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hey tyler the metal thing in the onion cut is more for mincing and finely slicing quickly bc its reapeated action of up and down faster = more fine the mince or cube
Policy genius sucks There’s no one to explain coverages to you. So dumb to let the end consumer buy one of the most complicated financial products themselves. Facepalm
About the presto plug. It is rated for 13 amps. A standard outlet is 15 amps. Sone outlets are 20 amps. It doesnt say the gauge, but it is probably 16 gauge. That means you can start a fire if you use more than 13 amps and the breaker wont trip till 15 amps (or more). And how many people check the amps. Bad product; fire hazzard. Edit: so maybe i shouldve watched the whole video before i commented. Maybe it fries before starting a fire. I still think its a fire hazzard. Maybe not for 99% of the people. Tell that to the person who's house burns down.
He’s not a culinary specialist, he doesn’t know how to properly or improperly cut an onion. You have faults too. For example you like to laugh at people when they make a mistake when they could be doing something else that may be more important to them but is doing this to entertain others instead. Now I have a question for you, how does it feel to be judged? Who am I kidding, It doesn’t feel too good, right?
@@alexfacer6338 the smallest amount of effort would stop Tyler from looking like an idiot in mulitple videos. It's not that hard to research the product you are attempting to demonstrate before making the video.
The finger guard and slicing pick are teaching tools for beginning cooks. The shield forces you to hold your stabilizing fingers correctly as you slice long items like herbs or carrots. The pick teaches consistent uniform slices with round items like onions or potatoes. Neither is actually meant to be used permanently, just until you build your confidence and technical skills well enough to stop. Also, don't stab the pick in so far. You just have to seat it.
I'm not a beginning cook but I have and use the cutting pick because I don't have any good knives and can't slice thinly. I'm also not good at slicing evenly either, so it helps make things uniform.
There more meant for dicing, like when you have already cut slices stacked up and you cut them again to dice. That's what they're doing when you see chefs cutting stuff fast. Which is what that product is meant for is to teach you to speed up dicing without cutting yourself.
Like Barry Lewis often says in his reviews, some of these items might seem ridiculous for a lot of people to use but they can be of great help to some who might have a disability or mobility issue.
The first one doesn't even look good enough for that since it looks like it has a somewhat strong magnet you can even see him having to lightly exert himself to open it. I don't think that market group would generally have the... Opening hand strength(?) to open it. I can't even think of the word to use.
Yup. Anyone who ever ridiculed a Snuggie, saying a blanket with arm holes is ridiculous, has never been wheelchair bound. As a visually impaired dude who likes having a well trimmed beard I have a device called a Goatee Saver which looks ridiculous but it's a fantastic facial hair template which would allow anyone to clip their beard in pitch darkness.
For future cutting food demos, generally the first thing you want to do is create a flat surface so the food doesn't roll around. In the case of an onion cutting it in half is a good place to start.
Man, I love Tyler. I get so upset with watching him sometimes, but I think that just adds to the overall experience. Plus, there have been multiple times when he has come back to retest something that he tested incorrectly the first time around. He tries his best and is able to admit when he was wrong--a rare and admirable quality--so I don't really have a problem with the opinions that he forms off of his initial test.
@@aisforannihilation1662 Project Farm- This product is superior based on the data we have collected using scientific method. Tyler- This smells like an electrical fire on the inside.
The finger guard for the knife is probably meant for more like chopping actions. Where the movement is fast and you aren't holding the blade up so high on an unbalanced object. This would be great for beginners that want to practice the way professional chefs chop or dice foods because at the speed things can go wrong very fast. As for the wolverine claws. While it's not its intended purpose, it looks like it works better to help cut the food in more even slices as is the case from the onion with and without it.
"i can just do this - and slice my onion" and get thick ass slices, showing exactly what the device was for lol and the guard, absolutely for training a chef's chop
Also the way he cut the onion was awful. Basic knife safety they teach in culinary school: always cut a flat surface in what you're cutting so it can never roll.
@@StriK3FoRC3OwO he isn't ..he actually never reads the instructions and thinks he knows everything ..this is why he is so entertaining. Someone who is clueless telling us why he is so much smarter by demonstrating every way to use a product except for how it was designed ... It's like he actually thought is thick uneven slices of onion where some view of a great way to get onions chopped up for a recipe ...he js always using products without ever looking at the instruction or even understanding their intended use ..and making fun of something where his skills are worse than he even understands .
What impresses me the most is that you come up with questions I haven't thought of. For example, when I think of a product that is just plain useless, you come up with an idea that is not obvious, but find a use for it.
The tape is a version of self-amalgum tape. Often used in engineering applications, it's a bonded rubber tape that moulds to itself upon tension and application. When applied correctly, It can seal a broken gasket in high pressure hydraulic pipes, temporarily of course.
Love your channel. Just a note: The slicing pick is a lifesaver for older cooks with arthritis. It makes it easier and safer to continue to cook for our families. It also helps the new cook learn to cut properly. However, it works better if you cut the onion in half like the box shows.
"Magic tape!" We used to use that non-adhesive tape for making water tight seals at junctions. Kind of like heat shrink, but on anything. And unlike tape, there is no adhesive that will break down with time. Not sure the composition of that particular rubber, but the stuff we used was meant to be outdoors in the elements and last for years
@@Znipo93 maybe. But the stuff we used didn't exactly fuse. After stretching slightly and wrapping against itself it would just stick as it contracted. You could still unwrap it if you needed to, but it was very attracted to sticking to itself, kind of like cling wrap
Self vulcanizing tape is used for a lot of stuff. We use it to wrap amphenol connectors in machines to keep machining coolant from damaging them. We use it on all kinds of electrical stuff we want water tight.
Former culinary student here: the steel guard for the onion cut is actually very useful for teaching people to chop, dice and mince really fast (in a restaurant, if you're "in the weeds" really bad, sometimes you have to go way faster than is really safe) and build muscle memory, but the rest of it is trash
I can see a use for the 'safetyNailer' especially for people who are getting on in age and have started to shake, but are not yet at a point where they need/want help from a nurse. Sometimes you just need to hammer a nail to hang up a picture of your grandkids.
You gotta love how with all his experience Tyler is amazed and astounded by the simplest things. Every cheap sticky rubbish nowadays comes with 3M stickers. It seems for commercial products 3M really has a good value at low price
It's actually kind of insane that you need to use a specific website to get that extension cord when in most places you could just go into any shop that sells cheap shit and buy one with 4 plug sockets.
His tests are the least objective or informative tests anyone does on UA-cam. We just gotta trust him but the thing is we do trust him. We don't need real information or the scientific method or consistency all we need is Tyler's gut feeling. Tyler's the reason I bought a tub of flex plaste.
He also doesn’t read directions and just wings it. Just like with the wolverine chopper thing he puts it in way to far for no reason and then says it’s useless.
Anybody in the construction field who has nailed thousands of nails can testify that anyone can hit a finger no matter how great you're aim lol. Does that mean I'd use that product NO. But hitting a finger has nothing too do with bad aim lmao. I love this channel because Tyler makes reviews hilarious and I honestly never would use his opinions as staple for the possibility of buying something. And let's not forget he hit that finger guard therefore had he not had it on it would have been his finger 😂
Also another reason why that's not a good product is because something like that already exist and it's called pliers. And those give you WAY MORE distance between your fingers and the nail
God bless you and God bless anyone reading this! Hope you have an awesome day! Seek him while you can! Jesus is the way and the only way and he is returning soon! Whenever you think you aren't loved... Remember the ultimate sacrifice was for love! ENDING YOUR LIFE IS NEVER THE ANSWER! For God so loved the world, that he gave his only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in him should not perish, but have everlasting life. John 3:16 KJV The wages of sin is death (hell) but Jesus paid our debt on the cross, for our salvation! We must turn to God and away from our sinful ways, Confess Jesus is Lord and believe with our hearts that he was risen from the dead by God, and we must be baptized in the name of the Father, the Son and The Holy Spirit and live by His word and Commandments! Trust that God will help with the rest! Seek God today before it's too late! Today could be your last day on earth! Have a blessed day! --
For the kitchen utensils, Tyler if only you worked in restaurants you’ll be surprised how many cooks/chefs be cutting themselves by accident. I love your content don’t get me wrong, but for the cutting protector, I would actually use that myself. I use to work at a restaurant myself as a cook.
Same. When you use knives that much you're eventually gonna make a mistake. I used to be a sous chef and I've been cut a few times, mostly from being in a hurry. The way you cut your fingers off is by cutting like he does in the video with your fingers extended lmao.
@@agoogleuser7190 Knit kevlar gloves are not "food safe". Kitchen and factory floor are two different places with two different sets of rules. A big part of kitchen knife work is the technique. Both hands have to be doing different things at the same time and in sync with each other. VERY EASY, for even a skilled chef to slip and slice the wrong thing.
Self-sticking silicone tape has been around for a while and is very useful in certain applications such as electrical tape where you don't want to leave any residue. I wouldn't use it as a rubber-band substitute.
@@ryanjhardy There are professional versions of finger guards for chefs. So not out of the realm of use. That one was just a cheap version not being used correctly.
Nice! Just found this channel and I love it. I've been binging all the videos and this is the first new one I've ever seen. Thanks for all the great content, Tyler!!!
Normally I like UA-camrs for a while then get bored w them but I’ve been subbed to Tyler for like 2 years and have never stopped watching when he uploads, he also has a gaming channel that’s decent just doesn’t play any games that I like
The finger guard for cutting is a good thing for learning to chop fast with a chefs knife. The motion is to rest the side of the blade on the middle joint (the middle phalanx) and keept the tip of the fingers curled inward resting on the product. The thumb pushes the product forward and the curled fingers may retreat on the product as it's being cut. The knife always stay in contact with your fingers (that's why chefs knife is so wide). This is done in order to chop accurate and fast like a real chef as the cut is guided by your fingers and the thumb pusing and hand crawling sets the slice thickness. Way faster and more accurate than eyeballing and cutting on the product itself. In the learning stage, one may raise the knife too much and cut into the finger, or during crawling the tips don't stay curled inward and get cut. So a tall metal fingerguard can be very useful to learn to chop fast safely by resting the kinfe on that metal guard. The sound may be awkward, but you can practice safely this tehnique. The more pro you get you can rest the knife on the distal phalanx joint (the very last joint of the finger) and be very aware to keep the nails angled inward. It gives more reach for cutting bigger products, the grip is firmer, the cut is more defined and accurate as the resting point is much closer to the product itself but is more prone to cut yourself if you lift the knife too much off the product as it will raise above the joint and cut into it. (the closer your resting point to the product is, the harder it gets as you need to raise the blade just enough to enter a new cut but not more as it the resting point is quite close to the product) Anyway, for this task, this product does not look that bad.
I used to watch for laughs. Now I watch to see Tyler use almost everything he reviews incorrectly. Lol. You don't have to put the "wolverine cutter" all the way in the thing to the table, lmao
I started to write a similar comment but saw this one. I always love his premise for videos and wonder how exactly he’s going to use the products. I’ve also come to realize it’s people like Tyler that cause companies to insert what seem like useless instructions for simple products and weirdly specific warnings on packaging. 😂
@@adammccarty yeah if he would ever read the instructions we wouldn't get the Tyler factor ..I watch the videos to see cool products that Tyler cant seem to understand why or how or why they actually function . He is the new America I ready know it all and this is why I am so smart ...as they make a complete idiot of themselves on social media
God bless you and God bless anyone reading this! Hope you have an awesome day! Seek him while you can! Jesus is the way and the only way and he is returning soon! Whenever you think you aren't loved... Remember the ultimate sacrifice was for love! ENDING YOUR LIFE IS NEVER THE ANSWER! For God so loved the world, that he gave his only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in him should not perish, but have everlasting life. John 3:16 KJV The wages of sin is death (hell) but Jesus paid our debt on the cross, for our salvation! We must turn to God and away from our sinful ways, Confess Jesus is Lord and believe with our hearts that he was risen from the dead by God, and we must be baptized in the name of the Father, the Son and The Holy Spirit and live by His word and Commandments! Trust that God will help with the rest! Seek God today before it's too late! Today could be your last day on earth! Have a blessed day! -
OMG agree...such as the plug when it stop... Dude.. Unplug it from power and then plug it back in! It most likely has an auto reset on it thus why no reset button on it.. Either that it went into thermal mode as it got to hot...unplug it.. wait 5 min and try again.
I'm glad you did the 1000W test, because Freakin' Reviews didn't try that when tested it out. Not being able to withstand an overload definitely makes the product instant junk.
There's probably a built in fuse that burned out from what little knowledge I have of electronics. That would be why it defaulted back to the USB voltage, since the fuse would be there to protect the USB devices from a surge. Bad wiring basically, except its built into a board.
@@chronic_adhd208 Doubt it yes it was a little weird but he films and edits these so why even leave it in? I guess he was turning off a camera or the lights.
The Onion Cut shield is actually a really good tool (just not good quality from the bad spot-welds). You're actually supposed to curl your fingers in when cutting things like onions, and use the middle section of your fingers as a guide for the knife to go up and down (just like the product). The shield would be perfect for beginners. The rate of speed in which you cut is solely depends on the user's knife skills.
That onion slicing tool helps you in dicing the onions, not just slicing them. You first slice them up and then cut the slices the other way around to dice them up.
Thank god someone said it. "Then I would have to do this to dice it?" NOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO. Good lord Tyler.
I worked with disabled and elderly people before and cooking can be very dangerous for them. I guess the Second product is for exactly those applications: Teaching kids to do the claw grip while cutting (which you should do aswell Tyler ;) ) Elderly people that can't keep a grip on Onions. Disabled people with muscle / twitching problems as well as mentally disabled people you want to teach how to cook.
@@AtomSquirrel also it's not JUST about indipendence it can be about them contributing to society. Some are so severly disabled that they need tools to be able to work. Maby there's someone out there with twitching issues, who's a great knowledgable chef or something. You never know. Also if you have some sort of disability and there's a simple product that seems useless to others then you'd think differently about it. (E.g Pill press for elderly people that pushes a pill out of it's casing because they have fingers to weak to push 'em out totally useless for us. Exceptional for them)
I am brand new to your channel, you are so funny well providing a great service. I had some terrible things going on in my life and was very emotional for several days then I saw one of your videos and you managed to make me giggle. So I have been watching you a lot the last few days whenever I need a cheering up. Happy New Years and thank you so much
My dad once made something that looks similar to the outlet extender. He used Romex, a box, a box extender, and an outlet. It works very well. I recently replaced the box and outlet and I'm using a box cover for the outlet. The whole thing is still working just fine.
You can wire up a heavy duty extension cord into 2 outlets in a 2 gang box and run 4 tools/whatever. Works really well. Spring behind the box to prevent it from rubbing/kinking behind the box. There's a video on here somewhere showing the exact process. Super popular among the older/more experienced tradesmen.
To be honest, the first one is handy. I have something similair. Blind on my left eye, i still have a decent aim. But here and there hitting fingers became normal. Tools like this are great... But this is the "cheap version" Also, a real metal one helps your nail to go in straight.
Like he said in the video... a pair of pliers dude. You can get one for a couple bucks and they're metal so you won't screw them up if you miss. Plus they're way less awkward to handle than this contraption
It would actually be really helpful to individuals with arthritis, especially rheumatoid arthritis, in their fingers that is going to cause pain and decrease strength, which might cause the nail to slip and would also make using pliers a no go. Also if someone suffered a C7-C8 spinal cord injury they would have little to no strength to pinch anything. The magnets will hold the jaw closed. Those are the only two situations I see this being really useful though, and I’m sure this is being advertised to everyone, not just those with deficits so it’s 95% useless.
Also, not everyone has to drive nails through wood. In cement walls houses you definitely need something to hold your nails, a pair of pliers will do (in fact, that's what I use) but a more dedicated solution would be better.
I have cerebral palsy.. so have always struggled with holding a nail to get them started.. things need to get done so I could not just not drive nails..wish that was the case lol..i just hold them with plyers to keep fingers away..that contraption looks worse than nothing 😂
I've actually found that rubber type of tape that you have to stretch is usefull for stuff like radiator hoses or bike inner tubes in emergencies. I once covered over 100miles with a bike tube patch and 3 zip ties on my radiator hose that burst when I was holiday
Those power cords would be fire hazards if they didn't fail when you overload them. If I remember correctly, Technology Connections channel has a whole video on this, that also explains why common Christmas light strings are safer than off the shelf extension cords in the US. Extension cords sold in the EU have to fail safe, and require a fuse that matches the maximum current rating of the conductors in the cord. The fuse should be in the plug end, not in the socket end, as a socket end fuse wouldn't catch an internal short circuit. Most extension cords sold into the US market *don't* have such a fuse, and will merrily deliver current above the rated limits of the conductors in the cord. The fact that those cords continue to deliver 5 volts after they've been overloaded tells me they are either fused at the wrong end of the cord, or there's shenanigans with the fuse arrangement. Shenanigans might include fusing only the live wire, and allowing the 5 volt supply to run off of current between the return and ground when the fuse blows... gross. Common Christmas light strings typically *do* have a fuse, presumably to handle shorts in an outdoor setting or overloaded end to end strings, which ironically makes them *safer* than the majority of US extension cords. Note that the other side of the system is the wiring in the wall. That wiring has a particular current rating that has to match with the circuit breaker or fuse (if you have an ancient fuse box). That combo of wiring and breaker has no understanding of the current limits of any extension cords you plug in, however, which is what makes unfused extension cords fire hazards. The wall conductors may carry more current than the cord conductors (which is obviously the case in your setup). With old fuse boxes, it was apparently possible to put yourself in major jeopardy by jamming a penny into the fuse socket. Not recommended if you like your house unburnt.
I love how incredibly stupid the electrical outlet is. You basically have the ability to move a power box 4' from it's origin at the expense of another outlet that is now completely useless, so basically...you spent almost $25 to gain a single additional outlet in the room with a hideous cord attached to it 😆😆😆
So if it wasn’t hot garbage… I see the perfect use for 2 of them. You have an outlet behind a couch. You now have an accessible outlet on both sides of your couch.
It's actually pretty useful. I use 2 of them in my house because the outlets in my house are in bad spots, but this relocater allows me to set up my rooms the way I want them, and not what's most convenient for the outlets. That 4 extra feet may not seem like a lot, but it definitely is compared to most rooms in any house.
I don’t know I usually quarter onions and potatoes before I cut them down further. That might have given you more control when using that guard. Because then you’re able to rest the flat side on your workspace and it’s not rolling away. But also a sharp knife is gonna ensure safe cutting because you’re way less likely to have the blade slip and cut you. Then there’s definitely no need for the guard
Keep in mind these products are often aimed at people with disabilities or injuries. My neighbor recently had surgery and has 90 staples in his chest and was in obvious pain moving stuff around outside. I offered to help and he said "Thanks for the offer, but I'm not an invalid". People still want to be able to accomplish things by themselves even when it is more difficult for them, so they would disagree with the notion that maybe they shouldn't do x.
yeah I'm looking at these finger guard products thinking they're not stupid (conceptually). I have shaky hands but I still have pictures to hang and food to cut. if only we were all blessed with Tyler's silky smooth nerves ;)
I love how half the videos I've watched recently have the train whistle in the background. Keep up the good work love the video. You are my daily go to for a good laugh lately thanks!
Complains about the onion cutting shield thing while having zero idea how to actually cut an onion. Honestly, it’s good you had that thing on your fingers because you actually did risk slicing your fingers off.
That hammer Tyler is using actually has a built in nail holder. It's the magnet dent. Put nail in. Hit board. Nail stays in board. Continue nailing. It's awesome
30:15 It’s probably limited to that 1000w like you said for the extension cord so it’s probably got some safety feature that it breaks so it doesn’t pull to much and start a fire if you ask me I think it’s more for like phones and charger your portable speakers and headphones you know stuff like that
Yep. I saw 2 small black cubes on the circuit board. One going to the USB charging circuitry and another between the hot wire and the outlet prongs. Guessing they're fuses.
There is a version of the tape that has been around for a long time. Usually found in black, red, or blue, this film/tape binds things securely, does not apply undo pressure, and it doesn't leave sticky residue like adhesive tape would. Also, it doesn't stick to skin, so... it is also known by names such as "sex tape" and I'll leave the rest to your imagination. Edit: Thought I should mention the tape is used for packing fine furniture and such for shipping and moves. No marks, no residue. I have seen it used for lumber, as well (smaller amounts, like taking a few boards home from the store).
@@Lilith-Rose It should be noted that the tape in this video appears to be more stretchy than the tape I referred to above. I believe this one may be a vinyl type. Always good to know your potential allergens.
@@Lilith-Rose I knew some furniture makers that would get the black and the blue tape in bulk for packaging table legs and such for shipping. The less things move the less they rub and get hurt. Apparently, it was fairly cheap.
That safetynailer is a prime example of those "solutions" you come up with in the shower to common problems that end up being more expensive, impractical, or redundant than just fixing those problems the normal way.
first product could easily be replaced with a wooden clothespin, like those old school ones, could carve a groove into the pinchers so they could hold the nail. or just hammer nails the way Tyler showed you
That finger protector could be useful if you have thick fingers and you have to drive in a small nail. I had the situation some times when I pinched the nail between my fingers, and the head was basically at the same height as the skin on my fingers, but the tip didn't reach the wood. But TBH this gadget still seems useless in a way, since you can use a haircomb for the same purpose. Just put the nail between it's teeth and you're good to go
@@muddin Yeah, pliers can work as well, but if you're afraid of messing them up with a miss, you can still use the comb method, since it's playtic and cheap to displace
I sometimes think Tyler was raised in a mop closet. He has trouble understanding some of the basic concepts of the products. I want someone to find a website that existed in the 70's.
Reminder: many devices may seem stupid or useless for those with normal dexterity but helps tremendously for those, who have dexterity problems. They have normal tasks to accomplish, too.
The onion tool (the claw one) I can see being great for cutting fruit or something very soft that you would need even slives/pieces with. But using it for hard things it bends the prongs and just is useless. But I definitely agree if you NEED that to cut because your that clumsy; maybe don't use a knife lol.
He faked the brake in the knife guard (broke it off camera then cut the video to when he Chucked it on the table and He faked the overload of the plug and turned the power off. Totally obvious. Even had a remote that clicked exactly when the power went. 😂
Funny how he brought items to review and tryd his hardest to prove they are bad and failed hilariously. testing with dumb methods and using no intelligence atall. Was a laugh watching him squirm trying to prove how he is right and the fake acting was spot on. What a fool.
To start comparing quotes and simplify insurance-buying, check out Policygenius: policygenius.com/tylertube. Thanks to Policygenius for sponsoring this video!
hey tyler the metal thing in the onion cut is more for mincing and finely slicing quickly bc its reapeated action of up and down faster = more fine the mince or cube
You know your hammer has a built-in spot to hold the nail already. Not all but yours does.
Policy genius sucks
There’s no one to explain coverages to you. So dumb to let the end consumer buy one of the most complicated financial products themselves. Facepalm
🙄🤔😳
1970's Website ⁉️
When do you think Websites started?
About the presto plug. It is rated for 13 amps. A standard outlet is 15 amps. Sone outlets are 20 amps. It doesnt say the gauge, but it is probably 16 gauge. That means you can start a fire if you use more than 13 amps and the breaker wont trip till 15 amps (or more). And how many people check the amps. Bad product; fire hazzard.
Edit: so maybe i shouldve watched the whole video before i commented. Maybe it fries before starting a fire. I still think its a fire hazzard. Maybe not for 99% of the people. Tell that to the person who's house burns down.
The way he cut those onions was scarier than most horror movies.
that guy is totally clueless man, he don't know shit
holy shit I was just about to post this
THE EXTENDED THUMB
For real. At least cut the thing in half first so it can sit flat. x.x
😂 Get someone who has ever cut an onion to test an onion product. He’s like the before guy on infomercials.
those are mutated onions, normal yellow onions are about 2 inches in diameter
Tyler: "If you don't know how to cut an onion you probably shouldn't have a knife"
*proceeds to cut an onion wrong 🤣
He’s not a culinary specialist, he doesn’t know how to properly or improperly cut an onion. You have faults too. For example you like to laugh at people when they make a mistake when they could be doing something else that may be more important to them but is doing this to entertain others instead. Now I have a question for you, how does it feel to be judged? Who am I kidding, It doesn’t feel too good, right?
@@alexfacer6338 the smallest amount of effort would stop Tyler from looking like an idiot in mulitple videos. It's not that hard to research the product you are attempting to demonstrate before making the video.
@@alexfacer6338Says the guy watching a video on someone Judging something to begin with
@@alexfacer6338 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
How is he cutting it wrong, explain
The finger guard and slicing pick are teaching tools for beginning cooks. The shield forces you to hold your stabilizing fingers correctly as you slice long items like herbs or carrots. The pick teaches consistent uniform slices with round items like onions or potatoes. Neither is actually meant to be used permanently, just until you build your confidence and technical skills well enough to stop. Also, don't stab the pick in so far. You just have to seat it.
I'm not a beginning cook but I have and use the cutting pick because I don't have any good knives and can't slice thinly. I'm also not good at slicing evenly either, so it helps make things uniform.
Wow....Nope
Just a rip off product.
@@Andrew-315zz no likes on this comment. Understandable.
@@englishatheart I prefer a mandolin slicer and a cut proof glove. Much faster
There more meant for dicing, like when you have already cut slices stacked up and you cut them again to dice. That's what they're doing when you see chefs cutting stuff fast. Which is what that product is meant for is to teach you to speed up dicing without cutting yourself.
Like Barry Lewis often says in his reviews, some of these items might seem ridiculous for a lot of people to use but they can be of great help to some who might have a disability or mobility issue.
The first one doesn't even look good enough for that since it looks like it has a somewhat strong magnet you can even see him having to lightly exert himself to open it. I don't think that market group would generally have the... Opening hand strength(?) to open it. I can't even think of the word to use.
They're mostly dumb
I see it as useful for shorter nails too, not these long ones he’s using.
Yup. Anyone who ever ridiculed a Snuggie, saying a blanket with arm holes is ridiculous, has never been wheelchair bound. As a visually impaired dude who likes having a well trimmed beard I have a device called a Goatee Saver which looks ridiculous but it's a fantastic facial hair template which would allow anyone to clip their beard in pitch darkness.
That argument only holds up if the product works and makes it easier, which in this case wasn't really true
For future cutting food demos, generally the first thing you want to do is create a flat surface so the food doesn't roll around. In the case of an onion cutting it in half is a good place to start.
LOL RIGHT
Man, I love Tyler. I get so upset with watching him sometimes, but I think that just adds to the overall experience. Plus, there have been multiple times when he has come back to retest something that he tested incorrectly the first time around. He tries his best and is able to admit when he was wrong--a rare and admirable quality--so I don't really have a problem with the opinions that he forms off of his initial test.
I agree
We watch Tyler for some x's informative entertainment from a lovable guy & watch Project Farm for in depth, unbiased reviews.
@@aisforannihilation1662 Project Farm- This product is superior based on the data we have collected using scientific method.
Tyler- This smells like an electrical fire on the inside.
@@TC-th1ey tee hee. He's kinda funny tho & I do come back to watch. He's his own brand of reviews. Can't knock the hustle.
I commented before I read this comment, but yeah, exactly 💯 😅
The finger guard for the knife is probably meant for more like chopping actions. Where the movement is fast and you aren't holding the blade up so high on an unbalanced object. This would be great for beginners that want to practice the way professional chefs chop or dice foods because at the speed things can go wrong very fast.
As for the wolverine claws. While it's not its intended purpose, it looks like it works better to help cut the food in more even slices as is the case from the onion with and without it.
"i can just do this - and slice my onion"
and get thick ass slices, showing exactly what the device was for lol
and the guard, absolutely for training a chef's chop
Also the way he cut the onion was awful. Basic knife safety they teach in culinary school: always cut a flat surface in what you're cutting so it can never roll.
we are talking about Tyler here. sometimes I hope he's just acting like that for the videos
@@StriK3FoRC3OwO he isn't ..he actually never reads the instructions and thinks he knows everything ..this is why he is so entertaining. Someone who is clueless telling us why he is so much smarter by demonstrating every way to use a product except for how it was designed ... It's like he actually thought is thick uneven slices of onion where some view of a great way to get onions chopped up for a recipe ...he js always using products without ever looking at the instruction or even understanding their intended use ..and making fun of something where his skills are worse than he even understands .
@@dwayneb72 so true. “Look at this dumb device. Why?” (Slices wedge shaped onion chunks)
I’m just surprised he used a kitchen knife and not a sword.
What impresses me the most is that you come up with questions I haven't thought of. For example, when I think of a product that is just plain useless, you come up with an idea that is not obvious, but find a use for it.
The tape is a version of self-amalgum tape. Often used in engineering applications, it's a bonded rubber tape that moulds to itself upon tension and application. When applied correctly, It can seal a broken gasket in high pressure hydraulic pipes, temporarily of course.
Electricians use it.
Love your channel. Just a note: The slicing pick is a lifesaver for older cooks with arthritis. It makes it easier and safer to continue to cook for our families. It also helps the new cook learn to cut properly. However, it works better if you cut the onion in half like the box shows.
"Magic tape!" We used to use that non-adhesive tape for making water tight seals at junctions. Kind of like heat shrink, but on anything. And unlike tape, there is no adhesive that will break down with time. Not sure the composition of that particular rubber, but the stuff we used was meant to be outdoors in the elements and last for years
Youre talking about self-fusing tape
@@Znipo93 maybe. But the stuff we used didn't exactly fuse. After stretching slightly and wrapping against itself it would just stick as it contracted. You could still unwrap it if you needed to, but it was very attracted to sticking to itself, kind of like cling wrap
Self vulcanizing tape is used for a lot of stuff. We use it to wrap amphenol connectors in machines to keep machining coolant from damaging them. We use it on all kinds of electrical stuff we want water tight.
I have used that on Polaris lugs.
Former culinary student here: the steel guard for the onion cut is actually very useful for teaching people to chop, dice and mince really fast (in a restaurant, if you're "in the weeds" really bad, sometimes you have to go way faster than is really safe) and build muscle memory, but the rest of it is trash
I can see a use for the 'safetyNailer' especially for people who are getting on in age and have started to shake, but are not yet at a point where they need/want help from a nurse.
Sometimes you just need to hammer a nail to hang up a picture of your grandkids.
Just use a comb to hold the nail
You gotta love how with all his experience Tyler is amazed and astounded by the simplest things. Every cheap sticky rubbish nowadays comes with 3M stickers. It seems for commercial products 3M really has a good value at low price
It's actually kind of insane that you need to use a specific website to get that extension cord when in most places you could just go into any shop that sells cheap shit and buy one with 4 plug sockets.
I watch this show strictly because Tyler makes me feel REALLY smart!
hahaha true. great way to put it
😂😂😂
His tests are the least objective or informative tests anyone does on UA-cam. We just gotta trust him but the thing is we do trust him. We don't need real information or the scientific method or consistency all we need is Tyler's gut feeling. Tyler's the reason I bought a tub of flex plaste.
I second that
@@AmirAkhlaghi well said.
This man's does not know his way around the kitchen, but what would you expect from a man who hates pickles.
He also doesn’t read directions and just wings it. Just like with the wolverine chopper thing he puts it in way to far for no reason and then says it’s useless.
man lives off easy mac what do u expect
I hate pickles with a passion and can cook, so what does that do to your comment now? 🤔
my brain was spazzing during the abuse of the Onion tools. My god man.. you'd think some things are so simple it is self explanatory but no.
@@ohioknifelover the comment paired with your username did me a chuckle
The “Wolverine” looking thing for the onions (I’m pretty sure) isn’t to protect you from cutting yourself, but to make the slices equal
Also makes dicing much easier.
Yeah, he also wasn't using it right. You don't need to drive it all the way through the vegetable
@@WILLYLYNCH. yeah well the thing is garbage and ass
Agree and not only did he not use it right it also helps to use the proper knife
Id use it for boiled eggs
Tyler: Buys useless items for a video
Also Tyler: I wouldn't buy this
Tyler: "As long as you have a sharp knife it's not going to slide off or anything."
Also Tyler: Proceeds to use a butter knife to cut an onion.
Anybody in the construction field who has nailed thousands of nails can testify that anyone can hit a finger no matter how great you're aim lol. Does that mean I'd use that product NO. But hitting a finger has nothing too do with bad aim lmao. I love this channel because Tyler makes reviews hilarious and I honestly never would use his opinions as staple for the possibility of buying something. And let's not forget he hit that finger guard therefore had he not had it on it would have been his finger 😂
Also another reason why that's not a good product is because something like that already exist and it's called pliers. And those give you WAY MORE distance between your fingers and the nail
hitting your fingers build character and vocabulary
Lol I just wrote something similar.
I could see old people using the nail guard
God bless you and God bless anyone reading this! Hope you have an awesome day! Seek him while you can! Jesus is the way and the only way and he is returning soon! Whenever you think you aren't loved... Remember the ultimate sacrifice was for love! ENDING YOUR LIFE IS NEVER THE ANSWER!
For God so loved the world, that he gave his only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in him should not perish, but have everlasting life.
John 3:16 KJV
The wages of sin is death (hell) but Jesus paid our debt on the cross, for our salvation! We must turn to God and away from our sinful ways, Confess Jesus is Lord and believe with our hearts that he was risen from the dead by God, and we must be baptized in the name of the Father, the Son and The Holy Spirit and live by His word and Commandments! Trust that God will help with the rest!
Seek God today before it's too late! Today could be your last day on earth!
Have a blessed day!
--
For the kitchen utensils, Tyler if only you worked in restaurants you’ll be surprised how many cooks/chefs be cutting themselves by accident. I love your content don’t get me wrong, but for the cutting protector, I would actually use that myself. I use to work at a restaurant myself as a cook.
Same. When you use knives that much you're eventually gonna make a mistake. I used to be a sous chef and I've been cut a few times, mostly from being in a hurry. The way you cut your fingers off is by cutting like he does in the video with your fingers extended lmao.
Cut resistant glove would work so much better.
Technically that finger guard for the onions is for when you dice things. Not a hard chop. So. When used as it's intended it works great lol
I would use it until the bad tack weld inevitably broke 🤣
@@agoogleuser7190
Knit kevlar gloves are not "food safe". Kitchen and factory floor are two different places with two different sets of rules.
A big part of kitchen knife work is the technique. Both hands have to be doing different things at the same time and in sync with each other. VERY EASY, for even a skilled chef to slip and slice the wrong thing.
Self-sticking silicone tape has been around for a while and is very useful in certain applications such as electrical tape where you don't want to leave any residue. I wouldn't use it as a rubber-band substitute.
I don’t think that is what that was. I use f4 tape all day every day and that is not it.
It also would be useful in the rubber band situation if you want something sitting flat instead of having the rubber band bulge
It also works as bondage tape so you can tape gags and wrists without pulling hair or yanking skin!
"Are you sure you don't want Qty 3?" { knows 1 out of 3 is defective }
Who could forget that classic look of websites from the 70s 😁
What 70s okay sure guy
The “wolverine spike” is used to have consistent cuts, not a safety measure
exactly and a smaller knife would've been helpful.
If you want consistent cuts, then get a mandoline slicer. Far faster and easier.
Actually it works for both, it isn't a bad idea at all, and it does work at holding the onion instead of using your fingers.
Just imagine a construction worker coming to a job with this nail holder thing 🤣😂
Or a chef coming to work with the second product 🤣
All I thought us that if your worried about smashing your finger just buy a pair of pliers
What about the magnet built on top of the hammer for just a piece for show
@@ryanjhardy There are professional versions of finger guards for chefs. So not out of the realm of use. That one was just a cheap version not being used correctly.
Worst mistake of his career.. 15 years from that day and the guys will still be making fun of him 😆😆
Nice! Just found this channel and I love it. I've been binging all the videos and this is the first new one I've ever seen. Thanks for all the great content, Tyler!!!
Welcome to the Club mate
Bruh Tyler is dope, sometimes his test are so inaccurate but he’s human.
Tyler is great
Normally I like UA-camrs for a while then get bored w them but I’ve been subbed to Tyler for like 2 years and have never stopped watching when he uploads, he also has a gaming channel that’s decent just doesn’t play any games that I like
same, youtube showed me one of this videos, now Im spammed with them
The finger guard for cutting is a good thing for learning to chop fast with a chefs knife.
The motion is to rest the side of the blade on the middle joint (the middle phalanx) and keept the tip of the fingers curled inward resting on the product. The thumb pushes the product forward and the curled fingers may retreat on the product as it's being cut.
The knife always stay in contact with your fingers (that's why chefs knife is so wide).
This is done in order to chop accurate and fast like a real chef as the cut is guided by your fingers and the thumb pusing and hand crawling sets the slice thickness. Way faster and more accurate than eyeballing and cutting on the product itself.
In the learning stage, one may raise the knife too much and cut into the finger, or during crawling the tips don't stay curled inward and get cut. So a tall metal fingerguard can be very useful to learn to chop fast safely by resting the kinfe on that metal guard. The sound may be awkward, but you can practice safely this tehnique.
The more pro you get you can rest the knife on the distal phalanx joint (the very last joint of the finger) and be very aware to keep the nails angled inward. It gives more reach for cutting bigger products, the grip is firmer, the cut is more defined and accurate as the resting point is much closer to the product itself but is more prone to cut yourself if you lift the knife too much off the product as it will raise above the joint and cut into it. (the closer your resting point to the product is, the harder it gets as you need to raise the blade just enough to enter a new cut but not more as it the resting point is quite close to the product)
Anyway, for this task, this product does not look that bad.
If the obliviousness is an act, give this man an Oscar.
I used to watch for laughs. Now I watch to see Tyler use almost everything he reviews incorrectly. Lol. You don't have to put the "wolverine cutter" all the way in the thing to the table, lmao
I started to write a similar comment but saw this one. I always love his premise for videos and wonder how exactly he’s going to use the products. I’ve also come to realize it’s people like Tyler that cause companies to insert what seem like useless instructions for simple products and weirdly specific warnings on packaging. 😂
@@adammccarty yeah if he would ever read the instructions we wouldn't get the Tyler factor ..I watch the videos to see cool products that Tyler cant seem to understand why or how or why they actually function .
He is the new America I ready know it all and this is why I am so smart ...as they make a complete idiot of themselves on social media
God bless you and God bless anyone reading this! Hope you have an awesome day! Seek him while you can! Jesus is the way and the only way and he is returning soon! Whenever you think you aren't loved... Remember the ultimate sacrifice was for love! ENDING YOUR LIFE IS NEVER THE ANSWER!
For God so loved the world, that he gave his only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in him should not perish, but have everlasting life.
John 3:16 KJV
The wages of sin is death (hell) but Jesus paid our debt on the cross, for our salvation! We must turn to God and away from our sinful ways, Confess Jesus is Lord and believe with our hearts that he was risen from the dead by God, and we must be baptized in the name of the Father, the Son and The Holy Spirit and live by His word and Commandments! Trust that God will help with the rest!
Seek God today before it's too late! Today could be your last day on earth!
Have a blessed day!
-
OMG agree...such as the plug when it stop... Dude.. Unplug it from power and then plug it back in! It most likely has an auto reset on it thus why no reset button on it.. Either that it went into thermal mode as it got to hot...unplug it.. wait 5 min and try again.
That makes two of us
I'm glad you did the 1000W test, because Freakin' Reviews didn't try that when tested it out. Not being able to withstand an overload definitely makes the product instant junk.
I love freakin reviews, amazing guy
There's probably a built in fuse that burned out from what little knowledge I have of electronics. That would be why it defaulted back to the USB voltage, since the fuse would be there to protect the USB devices from a surge. Bad wiring basically, except its built into a board.
He faked it and turned the power off. Totally obvious. Even had a remote that clicked exactly when the power went. 😂
James from Freakin Reviews allegedly treats his camera man like %$#@ though.
@@chronic_adhd208 Doubt it yes it was a little weird but he films and edits these so why even leave it in? I guess he was turning off a camera or the lights.
If you want to understand how perfect that finger guard for the onions is then you must first understand how to use a knife properly.
Or how to cut an onion...
Who the fuck cares how cut an onion properly
@@thickgirlsneedlove2190 if you’re going to review a product , you should probably know how to use it properly.
Thank you and also needs to understand what kind of knife he should use
Tyler: “their website looks like it was made in the mid 1970s”
Internet: invented in 1983
WWW: invented in 1989
I love the old pasta still clinging to everyone who first bought Tyler's merch
That silicon tape is good for sealing tubes and pipes that have water in them, i.e. radiator hoses and under the sink pipes.
How tf tyler cut a shit load of onions and did not shed a tear….bro is invincible
If I ever designed a gadget, I would definitely send it to Tyler for prototype testing. He has an uncanny knack for misuse, in a good way.
He should start a business where companies can add an official seal on their package that says "idiot proof"
@@CJTheReal "Idiot Proof!" "TylerTube Tested and Approved!"
These don't sound like compliments 🤭
Watching Tyler fail is what brings me back to his channel
The Onion Cut shield is actually a really good tool (just not good quality from the bad spot-welds). You're actually supposed to curl your fingers in when cutting things like onions, and use the middle section of your fingers as a guide for the knife to go up and down (just like the product). The shield would be perfect for beginners. The rate of speed in which you cut is solely depends on the user's knife skills.
That onion slicing tool helps you in dicing the onions, not just slicing them. You first slice them up and then cut the slices the other way around to dice them up.
Thank god someone said it. "Then I would have to do this to dice it?" NOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO. Good lord Tyler.
Just get a “slap chop” or a grid blade chopper lol….
I worked with disabled and elderly people before and cooking can be very dangerous for them. I guess the Second product is for exactly those applications:
Teaching kids to do the claw grip while cutting (which you should do aswell Tyler ;) )
Elderly people that can't keep a grip on Onions.
Disabled people with muscle / twitching problems as well as mentally disabled people you want to teach how to cook.
Thank you! So many of these "useless" items are designed with disabled people in mind
Maybe disabled people shouldn't be cutting things
Of course nowadays it's easier than ever to be declared disabled
@@AtomSquirrel Maybe disabled people need independence...are you going to come do it for them?
@@AtomSquirrel also it's not JUST about indipendence it can be about them contributing to society. Some are so severly disabled that they need tools to be able to work. Maby there's someone out there with twitching issues, who's a great knowledgable chef or something. You never know. Also if you have some sort of disability and there's a simple product that seems useless to others then you'd think differently about it. (E.g Pill press for elderly people that pushes a pill out of it's casing because they have fingers to weak to push 'em out totally useless for us. Exceptional for them)
You already know it’s gonna be a funny when you test dummy Amazon products
The onion holder wolverine device is a really fantastic beard comb! It perfect for you Tyler.
I am brand new to your channel, you are so funny well providing a great service. I had some terrible things going on in my life and was very emotional for several days then I saw one of your videos and you managed to make me giggle. So I have been watching you a lot the last few days whenever I need a cheering up.
Happy New Years and thank you so much
Lol, Tyler your hammer already has a hands-free nail holder for starting nails!
Lol, I came here to see if anyone else pointed that out.
“I would never buy that...”
Tosses it aside.
Tyler, you DID buy that.
I need that t shirt. I did laughing when he called bread raw toast.
“Let’s see what we got here”
“Well, we got an onion”
I laughed so hard at this. Thanks bro.
My dad once made something that looks similar to the outlet extender. He used Romex, a box, a box extender, and an outlet. It works very well. I recently replaced the box and outlet and I'm using a box cover for the outlet. The whole thing is still working just fine.
You can wire up a heavy duty extension cord into 2 outlets in a 2 gang box and run 4 tools/whatever. Works really well. Spring behind the box to prevent it from rubbing/kinking behind the box. There's a video on here somewhere showing the exact process. Super popular among the older/more experienced tradesmen.
To be honest, the first one is handy. I have something similair. Blind on my left eye, i still have a decent aim. But here and there hitting fingers became normal. Tools like this are great... But this is the "cheap version" Also, a real metal one helps your nail to go in straight.
Like he said in the video... a pair of pliers dude. You can get one for a couple bucks and they're metal so you won't screw them up if you miss. Plus they're way less awkward to handle than this contraption
There’s also hammers with a groove in the top so you can get the nail in and hammer it down without using your other fingers
It would actually be really helpful to individuals with arthritis, especially rheumatoid arthritis, in their fingers that is going to cause pain and decrease strength, which might cause the nail to slip and would also make using pliers a no go.
Also if someone suffered a C7-C8 spinal cord injury they would have little to no strength to pinch anything. The magnets will hold the jaw closed.
Those are the only two situations I see this being really useful though, and I’m sure this is being advertised to everyone, not just those with deficits so it’s 95% useless.
Clothespins are cheap
Also, not everyone has to drive nails through wood. In cement walls houses you definitely need something to hold your nails, a pair of pliers will do (in fact, that's what I use) but a more dedicated solution would be better.
So we are all just going to ignore that he “hasn’t taken his Christmas tree back up to the attic yet”?? 😂🤣
Seems like Tyler doesn't have anyone in his family who is disabled or has arthritis
I have cerebral palsy.. so have always struggled with holding a nail to get them started.. things need to get done so I could not just not drive nails..wish that was the case lol..i just hold them with plyers to keep fingers away..that contraption looks worse than nothing 😂
I lol'd loudly at "Fight crime and then slice up some onions."
Good job Tyler! Your videos are useless but good waste of time with you! Thank you from Québec :)
I've actually found that rubber type of tape that you have to stretch is usefull for stuff like radiator hoses or bike inner tubes in emergencies. I once covered over 100miles with a bike tube patch and 3 zip ties on my radiator hose that burst when I was holiday
I love how he's using fancy Gadget to hold his nails when his hammer already has a nail starter built on to the top
I came here to say the same think. And he didn't mention it, so clearly didnt know about it.
Fancy? More like stupid.
I like the tape ( depending on what its made from) because I'm allergic to rubber and latex. I usually have to reuse bread twisties or zip ties.
Those power cords would be fire hazards if they didn't fail when you overload them. If I remember correctly, Technology Connections channel has a whole video on this, that also explains why common Christmas light strings are safer than off the shelf extension cords in the US.
Extension cords sold in the EU have to fail safe, and require a fuse that matches the maximum current rating of the conductors in the cord. The fuse should be in the plug end, not in the socket end, as a socket end fuse wouldn't catch an internal short circuit. Most extension cords sold into the US market *don't* have such a fuse, and will merrily deliver current above the rated limits of the conductors in the cord.
The fact that those cords continue to deliver 5 volts after they've been overloaded tells me they are either fused at the wrong end of the cord, or there's shenanigans with the fuse arrangement. Shenanigans might include fusing only the live wire, and allowing the 5 volt supply to run off of current between the return and ground when the fuse blows... gross.
Common Christmas light strings typically *do* have a fuse, presumably to handle shorts in an outdoor setting or overloaded end to end strings, which ironically makes them *safer* than the majority of US extension cords.
Note that the other side of the system is the wiring in the wall. That wiring has a particular current rating that has to match with the circuit breaker or fuse (if you have an ancient fuse box). That combo of wiring and breaker has no understanding of the current limits of any extension cords you plug in, however, which is what makes unfused extension cords fire hazards. The wall conductors may carry more current than the cord conductors (which is obviously the case in your setup).
With old fuse boxes, it was apparently possible to put yourself in major jeopardy by jamming a penny into the fuse socket. Not recommended if you like your house unburnt.
I love how incredibly stupid the electrical outlet is.
You basically have the ability to move a power box 4' from it's origin at the expense of another outlet that is now completely useless, so basically...you spent almost $25 to gain a single additional outlet in the room with a hideous cord attached to it 😆😆😆
It's a relocator for that one annoying outlet. Nothing more than that.
So if it wasn’t hot garbage… I see the perfect use for 2 of them. You have an outlet behind a couch. You now have an accessible outlet on both sides of your couch.
@@jeffandrews1020 mhm, that's what it's for.
It's actually pretty useful. I use 2 of them in my house because the outlets in my house are in bad spots, but this relocater allows me to set up my rooms the way I want them, and not what's most convenient for the outlets. That 4 extra feet may not seem like a lot, but it definitely is compared to most rooms in any house.
@@Foreign501st the comments about this makes me believe there's many without inconvenient outlet locations.
I don’t know I usually quarter onions and potatoes before I cut them down further. That might have given you more control when using that guard. Because then you’re able to rest the flat side on your workspace and it’s not rolling away. But also a sharp knife is gonna ensure safe cutting because you’re way less likely to have the blade slip and cut you. Then there’s definitely no need for the guard
He’s not the best chef 😂
6:40 well, I think we all know that accidents can happen, especially if your knife is in the dull side and you're getting impatient with it.
Or you don’t hold it or the item you are cutting properly which is what that guard teaches
Hearing that train helps my brain to not think we are in a simulation and he's not real
The most awkward cutting of an onion ever.
I love watching Tyler break things haha.
The tape that sticks to itself we call bondage tape. Can bind a person and doesn't rip out hairs and stuff
did not expect to see a comment about bondage under a Tyler vid
It’s good stuff XD
@@vikameow This is exactly where I'd expect to see one really.
Keep in mind these products are often aimed at people with disabilities or injuries. My neighbor recently had surgery and has 90 staples in his chest and was in obvious pain moving stuff around outside. I offered to help and he said "Thanks for the offer, but I'm not an invalid". People still want to be able to accomplish things by themselves even when it is more difficult for them, so they would disagree with the notion that maybe they shouldn't do x.
yeah I'm looking at these finger guard products thinking they're not stupid (conceptually). I have shaky hands but I still have pictures to hang and food to cut. if only we were all blessed with Tyler's silky smooth nerves ;)
I love how half the videos I've watched recently have the train whistle in the background. Keep up the good work love the video. You are my daily go to for a good laugh lately thanks!
For as many times as you miss the nail, that nail holder was created for you.
Also, choke back on your hammer 🔨 handle ffs, you always hold your hammer like a woman/child
Complains about the onion cutting shield thing while having zero idea how to actually cut an onion. Honestly, it’s good you had that thing on your fingers because you actually did risk slicing your fingers off.
Now it makes sense why they kept bombarding you to buy more outlets at checkout
😂
I always love watching Tyler at the end of the day when im just taking it easy. Thanks Tyler!
That hammer Tyler is using actually has a built in nail holder. It's the magnet dent. Put nail in. Hit board. Nail stays in board. Continue nailing. It's awesome
That last products cord wasn't even any longer than a normal power strip cord. 😂
Tyler: "Amazon products that SHOULDN'T exist"
also Tyler: includes a product not from amazon
30:15 It’s probably limited to that 1000w like you said for the extension cord so it’s probably got some safety feature that it breaks so it doesn’t pull to much and start a fire if you ask me I think it’s more for like phones and charger your portable speakers and headphones you know stuff like that
Yep. I saw 2 small black cubes on the circuit board. One going to the USB charging circuitry and another between the hot wire and the outlet prongs. Guessing they're fuses.
There is a version of the tape that has been around for a long time. Usually found in black, red, or blue, this film/tape binds things securely, does not apply undo pressure, and it doesn't leave sticky residue like adhesive tape would. Also, it doesn't stick to skin, so... it is also known by names such as "sex tape" and I'll leave the rest to your imagination.
Edit: Thought I should mention the tape is used for packing fine furniture and such for shipping and moves. No marks, no residue. I have seen it used for lumber, as well (smaller amounts, like taking a few boards home from the store).
Lol
@@Lilith-Rose that’s why I laughed 😂
@@Lilith-Rose It should be noted that the tape in this video appears to be more stretchy than the tape I referred to above. I believe this one may be a vinyl type. Always good to know your potential allergens.
@@Lilith-Rose I knew some furniture makers that would get the black and the blue tape in bulk for packaging table legs and such for shipping. The less things move the less they rub and get hurt. Apparently, it was fairly cheap.
For bondage?
That safetynailer is a prime example of those "solutions" you come up with in the shower to common problems that end up being more expensive, impractical, or redundant than just fixing those problems the normal way.
first product could easily be replaced with a wooden clothespin, like those old school ones, could carve a groove into the pinchers so they could hold the nail. or just hammer nails the way Tyler showed you
Thanks for making my Saturday 100x better! 35 seconds in and I already like the video! 🤘🏻
That finger protector could be useful if you have thick fingers and you have to drive in a small nail. I had the situation some times when I pinched the nail between my fingers, and the head was basically at the same height as the skin on my fingers, but the tip didn't reach the wood. But TBH this gadget still seems useless in a way, since you can use a haircomb for the same purpose. Just put the nail between it's teeth and you're good to go
i use needle nose pliers for tiny nails
@@muddin Yeah, pliers can work as well, but if you're afraid of messing them up with a miss, you can still use the comb method, since it's playtic and cheap to displace
Buy dollar store pliers…
Yea for chamfer/finishing nails.
@@andraslorincz8099 we need less plastic in are lives
I sometimes think Tyler was raised in a mop closet. He has trouble understanding some of the basic concepts of the products. I want someone to find a website that existed in the 70's.
Tyler is cutting the onion but i am the one crying watching him....
That metal guard would actually be really nice when dicing veggies. When you’re doing it properly of course 😂
Love the videos but you have to bare in mind that some products might be useful for people with disabilities of some kind
Shut up
The products are still trash.
Exactly! And other people at least acknowledge that fact.
@@genodedemon5109 the knife guard and uniform cutter arnt trash they help teach you proper cutting technique which he has none
I think he sorta mentioned that in his own way of words without fully saying it
I’d be interested to know how long it took you to recieve the power outlet. It screams dropshipped from china.
Watching him makes me want to take it and do it myself. It's so frustrating watching dummies.
Should of called this video dummy uses what he thinks are dumb products but the knife guard and slicer are very useful especially for beginners
😂😂 “Maybe you shouldn’t be driving nails!” 😂😂 Best line of the entire video! Love ❤ watching him! 🙌 👍 🥇
Honestly its like watching a cliche blonde review items lmao love it
Reminder: many devices may seem stupid or useless for those with normal dexterity but helps tremendously for those, who have dexterity problems. They have normal tasks to accomplish, too.
The fact that you NEVER put into consideration people with some sort of disability that NEED that layer of security is astonishing to me.
This 🙌
The onion tool (the claw one) I can see being great for cutting fruit or something very soft that you would need even slives/pieces with. But using it for hard things it bends the prongs and just is useless. But I definitely agree if you NEED that to cut because your that clumsy; maybe don't use a knife lol.
Tyler not cutting the onion in half before he chops it up made me laugh a little but I cook a lot😂😂
He has now cut it in half
has a built in nail holder on his hammer... grabs a set of pliers to show us other ways to help drive a nail lol
He faked the brake in the knife guard (broke it off camera then cut the video to when he Chucked it on the table and He faked the overload of the plug and turned the power off. Totally obvious. Even had a remote that clicked exactly when the power went. 😂
Funny how he brought items to review and tryd his hardest to prove they are bad and failed hilariously. testing with dumb methods and using no intelligence atall. Was a laugh watching him squirm trying to prove how he is right and the fake acting was spot on. What a fool.
Trying to prove his points by tampering with the product to fail. Manipulating his viewers. Well done
Trying to prove his points by tampering with the product to fail. Manipulating his viewers. Well done
Just saying never stop this chaotic Chanel plz and thank you Tyler
I just think it's hilarious that the spaghetti is still stuck on the wall from a past video