You cant expect agents of the matrix to understand pyramid power lol. They could not even get the School Girl Bedini motor to work. But a little girl managed lol! What do you expect from Atheists who dont know they follow Satan?
his name is Karel Drbal and he has been assigned a patent for a pyramid that is supposed to hold the blade. In the former Czechoslovakia ("Patentní spis č. 91304" you can find via google)
My teacher at university knows (knew) the guy in person. Sometimes, he talked about the pyramid power in class with real belief and interest. Honestly, it was impossible not to trust him... I was a freshman and he had a higher than PhD degree.
"Copper is a cool metal" is enough quote for me to immediately walk away from there 😇 True challenge should've been finding out what this guy's been snuffing.
I am glad they did. Now I've got something to show my sister who is still convinced that it's actually a thing. In her defense though, she has three kids and a job, so she definitely does not have time binge watching MythBusters episodes on RUclips.
@@mysenfandei The double slit experiment proved the observer affects the outcome! These Matrix fools did it all wrong, the same as they messed up replicating the Bedini School Girl motor, that a school girl managed LOL. Tell your Sister she is correct ! Why do Rabbits grow up to 40% bigger in a Pyramid Hutch? Why do they dehydrate meat? How do they charge water with Life Force?????????
Perhaps pyramid power has a different function other then a couple of tooth pick pyramids out in the open air inside a workshop ;) But hey! Who am I to suggest so ;)
@@OohzyJohnDow when i heard of it as a kid in the horrible histories awesome egyptians book i always thought of an enclosed pyramid which would protect it from dust light or other stuff
On one hand, giving magical myths a platform for discussion legitimizes the BS of them in some way. on the other, it gives a good example of empiricism clashing with magical thinking which could be enlightening to people that don't really grasp the scientific method very well
You'd think with the Build Team doing the most implausible woo-woo myth the show's ever covered, their "expert" would be the biggest scammer in the episode, but that Skycar fellow is on another level.
My guess would be on something psychoactive. He was not really there at all. But then I'm not experienced with drugs at all (other than the legal ones aka nicotine, alcohol and the internet), so I can''t tell for sure. Never seen someone as far past normal on weed either, so that's probably not it...
7:04 In one of Jamies recent videos he said, that the "this is the 2nd biggest ... I've ever seen" was a joke regulary made by Tory, no matter how big something was you showed him. I love to see, how happy Adam is after saying it. (He mentions it at the beginning of [Origin of "Well, There's Your Problem" on MythBusters] on the Adam Savage's Tested Channel)
I was going to suggest that Tory might be a Monkey Island fan, as Guybrush says it repeatedly....but apparently it's from Get Smart which likely influenced both!
More speed doesn't actually get you anything. The engine needs to have enough torgue to spin the props. If you gear it then the engine could easily stall.
That was the best part of the show I watch it when it aired that year why I'm watching it now is I want them to use that more powerful engine with shaft drive not belt and see what it can do
There'll never be flying cars... people can't even drive down a straight road without crashing in to each other, imagine tonz of flying cars falling to the ground...
Just a comment on an interesting effort with this one-men flying machine.. The stability experienced by the Hiller machine and the De Lackner Helivector was due in main to keeping the cemtre of gravity ABOVE the rotor system. To install the engine low in the craft would make the thing VERY unstable. It might seem to be the logical thing to do but entirely wrong in this case.
Personally I'd love to see an update on the Williams X-Jet, also known as the flying pulpit. I know someone had bought the rights and patents for it. Thing looked amazing.
The Primary obstacle for personal flying machines is the incredible complexity of piloting in 3 dimensions. Look at all the accidents on roads, where there are strict "pathways" and rules - increasing to 3 dimensions would make traffic control impossibly complex. And that assumes the actual craft is somehow flown "automatically" eliminating the need for the pilot to have the extensive training they now require.
Yeah,and Mythbusters saying that this is a viable solution to traffic,instead of building cities that don't require you to have a car to live in. This program and the ties with the defense industrial complex makes them a mouthpieces for stupid ideas.
Funnily enough, with the quadcopter tech and flight electronics today, you probably COULD build an electric jetpack from plans on the internet. Gravity Industries Jet Suit aside (which, incidentally, Adam's been flying on), multiple drone based jet packs do exist.
There is still the safety concern. There is a reason personal flying devices are never going to be a commercial product. They are too steeped in liability. Remember people, if your device fails while you are in the air, you are falling to the ground with no safety net.
They need some sort of parachute mechanism that auto deploys when it detects its falling past a certain rate. Problem with that, there is a minimum height for parachutes to work properly, and even then, what's going to help you below that minimum altitude?
They maybe would got some more Thrust, if they played with the gearratio of the Belt drive and or the Dimensions of the propellers (bigger or smaller but with less or more angle on the blades) BUT I am amazed and impressed how much has changed in these few years. Today we have working Jetpacks of different kinds. There are Electric ones with RC Brushless Motors. There are Turbine powered, also on base of RC Jetengines And I belive I saw some with gas engines. Also there are kind of Jetpacks like a German Guy with a flying Bathtub with RC Equipment. Its a manlifting Quadcopter.
once i was bored so i got a few people to attempt some "realistic" flying in some game and ngl, humans are relatively horrible at flying and considering that we haven't evolved at all to fly and even birds tend to crash against the walls sometimes, i can easily tell that giving people an access to flight irl would have disasterous consequences, at least we would have to train people first and then be more strict than in case of cars, perhaps just as much as it is the case for planes... and even then you have to make sure that there's absolutely zero technical issues and have backup engines
I speculate that the jetpack test failed because the propellers were not spinning fast enough. Someone building a machine like that would first check the specs of the propellers, in particular the fastest speed at which they generate thrust efficiently. Then the builder would select a gear ratio that would make the propellers spin at the highest speed allowed at the engine speed with the highest level of power output. It's possible that the engine would not be strong enough for that, so there might have to be experimentation with gear ratios. With no professional background in aeronautical engineering, I speculate that the main purpose of the cowling ducts is to prevent turbulence, as well as directing the thrust. Drones fly well enough without them. The Mythbusters made a good presentation, but I'm not fully convinced that the myth was busted.
The myth though was that someone without a background in aeronotics can do this and the mythbusters do have a lot of experience in engineering and a lot of contacts. If they can't do it then it's pretty clear some middle class guy in his garage can't do it either and that was the myth. That a ducted fan machine can lift a human is no myth, I mean all you have to do is scale down a helicopter. The question is can an average Joe with only a lose idea of mechanics and a single trip to the hardware store do it?
Cowlings are about scale and also compactness. For this application they wanted a lot of lift in a small form factor. With a helicopter you would just put bigger rotor blades on it and with a drone you can get more thrust for less additional weight by just adding an additional propeller. With this design though using a single engine having like 4-5 fans would require so much mechanical complexity it would not be reliable and would have added too much weight. They didn't yet have the powerful batteries and electric motors that allow drones to have up to a dozen rotor blades without being too heavy or become too unreliable. So if you can only use 2 rotors and they can't be too long then you have to add cowlings to maximize the thrust from them.
I'm going the tin foil hat route on this one. With it being TV and the FAA involved probably had the biggest hand in why this wasn't a successful experiment. Adam and Jamie are waay too smart to not be able to figure it out especially when smart guys like them are actually interested in the project.
Why did they decide to move the engine lower on the frame? I thought the pendulum effect didn't work on helicopters because the thrust is not vertical like a fixed hinge.
That flying machine duct fans reminds me of my sump pump when it jammed with sand and talking to a wonderful DeWalt tech about the tolerances. I think it would need precision measurement of the blue foam. I am not in any way blaming Adam. I expect you need to spend in excess of $50,00 to make this accurate to 1/16"
Sorry but got to ask....... Wich 3d printer is you go too printer. Ive a neptune 4pro (all your fault😊) but at the time was looking at the bamboo range. Any chance of doing video with your thoughts on all your printers . Always great videos . Thanks
To the pyramid myths, something scientists found out and what me really surprised is that the Gizeh pyramids have (like mountains) such a big mass that they do slow the time around them a tiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiny tiny bit. Not noticible and not measurable unless you have billions worth of lab Equipment but i think thats pretty cool. Like Einstein sayd, big Objekts can influence time and room. Like light bends around massive stars and black holes.
It's a shame they didn't research outside the US. In NZ the Martin company created a workable jet pack. Similar to what they did, only it worked. Could fly to 5000 ft at 60 mph tested and was quite stable with a parachute return system. But hey. If it's not invented in the US, it's just not invented...
This was a good episode, they were very close. Could the ratio be changed to spin the rotors faster, it looked like 2:1 reduction. Maybe if constructed of tubing like aeroplanes are rather than girders the weight would be significantly reduced.
Anyone know what the graphic is on Scottie's shirt at 8:42? I've definitely seen that character in the purple dress before and it hit with unexpected nostalgia
I think that if you could increase the diameter of the central pulley that is on the central axis of the jet pack, it would considerably increase the rpm of the propellers. There was just one thing missing from the video and descriptions. Where did you get the source for this project file?
Belt slipping? maybe variable pitch fan blades needed in order to maximise efficiency at max power? (I used to be a hovercraft builder many years ago and am jealous!)
It's kind of amusing because with current electrical engines this isn't a problem at all. Have you seen the platform ones with the small propellers that people get off into the air with these days? Turns out that what you really need is a better motor because ICE's efficiency is ~40% at the very best and have a rev limit, electrical engines ... not so much.
Did the jet-pack reappear in the later episodes? Like the pneumatic actuators from the marching bridge myth EDIT: Found one in the build team using it as a windblower, and in the Mythbuster exhibition
Even if those things were working great, be safe - and affordable (spoiler: They're not) - they still have the big problem of terrible fuel efficiency. Unless we have loads of free energy - these things will never be real. But hey - if I'd dumped 200 million USD into this - I'd probably believe that, too.
And the idea isn't new. The whole "flying cars" idea is around since the 50ies - at least. And it still all comes down to efficiency. Unless you're able to build a VTOL glider - it won't happen.
@@themonsterunderyourbed9408 Yeah - right. Where did I left it? Behind the time machine, left of the warp drive - or near the trans-dimensional travel device?
That private Helicopter would maybe fly easier If you increase the Diameter of the Rotors (and ducts). You get way more airflow/mass and dont get too mich weight ontop
LOL I remember seeing this "pyramid power" thing on Brazilian TV back in the days and I did put a banana for a month inside a paper pyramid. I dunno it did rot but not so much so kinda worked? Or was it a placebo effect of sort? Anyway it was quite unimpressive.
The real problem with this is the props were not spinning fast enough to generate lift. The engine driven pulley needs to be 10% larger than those driving the propellers. Another way is to use propellers with more blades.
The first big design mistake is not to use rotary colt propellers, we need too much power and the lack of carbon fiber makes it unfeasible ...... I love this program the most
Wing rotation speed was to law. The gear ratio was wrong - it should be the opposite. The common gear (on engine) should be larger, and gears on wings smaller.
The infamous pyramid power episode.
Wow that ‘expert’ is unintentionally hilarious
He is the proof LSD really damage your brain....😄
Big time. Guy couldn't even string a coherent sentence together!
@@tristandunn4628 that could be a PSA about the dangers of LDS. Would’ve worked way better than dare lmfao
@@kyuofcosmic good for memes
You cant expect agents of the matrix to understand pyramid power lol. They could not even get the School Girl Bedini motor to work. But a little girl managed lol! What do you expect from Atheists who dont know they follow Satan?
"A guy in Czechoslovakia" is the only evidence I need that pyramids are magic.
My reaction was like "Wohooo, we got mentioned!.... Wait...."
his name is Karel Drbal and he has been assigned a patent for a pyramid that is supposed to hold the blade. In the former Czechoslovakia ("Patentní spis č. 91304" you can find via google)
My teacher at university knows (knew) the guy in person. Sometimes, he talked about the pyramid power in class with real belief and interest. Honestly, it was impossible not to trust him... I was a freshman and he had a higher than PhD degree.
"Copper is a cool metal" is enough quote for me to immediately walk away from there 😇
True challenge should've been finding out what this guy's been snuffing.
When the sun shines on it, then its a hot metal....🥵
Yea i also thought that he must be high on something 🤣🤣🤣🤣
It's not even copper, it is brass :D
That pyramid bloke sounded like he was on drugs!
Magic Mushrooms will do that to you 🙂
@@bokami3445 No, not even close. Huffing petrol will though.
Yes. Because of the drugs he was on.
Adam has gone on record saying that Pyramid Power was a massive waste of time and he wishes they had never done that myth
I am glad they did. Now I've got something to show my sister who is still convinced that it's actually a thing. In her defense though, she has three kids and a job, so she definitely does not have time binge watching MythBusters episodes on RUclips.
@@mysenfandei The double slit experiment proved the observer affects the outcome! These Matrix fools did it all wrong, the same as they messed up replicating the Bedini School Girl motor, that a school girl managed LOL. Tell your Sister she is correct ! Why do Rabbits grow up to 40% bigger in a Pyramid Hutch? Why do they dehydrate meat? How do they charge water with Life Force?????????
Perhaps pyramid power has a different function other then a couple of tooth pick pyramids out in the open air inside a workshop ;) But hey! Who am I to suggest so ;)
@@OohzyJohnDow when i heard of it as a kid in the horrible histories awesome egyptians book i always thought of an enclosed pyramid which would protect it from dust light or other stuff
On one hand, giving magical myths a platform for discussion legitimizes the BS of them in some way. on the other, it gives a good example of empiricism clashing with magical thinking which could be enlightening to people that don't really grasp the scientific method very well
"Copper is a really cool metal" LMAOOOOOOO YEAH DUDE I TOTALLY TRUST YOU THAT PYRAMIDS HAVE MAGIC POWERS
9:20 😂😂 triangle hat 🤣🤣
Seems his head is quite messed up.
He soznd like Ozzy Osbourne
😵💫
I think that guy has lost his marbles 🤣
The OG Pyramid Head from Silent Hill :D
Really great episode and power to you Jamie for strapping in and trying!
You'd think with the Build Team doing the most implausible woo-woo myth the show's ever covered, their "expert" would be the biggest scammer in the episode, but that Skycar fellow is on another level.
yeah but that flying car works and was built, but regulations stopped it.
@@tbas8741 You really believe that? That the mean ol' gubmint is the only reason you don't have a flying car?
What a great build! Loved this episode!
10:02 Was that dude Drunk or something?
No just a Hippie... So he's probably high.
My guess would be on something psychoactive. He was not really there at all. But then I'm not experienced with drugs at all (other than the legal ones aka nicotine, alcohol and the internet), so I can''t tell for sure. Never seen someone as far past normal on weed either, so that's probably not it...
Took too much LSD one time and never returned
7:04 In one of Jamies recent videos he said, that the "this is the 2nd biggest ... I've ever seen" was a joke regulary made by Tory, no matter how big something was you showed him. I love to see, how happy Adam is after saying it.
(He mentions it at the beginning of [Origin of "Well, There's Your Problem" on MythBusters] on the Adam Savage's Tested Channel)
I was going to suggest that Tory might be a Monkey Island fan, as Guybrush says it repeatedly....but apparently it's from Get Smart which likely influenced both!
Things get interesting when Jamie is actually interested in the project.
Also why didn't they use gears to increase the speed 🤔
The extra weight would probably just have negated any increase in lift.
The drive shaft split already reduces like 17% of the power of the engine, putting gears on it would probably not make a difference for better.
You just would need to put a bigger pulleys on the engine for the belt.
@@user0000user yep, that's the way, changing the ratio of the pulleys would work
More speed doesn't actually get you anything. The engine needs to have enough torgue to spin the props. If you gear it then the engine could easily stall.
Copper is a really cool material!
Shopping for the engine for the flight pack, "Could I recommend this more powerful model instead?" Cue Tim Allen "Ahr ahr ahr More power!"
That was the best part of the show I watch it when it aired that year why I'm watching it now is I want them to use that more powerful engine with shaft drive not belt and see what it can do
9:36 oh my god this guy
🤣🤣
He had a bit to much of something.
6:43 The dude is a blend between Adam and Jamie lmao
The jetpack episode is legendary.
Wish mythbusters was around today so they could comment on this: ruclips.net/video/nj-Iwv5NJKg/видео.html
There'll never be flying cars... people can't even drive down a straight road without crashing in to each other, imagine tonz of flying cars falling to the ground...
Flying car traffic would be a nightmare to manage.
😂😂 right first master one axis never mind three ta four
They will be AI controlled it will eventually come to pass it not impossible
@@grahammukuyu4660 you know people are F$#ked when they need AI because they fail themselves 😥🤡
6:50: One of the best quotes on the show ever. 👌
Just a comment on an interesting effort with this one-men flying machine.. The stability experienced by the Hiller machine and the De Lackner Helivector was due in main to keeping the cemtre of gravity ABOVE the rotor system. To install the engine low in the craft would make the thing VERY unstable. It might seem to be the logical thing to do but entirely wrong in this case.
It gets me all worked up just looking at it! 🤪
The Gravity Industries Jet Suit still looks like winner when it comes to jet pack design.
Personally I'd love to see an update on the Williams X-Jet, also known as the flying pulpit.
I know someone had bought the rights and patents for it. Thing looked amazing.
This was fascinating
The Primary obstacle for personal flying machines is the incredible complexity of piloting in 3 dimensions. Look at all the accidents on roads, where there are strict "pathways" and rules - increasing to 3 dimensions would make traffic control impossibly complex. And that assumes the actual craft is somehow flown "automatically" eliminating the need for the pilot to have the extensive training they now require.
That Moller Skycar, which the show has been aired more than 10 years ago and still we're driving regular cars.
"Where's my flying car?!"
With Todays tech (drone,etc). Hobbyists build similar with bathtub or simple chair. But I think regulators won’t allow it for commercial use.
Flying cars are unrealistic for the Mainstream, Imagine 300 million cars in the USA are flying and all the accidents, collisions who happening
Yeah,and Mythbusters saying that this is a viable solution to traffic,instead of building cities that don't require you to have a car to live in.
This program and the ties with the defense industrial complex makes them a mouthpieces for stupid ideas.
i just looked it up and they have upgrade it, now it looks like they are uing KerbalSpaceProgram for their videos, that and those 240p/144p videos
@@borntoclimb7116 And the Road Rage collisions falling from the Sky flying over homes
Funnily enough, with the quadcopter tech and flight electronics today, you probably COULD build an electric jetpack from plans on the internet.
Gravity Industries Jet Suit aside (which, incidentally, Adam's been flying on), multiple drone based jet packs do exist.
There is still the safety concern. There is a reason personal flying devices are never going to be a commercial product. They are too steeped in liability. Remember people, if your device fails while you are in the air, you are falling to the ground with no safety net.
They need some sort of parachute mechanism that auto deploys when it detects its falling past a certain rate. Problem with that, there is a minimum height for parachutes to work properly, and even then, what's going to help you below that minimum altitude?
Yeah What Happened to the GAGAcopter?
You need to he able to autorotate, or it will be a death trap (unfortunately...).
@@jocax188723 or a flying bathtub like the guys from Germany
They maybe would got some more Thrust, if they played with the gearratio of the Belt drive and or the Dimensions of the propellers (bigger or smaller but with less or more angle on the blades)
BUT
I am amazed and impressed how much has changed in these few years.
Today we have working Jetpacks of different kinds.
There are Electric ones with RC Brushless Motors.
There are Turbine powered, also on base of RC Jetengines
And I belive I saw some with gas engines.
Also there are kind of Jetpacks like a German Guy with a flying Bathtub with RC Equipment. Its a manlifting Quadcopter.
Mythbuster's just missed out on Gravity Industries... Jamie would of loved making that episode.
once i was bored so i got a few people to attempt some "realistic" flying in some game and ngl, humans are relatively horrible at flying
and considering that we haven't evolved at all to fly and even birds tend to crash against the walls sometimes, i can easily tell that giving people an access to flight irl would have disasterous consequences, at least we would have to train people first and then be more strict than in case of cars, perhaps just as much as it is the case for planes... and even then you have to make sure that there's absolutely zero technical issues and have backup engines
6:50 both jamie
I speculate that the jetpack test failed because the propellers were not spinning fast enough. Someone building a machine like that would first check the specs of the propellers, in particular the fastest speed at which they generate thrust efficiently. Then the builder would select a gear ratio that would make the propellers spin at the highest speed allowed at the engine speed with the highest level of power output. It's possible that the engine would not be strong enough for that, so there might have to be experimentation with gear ratios.
With no professional background in aeronautical engineering, I speculate that the main purpose of the cowling ducts is to prevent turbulence, as well as directing the thrust. Drones fly well enough without them. The Mythbusters made a good presentation, but I'm not fully convinced that the myth was busted.
The myth though was that someone without a background in aeronotics can do this and the mythbusters do have a lot of experience in engineering and a lot of contacts. If they can't do it then it's pretty clear some middle class guy in his garage can't do it either and that was the myth.
That a ducted fan machine can lift a human is no myth, I mean all you have to do is scale down a helicopter. The question is can an average Joe with only a lose idea of mechanics and a single trip to the hardware store do it?
Cowlings are about scale and also compactness. For this application they wanted a lot of lift in a small form factor. With a helicopter you would just put bigger rotor blades on it and with a drone you can get more thrust for less additional weight by just adding an additional propeller.
With this design though using a single engine having like 4-5 fans would require so much mechanical complexity it would not be reliable and would have added too much weight. They didn't yet have the powerful batteries and electric motors that allow drones to have up to a dozen rotor blades without being too heavy or become too unreliable.
So if you can only use 2 rotors and they can't be too long then you have to add cowlings to maximize the thrust from them.
I was thinking maybe because they were testing the thing inside the shop. It there enough air to pass through in order to generate lift?
I'm going the tin foil hat route on this one. With it being TV and the FAA involved probably had the biggest hand in why this wasn't a successful experiment. Adam and Jamie are waay too smart to not be able to figure it out especially when smart guys like them are actually interested in the project.
i appreciate the timestamps
36:48 I guess it's save to say that didn't happen 😂
9:25 Imagine being a myth buster looking for scientific proof and you end up talking to Jerry!
hell yeah love this ep
36:40 That was a swing and a miss 🤣😂🤣
Why did they decide to move the engine lower on the frame? I thought the pendulum effect didn't work on helicopters because the thrust is not vertical like a fixed hinge.
It doesn't. The Mythbusters aren't aerospace engineers, they're winging it
It definitely can't make things worse, no?
@@HalNordmann It can, he had to deviate from the plan even more and make the thing heavier too.
@@ThePlacehole
Because... SCIENCE!
And some plumber from GB made a hoverbike in his shed,… I guess for a lot less money. Go Colin Furze!
Wow this was 19 years old,so much has change sense then
That flying machine duct fans reminds me of my sump pump when it jammed with sand and talking to a wonderful DeWalt tech about the tolerances. I think it would need precision measurement of the blue foam. I am not in any way blaming Adam. I expect you need to spend in excess of $50,00 to make this accurate to 1/16"
Sorry but got to ask.......
Wich 3d printer is you go too printer. Ive a neptune 4pro (all your fault😊) but at the time was looking at the bamboo range. Any chance of doing video with your thoughts on all your printers .
Always great videos . Thanks
I remember in my highschool science book having to repeat the experiments with the pyramid shapes.
It's been done with Benson gyrocopters, Martin jetpacks, & quadcopters.
7:00 I love how that line made it in the intro sequence from this really mundane context.
I know Torey and Kari never had a thing,but as a kid,and even now..I always thought,there was some spark there
Yeah, there's a little.
I am convinced they did the deed at least once or tpry rly wanted to but was friendzoned
They absolutely did it! But they will never speak of it. Kinda like all my ex’s lol 😂
You can see when Kari looks at Tory or stands very near to him that she likes him A LOT.
@@CarlosPCmx Uh, no.
that cellphone belt clip on the hyneman is so retro :)
"But it was too noisy."
I believe, noise was the least problem the military had with it.
That pyramid dude took too much acid one time, never came back and is permanently trippin. He's on a permo! xd
To the pyramid myths, something scientists found out and what me really surprised is that the Gizeh pyramids have (like mountains) such a big mass that they do slow the time around them a tiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiny tiny bit. Not noticible and not measurable unless you have billions worth of lab Equipment but i think thats pretty cool.
Like Einstein sayd, big Objekts can influence time and room. Like light bends around massive stars and black holes.
32:47 --> Is that 7 toes on one foot or two feet overlapping and missing toes?
It's a shame they didn't research outside the US. In NZ the Martin company created a workable jet pack. Similar to what they did, only it worked. Could fly to 5000 ft at 60 mph tested and was quite stable with a parachute return system. But hey. If it's not invented in the US, it's just not invented...
This was a good episode, they were very close. Could the ratio be changed to spin the rotors faster, it looked like 2:1 reduction. Maybe if constructed of tubing like aeroplanes are rather than girders the weight would be significantly reduced.
Anyone know what the graphic is on Scottie's shirt at 8:42? I've definitely seen that character in the purple dress before and it hit with unexpected nostalgia
Perfect for big cities and there traffic jam problems.....
go for it!
Seems to work in Dubai. LOL ruclips.net/video/nj-Iwv5NJKg/видео.html
18:40."nononono were going for that tower!'
ALOOOOOOOMIN-NUMB
😂😂😁😂😂😃😃😃
AluminIum! There are 2 i's.
I think that if you could increase the diameter of the central pulley that is on the central axis of the jet pack, it would considerably increase the rpm of the propellers. There was just one thing missing from the video and descriptions. Where did you get the source for this project file?
Of course, there's Colin Furse's flying bike. Unstable as anything but, if you believe the video, does fly
That was like a 60 year old design by the time he built it.
Belt slipping? maybe variable pitch fan blades needed in order to maximise efficiency at max power? (I used to be a hovercraft builder many years ago and am jealous!)
Any RUclipsrs who attempted to make a DIY jetpack or similar yet?
me and my buddy tried building a jet pack in grade school.....it went as well as you would expect
14:54 Adam reminds me of a monkey witnessing a magic trick lol
It's kind of amusing because with current electrical engines this isn't a problem at all.
Have you seen the platform ones with the small propellers that people get off into the air with these days? Turns out that what you really need is a better motor because ICE's efficiency is ~40% at the very best and have a rev limit, electrical engines ... not so much.
Did the jet-pack reappear in the later episodes? Like the pneumatic actuators from the marching bridge myth
EDIT: Found one in the build team using it as a windblower, and in the Mythbuster exhibition
36:46 Ten years huh? How did that prediction work out?
Not good, motel, not good.
Even if those things were working great, be safe - and affordable (spoiler: They're not) - they still have the big problem of terrible fuel efficiency.
Unless we have loads of free energy - these things will never be real.
But hey - if I'd dumped 200 million USD into this - I'd probably believe that, too.
And the idea isn't new.
The whole "flying cars" idea is around since the 50ies - at least.
And it still all comes down to efficiency. Unless you're able to build a VTOL glider - it won't happen.
@@stanislavczebinski994 not true. All we need to come up with is some type of gravity manipulation technology.
@@themonsterunderyourbed9408 Yeah - right.
Where did I left it?
Behind the time machine, left of the warp drive - or near the trans-dimensional travel device?
Where South went with North E. West?
Where all his working plans went - south 😁
Obviously Jamie's moustache is too heavy, if he shaved it off, that contraption would easily fly!
OH MY GOD, Lester Crest 6:50
20 years later - hold my brushless high power motor. With modern drone tech it's possible to build one of those.
That private Helicopter would maybe fly easier If you increase the Diameter of the Rotors (and ducts). You get way more airflow/mass and dont get too mich weight ontop
We have a say in the RC plane flying community, “Take offs are optional, but landings are compulsory”, landings ….that’s your problem!
This episode aired in 2005, its now 2024 we still infact do not have flying cars.
LOL I remember seeing this "pyramid power" thing on Brazilian TV back in the days and I did put a banana for a month inside a paper pyramid. I dunno it did rot but not so much so kinda worked? Or was it a placebo effect of sort? Anyway it was quite unimpressive.
The real problem with this is the props were not spinning fast enough to generate lift. The engine driven pulley needs to be 10% larger than those driving the propellers. Another way is to use propellers with more blades.
Now, there's real personal drones
And jet packs. ruclips.net/video/nj-Iwv5NJKg/видео.html
Bro revived Czechoslovakia to prove pyramid woogabooga is real
the Bell jet-pack was in one of the early James Bond movies
They are so clever they could not replicate the School Girl Bedini convertor, that a school girl got a A doing lol!
41:46 why does Adam have a Jafar knife (for all you Stargate fans, you know what I mean)?
That pyramid one was borderline insulating
Did you get the build over to the Nice Mr North E. West to accompany his drawers full of plans?
10:27 this guy sounds all purple-dranked to me...
I do still wonder if there'll ever be a backpack based jetpack like the Rocketeer... 🙃😅
The first big design mistake is not to use rotary colt propellers, we need too much power and the lack of carbon fiber makes it unfeasible ...... I love this program the most
Jet engines! Modern compact jet engines seem to work. If only for 15 minutes. ruclips.net/video/nj-Iwv5NJKg/видео.html
It flies without a pilot, so they made a giant heavy drone.
feeling younger watching this
Really tho lol
@@frankonabigon2974 honest to God
Forget a jetpack, get a power glider.
Fan on your back and a paragliding chute
And then parachute into a stadium in Israel and run for the nearest baby?
I heard the russian sknny pyramid has more power .
10 mil dollars?! Sure not
Those props dont look to be counter rotating which imho is a rotational torque reaction challenge looking for a place to happen
3:20 "Extremely dangerous" 2024 with available ones on the market, police using them and taxis ready to be deployed XD
Huh, where are police and taxis using jetpacks?
I think they should have tried an electric version. Probably a lot lighter,and just as powerful. They sell motors for paragliders that are electric.
Ah, the good old days, when the FAA inspected aircraft while they were under construction. (Boeing, I'm looking at you...)
Where’s our flying cars!
10:10 he still hasn’t returned from his trip back in 1967
Im sure the first jet pack was made by someone at home
i would use a heated string to get it right shape on those fans duckt.
Wing rotation speed was to law. The gear ratio was wrong - it should be the opposite. The common gear (on engine) should be larger, and gears on wings smaller.