlosser I been here for a while I just liked it over some of the other slow mos
It was cool looking yeah but nothin compared to the rubber band ball
Should try it with glow stick that are not activated
The content is good but honestly you blokes seem like a good group to hang around. You have a genuinely good time together, real laughter and good times. Good for you. I'm sure we're all enjoying it on this end vicariously through you.
They got that inbreed look tho
@@FriedSheep69 hatewatching much ? Touch some grass mate
Why are the chips in the fridge?
Asking the real questions here
From my experience australians put everything in the fridge.
I came here to ask that. 😂
@@jomohogamesno because I don’t
Yet still no answer? Are they hiding something? :P
get a UV light set up where the go-pro is on top of the blender and dump UV paint into the blander (idk what the UV liquid actually is just something like that)
Loved the night filming. I don’t think we have seen that since you stayed overnight at the tower in a little house where you pranked Heron for being late. You dropped glow sticks from the top and it looked awesome.
Agree
Is it me or was the camera work on another level in this video? The walking from out of focus to in focus, night shots, etc seemed extra good. Not sure if there's new cameras or what but it was excellent 👌
NGL They should like some flint and when it blends it makes a huge spark like what they were trying to get with the sparklers
So as a photographer I’d be very interested in doing or seeing some long exposure still shots of the sparklers or glow sticks. I think it could cause some cool effects kinda like a fire work sort of look, being able to track specific sparklers and glow sticks as they move through the blender.
The initial reaction after each fireball is so genuine and awesome!
And yeah, those glow sticks were fun, but the top view was best.
A big contributing factor to the heat was scraps of jock still stuck in the gears.
I think that newheat is potentially a small factor in the heating of the blades, since it does technically get closer to more hot particles. but I doubt it did much, steel( as all metals) is a pretty good conductor, so it absorbs heat quite quick. also, it being 4 cm thick doesn’t matter too much, because you were only feeling the heat on the surface, it was probably a little cooler inside. Those flames will have easily got to over 1000 degrees C , for about 5 seconds, that’s quite a lot of heat they’re baking in.
Awesome
That top down view of the glow sticks might be a top 3 or 5 for me of all time. It was amazing honestly.
Scott putting his hand on a thick metal piece and concluding it has heated all the way through is like my grandma putting a whole frozen chicken in the oven on broil for 3 minutes and concluding that it's perfectly cooked.
Also sure the rotation speed of the fans can assist with the overal heat transfer throughout the metal, but not only did it not sustain the spinning long enough to matter for the heat applied and the thickness of the metal, but it also did not add any "New Heat" like scott is implying. Convection is a method of retaining and circulating existing heat, not a method of generating heat. It could at most contribute to the metal retaining some heat from the fireball, but the fans rotating would not add any substantial heat, and certaintly not 40%. The obvious most important contributor to the heat would be covering the metal in a liquid based fireball for a minute
This video made my inner pyromaniac very happy. Also, fun fact: the stuff inside glowsticks is the same stuff used by crime scene investigators to expose blood residue on evidence and at crime scenes. Its called luminol. Stay safe and stay awesome 💜
For me out of this whole entire blender series we seem to be getting, nothing will beat blending that fridge man I laughed for days after seeing that man well done lads
Oh You Three Guys Are Ridiculously AWESOME!!‼🥰
The final slowy at the end was just magical, guys! It looked like a portal to another dimension
The glowsticks might be one of the coolest things I've ever seen on this channel. That was soooo mesmerizing!!
We gotta get these guys to 20M subs. They put out some of the best content on RUclips! Very under appreciated
Rexy looking on from the bunker is priceless. “THANK GOODNESS I’m not in there!”
that was one of the most enticing thumbnails I have ever seen, and God knows HR will deliver on it!
It's amazing how far this channel has come, MrBeast has nothing on you guys.
Love!
Better idea, MrBeast Collab.
Betterer idea😅:Kentucky ballistics or Garand Thumb collab
@@rastaboy_gamesnstuff7778 I believe they already did one with demo ranch
@@rastaboy_gamesnstuff7778 Not a chance with how Australian gun laws are. They would have to go to America to do it... If they're willing to do a gun video at all
The glow sticks look cool but nothing beats the glow sticks from the tower on the tiny house! Oh man. Derek's reaction to getting stuff thrown on him in the middle of the night was almost as funny as the boys laughing at the top. Oh the old days! 🤣🤣🤣
Watching your new videos has become something of a tradition for me and my 7 year old son. We both love everything you guys do, and for the record, he roots for Herron in every contest like he's rooting for our home football team. Thanks for being awesome boys. ❤
P.S. - I ordered him a Rexy for Christmas and I think it'll be his favorite gift
Your a great person
18:21 might be the most beautiful thing ever
This was one of your best videos in a while and not just because the ideas were good. I've always enjoyed the videos where you include more of your banter and conversation the best even if the "content" wasn't great that day. Please put more of your conversations and debates over Gaunson-science in your vids.👍
My only question is why do you put chips in a fridge? 😂
It keeps them fresh
Idk
There channel is the definition of boys will be boys, lol so cute
8:22 44 sparklers with 44 cans of shaving cream would be insane!
Convection is the quickest form of heat transfer, it's why stirring things as they cook helps heat them up. By constantly cycling the fluid (air, water, etc), you are always replacing the colder boundary layer fluid with warmer fluid.
So...what you're saying is...team New Heat were kind of right?
They were exactly right :)
@@jackdavis756 What a turn up for the books! 😂
Should have let the blender break the glow sticks
God, I needed that video to drop today. Today was NOT a good day. Thank you HR!! ❤
I hope it gets better for you
@@rampagent9226 thank you!
pasta
You guys save me so much in destruction therapy. I appreciate your desire to destroy. With such humor, cleanliness and joy inducing cheer. Thanks. Your 45 year old fan.
12:08 “the angry dude from inside out” 💀
“I thought we peaked at the jocks, but I think we’re finding another gear.”
~ Brett Stanford 2023
(8:51)
I don't know if you read my comment or if other people also said the same. But I appreciate you toning down the frequency of the editing cuts! Makes it much more enjoyable! ❤ Or should I say.....thank you Editor Jack?! ❤
The blender acting as a fan introducing more oxygen to the fire creating a flaming tornado with its base being the blades seems like a reasonable explanation for the increased heat. I do like new heat as well though.
What a video! Truly entertaining 😂 I'd love to have been a fly on the wall when one of you thought to add fire to the blender 😂😂Your faces when the first flame went off were priceless! And the flowsricks!!!! Awesome
great video guys , the vibe and different shots at night is great ... you guys should keep doing the night videos and maybe have challenges aswell ... but i wanted to suggest glow sticks with dry ice it would look really good
If you would've dumped a little bit of warm water in the blender with the dry ice, the smoke would've been much much cooler. (:
You need a remote triggered compressed air cannon on the bottom\floor so you can blast the stuff stuck under the blades upwards.
Just when I thought the 5x fire blender was the best visual in this video, the glowstick ocean pleasantly surprised me! Great vid as always boys!
How Ridiculous: Doing all the things you wanted to do as a kid since 2009.
Epic videos with this blender. Totally loving them. You guys should try to match the shutter speed of one of cameras to the rpm of the blender it could look trippy as hell 😂
It looks like a giant lantern! (8:08)
17:50 for those who want to skip to the glowsticks
0:59 100% smells like a middle school locker room
Engineer here, 'new heat' is definitely a thing. Although it's not called that. It's like wind passing through you on a cold day vs. the same temp, no wind. You extract more energy because of the moving air. The blender is the same, but hot. It's called Alpha in laws of convection.
seeing that fire at night makes it look 10 times better! 🔥
thank god you guys have a whole team of people helping you with this. y'all are some madmen lmao
The top view on the glow sticks might be the most beautiful thing I've ever seen
This is the quickest I have ever caught an HR video... a great break in my day!
EDIT: You three Ozzies are INSANE!
The Forbidden Orange Juice 11:32
That top down slow-mo with the glow sticks and even the sparklers... I feel like you could put those on a loop and sell those to advertisers or something for short animations for their brand or something. Pretty awesome shots!
Look in to fire salts. They use different metal salts to change the color of the flame
Ah! My grandparents used to bring those to us when they came to visit….back in the early 70’s. We, as little kids, would toss them into the fireplace. Such good memories.
The giant blender has definitely been the most chaotic so far 😂 #newheat
No stalling. Straight to the point. You earned 200 social credits
Who the fk.put Potatochips in the fridge?😂 2:02
I just want to know why the chips were in the refrigerator
I hope they realize glow sticks contain glass that becomes really small sharp shards when broken
18:22 is the best moment 😮
I'm on team #newheat - The introduction of convection into the heat, is the same reason that a fan oven heats up faster than a conventional oven. The heat will exponentially increase, the more oxygen is added to the fire. This is why you get flashovers from house fires where as soon as oxygen is introduced, the whole lot goes up like a bomb. Gaunson is right on the nose with this one.
Glow Sticks for the win, but I recon the footage would look even better, if the glow sticks weren't activated before blending but due to the blending.
12:00 You guys captured some incredible reference footage for properly tuning the light exposure of your CGI explosions and the following fire.
Imagine having to clean out the blender
Yeh, it’s not the easiest or most fun. Took so long to clean the deodorant off ready for the next drop 😑
1:24 monsters inc vibes🤔
RIP in peace Mr Blender, you will be missed 😢
3 Doors Down....
You guys have to get a Ballistic's lab dummy and drop it in.
I agree totally!!!!!. But it might be a little too violent or gruesome for HR. I would love to see it though
18:01 for people who came here just to see the glowsticks
3:04 He definitely enjoyed that
For the next night time blend, you should try a huge wad of steel wool. I think that would create the effect you were looking for with the sparklers.
Steel wool and sone 9v batteries
Imagine creating this giant blender in the middle ages....they would use it for capital punishment 😅