Not banned by the authorities, banned in schools. There were many things we were not allowed to bring to school in my childhood, most of them were not banned because they were dangerous in any way but because they would either distract from the lessons or be so valuable there would be a theft problem or angry parents blaming the school if they got lost or broken. I think I remember these (or something similar) being advertised here in Finland at some time but in the late 80:s I was a little too old to play with them as I was born in 1971.
At the end of the video you sort of want electrosync to have created a popball so powerful he just stands on a promontory above a roaring ocean during a storm and holds it in the palm of his hand yelling "RETURN TO YOUR CREATOR!" and the popball explodes out the palm of his hand and flies into the storm to return to Peter Fish.
Just proves there's a lot of science behind the simplest fun toy. These days at school Pokemon cards are banned due to gambling and children being tricked out of rare very valuable cards. LEGO Ninjago were banned because it was causing fights (early version of this toy became rare)
@@EM8844 Easy to explain, the first wave of these toys were hugely popular, they sold out in all stores. So kids who brought them to school would steal them from other kids. Then the fighting starts.
The only problem with the original ones was the whole in the middle may eventually develop a split, which stopped it from working properly. That what happened after I handed mine down to my nephew. But it was about 15 years old by then, and my nephew did give it a good work out.
@@notsillyone I think that was why I threw mine away...lol I prolly tried adding Tarzan's Grip glue to it but only delayed the inevitable, then I realised it is easy to make with a well cut in half tennis ball, remove the fur and melt a hole in the middle - done correctly it will work just the same!
@@gavincurtis Like modern technology such as Apple products that die in a year or 2! The decline was from 1996 when we started to use lead free solder/sodder in electronics. That meant the lead free solder/sodder on circuits melt as they warm up and crack when they cool down, over time the chip or component will separate from the board of the device - prime example was the original XBOX360 or PS3. This is why older devices last a LOT longer - the lead in the solder/sodder is less prone to melting under environmental stress combined with regular use.
Apple products die because the OS tells them to. That’s why you should never update when told to. I am still on the original OS on my iPhone, my buddy got his the same day and he kept updating his phone. He says the battery lasts maybe 3 hours now and it’s glitchy. Mine holds a charge all day still and my only complaint is the touch-screen is too sensitive.
would never imagine recreating a little rubber half circle would be such a challenge but your ability to problem solve and never give up is very inspiring
@@Ghorda9 Racquetball was best imo. With a bit of trimming down as a perfect half-sphere was not quite the right shape -- you wanted it a a bit 'shorter' than a full hemisphere.
I once had the bright idea of using a pop ball to roll some dice. It shot them into the air with sufficient force to smash the glass lightshade at my cousin's house. Good times.
Kiwi here. I remember these too. Like most childhood possessions, you don't always appreciate how cool things were until it's impossible to get back. Boy did this take me back. And Peter is a G
Like Chester Bennington(Linkin Park) said "You don't know what you've got, until it's gone" . Cool songs by them btw. Pretty sure the song it's from is called _Until It's Gone_
@@kiracomments-chca2747 It's a reference to Joni Mitchell's "Big Yellow Taxi" from 1970. "Don't it always seem to go, you don't know what you got till it's gone."
I remember if ever I threw them, they would revert in the air, so we always did the same as you. Every surface we could think of, we sat those damn poppits on. Including our eyes, nose, tongues.... 😅
A frequent cry from adults when I was a kid a long time ago was 'Don't play with that, it'll have your eye out.' This tended to apply to conkers, anything with elastic bands (a popular home-made skipping device), over-fuzzy plushies (!), the corners of books, five-stones and jacks especially the bouncy jacks ball, anything given away free in comics, those plastic submarines you put baking powder inside to play with in the bath, lucky bag lollies and drinking straws. Barbie's predecessor, Tressy, - 'her hair grows' was her UPS - came with a whole stash of accessories, all of them destined to cause near- fatal injuries.
To be fair, being told something would blast your eyeball straight out of your skull was probably enough to make a reasonable kid think twice about doing something that would actually cause that to happen with said objects.
How in the everlasting, soda-stained *BLIN* is a plushie supposed to take your eye out?! ò_Ó I swear to god, helicopter parents make me want to punch mankind.
Printers of the future should just auto-order and mix the required ingredients for the design you want to print. Otherwise it is still too much effort for a custom one time use prop.
@@nangld Are you suggesting 3D printing with parametric composition capabilities, such as adjusting strength, flexibility, shine and so on?... I like you!
My friend got his hands on some flexible filament and made a fidget slug. Its segments don't move, but there's something satisfying about its slight squishiness. (It can't be squeezed too hard, though, otherwise it might break.)
Beyblades were also banned 'cause we kept gambling with them. Lego was also banned 'cause we made beyblades and gambled with them. Many things were banned for the same reason, haha.
Also I'm pretty sure they weren't banned. I'm 100% sure they are available even today. I've bought some marbles myself long time ago, but also long after '90s.
I remember having one of these. It was always like a jump scare when the thing popped, kinda like staring at the toaster and trying not to flinch when it shot up
Jump scare 🤔. Then yours wasn't as strong as mine. Everybody in my household was afraid of them, if you throw one on someone's shirtless back it leaves a nasty welt lol😅
Excellent video, brought back so many memories. We actually worked with Peter Fish for many years, illustrating and designing his toy packaging, etc. We were even lucky enough to do the 90s POPball relaunch packaging when we were still in our teens.
You must be kidding!! As a kid I played with it non-stop.. I loved that thing to the moon and back! God knows where it ended up... A few months back, childhood memories came up and I remembered this popball - I started to look for them online for hours.. Unfortunately I could only find those cheap replicas and was pretty sad I could probably not get my hands on one anymore. I started to think about making them but have not yet started as I`m currently working on several other projects. I'm so glad this video popped up ^^ showcasing your attempts and results. I'm super jealous you actually got your hands on an original one.. If you're still in contact with Peter Fish, please send him all the best from my end - an almost 4 decade old German guy, living in Spain, who as a kid loved that toy.
Its eye opening how much work and genuine invention went into developing and creation of such "simple thing" a rubber that pops. Not only pops good, but is also durable enough to hold for half a century. And to think that we are unable to recreate 100% what our parents did many decades ago, thats humbling.
It's not a matter of not being able to make it and more of not wanting to. You have a lot more rules, regulations, and red tape in modern times. Plenty of room for trouble, and Peter himself even said they were too strong as a result of the rubber. The other issue is there's no need. The economy is much more margin centric now a days and it doesn't make sense to increase the manufacturing costs of an insignificant children's toy. Especially if by doing so you can incite legal problems.
A lot of it is also coincidence. Chances are that this produce is just the result of someone utilizing something he saw. Like he worked with rubber and one day saw/heard something similar to what this toy did (such as rest material in an unusual shape), so at some point he decided to turn it into an actual thing. Of course it could also be the result of hard work and development, just saying that many things are discovered by accident or through experience, which is then used to create an actual product.
That's like saying it's humbling that you can't recreate a Marvel movie in your basement. It's not humbling, it's just a matter of not having the same kind of resources and possibilities. I'm pretty sure "we" could 100% recreate it, if you can get some funding and production facilities for it. And "durable to hold a century" is also neither strange nor some lost art. It's essentially just a lump of rubber. Nothing to break here. You can't compare it to, say, the life cycle of a smartphone.
It's not that we can't do it, it's that companies these days are so hell-bent on infinite growth with finite space and wealth that they will design their products to be disposable. And no it has nothing to do with "regulations and red tape", if it weren't for those we'd have companies selling us spoiled milk labeled as "never expires" and continue to have cigarettes marketed as medicine on the regular!
Also in Australia, we had gumball machines that dispensed smaller ones called “Pop-Eyes” and they were banned cause kids were putting them on their eyes and the pop would damage the eye and cause blindness. A lot of see-through neon coloured ones.
No doubt one exceptionally stupid and unlucky kid ruined it for everybody. The nanny state is terrible. People should be allowed to experience consequences of their own foolishness! It's not a tragedy.
Marbles were banned because of gambling?! For us they were banned because some genius threw a king marble at another kid's head and fractured their skull. Parallel universes I guess.
I’m a ‘70s kid and know squat about 3D printing, yet I found this riveting. The hacks he made to override his printer’s governors were the best part. 😅🤷♂️ I’m in awe of this level of ingenuity & stick-to-itiveness. 👏👏👏👏
@@Lostachilles I’ve got a masters in American Lit. Ever heard of style & usage? “Perseverance,” huh. I bet you like “emotional rollercoaster” & “amazing,” too. 🥴 You remind me of the social outcasts in every class. Be proud. Have a seat: 👉 🚽
It's quite wonderful to see someone passionate enough about something so simple that you reached out to the original creator of Popballs and were kind enough to return the original back to him. I enjoyed everything about this video.
everyone underestimates 3D printing, but got to give Peter Fish credit for helping out even though he thought it wouldn't work. I bet with a printer better suited to flexible filaments and some tweaking you could get closer to the original too. awesome stuff
I remember these so well and I loved them too until they were banned (Europe). I remember newly bought ones had to be "broken in" a bit. They would get easier to setup and would go higher after a day of playing.
@@alfonsedente9679 Ha, yep. Depends on the squash ball, but the ones I made worked pretty good. I got about 5ft (150cm or so) out of some of them (they were coming up to my shoulders and I'm 5'10" or 178cm), especially if you put them in the fridge for a little while first to stiffen them up. Some of the real one's we got in the US back in the day, though, would go 20-30ft in the air! So, these are not exactly perfect, but probably about as good as what he was printing.
@@AlphaMachina i remember the colors... I tried a blue one today, worked great. The black ones i had were too thick, not enough air space in the middle. Ill try greens next. A couple guys posted tennis balls worked ok. Just thinking logically, im guessing the common pink or spaldeen was what the one kids were making.
In the 1960's, Edmund Scientific had jumping discs made of bimetallic thermostat material. You warmed it up in your hand so it would stay inverted, then it hopped when it cooled in a couple of seconds. They went really high especially from a hard surface.
Yes, I enjoyed those jumping disks. But after some usage, they would fail to remain "cocked". I suppose that metal fatigue set in or else some separation developed at the bimetal interface. Prior to the jumping disks, we enjoyed the plastic insects with the springy wire legs and the suction cup on the underside. These were indeed an eye hazard and were banned or else were no longer sold due to injury liability. (I'm glad I grew up and survived in an era when safety was not the be-all and end-all. Sometimes, experience can be a great teacher, if we survive without too much harm.)
My son was born in 1979 and had these as a kid in the 80s. A lot of his toys are still here in a trunk for grandkids to play with. I'm sure there will be a popper or two floating around in there. Great vid.
Thanks Peter. I only thought of these 2 days ago for my daughter as it was one of my favorites as a kid. I can remember many hours throwing them like a frisbee and popping them from a distance.
thanks for demonstrating what kind of hard work people go through just so we have a little piece of toy junk we can play with as kids i am really impressed how much work goes into developing even this kind of very 'simple' kid's toy
At 5:34, it's not clear what Peter Fish meant by "too dangerous" with the discontinued, extra jumpy, black ones made from recycled rubber. Too much force, maybe causing occasional eye injuries? Some leaching out of unhealthful compounds, if it was rubber not originally intended for frequent handling?
Eyes, yes, but ears also. If you let one of these things 'pop' close to your ear (not even covering your ear cana,l just near) you can seriously damage your hearing. It became a 'prank' that shitty kids would do in school, sneak one up to your ear and pop it.
What a nice video to watch with all the nice camera shots, the music, the narration - you nailed it! I think mr. Fish going through same processes to create the toy in the first place. I hope he is proud of you!
Surprised I had to scroll this far down for this. Nothing says maker culture like spending a week, using thousands of dollars of equipment & materials, that may be toxic, to make something that could have been done with a (tennis) ball and a utility knife. 🫠
@@qwaszx2 “It scares” you that 7 people agree it would have been quicker, cheaper and easier to cut a ball in half? Did you search this video out specifically, or did the AI algorithm suggest it to you?
I remember a game from my childhood, I forget what it was called but you had to land a plane attached to a wire and a joystick. My mum refused to buy one telling me I would get bored of it quickly. I so wanted this toy (the gleeful expression on the children in the advert had me) so I make a mock up with a kit plane fishing line an cardboard. I had more fun making that than I ever could have had playing with the game. Thanks Mum😊😊👍👍
This was so facinating to watch. Being an 80's kid myself, I remember having wicked dangerously fun toys (looking at you, automatic pogo stick etc). Glad you managed to get an original to base your model off of! So cool. Hope your day goes great. P.S. would you ever consider selling your 3D pop balls?
THEY WERE TOYS? (Here’s a story : I have 2 dogs both are mixed pit bulls and one day I was in my back yard picking up stuff and found that they destroyed a tennis ball and split it almost clean in half and I just was figeting with it and then it popped INTO MY FUCKING EYE was half blind for a month DONT even know how it flew into my eye but it did)
Great video, i remember having a blast playing with them as a child, fortunately in our school non of the toys were banned (execpt of playing card for some reason)
Yes! The black one with the duck on it jumped the most, that thing was amazing, you brought me back sweet memories I forgot to have. Thank you maestro, ¡Grande!
These were my favorite childhood toy that wasn't an rc car or video game. I do remember that once we started getting low quality import ones they didn't hold their shape while inside out for long enough to do anything. The older ones were the best, and you never knew when they would go, but once they did, KABOOM!
I was an 80s kid and I remember owning some Popballs myself, they were fun!!! Even remembered seeing the ad and nagging my parents for a Popball! Had no idea they got banned, but that's Australia for ya, a lot of stuff gets banned! Excellent video on recreating the Popball using 3D printing, thoroughly enjoyed it, glad the creator Peter Fish was very supportive of your project and helped you out!
0:30 - Yoyo is still in the EU. The metal slap bands are still there. But those are covered by transparent plastic packaging.They are retro-reflective and are sold as additional protection to improve the visibility of pedestrians and cyclists.
Yeah, slap bands are back for the little ones at the moment (2023-2024). Even saw a "decorate your own slap band" thing at a toddler party.. White material ones that the kids decorate with textas or stickers.
any bfb fans here? this looks exactly like the popper toys the contestants were playing with click like if you played with popper toys before they were invented
I have a metal disc variant of the pop ball I was given some 40 years ago. It's small, only 24.7mm (1 inch) diameter, 0.2mm thick and 1mm high, with a tiny 1.5mm diameter bump in the middle. You warm it up with your hands, press the middle to make it click then put it on a hard flat surface, after few or many seconds it cools down and 'unclicks', jumping about 50cm (1.5 feet) straight up when the tiny bump in the middle hits the hard surface. Was great for startling people who didn't realise it was on the table in front of them.
So, I was kinda into Popballs as a kid! What was your favourite childhood toy?
Join the electrosync team on Patreon: www.patreon.com/electrosync
So why was it banned? 🤔 An why are the knock-offs much worse? 🤔
Great video! 🤓
True
@electrosync do you sell these?
I hope he got it back
I loved to collect pogs in the 90's
Banned in the 80s? These were given as prizes in cereals when I was a kid (circa 2005-ish)
Not banned by the authorities, banned in schools. There were many things we were not allowed to bring to school in my childhood, most of them were not banned because they were dangerous in any way but because they would either distract from the lessons or be so valuable there would be a theft problem or angry parents blaming the school if they got lost or broken. I think I remember these (or something similar) being advertised here in Finland at some time but in the late 80:s I was a little too old to play with them as I was born in 1971.
@@Murgoh meanwhile, my teacher gave these out as prizes if you aced enough spelling tests.
I also had a similar adverse reaction to the title... but decided to watch the video for 30 seconds before commenting.
Do you remember what kind of cereal it was? Just curious.
Same I'm 14 and the popball thingy was still available In us 2017
+1 for Peter Fish. That dude was very cool about things.
I wish we had more people like him.
At the end of the video you sort of want electrosync to have created a popball so powerful he just stands on a promontory above a roaring ocean during a storm and holds it in the palm of his hand yelling "RETURN TO YOUR CREATOR!" and the popball explodes out the palm of his hand and flies into the storm to return to Peter Fish.
@@L_Martin Fantastic
Yeah it was very nice of him to help and even send a sample.
Just proves there's a lot of science behind the simplest fun toy. These days at school Pokemon cards are banned due to gambling and children being tricked out of rare very valuable cards. LEGO Ninjago were banned because it was causing fights (early version of this toy became rare)
Leo???
why did the ninjago cause fights?
@@EM8844 Easy to explain, the first wave of these toys were hugely popular, they sold out in all stores. So kids who brought them to school would steal them from other kids. Then the fighting starts.
I mean you can gamble on basketball games too. Are they going to ban basketball in schools now too?
@@Jake-bt3fc Sports makes too much money for School to care.
Peter Fish is one cool dude. And I'm surprised the original rubber one still worked after 30 years!
Not the modern cheap rubber that breaks down in 6 months.
The only problem with the original ones was the whole in the middle may eventually develop a split, which stopped it from working properly. That what happened after I handed mine down to my nephew. But it was about 15 years old by then, and my nephew did give it a good work out.
@@notsillyone I think that was why I threw mine away...lol I prolly tried adding Tarzan's Grip glue to it but only delayed the inevitable, then I realised it is easy to make with a well cut in half tennis ball, remove the fur and melt a hole in the middle - done correctly it will work just the same!
@@gavincurtis Like modern technology such as Apple products that die in a year or 2! The decline was from 1996 when we started to use lead free solder/sodder in electronics. That meant the lead free solder/sodder on circuits melt as they warm up and crack when they cool down, over time the chip or component will separate from the board of the device - prime example was the original XBOX360 or PS3. This is why older devices last a LOT longer - the lead in the solder/sodder is less prone to melting under environmental stress combined with regular use.
Apple products die because the OS tells them to. That’s why you should never update when told to. I am still on the original OS on my iPhone, my buddy got his the same day and he kept updating his phone. He says the battery lasts maybe 3 hours now and it’s glitchy. Mine holds a charge all day still and my only complaint is the touch-screen is too sensitive.
So great that Peter was kind enough to help you on your journey.
what a legend
would never imagine recreating a little rubber half circle would be such a challenge
but your ability to problem solve and never give up is very inspiring
It's actually a half sphere 🤓
half a tennis ball would do
@@Ghorda9 Racquetball was best imo. With a bit of trimming down as a perfect half-sphere was not quite the right shape -- you wanted it a a bit 'shorter' than a full hemisphere.
bfdi?!!! (Real)
I once had the bright idea of using a pop ball to roll some dice. It shot them into the air with sufficient force to smash the glass lightshade at my cousin's house. Good times.
Lol !!!
Yup, that's what it's all about! Capability of a slingshot and a time passer.
Trouble but you're actually getting in trouble
Kiwi here. I remember these too. Like most childhood possessions, you don't always appreciate how cool things were until it's impossible to get back. Boy did this take me back.
And Peter is a G
Like Chester Bennington(Linkin Park) said "You don't know what you've got, until it's gone" . Cool songs by them btw. Pretty sure the song it's from is called _Until It's Gone_
Ritchie here.. these weren't banned at all and are still available to buy.. your next holiday in Amsterdam perhaps ? :)
kiwi here too. used to make our own by cutting a squash ball in half.lol
@@kiracomments-chca2747 It's a reference to Joni Mitchell's "Big Yellow Taxi" from 1970. "Don't it always seem to go, you don't know what you got till it's gone."
@@BeersAndBeatsPDX: Well, _Until it's Gone_ by Linkin Park is where I first heard "You don't know what you've got, until it's gone" :p
My grandpa was a middle school physics teacher. He hand the old school metal versions of these that were essentially tiny flying circular razors.
You said "hand" instead of "had"
Ok never knew you were supposed to throw these... we just set them on the floor and watched haha
same here
I would put them under things to watch them fly 😂😂😂😂
I remember if ever I threw them, they would revert in the air, so we always did the same as you. Every surface we could think of, we sat those damn poppits on. Including our eyes, nose, tongues.... 😅
Same
@@Lucy_Fordgave myself a bruise by putting one over my eye
A frequent cry from adults when I was a kid a long time ago was 'Don't play with that, it'll have your eye out.' This tended to apply to conkers, anything with elastic bands (a popular home-made skipping device), over-fuzzy plushies (!), the corners of books, five-stones and jacks especially the bouncy jacks ball, anything given away free in comics, those plastic submarines you put baking powder inside to play with in the bath, lucky bag lollies and drinking straws. Barbie's predecessor, Tressy, - 'her hair grows' was her UPS - came with a whole stash of accessories, all of them destined to cause near- fatal injuries.
If you think about it, literally EVERYTHING is dangerous in their own way. You just gotta be careful otherwise we might as well just be dead...
To be fair, being told something would blast your eyeball straight out of your skull was probably enough to make a reasonable kid think twice about doing something that would actually cause that to happen with said objects.
How in the everlasting, soda-stained *BLIN* is a plushie supposed to take your eye out?! ò_Ó I swear to god, helicopter parents make me want to punch mankind.
@@MEGATRYANT For other kids that just made them even more appealing 😂
@@barahng Ye, but subconsiously they would avoid blasting their eyeball out of their skull
This was awesome. So cool you got in contact with the original designer, and he was willing to help you with your project. So cool!
9:30 the disrespect of that beetle that shat on your print bed had me rolling
LOL! Sure they aren’t future beetles?
I just noticed it lol 🤣
Did its own little 3D print project
as a time time traveller @@thebrapman this comment is underrated
@@emmettturner9452 They are not gonna be any future beetles on that heated bed
Man if I was in the original creator's position I'd really enjoy watching this video, seems like a real good dude.
Yes, the "semi-retired" dude who must be like 90 by now. . .
The way peter responded to u and sent u one is so sweet
Recreus Industries: "we made the most elastic and flexible filament on the market for professionals"
Electrosync: "I printed a Popball!"
Printers of the future should just auto-order and mix the required ingredients for the design you want to print. Otherwise it is still too much effort for a custom one time use prop.
@@nangld Are you suggesting 3D printing with parametric composition capabilities, such as adjusting strength, flexibility, shine and so on?... I like you!
@@nangldyou're underestimating the complexity of making such specialty filament
@@nangld Oh god no, sounds a lot like some DRMed startup ideas.
Hell, that's the idea behind Juiceroo
My friend got his hands on some flexible filament and made a fidget slug. Its segments don't move, but there's something satisfying about its slight squishiness. (It can't be squeezed too hard, though, otherwise it might break.)
"marbles were banned because kids were starting up a gambling racket!."had me laughing of my chair.😄
Beyblades were also banned 'cause we kept gambling with them.
Lego was also banned 'cause we made beyblades and gambled with them.
Many things were banned for the same reason, haha.
@@spankyjeffro5320 wtf is going on over there
Also I'm pretty sure they weren't banned. I'm 100% sure they are available even today. I've bought some marbles myself long time ago, but also long after '90s.
i guess kids where really losing their marbles over this xD
@@Netsukithey mean banned in schools. you couldn't bring those toys in because of these problems
the science behind all these seemingly simple toys is always mind blowing...
I remember having one of these. It was always like a jump scare when the thing popped, kinda like staring at the toaster and trying not to flinch when it shot up
Sounds like a great "toy" for cat owners! 😁
So do I. But I never understood what it was good for. It could slap pretty hard, though. 😅
I hated it fir that reason haha
@@2degucitas cats suck, do yourself a favor and get a dog.
Jump scare 🤔. Then yours wasn't as strong as mine. Everybody in my household was afraid of them, if you throw one on someone's shirtless back it leaves a nasty welt lol😅
Man I love that the original created worked with you. Im sure it meant a lot to him to know someone cared that much. Respect.
You said "created" instead of "creator"
wait.. those look like there were from BFB
The OSC found me again
Finally
I was looking for a comment like this
thx i was looking for this comment
my gosh a summoned everyone
Excellent video, brought back so many memories. We actually worked with Peter Fish for many years, illustrating and designing his toy packaging, etc. We were even lucky enough to do the 90s POPball relaunch packaging when we were still in our teens.
Thats so cool
It’s great to see you highlighting good practices with regards to fume monitoring and air filtration around 3d printers.
yeah, Ive always wondered about this with 3d printers but never heard anyone say anything about it
You must be kidding!! As a kid I played with it non-stop.. I loved that thing to the moon and back! God knows where it ended up...
A few months back, childhood memories came up and I remembered this popball - I started to look for them online for hours.. Unfortunately I could only find those cheap replicas and was pretty sad I could probably not get my hands on one anymore. I started to think about making them but have not yet started as I`m currently working on several other projects.
I'm so glad this video popped up ^^ showcasing your attempts and results. I'm super jealous you actually got your hands on an original one.. If you're still in contact with Peter Fish, please send him all the best from my end - an almost 4 decade old German guy, living in Spain, who as a kid loved that toy.
Its eye opening how much work and genuine invention went into developing and creation of such "simple thing" a rubber that pops. Not only pops good, but is also durable enough to hold for half a century.
And to think that we are unable to recreate 100% what our parents did many decades ago, thats humbling.
It's not a matter of not being able to make it and more of not wanting to. You have a lot more rules, regulations, and red tape in modern times. Plenty of room for trouble, and Peter himself even said they were too strong as a result of the rubber. The other issue is there's no need. The economy is much more margin centric now a days and it doesn't make sense to increase the manufacturing costs of an insignificant children's toy. Especially if by doing so you can incite legal problems.
this comment was right under the pop-eyes comment lmaoo
A lot of it is also coincidence. Chances are that this produce is just the result of someone utilizing something he saw. Like he worked with rubber and one day saw/heard something similar to what this toy did (such as rest material in an unusual shape), so at some point he decided to turn it into an actual thing. Of course it could also be the result of hard work and development, just saying that many things are discovered by accident or through experience, which is then used to create an actual product.
That's like saying it's humbling that you can't recreate a Marvel movie in your basement. It's not humbling, it's just a matter of not having the same kind of resources and possibilities. I'm pretty sure "we" could 100% recreate it, if you can get some funding and production facilities for it.
And "durable to hold a century" is also neither strange nor some lost art. It's essentially just a lump of rubber. Nothing to break here. You can't compare it to, say, the life cycle of a smartphone.
It's not that we can't do it, it's that companies these days are so hell-bent on infinite growth with finite space and wealth that they will design their products to be disposable. And no it has nothing to do with "regulations and red tape", if it weren't for those we'd have companies selling us spoiled milk labeled as "never expires" and continue to have cigarettes marketed as medicine on the regular!
Really impressive! Insane you got that to print at all.
It was definitely a challenge!
Oh, so this is the BFB thing
thats what i said
@@sarvente_00 cool
Yes
finally something fucking good to watch
I'm glad you liked it!
I feel your pain
If you havent go watch his worlds fastest roomba build!
lets go!
@@kristian6087 i did, loved it
9:31 finally a real proof you're in Australia.
The stink bug on their print bed?
@@thetab0179 spiders in australia
@@Its_Milkman but it's not a spider...
I thought it was a fly (a lot of flies in Aus) so I gave this comment a like. I see it looks more like a potato beetle if you pause the video
Is it because the text is upside down?
I didn't know it was a toy. Years ago I remember that we played with broken racketballs (the blue ones) and they jumped very high.
Also in Australia, we had gumball machines that dispensed smaller ones called “Pop-Eyes” and they were banned cause kids were putting them on their eyes and the pop would damage the eye and cause blindness. A lot of see-through neon coloured ones.
Australian kids are stupid then 😂
How sad some of the children in your area are so stupid 😢
No doubt one exceptionally stupid and unlucky kid ruined it for everybody. The nanny state is terrible. People should be allowed to experience consequences of their own foolishness! It's not a tragedy.
Marbles were banned because of gambling?! For us they were banned because some genius threw a king marble at another kid's head and fractured their skull. Parallel universes I guess.
BRUH😒
@@YICHEN-k8h WHAT'S YOUR PROBLEM HUH?
How?
wdym@@b3nj0vkry
@@b3nj0vkrybasic leverage
I totally forgot about this toy, Thank you for this trip trough memory lane.
I vaguely remember DIYing one out of a tennis ball. Didn't quite work as the shape wasn't right, but that's a material you should try.
I actually did try that, but I cut it from the edit in the end. It didn’t work for me.
If I'm not mistaken Tennis Balls are from natural rubber which would be the material of the original black popball.
just cut a racquetball in half.
haha look who I found in the comments :D
@riba2233 🤣
I’m a ‘70s kid and know squat about 3D printing, yet I found this riveting. The hacks he made to override his printer’s governors were the best part. 😅🤷♂️ I’m in awe of this level of ingenuity & stick-to-itiveness. 👏👏👏👏
There's an easier word for "stick-to-itiveness" -- perseverance (or persistence) :D
@@Lostachilles I’ve got a masters in American Lit. Ever heard of style & usage? “Perseverance,” huh. I bet you like “emotional rollercoaster” & “amazing,” too. 🥴 You remind me of the social outcasts in every class. Be proud. Have a seat: 👉 🚽
lol grandpa no need to get all defensive
@@olapyza 🥴
@@Mo_Ketchups Grandpa is mad that his outdated words are too wordy and verbose.
How about you have a seat: 👉🚽
It's quite wonderful to see someone passionate enough about something so simple that you reached out to the original creator of Popballs and were kind enough to return the original back to him. I enjoyed everything about this video.
everyone underestimates 3D printing, but got to give Peter Fish credit for helping out even though he thought it wouldn't work. I bet with a printer better suited to flexible filaments and some tweaking you could get closer to the original too. awesome stuff
I remember these so well and I loved them too until they were banned (Europe).
I remember newly bought ones had to be "broken in" a bit. They would get easier to setup and would go higher after a day of playing.
Where were they banned? We got these everywhere when i was younger (between 2000 - 2010)
@@channelnamedarson yeah same I'm european and I don't remember it being banned
@@channelnamedarson they never were banned anywhere, a lot of schools/districts might not have allowed them, but that would get fewer clicks.
When I was in NZ back in 2012 they still had them there
here in germany they are still sold. why would they get "banned"? makes no sense.
Isnt that the toy that appeared in bfb?
Stuck one of these to my forehead and it left a nice mark that stayed for at least a week. Smart kid
I was just waiting for a comment like this 😀
Same here! And then I wore a PopBall sized band aid on my forehead for a whole week or two at school.
@@pyrosnap4524 glad I'm not the only one
I put one on my eye. Broke blood vessels for at least a month lmao
@@slime_camp Kids will be kids.
That's the reason they were banned lol
Should've sent a printed one back with the original. I'll bet the creator would've been super fascinated by it, and how close you were able to get
How did you miss the part where he puts a 3D-printed one in the package before he put the original one in with it? Like, it was super obvious.
Peter Fish: **LENDS YOU AN ORIGINAL POPBALL LIKE A COOL DUDE**
This guy: **PIRATES IT**
Peter Fish: **SHOCKED PIKACHU**
I used to make these myself by cutting squash balls in half. They work a treat. Very powerful.
Say it aint so!
You mean i dont need $300 printer?
I can just chop a $1 ball in half!
@@alfonsedente9679 Ha, yep. Depends on the squash ball, but the ones I made worked pretty good. I got about 5ft (150cm or so) out of some of them (they were coming up to my shoulders and I'm 5'10" or 178cm), especially if you put them in the fridge for a little while first to stiffen them up. Some of the real one's we got in the US back in the day, though, would go 20-30ft in the air! So, these are not exactly perfect, but probably about as good as what he was printing.
@@AlphaMachina i remember the colors...
I tried a blue one today, worked great.
The black ones i had were too thick, not enough air space in the middle.
Ill try greens next.
A couple guys posted tennis balls worked ok.
Just thinking logically, im guessing the common pink or spaldeen was what the one kids were making.
In the 1960's, Edmund Scientific had jumping discs made of bimetallic thermostat material. You warmed it up in your hand so it would stay inverted, then it hopped when it cooled in a couple of seconds. They went really high especially from a hard surface.
I remember the CSIRO "double helix" membership got you one of those bimetallic discs.. back in the 80s/90s.
Lmao, I bet those were really aggressive XD
Yes, I enjoyed those jumping disks. But after some usage, they would fail to remain "cocked". I suppose that metal fatigue set in or else some separation developed at the bimetal interface. Prior to the jumping disks, we enjoyed the plastic insects with the springy wire legs and the suction cup on the underside. These were indeed an eye hazard and were banned or else were no longer sold due to injury liability. (I'm glad I grew up and survived in an era when safety was not the be-all and end-all. Sometimes, experience can be a great teacher, if we survive without too much harm.)
Can you find these now? I want some of or my daughter
9:29 not the bug on the print bed 💀💀💀
My son was born in 1979 and had these as a kid in the 80s. A lot of his toys are still here in a trunk for grandkids to play with. I'm sure there will be a popper or two floating around in there. Great vid.
Thanks Peter. I only thought of these 2 days ago for my daughter as it was one of my favorites as a kid. I can remember many hours throwing them like a frisbee and popping them from a distance.
thanks for demonstrating what kind of hard work people go through just so we have a little piece of toy junk we can play with as kids i am really impressed how much work goes into developing even this kind of very 'simple' kid's toy
I wore out many of them in primary school, with me they always tore along hole after much use.
That was a fun video, thanks for sharing.
Me too! My original Popball was blue and it tore along the hole too. It still worked though.
Just make it yourself. Take a tennisball. Cut it in 2 halfs , cut them from 50% up to 45%. Remove the soft layer...
You are welcome!
I had a blue one! Loved it. I still have it somewhere but no doubt it will have perished after a few decades in the heat of the garage.
Mine was blue too! When Peter sent me his blue one, it brang back a lot of memories.
Peter Fish - a name I didn't know yesterday - is now a legend in my mind.
Oh, and subbed. Excellent video!
Was so simple to find enjoyment back in the day
I miss my childhood marble gambling racket.
That was my favourite too, they did give us a two week marble season at the start of the year though and nothing else got played for those two weeks.
A pity i gave mine away, had some real collectors.
At 5:34, it's not clear what Peter Fish meant by "too dangerous" with the discontinued, extra jumpy, black ones made from recycled rubber. Too much force, maybe causing occasional eye injuries? Some leaching out of unhealthful compounds, if it was rubber not originally intended for frequent handling?
Yeah, I'm curious about that too
Eyes, yes, but ears also. If you let one of these things 'pop' close to your ear (not even covering your ear cana,l just near) you can seriously damage your hearing. It became a 'prank' that shitty kids would do in school, sneak one up to your ear and pop it.
they weren't banned in the uk, we had them when i was growing up in the '90s
What a nice video to watch with all the nice camera shots, the music, the narration - you nailed it!
I think mr. Fish going through same processes to create the toy in the first place. I hope he is proud of you!
I loved the music too! Sadly he only linked to epidemicsound.
Love it, remember them fondly. I think we also made DIY versions out of racquetball halves.
Here in the UK these were known as Hopper Poppers and I absolutely loved mine! Still have it to this day.
Just chop a tennis ball in half. Same effect.
Or a racquetball
Surprised I had to scroll this far down for this. Nothing says maker culture like spending a week, using thousands of dollars of equipment & materials, that may be toxic, to make something that could have been done with a (tennis) ball and a utility knife. 🫠
@@qwaszx2 “It scares” you that 7 people agree it would have been quicker, cheaper and easier to cut a ball in half?
Did you search this video out specifically, or did the AI algorithm suggest it to you?
@@qwaszx2 You doing okay?
Dude, I just cackled at 'industrial Vegemite'. 😄 6:02
I thought they banned marbles because people threw them down to avoid being chased?
I remember a game from my childhood, I forget what it was called but you had to land a plane attached to a wire and a joystick. My mum refused to buy one telling me I would get bored of it quickly. I so wanted this toy (the gleeful expression on the children in the advert had me) so I make a mock up with a kit plane fishing line an cardboard. I had more fun making that than I ever could have had playing with the game. Thanks Mum😊😊👍👍
This was so facinating to watch. Being an 80's kid myself, I remember having wicked dangerously fun toys (looking at you, automatic pogo stick etc). Glad you managed to get an original to base your model off of! So cool. Hope your day goes great. P.S. would you ever consider selling your 3D pop balls?
THEY WERE TOYS? (Here’s a story : I have 2 dogs both are mixed pit bulls and one day I was in my back yard picking up stuff and found that they destroyed a tennis ball and split it almost clean in half and I just was figeting with it and then it popped INTO MY FUCKING EYE was half blind for a month DONT even know how it flew into my eye but it did)
😂
mighta been why they were banned
Great video, i remember having a blast playing with them as a child, fortunately in our school non of the toys were banned (execpt of playing card for some reason)
Gambling
Really enjoying watching the whole process. The dedication is very inspiring
I love the lil guy appearing at 9:31 to appreciate the printer and then leave shortly after lol
9:31 I can see that the process still has a few bugs.
Peter fisher sounds like an amazing guy! Helping with recreation of this iconic toy of the past...
Most of this school banned toys would be gold in the hands of a good science teacher
Yes! The black one with the duck on it jumped the most, that thing was amazing, you brought me back sweet memories I forgot to have. Thank you maestro, ¡Grande!
These are not banned and are still easy to find in discount stores like Big Lots.
man i loved my popball when i was a kid. i'd put it on my forehead and man did it give me a good slap. the dumb things we did, it was great
These were my favorite childhood toy that wasn't an rc car or video game. I do remember that once we started getting low quality import ones they didn't hold their shape while inside out for long enough to do anything. The older ones were the best, and you never knew when they would go, but once they did, KABOOM!
Wow, the amount of dedication and hard work put in for just printing a simple toy with one part, amazing! Oh and the bug in 9:31 haha 😂
I was an 80s kid and I remember owning some Popballs myself, they were fun!!! Even remembered seeing the ad and nagging my parents for a Popball! Had no idea they got banned, but that's Australia for ya, a lot of stuff gets banned! Excellent video on recreating the Popball using 3D printing, thoroughly enjoyed it, glad the creator Peter Fish was very supportive of your project and helped you out!
Damn Australians banning everything. . .Like guns. . .
I'm just kidding. I would take that deal, banning guns and toys alike.
Brilliant video. I'm same age and remember these also. Thanks for the nostalgic trip.
Glad you enjoyed it
The Trendy "Pop It" in 2021 is basically this, but rubbery and softer. So I don't know why that was banned.
9:29 wtf That guy sneaking in and popping all over your bed... hahahaha good vid btw you just gave me an unexpected glimpse back into my childhood!
0:30 - Yoyo is still in the EU. The metal slap bands are still there. But those are covered by transparent plastic packaging.They are retro-reflective and are sold as additional protection to improve the visibility of pedestrians and cyclists.
WHaT? Yo-yos are banned in Europe?
@@ninjarooster9258 No. They are not. That's what I meant.
I remember briefly in the US the snap bands were banned but then the companies started making them with a plastic center instead a few years later.
Yeah, slap bands are back for the little ones at the moment (2023-2024). Even saw a "decorate your own slap band" thing at a toddler party.. White material ones that the kids decorate with textas or stickers.
@@ninjarooster9258 wtf, he literally wrote that they're not
I wonder what Mr. Fish thought of the slightly inferior but 3D printed version?
That thing was in BFB.
L pfp
Yeah.
dibohfe
omg i was looking for this comment
*loser never lied*
9:25 there a bug crawling around
In PH, there was a vintage snacks with free Popball toy inside. I forgot which snack brands, but it brings back my childhood days .
Great job, thanks for sharing 👍
Thanks for watching!
.... Did UA-cam actually give me a good recommendation. Such a cool video!
Thanks for watching!
any bfb fans here? this looks exactly like the popper toys the contestants were playing with
click like if you played with popper toys before they were invented
Really good video! Thanks for it. Needed some good vibes today
Enjoy the vibes!
Bro literally walked down the memory lane and revived his love! 💪🏻
Have you considered making larger ones?
so thats the thing that was in that one bfb episode..
0:15 Sun of a beach
Fun in the sun at the beach
Lol
I have a metal disc variant of the pop ball I was given some 40 years ago.
It's small, only 24.7mm (1 inch) diameter, 0.2mm thick and 1mm high, with a tiny 1.5mm diameter bump in the middle.
You warm it up with your hands, press the middle to make it click then put it on a hard flat surface, after few or many seconds it cools down and 'unclicks', jumping about 50cm (1.5 feet) straight up when the tiny bump in the middle hits the hard surface.
Was great for startling people who didn't realise it was on the table in front of them.
5:13 forbidden hubba bubba
Looks tasty. I love eating resin in the mornin
Hey isn’t that the thing from BFB???
SHUT UP
@@HankJW1mbIet0n NUH UH
THAT ONE EPISODE WHERE LOSER LIED🤨🤨🤨
Yes
wowie
I had one as a kid but never knew you could drop it and make it pop! Damn, I want one now..
Bfdi fans: is that a bfb 7 reference !!!!!!
It must be!!
Ye
Can someone tell me the song name 1:30 ?