Chris puts his beard in significant peril

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  • Опубликовано: 27 июл 2022
  • Welding, it turns out, is much more difficult than you might think. And there are a lot more sparks. ■ With thanks to all the team at TC Engineering!
    The Technical Difficulties are:
    🟥 TOM SCOTT: tomscott.com - / tomscott - / tomscottgo
    🟨 GARY BRANNAN: / garybrannan - / brannersatlarge
    🟩 CHRIS JOEL: / christhewrongun - / christhewrongun
    🟦 MATT GRAY: mattg.co.uk - / mattgrayyes - / mattgrayyes
    Editor: Elliot Gough
    Location producer: Jacob Trueman
    Audio mix: Dan Pugsley cassinisound.com
    techdif.co.uk

Комментарии • 721

  • @techdif
    @techdif  Год назад +2604

    And that's the last in this run! We'll be back towards the end of the year, if all goes well. Thanks for watching!

    • @FumbleBee1312
      @FumbleBee1312 Год назад +51

      Thanks for making this!! It was a nice experience for July, a month where I have literally nothing going on lmao

    • @tortistortis
      @tortistortis Год назад +1

      Great!

    • @morkmon
      @morkmon Год назад +1

      it was great fun, see you next time!

    • @jono6379
      @jono6379 Год назад +19

      Another great series. Please do more of the gameshow style videos too they were great.

    • @squidsbizarreadventure
      @squidsbizarreadventure Год назад +13

      This series has been absolutely lovely. Can't wait for what's next!

  • @flyinhigh7681
    @flyinhigh7681 Год назад +2330

    For some reason i had assumed that chris already knew how to weld

    • @magoshighlands4074
      @magoshighlands4074 Год назад +390

      It's the beard, that there's a Fabricator's Beard that is

    • @MercenaryPen
      @MercenaryPen Год назад +201

      @@magoshighlands4074 it might also have to do with the talk of him having a chainsaw license at one stage

    • @magoshighlands4074
      @magoshighlands4074 Год назад +71

      @@MercenaryPen True, but I still say it's the beard

    • @samuelmellars7855
      @samuelmellars7855 Год назад +58

      Oh yeah, I figured he was a machinist or something!

    • @awmperry
      @awmperry Год назад +2

      Same!

  • @stephenwilliams163
    @stephenwilliams163 Год назад +1358

    Watching Chris and Matt geek out over welding is absolutely fantastic.
    If they ran out and bought a MIG I'd happily watch a series of videos of the two of them in a shed learning how to use it.

    • @king4aday4aday
      @king4aday4aday Год назад +40

      Watch This Old Tony, though he's a pro, his editing style is hilarious

    • @1224chrisng
      @1224chrisng Год назад +59

      I'd also watch if they bought a MiG instead, flying around an airfield with more budget than sense

    • @Brian_Boxtruck
      @Brian_Boxtruck Год назад +34

      A Chris and Matt collaboration with Collin Furze?

    • @IstasPumaNevada
      @IstasPumaNevada Год назад +23

      I second the recommendation of This Old Tony.
      And, Tom already did a show in a garage somewhere, so why not Chris and Matt? Though this one would need thorough ventilation, because welding.

    • @wrenbird8352
      @wrenbird8352 Год назад +2

      like Matt's soft server ice cream machine channel it would be a fun set of videos.

  • @JaxMerrick
    @JaxMerrick Год назад +450

    "I went from an undisclosed location to a shed nearby."
    Sounds like how TechDif describes Sheffield, to be fair.

    • @MercenaryPen
      @MercenaryPen Год назад +78

      Chris did also mention crossing the border- so he might have ended up in Lancashire (which is clearly the most scandalous place for a Yorkshire lad to end up)

    • @ragnkja
      @ragnkja Год назад +70

      @@MercenaryPen
      With Chris, there’s no way of knowing if the border he crossed was a parish/municipality border, a county border, or the border between England and either Scotland or Wales.

    • @Speederzzz
      @Speederzzz Год назад +27

      @@ragnkja perhaps he went through the channel tunnel by foot

    • @ragnkja
      @ragnkja Год назад +10

      @@Speederzzz
      Slightly less likely (if only because Simon clearly wasn’t French), but not impossible.

    • @MercenaryPen
      @MercenaryPen Год назад +6

      @@ragnkja indeed, I merely suggested Lancashire as the option that seemed most unthinkable going by Yorkshire stereotype

  • @collinschofield808
    @collinschofield808 Год назад +1335

    For those who are wondering:
    MIG welding is Metal Intert Gas welding. The metal tip of the welder is fed out becomes the filler for the welds, and there is also an Inert Gas(Argon) being fed out of the welder as well to protect the welding process.
    TIG welding is Tungsten Inert Gas welding. It also has inert gas being fed out of the welder to protect the weld, but instead of the metal tip from the welder being fed and becoming the filler, TIG welders have a Tungsten tip that stays in place (and doesn’t melt due to the extremely high melting point of Tungsten), and you feed In the filler to the weld separately with your other hand.
    Both MIG and TIG are types of Electrical Arc Welding, they just vary in the tip of the welder and how you add filler.

    • @collinschofield808
      @collinschofield808 Год назад +31

      I now see some of this got explained starting immediately after I unpaused from making this comment 😂

    • @ragnkja
      @ragnkja Год назад +58

      You explained the acronyms, which neither of them did.

    • @collinschofield808
      @collinschofield808 Год назад +54

      @@ragnkja one other interesting thing I forgot to mention is that with TIG welding you also control the ampherage with your foot, which makes it an even more difficult coordinated operation.

    • @ragnkja
      @ragnkja Год назад +17

      @@collinschofield808
      Just in case I needed more reasons why I just shouldn’t even try TIG welding as someone who has never tried any kind of welding in my life.

    • @newdeathscope
      @newdeathscope Год назад +30

      @@collinschofield808 don't forget that the other option is controlling amperage by a knob on the torch, because your hands weren't doing enough already

  • @michaelboehme7964
    @michaelboehme7964 Год назад +447

    Only ever having seen Chris in the Technical Difficulty videos, He always looked and seemed like someone who would know how to weld. Glad he's fulfilling that assumption now.

    • @GKplus8
      @GKplus8 4 месяца назад +3

      He has the vibe of "ruddy mountain man who does anything and everything with his bare hands"

  • @errantalgae
    @errantalgae Год назад +274

    on the next season, Chris and Matt make a square tube rollcage for Toms car while Gary finds a way to cook bacon using a welder

    • @ragnkja
      @ragnkja Год назад +4

      Using bacon to draw out a little bit of the heat from the welded metal.

    • @RadeticDaniel
      @RadeticDaniel Год назад +2

      cooking bacon with a welder wouldn't be so weird considering all the steam iron cooking of bacon, beans and popcorn they've done in the past haha

  • @cpsedmonds
    @cpsedmonds Год назад +686

    We NEED more of Chris doing stuff. He's like Guy Martin lite!
    "I'm absolutely made up, that is mega"

    • @DanTheCaptain
      @DanTheCaptain Год назад +3

      You know what. I see it now!

    • @acasccseea4434
      @acasccseea4434 Год назад +7

      i'm really loving this series where they dig up childhood dreams and test them

  • @ondank
    @ondank Год назад +181

    Gary: Theres some hot technical chat in this one
    Me: The technical difficulties we were promised all along are finally here.

    • @kelvin0mql
      @kelvin0mql Год назад +1

      Yak shaving.
      The extra preliminary, requisite steps that you must complete before you can start on the ACTUAL thing, is colloquially called yak shaving.

  • @jackielinde7568
    @jackielinde7568 Год назад +637

    For those who are confused by what Chris Joel is talking about the use of Argon, when welding, you will want to keep Oxygen out of the joint you're creating. While the metal is hot and molten, Oxygen will combine with the metal to create metallic oxides, and the metallic oxides will cause the joint to be weaker and fail sooner. So, in MIG and TIG welding, an inert gas (usually Argon, but can be any of the noble gasses) is blown on the joint to displace the normal air containing Oxygen and Oxygen containing compounds from the area.

    • @ragnkja
      @ragnkja Год назад +15

      I doubt you’d use oganesson for welding, since the decay products aren’t necessarily inert.

    • @rasmusn.e.m1064
      @rasmusn.e.m1064 Год назад +7

      Also radon?

    • @jeffgoldblunt
      @jeffgoldblunt Год назад +32

      Imagine helium welding, after a long day in the shop you go out for beers with some of your coworkers, bar sounds like a preschool

    • @TheMrStotty
      @TheMrStotty Год назад +35

      @@jeffgoldblunt Tig was originally marketed as Heliarc and did indeed use helium instead of argon

    • @jackielinde7568
      @jackielinde7568 Год назад +8

      @@jeffgoldblunt A balloon filled with Argon has some interesting effects on the voice as well.

  • @KieronJohnstonSound
    @KieronJohnstonSound Год назад +80

    “I have wasted my life by not learning to make things” exactly how I felt when I tried my hand at blacksmithing. When I saw this series starting, I knew Chris’ was going to be amazing and it didn’t disappoint. Thank you gentlemen, you were sorely missed, please bring out more videos as soon as possible!

  • @arthurjohnson9982
    @arthurjohnson9982 Год назад +565

    Tonight:
    Gary cooks bacon on a steam engine's firebox
    Tom fulfills a childhood dream
    Matt gets angry at some clay
    and Chris puts his beard in significant peril
    EDIT: The series 2 sequel has been posted!

    • @rubegoldbergguy9909
      @rubegoldbergguy9909 Год назад +90

      today on Mundane Difficulties

    • @TomLuTon
      @TomLuTon Год назад +62

      You can't read that without hearing Clarkson's voice

    • @JimOHalloran
      @JimOHalloran Год назад +20

      @@TomLuTon And "Jessica" playing underneath... When you put them all together it makes a very Top Gear style intro.

    • @vigilantcosmicpenguin8721
      @vigilantcosmicpenguin8721 Год назад +17

      Tonight, on the Topnical Geariculties

    • @ArifRWinandar
      @ArifRWinandar Год назад +19

      Some say he has eaten Matt and gained his powers
      And that he wants non-land vehicles to be banned to encourage piracy
      All we know is, he's Will Seaward.

  • @CollinGerberding
    @CollinGerberding Год назад +304

    The thing that elevates this video is just how much Chris actually appreciates the opportunity he's given. It's not >just neat or >just a way to get a free bike rack: he made a smart choice and has grown for it.
    I would say I'm between the two groupings as presented in the video. I haven't watched mechanical tube with cocktails, but I've been enthralled by the industrial before. Super cool video and I must check out the rest of the series.

    • @henrikoldcorn
      @henrikoldcorn Год назад +5

      Try some This Old Tony, he's brilliant.

    • @abydosianchulac2
      @abydosianchulac2 Год назад +3

      I highly recommend the woodturning and knife-making channels on YT, then. They're all properly good times.

  • @RossParker1877
    @RossParker1877 Год назад +81

    Joel and Gray do things with Metal is a TV series waiting to happen

    • @flyinhigh7681
      @flyinhigh7681 Год назад +9

      Tbh "joel and gray" is a great name for the series.

    • @vigilantcosmicpenguin8721
      @vigilantcosmicpenguin8721 Год назад +12

      Every episode it's a different metal. Like, welding metal, elemental metals, thrash metal.

  • @kn5w
    @kn5w Год назад +129

    Firstly, I'd like to say this series has been more of an insight into all four of you that has been heartwarming to watch. I'd never known that Chris would have wanted to learn how to weld, Matt learn how to pot, and Tom how to Zamboni. Gary wanting to hop onto a train to cook a bacon sarnie, a little more on brand, but still a joy to see. I've enjoyed all four episodes and want them to continue in the future. The effort it takes to make these videos is clear in the presentation, and the subtitles, which I agree is needed in every video on RUclips, is much appreciated.
    That said, I miss the usual quizzing banter that comes from knowledge, bluffing, and generally confusing Tom. I realise that having both a game show and this show-and-tell idea as video series' on rotation would be difficult, particularly with your scheduling conflicts these days, but that's mostly because I just want more Technical Difficulties!

    • @vigilantcosmicpenguin8721
      @vigilantcosmicpenguin8721 Год назад +5

      I agree. This was an awesome special, but I hope it doesn't become the main content. Perhaps this could be every two years or something.

  • @unthoughtwords
    @unthoughtwords Год назад +17

    This was my favourite of the four - there was a real sadness in Chris' "I wasted my life not learning how to make stuff" and a real magic in seeing him learn what was clearly a passion here.
    I miss the gameshow formats, but this series was a nice little treat. Rewatching Citation Needed recently made me appreciate Gary's intro gags and Tom's punny prizes a whole bunch, hope to see them come back someday.

  • @crispyrice
    @crispyrice Год назад +17

    I love how over the years, tech diff have gone from filming in a kitchen, to under some stairs, to a set with a live studio audience, to a community hall as if that's a straight linear progression

    • @spartan8705
      @spartan8705 3 месяца назад

      You’ve skipped over them filming in RUclips studios

  • @the_sad_wallet1553
    @the_sad_wallet1553 Год назад +51

    Chris’ commentary skills while holding the camera are incredible, shame we don’t get to see it more often

  • @JBLewis
    @JBLewis Год назад +61

    I love the dynamic between Matt and Chris who know some of the technicalities of the MIG process, versus the wonderment of Gary and Tom! Bravo guys!

  • @endersftd
    @endersftd Год назад +57

    I love Matt in this. There's something about him co-explaining and being serious that's compelling

    • @ZeldaCW23
      @ZeldaCW23 Год назад +11

      Absolutely agree! Seeing how supportive they were all being of Chris’ efforts, even when he couldn’t quite give himself the credit he deserved, was just wonderful.

    • @FireIceEarth
      @FireIceEarth Год назад +2

      I just love how they take the mick out of each other constantly, but show so much support in moments like this. There’s a lot of love in that group.

  • @nyan2317
    @nyan2317 Год назад +14

    I do like how Chris even from the earlier techdif days until today is still introduced as "doesn't do this twitter/social media nonsense"

  • @whydoineedanameiwillneverp7790
    @whydoineedanameiwillneverp7790 Год назад +261

    This series was so much fun! Hope y'all make more
    Edit: I had to take a welding class as a mandatory requirement for my (totally unrelated) degree - and I wasn't a fan. It's so fascinating to see Chris choose _that_ as his once in a lifetime experience!

    • @SeanBZA
      @SeanBZA Год назад +8

      Some of my first welding attempts the slag was structural.....

    • @GunganWorks
      @GunganWorks Год назад +4

      I love welding because you get to play with temperatures as hot as the surface of the sun, and make metal so hot it liquefies.

    • @samuelmellars7855
      @samuelmellars7855 Год назад +2

      What degree did you get that required you to weld!? And where should I sign up? 😄

    • @TotoDG
      @TotoDG Год назад +7

      @@samuelmellars7855.
      I can't speak for the original commenter, but I did a Mechanical Practice Certificate as part of my engineering degree. Not only did we weld, but we also used hand tools and did some milling. I got a table vice out of it!

    • @joewwilliams
      @joewwilliams Год назад +3

      I did too, on my way to study CS in high school. I almost switched to welding!

  • @DonMorte2
    @DonMorte2 Год назад +32

    Really enjoyed watching Chris on his own. He's always been the mysterious one of the group and seeing only him in a segment was great. Really hope there's a season two!

  • @arvibi3084
    @arvibi3084 Год назад +20

    My dad used to be a welder and frequently did some welding at home. As I've been Pavlov-trained not to look into the flashing lights, this video was at times hard to keep an eye on, but I think I still managed to see most of it.

  • @bella380
    @bella380 Год назад +21

    Another point to be made: both MIG and TIG use DC (direct current) as opposed to AC (alternating current - what you get in your electrical sockets at home) With MIG, the power flows through the filler metal coming out of the stinger creating an arc to the base metal. With TIG, the power flows through the tungsten creating the arc to the base metal.
    [I was a Nuclear Welder on submarines for several years]

    • @PianoKwanMan
      @PianoKwanMan Год назад +1

      Did you do welding in the water?

    • @Jelfs
      @Jelfs Год назад +1

      Apart from AC TIG... Great for aluminium

    • @bella380
      @bella380 Год назад +2

      @@PianoKwanMan HaHaHa, no, dry dock

  • @ciaranreed91
    @ciaranreed91 Год назад +68

    Great series. Worked really well. I think there could be a game where one of you books a day like these for someone else and the person who goes on it has to guess who booked the trip.

    • @bbgun061
      @bbgun061 Год назад +7

      Yes! They definitely should plan experiences for each other!

    • @kairon156
      @kairon156 Год назад +3

      This could be a fun idea. Would they ever do dual experiences? Like 2 people doing something the others planned for them?

  • @michaelkeogh7722
    @michaelkeogh7722 Год назад +25

    “I’ll have to start fixing cars.”
    I subscribe to so many of those types of channels. Always room for one more, Chris.
    Congratulations! More please. I loved this series. The enthusiasm you all had for each other’s experiences was brilliant. Fantastic

  • @livingdeaddolls
    @livingdeaddolls Год назад +30

    This series has been surprisingly wholesome!

    • @vigilantcosmicpenguin8721
      @vigilantcosmicpenguin8721 Год назад +1

      Turns out, what it takes for TechDiff to be wholesome is watching someone learn to make something.

  • @schildmeneerpadman
    @schildmeneerpadman Год назад +22

    Can i just say these subtitles are so good. I didn’t even know the you could make the text a different colour to indicate who is speaking. And the consistency is great, by witch i mean that in pars of the video were there already are subtitles ( for example at 15:10) you use the same colour as in the imbedded ones. So thank you for that.

  • @Pyrozoid
    @Pyrozoid Год назад +77

    I did a workshop for a day about welding and the many ways by which metals are stuck to other metals and it was sooo much fun. My favorite was Ultrasonic welding which is not done on metals but on softer materials like plastic. The basic concept is that when you pass a high enough frequency (with high enough amplitude and pressure) through two materials in contact with each other, the friction causes them to bind to each other. Also the sound the machine makes is gnarly. Such a creative method.

    • @Svenz0r
      @Svenz0r Год назад +10

      If you want to see something interesting, check out friction stir welding if you haven't already.

    • @Pyrozoid
      @Pyrozoid Год назад +7

      @@Svenz0r Damn didn't know that was a thing. Looks cool. Bruh wtf !! The thing's just stirring the metal into a soup in the welding spot!! That's sick !!!

    • @archons-court
      @archons-court Год назад +3

      i think cold welding is cool - if you're in a vacuum, with a little bit of prep you can touch two pieces of metal together and they just stick

    • @olivier2553
      @olivier2553 Год назад +1

      I think there is some welding by rubbing for metal too. It is not the name, but I kind of remember something like that. Friction welding?

    • @ragnkja
      @ragnkja Год назад +1

      @@olivier2553
      Sven mentioned friction stir welding.

  • @JouvaMoufette
    @JouvaMoufette Год назад +37

    I really enjoyed these videos! I'd love to also see sort of "one off specials" where multiple TechDif members (or the whole team) go out and do a thing.
    We still need The Technical Difficulties: On Ice

    • @MercenaryPen
      @MercenaryPen Год назад +11

      but when do we get The Technical Difficulties: Covered In Bees?

    • @ragnkja
      @ragnkja Год назад

      Matt Gray’s Curling Foursome would _presumably_ be The Technical Difficulties-on ice, but there’s a chance they’ll send the rocks off a diving board instead.

    • @JouvaMoufette
      @JouvaMoufette Год назад +3

      @@MercenaryPen TAKE THAT, MORIARTY!

    • @chersegems2315
      @chersegems2315 Год назад +4

      We sort of had "on ice" 2 weeks ago TBF

    • @JouvaMoufette
      @JouvaMoufette Год назад +6

      @@chersegems2315 I was thinking that, but no that was more preparation for TechDif on ice. That's making sure the ice is smooth. I wanna see them all on ice and do a sport! They need to go curling or something

  • @newgreen956
    @newgreen956 Год назад +14

    As welding has been explained via an analogy to soldering I though I might elaborate on that:
    There is an important destinction between soldering and welding. Welding melts the base material, while soldering does not. This leads to welds being a fusion of the material, instead of glue holding it together. Because the filler material is usually harder that the surrounding metal, the welded region is harder the base metal. The only loss in strength comes from the smaller cross section and the influence of heat on the surrounding metal.

  • @charleyb.8286
    @charleyb.8286 Год назад +33

    This was a great series! I also just want to really thank whoever put the flashing light warnings in the video. I've sadly had to stop watching too many movies and shows recently because of my photosensitivity so it was great to be warned but still be able to watch the rest of the video. Wish it was standard practice for more media!

    • @ragnkja
      @ragnkja Год назад +10

      It also helps that it’s linked to something that makes a sound, so that you know to not look again until the welding noise stops.

    • @clockworkkirlia7475
      @clockworkkirlia7475 Год назад +5

      Of Tom Scott's many online niches, one of my favourites is "not ableist".

    • @LeopardMask12
      @LeopardMask12 Год назад

      +

  • @TomOConnor-BlobOpera
    @TomOConnor-BlobOpera Год назад +18

    So this is awesome, Well done Chris. TIG is *bloody* hard to learn, and you need coordination and really steady hands. I did a 4 day welding course a few years ago at a local agricultural college. Those Jasic welders they had you using are serious bits of engineering kit. I'd actually recommend that your first welder doesn't come from machine mart, as I've had a few Clarke 90 and 100's, and they're really not that great, especially when you're first learning. I'd recommend having a look at R-Tech for your first, especially as they do a MIG that can also do MMA (Stick Welding) for under 500 quid. (Not affiliated, just impressed with their quality).

  • @popperama6478
    @popperama6478 Год назад +34

    This is a great run! However it seems to be missing the episode where Chris wrestles a bear?

    • @MercenaryPen
      @MercenaryPen Год назад +9

      they're still working out how to write up an acceptable risk assessment for that video

    • @garethreece
      @garethreece Год назад +9

      @@MercenaryPen Yeah and find a bear willing to take the residual risk...

    • @vigilantcosmicpenguin8721
      @vigilantcosmicpenguin8721 Год назад +4

      Unfortunately, the censors had to cut it out. The bear received some very gruesome injuries.

  • @daeken
    @daeken Год назад +44

    This is just my favorite series ever. I love seeing y'all getting to have these special experiences!

  • @barryhomeowner9293
    @barryhomeowner9293 Год назад +11

    For all techdif usually take the piss and whatever else, it's nice to see them genuinely complimenting each others' skills. Same with the clay last week.
    I'd love to see "Techdif learn a skill" as a series, the four of them go and learn how to do a skill together and show off their finished product to each other in real time. May be very impractical, but it'd be nice to see.

  • @alorachan
    @alorachan Год назад +7

    In the immortal words of Gary "I don't want it to end"
    You guys better be back for more! This is amazing viewing.

  • @0utOfSkill
    @0utOfSkill Год назад +19

    I love how wholesome the four of you are, all giving complements to each other

  • @thatspiderbyte
    @thatspiderbyte Год назад +4

    I like how the technical difficulties is them all just being lovely and supportive while one of them shows something they've done

  • @nanothrill7171
    @nanothrill7171 Год назад +8

    these are so goddamn wholesome i'm gonna die

  • @lanky2610
    @lanky2610 Год назад +14

    I'd like a Tech Dif try bobsled episode!

    • @MelficeSilesius
      @MelficeSilesius Год назад +1

      Chris: "Gary! Are ya dead!?"
      Gary: "Ya man..."

    • @ragnkja
      @ragnkja Год назад

      Or curling.

  • @andreabutitsruth
    @andreabutitsruth Год назад +11

    I’ve been on the woodturning/carpentry side of RUclips and currently have it solidly set in my life’s plan to get into making and restoring furniture. The same thought also occurred when I saw how stained glass was made. Now I’m tempted to add welding into that. The next logical step is to, I don’t know, get into watching car and RV restorations and go full on into making everything from the Red Green Show’s “Handyman’s Corner” a reality.

  • @kvader
    @kvader Год назад +5

    What I love about this series is that everyone is so supportive and happy for each other and what they're doing.

  • @auroran0
    @auroran0 Год назад +5

    The origin story of SteelMember.

    • @mikeru99
      @mikeru99 Год назад +1

      Steel Member, wah, wah, waaaah!

  • @magoshighlands4074
    @magoshighlands4074 Год назад +17

    You did really well Chris, my father's been a Fabi all his life and he still fuckin' hates TIG welding

  • @honestlyreed1612
    @honestlyreed1612 Год назад +3

    I love the sheer joy expressed by Chris every second he's on screen

  • @AmySoyka
    @AmySoyka Год назад +6

    13:15 Agree. Thanks to Simon & Gavin for teaching Chris how to weld ~ for all of our enjoyment.
    13:32 Also couldn't help but appreciate the Blue Peter reference. 😅

  • @watson-disambiguation
    @watson-disambiguation Год назад +9

    Ah yes, TechDiff wishes they went into trades: the show.

  • @jackielinde7568
    @jackielinde7568 Год назад +18

    For those who don't know the difference between soldering (not pictured here) and welding (pictured here):
    Soldering - The process of connecting two or more bits of metal by melting a soft metal to surround and bond to the bits to be connected. Depending on the application, it's generally used for non-structural connections (like joining two wires electrically) but can be used for a structural connection.
    Welding - The process of getting two or more bits of metal hot enough that they melt and mix together creating a solid bond between the bits being connected. This is almost always used for structural connections expecting to take some sort of force.
    I say this, because I know "Tom and Et Al" keep throwing around the terms soldering and welding interchangeably. Having done both, I can appreciate the difference. Also, when I say non-structural connection, while it's expected that when you solder two lengths of wire together and you should be able to hang a significant bit of weight on them and not have the joint fail. But, this is not the primary purpose of the joint. It's usually used to make an electrical connection between two bits of metal. That being said, I used soldering to create a model car for electronics class by soldering bits of brass together to form the frame. The frame was needed to hold the drive system made from an old electric razor, battery tray, and a switch.

    • @gordonrichardson2972
      @gordonrichardson2972 Год назад +3

      Another technique called brazing is similar to soldering, but uses a higher temperature process, with a stronger bond.

    • @AmySoyka
      @AmySoyka Год назад +1

      Ok, but, what is brazing?

  • @Mr_Haddles
    @Mr_Haddles Год назад +18

    Honestly, this format is amazing. The sheer amount of interest and passion from you all has been great to see, it's a really fun watch!

  • @lamarhenderson8058
    @lamarhenderson8058 Год назад +4

    A welder friend of mine called making a long weld nicely "stacking dimes."

  • @Venomm12
    @Venomm12 Год назад +4

    It was great to see Chris doing something that was kinda away from the Tech Dif table. This is the first real insight into Chris I think we have gotten. Which I totally understand his desire to maintain his personal life privacy; which I think he has done well!

  • @2122kay
    @2122kay Год назад +5

    Such a great video! I learned some stuff in this so thank you, also I can confirm wood turning RUclips is very therapeutic.

  • @tabithafox7324
    @tabithafox7324 Год назад +2

    This is exactly the type of technical difficulties content I’m looking for. These guys just cheering eachother on and being happy for eachother and trying cool stuff

  • @ericsiskosky2779
    @ericsiskosky2779 Год назад +12

    When you lose your chainsaw license...

  • @collinscody57
    @collinscody57 Год назад +4

    I would love to see two of them trying to run a small horizontal directional drilling rig. Well supervised in a controlled environment of course

    • @christianweagle6253
      @christianweagle6253 Год назад

      This is a comment so out of left field... that I agree with 100%. These fellows are smart, they can figure out all sorts of... technical difficulties. Please somehow convince them to figure out how to do this, especially since they didn't spend any of Tom's money. Somebody with a hire service must be convinceable.

  • @diarya5573
    @diarya5573 Год назад +2

    Finale: Use a MIG torch to heat up a ceramic pan to cook bacon on, while sitting on the back of a zamboni.
    Never have I ever wanted a video more

  • @donaldasayers
    @donaldasayers Год назад +1

    I was taught to weld at school, the metalwork teacher showed me how to use the Oxy-Acetylene safely, showed me what a good weld looked like and walked away and left me to it. I was 13.
    Years later I returned to teach at the same school in the same room. I had to jump through so many H&S hoops just to even use the welder let alone teach it.
    I miss having welding kit and no MIG is just not the same.

  • @Beaverthing
    @Beaverthing Год назад +1

    This series is really just adult show and tell, and I absolutely love it.

  • @justandy333
    @justandy333 2 месяца назад +1

    I'm so glad Chris learned how to weld. Because if my experience in life is anything to go by, A beard like that is a pre-requisite for a welder! 🤣🤣🤣

  • @isabellenevill5770
    @isabellenevill5770 Год назад +1

    The fact that they aggressively stopped Chris from putting himself down is oddly heartwarming

  • @PH4RX
    @PH4RX Год назад +2

    7:28 those sparkly lines look neat!

  • @olivier2553
    @olivier2553 Год назад +1

    I totally second Chris' comments on watching wood turning or welding videos. It is as good as the sound of rain fall.

  • @sukhoikip
    @sukhoikip Год назад +4

    I never could get good at welding, there was just something about holding something that was throwing current through a piece of metal and seeing what stuck that kept me from relaxing enough

  • @harrytsang1501
    @harrytsang1501 Год назад +6

    Best RUclips series I have followed in a long time

  • @KurosakiYukigo
    @KurosakiYukigo Год назад +6

    This is the Chris-est thing to have done.

  • @ids1024
    @ids1024 Год назад +3

    Next on The Technical Difficulties: Chris and Matt learn underwater welding.

  • @SergeantSphynx
    @SergeantSphynx Год назад +1

    I did a bit of welding in university during my mechanical engineering degree. I tried stick, MIG, and TIG. I learned very quickly that I am not good at welding and would need a ton of practice to get to an acceptable level. Chris did far better than I ever did.

  • @puffin_no23
    @puffin_no23 Год назад +2

    Can you please do more of these videos? I really enjoy watching them. They just give of such a positivity.

  • @almosteducational3729
    @almosteducational3729 Год назад +6

    You guys make so happy I’m glad you exist

  • @cedrickropp
    @cedrickropp Год назад +1

    As a person whos been doing some sort of metal working/ screwin around with machinery I find it very entertaining that you just talk about it without knowing any sort of appropriate nomenclature.

  • @ItsAClairesLife
    @ItsAClairesLife Год назад +2

    This is brilliant, and completely agree, wood turning youtube is so relaxing

  • @matthewbowers88
    @matthewbowers88 Месяц назад

    For a bloke that's not a teacher, he's an excellent teacher.

  • @lennardodavinci6350
    @lennardodavinci6350 Год назад +1

    Well, we all had our theories on what Chris was going to do.
    All of them were off. Yet, in hindsight, this is exactly something we would all expect Chris to do. Incredible.

  • @punkrockzoologist9449
    @punkrockzoologist9449 Год назад +2

    I think I just assumed that a bearded Northern man would already automatically know how to weld.

  • @Look_Dad_Old_Tunes
    @Look_Dad_Old_Tunes Год назад +1

    You've arguably done the four elements; Tom with (ice) water, Gary with fire, Matt with earth and now Joel with (extremely hot) air. It's a bit tenuous but that's on-brand for the TDs.

  • @sid28
    @sid28 Год назад +8

    This was the video i was looking forward to the most, and i really enjoyed it! good work guys!

  • @ArticJane
    @ArticJane Год назад +2

    Having done a 6 month course on welding ages ago. I can appreciate how much he managed in a day.

  • @rekagaal
    @rekagaal Год назад +6

    Well this series has been absolutely delightful, guys! It's quite different from your previous stuff, I found myself laughing less but generally smiling a lot more! It was really enjoyable in a slightly different way, a bit less bants but really wholesome! Thank youuu

  • @Dr.Death8520
    @Dr.Death8520 Год назад +2

    This series has just read like the opening titles to a Top Gear episode.
    "Tonight on Tech Dif:
    Gary cooks bacon on a train
    Tom drives a Zamboni
    Matt gets angry at some clay
    And Gary nearly sets his beard on fire"

  • @TheEviling
    @TheEviling Год назад +6

    Welding is definately on my list of things i want to learn, just never got arround to it, hadnt even considered there would be workshops for it.

    • @rin_etoware_2989
      @rin_etoware_2989 Год назад +2

      definite was misspelled, but Tom's already pointed out from somewhere else how definite gets misspelled a lot

  • @unexpected2475
    @unexpected2475 Год назад +6

    Waiting for this for SO LONG! At last, welcome back men!

  • @ckannan90
    @ckannan90 Год назад +1

    I didn’t know anything about welding before, and now I realize I knew even less than I thought I did. I thought it was just a hot blow torch that melted metal so it stuck together. That there is metal being fed in blew my mind.

  • @randomicon918
    @randomicon918 Год назад

    I love seeing four men compliment each other’s work, especially when trying something new. It is so refreshing in the world today.

  • @MichaelBerthelsen
    @MichaelBerthelsen Год назад +6

    Having gone down the metal-working and woodworking/turning rabbit hole SO many times, and loving it every time, this was a WONDERFUL video, and very cool too see someone new learn these skills! Also, I recommend you guys check out the restoration rabbit hole too, some time.😉😁

    • @qwertyTRiG
      @qwertyTRiG Год назад +1

      My rabbit hole is usually trains, especially Danny Harman (Distant Signal).

  • @nathanielb5659
    @nathanielb5659 Год назад +1

    matt’s new channel with chris: will it MIG weld

  • @germimonte
    @germimonte Год назад +1

    The welding and the glorious beard on the thumbnail I thought it was a big Clive video xD

  • @NFSHeld
    @NFSHeld Год назад +1

    I like how Matt and Tom are very invested in the topic, but Gary is actually blown away by every facet of it.

  • @mnspstudioful
    @mnspstudioful Год назад

    I was raised by a production welder dad. I've used MIG wire feed and SMAW, but I ultimately became a weld quality inspector shooting radiographic film on vessel, exchanger, and pipe welding to B31.3/B31.1 specs. I've shot film on TIG and the titanium inclusions show up opposite spectrum to any other inclusion in the industry since radiographic film picks up on densities. I would love to shoot film on all of your welds, but especially the training TIG welds. I've only ever seen two titanium inclusions in the field in five years of shooting film. TIG welding is extremely difficult. Great job, enjoyed all the videos but this one most of all.

  • @ronwingrove683
    @ronwingrove683 Год назад +2

    In which Chris Joel hires an engineering firm to make a bike rack, gets a lesson in welding out of it, and runs out of words.

    • @collinscody57
      @collinscody57 Год назад +1

      A Bike rack that costs significantly more of Tom's money then just buying one

  • @spencerhansen2927
    @spencerhansen2927 Год назад +6

    As someone who has spent a decent amount of time welding, it is weird to hear that MIG at 50hz rather than the 60hz here in the US.

    • @ragnkja
      @ragnkja Год назад

      Oh yeah, it must sound a minor third higher on your side of the pond.

    • @tomcardale5596
      @tomcardale5596 Год назад +2

      I think that might have been set to pulsed?
      It certainly doesn't sound anything like my welder!
      Most welders these days are inverter ones so mains frequency shouldn't have any effect.

    • @1pcfred
      @1pcfred Год назад +1

      MIG is direct current. Or should be. I think some really cheap welders may be AC. But they're flux core too. So MAG.

    • @tomcardale5596
      @tomcardale5596 Год назад +1

      @@1pcfred MIG is generally more correctly called MAG. The gas is not usually pure argon, it has carbon dioxide and sometimes other stuff in smaller quantities too. Different mixes for different applications. You generally use pure argon for TIG.
      Flux core can either be gasless or dual shield for very high power welding.
      I've never used pure argon for MIG or MIG mix for TIG. It probably would work in some form.

    • @1pcfred
      @1pcfred Год назад

      @@tomcardale5596 I'm well aware of all of the gas options with MIG and I have used all of them. I prefer straight argon for everything myself.

  • @mollymauktealeaf
    @mollymauktealeaf Год назад +2

    This series has been really great, would love to see more!

  • @iGleeson
    @iGleeson Год назад +1

    They're actually very supportive of one another, it's so wholesome!

  • @JewishMusicToronto
    @JewishMusicToronto Год назад +1

    Great fun! This was a fun turn from the usual stuff.

  • @AtomicAus
    @AtomicAus Год назад +1

    I hope this type of videos become a series, maybe something along the lines of Technically Difficult. I'm loving this.

  • @LeyenaZoey
    @LeyenaZoey Год назад +2

    @12:12 Wahey Energy was used!

  • @draexian530
    @draexian530 Год назад +2

    As a weldy man it's very amusing to see people misunderstand. Four brits who haven't worked the field makes for a good lunch break.

  • @nicjansen230
    @nicjansen230 Год назад +2

    If one of these four wants to add sailing to their list, I can take you on a small sailboat in the south of the Netherlands, though you probably can just go to an expensive sailing school. Idk what's cheaper, a sailing school or a trip to the Netherlands where you can have a nice vacation afterwards

  • @fugithegreat
    @fugithegreat Год назад

    I'd love to see more videos like this! They were all absolutely delightful.