Hardest-to-Obtain Item in MythBusters History

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  • Опубликовано: 1 окт 2022
  • In this livestream excerpt, Adam answers MythBusters-related questions from Tested members Monkeycircus and Jman3302 about which items were the hardest to obtain for the show, and what filming at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway was like. Thank you for your questions and support, Monkey and Jman! Join this channel to support Tested and get access to perks, like asking Adam questions!: / @tested
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Комментарии • 2 тыс.

  • @michaelramon2411
    @michaelramon2411 Год назад +8666

    Adam: "Can we blow up a grenade?"
    Insurance: "No. Too dangerous."
    Adam: "Can we make our own grenade out of plastic explosives and blow it up?"
    Insurance: "I don't see why not."

    • @SyntheticFuture
      @SyntheticFuture Год назад +483

      Weird thing being is that I am pretty sure there's civilians with grenades that have posted videos on RUclips showing they own a grenade... I'd 100% trust Adam more with one than some random Texas guy xD

    • @worldchamp1999
      @worldchamp1999 Год назад +357

      @@SyntheticFuture yea i see dumb guntubers getting their hands on this kind of stuff, the reason why they actually can do it is because they dont have an insurance company telling them what they can and cant do

    • @iabervon
      @iabervon Год назад +135

      I think it's really that insurance can't evaluate the risk from getting anyone else's live grenade. It's like requiring that you pack your own luggage and remain in control of it.

    • @Iron_Triton
      @Iron_Triton Год назад +124

      its hard to accurately remotely detonate a grenade. imagine tying a strying to the pin and ping! but no explosion. the scenario of undetonated c4 is easier to apporoach than a grenade

    • @mysteriousplankton
      @mysteriousplankton Год назад +3

      @@Iron_Triton Just like in the movies!

  • @ameliatbh001
    @ameliatbh001 Год назад +4862

    I was wondering why those bomb squad folks worked with y'all so readily over the years. It's so interesting (and entertaining) to me that they considered all those explosions to be training exercises.

    • @MonkeyChessify
      @MonkeyChessify Год назад +605

      Its one of those things that sounds surprising and then after thinking about it makes total sense.
      Bomb squads always have the possibility of coming across some random device. What better way to practice procedures, learn something, and have a lil fun too than working with mythbusters and seeing what they come up with. Experience is experience.

    • @JV-pu8kx
      @JV-pu8kx Год назад +159

      Same with the fire department.

    • @seanbarraclough2484
      @seanbarraclough2484 Год назад +178

      It's great foresight, what would x be like under y circumstances with z variables? Fail to prepare, prepare to fail, and the 7 P's. Why not take every opportunity to blow shi, errrr learn the properties of explosive ordinance under specific conditions?

    • @ironcito1101
      @ironcito1101 Год назад +124

      Besides, people who join the bomb squad surely like explosives and explosions. Exploding things on TV, having it broadcast and seen by millions, seeing the slo-mo, meeting the show's stars... what's not to like? 😉

    • @ZombieJesus1987
      @ZombieJesus1987 Год назад

      Give them an excuse to blow something up and they'll be all in

  • @jackalopewright5343
    @jackalopewright5343 Год назад +3326

    I had a friend that bought an L-19 Birddog aircraft that was French military surplus. After purchase, he set off to do a careful inspection. In a small compartment near the wing root, (overhead in this case) he felt something rolling around in there and found what appeared to be a hand grenade. Thinking it could either be a training grenade or maybe a real one, he carefully put it in a shoebox padded with newspaper and drove to the local police department. He didn't bring it inside, but told the story. When he got to the "I found what looks like a hand grenade" part, a bunch of police flattened him to the floor. Once they determined he didn't bring it in, they let him finish the story. In the end he got to watch as the bomb squad blew it up. It was real.

    • @garmack12
      @garmack12 Год назад +360

      Probably should have had them come to him. Call in advance next time

    • @hellishcyberdemon7112
      @hellishcyberdemon7112 Год назад +490

      Dont tell the police you own stuff they will charge you when in reality your trying to turn it in

    • @ElisArid
      @ElisArid Год назад +64

      @@hellishcyberdemon7112 not true 🤦

    • @hellishcyberdemon7112
      @hellishcyberdemon7112 Год назад +435

      @@ElisArid you just read the story about how they tackled him... imagine if he messed up his story they would have charged him for a bomb threat... I've seen it happen many times... people are good Samaritans and they call the police to report a gun or a bomb or whatever then they get charged for the crime

    • @MrOrgeston
      @MrOrgeston Год назад +185

      @@ElisArid Happens all the time.

  • @nlpnt
    @nlpnt Год назад +273

    The one I remember from the early seasons was the drug tests, the whole drug-testing industry didn't want it to be known that poppy-seed cakes and bagels cause false positives and you had to go to ridiculous lengths to get the test kits. A couple years later they started selling them at CVS and Walgreens' to anyone with cash.

    • @FyreWulff
      @FyreWulff Год назад +73

      They found out there was more money in people buying them to check if they'd pass a test AND to the companies used the tests than just selling to the companies using the tests. Play both sides and come out on top!

    • @NoriMori1992
      @NoriMori1992 18 дней назад +1

      Wait, that's true? I always assumed that was a myth. I figured there couldn't possibly be enough drug in that number of poppy seeds.

    • @kristopherselders1342
      @kristopherselders1342 16 дней назад

      It is true, Mythbusters actually did it.

    • @chadgrylls5264
      @chadgrylls5264 День назад

      It's pretty stupid that *any* amount detected is considered positive; even levels that cause no impairment. It should be measured like alcohol - by blood concentration.

  • @GijsvanDam
    @GijsvanDam Год назад +4398

    To make it even thinner than requested is the most German thing ever, but also they probably used metric, so delivered 20 micron thick lead foil, which is 0.000787 inch.

    • @MagnusWissler
      @MagnusWissler Год назад +295

      Easy there, tiger. Adam said it was "point seven of one thousandth of an inch". Isn't that so much clearer?

    • @MytronixOfficial
      @MytronixOfficial Год назад +498

      @@MagnusWissler 0.000787 inch. Or, point seven eight seven of one thousands of an inch. Also, the Germans probably were very sad that their machines could only dial microns in steps of 10 and they had to deliver the next best thing.

    • @slickstretch6391
      @slickstretch6391 Год назад +357

      @@MytronixOfficial lol Only the Germans would be disappointed in delivering a product that's better than what was requested because it's not exactly what was requested.

    • @sainsay
      @sainsay Год назад +119

      @@thereinthetrees_5626 no, he is not. 0.7 thousandths is 7 ten thousandths which is 0.0007 inch which is roughly 20 micron

    • @ErwinPommel
      @ErwinPommel Год назад +74

      @@thereinthetrees_5626 I'm embarrassed for you.

  • @Real28
    @Real28 Год назад +2066

    That story about the lead foil is fascinating. It's incredible that it took a year and half and your request broke 2 companies machines. So crazy.

    • @Yugophoto
      @Yugophoto Год назад +64

      as soon as I read the title I knew the lead balloon story was coming

    • @makettaja
      @makettaja Год назад +93

      well american quality. what can you expect. Had to go to Germany to get the real deal. hahaa

    • @QuantumConundrum
      @QuantumConundrum Год назад +36

      This is a prime example on how production delays happen in a lot of products. Even more so in electronics.

    • @Outside85
      @Outside85 Год назад +68

      It kinda makes me wonder what the Germans were actually using it for when they could make it that thin without any great amount of difficulty... because I am going to be polite and assume it has nothing to do with Germans working in millimetres and Americans working in inches.

    • @ThaPakue
      @ThaPakue Год назад +34

      @@Outside85 I'd guess for medical/science instruments that need good EMI and radiation shielding.

  • @MrCunningham4
    @MrCunningham4 Год назад +100

    I love the symbiotic relationship you guys had with the bomb squad, you get free C4, they get a training experience, and everyone wins

  • @tommywolfe2706
    @tommywolfe2706 Год назад +193

    The deal with the bomb squad sounds like just about the best possible scenario that you could EVER run into, especially for a show like yours. Thats incredible, what a great partnership!

  • @fissionphoenix4995
    @fissionphoenix4995 Год назад +1129

    I love that Adam is able to reminisce about Mythbusters in such a positive way without also bemoaning them as being the "good old days" in his life or anything like that. The way he tells his stories it was just a super positive experience and even though it's over and done with he has absolutely no issues with that fact.
    Storytelling is a wonderful skill and one I really wish to develop because I find that even family members get bored when I try to tell a story haha.

    • @sparkplug1018
      @sparkplug1018 Год назад +46

      I got the feeling at the end that he was of the opinion that, I want to go out on top. While I'm still enjoying it and having a good time.
      Going out with a bang as it were.
      Because at least in my experience so far, the guys that pine for the good ol' days are usually the guys who either got out way to early, or stayed in way to long. But when you go out on your terms, while at the height of it, it remains in your memory as this amazing, positive, incredible thing you did and always excites you thinking about it.

    • @v44n7
      @v44n7 Год назад +8

      @@sparkplug1018 reminds me to the seinfield cast and the difference feelings between them and Larry David's experience leaving early

    • @superbaas8822
      @superbaas8822 Год назад +9

      If you've followed what he has been up to, you know he has plenty of good ol' days still ahead of him.

    • @ZBritt92
      @ZBritt92 Год назад +1

      @@superbaas8822 I think he's saying they're sick of it while he just got to enjoy his mountain of money.

    • @vmaldia
      @vmaldia Год назад +3

      I tell myself that too about college, that this was a great part of my life, but it is over and we have to move on

  • @Slide100
    @Slide100 Год назад +1892

    Throwing your first live grenade is simultaneously exciting and terrifying. You’ve been hearing the booms all morning while you’ve been waiting your turn, and then you’re holding this small, surprisingly heavy globe of death in your hand.

    • @noremorsewoodworking2258
      @noremorsewoodworking2258 Год назад +362

      Imagine the rookie whose very first live grenade (and he was the very first to throw of the squad of rookies) was a dud!
      I was there as one of the range officers, tasked mostly with keeping a bunch of nervous rookies calm enough to stay behind the safety barricade but my secondary task was - in the event - to "deal with" any duds.
      I had of course been behind the barricade myself when he threw so I had not seen where it had landed - and let me tell you: it was indeed a very long and lonesome walk to go out and search for the damn thing.
      Often, when rookies throw duds it is because they have failed to pull the pin correctly and the mechanism is at least somewhat safe to approach, but this guy had pulled the pin (he still had it in his shaking hand) so the grenade I was searching for was indeed a "hang-fire", and thus very sensitive to anything, even a heavy footfall could set it off.
      Long story short: I found it where it had landed, luckily on top of the sand and not in any shallow depression (from the previous squads successful throwing), carried out the neccessary steps to safely dispose of it (which involves even more explosives, a detonator and a timed fuse).
      And by the way: I was not wearing a full blast-suit - nor even a fragmentation vest (those weren't issued to units at my level at the time) so all I had for protection was a helmet on my head. Trying to place the disposing charge while keeping the helmet between me and the dud was - shall we say challenging, especially since I am very much a right-hander and thought "if I am going to lose a hand, better the left" so I had to do the most delicate work essentially blind and with my left hand..
      Thankfully the rest of the day went without other hitches but I will never - ever - forget that morning as it was also my first time dealing with a live, thown but unexploded grenade.

    • @stamfordly6463
      @stamfordly6463 Год назад +53

      The DS (a short and vicious Argyle IIRC) had a very well practised line, "Don't feck it up sir, but if you do we'll try to pick up most of the bits."

    • @Slide100
      @Slide100 Год назад +19

      @@noremorsewoodworking2258 I saw that happen the odd time. Kudos to you for your bravery sir.

    • @zenistfpv
      @zenistfpv Год назад +17

      and incredibility underwhelming after years of hollywood grenades.

    • @penchant4
      @penchant4 Год назад +114

      By the time I got to the live range, I had thrown at least three or four practice grenades. The AI (Assistant Instructor) in my pit looked me in the eyes and said; " If for any reason, you drop this grenade; do NOT attempt to recover it. Yell "GRENADE" and jump behind those sandbags at the back of the pit. I will deal with the grenade and beat you over the sandbags."

  • @mgsPWlover
    @mgsPWlover Год назад +634

    One could argue they actually made their own very large grenade via the exploding cement truck

    • @cryptodentist
      @cryptodentist Год назад +20

      I also recall explosives (simulating a grenade) in a fridge. Myth being it would reduce the explosion, but actually it caused more damage due to fragmenting debris.

    • @debbiebernhardt5406
      @debbiebernhardt5406 9 месяцев назад +3

      They did that because of the myth. But the side effects were recorded that became a base for custom test subjects and results.

    • @davidtatum8682
      @davidtatum8682 9 месяцев назад +7

      Best explosion ever.

    • @cosmicraysshotsintothelight
      @cosmicraysshotsintothelight 3 месяца назад +1

      Except that the shell or frag casing in the case of the truck would be considerably thinner. They should have glued a bunch of barbell weights onto it to get the same effect... and stood back even further...

    • @Palmtop_User
      @Palmtop_User 2 месяца назад +1

      Hulk's grenade

  • @leokimvideo
    @leokimvideo 6 месяцев назад +78

    I can relate to the C4 story, I was involved in a bridge explosion for a film in Malaysia. It requited different loads of detonation cord and C4 to pack into chevron shaped metal cutting charges. The only people who had C4 were the bomb squad. I always thought that was weird but it seems that's how it works everywhere. As for the det cord that came via normal channels, 10g/m and 70g/m from memory. The 70g/m det cord was fun to play with.

    • @ericharrison6418
      @ericharrison6418 3 месяца назад +2

      The film: Tropic Thunder

    • @Tunkkis
      @Tunkkis 3 месяца назад +2

      Linear shaped charges are really cool.

    • @PhysicsGamer
      @PhysicsGamer 2 месяца назад +1

      70g/m... wow, I bet that was fun! How big were the spools it came on?

  • @SaschaFerda
    @SaschaFerda Год назад +724

    I trained as a sign painter in Germany. We used super thin lead foil to mask car enamel. You can use vegetable oil to adhere the foil to the enamel, then use a pounce pattern to transfer the design. Finally cut out the letters with an X-Acto knife. Because it is so soft, it is great to use on compound curves. The lead foil is also super easy to cut. Then you cover it with a piece of paper, wad up a scrap of lead foil, and use that to burnish the edges for a fantastically sharp finished edge. Clean off the oil from the cut outs, spray an adhesion promoter and then spray your lettering color. I have tried lots of other masking materials, but never found anything that worked as well for cars as lead foil.

    • @angrydragonslayer
      @angrydragonslayer Год назад +79

      "The better it is at its job, the better it is at putting you in the box"
      We had a cutting fluid that made chlorine gas when evaporating.... It made cutting hardened steel (68 HRC) feel (and feed) like high-lead brass.

    • @thescholarlychronicler1805
      @thescholarlychronicler1805 Год назад +5

      That sounds so satisfying to be able to see.

    • @CoolAsFreya
      @CoolAsFreya Год назад +27

      As an electronics enthusiast there's just no better solder than lead solder. I've tried every brand of lead free solder and it's just a worse alloy. Lead is an amazing metal with lots of useful properties, shame about the toxicity!

    • @angrydragonslayer
      @angrydragonslayer Год назад +8

      @@CoolAsFreya you should try doped solder (germanium is my favorite)
      Some of the stuff will make you drop dead if you miss any of the safety measures but the usefulness goes up proportionally

    • @RyTrapp0
      @RyTrapp0 Год назад +6

      @@CoolAsFreya Fun fact: the Xbox 360's 'red ring of death' issue was never figured out(at least while he was there), but was suspected to be caused by the lead free solder they switched to due to EU regulation changes not long before it went into mass production.
      This according to Peter Moore, from the 'Podcast Unlocked' episode 201; it features Moore, Seamus Blackley(dude who thought of the idea & presented it to Gates & Co), and Phil Spencer all talking about the origin of the brand and first console up through the XB1(after Phil took over, before the XBS), amazing insight(including how they arrived at hardware specs and such) if you're into this behind the scenes stuff.

  • @jaydentierney2194
    @jaydentierney2194 Год назад +709

    I find it funny how they were allowed to build a granade with C4 but not allowed to source one, "can we have a granade please" "no just build one"

    • @ryano.5149
      @ryano.5149 Год назад +69

      "Can we have a grenade?"
      "No, we have grenade at home." lol

    • @eddominates
      @eddominates Год назад +6

      Same thing with fully automatic machine guns. 'MERICA!

    • @semi-useful5178
      @semi-useful5178 Год назад

      @@eddominates
      FFFFFFFFUCKING WILSSSOOOOOOOON!

    • @tanall5959
      @tanall5959 Год назад +21

      @@eddominates That is actually worlds easier. The really crazy part is that it is easier to get a grenade LAUNCHER and ammunition, than it is to get hand grenades. All thanks to the layers of bureaucracy that have built up over the years.

    • @TzunSu
      @TzunSu Год назад +2

      @@eddominates How is it the same thing? Anyone who can legally own a firearm in the US can own a fully automatic weapon, just have to pay the tax stamp, and it's a lot harder to get the permissions to build your own.

  • @ibey01
    @ibey01 Год назад +100

    When I was in high school I had a teacher that had been in Vietnam. He told us about a time a grenade was thrown into the fox hole his squad was in. A squad mate grabbed a sand bag and dove on the grenade. The squad mate was seriously injured but survived.

    • @1014p
      @1014p Год назад +23

      Smart, that sand bag would eat a lot of energy.

    • @tomhenry897
      @tomhenry897 8 месяцев назад +10

      Under powered commie gernade

    • @ninjalectualx
      @ninjalectualx 8 месяцев назад

      NOT smart. Just throw thr bag without using your own body

    • @CyVinci
      @CyVinci 8 месяцев назад +26

      @@ninjalectualxeasy to take time and reflect on what that man had to decide in a moments notice. It was a smart decision to make in the moment, who knows if the sand bag would’ve been enough

    • @JL32506
      @JL32506 2 месяца назад +6

      @@ninjalectualx Human body is very resilient. If he was seriously injured, then it's very likely his body stopped a good portion of the shrapnel and saved everyone's lives by eating it.

  • @backdraft916
    @backdraft916 Год назад +54

    Same things with “Practice Burns” when we got donated houses in my fire jurisdiction. We were accused of ‘just playing’, but it gave us valuable opportunities to try different techniques of search, rescue, and fire suppression.

    • @thedeviantguy
      @thedeviantguy 4 месяца назад +3

      Real world experience can’t be beat, especially when lives are on the line.

  • @dpsamu2000
    @dpsamu2000 Год назад +749

    What a wonderful story teller Adam is. That's the result of pursuing a rewarding life. So lucky when you enjoy your work. Not a criticism of those who don't. But the pursuit is so worthwhile.

    • @resaledragon
      @resaledragon Год назад

      Am I the only one that noticed the creepy hand at 7:32?

    • @JoshSweetvale
      @JoshSweetvale Год назад +12

      Well, Jamie did headhunt him to get a cohost with a reasonably high CHA stat.
      He didn't choose the vlog life, the vlog life chose him.

  • @nightrunnerxm393
    @nightrunnerxm393 Год назад +331

    Yes. I laughed at the whole "calling it a training exercise" thing. Not because of the end run nature of it (didn't know about the lack of permitting around C4) but because I knew that for a bomb squad it really _was_ a training exercise. That's just the way they are.

    • @filanfyretracker
      @filanfyretracker Год назад +56

      Similar to why the FD let them burn so much crap down I am sure, They can study fire theory all they want but nothing beats having the crews take up a hose and put something out for real. Well also from a fire department angle, lots of MB tested fire myths were able to be tied to important fire safety lessons for people so they did not have to do it at someone's home hopefully.

    • @Kevin2432
      @Kevin2432 Год назад +16

      Technically, if you have an NFA Class 4 designation, you maybe could get c4 legally. I have an ex military friend and his rifle has an M203 launcher (class 4 since it launches explosives). I have no clue where or why someone would sell you explosives, but there is a legal channel for law enforcement, military, and federal agents.

    • @tanall5959
      @tanall5959 Год назад +14

      @@Kevin2432 NFA Class 4 is, technically, a dealer's license. So if you have one of those you are, again 'technically' part of said supply channel.

  • @patrickdiehl6813
    @patrickdiehl6813 8 месяцев назад +49

    I never understood the phrase "Up on the wheel" Until I drove a 6oo HP Nascar stock car around Michigan International Speedway @ 140+ mph. The intense focus of going that fast literally tenses all of your body into that moment and when it's over you look back and realise you were pulling yourself forward gripping the wheel and straining against the 5 point harness in ernest. An experience I will never forget.

    • @Mouthwashh
      @Mouthwashh 27 дней назад +1

      I took my grandmas 2004 Buick Rendevous to 136 mph on bald tires on a public road. 140 is quick, but it's not “tense your whole body and intense focus” quick. Driving through New Mexico, Arizona, SoCal desert roads I usually cruise at 130 while half asleep. Fastest I've been is 196-197 on a Ninja H2. That was admittedly pretty scary.

  • @FurryMcMemes
    @FurryMcMemes Год назад +67

    What I loved about seeing you guys working with the bomb squad was you could tell they were having just as much fun as you guys were and everyone was learning in those moments.

  • @marvindebot3264
    @marvindebot3264 Год назад +535

    Adam: "There is no permit for C4 or a grenade"
    Ordnance Lab: "Hold my non alcoholic beverage"

    • @johnbeauvais3159
      @johnbeauvais3159 Год назад +62

      They’re manufacturers, I think Adam means that for your average individual in the state of California there is no pathway to being able to do that.

    • @AwfulxAim
      @AwfulxAim Год назад +73

      @@johnbeauvais3159 TXMGO, the company that owns ordnance lab, sells the opportunity to just throw (and detonate) a live grenade. In fact, they just got done with a lawsuit from the ATF, which decided that they ARE legally allowed to do so. But I'm sure at the time that Mythbusters was being filmed, this wasn't nearly as possible.

    • @johnbeauvais3159
      @johnbeauvais3159 Год назад +22

      @@AwfulxAim I’m a big fan of Ordnance Lab and please don’t think I’m trying to correct you, from their videos it seems that if you manufacture and detonate the same day it’s a different paperwork than if you were to make, then store, then destroy an explosive.

    • @AwfulxAim
      @AwfulxAim Год назад +21

      @@johnbeauvais3159 Absolutely, the paperwork is different because they don't have to file that they manufactured and then later file that they destroyed a destructive device.

    • @benjaminshropshire2900
      @benjaminshropshire2900 Год назад +40

      @@johnbeauvais3159 I strongly suspect the most important part of your comment is "in the state of California".
      IIRC Nationally, if you can find a legal owner willing to sell, getting a grenade isn't really that hard to do. Fill out the right ATF Form (5320?), get it signed off by the local CLEO and approved by the ATF, pay for the tax stamp and 6-24 months later bob's your uncle.

  •  Год назад +234

    Adam in the early days on the phone: "I'm trying to locate a pig's stomach... Hello? ..." Classic!

    • @Yugophoto
      @Yugophoto Год назад +35

      Man season 1 must have been a massive nightmare for sourcing weird stuff. By probably season 4 or so just about everyone knew about the mythbusters and were eager to help, but the first year or two they must have seemed like prank callers.

    • @daddynitro199
      @daddynitro199 Год назад +2

      “A very fleshy swimming cap”

    • @Oshroth
      @Oshroth Год назад +5

      @@Yugophoto I've been rewatching MB recently and the JATO rocket myth is a great example of them trying and failing to get a JATO. I can't remember if they do get one in one of the revisits.
      Though by the time of season 2 (and seemingly late season 1) they have a much easier time and also plenty of people who want to give them stuff to use

    • @garavonhoiwkenzoiber
      @garavonhoiwkenzoiber Год назад +8

      @@Yugophoto I hear the early years of Jackass had similar problems with insurance. "Hello we would like to-" "NO *click-brrrrrr*"

  • @Twerkulies
    @Twerkulies 4 месяца назад +6

    Mythbusters: We need a grenade for a myth
    Bomb Squad: No.
    Mythbusters: We need 500 pounds of C4 to blow up a porta potty.
    Bomb Squad: Did we hear training exercise????

  • @dakotalovell6992
    @dakotalovell6992 Год назад +21

    Man this is so cool seeing you talk about these things. I watched EVERY SINGLE EPISODE until I was unable to (1 year before the closing of the og show) and they always made me laugh, learn, and just generally answer all those questions nobody would answer. I especially loved you titanic episode. I love saying they could have both survived. I believe that you are the main reason I’m so open to unexpected results, and fully created my desire to learn and grow in a isotope way. You deserve to be remembered for eternity and beyond, no doubts at all!
    I have to pay respect to grant too. Rip to one of the best creative teachers

  • @violinmiata
    @violinmiata Год назад +242

    Mario Andretti is a total legend. About five years ago I picked my kid up from preschool and there was a picture of Mario Andretti hanging out with his class at the 500 Museum. I asked his teacher if it was a cutout that they posed with, she said “nope, he was just there and offered to take the picture”. Still kicking myself for not signing up as a parent volunteer!

    • @tommerwhite
      @tommerwhite Год назад +10

      I have had the pleasure of meeting him 3 times, always a humble gentleman ,I treasure the items he signed for me including 3 Honda z50s

    • @brandonobaza8610
      @brandonobaza8610 7 месяцев назад +1

      In 2016, I was helping my stepdad move when I found a six pack of Coca-Cola from 1994 commemorating Mario's retirement. Had a good chuckle at that 😁

  • @Shakes-Off-Fear
    @Shakes-Off-Fear Год назад +240

    I think part of the issue with the insurance with the grenades, Adam, is that they saw you on television, trying to pull a pin (on an inert grenade) with your teeth 😂 and they said to themselves “Ohhhhh my god…”

  • @zachlewis9751
    @zachlewis9751 9 месяцев назад +13

    Adam: we couldn’t get a grenade!
    Also Adam: we vaporized a cement truck!

  • @ZtotheMills
    @ZtotheMills 9 месяцев назад +16

    I am now very curious how much time was spent between shots, of the bomb squad analyzing every single detail of the explosion, the footage, and aftermath to get their own data.
    I just find this 'Training exercise' relationship to be very fascinating.

  • @boscorner
    @boscorner Год назад +259

    I've heard the story about the lead foil like 3 times from Adam and I still love it lol

    • @toeb1n
      @toeb1n Год назад +7

      Was just gonna say lol. There needs to be a counter for every episode that it's mentioned. I think I've heard it at least 6 or 7 times, goes to show how proud of it they were.

    • @MattyBmemes
      @MattyBmemes Год назад +1

      Weird question but where have you herd it? on this channel? or other stuff hes been in?

    • @toeb1n
      @toeb1n Год назад +5

      @@MattyBmemes On various tested channel episodes. I mainly watch the Q&A videos and one days build videos. Especially in the Q&A video where he talks about Mythbusters.

    • @jonathanbair523
      @jonathanbair523 Год назад +5

      I love the pure joy he has when talking about the "MythBuster days" I find it funny when they started out in season 1 the company was like "Get the pros to make it safe." So they look at each other and the other folks in the field of theres and come back saying "Ok we got a few pros"... Adding Grant to the team really did help the show all together tho. RIP Grant

  • @TECHNOBOGAN
    @TECHNOBOGAN Год назад +260

    Adam struggling not to call drivers race-ists made my night.

    • @bwc1976
      @bwc1976 8 месяцев назад +11

      When I was a kid and heard the word "sexist" for the first time, I thought it was someone who was really good at sex or really into sex!

    • @kacperwhite386
      @kacperwhite386 8 месяцев назад

      Can you explain it for me?

    • @ThePimperorsHumpire
      @ThePimperorsHumpire 4 дня назад

      It is isnt it - hi yaw!

  • @projektdarkside8757
    @projektdarkside8757 Год назад +13

    Seeing Adam be so excited about things genuinely makes me happy.

  • @catbraunwell6450
    @catbraunwell6450 8 месяцев назад +1

    Adam you are an absolute delight to watch. Your unending enthusiasm and energy are contagious. Thanks man. You’re awesome.

  • @plastix6041
    @plastix6041 Год назад +443

    i want to know "Given today's technology, can you think of any myths who's results wouldve changed if you had given tech "

    • @DraconianEmpath
      @DraconianEmpath Год назад +59

      high speed cameras /might/ fall into that category? I know Adam's talked about that before, how slow motion footage would have changed the which storeys they could do, out how they documented things. especially in the first few seasons.

    • @plastix6041
      @plastix6041 Год назад +26

      @@DraconianEmpath I meant which resuts would have changed. A busted myth being confirmed, or vice versa

    • @tbotalpha8133
      @tbotalpha8133 Год назад +37

      @@plastix6041 I think most of their experiments were too imprecise for modern technology to really affect how they recorded the results. They were looking for big, obvious results, not anything that more sensitive equipment could help them find.
      Meanwhile, a lot of their experiments revolved around things that happened in the past, at some indeterminate point (as is the way with urban legends). So being able to replicate a myth's claims with modern technology wouldn't actually change anything. They wanted to know if it could be done with the technology of the day.
      The only experiments that could be affected by this, would be myths about things that are supposedly true here and now. Like the idea that submerging in a body of water will protect you from bullets - that was true then, but is it true now, with modern bullets? Yes, it is. But that's what I'm getting at: truths that may have been invalidated by advances in technology.

    • @nes999
      @nes999 Год назад +10

      I think Drone and the ever cheapend camera tech would have a large effect.

    • @davidmcgill1000
      @davidmcgill1000 Год назад +5

      Pretty much all the myths they used ballistics gel for. Just seeing the end result doesn't tell the whole story. Need that high speed footage.

  • @bshilling9924
    @bshilling9924 Год назад +123

    I started watching Mythbusters again. I have always loved it went from no agency wanting to work with you to everyone wanting to work with you. It is funny to watch the oldest episodes and see a flip phone and to watch the evolution of camera technology.

  • @MisterJackmanB
    @MisterJackmanB Год назад +2

    I wasn't expecting the IndyCar question in this video! Happy you enjoyed the track; it really is a cool place. We love going there every year for Indy GP and the 500.

  • @RichardHopkinsLobosSolos
    @RichardHopkinsLobosSolos 10 месяцев назад +4

    Dad lived in Indy for a time back in the seventies. He hung around the track and got to take a class from AJ Foyt and Andy Granatelli. He even got to drive the pace car during one of the time trials.

  • @stangiles2001
    @stangiles2001 Год назад +110

    Jamie's approval.
    Jamie's smile.
    Jamie's love

    • @SnowPheasant
      @SnowPheasant Год назад

      😂 a worthwhile pursuit nonetheless

  • @anneliseolsen6896
    @anneliseolsen6896 Год назад +36

    Gods, I miss Mythbusters. It was the highlight of my day when I could watch you all do your thing.
    It was especially good when you all had fun with what you were doing, and seeing the joy on your faces.

  • @nathandiefenbach1274
    @nathandiefenbach1274 Год назад +1

    I absolutely adore hearing these stories and reliving the episodes like this.

  • @boruff68
    @boruff68 9 месяцев назад +1

    I am GLAD you enjoyed the IMS track experience Adam. I guess I just feel complacent as I drive by it everyday for decades now,but Indy has SUCH a history behind it,and I still ove it as well !

  • @skiser7176
    @skiser7176 Год назад +199

    For the German foil company: I think they gave you a foil with the thickness of 0.001 cm instead of 0.001 inch. Because 0.0007 inch is approximately 0.001 cm

    • @logitech4873
      @logitech4873 Год назад +11

      Or 10 micrometers

    • @bripslag
      @bripslag Год назад +8

      @@logitech4873 how many nanofortnights is that?

    • @freescape08
      @freescape08 Год назад +25

      Actually, that would be closer to 0.4 thousands of an inch. Someone else posted that 20 Micros would be about right, and I agree with that. 0.787 thousandths.

    • @skiser7176
      @skiser7176 Год назад +4

      @@freescape08 yes you're right

    • @epicninjacakez6716
      @epicninjacakez6716 9 месяцев назад

      Whoopsie!

  • @punkdigerati
    @punkdigerati Год назад +22

    You've mentioned the difficulty in obtaining Buster before, that it was essentially an off the books legally grey deal due to a conversation on a plane.

  • @Concorde4711
    @Concorde4711 Месяц назад +2

    For those who wonder: This extreme thin lead foil is used for industrial x-ray films. They have an amplifying effect and reduce exposure time. Greetings from Germany.

  • @Onelegleg
    @Onelegleg Год назад +1

    The one you guys did that still just amazing me is when you pressurized the airliner cabin and set off the shaped charge, the resulting damage was just amazing. Your explosives expert really knew his stuff.

  • @chrislonghurst
    @chrislonghurst Год назад +217

    What about the original JATO bottles? I remember the military kept calling you back for months afterwards, continuously telling you “no” even long after you made the episode. Not getting a grenade seems tame by comparison 😅

    • @johnknapp952
      @johnknapp952 Год назад +30

      The problem with JATO bottles is that there just aren't any around anymore, though there were some for that first show. The military stopped using (and buying) them a long time ago except for the Navy's Blue Angles C-130 Fat Albert (which I did see doing a JATO takeoff). But once the supply system ran out of those, that was it, no more.

    • @rooknado
      @rooknado Год назад +5

      @@johnknapp952 what are JATO bottles?

    • @bayardkyyako7427
      @bayardkyyako7427 Год назад +10

      @@rooknado Basically military grade bottle rockets. Quite big and were first successfuly launched in 1941.

    • @obsoleteprofessor2034
      @obsoleteprofessor2034 Год назад +6

      @@rooknado Basically, a rocket in a bottle attached to side of an airplane to boost takeoff.
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/JATO

    • @mikesixx7655
      @mikesixx7655 Год назад +7

      @@rooknado think instead of a catapult to launch a plane its rockets. It stands for Jet Assisted Take Off and its hilarious to watch

  • @erinhoffer9920
    @erinhoffer9920 Год назад +97

    Leave it to the Germans to not only get the lead that thin, but one up the other companies and say they will get it even thinner

    • @KonradTheWizzard
      @KonradTheWizzard Год назад +16

      We are metric over here. 1/1000 inch is 0.0254 mm or 25.4µm which is a bit odd for us. A typical metric foil thicknesses is 15µm - that is about 0.0006 inch - I guess that's what they sent. If it oxidizes a bit it will probably be measured at 0.0007 inch. They probably went into their inventory and looked for the first standard thing thinner than what Mythbusters specified.
      Why do they even produce this thin stuff and call it a "standard thickness"? We are in the EU. Accoding to the EU lead in any form is evil (because it can be in some forms). So customers who need to line something with lead will ask for the thinnest possible foil that still does the job, because it will be hard enough to get permission to use it anyway - the thicker it is the more difficult the paperwork.

    • @itwasagoodideaatthetime7980
      @itwasagoodideaatthetime7980 Год назад +6

      @@KonradTheWizzard I think they were referring to the rather well known stereotype about German over efficiency.

    • @itwasagoodideaatthetime7980
      @itwasagoodideaatthetime7980 Год назад +1

      Gotta love them for being an overly efficient people.

    • @KonradTheWizzard
      @KonradTheWizzard Год назад +11

      @@itwasagoodideaatthetime7980 While I appreciate your admiration of our efficiency, I've got to admit that most of the time we are just running away from the bureaucracy. We German engineers prefer to solve seemingly impossible problems over filling out a stack of forms to explain why it cannot be done... 😁
      Efficiency comes into play when we solve the problem before anyone can get the "brilliant" idea to make up a form about it, because the form will inevitably be worse than the original problem. A functioning bureaucracy can be a great motivator to avoid it...

    • @mattkennedy9308
      @mattkennedy9308 Год назад +2

      @@KonradTheWizzard
      I can see that.
      Well, we can engineer the product better or we can fill out forms...

  • @AgentSn0wWhite
    @AgentSn0wWhite 10 месяцев назад +2

    Just love how passionate you are about everything

  • @leon_De_Grelle
    @leon_De_Grelle Год назад +10

    You're rocking the mad scientist vibe harder than ever. Love it.

  • @ChefHazmat
    @ChefHazmat Год назад +67

    Another item that was apparently hard for them to get because they did a whole segment on it being hard to find was the pig stomach with the esophagus still attached. I want to say it was for the pop rocks and cola myth.

    • @Oshroth
      @Oshroth Год назад

      Yes

    • @BJGvideos
      @BJGvideos Год назад +2

      You'd think all they'd have to do was ask at a pig farm

    • @katrinareads
      @katrinareads Год назад +6

      It was. I rewatched that about a month ago, and I think Jamie said it was apparently illegal or a hazardous material or something. That was also Episode 1, though, so I'm sure some things became easier to get once people wanted to help the Mythbusters do their super cool things.

    • @BJGvideos
      @BJGvideos Год назад +2

      @@katrinareads A pig stomach plus esophagus was a hazardous material?

    • @Defirence
      @Defirence Год назад

      @@BJGvideos consider the COVID-19 pandemic and Swine flu ..

  • @worldchamp1999
    @worldchamp1999 Год назад +43

    you know im always trying to find contributing factors as to why i turned out the way i did, and its funny i completely forgot how obsessed with mythbusters i was in jr high and high school. and its crazy how much of it rubbed off on me unbeknownst to me.

    • @katrinareads
      @katrinareads Год назад +4

      I skipped taking physics in high school, not due to lack of intelligence or schedule space but because the teacher was boring. I promised my mom I'd watch Mythbusters every week if I didn't have to take physics because I'd still learn what I'd need to know for college. Sure enough, I get to one of the mandatory science courses for elementary education majors, and the other students who hadn't taken physics would come to me for help during the physics unit, not to anyone who'd actually taken physics. My entire way I figured it out in college was just rewriting every scenario in my head as a Mythbusters experiment.

    • @irregularassassin6380
      @irregularassassin6380 Год назад +2

      @@katrinareads That's honestly brilliant. When I was a kid, I had an educational game about dinosaurs on my parents' laptop. I completely beat the thing at least five times, and absorbed every single fact about dinosaurs in it. By Grade 1, I was at the point where I already knew things that were in Nova science programs, and I was able to interact with museum curators on an intellectual level about dinosaur (and other fossil) exhibits on a trip to Australia.
      If you give children, who are eager to learn, educational content that is also highly enjoyable, they will absorb astonishing amounts of knowledge. That's literally the principle upon which _Sesame Street_ operates.

  • @chillindillon1889
    @chillindillon1889 Год назад +1

    This is so damn cool. I just came across your videos a couple days ago and I'm loving it. I was looking for a video of you and Grant and your videos came up. What a great ass surprise!!! I'm a fam like so many millions of people and it's such a delight to hear you talk about the Myth and ILM days. Love it!!!

  • @King_krobit
    @King_krobit 12 дней назад +1

    Adam’s ability to remember so much is incredible that’s all I want is to have a wonderful life and be keep the memories with me up until my time comes to an end.

  • @SimuLord
    @SimuLord Год назад +19

    My one biggest regret in life is not applying myself when I was younger toward a path that would let me satisfy my infinite curiosity.
    Not many opportunities to venture into the unknown with an accounting degree.
    There's a life lesson in there that I hope young folks learn.

    • @matthewrose2908
      @matthewrose2908 Год назад +1

      Even in the science and engineering fields, it’s still challenging to find a career where your creativity isn’t stifled by red tape and bureaucracy. You’re honestly likely in a good position of financially security which will eventually give you the free time to pursue your interests outside of a work environment if you so choose.

  • @thesusuncle5607
    @thesusuncle5607 Год назад +14

    Man, I Rember watching you growing up you made me feel like I could do anything. You have no idea how many people you have inspired and helped my biggest dream is to have a shop like yours one day and just wake up and build what's in my mind! Thank you so much!!

  • @firemanjeff911
    @firemanjeff911 Год назад

    I grew up in Indy. I used to spend at least 2 weeks of May at the track. I've also had the opportunity to go around the track once in my own car, once on my Harley, and twice running around it for the mini marathon.

  • @sdswood3457
    @sdswood3457 5 дней назад +1

    I could listen to Adam talk all day. Mythbusters was and will always be one of my all time favorite shows, and it will always sadden me to know folks didnt always get along

  • @SeanByramTheOneAndOnly
    @SeanByramTheOneAndOnly Год назад +25

    I love what you had to say about the ethos of the bomb squad folks you've worked with. Though I burnt out on the industry, I experienced much the same ethos in cybersecurity/infosec/CNO, and even though I'm now (mostly) out of that work, it's still very much something I bring to all the work I do.

    • @JustinBishop97
      @JustinBishop97 Год назад +1

      Having trained in EOD school in the military, but ultimately failing out, I have never had the camaraderie I had with my fellow classmates and instructors that I had there. Nothing else compared.

  • @jamisonr
    @jamisonr Год назад +3

    Love you're enthusiasm over everything Adam. These stories are always great!

  • @brianb760
    @brianb760 9 месяцев назад +1

    i was looking away from my computer when this came on so i had no idea what was going to be next in queue; A behind-the-scenes MythBusters livestream is just about the farthest thing from what I could imagine it would've been. I mean dude it's been like a decade since I saw ANYTHING from that show. Loved it! Just never kept up with it.
    Glad this came on though because MAN, Adam is a truly engaging speaker and storyteller. I would looooove to see him do a one-man show type thing and just tell stories live because he's great at it.

  • @ZachMauch
    @ZachMauch Год назад +1

    Sometime in my lifetime I want to hang out with you Adam. I don't know how or when or whatever, but I just want to buy you a drink and let you ramble. You honestly shaped me so much during my college life and influenced who I am as an Engineer today. Thank you for all you have done for science and making people curious. God Bless!!!

  • @gloriouslyimperfect
    @gloriouslyimperfect Год назад +21

    Andretti is still doing the ride alongs into his 80s!

    • @RustyDroid
      @RustyDroid Год назад

      Just drove an F1 car at Laguna Seca yesterday!

  • @juddphillips
    @juddphillips Год назад +8

    It is possible to buy and use c4 but it is extremely difficult. First you have to get a state issued buyers license, a storage license, a licensed magazine, licensed blaster, and an approved blasting area. I use to work for a company that did explosion welding and we used c4 and c2 all the time.

    • @tomhenry897
      @tomhenry897 8 месяцев назад

      Not that hard to buy

  • @joshhomer4367
    @joshhomer4367 10 месяцев назад +3

    Amazing recall by Jamie! Not sure if he was prepping before this episode but still crazy memory.

  • @billjohnson69
    @billjohnson69 Год назад

    We were at the Indy race at Laguna Seca this fall and he was still out there. He flew by us on a little Honda scooter at the race and it was so cool

  • @naut96
    @naut96 Год назад +19

    I love how often these questions just come back around to lead balloon

  • @ironwolfstudios2857
    @ironwolfstudios2857 Год назад +36

    I also seem to recall you saying in the last season that one of the all time most difficult objects to acquire ever in the show's history was the train car for "Tanker Crush".
    Good times

  • @josephbilling
    @josephbilling Год назад +1

    Adam, I'd like to say thanks. Mythbusters stoked my interest in science and I've remained curious and I think(/hope) I always will. Cheers from Australia

  • @Legomanfred
    @Legomanfred 11 месяцев назад +1

    I love that Hellboys gun ( you made) is sitting unobtrusively on the desk while you're talking. Lovely. 👍❤️💪

  • @usmcmech96
    @usmcmech96 Год назад +29

    I find the trouble acquiring a grenade due to safety very ironic since everyone in USMC boot camp got to throw one. It was quite a rush, and it's a lot bigger explosion than I would have thought.

    • @88porpoise
      @88porpoise 10 месяцев назад +1

      Any member of the USMC is liable to come across a grenade in the course of their duties. Knowing what it can do and how to handle it is pretty important, even if your duties don't entail carrying one.
      The vast majority of civilians in the US will never be in a position to encounter a grenade.
      The big difference is likely that all kinds of explosives have various legal civilian use cases. A grenade is explicitly a weapon with the sole purpose of killing.

    • @russellstyles5381
      @russellstyles5381 8 месяцев назад +1

      Army too. Bet they might be able to get permission to watch some recruits or grunts throw one. I've never seen that, and I threw one. Windows on the blast wall were small and rare. A recruit isn't going to be able to watch. I saw the bottom of the foxhole.
      Noisy.

  • @finkelmana
    @finkelmana Год назад +51

    Speaking of Indy cars, there is one myth I suggested for decades since MythBusters started, but they never did: Can an Indy car actually drive upside down? Yes, its probably not safe to test, not to mention building an upside down section of track... but I sure would have liked to see it.

    • @jacklougheed4561
      @jacklougheed4561 Год назад +13

      The main problems are trying to get the oil to the bottom of the motor when it collects at the top of the motor, potential of the brakes un bleeding themselves as the fluid would drain from the master cylinder into the reservoir, having a team lend you a car, and risk dropping it upside down on its lid at presumably 100+mph, and finding a spot to build a track where you can safely get up to speed, make the transition, get some shots, and get back.
      Not that they couldn’t do it, but the math is simple if you are only taking that question at the level of downforce that they are making. The practical side is way more complicated as gravity fights all of the mechanical components in the car.

    • @finkelmana
      @finkelmana Год назад +1

      @@jacklougheed4561 Very good points.

    • @fryerlawrence
      @fryerlawrence Год назад +2

      Ooooo! OOOO! Like Hot Wheels!

    • @Shakes-Off-Fear
      @Shakes-Off-Fear Год назад +2

      The other aspect that one would have to consider is that, yes, on the ground, the car would generate enough downforce at less than 100 mph exceeds the weight of the car which would mean that it would stick to the ceiling HOWEVER, the gravity which pulled that weight towards the road surface is now inverted on the ceiling and is now trying to pull the car away from the surface. As any F1 or Indy driver will tell you, grip is absolutely crucial and any loss in grip is liable to make the rear wheels spin, which is bad news.

    • @AutoAnomoly
      @AutoAnomoly Год назад +1

      @@jacklougheed4561 the motor is most likely a dry sump for high lateral loads the main issue I would see is fuel starvation. With so many of the claims made over the years from many manufacturers and companies I would love to have someone actually do it

  • @OldManTheseDays
    @OldManTheseDays Год назад

    I used to live in Roseville, CA. Roseville has a very large railyard and military supply trains used to go through all the time. In 1973 there was a huge explosion of munitions bound for the Vietnam war (you can look up the story). Housing estates started going in around the rail yards in the late 80s and throughout the 90s. For years they were finding un-detonated explosives all over the place while building/excavating.

  • @eggbertreviews1477
    @eggbertreviews1477 Год назад +1

    I absolutely love all these behind the scenes videos.

  • @brickct123
    @brickct123 Год назад +39

    You can absolutely get a permit for a grenade, through the typical NFA paperwork with the ATF. Or at least you can these days.
    An SOT is required to manufacture one, and you need an FFL to be a transferee, though.

    • @thewalrus511
      @thewalrus511 Год назад +18

      I’m pretty sure the thing here is that you can’t get a permit to throw a grenade in California.

    • @Yugophoto
      @Yugophoto Год назад +21

      A big problem was california specific laws. Im sure they could have had a way easier time with any explosive myth if they travelled to other states/countries, but theres a huge expense difference between doing a shoot at a facility an hour or two away vs a multi day trip dragging a whole crew out hundreds or thousands of miles away. Plus Adam already said the insurance wasn't having it either. Even if you can find a place to do it, if your insurance won't let you then you can't film.

    • @2010RSHACKS
      @2010RSHACKS Год назад +5

      Private jet could fly the whole crew to another state in under an hour and would only be a few grand in fuel

    • @2010RSHACKS
      @2010RSHACKS Год назад +3

      Or really any private aircraft. How many times did myth busters rent helicopters and planes for ridiculous shit?

    • @rrr-mi9kv
      @rrr-mi9kv Год назад +13

      Sometimes, I wonder if people are making up abbreviations and everyone else is just going along with it.

  • @MrOvergryph
    @MrOvergryph Год назад +3

    Adam, I had no idea you uploaded every day. I miss you! Glad to see you're still in it. Do more collabs!

  • @tfp0052
    @tfp0052 Год назад +8

    I really enjoyed Mythbusters back in the day! My favorite episode was when they blew up the concrete mixer truck. I was utterly amazed that they ever got permission to do it! Great show, back when TV was actually interesting! Now days I only watch TV one night a week!

  • @JBreeze4598
    @JBreeze4598 Год назад

    I graduated from HDS in 2010, first that is a very nice complement. Second there were sever times after one of the MB shows, we would go back and try other ways to approach what happened in the show.

  • @SenorBolsa
    @SenorBolsa Год назад +7

    It's always very hard to express how intense being in a car at the limit really is, even a street car, sure, everyone thinks they have driven hard... I can imagine how brutal an Indy car is, my mustang already takes a lot out of you to be on the track for 30 minutes. if you ever get the chance to be driven around a track by a competent or professional track driver take it, you'll never look at driving the same way again.

  • @SometimesMakayla
    @SometimesMakayla Год назад +3

    Such a good story teller he is!!! People usually can't hold my attention if it's a video like this 😅

  • @kevsousa95
    @kevsousa95 11 месяцев назад

    Watching you talk about the show like this always reminds me about watching it in my child hood

  • @MM-kq5ey
    @MM-kq5ey 9 дней назад

    So genuine and suxh warmth, thank you for sharing with us. You Grant ability to anyone with an imagination❤️

  • @libertarian1637
    @libertarian1637 Год назад +27

    The “permitting” must be a California thing as in plenty of other states in the USA it can be quite easy to get and use explosives. Grenades and other destructive devices can also be procured and legally used with a simple application and tax payment. In some states you don’t even need a permit just a use, like farming; plenty of farmers use explosives from time to time without any major issues.

    • @itwasagoodideaatthetime7980
      @itwasagoodideaatthetime7980 Год назад +12

      California is the *WORST* state when it comes to Red Tape. I think New York might be second.

    • @anon_y_mousse
      @anon_y_mousse Год назад +1

      Yeah, I'd wager if they'd done it in Texas it would've been easy to get. Basically just need to inform the police and fire department that you're about to blow something up and done.

    • @unsoundmethodology
      @unsoundmethodology Год назад +12

      It does also sound like - even beyond the legal red tape - that getting the insurance company to sign off on things was the real hangup. I mean, sure, if you were filming in Texas you could probably pick your grenades up at the Circle-K, but the underwriters would still say you couldn't set them off.

    • @ExplosiveWeaponForum
      @ExplosiveWeaponForum Год назад

      dude rancher friends with blasting permits are the best. i got tired of trying to dig this post hole in prehistoric river bed shit was hard as rock called up my rancher friend and was like yo i need a blasting cap and some expolosive to make a post hole. he was like come on over shit is in the barn keys are hanging in the house for the lock box caps are in the house on a shelf in the red ammo can. poped a new post hole for a gate and it was fast and simple. dad came out and helped me set it up as he took a corse in it for civil enginering had the post in the ground before lunch

  • @SteezySteez2011
    @SteezySteez2011 Год назад +8

    Seeing him draw a blank on the word driver makes me feel so much better about doing similar things, and losing my train of thought lmao

  • @jayjackson597
    @jayjackson597 Год назад

    you may be surprised but this is one of my favorite episodes, love the back stories

  • @mateo1726
    @mateo1726 Год назад

    Just started rewatching myth buster on D+. So much fun

  • @aaronbeaston4514
    @aaronbeaston4514 Год назад +5

    So on a similar note. I hat are some of the surprising easiest things to get that you would think are more difficult to obtain.

  • @instarissicco
    @instarissicco Год назад +7

    As a combat engineer I've gotten to train a little with our local EOD squad can confirm they are some of the most curious people I have ever met it's crazy some of the things they come up with

  • @mk-jf1ux
    @mk-jf1ux Год назад

    this was fun, glad someones filmin adam and sharing these gems

  • @danieljonas6773
    @danieljonas6773 Год назад

    I love the Wilton bullet vise in the background 🛠

  • @jetskii9455
    @jetskii9455 Год назад +3

    anyone see the door on the right above the green tank open and hand come out (holding a phone maybe?) at 7:30?

  • @Tollyman69
    @Tollyman69 Год назад +7

    What about the Oil tanker train car? I heard that was difficult to find.

  • @muthsera5680
    @muthsera5680 10 месяцев назад

    always loved you guys! i would love to see you and have a coffee or beer sometime for my bucket list

  • @tylerhorton6747
    @tylerhorton6747 Год назад

    been watching u do crazy stuff since I was a kid keep up the great work lol big fan

  • @firemanjeff911
    @firemanjeff911 Год назад +3

    I went through US Army basic training, and qualified "expert" on grenades. I have never seen or held an actual live grenade. I broke my thumb early in basic, they let me finish with my class, but wouldn't let me any where near the grenade range with a cast on my hand. I was still expected to do push ups though.

  • @russjudge
    @russjudge Год назад +3

    One of my favorite explosives you detonated on Mythbusters was non-dairy creamer.

  • @Guam500
    @Guam500 13 дней назад

    That scuba story, when i was a kid i was told that happened near my town in the Uintas

  • @formulized94
    @formulized94 Год назад

    Maaaan, I love these revisits. Good times!

  • @ulvsbane
    @ulvsbane Год назад +3

    Oh, I got a ride with a Sikorsky AH-64 Skycrane when they for the first time were using a helicopter to build a large power line here in Sweden. I got a summer job building those things since my father worked for vattenfall, the agency who did that things here.
    Next time they rented a different helicopter instead, from the UK if I remember correctly. I seem to recall that they liked the UK helicopter better better since it apparently were able to keep those big two legged power tower thingies more stable (sorry, no idea what they are called in English).

  • @NoMercy13567
    @NoMercy13567 Год назад +4

    It’s actually so wild that Mythbusters we’re not allowed to have a grenade yet The Slow Mo Guys were able to get one. It’s also even more wild that it seemed like they pulled it out of nowhere like it was nothing

  • @justintyme4690
    @justintyme4690 Год назад +1

    Adam, you are such a wonderful person with a childlike curiosity for for learning and you have made millions of peoples childhood hoods full of wonders. I know you're a man of science, but I'm a person of faith and I mean this with upmost sincerity. God bless you.

  • @jacobkarns2025
    @jacobkarns2025 Год назад +1

    I genuinely appreciate this type of content. As fascinating as the show was, I can only imagine the trials and tribulations of the entire crew.

    • @ThePimperorsHumpire
      @ThePimperorsHumpire 4 дня назад

      He's like a pharaoh. After the work they bury the crew. Hi Yaw!