Ryobi certainly did "not" create the oscillating multi-tool. It was created by GmbH Fein in 1967 as a plaster cast saw. In '85 Fein adapted the design for automotive use and in 2009 the patent expired allowing other companies to produce similar products. The first such clone I remember is the Dremel Multi-Max, certainly not Ryobi.
Yep. I have been using a multi tool for years to trim livestock hooves. It’s only as good as the blades you use. Like butter is far from the usual experience.
@@the-original-ghost I sale and repair Milwaukee makita and dewalt... we won't even touch ryobi and despite the rumors no they're not made in the same plant or with the same components
Thanks for the time stamp. Disappointing it doesn't do anything. It's as "amazing on another level" as someone 3d printing a pinwheel to stick outside and say it can be used to power an LED.
As a former concrete cutter. I can attest that running a core drill correctly does go through reinforced concrete like butter. Always fun to use but needed to be dead on to avoid issues. Biggest bit I ran was 30" in diameter
Love these innovations. For the "Backup Wrench" (14:24) to save money, make your own. Buy a socket set and weld a piece of bar on the side of each socket.
Better weld something with a thread to it, so you can use a bolt. As the device gets pushed into the neighboring nut, it may get too tight to remove, so you can loosen the bolt instead to release tension. (Not sure if it's clear what I mean, but I can't think of better words right now)
The crystal in the piezoelectric ignition is not electrically charged. It converts the energy from hitting it INTO electricity. Like if you could charge your phine by punching the screen.
"Industrial Diamonds" are MADE in a factory, they aren't there because they're "too flawed to be made into gems". The process making them isn't refined enough to produce gem-grade diamonds. When they DO decide they want to MAKE gem-grade diamonds, they are good enough to be totally indistinguishable from natural gem-grade diamonds. This is why the "natural" market -- aka DeBeers -- has taken to using lasers to tag the "natural" diamonds, so THEY can claim there is some reason anyone should pay more for a "natural" diamond instead of a man-made diamond that, without the laser-mark, could not be determined to be different.
Just nope. Industrial diamonds are mined just like gem quality. I used to live not that far from what was and maybe still is one of the major sources of Industrial grade diamonds.
While yes, the natural diamond market is highly controlled, and is one of the top monopolies to ever have existed in the world, like any gem or mineral, diamonds come in many different grades, industrial being one of them. And there is a process for “creating” flawless created diamonds. The laser marking is because the highest quality created diamonds are literally indistinguishable from natural diamonds. They test identically to each other.
What everyone is failing to mention is that industrially manufactured diamonds can be produced that are indistinguishable from diamonds formed in nature. Also, it should be mentioned that naturally mined diamonds are being etched by lasers so that they can be tested and marketed as real diamonds. You're welcome.
I truly & genuinely ❤ this channel's content, it has amazing fact's explained by the bestest narrators who each put their own spin on it making it all the better, THANK YOU.❤❤😊
@@TheJurnalyst I apologize, I’m used to people attacking me on the subject when I discuss it on other channels. So please forgive me for jumping to the wrong conclusion and I guess you’re right, I can’t recognize a compliment when I see one, but I’m working on it. You may not like me telling you what to do but, have a great day.
As I have heard it, Industrial diamonds are actually the harder type of diamonds and the ones slapped on rings are the idiot stones which aren't as hard, just pretty. Also the absolute hardest ones are very special created in actually rare circumstances into having a hexagonal structure instead of a cubic one. Normal ring diamonds are kind of overblown, extremely low in rarity etc.
Speaking as a metal detectorist, I can say that the reclamation value in a diamond ring is in the GOLD... and not the stone! Diamonds are kept artificially expensive, but their resale value is very low. In fact, many detectorists will pry the stones out and leave them in a jar while selling jewelry for its melt value.
I spent most of my life working with gems and minerals, and jewelry making. Industrial diamonds usually have impurities that cause them to be unsuitable for jewelry purposes. But all diamonds have what is called a perfect cleavage plane, and if hit from the right direction, they shatter like glass. And the industrial diamonds are also used for cutting and polishing other gems. You are correct that the price is artificial, a certain diamond company has huge vaults full of flawless diamonds, that keeps the supply controlled. There are occasionally large or unique diamonds, but the majority in the one to five carat stones are highly controlled. Many colored gems are truthfully more valuable than diamonds, like alexandrite, rubies, and emeralds.
If you DIY a lot then get you a oscillating tool. When remodeling a bathroom recently the structures were built with those annoying staples. My oscillating tool was indispensable in cutting through those with great speed.
5:08 This oscilating multitool was designed and patented by a German company Fein. When their patent protection expired every tool manufacturer made their versions of the tool, Ryobi is just one of them.
Edit: The Lock Right Backup Wrench if flipped around it can also be used as a way to break loose the Nuts on the all-thread studs without having to use a Knock wrench and beater The Brush Grubber Extreme seems like it could also work as a anchor for a winch for pulling your truck out of the mud pit
As a 10 year operator of concrete/rock core drills, blade- and wire saws, I can promise you they _do _*_NOT_* cut like butter, and their speed is not that high. They're awesome tools, but it's still a pretty slow process. Gotta remember, unlike a traditional basic drill (bit) that use sharp edges and often spiral flutes to cut, strip and gouge/hog out material - these kinds of concrete/rock/masonry diamond cutters grinds away at the medium. Think sandpaper, not knives. Prices may have chsnged over the years. But IIRC that particular hilti core drill model (looks lile a 300) is significantly more than 9 grand. Thr one I had used to spend more time at the service center than in the field, because the internal seals would notoriously fail, leaking water into the electronics.
diamond carbide doesn't cut composites like butter either... $500 - 1000 saw blades wouldn't even last a day when I worked for Martin Marietta (the irony being, it was still the cheapest option as water jets and lasers didn't work either)
@@wildbill6976 @wildbill6976 The excess friction and heat is murder on all such cutters eventually. It not only heavily wears at the substrate the diamond grit is bonded to, but it can get so hot that the bonding softens enough that the diamond grit eventually get torn off. The best you can usually do to improve longevity for these kinds of "cutters" is cool them, commonly by circulating fluid. The blade/shank/cylinder used just doesn't have nearly enough thermal conductivity for chilling _that,_ internally or a distance away from the cutting action itself, to help cool the "teeth" / crown(s) adequately. Fluid cooling "the cut" though, also helps lubricate and evacuate cut/ground material particles, both reducing excess friction. But fluid cooling / lubrication is usually a major no-go when cutting composites. As both the fluid itself, and through it other contaminants, can/will oxidize material and wick into the composite through the bare edges that the cut exposes. (I assume you know this well, but others reading this might not). Lasers aren't great for very thick composites, and/or composite materials with exceptional thermal conductivity like carbon fiber, graphene etc. Difficult to cut without damaging the surrounding material and compromise the binder/matrix. Waterjets - well then we're back to the wicking issue, plus the added bonus of the immense pressure causing fraying and delaminations. Good times 😅
8:55 PSA because the OP didn't mention it Don't use the curls from a metal shear as Christmas tree decorations these can be very sharp and dangerous for small children or even the unwary adult to handle. This warning shouldn't need to exist but I know the internet and someone out there will 100% try it.
Ryobi, Milwaukee, and Hart are all brands owned by Techtronic Industries, a Hong Kong company. So Ryobi isn't Japanese, they also didn't develop Oscillating Multi-tool, and Milkwaukee isn't an American company. Not anymore at least. Also, 3800F is above Steel's melting point, and WAY above copper's. That website "panthereast" you got that info was OBVIOUSLY wrong about the temperature. Also, the Lokrite isn't held in place by "magnets". It's held in place by simply not being able to rotate past the neighboring nut (the reason for the screw).
Wow it's so satisfying! Congratulations on reaching 10 million subscribers, you have an incredible channel! I watch your RUclips channel In Brazilian Portuguese Fala Sério Every day (yes I'm brazilian lol) Like if You are from Brazil
Maybe not the only one, but I'm quite often surprised how the thing in the thumbnail is actually in the video. (Or I was, since now I know it always is 😀)
Even though Ryobi is Japanese (where most good tools come from), they aren't up to large projects, great for small home jobbers, but that's about it. Try out the "red" Makita tools.
among the many company made and unique tools you'll find in a mechanics tool set you will also find some not so pretty, one of a kind tools that quite simply don't exist, as the mechanic themself made them by hand out of other tools, to get a particular job done, and has since saved them for when they have to do it again, so if you find some of these tools at a garage/estate sale do yourself a favor and pick them up you may not know what its good for but once you realize where it can be useful it will more than pay itself off by you not having to make your own in the first place
It's super hard, but it's brittle. A sudden impact is very different than the steady pressure from a cut. Think of a window and a baseball. You can rub the baseball on the window all day, the leather will never hurt the glass. Throw it at the window though and it'll break the window no problem. Same idea. They have high hardness, but low toughness, which actually are different scientific measurements. Hardness, strength, and toughness are all different measurements of different properties of a material. Hard doesn't mean strong, strong doesn't mean hard.
Just another reply for some clarity. Hardness is a measure of how hard it is to scratch, strength is a measure of how hard it is to stretch, and toughness is a measure of how hard it is to break. And usually as things get higher in hardness they get lower in toughness, which is what makes things brittle. Too hard to deform so it just shatters.
Hardness and toughness aren't exactly mutually inclusive. Ex: if you have similar size glass and plastic bottles, you can try this next experiment yourself! Throw them against a hard surface (a brick wall works wonders) and see which one survives.
That is why we "temper" metal - otherwise, it'll be too hard and become brittle and easily crack under pressure, impacts, ect. You basically need to balance hardness with flexibility - diamond is highly inflexible, its been compressed in the earth under extreme pressures for a long long time, having its mass compressed into a smaller form. Its essentially what happens when you take something softer and comparatively more flexible, and make it harder, more dense. Like graphite - both are essentially pure carbon, and you CAN make diamonds from graphite. Those are diamonds used mainly in industrial settings, or for cutting diamonds, ect.
I mean I get that these tools are amazing if I were a time traveling salesmen, I would blow some freaking minds, but these tools are literally just progression of technology and nothing really amazing in modern times
I've used these core drills before. Large enough to fit a human inside the hole for opening bank vaults when they lock themselves out (legally, of course) its a very expensive and time-consuming project.
The krokoline is cool till you realize you need to buy like 100 of them for real projects. Also its way over engineered because most people use a stake and a metal hook that adjusts really easily for way cheaper and is more durable
Diamonds are NOT the hardest. There’s actually an even harder carbon based stone. Lonsdaleite, they use it in cutting blades as well but it lasts longer and cuts better
I do not have dreams like that. My most recent one was receiving a free Lamborghini Gallardo from a McDonalds at the top of a skyscraper during a zombie apocalypse.
A steel hammer will break a diamond down into dust... Right... And industrial diamonds are manufactured, as well as a lot of engagement rings in recent years(cheap skates), they're not just because they're ugly/discolored.
Happy Easter everyone have a great day
Happy Easter to you. , too ❤🎉
Happy Easter! 🐣
Happy Easter to you .. have a great day
Thank you so very much and happy Easter to you and everybody else who commented here!!! May your ham be smoked and your beer be ice cold
@@jackieann5494 thanks I had a great day
Ryobi certainly did "not" create the oscillating multi-tool. It was created by GmbH Fein in 1967 as a plaster cast saw. In '85 Fein adapted the design for automotive use and in 2009 the patent expired allowing other companies to produce similar products. The first such clone I remember is the Dremel Multi-Max, certainly not Ryobi.
Yep. I have been using a multi tool for years to trim livestock hooves. It’s only as good as the blades you use. Like butter is far from the usual experience.
True but, I don't know any other manufacturer that has a swivel head on theirs.
Ryobi was purchased by the same group that runs Milwaukee and several other tool manufacturers.Their one plus tool line might pleasantly surprise you.
@@the-original-ghost I sale and repair Milwaukee makita and dewalt... we won't even touch ryobi and despite the rumors no they're not made in the same plant or with the same components
The old blue ryobi still takes modern ryobi batteries.
My dad is a carpenter, mobile home mover and setter
Its cool seeing the stuff we use on a daily base get the spotlight
🥚🪳🥚🪳🥚🥚🪳🥚🪳🥚🪳🥚🥚🪳🥚🪳🥚🪳🥚
The water faucet turbine in the thumbnail is at 22:40
Thanks for the time stamp. Disappointing it doesn't do anything. It's as "amazing on another level" as someone 3d printing a pinwheel to stick outside and say it can be used to power an LED.
Construction workers are blessed by this vidoe
fr
Video
I am a specialist on construction work, this video does show some good ideas but most are already known
vidoe
@@Ishan9726gaming shut up
As a former concrete cutter. I can attest that running a core drill correctly does go through reinforced concrete like butter. Always fun to use but needed to be dead on to avoid issues. Biggest bit I ran was 30" in diameter
Love these innovations. For the "Backup Wrench" (14:24) to save money, make your own. Buy a socket set and weld a piece of bar on the side of each socket.
Better weld something with a thread to it, so you can use a bolt. As the device gets pushed into the neighboring nut, it may get too tight to remove, so you can loosen the bolt instead to release tension. (Not sure if it's clear what I mean, but I can't think of better words right now)
Or go the cheaper route and weld a Nut to a bolt...
@@NathanThompsonBlueEyes Or just don't be a limp wrist and use a dead wrench like real men do!
my God I love the ice pipe clamps!
How come MY oscillating tool never cuts like that?
imagine using diamond drills for diamonds to make new diamond drills
diamonds for daysss
You didn't pay attention.....its hamering that breaks the diamonds into dust
Imagine a robot shooting a gun at a plane that's made out of guns that shoot guns.
The multi-tool you attributed to Ryobi was actually invented by a man named Fein. I’m not sure of the details, but it can easily be researched.
Yep. A German company. Like all the others, the ryobi only exists because Fein's 40 year patent ran out.
ITS JUST ADVERTIZING
I think what we're missing here was that this video is really just a bunch of commercials for products, and Ryobi bought ad space and Fein did not.
That "magical, crystal-hammering, flame wand" is literally a big kitchen lighter with a metal spike on the end. The technology is identical.
The crystal in the piezoelectric ignition is not electrically charged. It converts the energy from hitting it INTO electricity.
Like if you could charge your phine by punching the screen.
You commented it, so I don´t have to. Thank you.🙏
That would be phine.
"Industrial Diamonds" are MADE in a factory, they aren't there because they're "too flawed to be made into gems". The process making them isn't refined enough to produce gem-grade diamonds. When they DO decide they want to MAKE gem-grade diamonds, they are good enough to be totally indistinguishable from natural gem-grade diamonds. This is why the "natural" market -- aka DeBeers -- has taken to using lasers to tag the "natural" diamonds, so THEY can claim there is some reason anyone should pay more for a "natural" diamond instead of a man-made diamond that, without the laser-mark, could not be determined to be different.
You're kind of right.
huh?
Just nope. Industrial diamonds are mined just like gem quality. I used to live not that far from what was and maybe still is one of the major sources of Industrial grade diamonds.
While yes, the natural diamond market is highly controlled, and is one of the top monopolies to ever have existed in the world, like any gem or mineral, diamonds come in many different grades, industrial being one of them. And there is a process for “creating” flawless created diamonds. The laser marking is because the highest quality created diamonds are literally indistinguishable from natural diamonds. They test identically to each other.
What everyone is failing to mention is that industrially manufactured diamonds can be produced that are indistinguishable from diamonds formed in nature. Also, it should be mentioned that naturally mined diamonds are being etched by lasers so that they can be tested and marketed as real diamonds. You're welcome.
Why'd I think the diamond core drill was an iron lung 💀
Fr tho, love the vids! Keep up the amazing work, Be!
That saw blade pruner would my zombie apocalypse weapon
I truly & genuinely ❤ this channel's content, it has amazing fact's explained by the bestest narrators who each put their own spin on it making it all the better, THANK YOU.❤❤😊
These huge conglomerate channels are crazy. Content mills are something i never imagined in my lifetime lol
It’s amazing that with modern diamond drills we still can’t match the Egyptian spiral drill holes and cores from thousands of years ago.
This is comment gold...
@@TheJurnalyst Research it.
@@Sandy.J.Lloyd.Sr. I already have... U don't know a compliment when u see one? "Research it"... 😑😒
Nobody’s perfect!
@@TheJurnalyst I apologize, I’m used to people attacking me on the subject when I discuss it on other channels. So please forgive me for jumping to the wrong conclusion and I guess you’re right, I can’t recognize a compliment when I see one, but I’m working on it. You may not like me telling you what to do but, have a great day.
Happy Easter ❤❤❤
Happy Easter yourself
@@Timsmith13911well dat rude
@@Sus-oc5bx wtf
@@Timsmith13911Exactly what did he do?
how interesting i didn't know these cool tools existed but now i do
Super as always😁
9:09 that some sweet pipes there! Not just the metalwork, but also those producing beautiful dulcet tones!
2800 degree copper? Wow, some copper! Steel melts at 2500
As I have heard it, Industrial diamonds are actually the harder type of diamonds and the ones slapped on rings are the idiot stones which aren't as hard, just pretty. Also the absolute hardest ones are very special created in actually rare circumstances into having a hexagonal structure instead of a cubic one. Normal ring diamonds are kind of overblown, extremely low in rarity etc.
Speaking as a metal detectorist, I can say that the reclamation value in a diamond ring is in the GOLD... and not the stone! Diamonds are kept artificially expensive, but their resale value is very low. In fact, many detectorists will pry the stones out and leave them in a jar while selling jewelry for its melt value.
I spent most of my life working with gems and minerals, and jewelry making. Industrial diamonds usually have impurities that cause them to be unsuitable for jewelry purposes. But all diamonds have what is called a perfect cleavage plane, and if hit from the right direction, they shatter like glass. And the industrial diamonds are also used for cutting and polishing other gems. You are correct that the price is artificial, a certain diamond company has huge vaults full of flawless diamonds, that keeps the supply controlled. There are occasionally large or unique diamonds, but the majority in the one to five carat stones are highly controlled. Many colored gems are truthfully more valuable than diamonds, like alexandrite, rubies, and emeralds.
I enjoy your tool presentations because they provide more detail on how tools work.
If you DIY a lot then get you a oscillating tool. When remodeling a bathroom recently the structures were built with those annoying staples. My oscillating tool was indispensable in cutting through those with great speed.
5:08 This oscilating multitool was designed and patented by a German company Fein. When their patent protection expired every tool manufacturer made their versions of the tool, Ryobi is just one of them.
As far as I know, the true limit for the power of slingshots usually is their lack of a stock to liberate the aiming wrist from pressure.
Where are the springs on the Brush Grubber?
I just fell down a rabbit hole of your videos on my day off from work haha and it was not disappointing. Very amusing videos . Thanks buddy
Edit: The Lock Right Backup Wrench if flipped around it can also be used as a way to break loose the Nuts on the all-thread studs without having to use a Knock wrench and beater
The Brush Grubber Extreme seems like it could also work as a anchor for a winch for pulling your truck out of the mud pit
Everything seemed casual until you broke out the Ryobi commercial. That link gave it away lol 😉
As a 10 year operator of concrete/rock core drills, blade- and wire saws, I can promise you they _do _*_NOT_* cut like butter, and their speed is not that high. They're awesome tools, but it's still a pretty slow process. Gotta remember, unlike a traditional basic drill (bit) that use sharp edges and often spiral flutes to cut, strip and gouge/hog out material - these kinds of concrete/rock/masonry diamond cutters grinds away at the medium. Think sandpaper, not knives.
Prices may have chsnged over the years. But IIRC that particular hilti core drill model (looks lile a 300) is significantly more than 9 grand. Thr one I had used to spend more time at the service center than in the field, because the internal seals would notoriously fail, leaking water into the electronics.
diamond carbide doesn't cut composites like butter either... $500 - 1000 saw blades wouldn't even last a day when I worked for Martin Marietta (the irony being, it was still the cheapest option as water jets and lasers didn't work either)
@@wildbill6976 @wildbill6976 The excess friction and heat is murder on all such cutters eventually. It not only heavily wears at the substrate the diamond grit is bonded to, but it can get so hot that the bonding softens enough that the diamond grit eventually get torn off. The best you can usually do to improve longevity for these kinds of "cutters" is cool them, commonly by circulating fluid. The blade/shank/cylinder used just doesn't have nearly enough thermal conductivity for chilling _that,_ internally or a distance away from the cutting action itself, to help cool the "teeth" / crown(s) adequately. Fluid cooling "the cut" though, also helps lubricate and evacuate cut/ground material particles, both reducing excess friction.
But fluid cooling / lubrication is usually a major no-go when cutting composites. As both the fluid itself, and through it other contaminants, can/will oxidize material and wick into the composite through the bare edges that the cut exposes. (I assume you know this well, but others reading this might not).
Lasers aren't great for very thick composites, and/or composite materials with exceptional thermal conductivity like carbon fiber, graphene etc. Difficult to cut without damaging the surrounding material and compromise the binder/matrix. Waterjets - well then we're back to the wicking issue, plus the added bonus of the immense pressure causing fraying and delaminations. Good times 😅
8:55 PSA because the OP didn't mention it Don't use the curls from a metal shear as Christmas tree decorations these can be very sharp and dangerous for small children or even the unwary adult to handle. This warning shouldn't need to exist but I know the internet and someone out there will 100% try it.
Ryobi, Milwaukee, and Hart are all brands owned by Techtronic Industries, a Hong Kong company. So Ryobi isn't Japanese, they also didn't develop Oscillating Multi-tool, and Milkwaukee isn't an American company. Not anymore at least.
Also, 3800F is above Steel's melting point, and WAY above copper's. That website "panthereast" you got that info was OBVIOUSLY wrong about the temperature.
Also, the Lokrite isn't held in place by "magnets". It's held in place by simply not being able to rotate past the neighboring nut (the reason for the screw).
Wow it's so satisfying! Congratulations on reaching 10 million subscribers, you have an incredible channel! I watch your RUclips channel In Brazilian Portuguese Fala Sério Every day (yes I'm brazilian lol) Like if You are from Brazil
Uh don't you mean 12.3 million? 🤔
Oh yes! Thanks Angyal
Back up wrench $230, mole grip $20. Both can do the same job for the same reason
The sheet metal cutting tool is used by first responders to cut people out of wrecked cars. Probably not battery powered.
Your literally the only like yt channel that actually has content that is not clickbait
Maybe not the only one, but I'm quite often surprised how the thing in the thumbnail is actually in the video.
(Or I was, since now I know it always is 😀)
5:07 I have that ryobi multi-tool and I love it. Recommend to anyone who does little or big DIY projects!
Sure looks like a tool to get.
@@Gnomelotte def is
Even though Ryobi is Japanese (where most good tools come from), they aren't up to large projects, great for small home jobbers, but that's about it.
Try out the "red" Makita tools.
@@DinDooIt harbor freight/hercules; fraction of the price and made in same factory /w same parts as milwaukee...
I want the slingshot!
I'm addicted to sling shots
The little marshmallow guy doesn't yell "Amazing!" anymore. I miss that. Now I have to say it for him.
among the many company made and unique tools you'll find in a mechanics tool set you will also find some not so pretty, one of a kind tools that quite simply don't exist, as the mechanic themself made them by hand out of other tools, to get a particular job done, and has since saved them for when they have to do it again, so if you find some of these tools at a garage/estate sale do yourself a favor and pick them up you may not know what its good for but once you realize where it can be useful it will more than pay itself off by you not having to make your own in the first place
Your site has all the best info and entertainment!
Diamond being the hardest naturally occurring mineral can be 'shattered' by a hammer? I feel like I'm missing something...
It's super hard, but it's brittle. A sudden impact is very different than the steady pressure from a cut. Think of a window and a baseball. You can rub the baseball on the window all day, the leather will never hurt the glass. Throw it at the window though and it'll break the window no problem. Same idea. They have high hardness, but low toughness, which actually are different scientific measurements.
Hardness, strength, and toughness are all different measurements of different properties of a material. Hard doesn't mean strong, strong doesn't mean hard.
Just another reply for some clarity. Hardness is a measure of how hard it is to scratch, strength is a measure of how hard it is to stretch, and toughness is a measure of how hard it is to break. And usually as things get higher in hardness they get lower in toughness, which is what makes things brittle. Too hard to deform so it just shatters.
Hardness and toughness aren't exactly mutually inclusive.
Ex: if you have similar size glass and plastic bottles, you can try this next experiment yourself!
Throw them against a hard surface (a brick wall works wonders) and see which one survives.
That is why we "temper" metal - otherwise, it'll be too hard and become brittle and easily crack under pressure, impacts, ect. You basically need to balance hardness with flexibility - diamond is highly inflexible, its been compressed in the earth under extreme pressures for a long long time, having its mass compressed into a smaller form. Its essentially what happens when you take something softer and comparatively more flexible, and make it harder, more dense. Like graphite - both are essentially pure carbon, and you CAN make diamonds from graphite. Those are diamonds used mainly in industrial settings, or for cutting diamonds, ect.
7:28 So it's a very precise propane torch. Nice.
The way he sang that christmas song was awesome 🙂🙂😂😂😊😇
“Satisfying” it’s quickly becoming such an overused word. Everything is always “ so satisfying” 😵💫😏😏😏
Thst last one would be great for harvesting mistletoe!
That chicken tendon one blew mind! Ill be using that reguo!
This is the only infomercial I've ever enjoyed watching.
I mean I get that these tools are amazing if I were a time traveling salesmen, I would blow some freaking minds, but these tools are literally just progression of technology and nothing really amazing in modern times
Can someone please count how many times he says butter?
I was using a subsoiled over 60 years ago. We used it to breakup the clay hard pan left by regular plows.
I've used these core drills before. Large enough to fit a human inside the hole for opening bank vaults when they lock themselves out (legally, of course) its a very expensive and time-consuming project.
14:06 The battlebot reference is epic
Love these types of vids! Keep it up
Really nice video! Thank you!
we need more power of time!
The krokoline is cool till you realize you need to buy like 100 of them for real projects. Also its way over engineered because most people use a stake and a metal hook that adjusts really easily for way cheaper and is more durable
Super cool ‼ Part two please ‼💯
I would totally try the slingshot :)
I ❤ this channel
3:48 Vincent Price used one of these in The Abominable Dr. Phibes!
Diamonds are NOT the hardest. There’s actually an even harder carbon based stone. Lonsdaleite, they use it in cutting blades as well but it lasts longer and cuts better
300 gallons per day 😳 That's super crazy( I was amazed)
FACE REVEAL AT 14M PLEASE 🎉🎉
Oh my, a My Hero Academia reference of One for All
My hero academia did not make that saying
the subscribe button shined once he mentioned it
how
this is crazy
frfr
That's basically a 27:59 long tool commercial lol
OK HAHAHHAHAH
Yeah but I just can't scrape together enough for an orchard pruner atm...
Thanks, my friend, and happy Easter! I always look forward to your videos.
Happy Easter
So it’s 2.6 million years now? Hard to keep up.
Happy Easter, Be Amazed!
The Lokrite is actually incredible! Js
Can we have a face reveal 😢? Please?😅
thanks to you too
People need to remember that these new houses burn at much much higher temperatures than an older house. Like almost triple the temps
Happy Easter everyone
i love how he says "forstreich maschinenbau"
The Room reference was hilarious
Ok thx for the new tools we need for wooden trapdoors
Be amazed you are amazing and I will see my self out 😊😂
copper melts at ~1085 degrees Celsius or ~1983 degrees Fahrenheit......@7:23
You can break into underground safes with diamond core drills. Just don’t chat about it in your local pub.
The oscillating saw is also commonly known as a "guybrator".
Happy easter
I do not have dreams like that. My most recent one was receiving a free Lamborghini Gallardo from a McDonalds at the top of a skyscraper during a zombie apocalypse.
Yours video are the best
We use diamond tips to cut the lens blank that makes the lenses for your glaases.
Those metal curls are sharp as hell and you shouldn't play with them. Especially do not use them for Xmas decorations.
A steel hammer will break a diamond down into dust... Right...
And industrial diamonds are manufactured, as well as a lot of engagement rings in recent years(cheap skates), they're not just because they're ugly/discolored.
Love your video Be Amazed and keep up the great work you are awesome
This is Tim The Toolman Taylor Aproved!!!
😮😮😮😮😮😮😮
😊
It's a soldering iron not a sordering iron.
They use the same ignition system in your stove.
Just me or is this just a compilation of amazing ads
Come work for me I’ll let you use the first two machines as loooong as you possibly want
Brand new sub, thanks for posting...
But only use it when it’s hot because if it was cold it would take forever to moult