Yeah, the thin pipettes are very finely graduated so that you can carefully figure EXACTLY how much of a chemical needs to be added to very large playing baths so that the copper plating on aluminum or stainless steel base metal rolls comes out EXACTLY to spec. You can really waste A LOT of $$$ if you aren't EXTREMELY careful!!! If you break or crack the tip of a pipette it is USELESS!!! (Please don't ask me how I know from personal experience.) When you have the tip of the pipette in a top opening of a flask and are swirling the solution and adding chemical one dropped at a time, the slightest hand-eye miscalculation can VERY EASILY break the tip!!! Mean maxima culpa!!! It takes lots of practice and nerves of titanium everytime. I eventually got extremely good at titrating, but in the beginning it was sketchy. My bosses were fortunately very patient with me.👽😄😲👍
This is awesome! I like all your video's, but this is a great little change from the usual. You should do more specials like this. I've always wondered about the manufacturing process of lab glass.
Westerners never seem to understand where their things come from. As if it magically appears out of thin air. No such skill can be found in the good ol you ess of aye.
Back in the 1960's I worked in a chemical lab, so how they make all the equipment that I used every day for five years was very, very interesting!!! Thank you very much!!! Great job!!! Terry
4 роки тому+13
It is amazing how this ancient art of glass blowing has continued on to be an important and very necessary component to modern scientific research. Along with metallurgy/metal working, glass blowing is one of those ancient technologies that seem to always need some form of human skill.
This is an amazing video! My wife is a chemistry professor at the university here. I is really great to see this process and the fantastic skilled workers that make them. Thank You! I wish good health and all the best to you and yours!
Much respect to this great little heroes making such beautiful glass precision equipment, it’s really a wonderful art. Stay safe and well. Blessings to all of you here and, blessings to your family and friends as well.
the single most fascinating thing to me is watching them trim the glassware. it's amazing to just see the glass lightly touch the metal bit and boom a perfect cut forms and slides right off.
Yes Another Great Video filled in some gaps in my knowledge. Back in the day I was an instrument scientist in UK Met office and we used a glass blower at University of East Avglia. Watching him work was inspirational, Importantly for us he had an aprentice who he was training fo pick up the ultra skilled work when he retired. Your videos are a complete window in the world of Science and mercifully all of your exotic substances are simply not available outside of industry or accademia. There was a time when I could get antything from Aldritch and others. Now I am retired and an ordinary householder mercifully not.
As an American I would buy items that’s said “made in Russia”. The people there are strong and I greatly respect them. I hope my grandsons learn more appreciation towards other countries. I wish good health and all the best to you and yours!
@@atrumblood He was wrong, it is standardized by the mold, basically every piece they make will have very very small differences and that is why all glassware says +/- 5%.
@@jonross377 hmm, it would be nice to confirm. Ive overed a box of 100 mL flasks all with the volume mark being in slightly different places along the neck. This is class A glassware btw.
What a fun video! One of my first jobs was as a scientific glass blower, but the glass shop did not do production glassware. Our job was to support the labs at the company. We usually fabricated glassware from tubing, flasks, pre ground joints and valves. So it was interesting to see how a production shop goes about the process. We also worked fused quartz this requires eye glasses that are much darker because the quartz glows with a very bright white light when heated to very high temperatures required to work it.
Also would be nice to elaborate on making graduation marks and labels, as well as quartz glass manufacture and it's special properties (e.g. transparency for UV-C light, making it useful in photochemical reactors).
Well this is very different for this channel, but what a good and thorough video it was! Seriously, one of the best and most informative videos I've seen in a while. Nice work!
You should have respect for him because, he’s trying hard to speak English. Make a laughingstock out of him shows lack of respect, empathy, kindness and respect for his efforts. Your lack of education is showing up to all the people in this comment section. Typical for some people, we know who they are of course. Always the same.
I had a friend who made specialty scientific glassware. I wish I had stayed in contact with him because I need a distillation apparatusbut he showed me how he does it and its cool as hell.
This video is amazing that glass furnace cold tungsten glass top fracturing part is awesome. I've seen glass blowing but never laboratory glass so cool.
Excellent video! I was actually curious how they made the condensers. I found such a condenser at the garbage in perfect condition and being the hoarder I am it now has a place in my basement. Such a shame to throw away such awesome piece of workmanship. Thank you for sharing with us this process
I thought you were older man my friend your a very young man and smart also..... Thank you for your hard work and information.. learned alot from your videos... God bless you and family
Is no one going to talk about what happened at the end there? Because I need answers. Great video btw, I’m fascinated by glass and it’s manufacture. I love learning about how we get different properties and colours by doping the mix with different elements and compounds.
How it’s made Thoisoi edition 😍
Respect for these skilled people that can produce this precize equipment.
Yeah, the thin pipettes are very finely graduated so that you can carefully figure EXACTLY how much of a chemical needs to be added to very large playing baths so that the copper plating on aluminum or stainless steel base metal rolls comes out EXACTLY to spec. You can really waste A LOT of $$$ if you aren't EXTREMELY careful!!! If you break or crack the tip of a pipette it is USELESS!!! (Please don't ask me how I know from personal experience.) When you have the tip of the pipette in a top opening of a flask and are swirling the solution and adding chemical one dropped at a time, the slightest hand-eye miscalculation can VERY EASILY break the tip!!! Mean maxima culpa!!! It takes lots of practice and nerves of titanium everytime. I eventually got extremely good at titrating, but in the beginning it was sketchy. My bosses were fortunately very patient with me.👽😄😲👍
Just what I was thinking.
#cofact
Exactly, I had no idea they were handmade
😍
This is awesome! I like all your video's, but this is a great little change from the usual. You should do more specials like this. I've always wondered about the manufacturing process of lab glass.
Oui, je suis d'accord avec toi, monsieur! ;p
now let's make concrete and c4, then test the 2 : D
This was awesome, It reminds me if the show "How it's Made". I would love to see more of this place.
This is a free and more cientific version of that tv program (which is even better). 😃
#cofact
Agree
This is an incredibly cool look at the process-I had no idea it involved so much human effort. Really beautiful work.
#cofact
Westerners never seem to understand where their things come from. As if it magically appears out of thin air. No such skill can be found in the good ol you ess of aye.
Back in the 1960's I worked in a chemical lab, so how they make all the equipment that I used every day for five years was very, very interesting!!!
Thank you very much!!!
Great job!!!
Terry
It is amazing how this ancient art of glass blowing has continued on to be an important and very necessary component to modern scientific research.
Along with metallurgy/metal working, glass blowing is one of those ancient technologies that seem to always need some form of human skill.
#cofact
This is an amazing video! My wife is a chemistry professor at the university here. I is really great to see this process and the fantastic skilled workers that make them. Thank You!
I wish good health and all the best to you and yours!
Absolutely fascinating! I'm surprised by how much is still done by hand. Thank you for the video!
Much respect to this great little heroes making such beautiful glass precision equipment, it’s really a wonderful art. Stay safe and well. Blessings to all of you here and, blessings to your family and friends as well.
god i love how this guy talks its like he's the the adult version of Dexter from Dexter´s lab
Ok my son.
@@ozgunkara1930 Fack off
Hes talkses likes skwisgard skuigelfs froms metalocolypse
if i don’t focus really hard it sounds like a complete foreign language
@@ozgunkara1930 you are imaginary
this is honestly one of the best science channels on youtube!!
the single most fascinating thing to me is watching them trim the glassware. it's amazing to just see the glass lightly touch the metal bit and boom a perfect cut forms and slides right off.
This was pretty great. The footage of the condenser was awesome. Good stuff mate
I always find making glassware fascinating, especially laboratory glassware. Such skill and hard work. Thanks for the video!
Yes Another Great Video filled in some gaps in my knowledge. Back in the day I was an instrument scientist in UK Met office and we used a glass blower at University of East Avglia. Watching him work was inspirational, Importantly for us he had an aprentice who he was training fo pick up the ultra skilled work when he retired.
Your videos are a complete window in the world of Science and mercifully all of your exotic substances are simply not available outside of industry or accademia.
There was a time when I could get antything from Aldritch and others. Now I am retired and an ordinary householder mercifully not.
As an American I would buy items that’s said “made in Russia”. The people there are strong and I greatly respect them. I hope my grandsons learn more appreciation towards other countries.
I wish good health and all the best to you and yours!
Im working in chemical and microorganism lab, i use these glass everyday but dont know how it make until now. Respect for these maker
I would love to see more videos like this. Also would be interesting to see how they Standardize volumetric glassware.
Acid
@@stucknousernames care to elaborate?
@@atrumblood He was wrong, it is standardized by the mold, basically every piece they make will have very very small differences and that is why all glassware says +/- 5%.
@@jonross377 hmm, it would be nice to confirm. Ive overed a box of 100 mL flasks all with the volume mark being in slightly different places along the neck. This is class A glassware btw.
@@atrumblood I told you how it is done.
The blacksmith and the artist, reflect it in their art. They forge their creativity, closer to the heart. . RUSH - great vid Thoisoi keep it up dude!
I didn’t know it required so many labour. Respect for these highly skilled people. Thank Thoisoi for making this awesome little documentary.
Sir, make video on " Hydrofobic material " .
How it's made? And it's uses .
This video is assome .
👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏
,👌👌👌👌👌👌👌👌
#cofact
you mean hydrophobic? that's made by coating with substance that hates water.
What a fun video! One of my first jobs was as a scientific glass blower, but the
glass shop did not do production glassware. Our job was to support the labs
at the company. We usually fabricated glassware from tubing, flasks, pre ground
joints and valves. So it was interesting to see how a production shop goes about
the process. We also worked fused quartz this requires eye glasses that are much
darker because the quartz glows with a very bright white light when heated to very
high temperatures required to work it.
who needs daytime tele when you can have this, brilliant . thank you.
Awesome vidio man, it's fascinating to see where these glass components are made and how they are made.
Fascinating video! Those guys are full on artistic tradesmen!!
Agree!
really good video mate
Please do more content like this! This was hands down my favorite video I've seen so far.
WOW ! That video went by FAST ! So fascinatingly informative ! Well done, Mr. Maxim Bilovitskiy !
Thank you! SUperb!
Now this is awesome my friend . Thank you from Bill in the USA. 👍 Your such a blessing.
This was so cool to watch, especially the condenser parts!
This video made me smile more than you could ever imagine
This video is truly outstanding!
One of your best ever!! Well done
Very intresting video. Making glass is always Nice. But in that factory it looks even better.
I've always wondered how they make glass joints! So interesting! Thank you for this
Love your videos. Cheers from argentina!
Those guys and girls are very skilled, that is not something you can learn to operate in a few days. Respect!
Also would be nice to elaborate on making graduation marks and labels, as well as quartz glass manufacture and it's special properties (e.g. transparency for UV-C light, making it useful in photochemical reactors).
that was one of the coolest videos i’ve seen all week! thanks Thoisoi!
Bravo, highly engaging and informative.
This is one of your best videos ever! I love how you walk us through the process like How It’s Made. The camera work is superb too! So awesome
No wonder most of the lab glassware haves a price so high. I can appreciate more this pieces of equipment now.
Well this is very different for this channel, but what a good and thorough video it was! Seriously, one of the best and most informative videos I've seen in a while. Nice work!
Beautiful and lovely ground glass joints!!!
It's superb, the work of glass is really an art. I am fascinated by glasslab.
Thanks for the video. 👍👍👍
Love this channel
11:19 uuuulolololollollololololololr
Annn eeennterestiing aggha
W.T.F.?!
You should have respect for him because, he’s trying hard to speak English. Make a laughingstock out of him shows lack of respect, empathy, kindness and respect for his efforts. Your lack of education is showing up to all the people in this comment section. Typical for some people, we know who they are of course. Always the same.
@@gunnarallgottsmann I am not judging his English, i think he's perfect the way he is and i enjoy his videos. I just found funny the end :D
@@gunnarallgottsmann Idiot, he's not making fun of him...
love your video and missed your video for a long time
Awesome video @Thoisoi2! Thanks a ton for this window into the lab glassware world!
I had a friend who made specialty scientific glassware. I wish I had stayed in contact with him because I need a distillation apparatusbut he showed me how he does it and its cool as hell.
You can get one on ebay for 30 bucks, or get a really extensive setup for around 200...
Fantastic video! What craftsmanship.
LOVE this! Fantastic footage and commentary. You're really stepping up your educational game!
Brilliant video - really interesting to watch these skilled people at work. Great camera work as well. Thanks for sharing.
Good video. Some glass forming skills take years to perfect. Thank you!
The guy at the end finishing the condenser was awesome. I'd like to take a bong rip using that piece. ✌
And clean it afterwards?
So glad I found this channel.
Congratulations for the video...the workers are artists.5stars..and the accent is unique.
This video is amazing that glass furnace cold tungsten glass top fracturing part is awesome. I've seen glass blowing but never laboratory glass so cool.
I love watching how factories works. Amazing video.
I question I wasn't aware I wanted to know the answer to, until now! :D
Woooooowwwww!!!!! Awesome video!!!! This guy deserves 1M subscribers!!!!!
I've always loved watching glass blowers.
I wish I could give this video two likes. Really interesting and well put together.
the final cat clip :3 was really interesting
You watch this video RIGHT MEOW!
Wow, thank you for sharing! Very interesting and educational!
I love your videos, really interesting to see chemistry in action.
This is one of your most amazing videos yet!
Excellent video detailing the process.
Love your videos from india ♥️
not only glass blowing but mind blowing too!
You always have great videos. Thanks👍
Amazing, you are the best ❤️
That's a really interesting facility . Very well oporated.
"heat resistant"
Pure quartz glass laughs 😁
I just thought the same. 😂
Pure quartz glass is simply Godly
pure quartz crystal laughs at 32.768 KHz
Salute to those who is doing such a great work.
This is fascinating! I had no idea laboratory glassware was all handmade. I'd have thought it was all mass produced on machinery by now.
Really enjoyed this one. Always wondered how the ground joints were made.
One of your best videos ever, thanks!
I'm ceramist and liked a lot this video, ceramic materials are interesting too, refractory heat resistant materials, even used in space rockets!
now we finally know how they make those ground glass joints ! thank you !
Very nice. Thanks for the basic lab-scale recipe too.
Using heat resistant glass to make heat resistant glass is a pro gamer move
Excellent video! I was actually curious how they made the condensers. I found such a condenser at the garbage in perfect condition and being the hoarder I am it now has a place in my basement. Such a shame to throw away such awesome piece of workmanship. Thank you for sharing with us this process
Some awesome human ingenuity at work.
I thought you were older man my friend your a very young man and smart also..... Thank you for your hard work and information.. learned alot from your videos... God bless you and family
Thank you for giving us this amazing video! You clearly put a lot of time and effort into it! Well done!
This is a Brilliant Video.
One of your best so far.
your videos are awesome :)
the process of making this glass is mesmerizing
Fantastic video. 👍👍😁😁
Keep the good work up. 👍
Greetings from the Netherlands.
Very cool stuff. I haven't used any like this other than in high school. Over 30 years ago.
Glass is such an incredible material; I would wager it has been as important to humanity's development as steel.
Very good video.
I swear I want a Graham condenser just to put glowing and colorful liquids in.
The bulbous condenser was also interesting.
That was a super cool video. Nicely done.
Thanks you guy so much!!!! Now i knew how was glass joint made✌️
Incredible. Thank you for sharing this.
Extremely well done
Is no one going to talk about what happened at the end there? Because I need answers.
Great video btw, I’m fascinated by glass and it’s manufacture. I love learning about how we get different properties and colours by doping the mix with different elements and compounds.
That's for the next video . Lol
wow, great video. I did a little glassware making/blowing in college, but quite primitive, wonderful to see how the pro's do it!
Great video man, thank you. I love this channel.