With the help of a hydraulic press, we will test the strength of very strong objects
Пікірлер
>reads “do not try at home” >sadly wheels 500 ton hydraulic press back into garage and closes door
@connormcdonald26403 ай бұрын
Dang it😔😂
@norman95885Ай бұрын
Yeah, they never let you do the fun stuff 😒
@TransformersIsValidАй бұрын
Oh, come on Wiley Coyote. That never stopped you before!🤭
@ThomasBarone21 күн бұрын
>wheels 500 ton hydraulic press over to neighbor's house >:)
@enigmadrath178014 күн бұрын
🥺
@sharpno2pencil47612 күн бұрын
Reporter: "Do you take steroids?" 80mm steel ball bearing: "I don't juice. Just exercise, good eating, and sleep. Sometimes take a cold shower."
@vladimirputindreadlockrast8124 ай бұрын
This reads like a Plants vs Zombies almanac entry lol
@zer0_creativity2 ай бұрын
@zer0_creativity "I'm not bragging, run the numbers, you'll see."
@ImmenseJ-tard8253Ай бұрын
Just do your homework and eat your vitamins, brother!
@magicmulder8 күн бұрын
@@zer0_creativity This is just the Football Zombie's almanac entry tbh.
@candy-ass49157 күн бұрын
Just chicken, rice, broccoli and discipline
@thetextbookgamer6 күн бұрын
I love the warning at the beginning. "Don't try this at home", Yeah, because everyone has a 500 ton press in their home!
@albundy60084 ай бұрын
😂😂👊
@bjones57914 ай бұрын
Actually, you'd be surprised.....
@ericwofford18964 ай бұрын
Mine only goes to 300 tons.
@djbeacon68954 ай бұрын
I do every time my mother in law visits.
@Superintendent_ChaImers3 ай бұрын
Hospitals would be overflowing with I was Stupid cases.
@marlberg29633 ай бұрын
I am a retired metal forger. One of the presses I had access to was 24,000 Tons. We also had a 12,500 and a 500. ton. One day I was exercising the 24 and decided to see what it would do to a wooden 4x4, it was about a foot long. It took down to just under a 1/4'' and then stoped. At this point I was dumbfounded I thought it would take down to paper thin. I was about to pull back on the control lever, and that is when the wood exploded. ( was now petrified) I was in a very large building by my self until the would explode. that is the exact time some of my superior’s come walking in the side door next to the large roll up door. A good size piece of the wood hit the roll-up door as they stepped in the building. There was a large bang at the roll-up door, next to them, they looked to see what the racket was, but the wood had ricocheted off in another direction. I pulled up on the lever, and removed the evidence promptly, they shrugged it off, know body was hurt, and this foolishness was never repeated again.
@markbutler66343 ай бұрын
Are you 'retired' now because you sold one of your forgeries to a prominent Museum and you were apprehended when they tested it.?
@Smedley19473 ай бұрын
So petrified wood is just wood under extreme pressure. That explains all the modern petrified artifacts from the mud flood
@drygordspellweaver87613 ай бұрын
It must had been water in the wood who had becomes steam, which expands to 2,000 times the volume of it in the liquid state - so it was really a steam explosion.
@charonstyxferryman3 ай бұрын
that isn't how petrified wood forms (lithified through replacement mineral precipitation.) Basically the wood is replaced by crystalline minerals and becomes stone... which still preserves the original shape and detail of the original wood structure.
@davidhenningson4782Ай бұрын
nobody*
@Sarkhan69Ай бұрын
That 500 ton press is amazing. Yet it doesn't stand a chance against a 3 day old McDonalds french fry.
@JOHNDOE-gl2ic3 ай бұрын
Your right
@Rocket3513 ай бұрын
I bet that hydraulic press would stop existing if it ever came into a 5 foot radius of a 3 day old McDonald French fry
@Rocket3513 ай бұрын
Or my girlfriends muffins!
@GrantJohnston-dr9rt3 ай бұрын
That's not McDonald's, it's pure diamond right there 😮
@MiladHeidary13 ай бұрын
Imagine the potatoes in your house there too. hahahaha
@Cearense.paraibano3 ай бұрын
I’ve been wasting my life on KZhead for years. That was one of the more incredible things I’ve ever seen..
@sshah25453 ай бұрын
I feel you. It was all worth it.
@joblo2671Ай бұрын
That's experience
@theanonymoustechie22 сағат бұрын
Bro Lost His Studio Just To Break Balls 💀💀
@mayurphad17505 ай бұрын
😂😂💀
@hritik1055 ай бұрын
haha true! 😁😁❤❤👌👌
@FurryAnimator5 ай бұрын
FR
@Satang3c025 ай бұрын
Ayo Pause lol
@mosesking70795 ай бұрын
Lmfao
@Jays_SweatGlandsUwU5 ай бұрын
Dude, if you keep doing tests like this, you're going to create a black hole in the world.
@ilkerkaracan23154 ай бұрын
no.
@jacksmith69724 ай бұрын
You need to implode a star for that
@ifstatementifstatement27044 ай бұрын
@@ifstatementifstatement2704 Next Video: *Hydraulic Press vs Star.*
@ilkerkaracan23154 ай бұрын
I thought that anything could theoretically create a black hole if compressed enough
@ASAP_Goz4 ай бұрын
He need to be sponsored
@camionesfernandez37454 ай бұрын
6:03 Tungsten ball: CALL AN AMBULANCE!!! ...BUT NOT FOR ME!!!!
80mm steel after 20 minute liquid nitrogen bath: *I'm still standing, yeah, yeah, yeah!* Brick underneath: "Oh noes now * I * broke" TT_TT
@Echo81Rumple83Ай бұрын
@@Echo81Rumple83 That "brick" was a chunk of AR500 hardened steel.
@Pyroteknikid20 күн бұрын
Yall cringe
@Real_uMMActually13 күн бұрын
@@Real_uMMActually your single comment calling them cringe is 12 times more cringe than anyone else here
@susrock11528 күн бұрын
@Real_uMMActually ur ghey
@danielkeslerjr4407Күн бұрын
I only use my 500 ton press for cracking walnuts.
@catkeys69115 ай бұрын
I use a metal nut cracker with the force of my hands to do that
@WingsTheRobloxYT3 ай бұрын
And make walnut butter
@Person-gn6dt3 ай бұрын
That takes busting a nut to a whole new level
@curtisclayton8023Ай бұрын
Court ordered?
@someitguy2175Ай бұрын
I use it to crack Pistachios 😛
@thirumurugank24 күн бұрын
Didn't know there were so many ways to destroy a hydraulic press! 🤣
@BartyTheParty3 ай бұрын
😆😆
@avantempireavantempire37852 ай бұрын
I would like to see what this looks like using a thermal camera. These steel and tungsten objects must get really hot when subjected to so much pressure.
@dwc19704 ай бұрын
You mean under suspicious circumstances
@Rocket3513 ай бұрын
Até um gás se aquece na compressão @@Rocket351
@jadneves3 ай бұрын
Maybe some contact metamorphism.
@user-rp7yf8xu8h3 ай бұрын
It’s not the pressure it’s the friction from being reshaped. So the tungsten would not be very hot since it is not reshaped while the distorted steel would burn through plastic. To replicate it try hammering a nail into a knife
@drygordspellweaver87613 ай бұрын
Well get yourself a thermal camera and 500 ton press and start. Channel. Lol
@dougvuillemot8670Ай бұрын
I find it funny how attempting to crushing certain strong metals breaks the hydraulic press and/or the stand instead.
@Formula_Zero_EX5 күн бұрын
4:08 To think, even after being dipped in _liquid nitrogen,_ the 80 mm steel ball _still survived._
@lorienmyers76433 ай бұрын
I google afterward.. I was expecting it to shatter because of the cold. It turns out the extreme cold actually makes steel stronger. Something about molecular bonds being harder to separate.
@sshah25453 ай бұрын
@@sshah2545the action lab has done a video on this. Actually the molecules come closer so the steel ball does become harder but it should also become more brittle, ie, it's tensile strength and malleability will decrease
@M1551NGN03 ай бұрын
@@sshah2545outros objetos seriam quebradiços então há algo de resistência negativa
@jadneves3 ай бұрын
Terminator 2 lied to us!
@drygordspellweaver87613 ай бұрын
@@sshah2545 When steel becomes harder, it also becomes more brittle. That's work hardening. You can create work hardening on a paperclip, i.e. bending it until it breaks.
@charonstyxferryman3 ай бұрын
Tungsten carbide: "You don't wanna mess with me son."
@wabio3 ай бұрын
Bro, you’re lucky it’s just the studio. If the 80mm steel ball slips, that’s basically an 80mm ballistic bullet goes straight to you.
@se7engold4 ай бұрын
Or in some other direction: it's got a lot of directions to choose from :)
@DieFlabbergast4 ай бұрын
Vdd
@sandrajaqueira5074 ай бұрын
@@DieFlabbergast But if it chose him. He would literally have the ball go right through him and crush the bones it touched
@I_unar3 ай бұрын
If it slips😂
@alexcrompton95093 ай бұрын
It would open a hole on the wall
@juniorsilvabroadcast3 ай бұрын
This is what happens when unstoppable force meets immovable object
@ROHANDATAR14 ай бұрын
No. Something always gave way.
@chrisatkins795927 күн бұрын
That ball really said: “it’s Opposite Day >:)” to the studio and the camera💀
@AXOLOTL_SMITH4 ай бұрын
I knew steel bearings were strong but i never imagined they'd survive this amount of abuse.
@TimeHunter23055 ай бұрын
Depends where the steel balls are made
@inktray49134 ай бұрын
Helps you appreciate how annealed roller bearings that the wheels of your car turn on are able to last through decades of shock & severe impact out on the road There will be examples of higher milage, but personally my mother's subaru reached 250,000 miles on the same wheel bearings before she sold the car. (A 1992 Loyale) A neighbor with an 80's Toyota truck reached 350,000 before he finally replaced the bearings during a brake job
@magnificentmuttley1544 ай бұрын
There are different grades. Those seen were not actually "bearings" but "valves". Typically the ones used for load bearing are made of 455C steel and tempered to around 60 Rockwell (SUPER hard) Carbide ones go much higher and I suspect the one that broke his setup causing the crash was Carbide not Steel. The 455 one had to be the one that shattered at the start of the video.
@RetroCaptain3 ай бұрын
Bearings are used in a insane amount of heavy machinery that require a lot of wear and put a lot of abuse on them. They can take a lot, like a lot, a lot.
@AlexBrown2303 ай бұрын
@@AlexBrown230 Fafnir are lifetime
@inktray49133 ай бұрын
The SpaceX Starship uses thinner stainless steel because the cryogenic cold fuel makes the steel stronger at very low temps. This is a great practical example.
@GarryCollins-ec8yo5 ай бұрын
That's actually what I was immediately wondering about. I thought the temperatures would make it more brittle.
@Jake17024 ай бұрын
@@Jake1702 y es mas frágil, mas duro y mas frágil. Lo opuesto a la fragilidad es ductilidad, no dureza.
@etcqiel10 күн бұрын
A shame Elon won't ever get to Mars.
@Kainlarsen6 күн бұрын
Tha Man of Steel now has a stronger Challenger .... The Man of Tungsten 🤫
@JosueMartinez-ww1vj3 ай бұрын
This gives "you have balls of steel" a whole new meaning.
@tongwang6535 күн бұрын
This is actually a really good analogy for how enriched plutonium can go supercriticl when in a situation where the stresses keep exponentiating from further and further pressure, until the rate of the runaway react, or in this case the microcracking and deforming of the steel balls, goes from 0 to 10 to 10,000,000,000,000 in such a fast time that it appears to the outward eye like a singular instant explosion when in reality is a compounding mass failure of micro cracks and fails that happen millions of times in less than a second which has incredible force
@Robisquick5 ай бұрын
Great comment,never read many that are really worth reading 👌👌👌
@stephengeraghty33683 ай бұрын
Much appreciated my good friend!@@stephengeraghty3368
@Robisquick3 ай бұрын
Pois creio que após a expansão há o efeito de vácuo e por isso ocorreria uma descarga elétrica cujo pico um receptor de AM detectaria, pois relâmpagos são descargas térmicas instantâneas que causam o vácuo atmosférico cuja implosão de reação é o trovão.
@jadneves3 ай бұрын
As above so below. The smallest boom would seem nuclear in size if u were that small, and inversely if it was a real atom bomb size boom, if u were that small it would seem the same to u.
@danielkeslerjr4407Күн бұрын
Wow that was epic, glad u had the countdown my nerves were going haywire
@HJay835 ай бұрын
The hydraulic press: “I’m tired boss.”
@NoSou1L19 күн бұрын
"Do not repeat at home"!?! Who in Hell has a 500-ton press in their house?
@ctaylor146013 күн бұрын
Holy crap! I think you just made an earthquake! 😲
@irvyne6111Ай бұрын
Thank you for showing us the metal strength and breaking points. More power to you. 👍👍👍
@tonysia64743 ай бұрын
I cannot believe the 80mm ball split the plate you was crushing it on. The fact most of your press tools were split by these is a testament to how hard they are
@shlushe10503 ай бұрын
My eyes twitching and squinting while I'm watching this, like my brain thinks I'm in the same room and knows something is about to go BOOM CHAKA LAKA 😂
@_moon17829 күн бұрын
Glad I wasn’t the only one.
@Lil.Grandpa15 күн бұрын
your tests are amazing. we use the same system in our concrete block machines to press mortar and shape it to molds. our pressure is maximum 200 bars.
@concreteblockmakingmachine5 ай бұрын
200 bar ~= 2900 psi
@Milesco3 ай бұрын
Love this video but I guess I missed the switch between the comparative 30mm and 80mm tungsten Bearings. And what materials are the top compression component made from?
@salvatoretranquoso47793 ай бұрын
O melhor vídeo de esmagamentos que eu já vi. Sempre me perguntei o quanto aguentariam esses materiais da prensa. E hoje vejo que também possuem o seu limite de resistência. Parabéns pela experiência. E espero que a câmera e a lente não tenham quebrado!
@HiTechBR3 ай бұрын
What do you mean don’t try this at home i just set up a 500 ton press in the living room do you know how long it took to convince the wife it was a functional piece of furniture 😂
@MeNanWazaHowitzer3 ай бұрын
Wow, how crazy?!! Incredible. Love this
@JW.C3964 ай бұрын
What is the piston and block made of? What is it’s hardness? If seems unphased by 150tons.
@markcowie9734 ай бұрын
The synchronicity of the music along with the sound of the actuality was so spot on to be noted you can put that press in a song in the fact that tungsten dented your press what is both to me fascinating and insane I did not know that
@N3MES1SX129 күн бұрын
7:24 I love how it looks like there's no resistance at all. Just goes in smoothly with zero slowing or struggle.
@billbadson75989 күн бұрын
The hydrolic press has met it's match and then some!
@trenttan37795 ай бұрын
Me gustan mucho sus videos. Por favor siga haciendo más y más. Para mí es muy relajante verlos
@anjoingenieriajosebarrante25293 ай бұрын
your commitment to break balls is truly amazing and inspirational
@techno_otaku4 ай бұрын
🤨
@kristylynch67793 ай бұрын
This channel keeps getting crazier.
@WontSeeReplies5 ай бұрын
I like this video on how to break your tool the pro way !!!
@lechkenassh90085 ай бұрын
That heavy metal sounds so friggin metal, dude!
@RobbedPierre4 ай бұрын
Very informative to know how those materials will react under such conditions in relation to each others
@VakoDemuro-wc3yw3 ай бұрын
Probably the greatest thing I've ever watched
@g1andonly17 күн бұрын
I was surprised when the first steel bearing shattered. I predicted it would flatten. I think the ceramic bearing surprised me the most!
@biknjak4 ай бұрын
Ultra hardened tool steels don't flex, they break.
@jakefriesenjake4 ай бұрын
@jakefriesenjake Because the steel in ball bearings is so unbelievably hard it's a favorite for today's lunatic knife makers to make Damascus steel utilizing ball bearings among other things. If you haven't seen any of those videos I would highly recommend them. Think of it, turning Ultra hard steel ball bearings into knife blades that look like wood grain. If you've never seen Damascus steel you're missing something.
@Smedley19473 ай бұрын
@@Smedley1947 oh I've seen my share of knife making vids. They are beautiful.
@jakefriesenjake3 ай бұрын
@@Smedley1947I collect knives and specialize in different types of steel. I use a dovpo straight razor to shave. Lol. I know steels. And tho those Damascus blades are pretty, it isn't true Damascus. Just saying, I wish they had used a different word for it to not confuse the types.
@danielkeslerjr4407Күн бұрын
What kind of heat temperatures when the objects are forced together by the press?
@seanstevenson75924 ай бұрын
Love this channel and their videos!
@Bubuzizi3 ай бұрын
Ok, KZhead algorithm HAS to be reading my mind. I was just thinking that I haven’t seen a hydraulic pressure video in forever.
@markstahl14643 ай бұрын
Almost a supernova. 😂 Epic! Hope your studio is OK.
@diogeneshere3 ай бұрын
The Tungsten was literally unbreakable under the 500 ton press, and went through the steel like butter. So was the 80mm ball, but that didn't put a literal gaping hole into it (the steel ball did too, but not nearly as much). I wonder just how much it would take to break Tungsten. I guess that's why they make military tanks out of the stuff
@TrueKingOmega3 ай бұрын
Can you smoosh metal/s together until they're same frequency resonance as ultra violet light?
@sampleoffers19785 ай бұрын
That was awesome bro!
@tbsschiro13934 ай бұрын
Amazing! Commercial aircraft typically use only 3 super strong hydraulic jacks to lift an aircraft weighing in excess of 400,00 lbs without fuel, in this case DC-10, MD-11. With three separate support arms, with a center column supporting the load, there is only a very small point of contact, roughly 2.5 inches with a center pin in the middle.
@alexp37523 ай бұрын
Ty. No one actually compared what 500ton lbs actually equals out too. Lol, kinda like Americans like to compare things to football fields.
@danielkeslerjr4407Күн бұрын
Epic doesn't even come close to describing THAT. Holy carp!
@jaysdood4 ай бұрын
When an unstoppable force meets an immovable object.
@Pagliacci_RexАй бұрын
Try doing a Christmas tree under a big press for the holidays!
@user-vu3in3eb6h5 ай бұрын
Can you get your hands on some depleted uranium? I'm sure you must have some laying around somewhere XD
@mattt1986543215 ай бұрын
Here in 1955 it’s a little hard to come by…
@alexfischer92134 ай бұрын
6:04 bro really said "It's already broken, what do I have to lose at this point?"
@Cal-zk4nc3 ай бұрын
Great educative video. Thank you👍🏻 I think Its the time to update your equipments!👌🏻
@khashayarmodaberi4958Ай бұрын
That feeling of it will explode in your face in any moment.
@overdose855 ай бұрын
It's seems like you're pretty familiar with that feeling lmao
@FreedomEagles1005 ай бұрын
Holy shit!! Did not expect that
@baldbearded96015 ай бұрын
That was a real ball buster. Ive never seen a thick piece of steel blow apart like that.
@codester111125 күн бұрын
Insane to think how dangerous these experiments can be. Great way to meet your maker.
@Vladd79 күн бұрын
6:07 What kind of ball is that??? Its destroying the 500 ton press!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
@2tjanthony5 ай бұрын
pretty sure it's tungsten
@yannbardet8265Ай бұрын
Yeah, the press is no match for tungsten, quite literally the strongest metal.@@yannbardet8265
@ImmenseJ-tard825310 күн бұрын
Interesting to me is that you seem to be able to handle all the pieces by hand after the press activity. I would think there would be a lot of heat generated by the process. Maybe some thing to add...
@robohippy3 ай бұрын
The workpieces are fairly large, and therefore able to absorb a fair amount of heat.
@Milesco3 ай бұрын
A lot of editing goes into the video, I'm sure they cut out what's probably at least several minutes of waiting for the stuff to cool down before handling it. I seriously doubt they go touch the stuff immediately.
@KelpTheGreat14 күн бұрын
The video that I didn't know that I need to watch. Thanks to the algorithm. I am impressed.
@MrQwertypoiuyty3 ай бұрын
They used to coat tank shells in tungsten to increase their penetration. None of that shocked me, but the steel ball bearing did.
@girlbuu94033 ай бұрын
After 6:16, I think you're going to need a new press.
@beornthebear.82204 ай бұрын
That big steel ball chilled released a lot of energy when it burst.
@beornthebear.82204 ай бұрын
The steel ball was intact. The 10 cm steel plate under it is what broke into pieces and damaged the studio.
@danielciocilteu35454 ай бұрын
I hope you don't mean what I think you mean. Otherwise technically it had all the same energy on it while pressed as when it burst. It just did not release any energy. Keep in mind when something that does not mean it heated up. Thats a chemical reaction not a physical one
@aheadsounds25224 ай бұрын
@@danielciocilteu3545 I thought it was a brick?
@lorienmyers76433 ай бұрын
@@aheadsounds2522pura Física, pois houve uma relaxação, e osciladores de relaxação têm esse princípio, mesmo tendo havido apenas um impulso ou ciclo na onda gerada. É tal como um monjolo, ou mesmo o rangir de uma porta, ou o eventual som do surto do crescimento de uma bananeira
@jadneves3 ай бұрын
After the 80mm steel ball, they be like, "...imma stick to Skittles from now on." 😂
@MildewedDuke2 сағат бұрын
How much did this entire "test" cost you?
@GA-1st28 күн бұрын
yes
@spinacker1610 күн бұрын
4:00 PLOT TWIST
@mattt1986543215 ай бұрын
500 ton press: tungsten carbide, I will crush you!! TC: haha that's adorable bud, have fun playing!
@MiBrCo41774 күн бұрын
I'm 43. This video shaved 35 years off of my life for 9 minutes... 👏🏿
@cosmoscoach46986 күн бұрын
You do good work.
@Jeremy-Two5 ай бұрын
True! 💙💙😉😉❤❤
@FurryAnimator5 ай бұрын
Tungsten press with a tungsten ball with a tungsten stand. Unstoppable force vs immovable object. PLEASE I BEG OF THEE
@KlapppdXD5 ай бұрын
Ok, whats the second song that drops? It's pretty awesome! Also, i cant believe how your studio almost exploded on the frozen 80mm steel ball.
@2Tall_Powerlifting8 күн бұрын
- I'm just breaking balls. - Hold my hydraulic press!
@manuelcapela76203 ай бұрын
Be that hard that nothing can press you down,instead break up who press you down💪🏻 Btw how did such motivation came in my mind idk😂😂
@hritik1055 ай бұрын
Hope it was not too expensive to replace the camera and tools!
@JaimeCharaf5 ай бұрын
The plastic sheets mounted on wooden frames used as blast shields are pretty cheap. That Nikon camera however is worth like 2000 euros. As an amateur photographer, my heart broke a little when i saw that camera... OOOF! Im glad he films in a warehouse and stays far away from the press studio. XD
@danielciocilteu35454 ай бұрын
@@danielciocilteu3545 He told he had to replace only lenses. Body was ok
@efimkrivov4 ай бұрын
Amazing how the explosion happened to unlock and rotate the lens off of the camera body without damaging any glass or the mount. More peculiar that it was revealed after an edit.
@digitalthrills4 ай бұрын
@@digitalthrills in russian version of this video he told the way it had happened
@efimkrivov4 ай бұрын
I know a hero when I see one Not even a word spoken during the video Letting us take it all in by ourselves
@filipedonatti58034 күн бұрын
Dips 80 mm steel ball into liquid nitrogen. Steel Ball: So you've chosen death for your little toy.
@Psylent853 күн бұрын
Phenomenal, broke the block!
@razscott5 ай бұрын
Water balloons. Air balloons. Coffee Tumblers. Multi tools.
@Jeremy-Two5 ай бұрын
What alloy are the black/yellow parts and the unpainted block that exploded under the chilled ball? Interesting videos, thanks!
@firstielasty11624 ай бұрын
The cilindrical plates are made of high density steel which is why tungsten goes right through them. The plate that exploded was a piece of 10cm steel plate, but of a lesser density than the cilindrical plates. It looked a bit rusted so im guessing old steel from some factory.
@danielciocilteu35454 ай бұрын
this gives a whole new meaning to the term "bricked it"
@simbiant414 күн бұрын
Different types of rocks.
@Jeremy-Two5 ай бұрын
If a man has [balls] of steel, nothing can break him.
@mr.pizzamarlon3 ай бұрын
This does give new meaning to "got my balls in a vise."
@AmateurHistorian9993 ай бұрын
Ele é o Clark Kent mas é segredo.
@jadneves3 ай бұрын
Man, i never realized how tough tungsten can be! I wonder if it went to high school with diamond?
@Echo81Rumple83Ай бұрын
Every morning as he leaves for work, this guy gets to say, "I have to get going. I have some pressing business to attend to."
@kit277013 күн бұрын
The ball lost its bearings
@MiningMyBusiness5 ай бұрын
All I can say is HOLY SHIT. 😮
@adamdeere15 ай бұрын
Lol, this guy literally has balls of steel
@dukemartin124 күн бұрын
3:55 Steel Ball: "And I won't watch this ANYMORE! HYAAAAH!!"
@6ANUR34DT81S2 күн бұрын
500t mehr kann die Presse nicht 😅 Es muss eine größere her!😊
>reads “do not try at home” >sadly wheels 500 ton hydraulic press back into garage and closes door
Dang it😔😂
Yeah, they never let you do the fun stuff 😒
Oh, come on Wiley Coyote. That never stopped you before!🤭
>wheels 500 ton hydraulic press over to neighbor's house >:)
🥺
Reporter: "Do you take steroids?" 80mm steel ball bearing: "I don't juice. Just exercise, good eating, and sleep. Sometimes take a cold shower."
This reads like a Plants vs Zombies almanac entry lol
@zer0_creativity "I'm not bragging, run the numbers, you'll see."
Just do your homework and eat your vitamins, brother!
@@zer0_creativity This is just the Football Zombie's almanac entry tbh.
Just chicken, rice, broccoli and discipline
I love the warning at the beginning. "Don't try this at home", Yeah, because everyone has a 500 ton press in their home!
😂😂👊
Actually, you'd be surprised.....
Mine only goes to 300 tons.
I do every time my mother in law visits.
Hospitals would be overflowing with I was Stupid cases.
I am a retired metal forger. One of the presses I had access to was 24,000 Tons. We also had a 12,500 and a 500. ton. One day I was exercising the 24 and decided to see what it would do to a wooden 4x4, it was about a foot long. It took down to just under a 1/4'' and then stoped. At this point I was dumbfounded I thought it would take down to paper thin. I was about to pull back on the control lever, and that is when the wood exploded. ( was now petrified) I was in a very large building by my self until the would explode. that is the exact time some of my superior’s come walking in the side door next to the large roll up door. A good size piece of the wood hit the roll-up door as they stepped in the building. There was a large bang at the roll-up door, next to them, they looked to see what the racket was, but the wood had ricocheted off in another direction. I pulled up on the lever, and removed the evidence promptly, they shrugged it off, know body was hurt, and this foolishness was never repeated again.
Are you 'retired' now because you sold one of your forgeries to a prominent Museum and you were apprehended when they tested it.?
So petrified wood is just wood under extreme pressure. That explains all the modern petrified artifacts from the mud flood
It must had been water in the wood who had becomes steam, which expands to 2,000 times the volume of it in the liquid state - so it was really a steam explosion.
that isn't how petrified wood forms (lithified through replacement mineral precipitation.) Basically the wood is replaced by crystalline minerals and becomes stone... which still preserves the original shape and detail of the original wood structure.
nobody*
That 500 ton press is amazing. Yet it doesn't stand a chance against a 3 day old McDonalds french fry.
Your right
I bet that hydraulic press would stop existing if it ever came into a 5 foot radius of a 3 day old McDonald French fry
Or my girlfriends muffins!
That's not McDonald's, it's pure diamond right there 😮
Imagine the potatoes in your house there too. hahahaha
I’ve been wasting my life on KZhead for years. That was one of the more incredible things I’ve ever seen..
I feel you. It was all worth it.
That's experience
Bro Lost His Studio Just To Break Balls 💀💀
😂😂💀
haha true! 😁😁❤❤👌👌
FR
Ayo Pause lol
Lmfao
Dude, if you keep doing tests like this, you're going to create a black hole in the world.
no.
You need to implode a star for that
@@ifstatementifstatement2704 Next Video: *Hydraulic Press vs Star.*
I thought that anything could theoretically create a black hole if compressed enough
He need to be sponsored
6:03 Tungsten ball: CALL AN AMBULANCE!!! ...BUT NOT FOR ME!!!!
💪🤏
Anyone else squinting their eyes?
nope
@@Zerrow_nighttttt 🏅
@@durango.j-onezwth
No I put safety glasses before watching
@@vihuelero1001 clever
30mm steel: “Oh noes I broke” 😭 80mm steel: *I don’t think so.*
80mm steel after 20 minute liquid nitrogen bath: *I'm still standing, yeah, yeah, yeah!* Brick underneath: "Oh noes now * I * broke" TT_TT
@@Echo81Rumple83 That "brick" was a chunk of AR500 hardened steel.
Yall cringe
@@Real_uMMActually your single comment calling them cringe is 12 times more cringe than anyone else here
@Real_uMMActually ur ghey
I only use my 500 ton press for cracking walnuts.
I use a metal nut cracker with the force of my hands to do that
And make walnut butter
That takes busting a nut to a whole new level
Court ordered?
I use it to crack Pistachios 😛
Didn't know there were so many ways to destroy a hydraulic press! 🤣
😆😆
I would like to see what this looks like using a thermal camera. These steel and tungsten objects must get really hot when subjected to so much pressure.
You mean under suspicious circumstances
Até um gás se aquece na compressão @@Rocket351
Maybe some contact metamorphism.
It’s not the pressure it’s the friction from being reshaped. So the tungsten would not be very hot since it is not reshaped while the distorted steel would burn through plastic. To replicate it try hammering a nail into a knife
Well get yourself a thermal camera and 500 ton press and start. Channel. Lol
I find it funny how attempting to crushing certain strong metals breaks the hydraulic press and/or the stand instead.
4:08 To think, even after being dipped in _liquid nitrogen,_ the 80 mm steel ball _still survived._
I google afterward.. I was expecting it to shatter because of the cold. It turns out the extreme cold actually makes steel stronger. Something about molecular bonds being harder to separate.
@@sshah2545the action lab has done a video on this. Actually the molecules come closer so the steel ball does become harder but it should also become more brittle, ie, it's tensile strength and malleability will decrease
@@sshah2545outros objetos seriam quebradiços então há algo de resistência negativa
Terminator 2 lied to us!
@@sshah2545 When steel becomes harder, it also becomes more brittle. That's work hardening. You can create work hardening on a paperclip, i.e. bending it until it breaks.
Tungsten carbide: "You don't wanna mess with me son."
Bro, you’re lucky it’s just the studio. If the 80mm steel ball slips, that’s basically an 80mm ballistic bullet goes straight to you.
Or in some other direction: it's got a lot of directions to choose from :)
Vdd
@@DieFlabbergast But if it chose him. He would literally have the ball go right through him and crush the bones it touched
If it slips😂
It would open a hole on the wall
This is what happens when unstoppable force meets immovable object
No. Something always gave way.
That ball really said: “it’s Opposite Day >:)” to the studio and the camera💀
I knew steel bearings were strong but i never imagined they'd survive this amount of abuse.
Depends where the steel balls are made
Helps you appreciate how annealed roller bearings that the wheels of your car turn on are able to last through decades of shock & severe impact out on the road There will be examples of higher milage, but personally my mother's subaru reached 250,000 miles on the same wheel bearings before she sold the car. (A 1992 Loyale) A neighbor with an 80's Toyota truck reached 350,000 before he finally replaced the bearings during a brake job
There are different grades. Those seen were not actually "bearings" but "valves". Typically the ones used for load bearing are made of 455C steel and tempered to around 60 Rockwell (SUPER hard) Carbide ones go much higher and I suspect the one that broke his setup causing the crash was Carbide not Steel. The 455 one had to be the one that shattered at the start of the video.
Bearings are used in a insane amount of heavy machinery that require a lot of wear and put a lot of abuse on them. They can take a lot, like a lot, a lot.
@@AlexBrown230 Fafnir are lifetime
The SpaceX Starship uses thinner stainless steel because the cryogenic cold fuel makes the steel stronger at very low temps. This is a great practical example.
That's actually what I was immediately wondering about. I thought the temperatures would make it more brittle.
@@Jake1702 y es mas frágil, mas duro y mas frágil. Lo opuesto a la fragilidad es ductilidad, no dureza.
A shame Elon won't ever get to Mars.
Tha Man of Steel now has a stronger Challenger .... The Man of Tungsten 🤫
This gives "you have balls of steel" a whole new meaning.
This is actually a really good analogy for how enriched plutonium can go supercriticl when in a situation where the stresses keep exponentiating from further and further pressure, until the rate of the runaway react, or in this case the microcracking and deforming of the steel balls, goes from 0 to 10 to 10,000,000,000,000 in such a fast time that it appears to the outward eye like a singular instant explosion when in reality is a compounding mass failure of micro cracks and fails that happen millions of times in less than a second which has incredible force
Great comment,never read many that are really worth reading 👌👌👌
Much appreciated my good friend!@@stephengeraghty3368
Pois creio que após a expansão há o efeito de vácuo e por isso ocorreria uma descarga elétrica cujo pico um receptor de AM detectaria, pois relâmpagos são descargas térmicas instantâneas que causam o vácuo atmosférico cuja implosão de reação é o trovão.
As above so below. The smallest boom would seem nuclear in size if u were that small, and inversely if it was a real atom bomb size boom, if u were that small it would seem the same to u.
Wow that was epic, glad u had the countdown my nerves were going haywire
The hydraulic press: “I’m tired boss.”
"Do not repeat at home"!?! Who in Hell has a 500-ton press in their house?
Holy crap! I think you just made an earthquake! 😲
Thank you for showing us the metal strength and breaking points. More power to you. 👍👍👍
I cannot believe the 80mm ball split the plate you was crushing it on. The fact most of your press tools were split by these is a testament to how hard they are
My eyes twitching and squinting while I'm watching this, like my brain thinks I'm in the same room and knows something is about to go BOOM CHAKA LAKA 😂
Glad I wasn’t the only one.
your tests are amazing. we use the same system in our concrete block machines to press mortar and shape it to molds. our pressure is maximum 200 bars.
200 bar ~= 2900 psi
Love this video but I guess I missed the switch between the comparative 30mm and 80mm tungsten Bearings. And what materials are the top compression component made from?
O melhor vídeo de esmagamentos que eu já vi. Sempre me perguntei o quanto aguentariam esses materiais da prensa. E hoje vejo que também possuem o seu limite de resistência. Parabéns pela experiência. E espero que a câmera e a lente não tenham quebrado!
What do you mean don’t try this at home i just set up a 500 ton press in the living room do you know how long it took to convince the wife it was a functional piece of furniture 😂
Wow, how crazy?!! Incredible. Love this
What is the piston and block made of? What is it’s hardness? If seems unphased by 150tons.
The synchronicity of the music along with the sound of the actuality was so spot on to be noted you can put that press in a song in the fact that tungsten dented your press what is both to me fascinating and insane I did not know that
7:24 I love how it looks like there's no resistance at all. Just goes in smoothly with zero slowing or struggle.
The hydrolic press has met it's match and then some!
Me gustan mucho sus videos. Por favor siga haciendo más y más. Para mí es muy relajante verlos
your commitment to break balls is truly amazing and inspirational
🤨
This channel keeps getting crazier.
I like this video on how to break your tool the pro way !!!
That heavy metal sounds so friggin metal, dude!
Very informative to know how those materials will react under such conditions in relation to each others
Probably the greatest thing I've ever watched
I was surprised when the first steel bearing shattered. I predicted it would flatten. I think the ceramic bearing surprised me the most!
Ultra hardened tool steels don't flex, they break.
@jakefriesenjake Because the steel in ball bearings is so unbelievably hard it's a favorite for today's lunatic knife makers to make Damascus steel utilizing ball bearings among other things. If you haven't seen any of those videos I would highly recommend them. Think of it, turning Ultra hard steel ball bearings into knife blades that look like wood grain. If you've never seen Damascus steel you're missing something.
@@Smedley1947 oh I've seen my share of knife making vids. They are beautiful.
@@Smedley1947I collect knives and specialize in different types of steel. I use a dovpo straight razor to shave. Lol. I know steels. And tho those Damascus blades are pretty, it isn't true Damascus. Just saying, I wish they had used a different word for it to not confuse the types.
What kind of heat temperatures when the objects are forced together by the press?
Love this channel and their videos!
Ok, KZhead algorithm HAS to be reading my mind. I was just thinking that I haven’t seen a hydraulic pressure video in forever.
Almost a supernova. 😂 Epic! Hope your studio is OK.
The Tungsten was literally unbreakable under the 500 ton press, and went through the steel like butter. So was the 80mm ball, but that didn't put a literal gaping hole into it (the steel ball did too, but not nearly as much). I wonder just how much it would take to break Tungsten. I guess that's why they make military tanks out of the stuff
Can you smoosh metal/s together until they're same frequency resonance as ultra violet light?
That was awesome bro!
Amazing! Commercial aircraft typically use only 3 super strong hydraulic jacks to lift an aircraft weighing in excess of 400,00 lbs without fuel, in this case DC-10, MD-11. With three separate support arms, with a center column supporting the load, there is only a very small point of contact, roughly 2.5 inches with a center pin in the middle.
Ty. No one actually compared what 500ton lbs actually equals out too. Lol, kinda like Americans like to compare things to football fields.
Epic doesn't even come close to describing THAT. Holy carp!
When an unstoppable force meets an immovable object.
Try doing a Christmas tree under a big press for the holidays!
Can you get your hands on some depleted uranium? I'm sure you must have some laying around somewhere XD
Here in 1955 it’s a little hard to come by…
6:04 bro really said "It's already broken, what do I have to lose at this point?"
Great educative video. Thank you👍🏻 I think Its the time to update your equipments!👌🏻
That feeling of it will explode in your face in any moment.
It's seems like you're pretty familiar with that feeling lmao
Holy shit!! Did not expect that
That was a real ball buster. Ive never seen a thick piece of steel blow apart like that.
Insane to think how dangerous these experiments can be. Great way to meet your maker.
6:07 What kind of ball is that??? Its destroying the 500 ton press!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
pretty sure it's tungsten
Yeah, the press is no match for tungsten, quite literally the strongest metal.@@yannbardet8265
Interesting to me is that you seem to be able to handle all the pieces by hand after the press activity. I would think there would be a lot of heat generated by the process. Maybe some thing to add...
The workpieces are fairly large, and therefore able to absorb a fair amount of heat.
A lot of editing goes into the video, I'm sure they cut out what's probably at least several minutes of waiting for the stuff to cool down before handling it. I seriously doubt they go touch the stuff immediately.
The video that I didn't know that I need to watch. Thanks to the algorithm. I am impressed.
They used to coat tank shells in tungsten to increase their penetration. None of that shocked me, but the steel ball bearing did.
After 6:16, I think you're going to need a new press.
That big steel ball chilled released a lot of energy when it burst.
The steel ball was intact. The 10 cm steel plate under it is what broke into pieces and damaged the studio.
I hope you don't mean what I think you mean. Otherwise technically it had all the same energy on it while pressed as when it burst. It just did not release any energy. Keep in mind when something that does not mean it heated up. Thats a chemical reaction not a physical one
@@danielciocilteu3545 I thought it was a brick?
@@aheadsounds2522pura Física, pois houve uma relaxação, e osciladores de relaxação têm esse princípio, mesmo tendo havido apenas um impulso ou ciclo na onda gerada. É tal como um monjolo, ou mesmo o rangir de uma porta, ou o eventual som do surto do crescimento de uma bananeira
After the 80mm steel ball, they be like, "...imma stick to Skittles from now on." 😂
How much did this entire "test" cost you?
yes
4:00 PLOT TWIST
500 ton press: tungsten carbide, I will crush you!! TC: haha that's adorable bud, have fun playing!
I'm 43. This video shaved 35 years off of my life for 9 minutes... 👏🏿
You do good work.
True! 💙💙😉😉❤❤
Tungsten press with a tungsten ball with a tungsten stand. Unstoppable force vs immovable object. PLEASE I BEG OF THEE
Ok, whats the second song that drops? It's pretty awesome! Also, i cant believe how your studio almost exploded on the frozen 80mm steel ball.
- I'm just breaking balls. - Hold my hydraulic press!
Be that hard that nothing can press you down,instead break up who press you down💪🏻 Btw how did such motivation came in my mind idk😂😂
Hope it was not too expensive to replace the camera and tools!
The plastic sheets mounted on wooden frames used as blast shields are pretty cheap. That Nikon camera however is worth like 2000 euros. As an amateur photographer, my heart broke a little when i saw that camera... OOOF! Im glad he films in a warehouse and stays far away from the press studio. XD
@@danielciocilteu3545 He told he had to replace only lenses. Body was ok
Amazing how the explosion happened to unlock and rotate the lens off of the camera body without damaging any glass or the mount. More peculiar that it was revealed after an edit.
@@digitalthrills in russian version of this video he told the way it had happened
I know a hero when I see one Not even a word spoken during the video Letting us take it all in by ourselves
Dips 80 mm steel ball into liquid nitrogen. Steel Ball: So you've chosen death for your little toy.
Phenomenal, broke the block!
Water balloons. Air balloons. Coffee Tumblers. Multi tools.
What alloy are the black/yellow parts and the unpainted block that exploded under the chilled ball? Interesting videos, thanks!
The cilindrical plates are made of high density steel which is why tungsten goes right through them. The plate that exploded was a piece of 10cm steel plate, but of a lesser density than the cilindrical plates. It looked a bit rusted so im guessing old steel from some factory.
this gives a whole new meaning to the term "bricked it"
Different types of rocks.
If a man has [balls] of steel, nothing can break him.
This does give new meaning to "got my balls in a vise."
Ele é o Clark Kent mas é segredo.
Man, i never realized how tough tungsten can be! I wonder if it went to high school with diamond?
Every morning as he leaves for work, this guy gets to say, "I have to get going. I have some pressing business to attend to."
The ball lost its bearings
All I can say is HOLY SHIT. 😮
Lol, this guy literally has balls of steel
3:55 Steel Ball: "And I won't watch this ANYMORE! HYAAAAH!!"
500t mehr kann die Presse nicht 😅 Es muss eine größere her!😊
Translation please
Balls