We hope you all enjoy this longer style video that shows more of the process of what we do behind the scenes. It was a lot of work and a lot of fun! Let us know what else you would like to see us explore on the channel with our high-speed cameras.
Congrats on getting some beautiful shots (both with the cameras and the weapons)! Watching your impact footage made me think deeply about a materials problem I'm wrestling with. Thanks!
Much appreciated! Watching your episode last year really inspired us to keep pushing this idea further and further. Feel free to reach out anytime if there’s anything we can do to help you!
Yes! Destin made it early! Now, we wait for Destin to put out a video revealing this materials problem then we get a future collaboration between BHS & SED. 💪🏻
I would like to suggest trying to find a left hand twist barrel. One left hand, one right hand. So the bullets are both spinning the same direction when they collide. To see how the mass in the center reacts. the fused portion. That could be very interesting
@BallisticHighSpeed or try 2 straight rifled barrels like the Franklin Armory Reformation barrels have. Also 2 shotgun slugs would be interesting, and a little more forgiving on impact.
@@BallisticHighSpeed .38spl HBWC... you'd basically have two miniature shotgun slugs with flat noses. Aside from that, there's also .45acp solid copper HPs out there... and *maybe* some scrounging might dig up something fancy like a tracer round. Glaser safety slugs would look spectacular, as would any of the frangibles that had the market several years ago, compressed metal powder projectiles. As far as platforms go, if you found something with a rotating or fixed barrel and a striker, your lock time and mechanical deflection would be a lot more consistent. The lighter the impact part of the FCG is, the closer the tolerances are between two guns since spring inconsistencies take less of a percentage of the force against the mechanism's inertia. Believe it or not I think I just accidentally described a Hi-Point... not sure if that's going to be timing consistent though :)
Ballistic high speed, smarter every day, demolition ranch, Taofledermaus, Kentucky ballistics, how ridiculous and mythbusters all do a collaboration... It could be a 6-hour saga at I would watch every second.
The pieces of lead spinning in mid-air are truly some of the coolest things I've seen on the internet. Thanks guys for doing the work, and congratulations.
Watching the fused peice sping in place, not dropping is absolutely facinating and mesmerizing. Huge props to you guys for achieving this with such clarify! I tip my cap to you.
Wish they would have shown the money shot in full. They kept cutting away. Why? They spent so much time and effort on capturing the shot. Why not show the spinning center piece until it fell?
I am absolutely loving the layers of safety ABOVE the content. This is exemplary and a step up from all the backyard shooting content creators. This is certainly a magnificent achievement in terms of technical ability! 16:36 is THE moment we had been waiting for all these years ever since mythbusters started playing with bullets.
Well done gentlemen. Well done. As an old time fan of the original mythbusters, I did in fact watch them collide two bullets... but even in the later years they never had this level of camera, and it took them most of a day to make work. Well done.
😂 Came here to see who else remembers Mythbusters doing this! And yes I believe Adam and Jamie would've LOVED to have the camera technology that these guys have!
I was thinking the same thing. It's like two giant planets or 45 cal bullets crashed together and created the Milky Way or any of the other galaxies out there.
NASA's jet propulsion lab does stuff like this daily. They also fire shit at like 10x the speed of a bullet which is more in line with the speeds objects in orbit are traveling. The minimum speed to even enter an orbit around the earth is roughly 17,500 miles an hour, just to not fall back towards earth and actually stay at a consistent height. I would recomment looking up, "Miracle Planet Impact" for an old video going into detail on a major theorized astroid impact from the early Earth's history. They interview some of those guys in it and even use the super ultra retard air cannon they have to shoot something at upwards of 20,000 miles an hour to demonstrate that such extreme forces and pressure literally evaporates solid rock and makes it into a super heated gas. Wild stuff really.
I'm geeking out about how well these shots demonstrate conservation of momentum, angular momentum, and energy. There's a tendency to think of collisions as chaotic. But the possible outcomes are very constrained, and these videos do a great job of illustrating what are basically the results of equations.
At 10:17 not only did the round from the black gun collide with the barrel of copper but after that it smacked the shell casing right as it was ejecting. One of the coolest shots (both from video and an actual firearm) I have ever seen. Even if you tried a 1000+ times you may never be able to recreate that!!! 😮👌
Congrats, Guys, this is an accomplishment! The two bullet bases spinning in the center was absolutely mesmerizing! Do be aware that most FMJ bullets have a lead base and the jacket is usually swaged into or curled around the very edge of the bullet. The only way to know is to pull a bullet and check. This is why you only had shards of the jacket on each side of the bullet instead of a flat copper jacket disk. If you want to get solid copper you will need to use a plated bullet, such as a Speer Gold Dot, or something like the Berry's plated bullet. Off hand I'm not aware of any semi auto pistols that have slow, soft bullets, with the exception of sub-sonic 9mm or 45 Auto. You might be able to get those from your speciality shop. Using a standard FMJ 9mm and 45 will likely see the 9mm actually shoot through the 45 ACP! You guys know that in places like Gettysburg they have found rifle and musket balls fused together that were fired from opposing lines of soldiers but it was definitely not intentional. You're probably right that you're the first to actually achieve this with bullets fired from actual handguns, so again, congratulations on this accomplishment! Cheers, jc
So glad Adam came back after the RPG accident. And I think we all appreciate the extra safety steps they're taking to prevent another accident, unlike some guntubers who do the least amount just to spit out content without any regard to their own safety and their crews.
I hope the significance of that scene, with that perfectly centered, spinning, almost free floating piece of the fused remains of both bullets, is not lost on people. That was truly something special to witness , especially from the standpoint of both the physics community as well as the ballistic information gleened that could provide insight for both weapons and ammunition manufacturing. But as someone who studies astrophysics for fun in my free time, that one shot really gives us some very real and usable info about collisions of astral bodies, and the formation and evolution of the universe, and things like galaxies and star systems. Because everything undergoes a period of major upheaval during its formative years, with countless collisions happening between the disk of gas and dust that's left after a star is formed, which ends up shaping the system and leaving the remnants that survive (and aren't ejected from the system) as planets, comets, asteroids, and moons, and we see this nowhere more in detail than here in our own solar system. To imagine the earth being formed, and to imagine things like our moon being created, by a large planet that is currently fused with earth and still deep in the core and mantle, causing a remaining chunk of both earth and the planet ( this destroyed planet now known as Theia) to just hang in space, with the momentum almost canceled out entirely, so much so that our moon rotates at the exact same speed that it orbits around us, causing the same side to always be facing us, makes this video very intriguing indeed. Because science has long assumed this to be the result of just gravitational equalization making the moon just sort of match our spin due to tidal interactions and proximity, but now I think a very real possibility exists that maybe this early planet (Theia) may have been larger than originally thought, and Earth may have been much smaller, and since both would have came from the same spinning disk of gas and dust around the sun, maybe they met each other at relatively the same speed in a nearly head on impact, essentially destroying both worlds entirely, and leaving the earth spinning in the middle of both, with a smaller portion of the left over magma and dust left to slowly coalesce into our moon, thus making it a body with no real momentum of its own that was free to grow nearly stationary and then eventually due to the laws of the conservation of momentum, became tidally locked to our natural spin speed, which is a result of this ancient collision, exactly like that spinning disk of both bullets. It is very interesting and makes one really wonder about things like why venus has no moons and spins opposite of the other planets, and so slowly that one day is almost the same time its year is, making one think it was likely a peice of a collision that so perfectly met and were so equally sizd that the remains was left with basically no spin at all, just floating there. Or Uranus, which actually lays on its side, with one pole always facing the sun for half a year, and then the other side facing it for the other half, as it rolls around the sun like a ball. It also must have really been smacked by something very large or very fast, causing it to end up with this very strange alignment to the ecliptic plane the rest of the planets are set on. This video provides a lot of insight into these mechanics of astrophysics and I hope it ends up being used by astronomers and physicists to learn more about things we will never be able to see. Also, if you watch simulations of Galactic mergers, much like what will happen billions of years when our Milky Way and Andromeda will collide, they look nearly identical to the first couple of collisions, with the onky difference being that the shrapnel doesn't just go flying off, but most stays gravitational bound and swirling around the center of the collision, eventually stabilizing and the newer larger galaxy then becomes a elliptical galaxy as we both lose our spiral shapes. What's funny is the fact that when this "collision" occurs, really nobody woukd notice because pretty much nothing will actually collide at all, due to the sheer amount of space between stars. It's very likely that our solar system, (which will be very dead and old by then) should remain untouched and if we could still exist by then, we likely wouldn't notice anything other than having a he might sky slowly change radically with new stars in it, not to mention the new for I g stars that should be everywhere after the clouds of gas and dust in both are sort of squished slightly by the gravity and then start collapsing as material that was to fat apart to collect , slowly grows in size and develops its own gravity allowing it to collect more of the gas and dust until huge portions of do many gas and dust eventually become large Starburst regions of stellar nurseries, with brand new forming stars and planets being created. It's sure to be a fascinating time that's for sure, but other than the very centers of our galaxies which should eventually merge to create an even more suoermqssive black hole, the large majority of both galaxies won't even know what hit them since most stars will just sort of pass between each other harmlessly. That's not to say collisions won't happen but they woukd be extraordinarily rare a d more likely would be stars eventually forming into binary star systems. Still, to imagine both of our central rapidly spinning supermassive black holes blackholes being lucky enough to have a head on collision, makes one wonder if they would merge and have almost no.soin anymore or if it would just cause them to start spinning close to the speed of light. But anyways, awesome job guys, I hope you get many subscriptions for your hard work. You deserved it a while ago , you deserve it so much more now. May you have many many more years of success
or two asteroids moving at the same speed and having a similar mass slamming into each other and there cores fusing together buy the sheer force of impact
Here is a what I think is an easy way to aim the guns to get the bullets to hit, use bore sight lasers and a blank sheet of paper. Now if you are using different calibers then you will have to calculate the trigger pull delay based on speed difference.
As a Canadian whos never shot a gun before, seeing all the things you've filmed really peaked my interest in firearms and firearm designs and my tism found a new ride
THis was honestly one of the most impressive things I've ever seen. Particularly the bases telling gravity they were busy. I love how casually Adam says "let me rewrite the software real quick". I know how much work this took, conceptually.
To achieve something unique, such as a mid-air collision of two bullets fired from actual guns, so that a piece from both bullets pauses there, spinning in frame? That is world-record achievement. Congratulations!
Serious congrats on this guys. You worked hard to make this look easy and I can see the well earned joy and pride in what you did in how you react. Again. Congratulations!
Holy shit you guys did some amazing work, that first nose on collision was as perfect of a disk as it could possibly be. Frame that with like the trajectory diagram as the background! Keep it up, you guys are awesome.
Well, I was going to save this for the weekend. Couldn't wait! That was very impressive, guys. The first impacts were great. Very much like the Big Bang throwing planets out from a center star. Pretty danged sweet!! That center melding of 2 lead cores was awesome!!! Then you could tell when they were a little off center and the next ones would move a little as those cores stuck together and flipped around. Looking forward to the next version, Adam. Will be interesting to see what has more power to overcome the other side. Small and fast or fat and heavy. This brings a whole different meaning to Power Factor!! Great show, both of you! And fun seeing some guest with G Van and Nick!
Absolutely incredible, and Bryce said exactly what I was thinking: it doesn't look real. It's so good it looks fake. The bullets shatter into thin sheets in the perfect way, and it's just so cool! Well done, lads.
You guys are awesome..!!! I mean you guys are showing things which one could have only imagined. Splitting bullets to colliding bullets, that’s amazing..!!! All the best…!!! 🤘🏻
Wow just wow… I think every person who shoots firearms has imagined what you two just did… this is spectacular thank you for some excellent high speed❤
In a decade time you guys will be making the bullets collide perfectly dead on precision to something stupid like nano mil apart (this video is pretty much perfection I can’t deny that and it’s really impressive!) awesome work lads :)
Just beautiful. That perfect hit was just... hmm... *chef kiss*. I hardly believe someone is gonna be able to recreate that perfect spinning in place situation there in a long time.
16:25 This shot with the sound design is so sick. This is such a great visual of how many lead particles come out the barrel. If you could do it, it would be so cool if you could do a cross section of Barrett and/or the cross section of a bullet igniting in the casing an traveling down the barrel.
Material science is fascinating to me and watching those metal slugs collide and liquify in the most geometrically pleasing way was just absolutely jaw dropping a worlds first for sure you guys are legends stay safe, stay beautiful all love !
that piece frozen in mid air was pretty incredible the amount of precision in the machining of the barrel and ammo is pretty insane for such a thing to even be possible
What’s amazing about the 1st collision is the energy dump, for not having full frontal contact the bullets fragmented spectacularly. Overall the whole video was fantastic.
Thank you all for doing this. I know the time it took to get this right. Just wanna let you know I used this to teach my two sons science. I homeschool my boys and this is an excellent video for our science project! You have shown my boys things I never had the opportunity to see growing up. THANK YOU!
Guys that was amazing well done !! Loved to have seen what the rounds would have done in a bullet proof tunnel which is a slightly wider diameter than the rounds
Your scientific efforts are not only entertaining BUT much appreciated for those of us who’s minds never stop spinning with ideas or concepts. You are a unique group of individuals. I look forward to future content and visuals. 💯!!!
You guys mentioned Wanted at the start, but I was thinking back to The Shadow. There was one shootout scene with 2 characters firing at each other from across the room. And their end result was the bullets perfectly colliding and dropping to the ground after impact
We hope you all enjoy this longer style video that shows more of the process of what we do behind the scenes. It was a lot of work and a lot of fun! Let us know what else you would like to see us explore on the channel with our high-speed cameras.
Could do rifles with a similar setup and use fine thread bolts and nuts to do ultrafine adjustments.
The behind the scenes makes a fantastic video better! I especially like the acknowledgement of other creators’ attempts.
Awesome!!!!
Thanks for doing what you do. Love the shows.
Do solid copper slugs out of 45-70’s next!🙏🙏🙏
We def do thank you for the entertainment ❤
Congrats on getting some beautiful shots (both with the cameras and the weapons)! Watching your impact footage made me think deeply about a materials problem I'm wrestling with. Thanks!
Much appreciated! Watching your episode last year really inspired us to keep pushing this idea further and further. Feel free to reach out anytime if there’s anything we can do to help you!
Now that would be an amazing collab🎉❤
I'm curious about that materials problem now.
Please don't advertise for BetterHelp like some channels do.
I’m definitely digging this style. I love seeing the creative process
Yes! Destin made it early! Now, we wait for Destin to put out a video revealing this materials problem then we get a future collaboration between BHS & SED. 💪🏻
10:14 Shooting the other gun's ejecting case is SO COOL!
Your comment needs to be pinned
That's so sick! Tysm for the timestamp
I would like to suggest trying to find a left hand twist barrel. One left hand, one right hand. So the bullets are both spinning the same direction when they collide. To see how the mass in the center reacts. the fused portion. That could be very interesting
Definitely a great idea!
Definitely need to retry with this
@BallisticHighSpeed it might just keep that "spalling" all hitting the back board ❤😂
@BallisticHighSpeed or try 2 straight rifled barrels like the Franklin Armory Reformation barrels have. Also 2 shotgun slugs would be interesting, and a little more forgiving on impact.
@@BallisticHighSpeed .38spl HBWC... you'd basically have two miniature shotgun slugs with flat noses.
Aside from that, there's also .45acp solid copper HPs out there... and *maybe* some scrounging might dig up something fancy like a tracer round. Glaser safety slugs would look spectacular, as would any of the frangibles that had the market several years ago, compressed metal powder projectiles.
As far as platforms go, if you found something with a rotating or fixed barrel and a striker, your lock time and mechanical deflection would be a lot more consistent. The lighter the impact part of the FCG is, the closer the tolerances are between two guns since spring inconsistencies take less of a percentage of the force against the mechanism's inertia.
Believe it or not I think I just accidentally described a Hi-Point... not sure if that's going to be timing consistent though :)
This is by far one of the coolest things I’ve ever seen
I love your shorts😂😂
How’s Fenton?
Even 300kfps wouldn't have captured me clicking on this video when I got the notification.
Underrated comment!
Now try smaller trougg bigger bullet like that movie when jon cena get "killed"
No kidding! Gratz Mr first
@@shenkker1 The Slow-Mo Guys did that one already. Not with guns unfortunately
Best comment! Very smart lol
Ballistic high speed, smarter every day, demolition ranch, Taofledermaus, Kentucky ballistics, how ridiculous and mythbusters all do a collaboration... It could be a 6-hour saga at I would watch every second.
Add the slow mo guys
The pieces of lead spinning in mid-air are truly some of the coolest things I've seen on the internet. Thanks guys for doing the work, and congratulations.
Watching the fused peice sping in place, not dropping is absolutely facinating and mesmerizing. Huge props to you guys for achieving this with such clarify! I tip my cap to you.
Wish they would have shown the money shot in full. They kept cutting away. Why? They spent so much time and effort on capturing the shot. Why not show the spinning center piece until it fell?
Spinning
The core of the newly fused bullets spinning in place is one of the coolest things I've ever seen and I don't say that lightly
What did I just witness, holly cow guys that was insane. What a way to do the 50th episode. Here is to a million plus more please.
Thanks!
I am absolutely loving the layers of safety ABOVE the content. This is exemplary and a step up from all the backyard shooting content creators.
This is certainly a magnificent achievement in terms of technical ability!
16:36 is THE moment we had been waiting for all these years ever since mythbusters started playing with bullets.
Yes. Definitely a cut above the rest
@@robinpage2730 one could say, a *bullseye* above the rest? :P
Definitely! Also really like how everything is loudly verbalized and then acknowledged.
Well done gentlemen. Well done. As an old time fan of the original mythbusters, I did in fact watch them collide two bullets... but even in the later years they never had this level of camera, and it took them most of a day to make work. Well done.
😂 Came here to see who else remembers Mythbusters doing this! And yes I believe Adam and Jamie would've LOVED to have the camera technology that these guys have!
9:30 11:56 14:49 17:17 20:23 21:39 21:04 Collisions
Thanks a lot dear
TY
Wanted was a good reference. I personally like in RED, when he shoots the RPG out of the air with the big 45 revolver.
I would imagine space debris researchers are loving all of this high definition, high-speed footage of bullet on bullet impacts
I was thinking the same thing. It's like two giant planets or 45 cal bullets crashed together and created the Milky Way or any of the other galaxies out there.
NASA's jet propulsion lab does stuff like this daily. They also fire shit at like 10x the speed of a bullet which is more in line with the speeds objects in orbit are traveling. The minimum speed to even enter an orbit around the earth is roughly 17,500 miles an hour, just to not fall back towards earth and actually stay at a consistent height. I would recomment looking up, "Miracle Planet Impact" for an old video going into detail on a major theorized astroid impact from the early Earth's history. They interview some of those guys in it and even use the super ultra retard air cannon they have to shoot something at upwards of 20,000 miles an hour to demonstrate that such extreme forces and pressure literally evaporates solid rock and makes it into a super heated gas. Wild stuff really.
Then they can get a job changing blinker fluid.
I'm geeking out about how well these shots demonstrate conservation of momentum, angular momentum, and energy.
There's a tendency to think of collisions as chaotic. But the possible outcomes are very constrained, and these videos do a great job of illustrating what are basically the results of equations.
Amazing video guys 🤘 glad I got to watch it live 🤯😂
I’m still convinced you being on set is half the reason it even worked!
At 10:17 not only did the round from the black gun collide with the barrel of copper but after that it smacked the shell casing right as it was ejecting. One of the coolest shots (both from video and an actual firearm) I have ever seen. Even if you tried a 1000+ times you may never be able to recreate that!!! 😮👌
are we going to see colliding rpg's
last time we saw one it didnt go well.
Not funny lol😂
I'am in.
Too soon dawg
The last time we had RPGs in this, bad stinking shit happened 💀
You can still see the scars on Adam's arms actually.
I watched so many slowmos, but this is by far the coolest video! Collision 3 had that fused part spinning in a single position was the pinnacle!
“Okay bro, you gotta SHOOT MY BULLET or we BOTH DIE. LETS DO THIS!”
16:35 is actually the coolest thing I've ever seen.
I’ve seen a handful of bullets hitting bullets, but that shot with the center spinning is the most intense I’ve ever seen. Wild
*Timestamp?!*
@@TheAbysssarian 17:32
@@Daman004 *Thanks* 👍🏿
Always love seeing how much gas/powder pushes its way past the projectile in the barrel rifling before the projectile exits the muzzle.
Congrats, Guys, this is an accomplishment! The two bullet bases spinning in the center was absolutely mesmerizing! Do be aware that most FMJ bullets have a lead base and the jacket is usually swaged into or curled around the very edge of the bullet. The only way to know is to pull a bullet and check. This is why you only had shards of the jacket on each side of the bullet instead of a flat copper jacket disk. If you want to get solid copper you will need to use a plated bullet, such as a Speer Gold Dot, or something like the Berry's plated bullet.
Off hand I'm not aware of any semi auto pistols that have slow, soft bullets, with the exception of sub-sonic 9mm or 45 Auto. You might be able to get those from your speciality shop. Using a standard FMJ 9mm and 45 will likely see the 9mm actually shoot through the 45 ACP!
You guys know that in places like Gettysburg they have found rifle and musket balls fused together that were fired from opposing lines of soldiers but it was definitely not intentional. You're probably right that you're the first to actually achieve this with bullets fired from actual handguns, so again, congratulations on this accomplishment!
Cheers,
jc
11:55 сollision
So glad Adam came back after the RPG accident. And I think we all appreciate the extra safety steps they're taking to prevent another accident, unlike some guntubers who do the least amount just to spit out content without any regard to their own safety and their crews.
I hope the significance of that scene, with that perfectly centered, spinning, almost free floating piece of the fused remains of both bullets, is not lost on people. That was truly something special to witness , especially from the standpoint of both the physics community as well as the ballistic information gleened that could provide insight for both weapons and ammunition manufacturing. But as someone who studies astrophysics for fun in my free time, that one shot really gives us some very real and usable info about collisions of astral bodies, and the formation and evolution of the universe, and things like galaxies and star systems. Because everything undergoes a period of major upheaval during its formative years, with countless collisions happening between the disk of gas and dust that's left after a star is formed, which ends up shaping the system and leaving the remnants that survive (and aren't ejected from the system) as planets, comets, asteroids, and moons, and we see this nowhere more in detail than here in our own solar system. To imagine the earth being formed, and to imagine things like our moon being created, by a large planet that is currently fused with earth and still deep in the core and mantle, causing a remaining chunk of both earth and the planet ( this destroyed planet now known as Theia) to just hang in space, with the momentum almost canceled out entirely, so much so that our moon rotates at the exact same speed that it orbits around us, causing the same side to always be facing us, makes this video very intriguing indeed. Because science has long assumed this to be the result of just gravitational equalization making the moon just sort of match our spin due to tidal interactions and proximity, but now I think a very real possibility exists that maybe this early planet (Theia) may have been larger than originally thought, and Earth may have been much smaller, and since both would have came from the same spinning disk of gas and dust around the sun, maybe they met each other at relatively the same speed in a nearly head on impact, essentially destroying both worlds entirely, and leaving the earth spinning in the middle of both, with a smaller portion of the left over magma and dust left to slowly coalesce into our moon, thus making it a body with no real momentum of its own that was free to grow nearly stationary and then eventually due to the laws of the conservation of momentum, became tidally locked to our natural spin speed, which is a result of this ancient collision, exactly like that spinning disk of both bullets. It is very interesting and makes one really wonder about things like why venus has no moons and spins opposite of the other planets, and so slowly that one day is almost the same time its year is, making one think it was likely a peice of a collision that so perfectly met and were so equally sizd that the remains was left with basically no spin at all, just floating there. Or Uranus, which actually lays on its side, with one pole always facing the sun for half a year, and then the other side facing it for the other half, as it rolls around the sun like a ball. It also must have really been smacked by something very large or very fast, causing it to end up with this very strange alignment to the ecliptic plane the rest of the planets are set on. This video provides a lot of insight into these mechanics of astrophysics and I hope it ends up being used by astronomers and physicists to learn more about things we will never be able to see. Also, if you watch simulations of Galactic mergers, much like what will happen billions of years when our Milky Way and Andromeda will collide, they look nearly identical to the first couple of collisions, with the onky difference being that the shrapnel doesn't just go flying off, but most stays gravitational bound and swirling around the center of the collision, eventually stabilizing and the newer larger galaxy then becomes a elliptical galaxy as we both lose our spiral shapes. What's funny is the fact that when this "collision" occurs, really nobody woukd notice because pretty much nothing will actually collide at all, due to the sheer amount of space between stars. It's very likely that our solar system, (which will be very dead and old by then) should remain untouched and if we could still exist by then, we likely wouldn't notice anything other than having a he might sky slowly change radically with new stars in it, not to mention the new for I g stars that should be everywhere after the clouds of gas and dust in both are sort of squished slightly by the gravity and then start collapsing as material that was to fat apart to collect , slowly grows in size and develops its own gravity allowing it to collect more of the gas and dust until huge portions of do many gas and dust eventually become large Starburst regions of stellar nurseries, with brand new forming stars and planets being created. It's sure to be a fascinating time that's for sure, but other than the very centers of our galaxies which should eventually merge to create an even more suoermqssive black hole, the large majority of both galaxies won't even know what hit them since most stars will just sort of pass between each other harmlessly. That's not to say collisions won't happen but they woukd be extraordinarily rare a d more likely would be stars eventually forming into binary star systems. Still, to imagine both of our central rapidly spinning supermassive black holes blackholes being lucky enough to have a head on collision, makes one wonder if they would merge and have almost no.soin anymore or if it would just cause them to start spinning close to the speed of light. But anyways, awesome job guys, I hope you get many subscriptions for your hard work. You deserved it a while ago , you deserve it so much more now. May you have many many more years of success
or two asteroids moving at the same speed and having a similar mass slamming into each other and there cores fusing together buy the sheer force of impact
You guys won the Internet today. I think the best YT vid I've seen thus far. Couldn't believe that spinning bit. Wow! Dudes! The professionalism.
Here is a what I think is an easy way to aim the guns to get the bullets to hit, use bore sight lasers and a blank sheet of paper. Now if you are using different calibers then you will have to calculate the trigger pull delay based on speed difference.
the spark at 21:15 is pretty cool
I'm super curious if it was before they collided, like the air friction caused a explosion. Wish I could do a frame by frame with the raw footage
@@justapanda6716 Nah, i think its the very first moment the bullets touch, and just instantly vaporize their tips
Cool! Not easy to see sparks from copper impacts, it is a lot of concentrated energy.
@@justapanda6716 signs on pc
I think most of us missed that. That was definitely cool!
Holy cow man… just WOW!!!!! I don’t know what other content on the internet can top this. wtf wow!!!!!!!
No skits, no childish bs. Just a couple of likable guys making really high quality content. This is my favorite gun channel by a mile.
13:24
I like these guys a lot since they also leave out most of the politics, but we can't sit here and act like they don't crack a joke or two.
@@jamesofthekaijukompendium Right... But they aren't doing little kid voice like Kentucky, trying to grab the 11 year old COD demo.
Only thing I don’t like is the tactical clothing. Why are you dressing up like a soldier? Makes you cringe
@@dustinf11 damn bro u mad? What'd Scott ever do to you? He found his niche with his fans and it works, don't have to be such a hater lol
As a Canadian whos never shot a gun before, seeing all the things you've filmed really peaked my interest in firearms and firearm designs and my tism found a new ride
Time to defect! ;D
Then get a pal
THis was honestly one of the most impressive things I've ever seen. Particularly the bases telling gravity they were busy.
I love how casually Adam says "let me rewrite the software real quick". I know how much work this took, conceptually.
Once again you produced some of the craziest footage possible, genuinely impressive. Great work as usual guys, thanks for all your content)
Come on over from unsub, this is incredible! The mathing involved is insane by itself. It's incredible that you managed to accomplish this!
To achieve something unique, such as a mid-air collision of two bullets fired from actual guns, so that a piece from both bullets pauses there, spinning in frame? That is world-record achievement. Congratulations!
Serious congrats on this guys. You worked hard to make this look easy and I can see the well earned joy and pride in what you did in how you react. Again. Congratulations!
Удивительно, процесс слияния и разлёта пуль - завораживает!
1.5 year of work and all the math and all the custom setup and software. Why haven't you got 1M subs yet man? I wish I could subscribe multiple times.
They may not be to 1m yet but it feels like they blew up really really fast being to almost 700k already
Holy shit you guys did some amazing work, that first nose on collision was as perfect of a disk as it could possibly be.
Frame that with like the trajectory diagram as the background! Keep it up, you guys are awesome.
Do hollow point next.
That little disc sitting there spinning in mid air at an absolute ferocious rate was amazing to see!
Thank you guys for being awesome 👌
2 50BMG are next?
that would destroy both goddamm setup
That's how black holes are made 😂
@@user-ou6lj3hc4qwhat’s God got to do with it?
Будет взрыв, начало новой вселенной.
Well, I was going to save this for the weekend. Couldn't wait! That was very impressive, guys. The first impacts were great. Very much like the Big Bang throwing planets out from a center star. Pretty danged sweet!! That center melding of 2 lead cores was awesome!!! Then you could tell when they were a little off center and the next ones would move a little as those cores stuck together and flipped around.
Looking forward to the next version, Adam. Will be interesting to see what has more power to overcome the other side. Small and fast or fat and heavy. This brings a whole different meaning to Power Factor!! Great show, both of you! And fun seeing some guest with G Van and Nick!
Definitely best bullet collision on internet filmed in slow motion *ever* , this happens only once !!! Congrats Guys, you rock 👊🎯🎯🎯
Absolutely incredible, and Bryce said exactly what I was thinking: it doesn't look real. It's so good it looks fake. The bullets shatter into thin sheets in the perfect way, and it's just so cool! Well done, lads.
You guys are awesome..!!!
I mean you guys are showing things which one could have only imagined. Splitting bullets to colliding bullets, that’s amazing..!!!
All the best…!!! 🤘🏻
The amount of math that goes into something like this is just mental. Absolute champions
Thanks to you guys, I've become a ballistics nerd. You've broadened my horizons as it pertains to shooting.
Amazing! Great shots. This has happened on the battlefield. They found two bullets fused at Antietam. This video makes that history even more amazing.
Thank you guys-amazing content as always. Just love to see the dedication to your craft and also the process of getting amazing results.
OMFG! I'd so watch that over and over again that piece that was spinning in mid air is like gravity defying to the max
You guys are my favorite 👊 Excellent job and thank you for your exhaustive efforts 👌
It's like watching a galaxy getting formed when 2 bullets collide, fantastic!
This is, by far, the best episode to date. The quality of the video, the personalities, the sound effects, what was captured. Amazing!!
the farts
This channel needs millions of subs. Some of the best content on RUclips!
Video had to start here. 11:27
مبدعين...انكم تحققون مافكرت به طويلا وتجعلونه حقيقة....شكرا لكم من كل قلبي ...
start in 12:00
Thankyou 🎉
12:30 absolutely incredible shot, guys you're killing it!
0:16 in todays video is it possible to touch tips
Docking 101, presented by BHS.😂
Getting the perfect shot in 10 tries really speaks to the amount and quality of preparation.
Who else is here from Unsubscribe podcast?
Wow just wow… I think every person who shoots firearms has imagined what you two just did… this is spectacular thank you for some excellent high speed❤
this has to be the most impressive thing i ever saw in any gun channel. you should be proud!
the air dieseling the moment before the impact is so cool. I think this is probably the coolest thing I have ever seen
One of the most amazing slow-mo footages I've ever seen. fantastically done!
That head-on shot probably created a universe that only existed for a fraction of a second.
In a decade time you guys will be making the bullets collide perfectly dead on precision to something stupid like nano mil apart (this video is pretty much perfection I can’t deny that and it’s really impressive!) awesome work lads :)
Just beautiful. That perfect hit was just... hmm... *chef kiss*. I hardly believe someone is gonna be able to recreate that perfect spinning in place situation there in a long time.
17:35 This is the moment an entire lifecycle, from creation to extinction, of a universe was caught in slow motion 😂
One of the best short clips of all time.
16:25
This shot with the sound design is so sick. This is such a great visual of how many lead particles come out the barrel. If you could do it, it would be so cool if you could do a cross section of Barrett and/or the cross section of a bullet igniting in the casing an traveling down the barrel.
That's pretty crazy, I would never have imagined the two bullets would merge into one and spin in place like that, looks like two planet's colliding.
I would love to get the ultra high speed close up shots on repeat as an animated desktop background. That would be awesome.
When to 2 rounds fused to one another, what it looked like to me was seeing the Death Star explode. Great episode guys.
Material science is fascinating to me and watching those metal slugs collide and liquify in the most geometrically pleasing way was just absolutely jaw dropping a worlds first for sure you guys are legends stay safe, stay beautiful all love !
This has got to be the peak, guys. Been looking for a "spark" and it seems to be clearest at just a moment after 21:49 Top!!!
Unbelievable. Amazing work. You won the Internet guys, this is truly truly amazing. What a time to be alive!!!
that piece frozen in mid air was pretty incredible the amount of precision in the machining of the barrel and ammo is pretty insane for such a thing to even be possible
What’s amazing about the 1st collision is the energy dump, for not having full frontal contact the bullets fragmented spectacularly. Overall the whole video was fantastic.
My god those high speed shots were gorgeous! I really appreciate the shots of the bullets leaving the barrels too!
Just imagine the day you step the ladder till 50 cal colliding... is insane. And dangerous too! Amazing content as always!
That was bad ass!! Definitely need to try this (safely😉) with different calibers, hallow points, incendiary rounds, etc.!! Absolutely epic!
The way that centerpiece was just spinning menacingly without going anywhere was cool as fuck.
There are civil war bullets that hit each other in basically every civil war museum.
Thank you all for doing this. I know the time it took to get this right. Just wanna let you know I used this to teach my two sons science. I homeschool my boys and this is an excellent video for our science project! You have shown my boys things I never had the opportunity to see growing up. THANK YOU!
Its crazy how CGI the collision shots look, but man are they super cool!
Guys that was amazing well done !! Loved to have seen what the rounds would have done in a bullet proof tunnel which is a slightly wider diameter than the rounds
Super cool. For future testing .40 would be interesting; the flat nose bullets might fuse together nicely.
Thanks for the video. it remembers me Dardanel wars during the WW1. You should see the bullets hit each other.
Your scientific efforts are not only entertaining BUT much appreciated for those of us who’s minds never stop spinning with ideas or concepts. You are a unique group of individuals. I look forward to future content and visuals. 💯!!!
That spinning piece was awesome,motion totally canceled out.
Great work
You guys went SO FAR above and beyond it's unbelievable! Bravo!
You guys mentioned Wanted at the start, but I was thinking back to The Shadow. There was one shootout scene with 2 characters firing at each other from across the room. And their end result was the bullets perfectly colliding and dropping to the ground after impact