I am horrified at not hearing him say, "kids, don't try this at home" at the end of the video. A microwave oven that uses more than 2400 watts and would blow the typical residential switchboard most likely requires large high-voltage components and equipment. It's the kind of thing that you would normally find in a power station or electrical engineering student's laboratory in a university. You don't want your kids handling this stuff. I am surprised he got his hands on 2 kilograms of metallic sodium at the age of 13. Was there any adult supervision there? Nice to know he survived, but this behaviour isn't recommended.
@@zerumsum1640 I forgot it was called "the macrowave." It's actually still a microwave oven, just built to deliver more power. The "microwave" refers to the wavelength of the radiation delivered, not the power delivered by the device.
I will say, there's a wonderful irony that Boron, a chemical used to help prevent excessive radioactive reactions, glows almost the exact shade of green cartoons use to show something is radioactive
@@soundspark Yes, that's right, but the green color of the clock hands is not because of the radium, but because of the phosphorescent paint that they put together with the radium, the radio only served to give energy to the paint to glow.
0:16 "did he yoink a transformer from a pole?!" - probably, like he's powered a very powerful magnetron with it, so it probably operates on like ~11kV-22kV lol
@@Hawk7886 Incorrect. The magnetron operates in the kilovolt range, or they'd not have an HV transformer in a household oven, Maybe you're thinking of the filament? Which is very low voltage at several amps in a domestic variant
Sometimes I wonder how insane Styropyro seems to people who aren't familiar to his videos. Like, those of us who have been following him for years have the benefit of knowing that he actually does know what he's doing, so what would it be like if the macrowave was someone's first Styropyro video? Also, I hadn't really thought about it but yeah, microwave transformers probably cause more injury and death these days for electronics hobbyists than pulling flyback capacitors out of old TVs, given the availability of old microwaves with working transformers compared to old TVs with intact capacitors.
First time I've seen a video of his, albeit through someone else's reaction video, but the moment I saw the contraption with transformer and everything, the only real option was that he REALLY knows his stuff. There might be some bias due to me going to a vocational school with focus on electronics, but still. Besides, oddly enough, he does fit a stereotype(?) I have about people who experiment a lot, job or otherwise - that childlike glee and happiness about trying more stuff and different stuff and even crazier stuff.
This is the first time I've seen his content, and my initial thoughts after seeing how he powered this macrowave contraption and how janky the whole thing looked was "Ok this guy is INSANE, but still alive, so he must know what he's doing."
I'm not an engineer or anything, but aren't control rods solid material covered in a zirconium cover? I tried searching more about "liquid control rods" specifically and nothing is coming up, so what does this mean? Is this a meme that's going over my head or something?
@@alexdenommee3219 It's been referred to a couple of times in both solid and liquid form in the videos. I assume they're both used in similar ways in perhaps different contexts/conditions.
One thing I do know about StyroPyro, is he would NEVER EVER harm a living creature. The dude is basically a male version of Snow White. He has squirrels and moths and butterflies landing on him. He loves nature and would never intentionally harm a creature like that.
Styropyro is one of the few people who can explain complicated topics in a way, that even toddlers can understand it. And a little side note: Tungsten is really good at shielding radiaton, but gold also is (and gold is actually sparely used for this purpose in the medical field)
Just gold plating, which is very thin, is a very good shield, often used in connectors for making them more conductive which is what they are usually advertised for but really helps with shielding from external interference as well. as the cables are often well shielded and the connectors are not.
Worked in a Hospital that did proton therapy...their gold 'drapes' were 18K gold. Drapes were used to mask off areas that didn't need radiation. Part of the inventory process was weighing the drapes on a regular basis...they were essentially chain-mail and it would be easy to clip off a link or two... Beautiful to see when we had them all laid out for inspection.
I am always impressed with Styropyro's depth of knowledge and engineering ability. The guy is truly gifted. His UA-cam videos could land him a lot of well paying jobs.
The truth of the matter is your super genius Mister Mc Scientist Fella is not making even close to $1 mln/yr. That goes to braindead marketing degree suits that wave their hands around and sell magic the gathering of pokemon cards, or whatever dumb thing people are throwing money away for. Real science requires so much expertise it's nuts. But as a society, we don't really reward it. Sure, you get a stable job.
It would be nice to hear you as a nuclear person explain the meaning of the bequerel, and how many atoms of cesium 137 in a kilo of food are required to achieve 100 bequerels? Also the relationship between the half life of a long decay isotope and the bequerels per kilo, accompanied to a short halflife isotope like cesium 134 and again then mumber of atoms needed present in a sample to provide 100 bequerels per kilo in a 1 kilo sample of each.
My thoughts on "Yeet" is it should be a unit for the escape velocity of Earth. So 1 yeet = 11.2 km/s. Then "Yeeting something" means "Throwing/Launching/Projecting something so fast it exits the earths atmosphere".
They used to have them for sale at Mendelson's in Dayton Ohio. I wish that place was still around, though it's probably better for my life expectancy and wallet that they aren't. :D
@@Logic44 Of course you can. How do you think power companies get them? And if for some reason you couldn't, it's such a simple device you could build one from scratch quite easily. On another note, I'm in the trucking business. Every time there's a hurricane somewhere or some other major storm, I find tons of loads of transformers going into the effected area.
The first Radarange was made by Raytheon in 1947. It was almost 6 feet tall, weighed 750, consumed 3 kw of power and sold for $5,000, which had a modern purchasing power of approximately $70,000.
@@CoreyKearney raytheon has a pretty interesting history and only became a weapons contractor due to their specialized manufacturing that was needed to build the first radars and then it snowballed from there into the company they are now.
Tungsten is even denser than gold. In fact it's less than 1% from being as dense as platinum. Incredible stuff. I use tungsten sinker weights instead of lead ones when fishing nowadays.
@6:19 I was raised with that microwave. Gor rid of it in '92 when we moved. Not because it was bad but just to get a new one. Worst mistake ever. That thing was amazing and I bet it would still work to this day.
The funniest thing to me is when people who aren't used to Drake's videos see him for the first time and immediately assume he is some unhinged lunatic 😅 he kind of is, but he clearly knows what he's doing. The batshit insane nature of his videos is BECAUSE he knows what he's doing.
The superheating of water is even what caused Chernobyl to be so disastrous. The cooling water flashed into steam, blowing apart the reactor and launching the upper biological shield.
I actually had to explain this to my dad recently (I think he still believed the misconception that it was a nuclear detonation), I compared the reactor building to a giant pressure cooker.
if you microwave distilled water then add any contaminate it explodes. People get burned in offices by microwaving water and forgetting it and microwave it again then adding coffee or something else as soon as a nucleation point is added it explodes
I don't know about destilled water, but if you microwave water in a brand-new glass (I mean never used before, not a single microscopic scratch) it will occur what you are describing too.
Yellow chemistry got mentioned, ever chicked out explosions&fire? Australian dude making explosives in his shed. Has a phd in physics. great science youtuber.
Are used to work on a 1 million watt microwave. It’s called a UHF transmitter. The klystron is about 6 feet tall. You wouldn’t want to hear my chief engineer stories about people who did dumb things with radar in the Navy. This type of equipment will take an appendage off without much effort.
@@tookitogo there are stories (with little to no evidence, so take them with a grain of salt) of navy ships cooking entire flocks of birds alive, and another story of a radar operator accidentally pointing the radar at a concrete dock and carving a divot into it. Another tale that gets thrown around is that the radars for Aegis ships can focus their emissions to a concentrated beam that can destroy incoming missiles.
this one swears, Styro's the sorta person who would figure out how to make the Minovsky-Ionesko nuclear fusion reactor from Gundam lore for a youtube video and then never do anything with it again because deuterium's hard to get.
Ikr? He joking went I’ll make microwaves better then accidentally did it and now it cooks perfectly in seconds. Like dude wtf? It uniform cooks a hot pocket somehow doesn’t burn the popcorn and near insta makes a hot dog. No joke the kind of wack instant food stuff we wish our microwaves did
I watched his video a few days ago and cracked up. He is the mad scientist we need! Also that set up with the knife switch is nuts. I am scared of that much electricity. Oof. Also, going to say, power supply units for computers can also give you the good ol zap of death too.
So i kinda knew styro was on a another level even though I'm no chemist or engineer. So hearing you speak your doubts about the sodium like "maybe i don't wanna know " 😂. Love it. Great reaction video with the extra info/ explanations ❤
"Big dials"... I actually do see that on some Variacs that I still use in my lab. The best way to build those is still to have the knob move a mechanical piece that taps off part of the transformer (simple, effective), and the bigger the dial, the better the resolution that you have in your control.
I love watching Mr.F reactions. I enjoy the added information, also he reacts to alot of some of my fav youtubers, I.e Nile red, styropyro etc. Keep up the great vids Sir. Thankyou. P.s I have LPL lined up in my queue, lock picking lawer is a great youtuber too!
I'd love to see T. Folse and Styropyro in the same video together... Might just be hilarious. And while I was typing "hilarious" Styropyro just said it... ha ha.
HAHAHAHA the idea of getting a regulatory board to make it official to use the term “yeet” as a startup procedure for any nuclear reactor is just amazing and I would love to be a dictator at this point lol
30:50 new hire: “Alright, so now we’re ready to start?” Experienced operator: *stares back expectantly* New hire: *sighs* “Ready to yeet?” Experienced operator: *without missing a beat* “Yeah, go ahead”
@ 7:08 Hahahahahhaa! I was doing the SAME THING when that came on the screen...... Heh heh heh!!! Ohhh, I COULDN'T WAIT to see your reaction..... And you did not disappoint, Tyler... Sir, you did not... To be completely fair Sir, to be fair, I did not work in nuclear power.... I worked in a more general electrical industry.... But if you KNOW what that thing is... You KNOW.... Heh heh heh heh heh!!!! That thing belongs on a power pole.... Not in a frickin basement.... I still can't stop laughing....
@ 10:11 He doesn't discuss it, but it appears he has grounded copper mesh all around it also.... Kind of a Faraday Cage concept sort of thing going on, which I assume is to protect him from what's happening in that room....
I installed a commercial microwave conveyor used to cook bacon for a national sandwich chain. It was(10) 20k emitters but they run at something like 10 percent power for efficiency . Apparently cost per hour is better with a large emitter at low load than using one rated for what you need at full go.
Exactly. A lot of this stuff (like rubbing his hands all over the microwave internals he just claimed to cause many deaths of hobbyists) are clear references to ElectroBOOM style humor.
@@Kalladdin while he was factually correct in his statement, many amateur videos and things dealing with flyback and HV Transformers have resulted in serious injuries and deaths by curious individuals who have little to no experience working with high voltage / high potential electronics, that is no joke. But yes, Styro, obviously discharges the HV Transformer and Super Capacitor before doing things like these as you eloquently put it, making references to Electroboom and meme references.
Hey @T. Folse Nuclear I hope you have one planned already. @Bobby Broccoli is in the middle of releasing a three (3) part video on Pons and Fleischmann. I hope to get some real nuclear physics responses to that and what they were claiming and talking about.
I knew,you were going to do this one…Styropyro is already 100% mad scientist…this just pushed it over the edge and he discussed ionizing and non-ionizing radiation ..the fact that he owns a pole transformer…that just adds to it…when he was able melt tungsten…that’s what shocked me…his toy here is amazing…if he had a cylinder with ten of these magnetrons…one hell of an “arc” furnace…maybe there are microwave “arc” furnaces? Styropyro is brilliant but totally mad scientist…
1:45 about the flemmability... Styro's backyard (or some place) was full of dry leaves and he messed with lasers, lighting things up far. I still can't comprehent that...
1:54 It's also got a poison sticker on it lol Also: I still think the craziest thing is not only that the hot pocket was cooked in seconds, but that it actually cooked it perfectly.
What amazed me was the number of nuclear and materials scientists in the comments explaining ways to make a more functional machine. That said, I would really like to see Alex's original vision for the project before the safety committee decided that he and Linus were going with lead sheeting and snips.
I love how ever so slightly deranged Styro looks in some of his videos when he starts smiling. Its a slightly too-wide-eyed look that screams "I know fourty ways to kill you with the power of science and I dont even need to move to do so."
You could tell 90% of the younger population that this 6:20 is an old CRT TV, and they would believe it. They might even think the dial on the right is used to change channels or frequency.
Those transformers are actually how my uncle died he worked on powerlines and one day he touched one that hadn't been powered off like it supposed to be and he fell 30ft but was dead before he even started falling.
I love watching your reactions, but I wish you'd wait longer to do them. When you react to a video so soon, you're taking away views from the original creator. If someone sees your reaction before the original video, they're not gonna go watch the original after. I don't think you're meaning to, but you're kinda taking views from the OC.
The mental image of styropyro scaling a power pole like a little electrician goblin to get his gubbins is hilarious
"Must get the ceramic precioussess from the tricksy linesmen, yes!"
Styropyro as an electronics loot goblin is not the mental image I expected going into this video, but here we are
I'm picturing him exactly as he is in that shot of him from the macrowave's perspective (27:31) with the respirator on. Just pure goblin energy.
I am horrified at not hearing him say, "kids, don't try this at home" at the end of the video.
A microwave oven that uses more than 2400 watts and would blow the typical residential switchboard most likely requires large high-voltage components and equipment. It's the kind of thing that you would normally find in a power station or electrical engineering student's laboratory in a university.
You don't want your kids handling this stuff.
I am surprised he got his hands on 2 kilograms of metallic sodium at the age of 13. Was there any adult supervision there? Nice to know he survived, but this behaviour isn't recommended.
@@zerumsum1640 I forgot it was called "the macrowave."
It's actually still a microwave oven, just built to deliver more power. The "microwave" refers to the wavelength of the radiation delivered, not the power delivered by the device.
The most terrifying of styropyro's powers is the uncanny ability to legally acquire objects and materials that most people would be arrested with.
he doesn't acquire them legally 😭 The magnetron was sold as something completely different (i.e. customs fraud)
Ones he told that The fbi already went to his house
@@vgg175 what do you mean? its a heat exchanger :)
The power of misleading EBay listings can get you just about anything, if the explanations in his videos are anything to go by.
not true at all, the components are legal, just expensive.
I will say, there's a wonderful irony that Boron, a chemical used to help prevent excessive radioactive reactions, glows almost the exact shade of green cartoons use to show something is radioactive
Although isn't that color more likely to be inspired by the color of radium watch hands?
@@soundspark It absolutely is. That's why it is more ironic, and less a fun fact
@@soundspark Yes, that's right, but the green color of the clock hands is not because of the radium, but because of the phosphorescent paint that they put together with the radium, the radio only served to give energy to the paint to glow.
@@DrArkham. Yup. Copper doped Zinc Sulfide. Use Silver instead of Copper and you get blue light.
@@soundspark Or uranium glass.
"Dad, how hot is the sun?" -"Well, it can melt tungsten."
Only pure tungsten tho!
The welding eletrodes I use have a melting point of around about 6000f
@@embersaffron5522the sun is millions of degrees fahrenheit
@@TheTJHayes the surface is only around 5,000
@@embersaffron5522 The photosphere ranges between 7400°F and 17500°F and there's nothing on earth that could withstand those temperatures
@@TheTJHayes the photosphere is cheating
Weird ass magnetic heating zone
The pure glee in styropyro's voice is both awesome and terrifying at the same time.
It's his testosterone looking for an outlet.
Don't forget the mad glint in his eyes!
He’s so happy *to have the power in the palm of his hands*
0:16 "did he yoink a transformer from a pole?!" - probably, like he's powered a very powerful magnetron with it, so it probably operates on like ~11kV-22kV lol
the magnetron runs at 115v, it pulls something like 175 amps. The transformer is a huge flex, you could power that thing off a welder PSU.
@@Hawk7886 Incorrect. The magnetron operates in the kilovolt range, or they'd not have an HV transformer in a household oven, Maybe you're thinking of the filament? Which is very low voltage at several amps in a domestic variant
I don't think that's a pole transformer I think it is a capacitor from a HV circuit
Sometimes I wonder how insane Styropyro seems to people who aren't familiar to his videos. Like, those of us who have been following him for years have the benefit of knowing that he actually does know what he's doing, so what would it be like if the macrowave was someone's first Styropyro video?
Also, I hadn't really thought about it but yeah, microwave transformers probably cause more injury and death these days for electronics hobbyists than pulling flyback capacitors out of old TVs, given the availability of old microwaves with working transformers compared to old TVs with intact capacitors.
First time I've seen a video of his, albeit through someone else's reaction video, but the moment I saw the contraption with transformer and everything, the only real option was that he REALLY knows his stuff.
There might be some bias due to me going to a vocational school with focus on electronics, but still.
Besides, oddly enough, he does fit a stereotype(?) I have about people who experiment a lot, job or otherwise - that childlike glee and happiness about trying more stuff and different stuff and even crazier stuff.
This is the first time I've seen his content, and my initial thoughts after seeing how he powered this macrowave contraption and how janky the whole thing looked was "Ok this guy is INSANE, but still alive, so he must know what he's doing."
The macrowave was actually the first video I watched from Styropyro. I instantly recognized that he knows his stuff.
First time I've seen a video of his, and he reminds me of Peewee Herman
12.5 minutes in to this video and I'm done, can't stand his laugh
as soon as i saw styropyro’s video i was wating for you to react to this!
Fr me too
*watting
Same here lol. I was almost tempted to just wait for this one
Yikes
Same lol
*boron gets mentioned in the video*
Me, immediately: oh, Tyler's gonna bring up "liquid control rods" again
someone should make a t folse bingo card
@@madjack1748 ya i gotchu (goes on to make a Tyler Folse nuclear bingo card)
I'm not an engineer or anything, but aren't control rods solid material covered in a zirconium cover?
I tried searching more about "liquid control rods" specifically and nothing is coming up, so what does this mean? Is this a meme that's going over my head or something?
@@alexdenommee3219 It's been referred to a couple of times in both solid and liquid form in the videos. I assume they're both used in similar ways in perhaps different contexts/conditions.
@@alexdenommee3219 boron is dumped into the reactor. it's used the same way a control rod is: slow the reaction created by the reactor.
One thing I do know about StyroPyro, is he would NEVER EVER harm a living creature. The dude is basically a male version of Snow White. He has squirrels and moths and butterflies landing on him. He loves nature and would never intentionally harm a creature like that.
Good to know 💙
A mad scientist with a gentle soul.
He's exactly what my younger self would love to be in the future.
Didn't he build a super bug zapper exclusively to kill wasps?
@@lucassanchez3734Nobody likes wasps. There’s a big difference between a squirrel and a wasp.
Styropyro is one of the few people who can explain complicated topics in a way, that even toddlers can understand it. And a little side note: Tungsten is really good at shielding radiaton, but gold also is (and gold is actually sparely used for this purpose in the medical field)
Just gold plating, which is very thin, is a very good shield, often used in connectors for making them more conductive which is what they are usually advertised for but really helps with shielding from external interference as well. as the cables are often well shielded and the connectors are not.
just goes to show how much he knows about his stuff, the guy is great honestly
Gold plating inside my bunker, new goal achieved.
Worked in a Hospital that did proton therapy...their gold 'drapes' were 18K gold.
Drapes were used to mask off areas that didn't need radiation.
Part of the inventory process was weighing the drapes on a regular basis...they were essentially chain-mail and it would be easy to clip off a link or two...
Beautiful to see when we had them all laid out for inspection.
Gold plating is used on astronaut helmets to help with the radiation as well
10:58 this is a reference to a classic old UA-cam show, "Is It A Good Idea To Microwave This?" The show started in 2007 and yet it still holds up.
Nobody likes roasted nuts.
I love that series😂 glad some people remember it still.
I had a physical reaction to hearing him say that, I was curious if it was a reference or not lol!
@@kiitos8426it's gotta be. There's no way you spend as much time on microwave youtube as drake has and not watched IIAGITMT
Suddenly had a flashback to “Will it blend” too 😁
Please please convince them to make a ceremonial "yeet!" startup for reactors.
And to let styro pyro be working in a plant shrinking nuclear waste with a gigatron
I'm more for the traditional "123pleasedontblowup"
@@bushhawk5460 Exploding is actually better than melting down.
@@nullpoint3346 It really, _really_ isn't. Melting down can still be completely contained, blowing up spreads radioactive material over a wide area.
"10%.... 35%... Starting to get sussy. 70%... Turn the switch to no cap and prepare for yeet."
I am always impressed with Styropyro's depth of knowledge and engineering ability.
The guy is truly gifted. His UA-cam videos could land him a lot of well paying jobs.
The funny thing is he does this is a side gig for him
Well he is a chemical engineer
A lot of well-paying jobs don't even come close to his income from this hobby.
The truth of the matter is your super genius Mister Mc Scientist Fella is not making even close to $1 mln/yr. That goes to braindead marketing degree suits that wave their hands around and sell magic the gathering of pokemon cards, or whatever dumb thing people are throwing money away for.
Real science requires so much expertise it's nuts. But as a society, we don't really reward it. Sure, you get a stable job.
Styropyro has always been a crazy genius. I went through the same chemistry program with him in college.
ohhh I was hoping and waiting you'd react to this :) Love your Styropyro reactions!
It would be nice to hear you as a nuclear person explain the meaning of the bequerel, and how many atoms of cesium 137 in a kilo of food are required to achieve 100 bequerels? Also the relationship between the half life of a long decay isotope and the bequerels per kilo, accompanied to a short halflife isotope like cesium 134 and again then mumber of atoms needed present in a sample to provide 100 bequerels per kilo in a 1 kilo sample of each.
Thank you!
>"It EMP'd one of my cameras..."
That's got to be some kind of achievment, right there.
Timestamp?
My thoughts on "Yeet" is it should be a unit for the escape velocity of Earth. So 1 yeet = 11.2 km/s.
Then "Yeeting something" means "Throwing/Launching/Projecting something so fast it exits the earths atmosphere".
Your RFC was accepted
I like. But not of Earth, but based on local gravity. Would be easier to yeet someone on the moon.
I like this 😂
17:50 im still shocked the popcorn looks perfect
i'm microwaved that the popcorn looks perfect
@LeonardNemoy popcorn? I was popcorn once. They locked me in a bag, a paper bag, a paper bag full of rats
@@Mister_Matthew rats make me popcorn
He has become the ultimate supervillain. Excessively dangerous contraptions, evil laughs and strange colored lights coming from his lab.
Can't believe he found someone that would be willing to go "Here's a brand new distribution transformer, don't kill yourself"
$2,200 from bear power solution
They used to have them for sale at Mendelson's in Dayton Ohio. I wish that place was still around, though it's probably better for my life expectancy and wallet that they aren't. :D
@@ElizabethGreene Holy shit, you can just BUY THEM?
@@Logic44 Of course you can. How do you think power companies get them? And if for some reason you couldn't, it's such a simple device you could build one from scratch quite easily.
On another note, I'm in the trucking business. Every time there's a hurricane somewhere or some other major storm, I find tons of loads of transformers going into the effected area.
All that takes is money.
0:40 he's gona make plasma isint he
Styropyro : proceeds to make every plasma ever conceived by man
...except the kind you get by putting blood in a centrifuge...
ALL of the plasmas! It was impressive.
@@a-blivvy-yusi mean, if he was close enough maybe
@@foxicecube I hope not! xD
PUTS A WHOLE NEW MEANING TO NUKING UR FOOD!!😂
"...some of my more cursed ideas." He says, while holding Isaac Clarke's helmet...
The first Radarange was made by Raytheon in 1947. It was almost 6 feet tall, weighed 750, consumed 3 kw of power and sold for $5,000, which had a modern purchasing power of approximately $70,000.
Raytheon? like the weapons contractor? Well that's terrifying.
@@CoreyKearney microwaves were discovered by experimenting with radar in millitary
@@CoreyKearney raytheon has a pretty interesting history and only became a weapons contractor due to their specialized manufacturing that was needed to build the first radars and then it snowballed from there into the company they are now.
Tungsten is even denser than gold. In fact it's less than 1% from being as dense as platinum. Incredible stuff. I use tungsten sinker weights instead of lead ones when fishing nowadays.
Densest of the affordable materials.
I think convincing the NRC to use the term "Yeet" when starting up reactors is an incredible idea!
@6:19 I was raised with that microwave. Gor rid of it in '92 when we moved. Not because it was bad but just to get a new one. Worst mistake ever. That thing was amazing and I bet it would still work to this day.
fun fact Styropyro's Respirator has an I voted sticker on it
The funniest thing to me is when people who aren't used to Drake's videos see him for the first time and immediately assume he is some unhinged lunatic 😅 he kind of is, but he clearly knows what he's doing. The batshit insane nature of his videos is BECAUSE he knows what he's doing.
don’t be silly his name is styro, short for styrofoam
is the styropyro's channel's owner called Drake?
got too much testosterone
He’s like a young, skinny version of ElectroBoom 😁
@@dinhero21 yeahuh, his full name is Drake Anthony
- Explodes on failure
- Hits dials to max power
- Has outrageous tools
Bro is a cartoon
This might be my favorite reaction video in a while
Fun fact: in Dutch the word for a microwave is magnetron. The Flemish speakers says microgolf, which translates back to microwave.
7:00 the way his face changed when he saw it
The superheating of water is even what caused Chernobyl to be so disastrous. The cooling water flashed into steam, blowing apart the reactor and launching the upper biological shield.
If he reduced glass to dust, is it possible to oxidize dust to glass?
@@vinnysworkshop Depending on the kind of dust. Glass is oxidized sand after all, and it will melt back into glass if it's ablated into dust.
I actually had to explain this to my dad recently (I think he still believed the misconception that it was a nuclear detonation), I compared the reactor building to a giant pressure cooker.
The "heck" edits always crack me up
if you microwave distilled water then add any contaminate it explodes. People get burned in offices by microwaving water and forgetting it and microwave it again then adding coffee or something else as soon as a nucleation point is added it explodes
I don't know about destilled water, but if you microwave water in a brand-new glass (I mean never used before, not a single microscopic scratch) it will occur what you are describing too.
Yellow chemistry got mentioned, ever chicked out explosions&fire? Australian dude making explosives in his shed. Has a phd in physics. great science youtuber.
I got hyped when I heard this explosions and fire reference 😂
They've appeared together in safety third casts
I watched Styropyro's video this morning and was delighted to see this video this evening as a followup. I love you guys :-D
Are used to work on a 1 million watt microwave. It’s called a UHF transmitter. The klystron is about 6 feet tall. You wouldn’t want to hear my chief engineer stories about people who did dumb things with radar in the Navy. This type of equipment will take an appendage off without much effort.
We _absolutely do_ want to hear those stories!!!
@@tookitogo there are stories (with little to no evidence, so take them with a grain of salt) of navy ships cooking entire flocks of birds alive, and another story of a radar operator accidentally pointing the radar at a concrete dock and carving a divot into it. Another tale that gets thrown around is that the radars for Aegis ships can focus their emissions to a concentrated beam that can destroy incoming missiles.
Plasma flash over inside a 60's era radar range is insane. Coupled with styropyro levels of tism and testosterone is next level
this one swears, Styro's the sorta person who would figure out how to make the Minovsky-Ionesko nuclear fusion reactor from Gundam lore for a youtube video and then never do anything with it again because deuterium's hard to get.
It's interesting how well this actually cooks food
Ikr? He joking went I’ll make microwaves better then accidentally did it and now it cooks perfectly in seconds. Like dude wtf? It uniform cooks a hot pocket somehow doesn’t burn the popcorn and near insta makes a hot dog. No joke the kind of wack instant food stuff we wish our microwaves did
I've never seen either of you before, now I am _rewatching_ the macrowave video here with you and enjoying it! 🤗
"I bought this cute distribution transformer" Had me laughing my ass off, what a saint!
His laugh and general innocent curiosity, matched with his "Mad Scientist" knowledge is heartwarming and concerning at the same time.
I watched his video a few days ago and cracked up. He is the mad scientist we need!
Also that set up with the knife switch is nuts. I am scared of that much electricity. Oof.
Also, going to say, power supply units for computers can also give you the good ol zap of death too.
Bro I saw that and went “T. Folse is gonna have a heart attack”
Oh yes I was waiting for this one 🤣🤣 Styro has gone completely off the reservation
Was he ever on it? 😝
@@Hurricayne92 good point 🤣 what a mad man
So i kinda knew styro was on a another level even though I'm no chemist or engineer. So hearing you speak your doubts about the sodium like "maybe i don't wanna know " 😂. Love it. Great reaction video with the extra info/ explanations ❤
"Big dials"... I actually do see that on some Variacs that I still use in my lab. The best way to build those is still to have the knob move a mechanical piece that taps off part of the transformer (simple, effective), and the bigger the dial, the better the resolution that you have in your control.
The look on your face and mine were the same at the 7 minute mark lmao. "wait... WAIT YOU CAN GET... HOW DID HE?!"
I love watching Mr.F reactions. I enjoy the added information, also he reacts to alot of some of my fav youtubers, I.e Nile red, styropyro etc. Keep up the great vids Sir. Thankyou.
P.s I have LPL lined up in my queue, lock picking lawer is a great youtuber too!
He's the best
I'd love to see T. Folse and Styropyro in the same video together... Might just be hilarious. And while I was typing "hilarious" Styropyro just said it... ha ha.
13:18 Ohhhhh so this is how skinner had an aroura borealis that time of year and localised entirely within the confines of his kitchen!
HAHAHAHA the idea of getting a regulatory board to make it official to use the term “yeet” as a startup procedure for any nuclear reactor is just amazing and I would love to be a dictator at this point lol
30:50 new hire: “Alright, so now we’re ready to start?”
Experienced operator: *stares back expectantly*
New hire: *sighs* “Ready to yeet?”
Experienced operator: *without missing a beat* “Yeah, go ahead”
there is a higher then normal chance his tombstone will read "at least he went out trying to make folse nuclear laugh."
@ 7:08 Hahahahahhaa! I was doing the SAME THING when that came on the screen...... Heh heh heh!!! Ohhh, I COULDN'T WAIT to see your reaction.....
And you did not disappoint, Tyler... Sir, you did not...
To be completely fair Sir, to be fair, I did not work in nuclear power.... I worked in a more general electrical industry.... But if you KNOW what that thing is... You KNOW....
Heh heh heh heh heh!!!!
That thing belongs on a power pole.... Not in a frickin basement.... I still can't stop laughing....
Watched it yesterday and was already hyped for your reaction, especially the last part where he explains radiation types
Speaking of microwave safety, you've got to see Mr Green's "I Tested the Limits of a Microwave"
29:58 just styro casually cutting a LOAF of sodium metal 🥹
7:02 THE WAY HE WIPED THE SMILE OFF YOUR FACE
@ 10:11 He doesn't discuss it, but it appears he has grounded copper mesh all around it also.... Kind of a Faraday Cage concept sort of thing going on, which I assume is to protect him from what's happening in that room....
I watched this Styropyro video already and you identified details that I missed the first time. Appreciate your commentary.
I installed a commercial microwave conveyor used to cook bacon for a national sandwich chain. It was(10) 20k emitters but they run at something like 10 percent power for efficiency . Apparently cost per hour is better with a large emitter at low load than using one rated for what you need at full go.
The way he laughs as he pulls the lever to make the light bulb explode looks exactly like a mad scientist stereotype
1:30 - Styro knows this and surely that cabinet and the one next to it is empty, he just does it for the meme.
Exactly. A lot of this stuff (like rubbing his hands all over the microwave internals he just claimed to cause many deaths of hobbyists) are clear references to ElectroBOOM style humor.
@@Kalladdin while he was factually correct in his statement, many amateur videos and things dealing with flyback and HV Transformers have resulted in serious injuries and deaths by curious individuals who have little to no experience working with high voltage / high potential electronics, that is no joke.
But yes, Styro, obviously discharges the HV Transformer and Super Capacitor before doing things like these as you eloquently put it, making references to Electroboom and meme references.
@@CapStar362 yeah I heard explaining the joke makes it way funnier, cheers mate
This is how reaction videos should be done>>> pleasure to watch..
Hey @T. Folse Nuclear I hope you have one planned already.
@Bobby Broccoli is in the middle of releasing a three (3) part video on Pons and Fleischmann.
I hope to get some real nuclear physics responses to that and what they were claiming and talking about.
and from that day forward, everytime a particle accleerator was powered up, a 'yeet' could be heard.
I knew,you were going to do this one…Styropyro is already 100% mad scientist…this just pushed it over the edge and he discussed ionizing and non-ionizing radiation ..the fact that he owns a pole transformer…that just adds to it…when he was able melt tungsten…that’s what shocked me…his toy here is amazing…if he had a cylinder with ten of these magnetrons…one hell of an “arc” furnace…maybe there are microwave “arc” furnaces? Styropyro is brilliant but totally mad scientist…
1:45 about the flemmability... Styro's backyard (or some place) was full of dry leaves and he messed with lasers, lighting things up far. I still can't comprehent that...
This is really interesting because here in Canada i think parts of this video got cut out. I didnt see the ruby or the thermite watching it last night
The government doesn't want you making rubies at home. They have too much money invested into them.
Really? I saw both parts when I watched yesterday and I am from Montreal
Nighthawkinlight is goated, subscribed sknce i was 14, im 28 and the mans still etertaining and educational
Ive super heated water the second i pulled it out of the microwave it exploded everywhere i was glad i didnt burn my self
I love that there's something plugged into the outlet behind the table when he's warning people about the danger of microwave components
1:54 It's also got a poison sticker on it lol
Also: I still think the craziest thing is not only that the hot pocket was cooked in seconds, but that it actually cooked it perfectly.
The favorite part of these is when he cusses but edits in that nonchalant heck. It gets me every time.
You should definitely react to the Hacksmith’s new fallout power armor video.
Yeah
I fully support him becoming a mad scientist with electricity. Styropyro is a gem.
I did love pyro’s reference to the old UA-cam series Is It A Good Idea To Microwave This? Brings me back.
7:02
that change on face "oh, wait, this is no joke"
7:16 nah, he's crazy enough to say that's still a small one lol
Lmao the look on your face when styro shows that huge transformer was priceless!!
Haha microwave goes brrrr
Styropyro is a total madlad. Love his videos.
Styro is getting some guns lol
Your reaction at 7:00 was hilarious, I knew you'd like this video when I watched it on his channel
You should watch Linus Tech Tips making a radiation proof computer.
What amazed me was the number of nuclear and materials scientists in the comments explaining ways to make a more functional machine. That said, I would really like to see Alex's original vision for the project before the safety committee decided that he and Linus were going with lead sheeting and snips.
"Guess you can go the other direction with that"
Dude just expanded the mind of a nuclear engineer.
15:49 he didn't put it in the crisping sleeve!!! It's ruined!!!
Look at a new box of hot pockets it says why it doesn’t have the crisping sleeve 15:54
I love how ever so slightly deranged Styro looks in some of his videos when he starts smiling. Its a slightly too-wide-eyed look that screams "I know fourty ways to kill you with the power of science and I dont even need to move to do so."
You could tell 90% of the younger population that this 6:20 is an old CRT TV, and they would believe it. They might even think the dial on the right is used to change channels or frequency.
I can see how.
”Is he gonna put the scorpion in the microwave” got me cracking up😂😂😂
I love these pyscho mad scentist guys these are the types you are supposed to marry lol
Those transformers are actually how my uncle died he worked on powerlines and one day he touched one that hadn't been powered off like it supposed to be and he fell 30ft but was dead before he even started falling.
megatron...the decepticon?
hes the modern nuclear boy scout
1:33 great spot, I missed that when watching the original video
I love watching your reactions, but I wish you'd wait longer to do them. When you react to a video so soon, you're taking away views from the original creator. If someone sees your reaction before the original video, they're not gonna go watch the original after. I don't think you're meaning to, but you're kinda taking views from the OC.
It's more like an ad for the original video/channel
Now hold up!! Doesn't exploding water part mean the ocean becomes a bomb if the sun explodes
His delighted, unhinged laughter gives me life.
It's great to see him upload again with his craziness. Was hoping for this reaction.