Yea much like builders without helmets are true builders, lumbermill workers without cutting gloves are true lumbermill workers, and coalminers without dustmasks are true coalminers, right? Because you can't be true and real without ignoring basic survivability measures of course. You must be stupid to be one of the real ones.
Touching liquid nitrogen with gloves on is a death sentence for your hand. Naked skin creates a protective vapor layer that prevents liquid nitrogen from making contact with naked skin.
Being a scientist is when you know when to use correct safety equipment. Glasses and gloves would not help, but glasses could fog up and gloves actually could freeze and transfer the cold way quicker and it is way slower to take off than just take our hand away from source of cold. It is similar to some acids where it is actually better to wear no gloves at all, because most gloves actually melt and burn while in contact and could cause bigger damage if the acid just fell on your hand where layer of dead skin would protect you for the first minute or so until you got to the washing station.
I think u can hold it 10 seconds before it freezes (feels like a burn) you. It would be like touching something 250° f. It will burn but not for 5 to 10 seconds like very hotter than normal scolding 🚿 shower water
@@RealStrategyGamingClassics 250° f water burns you almost instantly, after 5 seconds you would already have 3rd degree burns. Go ahead and stick your hand into boiling water and see if you can hold it there for 10 seconds, lmao
I’ve experienced-33°C before and the texture of the snow becomes very crunchy as it loses its moisture. The roads also slightly resembled a desert as cars driving by would kick up snow and it looked like sand in the wind
@@MiracleMagicianwhether he has or not doesn’t change whether video guy wears gloves or not, regardless if that’s the reason he does it. Guys point still stands.
@@gregritferdjrliquid nitrogen is a lot cheaper than gasoline. The store is selling gasoline for a $1.004 per liter. Well, you can get liquid nitrogen as little as $0.13 per litter.
@@VentiVonOsterreich They're about the most similar of the four original shows. but there are key differences. like having a new show name and a new theme song and a bunch of other stuff.
You don't want to use gloves when handling liquid nitrogen. The leidenfrost effect will protect your hands, but if a glove is soaked you can't easily remove the liquid nitrogen from your hand.
Liedenfrost effect is only good for a second, and use common sense. If LN2 didn't burn people, no one would would have been burned. They have been. Fatally. There are gloves made out of synthetic "rubbers" made for protection against this risk and used in industry. I suppose it's his life to do with as he wishes, but once you see first hand the results of accidents, it gives you religion.
@@haminabowl7876hey, thanks buddy. I have heard of that effect many a times but never remembered that name and just this morning I was thinking of it and trying to recall it, anddd here you’ve mentioned it 😅
@@maszina8187 you have to use specific types of gloves to handle liquid nitrogen, for regular gloves won’t do much protection. Another reason is because absorbent material close to your hands/skin (such as gloves) shouldn’t be in contact with liquid nitrogen (according to a university article on how to handle liquid nitrogen). It will be way worse than holding it with your hands, because once the coldness of liquid nitrogen breaks the protection of the gloves, your hands will basically be trapped with the liquid nitrogen making the frostbite, burns, and blistering of the skin worse
The leidenfrost effect happens when something is so hot it boils a liquid so rapidly that it forms a layer of steam in that area effectively creating a barrier between the liquid and the object heating it. With pure liquid nitrogen what you said would be true as liquid nitrogen boils well below water's freezing point, but surely it's evaporated away by the time he's pulled that chunk of ice out and handled it. The ice is just very cold, it still has the same boiling point as regular water so I don't feel the leidenfrost effect is happening here.
Behold my latest invention, The Snowcoldinator! You see, Perry the Platypus, when I was a little boy growing up in Drusselstein, I always wanted to play snowball fights with the other kids. But my parents would always get me these cheap bargain bin gloves filled with holes, you know, the really linty ones that has the unraveling string that you just can't help pulling at, while of course Roger would get the good fancy gloves. So I could never hold snowballs because they were too cold. Now, I will make all the snowballs so cold that even with the best gloves, people's hands will freeze. They won't be able to lift a finger to stop me from taking over the TRISTATE AREAAA!
That ammount of snow onm the ground no way it's 0c, it's gonna be more like -5 or -10. And yeah it's funny hearing the farenheit when it's so logical and obvious what temperature it is in celcius. Well it's frozen so it's under 0 degrees. Easy.
i mean yeah, then again the Celsius system is kinda based around water, as in 0C is the freezing point, 100C is just the boiling point and a difference of 1 degree im pretty sure is just some formula derived from those 2
Super snowballs -freezed enemies for 5 second -extra damages 50% -cold for user to used -risk:maker the user hand frostbite -enemy might get injured like snowball with rock
Once upon a time (like 2006 lol), I was walking on a university campus with my headphones on when I suddenly walked through a patch of _very_ cold air. I removed my headphones, and heard a very distinct hissing sound. Like pressurized air escaping from a tank lol As anyone who reads this may have guessed, the liquid nitrogen tank adjacent to the chemistry building was leaking. I had passed ~15 feet (4.6 meters), maybe less, from the tank. It was around 110°F (43.3°C) that day with a *hot* breeze (like when you open the oven and get blasted with that cloud of freshly baked air). So the random patch of arctic air _really_ stood out. Liquid nitrogen is definitely a very interesting substance.
He kind of mentioned but forgot to explain-the snow had insulated the underside from the extreme cold temps the top was exposed to. Contrast with the small ball which as he said is actually that temp throughout due to having been submerged for some time
Snow being a good insulator is how igloos have been a thing that people have built for hundreds of years. Also why digging a snow cave is a good survival strategy.
This is also partially due to the leidenfrost effect where a layer of gas forms between your hand and the ice to shield your hand from getting direct contact with the ice. It also works for extremely hot objects
Snowball now inflicts extra Frost damage
I haven't seen anything that cold since last I tried to talking to a girl.
😂😢@@randygonzalez6250
@@randygonzalez6250I dunno. Computers can run pretty hot...
@@anonymousapproximation8549AI girls now? 😂
@@presidentgamingz AI chatbots have been around since forever at this point. They just take up more processing, now.
Only a scientist would think to ask "what if snow was colder?"
fr 😂
Up next: making lava hotter
And then touch it lol
Scientists definitely thought of this after smoking a blunt
This dude said 'look at it smoking' he aint no scientist
"That is cold snow"
-ActionLabShorts
260 (261, including me) likes, and no replies? Jeez, (almost) everyone who liked unanimously agreed this is too perfect to reply onto.
its like the opposite of hot potato
No no it *is*
A game of hot potato where this ice ball gets thrown in the mix randomly 💀
Cold potato
Cold tomato
This will still burn your skin.
Many people got burned in my lab by LN2.
No gloves or safety glasses = a true scientist
Yea much like builders without helmets are true builders, lumbermill workers without cutting gloves are true lumbermill workers, and coalminers without dustmasks are true coalminers, right? Because you can't be true and real without ignoring basic survivability measures of course. You must be stupid to be one of the real ones.
Safety third! Maybe fourth if we're in a rush
As long as he isn't keeping two metals from touching each other with a screwdriver he should be fine
Touching liquid nitrogen with gloves on is a death sentence for your hand. Naked skin creates a protective vapor layer that prevents liquid nitrogen from making contact with naked skin.
Being a scientist is when you know when to use correct safety equipment. Glasses and gloves would not help, but glasses could fog up and gloves actually could freeze and transfer the cold way quicker and it is way slower to take off than just take our hand away from source of cold. It is similar to some acids where it is actually better to wear no gloves at all, because most gloves actually melt and burn while in contact and could cause bigger damage if the acid just fell on your hand where layer of dead skin would protect you for the first minute or so until you got to the washing station.
"HAHA YOU FLINCHED"
The snowballs he was trying to throw:
How to win a snowball fight:
Add rocks to inflict more damage
@@dragonslayer1009Rocks for bludgeoning damage and ice for slashing damage
Thank you, Frosty the Snowman 💀
Nah just pack some slush into your hand and make an ice ball. Gets em every time
@@dragonslayer1009Too far
“I can hold it in my hand if I keep moving it”
*holds it still*
ai generated ahh comment
ai generated ahh reply
He was moving it
Bro's reaching strength of Vsauce
ai generated ahh comment
Thanks. Now I’m bringing liquid nitrogen to my next snowball fight.
So will i
Don't give anyone the cold shoulder
💀
Moral of the story: if something is smoking it's either really hot or really cold, don't hold it in your hand unless you want to find out.
that's steam though, steam means something is boilin
@@ItsDoneWithMirrorstake chemistry please dude
man this guy came off the algorithm not knowing chemistry and you blasted him. You could at least explain that shit
@@ItsDoneWithMirrorsYeah that -196C snowball was so hot, it was boiling!
@@PelvicSlingit's the nitrogen boiling
"I can hold it in my hand if I just keep moving it". **STOPS MOVING IT**
Exactly what I was thinking lmfaooo
Same
I think u can hold it 10 seconds before it freezes (feels like a burn) you. It would be like touching something 250° f. It will burn but not for 5 to 10 seconds like very hotter than normal scolding 🚿 shower water
@@RealStrategyGamingClassics 250° f water burns you almost instantly, after 5 seconds you would already have 3rd degree burns.
Go ahead and stick your hand into boiling water and see if you can hold it there for 10 seconds, lmao
Ik lol
I’ve experienced-33°C before and the texture of the snow becomes very crunchy as it loses its moisture. The roads also slightly resembled a desert as cars driving by would kick up snow and it looked like sand in the wind
You need more like ngl
"That is cold snow."
-ActionLab, 2023
Greatest quote of the year.
The motivation is coming inside me! 😩
This snow is too hot. Let me cool it down.
@@tuxeeepause
yeah, like all the snow there is lol
the correct thing to say would've been "that's even colder snow"
“Either it’s really hot or it’s really cold, but either way it REALLY hurts.”
Terraria reference?
I loooooooveeee Terraria
Frostbite from terraria????
Lmaoo
Cold and hot can cause burns so I guess either way it really burns.
“Look it’s smoking ” proceeds to pick it up
"And if I hold still I can feel my hand dying :)"
Hypothermia is that you?!
This man has never worn gloves in his life and isn't about to change now
@@letsreadtextbook1687 Ever heard about Leiden Frost effect?
@@MiracleMagicianwhether he has or not doesn’t change whether video guy wears gloves or not, regardless if that’s the reason he does it. Guys point still stands.
"I can hold it in my hand if I keep moving it" {not moving it}
I came here for this 😅
Me too :D
That one kid jumping in the snow is having frostbite 24/7
Imagine using a snowball fight with those.
HAHAHAHAHAHA
Iceball fight*
Would be extremely expensive
Warmer than the shit we had in the UP >_> lol
@@gregritferdjrliquid nitrogen is a lot cheaper than gasoline. The store is selling gasoline for a $1.004 per liter. Well, you can get liquid nitrogen as little as $0.13 per litter.
"This snow is cold."
"Hold my liquid nitrogen canister lid..."
.
You meant "this snow is warm."
@@frenzyfrfrwarm deez nuts
I wanna see what happens when you throw a snowball!
The fun thing about liquid nitrogen is that it sublimates, and doesn't melt, so it kind of just "disappears"
I think you misunderstand. sublimation and melting are things that happen to solids, which liquid nitrogen most certainly is not.
The correct term would be “evaporates” because it’s already liquid 🤓
@@inconspicuous45I meant the snow form (solid crystals)
New Frostbite% speedrun strat
Its quite the timesavr ngl we might get a new wr soon
"So cold it burns"
-Ben Tennyson, Ben 10 Alien Force
Actually that was Ultimate Alien
@@curtisleblanc5897 I didn't know grown up Ben had two separate shows, I was sure they were one and the same and just split between different seasons
Such a fire line(or cold i dont know, big chill ftw)
Haha
@@VentiVonOsterreich
They're about the most similar of the four original shows. but there are key differences.
like having a new show name and a new theme song
and a bunch of other stuff.
Bro lost a snowball fight and he isn't letting that slide.
My brain intuitively expects the snowball to melt when it's put in liquid
Same brain almost exploded
students without science often experience this type of things
People before gloves were invented
You don't want to use gloves when handling liquid nitrogen. The leidenfrost effect will protect your hands, but if a glove is soaked you can't easily remove the liquid nitrogen from your hand.
Liedenfrost effect is only good for a second, and use common sense. If LN2 didn't burn people, no one would would have been burned. They have been. Fatally. There are gloves made out of synthetic "rubbers" made for protection against this risk and used in industry. I suppose it's his life to do with as he wishes, but once you see first hand the results of accidents, it gives you religion.
@@haminabowl7876
why does vapour repel liquid?
@@rsr4228 It doesn't repel it, it turns into it (liquid N2 into gas).
@@haminabowl7876hey, thanks buddy.
I have heard of that effect many a times but never remembered that name and just this morning I was thinking of it and trying to recall it, anddd here you’ve mentioned it 😅
Snowball fights just got a whole lot painful…
That's no snowball, that's Snowball Pro Max.
If Apple made a snow ball ⬆️
@@placefeature5329 nahh. It would just be an above average snowball that's 1000$ for no reason.
And called the iSnow
This is how you turn a snowball fight into a death match
Maybe into a Death Battle. Alright imma head out.
That man bun killed me
imagine someone goes outside there later and makes a snowball in that liquid nitrogen
Rip to the boy that accidentally falls flat onto the liquid nitrogen snow.
Cause of death: skill issue
Lol it would warm up by the time the area was done with the chem spill. It's not gonna stay there like negative lava or something
It's just Boris at the end of Goldeneye
@@adrianostrowski6431 😐
Well thank golly it wasn't a gurl that fell
Is this a tutorial on how to lose your hands to frostbite
Lidenfrost effect
using gloves to handle liquid nitrogen is more dangerous than no gloves
@@HiYouHavePoliowhy? Genuine question
@@maszina8187 you have to use specific types of gloves to handle liquid nitrogen, for regular gloves won’t do much protection.
Another reason is because absorbent material close to your hands/skin (such as gloves) shouldn’t be in contact with liquid nitrogen (according to a university article on how to handle liquid nitrogen). It will be way worse than holding it with your hands, because once the coldness of liquid nitrogen breaks the protection of the gloves, your hands will basically be trapped with the liquid nitrogen making the frostbite, burns, and blistering of the skin worse
@@the_cap64 the material from regular glove would melt in my skin?
“We can make it colder” *pours 10 gallons of liquid nitrogen on it*
“That is cold snow” 😂 you don’t say??
😂😂😂
The forbidden snowball
The forbidden ice cream
It's only forbidden if you're a coward
"I can hold it in my hand if i keep moving it"
....*Stops moving it*
That one rich kid in a snowball fight :
Thank the Leidenfrost effect for still having both hands still
you edited it and still have the word "still" twice
@@iwuanadie1058you do too so what's your point lol
I... am pretty sure the Leidenfrost effect is not involved here since it can still hurt him if he doesn't move it.
afaik Leidenfrost effect has to do with liquids, not with solid substances like snow...
The leidenfrost effect happens when something is so hot it boils a liquid so rapidly that it forms a layer of steam in that area effectively creating a barrier between the liquid and the object heating it.
With pure liquid nitrogen what you said would be true as liquid nitrogen boils well below water's freezing point, but surely it's evaporated away by the time he's pulled that chunk of ice out and handled it. The ice is just very cold, it still has the same boiling point as regular water so I don't feel the leidenfrost effect is happening here.
This prank bout to be crazy
All I can imagine is a kid passing by and deciding to try making a snow angel in that exact spot 💀
He is going to be a snow angel, 5 seconds after he goes to heaven.
Why does it burn?!
@@BRUH-lx3jv💀💀
Snow: I’m cold….
Liquid nitrogen: not enough
😂 idk why but this made me bust up laughing while on the toilet
“The snow is cold”
No crap Sherlock Holmes
New update: snowballs have been buffed and will now give 50 frost damage instead of 25 before.
“I can hold it in my hand if I keep moving it”
Proceeds to stop moving it
Perfectly balanced comment box 2200 now I am breaking it
"Hmm this snow is cold, let's make it colder"
“That is SO cold” **proceeds to hold it with bare hands**
another video explained it is more have gloves or mittens when pouring or holding liquid nitrogen
"You know nothing cold snow"
- Liquid Nitrogen.
Imagine using these snowballs in a snow fight 💀
Edit : WOW! I really got 700+ likes! DAMN!
Liquid Nitrogen Snowballs = Extra Frost Damage
Lowkey, if someone knew, you could PROBABLY get arrested for it....
On the other side, probably the most subtle assassination weapon ever
DLC Pack?
Someone would die maybe probably most likely
Death:
"I can hold it in my hands if I keep moving it"
Proceeds to not even move it by an atom
“mommy the snowman is on fire”
“you mean it's melting?”
“no...”
*points to smoke*
You made the snowball that ends up going down the back of your shirt when someone you’re in a snowball fight!
Never engage the guy with a liquid nitrogen tank in a snowball fight
I think that's known as applying a Frostbite enchantment.
I would have loved to see the thermal camera on the chunk of snow to notice the isolation taking place!
Me talking to snow: you call yourself cold?
Pouring liquid nitrogen: taste this shit!
ferb i think i know what we’re gonna do today
Behold my latest invention, The Snowcoldinator! You see, Perry the Platypus, when I was a little boy growing up in Drusselstein, I always wanted to play snowball fights with the other kids. But my parents would always get me these cheap bargain bin gloves filled with holes, you know, the really linty ones that has the unraveling string that you just can't help pulling at, while of course Roger would get the good fancy gloves. So I could never hold snowballs because they were too cold.
Now, I will make all the snowballs so cold that even with the best gloves, people's hands will freeze. They won't be able to lift a finger to stop me from taking over the TRISTATE AREAAA!
-32°F for snow feels so unnatural, 0°C makes so much more sense
It isn't -32°F, just 32°F. I do agree Celsius makes more sense than Fahrenheit, though.
That ammount of snow onm the ground no way it's 0c, it's gonna be more like -5 or -10.
And yeah it's funny hearing the farenheit when it's so logical and obvious what temperature it is in celcius. Well it's frozen so it's under 0 degrees. Easy.
@@red0ctane19 yea 0 Celsius is +32F
i mean yeah, then again the Celsius system is kinda based around water, as in 0C is the freezing point, 100C is just the boiling point and a difference of 1 degree im pretty sure is just some formula derived from those 2
Putting it in your hand is literally playing with fire.
"Whoa that's cold snow "
-ActionLab 2023
"I can hold it in my hand if I just keep moving it" *proceeds to hold it firmly in place*
I love this man.
“I can hold it as long as I keep moving it”
*immediately stops* 💀
Even the snow got cold.
bro summoned the void and thought we wouldn’t notice 🙄
bro was essentially rawdogging that nitrogen😭😭
"That is cold snow"
the kid trying to make a snow angel: ☠️
According to the camera the liquid nitrogen is cold but not the container that comes in
He made some Hoth snow
"it can't damage me if I keep moving it"
**stops moving it**
*"That is cold snow"*
- Action lab guy 2024
Super snowballs
-freezed enemies for 5 second
-extra damages 50%
-cold for user to used
-risk:maker the user hand frostbite
-enemy might get injured like snowball with rock
Holding -203°F snow.
Gloves: "What, am I a joke to you?"
9999 missed calls from Sub-Zero
"that's cold snow"
What do you expect it to be
Umm I wouldn’t hold it like that but that’s just me 😃
Once upon a time (like 2006 lol), I was walking on a university campus with my headphones on when I suddenly walked through a patch of _very_ cold air. I removed my headphones, and heard a very distinct hissing sound. Like pressurized air escaping from a tank lol
As anyone who reads this may have guessed, the liquid nitrogen tank adjacent to the chemistry building was leaking. I had passed ~15 feet (4.6 meters), maybe less, from the tank.
It was around 110°F (43.3°C) that day with a *hot* breeze (like when you open the oven and get blasted with that cloud of freshly baked air). So the random patch of arctic air _really_ stood out.
Liquid nitrogen is definitely a very interesting substance.
Monster ice potato: see I just rotate it, np.
Tiny ice potato: see I can hold- ow!
He kind of mentioned but forgot to explain-the snow had insulated the underside from the extreme cold temps the top was exposed to. Contrast with the small ball which as he said is actually that temp throughout due to having been submerged for some time
I’m like dude, you are so smart… why do you keep touching it?
“I can hold it in my hand if i just keep moving it around” 😀
That must have been exteremely cold, even colder than -89°C.
"I can hold it in my hand if I just keep moving it". *STOPS MOVING IT*
“I can hold it in my hand if I keep moving it” proceeds to stand completarla still
👇
Snow being a good insulator is how igloos have been a thing that people have built for hundreds of years.
Also why digging a snow cave is a good survival strategy.
Marty McFly: "What, what, is it hot?"
Doc Brown: "It's cold! DAMN COLD!"
Imagine playing snowball fights and the other team pulls this up
Imagine in a snowball fight opponent uses liquid nitrogen dipped snowball 😂😂
Imagine walking in the snow and suddenly ur foot gets frostbite
Seeing the snow be covered in liquid without melting is disturbing.
“That is cold snow” is the most true thing ever
Imagine getting snowballs made with liquid nitrogen at you
I love these types of videos where they teach things like school would but it’s actually entertaining.
This is some primo data source for thermo analysis. Thanks bro
Anything too hot: burns
Anything too cold: BURNS
Touching this snow is now like holding your hand under hot water😂
"That is cold snow."
Only quality science here ladies and gentlemen.
Snow ball? More like snow heart. Gives a whole new meaning to ice cold heart
2 days later: Hey guys, I'm going to try this new prosthetic hand
This is also partially due to the leidenfrost effect where a layer of gas forms between your hand and the ice to shield your hand from getting direct contact with the ice. It also works for extremely hot objects
Me while he was holding it:
"THROW IT AT THE WALL! THROW IT AT THE WALL!"