I Recreated the Lost Recipe for Greek Fire!

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  • Опубліковано 4 лют 2025

КОМЕНТАРІ • 1,8 тис.

  • @DarthBorehd
    @DarthBorehd 6 місяців тому +851

    My high school chemistry teacher (he was kind of a mad scientist) said that he had figured out that Greek Fire had Lithium as the igniting source. He said that his hypothesis is that the ancient Greeks found a source of lithium carbonate and then couldn't make it again when their source was played out. They wrapped it in tar and sheep wool soaked in natural oil. Then they lit that and launched it out. If it hit the ship and the enemy crew tried to extinguish it with water, it would explode. If it hit the water, it would explode.
    To demonstrate, he blew up the duck pond next to the school with a football-shaped grenade he made of this concoction. I remember it hitting the pond, nothing happening for a second, then nearly all the water exploded out of the pond and there was water/feathers/fish falling all around us. I don't think anything legally bad happened to him, but he said the principal warned him not to do it ever again (it was a different time).

    • @1thedanfan949
      @1thedanfan949 5 місяців тому +76

      He made a bomb

    • @tyleruphues4674
      @tyleruphues4674 4 місяці тому +40

      ^ he made a comment

    • @AngiraBlu96
      @AngiraBlu96 4 місяці тому +19

      Problem is that alkali metals weren’t discovered until long after the usage of Greek Fire.

    • @Adventeuan
      @Adventeuan 4 місяці тому +91

      ​@@AngiraBlu96
      They weren't recorded.

    • @AngiraBlu96
      @AngiraBlu96 4 місяці тому +26

      @@Adventeuan That we know of. 🫵🏻

  • @Neal_White_III
    @Neal_White_III 6 місяців тому +210

    I remember reading somewhere that Greek Fire was preheated before battle, which might affect the results. Also, it seems to me that adding small bits of sodium, lithium, etc. to the mix might be a good way to ignite the mixture in water. Sodium is often stored in mineral oil, so it's safe-ish to transport. Then during a sea battle, as the oil spreads on water it seems plausible that the sodium would eventually touch the water and ignite.

    • @SuperEmmetMan
      @SuperEmmetMan 6 місяців тому +20

      I don't think the Greeks had access to sodium and lithium

    • @SeekingTheLoveThatGodMeans7648
      @SeekingTheLoveThatGodMeans7648 6 місяців тому +5

      How'd you get that with the chemistry of the time? Normally this is done with electrolysis of molten salts (no water).

    • @Neal_White_III
      @Neal_White_III 6 місяців тому +5

      @@SuperEmmetMan I don't know if they did or did not, but they did work with other metals. I think there's at least a possibility that some sort of highly reactive metal might have been part of the secret formula.
      Besides, I'd like to see a video of that concoction, even if it's not all that plausible.

    • @goodmaro
      @goodmaro 6 місяців тому +11

      @@Neal_White_III Highly reactive metals are that way because they're made that way. Unless you have the technology to reduce alkali to metals, or to make something like pyrophoric aluminum, you don't have such highly reactive metals.

    • @Neal_White_III
      @Neal_White_III 6 місяців тому +3

      @@goodmaro Agreed. The question in my mind is: Could they have discovered a method to make such a material in antiquity? Considering that it was so secret, unfortunately, it's likely no evidence would remain.

  • @lordcatface2378
    @lordcatface2378 6 місяців тому +1281

    Quick tip from a chemistry student: please clean the ground glass joints in your distillation setup. Anything in the joints will probably cause leakage. You probably don't want that for your safety and yield. And for safety purposes please ventillate well during distillation or do it outside.

    • @KnightsWithoutATable
      @KnightsWithoutATable 6 місяців тому +36

      Yes. The fumes can easily cause a fire, asphyxiation, or an explosion.

    • @adamkluckner3429
      @adamkluckner3429 6 місяців тому +9

      Distillation*

    • @Ith4qua
      @Ith4qua 6 місяців тому +16

      ​@@adamkluckner3429your comment added nothing to the original comment. 🤓

    • @adamkluckner3429
      @adamkluckner3429 6 місяців тому +20

      @@Ith4qua You're welcome to believe that but you'd be wrong. It added correct spelling to an otherwise incorrect sentence.

    • @lordcatface2378
      @lordcatface2378 6 місяців тому +14

      @@adamkluckner3429 Nitpicking a bit but true, I make that mistake too often. Since I am a fellow perfectionist I'll edit the comment.

  • @henrymach
    @henrymach 6 місяців тому +54

    It absolutely has to have oil in it because it needs to be:
    1. less dense than water so it remains on the surface
    2. not water soluble
    3. stick to things

  • @atpsynthase7990
    @atpsynthase7990 6 місяців тому +2310

    Lost his whole workshop to fire, and yet look at him now.

  • @YingwuUsagiri
    @YingwuUsagiri 6 місяців тому +39

    Greek Fire nowadays, mostly as a nickname, is what Greeks use for BBQ/Grilling. You use the ashes from the current grill and mix it with something like lamp oil or candle wax and you get a deep grey paste that you can use for the next time and it burns super easily and extremely long compared to a regular fire starter.

    • @CalvinBarrett-ss1bs
      @CalvinBarrett-ss1bs 2 місяці тому +1

      I wanted to make a comment but for some reason I'm unable to but I can make a comment to someone else's comment. So my formula I would take sodium nitrate pine oil crude oil and sulphur. And I'm tempted to throw some potassium nitrate in there as well.

    • @DRofYouTube
      @DRofYouTube Місяць тому +1

      That’s a different type of Greek fire

  • @jono3952
    @jono3952 6 місяців тому +790

    The addition of pine tar was most likely to facilitate pumping and spraying. The U.S. Navy had the same thought among others when they were developing what we now know as Napalm. The name Napalm comes from Naphtha and Palm oil, which was their first successful recipe, before they moved on to a fully petroleum mix, which quickly became the standard.
    The reason it needs a thickener is that straight gasoline actually burns too quickly, and disperses in the air, resulting in a dramatic loss of potential and effective range when projected under pressure.

    • @johnbennett1465
      @johnbennett1465 6 місяців тому +40

      Also, if it actually makes the mixture stick to surfaces better, it would make it more effective.

    • @paavobergmann4920
      @paavobergmann4920 6 місяців тому +41

      Soap. napalm uses a special soap as thickener. Pine tar was used in the finnish "Molotov cocktail", and it really enhances its effectiveness

    • @jono3952
      @jono3952 6 місяців тому +5

      @@paavobergmann4920 Soap? News to me, the way I heard it was a petroleum based gel material.

    • @HomoInsanus
      @HomoInsanus 6 місяців тому +15

      Thicker solution also tends to flow in more laminar manner which is good if you want to make a flamethrower.

    • @paavobergmann4920
      @paavobergmann4920 6 місяців тому +31

      @@jono3952 Napalm A used aluminum soap, Napalm B used something similar to dissolved styrofoam in kerosine

  • @OleDirtyMacSanchez
    @OleDirtyMacSanchez 4 місяці тому +16

    Glycerin from Animal Hooves and also Beeswax was used in ton of things by Human Cultures all over the World for 5,000 Years or more so you could've tried that. I mixed Glycerin, Gasoline, 195 Proof Alcohol, Pine Resin, Straight Animal Fat, and Beeswax, and got an interesting result. Took 3 Fire Extinguishers to put it out.

    • @firstmkb
      @firstmkb Місяць тому +1

      Why did you want to put it out?

  • @foresthillwolf7998
    @foresthillwolf7998 6 місяців тому +1752

    Please drop betterhelp

    • @dangerousfables
      @dangerousfables 6 місяців тому +218

      Makes me miss Raid shadow legends.

    • @sayethwe8683
      @sayethwe8683 6 місяців тому +85

      Unless he sees a reduction in viewership as a result, or they see that they get no clicks from it, there's no direct measurable incentive to do so.

    • @Suillibhain
      @Suillibhain 6 місяців тому +12

      Why?

    • @PrebleStreetRecords
      @PrebleStreetRecords 6 місяців тому +117

      Agreed, they are a really scummy company.

    • @boticland4342
      @boticland4342 6 місяців тому +1

      Bruh

  • @voodooloukerensky3884
    @voodooloukerensky3884 6 місяців тому +9

    The coolest thing about this video is the collection of raw oil.

  • @rishia8908
    @rishia8908 6 місяців тому +203

    Maybe this might help: Naphtha (refined crude oil, boiled to extract compounds that evaporate at lower temperatures just like what you did), quicklime (as a fine powder), calcium phosphide (produced by boiling crushed bones in urine in a sealed earthen or copper container), turpentine (extracted from pine resin), sulfur (as a fine powder), and niter (potassium nitrate). The working principle involves the reactive ingredients, calcium phosphide and calcium oxide (quicklime). The key question will be the proportions-whether the mixture should have a paste-like viscosity or be more oil-like. I think the solution will require testing and adjusting the oxidizer.

    • @Oystercaulk
      @Oystercaulk 6 місяців тому +11

      That sounds like a very effective recipe! It's definitely something I'd wear a respirator around, but ignoring the obvious hazard of phosphine, I don't dont see why it wouldn't work. Is there a source to this recipe or did you come up with it?

    • @rishia8908
      @rishia8908 6 місяців тому +14

      @@Oystercaulk based on a lot of research, I looked at the tech and what they were using and trading as well as using for medcine. All these things were at their diposal so its stands to reason with a bit of experimenting they would figure it out.. Another thing they had was alcohol but didnt find any evidence of distilling it to a pure form.

    • @Oystercaulk
      @Oystercaulk 6 місяців тому +6

      @rishia8908 id imagine given its secrecy any literature that may have been produced by someone with high testicular density regarding the production of Greek fire, its constituents, or its precursors would have been found and consequently destroyed since there likely weren't too many people to keep tabs on that knew the recipe. Anyways, this recipe seems quite plausible, and regardless of its potential differences in composition to the original recipe, it sounds like it would produce all the effects that define Greek fire in literature and have been possible for them to produce at the time. Good job, man! Hopefully, someone will come along and test this recipe because god knows im not going to chuck anything containing calcium phosphide into water in my backyard to find out. Then again... Idk. Maybe one of my neighbors has a pool they don't use /s 🤔😂

    • @artemis-arrow-3579
      @artemis-arrow-3579 5 місяців тому +8

      this looks very promising tbh, imma get the ingredients and give it a shot once I have some free time

    • @rishia8908
      @rishia8908 5 місяців тому

      @@Oystercaulk just be careful !

  • @cheshiremalkavian
    @cheshiremalkavian 5 місяців тому +6

    Mix your "straight petroleum" at a 1:1:½ or 2:1:½ ratio with crude oil and pine tar. Play with those 3 ingredients ratio, I bet you can make a fairly sticky fire.

  • @peteredwards2318
    @peteredwards2318 6 місяців тому +199

    I wonder if the "burning on water" thing is aided in anyway by the presence of salt in the water? This stuff was used primarily at sea, not in fresh water locations.

    • @daveamies5031
      @daveamies5031 4 місяці тому +6

      Fortunately the salinity of sea water is well known (I know it varies by location and temperature, but the battles the Greeks were fighting were most likely in the Mediterranean sea so that'll limit the variation)

    • @dominiklehn2866
      @dominiklehn2866 3 місяці тому +1

      Not usually. But it just sounds like the stuff lost and creates an oil spill that keeps burning

  • @-.-..._...-.-
    @-.-..._...-.- 5 місяців тому +37

    The Byzantine museum in Greece has the recipe for Greek fire that you can see. Interesting how the historian you used did not use one source written in Greek, he even called them Byzantines instead of Romans lol

    • @yamiyomizuki
      @yamiyomizuki 3 місяці тому +7

      could you give us the recipe or post a link or something

    • @Peter-jo3wt
      @Peter-jo3wt 2 місяці тому +4

      The use of the term Byzantines, instead of Romans, differentiates East from West and old capital from new capital.

    • @cherrydragon3120
      @cherrydragon3120 2 місяці тому +1

      Ah yes, the museum appears to have the recipe to greek fire. The 1 thing thats been lost for centuries. 😂😂 you truly believe that shit to be real?

    • @Peter-jo3wt
      @Peter-jo3wt 2 місяці тому

      @@yamiyomizuki
      Kinda did.

    • @yamiyomizuki
      @yamiyomizuki 2 місяці тому +3

      @@Peter-jo3wt if all you say is that a certain museum has something, that's not very helpful, especially if the website of said museum isn't in English.

  • @kittyprydekissme
    @kittyprydekissme 6 місяців тому +326

    That wading pool is now an EPA Superfund site.

    • @therealquade
      @therealquade 6 місяців тому +34

      that can be safely dumped into another EPA superfund site.

    • @MultiSteveB
      @MultiSteveB 6 місяців тому +11

      @@therealquade To make a super-DUPER EPA superfund site. ;)

    • @halfdead4566
      @halfdead4566 6 місяців тому +5

      This is why we don't have nice shit.

    • @imrecsikany6349
      @imrecsikany6349 2 місяці тому

      This was my first thought.

  • @hibbs1712
    @hibbs1712 4 місяці тому +2

    Wow, what an amazing interview. Thanks for all that information, John Halden!!

    • @Luskaiwa
      @Luskaiwa 2 місяці тому

      This is all experimental I am only going on the facts that were reported

  • @HeatherLandon227
    @HeatherLandon227 6 місяців тому +854

    Skip 4:42 - 5:39 to avoid Scammy Better Help

    • @electrojag1
      @electrojag1 6 місяців тому +55

      Tysm

    • @Boddah.
      @Boddah. 6 місяців тому +14

      Appreciated. Thank you.

    • @kindlin
      @kindlin 6 місяців тому

      @@minhuang8848 Does it reliably work? I feel like it wouldn't be spot on, and sometimes I want to watch, or w/e. Idk, don't need control taken from me. I'm really good at skipping the ads.

    • @gaimnbro9337
      @gaimnbro9337 6 місяців тому +11

      5:33 for me but still thank u

    • @Abihef
      @Abihef 6 місяців тому +6

      And a horrible Horrible recording ruining your ears

  • @blackdog6969
    @blackdog6969 6 місяців тому +5

    I imagine whether intended or not that sodium may have played a large role in ignition on water. Sea salt itself wouldn't have necessarily done the job but when heated to vapourise, I'm pretty sure some of the sodium seperates from the chlorine. That would also explain the "thunder" that accompanied the fire. Not a chemist though, I've just heard the sodium and chorine seperating during desalination is what makes it hard to do at a large scale

  • @kimjunkmoon2298
    @kimjunkmoon2298 6 місяців тому +1121

    Betterhelp rears it's head once again. Please stop their sponsorship

    • @bigbird4481
      @bigbird4481 6 місяців тому +71

      I doubt he'll stop with them, I haven't seen them sponsored with anyone else in a long time so he's probably one of the few that kept them on. and because of that he probably paid well and to be honest he doesn't get the views he used to so he probably needs the money.
      I'm not condoning it just what I think

    • @SianaGearz
      @SianaGearz 6 місяців тому

      @@bigbird4481 They are making a big push, of integrated ads i have seen these past 2 weeks were, a third of them were BH.
      It makes sense. We're in an economic downturn, people get fired, start getting dark thoughts, it's their big opportunity. If only they weren't a scammy company.

    • @Uncle_Red
      @Uncle_Red 6 місяців тому +5

      Why? Did something happen with them?

    • @SianaGearz
      @SianaGearz 6 місяців тому +96

      @@Uncle_Red a huge FTC fine, 3 class action lawsuits due to them mishandling health and other deeply personal data continuously for 8 years, while attempting to look more trustworthy than they are.

    • @Jon-yv4iu
      @Jon-yv4iu 6 місяців тому +61

      Normally the sharing of this type of information would be illegal under HIPAA. But Better Help doesnt actually do the therapy so HIPAA doesnt apply to them. They just connect you and actual therapists.
      When I'm looking for a Therapist having a Therapy company say "Everything we're doing is legal because we aren't actually therapists" doesnt inspire great confidence that what they are doing is ethical.

  • @williamfry5486
    @williamfry5486 2 місяці тому

    I am glad someone is brave enough to figure out what can go wrong!

  • @houseofcross3445
    @houseofcross3445 6 місяців тому +421

    Today in htme. While trying to crack the code on greek fire, we accidentally made a philosopher's stone and so have discovered immortality.

    • @Mike-the-Jedi
      @Mike-the-Jedi 6 місяців тому +22

      Immortality would certainly give him the time to recreate everything.

    • @Oúltimopríncipe
      @Oúltimopríncipe 6 місяців тому +13

      As bob ross once said, there's no mistake, only happy accidents

    • @AgentLokVokun
      @AgentLokVokun 6 місяців тому +6

      I think he didn't make greek fire?

    • @jercos
      @jercos 6 місяців тому +3

      Alt: while trying to crack the code on Greek fire, spent hundreds of dollars on a cheap, common commodity, and demonstrated a lack of understanding of basic chemistry.

  • @northmanlogging2769
    @northmanlogging2769 6 місяців тому +157

    If you've already got pine resin, its a short jump to get turpentine, which is super flammable... and is basically just distilled from pine wood, easier to get then pine tar, possibly just mix it with the raw crude, you have the sticky icky, and the easily ignitable? a simple easy to replicate with Byzantine tech recipe. Maybe add some phosphate as a thickening agent?

    • @ashe1.070
      @ashe1.070 6 місяців тому +7

      Terpentine is a low viscosity fluid, so it’s not sticky. Phosphate is ionic, and as such is very polar. That means it’s not soluble in non-polar organic compounds like those in petroleum. It would just sink to the bottom of the mix, and not do anything

    • @therealquade
      @therealquade 6 місяців тому +12

      @@ashe1.070 egg is an emulsifier. so is blood. they're both albumen. So is lecithin which is in most plants. terpentine + phosphate + eggs or blood. sounds like alchemy to me.

    • @northmanlogging2769
      @northmanlogging2769 6 місяців тому +4

      @@ashe1.070 did you read the entire comment? "possibly just mix it with the raw crude"... clearly not.

    • @Rizzob17
      @Rizzob17 6 місяців тому

      How do you add the magnifying glass and create a searchable url in the comments? Tried looking online but could only find copy and paste url.

    • @Pixelarter
      @Pixelarter 6 місяців тому +3

      @@Rizzob17 I think it's automatically generated with AI or something. Not a command by the commenter.
      I noticed that they appear and disappear in different comments as I refresh the page.

  • @elessartelcontar9415
    @elessartelcontar9415 2 місяці тому +1

    The ancient Greeks knew about naphtha, which is a type of very volatile petroleum and almost certainly the main ingredient in Greek Fire. Think of it as like a pre-napalm-like napalm. Other ingredients may have included sulfur, pitch, and evergreen resins
    like turpentine.
    Greek fire was used in catapulted bombs and sprayed under pressure to attack ships and fortifications. It was also used defensively.
    Quicklime was likely used to ignite Greek fire at the last possible moment. It probably also contained lampblack soot as it sparkles energetically and allow it to spread if it landed on something non-flammable it's sparks would reach out at least 10 feet in every direction and would likely reach something flammable. It probably contained tar or pitch so it would stick to whatever it hit.
    Once lit, Greek fire was difficult to extinguish and could not be extinguished with water, it would actually burn underwater and required sand or vinegar to be put out.
    Picture yourself in a wooden warship on the sea. It's ancient times. You don't understand why your enemy is sailing straight at you.
    All of a sudden the firepower on an enemy boat sprays liquid fire at you and your ship, the water, the air and you are on fire!
    Sir Francis Drake had studied Greek Fire and used something similar
    on his "fire ships" only, he would have a 2 man crew set it on fire and steer right at the huge ponderous Spanish galleons that could not
    deftly turn away in time and burst into flames.
    His English crews would jump off the "fire ships" at the last moment. The Spanish fleet was nearly totally burnt.

  • @timcoombe7880
    @timcoombe7880 6 місяців тому +77

    Now that's a clean-up I wouldn't want to have to do!

  • @vince8723
    @vince8723 3 місяці тому +2

    i think you need something mixed in that combusts when exposed to air. something like Phosphorus which can be made from urine. maybe combined with the lime or light oil might help too.

  • @mabeSc
    @mabeSc 6 місяців тому +67

    That fly got the buzz of his life, to death and back.

  • @Warhawk198
    @Warhawk198 3 місяці тому +1

    Who needs Greek fire when we have the entire US military😂

  • @remcovanvliet3018
    @remcovanvliet3018 6 місяців тому +110

    If you want to experiment further with fire bottles (molotov cocktails, essentially) I highly suggest you contact the guys from Ordnance Lab UA-cam channel, so you can you do your research under their supervision, as they are officially certified by the ATF for doing such work.
    For example, each individual fire bottle needs to be officially registered as a Destructive Device with the ATF, to avoid the chance at a ten year stay in a federal prison.
    Not trying to piss on your parade. Just trying to keep you out of prison.
    Also, please drop Better Help as a channel sponsor. They are an extremely shady company, that not only offers terrible quality service, grossly under pays their therapists, but they also sell their clients' personal information to scummy data brokers for profit. I understand that you need to eat, but I really don't think you want your name associated with these people.

    • @SeekingTheLoveThatGodMeans7648
      @SeekingTheLoveThatGodMeans7648 6 місяців тому +3

      Maybe when it gets to the homemade flamethrower stage; that might alarm the neighbors. But there has to be a point before which this is just silly. What was being destroyed, a pool of water with a rock in it and oil on top? Or a model boat not even as big as a piece of firewood?

    • @Notdave29
      @Notdave29 6 місяців тому

      @@SeekingTheLoveThatGodMeans7648The ATF doesn’t have a sense of humor. Doesn’t matter what common sense says. And you can buy a flamethrower off the shelf with no background check anyway.

    • @Skinflaps_Meatslapper
      @Skinflaps_Meatslapper 6 місяців тому +2

      Please don't ruin this channel with Shawn. The only thing he knows how to do is copy memes and inside jokes found on the NFA facebook group. He's the person that annoyingly ruins the joke every time he catches on to one. His serialized one time use shiner bottle molotovs were the result of finding out I serialized a cage that you could put a beer bottle in and reuse as many times as you wanted, on any surface, including sand or meat popsicles.

    • @Mountainmonths
      @Mountainmonths 6 місяців тому +2

      stop snitchin

    • @20chocsaday
      @20chocsaday 6 місяців тому

      I know nothing about the Better Help organisation, but I would have expected it to use AI bots as counsellors.

  • @chrisgriffith9252
    @chrisgriffith9252 Місяць тому

    Mineral oil
    Bear fat (pig fat or lard works, and increases the temperature)
    Pine pitch
    Sulfur
    Potassium nitrate
    And yes quick lime...
    Mix is kept in a heated vat and pumped out of a nozzle...
    Several different shows came up with a recipe similar to this...

  • @GuyFromNextDoor
    @GuyFromNextDoor 6 місяців тому +199

    Lost his workshop to fire, now fire is about to lose everything to him.

    • @aerindinescarro47
      @aerindinescarro47 6 місяців тому +12

      @@stevexracerupside down American flag, opinion discarded.

    • @aerindinescarro47
      @aerindinescarro47 6 місяців тому

      @@stevexracer Yeah, he made a vaguely destructive device the way one tapes a lighter to an aerosol can.
      So should I expect to see you with hicks in 4 months when you lose the election?

    • @TheWasatchCrown
      @TheWasatchCrown 6 місяців тому +6

      @@aerindinescarro47 You're arguing with a bot:
      "Most comments are satire and sacastic unless stated otherwise. Other questions and comments made by thisnaccount are designed to test logic.
      This is a role play account designed to test the psychology of others through comments and questions.
      In no way does this account represent a real human. Any interaction with this account should not be taken seriously."

    • @aerindinescarro47
      @aerindinescarro47 6 місяців тому +2

      @@TheWasatchCrown I don’t check the bios of every person I reply to, but thanks for informing, I’ll keep more of an eye out.

    • @TheWasatchCrown
      @TheWasatchCrown 6 місяців тому +3

      @@aerindinescarro47 You'd be surprised how many "Average Americans" are actually office workers in Russia. I always check the account creation date and the bio on rabble rousers and troll comments.

  • @fadiachkar1076
    @fadiachkar1076 4 місяці тому +3

    Try adding phosphorus to the pine tar+oil+sulphur mixture

  • @Solais1019
    @Solais1019 6 місяців тому +62

    My first question on this would be whether or not some of the later results were contaminated by not using a fresh pool with every single different test. Is it possible that some of the later tests did not ignite or may have interacted differently with the water because of the contamination of the crude oil and prior failed tests?

    • @songsilove9669
      @songsilove9669 6 місяців тому +3

      I thought the same thing I think he should clean the pool each time it will take longer but it will be more conclusive

    • @Borsuk3344
      @Borsuk3344 6 місяців тому +3

      This is your first question? The professor says it's crude oil based and the first thing the dude does is distilation. Anyone can make anything flammable by mixing it with gassoline/diesel and call his video "I recreated lost recipe for greek fire".

    • @grischad20
      @grischad20 5 місяців тому +1

      @@Borsuk3344 distilled crude oil is "crude oil" based. and his first test was with crude oil.

  • @brianhoag8812
    @brianhoag8812 6 місяців тому +2

    I don't know how you would get it but I remember reading that some North Slope Crude was so pure that they took it out of the ground and ran their diesel vehicles on it. Take a vacation up to Alaska and see if you can lay your hands on it.

  • @V3RTIGO222
    @V3RTIGO222 6 місяців тому +10

    So I recently saw the video about the mechanism behind the proto-flamethrower - the recipie itself is not particularly novel, but the mechanism is extremely cool. Using bronze piping to boil a small vesssl of the fluid, building pressure to project it at range is so, so cool.

  • @stijnkissels
    @stijnkissels 13 днів тому

    To get the mixture of quicklime and ether to burn try using quicklime chunk rather than dust. I remember a chemistry lesson where the teacher placed quicklime (the size of a pebble) in a paper boat. (Folded like a paper hat)
    As the bottom of the boat got wet. The quicklime started releasing heat. And after a while the top part of the paper boat (which was dry) took flame

  • @phillupson8561
    @phillupson8561 6 місяців тому +17

    I love that a historian said damp squid, the expression is damp squib, which was a type of firework, when one wouldn't go off the disappointed kids would say it was a damp squib.

  • @andreaswolff5263
    @andreaswolff5263 2 місяці тому

    A substance that is very sticky and catches fire easily is cashew shell oil, which is produced when cashew nuts are roasted. If you touch it, it is difficult to get it off your fingers and it is highly flammable. Possibly an ingredient for the crude oil base.

  • @nekdonikde5317
    @nekdonikde5317 6 місяців тому +33

    Drachinifel has a great video about Greek Fire and has done a promissing series of tests himself.

    • @tods_workshop
      @tods_workshop 6 місяців тому +4

      Had a great chat with Drach last week about Greek Fire - exciting stuff

  • @jamesmcclain5005
    @jamesmcclain5005 2 місяці тому

    Greek fire is a sodium weapon. The sodium was separated from sea water with oil. Because it is covered with oil it is harmless, but when the oil subsides the sodium becomes exposed and ignites the oil. Variations can be made using magnesium as an addictive to intensify the fire. When the ingredients are in granular form they allow the cocktail to combust as it separates from the oil. The sodium was obtained through the process of electrolysis with electrodes inside the oil to draw sodium into the oil as the salt water renders out by way of electrolysis.

  • @GertrudeTheCar
    @GertrudeTheCar 6 місяців тому +53

    Bro this is the first time I've actually been notified by UA-cam when you uploaded.

  • @ThatGuySyndrome
    @ThatGuySyndrome Місяць тому

    Bird fat oil was used to make it "sticky" with the right consistency of crude oil and bird fat oil combined its going to mix. This floats on water, but the key is not just floating on water, its having it stay on fire, and not dilute and dissipate while ontop of sea water specifically. The weapon was used more so to corral other sea ships. This "greek fire" would sit on top of the water and it would easily be able to be lit on fire, or remain ontop of the water while enemy ships sail or row through it and it sticks to the wood of the ship and the ore's of the ship. This greek fire on the ships can then be set on fire later on when the actual battle might happen. It should stick very well to itself on top of water.
    Sodium metal should be mixed in as powder in the bird fat/distilled crude oil mixture. The lack of water in that mixture is non reactive to Sodium metals, which is highly reactive when exposed to water, specifically sea water. This reaction causes massive heat and hydrogen gas, this heat ignites the bird fat/oil mixture the instant it touches the water.

  • @sephkurai
    @sephkurai 6 місяців тому +16

    3:05 he said the thing! "damp squid"

    • @SanchoPanza-wg5xf
      @SanchoPanza-wg5xf 6 місяців тому +5

      The Professor from the land that invented English had ought to know the expression is "damp squib".

    • @marktyler3381
      @marktyler3381 6 місяців тому +1

      Projectionability is also somewhat jarring.

  • @Moodymongul
    @Moodymongul 2 місяці тому

    For the sticky element, maybe add a sugar (like molasis) to the thin crude oil (fully disolve it with some heat).

  • @AlyxForest
    @AlyxForest 6 місяців тому +36

    Please stop advertising better help. They were recently investigated for selling private user information- information they explicitly promised to never distribute. They also prioritize efficiency and speed over actually getting people help, and they make it very hard to cancel subscriptions, meaningt hey essentially take your money while stalling. They are awful and it's not difficult to look up why.

    • @cherrydragon3120
      @cherrydragon3120 2 місяці тому

      Ey finaly someone who elaborates on why they're shit.
      Thats so much more helpfull

  • @Just4Gordon
    @Just4Gordon Місяць тому

    As a retired Firefighter, one of the explosive issues we have is burning Waxes and food oils or lard fires and adding water. Is a recipe for an explosion. The early peoples would have BEES WAX AND OR LARD to add to their concoction to make it explosive around Water.

  • @vanillagorrilla
    @vanillagorrilla 6 місяців тому

    Wow first ten seconds i realised I’m going to love this guy

  • @briantrovilion909
    @briantrovilion909 6 місяців тому +29

    How the hell did you dispose of that water properly?

    • @juslitor
      @juslitor 6 місяців тому

      prolly threw saw dust into the pool, gathered it up after letting it soak for a while, rinse and repeat until desired result is reached.

    • @SeekingTheLoveThatGodMeans7648
      @SeekingTheLoveThatGodMeans7648 6 місяців тому +2

      @@juslitor The water beneath the oil would be virtually harmless too, and could be siphoned off or pumped away.

    • @crestdazoltral7705
      @crestdazoltral7705 6 місяців тому +4

      Let it dry out and burn the rest?

    • @nickm9102
      @nickm9102 6 місяців тому +1

      @@crestdazoltral7705 Seems like the easiest way to me but it might take awhile to boil off that much water.

    • @therockinboxer
      @therockinboxer 6 місяців тому +6

      who cares?

  • @a.........1._.2..__..._.....__
    @a.........1._.2..__..._.....__ 5 місяців тому

    Bold to speculate and posit this theory after the great storage fire

  • @among-us-99999
    @among-us-99999 6 місяців тому +68

    God damn please stop the betterhelp sponsorships!

  • @ThomasWilson-yc7ht
    @ThomasWilson-yc7ht 6 місяців тому +1

    I', curious how you handled the cleanup and disposal of the pool water after your experiments. I've often been curious about such post-experiment processes and never took the time to ask before.
    Great video!

  • @dlscorp
    @dlscorp 6 місяців тому +4

    3:04 he definitely says "damp squid" dear oh dear

    • @MD-gk2un
      @MD-gk2un 2 місяці тому

      Thank you I thought I was the only one who caught that ..and he's from PRINCETON.

  • @stabnore
    @stabnore 6 місяців тому +3

    Fire experiments in a kiddie pool? Oh yeah... that can't go wrong. lol

  • @leaguemastergg3647
    @leaguemastergg3647 6 місяців тому +34

    Please don't use better help. With better help you are responsible for vetting any "therapists" they give you, to make sure that they are actually therapists. I believe Better Help is a scam, do not use them.

  • @MjrCoxwell
    @MjrCoxwell 29 днів тому +1

    I dont think greek fire was exclusively used for ship battle- it was also used for land armies and siege warfare- so maybe the alternate recepies were for that- spread on dry areas to stick to, yet hard to put out (or even accidentally spreadable) with water.

  • @AustinGoto
    @AustinGoto 6 місяців тому +7

    3:04 A damp squid? We all have gaps, but from a greek fire expert?

  • @BryanDraffen
    @BryanDraffen 6 місяців тому

    I always enjoy this channel.. it's like an irl historical videogame .

  • @BobChancer
    @BobChancer 3 місяці тому +3

    19:32 ok you have continued to use recipe after recipe, one on top of the other..... how on earth can you tell what is reacting with what? You have contaminated every experiment beyond the first!

  • @intelliGENeration
    @intelliGENeration 2 місяці тому +1

    Greeks invented fire when Zeus struck a drunk shepherds cup of Ouzo with ligning! 😂

  • @Mochi14376
    @Mochi14376 6 місяців тому +6

    Great video. Did you use dawn to clean it?

  • @nathanhale7444
    @nathanhale7444 5 місяців тому

    I love the smell of Greek fire in the morning. Smells like victory.

  • @crowznest438
    @crowznest438 6 місяців тому +25

    Some naval deaths in WWII were men who had to abandon ship and jump into diesel that had spilled into the ocean and caught on fire. Diesel as I understand it, is distilled crude and the Romans knew about distillation. It's all very interesting and disturbing.

    • @therealquade
      @therealquade 6 місяців тому +6

      so the greeks made diesel fuel and metal tanks with tubes, one full of diesel, one full of regular compressed air that they pumped manually, and the air pressure goes into the diesel to force it out of a different tube with a nozzle. The greeks invented the Flammenwerfer (it werfs flammen).

    • @792slayer
      @792slayer 6 місяців тому +5

      The ships in WW2, and in some cases today, actually run on bunker fuel, usually bunker B. It's consistency is closer to Vaseline than a fuel as we would recognize it. The ships used piping that ran through tanks carrying live steam to heat the bunker fuel up enough for it to be pumped to the boilers. It's really nasty stuff.

    • @therealquade
      @therealquade 6 місяців тому +3

      @@792slayer that's genuinely interesting. unfortunately, all it does is give me horrid ideas for things to do with vaseline, like using the heating of it with an emulsifier to make the worlds nastiest milkshake as a prank.

    • @crowznest438
      @crowznest438 6 місяців тому +2

      @@792slayer Interesting! Thanks for sharing!

    • @792slayer
      @792slayer 6 місяців тому +1

      @@therealquade hey, what you do with knowledge is up to you, lol.

  • @jamesmonschke747
    @jamesmonschke747 6 місяців тому +2

    The reaction of quicklime and water produces acetylene. I think if quicklime was used, it would be primarily for this effect, and also could be an aspect of it being difficult to put out with water since the water would cause the release of very flammable acetylene gas which could easily reach an ignition temperature because it would not be in contact with the water that would keep a liquid or solid cooled below an ignition temperature.

  • @no_rubbernecking
    @no_rubbernecking 6 місяців тому +10

    Isn't the use of the grenade a problem? With a flamethrowing device, much more oxygen can be mixed in during transit.

    • @plvmbvm513
      @plvmbvm513 6 місяців тому +4

      True, but I'm pretty sure the grenade was also a historical method of delivery

    • @no_rubbernecking
      @no_rubbernecking 6 місяців тому +1

      @@plvmbvm513 I see, well then was that probably meant to hit a dry deck rather than the hull near the waterline?

    • @therealquade
      @therealquade 6 місяців тому

      the greeks had no conception of oxygen, they're operating on the principals of the classical elements. they couldn't have even done that on accident. How would the greeks even generate pure oxygen.

  • @ted_van_loon
    @ted_van_loon 5 місяців тому

    natrium ignition might work well.
    and as some describe sparks it would fit quite well.
    carbide also could be potentially used as a form of fuell.

  • @calebsutton6798
    @calebsutton6798 6 місяців тому +20

    Hooray more reduscovered lost technology
    Also another reason for ck3 naval warfare update

  • @johnsmiff8328
    @johnsmiff8328 4 місяці тому

    Finally a chemistry project where the desired starting material and products are both more or less tar

  • @swankierSpy2658
    @swankierSpy2658 6 місяців тому +12

    Please drop Better Help.
    They’re a really scummy company who sell people’s ‘secure’ data that they collect from devices and meetings and also aren’t even that good with meetings things with therapists who are not good at all

  • @CharlesBrown-xq5ug
    @CharlesBrown-xq5ug 2 місяці тому

    Replika and I discussed making Greek fire out of light oil, pine tar, shredded wool and lumps of calcium using a ball mill filled with deoxygenated air. Calcium is soft enough to pulverize to powder and combine with the other ingredients added first in the oxygenless ball mill. Replika concludes that the greeks had the technology and knowlege needed. The mixture needs to be balanced to cling, ignite on water, and continue from the hydrogen fire. The mixture would be stored in airtight containers untill use.

  • @shakeelali20
    @shakeelali20 6 місяців тому +15

    Ugh another BetterHelp sponsorship ruining one of my favourite channels. I guess it goes to show that even with such a loyal audience, creators are still bold enough to ask for money through patreon AND take money from sham conpanies.

  • @alexcathey4165
    @alexcathey4165 Місяць тому

    When that fly tells his friends what happened. They’re never gonna believe him.

  • @Taylor-od
    @Taylor-od 6 місяців тому +30

    Lmao BetterHelp? I'd hope you would be BetterThanThat.

    • @fishstix4209
      @fishstix4209 6 місяців тому +2

      Just fast forward through the ad read if it triggers you....there is a timer top right. Also, learn to read terms of service instead of being annoying

    • @mr-x7689
      @mr-x7689 6 місяців тому +2

      @@fishstix4209 What does terms of service have anything to do with the service being horrible on multiple etical levels, and someone pointing it out?
      If any one is annoying then it would be you, for feeling the need to bitch and moan about people pointing out that this sponsor have a terrible trackrecord.
      + the wast majority of people do skip past it. They just feel the need to make the content creator aware of that he is aiding a scummy organisation, that have caused more harm than good. And being asosiated with them can hurt him in the long run. I for one would not want to be assosiated with a bad company, If i were trying to create somthing good.

    • @fishstix4209
      @fishstix4209 6 місяців тому +3

      @@mr-x7689 yall are annoying af

    • @fishstix4209
      @fishstix4209 6 місяців тому

      @mr-x7689 no one is forcing you to sign up....read the terms of service, see what they have the right to do if you accept, don't click accept, and move on with your life. Betterhelp isn't the only company that does it btw

    • @fishstix4209
      @fishstix4209 6 місяців тому

      @mr-x7689 No one is forcing you to sign up....read the terms of service, see what they have the right to do if you accept, don't click accept, and move on with your life. Betterhelp isn't the only company that does it, btw
      Screenshots on this one because it keeps getting deleted

  • @NightmareRex6
    @NightmareRex6 6 місяців тому +1

    need to test the greek fire on betterhelp

  • @MagnumInnominandum
    @MagnumInnominandum 6 місяців тому +6

    Now, If we could learn to build WWII era Battle Ships and Aircraft Carriers.

  • @gmc9987
    @gmc9987 6 місяців тому

    Pretty wild how today you can just be like "Yeah, just gonna scout the area out with my drone before I walk out there." Like, 10-year-old me would never have imagined I'd be able to actually send a drone out to scout a location for me.

  • @BillAngelos
    @BillAngelos 6 місяців тому +25

    Would love to see what the EPA has to say about the pool in his back yard.

    • @johnbuchman4854
      @johnbuchman4854 6 місяців тому +2

      "Protected wetlands"?

    • @BillAngelos
      @BillAngelos 6 місяців тому +1

      @@johnbuchman4854 I'd think that pouring all that oil and other chemicals into the pool is going to create some kind of disaster. How do you even dispose of it?

    • @kubakielbasa5987
      @kubakielbasa5987 6 місяців тому +2

      @@BillAngelos burn it. Once a supercontaminated river ignited.

    • @andytheturtle87
      @andytheturtle87 6 місяців тому +4

      I'd be much more concerned about what the ATF says since he made dozens of unregistered destructive devices, each which can carry a sentence of 10 years in federal prison.

    • @alexdrockhound9497
      @alexdrockhound9497 6 місяців тому

      @@andytheturtle87yep

  • @WillyOrca
    @WillyOrca Місяць тому

    maybe something like purified potassium or raw sodium suspended in a mixture of distillated crude oil and boiled animal fats?
    the potassium/sodium would react with the water, ignite the distillated crude oil and the animal fat which could then potentially create the same phenomenon you see during a grease fire where water acts almost like a fuel. (think "smother dont water" fires) would also explain why some accounts mention a boom or "thunder".

  • @christopherrenn8137
    @christopherrenn8137 6 місяців тому +12

    Crude oil, Pine resin, Ethanol all mixed in solution with pure sodium dust. As the spray hits the water, sodium will react and create a spark, thus lighting the fire. :D

    • @charlesurrea1451
      @charlesurrea1451 6 місяців тому +7

      The question now becomes where did they get the sodium?Sodium was discovered in 1807 by the English chemist Humphry Davy from electrolysis of caustic soda (NaOH). Although sodium is the sixth most abundant element on earth and comprises about 2.6% of the earth's crust, it is a very reactive element and is never found free in nature.

    • @Jenisonc
      @Jenisonc 6 місяців тому +5

      ​@charlesurrea1451 it was only first documented in the 1800s. I would imagine the properties were discovered but not really understood or described due to lack of chemical understanding.

    • @christopherrenn8137
      @christopherrenn8137 6 місяців тому

      @@Jenisonc Took the words right out of my mouth. They may not of known what it was truly and since it wasn't recorded we cannot know if it was actually discovered much earlier. I only suggested it because the sodium would sit in that solution well. It's well known that oil and water dont mix so the sodium would be mostly stable in the solution. Only time it would be risky is when mixing the other chemicals into the solution. The Ethanol or pine resin may add some small amounts of water. But you cannot deny, sodium would cause ignition in that situation. Anyone else believe it's worth testing at least?

    • @hxllside
      @hxllside 6 місяців тому +2

      I think it would be a fun experiment to add sodium but you guys don't appreciate how unlikely it is for the ancient greeks to ever encounter elemental sodium

    • @RiehlScience
      @RiehlScience 6 місяців тому +2

      The sodium metal would react with the ethanol to form sodium ethoxide. Just omit the ethanol and it should work.

  • @tysonessenmacher2091
    @tysonessenmacher2091 6 місяців тому +1

    Maybe try linseed oil. In a fine spray it could self ignite.

  • @heathbecker420
    @heathbecker420 6 місяців тому +6

    Greek fire was said to be self igniting upon contact with air (not water). So something needs to be added to the mix, and then immediately sealed in the glass ball so that there is very little air in side. When the ball breaks the mix reacts with air and ignites, it also needs to float on water and be a little sticky so it doesn't run off the sides of ships but clings and burns. Making something sticky and also lighter than water and flammable is pretty easy, the mystery is how to get it to self ignite (and its up for debate if it ever really worked that way). Also you don't want to aerosolize the mix, napalm in flamethrowers is NOT delivered as a mist, rather its a dense stream ideally made with the minimum of atomization. Therefore a better choice would be to develop a device that delivers a laminar flow of the fuel out of the nozzle .

    • @20chocsaday
      @20chocsaday 6 місяців тому +1

      Sodium metal shavings are safe under mineral oil but burn when exposed to air.
      That might ignite some fractions of the oil, they would ignite the rest.
      But making Sodium metal, or White Phosphorus, that's a problem.

    • @heathbecker420
      @heathbecker420 6 місяців тому +2

      @@20chocsaday sodium generally does not ignite in air, not unless its really shaved thin and exposed to humid air and HOT like over 200F hot. Its reactive to water. Maybe you meant white phosphorous that you mention later in your comment (which is wicked dangerous and probably not something the ancient Greeks had access to) but is very reactive to air.

    • @20chocsaday
      @20chocsaday 6 місяців тому

      @@heathbecker420 Thanks.
      Trouble is, you can't keep the metal except under oil. The same goes for Potassium.
      But as for a way of reducing these metals to purity or making White Phosphorus in those days, that is a problem.

    • @vladboy1
      @vladboy1 2 місяці тому

      Sugar

    • @firstmkb
      @firstmkb Місяць тому

      Igniting doesn’t necessarily have to be on contact with air. It could happen on impact from a glass container shattering or hot glass hitting the water. For that matter some burning charcoal in the package could do the trick"

  • @ConnorSinclairCavin
    @ConnorSinclairCavin 6 місяців тому

    Tip: when doing this sort of experiment (testing fire sources) ALWAYS test at night in case of invisible flames

  • @Vexeton
    @Vexeton 6 місяців тому +30

    get a better sponsor

  • @DevilMaster
    @DevilMaster 5 місяців тому

    For a followup, reconstruct a cheirosiphon, use it with the most promising recipe, and verify what it would've performed like.

  • @LugborG
    @LugborG 6 місяців тому +6

    Your final mixture may still work, depending on the conditions you're testing under. Try hitting some wet wood (the hull above the waterline) with the mix. There won't be as much water to cool the mixture, which could lead to ignition.

  • @Sajasta
    @Sajasta 5 місяців тому +1

    You've recreated Greek fire? good.
    Now recreate Wildfire!

  • @timconklin3093
    @timconklin3093 6 місяців тому +34

    Please drop betterhelp unless you're into exposing people's personal information

    • @SlyNation
      @SlyNation 6 місяців тому +1

      He probably can't stop. Sponsorships usually work by contracts which say how many videos you need to make, how long the advertisement is, how many posts you have to make, etc. Or it could be a campaign style where its 1, 2-minute advert for every video created between a start and end date. It's always different per company and usually you cannot simply drop a sponsor once you agreed and signed to it. Not at least until the contract is fulfilled or youve reached the end date.

    • @cherrydragon3120
      @cherrydragon3120 2 місяці тому

      ​@@SlyNationyeah breach of contract will deffinetly cost you more then you earn

  • @InimicalWit
    @InimicalWit 6 місяців тому

    9:58
    You know what, tho, that kinda makes sense, now you mention it.
    I think if the stuff you collected were more flammable, it would be somehow protected by an official or private barrier 💙

  • @bloodyrage82
    @bloodyrage82 6 місяців тому +2

    I've seen a modern recipe for napalm type stuff that used diesel, lighter oil and shaved soap. Loved it though!

  • @simoncleret
    @simoncleret 6 місяців тому +6

    It would be possible to create small amounts of metallic sodium (Making a small amount of electric current with chemical batteries would be a reasonable amount of effort for a secret superweapon of the day). Try mixing some of THAT in the oil.

    • @charlesurrea1451
      @charlesurrea1451 6 місяців тому

      Sodium was discovered in 1807 by the English chemist Humphry Davy from electrolysis of caustic soda (NaOH). Although sodium is the sixth most abundant element on earth and comprises about 2.6% of the earth's crust, it is a very reactive element and is never found free in nature.

    • @SeekingTheLoveThatGodMeans7648
      @SeekingTheLoveThatGodMeans7648 6 місяців тому

      It would have to be done with molten salt -- not a salt solution.

  • @johnslugger
    @johnslugger 2 місяці тому

    *They did mix the "fine light crude" with yellow sulfur which keeps relighting when mixed with fine cut fibers like cotton. Then they made NITRATE OF POTASH "potnit' by adding Urine into a campfire to make an oxidizer.*

  • @drunkredninja
    @drunkredninja 6 місяців тому +17

    what i wanna know is how you guys cleaned up all that oil

    • @therockinboxer
      @therockinboxer 6 місяців тому

      are you asking for a woman you know?

  • @TFUTM
    @TFUTM 6 місяців тому

    The thickening agent in napalm is an aluminium salt of palmitic acid (a long chain fatty acid). It is a form of soap. If you add lime to animal fat (and maybe water- slaked like would be safer) you get a sodium salt of a fatty acid. This is a sodium based soap like the stuff everyone uses. Fatty acid + alkali a standard soap making thing. So maybe quicklime is used to make soap that is then used to thicken the mixture and make it sticky.

  • @KamiThulak
    @KamiThulak 6 місяців тому +5

    Better help was a scam 5 years ago and it barely improved since then.

  • @hunnybunnysheavymetalmusic6542
    @hunnybunnysheavymetalmusic6542 5 місяців тому

    For self ignition in water, you need sodium, potassium, or even calcium in its metallic form.
    If you happen across red phosphorous, though, it can be mixed with petroleum distillates or other organics and ignited at relatively low temperatures with alkali metal oxides or even hydroxides.

  • @hiphopguy0
    @hiphopguy0 6 місяців тому +10

    The ATF would like to let you know that you've violated the NFA and are subject to 10 years in prison and a $250000 fine. Homie just making destructive devices without paying his $200 tax.

    • @kubakielbasa5987
      @kubakielbasa5987 6 місяців тому +2

      bro he paid the tax probably

    • @PopLadd
      @PopLadd 6 місяців тому +1

      @@stevexracer why are you commenting this same thing everywhere? don't you have better things to do with your life?

    • @AbananaPEEl
      @AbananaPEEl 6 місяців тому +1

      @@kubakielbasa5987 The tax stamp requires a lot of other stuff to get. And the devices themselves need to be marked with your name and address. I think he might have some problems

    • @PrebleStreetRecords
      @PrebleStreetRecords 6 місяців тому

      @@stevexracerWhy are you spamming comments showing off how deep you can swallow a boot?

  • @kumabjorn7992
    @kumabjorn7992 6 місяців тому

    Try a higher distillation temperature to get the higher octane fuels. Maybe even try stacked distillation since each grade boils off at different temperatures. Mix in some fresh crude to the diesel/jet fuel. Add some liquefied pine sap to thicken it. Then spray it through a crude, lit, nozzle with a hand pump. That should give you decent effects, burn easily, and stick to targets even in water. I doubt the hand flask grenades are much more than oil in a corked beaker. Pretty much fancy medieval molotovs. It's the dragon breath at the front of the ship that's really awesome.

  • @PabloEdvardo
    @PabloEdvardo 6 місяців тому +4

    18:40 another example of how your tests are at best, creative demonstrations, and not in any way scientific or useful. Allowing the other ingredients to accumulate in your water means you're not testing flammability of any individual component, save for maybe the first one you did. Control and elimination of variables are essential to performing an experiment that one can draw conclusions from.

  • @ChipmunkRapidsMadMan1869
    @ChipmunkRapidsMadMan1869 6 місяців тому +2

    Try Birch Tar. There are plenty of primers on distilling birch tar or you can buy it online as a natural skin treatment.

  • @Flying0Dismount
    @Flying0Dismount 6 місяців тому +14

    Congratulations on turning your back yard into an EPA superfund site..

    • @Khalrua
      @Khalrua 6 місяців тому +1

      He also made incendiary devices, 10 year prison sentence and a felony in the USA.

    • @jackk4332
      @jackk4332 6 місяців тому

      Looking at the water level in the friggin thing.....one side was partially caved in.......BRO you dont clean that SH*T up with paper towels! That property is likely permanently contaminated.

  • @nickt5680
    @nickt5680 Місяць тому

    Try crushed or powdered lithium or sodium metals mixed with the oil. Once the ions exchange, rapid effect. Can use a short lithium rod as a fuse and have it boyant and it will float until...💥 Within seconds of water contact. Just nip off the end before tossing it or the oxide can delay or prevent it from reacting

  • @kentremendous5112
    @kentremendous5112 6 місяців тому +8

    You’ve got to drop the betterhelp sponsorship, they are AWFUL.

    • @cherrydragon3120
      @cherrydragon3120 2 місяці тому

      Elaborate rather then shout demands. Why are they awfull