The more you learn about chemistry, the more you understand why chemistry teachers are so concerned about you even drinking water in class. So many dangerous dissolved chemicals look and seem like water
And fun fact, even water can be dangerous. Nano-pure water, which is basically as close to 100% water (meaning no ions, no free floating random solids etc) as you can get, can be dangerous to drink. As it has technically no concentration in it and is a pretty great universal solvent it will actually steal minerals and nutrients and ions from your body/system. You'd need to drink a lot but would be noticeable over time
@@alext6933 I don't disagree, though I'm unsure of how to specify non-food manufactured goods. You can't say inorganic, because it's the organic chemicals in things like latex gloves that makes the grape flavouring possible. Any suggestions?
Fun fact, you can add milk to a strong, dark wine mixed with a bunch of other fruits and syrup and strain out the curds to produce a light and clear beverage with a much milder flavor. The curds will also taste like wine, but if your initial mixture was very strong and crude, you might not like all the harsher flavors it took out of the drink.
Why not just use a bit of wine/acid and then mix the whey into your wine? You're basically doing the same thing, except losing wine in the curd in the process.
My mother was married in 1946. She kept her dress she wore for her wedding, which was woven from milk fibers. It was a cute 1940's era "business dress", with skirt and jacket in a pale blue. It was very soft, and quite pretty. Until watching this, I had always assumed that the fibers were just chemically derived from milk, not actually mechanically pulled from milk fibers, like you've shown here. This has been a very cool connection for me.
Technically it more that our understanding of stop in “normal human level” isn’t deep enough to realize intuitively that it is possible (nilered for example made spicy molecules from vanillin and rubber gloves, make sense if you know chemistry but completely wild if you don’t)
I'm not a chemist, but I am a knitter, so this definitely interests me! My only criticism is that braiding and twisting fibers are not the same thing. Twisted yarns are made by turning all the fibers in the same direction and then taking those threads and turning *those* in the opposite direction. Because your first-try fibers were so thick, you could theoretically skip the thread making step, but braiding doesn't introduce that same friction strength that twisting does.
Hey, Fabric process RandD engineer here. You need to swap out your clamps on your tensile test. Using a pinched clamp like this creates localized weakness near the clamp point resulting in weakness in the 20-50% lower range for the actual fiber strength. Great Video!
@@sultanmutschinot tie, but splice. look up rope splicing, it's an art and gives you loops on the ends that exceed the strength of the bare rope with no weak points.
Can I hire you to make a whole new type of silk from all sorts of products including biomass!? I need a new 10 million dollar factory coming online if it's so...
i saw milk yarn about a decade ago and thought milk was a descriptor of the yarns' softness. finding out it really is made from milk, and how, is fascinating. thank you.
@@erikheller3769 ngl I'd never heard of the band before so this comment made me laugh harder than it should but I'm listening to one of their songs now and I'm feeling it would probably actually work well as a cover band
Greed well that and the fact that they have to cover their cost of operations and gas and electricity prices have gone up leading to higher costs for dairy farmers but yeah
in my country at least in ireland dairy farmers aren't paid that much, increased costs and clampdowns on electricity, fertilizer, gas, transport systems & more have made operations expensive, and also not all milk is of drinking quality or of production quality to make things like cheese; lots of poor quality watery wastemilk, milk from low-quality or dual-purpose breeds, and milk contaminated with things like somatic cells and antibiotics is produced but unable to be used for consumption
@@afterskool444 my mum buys milk directly through the dairy farmer because of this it gets delivered like twice a week it's probably not cheaper than what the stores buy from them at but ykno at least the man's getting paid a decent price for his products instead of the prices shops pay only to jack the prices up on their end
I don't normally comment on videos, but I will say that if you actually were to sell some of the milk fibres you make, I'd be willing to buy some if I had money to spare at the time it was being sold. I like knitting and crochet a lot and one of my big interests is using "weird" yarns and whatnot to make things. A small run of milk fibres made by a RUclipsr would definitely fit that bill! Though like you said the fibres you ended up getting had a bit of a not-yarn-like texture, I can still see potential fun uses for them in knitting or crochet other than clothes, something like a crocheted basket or just some sort of decorative piece.
One of the first things they taught us in the material science class is that most common plastics can actually be made from regular organic substances. For example PLA is made from lactic acid that can be made using bacterial or milk fermentation.
Decades ago, My kindergarten teacher took us to her family's dairy farm in Oregon and showed us all of the different products that could be made out of plastic from that milk. It's such a basic thing now but man when we were kids she inspired us all to the max
i love how you just casually say you will make carbon nanotubes with a milk fiber machine, thats what makes your stuff just amazing, especially since you'll actually do it too
"Right now, it's just plain unadulterated cow juice" Also my uneducated self has to ask if there is possibly a way to make it edible, cause I had never thought of a cheese sweater till now and now I kinda wanna be able to eat a cheese sweater
So as a seamstress I found this extra interesting because formaldehyde is frequently used as a fabric preservative (that's why your dropshipped shein clothes smell like fish when you first open the package) and I didn't realize that it could be used to bind fibers, too!
I mean why not both? Would be interesting if he could get the yeast to produce both casein and spider silk proteins to see if it makes a better fiber. Well, better is relative but I would hope it does have use cases.
pretty sure we stopped using formaldehyde in the production of synthetic yarns or in clothing in general because as you wear and wash the garment the yarn breaks down and leaches potentially harmful chemicals into your skin and into the water supply. it's one of the reasons people are against synthetic yarns in general as well, because modern synthetic yarns aren't exactly safe either we just haven't been using these chemicals long enough to understand how they might impact us.
On your wet spinning machine you should add a spreader on the final spool so it fills up layer by layer (like a fishing reel does). this would also allow each layer to air out a bit more to speed up the drying process, and would make it neater and easier to unspool. You could add a drying spool, essentailly similar to the final spool but with a warm air feed through the centre, before winding onto the final spool.
Adapting spooler designs from FDM 3D Printing Filament Making Machines may work. That one channel “Mr. Innovative” or whatever (I’ll double check the name) has all sorts of interesting threadwork related tools which may have a good spooler design.
@@cornonjacob There's a small rope winder on thingiverse I've printed and used (thing:2255317) to pretty good results, though I had to make a little winder to use on the other end of the rope which it lacks. It wouldn't be complicated for them to design that.
@@mars5train601 Hmm, interesting UI bug. I had originally responded to a comment about the use of foodstuffs to make materials and fuels vs use as actual food.
Hot damn, that fiber-pulling machine is rad! I was just expecting a general chemistry video about the process, wasn't expecting to see a fully fiber-pulling machine. Neat!
Plot twist: He's an eccentric knitting-genius off-camera, and he can't accept the yarn options he has been given. They never seem to truly express the beauty of his twists and bulbs. In a pursuit to finally be able to properly express himself, he armed himself with an engineering degree, and began building a device that produces "the perfect yarn". Never again will his art suffer from inadequate yarn quality.
Thank you for raising this. I thought exactly the same six months ago. I am Italian and a chemist, and I always knew about lanital. Excess milk could be converted into fully biodegradable plastic that can be used for pretty much anything in the consumer market.
Casein can also be used to make a har durable plastic called Galalith. Goats and sheep milk is also on par with cows milk on Casein content, so you can have fibers from milk and wool. And in general Rayon can be produced from pretty much any good source of waste cellulose (so bamboo, hemp, other grasses, wood scraps, wheat/corn husks, recycled paper, etc).
Very nice. You could set up other baths, to rinse and further cross link the thread, the as you pull it further dry the thread, so you end up with finer fibres. Love it.
This is awesome. I'm a knitter weaver, and spinner. It is the twist and number of plies in the final yarn that add strength. Really curious to see where this goes.
If somebody wonders how lactose intolerant people are supposed to handle this: Remember, he has a homebrewed pill for that. 👀 Definitely safe. FDA loves it. 100% wow.
@@inventorbrothers7053 absolutely yes but that's not what's being discussed here re his lactose intolerance. That'd be more similar to e.g. people that have latex allergies that have reactions to gloves and condoms and so on
@@inventorbrothers7053again, usually have to consume it and as allergy would usually come from a particular molecule or protein in milk. Chances are the antigen is either all bound up or not present in milk yarn 😊
Too cool! I kept seeing "milk cotton" pop up since I'm into crochet, but i thought it was just a type of cotton yarn. I'm so psyched to try out milk cotton now! Also, those "noodles" reminded me way too much of worms. So gross.
Every time I see a new upload, it feels like you are getting closer and closer to some sort of evil genius sci-fi utopia. It's usually a rather long time for each individual project, but the progress and implications are incredible. I can't wait to see you spin your carbon nanotubes yeast silk on this.
@@thesoloveichiks159 did you see how he did not interact with the cows at all? This project just took advantage of the system in place, making no statements condemning nor approving the system in place. Seeing as this video focuses on biochemistry of milk and how it can be exploited, with some hints of development for other projects, I really fail to see how any sort of moral argument is relevant here.
7:58 - i love how apparently nobody in the comments noticed or recognized this immediately lmfao. the bubbling machine that can be heard is a really important component of this synthesis, I wonder which 'watercooling bubble filter apparatus' was used. 😉
You have to find a way to feed this machine into one of those circular knitting machines, thus creating a device that you pour milk into and spits out socks
I'm a crochet enthusiastic and saw some tutorials using milk yarn but I never expected that was made with literal milk, I thought that was some brand name or something like that 😂
The combination of super interesting science and you doing this in a more amateur fashion with more common equipment and chemicals would make these videos a fantastic resource for a community after an apocalypse.
Doesnt kgf mean kilogram-force, instead of kilograms per foot? The video is very cool, it makes sense that this would work, but it's still very interesting to think about milk being turned into fibers!
@@Hendlton the length doesn't matter when measuring the force. So it would be strange for him to include that in the unit. More likely he just made a mistake.
I am a knitter and spinner and milk fibers are very interesting. They have a very soft, but slippery, texture and can be a little difficult to work with, but the result is a yarn that has a lot of the floof of wool with more of the slippery softness you'd associate with mercerized cotton without the shine. When I first started working with it, I felt pretty meh - the yarn is slippery, so when it's plied together the separate strands don't hold together well and it tends to unravel a bit at the ends. That makes perfect sense, since the fibers are just long and straight, whereas wool clings together. It's not a bad fiber, but I also don't think it's a great replacement for wool on its own. It could easily be used in a blend to bring more sleek softness to the table, though.
that's so awesome, i didn't know about nettle yarn but that sounds like an awesome use to improve the image of an otherwise loathed plant, despite its ecological importance..!
With equipment like this, once it’s open source, you could make your own Rayon and (potentially) keratin silk! (That combined with the diy/open source Looms, Circular Knitting Machines (CircularKnitic), and just good old fashioned needles+sewing machine etc you can some MAJOR theeadwork)
I additionally feel the need to point out that the kgf has been deprecated for over 70 years because it's confusing and less logical/simple. Newtons were already made the standard over a decade before the formation of the SI.
I love applications of milk like this. It's pretty easy to make basic plastic and glue with milk (and I've done composites with recycle cardboard too), but more advanced, stronger stuff requires additional chemicals (like formaldehyde) and machinery. Still, from a self sufficiency point of view, milk is a massive resource that we seem to be largely ignoring. Excellent video!
You might wanna check out Robert Murray-Smith as he's done a couple of videos on milk plastics, though he didn't try to make fibers out of it. Two things to check out is that adding glycerin makes it not nearly as brittle, and that you can also use Tannic acid as a fixitive. Tannic acid is also found in tea so he made something impressive just in a really strong batch of tea.
Bro casually mentions he geneticly modified himself I love you and your channel As a chemistry fan bio stuff are konda complicated but just as fascinating
The force gauge measurement of "kilogram foot" you mention must obviously be an error. It will be measuring in Newtons, pound force, or kilogram force (kgf). I loved the video, and your very impressive work on all your projects.
20 year knitter here. There's an important part of the yarn making process you're overlooking, called plying. None of the wool yarns you're using for comparison are individual twists of yarn; they're 3-4 strands spun together. This helps the strength, integrity, and texture. I'd love to see a follow up test with plied milk fiber to see how that strength compares to store bought wool yarn.
I’d love to see this fibre properly spun into a thread of some sort. I’m sure there there are several craftspeople on RUclips who would be interested in collaborating to spin such a unique fibre.
Given the design is (going to be) Open Source, as long as you have the Funds and the Ability to Assemble Parts (Or join/make a Club or Makerspace for this), you can make and use one!
I'm a mechanical engineer with some background working with those sorts of test benches. the break being right at the clamp means you've secured your sample incorrectly. at least, if you want to accurately measure it. I get that you were mostly just making a comparison to wool so it probably doesn't matter, but if that number is ever important, you have to be very careful that you aren't accidentally measuring connection strength, as opposed to material strength.
A bit late for this, but if you replace the syringe pump linear actuator with a pneumatic plug instead you will be able to get more pressure out of it and should be able to get a slightly more even dispense rate too. If you go with a steel syringe (or a steel tube with a lure fitting on it) you would be able to put a ton more pressure on it. Also, you could go with a smaller needle tip if instead of using a constant diameter needle tip you went with a conical tip.
When I was a kid, I remember doing an experiment that turned milk into polymer. Using vinegar to separate out the casin. The resulting goop was pretty lumpy. But it was fun to make models with. Had no idea it could be used for yarn too!
I’m doubtful on layer adhesion, but it’s worth a try! Printing in Gel (i forget the name, was it “FRESH”, used for bioprinting) may work. I also saw a paper on using solvents that evaporate off and fans for Cellulose Acetate 3D Printing. Would require tinkering and *probably* wouldn’t work, but again worth a try. (Also “casting” or injection molding the casein plastic into 3D Printed or CNC Milled Molds could probably work as well)
I really hope milk yarn becomes more popular, and milk-made products in general, because of how much plastic waste there is. It feels like we'd be killing two birds with one stone, unless I'm missing something.
13:23 are you sure that that is reading kg/foot? I am pretty sure it is kg-force. kg/foot doesn't make sense dimensionally not does there seem to be a way for the force meter to input length. Very interesting video. I didn't know that this was possible
@@simtexaNot really a shame. It's a great video and I'm sure most people got the meaning of that segment. It's a tiny mistake :) just might be confusing for someone who isn't super sure of physics to follow along with.
@@dante7228 Is there some context I don't understand, or is it really just a This-Old-Tony-style cutaway gag where the vacuum chamber gets a sound effect? It totally caught me off guard, and I have no idea why the lava lamp is there.
@@DuckPerc that's a mouth operated vacuum chamber used for leisure 🤣 But if you don't know what it's about don't worry... It's kind of an insider joke anyway...
"Once all the bubbles are out" we reintroduce them by rubbing the goo with a spatula through as sieve, as we clearly see numerous visible bubbles in the beaker and syringe.
11:21 there are actually like cotton knitted straps you put onto to exicators to secure big big tubes together for industrial construction companies. More Trench, a keller company in Florida does this for example
The more you learn about chemistry, the more you understand why chemistry teachers are so concerned about you even drinking water in class. So many dangerous dissolved chemicals look and seem like water
Reminds me of a kid joke song I heard eons ago that went something like:🎵"What Johnny that was H2O was H2SO4, HEY!"🎵
And fun fact, even water can be dangerous. Nano-pure water, which is basically as close to 100% water (meaning no ions, no free floating random solids etc) as you can get, can be dangerous to drink. As it has technically no concentration in it and is a pretty great universal solvent it will actually steal minerals and nutrients and ions from your body/system. You'd need to drink a lot but would be noticeable over time
@@duxangus Just don't have H2O2
@@duxangus -- Johnny was a little boy, but Johnny is no more; for what he thought was H2O was H2SO4
And if your bottle is open it could very well get contaminated
Nile Red: turns manufactured goods into foods.
The thought emporium: turns foods into manufactured goods.
Perfect cycle...
I need those two to collaborate one day
Food is manufactured goods.
@@alext6933 I don't disagree, though I'm unsure of how to specify non-food manufactured goods. You can't say inorganic, because it's the organic chemicals in things like latex gloves that makes the grape flavouring possible. Any suggestions?
@@snosah7571 not really, I was more just implying that what they both do is pretty much the same thing
Nile Red: Turns inedible things edible
The Thought Emporium: Turns edible things inedible
I guess this pretty much works for the most part
So in theory you can make cheesecloth out of... cheese-cloth?
Yes.
Yeah 😂
I wonder if there’s a way to make cheese form cheesecloth
@@Unknown_-.. you use it as a cheesecloth to make cheese
@@ronkdonkles😂😂😂😂
Fun fact, you can add milk to a strong, dark wine mixed with a bunch of other fruits and syrup and strain out the curds to produce a light and clear beverage with a much milder flavor. The curds will also taste like wine, but if your initial mixture was very strong and crude, you might not like all the harsher flavors it took out of the drink.
Why not just use a bit of wine/acid and then mix the whey into your wine? You're basically doing the same thing, except losing wine in the curd in the process.
Thanks for sharing!
7:58 the bong bubbling after ‘spinning dope’ 😭
I wonder if he did the sound effects in house
Not a bong! That's a lava lamp.
I was looking for that comment lmao
My mother was married in 1946.
She kept her dress she wore for her wedding, which was woven from milk fibers.
It was a cute 1940's era "business dress", with skirt and jacket in a pale blue.
It was very soft, and quite pretty.
Until watching this, I had always assumed that the fibers were just chemically derived from milk, not actually mechanically pulled from milk fibers, like you've shown here.
This has been a very cool connection for me.
My brain sees milk as a billion dollar investment...
too many details, i not like.
@gothchicklover racist.
@@dusted_mellohow to pull the color card seamlessely
@@dusted_mellopooping in ur moooouth
No wonder all those dads go looking for the milk. They all need spare socks
That makes so much more sense now! I wonder how many socks I’m gonna have when dad comes back. Probably quite a few.
😅
💀💀💀
That joke is reaching a bit far but, it's firmly grasping the dad humor.
And then they keep loosing them to the dryer, so dad takes even longer to come home
As the years go on, chemistry turns more and more into witchcraft.
It has always been the basis of chemistry.
So you're saying chemistry just returning to it root as alchemy
It is
@@dutchik5107 these days only difference they measure what they do.
Technically it more that our understanding of stop in “normal human level” isn’t deep enough to realize intuitively that it is possible (nilered for example made spicy molecules from vanillin and rubber gloves, make sense if you know chemistry but completely wild if you don’t)
7:58 the shameless bong hit lmaooo
0:53 COW JUICE!
😂 I loled when this comment popped up after I heard cow juice lol
lol 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
I'm not a chemist, but I am a knitter, so this definitely interests me! My only criticism is that braiding and twisting fibers are not the same thing. Twisted yarns are made by turning all the fibers in the same direction and then taking those threads and turning *those* in the opposite direction. Because your first-try fibers were so thick, you could theoretically skip the thread making step, but braiding doesn't introduce that same friction strength that twisting does.
Milk yarn is very soft and squishy in my experience, but prone to pilling
i cant STAND knitters
@@mehalfricansomeone got their heart rboken by a knitter..
@@mehalfricanknitter hater
@@mehalfricanthat's so specifically rude, but aren't you glad that everyone knows how horrible you are now?
Hey, Fabric process RandD engineer here. You need to swap out your clamps on your tensile test. Using a pinched clamp like this creates localized weakness near the clamp point resulting in weakness in the 20-50% lower range for the actual fiber strength. Great Video!
so would it be better to use hooks where you tie the rope to?
@@sultanmutschinot tie, but splice. look up rope splicing, it's an art and gives you loops on the ends that exceed the strength of the bare rope with no weak points.
In standard tests they bend them over a defined radius on each side before clamping them.
Can I hire you to make a whole new type of silk from all sorts of products including biomass!? I need a new 10 million dollar factory coming online if it's so...
making a cheesecloth out of milk fiber would be one of the most insane things a cheese maker could do
Dang that'd be cool, I wonder if there's people who do that
@@ZappygunshotI got a guy
@@rubeningPlease disclose this “guy” you speak of
I feel like the formaldehyde would deem it very un-food safe
@@hannahbloom no harm in a little formaldehyde every once in a while as a treat
You have pulled an opposite Nile Red. Truly seeing how alchemy became chemistry.
Yes at first I was like this guy seems kind of like Nile red
but can you make milk from socks?
😂😂😂
i saw milk yarn about a decade ago and thought milk was a descriptor of the yarns' softness. finding out it really is made from milk, and how, is fascinating. thank you.
"Plain unadulterated cow juice"
Is gonna be my indie band name
Plain unadulterated cow juice apartment could be a Neutral Milk Hotel cover band
@@erikheller3769 ngl I'd never heard of the band before so this comment made me laugh harder than it should but I'm listening to one of their songs now and I'm feeling it would probably actually work well as a cover band
Hearing the narrator say "you ain't seen nothin yet" in a 50s news accent was weird
you ain't seen nothing yet
"demand for milk is dramatically lower than production" THEN WHY IS IT DAMN NEAR $4 A GALLON
Greed well that and the fact that they have to cover their cost of operations and gas and electricity prices have gone up leading to higher costs for dairy farmers but yeah
Because you're paying for the 1 gallon of milk you drink and the 3 gallons they dump in a river to keep the price at the maximum profit point.
Capitalism
in my country at least in ireland dairy farmers aren't paid that much, increased costs and clampdowns on electricity, fertilizer, gas, transport systems & more have made operations expensive, and also not all milk is of drinking quality or of production quality to make things like cheese; lots of poor quality watery wastemilk, milk from low-quality or dual-purpose breeds, and milk contaminated with things like somatic cells and antibiotics is produced but unable to be used for consumption
@@afterskool444 my mum buys milk directly through the dairy farmer because of this it gets delivered like twice a week it's probably not cheaper than what the stores buy from them at but ykno at least the man's getting paid a decent price for his products instead of the prices shops pay only to jack the prices up on their end
I don't normally comment on videos, but I will say that if you actually were to sell some of the milk fibres you make, I'd be willing to buy some if I had money to spare at the time it was being sold. I like knitting and crochet a lot and one of my big interests is using "weird" yarns and whatnot to make things. A small run of milk fibres made by a RUclipsr would definitely fit that bill! Though like you said the fibres you ended up getting had a bit of a not-yarn-like texture, I can still see potential fun uses for them in knitting or crochet other than clothes, something like a crocheted basket or just some sort of decorative piece.
One of the first things they taught us in the material science class is that most common plastics can actually be made from regular organic substances. For example PLA is made from lactic acid that can be made using bacterial or milk fermentation.
Decades ago, My kindergarten teacher took us to her family's dairy farm in Oregon and showed us all of the different products that could be made out of plastic from that milk.
It's such a basic thing now but man when we were kids she inspired us all to the max
Tell me more...
You and NileRed are true alchemists
One turns poisons into edible things
The other ,food into commodities
Yep.
the next logical step is nilered turning poison into food and then giving it to the thought emporium to be turned into other stuff
@@lycandusk7263Sisyphus
Eventually they'll be turning base metals into gold and developing the universal solvent.
@@dafoex You mean “the philosopher’s stone” when you said turning base metals into gold, right?
Imagine Thought Emporium and NileRed get into a loop of turning food into clothing into different food
And the first one to fail to turn one thing into another make a food for the other lmao
i love how you just casually say you will make carbon nanotubes with a milk fiber machine, thats what makes your stuff just amazing, especially since you'll actually do it too
"Right now, it's just plain unadulterated cow juice"
Also my uneducated self has to ask if there is possibly a way to make it edible, cause I had never thought of a cheese sweater till now and now I kinda wanna be able to eat a cheese sweater
So as a seamstress I found this extra interesting because formaldehyde is frequently used as a fabric preservative (that's why your dropshipped shein clothes smell like fish when you first open the package) and I didn't realize that it could be used to bind fibers, too!
First spider silk, now milk silk...
I see a bright future for the Silk Emporium
I see milk kimonos and special insect milk becoming a thing now. Selling millions of dollars per dress...
I mean why not both? Would be interesting if he could get the yeast to produce both casein and spider silk proteins to see if it makes a better fiber.
Well, better is relative but I would hope it does have use cases.
SPIDER MILK... wait no
Don’t forget to milk your spiders everyone
My favourite yarn to crochet with is actually the milk cotton yarn that was showcased in the video! It’s super soft and nice to work with
Milk yarm is by far one of my favorite types of yarn to use for my crocheting. It helps thats its cheap and soft too.
pretty sure we stopped using formaldehyde in the production of synthetic yarns or in clothing in general because as you wear and wash the garment the yarn breaks down and leaches potentially harmful chemicals into your skin and into the water supply. it's one of the reasons people are against synthetic yarns in general as well, because modern synthetic yarns aren't exactly safe either we just haven't been using these chemicals long enough to understand how they might impact us.
On your wet spinning machine you should add a spreader on the final spool so it fills up layer by layer (like a fishing reel does). this would also allow each layer to air out a bit more to speed up the drying process, and would make it neater and easier to unspool. You could add a drying spool, essentailly similar to the final spool but with a warm air feed through the centre, before winding onto the final spool.
Adapting spooler designs from FDM 3D Printing Filament Making Machines may work.
That one channel “Mr. Innovative” or whatever (I’ll double check the name) has all sorts of interesting threadwork related tools which may have a good spooler design.
I'm so glad you picked chaotic neutral instead of chaotic evil.
Wonderful video, as always.
Let's be real, if thought emporium was chaotic evil, he'd have already defeated batman and taken over Gotham city.
I suspect the rope would be stronger when twisted together instead of braiding, possibly might even beat the wool tensile strength test!
@@ValleysOfRain??
Yeah, they could make a scaled down version of the rope making machine the king of random put out a long time ago
@@cornonjacob There's a small rope winder on thingiverse I've printed and used (thing:2255317) to pretty good results, though I had to make a little winder to use on the other end of the rope which it lacks. It wouldn't be complicated for them to design that.
@@mars5train601 Hmm, interesting UI bug. I had originally responded to a comment about the use of foodstuffs to make materials and fuels vs use as actual food.
Hot damn, that fiber-pulling machine is rad! I was just expecting a general chemistry video about the process, wasn't expecting to see a fully fiber-pulling machine. Neat!
Plot twist: He's an eccentric knitting-genius off-camera, and he can't accept the yarn options he has been given. They never seem to truly express the beauty of his twists and bulbs. In a pursuit to finally be able to properly express himself, he armed himself with an engineering degree, and began building a device that produces "the perfect yarn". Never again will his art suffer from inadequate yarn quality.
The meat robot now has milk clothes... this just keeps getting better
Thank you for raising this. I thought exactly the same six months ago. I am Italian and a chemist, and I always knew about lanital. Excess milk could be converted into fully biodegradable plastic that can be used for pretty much anything in the consumer market.
Casein can also be used to make a har durable plastic called Galalith. Goats and sheep milk is also on par with cows milk on Casein content, so you can have fibers from milk and wool. And in general Rayon can be produced from pretty much any good source of waste cellulose (so bamboo, hemp, other grasses, wood scraps, wheat/corn husks, recycled paper, etc).
0:10 you did what??
I literally screamed “WHAT??”
@@Buzzzy-bee yeah he has an old video on this and ngl it's some amazing §hit
@@Xnoob545and one assumes he had very average $hit during the duration of that experiment 😂
Very nice.
You could set up other baths, to rinse and further cross link the thread, the as you pull it further dry the thread, so you end up with finer fibres.
Love it.
This is awesome. I'm a knitter weaver, and spinner. It is the twist and number of plies in the final yarn that add strength. Really curious to see where this goes.
If somebody wonders how lactose intolerant people are supposed to handle this: Remember, he has a homebrewed pill for that. 👀
Definitely safe. FDA loves it. 100% wow.
You also don't typically eat yarn
Handling milk products isn't an issue for lactose-intolerant people, you have to consume it.
What about the anaphylactically allergic people? It would actually be deadly to them 😢
@@inventorbrothers7053 absolutely yes but that's not what's being discussed here re his lactose intolerance. That'd be more similar to e.g. people that have latex allergies that have reactions to gloves and condoms and so on
@@inventorbrothers7053again, usually have to consume it and as allergy would usually come from a particular molecule or protein in milk. Chances are the antigen is either all bound up or not present in milk yarn 😊
Just waiting for Nilered to turn these socks back into milk
Lol that would be cool!
2:36 does it taste like milk though
Too cool! I kept seeing "milk cotton" pop up since I'm into crochet, but i thought it was just a type of cotton yarn. I'm so psyched to try out milk cotton now! Also, those "noodles" reminded me way too much of worms. So gross.
Every time I see a new upload, it feels like you are getting closer and closer to some sort of evil genius sci-fi utopia. It's usually a rather long time for each individual project, but the progress and implications are incredible. I can't wait to see you spin your carbon nanotubes yeast silk on this.
I saw this and thought it was going to be a spider silk update, as in this is how he is going to make a fibre from it.
@@thesoloveichiks159 did you see how he did not interact with the cows at all? This project just took advantage of the system in place, making no statements condemning nor approving the system in place. Seeing as this video focuses on biochemistry of milk and how it can be exploited, with some hints of development for other projects, I really fail to see how any sort of moral argument is relevant here.
7:58 - i love how apparently nobody in the comments noticed or recognized this immediately lmfao. the bubbling machine that can be heard is a really important component of this synthesis, I wonder which 'watercooling bubble filter apparatus' was used. 😉
I was looking for this comment lol
Immediately went looking for the bong rip comment
I almost gave up scrolling to find this comment..
Needed that machine to make hemp
@@fernetstock1same 😂
You have to find a way to feed this machine into one of those circular knitting machines, thus creating a device that you pour milk into and spits out socks
CircularKnitic is a good Open Source design. There are some others out there as well if i remember correctly.
I'm a crochet enthusiastic and saw some tutorials using milk yarn but I never expected that was made with literal milk, I thought that was some brand name or something like that 😂
The combination of super interesting science and you doing this in a more amateur fashion with more common equipment and chemicals would make these videos a fantastic resource for a community after an apocalypse.
Neat! Synthetic threads are a big source of persistent microplastics. We have plenty of routes to replace them, now we just need enforcement.
All I can say is I'm very impressed. Every video from this channel has blown my mind, and the inner child in me goes "wow" every single time.
Doesnt kgf mean kilogram-force, instead of kilograms per foot?
The video is very cool, it makes sense that this would work, but it's still very interesting to think about milk being turned into fibers!
was going to say the same :)
12 hours ago? mom pick me up i'm scared
yeah I don’t understand how you would mix kg with feet. it’s definitely kg force
I'm pretty sure "per foot" was because he made all the test samples around a foot long. The device just measures pure force.
@@Hendlton the length doesn't matter when measuring the force. So it would be strange for him to include that in the unit. More likely he just made a mistake.
“Those are nice socks, what are they made of?” “Milk.”
I am a knitter and spinner and milk fibers are very interesting. They have a very soft, but slippery, texture and can be a little difficult to work with, but the result is a yarn that has a lot of the floof of wool with more of the slippery softness you'd associate with mercerized cotton without the shine. When I first started working with it, I felt pretty meh - the yarn is slippery, so when it's plied together the separate strands don't hold together well and it tends to unravel a bit at the ends. That makes perfect sense, since the fibers are just long and straight, whereas wool clings together. It's not a bad fiber, but I also don't think it's a great replacement for wool on its own. It could easily be used in a blend to bring more sleek softness to the table, though.
Awesome! I think if you actually spun the fibers on a spindle before braiding it would likely improve tensile performance tremendously.
It's a very strange time for me to be hyperfixated on making yarn from nettle and dog/cat fur. Okay here we go
that's so awesome, i didn't know about nettle yarn but that sounds like an awesome use to improve the image of an otherwise loathed plant, despite its ecological importance..!
omg im not aloneee
Cool! I was planning on making thread from nettle but never thought of spinning it. Now I'm even more tempted to get myself a drop spindle...
Yarn is addictive
With equipment like this, once it’s open source, you could make your own Rayon and (potentially) keratin silk!
(That combined with the diy/open source Looms, Circular Knitting Machines (CircularKnitic), and just good old fashioned needles+sewing machine etc you can some MAJOR theeadwork)
12:45 As a Structural engineer, I feel obligated to point out that "kgf" means kilograms of force, not kilograms per foot!😅 (1 kgf = 2.2 lb = 9.8 N)
I additionally feel the need to point out that the kgf has been deprecated for over 70 years because it's confusing and less logical/simple. Newtons were already made the standard over a decade before the formation of the SI.
I'm glad someone said it. A year later and I was searching through the comments looking for this. Freaking chemists.
I love applications of milk like this. It's pretty easy to make basic plastic and glue with milk (and I've done composites with recycle cardboard too), but more advanced, stronger stuff requires additional chemicals (like formaldehyde) and machinery. Still, from a self sufficiency point of view, milk is a massive resource that we seem to be largely ignoring. Excellent video!
Wow NileRed voice finally matured))
No way are those workers putting their hands in sulfuric acid! Jesus!
Eh, it's the 30's when workers stuck their bare hands in sulfuric acid and movie snow was friable asbestos, those were the days...
Im gonna dip my balls in sulfuric acids
Doesn't really surprise me at all, stuff like this still happens today in mines in poor countries, spraying sulphuric acid without PPE
Back in the 30s work safety wasn't quite there yet
Back then if something didn't kill you instantly it was considered safe.
You might wanna check out Robert Murray-Smith as he's done a couple of videos on milk plastics, though he didn't try to make fibers out of it. Two things to check out is that adding glycerin makes it not nearly as brittle, and that you can also use Tannic acid as a fixitive. Tannic acid is also found in tea so he made something impressive just in a really strong batch of tea.
Bro casually mentions he geneticly modified himself
I love you and your channel
As a chemistry fan bio stuff are konda complicated but just as fascinating
I genetically modify myself by getting sunburns haha! Cancer is a genetic modification 🌈
self upgrading
I was genuinely startled when I didn't hear Nile Red's voice lmao
*Fiber artist angst watching you mix all those wool yarns together* uhhuh. Right. Okay. Right cool cool cool. *Fast forwards a bit.*
I’ve hardly ever even touched yarn and that hurt me too 🥲
The bong rip in the middle was unexpected and hillarious
The force gauge measurement of "kilogram foot" you mention must obviously be an error. It will be measuring in Newtons, pound force, or kilogram force (kgf).
I loved the video, and your very impressive work on all your projects.
First there was choccy milk. Now there is socky milk 😊
20 year knitter here. There's an important part of the yarn making process you're overlooking, called plying. None of the wool yarns you're using for comparison are individual twists of yarn; they're 3-4 strands spun together. This helps the strength, integrity, and texture. I'd love to see a follow up test with plied milk fiber to see how that strength compares to store bought wool yarn.
Really appreciate your hard work, patience and dedication. You are amazing!!
I’d love to see this fibre properly spun into a thread of some sort. I’m sure there there are several craftspeople on RUclips who would be interested in collaborating to spin such a unique fibre.
Given the design is (going to be) Open Source, as long as you have the Funds and the Ability to Assemble Parts (Or join/make a Club or Makerspace for this), you can make and use one!
I'd love if i could get my hands on some of that "wasted" milk and cheese so it doesn't just get wasted, i'd gladly eat tons of it
6:59 yay spider silk project got an update. It is wierd that i am exited for a project just to get a passing mention
I'm a mechanical engineer with some background working with those sorts of test benches. the break being right at the clamp means you've secured your sample incorrectly. at least, if you want to accurately measure it. I get that you were mostly just making a comparison to wool so it probably doesn't matter, but if that number is ever important, you have to be very careful that you aren't accidentally measuring connection strength, as opposed to material strength.
As a first timer on this channel, YOU DID WHAT TO YOUR DNA?!?!
This is a prototype for the spider beer isn’t it? We’re getting closer! I can’t wait!
A bit late for this, but if you replace the syringe pump linear actuator with a pneumatic plug instead you will be able to get more pressure out of it and should be able to get a slightly more even dispense rate too. If you go with a steel syringe (or a steel tube with a lure fitting on it) you would be able to put a ton more pressure on it. Also, you could go with a smaller needle tip if instead of using a constant diameter needle tip you went with a conical tip.
I wonder how this will be implemented into the biorobot fish. Maybe a coasy sweater for it? Or fins?
When I was a kid, I remember doing an experiment that turned milk into polymer. Using vinegar to separate out the casin. The resulting goop was pretty lumpy. But it was fun to make models with. Had no idea it could be used for yarn too!
i thought i could eat it
14:03 I'd assume cotton is still more eco friendly than dairy cows if we compare land use, water use and greenhouse gas emissions
Id love to see a mathematical comparison to this. I also wonder if spoiled milk could still be used to help reduce further waste.
What about... Turning socks into milk?
Why isn't it a video of Nile Red
because
Fr tho🤣🤣🤣
I clicked it thinking it was 😅
I'm allergic to casein. This fabric is my worst nightmare but it is so interesting to see you do this!
im a crocheter and knitter and i’ve heard a lot about milk yarn! never knew it was actually made from milk lol
this video has immediately solved two pressing issues in my life
4:25 skip ad
5:56 Add a 3-axis to that syringe and you've got a 3D Printer
I’m doubtful on layer adhesion, but it’s worth a try! Printing in Gel (i forget the name, was it “FRESH”, used for bioprinting) may work.
I also saw a paper on using solvents that evaporate off and fans for Cellulose Acetate 3D Printing.
Would require tinkering and *probably* wouldn’t work, but again worth a try.
(Also “casting” or injection molding the casein plastic into 3D Printed or CNC Milled Molds could probably work as well)
I really hope milk yarn becomes more popular, and milk-made products in general, because of how much plastic waste there is. It feels like we'd be killing two birds with one stone, unless I'm missing something.
As a fiber crafter this was super fascinating to me. I'd love to see more biodegradable fiber options on the market.
13:23 are you sure that that is reading kg/foot? I am pretty sure it is kg-force. kg/foot doesn't make sense dimensionally not does there seem to be a way for the force meter to input length.
Very interesting video. I didn't know that this was possible
Kind of a shame I had to scroll this far for this comment.
@@simtexaNot really a shame. It's a great video and I'm sure most people got the meaning of that segment. It's a tiny mistake :) just might be confusing for someone who isn't super sure of physics to follow along with.
As a knitter, you tangling all those skeins of yarn at 2:44 made me very angry lol
hahhahahaha sameee
But can you do it the other way around?
Now that would be impressive!
That's a job for NileRed. He has a thing for making edible chemicals out of plastic gloves, paint thinners, and toilet paper.
That was a very smooth segue to the ad. I’m impressed
I can see how close we are to spider silk here
Dope 07:52
Why is my crack spinning?
That aggressive bong rip is fucking ridiculous lol
I wonder what percentage of the viewers didn't even get it😂
@@dante7228 Is there some context I don't understand, or is it really just a This-Old-Tony-style cutaway gag where the vacuum chamber gets a sound effect? It totally caught me off guard, and I have no idea why the lava lamp is there.
@@DuckPerc that's a mouth operated vacuum chamber used for leisure 🤣
But if you don't know what it's about don't worry... It's kind of an insider joke anyway...
0:22 cheese pizza 💀
"Once all the bubbles are out" we reintroduce them by rubbing the goo with a spatula through as sieve, as we clearly see numerous visible bubbles in the beaker and syringe.
11:21 there are actually like cotton knitted straps you put onto to exicators to secure big big tubes together for industrial construction companies. More Trench, a keller company in Florida does this for example