Testing the US Military’s Worst Idea

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  • Опубліковано 23 лис 2024

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  • @SoniasWay
    @SoniasWay Рік тому +36255

    I like to imagine that Adam Savage just materializes whenever something fun like this is happening in the desert

    • @nateking6629
      @nateking6629 Рік тому +430

      lmao yeah

    • @mohitrahaman
      @mohitrahaman Рік тому +1585

      I imagine like they run into Adam randomly, like he's taking a stroll in the desert and find these Veritasium guys testing stuff, sharing his wisdom along the way.

    • @Shrooblord
      @Shrooblord Рік тому +1

      Adam's just busy on something in his workshop, when suddenly something twinges in the back of his mind. With a jerk, his head shoots up and he faintly cocks it, as if to listen for something in the distance. His eyes narrow and his brow furrows, and with a slightly defeated -- for the distraction -- but otherwise classically enthusiastic "It's time. I am needed!" he fades from the workshop and surprises Derek with a clap on the back and a "Hey there! So I heard you were doing some science experiments out here..?"

    • @jaysonhinds6838
      @jaysonhinds6838 Рік тому +258

      Funny. Had me laughing. Haha. And i actually needed to laugh with the night I'm having so thanks.

    • @bentboybbz
      @bentboybbz Рік тому +266

      I mean I'm fairly sure anyone attempting an experiment like this is required to get permission and supervision from and by Adam by law in the United States lol 🤣 I Hope You Are All Doing Well And Having A Great Day/Night!!

  • @Sonicalex0
    @Sonicalex0 Рік тому +16595

    Wish there was a point in the experiment that the goal switch from accuracy to "lets see how big crater get from dropping really high" and proceed to have everyone really far away until it lands.

    • @BestCosmologist
      @BestCosmologist Рік тому +695

      They got scared. lol

    • @IceSpoon
      @IceSpoon Рік тому +943

      @@BestCosmologist You can tell that by the final shot (the 500 m one) they were terrified lol. I would too, honestly.

    • @ChadwickHorn
      @ChadwickHorn Рік тому +163

      Fan of mythbusters, I take? ;)

    • @PinnysVids
      @PinnysVids Рік тому +386

      I suppose they could have dropped from higher while staying safe, by not dropping it anywhere close to people, and just using the handcam footage from the helicopter

    • @iFix.
      @iFix. Рік тому +158

      Thought the same, fly the helicopter really far and drop it, would love to see it

  • @sungi7833
    @sungi7833 Рік тому +32175

    As someone from the military. I assure you, this is not their worst idea.

    • @Paul_Bedford
      @Paul_Bedford Рік тому +2099

      Probably in the top half of ideas because at least with this, there isn't any chemicals or radioactive materials that can become uncontained when things inevitably go wrong.

    • @raimuresan8998
      @raimuresan8998 Рік тому +288

      Wasnt their idea to begin with

    • @ihavetubes
      @ihavetubes Рік тому

      worst one was allowing females to have combat roles in the military.

    • @austinduong-van6071
      @austinduong-van6071 Рік тому +1510

      Their worst idea was reducing the Jalapeno cheese spread to 1 ounce from 1.5

    • @samirs8140
      @samirs8140 Рік тому +58

      Worst in terms of costing

  • @CusheeFoofee
    @CusheeFoofee 6 місяців тому +1035

    Huh, forgot to add fins, refused to shorten the rope connecting the payload, refusing to have people walk away to a safe distance to test extreme height, refusing to try and use lasers to track positioning... Interesting...

    • @horrorislander
      @horrorislander 5 місяців тому +118

      Yeah, first thing would be to attach the payload securely to the stabilized platform - the chopper -- and the second thing would be to impart spin. Since they're attempting to "drop straight down", I'd take spin over control surface like fins - but you're right, a targeting laser could have been a big, and not very expensive help.

    • @IWKS1
      @IWKS1 5 місяців тому +75

      Yeah it was very weird, i'm not even 10% as smart as veritasium but i thought about this stuff, pretty dissappinted

    • @EtzEchad
      @EtzEchad 4 місяці тому +72

      Nobody thought to add fins? They spend thousands of dollars but nobody brought a welder? Or some plywood and some super glue?
      I lost a lot of respect for Veritasium because of this vid.

    • @johnjames5842
      @johnjames5842 4 місяці тому +10

      Yup, I mean attach fins or like a square kite to the tow strap would of straightened it out like an arrow, but what do I know, I didn't finish high school, but I have made arrows and spears from scratch that flew very straight, also built a rc airplanes, and many dozens of model rockets when I was a kid.

    • @user-cv8xu2yk7m
      @user-cv8xu2yk7m 4 місяці тому +12

      @@horrorislanderat a certain length to width ratio, the required spin will be too much; so fins are more practical for pole-like rods.

  • @dheigl
    @dheigl Рік тому +2888

    I'm a little shocked that no smaller-scale testing was done prior to the full-scale "helicopters and sand castle professionals" part was brought out. A drone with a piece of rebar would have taught you a lot about the need for targeting apparatus, the lack of fins, etc.

    • @randohm8464
      @randohm8464 Рік тому +101

      I dont know this still probably got all of our views which is the real success

    • @Davidautofull
      @Davidautofull Рік тому +12

      arrows work too.

    • @MichaelIreland
      @MichaelIreland Рік тому +282

      This new format, focusing on hype and false drama like on Discovery Channel is really hurting Derek's videos, IMO. If the next video follows suit, I'll be unsubbing, and that's sad because I've followed him since he had less than 10k subscribers. I think it's probably due to the sheer size of the production team. IMO he needs to return to his roots. But that's just me. Also get off my lawn. Rawr.

    • @shaider1982
      @shaider1982 Рік тому +9

      Yup, no small scale test first.

    • @unliving_ball_of_gas
      @unliving_ball_of_gas Рік тому +16

      @Adrian Molière Because then it would miss the point of this video (no pun intended). The video was trying to prove or disprove that the Rods from god was a feasible idea. And they disproved that. I mean, what's the point of having a missile when you would miss the target by a kilometre away?
      Althougth I still think it was a bad idea he didn't do a small scale test first

  • @joshuaheadey9670
    @joshuaheadey9670 Рік тому +37395

    My favourite part is where Adam Savage appears out of nowhere, as if desert explosion tests just summon him 😂

    • @ericpmoss
      @ericpmoss Рік тому +701

      “As if”? :)

    • @informant09
      @informant09 Рік тому +169

      @@ericpmoss As if

    • @insectwarfare8681
      @insectwarfare8681 Рік тому +132

      @@ericpmoss As if

    • @filipsperl
      @filipsperl Рік тому +556

      Derek probably did a couple of expensive videos with helicopters at once. In previous videos, Adam Savage was there as a guest. Here, I guess, he didn't have that much to add to the experiment so he just watched.

    • @skm9420
      @skm9420 Рік тому +77

      You mean they don't?

  • @TheBradszone
    @TheBradszone Рік тому +6617

    Genuinely shocked at the scant amount of forethought that went into something with a budget this large.

    • @simonprice8638
      @simonprice8638 Рік тому +548

      Yeah... Like I would have thought Derek would have welded some fins on or somthing to get it to fly true.

    • @Nullified573
      @Nullified573 Рік тому +643

      Physics vs engineering

    • @piele1982
      @piele1982 Рік тому +373

      If they would've dropped it out of a tube that would have in part cancel out the swaying. A lot more accurate.

    • @davesomeone4059
      @davesomeone4059 Рік тому +299

      @@piele1982 or just not let it swing from a copter. Anyone who's played a video game knows what would have happened.

    • @docprune9922
      @docprune9922 Рік тому +190

      They are playing about for Likes.
      Sort of "Myth busters very lite for UA-cam"..

  • @FT__Home__Plants__etc___-go9rv
    @FT__Home__Plants__etc___-go9rv 5 місяців тому +846

    I don't really understand why they bothered doing such a poorly done test. They used no fins. No control device. etc. What they tested has basically nothing to do with using an actual developed weapon. It'd be like throwing a spear the first time in your life and then declaring that missiles don't work

    • @SG-Gaming20
      @SG-Gaming20 3 місяці тому +109

      I can guarantee they basically insulted anyone with a basic knowledge of aerodynamics lol

    • @erikamikulcova3796
      @erikamikulcova3796 Місяць тому +17

      ​@@SG-Gaming20 I kinda like the simplified explanation of why birds can fly, that air is also a fluid. But since people can't see it, they forget about that fact. That's what I think.

    • @wuvme9354
      @wuvme9354 Місяць тому +5

      @@erikamikulcova3796 now u remind me air is actually fluid, thx

    • @fretpound
      @fretpound Місяць тому +6

      Exactly. I commented they should get the guy that makes glitter bombs to help them add a guidance system via some fins.

    • @MrFacts-ub3gk
      @MrFacts-ub3gk 22 дні тому +4

      He gave logical reasons as to why the rod of gods wouldn't work at the end. He didn't just say it wouldn't work because of the conclusion of the video. Maybe you should pay attention more.

  • @ezmoore27
    @ezmoore27 Рік тому +1612

    There are two main problems I see with Derek's setup: 1) Dropping the payload from what is effectively a pendulum is going to make it nearly impossible to aim, and 2) as Adam pointed out, you need some fins on the rods if you want them to land perpendicular to the ground.

    • @skarlath7940
      @skarlath7940 Рік тому +9

      Can't it be dropped at the height of the swing when it has 0 velocity? Correct me if I'm wrong but don't pendulums work based off turning gravitational potential energy (GPE) to kinetic energy (KE) and at the top of the swing it has no KE and thus no velocity?

    • @SoloPilot6
      @SoloPilot6 Рік тому +110

      I'm trying to find a part of this was WASN'T a problem.

    • @kilansgames556
      @kilansgames556 Рік тому +29

      Didn't Mark Rober just do a video of trying to make an egg survive a fall from space. Think they could've collaborated

    • @OldBuggaboo
      @OldBuggaboo Рік тому

      @@kilansgames556 Mark Rober and Adam Savage casually testing failed doomsday devices for UA-cam.

    • @Fernando-ek8jp
      @Fernando-ek8jp Рік тому +52

      I think the (incredibly flawed) reasoning was that since the rods from god weren't meant to have them, these ones didn't need it either. Completely forgetting that launching something from space has way more variables that could allow for such a thing:
      -little to no air resistance from orbit (no duh)
      -no swinging motion from a satellite moving at orbital speeds
      -once in the atmosphere, the speed would be so high that the air resistance would be more than enough to cause the rod to fall vertically (at so relatively low speeds from the helicopter, the density of the metal is more than enough to overcome the wind resistance)

  • @erictheepic5019
    @erictheepic5019 Рік тому +7465

    I find it funny that Adam Savage is in this video, and it's not even mentioned. I'm just used to him being the one talking to a camera out in the desert, busting a myth.

    • @jordancarter8310
      @jordancarter8310 Рік тому +122

      Smart to reach out to him! He’s probably the global expert on these things!

    • @CouldBeSaladFingers
      @CouldBeSaladFingers Рік тому +11

      @MrBeest is ruining the planet[recent vid explains] 100%

    • @WayStedYou
      @WayStedYou Рік тому +212

      @@jordancarter8310 and yet he didnt reach out to him and missed out on the vital "you should put fins on it" that noone else involved seemed to think of

    • @curiouscommand5916
      @curiouscommand5916 Рік тому +88

      The man needs no introduction, hes that iconic lol.

    • @joaomrtins
      @joaomrtins Рік тому +68

      "We should have had this conversation yesterday..."

  • @watermelonsavage2914
    @watermelonsavage2914 Рік тому +6060

    I'm shocked at how little thought went into properly testing this idea, especially when compared to the amount of money and number of people involved.

    • @hellomark1
      @hellomark1 Рік тому +937

      Honestly I wish they had just dropped one from the max height they wanted to do, just to demonstrate how big of a crater it would make. But also, even with the height they were dropping from, everyone needed to be a LOT FURTHER back. They took some really dumb risks.

    • @watermelonsavage2914
      @watermelonsavage2914 Рік тому +837

      @@hellomark1 The dumbest thing to me was that they saw how they weights were swinging around like crazy below the helicopter and NOBODY thought to shorten the tether, if that tether was 3ft long it would've been much more accurate. What they really should have done though is make a mount/drop system strapped tight to the bottom of the helicopter that would lock the weights in place before release. That, coupled with fins, would have made an enormous difference.

    • @sheldonh4341
      @sheldonh4341 Рік тому +67

      @@watermelonsavage2914 not as much of a difference as it would have made with the way the helicopter itself was fidgeting, but it'd still have been better.

    • @hellomark1
      @hellomark1 Рік тому +343

      @@watermelonsavage2914 Yeah that bothered me too. They could have made a solid mount, or stabilized the strap with a few more anchor points... or ANYTHING really. Like you said, I'm surprised at how little actual engineering went into this.

    • @PaulJimenez3
      @PaulJimenez3 Рік тому +159

      Agreed. Using a laser or camera for vertical alignment would have been much more reliable than GPS. As someone else said, a shorter tether would reduce swing inaccuracy. Fins would increase flight stability on the rods. It's poorly enough done that if i were a conspiracy theorist, I might think they were being intentionally misleading.

  • @CFD339
    @CFD339 6 місяців тому +151

    This could have been a 5 minute explanation. Nothing actually representative happened.

  • @m1k3droid
    @m1k3droid Рік тому +955

    Your aiming problem was because your rods were pendulums, so they had significant lateral velocities that threw them off target. you should have had them in hardpoint mounts under the chopper so they'd be dropped with zero lateral velocity.

    • @Bimmer_MD
      @Bimmer_MD Рік тому +81

      Don't forget about the drag that was caused by the massive strap that was trailing behind it.

    • @m1k3droid
      @m1k3droid Рік тому +66

      @@Bimmer_MD negligible at that velocity and mass, esp given that straps 'drag" didn't prevent the posts from falling sideways.

    • @InfernoViperz123
      @InfernoViperz123 Рік тому +72

      Needs fins as well to keep the center of drag begin the center of mass, so it stays straight rather than drifting off to the side. Realistically it needs GPS guiding with fins as well because there will always be wind hitting the rods broadside. imo this video was really poorly done, many of these issues could have been mitigated with just an hour or reviewing potential issues and small scale tests, and a week of implementing the fixes full scale.

    • @m1k3droid
      @m1k3droid Рік тому +17

      @@InfernoViperz123 at the speeds they are testing at, the fins would need to be large, and the larger they are, the more wind will blow them off course as well. Now they are realizing why bomb zones in WW2 were often miles wide from a single wave of bombers. yes, GPS or laser buiding would be necessary. A real THOR warhead would have GPS and inertial guidance, as well as active radio guidance from a spotter either on the ground or in space, particularly for hitting moving targets like aircraft carriers.

    • @DavidStruveDesigns
      @DavidStruveDesigns Рік тому +6

      The problem with a hard mount, is that the object would _still_ be affected by the turbulence caused by the heli rotor the moment it was released. That turbulence extends downwards for a fair distance beneath the chopper before it even starts to ease away. And then once it does you have the general motion of the atmosphere to deal with - which in a hot desert area is probably a fair amount at that height. Only fins can counter this issue - especially adjustable fins whos angle can be adjusted to counter any spin/lateral movement.

  • @uncensoredpilgrims
    @uncensoredpilgrims Рік тому +7241

    The fact that they didn't seem to anticipate that a weight dangling from a helicopter on a tether would be swinging all over the place is ... odd to say the least.

    • @AgeDrain
      @AgeDrain Рік тому +353

      Things like these in a video like this seems like it’s scripted

    • @qprett
      @qprett Рік тому +588

      Sometimes a genius is so into the genius stuff, that he forgets about the basic stuff. Whenever I try to do something smart, a rookie mistake just screws it up.

    • @qprett
      @qprett Рік тому +66

      @@AgeDrain What exactly should be scripted about this?

    • @Mizanur28
      @Mizanur28 Рік тому +243

      Also the weight was not pointed on one end. How much more could have cost them to weld some steel fins to it?

    • @psycheameliorate7446
      @psycheameliorate7446 Рік тому +152

      ikr, like they can make the rope shorter or something to increase precision.

  • @dvrrwd307
    @dvrrwd307 Рік тому +2258

    I find it hard to believe the engineering problems couldn't be worked out. At one time it was thought you couldn't hit a missile with another missile.

    • @anandaditya479
      @anandaditya479 Рік тому +252

      At one point we also thought that re-usable rockets are far-fetched.

    • @JasperJanssen
      @JasperJanssen Рік тому

      KEW on that scale essentially fall under the nuclear disarmament treaties. They’re not mentioned explicitly, but any nation developing them would find itself negotiating soon.

    • @chiefgully9353
      @chiefgully9353 Рік тому +166

      The engineering problems have been worked out. We have tables based on windage for dropping troops out planes been doing it since nam.
      We know exactly how far a t10 or t11 chute will fly given altitude and windage. Its not that hard to calculate the same for a rod. just add stabilizing fins. and walla

    • @davesomeone4059
      @davesomeone4059 Рік тому +50

      @@chiefgully9353 pretty much but there have been artillery charts for much longer than nam.

    • @raithneachdavisson6156
      @raithneachdavisson6156 Рік тому +74

      Well the video explains pretty clearly that the issue isn't launching a projectile and hitting a target. The issue is maintaining accuracy as weight, distance, and velocity increase exponentially. Launching a howitzer round 2 miles past the horizon is nowhere comparable to dropping a 10-tonne rod from 22,000 miles altitude, accounting for the change from a vacuum to entering the atmosphere and still trying to maintain enough accuracy to cripple installations. Artillery actually requires less accuracy than kinetic weapons, and it's cheaper and more accurate.

  • @LostButMakingGoodTime
    @LostButMakingGoodTime 6 місяців тому +46

    Easily the greatest distance between original concept and small-scale simulacrum ever demonstrated. I have tremendous admiration for Derrick’s ability to understand and explain some pretty intense scientific concepts, especially those involving complex mathematical constructs. But I have noticed over a series of videos that he sometimes struggles to appreciate the complexity and practical requirements involved in a hands-on physical undertaking to demonstrate a concept. From any scientific perspective, this was a disaster.

  • @sergioortiz8219
    @sergioortiz8219 Рік тому +551

    15:11 "It ripped right through the pool. Unbelievable." That's actually the most believable thing ever.

    • @musstakrakish
      @musstakrakish Рік тому +63

      I put this knife to my skin and now I'm bleeding. Purely amazing and mind blowing. So happy we have science channels like this to show us that plastic pools will in fact rip when dropping a 150 pound piece of metal from thousands of feet in the air.

    • @darksu6947
      @darksu6947 Рік тому +12

      @@musstakrakish Who'd a thunk it?

    • @edwardpaulsen1074
      @edwardpaulsen1074 Рік тому +10

      Indeed, talk about a face palming "Well DUH" type of moment...

    • @culwin
      @culwin Рік тому +17

      They have to over-act everything.

    • @TadpoleTrainer
      @TadpoleTrainer 2 місяці тому +2

      My nieces and nephews nephews have broken like 6 of these kiddie pools just being dumb kids

  • @RPGillespie
    @RPGillespie Рік тому +5498

    This seemed like a "lot of money, not a lot of thought" video. No one thought about how the rods were going to hit their targets until the day of?? Fins are a bare minimum, you could have even done some gps-based bang bang course corrections with an arduino or something. Of course then you are basically designing a precision guided bomb like Mark Rober noted in his egg drop video.

    • @ttopiass
      @ttopiass Рік тому +936

      This felt like a producer made video, with mr. Veritasium just hosting. Sub par quality for this channel

    • @matthewp4046
      @matthewp4046 Рік тому +315

      Very underwhelming.

    • @HaydenLau.
      @HaydenLau. Рік тому +116

      A precision guidance system with accelerometers dropping longer thinner rods with fin stabilization from heavy lift drones on much, much bigger sandcastle city from much higher. That would have been cool to see.

    • @Kantuva
      @Kantuva Рік тому +19

      Yeah, the producer not doing a good enough job

    • @dude157
      @dude157 Рік тому +76

      Big blimp tethered to the target, have the tether act as a zip line to target. Wait for a less windy day.

  • @SonikDethmonkey
    @SonikDethmonkey Рік тому +1583

    I’m honestly a little bit dumbfounded that they went through the whole process without considering down wash, swaying, and the rod’s stability. They didn’t even have a backup plan? (Pivot to just creating the largest impact possible, since this is all about the explosive potential of a KE weapon, not accuracy)

    • @thomasparkinson9404
      @thomasparkinson9404 Рік тому +37

      They could have created a larger impact but they were so inaccurate they would not have been able to position a camera to film it without endangering the people operating the camera

    • @99Plastics
      @99Plastics Рік тому +185

      Mate the fact they used SAND to showcase destruction of KE weapons might be the most moronic thing in this video. The substance that is LITERALLY known for its ability to do a good job stopping bullets because of it.

    • @stoniebro-nies
      @stoniebro-nies Рік тому +67

      Yeah, it seems like an 8th grader did the math and planned this out. It’s hilarious that physicists didn’t think about physics 😂

    • @theParticleGod
      @theParticleGod Рік тому +19

      To be fair he does admit it's his biggest failure, but yes you'd need a very thin, very long rope to not have to deal with wind from the helicopter blades, in turn the helicopter is buffeted by winds, it can't be steady either meaning that the projectile is always moving in a vaguely circular motion modified by the difference between where the helicopter was at this point in the last rotation and the current location.
      Setting the rod spinning with impeller-like fins would steady the trajectory of the rod but wouldn't help with getting it pointed at the right target and not imparting some spurious steering input as it's dropped.
      Probably the logical thing to do would be to put a "tungsten warhead" on a conventional missile and fire it on a "kinetic trajectory" (ie: straight down) from a great height (orbit, hopefully). Normal missiles have already solved all the problems rods would face, and could impart more energy as well as actively steering towards the target.

    • @iHopeyoure0ffended
      @iHopeyoure0ffended Рік тому +59

      This whole documentary is an embarrassment.

  • @juzeus9
    @juzeus9 2 місяці тому +24

    *uses longest swinging rope possible. "why do we keep missing?"*

  • @williambalogh4495
    @williambalogh4495 Рік тому +2640

    Honestly I'm surprised about how elementary this set up was

    • @aleksanderczajka6072
      @aleksanderczajka6072 Рік тому +109

      I wouldn't attempt it without an arduino based targeting system tested in KSP. Since it's not meant for combat, image processing can be simplified a lot by placing a few bright lights around the target.

    • @nathlindemann381
      @nathlindemann381 Рік тому +2

      What do you do?

    • @wyattroncin941
      @wyattroncin941 Рік тому +91

      I'd drop it on a wire guide. A few hundred meters of 3mm steel wire and a set of roller guides could get it reliably on target

    • @aleksanderczajka6072
      @aleksanderczajka6072 Рік тому +15

      @@wyattroncin941 There is absolutely no point. You are needlessly increasing resistance and weight carried on the heli while the same could be achieved over radio. Wifi might lack the range. Idk, whatever drones are using would do.

    • @wyattroncin941
      @wyattroncin941 Рік тому +37

      @@aleksanderczajka6072 a rope rail system would certainly be heavy and expensive, but it would be simple to get opperational, and wouldn't be destroying $200+ in hardware per drop, and it's practically guaranteed to work.

  • @Freakbob28
    @Freakbob28 8 місяців тому +2218

    Im an engineering student and my first thought was to add fins to these rods, with a bunch of other stuff that would easily make them way more accurate. This whole thing feels very under prepared.

    • @black7844
      @black7844 8 місяців тому +199

      LOL yeah he says its a bad idea but i dont think he really understands what the concept is, Fins as well as a design to make it accelerate even faster on the way down seem pretty simple

    • @TheLastOilMan
      @TheLastOilMan 8 місяців тому +6

      USA BS, or Hollywood?

    • @Simoxs7
      @Simoxs7 8 місяців тому +135

      I‘m a Industrial Design and Informatics Student and this was also my first thought + maybe a arduino with a gyroscope that controlls the rod to point straight down… what would that‘ve cost? 50-100$ and a few hours of testing? Definitely nothing compared to chartering a Helicopter for a day

    • @Squidbush8563
      @Squidbush8563 8 місяців тому +39

      @@Simoxs7 and a small rocket engine to increase acceleration. There's no way the real thing wouldn't have had some sort of initial acceleration.

    • @JT-lc7dp
      @JT-lc7dp 8 місяців тому +26

      No comparison since one is the speed of a meteor the other is just a plop

  • @brookswift
    @brookswift Рік тому +1727

    I am so confused by how thoughtless this "experiment" was but how well researched the rest of the content was, even with the lamp shading by adam savage and later admitting to "screwing up", it felt more like a drunken idea hastily executed without anyone stopping to think than a high budget science demonstration.

    • @fluffylittlebear
      @fluffylittlebear Рік тому +295

      I'm flabbergasted by how dumb this entire test was.

    • @chance2716
      @chance2716 Рік тому +225

      @@fluffylittlebear Same. I mean this is the worst Veritasium video by far. A city built of sand? What?

    • @dirkmohrmann8960
      @dirkmohrmann8960 Рік тому +82

      Honestly thought this was some sort of spoof after the first few minutes

    • @Mutantcy1992
      @Mutantcy1992 Рік тому +117

      Yeah this looks like it cost a ton of money for basically nothing. Why not build a little 25% scale house or something and do all the drops on that. Wtf was the point of the pool?

    • @HalOBrien
      @HalOBrien Рік тому +46

      @@Mutantcy1992The point of the pool was probably just what you saw: If there was a hit, it would make a splash. Remember, this is video, and you have to have an interesting image.

  • @boiled_cookie4084
    @boiled_cookie4084 2 місяці тому +29

    you hired a team of championship winning professional sand castle builders and you couldnt find a single physicist to figure out the aiming?

    • @PeterLGଈ
      @PeterLGଈ 20 днів тому

      A retired engineer would have sufficed.

    • @Flt.Hawkeye
      @Flt.Hawkeye 3 дні тому

      The sad artists where expensive

  • @DemsW
    @DemsW Рік тому +2311

    I appreciate the honesty and I understand why you had to post it.
    But brother if you had spent an hour with a ballistic expert enquiring about a good way to showcase this it would have worked a million times better.
    And like everyone is suggesting, dropping the biggest weight from the heighest height you can just to see the crater size would be a much more enjoyable video than this.
    I won't think less of your content from one failure and i'm sure it's a very complicated process but this one felt really like a lack of forethought

    • @abavariannormiepleb9470
      @abavariannormiepleb9470 Рік тому +379

      What irks me about the whole thing is it demonstrates an extremely shallow understanding of the topic at hand while oozing “self-satisfactory professionalism”, my next thought then is the question “On how many other topics that are less obvious did they do similar mistakes?”

    • @MichaelButlerC
      @MichaelButlerC Рік тому +46

      It's to try to get more youth interested in the USA military. I hope it's not working!

    • @GuidoAmbar
      @GuidoAmbar Рік тому +7

      Ir tie a crash Cam tied to a long rope to the weight with a small stabilizer parachute so you can record it no matter where it goes

    • @glitchsister
      @glitchsister Рік тому

      @@MichaelButlerC so it's just propaganda then? If so then wow boy is the FCC going to have a field day

    • @dakotareid1566
      @dakotareid1566 Рік тому +18

      @@MichaelButlerCyou say that till you need them

  • @carami6442
    @carami6442 10 місяців тому +1578

    I can feel Adam Savage's pain when he asks if it has fins and this guy says no. How could you not think to put fins on it??

    • @kkrauter1
      @kkrauter1 10 місяців тому +77

      This would not have made Mythbusters...

    • @grinandferret
      @grinandferret 10 місяців тому +23

      @@kkrauter1 Ghostbusters? I'm dying now! 🤣 Whoopsie!

    • @kkrauter1
      @kkrauter1 10 місяців тому +9

      @@grinandferret Yikes!!! My bad...MYTHBusters!!!

    • @ShinM.
      @ShinM. 9 місяців тому +19

      ​@@kkrauter1well, it probably wouldn't have made Ghostbusters, either.

    • @kkrauter1
      @kkrauter1 9 місяців тому +4

      Too true...I got my "busters" mixed up!

  • @ravenshrike
    @ravenshrike Рік тому +1534

    It's not the wind causing the swinging, it's that you created a long pendulum which exacerbated any vibrations and movement from the helicopter. You would want a 3 or 5 point strap system that the quick release drops from. Combine that with a set of fins and you'd be able to pretty consistently hit the target.

    • @bryan__m
      @bryan__m Рік тому +65

      Yeah if it were the wind it wouldn't swing with an even periodicity, it would be biased to one side.

    • @davidsoulsby1102
      @davidsoulsby1102 Рік тому +4

      The wind could start off the pendulum action and keep it going longer. Theoretically it could also stop the action.

    • @MLEOTA
      @MLEOTA Рік тому +61

      Yes!!! Thank you Raven! I almost stopped the video purely due to his statement of it being the wind. I typically enjoy his videos, this was terrible and for such an individual to have a fair level of intellect to miss so many key points was very frustrating to watch. Possibly his worst video yet.

    • @Kwisatz_HaderachXIII
      @Kwisatz_HaderachXIII Рік тому

      Curious…have you studied physics and what degree did you obtain?

    • @_vindicator_
      @_vindicator_ Рік тому +4

      or just use a plane and some rudimentary ww2 era bombing targeting system. if you lob it, not drop it, it's much more accurate, as long as it's fin stabilised.

  • @AstroDeGoat
    @AstroDeGoat 26 днів тому +7

    2:35 got all the bloons td players hyped

  • @Vastin
    @Vastin Рік тому +597

    So, the issue I have with this video is that while it is an amusing concept, it really poorly conveys the effects of the kinetic energies involved which are way outside the domain these kinds of mundane drops can achieve.
    As noted early in the video, true hyperkinetic impacts result in violently explosive energies and liquefaction of the impact area, so the physical dynamics are completely different than low energy kinetic impacts from things like bullets or simple dropped weights.

    • @99Plastics
      @99Plastics Рік тому +62

      The fact he literally has video which explains why scaling things is so difficult in science and how it needs additional adjustments but then makes this trash ....tragic.

    • @stabf2635
      @stabf2635 Рік тому +5

      Agreed this is baffling

    • @natalyawoop4263
      @natalyawoop4263 Рік тому +9

      That's the part I don't get - something coming in from orbit is way different than dropping a weight from a few hundred meters.

    • @user-tr2dh4xx6u
      @user-tr2dh4xx6u Рік тому +1

      @@natalyawoop4263 terminal velocity is a thing but that doesn't scale well with this size weight

    • @maxwellblackwell5045
      @maxwellblackwell5045 Рік тому +11

      its because he isnt as smart as he would have you belive he is.

  • @RyanLynch1
    @RyanLynch1 Рік тому +941

    8:15 I like to imagine that Adam Savage just materializes whenever something fun like this is happening in the desert

    • @Schulstand
      @Schulstand Рік тому +12

      Well, that's my headcanon now too

    • @JonMahn
      @JonMahn Рік тому

      Are they so firearm averse they couldnt have spent a few grand to get a 20mm single shot gun and 4 or five rounds and made it a real experiment? Jeez.. Adam Savage probably suggested this...

    • @MrAPCProductions
      @MrAPCProductions Рік тому

      Derek needs to speak with Darrel Barnette who worked for several years on projects like this for DOD.
      The videos that are public from the railgun and gravity weapons for DOD were taken by or with Darrel.

    • @MrAPCProductions
      @MrAPCProductions Рік тому +1

      @@JonMahn You can buy a 20mm for a lot less than a grand, also, pretty sure Derek lives in Cali so...... no. Lol.

    • @IstasPumaNevada
      @IstasPumaNevada Рік тому +4

      @@JonMahn Using a gun doesn't demonstrate the basic principle of "just dropping a big weight from high up is powerful". It would kinda defeat the point of the video.

  • @Dogsushi42
    @Dogsushi42 Рік тому +4936

    Kinda surprised that nobody realized that this was never going to work. Id expect this from a Mr. Beast video but not Veritasium. Usually he simulates outcomes with equations before going into the field to test.

    • @leomullins
      @leomullins Рік тому +152

      Big little boys playing sand castles?... Why not!

    • @iFix.
      @iFix. Рік тому +566

      Yeah, actually it really surprised me too, derek usually plans things really well, since Adam was there maybe this was at the same time they tested the pennies and the dropping of really big thing was just and afterthought?

    • @gasper5223
      @gasper5223 Рік тому +157

      I expected he would mention the "Iraqi bunker busters" the US used against Iraqi bunkers in the Kuwait invasion. They did contain explosives, but still used the kinetic energy to penetrate really deep, at least 15 meters (45 feet). Probably not feasible to be recreated by a youtuber tho.

    • @pyropulseIXXI
      @pyropulseIXXI Рік тому +247

      @@iFix. This is what happened. They just decided to milk this and release this video, which is going to make insane money; this video got 200,000 in 1 hour. So they got two videos out of this 'project' they did. Easily making over $500,000 from both videos when you consider the sponsorship as well

    • @Real28
      @Real28 Рік тому +44

      So many of you really don't understand the point of this video, and it's sad because his audience is usually fairly educated.

  • @FunnCubes
    @FunnCubes 6 місяців тому +92

    >Put satellite with rods into orbit.
    >is over target
    >let's go of rod
    >rod stays in orbit
    >orbital_mechanics_aren't_helicopters.png

    • @cktube69
      @cktube69 6 місяців тому

      Yeah this guy is just a dumb ass

    • @Milkomeda_Galaxy
      @Milkomeda_Galaxy 3 місяці тому +2

      A model isn’t meant to be the exact same. It should just fulfill a purpose.
      This wasn’t done as good, but he didn’t have alternatives.
      I think this video was good, because usually a lot of experiments fail but you still protocol it, to falsify it.

    • @Adifferentone741
      @Adifferentone741 3 місяці тому +1

      >Burn retrograde to deorbit
      >Drop rod
      >Re-orbit burn
      >Rod hits target
      >orbital_mechanics_sometimes_are_helicopters.png
      Edit: what I’m trying to say is that the “rocket” helicopter that drops off the rod is just a model showing what would happen

    • @darthvader6533
      @darthvader6533 3 місяці тому +5

      If i understand it correctly they were rocket propelled, not just dropped

    • @BillypilgrimII
      @BillypilgrimII 2 місяці тому

      @@darthvader6533 aka missiles. lol.

  • @mjiii
    @mjiii Рік тому +783

    All this crew and no one stopped to think about how hard it would be to hit the target? I think the story would have been just as interesting (or maybe even more interesting considering how underwhelming the impacts ended up being) without any targets, just going for the maximum drop height and letting it fall wherever. That would have at least demonstrated the power of kinetic energy, assuming you designed a projectile with high enough terminal velocity.

    • @wowisthatgami8293
      @wowisthatgami8293 Рік тому +164

      Yeah I get why this video was released considering the cost but...
      The high cost could've been reduced AND you could've better tested kinetic energy. Makes the video quite pointless. Also really not a fan of this editing/production.

    • @Bob_Adkins
      @Bob_Adkins Рік тому +4

      My thoughts exactly, though it would be hard to catch on camera!

    • @jimhorner19
      @jimhorner19 Рік тому +48

      Exactly. If the point was to demonstrate the release of the maximum possible kinetic energy, there was no need to do the whole targeting thing. Just take the rod really high and drop it. Film the results. One other issue is the effect the lift strap had on the aerodynamics of the object. Maybe rethink this a bit?

    • @xger21
      @xger21 Рік тому +19

      Yeah, I think the best drop was when the rod just completely buried itself, I think that showed a lot of power on it's own

    • @nanoflower1
      @nanoflower1 Рік тому +5

      The other problem is knowing where it might hit. It's clear there's going to be some drift as the object falls so you need more safe zone space the higher you go. At 3 kilometers I would want a safe space of at least a kilometer. Finding that sort of space where the land is flat enough that you can see the object hit and catch it on film is going to be tough. Plus actually having a camera close enough to the spot it hits to catch the impact point close up is going to be nearly impossible with a helicopter.
      What you need is something that can go up and drop the object over the target with no wind blowing the object around like some sort of UFO. Maybe on of those drone platforms designed to carry people might work. Only with the fans extended out another ten to twenty feet so that their downward force is far enough from the object that it isn't impacted by that turbulence. Which requires someone like Bezos to fund the development.

  • @Tupley
    @Tupley Рік тому +1035

    4 point rigging, fins, better weight distribution, and crosswinds are things I would have assumed would have been thought of for something this expensive. If it was just a backyard experiment type thing I get not doing all the bells and whistles and just trying to make a big hole. But I feel almost bad no one thought of this before dumping what appears to be a large amount of money into something of this caliber. You live and you learn.

    •  Рік тому +87

      At a minimum, they could have made the straps much shorter. Less swing that way.

    • @greasyclean
      @greasyclean Рік тому +179

      @ I can't believe they didn't talk about the swinging and the potential for harminic motion due to the helicopter pilot's compensation. He kept saying the "wind was blowing it all over the place" - something tells me the wind didn't have nearly as big an impact on that 450lb cubic foot of metal as the helicopter did.
      I was bothered by some of the other commentary as well. The cube punching straight through the bottom of the intex pool was "unbelievable"? Really??
      For me this video was just a miss all around, pun intended.

    • @MichaelIreland
      @MichaelIreland Рік тому +94

      I feel like this was one of Derek's absolute worst vids for all these reasons. It was just dumb, unscientific, hype.

    • @gaoutdooradventures
      @gaoutdooradventures Рік тому +14

      @ You read my mind!!!! Shorten the straps, have a 4 or 6 point harness to hold whatever they were going to drop which would exponentially minimize the swinging!!! They spent a ton of money prior to thinking everything through. Oh well........ next time (maybe.....)

    • @michalrzmichalrz6656
      @michalrzmichalrz6656 Рік тому +22

      I don't like when they are all for example doubtful if the helicopter is actually at the right altitude. At the beginning of the vid. I mean, a pilot probably would know...

  • @sleepingkirby
    @sleepingkirby Рік тому +793

    Adam: "Does it have fins?"
    Derek: "Why didn't we have this conversation weeks ago?"
    I just hear Jaime in my mind. "Should have done the engineering." Shortly followed by, "When in doubt, lube."

    • @stevenlynch3456
      @stevenlynch3456 Рік тому +13

      *tub of lard

    • @Cundalinis_Hand
      @Cundalinis_Hand Рік тому +21

      Yes, there's always time for lube.

    • @CrownRock1
      @CrownRock1 Рік тому +4

      Quack, damn you.

    • @colenewton5183
      @colenewton5183 Рік тому

      I was thinking the same thing as soon as I saw it??? everything that's a tube and is sent to fly has wings, except for bullets but they usually don't go that far

    • @ALRinaldi
      @ALRinaldi Рік тому +5

      @@colenewton5183 Bullets are spin stabilized.

  • @cHAOs9
    @cHAOs9 6 місяців тому +27

    I think it's amazing how this guy and mythbusters both suffer from the same problem of giant ego blindness. "If we can't do it with some rediculous half assed plan, then its impossible". That was a great try if you're in middleschool.

  • @EbboHima
    @EbboHima Рік тому +893

    Let's be honest here I think we all want you to do another redo video of the experiment targeting the problems you faced here.

    • @ShannonJacobs0
      @ShannonJacobs0 Рік тому +9

      The original business model of UA-cam stank, but at least the ads were reasonable.
      New flood of invasive, repetitive, and offensive ads are EVIL.
      Google is now fully dedicated to doing any evil that seems profitable.
      And censoring complaints, too.

    • @lucasng4712
      @lucasng4712 Рік тому

      @@ShannonJacobs0 loser

    • @DarkMug
      @DarkMug Рік тому +17

      @@ShannonJacobs0 what

    • @daftpanda6533
      @daftpanda6533 Рік тому +6

      Personally, I'd like to see Laser guided rods

    • @bombomos
      @bombomos Рік тому +6

      @@ShannonJacobs0 I agree with you, but that literally has nothing to do with the OP

  • @n0denz
    @n0denz 10 місяців тому +3106

    There are so many errors in the design and execution of this experiment, that one would almost think it was intentional.

    • @lost524
      @lost524 10 місяців тому +185

      for fuckin real

    • @TheChillestEver
      @TheChillestEver 10 місяців тому +485

      Exactly what I was thinking. Could’ve made the impact end a pointed end. Could’ve added wings. Added vents, more straps to stop the swinging. Just downright horrible execution

    • @marcferraro6949
      @marcferraro6949 10 місяців тому +124

      Author oversteps literary license with misleading statements many times.

    • @sireuchre
      @sireuchre 10 місяців тому +195

      Considering that shortly before this video was published, Mark Rober put up a video where he was well on his way to designing a system to do exactly this kind of guidance dropping an egg FROM SPACE (way higher than shown here), and he was already dropping from 10k feet (3048 meters) with an accuracy in a reasonable ballpark of what was achieved here, in scale, I'd say that with the technical resources of the US military contracting industry, this definitely COULD be done. It would be fairly costly, but uh... if Mark Rober with a few engineer friends and something like a Raspberry Pi or Arduino and a not absurd amount of code can get that far, that relatively fast, I'm sure it wouldn't take too long or too much money to develop a working system. Deploying the rapid response coverage is the issue, NOT making the projectile control be precise enough. Communicating a target would be trivial, and once loaded, no actual guidance from the ground would be needed - as demonstrated by how well Rober did so quickly. They only stopped from developing their system because of the snares of legality and ethics, when they realized they were developing a guided missile.
      Yes, this concept is functionally possible and on a smaller scale with less time response definitely feasible.

    • @HarmonRAB-hp4nk
      @HarmonRAB-hp4nk 10 місяців тому +73

      his experiment was flawed.. he needs to get a smaller object up closer to mach 1 to do any real kinetic damage... if you think about it the shock wave would be enormous..and the impact it rather small whoops right.. they cant show that on youtube..

  • @LogicalNiko
    @LogicalNiko Рік тому +222

    If you’re wondering why Adam is there, if you look at the details it’s the exact same site, helicopter, and crew from the penny drop video released 2 months ago. I suspect it was a pooled resource shooting multiple experiments at one time to minimize cost.
    Although it’s much cooler to think that Adam myth buster sense starts tingling and he just shows up whenever cool experiments are going down.

    • @jessec4677
      @jessec4677 Рік тому +8

      Sniff sniff... I smell science!!!

    • @jeremyowen1
      @jeremyowen1 Рік тому +2

      I reject your reality and substitute my own!

    • @FlyinSparky
      @FlyinSparky Рік тому +1

      Say, "Is it gonna blow up?" and Adam shows up behind you. He's the Savage Candyman.

    • @LogicalNiko
      @LogicalNiko Рік тому +1

      ​@@FlyinSparky Watch out it doesn't always work as planned, last time I did some crazy science experiments only Bill Nye showed up.

  • @grimreaper2606
    @grimreaper2606 25 днів тому +1

    Dropping a pebble in the water creates the same effect. An asteroid travelling so fast at hyper speed punches through the Moon with a circular result.

  • @wlockuz4467
    @wlockuz4467 Рік тому +654

    I don't know if you can afford it, But this video needs a revisit. Ideally with more effort put into the rods than the sand buildings.

    • @davesutherland1864
      @davesutherland1864 Рік тому +11

      If you ‘dropped’ a rod from geo synchronous, it would just orbit in geo synchronous orbit….You would have to launch it from orbit.

    • @probablyinconsistent4756
      @probablyinconsistent4756 Рік тому +2

      It would be relatively easy to make them gps guided. Some basic flight controller or even an FPV pilot.

    • @JackoNorm
      @JackoNorm Рік тому

      if you need you appetite whet now, check out Mark Rober's egg drop from space

    • @elementalist1984
      @elementalist1984 Рік тому +1

      Honestly the only way to test this is in a silo using an overhead crane/winch and a quick release. The fact that the projectile was swinging side to side ruined the accuracy as much as anything else they failed to do in the projectiles construction.
      However that means they can't drop it from as high as they can from the helicopter.

    • @samuela-aegisdottir
      @samuela-aegisdottir Рік тому +6

      Yes, the effort was wasted on a perfect sand city and not put in considering how to hit a target by dropping a not-aerodynamic rod swinging (!) under a helicopter.

  • @jeffwalston8110
    @jeffwalston8110 Рік тому +2507

    Pretty much all they proved is that they put minimal thought into this and that it's hard to drop things precisely from a helicopter.

    • @garyl6031
      @garyl6031 Рік тому +69

      Gee who would have thought? Apparently them.

    • @ulizez89
      @ulizez89 Рік тому +277

      I know! I'm surprised how much money was spent with so little care as to why.

    • @DauntlessX23
      @DauntlessX23 Рік тому +251

      Agreed, I thought the purpose was to find out the destructive force of the rods and scale it up, not find the most inefficient way to destroy a sand castle.

    • @noahjanowski9646
      @noahjanowski9646 Рік тому +31

      My opinion they should try to make it work and less on accuracy bc the accuracy can always come after you figure out how to drop the rod straight

    • @noahjanowski9646
      @noahjanowski9646 Рік тому +20

      At least do a test drop before making a video😅

  • @ilikaplayhopscotch
    @ilikaplayhopscotch Рік тому +816

    *gets helicopter and world-class sandcastle builders before testing how cylinders fall*
    Derek noooo

    • @quertbarbie62
      @quertbarbie62 Рік тому +53

      Adam Savage mentioned that to derek when they were doing the bullet/ penny drop episode.

    • @MobiusPeverell
      @MobiusPeverell Рік тому +49

      @@quertbarbie62 I'm pretty sure that was this exact conversation, from the same shoot. They tried to make two videos at the same time, only got one good one, and then posted the bad one too, just for kicks.

    • @Cssfiend
      @Cssfiend Рік тому +16

      ​@@MobiusPeverell surely you aren't calling the penny one good.

    • @emwhaibee
      @emwhaibee Рік тому

      @@Cssfiend False.
      NOW they posted both so your presumltion has now been invalidated.

    • @grantjones2863
      @grantjones2863 Рік тому +10

      not surprising since this show has turned into click bait and tv type videos.

  • @SlurryNoises
    @SlurryNoises 5 місяців тому +4

    *wasnt tungsten*
    *didnt even attempt to weld fins to at least try to add some stability*
    *built a sand castle*
    bruh i feel robbed

  • @rethla
    @rethla Рік тому +2098

    "We gonna drop rods from several kilometers up"
    Ok well that sounds hard but Veritasium probably knows what hes doing.
    **Pulls up mobile to get target GPS and gets into a helicopter with the payload just dangling freely a few meters under**
    Im surprised they didnt hit themself...

    • @hunterahudson
      @hunterahudson Рік тому +30

      Yea or rig up steerable fins with a live FPV camera so you can guide it.

    • @VitaKet
      @VitaKet Рік тому +111

      I don't know how this guy has so many subs if this is how he operates...

    • @dadawoodslife
      @dadawoodslife Рік тому +187

      Error margins on GPS being bigger than the target.

    • @GamingWO-
      @GamingWO- Рік тому +19

      @@hunterahudsoninstall the GPS right into the body, and just launch it like an actual rocket. That’s how you’ll test it.

    • @TheInfectous
      @TheInfectous Рік тому +23

      @Karl with a K just as competent as experts in any and every single field out there. no more, no less. regardless of how many we educate, truly intelligent people remain in short supply.

  • @Sentient.A.I.
    @Sentient.A.I. Рік тому +3045

    This is about as good a test for rods from god as me sitting on my roof dropping marbles onto army men in my front yard.

    • @AnEnderNon
      @AnEnderNon Рік тому +107

      so accurate

    • @wilfdarr
      @wilfdarr Рік тому +64

      Meh: rods from god were a piss poor idea from the get go: the fact that you can deliver a bunch of energy without it being nuclear was about the only thing they had going for them, the fastest weapon ever devised was constrained by the slowest kill chain conceivable!

    • @jasonlovi8745
      @jasonlovi8745 Рік тому +11

      Pencils would be better since it’s more rod-like

    • @flotsamike
      @flotsamike Рік тому +3

      I would watch that.

    • @Sentient.A.I.
      @Sentient.A.I. Рік тому +95

      @@wilfdarr Don't under estimate the Rod from God concept. The original idea was rods the size of telephone poles made of 100% tungsten 20 ft long by 1ft diameter. These would hit a city with the impact force of a ground penetrating nuclear weapon and destroy any underground facility hundreds of feet underground. When dropped from orbit it would reach up to 10x the speed of sound without violation of the 1967 outer space weapons treaty which prohibits nuclear, biological and chemical weapons attacks from space signed by 107 countries. These rods would destroy an entire city just like a nuke and any bunker, base or silo under it for hundreds of feet with none of the nuclear fallout. While the targeting system and cost for something like this was near impossible at the height of the cold war its much more feasible now. Especially with advanced AI and the cost of moving things into space diminished It is more possible than ever before ! Unfortunately some weights would have to be dropped from space to gather data for the AI and I would not want to be the country those tests are landing on lol.

  • @knallpistolen
    @knallpistolen Рік тому +5875

    Impressive how little research went into this.

    • @viliml2763
      @viliml2763 Рік тому +1018

      It was all planned just for the punchline at the end.
      "I would say it is my biggest failure of all time, which as it turns out, is also something you could say about the actual weapon Rods from God."
      The whole setup is so crappy it's obvious he never intended for it to succeed.

    • @L1ft0ff
      @L1ft0ff Рік тому +475

      Did you see all the producers that were involved? lol, so embarrassing.

    • @robobrain10000
      @robobrain10000 Рік тому +91

      @UCiUl8dZIzCkGUyB6nrTpOTg Ye, or instead of having the weight tied outside the coptor, have the guy chuck it. So, you don't waste so much fuel to reload.

    • @BestCosmologist
      @BestCosmologist Рік тому +215

      @@L1ft0ff They're all 20 somethings from prestigious universities. You can't expect them to do anything except hate everyone beneath them.

    • @bonob0123
      @bonob0123 Рік тому +544

      @@BestCosmologist calm down, edgelord

  • @Voxelgd
    @Voxelgd 12 годин тому

    when you were talking about how it wasn't a fair test, the whole sandcastle part is also unfair to the rods. the debris sand creates is far less devastating than what an actual building would, and sand also isn't actually connected together, so it would be very hard to take down the full building in one shot.

  • @QuasiDude
    @QuasiDude Рік тому +526

    I have to imagine this experiment was rushed or something, because I would've expected Derek to take a lot of these issues into consideration. There are a lot of good suggestions in the comments that would've given them a better chance, but I think the bigger issue is that they felt the need to do this at all.
    Veritasium videos are usually much more information-based; telling stories of scientists or interviewing experts in an interesting field. There's no need to do Mr.Beast-esque stunts like this, especially when there's such a high chance of failure

    • @broncogrizz
      @broncogrizz Рік тому +46

      It's like he outsourced all of it to his interns and just showed up for filming.

    • @smtx11
      @smtx11 Рік тому +5

      Maybe he really isn't very smart, I mean he does make YT videos for a living?

    • @Devorehardware
      @Devorehardware Рік тому +13

      100% gov contracted work. Where else do you see projects of this verbosity without any substance

    • @jordibear
      @jordibear Рік тому +11

      @@QuasiDude He has a PhD in Physics Education Research. His thesis was "Designing Effective Multimedia for Physics Education", ie. creating educational UA-cam videos. Still a PhD, but not in Physics- in education. And you know what they say about those that can't do...

    • @samuels1123
      @samuels1123 Рік тому +6

      @@QuasiDude More of a Ph.D in education about physics through media as it is defined.

  • @samanasadi2746
    @samanasadi2746 Рік тому +1739

    I think just one hour of consulting with a professional would make the results wayyyy different!

    • @hereandnow3156
      @hereandnow3156 Рік тому +253

      I mean shoot Adam Savage magically appeared and within a few minutes of the helicopter lifting up thought to ask if it had fins on it lmao.

    • @bryan__m
      @bryan__m Рік тому +68

      @@hereandnow3156 Right? He had THE professional right there the whole time!

    • @bconnler
      @bconnler Рік тому +47

      i mean he had adam savage there.. he could have spent 10 minutes with him and solved a lot of pain..

    • @bryan__m
      @bryan__m Рік тому +48

      @@bconnler yeah, and Adam almost looked in pain when he asked if it had fins on it.

    • @speakstheobvious5769
      @speakstheobvious5769 Рік тому +12

      Just releasing the weights when it reached to the apex of the swing would have made all the drops a lot more accurate. Just like when you jump off a swing on a swingset at the apex you go straight down rather then jumping off in the middle of the swing.

  • @sushimamba4281
    @sushimamba4281 Рік тому +1277

    15:08 "It ripped right through the pool. Unbelievable!"
    A 200kg cube of metal against a flimsy plastic membrane.
    Who would have thought?

    • @ashutoshkumar3864
      @ashutoshkumar3864 Рік тому +163

      Hydrogen bomb vs Coughing baby

    • @ritmosch
      @ritmosch Рік тому +45

      @@ashutoshkumar3864 Hydrophobic acid vs cancer patient

    • @Khylur_Getz
      @Khylur_Getz Рік тому +43

      Christ…this sums the video up wholly.

    • @BobbysWhip
      @BobbysWhip Рік тому +32

      im convinced veritasium is specially educated

    • @captaincrunch7944
      @captaincrunch7944 Рік тому +3

      It could have been a magic pool? Mb with magic water?

  • @jorgevalles6835
    @jorgevalles6835 5 місяців тому +4

    Falling piece of metal exists.
    Veritasium: "all begins in 1426"

  • @trentrichards6490
    @trentrichards6490 Рік тому +406

    Entirely shocked that you didn't expect a cylinder to turn on it's side given the air resistance the end of the cylinder would be experiencing compared to the rest of the cylinder.

    • @Jerald_Fitzjerald
      @Jerald_Fitzjerald Рік тому +26

      seriously, you can figure this out just by throwing a pencil up in the air.. it's very hard to get a pencil shaped object to land vertically in the dirt..

    • @BobbysWhip
      @BobbysWhip Рік тому +17

      @@Jerald_Fitzjerald but if you throw one really fast upwards with a half spin you can stick them in the ceiling 10/10 times - further research needed.

    • @alh3328
      @alh3328 Рік тому +11

      @@Jerald_Fitzjerald That’s why they should have added fins

    • @lliaolsen728
      @lliaolsen728 Рік тому +1

      Even watching old Airforce or Nasa files on dummy drops, they show the payload with fins.

  • @wolf1066
    @wolf1066 Рік тому +932

    I can't believe anyone would think that they were going to get any accuracy at all with that setup. I'm bloody positive they all knew about pendulums *before* they went out there.

    • @the_regulator1145
      @the_regulator1145 Рік тому +60

      I’ve watched enough mythbusters to know that you always attach radio controlled aerodynamic surfaces to hunks of metal whenever your dropping them from a helicopter.

    • @wolf1066
      @wolf1066 Рік тому +90

      @@the_regulator1145 I'd've thought at least a rigid "launch tube" or guide rail fixed to the side of the helicopter. Something other than a bloody-great pendulum

    • @williamkowalchik572
      @williamkowalchik572 Рік тому

      Shorten the strap up you don't need 50 feet of strap. Gees

    • @wolf1066
      @wolf1066 Рік тому +2

      @@williamkowalchik572 That'd just make it oscillate faster 😁

    • @mattches7791
      @mattches7791 Рік тому +29

      @@wolf1066 even just having a shorter pundulum arm.. Take out the 15ft of strap and put it right against the copter. Problem solved.

  • @metalhead2theEnd
    @metalhead2theEnd Рік тому +740

    Years of experience doing stuff like this, constant contact with world renown scientists, complex logistics involving several teams of people, Adam Savage who has done this for most of his life and somehow the test turned out like this.

    • @KorianHUN
      @KorianHUN Рік тому +61

      Welcome to soulles entertainment. This video was made for sharing it in 30 second clips on facebook and generating ad money.
      Sadly almost all large content creators get ground down and bought by big business.

    • @nerdlord2288
      @nerdlord2288 Рік тому +34

      Adam savage was just visiting,he wasn't really involved

    • @fiiredark
      @fiiredark Рік тому +22

      He was actually a desert mirage.

    • @ChemEDan
      @ChemEDan Рік тому +7

      @@fiiredark He always was...

    • @RumtumtuggerTB
      @RumtumtuggerTB Рік тому +20

      Yeah this is disgraceful. How do you make a science show, and have this loose a grasp on how to apply it practically

  • @CockerelOfficial
    @CockerelOfficial Місяць тому +1

    The sandcastle builders are incredibly chill. Knowing that your sandcastle would be hit by a telephone pole traveling faster than sound is not really amusing.

  • @tymz-r-achangin
    @tymz-r-achangin Рік тому +1048

    "it ripped right through the pool. Unbelievable!" What's so unbelievable that a chunk of steel being drop from the sky goes right through a shallow plastic pool?

    • @PATOOFA
      @PATOOFA 10 місяців тому +6

      🤣🤣🤣😂

    • @boboverlord1
      @boboverlord1 9 місяців тому +10

      I think their concern was about the accuracy

    • @edwardchester1
      @edwardchester1 9 місяців тому +8

      Yeah, that comment got me too. Clutching at straws for this car crash of a video.

    • @skattyopt
      @skattyopt 9 місяців тому

      my thought exactly lol

    • @Dromitos1
      @Dromitos1 9 місяців тому +1

      why are these people acting smart when they cant even understand what people are tryna say

  • @zombielizard218
    @zombielizard218 Рік тому +401

    Given the relative lack of anything beyond visual targeting, this video is functionally a demonstration of why, in WW2, they estimated there was only a 1% chance of a bomb falling within 100 feet of the intended target (thus necessitating hundreds of bombs/bombers in order to have a high likelihood of actually blowing up what you wanted blown up)

    • @chuckoneill2023
      @chuckoneill2023 Рік тому +23

      Actually, this was their measured result, not just estimated. This was very disappointing, as they'd had high hopes for their bomb sight technology.

    • @threesomemonkey8780
      @threesomemonkey8780 Рік тому +1

      🤣🤣🤣🤣🤙🏽🍻🇦🇺

    • @CornedBee
      @CornedBee Рік тому +4

      This. I absolutely expected the video to have something to say about WW2 bombing raids.

    • @ph1shstyx
      @ph1shstyx Рік тому +2

      Also relying on a phone GPS system for targeting, which has an accuracy of about 10 meters

    • @microreniassance2929
      @microreniassance2929 Рік тому +1

      Exactly. No wonder we needed so many bombs and bombers to level Germany....

  • @erobertt3
    @erobertt3 8 місяців тому +1236

    *rod swinging wildly back and forth on the helicopter*
    everyone: "wow I can't believe that missed the target."

    • @ToBeIsWasWere
      @ToBeIsWasWere 8 місяців тому +88

      OMG it can land sideways if you have no fins? How could we possibly know that before renting a helicopter?

    • @RichUncleGhostMutt
      @RichUncleGhostMutt 7 місяців тому +31

      The drop at 17:35 was ridiculous. If it was rigidly mounted to the base of the chopper and had fins it would've hit the middle of the city.

    • @Sad_But_True17
      @Sad_But_True17 6 місяців тому +9

      Shorten the strap and involve a professional surveyor.

    • @Ike_Laja
      @Ike_Laja 6 місяців тому +11

      If they did a quick reading of wind speed and direction, or maybe did a better probably cylindrical harness this would’ve been a much better experiment. Maybe it was a rush video

    • @clydepace9203
      @clydepace9203 6 місяців тому

      😂😂😂😂😅😅😅😅

  • @AsaGBurns
    @AsaGBurns Місяць тому

    Adam savage coming in and asking "Did you put fins on that thing?" was extremely telling of the quality of the experiment.

  • @aaronkcmo
    @aaronkcmo 8 місяців тому +700

    kinetic bombardment was not developed as an "answer" to soviet ICBMs. it was developed as a weapon that cannot be defeated and is capable of hitting any target anywhere in the world within an hour without the giant red flag of a missile launch that can be detected across the world.

    • @lachlan1971
      @lachlan1971 8 місяців тому +12

      Giant red flag with a hammer and sickle on it?

    • @aaronkcmo
      @aaronkcmo 8 місяців тому +22

      @@lachlan1971 well, most likely. an ICBM launch can be detected anywhere in the world. a kinetic weapon cannot be detected until it's too late and it cannot be defeated.

    • @thechloromancer3310
      @thechloromancer3310 8 місяців тому +6

      @@aaronkcmo "a kinetic weapon cannot be detected until it's too late and it cannot be defeated."
      Can not be defeated... but I am sure the Chinese, Indians, Pakistani and Israelis are aware of this weapon. The moment the incoming rods are detected is the moment the nukes would start flying.

    • @aaronkcmo
      @aaronkcmo 8 місяців тому +19

      ​@@thechloromancer3310 uh, this weapon doesn't exist. it's been superseded by hypersonic rockets and jets. are you suggesting that any of these countries would respond to conventional weapons with an all-out nuclear assault? seems highly unlikely since India, Pakistan and Israel do not possess the ability to launch a first strike against the united states. china, having that ability, would seem unlikely to initiate a global nuclear war in retaliation considering their entire country would be obliterated. this weapons system wasn't ever designed to be a strategic deterrent like the nuclear arsenal, it has always been a covert, precise, prompt global strike system that was meant to take out precision high-value targets such as assassinations. btw, by in the time it takes for a hypersonic weapon is detected and for that weapon to reach its target, there would not be enough time to even distribute launch orders to a nuclear arsenal, let alone actually see missiles fly. if an adversary were to launch a nuclear weapon in retaliation to a hypersonic missile or kinetic bombardment it would be a serious escalation, not a response in kind.

    • @aesopsaintours4491
      @aesopsaintours4491 8 місяців тому +6

      @@aaronkcmoThe other commenter seems to be assuming these would be city-burners, like in some popular media, and used like nuclear weapons. You are correct to dispel that notion. However, you claim this weapon has been "superseded by hypersonic rockets and jets." It has not, they fill different profiles. This theoretical weapon is not practical for a variety of mechanical and political reasons, so hypersonics fill most of the role. But hypersonics have nowhere near the same survivability as a kinetic penetrator, just look at tank combat. APFS is far more reliable than ATGM at killing tanks.

  • @patar3323
    @patar3323 Рік тому +1303

    I'm surprised he's gotten this far without learning he'd need fins on the rod. Should've talked to savage apparently

    • @pvic6959
      @pvic6959 Рік тому +210

      i am SHOCKED they didnt think of that. I mean this in the most respectful way possible. I think hes a smart dude. how was anyone surprised that "its really swinging"?? even the trick shot youtube channels (like HowRidiculous, DudePerfect, etc) hit small targets from very high up. Im really amazed that stuff wasnt thought about
      Really, the thing im amazed by is that they underestimated this. Dropping stuff from high up is something people have done for a long time lol. we know its hard. the fact they were like "we're above it" and didnt even mention that wind could push it to the side as like whugt. All this said, smart people make mistakes all the time. so im not hating. im just surprised

    • @royrunyon1286
      @royrunyon1286 Рік тому +42

      @@pvic6959 Yup, pretty poorly researched.

    • @forrest225
      @forrest225 Рік тому +51

      Sometimes incredibly smart people don’t always succeed at applying relevant knowledge. Saw it all the time in school. Classmates that could solve differential equations would struggle to apply concepts from physics 1.

    • @shenjingbing2293
      @shenjingbing2293 Рік тому +6

      They could just use a rope or something with one end on the ground and the other on the helicopter, and use that to guide the rod to the target.

    • @pvic6959
      @pvic6959 Рік тому +4

      @@shenjingbing2293 500m of rope seems like a lot of rope though

  • @tracyhunt4753
    @tracyhunt4753 10 місяців тому +1043

    this is "testing" rods of gods, like shooting a spitball at a wall is testing a bazooka

    • @rangerfurby
      @rangerfurby 10 місяців тому +19

      TRUE

    • @icejuice9316
      @icejuice9316 9 місяців тому +9

      not a wall but a pile of sand could give a good idea about a bazooka impact on broken particles probably

    • @ashscott6068
      @ashscott6068 9 місяців тому +7

      The difference being that a bazooka exists. How seriously do you want a UA-camr to take a subject this silly?

    • @Spiceodog
      @Spiceodog 9 місяців тому +3

      The point is that this isn’t a efficient way to distribute energy as the force is to focused to effect a large area . I’m sure it would do great work in the case of a giant kaiju or robot though

    • @tracyhunt4753
      @tracyhunt4753 9 місяців тому +22

      @@ashscott6068 by saying "this has nothing to do with rods of god, we just wanted to drop stuff from a helicoptor, they explain the rods work by hitting hard enough to create actual explosions, whis would be like testing grenades by throwing rocks at a wall, you are skipping the whole bit that makes it effective, the explosion

  • @249aaa
    @249aaa 2 місяці тому +1

    i think the solution here is to add properties to the weights that would stabilize their course, i.e. weighting one end to increase the likelihood of dropping perpendicularly to the ground, side fins to help straighten the path, etc.

  • @DangerRussDayZ6533
    @DangerRussDayZ6533 Рік тому +419

    It would have been interesting had you still just dropped the rod from 3km into the sand to see what kind of impact it made, even if you missed the target.

    • @ShannonJacobs0
      @ShannonJacobs0 Рік тому +6

      The original business model of UA-cam stank, but at least the ads were reasonable.
      New flood of invasive, repetitive, and offensive ads are EVIL.
      Google is now fully dedicated to doing any evil that seems profitable.
      And censoring complaints, too.

    • @SethEssington
      @SethEssington Рік тому +3

      @@ShannonJacobs0 I’ve been paying for an ad free experience since the UA-cam Red days.

    • @davesomeone4059
      @davesomeone4059 Рік тому +8

      @@SethEssington which just begs another question, why do they have to demonetize channels? They've only ever cited advertisers as the reason. You pay $10 to watch content that only UA-cam gets paid for.

    • @sinistertwister686
      @sinistertwister686 Рік тому +9

      @@ShannonJacobs0 just use adblock, what's the problem?

    • @mapa4113
      @mapa4113 Рік тому +1

      same impact. learn physics

  • @qbert4325
    @qbert4325 Рік тому +711

    You could have just dropped the biggest rod you had from around the highest height possible without thinking about target, it would also be cool to watch how much impact it makes.

    • @surajvkothari
      @surajvkothari Рік тому +11

      What if it hit them? No one would know how far to film from.

    • @KrulKrulSprietSpriet
      @KrulKrulSprietSpriet Рік тому +9

      But how would you get footage and make sure nobody gets hurt?

    • @daemonicflame
      @daemonicflame Рік тому +41

      @@KrulKrulSprietSpriet remote cameras.

    • @AMVaddictionist
      @AMVaddictionist Рік тому +41

      @@KrulKrulSprietSpriet I would be interested in just seeing the damage it caused on the ground

    • @stephenlennon9820
      @stephenlennon9820 Рік тому +3

      But wouldn’t it just get buried under the sand like the others and possibly drag the canvas straps down too making it hard to find?

  • @SquaresToOvals
    @SquaresToOvals Рік тому +704

    I was really surprised it wasn't just a few of us noticing the complete lack of aerodynamic consideration going into such an expensive project. Anyone who has tried throwing a stick as a spear can tell you it will tumble around. Hundreds of other people are already saying it, but I'll say it too: fins. Some rear drag surfaces (some people have even suggested spin-stabilizing fins which was a positive surprise) really would have been so simple to do. Tons of people working on this project, but I guess anyone realizing it needed fins wasn't comfortable enough to speak up or there was some kind of deliberate reason for excluding them.

    • @kaneanwalsh6943
      @kaneanwalsh6943 Рік тому +47

      Almost as if they did it wrong intentionally...
      What say if we show people on an open internet like UA-cam how to make weapons of ass destruction? Okay, so, maybe instead we make a video detailing how not to do it and say that it can't be done as if it hasn't been done already and isn't being done right now?

    • @theanonymouscommenter5608
      @theanonymouscommenter5608 Рік тому +91

      How will the average person launch massive rods of tungsten into space and then back at earth?

    • @CockatooDude
      @CockatooDude Рік тому +81

      @@kaneanwalsh6943 Weapons of ass destruction lol. I know what you meant but that's just too funny.

    • @louishermann7676
      @louishermann7676 Рік тому +2

      I haven't watched the vid yet, but I'm assuming this test never reaches a hypersonic regime. Are fins even effective at those speeds?

    • @peterlongprong7521
      @peterlongprong7521 Рік тому +31

      the tip should have been the heaviest part - clearly they didn't think ANYTHING through one single second

  • @invasivebird5646
    @invasivebird5646 6 місяців тому +4

    “Is that 500 meters, it seems too high”
    “Wanna radio him, to ask if that’s 1500 feet?”
    Says all this when the helicopter is literally equipped with altitude meters

  • @ManrajSingh4U
    @ManrajSingh4U Рік тому +479

    I am shocked to think why he puts so little thought to it.
    There were lots of things they could have done.
    1. Shorten the straps
    2. Steps could have been of metal.
    3. Calculated the wind and have done something to counter it ( like change the drop position of helli.
    4. Have designed the fins on rod.

    • @27sspider27
      @27sspider27 Рік тому +8

      Wind is partially the helicopter

    • @davidwuhrer6704
      @davidwuhrer6704 Рік тому +1

      @@27sspider27 Should have used a blimp.

    • @somebodyspapa5005
      @somebodyspapa5005 Рік тому +18

      @@27sspider27 Any trailing straps makes it "fly", not a true drop. The best thing would be to deploy it without a strap or wings of any kind. Projectile must be bottom heavy, so it stays in a downward orientation.

    • @variamente6855
      @variamente6855 Рік тому +19

      Calculating the wind is a lot harder than what you'd expect. Mark rober took a shot at this with his egg drop from space, its incredibly difficult to actually have any form of guidance. And also if it had guidance, it would be legally classified as a missile which makes it illegal

    • @3dw3dw
      @3dw3dw Рік тому +12

      Calculating the wind wouldn't have made a difference. You see it swinging, but as a result it is also rotating. When the dropped it is continued to rotate. It wasn't falling long enough for a fin to have a positive effect. What they needed was to contain it in a pipe that was fixed to the aircraft to prevent swinging. It would have been easy to rig if they'd just given it a few moments of thought.

  • @JaquesBobe
    @JaquesBobe Рік тому +280

    All of the issues are so easily fixed... I don't understand how a physicist would not see them from a mile away and resolve them, instead of wasting a bunch of money and time in the desert.
    I hope you make another go at it with better preparations.

    • @Mr.LaughingDuck
      @Mr.LaughingDuck Рік тому +7

      Well, when most of a physicist's calculations are done in a vacuum and a frictionless space, real life things like air and momentum get in the way lol

    • @OsedayCan
      @OsedayCan Рік тому +24

      @@Mr.LaughingDuck No. A physicist can easily calculate those. It's literally the job of a physicist to be able to calculate them properly. I would know, I'm a physics engineer.

    • @shivamverma7151
      @shivamverma7151 Рік тому

      @@OsedayCan i think they were joking and mocking high school physics, which all start with "neglecting air resistence" "assuming this to be frictionless"

  • @michaeljenkins730
    @michaeljenkins730 Рік тому +604

    As sad as it might have been to start again from scratch, I don't think this video should have been released until it became something worth watching, so as not to dilute the generally high quality of Veritasium's videos. It ended up as non-event, non-video but it would have been better to try again, with fins and without the need for a target.

    • @paulsyms2142
      @paulsyms2142 Рік тому +13

      Agreed it wasn't 'blowing things up' spectacular, but it does remind me of a lot of failed trial-and-error science experiments in my past, and how one has to take stock, change something, and try again. Sometimes the 'obvious' changes (e.g. fins) only dawn on you part-way through the first trials.

    • @goodsocksproductions9397
      @goodsocksproductions9397 Рік тому +16

      Brutally put and brutally true

    • @shogun2215
      @shogun2215 Рік тому +29

      @@paulsyms2142 But they aren't trailblazing here, a very similar experiment has been done by the Mythbusters, simply talking to Adam Savage could've fixed so many problems. It's bewildering, this isn't a Veritasium video.

    • @marinyanev3259
      @marinyanev3259 Рік тому +20

      I’d assume it probably has to do with money honestly..
      Like, as said many times it is the most expensive video, and the crew seemed to be very big here and all gotta be paid. Helicopters are expensive as hell, and those sand castle builders didn’t sound cheap either. I believe they just believed too much in themselves and did the failure, and probably thought of trying again, but funds running low, so being to forced to release as it is to gain back and get back on track, or something like that.. Kinda sad, but I hope it’s a lesson learned so they stick to doing the quality work so they don’t have such failures anymore!

    • @ross6635
      @ross6635 Рік тому +20

      It honestly feels like him just trying to recoup some of the lost money. Such a bad video.

  • @TheyFrNamedMeBen
    @TheyFrNamedMeBen 2 місяці тому +3

    You’re trying to tell me that orbital kinetic weapons are a worse idea than the CIA plot to turn a cat into a living surveillance device

  • @evanwweiler
    @evanwweiler Рік тому +314

    Honestly if he had just anticipated the fact that it would be unlikely to hit a target from 500 meters (it only takes a small amount of research to know this btw) he could've dropped the object into the sand from a significantly higher height, and at the crater site he'd be like "According to our calculations, this delivered the equivalent of X amount of TNT into this crater. We're now going to test what X amount of TNT would look like if it hit our sand castle city." Then use X TNT explosive planted in the sand city to see what the damage would look like.

    • @fpoggesi
      @fpoggesi Рік тому +72

      Yeah but then you don't get to put a whole crew of people in harms way like they did here.

    • @brettpresta-valachovic3631
      @brettpresta-valachovic3631 Рік тому

      I like it.

    • @andyvie5332
      @andyvie5332 Рік тому

      Pretty good idea

    • @mapa4113
      @mapa4113 Рік тому +4

      u dont need to go higher. Air also has resistance and is stopping acceleration at a point. the whole experiment is dumb

    • @godzillaleas
      @godzillaleas Рік тому

      lol that youtube comments are smarter written in 3 minutes are smarter than the 100k production value video

  • @Bogo0112
    @Bogo0112 Рік тому +1749

    Adam Savage doing tests in the middle of the desert… seems nostalgic. 😂

    • @agentkirb
      @agentkirb Рік тому +17

      Funny thing was, when I hovered over video to do the "preview autoplay" thing. I saw a guy with an Adam Savage goatee wearing his hat and laughing/smiling. I was sure it was someone that just happened to look like him. But no it was actually Adam Savage.

    • @rickgreer7203
      @rickgreer7203 Рік тому +32

      @@agentkirb Pretty sure this was shot at the same time as the earlier penny drop video with Savage in it -- same helicopter, I think the same clothes, and it makes sense to do it all as one set of rentals/excursion.

    • @user-Aaron-
      @user-Aaron- Рік тому +6

      Honestly that was the highlight of this vid.

    • @kennymustdie8518
      @kennymustdie8518 Рік тому

      He needs money for young girls

    • @GS-td3yc
      @GS-td3yc Рік тому +1

      @@rickgreer7203 Sounds up to the point.

  • @todayisokay4075
    @todayisokay4075 Рік тому +611

    Very dissapointed. There were a number of variables that could have been addressed with more thorough testing. Additionally, conducting smaller tests without the costly resources of a helicopter or the construction of sand castles for the final test may have helped to identify any potential issues. It seemed as though these factors may have contributed to a rushed and potentially incomplete evaluation of the subject.

    • @blingerstinger
      @blingerstinger Рік тому +57

      The simplest solution to their biggest problem in this test - weight swaying - could have been fixed by drastically shortening the cord that holds the weigh. Just make it like 30cm long, attach it to the helicopter in the same spot and voila - minimum swaying and probably more precision.

    • @LightningShiva1
      @LightningShiva1 Рік тому +14

      @@blingerstinger Damn that's simple but effective.

    • @jaymac7203
      @jaymac7203 Рік тому +4

      @blingerstinger
      Yes it's extremely lazy 😭 lol

    • @wise0wl
      @wise0wl Рік тому +1

      @@blingerstinger You probably wouldnt be able to take off, its a safety measure that the cord is that long.

    • @smiddyman
      @smiddyman Рік тому +1

      @@blingerstinger I was thinking you could have the rod contained within a tube attached on the side of the helicopter, which would have reduced swaying and the effect of the wind.

  • @bestia3027
    @bestia3027 Місяць тому +1

    Aftermath inside talk: "So, we did this dumb idea with 0 forethought and the result belongs to the trash"
    Him: *"Publish it anyways, we spent a lot on this, we have to make some money back even if this is a big waste of time for us and anyone watching it!*

  • @Jared2324
    @Jared2324 Рік тому +1113

    For as researched and thorough as the videos on this channel normally are, I’m shocked at how off the cuff this experiment felt.

    • @jonbutcher9805
      @jonbutcher9805 Рік тому +87

      I've always held the guy up as a very smart individual. After this I'm not so sure. He's always so polished on his channel But I guess with script and edits most anyone can be made to look knowledgeable. I'm not suggesting this is the case but clearly he's not the polished brainiak I believed him to be. Very little of this " experiment " went according to his reasoning. It's a shame really because it didn't give him any positives. It is even possible that he lost a few subscribers after this. Even Adam appeared to raise an eyebrow. I will keep watching Veritasium if the subject is of interest to me." But it's not Must See TV " anymore.

    • @The-co7hv
      @The-co7hv Рік тому

      dude messed up once due to a braindead mistake even though he's made hundreds of vids calm tf down

    • @smiaza1357
      @smiaza1357 Рік тому +60

      How they gonna put more effort into the sand city than thinking the actual process through on god🤣🤣🤣🤣

    • @The-co7hv
      @The-co7hv Рік тому +33

      @@smiaza1357yeah thats funny as hell the stupid ass sand city wasnt even necessary 💀💀

    • @Cheveyo888
      @Cheveyo888 Рік тому +25

      Research is something anyone can do, designing an experiment takes someone willing to put mental effort in.
      A particularly clear indication of poor mental effort and quality control here, even in the research, was how he somehow goofed the common name for the concept
      Its not "Rods from God" in most circles its "Rods from the Gods"

  • @sethstinson1341
    @sethstinson1341 Рік тому +274

    When Adam "Does it have fins?" His laugh was like "this guy has never dropped anything from this high huh?"

    • @Mr_Vosakisen
      @Mr_Vosakisen Рік тому +53

      It was so odd that a science channel didn’t think of this, like it seems obvious to me to put fins or to drop the cylinder by some type of rigid attachment to the helicopter or something.

    • @MattH-wg7ou
      @MattH-wg7ou Рік тому +1

      I thought that immediately.

    • @vyvianalcott1681
      @vyvianalcott1681 Рік тому +7

      @@Mr_Vosakisen It's kind of weird how unprepared he was for this, like he's trying to be Mark Rober but doesn't realize how much thought and preparation goes into even his failures

    • @AirNeat
      @AirNeat Рік тому +2

      @@teflontelefon There are "fins" on the animated one, they go inward instead of outward

    • @BryanHaddon
      @BryanHaddon Рік тому +1

      @@teflontelefon Can't trust the marketing photos without seeing the actual engineering lol.

  • @AhHereWeGo
    @AhHereWeGo Рік тому +474

    As someone who’s dropped a lot of cylinders from fairly high heights, yes, they DO tend to fall on their side, however, that strap would provide enough drag to right that. The problem was they dropped while it was still swinging, not that it wanted to fall wrong.

    • @IIARROWS
      @IIARROWS Рік тому +4

      Also: why did they dropped the strap too? They could have released just the rod.

    • @sluggo562
      @sluggo562 Рік тому +79

      There are a multitude of ways to stabilize that swinging and nobody thought of any in advance of making this. It's kind of hilarious.

    • @BunnyRaptor
      @BunnyRaptor Рік тому +14

      @@IIARROWS The quick release was attached to the chopper. Also when you take off you need a little slack between the helicopter lifting off and the load, so it is good to add a the strap or string or whatever to give the heli some room to take off.

    • @Jedi2155
      @Jedi2155 Рік тому +7

      @@sluggo562 You can tell these engineers aren't very good weapons designers haha

    • @UteChewb
      @UteChewb Рік тому +5

      It would have been better if they carried the weight in the cabin, and then when they got to the position they could lower it out and then drop it. That would eliminate most of the pendulum effect from the helicopter adjusting its position, plus the wind, though that would be minimal since the wind isn't going to easily blow a 100 kg weight around easily.

  • @eatyourcereal7353
    @eatyourcereal7353 21 день тому +4

    You call it rods from god, I call it Odin. Call of Duty Ghost was the best.

    • @regularphill
      @regularphill 3 дні тому

      Finally, I have been using ctrl f to find someone who also made the connection. I also loved Ghosts! (I did not have xbox live for multiplayer)

  • @wunkewldewd
    @wunkewldewd Рік тому +4418

    why on earth did you hire a team of pro sand castle builders, and then have them spend all their time making more accurate looking buildings, rather than just 10x the number of them so you wouldn't have to worry about missing them??

    • @WayStedYou
      @WayStedYou Рік тому +519

      Yeah I would've just gotten massive buckets to make a premoulded one and made 10x as much area.

    • @David-qs7yv
      @David-qs7yv Рік тому +461

      As if professionally sand castle makers would allow a quantity first approach

    • @1ogic948
      @1ogic948 Рік тому +277

      Because it’s fun to have fun

    • @fernandon3926
      @fernandon3926 Рік тому +74

      because its fun

    • @powertechgrows6093
      @powertechgrows6093 Рік тому +59

      Quantity wouldn't need professionals, and that part of the video is gone, so thats why

  • @insertyoutubehandlenamehere
    @insertyoutubehandlenamehere Рік тому +2286

    As others have said, for a creator that puts so much effort into research, this seemed half baked. I like that he left in the part where the first question Adam asks is, "Does it have fins?" and he's like, oh we should have thought of that. Like, what?? Also you could have shortened the rope significantly so it wouldn't swing as much. That was never adjusted.

    • @FunnyAnimatoFilms
      @FunnyAnimatoFilms Рік тому +179

      I think the rope length is probably determined by helicopter safety reasons.

    • @maskddingo1779
      @maskddingo1779 Рік тому +199

      Why use a rope at all? Seems very dangerous and probably hard to control the shifting center of mass for the chopper pilot... let alone aiming. It should have been a firm attachment with a release. That said, I was more interested in seeing a crater than needing to see it hit some "target"...but we never even got to see that from their original intended height because they were so obsessed with hitting something they arbitrarily placed there. Pretty lame.

    • @TacticalCommand
      @TacticalCommand Рік тому +117

      @@maskddingo1779 The rope is actually significantly safer and easier then a fixed mounting point. While I'm not a pilot I did spend a good many years as a technician for equipment that was installed into a helicopter and flew with it. One such piece of equipment was for a 800lb cast iron gimbal with sensors in it and that alone was right near the limit of what the AS350E we used was rated to handle in the cab due to centre of gravity concerns. When the payload is on a slingline it's better able to operate at it's max rated capacity because there is a bit of give in the slingline when the helicopter makes any sort of adjustments or movements and doesn't put nearly as much strain on the control hydraulics. It's also why it was likely so hard to aim because it's very difficult to completely stop the swing. Between the swing and upper air currents between extremely strong and not always the same direction as ground winds, the ground crew would need to be very far away to ensure there being 0 chance the payload accidentally doesn't land on them. Which also means they need a very large area to have cordoned off as if anyone did get hurt they would be opened up to some very serious litigation.
      Another reason fixed mounting was likely not an option is anything attached to the helicopter, especially of that weight, would need some kind of engineering approval and that process is expensive. And anything that might be off the shelf that has all the requisite approvals is also likely not to be very cheap because the company that made it had to go through that process. Slingline on the other hand only needs the approval for the sling mount system which the aviation company likely already has sling mounting equipment. Also keep in mind that helicopter rental can easily cost a few thousand dollars every hour, plus fuel which the AS350E took over 500L of Jet-A at $1.60/L for a 2.5h flight. I'm sure the cost of the sand castle was probably low on their list of expenses.
      Rotary aircraft arn't nearly as precise as they are made out to be in certain bits of media. The pilots I worked with all attested that the hardest thing to do well is hover perfectly in place. As often the controls are calibrated to be most at neutral when in forward flight and hovering often requires constant correction which introduces errors in positioning. Got to try it myself for a short while, was quite fun but indeed very tricky. At altitude mind you and with dual controls so the pilot always had the ability to take over :P

    • @ruotsionpaska
      @ruotsionpaska Рік тому +3

      When they started talking about aiming the helicopter to the pool, ok the chopper might have an RTK capable GPS to actually aim precisely, but they're taking/marking the pool coordinates with just a cell phone?
      In the middle of nowhere the cell network might not be good enough to augment the phone's precision(process of which admittedly I'm not very versed in so idk...) the result might actually for the mark to be off from the pool?
      E: so ok I watched more and they're aiming with a phone also... well hopefully they'll hit the ground :D

    • @maskddingo1779
      @maskddingo1779 Рік тому +12

      @@TacticalCommand That's a lot of words. Some make sense. Others don't. While I haven't flown real helicopters, but I do fly pretty powerful models and have been doing so for quite a while... long before automatic flight stabilization was the norm. I am aware of the principles under which they opperate. Adding a fixed weight to the bottom (or something that can be pushed out the side) is not significantly different than adding another passenger. If it were better to have weight you are carying suspended by a rope, then they ought to make helicopters where every occupant hangs from a rope.

  • @glitchy8429
    @glitchy8429 Рік тому +684

    Please redo this. It doesn’t need propulsion, it just needs guidance. With a guidance system distance becomes your friend instead of your enemy giving you more time to aim. I feel like you could easily build a cheap guidance system out of fpv drone/wing tech and some fins, and drop that thing from max altitude. Literally just fly it in like an fpv wing. If you use the dji fpv system, you have some nice footage too.

    • @maxdoesgames6753
      @maxdoesgames6753 Рік тому +77

      i think adding a guidance system makes it illegal basically a missile

    • @glitchy8429
      @glitchy8429 Рік тому +37

      @@maxdoesgames6753 didnt think about that. Idk how hard it would be to get clearance for that, but I feel like they’re past that by dropping stuff from a helicopter in the first place.

    • @MrGrimsmith
      @MrGrimsmith Рік тому +43

      @@glitchy8429 Apparently the FAA frown upon that sort of thing, Mark Rober ran in to the same issue with his egg drop from orbit plan A.

    • @marciostavares
      @marciostavares Рік тому +8

      ​@@maxdoesgames6753 if it succeeds they can already sell it to the military

    • @Lksz-l9k
      @Lksz-l9k Рік тому +30

      They could just freaking stabilise it better on the helicopter. Make it a three to four point structure that won't allow the weight to wiggle as much. I can't understand how they missed that.

  • @Kevin-et5zs
    @Kevin-et5zs 6 місяців тому +1

    This was a fun watch! I kinda guessed at the results, because while I was in my skydiving years, some of the guys and gals got the fun idea of dropping pumpkins on an old barn from the skydiving plane...and hilarity ensued. The barn was at no time in any danger, although passersby most certainly were. And their vehicles. Also, we were 'faced.

  • @johnabbottphotography
    @johnabbottphotography Рік тому +753

    You just know that the ENTIRE time Adam was watching this, he was trying to suppress his desire to say:
    "Uhm... why no fins?"
    Because that would have been the *first* thing he thought while looking at it, having dropped a bunch of things from heights, before.

    • @mikaellindqvist5599
      @mikaellindqvist5599 Рік тому +11

      He was in on the planning as he said to adam why didnt you say that a week ago. Either Adam is getting old or this bs is scripted.

    • @chromebooktest1128
      @chromebooktest1128 Рік тому +37

      @@mikaellindqvist5599 thats not what happened. 8:12
      veritasium was saying that he wished that they had had that conversation a week ago, which they wouldve IF adam had been involved in the prep.
      adam has dropped things from altitude several times. why would he forget things that even i would know having never done it?

    • @sunnymon1436
      @sunnymon1436 Рік тому +9

      @@mikaellindqvist5599 Derek DREAMS he had have spoken to Adam earlier, but he didn't... because Adam wasn't in on the planning at all. Hence Derek saying he wishes they had have spoken about this project sooner than on the day. Adam would have totally caught this early and saved them a lot of time/effort.

    • @mikaellindqvist5599
      @mikaellindqvist5599 Рік тому

      @@sunnymon1436 Holy crap thatbmakes this awful channel even more useless. A freaking daydreamer....

    • @thatguybrooke
      @thatguybrooke Рік тому +5

      Guess he didn't at any point think of an arrow? 🏹 😅 like ya need some fletching bruv

  • @pontushaggstrom6261
    @pontushaggstrom6261 8 місяців тому +871

    This might be one of the most unproffseional carried out experiments ive ever seen

    • @ToBeIsWasWere
      @ToBeIsWasWere 8 місяців тому +194

      Not just unprofessional, every single step was executed and/or planned sooooo badly if there was any planning involved at all beyond renting a heli. They rented a chopper but didn't even think about welding fins on their "darts"? They used extremely long rope in windy conditions and nobody said "maybe we should shorten the rope a bit or use another system"? They used GPS to hit targets less than 5 square meters big (civilian GPS is not that accurate) and were surprised when it wasn't accurate enough? Nobody thought of using a friggin laser pointer or something to aid the aiming?
      Those are just the things that immediately came to mind, seriously did nobody involved in this video think for just one damn second?
      I like veritasium but this is insultingly bad.

    • @zguesss
      @zguesss 8 місяців тому +81

      I refuse to believe no one thought about stabilization of a falling projectile before dropping one. It's like they were paid to convince us that it's not possible.

    • @qv43v
      @qv43v 8 місяців тому +10

      ​@@ToBeIsWasWerebut but Adam savage!

    • @4tdaz
      @4tdaz 7 місяців тому +13

      What is more, when the idea was conceived, they would have known every single fact covered in this video. Therefore, resurrecting the project years later must mean they had other ideas. For example, I would be interested in many rods and seeing what it does in an area. I also would not have ANYONE NEAR the drop site and then go for much higher distances. I think they went low for fear of not getting their objects back ever, or there were other limitations. But then what are you actually testing?

    • @locomotive9000
      @locomotive9000 7 місяців тому +3

      I think this was an impromptu add-on to the penny drop video. You can see they are in the same location with the same helicopter. He probably just wanted to get in two videos for the price of one helo rental.

  • @cellshaded
    @cellshaded Рік тому +647

    This video is about 20mins longer than it should have been.

    • @JTNugget
      @JTNugget 10 місяців тому +32

      They have to make some money back on all the money they wasted here.

    • @aermotors
      @aermotors 10 місяців тому +7

      Honestly a horrendous video

    • @barneymiller6204
      @barneymiller6204 9 місяців тому +2

      It seems EVERY video I watch on YT has this problem!

    • @83nav
      @83nav 9 місяців тому +2

      Thank you, so I´ll skip it 1,5 minutes in.

    • @sativagirl1885
      @sativagirl1885 9 місяців тому +1

      it's long enough to get naked and partially drunk.

  • @aryantiwari7105
    @aryantiwari7105 Місяць тому

    Building sand castles? Then dropping a 10 ton rod???? IM ALL FOR IT BABY

  • @pierQRzt180
    @pierQRzt180 Рік тому +179

    To be fair, from veritasium I was expecting more. (fins, preparation, more scientific and so on)
    I guess it was entertainment.

    • @rodolfocaires9613
      @rodolfocaires9613 Рік тому

      Yeh, that was a completely waste of time. What a useless video 😪

  • @stanleypeters5383
    @stanleypeters5383 Рік тому +565

    ThE Compressed sand castles don't behave like a real building structure.
    The loosely packed sand readily absorbed the displaced KE from impact dissipating it through the intergranular space. The Shockwave would probably do more damage to solid concrete,wood, and steel.

    • @Deutritium93
      @Deutritium93 Рік тому +61

      Yeah there were so many thing’s Veritasium could’ve done differently with this experiment. Like building actual scale model buildings/structures instead of sandcastles, using a helium filled balloon to lift the object instead of a helicopter that is going to move around slightly, especially at that altitude.

    • @shi-t
      @shi-t Рік тому +14

      I'm even surprised they didn't even think about this.

    • @RagdyAndy
      @RagdyAndy Рік тому +25

      bad bad unplanned video this one

    • @kevinwarburton2938
      @kevinwarburton2938 Рік тому +4

      @@RagdyAndy It's hit piece Anti RoG designed to fail. I'm sure there'd dome money backing Anti with weak Propo.

    • @teppo42
      @teppo42 Рік тому +15

      @@Deutritium93 Huh? A balloon would drift miles and miles off the target. There's literally no way to steer them. Absolutely hopeless.

  • @jamessunderlandseventh7410
    @jamessunderlandseventh7410 8 місяців тому +761

    That was possibly the worst and most flawled "Testing" Veritasium has ever done, what a shitshow.

    • @Shotakovicz
      @Shotakovicz 8 місяців тому +128

      I would have to agree. Equating a weight swinging from a helicopter with all the pendulum swinging and zero guidance to a space-launched kinetic strike weapon with computer guidance and fins is ludicrous. A massive false equivalency.

    • @Shotakovicz
      @Shotakovicz 8 місяців тому +19

      Where are the MythBusters when you need them?

    • @TheBoeboe
      @TheBoeboe 8 місяців тому +12

      this, and the selfdrving cars is some of the worst videos they have ever produced

    • @Rob-bn9ib
      @Rob-bn9ib 8 місяців тому

      @@Shotakovicz "As you can see, by throwing this lump of lead at a tree from a distance of 100 feet, I have proven that firearms are a gimick weapon that will never work."

    • @DigitalDiamonds24
      @DigitalDiamonds24 8 місяців тому +13

      ​@@Shotakoviczone of them was present tbf

  • @jeremyleemartens801
    @jeremyleemartens801 5 місяців тому +9

    M.O.A.B. is actually an airship and stands for mother of all Bloons. Everybody know that

  • @hippo762
    @hippo762 Рік тому +960

    How did someone not think "this thing needs fins" in the first 60 seconds of this idea getting discussed? 🤣

    • @Acidburn1155
      @Acidburn1155 Рік тому +94

      It's almost like literally every dumb bomb is shaped the same for a reason or something lmao

    • @MuppetsSh0w
      @MuppetsSh0w Рік тому +29

      @@Acidburn1155 Every bomb has fins

    • @brmbkl
      @brmbkl Рік тому +15

      Im guessing they wanted the shape to be closely associated to the orig project.
      ofcourse, a blunt object gets rounded after atmosphere entry, and wind/air is not a factor after gaining it's velocity, so yeah, to emulate those conditions, they would have to emulate completely opposite conditions in this context, iycmd
      guess they should have gone to space.

    • @samuela-aegisdottir
      @samuela-aegisdottir Рік тому +19

      The effort was wasted on a perfect sand city and not put in considering how to hit a target by dropping a not-aerodynamic rod swinging (!) under a helicopter.

    • @ThisCanBePronounced
      @ThisCanBePronounced Рік тому +7

      Seems only Adam Savage did lol

  • @andrewrhodes6999
    @andrewrhodes6999 Рік тому +784

    A helicopter is a pendulum hanging from the connection to the rotor blades. The rod is a pendulum hanging from another pendulum. Add wind.

    • @ryansamarakoon8268
      @ryansamarakoon8268 Рік тому +93

      A glorified demonstration of chaos theory

    • @lukasgadzijevas7163
      @lukasgadzijevas7163 Рік тому +21

      I was gonna say that,that miscalculation of the first attempt was brutal :D

    • @rolandovaldez3654
      @rolandovaldez3654 Рік тому +20

      You think they would have setup a helicopter mounted delivery system that doesn’t work off a pendulum. Like you mentioned earlier a pendulum attached to another pendulum is not a good idea.

    • @Myrius69
      @Myrius69 Рік тому +32

      I don't think that the wind is a major problem.
      The Movement of a helicopter/crane is what makes the load swing.
      Funny story, I worked in a cargo hold onboard a Russian/Ukraine cargo ship in 2010. The crane operator was drunk so they took him out of the crane and replaced him with a soper operator, he was bad, really bad, he didn't know how to counter a swing, and working below was terrifying. So 1 tonn pallets of frozen fish came crashing down about 5 times, we all down the cargo hold agreed that the drunk operator was much safer to work with 😂

    • @samb2195
      @samb2195 Рік тому +12

      Reduce the size of hanging rop, the more the rop size more it swings.. its basic knowledge.

  • @orangecrow157
    @orangecrow157 Рік тому +620

    It's kinda surprising they didn't think to put fins on the cylinders. I would expect to put not only fins but remote or automatically controlled fins to actually be able to aim. Like did They seriously just go to the desert with a chopper thinking they can hit something so small by releasing a dangling weight from that high?

    • @alpsoysal3586
      @alpsoysal3586 Рік тому +142

      Automatically controlled fins to guide a projectile to a target is essentially a guided missile and is illegal to make around the world. I'm in a student rocketry team and any form of active directional control is super problematic. But yes they absolutely needed some static fins to make it stable. It's aerodynamics 101 to know about static stability margins etc.

    • @dominikwylie147
      @dominikwylie147 Рік тому +78

      @@alpsoysal3586 yeah mark rober had that exact thing 2 weeks ago

    • @sills3454
      @sills3454 Рік тому +17

      It wouldn't really need to be necessarily "guided" to the target. If they just used passive or actively controlled fins purely for stabilization on it's way down, it would have taken out a lot of the inaccuracy without being in the illegal area of guided missiles, which is a bit of a grey area anyway.

    • @Ben-ms1ub
      @Ben-ms1ub Рік тому +11

      fins paired with a better release method like a mount to eliminate the rod swinging from a rope would likely have been beneficial. maybe move the chopper to account for wind (similar to what snipers do)

    • @XMarkxyz
      @XMarkxyz Рік тому +13

      @@alpsoysal3586 I don't think you can call it a missile as it isn't even propelled

  • @AntsPlayChess
    @AntsPlayChess 4 години тому

    It would have probably been a lot more accurate if the second person in the helicopter dropped the weight by hand after securing the point using GPS accurately. When it is set underneath the helicopter the wind kept shaking it around.

  • @michaelchen2718
    @michaelchen2718 Рік тому +255

    IT BAFFLES ME the incompetence in this video! from someone who I look up to, who I perceive as incredibly bright!

    • @BrianC1664
      @BrianC1664 9 місяців тому +16

      Agreed, this was a piss poor attempt, everything can be scaled down with the exception of the velocity of the projectile, but with that reduced to pedestrian speeds it's just pissing around in the desert with a chopper and some sand castle builders...

    • @thatbuckmulligan
      @thatbuckmulligan 9 місяців тому

      You look up to him.... lmao...

  • @tormentoxx
    @tormentoxx Рік тому +235

    This kinda feels like one of those modern Discovery or History Channel videos where they switched from science to explosions, slow motions, and cars.

    • @MylesJP
      @MylesJP Рік тому +29

      Yeah there was something cheap and off about this video. Like a whole different channel made it and just had Derek reactions cut in.

    • @Jaffjv
      @Jaffjv Рік тому +10

      and the title is total clickbait too. "Rods From God" aren't real yet, and it's definitely not a secret that it's a potential weapon that has been looked into

    • @matwyder4187
      @matwyder4187 Рік тому +1

      Boy, the world would be a much better place if they only switched to that... They instead went right ahead total nuts and ever since spread plain bs under the false flag of science. Because of demand, they say. There are only a handful of bad actors around the world who did more damage to mankind than those bastards.

  • @lowstringc
    @lowstringc Рік тому +507

    Aiming a drop from an aircraft involves calculating wind speeds at various altitudes to adjust for the push. I’m surprised that this didn’t come up at all in the planning (maybe it did behind the scenes but you seemed caught-off when it was blowing and swinging from a helicopter, and that seemed an obvious thing that would happen)

    • @mattmarzula
      @mattmarzula Рік тому +44

      The whole video is designed to entertain the ignorant.

    • @derederekat9051
      @derederekat9051 Рік тому +11

      yeah, anyone who watched the video of the grandma spinning under a helicopter knows more or less how carrying a weigh under a helicopter works.

    • @voneror
      @voneror Рік тому +10

      Bold of you to assume that there was any planning.

    • @earthenscience
      @earthenscience Рік тому +17

      @@mattmarzula This video is a fail. This video would be far more entertaining if they actually did the experiment right. I was ignorant of this technology until watching this video. Derrick spent a lot of money for this fail of a video, money that should have been given to me as the winner of the veritasium contest, so giving advice is the least I can do. U need to offset the mass of the cylinder so more of the mass is in the front of the cylinder. This will stabilize the cylinder. U cannot put fins on the cylinder because the fins will catch wind and make it sway off course even more. U need to put a sensor that measures the sway of the cylinder, then when the velocity is 0 quickly automatically releases the cylinder. The cylinder should be as heavy as possible and round on both the front and back so the wind has no flat surface to effect it. The amount of off-course radius should be simulated so a safety region is determined, and no personell inside of this region are allowed to be inside that region. Finally, the test demonstration should be built of brick which is more sturdy than sand castles (unless they hardened the sand with some kind of mortar or something.)

    • @tylerwright6006
      @tylerwright6006 Рік тому +4

      @@earthenscience I only know about the MOAB because of BLOONS TDS lol.

  • @ERIC-ck6qm
    @ERIC-ck6qm 4 дні тому

    “On a sandcastle city” seems to be more realistic than originally intended.