@@flamez1499 Or blood, (I know it is a liquid) it then boils. If you want to know a gruesome story about this look up the B4 Dolphin incident. You can find pictures of one of the guys after it. Small spoiler of said image: The guy looks likes shreaded chicken.
for me I just know the science behind them.... None of these have been particularly difficult, the only one that ever caught me off guard was when none of them were fake because I was spending ages with the video paused trying to think which one could possibly be fake.
@@louthinatorI guess I could say the same (for 80% of the videos at least.) Being on the good side of internet long enough has taught me a lot of obscure science things. It’s how I knew video number 2 was real
Additional fun fact. Dipping candles into a different type of wax was how they invented safety candles. Original candles would melt and collapse randomly often causing fires. Safety candles came after which were dipped in a slower burning wax. The inner wax would melt and burn first while the outer wax contained the liquid. It would eventually melt but always last. Now you could light a candle and it would burn uniformly all the way down to mostly nothing.
The bottle one is kind of fake because water will still come out for a while, it will just start to pull a vacuum in the bottle, I know because I’ve used plastic bottles for drip irrigation. It will get pretty crinkled before the flow actually stops completely.
Yes and no beacuse when the water comes out of the bottle it needs air to fill the space or there will just be a vacuum which is not possible in an atmosphere. It comes out for just a second when he puts the cap on beacuse it does not create a perfect seal.
@@VeteranVandal wdym luck? if you know there are 3 options, 1 fake, and you know which 2 are real, then the thing that you didn't think is true is your answer.
Yeah, I knew about the compressed air can and the water one makes sense if you think about air needing to displace the water and having no means of travel. While adding a layer of wax to a candle doesn’t make it a trick candle, soaking cotton balls in wax lets them burn longer.
The bottle one doesn’t make sense in my opinion. If he showed the entire process with a bit of water leaking at the start until it slowly stopped then yes it would have made sense. You need some water to leak out first to create that initial suction from the vacuum which prevents further leakage
The second one is kind of a trick question to me-- i just realised something I said the second was wrong because here in Bahrain(an island with a really high humidity) when i use compressed air for more than 10 seconds ill get ice around the can from the air alone lol. So i was like this had to be a trick question by saying it needed to be in the water. Ty for listening to my ted talk
well, the reality is that when a gas expands it gets cold, (which is half of the principle of how does the air conditioner work) so you need water in order to create the layer of ice, which in your case it's on the air itself.
I know that b and c are true- for my engineering club when we were at a vex competition we used how cold those cans get to cool our motors between fights bc vex motors suck and take hours to cool on their own. And the c is just physics- if the holes are small enough the water’s tension will prevent air from getting through them, and without air coming through the top the water can’t leave cause there’s nothing to replace it. That means a must be false.
Basically, something needs to replace the water which would flow out. The air can expand a little (and the water a very little), but pretty soon the force of gravity pulling water down and out of the bottle will no longer be enough to overcome the air's resistance to expansion, so the water just stays. It won't work as well if your bottle buckles easily. The surface tension is also important (keeping the water "in one piece" at the holes) otherwise air could flow in through one part of the holes and water out through the other.
Because ambient air pressure keeps the water in. The bottle is at a precarious equilibrium being helped by surface tension of the water. If the bottle were turned, it wouldn't work.
When the cap is screwed on the water cant escape because for water to escape it must be replaced by air, for it to not form a vaccum in the bottle , and when the cap is off, the place where water was originally, can be replaced by air
I don’t know what it was and I’ve been speaking english for most of my life the video basically gave it away though - the candle blew out and then reignited
2nd clip is literally how ac works. Air gets compressed, heats up, gets cooled by the surroundings, then gets depressurised and cools down and cools the surroundings on the other side. Reverse this and you have a heat pump
I knew A was fake, since I understand atomspheric pressure so the water is def true, and also I’ve felt the can get cold before but I didn’t know it was that cold
The way he relit the candle in the first video, assuming it isn’t a trick candle, is by lighting the smoke that the candle lets off, letting down a trail of fire back to the wick and relighting it
You can use the water bottle trick to make a diy automatic waterer for a plant, just either put the bottle in the pot so that at least one hole is in contact with the soil so it breaks the surface tension and slowly leaks out, or put the bottle on the soil and just barely open the top so that the water leaks slowly.
The water thing makes sense if you know about basic physics. Water won’t come out unless a roughly equivalent volume of air is coming in, otherwise it would create vacuum. If you put a hole on the opposite side and layed the bottle over, it would also overflow that way. The pressured air can works by using using a specific kind of pressurised air that absorbs heat when activated. It’s been known particularly among tech nerds that using it too much on one spot can produce ice, and the same can occur to the can if it’s not insulated. This isn’t that dangerous though, your body heat will usually neutralise it when your holding it. For the candle, wax is wax, regardless of where it’s from. If the other layer of wax *did* interfere with the wick, it would interfere all throughout and wouldn’t become a trick candle.
I know the water bottle one is true because I used to drink the schools chocolate milk with the straw then mess around with it (if you know you know) and as someone who has messed with air dusters, I know they definitely do that.
i noticed the audio cut out at the end of the candle one and i was like "ooh i'm going to choose A based solely on this minuscule editing error since there's no way i'm gonna know the actual answer" but then i ACTUALLY knew it! the first one i got without guessing (granted i haven't seen all of them yet)
Fun fact: the reason why computer duster does that in a bowl of water is because computer duster is literally just a can of refrigerant. Why it's legal to vent that shit into the atmosphere is a good question.
I knew about the last once cuz u know science and the second one I knew was possible cuz when I was a kid I used one for a long time and it started to freeze in my hand
Hold on I don't know how the candle one was fake, cuz when I was a kid we lit candles in the house during power outages and I would put the melted wax on the the wick and when I tried to blow out the candle it would ignite again on its own and would also be harder to put out
Second one is because pressure is directly proportional to temperature so as the pressure decreases so does the temperature. Third one is because of atmospheric pressure. Air needs to get into the bottle to allow water to flow out or it would create a vacuum
I knew b was true as you can freeze your chest area (WARNING: Do not try this ESPECIALLY if you are female ) as I saw a rooster teeth video on it. So it was down to a or c. I picked A as c seemed more realistic no airflow and more water means that the air doesn’t travel down to the holes.
Electronics dusters get painful-to-touch cold in a clearly endothermic process (not sure if it's solely gas equation or if there's a chemical reaction there) so that it can get cold enough to create ice is extremely easy to believe The water bottle is a basic pressure equation, next Adding layers of wax is how they make candles in the first place. And you're exposing the wick so you're just making a slightly thicker candle.
This one is alot easier then video 1 and 2 iv seen. I know air cans get cold when used. Iv seen C on a lot of physics channels. And I know you like to replace objects based of the last two videos iv seen so, I'm going to assume you replaced the candle "while I wasn't looking" Edit here: He did not say while I wasn't looking line like he did before butttt was right
I don’t believe in dragging kids into adult drama.. that said, all her lawyer talk is no different than anyone else on social media who threatens to do the same bc they don’t like something that was said.. etc. It’s a really fine line when you’re dealing with public forums. To start with, any time you sign up for ANY social media platform then you essentially signed a contract, you need to read the fine print. Most lawyers won’t even touch a case like hers, she’d have to hire someone who specializes in such matters. It’s a very tedious job bc they have to comb through video after video, message after message etc and they will start with her first just to make sure she didn’t instigate the situation to start with. Like I said, it’s a fine line. I have a fam member who is an entertainment lawyer which isn’t quite the same but some of it is similar. Much of it comes down to that fine print I spoke of.. but anyone can sue for anything if they want to give it a shot. 🤷🏻♀️
A is false. B seems reasonable enough And I’m fairly certain C is true because the water can’t get out because that would change the pressure inside the bottle or something, I don’t know how to properly explain it
1. Wax is bad at conditioning heat 2. Idk how electronics spray works 3. The water does not flow by itself from small holes but air can push water to make it flow through that small hole
Are we not gonna talk about the water bottle one, I'm in 7th grade. In physics, we've yet to study gravity, but as far as I'm concerned, it is a law of physics that exists.
Fun fact about those, Dont put them too close to eachother, bevause if you do, you might set your birthday cake on fire. I love those candles so much and always ask for them. I understand it takes away from it being a trick but it makes me happy. But they wont go out if they are Right next to eachother
I knew the third one was real for sure - many soy sauce bottles work like this. This principle is also why many water bottles have 2 holes; one for drinking, one for air flow.
Huh, I know what if you blow out a candle you can, for a very short bit, light the whisp of smoke. If you look at the video in slowmotion you can see the little flame travel down the whisp and light the flame, I thought that was what you did. I guessed the correct video, not the way it was faked tho!
the fact he put the cap on after taking it off sold the candle for me
Same
What cap?
@@Toydotafor the water bottle
@@BJK-hp1bk ofc cuz candle is water bottle
@@JustSomeoneRandomProgrammer cuz water bottle is right and there are only 1 trash so the candle is probably fake
EASY! The coin on the right was fake.
This IS a joke, Right?
@@JayceP13no
Yes@@JayceP13
@@JayceP13 Obviously.
It was a fake because all quarters are magnetic
2 is roughly how air conditioning works, drop in pressure makes gas cold
Yeah, though, in low enough pressures at the right drop rate you get what happened to those two guys during the B4 Dolphin incident. Blood boiled.
Joule Thomson effect
Charles' law
with one exception: hydrogen👀
@@flamez1499 Or blood, (I know it is a liquid) it then boils. If you want to know a gruesome story about this look up the B4 Dolphin incident. You can find pictures of one of the guys after it. Small spoiler of said image:
The guy looks likes shreaded chicken.
The trick to these kinds of videos isn’t finding which ones are true it’s finding which one is easier to fake
Or already knowing how the fake one was done.
for me I just know the science behind them.... None of these have been particularly difficult, the only one that ever caught me off guard was when none of them were fake because I was spending ages with the video paused trying to think which one could possibly be fake.
Or… just be knowledgeable
@@louthinatorI guess I could say the same (for 80% of the videos at least.) Being on the good side of internet long enough has taught me a lot of obscure science things. It’s how I knew video number 2 was real
@@londonnelson7359 Science has always been a passion of mine so all of this is stuff I've looked up before for one reason or another.
Additional fun fact. Dipping candles into a different type of wax was how they invented safety candles. Original candles would melt and collapse randomly often causing fires. Safety candles came after which were dipped in a slower burning wax. The inner wax would melt and burn first while the outer wax contained the liquid. It would eventually melt but always last. Now you could light a candle and it would burn uniformly all the way down to mostly nothing.
2 likes and 0 comments? Lemme fix that
Huh neat
Saying this phrase until I get 1k subs.
@@Alien_leader272 do content bruh u won't get subs by doing nothing
A trick trick candle
Flabbergasted
Discombobulated
Some might even say. Bamboozled
Preposterous
The bottle one is kind of fake because water will still come out for a while, it will just start to pull a vacuum in the bottle, I know because I’ve used plastic bottles for drip irrigation. It will get pretty crinkled before the flow actually stops completely.
I imagine it depends on how much water is in it. More water would want to keep flowing more because of pressure
Depends on how stiff the bottle is too. Some of them can be pretty sturdy, while others are only one step more rigid than plastic wrap.
Correct
That's not really true
Yes and no beacuse when the water comes out of the bottle it needs air to fill the space or there will just be a vacuum which is not possible in an atmosphere. It comes out for just a second when he puts the cap on beacuse it does not create a perfect seal.
A is fake. I know trick candles too well 😂
First is fake because I know the others are legit.
The beautiful process of deduction
@@valtarijunkkalaI call it process of elimination, but your way of saying it sounds cooler tbh.
@@valtarijunkkala it's luck.
@@VeteranVandal wdym luck? if you know there are 3 options, 1 fake, and you know which 2 are real, then the thing that you didn't think is true is your answer.
'Turns this regular candle into a trick can- '
'Ignite at the lower temperature of the em- '
Those two parts actually made me go crazy wtf
As a hobby candle maker this one was the easiest so far 😌
I’ve tried c it’s so cool to do
Yeah, I knew about the compressed air can and the water one makes sense if you think about air needing to displace the water and having no means of travel.
While adding a layer of wax to a candle doesn’t make it a trick candle, soaking cotton balls in wax lets them burn longer.
Well yeah it makes it burn longer because you just made a candle.
The bottle one doesn’t make sense in my opinion. If he showed the entire process with a bit of water leaking at the start until it slowly stopped then yes it would have made sense. You need some water to leak out first to create that initial suction from the vacuum which prevents further leakage
@@captainhd9741maybe check the full video, often times he doesn’t have the time in the shorts to explain the non fake ones.
The second one is kind of a trick question to me-- i just realised something
I said the second was wrong because here in Bahrain(an island with a really high humidity) when i use compressed air for more than 10 seconds ill get ice around the can from the air alone lol. So i was like this had to be a trick question by saying it needed to be in the water. Ty for listening to my ted talk
innocently smart
another person from bahrain
@@lumiixxne did not expect that lol. What anime is that character from?(your pfp)
@@acrackedwall I'm gonna take that as a compliment, so ty
well, the reality is that when a gas expands it gets cold, (which is half of the principle of how does the air conditioner work) so you need water in order to create the layer of ice, which in your case it's on the air itself.
The CO2 canister is an instant truth for me because of the safety warning
That’s not CO2
I know that b and c are true- for my engineering club when we were at a vex competition we used how cold those cans get to cool our motors between fights bc vex motors suck and take hours to cool on their own. And the c is just physics- if the holes are small enough the water’s tension will prevent air from getting through them, and without air coming through the top the water can’t leave cause there’s nothing to replace it. That means a must be false.
I agree A is false
I knew the trick candle one because the wicks are literally fatter and that remains unchanged in the video
The A is fake
CONCLUSION: Science is confusing as heck bruh 💀 ☠️ 💀 ☠️ 💀 ☠️
Bro how does the water one work 😭😭😭
Basically, something needs to replace the water which would flow out. The air can expand a little (and the water a very little), but pretty soon the force of gravity pulling water down and out of the bottle will no longer be enough to overcome the air's resistance to expansion, so the water just stays. It won't work as well if your bottle buckles easily. The surface tension is also important (keeping the water "in one piece" at the holes) otherwise air could flow in through one part of the holes and water out through the other.
Because ambient air pressure keeps the water in. The bottle is at a precarious equilibrium being helped by surface tension of the water. If the bottle were turned, it wouldn't work.
When the cap is screwed on the water cant escape because for water to escape it must be replaced by air, for it to not form a vaccum in the bottle , and when the cap is off, the place where water was originally, can be replaced by air
Ohhh I'm dumb
So all of the above makes sense, but given how squishy plastic bottles are, I'm still surprised it works.
the red paper throw is always so smooth
Anyone using a compressed air can knows they get cold as hell
Pretty sure the reason for the water is air can push the water a bit? Not sure, correct me if I’m wrong
it's mostly the surface tension which is why you need small holes. However the small amount of vacuum the drop in water level does assist.
@@bryantaylor948 ok
Should’ve probably explained what a “trick candle” is. Would be much easier with an explanation
I'm sure very few dont know what it is
@@ducksongfans people who aren’t native speakers don’t know. English people always forget that other countries exist 😂
I don’t know what it was and I’ve been speaking english for most of my life
the video basically gave it away though - the candle blew out and then reignited
@@mironsamokhvalov9323 sadly we're aware that America exists
A fake candle has aluminum flakes in the,wick so it never really goes out. The metal flakes and the unburnt carbon in the smoke will reignite it!
The intro never gets old
The candle guys
1-no idea
2-could be some pressure shenanigans
3-could be some pressure shenanigans
Guess 1 it is
Edit:pressure shenanigans moment wins again 👍
2nd clip is literally how ac works. Air gets compressed, heats up, gets cooled by the surroundings, then gets depressurised and cools down and cools the surroundings on the other side. Reverse this and you have a heat pump
I thought he would light it again from above when the smoke started coming up 😂
C is clearly fake because my Air Up bottle leaks even with the cap closed.
I knew A was fake, since I understand atomspheric pressure so the water is def true, and also I’ve felt the can get cold before but I didn’t know it was that cold
Keep that duster away from KingCobraJFS, he will make it disappear.
I answered A but when you were explaining I got confused because I thought you were saying it was real😂.
I done thought it was B.
Got it! The caution warning on the second one convinced me it was real- probably flawed reasoning but i dont care. The third one i knew was real.
i actually studied the latter 2 just recently in physics, so this one was an easy one for me, haha. they're both about pressure :]
I haven’t seen it yet, but I think it’s #2
newb
@@AveriV1holy fuck you destroyed them
💀💀💀😭😭😭🗣️🗣️🗣️😩😩😩🤫🤫🤫🧏🏻♂️🧏🏻♂️
The third one is fake as well. Poked holes in many water bottles before I open it and water squirts out of jt
The way he relit the candle in the first video, assuming it isn’t a trick candle, is by lighting the smoke that the candle lets off, letting down a trail of fire back to the wick and relighting it
I've seen cases of the other two done before, and the first one made no sense so it had to be it.. also kinda obvious when it went out
Still undefeated.
My self-padding on the back is that when the fake is A, I don't even need B and C to confirm.
Can you imagine if someone did all of these before finishing the video?
I swear I’ve seen this video before… anyone else, or is it just me?
The audio cut after the candle lighting up again is what sold the fact that the candle one is fake...
Big question how many tries to get the trick shot with the tiny bat?
Obviously a, you need magnesium for a trick candle
You can use the water bottle trick to make a diy automatic waterer for a plant, just either put the bottle in the pot so that at least one hole is in contact with the soil so it breaks the surface tension and slowly leaks out, or put the bottle on the soil and just barely open the top so that the water leaks slowly.
I only knew A was fake once he showed C off. I knew B was legit cus I've handled compressed air canisters, and those can get COLD.
The water thing makes sense if you know about basic physics. Water won’t come out unless a roughly equivalent volume of air is coming in, otherwise it would create vacuum. If you put a hole on the opposite side and layed the bottle over, it would also overflow that way.
The pressured air can works by using using a specific kind of pressurised air that absorbs heat when activated. It’s been known particularly among tech nerds that using it too much on one spot can produce ice, and the same can occur to the can if it’s not insulated. This isn’t that dangerous though, your body heat will usually neutralise it when your holding it.
For the candle, wax is wax, regardless of where it’s from. If the other layer of wax *did* interfere with the wick, it would interfere all throughout and wouldn’t become a trick candle.
I know the water bottle one is true because I used to drink the schools chocolate milk with the straw then mess around with it (if you know you know) and as someone who has messed with air dusters, I know they definitely do that.
You lit the smoke above the candle on fire. I've done it, it's so cool
Candle is easily the fake, just simple science
A trick candle 😂😂😂
Ive even done that compressed air trick.
The first one, "iT's iN rEvErSe"
i noticed the audio cut out at the end of the candle one and i was like "ooh i'm going to choose A based solely on this minuscule editing error since there's no way i'm gonna know the actual answer" but then i ACTUALLY knew it! the first one i got without guessing (granted i haven't seen all of them yet)
same the audio cut off just gave it away
You should include explanations of all 3.
He does longer versions of these on his channel but the shorts don't give him enough time
1.
2. Pv = n(ĝ) RT
3. P = (rho)gh
I realized it’s the first one because I have no idea what a trick candle is :P
Reignites when you blow it out.
Who guessed it correctly
👇
I think all the videos are trash
It's first round 3 I've ever seen in your videos
YEES I FINALLY GOT ONE RIGHT
A is wrong i think
Bro just boiled a bowl
A IS FAKE
a
A is definitely fake.
Fun fact: the reason why computer duster does that in a bowl of water is because computer duster is literally just a can of refrigerant.
Why it's legal to vent that shit into the atmosphere is a good question.
I’m guessing A.) and B.) are true and C.) is the wrong one. I hope I’m right!!!
I knew about the last once cuz u know science and the second one I knew was possible cuz when I was a kid I used one for a long time and it started to freeze in my hand
I could already tell that option A was the fake from the get-go because of all the steps involved
The magnesium is in the WICK of the candle NOT the wax! 🤦🤷 It's SO obvious. 🤔🤨
How old are you? 🫤
Man, they all seem fake :(
I think C is the fakest of them all, though, so I'm gonna have to go with that...
Wax: forbidden butter
E) all were fake
Hold on I don't know how the candle one was fake, cuz when I was a kid we lit candles in the house during power outages and I would put the melted wax on the the wick and when I tried to blow out the candle it would ignite again on its own and would also be harder to put out
Second one is because pressure is directly proportional to temperature so as the pressure decreases so does the temperature.
Third one is because of atmospheric pressure. Air needs to get into the bottle to allow water to flow out or it would create a vacuum
Man. That water bottle sure had some shock diamonds! 😂
I knew b was true as you can freeze your chest area (WARNING: Do not try this ESPECIALLY if you are female ) as I saw a rooster teeth video on it.
So it was down to a or c. I picked A as c seemed more realistic no airflow and more water means that the air doesn’t travel down to the holes.
Electronics dusters get painful-to-touch cold in a clearly endothermic process (not sure if it's solely gas equation or if there's a chemical reaction there) so that it can get cold enough to create ice is extremely easy to believe
The water bottle is a basic pressure equation, next
Adding layers of wax is how they make candles in the first place. And you're exposing the wick so you're just making a slightly thicker candle.
This one is alot easier then video 1 and 2 iv seen. I know air cans get cold when used. Iv seen C on a lot of physics channels. And I know you like to replace objects based of the last two videos iv seen so, I'm going to assume you replaced the candle "while I wasn't looking"
Edit here: He did not say while I wasn't looking line like he did before butttt was right
Had no clue about the candle so i chose C because of how easy it would be to fake even though i would believe it
I don’t believe in dragging kids into adult drama.. that said, all her lawyer talk is no different than anyone else on social media who threatens to do the same bc they don’t like something that was said.. etc. It’s a really fine line when you’re dealing with public forums. To start with, any time you sign up for ANY social media platform then you essentially signed a contract, you need to read the fine print. Most lawyers won’t even touch a case like hers, she’d have to hire someone who specializes in such matters. It’s a very tedious job bc they have to comb through video after video, message after message etc and they will start with her first just to make sure she didn’t instigate the situation to start with. Like I said, it’s a fine line. I have a fam member who is an entertainment lawyer which isn’t quite the same but some of it is similar. Much of it comes down to that fine print I spoke of.. but anyone can sue for anything if they want to give it a shot. 🤷🏻♀️
Definitely number one.
The wick burns, not the wax.
Number two is logical I guess,
And number three is a matter of surface Tension.
I knew the fake one was the candle, yet i still hoped i was wrong 😢
A is fake
A is false.
B seems reasonable enough
And I’m fairly certain C is true because the water can’t get out because that would change the pressure inside the bottle or something, I don’t know how to properly explain it
1. Wax is bad at conditioning heat
2. Idk how electronics spray works
3. The water does not flow by itself from small holes but air can push water to make it flow through that small hole
1 for sure, though i wasn't super confident about 2. Is it really ice? Or is it just lower pressure from being colder?
Are we not gonna talk about the water bottle one, I'm in 7th grade. In physics, we've yet to study gravity, but as far as I'm concerned, it is a law of physics that exists.
So is surface tension which doesn't allow air to get in through the holes and into the top of the bottle.
Try it yourself.
Good thing this is about fluid dynamics and not gravity
I understand the physics of B and C, but don’t see how A would work, so I’m going with A is fake.
It’s B
Ironically, I recently did the water bottle experiment with some kids at a camp I was volunteering at. It's pretty cool if done right.
Fun fact about those, Dont put them too close to eachother, bevause if you do, you might set your birthday cake on fire. I love those candles so much and always ask for them. I understand it takes away from it being a trick but it makes me happy. But they wont go out if they are Right next to eachother
I knew the third one was real for sure - many soy sauce bottles work like this. This principle is also why many water bottles have 2 holes; one for drinking, one for air flow.
A
A?
The PSA for the 2nd one gave it away that it was real for me.
Finnaly when school starts I can waste my friends water bottle
Huh, I know what if you blow out a candle you can, for a very short bit, light the whisp of smoke. If you look at the video in slowmotion you can see the little flame travel down the whisp and light the flame, I thought that was what you did. I guessed the correct video, not the way it was faked tho!