This is why potato cannons are dangerous.

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  • Опубликовано: 7 июн 2024
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Комментарии • 4,9 тыс.

  • @Nighthawkinlight
    @Nighthawkinlight Год назад +5021

    When I went out to visit Paul Gregg, backyard PVC rollercoaster extraordinaire, he showed me his extensive test results of PVC fracture toughness. He found that PVC lost something like 50% of toughness after a year of daily sunlight (UV exposure causes the plastic to become harder and much more brittle), but painted PVC in the same conditions retained over 98% of the same fracture toughness it started with. Color and type of paint made little difference. From then on I've been painting all my PVC projects.

  • @2miligrams
    @2miligrams Год назад +775

    the way how he looked at the price of a bombsuit (30k) then looked at the camera before it cut to a sponsor is hilarious.

    • @ConnorSinclairCavin
      @ConnorSinclairCavin Год назад +36

      I was about to say that as well, but hey, you could probably label it as a business expense right?

    • @77SBCR
      @77SBCR Год назад +5

      Made me laugh ngl

    • @LordLotman
      @LordLotman Год назад +3

      Too funny

    • @firstlast1278
      @firstlast1278 Год назад +9

      now that's how you transition to an ad

    • @ieuanhunt552
      @ieuanhunt552 Год назад +2

      too bad Honey is kinda a scam.

  • @SomeGuy-mt4hq
    @SomeGuy-mt4hq Год назад +500

    I'm sorry, did this man take a Bong hit through a potato cannon? Legend

    • @Delta132
      @Delta132 Год назад +31

      I laughed for a good 10 minutes at that

    • @lucivarsadiablo4191
      @lucivarsadiablo4191 Год назад +34

      I just started the video and haven't gotten past this spot. I was like omg. I came here for this comment.

    • @SomeGuy-mt4hq
      @SomeGuy-mt4hq Год назад +4

      @@lucivarsadiablo4191 happy to provide

    • @ooshgooch7671
      @ooshgooch7671 Год назад +16

      I thought I was going crazy does he usually do stuff like that lol

    • @kukulcangod1
      @kukulcangod1 Год назад +2

      lol that was funny

  • @JamesBond-qv2ht
    @JamesBond-qv2ht Год назад +294

    My brother’s friend is a steamfitter and he welded a potato cannon out of steel pipe. I believe it was fueled with acetylene and oxygen. It was big and heavy and had its own stand. It launched potatoes out of sight (likely into orbit) with a tremendous bang. Good times.

    • @nedcramdon1306
      @nedcramdon1306 Год назад +16

      I'd love to have one of those.

    • @michaelshine3353
      @michaelshine3353 8 месяцев назад +5

      I love this!

    • @bungersinyourarea
      @bungersinyourarea 8 месяцев назад +4

      Classic combo of gasses, great for old fashioned welding

    • @baraka629
      @baraka629 7 месяцев назад

      Bring out the tater 8 pounder! tally ho lads!

    • @michaelross1452
      @michaelross1452 4 месяца назад

      So, it was the size of a Saturn 5 rocket? The potato cannon?
      To get into orbit it would have to reach escape velocity. Which is 6 miles a second or roughly 25,000mph.

  • @baba3578
    @baba3578 Год назад +3380

    Babe wake up the backyard scientist just posted

  • @SirPembertonS.Crevalius
    @SirPembertonS.Crevalius Год назад +671

    Love how the blast shield is basically just a -sheet of plywood- small metal plate they have to crouch behind. Love it.

    • @FearThePegasus
      @FearThePegasus Год назад +18

      That's not plywood it's a metal plate.

    • @ChrisD__
      @ChrisD__ Год назад +20

      @@FearThePegasus *inflates you, making you big and round*

    • @johnyray6801
      @johnyray6801 Год назад +7

      how did you cross that out??

    • @muh1h1
      @muh1h1 Год назад

      @@johnyray6801 ˙ɔıƃɐɯ

    • @shadowxxe
      @shadowxxe Год назад +8

      @@ChrisD__ *detaches argon hose* Not today bud

  • @alfredofreesalt
    @alfredofreesalt Год назад +112

    I've been making quality potato cannons for years. Only time I've ever had a problem was when I went on vacation and my roommate decided to put a mortar firework into my newest build that had a 3" pipe for the combustion chamber tapered down to a 2" for the barrel. Firework obviously got stuck in the chamber and exploded in his hands.
    I was very surprised that he was surprised that it shattered on him.

    • @migolo1415
      @migolo1415 Год назад +13

      make way, mr brain is coming in

    • @justaweeb9086
      @justaweeb9086 Год назад +2

      How do you make a potato cannon? Or what defines a potato cannon and what are some do's and don'ts when trying to make one, sorry if I'm asking much

    • @andrew-know
      @andrew-know Год назад +3

      He stoopeed

    • @Fork.l
      @Fork.l 11 месяцев назад +1

      so youre good at making potato cannons, so a specific question. can i make a 29" barrel with a 2" diameter with a 5" long chamber 3" diameter? possibly 4" but taper it? trying to make it resemble an at4 for halloween lol

    • @EdmundSampson-pd7vi
      @EdmundSampson-pd7vi 6 месяцев назад

      Does your roommate just randomly play with your things, trying on your used condoms???

  • @Vexins
    @Vexins Год назад +13

    PVC is transparent to X-rays also if I recall correctly. So the only way to find all the shrapnel in you is through exploratory surgery. Yup, they just gotta dig til they hopefully find it all.

  • @doomgod314
    @doomgod314 Год назад +548

    Building them with my dad as a kid, we always had cut a "duct tape safety" in the rear chamber. If the pressure was too high, it would blow the back off, and remain dangerous directionally (forward and rear) rather than omnidirectionally. He only ever blew the safety when he used acetylene, rather than his usual starter fluid.
    I never did go back and make a new one when I became an adult, but I wanted to try to build a pneumatic spudgun with an electric solenoid. The pressure can be higher and more consistent, so it's safer than guessing how much starter fluid you used.

    • @BenMyhillJones
      @BenMyhillJones Год назад +10

      What kind of potato gun? Was it compressed air or propane or was it hairspray. Because I imagine a hairspray potato gun would be far safer because pushing a potato out a barrel is far easier than blowing up outwards.

    • @doomgod314
      @doomgod314 Год назад +9

      @@BenMyhillJones we usually used starter fluid. Hairspray was ok.
      Pneumatic would provide a more consistent power, so your safety margins could be higher

    • @IsraafeelMohammedMusic
      @IsraafeelMohammedMusic Год назад +1

      @Don't Read My Profile Photo ok

    • @HolowatyVlogs
      @HolowatyVlogs Год назад +5

      Did you say acetylene?!

    • @jtjames79
      @jtjames79 Год назад +1

      We would wrap ours in bailing wire and/or fiberglass. Never had an RUD.

  • @jclarkent3757
    @jclarkent3757 Год назад +612

    Second degree burns on my eyelids…I built a potato cannon when I was in high school. Glued all the pieces together and left it over night to cure. The next morning, I hooked up the sparker and looked into the combustion chamber to make sure the leads were close enough to spark. They were. And they ignited all the PVC cement fumes that were still hanging out. The fireball gave me second degree burns on my eye lids. I still have no idea how I was able to close my eyes in time. Careful out there, kids

    • @Seelenschmiede
      @Seelenschmiede Год назад +161

      Thankfully, the blinking reflex is the fastes reflex we have. Eyes are precious.

    • @Zippytez
      @Zippytez Год назад +33

      Yea. I didnt use fire, just air.
      I didnt use PVC primer with my first. I had it around 100 psi or so when the front barrel blew off. Threw the ~1kg barrel around 10 meters or so in front of me. The air chamber shot backwards and gave my arm a good cut. I still have that scar, and this was 3 or so summers ago
      I'm hella lucky I didnt get hurt more

    • @randomdude189
      @randomdude189 Год назад +20

      Thank god you can still see

    • @bagelsgarage
      @bagelsgarage Год назад +6

      I did the exact same thing when I built my first one

    • @jclarkent3757
      @jclarkent3757 Год назад +11

      @@bagelsgarage seriously? Haha glue fumes are the hidden killer

  • @fecklesstech929
    @fecklesstech929 Год назад +54

    I built a PVC potato cannon many years ago only I used water balloons instead of potatoes. The power, range, and thudding BOOM when I shot the thing were most gratifying. I started off with Aqua-net hairspray but later found that old-school Right Guard deodorant in the brown spray can was much cleaner burning, much more powerful, and left a nice fresh scent! BTW: a cup of paint balls was pretty amazing too. I called it the shotgun of Moses. The paint ball pattern was murder out to 100 feet or so.

    • @-jank-willson
      @-jank-willson 10 месяцев назад +4

      you used deoderant as fuel?? was it powerful enough to break concret (or bones?)

    • @fecklesstech929
      @fecklesstech929 10 месяцев назад +5

      I don't think it will break concrete. I did break a wooden privacy fence. It also punched a hole in a plastic dog house one time. I certainly wouldn't shoot it at a person or a pet. Not at a car or a house either. It could easily break a window.@@-jank-willson

    • @-jank-willson
      @-jank-willson 9 месяцев назад +1

      if you made one, but used a much smaller diameter pipe, that was too small for potatoes, but just the right size for ball bearings, do you think it would 'end' somebody? AKA a homemade firearm?@@fecklesstech929

    • @-jank-willson
      @-jank-willson 9 месяцев назад +1

      I did see a video where somebody broke a concrete slab with a potato launched from one of these. and also put molotovs in it instead of potatoes...
      @@fecklesstech929

  • @ctaylor7089
    @ctaylor7089 Год назад +26

    I made one many years ago out of copper pipe with an mip on the rear and a threaded pvc cap. The cap was the weak point so any failure would be controlled and directed in a safer direction. It worked really well with aquanet. Also, I sharpened the end of the barrel so it would trim the potato to tight fit as you pushed it in.

    • @user-cb1ln8vc8d
      @user-cb1ln8vc8d Год назад +2

      Jesus what size pipe did you use. 2 inch copper is 30 bucks a foot, 3in 60, and 4in 90 where i live

    • @ctaylor7089
      @ctaylor7089 Год назад +3

      @@user-cb1ln8vc8d 2" barrel 4" combustion chamber. It was 25 years ago, copper was cheaper back then, but I still don't pay anywhere near $30 per foot for 2" type l.

  • @NPzed
    @NPzed Год назад +112

    Sensible chuckle: Cutting from a 30k price tag for a suit straight to an ad was one of the best transitions I've seen! Props to the editor/timeline decision maker!

    • @daniks_en
      @daniks_en Год назад

      I UNDERSTAND THAT THERE ARE A LOT OF COMMENTS HERE, BUT PLEASE READ IT !
      I also try to create interesting content (experiments). Will you write your opinion? dg

  • @imajeenyus42
    @imajeenyus42 Год назад +287

    I had never seen pressure-rated PVC pipe in hardware stores here in the UK, so once, many years ago (like probably 2003 or so) when we were on holiday in Florida, we filled a whole suitcase with assorted fittings and got a couple of 6 foot lengths of pipe back as hold luggage. The guys at the airport didn't know what the hell to make of it 🤣🤣

    • @Hebdomad7
      @Hebdomad7 Год назад +81

      Damn plumbing enthusiasts with their product samples.

    • @DaimyoD0
      @DaimyoD0 Год назад +4

      Wow that is a genuinely amusing story lmao

    • @Lizlodude
      @Lizlodude Год назад +63

      I imagine the TSA dude's just thinking "none of this is actually against the rules, but I really don't want it on the plane..."

    • @whatcher8151
      @whatcher8151 Год назад

      Sorry sir but we are going to confiscate your Spud Gun parts. They have no serial numbers on them.

    • @boyjedi-vn9mr
      @boyjedi-vn9mr Год назад

      Same in ireland

  • @jamesberwick2210
    @jamesberwick2210 Год назад +19

    Before PVC, we used empty tin cans, before they punched them from Aluminum. Taped together, built right, they'd send a tennis ball quite a distance on just lighter fluid. I was in the Air Force, couldn't keep it together, but in a box, with a few cut up to make model airplane tanks, the others could be taped together in minutes, fired to wake everyone up, and tear it down in seconds and look just as surprised as anyone.

    • @aldrinmilespartosa1578
      @aldrinmilespartosa1578 Год назад +2

      Though Illegal, its very papular on the Philippines to celebrate new years though various degrees of safety and quality.

    • @rdm5190
      @rdm5190 Год назад

      Ahhhhh 1972 again!

    • @jamesberwick2210
      @jamesberwick2210 Год назад

      @@rdm5190 Oh to be 21 again. I wake up feeling twenty-five, look in the mirror, to shave, that reflection tells me no, I'm not 25 anymore.

  • @lullebulle2
    @lullebulle2 Год назад +3

    I just got to say i love that transition into the ad, Showing the suit for 29k, your smug face and then BAM, Ad time! Great work man i love your channel!

  • @bowreed
    @bowreed Год назад +70

    "lock a kid in a room with a potato cannon and a live hand grenade"
    Wise words to live by

    • @Francois_Dupont
      @Francois_Dupont Год назад +8

      imagine a soldier launching unpinned grenades from a potato canon.
      the grenade would strike open as it leaves the barrel.
      hahahahha

  • @ZevVeli
    @ZevVeli Год назад +226

    When I was in high school my Physics teacher was telling us that when he was in college they had a potato cannon that they would demonstrate for kids are science outreach. One year, their professor decided that "hey shooting flame propelled potatoes at groups of small children is probably a bad idea." And challenged them to come up with a different idea. So some of his buddies had the idea to use liquid nitrogen as a propellant. They would put some liquid nitrogen in a water bottle, drop it down the barrel as a propelling charge with a potato, and let the bottle explode. They, of course, had to test this where there were no people, which is how they were almost arrested for shooting potato canons out on the residence quad green at 3 am.

    • @Lizlodude
      @Lizlodude Год назад +40

      Done this with dry ice, tons of fun! Until one doesn't go off...
      I agree with Adam, the scariest explosive is the one that doesn't actually explode XD

    • @Ubiquitous138
      @Ubiquitous138 Год назад +6

      *after a few drinks and some engineering.

    • @8180634
      @8180634 Год назад +5

      @@Lizlodude A BB gun will take care of the ones that don't go off. ;)

    • @TheHippyProductions
      @TheHippyProductions Год назад

      @@8180634 better be a fricken pellet gun and not something you'd give a 10 year old

    • @8180634
      @8180634 Год назад +2

      @@TheHippyProductions when they are almost ready to pop, it doesn't take much to finish the job.

  • @wickedcircle
    @wickedcircle Год назад +3

    at 5:20, you be heavily injured or dead, you maybe don't see the damage on the surface but internally you be pretty mess up...

  • @samreddig8819
    @samreddig8819 Год назад +2

    This is why you should make designated failure points. Something like a plug glued in so if the pressure gets too high it shoots out instead of exploding. The idea is that if it's going to break it'll break in a predictable manner that can planned around and made safe.
    This is really common in things like water pumps for trains. They have exactly this though the plugs are screwed not glued into place.

  • @RicardoSanchez-es5wl
    @RicardoSanchez-es5wl Год назад +250

    When I was a kid my friends dad, who is a mechanical engineer, built us one that we used to set off with hair spray. He used pressure rated pipe and PVC primer and cement and designed it to be fired from about 10 feet away on a stand using long cables with the grill igniter. He also designed it so that if it failed, the end cap would blow off rather than the entire thing exploding. I don’t know how he did it but that’s what he said, and I trust him given the impressive projects he did as an engineer

    • @genewitch
      @genewitch Год назад +11

      you could probably friction fit the cap on snugly enough that it is 99.9% less likely to let go than a potato or whatever, using tape or putty or something similarly gap-filling. Look at ... uh, water distillers you can buy online, they're very leaky for the metal (copper) ones, you're supposed to either use PTFE (teflon) tape or "wheat paste" to fill the gaps in the connectors, and that has to both withstand moderate pressure *and* fairly extreme heat (steam under pressure is quite hot)

    • @daniks_en
      @daniks_en Год назад

      I UNDERSTAND THAT THERE ARE A LOT OF COMMENTS HERE, BUT PLEASE READ IT !
      I also try to create interesting content (experiments). Will you write your opinion? dg

    • @sullivan3503
      @sullivan3503 Год назад +2

      You just need to make sure the threads on the end cap will shear off well before the pressure gets to dangerous levels.

    • @josha254
      @josha254 Год назад

      Impressive.

    • @26heritage
      @26heritage Год назад

      My dad would build ours out of sced 80. We would use hairspray, amd a grill igniter as well. Only we shot them off our shoulders. Obviously looking back it wasn't the safest thing but not the most dangerous either. Never had one blow up luckily

  • @dodo2829
    @dodo2829 Год назад +12

    The way he looked at the camera is like: "I'd preferably die" 5:48

  • @TheUndeadFish1
    @TheUndeadFish1 3 месяца назад +1

    Me and my best friend in HS made a couple of these back in 01-02. We took them to the local football field during summer break and would sit in either of the end zones and fire potatoes at each other like we were enemy mortar squads. We used hairspray, and eventually swapped to butane because over time whatever additives where in the hairspray would stick to the side of the chamber, would stay lit and we didn't want to melt the sides.

  • @alecmalone5657
    @alecmalone5657 Год назад

    Love your energy man, great videos!

  • @dwatts64
    @dwatts64 Год назад +82

    I have personally been present in a room when a pvc potato Cannon exploded. My brother had made one using compressed air for the Oklahoma D-Day paintball game and we were testing it a bit. Then he thought it would be funny to put a piece of paper in it and launch it at my other brother's butt in the kitchen without him knowing.
    So Brother A pressurizes the potato Cannon, keeps it REALLY low pressure so he doesn't risk hurting Brother B, (like 15-20psi tops) and goes to shoulder it. While lifting it up, his shoulder bumped the valve and dumped a little more pressure into it. I saw it happen, I reached up and shut off the valve and tried to stop Brother A before he fired, but he didn't hear me in time, he opened the barrel's valve and the rapid expansion of air made the whole barrel go kablooey. Shrapnel went everywhere, put a hole through a cabinet, took a small chunk out of the countertop, and one piece went clean through an entire roll of paper towels, out the other side and still managed to stick into the plaster wall behind it. It was crazy.
    By SOME miracle, no one got hurt or injured except Brother A who had a medium sized cut on his hand that had opened the firing valve, but nothing that needed stitches, and some ringing ears.
    I still remember it all like it was in slow motion. Have never forgotten it. And it's why my kids will not be left home alone unattended for extended periods of time when they're in their teens 😂

    • @JoshuaKA02
      @JoshuaKA02 Год назад

      This is why I always stayed clear of compressed air cannons. While it seemed you could control the pressure more than using ignitable fuels, it just added another chance for something going wrong to me. I stuck to hairspray, and not clogging the barrel.

  • @degiguess
    @degiguess Год назад +168

    Personally what I would do to secure it is have a loose layer of thick canvas around the cannon and then 2 offset layers of hardware cloth on top of that. I think having something loose around it would be more effective than something tightly hugging it like fiberglass or duct tape because it would give the PVC room to rupture and release the gas inside while still catching the shrapnel.

    • @Seelenschmiede
      @Seelenschmiede Год назад +8

      This is what they do with cevlar jackets around drive shafts /gear boxes at racing

    • @rickgreer7203
      @rickgreer7203 Год назад +8

      I would never use any type of PVC at all for any DIY pressure stuff, especially close to you. One of the reasons we use HDPE for fireworks tubes...aside from a decent pressure rating...when it fails, it bulges, stretches, and then shreds.

    • @eelcohoogendoorn8044
      @eelcohoogendoorn8044 Год назад

      Dunno; thats kinda what he did and the glass fiber didnt do a very good job of containing the shrapnell. In any case, such a design including the one used here wouldnt improve max pressure; infact the concentrated loads induced by the chicken wire risk substantially weakening the PVC as it gets stretched outward onto the discontinuous metal wire. Pulling a kevlar continuously braided sleeve, or maybe something like UHMWPE (though i dont know thats readily available as sleeve), would provide orders of magnitude more impact toughness than glass, for sure, and if the kevlar is epoxied on, it will provide a crapton of strength and stiffness too, so you can make it so it only blows out the ends and will be safe to hold.

    • @garmancathotmailcom
      @garmancathotmailcom Год назад

      Works good for hydraulic hoses with tiny wire shrapnel. It's usually nylon webbing.

    • @DevinBaillie
      @DevinBaillie Год назад +1

      Just go with a larger PVC pipe outside the one you're pressurizing...

  • @ShellyTheSeal
    @ShellyTheSeal 11 месяцев назад +2

    8:30 own a potato cannon for home defense

  • @David-uy4jz
    @David-uy4jz 3 месяца назад +1

    Using a piece of carpet padding as a wad and a golf ball for ammo works really well

  • @1Thatstrangeguy
    @1Thatstrangeguy Год назад +91

    When I was a young teenager I wanted to make a potato gun but my parents said no and didn't let me get the materials I needed. Fast forward some time I found some old PVC that had been sitting out in the sun for a couple of years and built a potato gun out of that instead and kept it hidden from my parents. It worked fine for a while but on the last shot it exploded in my hands and even 15 years later I can still hear the ringing in my ears from it.

    • @superkip5920
      @superkip5920 Год назад +5

      Ik heb 2 aardappelkanonnen, en er is er één nog maar een paar keer ontploft! Veilig zat!😌

    • @Sundownnnn
      @Sundownnnn Год назад +5

      @@superkip5920 net 'n paar keer...

    • @AlexNV75
      @AlexNV75 Год назад

      @@Sundownnnn lol

    • @BigBodyBiggolo
      @BigBodyBiggolo Год назад +3

      Waarom praten we ineens Nederlands?

    • @superkip5920
      @superkip5920 Год назад +3

      @@BigBodyBiggolo omdat Nederlands de beste taal ter wereld is!😀

  • @whatcher8151
    @whatcher8151 Год назад +89

    I was the pressure tester for a company for 2 years. Aluminum tanks with fiberglass and resin covered, used for air/oxygen tanks by Firemen also large tanks for Vans using natural gas also COTA bus natural gas tanks. They almost 6 ft. long and 2.5 ft. diameter. The firemen O2 tanks would blow at 14-20 thousand pounds. They had to fail at the ends also. But of course pop off valves were used when built. Also did fire bomb tests and projectile tests from 30.06. Great job. All was done in a concrete safe and also inside of a metal tube with end caps. The man before me was killed when one blew up wrong, took the safe room door off and hit him. We always crouched down behind the machine on failure tests. D.O.T. was always there watching explosions, recording all findings. All was graphed out on chart paper for reference. Yes we used compressed water thru very thick stainless steel pipe. Each lot of 200 tanks, two were used to test. Testing would used pressure pumps, hydraulics to pump them to 5000 psi over 30 sec. then down to zero over 30 seconds. Then after 10,000 cycles then the pressure went to 7500 psi 30 times, then it went to failure in a concrete reinforced room. Every different size tank had differing pressures. Larger the tank, smaller the pressures.

    • @poopymcbunghole7027
      @poopymcbunghole7027 Год назад +3

      Ever have any close calls yourself?

    • @EC-dz4bq
      @EC-dz4bq Год назад +1

      Yeah... should I be worried about putting 4500psi carbon fiber tanks on my face while shooting my rifle? (Also have a 3000psi aluminum)

    • @ch3no2killz
      @ch3no2killz Год назад

      4th of July every work day want more could you ask for? Bring you Kid to work day. Where do you work now?

    • @Rekkuza-eu6sp
      @Rekkuza-eu6sp Год назад +1

      Pick up your cross and follow Jesus! The world is quickly headed for destruction, and sooner or later you will have to sit at the judgement seat and give an account for your actions. Belief in messiah alone is not enough to grant you salvation - Matthew 7:21-23, John 3:3, John 3:36 (ESV is the best translation for John 3:36). Call on the name of Jesus and pray for Him to intervene in your life! - Revelation 3:20.
      Contemplate how the Roman Empire fulfilled the role of the beast from the sea in Revelation 13. Revelation 17 confirms that it is in fact Rome. From this we can conclude that A) Jesus is the Son of God and can predict the future or make it happen, B) The world leaders/nations/governments etc have been conspiring together for the last 3000+ years going back to Babylon and before, C) History as we know it is fake. You don't really need to speculate once you start a relationship with God tho.
      Can't get a response from God? Fasting can help increase your perception and prayer can help initiate events. God will ignore you if your prayer does not align with His purpose (James 4:3) or if you are approaching Him when "unclean" (Isaiah 1:15, Isaiah 59:2, Micah 3:4). Stop eating food sacrificed to idols (McDonald's, Wendy's etc) stop glorifying yourself on social media or making other images of yourself (Second Commandment), stop gossiping about other people, stop watching obscene content etc and you should get a response. Have a blessed day!

    • @squidwardo7074
      @squidwardo7074 Год назад

      Compressed water? I thought water was incompressable

  • @hippomonstrososquepadeliaphobi
    @hippomonstrososquepadeliaphobi 6 месяцев назад +2

    3:50, a potato gun gun

  • @GordonFalt
    @GordonFalt 6 месяцев назад +1

    I’ve gotten pretty crazy with potato guns when I was young. From overloading them to using crazy fuel, never had one blow up. Just gotta do a good job cleaning and gluing the pipe.

  • @crimsonhalo13
    @crimsonhalo13 Год назад +232

    I've built half a dozen cannons over the years, always using ABS cellcore, and using butane as the fuel. Never had any of them go catastrophic, even after loading heavy projectiles and abusing the crap outta them. This plastic behaves differently from PVC, particularly when it comes to firing in the wintertime. If you live in a cold climate, never use PVC.

    • @michaelbutcher3198
      @michaelbutcher3198 Год назад +6

      My ABS cannon is 18+ years old.

    • @djhaloeight
      @djhaloeight Год назад +9

      We used to use hairspray on the cannons we built in high school in the 90s

    • @shoechew
      @shoechew Год назад +6

      @@djhaloeight I didn't like hairspray as it gummed everything up. I had good success with a generic Dollar Store version of Right Guard deodorant.

    • @minter_fab_mafia
      @minter_fab_mafia Год назад +2

      Yeah, I have multiple 10 plus year old cannons. Never used PVC. I use aqua net hair spray and some heavy and tight fiting objects. Never had a failure

    • @shoechew
      @shoechew Год назад +2

      @@minter_fab_mafia Walnuts right off the tree with their husks still on will kill a deer. At least that's what I hear.

  • @TY_Gemini
    @TY_Gemini Год назад +11

    0:30 I was so confused when I heard my local new’s jingle! I thought they interrupted RUclips for a weather alert haha

  • @danielhawkins6425
    @danielhawkins6425 Год назад +3

    It might not be a bad idea to create a deliberate weak point in the cannon, so you have a reproducible failure pathway. Maybe a shallow cut 1/4" wide by 0.05" deep at the front of the large chamber. Make sure the cut profile is rounded to prevent very low failure pressures due to the creation of stress risers in the plastic. A round file might be a good tool.

  • @motherreaper7287
    @motherreaper7287 Год назад

    I love that ending!

  • @bhutwheyttherismor86
    @bhutwheyttherismor86 Год назад +75

    I have been involved in a failed compressed air fuelled acorn canon incident and it wasn't fun. Couldn't hear anything in one ear for an hour or so and couldn't feel one hand for a couple hours and then all I was feeling was pain for a while. Everything healed alright in the end and I was good. Like he said follow the instructions and test a few times before you go hands on.

    • @BigBodyBiggolo
      @BigBodyBiggolo Год назад +4

      Good thing you healed up, ear damage is no fun.
      Any damage isnt really but ear damage can be a menace for a while

    • @Seelenschmiede
      @Seelenschmiede Год назад +4

      As a "retired" long time club DJ: hear loss and ear drum rupture isn't as much fun as you might think...

    • @meyou245
      @meyou245 Год назад +1

      @@Seelenschmiede Huh, guess I should cross that off my bucket list?

    • @bhutwheyttherismor86
      @bhutwheyttherismor86 Год назад +2

      @@Seelenschmiede It was awful, felt like one of those war movies after the shell hits next to the protagonist.

  • @OfficiallySnek
    @OfficiallySnek Год назад +18

    Seem like you really like that bomb suit. Maybe you can make one and then try and see how effective it is for a future episode?

  • @borisjohnson1944
    @borisjohnson1944 Год назад +1

    I made one a few years ago. Just used compressed air at 40psi. shot a plum, it was the closest fit down the barrel, over 150m.

  • @mcsniper77
    @mcsniper77 Год назад +1

    Potato Cannon Darwin Awards I like it. Things aren't dangerous, stupidity is.

  • @MrLarsgren
    @MrLarsgren Год назад +155

    highly recommend making the bottom part the weakspot.
    its way safer having it just blow out the bottom instead of acting like a frag grenade

    • @AAjax
      @AAjax Год назад +14

      Exactly this - fail safe should be the design goal.

    • @squidwardo7074
      @squidwardo7074 Год назад +8

      who cares about safety?

    • @shoechew
      @shoechew Год назад

      ​@@squidwardo7074 Is that you, Cyrus?
      ruclips.net/video/47Yxa9IeJEc/видео.html

    • @iceho6460
      @iceho6460 Год назад +9

      How about making the combustion chamber out of metal tubing where welding and fasteners are used instead of glue?

    • @daddyhobo2
      @daddyhobo2 Год назад

      @@iceho6460 that sir is a pipe bomb

  • @fordmanfinis
    @fordmanfinis Год назад +57

    My brother works for consumer testing laboratories (UL) and he says everything usually has to test 2 to 3 times over its rated limit. Swing set loads, pipe psi, shoe wear, you name it.

    • @garmancathotmailcom
      @garmancathotmailcom Год назад +5

      2.5 to 10 times for fluid conveyance. In some rare instances it is only 1.5 but that's usually for very large diameter or ultra high pressure products. 4 times is the norm.

    • @thomasbarlow4223
      @thomasbarlow4223 Год назад

      Hey ask him about water valves. What is their safety rating

    • @fordmanfinis
      @fordmanfinis Год назад +3

      @@thomasbarlow4223 "They are tested to 125 psi and have to remain operational and to 500 psi and must not burst or leak but don't have to work after." -My brother

    • @itswift
      @itswift Год назад +1

      PVC pressure pipe is generally designed to withstand 3.2x the rated pressure in short term rupture tests. Check out ASTM D2241 or AWWA C900.

    • @thomasbarlow4223
      @thomasbarlow4223 Год назад +1

      @@fordmanfinis tell him I said thanks. I am building something and want make sure its safe. 5000psi operation pressure surely must withstand 10k psi but I couldn't see much more than double safety margin. But hey I've been wrong before....

  • @aaronsorensen5165
    @aaronsorensen5165 Год назад +1

    No pressure problem if you use threaded end pieces.

  • @ryanc473
    @ryanc473 Год назад +5

    You should probably wear a mask when blasting fiberglass like that. It's not as bad as asbestos, but it still isn't great for your lungs, and this is almost certainly blasts a punch of small fibers all into the air. It's at least not really a carcinogen (that we can tell) but it is still pretty irriating and can cause some asthma/bronchitis like symptoms

  • @fuzznut25
    @fuzznut25 Год назад +115

    Word of advice for next time; you can use argon while it’s on its side. Pressurized gas that’s not liquid can lay sideways and still dispense. Welders do it all the time (I have personally as well). So you could have set the tank next to you behind your barrier for more safety + ease of reading gauges. Great video!

    • @TheWinjin
      @TheWinjin Год назад +12

      I would also suggest a thicker plate of cardboard for protection. Like, at least two layers :D

    • @ffjsb
      @ffjsb Год назад +7

      Plus it won't fall over sideways and hit you in the head while you're hiding behind it...

    • @recksnfx611
      @recksnfx611 Год назад +4

      @@TheWinjin That was sheet metal

    • @TheWinjin
      @TheWinjin Год назад +3

      @@recksnfx611 I guess you're right, it just looked like a piece of dark wood to me, but probably it's a rusty sheet. I think it would've been better with legs :D

  • @memelephant
    @memelephant Год назад +10

    0:23 I love that they used the minecraft tnt sound effect

    • @Ekipsogel
      @Ekipsogel 15 дней назад

      And the potato cannon from the create mod

  • @khakiwolf4146
    @khakiwolf4146 Год назад

    We made a potato cannon years ago out of ABS (all black stuff) and used a large gauge pipe to brace the combustion chamber. Basically cut the pipe in half lengthwise and put it around the original pipe, and then tightened it on there with a pair of large hose clamps. That was back in 1999-2000 and 23 years later it's still holding together.

  • @sirfalcon1
    @sirfalcon1 11 месяцев назад

    Excellent work. I really appreciate the data.

  • @IvanTheDraggo
    @IvanTheDraggo Год назад +70

    Finally! The other day I was thinking about your channel, I was worried if you had abandoned it. Don't leave us too long. I miss your scientific experiments

    • @corncobjohnsonreal
      @corncobjohnsonreal Год назад +6

      I thought the same thing and you must have also done a prayer sesh the same time I did cuz we brought him back

    • @Heroo01
      @Heroo01 Год назад +6

      @@corncobjohnsonreal LMFAO like praying is gonna make him upload a new video
      How come religious folk lack common sense

    • @TheBackyardScientist
      @TheBackyardScientist  Год назад +11

      @@Heroo01 I FELT THE VIBES

    • @corncobjohnsonreal
      @corncobjohnsonreal Год назад +1

      @@Heroo01 that's so rude, I'm making a joke and you're flexing your nonreligiousness like it makes you superior. Which is funny because it's really you that lacks common sense. AND I'm not actually religious I'm doing a bit. You really thought "prayer sesh" and praying backyard scientist back was sincere! Do you realize how absurd that is, and that you took it so serious that you felt like you had to insult religious people for it! It's so funny how oblivious you were, I think, I've been drinking bleach and that messes my judgment so maybe I'm the dummy and people take the youtube comments section seriously these days, which would be a good thing, let's clean this cesspool 🌻🌻♥️😊😊😊😊😊

    • @Dimencia
      @Dimencia Год назад +5

      If one day Backyard Scientist stops uploading, I don't think it'll be because he abandoned it

  • @hugbearsx4
    @hugbearsx4 Год назад +87

    Wrap the chicken wire LOOSELY a few times around. That way, it will contain the fragments by bending and absorbing their energy. A solid, tight wrap only increases the stiffness, therefore raising the pressure rating - and also the damage it does when it ruptures at those higher pressures it can now whithstand.

    • @daniks_en
      @daniks_en Год назад

      I UNDERSTAND THAT THERE ARE A LOT OF COMMENTS HERE, BUT PLEASE READ IT !
      I also try to create interesting content (experiments). Will you write your opinion? dg

    • @geneticdisorder1900
      @geneticdisorder1900 Год назад

      I prefer using Kevlar condoms and duct tape. You’ll never have to worry about it blowing a load right next to your face .😂

  • @daviddavis1322
    @daviddavis1322 Год назад

    7:45 made me laugh maybe the hardest I have this year. Dude that was well done.

  • @TruthSpeaker893
    @TruthSpeaker893 3 месяца назад

    I love that cut to ad

  • @HardwareUnknown
    @HardwareUnknown Год назад +95

    Glad you enjoyed the quad cannon! It was ridiculously fun to make (even more so to test it), and I truly appreciate the mention. I'll tell ya, though, your MGL style launcher looks absolutely amazing. I need one in my life like now. Can't wait to see the full video!

    • @StevieObieYT
      @StevieObieYT Год назад +2

      That was a badass creation man 😎

    • @keard558
      @keard558 Год назад

      It's mgs for metal gear solid

  • @foxtrotunit1269
    @foxtrotunit1269 Год назад +15

    0:15 geez, who would have though that DIY things used masses cause more injuries than things not used by masses :)

  • @anthonyhettinger9702
    @anthonyhettinger9702 9 месяцев назад +1

    It hurts like hell as well.
    But then again I was using o² acetylene torch for fuel and was shooting potato half a mile

  • @michaeltaylor4271
    @michaeltaylor4271 Месяц назад

    Hahaha the way you lead into your ad was perfect.. come on honey daddy needs a new bomb suit!

  • @salmonsoup15
    @salmonsoup15 Год назад +372

    I had a potato cannon when I was like eight, and I was showing it to my friends when they were over for a play date. My mom called us up from the treehouse because we had to go, so I want to relieve the pressure in the chamber so I just pulled the valve. Somehow, someway, the CO2 cartridge that was loaded at the time angled itself perfectly and hit my mom square in the forehead.

    • @infinitespiral4151
      @infinitespiral4151 Год назад +28

      Was your mom ok?

    • @sawyerh6838
      @sawyerh6838 Год назад +92

      @@infinitespiral4151 She died

    • @Mr.Shogun
      @Mr.Shogun Год назад +21

      @@sawyerh6838 you could've worded that better 💀

    • @ConnorSinclairCavin
      @ConnorSinclairCavin Год назад +13

      @@Mr.Shogun true, it made for a poor epitaph

    • @peko2299
      @peko2299 Год назад +3

      @@sawyerh6838 how do you know?

  • @whynotjustmyusername
    @whynotjustmyusername Год назад +77

    "I want to test when they explode" - *puts himself into an even more dangerous situation by almost dropping a gas bottle*
    Seriously though, pressurized gas bottles must ALWAYS stored such that they can not tip to the side, either by securing them with a chain or belt (as shown a few seconds later) or by simply laying them flat on the ground. If they tip and the valve gets sheared off, you've got yourself a missile that will easily make its way through a cinderblock wall.

    • @TimeSurfer206
      @TimeSurfer206 Год назад +30

      I saw that happen on a Skyscraper Roof, with a bottle of HVAC Refrigerant. The boys were laying it down on its side when one slipped. The bottle spun in circles for a bit, getting faster and faster, and then launched itself off the roof. And rocketed like the missile it was between Skyscrapers down a Major Municipality's Street. And then went kerplunk in the Bay, about a half-mile away..
      It was a good day to burn off some excess luck.

    • @carpediemarts705
      @carpediemarts705 Год назад +5

      "A cinder block wall"????
      More like a dozen cinder block walls.

    • @whynotjustmyusername
      @whynotjustmyusername Год назад +11

      @@TimeSurfer206 One of my teachers always told us the story of how he sat in his garden when suddenly a gas bottle impacted a few meters next to him. Turns out it was from a gas station 2 km away. Tipped on its side and flew off.
      Edit: Typos

    • @TimeSurfer206
      @TimeSurfer206 Год назад +3

      @@whynotjustmyusername I am not at all surprised or skeptical. I grew up IN a Welding Shop: My Grandpa's.

    • @TheBackyardScientist
      @TheBackyardScientist  Год назад +16

      the cap was on

  • @Par_and_syv_lovers56
    @Par_and_syv_lovers56 Год назад

    I remember building one when I was 9 but never tested it because of noise concerns. Kinda glad I didn’t and later went with lower pressure smaller air cannon manually pumped.

  • @ivy_ig_idk
    @ivy_ig_idk Год назад

    Kevin getting ready to -conquer the world- have fun in his backyard

  • @marsrover001
    @marsrover001 Год назад +24

    Glad to know I'm safe. The canon I built uses 4" pressure rated PVC and a bicycle valve to inflate up to 90PSI held back by a large ball valve. Turn it quick for maximum range. I think the hairspray or other explosive powered ones are more dangerous due to the higher (and uncontrollable) pressures possible.

    • @avroarchitect1793
      @avroarchitect1793 Год назад +5

      yes the shockwave pressure spike can be far higher than the expected average gas pressure. Plus shock loading of a material has completely different effects than static loading.

    • @fungdark8270
      @fungdark8270 Год назад

      @@avroarchitect1793 haven’t people found out the perfect dimensions for the pressure wave to hit the projectile or something?

    • @avroarchitect1793
      @avroarchitect1793 Год назад

      @@fungdark8270 that isn't the issue, its the spike of pressure at the wave colliding with the wall of the tube. And if the spike is too high... well we've seen the results.

  • @ichbrauchmehrkaffee5785
    @ichbrauchmehrkaffee5785 Год назад +38

    7:23 I like your definition of "safe"
    "Glue everything together properly so that the canon rips itself apart and disintegrates into 1000 pieces rather than blowing off the bottom"

    • @nade5557
      @nade5557 Год назад +1

      you're never going to get 1000 psi out of any kind of potato cannon when its not blocked

  • @Godyeater
    @Godyeater 10 месяцев назад +1

    That picture looked like a young earth creationist, and that makes it better.

  • @timdowney02
    @timdowney02 2 месяца назад

    We always used a clean out for the rear as a fail safe the cap is the only failure we’ve ever experienced and we always treated the area behind it as a back blast area

  • @Briaaanz
    @Briaaanz Год назад +9

    If you ever end up doing fictional content, would LOVE you in a series about a bare budget super villain trying to work your way up... cause your non-fiction content fits that motif perfectly

    • @Gibson99
      @Gibson99 Год назад +1

      Might have to give them names like "Potato Launch-inator" 😁

    • @Seelenschmiede
      @Seelenschmiede Год назад

      Oh no, Potatoelaunchinator has striken again with his Potatoelauncher 3.000!"

  • @jonkerr2050
    @jonkerr2050 Год назад +139

    I used to sell plastic piping systems. I had a customer (a municipality) have a 16” sch 80 PVC manifold explode with only a 60PSI “bubble” caused by a failed air release valve. While the system was being filled with water after a backwash cycle, the air release valve failed and all the air in the system had nowhere to go. The explosion was heard a mile away and sent shrapnel up to 300 yards away including multiple 100+ lb chunks. One of them totaled a car that it hit. The operator was protected by a concrete wall. But he’s now deaf. There are compressed air plastic piping systems that are specifically designed for that. Either ABS, or polypropylene. Those materials are far more ductile and tear when they fail. PVC fractures because it’s brittle. PVC SHOULD NEVER BE USED FOR COMPRESSED AIR. OR COMPRESSED GAS OF ANY KIND. I DON’T CARE IF ITS “DONE RIGHT” OR NOT. DON’T DO IT!

    • @tabascoraremaster1
      @tabascoraremaster1 Год назад +1

      Are you family of Juan ?

    • @ZacLowing
      @ZacLowing Год назад +8

      Now I want to make something that can be heard a mile away too!

    • @jonathanmoody6951
      @jonathanmoody6951 Год назад +3

      The 60 psi in a 16" pipe makes me wonder if it was something like that torque vs. horsepower thing in engines. 16" of air would exert more force than 3". So less psi may be needed to burst

    • @RASAllusion
      @RASAllusion Год назад +1

      I am wondering if this might draw a "Destructive Device" visit from the BATFE... wouldn't be the first time youtubers have been visited.

    • @paulmaxwell8851
      @paulmaxwell8851 Год назад +6

      I'd want to see a link to the news story on this before I believe it. Schedule 80 failing at just 60 psi?

  • @nolanstrife7350
    @nolanstrife7350 Год назад +2

    4:39
    This, IMO, is a great demonstration why mindlessly reinforcing everything might not be the gteatest idea. Sometimes engineers design stuff to have a specific weak points, so in case an item in question fails, it does so in a comtrolled, safer manner. Not exactly the same thing as I tried to describe, but look for example at a rupture valve
    Holy crap, that pressure... I bet, that could cause not only lacerations, but also ruptured eardrums

  • @doniusgombongod1207
    @doniusgombongod1207 11 месяцев назад

    That's was great experiment awesome video.

  • @Crushonius
    @Crushonius Год назад +55

    I know i caught this video kinda late but what nobody mentions somehow
    is that pvc shrapnel is very dangerous for one particular reason
    if it happens to become embedded in a person its a real pain to remove all of it
    since it has a similar density as human tissue and does not show up on xrays

    • @acewmd.
      @acewmd. Год назад

      how small of a shard does it have to be to not show up on an x-ray or does it just not show up at all?

    • @joetuktyyuktuk8635
      @joetuktyyuktuk8635 Год назад +5

      @@acewmd. As far as I know, it is really hard to see, no matter the size.

    • @acewmd.
      @acewmd. Год назад

      @@joetuktyyuktuk8635 oh, well thanks.

    • @lanesaarloos281
      @lanesaarloos281 Год назад

      Good knowledge..

    • @brooklyna007
      @brooklyna007 Год назад

      True, it is much harder. But the army has come up with some pretty amazing methods for detecting non-metallic shrapnel in the last decade and they are making it to the general public

  • @ReverendTed
    @ReverendTed Год назад +19

    Super excited for the next video. In high school, I envisioned a pump-action, cylinder-fed semi-automatic potato cannon. I went so far as to draw up plans and purchased valves and PVC, but never got around to building the thing. Mine was designed around the action also pumping a specific amount of propane and air into the chamber, and in hindsight I seriously doubt it would have worked at all.

  • @pv8685
    @pv8685 23 дня назад

    i cant wait to see the final version of the mgl32 like potato cannon in the end of the video!!

  • @woolfy02
    @woolfy02 3 месяца назад

    That first build guide I ever used (early 90s) said to use ABS on it, and not PVC. It's cheaper the other way but, also not safe. I never had issues with mine ever going boom.

  • @bubblegum0149
    @bubblegum0149 Год назад +13

    5:54, amongus

  • @Henrik.Yngvesson
    @Henrik.Yngvesson Год назад +7

    7:45 You still had a lot of air in it.

  • @ozijak
    @ozijak Год назад +1

    Dude I'll give you a like for that perfect honey promo after seeing the price of the bomb suit and that glance, holy smoke that was hilarious.

  • @ijneb1248
    @ijneb1248 Год назад

    0:16 legendary bong hit

  • @iblocstudios5563
    @iblocstudios5563 Год назад +9

    6:09 SUS

  • @joedirt7604
    @joedirt7604 Год назад +7

    Learn from the pyros.
    There is a reason regular pvc isnt used for mortor tubes.

  • @Dr.STorch
    @Dr.STorch 3 месяца назад +1

    The m32 rotary potato launcher is a lightweight 40 mm six-shot revolver-type potato launcher developed by a lunatic

  • @JoepSwagemakers
    @JoepSwagemakers 2 месяца назад

    Dude your backyard is huge!

  • @patrickhurley7029
    @patrickhurley7029 Год назад +4

    Dude- I've seen countless honey ads, but when I saw you could save $1000 on something as obscure as a bomb disposal suit, I finally joined and with your discount.

  • @adto5942
    @adto5942 Год назад +13

    A few years ago, I saw a video of a French youtuber who built a potato canon out of steel that used oxygen and acetylene and with a barrel which had the exact diameter for golf balls. Let's just say it was pretty powerful.

  • @louisparker6553
    @louisparker6553 9 месяцев назад

    Brooo the shotgun revolver thing at the end is awesome

  • @JesusChrist_IsTruth-LoveForALL

    Daaaaamn when do those street sweeper canons go to market! 😁

  • @billmeade9029
    @billmeade9029 Год назад +26

    When pressure testing with water you have to make absolutely sure there is no air anywhere in the part or that will be the result, I worked at a water treatment equipment manufacturer for 22 years and we pressure tested tanks about every day and when done properly it makes a loud bang but doesn't send shrapnel flying

    • @larryspiller6633
      @larryspiller6633 Год назад

      Was involved in many pressure tests in construction. Doesn't take much to have a failure. Also have hit a few pieces of PVC pipe when excavating. That stuff grenades uncontrollably. Always cut it with a saw instead of the excavator. I enjoyed others and their potato guns, from a distance that is. I don't trust any explosives 100 percent. Seen the unexpected even in the Army, in a controlled safe environment. Energy/explosives is something to be wary of.

  • @shout_2000
    @shout_2000 Год назад +248

    When it comes to hydrostatic testing, the goal generally isnt to pressurize untill means of failure. To add on to this, you used a pnumatic over hydrolic test which at high pressures (above 135 psig) can quickly become unstable due to a large void forming on the top of the tank.
    I test hazmat and high pressure tanks as my career, seeing a quick or semi false statement as to say "it diddnt make a difference" just urks me. Even though you would use a hydrostatic pump to correctly test your rig, we use posthole hydrostatic pumps to test NH3 and LPG tanks, it DOES reduce the explosive potential, but its still 400+ psig.
    Never do this unless you are a trained professional and always wear your PPE Florida man! Haha!
    Edit: this is just for the grammar nazi. Im not checking my spelling for you 🤙

    • @EC-dz4bq
      @EC-dz4bq Год назад +1

      Yeah... can that happen to my 3000psi and 4500 psi carbon fiber and aluminum tanks for my rifle?

    • @shout_2000
      @shout_2000 Год назад +5

      @@EC-dz4bq if you over pressure them then there is always a possibility. Always keep within the maximum allowable working pressure. There are also factors like material fatigue and tempurature cycling. Look up the data sheet on your tanks and see what or if there is a expiry for wear. If its say 10 years of use then ditch it then and get a new one, but composites are much different than stainless, mild steel and aluminum.

    • @EC-dz4bq
      @EC-dz4bq Год назад +1

      ​@@shout_2000 I assume the burst disks would prevent that (for the most part?) My pump I use pump it up, also has burst disks. (Mine is not homemade.)
      Also, all my tanks are made by the rifle manufacturer. They claim to have a lifetime warranty(rifle + tanks), with proper care. So I assume I don't need to change them out?
      Edit: Not a sponsor, but if the tanks/rifles themselves may help answer. They are Airforce Texans, and Texan SS. Also, I have larger recharging tanks...would those be different?

    • @gruntopolouski5919
      @gruntopolouski5919 Год назад +3

      @@EC-dz4bq not an expert, but I would assume that the lifetime warranty would be trustworthy, as long as you don’t do things like subject the tank(s) to over-pressure, high temperatures, long exposure to sunlight, etc.

    • @EC-dz4bq
      @EC-dz4bq Год назад +1

      @@gruntopolouski5919 Thank you

  • @paulg3336
    @paulg3336 Год назад

    In a hydrostatic test the liquid does not get compressed,but the hose,the vessel in test etc. all store energy in tension .
    That is why you still get an energetic release when failure occurs

  • @silentblackhole
    @silentblackhole 6 месяцев назад

    That was the BEST segway! hahah 5:44

  • @firecoat1235
    @firecoat1235 Год назад +5

    5:40 That sponsor transition was actually so funny

  • @ChainsawFPV
    @ChainsawFPV Год назад +10

    15 years ago my brother and I had a cannon building contest. He built PVC with a grill igniter and some hairspray. I built mine with 1/8th inch thick, 2 inch diameter steel tube, 1\4 in steel wrapped lower for chamber, that runs on Oxygen and acetylene from my cutting torch. It sounds like a tank cannon, turns potatoes to a fine mist, and puts tennis balls thru 1\2 in plywood. I won......

  • @JasonWelch
    @JasonWelch 2 месяца назад

    When my dad and I use to build these, we used screw on caps + epoxy. We used a gass grill ignitor mounted on the top with two screws going into the chamber. When firing, we'd spray hairspray, alcohol, etc. into the chamber, and then screw the back cap back on thoroughly. What I'm curious about now is just how much pressure the explosion was actually generating inside of the chamber.

  • @adamnclown9085
    @adamnclown9085 Год назад +1

    There’s no way you took a bong rip or if your potato cannon. I love you Kevin

  • @nathank7989
    @nathank7989 Год назад +16

    For those who are unfamiliar with hydrostatic tests: The cannon exploded because it was still pressurized with a compressible gas. To ensure a safe hydrostatic test the system needs to be pressurized using a water pump. The presence of gas anywhere in the pressurized system can cause a failure to become explosive.

    • @daniks_en
      @daniks_en Год назад

      I UNDERSTAND THAT THERE ARE A LOT OF COMMENTS HERE, BUT PLEASE READ IT !
      I also try to create interesting content (experiments). Will you write your opinion? dg

    • @supremesloth105
      @supremesloth105 Год назад

      He tried that in the video

    • @nathank7989
      @nathank7989 Год назад +2

      @@supremesloth105 He filled the cannon with water, but you can see he is using the same air line used in every other test to pressurize the cannon. The compressed gas in the line (and in the off-camera tank) is what caused the explosion.

    • @supremesloth105
      @supremesloth105 Год назад

      @@nathank7989 ahh, yea that is interesting

  • @CaptainCandycorn
    @CaptainCandycorn Год назад +9

    Put it in a kevlar sleeve but don't wrap it tight, it will allow for some expansion and will decelerate the shrapnel since the loose kevlar has time to slow it down

    • @rickgreer7203
      @rickgreer7203 Год назад

      Start by using something like HDPE instead of PVC...

  • @McPlot28
    @McPlot28 Год назад

    My potato cannon, which was made around 1995, has a pressure release system. Basically, instead of blowing up the back blows off. It can then be easily reinstalled. I do agree that it is still on the dangerous side. Someone I knew made a potato cannon that he over filled with propellant and did not listen to me about putting in some sort of pressure regulator. It blew up and he ended up in the ER.

  • @TaekwondoFitForLife
    @TaekwondoFitForLife 11 дней назад

    Pressure “AND” Volume makes a big difference in abilities to handle this. Smaller volumes can handle more pressure when using same materials typically, unless the wall thickness is increased as well. Cool to see this..❤😮

  • @thefriendlyirishman4586
    @thefriendlyirishman4586 Год назад +5

    The power of the potato is unmatched, as an irish person I can confirm, if that wasn't obvious.

  • @RandomBogey
    @RandomBogey Год назад +8

    My dad and I made a pneumatic tennis ball “cannon” out of schedule 40 PVC when I was a kid. He based it on a design he’d come across while researching where the tank sat under the barrel to shorten the overall length, so it needed two 90° pieces to connect the tank and barrel. One time I thought it would be cool to fill the barrel with water and dump about 100psi. The weight of the water was too much and instead of blowing the water out in a spectacular mist like I’d imagined, it instead just blew the piece between the 90° fittings and the water just drain out the back. The piece that blew out was just inches from my feet and somehow I didn’t get so much as a scratch… afterwards, he tweaked the design by adding two T pieces to increase the area and it still works today, 20 years later

  • @SIN3JASON
    @SIN3JASON Год назад

    Haha I like this guy! He's like a cooler version of Eric from that '70s show. 🤣

  • @fridaycaliforniaa236
    @fridaycaliforniaa236 8 месяцев назад +1

    I use mines with propane that I actually pump under pressure inside the combustion chamber XD. I add some fiberglass wrap around and everything is fine. And it acts as a protection again shrapnel if it breaks. You actually have to design a "weak part" in the cannon in a way that if it breaks, the weakest part of it will break first and explode in a non-dangerous direction (for example, the junction with the barrel will pop and the chamber is still intact, so you don't lose your fingers). Usually, when I'm having a failure, it's just the cannon that goes away towards the front like a dart.
    Oh, and don't let your PVC under UV exposure. UV makes PVC really brittle.