New try! I got demonetized and age restricted with the first upload, RUclips thought that "oho" was bad word during the first 15 seconds? So let's try without that! Happy new year again to everyone!
@@tankl.jackson3481 yea sure the police are gonna care. Ever been to disneyland? You put a coin in and it stamps it with a design? The police dont give a shit.
I'm a machinist that makes the tools for powdered metal compaction presses. They operate anywhere between 100-1000 tons of force. Videos like this demonstrate why my tolerances are +/- .0001 inch for dimensions. (.00254mm) In effect, it's either perfect, or scrap, because if we mess up, things like in this video happen.
hecking americans man.... just use 0.0025mm or 0.001mm or so, doing any type of machining or engineering work in imperial (or metric that has to be converted to inches) is just mental. Way too many issues like differing international standards, eventual errors in the conversion or just confusion (looking at you 25 million dollar lost sattelite or what it was that went down because of mixed use of imperial and metric)
@@ToBeIsWasWere The satellite went down because of _mixed_ use. Not one particular system being "mental". It's also easy for the same mistake to happen within a system as well (Reporting mm instead of cm).
@@ToBeIsWasWere Just seen your reply. I only referenced metric for those that don't easily think in inches. I can easily work in either, and know well that mixing the two doesn't work well. Many customers will try to do so, because a lot of college trained engineers are stupid, but we send those blueprints back to be corrected, or we don't take the job. Also, while I'm am an American, you can take that attitude and stuff it in your sauerkraut. Been around the world while in the military and for my profession. I can tell you for free that stupid is everywhere and knows no country borders.
@@ryimscaith1593 Also as a machinist, I easily work in both, but never at the same time. Mixing them is asking for disaster, especially with for instance the NC machine I ran frequently, to go between you had to toggle it manually in the controller, and then load another program programmed for that section, then toggle back, too much room for an error, loading the wrong program, forgetting to load the other, or forgetting to change it to metric control at the stop, all of these reasons were why we would not do it. Also I did a LOT of manual machining, why not do it in metric? because the machine was made in imperial, and with no DRO, going on indicators and the scales on the machine, if it's made in imperial, I work imperial only on those machines. Tobias does have a point in conversion errors, however the shops I worked in never accepted a print that didn't match what the machine was set up to do, and say if they wanted a part off a manual machine and the print was metric, we sent the customer the print back, THEY can convert it, then as long as we make it to the print, it's not my problem if they converted it incorrectly. Machinist 101, make it like the drawing, so when they complain, you made exactly what they asked for, if it wasn't what they wanted that is a them problem, and they are still going to be paying the agreed price.
@John Alpha I used to do that too, but never managed to find them afterwards. They always seemed to get sent flying off, that or I was just not looking hard enough. Had the attention span of a gnat back then.
@@jimboSleeeeiiice I thought so too but it's not molten metal. There's a hole in the top of the hammer and you can see. Plus the tiny pieces left on the base would have cooled and not still been red. It's whatever was helping the handle stay connected to the head of the hammer.
More interestingly, how this force is converted to elastic energy, and how the elastic energy is instantly converted to kinetic energy and to heat upon rupture.
It's actually pretty obvious that's what would happen when you understand the forces at play It's the same principle behind a volcanic eruption: lots of pressure builds up in one place, eventually it's enough to overpower the forces kipping it at bay (the surface rock for the volcano, the tensile strength for the book) witch results results in all that pressure begins released BOOM
I was shocked at first too, then I remembered there was such a thing as dust explosions, where enough combustible particles collect in a tight area can explode. And that's without any kind of external pressure like using a hydraulic press.
That's called tension, Paper surprisingly has a high tension resistance, If you simply pull a piece of paper on opposite ends it will not tear, or will give a very hard snap if pulled hard enough, Because the press is pushing down on the paper, it wants to slide out from under the press but is evening out the energy in all directions at once and eventually, well, you can see what happens
There's something unusually satisfying and fascinating about seeing a stack of coins smushed into a a giant mega coin. Also makes the stories of how my uncle would trick arcade machines back in the day by using pennies he flattened out with a hammer make more sense.
It's kind of amazing that the safety glasses were only _scratched_ after taking a chunk of a drill bit moving at an appreciable fraction of the speed of sound
It's so interesting to see how much energy can be stored in objects under pressure. At the point when the object explodes, nearly all of the energy that is released is coming from the tension from within the object. Really cool physics.
Beautiful! I never tire of seeing bearings exploding. It is a work of art in slow motion! all those parts dancing in space with sparks and lights... I just love it!
Every time I watch this guy, I remember why this is the best hydraulic press channel. It really all comes down to the accent, it makes these videos way funnier and he knows it.
@@AL-SH Wrong equation. You’re looking for F=ma. Force equals Mass times Acceleration. The force the press exerts onto the target is equal to its mass (heavy) times its acceleration (considerable). The targets deform until they can’t and then start absorbing that energy until they *suddenly* can’t.
@@kibe2134 Extreme density is something I really struggle to understand and your comment has clarified a number of questions bouncing around my head. Thanks!
After watching this channel for a couple years or so, I can honestly say I have no idea what a hydraulic press would be used for other than this. UPDATE: While I appreciate all the replies explaining what a hydraulic press is used for, I perhaps should point out that my comment was a joke. I know what it's used for. My comment was a joke referring to the seemingly infinite uses for a press that aren't actually the intended use. I realise sarcasm is not conveyed easily through text, hope this clears it up.
A machine like this would be used in a manufacturing process where parts are quite literally press fit together when the matching pieces are machined in tight tolerance of each other within .001 of a inch or tighter. Think like bearing housings and stuff like that.
You know, putting a column of post it notes under extreme pressure like that is an excellent demonstration of what happens in deep mines, where the colossal pressure of overburden can trigger a burst from the mine shaft wall or pillar.
The slow-mo of the stack of coins being cut in half sounded like something out of a fantasy movie. And the prefragmented ball bearing, well, all I can say is "Great shot, kid. That was one in a million."
I don't know why, but I found the failure of the large bolt threads to be highly entertaining. I retired from an industry where we were more concerned with bolt elongation. The drill bit was informative. Thankfully, the melon lived.
The rocks experiment, how they go all crumbly (friable is the correct term) is the same as what happens to the rocks at an impact site of a meteor - the impact force is so high it literally powders the rocks, then compacts them again so they look like rocks, but they can be crumbled in your hands - I've seen it at the Arizona Crater. All the "rocks" within and near the impact crater are like this.
The video auditions for the year 2022 were very good, it was a video that I watched with great pleasure, and we look forward to the continuation of your successes in 2023.
Came across this video in my feed so I'm a new viewer to your channel. This video reminds me of when I was in high school my theatre tech buddies and I would do similar things with the trash compactor on campus. I enjoyed this so much, what a great video!
Lol! I use Alexa to control most of the lights in my house and shop, but sometimes when I tell her to turn on or turn off the BENCH lights, I feel she misunderstands me like I said another word that sounds much like BENCH and she ignores me. By the way, my favorite episodes involved compressing the paper, who would have ever thought a stack of paper would explode so violently? Lol! May you and your family remain safe, happy, and enjoy a prosperous New Year! Your friends in Texas!
@@skrimper I think it thinks I am saying "bitch", because it replies with that high-low tone like it heard me but the command was bad, so its won't act on it. If say slower and enunciate clearly, it works almost every time.
The thing that just seems so crazy to me is how this press can destroy pretty much anything but yet the pieces used in the press like the chisel and other ends never seem to get damaged...
You can find older videos where he talks about how he has to remake the pressing tool pretty much every video. Definitely on videos with really hard things like ball bearings. It looks similar because it's a tool shop, he can make the press head himself and they're easily replaced.
That is so fascinating to watch but at the same time is so stressful! (And scary, frankly). Because those energy releases can be absolutely DEADLY. Are you sure that you have enough protection? I really hope that no one ever gets injured when making these videos.
It would be really interesting if you could set-up a cheap (since you'll probably only get one or two uses out of them before they're blown-up) $10-15 infrared kitchen thermometer in the shot and aim it at whatever you're squishing. I'd love to see the reading shoot from room temperature to 500-600 degrees simply from adding mechanical force to various materials, metals especially. Does paper get hot from compression? It would be neat to see, anyway.
Everything gets hot when compressed, you're adding energy to the system. However, I agree 100% I want to see how much, and how much it differs per material, because it will vary drastically. So Very interested in that lol
That's amazing, I had no idea paper would explode under pressure... I wasn't exactly sure what to expect, but explosion would have been my last guess...
As part of safety procedure if you're in an earthquake in a building, they tell you to lie next to stacks of phone book/papers, instead of under a desk.
@@Vagabond_Etranger realistically who’s going to have high enough multiple stacks of books just lying around though. Unless you work in a printing factory or library it seems quite unlikely. Desks on the other hand, much more prominent.
New try! I got demonetized and age restricted with the first upload, RUclips thought that "oho" was bad word during the first 15 seconds? So let's try without that! Happy new year again to everyone!
Very Rasscist of RUclips. Not good.
No onhan oho nyt aika törkeä sana
Guten Rutsch ins neue Jahr
@@AbsoluuttinenTotuus racist?
@@SomeRandomPiggo raascist against Finns
“that was really stupid” is a hefty understatement for most of the things on this channel. never change or stop, you wonderful finns.
An infrared camera would be very interesting to see just how quickly things get hot under pressure.
underrated comment
this
It's illegal to destroy money. I have turned it into the police.
@@tankl.jackson3481 yea sure the police are gonna care. Ever been to disneyland? You put a coin in and it stamps it with a design? The police dont give a shit.
It’s a thermal camera not infrared
I'm a machinist that makes the tools for powdered metal compaction presses. They operate anywhere between 100-1000 tons of force. Videos like this demonstrate why my tolerances are +/- .0001 inch for dimensions. (.00254mm) In effect, it's either perfect, or scrap, because if we mess up, things like in this video happen.
hecking americans man.... just use 0.0025mm or 0.001mm or so, doing any type of machining or engineering work in imperial (or metric that has to be converted to inches) is just mental.
Way too many issues like differing international standards, eventual errors in the conversion or just confusion (looking at you 25 million dollar lost sattelite or what it was that went down because of mixed use of imperial and metric)
@@ToBeIsWasWere The satellite went down because of _mixed_ use. Not one particular system being "mental". It's also easy for the same mistake to happen within a system as well (Reporting mm instead of cm).
@@ToBeIsWasWere Just seen your reply. I only referenced metric for those that don't easily think in inches. I can easily work in either, and know well that mixing the two doesn't work well. Many customers will try to do so, because a lot of college trained engineers are stupid, but we send those blueprints back to be corrected, or we don't take the job.
Also, while I'm am an American, you can take that attitude and stuff it in your sauerkraut. Been around the world while in the military and for my profession. I can tell you for free that stupid is everywhere and knows no country borders.
@@ryimscaith1593 Also as a machinist, I easily work in both, but never at the same time. Mixing them is asking for disaster, especially with for instance the NC machine I ran frequently, to go between you had to toggle it manually in the controller, and then load another program programmed for that section, then toggle back, too much room for an error, loading the wrong program, forgetting to load the other, or forgetting to change it to metric control at the stop, all of these reasons were why we would not do it. Also I did a LOT of manual machining, why not do it in metric? because the machine was made in imperial, and with no DRO, going on indicators and the scales on the machine, if it's made in imperial, I work imperial only on those machines.
Tobias does have a point in conversion errors, however the shops I worked in never accepted a print that didn't match what the machine was set up to do, and say if they wanted a part off a manual machine and the print was metric, we sent the customer the print back, THEY can convert it, then as long as we make it to the print, it's not my problem if they converted it incorrectly. Machinist 101, make it like the drawing, so when they complain, you made exactly what they asked for, if it wasn't what they wanted that is a them problem, and they are still going to be paying the agreed price.
@@npip99 mm instead of cm I've never seen happening, one is 10 times bigger than the other
The chisel and the coins has to be the most satisfying thing to watch. I love how they stay stacked and just go shooting off to the side.
@John Alpha I used to do that too, but never managed to find them afterwards. They always seemed to get sent flying off, that or I was just not looking hard enough. Had the attention span of a gnat back then.
@@jimboSleeeeiiice I thought so too but it's not molten metal. There's a hole in the top of the hammer and you can see. Plus the tiny pieces left on the base would have cooled and not still been red. It's whatever was helping the handle stay connected to the head of the hammer.
The different failure modes! Stressed fiber (paper), Ductile (most metals), compressive failure of ceramic/rock.
@John Alpha Not stacked, but placed here and there. Rough wheels tend to pick them up for a few revolutions (3 to 20 feet)
Hope theybwere foreign coins, or it could be a serious crime!
Therapist: Would you say your job involves high pressure and stressful work?
HPC: Yes
Very dynamic environment
Jes* (finnish accent)
It's particularly impressive how, even on the high speed camera, the broken pieces fly so fast. There's so much force being imparted on them.
All the tens of thousands of kg on stuff under one kg
This high speed camera isnt fast enough.
More interestingly, how this force is converted to elastic energy, and how the elastic energy is instantly converted to kinetic energy and to heat upon rupture.
a paper can cut you very well if you didn't know...
The Slo Mo Guys did it...
ruclips.net/video/1A9epPJraho/видео.htmlsi=-Q34PVzRyUrC9-l6
In a million years I would have never thought that layers of paper under extreme pressure would explode/shatter like that. Astounding.
It's actually pretty obvious that's what would happen when you understand the forces at play
It's the same principle behind a volcanic eruption: lots of pressure builds up in one place, eventually it's enough to overpower the forces kipping it at bay (the surface rock for the volcano, the tensile strength for the book) witch results results in all that pressure begins released BOOM
I was shocked at first too, then I remembered there was such a thing as dust explosions, where enough combustible particles collect in a tight area can explode. And that's without any kind of external pressure like using a hydraulic press.
@@RndmBad that’s very different, it’s an incredibly rapid burn.
That's called tension, Paper surprisingly has a high tension resistance, If you simply pull a piece of paper on opposite ends it will not tear, or will give a very hard snap if pulled hard enough, Because the press is pushing down on the paper, it wants to slide out from under the press but is evening out the energy in all directions at once and eventually, well, you can see what happens
Imagine the same situation occurring on a block of wood,since that’s effectively what a compressed book is. That paper didn’t shatter, it splintered.
8 years later and this is still my favorite ASMR channel.
I am simply amazed by how deeply satisfying this is!
There's something unusually satisfying and fascinating about seeing a stack of coins smushed into a a giant mega coin. Also makes the stories of how my uncle would trick arcade machines back in the day by using pennies he flattened out with a hammer make more sense.
Really one of my favourites of all time is 12:20 when Lauri sounds genuinely surprised and happy that the safety glasses worked as intended.
"This is like, educational!" too cute.
It really is educational. Imagine paying about 1 dollar to keep your vision.
It's kind of amazing that the safety glasses were only _scratched_ after taking a chunk of a drill bit moving at an appreciable fraction of the speed of sound
It's so interesting to see how much energy can be stored in objects under pressure. At the point when the object explodes, nearly all of the energy that is released is coming from the tension from within the object. Really cool physics.
You should see what happens with radioactive materials 😲
Some people wonder why tyrants always say books are so dangerous. Maybe this is why.
With enough force and potential energy, anything is possible!
imagine getting shot by a fucking book lol
@@wes4578 "Finnish him!"
@@briansimcoe9119 finish* 🤓
@@Tipicall Finnish. 🇫🇮
It’s 5am I have work at 10am and I’m watching the hydraulic press channel. No regrets.
Beautiful! I never tire of seeing bearings exploding. It is a work of art in slow motion! all those parts dancing in space with sparks and lights... I just love it!
"I have the best worst idea" is such an accurate statement for so many situations
The cheeky smile from the paper roll before it explodes is perfect
Every time I watch this guy, I remember why this is the best hydraulic press channel. It really all comes down to the accent, it makes these videos way funnier and he knows it.
Not guud 🤭 I like when he says this.
sounds like marco repairs coffee time for talk english
Where is he from?
@@hectorolea9665 pretty sure he's Finnish
Aaah! Thats who he sounded like. ISMO, the comedian. He sounded like someone i had heard before
Could you try using an infrared camera to see how hot the pressure points get on an object? I think that’d be neat to see.
This is a great idea
"Let's explode the book and the knife in one go"
A few moments later: "Ok, that was really stupid"
lol
All the years I've watched your vids and I've never thought of how much of a beating that sudden break in pressure must be on the press.
Absolutely amazing how much energy is released when compressing paper. You guys are crazy.
E=MC²
@@AL-SH Wrong equation. You’re looking for F=ma. Force equals Mass times Acceleration.
The force the press exerts onto the target is equal to its mass (heavy) times its acceleration (considerable). The targets deform until they can’t and then start absorbing that energy until they *suddenly* can’t.
nuclear reaction paper 🤯
Paper was crazy, how bout that knife though!!😮
The amount released is the same as the amount you put in. In this case, 70 tons of force.
I love the fact that when you boil it down to basic terms, If you squeeze something hard enough, it'll explode.
Yes
That's how stars work.
@@kibe2134 pretty much exactly this.
@@kibe2134 Extreme density is something I really struggle to understand and your comment has clarified a number of questions bouncing around my head. Thanks!
Under those conditions, the answer is yes and no. Elastic properties of the material play a big part.
i love that there is an endless amount of things to press... and on top that multiplied by the methods.. .this is ENDLESS content
The best part was how much joy and laughter this caused. LOL.
After watching this channel for a couple years or so, I can honestly say I have no idea what a hydraulic press would be used for other than this.
UPDATE: While I appreciate all the replies explaining what a hydraulic press is used for, I perhaps should point out that my comment was a joke. I know what it's used for. My comment was a joke referring to the seemingly infinite uses for a press that aren't actually the intended use. I realise sarcasm is not conveyed easily through text, hope this clears it up.
Smashburgers
Haaaa
Mostly garbage compaction
A machine like this would be used in a manufacturing process where parts are quite literally press fit together when the matching pieces are machined in tight tolerance of each other within .001 of a inch or tighter. Think like bearing housings and stuff like that.
To kill the terminator
You know, putting a column of post it notes under extreme pressure like that is an excellent demonstration of what happens in deep mines, where the colossal pressure of overburden can trigger a burst from the mine shaft wall or pillar.
You should use something other than post it notes in your mine.
Lol
@@HubertofLiege smh imagine using post it notes to support a cave. Cardboard seems like such a better alternative
This is so unaccountably satisfying. Most channels get boring after a while, but this? Nope. Still wonderful.
Dude: Hey. I have an idea. Let's just explode everything.
At 4:40 it sounds like you gained Minecraft experience points.
3:16
"Hey! I have the best worst idea!"
-- famous last words
The slow-mo of the stack of coins being cut in half sounded like something out of a fantasy movie. And the prefragmented ball bearing, well, all I can say is "Great shot, kid. That was one in a million."
"Now that was really stupid!" Lol! Best commentary ever by a RUclips creator!
The toilet paper was smiling and graciously opened up before finally exploding 😂 priceless
These are so fun to watch. And helped with being more safe in the workshop using a much smaller press by knowing how it can go very bad!
The coins getting snipped down the center are always my favorite. The sound, and the visual is just exciting to the senses.
I love how he said, "Eh it's okay, it'll sort itself out." 😂
Lol...I like the Watermelon with the safety glasses. And the 1/2 book sliding off the cutting board. Good job!
hydraulic press channel is a treasure to humanity
LOVE THE DESTRUCTION!!! Eager for more in 2023
I don't know why, but I found the failure of the large bolt threads to be highly entertaining. I retired from an industry where we were more concerned with bolt elongation. The drill bit was informative. Thankfully, the melon lived.
The safety glasses melon videos were among my favorites this year.
The moment he said at 0:44
"....... Alright.... that's not .. good"
I died of laughter 😂
Absolutely useless but most entertaining channel on RUclips!!! I could watch this for hours . . . and sometimes do!
It would be interesting if you used a laser thermometer to find out how much that chilly mallet heated up as it compressed.
This is so awesome. I've worked with hydraulic presses, but not at these pressures. Total destruction. I love it.
2:25, I unconsciously blew on my phone screen thinking I'd blow the glass powder off 🤦🏻♂️
The rocks experiment, how they go all crumbly (friable is the correct term) is the same as what happens to the rocks at an impact site of a meteor - the impact force is so high it literally powders the rocks, then compacts them again so they look like rocks, but they can be crumbled in your hands - I've seen it at the Arizona Crater. All the "rocks" within and near the impact crater are like this.
The most amazing part to me is how successful a channel is just for smashing stuff with a press. One more thing I wish I’d thought of.
How come you and SlowMo guys never did a colab, this is gold
2:50 Never knew He did this but he made a machine of childhood dreams, a knife that cuts just by going straight down, so satisfying
Hyvää uutta vuotta.
Happy New Year!
Can’t help but to laugh so hard! It’s simple videos like these that brings me joy
I love it went you say "hey i have a good idea" 😂
That high speed camera action at the end was insane! Happy new year
Amazing as always! *Happy new year!*
Everytime I see you put paper or bearings on the press I instinctively hide under my desk. HA HA. Love you guys!
Anyone else need to to sit waaaay the hell back while watching these? X'D
That gentleman's laugh is just diabolic :) Another amazing video 👍Paper rulezzz!
Thank yous for being so fun with the hydrolic press. I've really enjoyed watching.
This was so satisfying. The frozen hammer, the coins being cut and both of the bearings were the best! The last bearing was AMAZING on high speed.
Pretty much everything will explode if compressed hard enough is what I learned. What a rad video. Wild watching paper explode!
This song has hit me harder than anything from mainstream music EVER has. Thank you
1:27
You’re finally awake
Never ceasing to amuse and entertain. Glad you're still doing this.
This was like a firework show for new years. What fun!
the satisfaction of watching things get destroyed is unmatched
"Hey! I have the best worst idea!" Yes! Just yes! They are always the best best ideas!
The video auditions for the year 2022 were very good, it was a video that I watched with great pleasure, and we look forward to the continuation of your successes in 2023.
That’s crazy going to need protection for camera too 😂 for now on start saying we are behind protective measures 🤣🤣🤣
😂😂😂😂😂😂
Came across this video in my feed so I'm a new viewer to your channel. This video reminds me of when I was in high school my theatre tech buddies and I would do similar things with the trash compactor on campus. I enjoyed this so much, what a great video!
This is so satisfying watching this. Thanks for posting ✌️
We need a collaboration with The Slow Mo Guys ASAP!!
Whenever Lauri says "...not good." that is a guarantee that it will be good.
It's amazing to see the different ways thing react to extreme pressure. Love the slow motion shots. 👍👍👍👍👍
I’d love to see a thermal camera view of the sudden temp change
The crushing paper one was like a cutscene . Paper be like "hey you, your finally awake"
Lol! I use Alexa to control most of the lights in my house and shop, but sometimes when I tell her to turn on or turn off the BENCH lights, I feel she misunderstands me like I said another word that sounds much like BENCH and she ignores me. By the way, my favorite episodes involved compressing the paper, who would have ever thought a stack of paper would explode so violently? Lol! May you and your family remain safe, happy, and enjoy a prosperous New Year! Your friends in Texas!
Is it "Wench"? Mine does the same thing lol, thinks I'm insulting it
@@skrimper I think it thinks I am saying "bitch", because it replies with that high-low tone like it heard me but the command was bad, so its won't act on it. If say slower and enunciate clearly, it works almost every time.
"hey, that's pretty God damned good" happy New year guys!! 🥂
wut
God had nothing to do with this but t.y. for mentioning my best friend's name !! WUT
0:32is actually a slow motion animation of my head exploding from stress
Superb video.
Idk why I love the paper explosions.
Stay classy guys !
12:25 “yea hey this is like educational.” 😂 Subscribe button clicked. ✅
It's crazy that sparks are generated just from a release of pressure.
The thing that just seems so crazy to me is how this press can destroy pretty much anything but yet the pieces used in the press like the chisel and other ends never seem to get damaged...
Some heat treated alloys are strong as hell
You can find older videos where he talks about how he has to remake the pressing tool pretty much every video. Definitely on videos with really hard things like ball bearings. It looks similar because it's a tool shop, he can make the press head himself and they're easily replaced.
Awesome recap video! Love your videos!
Dude this channel rocks, I just found it
Special like for the moment with the watermelon and the safety glasses 👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻
And I always have said that books can have an explosive effect 🤣
I've seen these all already. But they're too fun to pass up another look.
Yeah, that's kind of how end of year compilations work.
I don't know why I can't stop watching things get crushed into oblivion.
That is so fascinating to watch but at the same time is so stressful! (And scary, frankly). Because those energy releases can be absolutely DEADLY. Are you sure that you have enough protection? I really hope that no one ever gets injured when making these videos.
9:20 so that's how they got the original death star shot
The SLO-Mo guys need to come and film those with their 1,000,000 frame per second camera.
I like how the sledge hammer started to bleed.
It would be really interesting if you could set-up a cheap (since you'll probably only get one or two uses out of them before they're blown-up) $10-15 infrared kitchen thermometer in the shot and aim it at whatever you're squishing. I'd love to see the reading shoot from room temperature to 500-600 degrees simply from adding mechanical force to various materials, metals especially. Does paper get hot from compression? It would be neat to see, anyway.
Everything gets hot when compressed, you're adding energy to the system. However, I agree 100% I want to see how much, and how much it differs per material, because it will vary drastically. So Very interested in that lol
Perfect video.
Happy new year to both of you !
Incredible, fascinating and educational video!!! Great work guys!!!!
That watermelon with safety goggles made my day😂
That's amazing, I had no idea paper would explode under pressure... I wasn't exactly sure what to expect, but explosion would have been my last guess...
This just goes to show how strong paper really is…
As part of safety procedure if you're in an earthquake in a building, they tell you to lie next to stacks of phone book/papers, instead of under a desk.
See? It really does beat rock!
dilo en español jajaja
The string was the real MVP
@@Vagabond_Etranger realistically who’s going to have high enough multiple stacks of books just lying around though. Unless you work in a printing factory or library it seems quite unlikely. Desks on the other hand, much more prominent.
I would love to see a thermal camera. The heat generate by the pressure must be inmense.