the real reason i think (coming from community post) is because he has fatique trying to record their voice into english by translating and manually speak in that. he had more fatique, leading to the switch of AI voice
@@BengalBoy16 yeah I can totally understand that. But if this is easier and better for him and his time; purely in my own opinion we should just let it go. It's either that or he hires someone to make subtitles which is probably harder and more expensive, but that would return his voice and maybe combine his two channels together. I can understand why he chose to use an AI voice (I assume it's an AI voice, if it is it's very good and impressive what can be done these days.)
Agreed! I love hearing it! I miss it. He should be proud that his English is so excellent and his vocabulary extends far beyond what most native English speakers are capable of.
Explosive sodium reminds me of something that happened in college. When I was in high school chemistry, we put a sliver of sodium in a large beaker of water, on the bench, to watch the reaction. We added phenolphthalein to see the formation of sodium hydroxide. I told my college Gen Chem professor about this and he thought it would be a good demo for class. He used a chunk of sodium and a smaller beaker, held in his hand as the reaction progressed. The sodium popped and flared twice, the second time louder and more intense than the first. The entire bottom of the beaker cracked off and fell, spilling pink sodium hydroxide on the floor and leaving an "oh crap" look on the professor's face as giggles spread through the class.
Thank You for showing the REASON why we use Class D extinguishers on metals.... those reactions were AMAZING!!! You CHANNEL is AMAZING!!! and YOU are AMAZING!!! :D
You could send a firefighter on a million seminars and expert training from the experts, two minutes later there's an alkali metal fire, he's still going to be using water.
To error is human. That's true. No amount of training or knowledge can protect us from that. It only reduces the chances of carelessness. When things change quickly, the group often chooses most practiced methods instead of using the best solution. They see a fire, the first responders to the scene misidentify it, and... It's all very logical if you think about it. A, B, or C fires were/are far more common. D fires typically weren't so until the technology made it more common. Logical mistake.
I can second this, I lost my home to a fire last year and watch 5 guys stand there for 20 minutes trying to put out my old Stihl 075. I miss that saw :(
@@Mix1mum I've seen them nearly demolish the side of a house because they refuse to pick a lock, the only reason they stopped being that they'd a similar call the week before where they did demolish one, must have thought two so close together might raise eyebowk
I learned a lot about extinguishing metal fires here, thanks! As far as your voiceover, it is ok, a bit more understandable- however, I’ll still be glad to watch your videos with you speaking in your natural voice.
As part of my career path, I got to teach inexperienced construction workers about fire safety. Namely about the different types of fires and the extinguishers needed for them. A memory trick I used often was this: Stuff that burns to ash (wood, paper, cloth) gets the Class A. Liquids (like oil, gasoline, etc,) boil just below the flame and get the Class B. Fires around electrical current get the Class C. Metal fires are Damned Hot and get the Class D. Kitchen fires get Class K. Its worked well enough to increase the quiz scores.
"To date, the only type of Class D fire extinguisher is the Dry Powder extinguisher. The powder agent used may be either powdered graphite, granular sodium chloride or copper based, all of which are effective at separating the fuel (the ignited combustible metal) from the oxygen."
Back in the 90s, I was part of a fire department. At a fire we were called too (Foxworth-Galbraith wearhouse) there was a magnesium storage. Most of the place held wood, but the moment the fire got to the magnesium storage, we had to cut all the pumps and just let it go. It was amazing and terrifying at the same time. There was nothing more we could do. We were there with departments from other counties.
Thank you for this public service ad. "people who work with magnesium or other combustible metals" include millions of us who rely on lithium batteries, which can turn into incendiary devices if they are cheaply made and/or not properly maintained and monitored. Thank you, seriously! I'm a biochemist with much knowledge of inorganic chemistry, and I learned a lot watching this.
In the places I used to work where other flammable metals are worked with (U and Pu), our Class D extinguishers contains finely atomized copper and are pressurized with argon. This powder works in 4 ways 1) it is very fine so it packs in tightly. 2) it is very dense and so packs in tightly, depriving the metal of oxygen 3) It has a low melting point relative to these two metal. Liquid copper floats on these metals, eventually depriving the burn of oxygen. 4) it is very heat conductive so it cools the burning metal to below is fire temperature. Fortunately I never saw a flammable metal fire myself, but I've watched several training films on how to put out a fire. It is almost instantaneous.
They have fire resistant places and special tongues to pick it up and "dispose of" it, until they hopefully emergency land at the nearest suitable airport.
@@JustAnInnocentLamb we all gain and lose weight throughout life. Sometimes it's a little bit funny. No one is hating on the guy, we love him fat or skinny . .. it's the AI voice he originally had we all want back 😁
One of my biggest surprises was a gas barbecue that suddenly lit up like a flare when I was preheating it to sear some steaks. I found out later that that barbecue had been recalled, because of manufacturer thought it was a good idea to make this barbecue out of a lightweight alloy that he had gotten as spare metal from an aircraft manufacturer. The metal was a magnesium aluminum alloy. All I could do was stand there with my hose and spray the wall and the House nearby it and the ground around it to keep the fire from spreading. Oh yeah I also shut off and detached to the propane tank. I got a little bit of a sunburn from having to go in and take that tank off. I called it off first with the water spray, the tank not the magnesium barbecue
I worked at a lead smelter/ refinery as a contractor they used powdered calcium in the refining process. One day I was welding near the kettle's of lead as one of the plant hands added the very dangerous/explosive elements the kettle exploded lightning the calcium barrel on fire the plant hands picked up the burning barrel and brought it over to the blast furnace and the loader dumped a few buckets of sand on it. Coming back from lunch 4 hours later I saw a pool of burning liquid calcium surrounded by a mote of lead oxide sand and blast slag still happily burning apparently this happens from time to time but there's nothing to be done but let it burn it's self out. That job was nuts but a hell of a lot of fun
An excellent video, thank you very much! Up until now I had the notion, that you could use sand for lithium fires. Question: could you use gypsum CaSO4 for extinguishing the fire or would it worsen especially by forming SO2 and SO3 gas?
Thoisoi, i know youre not super confident in your english, and its not like the subject matter is the easiest to describe, but my guy, you are entirely understandable and, maybe its still some effort but you come across as fluent to me. You got nothing to to worry about my dude! The inflections and emotions of your voice overs are half the charm of the channel. The new voice over is fine, but youve already DONE the hard part and bullt an audience!
I have a suggestion for a continuation of this vid; how about trying with a fiberglass towel / "fire blanket" that is always being advertised & see if it fares any better- or worse than these options. As for the voice thing- I don't mind either way, but you were perfectly understandable to begin with.
Sometimes, and if it's underdeveloped countries most of the times, the firefighter was not informed about the type of materials in burning buildings. All they informed about is that a building is on fire. There was also a case where the firefighter knows what type of fire it is and try to be careful, but the uninformed masses forced them to use water, this happens on EV car fire though, not building.
Love your videos! (to the other commenters.. I wish youtube had option for multiple audio tracks! I agree, I like his voice.. But maybe not everyone can understand his accent)
Wow, I start to watch again your videos now that I understand them. (English is not my mother tongue) Out of curiosity, what did you do ? Is someone speaking your text or do you use an AI ? In both case, thanks for delivering and improving quality !
Just for a time reference, I'm at 10:08 right now. Surely if you can store these metals in argon can you not use argon gas to extinguish their fires? Edit: so maybe I was on to something with the argon....but that aside; that reaction of burning Lithium and Salt was amazing!!
The water experiment did indeed put out the magnesium fire, it seems that if your goal is just to put out the metal fire and you don't care about burning anything around the fire then overwhelming it with water or blowing it up might just work.
I do miss the accented voice, it sounded more sophisticated and gave the impression of intelligence. The new voice sounds like so.e schmuck off the street reading a script. Content is still fascinating.
I think argon would be the only relatively common gas that could put out those metals since it is truly inert. But I don't think argon fire extinguishers are a thing, other than the class D ones you mention that have argon and salt.
when 200 watt hours of lithium ion batteries catch fire in your basement, all you can do is spray water on everything NEAR it and hope that you can suck enough heat out of the combustion that you can get it under control
Would love to see the surface tension of metals vs temperature. Also what effect would metals have with surface tension? Would it cause more or less sparks?
I miss you narrating. Nothing against thus guy but it's so much more genuine and honest feeling. Not that I think you are not genuine, but the ambiance of that has changed.
Interesting experiments! But i have to correct your title: metall fires like magnesium e.g. dont give the hottest flame! The hottest flame - to my knowledge - is obtained from an acethylene like gas with even more C and ozone (under pressure). This flame can rise to temperatures around 6000 degrees C!
Not sure if this is translated correctly. 3:24 Lathe not lath. 5:01 Cookies makes sense it's just odd. 15:40 Isn't chlorine much more of an oxidizer than oxygen? Shouldn't it be "to cut off an oxidizer supply to the newly formed metal." rather than oxygen? I'm not a chemist I just like watching chemistry videos.
I liked the old accent but I believe you use a voice narrator because your videos get watched all over the world and can be translated easily into different languages. I may be wrong I assumed that from previous replies.
i once had an angry lithium Ion battery pack situation and my instinctive reaction was to put an empty metal bucket on it and leave it alone for the next few hours.
Aaah so the transition from burning metal to weirdly low surface tension to fluffy stuff may be peroxides? I have observed this with leaded solder as well. I could test this sometime.
I remember many years ago talking to a fireman who said when they wanted to put powder on a fire but it couldn't contain ANY water they used cement. Any thoughts on this?
well it is possible today to make metallic glass yourself and test it yourself however this is not easy task as it is due to berylillum metal you can see a video from nilered about "making atomic trampoline "
Your accent is fine bro, you're entirely understandable, you don't need to hire voice actors
The problem wasn't only the voice but also the translation process and recording the voice takes time from other things
I think that the process of rerecording it in English was too time consuming.
the real reason i think (coming from community post) is because he has fatique trying to record their voice into english by translating and manually speak in that. he had more fatique, leading to the switch of AI voice
Bring him Baaack 😢
And why tf does he use Fahrenheit, is he making videos for Americans?
Every new video, I am hoping he's back to his original, kickass voice :(
it takes double his time to re-record videos for english audience, now he only has to record in his native estonian (which is on his main channel)
@@ExarchGaming Not Estonian, he records in Russian since he is Estonian-Russian.
@@ExarchGaming But it adds so much charm :(
@@BengalBoy16 yeah I can totally understand that. But if this is easier and better for him and his time; purely in my own opinion we should just let it go.
It's either that or he hires someone to make subtitles which is probably harder and more expensive, but that would return his voice and maybe combine his two channels together.
I can understand why he chose to use an AI voice (I assume it's an AI voice, if it is it's very good and impressive what can be done these days.)
Agreed! I love hearing it! I miss it. He should be proud that his English is so excellent and his vocabulary extends far beyond what most native English speakers are capable of.
I miss the old voice, even if the content is still good.
Same x.x
I do miss the old voice but the content is still phenomenal. So for me it's not a deal-breaker I'm still totally going to watch his stuff
Me too
Nostalgia is good and all but could only make out 60% of what he said.
Is there another channel without this dubbed voice?
We love the old Estonian Accent back!
Exactly. Nothing is more annoying that hearing Americans talk.
Wait he's not russian?
@@JoakimfromAnkanope, Estonia.
Russo Estonian. His accent have Russian sounding. I've seen his video in Russian .@@andrewdoesyt7787
@@JoakimfromAnka He is Russian who is living in Estonia. Big difference.
I would happily pay for his original voice
Shut up and speak! Take my money, give us the goods
Maybe he's giving someone a job, who knows. So sad for that guy.
Yes I would pay extra. Although I'm worried our complaining is going to cost someone his job
No no! Only with the original voice. I really like your original voice and accent. Please keep it.
I was today years old (nearly 40) when I understood exactly why every single fire extinguisher I've seen in my life said "Do not use on metal fires".
Explosive sodium reminds me of something that happened in college. When I was in high school chemistry, we put a sliver of sodium in a large beaker of water, on the bench, to watch the reaction. We added phenolphthalein to see the formation of sodium hydroxide. I told my college Gen Chem professor about this and he thought it would be a good demo for class. He used a chunk of sodium and a smaller beaker, held in his hand as the reaction progressed. The sodium popped and flared twice, the second time louder and more intense than the first. The entire bottom of the beaker cracked off and fell, spilling pink sodium hydroxide on the floor and leaving an "oh crap" look on the professor's face as giggles spread through the class.
Please bring back original voice along with Celsius😅
I think I remember someone extinguishing a metal fire with petrol, and then dealing with the petrol fire using normal methods.
@MrGreenGuy did a video on that 2 months ago
"the weird way gasoline puts out metal fires"
I wonder if diesel or oil would work better
Thank You for showing the REASON why we use Class D extinguishers on metals.... those reactions were AMAZING!!! You CHANNEL is AMAZING!!! and YOU are AMAZING!!! :D
Hi, you're the one that made me love chemistry when I was 10, and now I'm studying rocket science! Thank you for your motivation!
Every new video I come back to see if he switched back to the original voice, no luck this time
You could send a firefighter on a million seminars and expert training from the experts, two minutes later there's an alkali metal fire, he's still going to be using water.
To error is human. That's true. No amount of training or knowledge can protect us from that. It only reduces the chances of carelessness. When things change quickly, the group often chooses most practiced methods instead of using the best solution. They see a fire, the first responders to the scene misidentify it, and... It's all very logical if you think about it.
A, B, or C fires were/are far more common. D fires typically weren't so until the technology made it more common. Logical mistake.
I can second this, I lost my home to a fire last year and watch 5 guys stand there for 20 minutes trying to put out my old Stihl 075.
I miss that saw :(
@@Mix1mum I've seen them nearly demolish the side of a house because they refuse to pick a lock, the only reason they stopped being that they'd a similar call the week before where they did demolish one, must have thought two so close together might raise eyebowk
My friend, your Russian accent is charming and perfect. You don't need ai generated American voice.
@@gib666 Russian accent*. Estonian is completely different.
@libervitaexaltis4551 especially not that kind of American accent. Maybe he could get another translator which a Russian accent? 🤔
@@TheLowerFlowerPowerThe Estonian accent sounds like the Finnish accent. His accent is absolutely Russian
I learned a lot about extinguishing metal fires here, thanks! As far as your voiceover, it is ok, a bit more understandable- however, I’ll still be glad to watch your videos with you speaking in your natural voice.
Every new video i`m hoping to hear your voice again...
As part of my career path, I got to teach inexperienced construction workers about fire safety. Namely about the different types of fires and the extinguishers needed for them. A memory trick I used often was this: Stuff that burns to ash (wood, paper, cloth) gets the Class A. Liquids (like oil, gasoline, etc,) boil just below the flame and get the Class B. Fires around electrical current get the Class C. Metal fires are Damned Hot and get the Class D. Kitchen fires get Class K. Its worked well enough to increase the quiz scores.
Pls, Your original voice is what made this channel stand out --> it's what we connected with!
"To date, the only type of Class D fire extinguisher is the Dry Powder extinguisher. The powder agent used may be either powdered graphite, granular sodium chloride or copper based, all of which are effective at separating the fuel (the ignited combustible metal) from the oxygen."
Back in the 90s, I was part of a fire department. At a fire we were called too (Foxworth-Galbraith wearhouse) there was a magnesium storage. Most of the place held wood, but the moment the fire got to the magnesium storage, we had to cut all the pumps and just let it go. It was amazing and terrifying at the same time. There was nothing more we could do. We were there with departments from other counties.
Thank you for this public service ad. "people who work with magnesium or other combustible metals" include millions of us who rely on lithium batteries, which can turn into incendiary devices if they are cheaply made and/or not properly maintained and monitored.
Thank you, seriously! I'm a biochemist with much knowledge of inorganic chemistry, and I learned a lot watching this.
In the places I used to work where other flammable metals are worked with (U and Pu), our Class D extinguishers contains finely atomized copper and are pressurized with argon. This powder works in 4 ways
1) it is very fine so it packs in tightly.
2) it is very dense and so packs in tightly, depriving the metal of oxygen
3) It has a low melting point relative to these two metal. Liquid copper floats on these metals, eventually depriving the burn of oxygen.
4) it is very heat conductive so it cools the burning metal to below is fire temperature.
Fortunately I never saw a flammable metal fire myself, but I've watched several training films on how to put out a fire. It is almost instantaneous.
11:54 , you should see lithiums reaction red fuming nitric acid. I have a video on this and it's amazingly violent!
Good morning. Now I see why they ask if you have a lithium battery going on the airplane and sending packages. Great video.
They have fire resistant places and special tongues to pick it up and "dispose of" it, until they hopefully emergency land at the nearest suitable airport.
That's why it should be around you and not in the overhead compartment when you are airborne.
Homeboy been eatin....
It's alkaline metal weight.
Lmao for real godamnnnnnn
There's no reason to disrespect him.
@@JustAnInnocentLamb just an observation. He can do whatever he wants.
@@JustAnInnocentLamb we all gain and lose weight throughout life. Sometimes it's a little bit funny. No one is hating on the guy, we love him fat or skinny . .. it's the AI voice he originally had we all want back 😁
7:56 that ant is about to have his day ruined.
Where
@@lazyobject5797left side of the wood
बहुत ही सुंदर तरीके से आपने धातु के सारे गुणों को बताया है ।
One of my biggest surprises was a gas barbecue that suddenly lit up like a flare when I was preheating it to sear some steaks. I found out later that that barbecue had been recalled, because of manufacturer thought it was a good idea to make this barbecue out of a lightweight alloy that he had gotten as spare metal from an aircraft manufacturer. The metal was a magnesium aluminum alloy. All I could do was stand there with my hose and spray the wall and the House nearby it and the ground around it to keep the fire from spreading. Oh yeah I also shut off and detached to the propane tank. I got a little bit of a sunburn from having to go in and take that tank off. I called it off first with the water spray, the tank not the magnesium barbecue
Great video for category D fires! Very nice work!
can you please add metric system values? i for eu audience. It will be nice to have somewhere on screen.
This is so nice to see so many polish products in this very interesting video :)
So you're telling me I'm having a lithium flamethrower in my hand right now?
I mean, certain phones were recalled because they were lithium hand grenades
@@JesseTheDude how not to remember the famous Samsung Galaxy Note 7? 😏🤭
I worked at a lead smelter/ refinery as a contractor they used powdered calcium in the refining process. One day I was welding near the kettle's of lead as one of the plant hands added the very dangerous/explosive elements the kettle exploded lightning the calcium barrel on fire the plant hands picked up the burning barrel and brought it over to the blast furnace and the loader dumped a few buckets of sand on it. Coming back from lunch 4 hours later I saw a pool of burning liquid calcium surrounded by a mote of lead oxide sand and blast slag still happily burning apparently this happens from time to time but there's nothing to be done but let it burn it's self out. That job was nuts but a hell of a lot of fun
Love your videos especially with your own voice.
What if I told you this wasn't actually ever a chemistry channel.. This was an vocal ASMR channel with chemistry subject matter.
We love the original voice x
An excellent video, thank you very much! Up until now I had the notion, that you could use sand for lithium fires. Question: could you use gypsum CaSO4 for extinguishing the fire or would it worsen especially by forming SO2 and SO3 gas?
Would say it would pull out the calcium free and making the gasses, so now you have a calcium metal within the sand and gasses spewing from that
Love your videos, keep up the great work! P.S. I've grown used to the voice over, thumbs up!
Thoisoi, i know youre not super confident in your english, and its not like the subject matter is the easiest to describe, but my guy, you are entirely understandable and, maybe its still some effort but you come across as fluent to me. You got
nothing to to worry about my dude!
The inflections and emotions of your voice overs are half the charm of the channel. The new voice over is fine, but youve already DONE the hard part and bullt an audience!
it's the amount of time I think is more the problem, he has to do everything over again doubling his workload.
Great video! I loved all the examples and your explanations. Will now start hoarding fine, dry salt. 😁👍
I have a suggestion for a continuation of this vid; how about trying with a fiberglass towel / "fire blanket" that is always being advertised & see if it fares any better- or worse than these options. As for the voice thing- I don't mind either way, but you were perfectly understandable to begin with.
Sometimes, and if it's underdeveloped countries most of the times, the firefighter was not informed about the type of materials in burning buildings. All they informed about is that a building is on fire. There was also a case where the firefighter knows what type of fire it is and try to be careful, but the uninformed masses forced them to use water, this happens on EV car fire though, not building.
I find it hilarious that a highly respected and knowledgeable chemist wears a Black Mesa shirt. Love it lol
Class D fire extinguishers are extremely expensive
Love your videos. A tip is to try integrating the loud noise queue such as a clap to time your voice better.
Oh *now* you test extinguishers 🙂
Love your videos!
(to the other commenters.. I wish youtube had option for multiple audio tracks! I agree, I like his voice.. But maybe not everyone can understand his accent)
Magnesium fire can be put out with regular salt.
There are even fire extinguishers that contain salt.
Magnesium has a low boiling point, 1,091°C (aluminum at 2,470°C). Magnesium thermites are exceptionally dangerous - going off high order from a spark.
6:42 14:38 Poland is here :)
Not watching any more of these until the original voice is back....
I don't worry about the voice used, I'm here for content. It's all good to me.
12:43 It's DON'T use wet sand! It looks like wet sand, if you have to use sand to extinguish metal fires, only take FULLY DRIED sand free of any dirt.
Wow, I start to watch again your videos now that I understand them. (English is not my mother tongue)
Out of curiosity, what did you do ? Is someone speaking your text or do you use an AI ?
In both case, thanks for delivering and improving quality !
Just for a time reference, I'm at 10:08 right now.
Surely if you can store these metals in argon can you not use argon gas to extinguish their fires?
Edit: so maybe I was on to something with the argon....but that aside; that reaction of burning Lithium and Salt was amazing!!
The water experiment did indeed put out the magnesium fire, it seems that if your goal is just to put out the metal fire and you don't care about burning anything around the fire then overwhelming it with water or blowing it up might just work.
I do miss the accented voice, it sounded more sophisticated and gave the impression of intelligence. The new voice sounds like so.e schmuck off the street reading a script. Content is still fascinating.
Standard dry powder fire extinguisher (ABC powder) -ammonium sulphate+ammonium phosphate
Ammonia+phosphoric acid+ammonium biphosphate
The old voice ain’t coming back. I still watch, even though it makes me a little sad.
old voice was a caracteristic of this channel
Please use your voice. I found it genuinely pleasant and soothing. and I understood you just fine.👍
Fire&Explosion talked about that several month ago, and did the same tests
I guess it makes sense that burning metal can be extinguished with said metal that has already undergone a reaction (sodium chloride)
You could look into the Purple K fire extinguishers. I believe they were potassium. They were discontinued
Great video!!! Miss your voice though.
I prefer your REAL VOICE. I can understand everything you say!
Someone got into the swiss chocolate stash and french pastries.
I think argon would be the only relatively common gas that could put out those metals since it is truly inert. But I don't think argon fire extinguishers are a thing, other than the class D ones you mention that have argon and salt.
I really like that you mentioned Igor Negoda - he inspired me to build my own micro turbine!
Uh oh!! Our boy looks like he's been eatin' way too many Gravy Biscuits or either he's figured out the formula for Man-Pregnancy. 😳😆
Sól Kujawska jest dobra na wszystko 😁
when 200 watt hours of lithium ion batteries catch fire in your basement, all you can do is spray water on everything NEAR it and hope that you can suck enough heat out of the combustion that you can get it under control
how to put out the hottest flame? like the flame in my heart for your original voice.
Would love to see the surface tension of metals vs temperature. Also what effect would metals have with surface tension? Would it cause more or less sparks?
Polish salt, good for extinguishing burning metals :)
i learned this from playing pokemon...
water > rock > fire > plant > water
So, Esti... Would be nice to hear you speaking, I enjoy the "style" of Finnish as Estonian speech.
Really like the videos you should invest in a slow-mo camera of a good quality you could do a whole lot of shorts just with that.
if you hurt by white phosphorus bomb,
can salt or sand cover and use Nitrogen Liquid to decrease the temperature?
No, you just use water and dig out any phosphorus that has penetrated the skin.
Use copper sulfate solution to remove white phosphorous, it work better
Your real voice is my favorite thing. I can go read about science elsewhere.
I miss you narrating. Nothing against thus guy but it's so much more genuine and honest feeling. Not that I think you are not genuine, but the ambiance of that has changed.
Interesting experiments! But i have to correct your title: metall fires like magnesium e.g. dont give the hottest flame! The hottest flame - to my knowledge - is obtained from an acethylene like gas with even more C and ozone (under pressure). This flame can rise to temperatures around 6000 degrees C!
Not sure if this is translated correctly. 3:24 Lathe not lath. 5:01 Cookies makes sense it's just odd. 15:40 Isn't chlorine much more of an oxidizer than oxygen? Shouldn't it be "to cut off an oxidizer supply to the newly formed metal." rather than oxygen? I'm not a chemist I just like watching chemistry videos.
I liked the old accent but I believe you use a voice narrator because your videos get watched all over the world and can be translated easily into different languages. I may be wrong I assumed that from previous replies.
i once had an angry lithium Ion battery pack situation and my instinctive reaction was to put an empty metal bucket on it and leave it alone for the next few hours.
I need that electro thing in the background shooting lightnings in 3:34. Someone know this video? Cant find it
Aaah so the transition from burning metal to weirdly low surface tension to fluffy stuff may be peroxides? I have observed this with leaded solder as well. I could test this sometime.
huh... the last time I watched this channel the accent was very difficult to make out I didn't even bother watching longer than a few minutes.
I wish you had have tried pencil lead. Basically pure carbon should be able to put it out as well I would think. Maybe from Toner cartridges
Apparently according to nile green you can use gasoline to put out magnesium fire
Youre voice has changed! You must be going through puberty.
and his weight, too
I want that purple lightning thing on your wall!! What is it?! 😊😊
Having watched this, I want to get rid of all wireless rechargeable devices.
We want your voice back. Please
I remember many years ago talking to a fireman who said when they wanted to put powder on a fire but it couldn't contain ANY water they used cement. Any thoughts on this?
well it is possible today to make metallic glass yourself and test it yourself
however this is not easy task as it is due to berylillum metal
you can see a video from nilered about
"making atomic trampoline "
Come on, man, what's wrong with your own accent?
We love it
What is the plasma discharge thingy to his right? Looks cool!
Good one!!