Why "Golf Ball Car" Is Pivotal in MythBusters' History

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 1 авг 2021
  • This maquette from Golf Ball Car -- which will be offered in the upcoming MythBusters auction -- is more than just a prop; according to Adam Savage, it represents a significant shift in the history of the series.
    Donate directly to the Grant Imahara STEAM Foundation: grantimaharafoundation.org/
    Watch MythBusters on Discovery Plus: discoveryplus.com
    Join this channel to support Tested and get access to perks:
    / @tested
    Tested Ts, stickers, mugs and more: tested-store.com
    Subscribe for more videos (and click the bell for notifications): ruclips.net/user/subscription_c...
    Twitter: / testedcom
    Facebook: / testedcom
    Instagram: / testedcom
    Discord: / discord
    Amazon Storefront: www.amazon.com/shop/adamsavage...
    Savage Industries T-shirts: cottonbureau.com/stores/savag...
    Tested is:
    Adam Savage / donttrythis
    Norman Chan / nchan
    Joey Fameli www.joeyfameli.com
    Gunther Kirsch guntherkirsch.com
    Ryan Kiser / ryan.kiser
    Jen Schachter www.jenschachter.com
    Kishore Hari / sciencequiche
    Sean Charlesworth / cworthdynamics
    Jeremy Williams / jerware
    Kayte Sabicer / kaytesabicer
    Bill Doran / chinbeard
    Ariel Waldman / arielwaldman
    Darrell Maloney / brokennerd
    Kristen Lomasney / krystynlo
    Intro bumper by Abe Dieckman
    Thanks for watching!
    #AdamSavage #MythBusters #GrantImahara
  • НаукаНаука

Комментарии • 2,3 тыс.

  • @fernandotrevinocastro1018
    @fernandotrevinocastro1018 3 года назад +4524

    For 14% fuel eficiency i would drive a car with scales, feathers, whatever man, this fuel prices are killing me

    • @garystinten9339
      @garystinten9339 3 года назад +65

      Make covers for the wheels

    • @Bob_Lob_Law
      @Bob_Lob_Law 3 года назад +196

      Get a smaller car.
      Or better yet, ride a bicycle or use public transportation.

    • @oceanbytez847
      @oceanbytez847 3 года назад +117

      @@garystinten9339 Brakes get hot and need airflow for cooling. Covering them entirely wouldn't be worth the drawback of hot and short lived brakes.

    • @CannonRaw
      @CannonRaw 3 года назад +205

      @@Bob_Lob_Law not saying you're wrong. But living in more remote areas sometimes you need your own vehicle. And having something with more power is essential when you drive in sleet, slush, ice, and, snow.

    • @asmodiusjones9563
      @asmodiusjones9563 3 года назад +46

      Bro - get a used Prius. I get 55 mpg on average, and regularly 65 on long trips.

  • @SevenBates
    @SevenBates 3 года назад +5569

    Casually learning about the name of the strudel (Strouhal) wave, out of nowhere, It's just one example of why I am so grateful for these videos.

    • @SevenBates
      @SevenBates 3 года назад +36

      We wasted their time! (huge laugh) oh that's the cherry on top.

    • @danielwgk
      @danielwgk 3 года назад +20

      Good luck googling it. I couldn't find any relevant info. Google sure seems to be less and less useful as time goes on.

    • @jasonbell6670
      @jasonbell6670 3 года назад +9

      @@danielwgk that's simply not true. it's the only thing that comes up when you search it.

    • @jasonbell6670
      @jasonbell6670 3 года назад +3

      wow 15 year's holy shit, congratulations. seven you have the oldest account i have seen this year.

    • @danielwgk
      @danielwgk 3 года назад +2

      @@jasonbell6670 aww, mine just slightly less old.

  • @HartenDylan
    @HartenDylan 3 года назад +3334

    There's a 4th part to this story: The new Bugatti uses an active dimpling system for exact reason of decreasing turbulence and tightening the slip stream! Real world application that this general methodology is actually viable. Aka - Mythbusters were right.

    • @fist-of-doom487
      @fist-of-doom487 3 года назад +98

      The way I see it you can only take the response to the previous motor company one of two ways 1) they refused to alter the design principles of their cars either out of greed or pride and there by claiming that the claim itself was unfounded 2) they genuinely couldn’t get the same result

    • @HartenDylan
      @HartenDylan 3 года назад +218

      @@fist-of-doom487 In my mind it's likely the latter for one simple reason: a company that finds a way to advertise a new vehicle that saves you up to 14% (+/- %) on your gas bill, and is the first to offer a mainstream solution (USDM), their sales (and therefore their profits) would increase.
      I saw in another comment discussing how even in the golf ball world there's massive variations (one manufacturer uses hexagons of all the same size, another does circles of varying sizes, different numbers/depths/spacing of dimples) so it's likely a design challenge that didn't see immediate results with and assumed it must have been flawed.
      But I agree with Adam, the validity and reliability of the original methodology is sound - the manufacturer deviated from that methodology and got a different result. Doesn't mean Mythbusters was "wrong", it means that the manufacturers got a different result - aka science haha.

    • @jimmmaaayyy5163
      @jimmmaaayyy5163 3 года назад +149

      Yeah. Adding huge dimples all over is a fairly brute-force way to do it. A car doesn't rotate like a golf ball -you always know which end is pointed forward! Automakers can concentrate their aerodynamic tinkering to where it matters without just blindly dimpling the whole surface and wasting effort where it is not needed.

    • @HartenDylan
      @HartenDylan 3 года назад +36

      @@jimmmaaayyy5163 Absolutely! It'll be interesting to see how the Bugatti design fares in the long term (soft membrane going through repetitive cycling sounds like it could be a failure point, but who knows).

    • @jimmmaaayyy5163
      @jimmmaaayyy5163 3 года назад +18

      @@HartenDylan I really wish moveable aerodynamics was legal in F1, it would be cool to see more of this kind of thing! PS I hadn't really kept up with the new Bugattis so thanks for mentioning it off to do some googling!

  • @jimluebke3869
    @jimluebke3869 3 года назад +402

    Strictly speaking it's not a "slipstream" you're interested in here, it's a "boundary layer".
    Air drag has two components - First, "surface drag", the actual friction of the air against the vehicle. Second, "form drag", the force produced by the fact that you're pushing into a lot of air in front of you, making the air pressure in front of your car a lot higher than the pressure behind your car (this pushes you back). Dimples obviously increase the surface drag on your car. However, they DEcrease the form drag.
    Decreasing form drag is all about increasing the air pressure behind your car (or golf ball). How? Well, that's where the boundary layer comes in.
    The boundary layer is the layer of air flowing near your car, whose flow is changed by the action of your car. If you can keep this boundary layer close to your car, this evens out the pressure of the air behind your car with the pressure in front of your car, dramatically reducing the pressure drag.
    Picture a Porsche, with its iconic airfoil design. The "boundary layer" sticks close to the top of the car, not only when it reaches the highest point on the car's profile, but also as the profile starts to slope downward. The farther down the back of the car the boundary layer sticks to, the more the air pressure recovers, so the higher the pressure behind the car.
    Making the flow in this boundary layer turbulent helps keep the boundary layer attached. Technically speaking, the vortices that develop in the turbulence cause higher-pressure air from the top of the boundary layer to circulate lower into the boundary layer, increasing the pressure in the parts of the boundary layer closer to the car, and helping the layer stay attached.
    Dimples on a golf ball, fuzz on a tennis ball, vortex generators on a wing's leading edge, all of these have the same effect.
    Sorry about the long explanation, but I wanted to go step-by-step.

    • @qrzupsjohnson707
      @qrzupsjohnson707 3 года назад +5

      Yeah but how does it work?

    • @jimluebke3869
      @jimluebke3869 3 года назад +21

      @@qrzupsjohnson707 The dimples (ideally) help keep higher-pressure air close to the back of the car.
      This means the difference between the pressure on the front of the car and the pressure on the back of the car, is less.
      If that pressure difference is less, the drag force on the car (which tends to decelerate the car) is less, so it decelerates the car less, and the car is more fuel efficient.
      There are already a number of devices that cars and trucks use to allow air pressure to "recover" behind the car -- the old Landcruiser, I recall, has a flap on the top of the back that straight-up drives air from the top of the car into the recirculation zone behind the car; some tractor-trailers have rounded shells attached to the back of the trailer, which is much better than a squared-off back, for allowing pressure to recover.
      Related to this, is the old (dangerous) motorcycling trick of tailgating a tractor-trailer, riding behind in its low-pressure recirculation zone. I think Mythbusters may even have done an episode on that. It demonstrates how low the pressure can be, behind a vehicle.

    • @qrzupsjohnson707
      @qrzupsjohnson707 3 года назад +13

      @@jimluebke3869 sorry Jim I was trolling you. Great responses 👍

    • @jimluebke3869
      @jimluebke3869 3 года назад +17

      @@qrzupsjohnson707 Thank you for giving me an excuse to geek out more about aerodynamics. =)

    • @michaelbrownlee9497
      @michaelbrownlee9497 2 года назад

      @@jimluebke3869 i applied that thinking to the bottom of my sail boat which went against the yacht club make it smooth code.
      Also imagined putting a venturi air vent. Speaking of those, i wonder why no one has developed those for cars. If i recall, they toyed around with those in early automotive designs.

  • @kilroy987
    @kilroy987 3 года назад +2759

    Interestingly, golf ball dimples are the ultimate result of players from long ago realizing that damaged golf balls flew more consistently. So manufacturers experimented and arrived at the dimples.

    • @gearandalthefirst7027
      @gearandalthefirst7027 3 года назад +99

      I'd say a goblin's head is pretty damaged, so they must have had some idea from the very start lmao

    • @Unqualifiedtake
      @Unqualifiedtake 3 года назад +90

      And older golfers were upset because "youth are ruining the game"

    • @saphcal
      @saphcal 3 года назад +26

      @@gearandalthefirst7027 i understood that reference

    • @Seele2015au
      @Seele2015au 3 года назад +138

      Not "more consistently" but they went farther. Manufacturers then started making balls with textured surfaces, but they were more like random and decorative. A British golf enthusiast, William Taylor, wanted to find the optimal texture design, so he built a wind tunnel and started his study, and arrived at the design in use to this day. William Taylor was a co-founder of the company TS & W Taylor, later Taylor, Taylor & Hobson, then Rank Taylor Hobson, well known as makers of precision instruments, and lenses for photography and cinematography.

    • @masteranakin8827
      @masteranakin8827 3 года назад +2

      I was going to say that, and The first thing I saw was your comment

  • @williegillie5712
    @williegillie5712 3 года назад +3591

    I’m glad to see Grant has something to be remembered with. He and Tori and Carie where all an integral part of the mythbusters team. He will be sorely missed.

    • @Sheridantank
      @Sheridantank 3 года назад +155

      He was such a genuine seeming person. He did a lot to make "nerds" seem cool for my generation. RIP Grant.

    • @Fleato
      @Fleato 3 года назад +66

      right, i really think that the mythbusters team had a major influence on my decision to go into engineering. I always had a love for science and the process of problem solving and never realized it until my later years but now im full swing into engineering.

    • @bbugarschi
      @bbugarschi 3 года назад +5

      He also did some ads for McDonalds, look it up...

    • @thisismyusername6717
      @thisismyusername6717 3 года назад +31

      Wait a fucking minute...GRANT DIED!!!???

    • @B3Band
      @B3Band 3 года назад +15

      Grant is dead?!?!

  • @someoneelsedoit8706
    @someoneelsedoit8706 3 года назад +187

    Still love how all these years later after mythbusters ended, Adam is still so sweet and fucking around with science. His deposition is like he’s always a happy child in a candy shop.

    • @KienDLuu
      @KienDLuu 11 месяцев назад +2

      Agreed. Adam’s energy was a major reason of the shows succession. His genuine joy and curiosity was infectious.

  • @KenLimPhotography
    @KenLimPhotography 3 года назад +25

    One aspect I love about Mythbusters is the passion y’all had for the science and the willingness to fail and more importantly, learn from your failures and apply what was learned. Thank you for making every hour enjoyable which I still enjoy on Discovery+ to this day!

  • @jordonfreeman166
    @jordonfreeman166 3 года назад +2412

    I still remember after Adam announced the results Jamie saying “I feel like eating my beret” because he thought they wouldn’t have an effect.

    • @cavemanvi
      @cavemanvi 3 года назад +33

      i still remember Kari's first episode. #AUCTIONTHESEAT

    • @idewmeth4203
      @idewmeth4203 3 года назад +1

      @@cavemanvi auction the seat? Could you elaborate on that?

    • @shorey66
      @shorey66 3 года назад +10

      @@idewmeth4203 they made a cast of her ass for some reason. Can't quite remember why but funnily enough I remember that part.

    • @clayxros576
      @clayxros576 3 года назад +12

      @@shorey66
      It was to test if someone could be vacuum sealed to an airplane toilet. They took the picture of her butt, rendered it, then modified the render to mimic an obese person to maybe make a vacuum seal.

    • @Matrxmonky
      @Matrxmonky 3 года назад +1

      When they finally tallied up the gas mileage and looked at the differences...

  • @omnipotent_arcanis
    @omnipotent_arcanis 3 года назад +1479

    "We wasted the time of a big three automaker for like a week; that is so cool" Some of the sweetest words I have ever heard.

    • @outkast187
      @outkast187 3 года назад +22

      Eh, I think you are missing the message. Most people agree to this because they hate people more successful than them and think anyone with more than them is evil and they want revenge. (Democrats are experts at pushing this message, so they can gain power)
      Where Adam....I believe was saying it was cool to be so relevant, that a big company noticed and had to use their resources to see if they could replicate it. Thats a big deal.

    • @squarespectrum2271
      @squarespectrum2271 3 года назад +53

      @@outkast187I think you read a message noone wrote. That's some A grade nonsense you're spouting there chap. Zero logic. Plenty of contradiction. Pulling ideas out of thin air. Brilliant stuff mate.
      I'd like to think your comment was satire. Clearly it is not.

    • @clayxros576
      @clayxros576 3 года назад +34

      @@outkast187
      We ain't here to talk politics bud, we are here to laugh at an auto manufacturer for incorrectly replicating the hypothesis. Which amounts to them wasting time and mo ey for a bum result. Which is hilarious

    • @outkast187
      @outkast187 3 года назад +7

      @@clayxros576 but why is it hilarious for someone to waste time and money? Are you just a hateful person?
      Ah, no...its because you are jealous of the success. Its human nature, its common. If it upsets you to know that, break down why it makes you happy when someone else fails.

    • @outkast187
      @outkast187 3 года назад +5

      @@squarespectrum2271 oh yea? Then why would someone take joy in someone's loss of money and failure?
      Are you saying these human traits no longer exist? Jealousy is no longer a thing? People are no longer mean?

  • @sereth7582
    @sereth7582 3 года назад +32

    Seeing this about the charity for the first time. Grant's death was one of the only times I cried over a role model's death. He inspired me to be a better engineer and do innovative work. Good to see the charity going.

  • @samsaverino8159
    @samsaverino8159 3 года назад +8

    I swear I could listen to him tell story's all day long. I love hearing him talk, especially how you can hear the excitement in his voice. It really brings me into what he is talking about.

  • @glytchmeister9856
    @glytchmeister9856 3 года назад +1705

    Wasting a week’s worth of time of a world leading company is honestly a massive bucket list item

    • @brucecarter8296
      @brucecarter8296 3 года назад +55

      getting them to improve effeciency would be better. i would like to know more about why they arrived at different results

    • @1nicube
      @1nicube 3 года назад +68

      @@brucecarter8296 im pretty sure that size and quantity of the dimples are a big factor and they didnt found the right proportion. also im 100% garantee that even if it works they wont release a car with dimples on the body of the car. Mclaren already have a car with dimples under the car, so if a big supercar company made it.. im sure it does help and you juste need to find the right dimension and proportion.

    • @anonym3017
      @anonym3017 3 года назад +32

      @@brucecarter8296 because they used the wrong size or not enough of them.
      Because it definitely works to reduce drag.
      Which is why it's now being done by European manufacturers on the underside.
      Gets them 0.5 liters less fuel consumption for no costs whatsoever.

    • @thereaction18
      @thereaction18 3 года назад +17

      It's hardly an accomplishment to get a big company to waste their time. They are already doing that all the time.

    • @malcanthetduffy3613
      @malcanthetduffy3613 3 года назад +2

      I know my mom complained when the insurance company traded her car in because of a hail storm and she had to lose out on the 20% improved fuel efficiency. But yes the sizes and number of dimples can really improve how long fuel lasts. I do wonder if they took the added weight of the clay into their original calculations though.

  • @poeboygolfs
    @poeboygolfs 3 года назад +2115

    There is actually no standard number of dimples on a golf ball. Each manufacturer and each brand of golf ball can have different size, number, pattern, spacing and even shape of dimples on their golf balls. For example, Callaway golf balls are known for having hexagonal shaped dimples. Also the top selling golf ball, the Titleist Pro-V1 has a dimple pattern that incorporates dimples of different sizes. Each manufacturer's dimple pattern is used as a proprietary effort to not only reduce drag to improve the ball's speed, but also keep the ball in the air longer to improve carry distances.

    • @gregbrown98
      @gregbrown98 3 года назад +115

      you're absolutely right. to add to this, the dimple patterns are fined tuned to a degree that they even affect the amount of spin the golf ball maintains after impact. the Pro V1x has a dimple pattern that aims to reduce spin more than that of the Pro V1, since it's marketed as a lower spinning ball. the amount of engineering that goes into golf equipment these days is unfathomable.

    • @rays5163
      @rays5163 3 года назад +21

      That's just what the illuminati wants you to believe

    • @maxmarkfield
      @maxmarkfield 3 года назад +53

      @@gregbrown98 Or at least the amount of marketing that goes into it...

    • @Real28
      @Real28 3 года назад +6

      My fellow golfers are here.

    • @tonycrabtree3416
      @tonycrabtree3416 3 года назад +2

      792 I believe was the ProV1 standard at one time.

  • @devikwolf
    @devikwolf 2 года назад +2

    Mythbusters will always be a tremendous part of my adolescence, and all of you are in no small part responsible for keeping me interested in answering questions and building cool things. I always felt a particular connection to Grant's excitement to build new things and answer really cool questions, so I'm extremely proud to see how the Mythbusters, and in particular Adam, have honored his legacy.
    I wish I'd had the chance to tell Grant personally just how much he inspired me to keep building, learning, doing, and exploring, but ALL of you helped foster that same attitude. I love all of the Mythbusters team for setting an example that an entire generation could idolize.

  • @outkast187
    @outkast187 3 года назад +6

    It was so awesome to watch these episodes and see all the fun and frustration baked in. I liked everyone on the show, Grant was so perfect for it, the show couldn't be what it was without the same group.

  • @theonly9
    @theonly9 3 года назад +176

    I remember this episode when I was a kid. I told my parents "but they are taking weight off the car with the dimpples" then it almost immediately cuts to you with a milk crate of the cut outs putting them back in the car, saying "we are going to keep it fair and put the weight back in the car."

  • @CatMintKat
    @CatMintKat 3 года назад +522

    Back in high school, this episode helped me make the fastest CO2 racer for my science class. I was so proud since it even beat the teacher's car ❤️

    • @becauseimafan
      @becauseimafan 3 года назад +4

      Sweet!! 😁

    • @haddow777
      @haddow777 2 года назад +23

      It can't be overstated how much aerodynamics affect things. I made the fastest CO2 car in my class using another principal of aerodynamics. I made a general block car out of a 2x4. Nothing fancy other than narrow at the front, tapering to tiller in the middle and slightly tapering down towards the rear.
      The big design feature I added that made mine faster was to add a big groove on the bottom of the car. It kind of looked like I cut the profile of a wing out of the bottom of the car.
      The way it worked is kind of like how F1 racers work. As the air went under the car, the bottom rasing up in an inverted wing slope created a small area of low pressure under the car. This in effect, created a weak vacuum that sucked the car to the floor. This kept it stable as it drove, and allowed more of the thrust to be applied to the forward direction rather than be wasted by the car gyrating all over the place. It killed all the other cars. Now, if only I thought about dimples at the time too.

    • @CarsOfPennsylvania
      @CarsOfPennsylvania 2 года назад

      God I wish I had this project

    • @wea_lodd9961
      @wea_lodd9961 2 года назад

      @@haddow777 your teacher must have been proud to have a student who truly cared about what he taught :)

    • @haddow777
      @haddow777 2 года назад +8

      @@wea_lodd9961 unfortunately no. The class was a new experimental class called Techology class. It was supposed to be, in there words, be a low tech class. Meaning mostly engineering. Our teacher's name was Mr. Dench, so of course, as 13 year olds, we called him Mr. Stench behind his back. In any event, he didn't really view it as a real class I guess. He would go through attendance in the beginning and he paid so little attention he never noticed more than half the class leaving right after their names were called. He just left us to do whatever we wanted in a metal work shop. Imagine, a bunch of 13 year olds left alone in a metal shop. No word of a lie, I stopped one kid from holding an acetaline torch on the acetaline tank. Fortunately for the whole school, he didn't know how to mix the oxygen ratio so it wasn't hot enough to burn through steel, still that scared the living daylights out of me. Also, one time someone made a bunch of ninja stars and we threw them all around the room.
      No, a couple months later, Mr, Dench finally realize most people were skipping and put an end to it. That's when he actually gave us assignments. The CO2 race car one came with basic requirements. It could be a certain size and must have a hole for the CO2 cartridge. He gave us some basic wheels we could attach. That was it. I think I got the idea for my design because I watched a show on car design and they explained how F1 racers work. After seeing how CO2 cars were so volatile that they flew half the time, I thought the design principal would stabilize it, and luckily for me it did. Unfortunately, some kid in the class who didn't seem to care that mine beat his had the last word. A day or so later I ended up finding my car smashed to pieces on the floor of the shop.
      It wasn't too bad of a class though. Once Dench got into the swing of things, he did assign us to build a robot arm powered through hydraulics using syringes. You know, connect 2 syringes together by a hose, as you push one in, the other extends. You could have one for the gripper hand, another for the elbow, another for the shoulder, and another to turn the arm. It was a cool project, but to show I was just another punk kid in the room, I never actually built it. Too lazy at the time. I always regret that.

  • @whitestarlinegoodnight
    @whitestarlinegoodnight 3 года назад

    Watching Adam get excited about strudel waves and the thumping noise of a car window brings me immense joy. That genuine interest you can see is just so wholesome!

  • @tom.in.barcelona
    @tom.in.barcelona 3 года назад +9

    Adam's enthusiasm is so infectious - what an educator, seriously!

  • @Throttle.Therapy.
    @Throttle.Therapy. 3 года назад +531

    Great dedication for Grant. ❤

    • @dollarbill93
      @dollarbill93 3 года назад +10

      May he rest in peace.

    • @JV-ll1cu
      @JV-ll1cu 3 года назад

      Yes. But does every late famous/semi-famous person need to have their own foundation?

    • @teedjay91
      @teedjay91 3 года назад +35

      @@JV-ll1cu Peoples around him felt he didn't have enough time to give all the positive he could have in the world. It's not only about him but about everyone who shares his values that can be helped to develop their full potentials. How can that be a bad thing?

    • @armchairexpert4151
      @armchairexpert4151 3 года назад

      RIP Grant, didn't know his death until now :(

  • @jsclayton
    @jsclayton 3 года назад +470

    This is why I refer to the hail damage on my truck as “speed dimples” 😆

  • @chepaco3290
    @chepaco3290 Месяц назад +1

    That was the single most memorable episode of Mythbusters for me, a 90's kid, who grew up watching you. Thanks for the memories.

  • @JefffRushton
    @JefffRushton 3 года назад +3

    Grant's passing hit different.
    You could tell he was a genuine and kind person.

  • @thumbwarriordx
    @thumbwarriordx 3 года назад +570

    "didn't really realize we were making a science show at the beginning"
    Oh boy 15 year old me had some OPINIONS about some of the methodologies of the first 3 seasons of Mythbusters.
    ...Many of which were addressed two or even three times over the ensuing years.

    • @stitch626aloha
      @stitch626aloha 3 года назад +54

      Yes, like the episodes where they called Gy Sgt. Hathcock a LIAR because “.30-06 can’t get through a scope.” and they were using a round-nose -06 against a 9x Leupold scope in an M1 Garand instead of the boat tail spitzer ball ammo used by the military against the actual pzu scope in a Winchester M70((my terms are wrong, and I know, gimme a break))… when the experiment WORKED at 8 feet, they declared it “Plausible”, then turned around and said, “but it’s still impossible”.
      I get it, one in a billion shot, but they called him -and his spotter- LIARS

    • @Delightfully_Bitchy
      @Delightfully_Bitchy 3 года назад

      Didn't Simo Haya also do something like that?

    • @demongrenade2748
      @demongrenade2748 3 года назад +64

      @@stitch626aloha That's because it didn't work with standard ammo. They had to pull out armor piercing ammo in order to make it happen. And Hathcock was a liar. At the range Hathcock supposedly pulled off that shot, the bullet would no longer flying straight. Even if you had no lenses in the scope, the bullet wouldn't be able to fly through the scope without hitting the scope housing. Its angle of trajectory makes it impossible. Add in lenses, and now its even more impossible.
      Carlos hathcock, and his spotter, were completely full of shit. They didn't pull off that shot.

    • @z-beeblebrox
      @z-beeblebrox 3 года назад +15

      @@Delightfully_Bitchy Probably a legend. Most stories about Simo Hayha are second-hand because he rarely gave interviews and kept to himself, so there's likely quite a few made up stories about him.

    • @WaluTime
      @WaluTime 3 года назад +20

      @@stitch626aloha only half of that paragraph felt like english.

  • @thewanderingfool4435
    @thewanderingfool4435 3 года назад +780

    "The water tank is just a place of wonder!" Now there's something you don't hear everyday. Love Adam and all the Mythbusters cast. RIP Grant gone but not forgotten, the amount of people globally who's lives have been positively affect by grant and this show would be off the chart if we knew the exact number. Mythbusters is one of the greatest shows ever made.

    • @charlottem.1477
      @charlottem.1477 3 года назад +7

      It really was! I grew up watching with my dad. It helped push me into STEM at an early age. That and building rockets, we would set them off at the race track parking lot!

    • @ShawnSavageTeachings
      @ShawnSavageTeachings 3 года назад +2

      Hopefully he was a Christian and then we will see him again!

    • @Rayan-gb6tt
      @Rayan-gb6tt 3 года назад +13

      @@ShawnSavageTeachings You’re really peddling your religion in a reply to a comment like this? That’s disgusting.

    • @ShawnSavageTeachings
      @ShawnSavageTeachings 3 года назад +3

      @@Rayan-gb6tt no. Just stating a fact. I hope to see him in heaven he was an awesome guy!

    • @josh.wiggins8700
      @josh.wiggins8700 3 года назад +1

      perfectly said

  • @MountaindewM
    @MountaindewM 3 года назад

    I got so much joy in watching MythBusters. I get just as much joy now re-watching episodes but there is a part of me that feels a sadness for knowing someone so great is gone far too soon. I can't imagine how the whole MythBusters crew must feel with the loss of such a good friend that you had to of gotten to know at the very least decently well. I will cherish the moments he is on screen knowing he has taught so many young kids and adults alike about science and that being into science can be cool.

  • @wtimber
    @wtimber 3 года назад +1

    The golf ball car one was one of my all time favorites. I also really liked the model you made with water to show a shock wave going through a 90 degree turn vs a curve.

  • @jameswalker199
    @jameswalker199 3 года назад +487

    It's perhaps a regret of mine that I'll never meet Grant. He was truly inspirational in both robotics and engineering in general, and probably one of the people that nudged me down the path of computer science I'm on today.

    • @tuttosalve8352
      @tuttosalve8352 3 года назад +4

      Oh man fuckin brain aneurysm that's scary

  • @tannerrienbolt3143
    @tannerrienbolt3143 3 года назад +648

    I still can't believe Grant is gone

    • @raylarkin5004
      @raylarkin5004 3 года назад +15

      😥

    • @fuzzybits410
      @fuzzybits410 3 года назад +5

      F

    • @MmeHyraelle
      @MmeHyraelle 3 года назад +10

      Yea its so hard to accept reality and not substitute your own.

    • @cezarcatalin1406
      @cezarcatalin1406 3 года назад +2

      @@MmeHyraelle
      We can reject someone else’s reality... but we cannot reject our common reality.

    • @BPond7
      @BPond7 3 года назад +1

      It breaks the heart. 😥

  • @neil_down_south
    @neil_down_south 3 года назад

    You're one of the most engaging guys I know ... you are blessed with an ability to make stories/facts so interesting ... I am going to introduce my young kids to your channel this wknd! Your enthusiasm for your previous achievement was touching to watch.

  • @Patrick_The_Pure
    @Patrick_The_Pure 3 года назад +5

    Just seeing Adam get so exited like a little kid seeing the "disney world in 3 miles" sign just over him remembering the strudel wave, somehow makes me very giddy.

  • @bdubbsmark
    @bdubbsmark 3 года назад +86

    Mr. Savage it's an honor to take a walk with you down memory lane. Mythbusters was huge for me growing up, getting to watch you pull the curtain back so many years later has been wonderful! Thank you

  • @LycaonsMemories
    @LycaonsMemories 3 года назад +387

    i love how absolutely ecstatic adam is at wasting the big corporates time

    • @Schm1dtstorm
      @Schm1dtstorm 3 года назад +13

      Based.

    • @mrdanforth3744
      @mrdanforth3744 3 года назад +19

      It wasn't wasted if they learned something. Big companies do research and development all the time, most experiments don't lead directly to new car models but some do. Every new innovation starts as somebody's brain storm.

    • @fufun4me
      @fufun4me 3 года назад +7

      @@mrdanforth3744 plenty are ab accident or a "Oh fuck this" moment. Small, clever fixes are how humans got good

    • @kurtwagner350
      @kurtwagner350 3 года назад +5

      Yeah that’s how you know you made it, when billion dollar companies take you seriously

    • @clayxros576
      @clayxros576 3 года назад +2

      @@mrdanforth3744
      Yeah, tho to be fair from what we heard about the letter they tested the concept totally differently, and then with a different kind of car on top of it.

  • @JP-jm9fy
    @JP-jm9fy 3 года назад +1

    I remember watching this episode. Also one of episode that I just couldn’t get out of my head was the truck fuel usage better with the tailgate down or up. It was shown that with it up you got better fuel efficiency and I agreed with that result. However, I always wondered that if a tool box was added behind the cab would you get a different result.

  • @misplays_irl1261
    @misplays_irl1261 3 года назад +1

    these are great stories, thanks for sharing. did the automakers provide any documentation? footage? anything? i would love to see a revisit, utilizing their info / strats / equipment

  • @Taskarnin
    @Taskarnin 3 года назад +356

    It’s possible that depending on the SUV the flow around the vehicle was already quite turbulent.
    In airplanes there’s also a thing called parasitic drag and Induced drag. Different things cause different kinds of drag. Likely the dimples mitigate one kind of drag but not another.

    • @mushieslushie
      @mushieslushie 3 года назад +30

      Yeah, also the car they tested was a 90's Taurus where the SUV, while an SUV, probably had more modern aerodynamics.

    • @GiM_Retrospect
      @GiM_Retrospect 3 года назад +57

      From my understanding, dimples increase skin friction, but reduce the low-pressure drag experienced by the ball in flight. I'm guessing the SUV already had poor skin friction due to its shape, so the dimples didn't really help.

    • @InDreamsYourMine
      @InDreamsYourMine 3 года назад +14

      @@mushieslushie Actually it was a 2000,s Taurus, and if it was a late 90s Taurus, they were designed to be areo dynamic hence why they look a little weird.

    • @IstasPumaNevada
      @IstasPumaNevada 3 года назад +46

      Adam didn't specify exactly what numbers the auto manufacturer got. And if they only said "We did not come to the same results", that could mean anything really. It could mean "we got 10% instead of 14%", or 0%, or 25%, or -10%... And that's assuming they were telling the truth to Adam.
      Also, aero testing in the real world is notoriously fickle. A slight cross- or headwind on one test would completely throw off their results. Time of day can make big changes too; warmer/windier later. Should have done A-B-A-B testing; that is, without the dimples, then with, then without, then with. At least five runs in each direction for each test.

    • @cavalrycome
      @cavalrycome 3 года назад +22

      @@IstasPumaNevada It's clear from context that Adam is saying the auto manufacturer didn't find an improvement in fuel efficiency.

  • @Plankmeister
    @Plankmeister 3 года назад +47

    I love his enthusiasm, it's so infectious! You only ever see this kind of enthusiasm when someone is nerding out about something they're really genuinely interested in.

  • @tonyhouk9047
    @tonyhouk9047 3 года назад +1

    I was able to go to a lecture Grant did at The University of Nebraska Lincoln. He talked about the Bunny and his work on it. I’m glad I was able to attend it. Tony

  • @jmckendry84
    @jmckendry84 Месяц назад

    Love this video. Your enthusiasm for what you do (and did!) is infectious

  • @mcpherson244
    @mcpherson244 3 года назад +115

    Miss ya grant. This is a great idea. Thank you for your selflessness in giving these nostalgic items away to a great cause.

  • @hiplessboy
    @hiplessboy 3 года назад +62

    Wow. This is to benefit the Grant Imahara Foundation? So nice. That is so heartbreaking and heartwarming at the same time.

  • @GrowingAnswers
    @GrowingAnswers 2 года назад

    What I like the most is how genuinely enthused you are about science and being involved in it. Its the same reason why I started doing what I do before I started doing stuff for RUclips.

  • @foxfire719
    @foxfire719 3 года назад

    I remember when this episode came out. Since then I’ve been waiting for a commercial vehicle to be released with this design. I have thought about this test a lot. Thanks for all the great content

  • @elivaughan1192
    @elivaughan1192 3 года назад +71

    "But, we wasted the time of a big 3 automaker for like a week. That is so cool." ROFL. Spit out my water on that one.

    • @cezarcatalin1406
      @cezarcatalin1406 3 года назад +1

      Adam Savage is a based savage 👏

    • @lanceanthony198
      @lanceanthony198 3 года назад +3

      I don’t think he meant he was glad he “wasted” their time, more so he was excited that their little show inspired a week of testing and investigation from a major company

    • @elivaughan1192
      @elivaughan1192 3 года назад

      @@lanceanthony198 I'm not trying to start an argument here.. but what "little show" are you talking about?? Lol. Surely not the one that had several famous/professional athletes, or got access to NASAs resources over and over, or had the president of the united States of America request a special show....
      What little show?? Because you are certainly not talking about mythbusters.

    • @lanceanthony198
      @lanceanthony198 3 года назад +2

      @@elivaughan1192 Yes but the golf ball car episode was from like 2008 or 2009. He brings up the “wasting time” thing to talk about how it is moments like that that allows the crew to feel like they’re collaborating with real scientists and testers. That’s why he described it as “cool”, not that he’s so glad he literally “wasted” a companies money and employees time recreating their idea.

  • @markmudge6586
    @markmudge6586 3 года назад +34

    Bugatti is actually utilizing this principal in one of their concepts currently. Though I think that's to more efficiently funnel air to the rear wing.

    • @silver9802
      @silver9802 3 года назад +1

      Yeah! That was my first thought watching this. Hopefully the Bolide turns out sick!

    • @ericsson_motorsports
      @ericsson_motorsports 3 года назад +5

      Porsche is using it in their production cars under the front bumper to help air flow under the body better. It's also been used on other cars owned by VW

    • @ericsson_motorsports
      @ericsson_motorsports 2 года назад

      @@J.PC.Designs ruclips.net/video/tuwM8wU18xM/видео.html At around 2:20 you can see the golf ball pattern, I never knew that 911s had a lowering front lip and I couldn't find any information about it though

  • @sergeyakimov7332
    @sergeyakimov7332 3 года назад +1

    me and my buddy went to see you guys live in 2012 live in Richmond VA , couldn't be happier..

  • @loosenoose
    @loosenoose 3 года назад +1

    @smartereveryday @destin needs to watch this. ... We should also be able to tag people or pages in RUclips.
    Fantastic video, Adam! I must have missed the golf ball car back in the day. Glad I caught it here.
    I ride motorcycles and I've seen dimpling being used on some helmets. Usually on the sides, around the ears and approaching the rear of the helmet, like between the back of the ears and the neck line. Same principal, I guess. It creates a little bit of turbulent air around that area maybe to reduce buffeting at high speeds.

  • @paulgrieger8182
    @paulgrieger8182 3 года назад +41

    You had me at "Strudel Wave."

  • @funforall9741
    @funforall9741 3 года назад +76

    This was my absolute favorite episode, mostly because i walked away feeling like something incredible was stumbled upon. Also i was so sad to hear about grant. I have never once heard or seen a single bad thing about him and I'm sure it was an honor to know somebody that exceptionally kind

  • @xMiNdWaRpx
    @xMiNdWaRpx 3 года назад +2

    I would love to see Adam Savage and Clifford Stoll meet and discuss various things. These guys are so excitedly passionate about everything that it would just be a delight to watch.

  • @thethinkingtreefrog8061
    @thethinkingtreefrog8061 3 года назад

    From kindergarten until the show ended 14 years later I never missed a new episode. You guys influenced almost everything I am as a person today. My dream as a kid was to be a Mythbuster too. Now I just hope I have the opportunity some time to at least be able to talk to you and Jamie if I can. I just want to be able to thank you face to face while there's still time. Mythbusters is so deeply seated at the core of my developmental life, losing Grant was as hard as losing a family member. If I never get to speak with you guys, it will honestly be the biggest regret of my life. Hey who the hell put these teardrops on my screen?

  • @TheDemigans
    @TheDemigans 3 года назад +68

    When I saw that episode I immediately had two questions:
    1: the dimples on the golfball are all around due to it turning in the air. But a car only needs to have dimples near the back to create the disturbance effect right?
    2: how does the size of the dimples affect the stream? Is several large ones better than several small ones?

    • @corssecurity
      @corssecurity 3 года назад +4

      What shape? Uniform or varying? Paint vs carbon fibre? Wraps? Vs sheet metal.

    • @NetAndyCz
      @NetAndyCz 3 года назад +9

      Kind of think that it would be best to use some sort of machine learning and genetic algorithms, to place random sized holes and random locations and see what is more effective and then try to improve the promising deigns by further altering them.

    • @mushieslushie
      @mushieslushie 3 года назад +14

      I think the dimples work on a ball because it needs to be round and not have any other shapes protruding from it. On a car there are probably much better ways to get a similar or better end result. You would very likely see dimples on race cars if it was viable.

    • @BooBaddyBig
      @BooBaddyBig 3 года назад +3

      Probably would only need dimples at the front. At the rear the flow is already turbulent and they wouldn't do a whole lot.

    • @z-beeblebrox
      @z-beeblebrox 3 года назад +13

      The long and short of it is - this is a fascinating topic that demands further research

  • @DrewNorthup
    @DrewNorthup 3 года назад +97

    FWIW, the Engineering Explained RUclips channel has demonstrated several cars now which use dimpling in their under-car aerodynamic-enhancement panels.

    • @thereisnospace
      @thereisnospace 3 года назад +1

      nice, didnt see that episode. gonna go check that out :)

    • @ryanmrtn5
      @ryanmrtn5 3 года назад +2

      ruclips.net/video/tuwM8wU18xM/видео.html

    • @brianwest2775
      @brianwest2775 3 года назад +11

      Dimples don't reduce drag on the surface. They can change the effective shape of the car to by keeping the airflow more attached but I suspect it's more of a marketing story than any real effect. The air flow under a car is probably already very turbulent because it's not smooth. Dimples could help stiffen a panel to reduce noise (but the dimples probably make noise). (In the video mentioned in another comment, the dimpled surfaces and those behind it are near horizontal, so I'm very skeptical. ruclips.net/video/tuwM8wU18xM/видео.html)
      Dimples change the boundary layer from laminar to turbulent. A turbulent boundary layer has MORE friction because energy is used to mix that air. In a curved object, like a golf ball, that energetic turbulent boundary layer sticks to the surface better, thereby changing the effective shape of the ball, so the airflow around the ball looks more like a raindrop (or airfoil) than a bullet with a blunt rear end. The reduction in drag from the change in shape is much more than the increased drag of the turbulent boundary layer.
      A golf ball needs dimples everywhere because it is spinning. A car does not spin. The wind is in essentially one direction. Since the car is already shaped to be aerodynamic, it will have laminar flow wherever possible. Theoretically, there could be strategic places where you want to add dimples to keep the airflow attached, but I doubt it. If you wanted a steeper angle of the rear window or trunk, or fender then you could dimple those.
      ex: howthingsfly.si.edu/aerodynamics/pressure-drag
      www.scientificamerican.com/article/how-do-dimples-in-golf-ba/

    • @aierce
      @aierce 3 года назад

      @@brianwest2775 you almost sounded smart to someone who didn't watch this episode of Mythbusters

    • @lorinh2947
      @lorinh2947 3 года назад

      @@brucecarter8296 For anything performance related in cars, you usually want less air under the car to "suck" the car to the road (AKA the ground effect).
      You do have a point on economy cars such as Priuses which have no hands in the performance industry. - But I've never heard of them having dimples on the undercarriage of these cars.

  • @robertjones818
    @robertjones818 3 года назад

    Adam, as always truly amazing to learn about what you guys did in the show, and how.
    I am the “scientist” (or one of) you consulted with for the killer whirlpool episode (scaled vortex). And must say I wouldn’t mind getting my hands on the scale model of the ship you used.

  • @swapsplat
    @swapsplat 2 года назад

    the episode about the pickup tailgate myth in the water tank still sticks with me. It was such a great visual demonstration!

  • @circus.forrest
    @circus.forrest 3 года назад +9

    These actually are on at least one car now. The newest Mercedes E63 has dimples on the plate that covers the bottom

  • @gamesplayedpoorly8633
    @gamesplayedpoorly8633 3 года назад +13

    This was one of my favorite tests that you did on the show. This along with the air conditioner vs the windows rolled down for fuel efficiency.

  • @amateurishauthor2202
    @amateurishauthor2202 3 года назад

    I've watched Myth busters since I was a kid, it held. No, HOLDS a special place in my heart, I was sad to hear that Grant passed away, I miss Myth Busters, but older me can understand that eventually all things need to come to an end before they become tainted. I remember all the Mythbuster knockoffs that sprung up with your success, knocking heads with scientists and getting copycats really means that you've done well for a show. Thank you for the trip down memory lane

  • @royh4305
    @royh4305 3 года назад

    So nice to see you again Adam.. 1st time in like 8 years. Great episode, hope you are doing well. Thank you!

  • @speedwaynutt
    @speedwaynutt 3 года назад +74

    Honestly Discovery needs to try and do a Mythbusters reunion show before we lose anymore members.

    • @3nertia
      @3nertia 3 года назад +1

      It's already too late :'(

    • @speedwaynutt
      @speedwaynutt 3 года назад +2

      @@3nertia We Still have Adam,Jamie,Tori and Kari

    • @3nertia
      @3nertia 3 года назад +5

      @@speedwaynutt Not the same without Grant though, in my opinion :'(

    • @dracomenda2
      @dracomenda2 3 года назад +4

      @@3nertia it never will be, but I miss seeing the rest of them too

    • @corssecurity
      @corssecurity 3 года назад +8

      Would be fantastic but it's a fact Jamie and Adam do not get along. They worked both independently and together.
      Professionalism is working well with people you don't personally like. Respecting thier skills and being polite.
      Jamie is working on projects for the military.
      Honestly Imo he is a good sport and still does occasional interviews for the fans.
      He and Adam got unique opertunites due to the success of the tv show.
      Plus if you were looking for a shop to build a practical working prototype of something impossible M5 studios is it.

  • @ShadowHunter120
    @ShadowHunter120 3 года назад +21

    Grant will be sorely missed but this is definitely, DEFINITELY worthy contribution to his legacy.

  • @SamLee-tm6jn
    @SamLee-tm6jn 3 года назад +5

    Watching this episode as a kid was one of the most influential experiences with science that I had in my life.

  • @seasparrow7427
    @seasparrow7427 3 года назад

    Great testing!!! I don't get you guys on my stations. What episode was the golf ball car test??
    Thank you!!

  • @ReversePeople
    @ReversePeople 3 года назад +10

    I love, LOVE, your enthusiasm!!!! Thank you so very much for taking the time to share.

  • @Unitedflyier
    @Unitedflyier 3 года назад +22

    That was a great episode. The funniest was jet blasting the taxi and school bus behind a 747. I fell off my chair laughing.

    • @CortexNewsService
      @CortexNewsService 3 года назад +3

      My conservative dad and my left wing ass bonded over a mythbuster episode, the one where the smashed a small var between to semis. We both chuckled and said "cool."

  • @m1k3droid
    @m1k3droid 3 года назад +2

    Thanks for this. When I was a kid in the 80's I was testing golfball material on the wings of RC planes for a high school research class.

  • @subrisubrika5652
    @subrisubrika5652 3 года назад

    I love how even after years of doing this you can see how excited he is about this stuff. Never stop being awesome!

  • @howHumam
    @howHumam 3 года назад +36

    Wow, I can still see the animations for this in my head. This myth is very fascinating...

    • @Kyle-fu6en
      @Kyle-fu6en 3 года назад

      So I’m not the only one

  • @TonyHoyle
    @TonyHoyle 3 года назад +57

    Every time I see a citroen cactus I'm reminded of this episode.

    • @SirChickon
      @SirChickon 3 года назад

      lol me too

    • @cycoholic
      @cycoholic 3 года назад +14

      The funny thing about the Citroen Cactus, is how the word cactus is used in Australian slang. It's used to describe something that is not just broken, but beyond repair.
      Citroen certainly didn't do their market research here in Oz. 🤣

  • @microbeta
    @microbeta 3 года назад

    Mythbusters was one of my favorite shows on television. I'm an engineer and loved to see how you approached the problems...and how that evolved over the life of the show. Great work and I really miss the show.
    However, there was one episode I took issue with. "Killer Cable Snaps". Otherwise known as "Synthetic Line Snapback". When I was in the Navy I actually gave a safety lecture on this very subject. I poured over dozens of incident reports on the subject. That episode is the only one where I think you completely missed the mark.

  • @TisTheWay
    @TisTheWay 3 года назад

    Love the passion!
    Thank you for all your work

  • @Slikx666
    @Slikx666 3 года назад +6

    So glad to hear that there's something good happening with Grants name on it.
    We miss you Grant, but you'll always be with us.

  • @MysticWanderer
    @MysticWanderer 3 года назад +11

    Adam, I just love the wonder and joy you show in your work and science in general. You make everything you are involved in fun and inspiring.

  • @G5Hohn
    @G5Hohn 3 года назад +4

    The effectiveness of the dimples is related to the shape's tendency to induce flow separation. Dimples add their own drag, so the net benefit effect relies on the induced drag of the dimples being fully offset by the reduction of drag due to flow separation. If the shape doesn't have much tendency towards separation, then the dimples are just more drag and don't help. This is why you'll never see dimpled airplane wings (except for potentially in strategic locations where they might help reduce separation at high angles of attack). On the other hand, dimples could be useful at locations like the rear part of a large boxy truck trailer where the back of the trailer tends to have a huge amount of flow separation. Indeed, there are already "vortex generator" add-ons popularly fitted to these trucks because they reduce drag so effectively.

    • @orionred2489
      @orionred2489 2 года назад

      This is almost like rule 34, but with tech. If it exists, someone is tinkering with it.

    • @brettbuck7362
      @brettbuck7362 Месяц назад

      I think you are using "induced drag" in a non-standard way.

    • @G5Hohn
      @G5Hohn Месяц назад

      @@brettbuck7362 Yes, I think "induced drag" generally refers to "drag due to lift" but since there's no lift per se here I'm referring to a "drag that is caused."

  • @bojiguy2005
    @bojiguy2005 3 года назад

    The greatest thing about this video is your genuine excitement in telling the story. Your show is really missed. Best wishes to you and the entire team.

  • @peckenstein
    @peckenstein 3 года назад +35

    This is the second time I've heard the story about wasting the time of the big automaker. Both times I've laughed way too much. Great story!

    • @peglor
      @peglor 3 года назад +6

      They've wasted so much of their time flogging internal combustion engines to death and much worse, lobbying governments to design the world around cars rather than humans that this is a drop in the ocean of waste and suffering they've been responsible for.

    • @Mrjohnnymoo1
      @Mrjohnnymoo1 3 года назад +2

      @@peglor An in ICE engine can use 15 gallons of fuel, or 120lbs, and travel over 600 miles, nearly 700. An electric vehicle is the next best and needs 1500lbs of energy/fuel to travel 400-500 miles. It needs 12x the weight to travel 200-300 miles less than a $1200 Honda Civic. They aren't flogging ICE, it still has many advantages.

    • @peglor
      @peglor 3 года назад +1

      @@Mrjohnnymoo1 Most ICE cars won't do 600 miles on one tank unless you're driving them very carefully. Fewer people still will ever drive them far enough in one go often enough for a 400 mile car to make any appreciable difference to them over a 600 mile car. Imagine a situation where you just plug the car in when you get home, refilling costs a couple of dollars, and you never need to spend any time refilling it at all since it's happening while the car is parked at home - this is the reality of electric vehicle ownership day to day and exactly what ICE car companies don't want people to realise.
      In terms of actual energy in the fuel, anywhere from 60 to 80% of it is heading straight out the tailpipe and radiator as waste heat on an ICE car, so if you're talking efficiency, an electric car powered entirely by coal power station electricity, will be responsible for less CO2 per mile than an ICE car even though it weighs more.
      In stop-go driving, because it can take momentum back from the car to slow it down, charging the battery, the cost to accelerate the higher mass is offset by the amount of energy it can get back when you slow down. At constant speed aerodynamics and rolling drag are all you're dealing with, which is the same for all cars, but aero tends to be better on electric cars because they don't need massive vents to take in cooling air as their higher efficiency doesn't create anything like as much waste heat.
      The worst thing is the marketing hatchet job the car companies started on electric cars more or less as soon as battery tech made then feasible continues to stack the market against them. That and Tesla specifically being dicks to both their customers and employees to the degree that even though they're finally at the point of making decent products, I specifically won't give them my money.

    • @Mrjohnnymoo1
      @Mrjohnnymoo1 3 года назад

      @@peglor My friend, 600 miles is only 15 gallons of fuel with an average of 45mpg... Some Modern Hybrids get better in town mileage than highways even because of their active regen Hybrid system.

    • @peglor
      @peglor 3 года назад

      ​@@Mrjohnnymoo1 Not many cars are actually getting 45 mpg in real world use unless you literally are just cruising in top gear at constant 50-60 mph on the highway, and most that can hit the mpg figure don't have a tank that'll take 57 liters (15 gallons).
      Modern cars, especially the smaller ones and even a lot of bigger cars, have nothing like that big a tank. My large family car from over 10 years ago is officially 55 litres and that was reasonably common for large family cars at the time, but is quite big for fuel tanks on modern cars.
      It's a turbodiesel though, so getting 800 miles from a tank is easily possible driving for efficiency on uncongested roads, but real world I don't think I've ever even got 600 miles from a tank, so a gas engined car in the same conditions won't get anywhere close without the assistance of a lot of hybrid tech and very efficient driving - efficiency for me is making the journey in the least amount of time while obeying all the rules of the road though.

  • @spiercephotography
    @spiercephotography 3 года назад +20

    Your reactions to the wind tunnel story and the story about the auto maker at the end is priceless; i’d get a kick out of that too!
    Good luck with all the auction items, I hope it all goes well!!

    • @antekswiergocki6537
      @antekswiergocki6537 3 года назад +1

      To be fair tho, if there was a possibility of getting 14% better fuel efficiency out of the car ‘my company’ would manufacture, I’d try it out as well. Just think of the potential marketing and extra sales, for a negligible price.

  • @georgeclifton8615
    @georgeclifton8615 3 года назад +1

    Dude, your guys show was awesome. Thanks for sharing that story.🤩

  • @thearthound
    @thearthound 3 года назад +3

    Loving these prop stories!
    I hope we can get many more before the auction.
    Looking forward to it, 'cause I really want one of those paintings! 😎

    • @tested
      @tested  3 года назад +2

      Some Tested staff have also registered to bid ... Also: the paintings are AMAZING in person.

  • @halogrunt53
    @halogrunt53 3 года назад +73

    The Buggati Bolide actually uses dimples on its air scoop to improve aerodynamics. Even cooler is that they're active, raising and flattening based on the speed.
    Demo
    ruclips.net/video/Yfr9akYEbao/видео.html
    In depth explanation
    ruclips.net/video/mXx81YyjfL0/видео.html

    • @lazyboxfish7113
      @lazyboxfish7113 3 года назад +6

      A simpler, non-adaptive version of this concept has also been used on the Porsche 718 GT4, 718 Spyder, and even more normal cars such as the Volkswagen Golf. Here's a great video by Engineering Explained that briefly mentions it: ruclips.net/video/tuwM8wU18xM/видео.html

    • @ramiro1989
      @ramiro1989 3 года назад +5

      The Ford GT also uses a dimpled under floor panel all across the car. You can see it in this video at minute 1:45.
      ruclips.net/video/6VrvLGzT9WA/видео.html

    • @DapperHesher
      @DapperHesher 3 года назад +4

      @@ramiro1989 Vortex generating strakes are common on splitters/nose wings on race cars. The reason they're dimples on the road cars is strakes are subject to damage.

    • @didsomebodysaydmt8193
      @didsomebodysaydmt8193 3 года назад +1

      I got a flat today in my 89 accord.

  • @earlpickles68
    @earlpickles68 3 года назад +1

    Adam is the best story teller ever. Loved Myth Busters. This auction is another great way to pay tribute to Grant.

  • @YorkyPudinz
    @YorkyPudinz 2 года назад +1

    The strudel wave you referenced is actually called 'helmholtz resonance' and is effectively like blowing over a giant bottle to create a sound

  • @batsonelectronics
    @batsonelectronics 3 года назад +8

    every time you mentioned Grant, I got sad. Even though MB's is over, not having Grant in this world just sucks. I miss the whole gang being together. RIP Grant.

  • @tkmiller_author
    @tkmiller_author 3 года назад +34

    That's the difference between the wind tunnel test and the "regular Joe" test. Just like the windows/AC mileage test. Great show, Adam! 🥰🥰 I still watch MB every day on Discovery+.

  • @jamesscott2894
    @jamesscott2894 Месяц назад +1

    "Hey Intern! C'mon, I got a task for you" *hands them an ice cream scoop*

  • @Prohortico
    @Prohortico 3 года назад +3

    So ‘The Simpsons’ got it right again with Homer’s ‘Speed Holes’!

  • @dragonskunkstudio7582
    @dragonskunkstudio7582 3 года назад +4

    One car company DID listen.
    If you look under a Porsche, don't recall which model, you will plainly see the skid plate has dimples.

    • @spavliskojr
      @spavliskojr 3 года назад

      Lexus had dimples on the underside of one of its models too. helped reduce wind noise.

    • @DapperHesher
      @DapperHesher 3 года назад +1

      The dimples are simply a vortex generator which aircraft and race cars have used long, long before Mythbusters did anything. Typically, they're an array of small strake fins, but with a road car underbody they're subject to long-term damage so dimples are a good stand in.

  • @dyent
    @dyent 3 года назад +9

    Mythbusters were so ahead of their time, Bugatti are now using dimples to improve the aerodynamics of their cars.

    • @justayoutuber1906
      @justayoutuber1906 3 года назад

      really? wow 4 million and owners are worried about gas prices

    • @dyent
      @dyent 3 года назад +1

      @@justayoutuber1906 Not exactly. As the air is channeled over and around the car, it leaves a wake in the air similar to a boat in water. That creates a vacuum effect, increasing drag. The dimples make the air more turbulent, slowing it down and allowing it to flow into that space easier, which in turn allows the car to accelerate slightly faster and reach a slightly higher top speed.

  • @muzicman16
    @muzicman16 3 года назад

    This was always one of my favorite episodes that ALWAYS stuck with me. I was actually just talking about it in one of my racing chatrooms, and devastated that the chance to bid on the model is already gone. I always wondered why neither nascar not big auto looked into it. Glad to hear at least auto did.

  • @NexeL_NKC
    @NexeL_NKC 3 года назад

    My goodness... I never got to watch the entirety of mythbusters. I watched a good chunk of it, but I sorely miss watching it. It's also such a shame that we lost a great man in Grant. He really was taken home far too soon. Miss you my guy.

  • @pr0hobo
    @pr0hobo 3 года назад +6

    i am so glad i grew up with mythbusters on tv

  • @evandavis5223
    @evandavis5223 3 года назад +17

    Auto maker: We tried replicating your experiment but found different results, ultimately a waste of time.
    Adam: HAHA we made you do science!!

  • @Chirp296
    @Chirp296 2 года назад

    I watched Mythbusters for a good number of years and absolutely loved it. It's great hearing these memories from some of my favorite episodes.

  • @tylercarlson1659
    @tylercarlson1659 3 года назад

    Always appreciate the energy Adam has when teaching anything and I miss life lessons from Mythbusters

  • @gravious
    @gravious 3 года назад +3

    wonderful storytelling, a great story too. i could experience the entire mythbusters archive retold in this format

  • @JellyBlockLP
    @JellyBlockLP 3 года назад +5

    I loved Adam's look of absolute contentment at the end of the video. You can he tell he truly loves what he does!

  • @mphelps7919
    @mphelps7919 2 года назад

    I love the fact that Grant's family and friends have set up a system where grants are granted to those who may have been granted the joy of watching Grant at work. Indeed Many Artists Hold A Real Appreciation

  • @Abeuss
    @Abeuss 3 года назад +3

    I remember that episode. when people talk about fuel efficient cars and wonder why no one has made a dimpled car. I saw that show as a proof of concept.

  • @AAAnastasia27
    @AAAnastasia27 3 года назад +17

    So you’re telling me, there are around 544 dimples in a golf ball but you and Jamie only had to make 1100 in the full size car? Are those numbers accurate? That’s kind of insane!!

    • @intuitiveinterativedesigns8670
      @intuitiveinterativedesigns8670 3 года назад +5

      I think they picked a detent size they could reasonably do in the time they had. If they'd halved the diameter of the tool they use that means at least double maybe as much as four times the number of detents. That is an entirely new area though: the scale and quantity of the detents and how that changes the effect on the car.

    • @yddishmcsquidish3904
      @yddishmcsquidish3904 3 года назад +1

      The dimples were much bigger and feasible to actually do.