I'm a Finn and when I was seven years old we were in Italy with my parents. They had this sauna which was heated up to a whole 60 celsius, and they wouldn't let me in because it was DANGEROUS to a child. It's been over 30 years and I'm still irritated.
You know how people are asked about sauna and they tell you there's no way you could enter a sauna safely because of the temperature. Especially when they hear Finns heat it up to 80-120 °C. Ironically in Finland it's unbearably hot if the weather outside is more than +25 °C and the sauna is unbearably cold if it's under +80 °C.
Cars - they go through car washes and get rained on! But really it is that they don’t want to deal with the moisture problems in the sauna, because they aren’t interested in maintaining it in a hotel the proper way. They probably don’t even have a drain in those hotel saunas.
@@foff-666 Let's just agree that the letter C is stupid and useless. It's either S or K so just use those instead. If enough people get onboard we'll have rid of ourselves of that stupid C in a few generations.
Nope. The heat is why we go. There isn't a huge difference between plain heat and wet heat. Yes steam is better for clearing the passageways and lungs, but that's it.
This drives me crazy in gyms. One had the actual instructions for using the Sauna and making steam from the manufacturer telling you how to put water on the rocks, and under that, a sign from the gym saying "'Do not put water on the heater unit, it's electric." Although even worse, are the infra-red saunas. Just useless.
Sauna in LA Fitness Chicago, is the same stupid thing. Because Humidity inside is 0 and its too hot, everyone is sweating and coughing, once you go out in the cold after Sauna you get a bad throat that lasts for a week or two
If the sauna room is not built for löyly moisture with adequate ventilation, it will mould... Propably whole building. And even the löyly will not be fresh but suffocating🤢
Sauna for 10-12 mins under 90-95 Celsius is not a sauna and you also need cold water 5-10 Celsius bath afterwards for 1-2 mins + 10-15 mins of relaxation fully covered in towels/blankets...that's how Austrians and East Europe enjoys it
Its like an vibrator with no batteries! Finland has about 5.5 mil people and 3.2 million saunas and many of them are electric ofc. Yes as some one point it out read the manual.
@@SprakanaKerum If he means water kettles then.. Ismo has lived in USA for years, he knows that water kettles are not used in USA. The reason is simple: they have 120V mains voltage and that means every cable needs to be thicker so that they can carry the extra current needed. Everything is basically doubled from 240V system. But thicker cables means extra cost... so they are REALLY careful when it comes to ratings, and typical kitchen outlets do not carry enough current for 1.5kW water kettles. Their water kettles are half as powerful, and it is faster to boil water in a microwave or on a gas stove. Our kitchen outlets are rated to suitably high, i have never popped a fuse because of an overload. For US consumer they would have to install new wiring, or run an additional 240V line for EU electronics.. They get 240V in the house, they use center tapped mains where they get 240V and it is "split" to two 120V circuits. A lot of appliances actually use 240V, like clothes driers and such. So, if any US home builder is reading this, take time and futureproof your house a bit, having 240V line in the kitchen for EU and "rest of the world" appliances can become very handy. Water kettles are amazing when they are powerful enough. Nothing boils water faster and more efficiently than them, and they last forever. 20-30 years, easy. Same with all high power draw kitchen stuff. 240V outlet in the garage is also a good idea... 240V powertools, battery storage, and EV stuff... the EV charger anyway is going to use 240V, so get a regular Schuko outlet there too..
This is hilarious - no kidding I've had this conversation with a hotel in Malta before, they had a sauna with a sign saying "do not throw water on the electric furnace" lol -- I was with a Finnish friend, and he gave the reception a bit of a blasting, they wouldn't budge. They think a sauna is just a very warm room....
No, they don't know how to build a sauna, it'll mold because of it, that's why they say no water on the kiuas. It's not the kiuas, but the room that's the issue.
i was in Norway and they had "sauna" and there was big sign that "löylyn heitto kielletty" =(no fun and we are idiots) only Finnish sign on whole country
The funniest thing is that if you want to have löyly, you have to throw löyly. It's that simple. 😂 Ps. Löyly is the spirit of sauna, without löyly, it's just a hot room, not sauna. 😅
When our family found no bucket we just took the paper towel trash bucket next to the faucet in the bathroom which we emptied of paper and filled up with water. It was a Finnish electric sauna so we knew it could take water.
Finns get offended by that the same way as Italians get about pasta. It was big news in Finland when we found out that Andrew Tate sat on the kids bench in a towel with 50 degrees celsius. Half the country made fun of him.
I remember that one. Basically the most common comment was "I would look angry, too, if I found out that the sauna wasn't properly heated by the time I'm already sitting there."
You could compare it to a regular stove in the kitchen where in fact the heater element is connected to electricity that makes the element very hot, just like the element in the electric kettle. But they realized that instead of putting the electric wires on top of everything without being covered, they put the heater element on top. Or maybe you couldn't make that comparison, to my understanding americans still use gas fueled stoves that are on literally open fire inside their home. Like it was 2000 BC. I actually had an exercise in school last year to calculate the heat transition and temperatures in the sauna for the stove, air and the seats if the seats were made of metal.
A colleague told me that he had been on secondment in France. There was a sign somewhere on a street corner that said SAUNA. Had gone in and seen the stove without stones, the resistors red. Had told his friends about it and they went to the beach to collect stones. After washing, they had gone back to the sauna and put them in the stove and started throwing a bath. The owner had come to scream and rage, but they had just stripped it of its clothes and taken it to the sauna. After the beginning, the owner had always waited with a bottle of wine and Patong when he could go to the sauna with his friends again. By the way, the fine Swedish hotel had carpeted floor in the sauna.
I went to a sauna in Japan and there was a sign specifically forbidding throwing water on the stove. In addition to that, it was something like 50c lukewarm. Meanwhile, the hot bath in the next room was searing hot, I could barely take it.
There are traditions of curing pork in Sauna and of course heating sausages on or over the stove is done regularly, but I can't see how you're going to make pasta in sauna. If you really want to conbine the best of the two worlds get some "saunapalvi" which is pork that is cured in smoke-sauna and use that in a pasta. Note that most of the saunapalvi in finnish stores isn't actually cured in anything resembling a sauna and the smoke flavor is fake, but even those are actually surprisingly good.
@@jan7751-o4w I was only joking, no intention to cook pasta in a sauna, also because it would undoubtedly overcook and we Italians eat it "al dente" ... Moreover, I'm also vegetarian, so even your suggestion is for me out of question. But thanks anyway .
@@carlomariamosco well you can always use the afterheat of sauna to dry mushrooms;) I reccommend the finnish chanterelle mushrooms (out of which I will be making a mushroom risotto today) I'd also like to take this opportunity to thank all of Italy for your contributions to the world of food. I've been following some Italian chefs in youtube and learning to make authentic Italian food for a few years now. I almost never make anything that isn't at least heavily influenced by your cuisine anymore. I don't mean to brag but I've got to the point where it was actually difficult to find better Neopolitan pizza in Naples than what I can make home and I didn't find better carbonara in Rome. With all'amatriciana I still have some finetuning to do to get to the Rome level (but I blame the fact that we simply can't get as good tomatoes here).
My father was in a hotel in india with a sauna (rare). They would not let the finnish guys heat the sauna to a 100c because they though water in human would boil...
Also noticed this with hotel saunas, at least in the US. They have the temperature blocked at something ridiculously low, like 120F.. That's not a sauna, that's a slightly warm room..
Electric stoves, somehow manage to work as well after sometimes basically swimming in things. I was going to say something about laundry machines, but it seems mine work with Korean witchcraft, so I couldn't really compare.
Over here in Brazil we use a lot eletric shower, since decades... last month we did a project for a russian company over here, they were terrified at the idea of anything electrical inside the bathroom other than the light bulb. LMAO
@ISMO are you really pronouncing sound of the way you learned it in Finland? Because it sounds like you’re trying to say it the American way. or is it just that certain areas of Finland have different accents, the way different areas of the United States have different accents?
I can understand him perfectly. I wish the words wouldn't be printed on the damn screen. It is very distracting. If people need subtitles, they can turn them on. Please stop putting the text on the screen. Ismo speaks clearly even with the accent. Stop with the distraction and unnecessary annoyance.
Take it from a Finn, wood-heated saunas are the most authentic and most highly regarded ones here. The electric ones basically just mimic the real deal and exist only for convenience.
Sauna in LA Fitness, is the same stupid thing. Because Humidity inside is 0 and its too hot, everyone is sweating and coughing, once you go out in the cold after Sauna you get a bad throat that lasts for a week or two
In Hungary we have Finn-Saunas and they’re all electric and also we have wooden buckets with cold water. Also there is a little wooden cup with long handle. People often pour scented oil into that water call it “aromatic sauna”
Light a match and immediately extinguish it. But that on the stoves to get a nice smokey scent that resembles what you get from a wood burning stove. Also, i've noticed that beef jerky is awesome snack in sauna, with beer of course. I've never eaten anything in sauna before but decide to try and dear lord.. You are losing salt as you sweat so the salty beef jerky tastes like something essential that you are desperately missing, it is a craving that you are satisfying. Like drinking water when you are thirsty tastes extra great, it is that sort of a thing.. You can also eat it in cool down room, which is probably a better idea anyway..
don't use cold water, use Hot! cold water makes the stones cold faster, prevents any nice "löyly" the more you throw and takes longer time for the stove to heat them up again. Hot water keeps the stones hot. This keeps the sauna warm for the next guests!
@@munaus-3345 The difference between cold and hot water is negligible. The majority of energy is required to evaporate the water, not to heat it up. But having hot water has negatives like not being able to use it to cool/wash face. But most importantly, hot water is of lower quality (depending on a country pipe system can be drastically worse) and can do bad things to the stove. Therefore it's better to use cold water. Or put cold water in a bucket and put it in sauna to warm it up together with sauna.
@@munaus-3345 The difference is miniscule. To warm one liter of 15C water to 40C takes around 100J. To make it boil from 99C takes 2 200J. The phase change takes by far more energy, where as heating it is fairly cheap. It is one of those myths that keep circulating, while NO ONE who says it has ever done a controlled tests.. only "tests" done is to heat a sauna and then estimate by feel, and then heat up a sauna a week later and then feel it again. You need two identical saunas, or one sauna that has a good system to create identical conditions, them MEASURE the different. Not to feel it since your own biases will change how you feel.
@@munaus-3345 The temperature of the water that you throw on the stones makes very small difference. This is because evaporating boiling water into steam requires about 10x the amount of energy as getting the same amount of water from 1 °C into boiling temperature. The reason you should still use hot water is to reduce erosion of the rocks (the surface of the rocks cracks a little bit when you repeatedly throw cold water on hot stones).
The other week at my gym in Illinois a pair of guys started yelling at me and threatening to report me for splashing löyly. One claimed to be a "master maintenance technician" whatever the hell that means, talking about how it breaks the stove. Couple of clowns 🤦🏼♂️
yeah it's fine. it's actually fairly easy to make stuff like that water resistant because all the important electronics can be put inside a waterproof box and the heater coil is also easy because how do you think we can have electric waterheaters? :D
With the stove you only need a wire (electric conductor) inside a metallic pipe (insulator) that's not touching each other. Usually they use ceramic around the conductor to keep it not touching the pipe.
There is also simple geometry and gravity used, when you put your electronics up high and run cables from the bottom there can be easily enough space to disallow any spray going up unless there is a flood. They are not water tight, they are splash resistant devices only. Water tight things have tremendous drawbacks as that means water can then accumulate inside the electronics box because of high pressure differentials as the surrounding temperatures change drastically... so the seals can easily let just a bit of water in but doesn't let it out. Over time you can have a flooding in the internal "ecosystem". It is better to just keep it "leaking" and shape the bottom so that it drains efficiently from just one designated spot. A lot of devices operate this way, and i can say that as an universal advice: if it is cheap, do NOT buy water tight, but go for splash resistant. Those have a chance of lasting, the water tight won't be what promised and it certainly is not built so well that it can keep the pressure differential.. because that kind of design actually can't be cheated, it is going to cost you. Exceptions are maybe fully potted stuff, like cheap water pumps as they are just poured full of epoxy, preventing them to ever be opened at all, and most importantly, there is no air inside except for few bubbles.. Something cheap like garden LED lights can be modified by drilling a hole at the lowest point of the enclosure. They are notorious for filling up with water over time. You can put a piece of sponge in the hole to prevent insects from going in. Splash resistant is just usually safer and there is rarely a need for water tight unless you are talking about marine stuff, or scuba diving.. Everything outside you house at this moment are most likely just splash resistant.
Not only are they built to withstand the water, they are actually designed specifically for you to throw the water. The steam that it creates is THE bath of the sauna. A dry sauna is not a sauna bath. The stove exists for the purpose of being thrown water on.
Back on 90s in Japan carried water to sauna in a plastic bag...trew it on stones...electrics of the whole spa went of...didnt go to reception to explain that it was me who did it.
My father[rest easy] took me to sauna when I was 6 month age- I lost my content- so now I do not like sauna so much and seeking/ trying to find my content, after 55 years 😅
Actuallu i have seen some very dangeroys sauna stoves abroad where one should not throw water on to or at least be very careful about it.. yeah the kiuas.. stove might be ok, but electric connection non water proof or just wiring visible far from proper.
John 14:6 Jesus said to him, "I am the way, the truth, and the life. No one comes to the Father except through Me. 1 Corinthians 15:3 that Christ died for our sins according to the Scriptures, and that He was buried, and that He rose again the third day according to the Scriptures. Romans 10:9 that if you confess with your mouth the Lord Jesus and believe in your heart that God has raised Him from the dead, you will be saved. ❤
Also in Norway the Suana is around 90-110 .. atleast those i been in ... but i hate to go in em because its so dry those i tryed.. skin on my face feel like burning.. Water would be nice ..but they did not do that on those about 3 i try.. swiming halls ect.
Tell them about vastas, vihtas...I'm in SFV whenever you want a real Finish sauna..maybe some pulla and karjalanpiirakka. Oh what about Mammi? Fins are so funny
The receptionist’s first mistake was arguing with a Finn about saunas- that’s something you just don’t do
your average receptionist wouldn't even know what Finnland is
@@sigmundklaussadly, this is true.
Is it just me who sees Ismo/random finnish guy at reception, with only a small towel around his hips, educating the receptionist about the sauna?
I'm a Finn and when I was seven years old we were in Italy with my parents. They had this sauna which was heated up to a whole 60 celsius, and they wouldn't let me in because it was DANGEROUS to a child. It's been over 30 years and I'm still irritated.
Thanks, now I'm irritated too!
ftfr😊?s'ffd😊cz 0cvbx088ufrww😮😊
@@franksesma8638 Seems unlikely.
You know how people are asked about sauna and they tell you there's no way you could enter a sauna safely because of the temperature. Especially when they hear Finns heat it up to 80-120 °C. Ironically in Finland it's unbearably hot if the weather outside is more than +25 °C and the sauna is unbearably cold if it's under +80 °C.
😂😂😂
I’m Italian…
I’m so sorry!
Pls don’t blame us , ignorance always plays his role …
Boats. Water heaters. Immersion blenders. Scuba diving computers. Water pumps. Kettles. Dishwashers.
Submarines.
Washing machines. Coffee makers. Steam irons.
Cars - they go through car washes and get rained on!
But really it is that they don’t want to deal with the moisture problems in the sauna, because they aren’t interested in maintaining it in a hotel the proper way. They probably don’t even have a drain in those hotel saunas.
. . .dogs, pigs, bats. I mean. . .
Cables at the bottom of the ocean...
Lecturing a Finn on saunas is like lecturing an Italian on pasta. You simply don't do it!
When it is a sauna thing - trust a Finn 100%. We know these things.
Except when he mentions Gollum.
Off course you do 😅
@@rypaleleipa9007😂😂
@@rypaleleipa9007 now you made me want to play "saunaklonkku" and I am home alone...
Karstaa aah
What is the point if you cant throw löyly.
I live in house build in 1977 and had same KIUAS for 44 years. When i moved in it still worked, but i was stupid and replaced it. Harvia for life
"Do not site the deep magic with me, witch. I was there when it was written."
Eyyy another C.S. Lewis fan! :)
"Cite" (as in recite) : )
*cite
not *_site_*
@@foff-666 Let's just agree that the letter C is stupid and useless. It's either S or K so just use those instead. If enough people get onboard we'll have rid of ourselves of that stupid C in a few generations.
It's so frustrating. The steam is basically the reason we go to sauna? They didn't even bother reading the manual?
Nope. The heat is why we go. There isn't a huge difference between plain heat and wet heat. Yes steam is better for clearing the passageways and lungs, but that's it.
@@chrismccaffrey8256 If you find no difference in terms of relaxation between steam and a hair dryer, maybe the problem is you.
@@chrismccaffrey8256 tell me your not a Finn without telling me you're not a Finn 😂 (or any other Nordic country for that matter)
@@chrismccaffrey8256You should lose your internet privileges for talking shíte.
@@Phonton😂
This drives me crazy in gyms. One had the actual instructions for using the Sauna and making steam from the manufacturer telling you how to put water on the rocks, and under that, a sign from the gym saying "'Do not put water on the heater unit, it's electric."
Although even worse, are the infra-red saunas. Just useless.
Sauna in LA Fitness Chicago, is the same stupid thing. Because Humidity inside is 0 and its too hot, everyone is sweating and coughing, once you go out in the cold after Sauna you get a bad throat that lasts for a week or two
There is not a thing "infra-red sauna". It's like "only downhill car" totally useless 😆
If the sauna room is not built for löyly moisture with adequate ventilation, it will mould... Propably whole building. And even the löyly will not be fresh but suffocating🤢
Sauna for 10-12 mins under 90-95 Celsius is not a sauna and you also need cold water 5-10 Celsius bath afterwards for 1-2 mins + 10-15 mins of relaxation fully covered in towels/blankets...that's how Austrians and East Europe enjoys it
Its like an vibrator with no batteries!
Finland has about 5.5 mil people and 3.2 million saunas and many of them are electric ofc. Yes as some one point it out read the manual.
You know what are also electric? Water boilers...
YEP
Ismo didn't think about that joke, or he would've included it
@@SprakanaKerum If he means water kettles then.. Ismo has lived in USA for years, he knows that water kettles are not used in USA.
The reason is simple: they have 120V mains voltage and that means every cable needs to be thicker so that they can carry the extra current needed. Everything is basically doubled from 240V system. But thicker cables means extra cost... so they are REALLY careful when it comes to ratings, and typical kitchen outlets do not carry enough current for 1.5kW water kettles. Their water kettles are half as powerful, and it is faster to boil water in a microwave or on a gas stove. Our kitchen outlets are rated to suitably high, i have never popped a fuse because of an overload.
For US consumer they would have to install new wiring, or run an additional 240V line for EU electronics.. They get 240V in the house, they use center tapped mains where they get 240V and it is "split" to two 120V circuits. A lot of appliances actually use 240V, like clothes driers and such. So, if any US home builder is reading this, take time and futureproof your house a bit, having 240V line in the kitchen for EU and "rest of the world" appliances can become very handy. Water kettles are amazing when they are powerful enough. Nothing boils water faster and more efficiently than them, and they last forever. 20-30 years, easy. Same with all high power draw kitchen stuff. 240V outlet in the garage is also a good idea... 240V powertools, battery storage, and EV stuff... the EV charger anyway is going to use 240V, so get a regular Schuko outlet there too..
@@squidcaps4308 Most american households get 2 reversed 120volt AC lines, which combined make 240volt.
This is hilarious - no kidding I've had this conversation with a hotel in Malta before, they had a sauna with a sign saying "do not throw water on the electric furnace" lol -- I was with a Finnish friend, and he gave the reception a bit of a blasting, they wouldn't budge. They think a sauna is just a very warm room....
No, they don't know how to build a sauna, it'll mold because of it, that's why they say no water on the kiuas. It's not the kiuas, but the room that's the issue.
i put water into my electric kettle....damn, if only i had known
oh man, hope you're ok!
Did she think it was decorative stones like a fake fireplace???
Nice one 😆
i was in Norway and they had "sauna" and there was big sign that "löylyn heitto kielletty" =(no fun and we are idiots) only Finnish sign on whole country
The same people won't drive their fancy electric cars when it's raining, because it's DANGEROUS! 😂
And you do? Are you crazy?!? 😮 They're electric. ⚡⚡⚡
You probably pour water inside an electric kettle too. Insanity.
The funniest thing is that if you want to have löyly, you have to throw löyly. It's that simple. 😂
Ps. Löyly is the spirit of sauna, without löyly, it's just a hot room, not sauna. 😅
😮
When our family found no bucket we just took the paper towel trash bucket next to the faucet in the bathroom which we emptied of paper and filled up with water. It was a Finnish electric sauna so we knew it could take water.
Finns get offended by that the same way as Italians get about pasta. It was big news in Finland when we found out that Andrew Tate sat on the kids bench in a towel with 50 degrees celsius. Half the country made fun of him.
I remember that one. Basically the most common comment was "I would look angry, too, if I found out that the sauna wasn't properly heated by the time I'm already sitting there."
But did the american sauna have carpet on the floor?
Most likely and microwave on one corner.
❤Ismo Leikola, we waything you back here, we coming to see show in East-Finland
"Waything" :D
You could compare it to a regular stove in the kitchen where in fact the heater element is connected to electricity that makes the element very hot, just like the element in the electric kettle. But they realized that instead of putting the electric wires on top of everything without being covered, they put the heater element on top.
Or maybe you couldn't make that comparison, to my understanding americans still use gas fueled stoves that are on literally open fire inside their home. Like it was 2000 BC.
I actually had an exercise in school last year to calculate the heat transition and temperatures in the sauna for the stove, air and the seats if the seats were made of metal.
A colleague told me that he had been on secondment in France. There was a sign somewhere on a street corner that said SAUNA. Had gone in and seen the stove without stones, the resistors red. Had told his friends about it and they went to the beach to collect stones. After washing, they had gone back to the sauna and put them in the stove and started throwing a bath. The owner had come to scream and rage, but they had just stripped it of its clothes and taken it to the sauna. After the beginning, the owner had always waited with a bottle of wine and Patong when he could go to the sauna with his friends again.
By the way, the fine Swedish hotel had carpeted floor in the sauna.
Been there, done that, same response. Took a water bottle to compensate..
I went to a sauna in Japan and there was a sign specifically forbidding throwing water on the stove. In addition to that, it was something like 50c lukewarm. Meanwhile, the hot bath in the next room was searing hot, I could barely take it.
As Italian I'm planning to go to Finland and cooking pasta inside a Finnish sauna.... best of two worlds
There are traditions of curing pork in Sauna and of course heating sausages on or over the stove is done regularly, but I can't see how you're going to make pasta in sauna. If you really want to conbine the best of the two worlds get some "saunapalvi" which is pork that is cured in smoke-sauna and use that in a pasta. Note that most of the saunapalvi in finnish stores isn't actually cured in anything resembling a sauna and the smoke flavor is fake, but even those are actually surprisingly good.
@@jan7751-o4w I was only joking, no intention to cook pasta in a sauna, also because it would undoubtedly overcook and we Italians eat it "al dente" ...
Moreover, I'm also vegetarian, so even your suggestion is for me out of question.
But thanks anyway .
@@carlomariamosco well you can always use the afterheat of sauna to dry mushrooms;) I reccommend the finnish chanterelle mushrooms (out of which I will be making a mushroom risotto today)
I'd also like to take this opportunity to thank all of Italy for your contributions to the world of food. I've been following some Italian chefs in youtube and learning to make authentic Italian food for a few years now. I almost never make anything that isn't at least heavily influenced by your cuisine anymore.
I don't mean to brag but I've got to the point where it was actually difficult to find better Neopolitan pizza in Naples than what I can make home and I didn't find better carbonara in Rome. With all'amatriciana I still have some finetuning to do to get to the Rome level (but I blame the fact that we simply can't get as good tomatoes here).
So did you convince her to give you a bucket or not?
I don't think she wanted to learn, employee is probably the level of a robot. not allowed is not allowed.
Remember, it is a made-up story by a comedian
@@derlachendevagabund7942No it isnt. This happens a lot.
@@derlachendevagabund7942Exactly. It happens a lot and not only in the US but for example in Japan as well.
@@onzirIn one hotel in Jeddah we just couldn't bother to tell them, so we got the water from a tap.
My father was in a hotel in india with a sauna (rare). They would not let the finnish guys heat the sauna to a 100c because they though water in human would boil...
I'm not even joking - the spa in my apartment building has a steam room and a sauna...and several signs saying to never throw water on the rocks.
Estonian here. My preference is 80-85c.
85'c is perfect
As a Finn, my preference is hot stones in a 70 °C and 70% RH sauna. And then throw water about a litre per 5 minutes on the stones.
😂😂😂😂 i didn't expect the ending
Also noticed this with hotel saunas, at least in the US. They have the temperature blocked at something ridiculously low, like 120F.. That's not a sauna, that's a slightly warm room..
wait, its everywhere in America? without that bucket the sauna ir practically useless, its like pizza without pineapples :)
Agreed😉
Electric stoves, somehow manage to work as well after sometimes basically swimming in things.
I was going to say something about laundry machines, but it seems mine work with Korean witchcraft, so I couldn't really compare.
Niin mikä oli? Oliskohan se SaUna, ei Saana.
The best saunas are bbq saunas where the heat comes from the grill and instead of water you throw pork and chicken legs.
Hello there,
I was about to be fasting today... now, there is no way, I go to get baked ribs.
As an American of Finnish origin, I know where he’s going with this because I’ve seen it myself.
Over here in Brazil we use a lot eletric shower, since decades... last month we did a project for a russian company over here, they were terrified at the idea of anything electrical inside the bathroom other than the light bulb. LMAO
Come on Ismo. You know it's sauna, not sawna.
They wouldn‘t understand sow-nah
Right? Even I understand sauna!
but the americans dont
@@derlachendevagabund7942 Emäsika höh !
@@JanoTuotanto ruclips.net/video/SJevFkRs7R4/видео.html
@ISMO are you really pronouncing sound of the way you learned it in Finland? Because it sounds like you’re trying to say it the American way. or is it just that certain areas of Finland have different accents, the way different areas of the United States have different accents?
I listened the same. Ismo is spelling sauna in American way - which always infuriates me since it is SAU-NA, NOT soona...
@@marjo4987Where did he do that?
@@Anonymous-uw4sr "soona" is the Finnish spelling of the American pronunciation of "sauna".
@@l2QSrrfhEOdEnu48u0Tl.......... oh really
@@l2QSrrfhEOdEnu48u0Tl.......... well he's speaking english
What about toasters?
Brilliant 😂
Tea kettles!
Well if that stove have never seen water before you don't want to throw water before those stones are cleaned from dust.
it is a wonder you found at least a sauna... then if you do, usually it is between 60/70o celsius... no sense at all 😅
זאת השאלה: לקנות או לא לקנות (טסלה)
Submarines
Well there actually are dry sauna stoves that are not made for infusion
Those are just space heaters, if that is what sauna is then I have a sauna in my car.
As Ismo explained, he knew the brand of the kiuas (the official Finnish name of the thing that heats the stones). It wasn't a space heater.
I feel like I would understand this joke if I were familiar with saunas.
A Finn and a ruskie went to sauna.
The ruskie died
Why, oh Whyy the spoiler?? Whyy!!??
😂😂😂
I can understand him perfectly. I wish the words wouldn't be printed on the damn screen. It is very distracting. If people need subtitles, they can turn them on. Please stop putting the text on the screen. Ismo speaks clearly even with the accent. Stop with the distraction and unnecessary annoyance.
The only place I'd be okay being hot, sweaty, and surrounded by strangers is a beach in July.
Ah, you have missed something in life.
koivun oksa
How can we save the world if people don't belive us?
As apparently "the conspiracy theorist" I have been pondering the same
English is getting way better.
How sad . Shows that information does not always get through even with google.
Bro can you increase the volume on your videos its fucking ridiculous
Apparently, the receptionist lady is from russian village, cause they have wood burning furnaces in saunas there. No electricity.
Take it from a Finn, wood-heated saunas are the most authentic and most highly regarded ones here. The electric ones basically just mimic the real deal and exist only for convenience.
Its blasphemy for a finnish person to pronounce sauna like americans, like sawna. Shame on you ismo.
Women and technology. 😂
Get a shave and a scrubbing first!
ÖLYT : Burnmark letters on your bum if you accidently back into that thing in sweden
😄
Sauna in LA Fitness, is the same stupid thing. Because Humidity inside is 0 and its too hot, everyone is sweating and coughing, once you go out in the cold after Sauna you get a bad throat that lasts for a week or two
The sub? Someone gonna do anything about that? 🫣🤔
Water resistance IP24 by standard, usually IP25. Wiring needs to be heat resistant up to 170°C
SFS 6000-7
In Hungary we have Finn-Saunas and they’re all electric and also we have wooden buckets with cold water. Also there is a little wooden cup with long handle. People often pour scented oil into that water call it “aromatic sauna”
Light a match and immediately extinguish it. But that on the stoves to get a nice smokey scent that resembles what you get from a wood burning stove. Also, i've noticed that beef jerky is awesome snack in sauna, with beer of course. I've never eaten anything in sauna before but decide to try and dear lord.. You are losing salt as you sweat so the salty beef jerky tastes like something essential that you are desperately missing, it is a craving that you are satisfying. Like drinking water when you are thirsty tastes extra great, it is that sort of a thing.. You can also eat it in cool down room, which is probably a better idea anyway..
don't use cold water, use Hot!
cold water makes the stones cold faster, prevents any nice "löyly" the more you throw and takes longer time for the stove to heat them up again.
Hot water keeps the stones hot. This keeps the sauna warm for the next guests!
@@munaus-3345
The difference between cold and hot water is negligible. The majority of energy is required to evaporate the water, not to heat it up.
But having hot water has negatives like not being able to use it to cool/wash face. But most importantly, hot water is of lower quality (depending on a country pipe system can be drastically worse) and can do bad things to the stove.
Therefore it's better to use cold water. Or put cold water in a bucket and put it in sauna to warm it up together with sauna.
@@munaus-3345 The difference is miniscule. To warm one liter of 15C water to 40C takes around 100J. To make it boil from 99C takes 2 200J. The phase change takes by far more energy, where as heating it is fairly cheap.
It is one of those myths that keep circulating, while NO ONE who says it has ever done a controlled tests.. only "tests" done is to heat a sauna and then estimate by feel, and then heat up a sauna a week later and then feel it again. You need two identical saunas, or one sauna that has a good system to create identical conditions, them MEASURE the different. Not to feel it since your own biases will change how you feel.
@@munaus-3345 The temperature of the water that you throw on the stones makes very small difference. This is because evaporating boiling water into steam requires about 10x the amount of energy as getting the same amount of water from 1 °C into boiling temperature. The reason you should still use hot water is to reduce erosion of the rocks (the surface of the rocks cracks a little bit when you repeatedly throw cold water on hot stones).
The other week at my gym in Illinois a pair of guys started yelling at me and threatening to report me for splashing löyly. One claimed to be a "master maintenance technician" whatever the hell that means, talking about how it breaks the stove. Couple of clowns 🤦🏼♂️
yeah it's fine. it's actually fairly easy to make stuff like that water resistant because all the important electronics can be put inside a waterproof box and the heater coil is also easy because how do you think we can have electric waterheaters? :D
With the stove you only need a wire (electric conductor) inside a metallic pipe (insulator) that's not touching each other. Usually they use ceramic around the conductor to keep it not touching the pipe.
There is also simple geometry and gravity used, when you put your electronics up high and run cables from the bottom there can be easily enough space to disallow any spray going up unless there is a flood. They are not water tight, they are splash resistant devices only. Water tight things have tremendous drawbacks as that means water can then accumulate inside the electronics box because of high pressure differentials as the surrounding temperatures change drastically... so the seals can easily let just a bit of water in but doesn't let it out. Over time you can have a flooding in the internal "ecosystem". It is better to just keep it "leaking" and shape the bottom so that it drains efficiently from just one designated spot.
A lot of devices operate this way, and i can say that as an universal advice: if it is cheap, do NOT buy water tight, but go for splash resistant. Those have a chance of lasting, the water tight won't be what promised and it certainly is not built so well that it can keep the pressure differential.. because that kind of design actually can't be cheated, it is going to cost you. Exceptions are maybe fully potted stuff, like cheap water pumps as they are just poured full of epoxy, preventing them to ever be opened at all, and most importantly, there is no air inside except for few bubbles..
Something cheap like garden LED lights can be modified by drilling a hole at the lowest point of the enclosure. They are notorious for filling up with water over time. You can put a piece of sponge in the hole to prevent insects from going in. Splash resistant is just usually safer and there is rarely a need for water tight unless you are talking about marine stuff, or scuba diving.. Everything outside you house at this moment are most likely just splash resistant.
So True, was In hotel sauna on fkin us of A had To bring water To stove with my swimmig panta.
electric eels, somehow still alive
Yes! They all survived (themselves)
🤣
If you can't get Löyly, it's just a warm room.
Not only are they built to withstand the water, they are actually designed specifically for you to throw the water. The steam that it creates is THE bath of the sauna. A dry sauna is not a sauna bath. The stove exists for the purpose of being thrown water on.
Back on 90s in Japan carried water to sauna in a plastic bag...trew it on stones...electrics of the whole spa went of...didnt go to reception to explain that it was me who did it.
This was also the thinking of someone who throw water on the stove, and the fuse popped. They need to be installed correctly.
Best sauna out Side from Finland was In Nerherland. Made me cozy
pigeons!
(everyone ofc knows they're just *electric* government drones)
My washing machine is electric. Apparently I've been cheating death for years.
My father[rest easy] took me to sauna when I was 6 month age- I lost my content- so now I do not like sauna so much and seeking/ trying to find my content, after 55 years 😅
Actuallu i have seen some very dangeroys sauna stoves abroad where one should not throw water on to or at least be very careful about it.. yeah the kiuas.. stove might be ok, but electric connection non water proof or just wiring visible far from proper.
Every Finn here in the comments just frustrated at the fact you couldn't throw water at it (löyly), as am I!
Kettles would’ve been a better line
Remote control boats
Kettle
John 14:6 Jesus said to him, "I am the way, the truth, and the life. No one comes to the Father except through Me.
1 Corinthians 15:3 that Christ died for our sins according to the Scriptures, and that He was buried, and that He rose again the third day according to the Scriptures.
Romans 10:9 that if you confess with your mouth the Lord Jesus and believe in your heart that God has raised Him from the dead, you will be saved. ❤
Yeah, but what about löyly ?
Also in Norway the Suana is around 90-110 .. atleast those i been in ... but i hate to go in em because its so dry those i tryed.. skin on my face feel like burning..
Water would be nice ..but they did not do that on those about 3 i try.. swiming halls ect.
now we have electric boats.........................
audio 180 degrees out of phase
Ahhahahahahah😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
Never throw water on the sauna electric heating elements but on the stones covering it.
Tell them about vastas, vihtas...I'm in SFV whenever you want a real Finish sauna..maybe some pulla and karjalanpiirakka. Oh what about Mammi? Fins are so funny
Mämmi*
Strangely hilarious
Sauna without water and lately steam is called just a Swedish sauna, as simple as that an oven basically! 😆