Every time the parrot comes on screen you might as well be soeaking portugese, all my attention goes to watching the little guy dance and play. Hes so inquisitive, i love watching him.
If you're prepping more fossils, I'd recommend making glue from B72 resin pellets and acetone. It's reversible so if you make a mistake when setting the pieces together, you can separate them with a bit of acetone. It's also good for solidifying pieces before you prep them since you can make it really dilute and it'll flow inside the fossil.
you're like the best DIY guy in the business but the problem is the algorithm doesnt care about the quality of your projects and videos promoting bad easy to make content instead
Im sure someone has already mentioned this but just for accuracy sake, mosasaurs aren't dinosaurs. They essentially are giant marine lizards that lived during the same time. The only marine dinosaurs we know actually are birds!
Dinosaur is a portmanteau word derived from the Greek words 'deinos' = terrible and 'sauros' = lizard' or terrible/terror-lizard, therefore dinosaur is semantically correct. A marine lizard with teeth that size would presumably be quite terrifying to encounter during a day out at the beach.
@MichaelKingsfordGray That would be a matter of scale, for a small frog, cricket or bug then encountering a hungry tuatara would indeed trigger a terrifying flight or fight response.
Birds are not marine, the only living larine reptiles are seaturtles. And for something to be classified as a dinosaur it is best to look at the legs wich schould stand straight under the body, not to the side like with most reptiles.
@The Big Game Theory It is not a case of right or wrong, semantically dinosaur means 'terrible lizard' so from that perspective is correct. However the science of palaeontology has progressed considerably since the word was originally invented, so, from a taxonomical point of view it is indeed no longer accurate in its scope.
@@Nighthawkinlight Could you tell more about the AV equipment you used? I can see you used some kind of lapel mic but what camera, lens and lights did you use for the ending around 9:15? That looks like a proper studio shot!
@@Sqwaush I mean, what is there to say? This person is completely correct. I suppose it could be useful to point out that the dust from the blasted rocks can be used to be very precise since it'll just be a tiny bit harsher than the baking soda
@@leeroyjenkins0 it’s a sterility and purity issue, you can get it in different grit sizes just like sand paper. Food grade has safe heavy metal traces and all the bugs are dead (bacteria, fungus, etc.).
Grit size is very important for how abrasive your needs are. Arm and Hammer makes a whole assortment of baking soda blast media for varying applications.
Cool video, might try to make one myself. I have a load of Devonian rocks rich in fossils that are a little bit to hard to prepare with pin & needle. But just a little correction, the tooth in 6:14 isn't a dinosaur tooth nor is it a Mosasaur tooth. I is actually a Plesiosaur tooth belonging to Zarafasaura oceanis which was a type of marine reptile from the Late Cretaceous (70 mya)
Thank you so much for making this video! Not only cool content (which I can't wait to try making for myself!) but also for the endorsement of Skillshare. My wife and I have been debating starting on it for the past few weeks, but held off because we weren't sure if the content would be worth the money (we have an extremely limited budget). With the offer of 2 free months though I could no longer hold back - I just finished signing up. So thank you good sir!
I actually built such a thing a little bit bigger a little while ago. I am using it to clean my copper and aluminium casts. Like my last project a 2,5 kg casted copper cannon.
Very cool. For the aquarium blasting cabinet: I've used pro-cabinets where acrylic or polycarb sheets (even projector transparencies) are taped on the inside of the window. They can easily be replaced with another once they're cloudy. Another media for light blasting is powdered walnut shell, which you should be able to get from Harbor Freight or online. Keep it up, man!! I love your channel!!
The tooth fossil was BRITTLE! It's a testament to how gentle the "sand" blaster was. Once again you study technology and apply it in an inexpensive, easy, fun and sometimes useful way! You are so right about how learning something new generally brings in other skills/knowledge. It is fueled by prior learning and provides the tools for more advanced learning. I'm an old man and I still love learning about many new things. Mental variety is the spice of knowledge!
"Many hours to carefully reveal" . I don't really think describing it as taking hours does it justice. Depending on it's size and the makeup of the matrix, (rock and dirt), surrounding the fossil, it can take years to clean. If it's something someone finds and wants to display at home then yea, hours. But honestly the longer you take the better the end results.
Fantastic build! I've made a larger one very similarly, but love the size of the small one for the ability to get into nooks and crannies and smaller detail. Great job!
I have heard that super market checkout scanners have a piece of glass coated in something really hard, maybe sapphire or diamond, so that products don't scratch as they scan. I haven't been able to find somewhere to buy replacement parts for that glass but it's supposedly pretty cheap and it makes a really good window for a sandblaster box.
Not everything needs to be nice looking. I have created many of my own tools, when they work really well it really doesnt matter if your grinder made from a discarded quisenart looks funky! It was free and youve gained so much more from the learning experience. Own that funk and wear it with pride!
I think you just changed my life I need to send this to the museum I work at as a fossil preparator- it's tiny and we can't afford an air abrasive unit but we have an air compressor for my other tools!!
This is a really cool idea. I like to maintain old tools but hate using chemicals to remove paint and rust. I purchased a cheap sandblaster but its really big and uses alot of medium for small jobs. Will defiantly look into making one :)
Did not know sandblasting equipment could be improvised this easily. Thanks for the video I think I'll be making one of these to help with some tool restoration I'm doing.
What did work for my application (get rust of automotive steering knuckle) was a wire brush on an angle grinder. I tried sandblasting too but wasn't effective at all. The wire brush on the angle grinder did work quite well. Without actually abbrazing the cast iron.
Thanks for the video! If you want to improve the issue with the glass panels turning opaque, you could look into adding an airbrush spray booth at the back. They're quite inexpensive and might give you enough air suction to reduce the amount of sand hitting the top glass panel and give you better visibility by also reducing the amount of dust flying around inside the booth.
Lately I made a alchahol gun. It Consisted of a 2 1/2 foot section of 2 1/2 inch PVC pipe with a cap and a reducer system to half-inch PVC to a half inch ball valve to a 3 foot section of half inch PVC acting as a barrel. I used darts just like the King of Random for his blowgun project. Then, after seeing some of your videos I bought a stick lighter and attached the Piezo igniter through the combustion chamber and hot glued it into place. The result was that the nail darts stuck at least a third of an inch into plywood. That was only with about 2 skwirts of alchahol. ( I had to screw the end cap on because it blew off repeatedly if I didn't) Just an idea for you. ( You're my favourite youtuber. )
I'm an industrial painted and we paint with a 1600compresor and a huge blast pod that run up to 4 blast hoses. We're under supplied air and blast with steelshot,black magic and green diomond.
almost missed this video because i thought tkor redid one of their ideas but then i realized that this was a much more interesting take with actual applications
IM SO BUILDING ONE!!! I think sandblasters are really cool. But I always thought the only ones there was, Was them big huge ones that are thousands of dollars and you have to use that huge sandblasting head cover that goes over your head and chest and arms then you go into the chamber and pick up the big ass sandblaster gun n go to work. But something like this super small and contained in that tank is PERFECT AND JUST WAT I WANTED AND NEEDED!! SO DUDE THANK YOU VERY MUCH FOR MAKING THIS VIDEO AS IT IS WHAT IS MAKING ME BUILD ONE!!! THANK YOU VERY MUCH!!!
1 Acrylic insert inside the fishtank at your top down viweing angle' and two side angles will be cheaper to replace regularly than an entire piece of glass. Simple clear gel will work to hold it in place and keep out much of the sand from the surface of the glass. Or even "rough" silicone the edge since that would also be easy to peal off to replace.
You know, what you said about learning along the way is what I've been telling everybody for years and years and that is simply anytime I do a new project I learn a little bit along the way without even trying and it is the most funnest way to learn because you don't even have to try to learn, you just learn it along the way of having fun and that's what I've been telling everybody for a long time. I always say you wouldn't believe how many things you learn while trying to do one new project, and then I go on to tell them all the things I've learned while trying to make this or that, so anyway I wanted to let you know that I know exactly what you are talking about because I have been saying that exact same thing for years and thank you very much for all your really really really great videos I love them all.
very neat little tool! I've always loved sandblasters in auto motive work but glass etching is something i'm looking to get into as well as wood etching. another super fantastic video!
Very interesting indeed. I shall try to make one of these sometime. Our hills and rock formations are full of limestone and of course fossil's. But the reason I want to make a fine sandstone blaster is to help carve fine details into our pumice rocks.
Get hold of a sheet of thin acrylic, styrene, or other(?) clear plastic, cut it to the size of the aquarium's glass panel(s) and tape it to the inside of any glass you want to protect. When it becomes too frosted from errant sand, you can easily replace it. It's also a real help to have a light inside your sandblasting box - you could rig up a low voltage one with a clear jar - as you won't be dealing with as much reflection, especially as the plastic starts to frost up. Minor point: it's one medium, a number of media.
You can just tape a piece of 1/8” glass to the top part of the fish tank so you can just cut it out and tape a new piece when it frosts over. Super cool design!!
You can collect fossils from a quarry down in Toledo, OH--not too far from you. I remember crinoids, brachiopods, and the rare trilobite. That was close to 20 years ago, I think I heard they turned it into a county or state park. Excellent project--and new hobby!
I was thinking about showing how to make your own air tank powered by a bicycle pump in this video, but it was long enough as it is. You could certainly run this little sandblaster on a much smaller air supply.
@@Nighthawkinlight I was thinking of using a cheap electric bicycle pump/compressor, i found one for 7 dollar. And it's 12volts so with a 3s lipo also you can take it anywhere. This is a cool project! Thank's a lot!!
With that you'll need a little air tank to be a buffer for the pressure. Otherwise your blaster will kind of sputter as the pump cycles rather than being a constant flow.
First im learning things from thor (because science) Now im learning other things from will wheaton. Loving all the videos so far. Keep up the good work
Every time the parrot comes on screen you might as well be soeaking portugese, all my attention goes to watching the little guy dance and play. Hes so inquisitive, i love watching him.
If you're prepping more fossils, I'd recommend making glue from B72 resin pellets and acetone. It's reversible so if you make a mistake when setting the pieces together, you can separate them with a bit of acetone. It's also good for solidifying pieces before you prep them since you can make it really dilute and it'll flow inside the fossil.
.
@@Saohesc ...
Paraloid B72, the best consolidation glue for restauration.
4:12 NEW Crotch-activated technology (patent pending)
Dick sold separately 🤣😅
oh god
HumpswitchTM
That gratuitously slowed down and zoomed in shot had me rolling
>Is 5 minute
>uses hot glue
>not 5-minutes-craft and actually useful
Help, I'm confused!
all of r/DIWhy is asking the same
You are not expressing yourself very well. It could be the translator you use is at fault!
@@mrsillywalk Jackass, he's not using a translator.
@@user-ob3nn3th7y Thank you for talking (typing) to Jackass..............no offence ment to mrsillywalk here !
@@user-ob3nn3th7y I could tell.
Sandblaster sounds like an ancient insult
Sound like the person who pees or farts in the sand all day ....
oi you fokkin sandblaster
My first PC audio device was a sandblaster...
It was only used on Tatooine.
I cant stand those fucking sandblasters dude
I've used many large production sandblasters but have never even thought about a mini..... I'll definitely be using one in about 15 minutes :)
you're like the best DIY guy in the business but the problem is the algorithm doesnt care about the quality of your projects and videos promoting bad easy to make content instead
Nokia I know what you mean, it's a bit frustrating!
he has 1.4m subs idiot
The algorithm recommended this to me
@@twizz420 look at how many subs 5 minute crafts has then tell me he isnt underappreciated
It was suggested by the algorithm to me??
Im sure someone has already mentioned this but just for accuracy sake, mosasaurs aren't dinosaurs. They essentially are giant marine lizards that lived during the same time. The only marine dinosaurs we know actually are birds!
Dinosaur is a portmanteau word derived from the Greek words 'deinos' = terrible and 'sauros' = lizard' or terrible/terror-lizard, therefore dinosaur is semantically correct. A marine lizard with teeth that size would presumably be quite terrifying to encounter during a day out at the beach.
@MichaelKingsfordGray That would be a matter of scale, for a small frog, cricket or bug then encountering a hungry tuatara would indeed trigger a terrifying flight or fight response.
Birds are not marine, the only living larine reptiles are seaturtles. And for something to be classified as a dinosaur it is best to look at the legs wich schould stand straight under the body, not to the side like with most reptiles.
@MichaelKingsfordGray damn you're right my mistake
@The Big Game Theory It is not a case of right or wrong, semantically dinosaur means 'terrible lizard' so from that perspective is correct.
However the science of palaeontology has progressed considerably since the word was originally invented, so, from a taxonomical point of view it is indeed no longer accurate in its scope.
That was a really great video! Cool fossils. I'll be making one soon. :-) Very professional video and the audio was excellent.
Thanks! I used to make videos in this style a lot more often.
@@Nighthawkinlight Could you tell more about the AV equipment you used? I can see you used some kind of lapel mic but what camera, lens and lights did you use for the ending around 9:15? That looks like a proper studio shot!
Skillshare should mandate all all advertisers to have a parrot. Only ads I always watch are yours.
Thats is honestly pretty cool. Great video as always!
It's good to see someone doing so well from way back when. Grats on 1.5M!
Non food grade baking soda is much less expensive than edible baking soda.
How come nobody else has weighed in their opinion yet?
@@Sqwaush I mean, what is there to say? This person is completely correct. I suppose it could be useful to point out that the dust from the blasted rocks can be used to be very precise since it'll just be a tiny bit harsher than the baking soda
agree. soda blasting is now the standard method for blasting old bottom paint from boats. less damage to fiberglass....
@@leeroyjenkins0 it’s a sterility and purity issue, you can get it in different grit sizes just like sand paper. Food grade has safe heavy metal traces and all the bugs are dead (bacteria, fungus, etc.).
Grit size is very important for how abrasive your needs are. Arm and Hammer makes a whole assortment of baking soda blast media for varying applications.
Cool video, might try to make one myself. I have a load of Devonian rocks rich in fossils that are a little bit to hard to prepare with pin & needle.
But just a little correction, the tooth in 6:14 isn't a dinosaur tooth nor is it a Mosasaur tooth.
I is actually a Plesiosaur tooth belonging to Zarafasaura oceanis which was a type of marine reptile from the Late Cretaceous (70 mya)
i have two things to say, the government needs your creativity and the second thing is that you are the bob ross of homemade technology.
This was really neat!
Also yay birb footage!
Thank you so much for making this video! Not only cool content (which I can't wait to try making for myself!) but also for the endorsement of Skillshare. My wife and I have been debating starting on it for the past few weeks, but held off because we weren't sure if the content would be worth the money (we have an extremely limited budget). With the offer of 2 free months though I could no longer hold back - I just finished signing up. So thank you good sir!
Hope you like them! I'm finding them really useful for their business related courses. They're known for great video and photography stuff too.
Investing in yourself and your wife is a smart thing to do.
Mosasaur wasn't a dinosaur, but a prehistoric marine reptile that lives in the same time! They're still hella cool.
It's always cool to see all of these skilled hobbies that I've never heard about
What a cool project! By the way, a Mosasaur was not a dinosaur, but the little guy on your table actually is 🙂
I actually built such a thing a little bit bigger a little while ago. I am using it to clean my copper and aluminium casts. Like my last project a 2,5 kg casted copper cannon.
+Freizeitflugsphäre A cannon?? That’s awesome!
@@cosmicjenny4508 yes, video is gonna be released at some point 😄
Hey man, I see you a lot on RUclips.
geilo ... ist abonniert. Bin mal gespannt :-)
Grüß dich :D
Very cool. For the aquarium blasting cabinet: I've used pro-cabinets where acrylic or polycarb sheets (even projector transparencies) are taped on the inside of the window. They can easily be replaced with another once they're cloudy. Another media for light blasting is powdered walnut shell, which you should be able to get from Harbor Freight or online. Keep it up, man!! I love your channel!!
he found out that we are all watching for the parrot and kepping that in the ending so that he can count cash
Genius lol
this is bizzness😂
The tooth fossil was BRITTLE! It's a testament to how gentle the "sand" blaster was. Once again you study technology and apply it in an inexpensive, easy, fun and sometimes useful way!
You are so right about how learning something new generally brings in other skills/knowledge. It is fueled by prior learning and provides the tools for more advanced learning. I'm an old man and I still love learning about many new things. Mental variety is the spice of knowledge!
Ben, great video, stayed glued to the monitor! Love fossils!!
Those trilobite fossils are amazing! I've only ever seen them as "flat" shapes.
"Many hours to carefully reveal" . I don't really think describing it as taking hours does it justice. Depending on it's size and the makeup of the matrix, (rock and dirt), surrounding the fossil, it can take years to clean. If it's something someone finds and wants to display at home then yea, hours. But honestly the longer you take the better the end results.
Fantastic build! I've made a larger one very similarly, but love the size of the small one for the ability to get into nooks and crannies and smaller detail. Great job!
Here from the short. Awesome project.
I have heard that super market checkout scanners have a piece of glass coated in something really hard, maybe sapphire or diamond, so that products don't scratch as they scan. I haven't been able to find somewhere to buy replacement parts for that glass but it's supposedly pretty cheap and it makes a really good window for a sandblaster box.
Did you hear that from Dan Gelbart? If not go watch his videos and thank me later.
Just go break one in Walmart, pick up the pieces and run before they have time to react
It might be a borosilicate glass, like Pyrex cookware. They're incredibly durable, cost-effective, and heat resistant, as well!
Joe Fro, if you did that in the checkout area, they’d never notice!
Dinosaurs: Producing huge teeth all through their lives
Also dinosaurs: throws broccoli on the floor and slips on glass
That sand blaster could be useful for a lot of other small objects and applications, thank you, nice vid as always!!
I don't like sand. It is coarse, rough and irritating... and gets everywhere.
I hated that line
I like sand. Sand is squishy!
Artyon: ...
@@Felipeh999 its not
Иван Снежков Funny because this guy also looks like Rian Johnson.
I now want a Jurassic park where the dinosaurs are held together with Superglue!
Very useful tool for cleaning of walls and metal objects. Like how it cleans rust !
@8:40 cute bird :-)
Videos like this is why I've been watching this channel for so long
Not everything needs to be nice looking. I have created many of my own tools, when they work really well it really doesnt matter if your grinder made from a discarded quisenart looks funky! It was free and youve gained so much more from the learning experience. Own that funk and wear it with pride!
I think you just changed my life I need to send this to the museum I work at as a fossil preparator- it's tiny and we can't afford an air abrasive unit but we have an air compressor for my other tools!!
Hi Emily - I'm in the same situation - did you get yours working? I'm wondering how powerful the air compressor needs to be ?
Thumbs up for stressing the importance of respiratory protection!
This video really gives me “how its made” vibe, great video btw!
0:17 - HELP? HE NEEDS HELP? IS THIS A CALL FOR AID? WE MUST-
0:19 - Oh, nevermind.
FINALL... n/m
This is a really cool idea. I like to maintain old tools but hate using chemicals to remove paint and rust. I purchased a cheap sandblaster but its really big and uses alot of medium for small jobs. Will defiantly look into making one :)
Those trilobite fossils are amazing!
Good work Mr NightHawkInLight !!! Thank you, very much appreciated.
That was fun to watch, I'm always finding reasons why I need an air compressor and now I've found another. Cute birdy 🐦
Excellent work as always
That’s amazing keep up the awesome projects
" project that can be finished in literally 5 min. " you have the magic to cut these 5 min into an video and need 10:30 . well done mate
This is such a high quality, informative, and calming video it’s like an episode of How It’s Made
Did not know sandblasting equipment could be improvised this easily. Thanks for the video I think I'll be making one of these to help with some tool restoration I'm doing.
Simple idea that should work well for fossil cleaning. Maybe, a few other things too. Thanks for sharing.
I remember the king of random did this kind if thing, but I like this more, the feeling is more calm and such
I'll have to go look, I don't remember that.
What did work for my application (get rust of automotive steering knuckle) was a wire brush on an angle grinder. I tried sandblasting too but wasn't effective at all. The wire brush on the angle grinder did work quite well. Without actually abbrazing the cast iron.
that bird deserve its own video!!! :D
Thanks for the video!
If you want to improve the issue with the glass panels turning opaque, you could look into adding an airbrush spray booth at the back.
They're quite inexpensive and might give you enough air suction to reduce the amount of sand hitting the top glass panel and give you better visibility by also reducing the amount of dust flying around inside the booth.
Lately I made a alchahol gun. It Consisted of a 2 1/2 foot section of 2 1/2 inch PVC pipe with a cap and a reducer system to half-inch PVC to a half inch ball valve to a 3 foot section of half inch PVC acting as a barrel. I used darts just like the King of Random for his blowgun project. Then, after seeing some of your videos I bought a stick lighter and attached the Piezo igniter through the combustion chamber and hot glued it into place. The result was that the nail darts stuck at least a third of an inch into plywood. That was only with about 2 skwirts of alchahol. ( I had to screw the end cap on because it blew off repeatedly if I didn't) Just an idea for you. ( You're my favourite youtuber. )
It's nice to see you making more videos
Thanks again for another useful project! this one is up there with the 5-minute cutting torch as most functional & easy projects ive seen
I'm always happy when I see you post a new video :)
No way. I just started fossil hunting recently. Just smacking some rocks at the beach more or less, but what a coincidence!
The thought that fossil hunting may have been the spark in discovering fire...
I'm an industrial painted and we paint with a 1600compresor and a huge blast pod that run up to 4 blast hoses. We're under supplied air and blast with steelshot,black magic and green diomond.
This is a great idea, i can't wait to try it for myself!
I like your bird! He looks happy!
almost missed this video because i thought tkor redid one of their ideas but then i realized that this was a much more interesting take with actual applications
IM SO BUILDING ONE!!! I think sandblasters are really cool. But I always thought the only ones there was, Was them big huge ones that are thousands of dollars and you have to use that huge sandblasting head cover that goes over your head and chest and arms then you go into the chamber and pick up the big ass sandblaster gun n go to work. But something like this super small and contained in that tank is PERFECT AND JUST WAT I WANTED AND NEEDED!! SO DUDE THANK YOU VERY MUCH FOR MAKING THIS VIDEO AS IT IS WHAT IS MAKING ME BUILD ONE!!! THANK YOU VERY MUCH!!!
1 Acrylic insert inside the fishtank at your top down viweing angle' and two side angles will be cheaper to replace regularly than an entire piece of glass. Simple clear gel will work to hold it in place and keep out much of the sand from the surface of the glass. Or even "rough" silicone the edge since that would also be easy to peal off to replace.
You know, what you said about learning along the way is what I've been telling everybody for years and years and that is simply anytime I do a new project I learn a little bit along the way without even trying and it is the most funnest way to learn because you don't even have to try to learn, you just learn it along the way of having fun and that's what I've been telling everybody for a long time. I always say you wouldn't believe how many things you learn while trying to do one new project, and then I go on to tell them all the things I've learned while trying to make this or that, so anyway I wanted to let you know that I know exactly what you are talking about because I have been saying that exact same thing for years and thank you very much for all your really really really great videos I love them all.
very neat little tool! I've always loved sandblasters in auto motive work but glass etching is something i'm looking to get into as well as wood etching. another super fantastic video!
I bet you could make really sharp lines etching glass this way if you used masking tape as a stencil. I haven't tried it yet.
Very interesting indeed.
I shall try to make one of these sometime.
Our hills and rock formations are full of limestone and of course fossil's.
But the reason I want to make a fine sandstone blaster is to help carve fine details into our pumice rocks.
This kind of thing is exactly why I subscribed, keep up the awesome work man!
you writing hello broke my brain. i was reading it backwards and it took a second to realize you had written it backwards lol
olleh = olay?
Ageless love the skin youre in.
Get hold of a sheet of thin acrylic, styrene, or other(?) clear plastic, cut it to the size of the aquarium's glass panel(s) and tape it to the inside of any glass you want to protect. When it becomes too frosted from errant sand, you can easily replace it. It's also a real help to have a light inside your sandblasting box - you could rig up a low voltage one with a clear jar - as you won't be dealing with as much reflection, especially as the plastic starts to frost up.
Minor point: it's one medium, a number of media.
Good to see you again!
Gotta represent the Yoop! Nice mug!
I genuinely thought he was going to write “ *HELP* “on the glass
Me too
You can just tape a piece of 1/8” glass to the top part of the fish tank so you can just cut it out and tape a new piece when it frosts over. Super cool design!!
You can collect fossils from a quarry down in Toledo, OH--not too far from you. I remember crinoids, brachiopods, and the rare trilobite. That was close to 20 years ago, I think I heard they turned it into a county or state park.
Excellent project--and new hobby!
Sylvania, OH is where the fossil park is. They also have a fossil festival once a year.
Wow! This is exactly what I needed for my investment casting. The alumina was destroying the super tiny details in the work. Thank you sir!
That was very cool. Thanks for sharing!
What pressure did you have compressor set at that's pretty cool little blaster idea
Around 90 psi
i didn't listen the talker guy when i was seen that beautiful parrot. how beautiful colors they're omg.
English please. ffs
@@anthonyjohnson5311 what do you mean?
As a fellow Yooper I love the mug!
That tooth turned out surprisingly beautiful. Really cool video NHL, thank you.
Love your Upper coffee cup! TVC here.
That's was a nifty li'l blaster you made. Thanks for the project.
This is just what I have been looking for. Thank you
Awesome video, thank you for the upload
Great video and awesome tool you made. I will be making me one.
Not sure if this would be a compliment or not but this is my first time seeing you, and you look exactly how I thought you would.
Another great video! ...And a cute birb.
Hey I'm impressed. I'm gonna make a sandblaster for rust cleaning.
Excellent video sir, I'm going to give this a try. Also, beautiful birdy!
Make a mini sand blaster in 5 minutes...
2 minutes later pulls out full, factory-fresh compressor kit....
Dat bird at the end tho, 5/5 pet
I was thinking about showing how to make your own air tank powered by a bicycle pump in this video, but it was long enough as it is. You could certainly run this little sandblaster on a much smaller air supply.
@@Nighthawkinlight I was thinking of using a cheap electric bicycle pump/compressor, i found one for 7 dollar. And it's 12volts so with a 3s lipo also you can take it anywhere. This is a cool project! Thank's a lot!!
With that you'll need a little air tank to be a buffer for the pressure. Otherwise your blaster will kind of sputter as the pump cycles rather than being a constant flow.
@@Nighthawkinlight Air tank is on the list :D Can't wait to try it out, a micro master blaster! Thank's again!!
An extractor fan and dust collector would be a worthwhile addition.
First im learning things from thor (because science) Now im learning other things from will wheaton. Loving all the videos so far. Keep up the good work
Terrific build! Thanks!
Great content! I also look for fossils wherever they can be found, this will be great for future projects!
Loving this video, thank you so much for the upload!
Your little dinosaur is beautiful!
Indeed it's a cute little sand blaster but the best takeaway from here is that fine sandblasting using baking powder. Thank you