Dynamite and TNT - Periodic Table of Videos

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  • Опубликовано: 2 фев 2011
  • Nitroglycerine, TNT and dynamite.
    More chemistry at www.periodicvideos.com/
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Комментарии • 1,2 тыс.

  • @beeble2003
    @beeble2003 7 лет назад +2055

    "I was once asked to hit nitroglycerine... with a hammer." And this is how the professor's hair came to be. It's like a superhero origin story.

    • @old-bitprogaming4857
      @old-bitprogaming4857 7 лет назад +2

      beeble2003 yea

    • @joshuahadams
      @joshuahadams 7 лет назад +13

      beeble2003 **BOOM!** No more Chinese laundry.
      I found myself in that boom.

    • @mikecorleone6797
      @mikecorleone6797 5 лет назад +2

      Josh Adams i remember a disney character saying this in atlantis

    • @mike62mcmanus
      @mike62mcmanus 5 лет назад +2

      Thats how a guy tested dynamite, he put a touch on the anvil, crazy French guy.

    • @ludwigludwig3515
      @ludwigludwig3515 5 лет назад +4

      I made nitroglycerine with age of 15 years, decades ago. And now i am Doctor in chemistry.

  • @Bombtrack411
    @Bombtrack411 10 лет назад +118

    This explains why in those old Crash Bandicoot games the nitroglyceryn crates explode instantly while the TNT crates have a short delay.

  • @theCodyReeder
    @theCodyReeder 6 лет назад +1204

    "Stroke it gently and it went off"? I'd like to see proof of that.

    • @danielpasaperamontalban9787
      @danielpasaperamontalban9787 6 лет назад +72

      Cody!

    • @scubacertified
      @scubacertified 6 лет назад +35

      If you only had to stroke it gently, it would explode if you tried to transport it

    • @ScienceWithJames
      @ScienceWithJames 6 лет назад +15

      I was thinking of you this entire video.

    • @alfredoguri
      @alfredoguri 6 лет назад +4

      i love ur videos codyn

    • @VRossInMo
      @VRossInMo 6 лет назад +58

      It does go off easily when one tries to transport it.. which is why raw nitro is seldom transported. Dynamite was invented as a way to stabilize it and make it safer to handle and transport. When transporting nitro, they fill the bottles all the way, leaving no air in the bottle, because even a droplet splashing around inside the bottle can detonate it.

  • @Commandelicious
    @Commandelicious 7 лет назад +920

    What I take from this video is: The professor eats chocolate for lunch.

    • @kellyjackson7889
      @kellyjackson7889 5 лет назад +21

      The professor eats way too much chocolate for lunch

    • @Shadow77999
      @Shadow77999 4 года назад +1

      Ja wohl

    • @Interestingworld4567
      @Interestingworld4567 4 года назад +4

      Chocolate 🍫 is healthy is KETO friendly.

    • @somedonkus69420
      @somedonkus69420 4 года назад +2

      @@Interestingworld4567 I really hope you're joking.

    • @uraldamasis6887
      @uraldamasis6887 4 года назад +5

      @@somedonkus69420 Well, to be fair, chocolate with sufficiently high cocoa content IS keto friendly. However, it isn't particularly tasty.

  • @johnries5593
    @johnries5593 6 лет назад +303

    Yep, I was introduced to TNT by Warner Brothers animators as well.

  • @snowflakemelter1172
    @snowflakemelter1172 5 лет назад +409

    " we're going to explode 500 tons of TNT"
    " why ? "
    " because this is America "

    • @grendelum
      @grendelum 4 года назад +30

      It was a part of the nuclear tests... essentially a calibration test for calculating the yield from nukes.

    • @jamest.5001
      @jamest.5001 4 года назад +1

      500 mega tons of TNT! Maka bigga booma!

    • @dannygjk
      @dannygjk 4 года назад +1

      I was thinking I'd like to have the money they spent on 500 tons of TNT.

    • @ze_rubenator
      @ze_rubenator 4 года назад +8

      @Tt Miller I think TNT is relatively cheap and easy to make. When compared to the cost of the Manhatten Project those 500 tons will be a drop in the ocean.

    • @S71xx
      @S71xx 4 года назад +2

      You had me at explode.

  • @LCdrDerrick
    @LCdrDerrick 10 лет назад +219

    0:14 Ah, I never tried to ask, but here he explains the "genesis" of his haircut ;)

  • @jhyland87
    @jhyland87 4 года назад +30

    Those photographs of the TNT detonation are pretty amazing.
    5:19 Look at the steel casing on the tube/cylinder thing, the shockwave from the TNT makes it look like it's rubber or elastic... _Steel!_ Thats awesome... haha

  • @qbmac2306
    @qbmac2306 7 лет назад +709

    You mean TNT is not the same as Dynamite?
    My life is a lie.

    • @nocknock31
      @nocknock31 7 лет назад +9

      Yep.

    • @Sup3rman1c
      @Sup3rman1c 7 лет назад +32

      Nitric acid and sulphuric acid you debil.

    • @FedorovAvtomat
      @FedorovAvtomat 7 лет назад +12

      +Nicolas Broszky
      I prefer torpex which is also insanely easy to make.

    • @caytlinnickole2046
      @caytlinnickole2046 6 лет назад +23

      QB Mac
      I thought Bon Scott from ACDC was both simultaneously.

    • @Alkaloid-Odin
      @Alkaloid-Odin 6 лет назад

      Dude wrong channel

  • @phoenixbrothers5924
    @phoenixbrothers5924 8 лет назад +487

    "A bar of chocolate you know the kind you eat for lunch"

    • @icedragon769
      @icedragon769 8 лет назад +114

      Well I'm having Chocolate for lunch from now on, the Professor said it's okay.

    • @doggonemess1
      @doggonemess1 8 лет назад +39

      100g? Please. Anyone who eats chocolate for lunch knows that you do it by the pound. Or... half kilo? Damn metric system.

    • @VIpown3d
      @VIpown3d 7 лет назад +68

      Damn imperial system

    • @XpertPilotFSX
      @XpertPilotFSX 7 лет назад +9

      +NippelsoN The one and only only like 2 countries use it.
      METRIC METRIC METRIC

    • @coomcake
      @coomcake 7 лет назад +32

      And now the thread will digress into pointless argument about measurement systems

  • @russbilzing5348
    @russbilzing5348 3 года назад +39

    I remember well, attempting to explain the characteristics of nitroglycerin to my father who had discovered that I was using the rod propellant from his 303 British ammunition as fire starter. I also remember that it was no use to try, as fear of what (to him) was unknown would always trump anything I knew.

    • @14goldmedals
      @14goldmedals 3 года назад +2

      Cordite, I did the same thing.

    • @georgesheffield1580
      @georgesheffield1580 Месяц назад

      That was cordite,about 30 %nitroglycerin and 70 % nitro cellulose .

    • @aldunlop4622
      @aldunlop4622 13 дней назад

      I used to steal my dad's .303 cartridges for the same thing haha.

  • @pirobot668beta
    @pirobot668beta 9 лет назад +27

    I worked with dynamite [ok, played with it!] years ago, and I can tell you there is no headache worse than a nitroglycerine withdrawal headache!
    Those dilated veins and capillaries [I hear this as 'cap-pillories' and not the American cap-pill-airies. Thanks BBC!] draw tight when the nitro runs out!
    Think deep 'brain-freeze' pain for about three days! This is why you carry nitro 'samples' home!

    • @patrikmanni3559
      @patrikmanni3559 8 лет назад

      +Steve Johnson You DO get withdrawal effects after long term nitroglycerin exposure since your body adjusts for the vasodilation. When you stop using it after building a tolerance you suffer from vasoconstriction and the pains associated. Medical administration of nitroglycerin includes gradual dose reduction procedures because of this.

    • @patrikmanni3559
      @patrikmanni3559 8 лет назад +1

      ***** Vasoconstriction is quite literally the cause of headaches. Nitroglycerin withdrawals do cause headaches. And it would depend entirely on how much the person was playing with nitroglycerin, what the methods of exposure were, and on the individual in question.

    • @lensman3a
      @lensman3a 8 лет назад

      +Greg Gallacci I've had a powder headache working in mines. Staying around after a blast and breathing the blast smoke (not all the nitroglycerine explodes but it is vaporized) and the headache starts and doesn't quit for hours. Aspirin didn't help me.

    • @june9914
      @june9914 8 лет назад +1

      +Greg Gallacci xkcd: pumpkin carving
      look at what the black hat guy does to his pumpkin ;P

    • @LillianWinterAnimations
      @LillianWinterAnimations 8 лет назад

      Goodness, it's not like this is a prank! My pumpkin simply has chest pains!
      (nitroglycerin IS used to treat angina)

  • @minxythemerciless
    @minxythemerciless 5 лет назад +75

    TNT C6H2(NO2)3CH3 is classed as an Oxygen Deficit explosive. - it only has six oxygens for 7 carbons and 5 hydrogens. It has a very characteristic black smoke plume.

    • @95rav
      @95rav 4 года назад +9

      true. Unlike what is said at 4:25 it DOESN'T "have enough oxygen for all those carbons".

    • @davemanning6424
      @davemanning6424 4 года назад +6

      I think the professor is confusing tnt with picric acid when he talks about the Canary girls, picric was a dye that had tremendous explosive power and was bright yellow in color, it was the main British explosive in ww1 .

    • @emartinez2046
      @emartinez2046 3 года назад +7

      @@davemanning6424 acording to my Google search it was in fact TNT that turned there skin yellow, it reacted with melanin to create a yellow pigment

    • @longimanusisurus132
      @longimanusisurus132 3 года назад +1

      Hello, i have a question about oxigen balance. How does affect oxigen balance in high explosives? I want to mean for example, if we compare rdx with pentryte; rdx has less oxigen than pent? So what effect has this oxy balance when these stuff is set off? Is better more oxigen, less?? What.

    • @minxythemerciless
      @minxythemerciless 3 года назад +2

      @@longimanusisurus132 The oxygen balance doesn't seem to be a major factor in effectiveness of TNT for high bruisant purposes. It is mixed with ammonium nitrate to make Amatol which is much more oxygen balanced, less bruisant, but a lot cheaper. It's also mixed with a host of other explosives for much the same reasons.

  • @TheRealFlenuan
    @TheRealFlenuan 9 лет назад +96

    0:11-0:18
    Oh, come on. There's no way that joke was an accident.

    • @D4RKBRU73
      @D4RKBRU73 5 лет назад +4

      For once in my life i didn't even see that one coming... uhhhh, i mean i didn't realize the ambiguity right away :D

    • @ke6gwf
      @ke6gwf 5 лет назад +4

      Stroke means something different in UK lol

    • @kelcell2923
      @kelcell2923 4 года назад

      Well, pretty obvious that it was a joke as you'd normally say to someone to strike something gently. With an "i" and not with an "o".

  • @AnonymousGoogleUser
    @AnonymousGoogleUser 7 дней назад

    The most educational chemistry channel on RUclips 😀👍

  • @williamknight5824
    @williamknight5824 3 года назад +3

    I was a us army combat engineer. I love these explosives vids. Thanks for making them.

  • @DANGJOS
    @DANGJOS 10 лет назад +59

    there's a slight mistake in this vid. TNT does not have enough oxygen to burn all the carbon even to the monoxide form. That's why ammonium nitrate is sometimes needed to increase the oxygen and hence the energy

    • @1mctous
      @1mctous 6 лет назад +5

      As Professor Poliakoff noted, the combination at the Chilwell plant killed over 200 workers on July 1st, 1918.

  • @McBango
    @McBango 10 лет назад +76

    "stroke it gently. and i did."

  • @60skidlostinspace
    @60skidlostinspace 8 лет назад +8

    You may also recall the 1917 explosion in Halifax,Canada. A ship carrying gun cotton collided with another ship,a fire broke out and consequently exploded. Over 2000 were killed and 9000 were inured.

    • @xeon6038
      @xeon6038 4 года назад

      Roderick Cloutier I can clearly hear the history guy saying this in my head

  • @geoninja8971
    @geoninja8971 4 года назад +4

    Very cool. Back in 1992 I studied chemistry, second year had a unit of explosive chemistry - we got to make some (a very small amount) of TNT, and much more nitrocellulose in prac - those were the days!

  • @stigmaticraven
    @stigmaticraven 8 лет назад +15

    I Love these videos,They should be shown in Schools everywhere

    • @nemeanlyan7918
      @nemeanlyan7918 8 лет назад +2

      I found this channel through my Chen teacher, who showed us a few of their videos. Have been addicted to both Chem and the channel since.

  • @h0lx
    @h0lx 8 лет назад +63

    The copper residue is from the copper liner, which actually penetrates the steel, not the detonator, the detonator will be flying the other way in a shaped charge.

    • @joeboscarino2380
      @joeboscarino2380 5 лет назад +2

      Yes , the copper cone is to focus the expanding gases , cone turns to gas ,and the copper gas cuts the steel .

    • @leouvarov8982
      @leouvarov8982 4 года назад

      @@joeboscarino2380 the cone doesn't turn into gas, it gets accelerated to a very high velocity (~10 km\sec)

    • @DepakoteMeister
      @DepakoteMeister 4 года назад +1

      @@leouvarov8982 I think you'll find the copper gets turned into plasma, another state (beside solid, liquid, and gas).

  • @CaptCrewSock
    @CaptCrewSock 3 года назад +10

    The old man looks like he brushed his hair with dynamite.

  • @eljohn3
    @eljohn3 11 лет назад +1

    I love watching these videos just because they remind me of just how much I actually learned from my university studies... which, as it turns out, is quite a bit more than I would have expected.

  • @Mazaroth
    @Mazaroth 9 лет назад +40

    0:18 i must say, the professor is superman, he survived that experiment.

  • @Justin-ou6gq
    @Justin-ou6gq 9 лет назад +216

    Stroke it gently, and I did 😂😂😂😂😂😂

    • @yuh6094
      @yuh6094 9 лет назад +33

      Are you 11? So immature .
      I am so lol

    • @jl7986
      @jl7986 9 лет назад +3

      Rachet Diva Productions honestly i searched the comments just to make sure i wasn't the only one who that phrase stood out to ...

    • @TheRealFlenuan
      @TheRealFlenuan 9 лет назад

      Everyone else was thinking the exact same thing. ;)

    • @hjembrentkent6181
      @hjembrentkent6181 8 лет назад +1

      The Real Flenuan Every single person xD

    • @Teth47
      @Teth47 8 лет назад +15

      Justin S. You forgot the best part "And it went off"

  • @JamesKing2understandinglife
    @JamesKing2understandinglife 11 лет назад +1

    I am enjoying the knowledge that you include in your videos. It tickles me that it is virtually free to me to enjoy your work. Thanks!

  • @constructivist6
    @constructivist6 11 лет назад +1

    When I think Chemistry Professor, this guy will now forever pop into my head. Awesome!

  • @leokimvideo
    @leokimvideo 12 лет назад +4

    @TerminalRhinoVirus wow, never knew that

  • @exileddeath65543
    @exileddeath65543 7 лет назад +21

    I've been to the crater that was created in operation sailors hat on Kaho'olawe. It was... rather startling how big it was. Come to think of it, that whole island was pretty startling...

  • @jayc2469
    @jayc2469 7 лет назад +42

    0:11 _"Stroke it gently.."_ then hit it with a hammer, or before?

  • @rickey5353
    @rickey5353 4 года назад

    I love these videos. I have fond memories of my chemistry education. I get the Ah-Ha pleasant recall of the reactions and the fascination still lives in this retired old soul.

  • @steztoyz
    @steztoyz 3 года назад +11

    2:55 The copper wasn't from the detonator. The copper was a cone with the widest end at the front, towards the target, and the narrow end, (where the actual detonator is), is to the rear. The explosive material is shaped around the copper cone, and when the device explodes, melts the copper into a plasma that burns through the target.

    • @Tunkkis
      @Tunkkis 2 года назад

      There is no plasma involved, that is a myth. It doesn't go above a few hundred degrees C, IIRC. The enormous pressure just forces the liner material to act as if it was a fluid.

    • @mastershooter64
      @mastershooter64 Год назад +2

      shaped charges are so cool

    • @xafar67
      @xafar67 Год назад

      The Copper isn't melted, nor is it plasma, it is still a solid. Monroe Effect 101...

  • @goose300183
    @goose300183 9 лет назад +78

    5:03 is quite Minecraft-y.

  • @richardmoorman4227
    @richardmoorman4227 4 года назад +1

    I love how he makes the molecule examples so damn cool

  • @MitchelRathbone
    @MitchelRathbone 8 лет назад +30

    the way you guys are teaching this information is great i would hae had a bigger intrest in chemistry if this is the way i was thought in school instead of text booxs and boring slide notes vids are awsome keep them up :)

    • @Satters
      @Satters 4 года назад +4

      we did several explosive experiments when I was studying chemistry at "O" Level in the 1980s,
      It is a shame schoolboys don't do anything practical these days,

  • @CelticSaint
    @CelticSaint 9 лет назад +52

    My old chemistry teacher at school was called Tobias Nicholas Trevains T.N.T

    • @VRossInMo
      @VRossInMo 6 лет назад +6

      lol.. cool. My son is William Andrew Ross.. W.A.R... small wonder he is a soldier.

    • @Shadow77999
      @Shadow77999 4 года назад

      @@VRossInMo lol

    • @edwardv1255
      @edwardv1255 4 года назад +1

      My son's initials are B.R.G.V. He's still only 2yo, but hopefully he'll live up to his name by not moving to Birmingham and joining a gang.

    • @totallyfrozen
      @totallyfrozen 4 года назад

      Cool story, bro.

    • @ildart8738
      @ildart8738 3 года назад

      As a Russian saying goes: Whatever you call a ship is how it will sail. Same applies to people.

  • @lynth
    @lynth 9 лет назад +154

    TIL British people eat bars of chocolate for lunch.

    • @mc4bbs
      @mc4bbs 9 лет назад

      I caught that too! :-)

    • @shippyshiphead
      @shippyshiphead 9 лет назад +1

      lynth sigh. I use to do that growing up.
      Not British.

    • @hoobaguy4311
      @hoobaguy4311 3 года назад

      English, not British.

    • @hoobaguy4311
      @hoobaguy4311 3 года назад

      @Zeeko Zappo You do realise... that it's England before Britain before UK. So an English person is English.

    • @hoobaguy4311
      @hoobaguy4311 3 года назад

      @Zeeko Zappo You're arguing semantics. Is a Canadian going to say that they're American since Canada is in North America? Are you ok?

  • @queefyg490
    @queefyg490 7 лет назад +12

    That double monitor setup.😂

  • @erictaylor5462
    @erictaylor5462 9 лет назад +19

    7:55 How do you keep a huge explosion secret? Something like this happened at Port Chicago near San Fransisco. An ammunition ship was being loaded and it exploded. The ship's anchor was found atop Mount Diablo, a 3500 foot high peak several miles away from the port.

    • @myspacebarbrokenevermindif9892
      @myspacebarbrokenevermindif9892 9 лет назад +6

      The ships anchor was found on top of a 3500 foot mountain peak several miles away?
      I highly doubt that, no way would an uncontrolled explosion send an un aerodynamic, heavy and large object that far, even if it's humongous,.

    • @erictaylor5462
      @erictaylor5462 9 лет назад

      mistercococat peace You don't have to believe me. Look it up yourself. It was the Port Chicago Disaster.

    • @erictaylor5462
      @erictaylor5462 8 лет назад

      *****
      New Jersey doesn't matter even in New York. Why would it matter in California?

    • @paulsepe5716
      @paulsepe5716 8 лет назад +5

      Mount Diablo is a 3849-foot mountain almost 14 miles from the port. The anchor never came close to the mountain;

    • @erictaylor5462
      @erictaylor5462 8 лет назад +1

      Paul Sepe
      I heard it was on top. And I know how high the mountain is. I rode a bike up more than once (3 or 4 times).

  • @WDKino
    @WDKino 9 лет назад +8

    Thee bright-yellow color of skin of "Canary girls of Chilwell", most probably, was because not of TNT, but of "Lyddite" (picric acid, trinitrophenol, TNP).

    • @U014B
      @U014B 8 лет назад

      I thought Lyddites were those guys that hate technology.

    • @davidhorsley1149
      @davidhorsley1149 4 года назад +1

      Wasn't going to weigh in but in both nitroglycerin and TNT manufacture there is a second step that imparts a yellow hue to the final product. That yellow color is readily absorbed into porous material including skin.

    • @jodybanks5344
      @jodybanks5344 3 года назад

      Mustard seed or safrin

  • @3bydacreekside
    @3bydacreekside 4 года назад +14

    I was really confused at 7:17
    For a second...I thought that the Screensaver had jumped off of the screen. :p

  • @dirkbruere
    @dirkbruere 6 лет назад +1

    I went to one of Col Shaw's lectures when I was at Nottingham University. Somewhat loud!

  • @koodude2313
    @koodude2313 6 лет назад +1

    I'd really like to see a video on C-4 or semtex. Never knew dynamite could be thrown in fire. Great video!

  • @Holyshadoww
    @Holyshadoww 13 лет назад +5

    i just want to say thanks, your vids have helped me through a leave chemistry and i just got accepted into medical school thanks to my good grades in chemistry, i always found you an inspiration :)

  • @Stray03
    @Stray03 9 лет назад +19

    Wasn`t it picric acid (Trinitrophenol) that was being loaded in the shells by the women? It is also used as a Dye and is canary yellow.

    • @proffski
      @proffski 6 лет назад

      Correct! It was also called Lyddite, see my posting above. This needs correcting.

    • @Tindometari
      @Tindometari 5 лет назад +4

      By that time, picric acid was not really being used any more as an explosive, more as a feedstock for making better ones. Its sensitivity was problematic and it wasn't very stable ... and the devastating Halifax explosion had turned people off of picric acid. It was TNT that turned the Canary Girls yellow. Of course, if picric acid was used in the process somewhere (I don't know the TNT process offhand), then there might have been a route for contamination.

    • @schautamatic
      @schautamatic 5 лет назад +5

      Having handled artillery shells and their picric acid booster charges, what I saw was that TNT is an off-WHITE color. Five years later, I made my own picric acid (2,4,6-trinitroPHENOL), which was QUITE YELLOW, thank you very much! Oh, and while nitroglycerine can be set off with a five-pound weight dropped from four inches, I also made some mercury fulminate, which can be set off with the same amount of weight dropped from only TWO inches. Always thought-proving when making primary explosives! 😄😄

    • @christophercripps7639
      @christophercripps7639 4 года назад +2

      At circa 7:12 the Prof says the explosion occurred in the ammonium nitrate (AN) and TNT works. AN + TNT mixtures were used as shell fillers (" amatols"). Both the Allies & Germany used amatols to "extend" supplies of TNT.
      The problem with picric acid is that it forms extremely shock/friction sensitive salts with common metals such as Fe, Cu, Zn ... for which a small amount of the salt can detonate a large amount (such as the main charge in a cannon shell). Premature detonation in the barrels of artillery is bad for the soldiers. Guess what, munitions are commonly made of Fe, Cu, Zn, ...

    • @Andrew-my1cp
      @Andrew-my1cp 4 года назад +1

      @@schautamatic I am really confused because it seems that pure picric acid is also pale yellow. I made some and at first my picric acid was exactly that. Pale yellow. But after a recrystallization it turned very yellow. I'm not sure why. Possibly sodium ion contamination that formed some sodium picrate? The recrystallization was somewhat of a failure though. No proper crystals were formed and the contents of the flask bumped and spilled out a lot of the contents which was quite a shame.

  • @andrestrujado
    @andrestrujado 13 лет назад +1

    Great video!!!!
    And great help for my dissertation.
    Thanks
    Andres

  • @theosmid8321
    @theosmid8321 5 лет назад

    I absolutely like your videos.Could you please tell something about RDX? It seems to be twice as strong as TNT. Thanks.

  • @GraemeMarkNI
    @GraemeMarkNI 9 лет назад +33

    He eats bars of chocolate for lunch? ;)

    • @lreyes493
      @lreyes493 9 лет назад +11

      The professor eats TNT bars for breakfast ! it keeps his brain working at that high performance...

    • @lreyes493
      @lreyes493 9 лет назад +3

      That's what I call Black humor joke ; )

  • @laughterman805
    @laughterman805 4 года назад +17

    I wonder if today’s youth is going to know what TNT is in the absence of looney toons

    • @Songwriter376
      @Songwriter376 3 года назад +3

      In my experience the snowflake soyboy youth hate the old cartoons from those times saying they are violent and the characters are so mean to each other. They have no capacity to see humor in slapstick and appear to not be able to really laugh at anything. So sad.

    • @tymz-r-achangin
      @tymz-r-achangin 3 года назад

      @@Songwriter376
      Completely agree

    • @luthandonxumalo1254
      @luthandonxumalo1254 3 года назад +1

      Minecraft

    • @cloroxbleach8676
      @cloroxbleach8676 3 года назад

      @@luthandonxumalo1254 minecraft

  • @Thestargazer56
    @Thestargazer56 11 лет назад +1

    Dynamite and nitroglycerin causes dreadful headaches from blood vessel dilation. We sometimes used dynamite on our farm and you did not wear gloves you would get "explosive" headaches. A few years ago I was in the hospital for heart and blood pressure problems I would nearly cry whenever it was time for the nitro dose, morphine would hardly dull the pain.

  • @nikolai502
    @nikolai502 3 года назад +1

    3:00 the copper is probably from the shaped charge, liquid copper which shoots through the plate.
    Not from the detonator

  • @Heartbreakhotel112
    @Heartbreakhotel112 13 лет назад +6

    "They poured some out on a brick, gave me the hammer, said stroke it gently and I did... and it went off with one hell of a bang!" .. Sentence of the year :-)

  • @squishybrick
    @squishybrick 6 лет назад +4

    0:13 I could imagine the scientist looking back at this video and being like "Wait, I don't remember surviving that..Where did you get this footage? Is that even nitro exploding?"

  • @TheKaarstein
    @TheKaarstein 13 лет назад

    you guys make me happy.

  • @nathanokun8801
    @nathanokun8801 3 года назад

    The TNT delay is on the order of 0.003 second. Fuzes using this full explosive-only TNT-type delay (base fuzes, for example, at the far end of the shell away from the target they hit) are called "non-delay" (they can have longer delays made inside the fuze, but that is not part of the explosive charge itself), as compared to "instantaneous" for nose impact fuzes ("Point Detonating" or "Direct Action") where the fuze firing shock on crushing against the target moves the blast sequence to the main explosive charge *backward* as the shell moves forward, so the shell center only moves a tiny amount forward as it is destroyed nose-to-base (as in those Dynamite pictures) even though that TNT delay happens there too.

  • @wesleywalker5837
    @wesleywalker5837 10 лет назад +4

    Fun fact: Mr. Nobel, who discovered nitroglycerin, was told by his doctors to take nitroglycerin for his heart problems. I refused to consume something that he considered to be a very dangerous explosive. He died of heart problems.
    EDIT: K so he didn't discover it. He made dynamite and made his fortune off of nitroglycerin.

    • @howiedewin3688
      @howiedewin3688 4 года назад

      Sobrero discovered NG, Nobel invented dynamite and more significantly the detonator.

  • @UnprofessionalProfessor
    @UnprofessionalProfessor 5 лет назад +3

    You know it's going to be an informative video when that hair tells you "I was once asked to hit nitroglycerin with a hammer..."

  • @geodeaholicm4889
    @geodeaholicm4889 8 лет назад

    another early use for both nitroglycerine and shaped charges was in oil wells; tubes of nitro were set off inside early oil wells to frack them & release more oil from the formation. shaped charges are still used today to perforate the steel casings to allow oil & gas to flow into the wellbore.

  • @yusukeshinyama
    @yusukeshinyama 13 лет назад

    @periodicvideos I surely appreciate that style!

  • @T_Fizzle
    @T_Fizzle 10 лет назад +11

    S my iPad was muted and when I turned my sound on at 14 sec all i heard was "stroke it gently, and I did" hahahaha

    • @TheShadowproz
      @TheShadowproz 9 лет назад +1

      hahahaha what a timing lol XD

    • @jkocol
      @jkocol 3 года назад +1

      We all do, to start.

  • @abcdefgh1279
    @abcdefgh1279 9 лет назад +34

    5:05 Kids, this is how Minecraft looked in 1965.

  • @gregwarner3753
    @gregwarner3753 4 года назад

    A genuine mad scientist. Wonderful!

  • @javierharth3647
    @javierharth3647 5 лет назад

    I enjoyed the chemistry class. Nitro-glycerin reacts with something to produce TNT, trinitro glycerides. I wonder what the catalyst is?

  • @Tindometari
    @Tindometari 5 лет назад +3

    "It was found out very quickly that it was very explosive."
    I'm going to go out on a limb here and guess that "very quickly" probably means "during the process of purifying the very first sample".

  • @jspin3609
    @jspin3609 7 лет назад +18

    A book about women turning yellow should be illustrated in color. JS

  • @TheRobertralph
    @TheRobertralph 3 года назад

    Fascinating. I didn't know TNT and Dynamite were different. Now, I know. Also, very interesting what was made for the war effort. What a time!

  • @hughjones13
    @hughjones13 4 года назад +1

    Sorry to be picky .. TNT isn't yellow that is Picrate Acid, and the ladies mentioned at 6-56 were working with picrates not TNT . Picrate was also used as a textile dye.

  • @stealth9799
    @stealth9799 9 лет назад +5

    the 500 tons of TNT is only a .5 kiloton nuke, what we use today is one megaton, two thousand times more powerful than that TNT

    • @planetwalker
      @planetwalker 9 лет назад +1

      xXstealth9799Xx "-only- a .5 kiloton" ! ?
      Nukes may have more blast power but they are also huge polluters.

    • @MichaelJones-ny3ot
      @MichaelJones-ny3ot 9 лет назад +2

      planetwalker compared to the first nukes todays nukes are like smart cars they put out very little radiation due to the fact that they are more efficient and don't leave as much radioactive materials left over

    • @anter176
      @anter176 9 лет назад +2

      Michael Jones air detonation of nukes really helps contain the radiation

    • @treahblade
      @treahblade 8 лет назад

      +Michael Jones Uhhhhh no incorrect here. Left over radioactive materials is not what fallout is..... its radioactive dust that gets picked up from the ground along with ash. It become radioactive due to the fission action occurring in the explosion.

    • @strongforce8466
      @strongforce8466 8 лет назад

      +Michael Jones that's true, though thing about the thousands of nukes those degenerates detonated, in water, high atmosphere, underground etc.. that's massive pollution, plus every single atom is radioactive.. that's silly when you think about it 1 atom = 1 potential cancer or whatever autoimmune disease mutation etc ! think about the millions or billions of particles sprayed in the atmosphere, scary !

  • @yatox8
    @yatox8 6 лет назад +4

    When an apocalyptic event is imminent, I would feel at ease if this man was in the room with top leaders.

  • @rascal0175
    @rascal0175 3 года назад

    My father told me as a boy ( born 1906) he and his brothers would break or cut pieces from dynamite sticks. They would put the pieces on an anvil and hit them with a sledge hammer. The fun was the sledge hammer being blown backwards over their heads.
    That dynamite was nothing more than sawdust or a form of clay into which nitroglycerin had been added. The sticks indicated the percentage of nitro in the dynamite stick.

  • @starked1
    @starked1 12 лет назад

    This is a terrific section. I think to add to this set you should do a video on fulminated mercury. I could be wrong but I think that that is one of the main ingredients in the detonators.

  • @beefcakeandgravy
    @beefcakeandgravy 9 лет назад +5

    detonator cap?
    So all the movies are wrong then when they blow up dynamite with a firework style fuse?

    • @yevrahhipstar3902
      @yevrahhipstar3902 9 лет назад +11

      George Smith Two kinds of detonators; electrical (push the t-handle on the box) & pyrolitic; firework style. Both provide heat to an azide compound. Look up azides: they're great fun ;D

    • @zameliz
      @zameliz 8 лет назад +10

      George Smith Well the firework style ones just detonates a compound that explodes very easily with heat and that tiny explosion blows up the dynamite.

    • @kossankarlsson1080
      @kossankarlsson1080 8 лет назад

      You cant make dynomite explode with a usual fuse as it doesnt produce any shockwave. You need a shockwave from another explosion to detonate the dynomite.

    • @ke6gwf
      @ke6gwf 5 лет назад +1

      No, they just didn't show that you push a detonator with the fuse crimped into it into the stick, as opposed to putting the fuse in directly.
      Now some may have had them tape the fuse to the outside or something, but if the fuse was sticking out the end, it was coming out of blasting cap/detonator.

    • @BillFromTheHill100
      @BillFromTheHill100 4 года назад

      A fuse goes to a cap.
      Not electric

  • @wrakowic
    @wrakowic 8 лет назад +183

    7:21 #REKT

    • @ananay010
      @ananay010 8 лет назад +2

      Haha

    • @jayboy12131
      @jayboy12131 8 лет назад

      +wrrabec get rest skrub

    • @bt70a9
      @bt70a9 8 лет назад +4

      +wrrabec 5:05 #Wrecked

    • @MrNickTube1
      @MrNickTube1 8 лет назад +7

      +wrrabec THE WHOLE PLACE WAS #REKT
      Don't mess with TNT, scrub.

    • @wrakowic
      @wrakowic 8 лет назад +2

      MrNickTube1 fite me 1v1 irl then

  • @randelldarky3920
    @randelldarky3920 6 лет назад

    You make great videos, period

  • @mychaelpierce8049
    @mychaelpierce8049 3 года назад

    Awesome video! Thanks for sharing!

  • @mitchm7563
    @mitchm7563 8 лет назад +62

    einsteins younger bro youngstein

    • @NorwayVFX
      @NorwayVFX 8 лет назад +27

      zweistein :P

    • @mitchm7563
      @mitchm7563 8 лет назад +1

      +NorwayVFX frostein

    • @fzigunov
      @fzigunov 6 лет назад

      Einstein's young brother AnderenStein

    • @ptroinks
      @ptroinks 6 лет назад

      Damn you! I was just going to reply with Zweistein :D.

    • @JoeZUGOOLA
      @JoeZUGOOLA 4 года назад

      @@NorwayVFX best me to it three years ago bro

  • @naryosh_
    @naryosh_ 7 лет назад +12

    5:08- When you didn't know you left the gas from your stove on and you light the eye

  • @mhorram
    @mhorram 4 года назад

    So, if you hit one of these Chillwell canaries with a hammer will they explode like Acme TNT?

  • @ajdexter4195
    @ajdexter4195 4 года назад

    I always thought TnT and dynamite were the same thing?
    You learn something new every day

  • @yishaqdavid2029
    @yishaqdavid2029 9 лет назад +5

    WTF is a arctic roll?

    • @chrisofnottingham
      @chrisofnottingham 9 лет назад +10

      Yiṣḥāq David It is a UK dessert, similar to a swiss roll (or jelly roll in the US) but filled with ice cream too. In fact it is just a tube of ice cream surrounded by a single turn of sponge and jam not a complete spiral to the middle like a swiss roll, which is probably what the chap was thinking of.

    • @yishaqdavid2029
      @yishaqdavid2029 9 лет назад

      chrisofnottingham thanks

    • @planetwalker
      @planetwalker 9 лет назад +7

      Yiṣḥāq David Think giant Twinkie with improvements.

  • @etmax1
    @etmax1 9 лет назад +8

    Hmm 100g of chocolate for lunch. Yumm I'm glad I watched this now :-)

  • @Anonyminded
    @Anonyminded 12 лет назад +1

    love the explanation, thank u folks, especially to professor ;)

  • @munsta007
    @munsta007 3 года назад

    I watched all these videos back when I was in high school. Now I'm getting them recommended to me again haha

  • @dirtymikentheboys5817
    @dirtymikentheboys5817 9 лет назад +4

    Please don't throw dynamite on a fire kids.

    • @eljuano28
      @eljuano28 5 лет назад +5

      I'm not an expert, just an old Marine, but it's my understanding that dynamite is "close to" as stable as C4 as long as you haven't let it weep. I've burned C4 many times to heat up my coffee, but I gotta say, even I'd be a little nervous putting dynamite in a fire. There's a reason the military really doesn't use it anymore. Someone better qualified than me, may have a difference of opinion.

    • @Shadow77999
      @Shadow77999 4 года назад

      @@eljuano28 yikes

  • @standupaddict94
    @standupaddict94 10 лет назад +8

    7:13 Look at the text on the monitor behind the guy. It spins off the screen

  • @modularnepl900
    @modularnepl900 5 лет назад

    I love the tie that crazy doctor wears!

  • @fuckboy6880
    @fuckboy6880 Год назад

    Is their any info for TNTNB and how it’s structure allows for a more stable compound?

  • @DevilMaster
    @DevilMaster 11 лет назад +5

    4:22 "These have enough oxygens in here to make all these carbons turn into carbon dioxide".
    /counts the atoms
    6 atoms of oxygen, 7 atoms of carbon
    Nope.

  • @soylentgreenb
    @soylentgreenb 10 лет назад +6

    The original dynamit was not a success. It was too weak and miners still used nitroglycerin.
    The real success was "rubber dynamite", which is a gel of nitrocellulose and nitroglycerin.
    Modern dynamite is mainly ammonium nitrate with some fuel, sensitized with some nitroglycerin or nitroglycol.
    In civil construction the explosives most frequently used is emulsion explosives, which are a mixture of an ammonium nitrate solution and fuel, sensitized by microspheres or similar. None of the components are themselves high explosives, and the resulting mixture is extremely insensitive to accidentalt detonation.

    • @jayfischer880
      @jayfischer880 9 лет назад +1

      Wrong

    • @BoredErica
      @BoredErica 9 лет назад +7

      Jay Fischer Just saying "wrong" is useless.

    • @lachlanallen341
      @lachlanallen341 9 лет назад +1

      Eric Lin Except Jay Fischer is right: TNT stands for Tri-nitro-toluene NOT ammonium nitrate...
      We do use AN-FO (ammonium nitrate + fuel oil) but it isn't called dynamite.

    • @BoredErica
      @BoredErica 9 лет назад +1

      Lachlan Allen Except what? I said just saying "wrong" is useless. Whether he himself was right or wrong was and still is irrelevant.

    • @lachlanallen341
      @lachlanallen341 9 лет назад +1

      Eric Lin It at least puts some doubt into others so they look it up for themselves.

  • @Bjo15
    @Bjo15 12 лет назад

    The molecule model you are using looks very nice !
    Where can someone buy one of these ?

  • @bimblinghill
    @bimblinghill 12 лет назад

    Near where I live (not far from Nottingham) is Fauld, where 3000 tonnes TNT equivalent exploded at an arms dump in 1944. The 120m deep crater is still visible on google maps, although the tags are all slightly out, the crater is in the wooded area just to the south. Its still fenced off as somewhere underneath are still thousands of tonnes of explosive.

  • @buildbyandmaster104
    @buildbyandmaster104 8 лет назад +5

    umm why are you eating chocolate for lunch😒

    • @JOHN0577ANDFRIENDS
      @JOHN0577ANDFRIENDS 7 лет назад +1

      same amount of salt you eat for lunch

    • @mudkip_btw
      @mudkip_btw 7 лет назад +1

      Joshua Inniss Not like he only eats chocolate

  • @fvazquez64
    @fvazquez64 10 лет назад +3

    That's why it always makes me smile when movies show explosions in space, because one condition for an explosión to take place is oxigen and in space there is no oxigen.... Excellent videos. thank you for sharing

    • @pjmccarry
      @pjmccarry 9 лет назад

      Learn to speil

    • @kindpotato
      @kindpotato 9 лет назад +1

      ***** *read more carefully

    • @benaldo138
      @benaldo138 9 лет назад

      TNT =/= Nitroglycerin, point taken about the vaccum explody bits though.

    • @koenth2359
      @koenth2359 6 лет назад +3

      Explosions really need no external oxygen. It would not be possible to get oxygen in from the surrounding air that fast anyway, so that cannot be the mechanism. The mechanism is really a rearrangement of the atoms that are present in the explosive molecules, so that lots of gas is formed and lots of energy is released. Which can happen in space too.
      What is funny though about most movie images of explosions in space, is that the explosions end up in clouds that stay. Outward motion is not decelerated at all in the vacuum of space.

    • @VRossInMo
      @VRossInMo 6 лет назад

      Explosives which require outside oxygen source are useless. Explosives contain both the fuel and the oxygen within them. Ammonium Nitrate/ Fuel Oil (ANFOS) for instance... the fuel oil provides the carbon based fuel, and the ammonium nitrate provides the oxygen. Koen Th described it correctly. Another funny thing is in most movies, etc, there is noise from the blast, which is not possible in vacuum.

  • @ThinkingSpeck
    @ThinkingSpeck 8 лет назад +1

    I was wondering, what's the benefit of TNT over trinitrobenzene? What use, if any, is that methyl group on the benzene ring?

  • @YouMockMe
    @YouMockMe 3 года назад

    Wait. Just glycerine and nitric acid?
    ...and I would have thought that to be a neat test. You just saved a life!

  • @chukotkapeninsula5924
    @chukotkapeninsula5924 8 лет назад +11

    Lots of muslims in this comments section. You can't fool me I know what you're up to.

    • @cserpent9195
      @cserpent9195 8 лет назад

      .......
      :)

    • @JafarChou
      @JafarChou 8 лет назад +12

      We're all having a 100 gram chocolate bars for lunch

    • @Jimpozcan
      @Jimpozcan 7 лет назад

      Ham sandwiches make a better lunch.

    • @seffard
      @seffard 7 лет назад

      Allahu Akbar!

  • @Cornz38
    @Cornz38 5 лет назад +1

    The term "a banging headache" comes from the old workers involved in the production of Nitro Glycerin as it does indeed cause a crashing headache in some people.

    • @capnbilll2913
      @capnbilll2913 5 лет назад

      Many nitrate compounds dilate capillaries causing a blood pressure drop, mostly in the head.

  • @JosBergervoet
    @JosBergervoet 4 года назад +2

    Some errors: TNT does NOT contain enough oxygen to "turn all the carbon into carbon dioxide" (claimed at 4:28). Only part of the carbon is able to react and it forms CO, NOT CO2 (5:30 in the video).

  • @Only_God_Is_Allah_SWT
    @Only_God_Is_Allah_SWT 3 года назад

    Dynamite are the parts of fabrics dipped and soaked in nitroglycerine then set in the stick casing that we call the dynamite stick.