Curious about even MORE of the engineering process? Watch the extended cut that includes more tests on bone analogues and real bones at our page on Nebula: nebula.tv/videos/hacksmith-coating-my-bones-in-a-real-life-adamantium
@@s0uverains95Erm, I’m not saying it’s old news down here, and I’m not saying it isn’t. Canada kind of perversely prides itself on the Geneva Checklist but that’s only because you guys usually admit to your shenanigans. Eventually. Us, not so much.
Man, being able to 3-d print something in plastic and coat it in a thin layer of hyper-strong metal to make it as strong as a fully metal part is literally game-changing! The main reason complex geometries are so inconvenient is because translating the prototype into a useful part is so difficult.
Electroplating was invented 220 years ago and there is speculation it was already known in ancient times. Doing it on plastics became a thing in the 1960s.
One thing I think I would see this being a huge Benefit in would be the vehicle industry, so something like a tierod or a sway bar could me made out a of material like this, I'm halfway through the video but I think I would need to see more long-term testing done on how these parts would hold up
He should make a sternum bone of that or the skull he made and coat it with the material and then see how it does against a bullet cause wolverine gets shot in the head one time but it doesnt penetrate his skull
As someone that mainly watches the more scientific and technical side of YT, I really appreciate the how detailed and methodical this video is while still being fun. It might be my favorite video I've seen on this channel. Definitely my favorite in recent memory.
You think that that hasn't been in production for YEARS? As far as I can tell, it started back in the Cold War era, post WWII. People thought that Captain America was just something someone "made up." Oh no, It's been working since the 1940's. Until we had the technology necessary, though, it wasn't working out. We have made ASTOUNDING leaps in the last 100 years. Far more than any other time period before. I can PROMISE you that the SSS has been in production since your grandparents were little.
As funny as this is, we'd probably need you more Dr Raynor... I'm pretty sure the amount of injuries would actually go up with people trying to test the limits of their new metal-coated bones.
If nanovate can be applied to anything, it might be used to create ultralight, but ultra-strong planes/jets capable of flying further and faster on less fuel. It might extend the battery life on electric flying vehicles like the Black Fly if they can cut the weight down. Awesome vid.
You want him to make metal-coated metal claws that are practically indestructible AND immensly sharp? You want him to put the indestructible shield on the all-piercing spear
It’s theoretically possible to replace most of someone’s bones (it would be hard to replace someone’s skull and spine, though.). However, if someone’s bones were completely replaced, it would kill them. Normally, bone marrow is where red blood cells are created. Without marrow, someone’s blood cells would die off without being replaced by new ones, causing death due to anemia. In order to give someone a titanium skeleton, you’d need to give them a new hemogenic organ. I’d put it in their body cavity. Take a mesh framework, run a bunch of small veins through it, and then gradually transplant their marrow onto the frame. Then, seal it so that the marrow stays put. The new blood enters the circulatory system through the thin walls of the rerouted veins, and the marrow can’t leave. Once all of the marrow is transplanted in this way, it should be possible to completely replace someone’s bones. However, titanium doesn’t repair itself like normal bones. You’d need to use nanomachines or gene-modded cells for structural repair. Once this operation was completed, whoever had their bones replaced would need to stop eating calcium and start eating titanium. Otherwise, they’d have massive kidney stones. //From a kind redit user/Mythopoeist
@@kloaken1 that's would be a lot of tictac) Which uses titanium oxide as white dye. I watched a video about the concept of a titanium skeleton. It was said that the skeleton should be mended if damaged
Wooden bats are heavier iirc so it might make sense that it would impart more force on a hit. Plus, the points of the barbed wire might act kind of like a window-punch and focus the force on a fine point and allow the bat to crack bones easier.
Bones are an organ brother! They constantly build and dissolve with osteoblasts/clasts in response to age, activity, diet, etc. and produce nearly all WBC and RBC lineages (immune system and blood). You can’t inject or coat them…you could surgically replace a select few but it’d damage/scar tissue. Beyond that we need nano tech advanced enough to make the healing and immortality of Wolverine. Pa - love your work and glad you stuck around :)
Plus I think everything around it like cartilage and muscles will be fatigued and you're limbs all gonna come off ,and ignoring all that you'd lose balance and break everything because you're skull would be heavy as heck
There is an easier way. Imagine if you were wearing armor or a suit made of this stuff. A chest plate of this stuff would probably be very hard to crush or break but it would be remarkably light. Bullets would probably be too much, but it would be interesting to see how tough it would be.
Tbh, when James talked about bones structure and then put “but that is not what you are here for”.. realised I could listen him talking about everything. Love the videos!❤
I think it's severely under appreciated how awesome it is that James can cosplay such a wide range of characters from different universes so accurately!
As a fan of the nerdier and more sciency stuff on the channel, this is the best Hacksmith video in over a year. Fantastic. Real engineering. Now, if only James had superhuman healing to survive the plating process. And umm... if the plating wouldn't interfere with bone barrow and whatever other processes need to happen inside bones. If any at all.
Thanks Matt, been my life for the past month, started it beginning of the year. 100 hours of editing this week alone myself, until midnight every day! Problem is, content like this isn't sustainable. Maybe one every few months at most.
@@hacksmith And we love that you guys are willing to put in the time, money, and effort to give us these treats whenever you can, even knowing that they wouldn't be sustainable for the channel on their own. It's a labor of love.
@@hacksmith Indeed, which is why we also love the smaller, more sustainable project you guys put out. Not only are they fun on their own, but they help bankroll these larger projects you guys make just because you want to! It’s all about balance~
And this just shows once again why this is one of my top youtube channels because this is insane that we have come this far in technology to be able to create such works of art and strength
Great. One idea for you is next, coat your bone claws with the nano stuff, then see how it performs as wolverine’s claws. But maybe don’t use your actual bone claws, make another pair or something, and coat that one with the nanobate(or however you spell it).
I love when creators make products that are actually legitimate, useful, and specifically tailored for their audience. That is a whole lotta utility in a small package with that knife/multitool. This was also a great video, and you guys obviously put a lot of work into it. Can't wait to see more, DP & Wolverine is awesome, and looking forward to seeing the latest liquid oxygen lightsaber update. Cheers!
32:30 The primary problem would be joints. Metal on metal joints in implants got the implants recalled because the ions coming off of them as they slowly eroded in the body were very toxic. Also the crosslinked bulk UHMWPE used to replace metal on metal joints would not hold up to such heavy loads without considerable young's modulus gradient matching with intermediate materials. I think one of the intermediate layers might end up being crosslinked bulk para-aramid (LCP). I also imagine the UHMWPE bearing surfaces would need to be much larger than normal joints to avoid galling. Then imagine the increased accelerative and shock forces upon the brain from living permanently in such a body as a superhero. Lifespan would be inverse to the concussions per day doing superhero things with superhero bones and joints. You would need a whole body of these implants to prevent destruction at the interface. Implants subjected to high forces will destroy themselves or surrounding bones depending upon the implant in question. In short, considerable further engineering of biocompatibility and joints required. Then it is still not survivable as designed due to incompatibility of increased impact forces with human brains and other organs.
I hope there will be a two handed version because I’m from Germany and flip knife like one handed are not really good to open Carrie. I hope that is coming at two handed version out.?😊
4:08 imagine how heavy your body would feel, no more swimming, running and jumping💀… we forget Logan was already a supernatural being before the procedure🤧🤷🏾♂️💯
Hacksmith in 2014 : So, Wolverein have really cool claws... So we made them ! Hacksmith in 2024 : So theses claws have a really cool guy... So we made it !
❤... You want to talk about synchronicity... I just learned/subscribed to Dr.Chris Raynor a couple months ago randomly came across in my UA-cam feed(❤️HimBTW!) & somehow I came across your channel through multiple other channels that had nothing to relate to this doctor lol. It's just crazy how our paths can intersect, how our connections happen, and you can actually see it when you're using technology(i.e. UA-cam algorithms)I guess? I don't know, I sound like a crazy person but I'm not! (I dont think?😅) I have had a couple drinks but hell I'm 44 years old,I live in a nursing home in Little Rock Arkansas, and UA-cam has become a big part of my life because it gives me connection with the same like-minded people in this world!❤ YOU ALL!
This man deserves 100 plus million subscribers, he's working on things we though just could happen in movies only but this man made all of them into reality and still surprises with more and more. He's the real genius and all of his team making fiction into reality
All your Projects are awesome, but this one blew my mind. Most projects I can understand, and I like the engineering that makes it work. This one is different. It really feels like a bug in a video game. It should not be possible to bend a solid chunk of tool steel with a 1mm coating on plastic. Its like a cheatcode for physics. Just today The Action Lab uploaded a video on the tensile strength of black widow spider silk, which is about 1.2 Gpa. This nanocoating reaching 2 Gpa is INSANE! This might even be useful for space elevators.
I cant believe ive been here for a decade.. since you did parkour. Qnd now you are doing rocket science and genetic mutation... love to see it. Thanks for existing.
This is honestly one of my favorite videos yet. I started resin 3d printing at home about a year and a half ago and I've just begun electroplating my models with zinc so this was exactly my sort of thing. Awesome stuff guys! I really hope you can make that full model of yourself and those hacksmith skeleton key-rings you mentioned would be hilarious.
i'm pretty sure that actually coating living bone with metal would cause a lot of problems in the body. first the body is probably still going to want to coat it in calcium...not too big of an issue there, the next part is that red blood cells are created in the bone marrow and a metal coating could prevent the blood cells from getting out and prevent nutrients from getting in (the outer shell of a bone is not as solid as it may seem) you would probably kill the bone, and then yourself when you ran out of red blood cells, not to mention the body might attack the metal. you could probably survive having a few key bones coated, assuming the metal is biocompatible. the skull is a good contender, and maybe the cervical vertebrae. as mentioned the bone will basically die, but you will still likely have enough red blood cell production from the other bones for it to be less of an issue. you are basically replacing the bone, it's the same as if you took it out and put a metal bone in its place. of course you aren't wolverine, your skull won't break, but your flesh will be less lucky. and then that comes to the flesh, coating bones while they are inside your body means you will likely end up coating flesh as well. you consider the face bones, they have a lot of spots where muscles attach to them, either those spots wont be coated or the ligaments will be coated. you would almost have to remove the bones, coat them, put them back in, and reattach all the muscles. i could go on, but i think i've made my point.
The easy way to fix this is to not fully coat the bones in metal but kinda weave the metal around the bone and leave some space for the real bone like symbiosis with the bone
Hence why he made a 3d printed version of his bone to coat in metal lol. Eventually though, if nanotechnology could be optimized to make a fibrous surface to let new blood cells travel through etc. It could be possible in the future. This is also why wolverine was able to survive the process because of his healing powers.
james i just gotta say you're living my dream life right now, im 15 and i say your channel like 3 years ago and its help keep my dream of building an ironman suit alive along with inspiring me to come up with other cool ideas, so thank you and keep doing what you're doing.
Seeing the spider mech on the background at 40:02 (which was one of my fave things you've ever done) made me think it could benefit from 'adamantium' as well
This channel is constantly giving my ideas for my fictional sci fi universe, and this video did not disappoint. Such an awsome innovation and I can't wait to see that whole skeleton and the Super Soldier Serum he talked about in the video.
I can see this technology being applied to prosthetics. With a strong metal coating you could make smaller intricate parts that would be durable to everyday wear and tear. We could even end up having cyborg arms one day if technology advanced enough. The possibilities are honestly endless. Imagine a spaceship or submarine covered in this material.
With his healing factor imagine the pain of the claws ripping through the flesh of his knuckles and moving his bones then retracts to heal and cycle repeats
you still have to account for what connects the bones, because no matter how strong the bone is, it could still be dislocated and could cause internal bleeding and the bone could still pop out through your skin and tearing/disrupting muscle tissue and you would need to amputate.
As someone who was born with denser bones, and who weights more than you'd think looking at me (and sinking like a rock in water). This was personally a really interesting topic even putting aside the cool factor of everything that went on in the video.
@@SaveTheFuture I tend to take my time walking but I'm not inherently slow moving, just more mindful of falling or bumping into things. And typically I'm the opposite, with too much energy at times.
9:43 - "reverse tanto style blade". My brother in smithing, that is a broken-back seax blade! Looks like a nice, slim little tool! Keep up the good work!
Ready for the cool knife. My dad has been tired of losing his knife and pliers lately. Since he retired he only wears shorts lol. He won't wear a single bladed folding knife because he likes his multi bladed older knifes but they don't have side clips. Bet he would carry this handy knife with its multifunctions,, clip, and smaller size.
Regarding canmax imaging and preemptive medical scanning, the chances of finding a false positive from them are much higher than finding a true positive. Medlife crisis, a cardiologist, has a great video explaining why scanning when you ain't getting symptoms does more harm than good. But this sort of curiosity scanning is a perfect use for it.
From the moment I understood the weakness of my flesh, it disgusted me. I claimed the strength and certainty of steel. I aspired to the purity of the blessed machine. Your kind cling to your flesh as if it will not decay and fail you. One day the cooled biomass that you called a temple will wither and you'll beg my kind to save you. But I am already saved. For the machine is immortal. Even in death i serve the Omnissiah.
Toll the Great Bell once. Pull the lever to engage the piston and pump. Toll the Great Bell twice. With push of button fire the engine and spark turbine into life. Toll the Great Bell thrice. Sing praise to the God of all machines.
Remember though: Bone hardenes after death quickly, so even a few hours after a bone was taken out of the body, it will be not representative to a living bone. Living bone is more flexible than old bone!
IDEA FOR THE MULTITOOL- mill out a little circle/rectangle on a nice surface, glue/attach tiny little mirror, for use with tweezers for if something is in your eye
This really is insane the more you think about it. Wow! I can't believe it. This has always been science fiction, this may be the biggest thing to be made real here yet. The future of this technology can change lives
Every episode Deadpool takes his step-son out on adventures across the Marvel Multiverse and at the end of each episode he's like "Don't tell your Mom!"
On the topic of multitools: I wish I had a multitool that came with a bit holder, so it could hold various tool bits AND where the knife blade is replaceable. Because in my line of work, I go through knife blades like crazy so it's no use trying to get a fancy knife and maintain it through sharpening because the level of abuse just doesn't make it worthwhile. So a multitool with a fold out bit holder, pliers and knifeblade that can be replaced with fresh blades and all of my dreams would come true.
I use the file on this great multitool all the time on my fingernails at my office job, because sometimes my fingernails get in the way of my work. Best purchase ever. Good job, Hackman!
working in a project like that must be crazy interesting ngl, im saying this as a mechatronics engineer (student) this is a crazy concept to follow through, so much stuff to use with. so many possibilities XD
Curious about even MORE of the engineering process? Watch the extended cut that includes more tests on bone analogues and real bones at our page on Nebula: nebula.tv/videos/hacksmith-coating-my-bones-in-a-real-life-adamantium
Only 1 reply
@@hrznblizzard2282 make that 2
Only 2 replies
guys, i could help you make a conscious AI
Oh please I beg a Electric Guitar made with metal Of your bones
Dude casually drops that he’s working on super soldier serum
Classic Hacksmith shenanigans
Dont tell the yanks
Bro’s going to destroy half of America
@@s0uverains95Erm, I’m not saying it’s old news down here, and I’m not saying it isn’t.
Canada kind of perversely prides itself on the Geneva Checklist but that’s only because you guys usually admit to your shenanigans. Eventually. Us, not so much.
@@markfergerson2145 "you guys"? I'm not canadian
Man, being able to 3-d print something in plastic and coat it in a thin layer of hyper-strong metal to make it as strong as a fully metal part is literally game-changing! The main reason complex geometries are so inconvenient is because translating the prototype into a useful part is so difficult.
Electroplating was invented 220 years ago and there is speculation it was already known in ancient times. Doing it on plastics became a thing in the 1960s.
@@kazioo2 But the strength of the resulting parts didn't go anywhere near that of a full metal part... Until now that is
One thing I think I would see this being a huge Benefit in would be the vehicle industry, so something like a tierod or a sway bar could me made out a of material like this, I'm halfway through the video but I think I would need to see more long-term testing done on how these parts would hold up
He should make a sternum bone of that or the skull he made and coat it with the material and then see how it does against a bullet cause wolverine gets shot in the head one time but it doesnt penetrate his skull
What if he use the material to line his John wick suit that way it would be a lot more durable
As someone that mainly watches the more scientific and technical side of YT, I really appreciate the how detailed and methodical this video is while still being fun. It might be my favorite video I've seen on this channel. Definitely my favorite in recent memory.
4:14 Are we just gonna gloss over the fact that he's involved in a project to create REAL LIFE SUPER SOILDER SERUM?
We boutta make Captain America
aha super funny aha so funny aha
Lol
You think that that hasn't been in production for YEARS? As far as I can tell, it started back in the Cold War era, post WWII. People thought that Captain America was just something someone "made up." Oh no, It's been working since the 1940's. Until we had the technology necessary, though, it wasn't working out. We have made ASTOUNDING leaps in the last 100 years. Far more than any other time period before. I can PROMISE you that the SSS has been in production since your grandparents were little.
Nanomachines, son! They harden in response to physical trauma. You can't hurt me, Jack.
What did I just say?
don't f**k with this senator!
Checked the internet lately?
(proceeds to still punch)
Fr
Thanks for the shout out, brother! Greatly appreciated! If only we could all coat our bones with this material, it might put me out of business.😂
I was planning on showing up to your office with a box of metal bones to ask you to swap them, but ran out of time making the video 😅
As funny as this is, we'd probably need you more Dr Raynor... I'm pretty sure the amount of injuries would actually go up with people trying to test the limits of their new metal-coated bones.
It makes me rather curious about potential applications for nano-coatings that stimulate growth/healing of fractured bones.
Yeah I bet people would forget we still have delicate skin and that we bleed @@ebixxdracion
@@Deadpool2566. EXACTLY! Bones aside we'd still be fairly squishy.
I need this for my suit!!!
Do you think your suit will ever be able to fly?
@@NuclearRocks We already have jetpack tech, so in the next 10 years probably
I was thinking you might need this!
Holy shit Alex yes
Can't wait to meet you at a Comic Con in my Anthem Javelin Suit!
Will be 10-15 years in the making from now of course 😏
If nanovate can be applied to anything, it might be used to create ultralight, but ultra-strong planes/jets capable of flying further and faster on less fuel. It might extend the battery life on electric flying vehicles like the Black Fly if they can cut the weight down. Awesome vid.
Indestructible bicycles! 🦾😎
dude, you HAVE to put your wolverine claws through this process
You want him to make metal-coated metal claws that are practically indestructible AND immensly sharp? You want him to put the indestructible shield on the all-piercing spear
@@amirshlomolavan yes
@@amirshlomolavanya know… this technology would be incredible for battle bots…
@@collinschofield808and probably way to expensive unfortunately
i also want to know how well that alloy retains an edge
It’s theoretically possible to replace most of someone’s bones (it would be hard to replace someone’s skull and spine, though.). However, if someone’s bones were completely replaced, it would kill them. Normally, bone marrow is where red blood cells are created. Without marrow, someone’s blood cells would die off without being replaced by new ones, causing death due to anemia.
In order to give someone a titanium skeleton, you’d need to give them a new hemogenic organ. I’d put it in their body cavity. Take a mesh framework, run a bunch of small veins through it, and then gradually transplant their marrow onto the frame. Then, seal it so that the marrow stays put. The new blood enters the circulatory system through the thin walls of the rerouted veins, and the marrow can’t leave.
Once all of the marrow is transplanted in this way, it should be possible to completely replace someone’s bones. However, titanium doesn’t repair itself like normal bones. You’d need to use nanomachines or gene-modded cells for structural repair. Once this operation was completed, whoever had their bones replaced would need to stop eating calcium and start eating titanium. Otherwise, they’d have massive kidney stones.
//From a kind redit user/Mythopoeist
@@kloaken1 that's would be a lot of tictac)
Which uses titanium oxide as white dye.
I watched a video about the concept of a titanium skeleton. It was said that the skeleton should be mended if damaged
I could have really used this tech when I got run over by a tank in the military... 😄
Gene edit them to allow for the regeneration of bones.
But is it medically possible to coat a human skeleton with this metal and have no issues that’s the real question
At that point the tendons should also be upgraded.
2:43 HE SAID THE LINE! PRAISE THE OMNISSIAH!
Praise the Machine God!
Mechanicus themed project soon? if it so pleases the omnissiah
Even in death I serve the Omnissiah.
may the machine god bless the machinery that was created by the hacksmith
PRAISE BE TO THE OMNISSIAH !!!
39:25 the fact that negan was able to smash glenn and abrahams head in that easily with a wooden bat is just crazy.
Wooden bats are heavier iirc so it might make sense that it would impart more force on a hit. Plus, the points of the barbed wire might act kind of like a window-punch and focus the force on a fine point and allow the bat to crack bones easier.
I love how he is just casually turning himself into a superhuman
and in the meantime bulding the skeleton of a Terminator lol
Isn't he also making a lightsaber on top of all that?
@@Casual-Yohoho-Enjoyeralready made a lightsaber
@@theillusionaryone still working on some new ones probably
@@theillusionaryone he made proto-saber, it's different thing
From the Elysium exoskeleton 9 years ago to a nanotech endoskeleton in 2024, my time as a hacksmith subscriber has been incredible
Your Skull: breaks instantly
VS
Turboflex Skull: Bends a little
Still an ouchie
Flex Skull (from the same guy as flex tape): fixes it self with flex tape!
have fun trying to unbend it to reduce the constant pressure on the brain while the other skull grows back together
@@AKR_ice It even works in water!
just slap some flex tape on it
We need Hacksmith to be the next Wolverine/Logan.
He is Canadian, ripped, etc.
This is great content.
He even has the mutton chops to boot :D
Bones are an organ brother!
They constantly build and dissolve with osteoblasts/clasts in response to age, activity, diet, etc. and produce nearly all WBC and RBC lineages (immune system and blood). You can’t inject or coat them…you could surgically replace a select few but it’d damage/scar tissue.
Beyond that we need nano tech advanced enough to make the healing and immortality of Wolverine.
Pa - love your work and glad you stuck around :)
Plus I think everything around it like cartilage and muscles will be fatigued and you're limbs all gonna come off ,and ignoring all that you'd lose balance and break everything because you're skull would be heavy as heck
Even in cinematic universe Wolverine's healing factor is the only reason he's able to undergo the procedure.
@@meh4294 obviously after this you'd have immense physical therapy and the weight of the skull wouldnt change too much
Yeah, there are so so many problems with this. Even more than you've already mentioned.
There is an easier way. Imagine if you were wearing armor or a suit made of this stuff. A chest plate of this stuff would probably be very hard to crush or break but it would be remarkably light. Bullets would probably be too much, but it would be interesting to see how tough it would be.
I love how Hacksmith always wears movie accurate outfits 😆
15:44
38:35 john wicks new wepon
rs
The look on your old professors face at 27:44. Can't believe you even shocked him for a second. 😂
XD i was thinking he couldn't afford the repairs for the machine...
this was actually incredible. This is absolutely game changing
It makes me so happy to see him in such a good mental state, he's so happy and it melts my heart.
Tbh, when James talked about bones structure and then put “but that is not what you are here for”.. realised I could listen him talking about everything.
Love the videos!❤
I think it's severely under appreciated how awesome it is that James can cosplay such a wide range of characters from different universes so accurately!
I ABSOLUTELY LOVE HOW COMFORTABLE HE IS IN THIS VID❤
This video is just him geeking out about bones, metal and superheroes for 40 minutes this was so much fun!!
Give him 15 years, he is literally going to be a real life superman
Alright bet
Probably closer to Iron Wolverine or some crazy crossover like that
He doesn’t fuck with DC bro
hmm seems youtube, IS angered from what i said.
“ill give him 15 years to die to Side -EFFECTs-, stop playing god idiots.”
As a fan of the nerdier and more sciency stuff on the channel, this is the best Hacksmith video in over a year. Fantastic. Real engineering. Now, if only James had superhuman healing to survive the plating process. And umm... if the plating wouldn't interfere with bone barrow and whatever other processes need to happen inside bones. If any at all.
Thanks Matt, been my life for the past month, started it beginning of the year. 100 hours of editing this week alone myself, until midnight every day!
Problem is, content like this isn't sustainable. Maybe one every few months at most.
Hi hacksmith
@@hacksmith And we love that you guys are willing to put in the time, money, and effort to give us these treats whenever you can, even knowing that they wouldn't be sustainable for the channel on their own. It's a labor of love.
But... when it's not sustainable, even as a labor of love... it means the channel can't survive 😞
@@hacksmith Indeed, which is why we also love the smaller, more sustainable project you guys put out. Not only are they fun on their own, but they help bankroll these larger projects you guys make just because you want to! It’s all about balance~
And this just shows once again why this is one of my top youtube channels because this is insane that we have come this far in technology to be able to create such works of art and strength
when the patient woke up, his skeleton was missing...
then he woke up a second time, his skeleton coated in the world's greatest nanotechnology!
@@Sl4ts_ the patient was a meat puddle when he woke up?
Anyway, that’s how I lost my medical license
@@ksoundkaiju9256 he fell asleep first at the sleepover
@@yaramudriy9636DOKTOR ARE YOU SHURE THIS WILL WORK
@@M3G4_M472
"Now _most_ skeletons couldn't handle this voltage, but I'm _fairly_ certain _your_ skeleton-"
So cool😎. They always deliver us the closed thing possible to sci-fi today.
From the moment I understood the weakness of my flesh + Nanomachines son + Adamantium + Super soldier serum. Bro this is metal af.
LITERALLY
This guy getting slowly invincible to rule the world and nobody noticed 😂
It'll just be him and Kyle hill in eternal conflict
This channel is single handedly keeping my inner child and my scientific inquiry alive.
Great. One idea for you is next, coat your bone claws with the nano stuff, then see how it performs as wolverine’s claws. But maybe don’t use your actual bone claws, make another pair or something, and coat that one with the nanobate(or however you spell it).
I love when creators make products that are actually legitimate, useful, and specifically tailored for their audience. That is a whole lotta utility in a small package with that knife/multitool.
This was also a great video, and you guys obviously put a lot of work into it.
Can't wait to see more, DP & Wolverine is awesome, and looking forward to seeing the latest liquid oxygen lightsaber update. Cheers!
32:30 The primary problem would be joints. Metal on metal joints in implants got the implants recalled because the ions coming off of them as they slowly eroded in the body were very toxic. Also the crosslinked bulk UHMWPE used to replace metal on metal joints would not hold up to such heavy loads without considerable young's modulus gradient matching with intermediate materials. I think one of the intermediate layers might end up being crosslinked bulk para-aramid (LCP). I also imagine the UHMWPE bearing surfaces would need to be much larger than normal joints to avoid galling. Then imagine the increased accelerative and shock forces upon the brain from living permanently in such a body as a superhero. Lifespan would be inverse to the concussions per day doing superhero things with superhero bones and joints. You would need a whole body of these implants to prevent destruction at the interface. Implants subjected to high forces will destroy themselves or surrounding bones depending upon the implant in question.
In short, considerable further engineering of biocompatibility and joints required. Then it is still not survivable as designed due to incompatibility of increased impact forces with human brains and other organs.
Dude this is so smart you're absolutely right
And the skeleton will cut thru the skin on the impact
This makes so much sense you really smart mate
I love your videos, i can’t wait for the Smith Blade!
Do you know the cost? Im broke rn haha
@@professionaldiscordmoderator asked that recently lol
I hope there will be a two handed version because I’m from Germany and flip knife like one handed are not really good to open Carrie. I hope that is coming at two handed version out.?😊
Ikr I can't wait to see the video about Super Soldier serum
4:08 imagine how heavy your body would feel, no more swimming, running and jumping💀… we forget Logan was already a supernatural being before the procedure🤧🤷🏾♂️💯
Hacksmith in 2014 : So, Wolverein have really cool claws... So we made them !
Hacksmith in 2024 : So theses claws have a really cool guy... So we made it !
“In this video my heart becomes powered by a small nuclear reaction”
How many sponsor segments do you want?
Hacksmith: yes
With the projects they plan and make, the costs can _really_ build up. It’s necessary for good content
@@guts60 yeah I know, just thought it was funny
these sponsored segments are actually pretty cool tho
@@vesph7067 depends, for example the snap thing was quite skippable
All the segments made sense too. Not just a cool video but also practical sponsors. Nice.
We need more of deadpool man.
nanomachines, son!
I love this comment
They harden in response to physical trauma.
@@Harbinger5777 You can't hurt me, Jack
You _can't_ hurt me, Jack!
what did i just say?
Imagine a full skeleton T-800 walking at you with this sort of bone. That hand legit looks straight off of one. So sick man.
Next vid: *Covering my own skeleton in REAL LIFE ADIMANTIUM and testing how BULLETPROOF I am!!!*
bro
Sounds like a good video
❤... You want to talk about synchronicity... I just learned/subscribed to Dr.Chris Raynor a couple months ago randomly came across in my UA-cam feed(❤️HimBTW!) & somehow I came across your channel through multiple other channels that had nothing to relate to this doctor lol. It's just crazy how our paths can intersect, how our connections happen, and you can actually see it when you're using technology(i.e. UA-cam algorithms)I guess? I don't know, I sound like a crazy person but I'm not! (I dont think?😅) I have had a couple drinks but hell I'm 44 years old,I live in a nursing home in Little Rock Arkansas, and UA-cam has become a big part of my life because it gives me connection with the same like-minded people in this world!❤ YOU ALL!
This man deserves 100 plus million subscribers, he's working on things we though just could happen in movies only but this man made all of them into reality and still surprises with more and more. He's the real genius and all of his team making fiction into reality
Now do it but surgically put metal into your real bones permanently
yes
I 100% think it would work like actual wolverine, and it would poison the blood quickly
Gonna get a lil awkward around the skull surgery
Theoretically, he could replace his bones with titanium ones
@@quncle doctor like “wait wtf how do we get in there?”
All your Projects are awesome, but this one blew my mind. Most projects I can understand, and I like the engineering that makes it work. This one is different.
It really feels like a bug in a video game. It should not be possible to bend a solid chunk of tool steel with a 1mm coating on plastic. Its like a cheatcode for physics.
Just today The Action Lab uploaded a video on the tensile strength of black widow spider silk, which is about 1.2 Gpa.
This nanocoating reaching 2 Gpa is INSANE! This might even be useful for space elevators.
The metal reminds me more of Vibranium considering how light it is, very cool stuff. Love this channel
I cant believe ive been here for a decade.. since you did parkour. Qnd now you are doing rocket science and genetic mutation... love to see it. Thanks for existing.
“I’m working with a doctor to make a super solder serum” I’m sorry WHAT?!
Hacksmiths wanna be Captain America fr fr!
This is honestly one of my favorite videos yet. I started resin 3d printing at home about a year and a half ago and I've just begun electroplating my models with zinc so this was exactly my sort of thing. Awesome stuff guys! I really hope you can make that full model of yourself and those hacksmith skeleton key-rings you mentioned would be hilarious.
You should make the Mithril Coat from the Hobbit with the Nanovate! This would be really cool to see.
Use the coating to make a feather weight katana. Test out the coating's resistance to heat and cold. I'm also curious if the coating is bulletproof.
The brick throw at the beginning caught me so off-guard 😭
i have sponsorblock so it literally just looked like he got hit with a brick and continued with the video
@@ZoeyMikol That was basically it anyway lmao it was a 3 second plug
Where?
Ohhh 0:48
"There are 206 bones in the human body. 207 if I'm watching Gossip Girl."
Why am I not surprised you quoted deadpool there
Ayo?😊
SCIENCE!!!!!!!!!!! AND METAL, both the best combinations!
i'm pretty sure that actually coating living bone with metal would cause a lot of problems in the body. first the body is probably still going to want to coat it in calcium...not too big of an issue there, the next part is that red blood cells are created in the bone marrow and a metal coating could prevent the blood cells from getting out and prevent nutrients from getting in (the outer shell of a bone is not as solid as it may seem) you would probably kill the bone, and then yourself when you ran out of red blood cells, not to mention the body might attack the metal.
you could probably survive having a few key bones coated, assuming the metal is biocompatible. the skull is a good contender, and maybe the cervical vertebrae. as mentioned the bone will basically die, but you will still likely have enough red blood cell production from the other bones for it to be less of an issue. you are basically replacing the bone, it's the same as if you took it out and put a metal bone in its place.
of course you aren't wolverine, your skull won't break, but your flesh will be less lucky. and then that comes to the flesh, coating bones while they are inside your body means you will likely end up coating flesh as well. you consider the face bones, they have a lot of spots where muscles attach to them, either those spots wont be coated or the ligaments will be coated.
you would almost have to remove the bones, coat them, put them back in, and reattach all the muscles.
i could go on, but i think i've made my point.
The easy way to fix this is to not fully coat the bones in metal but kinda weave the metal around the bone and leave some space for the real bone like symbiosis with the bone
Hence why he made a 3d printed version of his bone to coat in metal lol. Eventually though, if nanotechnology could be optimized to make a fibrous surface to let new blood cells travel through etc. It could be possible in the future.
This is also why wolverine was able to survive the process because of his healing powers.
"Um actually 🤓☝️"
33:23
"Thor-thousand, Thor-hundred, and Thorty-Thor pounds." 😂😂😂😂
LMAO
lol I heard that too I thought I was not hearing it right
Loving the geekout over the engineering specifics.
Such an amazing project 👍
james i just gotta say you're living my dream life right now, im 15 and i say your channel like 3 years ago and its help keep my dream of building an ironman suit alive along with inspiring me to come up with other cool ideas, so thank you and keep doing what you're doing.
Seeing the spider mech on the background at 40:02 (which was one of my fave things you've ever done) made me think it could benefit from 'adamantium' as well
Yeah, I remember it collapsed because the materials weren't strong enough at this weight.
This channel is constantly giving my ideas for my fictional sci fi universe, and this video did not disappoint. Such an awsome innovation and I can't wait to see that whole skeleton and the Super Soldier Serum he talked about in the video.
Bro made fiction into reality, bro is the best mechanic engineer youtuber ever
I can see this technology being applied to prosthetics. With a strong metal coating you could make smaller intricate parts that would be durable to everyday wear and tear. We could even end up having cyborg arms one day if technology advanced enough. The possibilities are honestly endless. Imagine a spaceship or submarine covered in this material.
4:01 so, Logan wasn't kidding with how those hurt every time they come out. (look at how the bones of his hand move when the claws extend.😰)
With his healing factor imagine the pain of the claws ripping through the flesh of his knuckles and moving his bones then retracts to heal and cycle repeats
@@David-nq8cv Imagine the pain of the skin trying to repair while the claws are out
you still have to account for what connects the bones, because no matter how strong the bone is, it could still be dislocated and could cause internal bleeding and the bone could still pop out through your skin and tearing/disrupting muscle tissue and you would need to amputate.
Way to derail the fanboy hypetrain
Skin and flesh might tear too
Also bones make blood inside of them..... So... How will it work out we don't know.
@@KumkumBeatsadamantium needle to make holes for the blood
@@SeveralGhost it would have to be small and a lot of them like a sponge but idk if the structure will break or not
That scene with Hugh Hackman coming out of the submersion chamber is the most epic movie moments
As someone who was born with denser bones, and who weights more than you'd think looking at me (and sinking like a rock in water).
This was personally a really interesting topic even putting aside the cool factor of everything that went on in the video.
@@MeleeTiger dang, now I kind of want more details on that…
Do you have the downside of being not able to move as fast and being effectively lower energy? No offense intended lol, really am curious.
@@SaveTheFuture I tend to take my time walking but I'm not inherently slow moving, just more mindful of falling or bumping into things. And typically I'm the opposite, with too much energy at times.
@@MeleeTiger oh, so although your bones are stronger you have more weight that can contribute to injuring the areas of your body that aren’t bony?
@@MeleeTigerdo you know exzctly how much thicker your bones are?
The coating technology would definitely be interesting for aftermarket engine parts for cars like super strong and light piston rods
9:43 - "reverse tanto style blade". My brother in smithing, that is a broken-back seax blade!
Looks like a nice, slim little tool! Keep up the good work!
James in excitedly reading the strength test results reminds me of Adam Savage. I think the Hacksmith just might be an alternate version of him.
No way James pulled the Mechanicus line.
So is that a hint at a Warhammer build someday?
Real life bolter perhaps, or maybe his serum is a precursor to the astatres gene seed.
@@sworn7705 if you made a real life bolter in Canada the RCMP would put you in jail and throw away the key lol
This was the best video in a while! Really cool!
I know not everyone likes the long videos and they arent always as financially practical, but i wanted to just say that many of us appreciate them!
Had same bone fractured under a bicycle accident. Nice concept with coating, impressed by this tech. :)
Ready for the cool knife. My dad has been tired of losing his knife and pliers lately. Since he retired he only wears shorts lol. He won't wear a single bladed folding knife because he likes his multi bladed older knifes but they don't have side clips. Bet he would carry this handy knife with its multifunctions,, clip, and smaller size.
Regarding canmax imaging and preemptive medical scanning, the chances of finding a false positive from them are much higher than finding a true positive. Medlife crisis, a cardiologist, has a great video explaining why scanning when you ain't getting symptoms does more harm than good. But this sort of curiosity scanning is a perfect use for it.
From the moment I understood the weakness of my flesh, it disgusted me. I claimed the strength and certainty of steel. I aspired to the purity of the blessed machine. Your kind cling to your flesh as if it will not decay and fail you. One day the cooled biomass that you called a temple will wither and you'll beg my kind to save you. But I am already saved. For the machine is immortal. Even in death i serve the Omnissiah.
What he said
Toll the Great Bell once. Pull the lever to engage the piston and pump. Toll the Great Bell twice. With push of button fire the engine and spark turbine into life. Toll the Great Bell thrice. Sing praise to the God of all machines.
That stuff is insane! Will be cool to see what new advancements are made using the Nano materials.
Remember though: Bone hardenes after death quickly, so even a few hours after a bone was taken out of the body, it will be not representative to a living bone. Living bone is more flexible than old bone!
IDEA FOR THE MULTITOOL- mill out a little circle/rectangle on a nice surface, glue/attach tiny little mirror, for use with tweezers for if something is in your eye
It'd probably be a bit too small to be useful-- you can just polish the knife blade to use as a mirror though!
Or use your selfie cam on your phone 😅
You should try testing the skull's bullet-proofness. Also I'd be curious to how well the nanotech coating works as a blade.
Collab with Kentucky Ballistics: punt gun vs adamantium skull :D
This really is insane the more you think about it. Wow!
I can't believe it. This has always been science fiction, this may be the biggest thing to be made real here yet. The future of this technology can change lives
POV your a scientist 1000 years in the future and you find this dudes remains
Watched the vid amazing time-lapsed it
Now I want a sitcom called "Deadpool Is My Step-Dad" LOL
Every episode Deadpool takes his step-son out on adventures across the Marvel Multiverse and at the end of each episode he's like "Don't tell your Mom!"
I think Wolverines healing factor would pop his bones back into a natural place with the adamantium, but I loves this vid, the tech is insane!
On the topic of multitools: I wish I had a multitool that came with a bit holder, so it could hold various tool bits AND where the knife blade is replaceable.
Because in my line of work, I go through knife blades like crazy so it's no use trying to get a fancy knife and maintain it through sharpening because the level of abuse just doesn't make it worthwhile.
So a multitool with a fold out bit holder, pliers and knifeblade that can be replaced with fresh blades and all of my dreams would come true.
Well, it's got all of that... except the pliers!
@@hacksmith Yep, it's very close.
I'll see about getting one and take it for a spin. 🙂
Thanks for the reply and the video!
The machine spirit is strong with this one XD
praise the omnissiah
Now I'd love to see Hacksmith, do a video on this subject.
Bro casually talked about a super soldier serum, and tossed it aside, thats why i love this channel.
Yall are absolutely insane. Lol it’s nuts watching what you guys come up with.
A question about Nanotech : "Does it sounds at the airport ?" 🧐
Because it could be a problem for Logan next holidays with Wade ! 😂
I use the file on this great multitool all the time on my fingernails at my office job, because sometimes my fingernails get in the way of my work. Best purchase ever. Good job, Hackman!
I really like the editing of this video!
Hacksmith original, was up all week editing
working in a project like that must be crazy interesting ngl, im saying this as a mechatronics engineer (student) this is a crazy concept to follow through, so much stuff to use with. so many possibilities XD
Making the mother of all omelette here Jack, Can't fret over every egg!