Can We Chop The World’s Strongest Cube In Half?

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  • Опубликовано: 22 янв 2025

Комментарии • 2,9 тыс.

  • @b.coates
    @b.coates Год назад +1455

    You should sell the broken shards of obsidian.

    • @howridiculous
      @howridiculous  Год назад +472

      We collected everything so we definitely could. Anyone else interested in purchasing (prices set by Herron) fragments of the various materials we chopped? Let us know and we can put them on the store :)

    • @curtisw2439
      @curtisw2439 Год назад +39

      @@howridiculousthat would be awesome

    • @Mr.Brothybear
      @Mr.Brothybear Год назад +97

      You could Use the shards to create an Obsidian Knife
      just in case you ever wanna kill a Geologist

    • @yahirsuxs611
      @yahirsuxs611 Год назад +7

      @@howridiculous I would for sure but it

    • @CarelessPing
      @CarelessPing Год назад +5

      @@howridiculous id buy one

  • @Fernybeme
    @Fernybeme Год назад +327

    0:55 Silicone is made of silicon, what you have is silicone. Silicon is a hard and brittle shiny rocklike material. Also heavily used to make just about every electronic device out there.

    • @MacksCurley
      @MacksCurley Год назад +12

      Yes, silicone sealer is very different to the element Silicon.

    • @dianacourt377
      @dianacourt377 10 месяцев назад +1

      Don't let the facts get in the way of a good story😂

    • @NotPeacemaker
      @NotPeacemaker 6 месяцев назад +8

      Also, plastic is not an element

    • @OneSon744
      @OneSon744 6 месяцев назад +4

      @@NotPeacemaker most them aren't peri's.

    • @Ejexion
      @Ejexion 6 месяцев назад +2

      There's very little in that whole bit that was correct. 230%, most common element... all wrong

  • @ottovonbearsmark8876
    @ottovonbearsmark8876 Год назад +1800

    Love how fast the periodic table concept was introduced and then immediately went out the window lol

    • @ThomasSawyers
      @ThomasSawyers Год назад +19

      Did you watch the entire video in four minutes? 🤣

    • @Volt64bolt
      @Volt64bolt Год назад +60

      They also got a lot of things wrong lol but they aren’t a science channel so who cares

    • @kylemcw8301
      @kylemcw8301 Год назад +40

      Obsidian:…. Required for Nether Portal! 😂

    • @ottovonbearsmark8876
      @ottovonbearsmark8876 Год назад +33

      @@ThomasSawyers no, but the periodic table idea went away within four minutes lol

    • @Wtfplsstfu
      @Wtfplsstfu Год назад +23

      At plastic i was like...🙄😑

  • @Mikeyman6488
    @Mikeyman6488 Год назад +92

    People have already said this, and they may have explained it too, but the piezoelectric "spark" phenomenon with quartz comes from the "piezo" part which means "squeez" or "pressure". Since your pressure point with the axe on a sphere was so small, there was very little if any spark action. If you had a cube and used a hammer, that would be a more ideal setup for sparky action.
    Additionally, you could potentially set up a high speed, high resolution voltmeter between a conductive platform the cube sat on and the hammer surface and see if you could measure a created voltage caused by the instantaneous squeezing on the quartz cube. Might be a fun video.

  • @Handles_AreStupid
    @Handles_AreStupid Год назад +49

    I don't know if they will ever see this, but the reason why the copper did so well is because they have previously compressed the material. When you strike copper, you cause localised dislocations to the region, which creates stress within the material. This stress actually makes it stronger and more resistant to bending and compressing, but it makes the material more brittle. The previous hammer hits would have "work hardened" the copper, which would have given it a competitive edge that standard, annealed copper wouldn't have had. Next time you use copper, heat it with a blowtorch and dump it in water to "quench" it. In some metals (especially steel), quenching makes it harder, but with copper and brass, it makes the material MUCH softer. You should compare normal copper, work hardened copper and quenched copper to see the difference. My bet would be that the quenched copper would nearly cut clean in two...

    • @seekerofthemutablebalance5228
      @seekerofthemutablebalance5228 10 месяцев назад

      I was shocked that the copper survived

    • @Handles_AreStupid
      @Handles_AreStupid 10 месяцев назад +6

      @@seekerofthemutablebalance5228 Work hardening is a really powerful technique. Basically doubles the materials hardness at the expense of making it more brittle.

  • @logansarver6767
    @logansarver6767 Год назад +18

    I love how they included info from each material, however pykrete warships (carriers in particular I believe) were considered as WW2 steel replacements as America was running low on steel, one of the reasons it wasn’t used was because it required more steel to make the freezer then it would take to make a warship.

  • @OurAwesomeUniverse
    @OurAwesomeUniverse Год назад +685

    I think that was silicone. I've never seen white silicon metal that deforms like rubber.

    • @dannykyle7950
      @dannykyle7950 Год назад +44

      I was about to say the same thing myself.

    • @DonaldR
      @DonaldR Год назад +105

      It for sure was - 'raw' silicon is typically a crystal... Ironically obsidian, glass and quartz are mostly silicon, so they did end up chopping silicon. :D

    • @guidokorber2866
      @guidokorber2866 Год назад +45

      Right, silicon is a silvery metal and it would have turned into splinters as it is rather brittle.

    • @DqwertyC
      @DqwertyC Год назад +40

      The comment about "it knows what it is and knows what it isn't" was especially funny, because silicon sometimes acts as a conductor and sometimes acts as an insulator. It's like the least decisive metal out there XD

    • @richbarrows3922
      @richbarrows3922 Год назад +19

      Definitely was Silicone (sila - cone) a rubbery plastic material. Look how it compresses about 50% in the slowing before breaks in half like a bouncy ball.
      Pure Silicon (sila - cun) is silver gray and breaks like obsidian. It is a semiconductor, the base material for computer chips. Semi-insulator.

  • @peterbear4413
    @peterbear4413 Год назад +214

    Two things that would improve the quartz bit: First, do it at night, you'll actually be able to see the effect properly. Second, use a cube or something with a flat surface, and impact it with another flat surface (such as your hammer), for the greatest surface area contact.
    How Good to see you boys back again though, always a blast!

    • @DestinMarvin
      @DestinMarvin Год назад

      Led me to think

    • @jurn-christianhocke2227
      @jurn-christianhocke2227 Год назад +1

      But also - you can see some tiny tiny sparks in the footage - just not as massive as expected

    • @BollWeevil
      @BollWeevil Год назад

      Yep, mechanical pressure.
      As is in the "candle lighter" for spark. The hammer on the quartz! Please

    • @phantomwraith1984
      @phantomwraith1984 Год назад +1

      And also use clear quartz

    • @KingOfRedPlays
      @KingOfRedPlays Год назад +1

      Ah, good... I was looking to see someone get this right so I wouldn't have to explain it myself, because I would have made that concise little beauty an absolute novel. A thumbs up to you.

  • @RedBeardReaper
    @RedBeardReaper Год назад +437

    There are many types of quartz, AKA borosilicate. You went with a muddy blue quartz, to view piezoelectric properties.
    It's best to go with pure clear quartz
    Also that was a ball of silicone- that was not silicon in its base form

    • @roblittle7428
      @roblittle7428 Год назад +32

      Borosilicate is glass not quartz. I made Borosilicate glass in a glass founder here in pa called jeannette specialty glass till it closed in 2019

    • @PsylomeAlpha
      @PsylomeAlpha Год назад +21

      @@roblittle7428 yeah, quartz is silicon and oxygen, not silicon and boron (as the name borosilicate implies)

    • @tobiwonkanogy2975
      @tobiwonkanogy2975 Год назад +2

      when the silicon was struck it did revert to dull silver in color . perhaps we were seeing an oxidized ball.

    • @statementleaver8095
      @statementleaver8095 Год назад +3

      F knows I'm from the UK and have only ever seen *White Quartz* = Train track chippings

    • @Mr_Bondi
      @Mr_Bondi Год назад +37

      ​@@tobiwonkanogy2975​​​No, unfortunately. See, silicon is not floppy and rubbery. Look up silicon, you'll see it's a hard, brittle, metalloid, which is also a semiconductor.
      Edit note* silicone rubber does contain silicon, but in it's dioxide form, aka silica.

  • @laser8389
    @laser8389 Год назад +7

    Aluminum doesn't "rust" because "rust" is iron oxide. Aluminum does oxidize very readily, though, and that's part of the reason that, although it is the most abundant metal on earth, it wasn't chemically produced from aluminum oxide until 1825/1827 (depending on whose claim you believe) and for some time was considered a "precious metal" like gold or silver because of its cost to produce.

  • @SynthhInHD
    @SynthhInHD Год назад +7

    Obsidian is "volcanic glass." It is formed when lava is cooled instantly, hence the glassy appearance. The instant cooling means the lava has no time to form into bigger crystals. A characteristic feature of obsidian (and flint, for that matter) is its fracture pattern. The rounded texture when fractured is called conchoidal fracturing.
    Also, for all intents and purposes, that quartz ball was essentially just a glass ball.
    The chemical formula for quartz is SiO2. Beach sand is often mostly quartz since it's one of the hardest minerals and it can withstand a lot more weathering than minerals like mica. The sand used to make glass is quartz. So... you've got three types of glass ball there.

  • @sashacohen3911
    @sashacohen3911 Год назад +43

    So that looks a lot more like "silicone" than the actual element silicon (Si), which is a dark, reflective, and brittle material. Silicone is rubber-like (as evidenced by the glorious chop) and made of complex polymer molecules. Unfortunately, silicone is not an element of the period table.

    • @DonaldR
      @DonaldR Год назад +1

      That obsidian ball was mostly silicon though, so... they were just off by one hit :)

    • @scottydu81
      @scottydu81 Год назад

      Your mom is an element on the periodic table

    • @dfgaJK
      @dfgaJK Год назад

      A bot a stolen all your up votes.

    • @vitocortison
      @vitocortison Год назад

      Yes this is clearly not a silicon sphere but a silicone one. DonaldR the obsidian sphere looks like obsidian to me, not like silicon. Obsidian is basically just dark glass, so mostly silicon dioxide, so the main components here are oxygen and silicon.

  • @marxer007
    @marxer007 Год назад +82

    The "science" graphics in this episode are great. Whoever wrote that copy earned my thumbs up for this video.

    • @micahdeck9553
      @micahdeck9553 Год назад +1

      Pure Aluminum plates are what is commonly used on Space craft to prevent overheating. 50 BMG rounds won’t go through solid Aluminum. Amazing idea though.

    • @DUKE_of_RAMBLE
      @DUKE_of_RAMBLE Год назад +2

      Obsidian getting...
      _- Required for Nether Portal_
      ... was perfect! lol 😘👌

  • @vancer.8886
    @vancer.8886 Год назад +121

    Scott, you forgot one important fact about cast iron. It has a tendency to fall from great heights.

    • @silversidewinder2025
      @silversidewinder2025 Год назад +10

      And it breaks pretty quick when you enchant tools and armor or decide you want to name your pet llama 🦙

    • @ericarsenault9891
      @ericarsenault9891 Год назад +8

      Just like Russians from a window.

    • @MyRegardsToTheDodo
      @MyRegardsToTheDodo Год назад +3

      ... and whenever a coyote uses it to stop a roadrunner, it normally hits the coyote instead.

  • @robijakus6860
    @robijakus6860 Год назад +61

    0:24 cuz as we all know plastic is definitely on the periodic table

    • @TannerJ07
      @TannerJ07 4 месяца назад +4

      And obsidian...glass...quarts...

  • @fionadakitsuneko
    @fionadakitsuneko Год назад +12

    8:42 no wonder firemen carry axes, they use them to put out fires!

  • @peterosmanski7466
    @peterosmanski7466 Год назад +69

    Jack's snarky comments on the fact sheet were hilarious. Loved Gaunson's explanation of how the Egyptians widened the Nile with quartz (not courts) shovels discovered by Horace Benutus.

    • @CutePotatoCat
      @CutePotatoCat Год назад +1

      So non members can reply to members comments ?

  • @FuzzyCollieDoggo
    @FuzzyCollieDoggo Год назад +27

    Jack is one of the best editor's ever! I fell over for the burger bit! 8:40

    • @sacah2
      @sacah2 Год назад +1

      Had to rewind and pause, wasn't sure I'd seen something flash up.

    • @crewrangergaming9582
      @crewrangergaming9582 Год назад

      timestamp or didnt happen

  • @ranndomundead9112
    @ranndomundead9112 Год назад +778

    having shards of obsidian floating around in this field seems like a nightmare

    • @The_Keeper
      @The_Keeper Год назад +54

      Yup.
      Imagine walking barefoot in that field... O_o

    • @elisha1984
      @elisha1984 Год назад +37

      There’s no getting all that out either. Shards everywhere.

    • @Doctor_Zucchini
      @Doctor_Zucchini Год назад +36

      I’ve always wondered that about all the obsidian cube videos on RUclips. Some people have cheese graters for fields

    • @Kualinar
      @Kualinar Год назад +18

      Glass shards are about as bad. There are also glass shards in that field.

    • @bhseigel
      @bhseigel Год назад +15

      its not real obsidian. Obsidian is opaque, thats some sort of synthetic glass

  • @danzilthard.7248
    @danzilthard.7248 9 месяцев назад +5

    9:13 "Gotta be lookin' always. On the ground" -Gaunson July 6th, 2023

  • @DJBEAST821
    @DJBEAST821 Год назад +10

    Love the tidbit about the Nether portal, great little wink there. Also great timing how he said "we smashed a cube of it" and right on cube is when the bullet point popped up lol

  • @jameszd4470
    @jameszd4470 Год назад +18

    I suspect the sparks were actually the metals knocking off tiny bits of the steel blade which oxidize super quickly creating heat (like how you light a fire with flint and steel). Super cool slowy!

  • @electricminecrafter
    @electricminecrafter Год назад +9

    2:00 most people think silicon is green but motherboards are dyed green, I don't know why. pure undyed silicon can range from slightly blue to white to slightly grey

    • @jubuttib
      @jubuttib 11 месяцев назад +1

      Also motherboards are made out of fiberglass usually, you'd need to find a chip to see some silicon. =)
      Which is also clearly not what the video showed, since silicon is really hard and brittle, not rubbery like what the video showed.

  • @robijakus6860
    @robijakus6860 Год назад +6

    10:23 this slowy was probably even better than the last one with the thungstan

  • @Michael-bs5pz
    @Michael-bs5pz Год назад +7

    The last tungsten at the end it wasn't sparks it was molten steel separating from the axe which I find very cool because alot of heat and energy must have been generated for that steel to melt like that ... brilliant video

  • @420trippyhippie
    @420trippyhippie Год назад +90

    You guys should do a night video in this format and then smash through the quartz for sparkage. In fact, a night video where you smash/chop various sparky materials actually sounds awesome!

    • @nickmcginley4570
      @nickmcginley4570 Год назад +2

      Chop some flint!
      Whoever guesses the worst about what happens, has to speak, for the rest of the video, in a "flinty" voice!

    • @2011Scarecrow
      @2011Scarecrow Год назад +1

      The downside to this idea is that the slowies will be harder to get because the high-speed cameras need a lot of light to get a quality picture

    • @420trippyhippie
      @420trippyhippie Год назад

      @@2011Scarecrow very good point

  • @fey9al
    @fey9al Год назад +31

    Scott delivered an all time great with that quartz talk

    • @MyRegardsToTheDodo
      @MyRegardsToTheDodo Год назад

      He was actually right that the ancient Egypts used it for jewelry.

    • @boooksareamazing
      @boooksareamazing Год назад

      Science with Gaunson, ladies and gentlemen.

  • @mattp422
    @mattp422 Год назад +10

    I guess in Australia, elemental silicon is white (?) and is not brittle. And the Aussie Periodic Table apparently contains plastic, glass, obsidian (which I guess is also glass, kind of) and Pykrete? They’re just not the same as the rest of us.

  • @CJ-hw4zc
    @CJ-hw4zc Год назад +3

    Guys what you had there was actually silicone with an "e"... Silicon however is an element that is shiny like a metal and very brittle.

  • @dylanhargus2609
    @dylanhargus2609 Год назад +1

    9:24 its because it isnt quartz, youll notice how it cracked like glass, thats because it probably is, quartz, unlike glass, has a crystalline structure, therefore, if you smacked it with the axe, it would look different upon cracking, also quartz cant natually look like that lol

  • @markiangooley
    @markiangooley Год назад +83

    I’m told that Australians are the world experts in making spheres of very precise sizes. There was an attempt to use an Australian sphere of silicon-28 to define the kilogram, I believe, as a fairly exact number of atoms (I suspect that I’m slightly wrong and will get a correction here).

    • @AlexLR
      @AlexLR Год назад +5

      We just told you that to keep you busy and off the streets

    • @cillianwilliamson16
      @cillianwilliamson16 Год назад +4

      Veritasium has a video. The roundest object on earth.

    • @grandadmiralthrawn92
      @grandadmiralthrawn92 Год назад +1

      Huh, is that because of certain manufacturing techniques that exist only in Australia?

    • @Generic_661
      @Generic_661 Год назад

      ​@grandadmiralthrawn92 it's just because they're a convict colony, so they've got time to spare

    • @MyRegardsToTheDodo
      @MyRegardsToTheDodo Год назад

      @@grandadmiralthrawn92 It's because you can only make a perfect sphere when you're upside down. That's why the Aussies are so good at it. Whenever they come to Europe they totally lose that ability.

  • @PrinceofWalesisland
    @PrinceofWalesisland Год назад +29

    Aluminum can oxidize, they use aluminum oxide as an abrasive. All bare aluminum you see has a thin oxide layer on it

    • @richbarrows3922
      @richbarrows3922 Год назад +4

      Aluminum oxidizes or rusts almost instantly.

    • @RyanW1019
      @RyanW1019 Год назад +3

      There are a couple things they could mean when they say it “doesn’t rust”:
      1. It doesn’t turn red/orange when it oxidizes. The oxide is still silvery.
      2. It doesn’t disintegrate to nothing as it oxidizes. With iron, the oxide is less dense than the original metal, so when it forms it expands and flakes off, revealing new metal to oxidize until the whole thing is gone. With aluminum, the oxide forms a thin surface layer that protects the inside from oxidizing.

    • @XtreeM_FaiL
      @XtreeM_FaiL Год назад +2

      Rust is iron oxide, so if it ain't Fe it can't rust.

    • @PrinceofWalesisland
      @PrinceofWalesisland Год назад +1

      @@XtreeM_FaiL So whats the point of saying it doesn't rust? I'm sure they meant oxidize considering they were talking about aluminum...

    • @XtreeM_FaiL
      @XtreeM_FaiL Год назад

      @@PrinceofWalesisland The point probably is that aluminium oxide create protective layer.
      When iron rust, it will rust untill there are no free iron left.

  • @minkuspower
    @minkuspower Год назад +4

    as an American who has beef with the EU/AUS pronunciation of aluminum, i respect you for spelling it the way you pronounce it 7:33

  • @floatliferoll7936
    @floatliferoll7936 Год назад +1

    How about trying Prince Rupert's drop! I bet that will win.😅

  • @getwreckedboi1222
    @getwreckedboi1222 Год назад +1

    I think soon you should do Spike “Geronimo” Tyson vs Hulks fist, it would be really cool to see who wins.

  • @szyeelai4917
    @szyeelai4917 Год назад +43

    Silicon Sphere - 1:50
    Obsidian Sphere - 3:10
    Pykrete Block - 3:45
    Glass Sphere 5:05
    Quartz Sphere - 7:08
    Aluminium Cube - 8:00
    Fire - 8:45
    Titanium Cube 9:50
    Anvil - 11:20
    Copper Sphere - 12:00
    Tungsten Cube - 13:30

    • @livingdecay2570
      @livingdecay2570 Год назад +1

      Why...

    • @beatnik6806
      @beatnik6806 Год назад +6

      @@livingdecay2570 because kids today have 20sec attention span because of tiktok and snapchat.

    • @bjooo
      @bjooo Год назад +2

      @@livingdecay2570 Maybe some dude (like me) doesn't find those guys really funny or interesting, and just want to see the actual content.

    • @UltaStorm
      @UltaStorm Год назад +1

      You missed the element Bg right after Fi

    • @UltaStorm
      @UltaStorm Год назад

      You missed the element Bg right after Fi

  • @LilithLonelyHeart
    @LilithLonelyHeart Год назад +8

    on no sparks from quartz, I think the axe just pushed the quartz away from the blade too fast to generate enough friction to cause sparks, in flint and steel you need to drag the steel along the flint quite a bit to make sparks
    P.S. Here are fun facts for the copper section they forgot about
    1: it's 2nd most conductive metal after silver, the reason why it's the most common material for wires in electronics
    2: when mixed with tin into alloy we get bronze, a metal that was so popular in use we had entire age named after it

  • @justing5228
    @justing5228 Год назад +4

    My summary of how ridiculous (watching since 2015):
    Gaunson: Hilarious, could do stand up if he learned how to improvise 😅
    Stanford: Hair gets longer every video
    Herron: Loves a good pair of jocks, what about greeney
    Editor Jack: Chill dude
    Such an underrated channel, seeing an upload from them just makes my day better immediately

  • @JyWalker1603
    @JyWalker1603 Год назад +22

    I'm here to be the obligatory do Uranium-235 or Plutonium-239 comment

    • @itsmeme1236
      @itsmeme1236 5 месяцев назад +3

      Make sure to split the particle😋

  • @yurypierre-louis7482
    @yurypierre-louis7482 Год назад +17

    Congratulations on 18 million subscribers. This is an incredible achievement and I can’t wait to see you at 20 million

  • @keithwoods266
    @keithwoods266 Год назад +5

    I love how safety went out the window in this one😂😂😂 9:43

  • @bomafett
    @bomafett Год назад +13

    The sparks are most likely coming from the steel ax, not the metal being struck. The harder metals are scraping some of the steel off of the blade. Those small bits of steel are very hot from the force of the blow, which causes them to oxidize very quickly (basically, they are rusting instantaneously), emitting light and heat - aka sparks.

    • @GodBidoof
      @GodBidoof Год назад +1

      No, titanium is flammable.

    • @mackebest1995
      @mackebest1995 Год назад

      @@GodBidoof yes titanium is making the sparks a big reason anything made out of titanium is expensive is that it is very hard and expensive to make or work on because when it is heated up it reacts with the oxygen in the air this is basic knowledge for anyone in a job involving welding or any form of metal working even if its not the material you work with you where more than likely told about it in education

    • @GodBidoof
      @GodBidoof Год назад

      ⁠​⁠​⁠@@mackebest1995the forces applied by the axe probably just sent tiny flakes of incredibly hot titanium metal flying, which then caught fire.

    • @White000Crow
      @White000Crow Год назад

      @@GodBidoof couldn’t it be the steel sparking for the same reason? Titanium should have a white spark.

  • @ihak707
    @ihak707 Год назад +2

    "very glassy isnt it?"
    Obsidian is literally volcanic glass, so yes

  • @C.j-Upside3
    @C.j-Upside3 Год назад +3

    Brett at 8:07
    "Aluminum is strong"
    But it sounds like he said Our Aluminum Is Strong, with his accent lol To my southern American ear it really sounded like "Our Aluminum"

    • @VHS_Serenity
      @VHS_Serenity Год назад +1

      he said aluminium

    • @C.j-Upside3
      @C.j-Upside3 Год назад +1

      @@VHS_Serenity I know but with his accent to my American ear it sounded like that's what he said.

    • @VHS_Serenity
      @VHS_Serenity Год назад +1

      @cjthurston5053 that's fine :D

  • @jacobpigott7653
    @jacobpigott7653 Год назад +40

    Huge props to the editor. They did a fantastic job. Very funny!

  • @imeleventeen
    @imeleventeen Год назад +28

    Please, do a series shooting cannonballs at things.

  • @BunnyKins1970
    @BunnyKins1970 Год назад +5

    Chaps, if you want to see quartz sparking, you need to use the hammer on it. At night. It creates an electic flash - you can try it with 2 bits of quartz by being in a dark room and hitting them together.
    💚🐇🐴💚

  • @ManadaCan
    @ManadaCan Год назад +5

    That last shot is arguably the best slowie you’ve ever had, boys. Great shots throughout. 🤘🏻

  • @tzapata28
    @tzapata28 Год назад

    @7:42 aluminium cannot rust because rust is iron oxide. But it can oxidize

  • @lesliemoiseauthor
    @lesliemoiseauthor Год назад +7

    To get quartz to spark you have to strike two pieces of quartz together. Also: quartz is clear. There are other types of rock that can be blue and are related to quartz, but that was not quartz.

  • @jopo7996
    @jopo7996 Год назад +35

    This was better than I thought.
    I figured the periodic table was out of your element.

    • @dannop2562
      @dannop2562 Год назад +1

      Yeah, I assumed that geology would be out of the fellas’ element…

  • @Nonunusmultorum
    @Nonunusmultorum Год назад +7

    I'm 99.999% certain that was silicone, not silicon. Silicon forms brittle crystals that don't show massive elastic deformation before being sliced in half....

  • @ZeroSleap
    @ZeroSleap Год назад +1

    4:40 Actually, the fracturing is called conchoidal,and it's not only amorphous but what you described mistakenly is its isotropic properties.

  • @wulfrickackerman9453
    @wulfrickackerman9453 Год назад

    Another fact for Copper and Tungsten: Copper has the second best electric conductivity of all metals. Only inferior to silver in that regard. Wolfram is a really bad conductor, but was used in the first lightbulbs ever made since it could withstand the current while starting to glow red hot, creating light and immense heat.

  • @csbrown9322
    @csbrown9322 Год назад +14

    I'm glad that I live in a time when building a 7 story tall axe in order to chop a campfire in half is normal and right

  • @Im_Aeros
    @Im_Aeros Год назад +6

    You guys should make a Swedish torch (large log you drill two holes into and burn the log from the inside out) to smash. It would send embers shooting everywhere and probably flames and smoke as well if its burning enough. Would just have to do it somewhere without risk of brush fire or wet the nearby area before hand.

  • @leighhargreaves4104
    @leighhargreaves4104 Год назад +6

    I'd speculate that the plastic cube (~1 g/cm^3) was HDPE plastic. High Density Polyethylene. The density of about right, and that's a very common plastic to get a hold of (it's typically used for cutting boards).

    • @bobibiboo
      @bobibiboo Год назад +1

      It could totally be HDPE, but it is more likely UHMW. UHMW is often sold in big white cubes like this for machining.

    • @leighhargreaves4104
      @leighhargreaves4104 Год назад

      @@bobibiboo Dammit, that was totally gonna be my second guess!
      You're right though. UHMW is easier to buy in that sort of quantity, so it's probably more likely.

  • @Thehuntergamer64
    @Thehuntergamer64 Год назад

    Very fun video hahaha
    Just a little mistake about glass: it's not a perfectly elastic material, otherwise it would always return to its original shape after being deformed. In our case, the glass doesn't deform and breaks immediately.
    - Perfectly elastic body: A body which regains its original configuration immediately and completely after the removal of deforming force from it, is called perfectly elastic body. Quartz and phosphor bronze are the examples of nearly perfectly elastic bodies.
    - Perfectly plastic body: A body which does not regain its original configuration at all on the removal of deforming force, howsoever small the deforming force may be, is called perfectly plastic body.
    So glass is perfectly plastic ;)

  • @daneroberts3741
    @daneroberts3741 Год назад +1

    if you want sparks its better to go with a glancing blow which is kinda what happened with the titanium) as the sparks are formed when the quartz scrapes bits of metal off of the blade, which become sparks, which is how a flint and steel work.

  • @JohnBainbridge0
    @JohnBainbridge0 Год назад +4

    10:47 Cast Iron does not contain "Truck Loads of Carbon." Cast Iron is between 95% to 98% Iron. The other percents are Carbon and/or Silicon. That's at most 4%ish Carbon. That's not what I'd call "Truck Loads." Truck Loads of Iron? Yes. Truck Loads of Carbon? Yeah, nah.

  • @electricminecrafter
    @electricminecrafter Год назад +9

    9:28 maybe the quartz was a sphere and not a cube so no flat surface and the titanium was

  • @P4tyY
    @P4tyY Год назад +4

    8:51 now that’s sick 😂

  • @dubbydub9245
    @dubbydub9245 Год назад +1

    MISSED OPPORTUNITY adding "Science with Gaunson" in post!!! 12:42

  •  7 месяцев назад +1

    Well, I got excited when you said “periodic table”

  • @charlcoetzee93
    @charlcoetzee93 Год назад +16

    The description of silicon was almost entirely opposite of it's actual characteristics 😂

  • @actuallyrichie
    @actuallyrichie Год назад +4

    Another excellent video. I'd love to see a tour of the warehouse where all of these big props are kept after you use them.

  • @billb.5183
    @billb.5183 Год назад +7

    It's always fun to hear them say "al-you-minium". 😀

    • @tristansheehan1453
      @tristansheehan1453 Год назад +4

      You mean like how its supposed to be pronounced ;)

    • @heathergarnham9555
      @heathergarnham9555 Год назад +2

      As opposed to the incorrect way of pronouncing it?

    • @billb.5183
      @billb.5183 Год назад

      I never said they were wrong. I just think it sounds great. 😀

  • @Funnystuff-2763
    @Funnystuff-2763 Год назад +3

    12:04 funni noise!

  • @ASharkNamedWaffle
    @ASharkNamedWaffle Год назад

    7:46. I love how he just throws the cube and it kind of stands on its edge in the ground

  • @ssu7653
    @ssu7653 Год назад +4

    7:40 to be fair the only thing that CAN rust is iron, rust is litterally iron oxidation...

    • @RaidLoalMulticraft_YT
      @RaidLoalMulticraft_YT Год назад

      Copper: am I a joke to you
      Statue of Liberty: 🗽 is not green right

  • @masterwelch9720
    @masterwelch9720 Год назад +6

    Hear me out here guys build a ramp at the bottom of the dam and drop bowling balls from the top the furthest wins??

  • @tomholroyd7519
    @tomholroyd7519 Год назад +3

    I love the detailed sciencey descriptions of the things you destroy

  • @ipod6979
    @ipod6979 Год назад

    10:05 the spark in the titanium were awesome

  • @josiahgosyne6495
    @josiahgosyne6495 Год назад +7

    Our boy Jack continues to out do himself :’)

  • @LegoPlayz29
    @LegoPlayz29 8 месяцев назад +3

    5:33 toot toot! 🤣🤣🤣

  • @MichelleStanley-y4g
    @MichelleStanley-y4g Год назад +5

    Always great content fellas. Never seen tungsten splinter like that.. Our boy Jack continues to out do himself :’).

    • @johnmanzo1147
      @johnmanzo1147 Год назад +2

      I am pretty sure that was a piece of the hammer that splintered off

    • @borey123xx9
      @borey123xx9 Год назад +2

      Thats was a piece of the axe. Tungsten cube is ductile and caved in slightly

  • @HunterTag
    @HunterTag Год назад

    love how straight to the point you guys are. Straight into the video!

  • @MattH-wg7ou
    @MattH-wg7ou Год назад

    That Obsidian sphere was beautiful. Also the glass. And the quarts. Actually almost all of them were quite pretty.

  • @StoneTitan
    @StoneTitan Год назад +4

    Hmm no expert but given the color of the sparks at 9:53 isn't that from the Axe rather than the Titanium? as far as I recall hearing Titanium should burn bright not sure if that's bright enough

    • @Semitruck1
      @Semitruck1 4 месяца назад +1

      U mean magnesium?

    • @StoneTitan
      @StoneTitan 4 месяца назад +1

      @@Semitruck1
      I think I mean Titanium, but bright might be relative to Iron and Steel.

    •  3 месяца назад

      I think that was exactly what they were saying

  • @netbat4399
    @netbat4399 Год назад +10

    rupert drop melted tail please

  • @CG-ee5jd
    @CG-ee5jd Год назад +5

    “Not to be confused with the food court” Absolutely killed me 😂😂

  • @monke-ei6iu
    @monke-ei6iu Год назад +1

    you should bring back the giant hammer... but with a big fat spike on the end

  • @Offbrand.Hashbrowns
    @Offbrand.Hashbrowns Год назад +1

    Here me out: What if you were to do something like this, but at night with flint and steel products? 🤔🤔🤔

  • @robijakus6860
    @robijakus6860 Год назад +3

    1:36 pretty damn sure that is most definitely not pure silicon as hat is a sparkly shiny metallic thing

  • @Enigma-Sapiens
    @Enigma-Sapiens Год назад +3

    Is that a spark out of the quartz at 9:38?

  • @mythicalswiggy7408
    @mythicalswiggy7408 Год назад +6

    Bro got his degree from the back of a Walmart 💀

    • @dannop2562
      @dannop2562 Год назад

      I think they’ve got K-Marts down under… But yeah, it was probably a Blue-Light special.

  • @mikescoreandoculuschannel4835
    @mikescoreandoculuschannel4835 4 месяца назад +1

    12:21 WHO WANTS TO HOLD THE TUNGSTEN CUBE?

  • @jonathanshaw8868
    @jonathanshaw8868 Год назад

    Fun fact about welding cast iron, it has a super high carbon content, 2.5 percent and up. Due to that it hardens when cooling to the point of brittleness. Pre heat and post heat makes the weld pretty strong.

  • @HanzoCrimson
    @HanzoCrimson Год назад +5

    FINALLY ANOTHER UPLOAD!!! Let's all just take a moment to appreciate how much hard work, effort, and time they put into making these videos and putting them out on RUclips for us to enjoy.

    • @howridiculous
      @howridiculous  Год назад

      We aim for every 2 weeks so expect another in…2 weeks :)

  • @preferablynopepper9530
    @preferablynopepper9530 Год назад +4

    New idea: drop two giant axes on each other and see which one wins

  • @jdj90
    @jdj90 Год назад +13

    Imagine dropping a twenty foot long, 10 inch thick, tungsten rod from orbit.

    • @bomafett
      @bomafett Год назад +5

      The US military attempted to develop a weapons system based on this principle. Veritasium did a video about it.

    • @PureVikingPowers
      @PureVikingPowers Год назад +1

      I could stop it with my abs

    • @jdj90
      @jdj90 Год назад

      @@bomafett Yup, Project Thor, orbital kinetic bombardment. It would be the most powerful non-nuclear weapon. The 11-ton rods would be able to penetrate and destroy even the most deep hardened bunkers, falling at a projected velocity of about Mach 10.

  • @fireaza
    @fireaza Год назад

    Here's another fun fact about aluminium! Although it's the most abundant metal, a cost-effective way of producing it took a LONG time to develop. It was originally more precious than gold, and the wealthy would have cutlery made from it.

  • @trstmeimadctr
    @trstmeimadctr 6 месяцев назад +1

    11:50 humans have actually been using copper for 10,000's of thousands of years. You don't see ti anymore because we ised almost all of it, but in the ancient past you could find what was called 'native copper' which was just pure copper sitting on the ground like a rock, and our ancestors would take that and shape it into tools

  • @LoveHandle4890
    @LoveHandle4890 Год назад +19

    Still an easier challenge than solving a Rubik’s Cube.

    • @thekitkatshuffler
      @thekitkatshuffler Год назад +3

      Which is almost as difficult as solving a Rubik's Cube.

    • @Liamguy999
      @Liamguy999 Год назад

      @@thekitkatshufflerwhich is almost as difficult as folding laundry blindfolded

    • @SuperSayinSolidSnek
      @SuperSayinSolidSnek Год назад +1

      I'm confident you could learn to solve one in less than a day, it's not all that difficult to learn a simple beginner's method.

    • @andramarquardt
      @andramarquardt Год назад

      No.

  • @cmorgan501
    @cmorgan501 Год назад +4

    10:03 I know your curious

  • @micha0001
    @micha0001 Год назад +4

    It happens at 13:30

  • @xCelticSamura1x
    @xCelticSamura1x Год назад

    One fact about tungstan is, it is mined in crystal form, the crystal is called Sheelite, and has glowing properties under UV exposure 😊

  • @auroramcbride1688
    @auroramcbride1688 Год назад

    Quartz sparks due to a thing called the piezoelectric effect. Where pressure on the material allows for electricity to build up and create a spark. If you've ever owned a BBQ lighter, one of the ones with a trigger and a long tube on the end, it has a quartz crystal with a spring around it inside to create a spark for the flame.

  • @Thatsmidg3
    @Thatsmidg3 Год назад +4

    12:38 wouldn't that just be netherite then?

    • @VHS_Serenity
      @VHS_Serenity Год назад +1

      you can't go to hell to mine the scraps for it

  • @Wotun
    @Wotun Год назад

    So, here's some material science:
    Obsidian is a type of impure glass formes in volcanoes, which means that you've smashed glass twice in this video
    The main component in glass is silicon, which quarts is also mainly made out of, so that means that you've done silicon 4 times in this video