It's not clear on the goal. For the petrol bulb to explode, one would fill the petrol to below the filament then the filament would heat up potentially igniting the oxygen and petrol vapour to cause an explosion. As it was filled above the filament, there is no oxygen and so no ignition with the filament simply heating the petrol until fails.
makes sense and this proccess reminds me of combustion engines, so if there was some decent amount of oxygen on the petrol bulb it would explode instantly instead of slowly burning and releasing bubbles?
@@NullCyan It needs a correct air to fuel ratio and some compression to actually explode, otherwise it can burn slower. It will surely burn with a small amount of gasoline in the bottom and let it vaporize, but not for too long otherwise the vapors would take the air's space instead.
It is a awesome video. All those liquids are water based (except petroil). Would ve Nice if You try baby oil, destilate water, aceton/alcohol, maybe even motor oil 😅.
Was completely pointless. And he's lucky the petrol didn't manage to light. This wasn't so much a science experiment as it was a "what dumb thing can I do for views" experiment.
Not really pointless, he demonstrated how a tungten filament fail in air, how it create blue tungsten oxide on water, how petrol is a bad conductor, and how energy drinks have enough salts to be a good conductor. It's dangerous, but with a proper electrolysis setup, can be a good teaching element on chemistry/physics.
Suggesttion: Hook up a stepless transformer and slowly increase the voltage to grid level. Let's see how the various liquids react to slowly increasing filament temperatures. Photonicinduction did that in one video, you can see the water boiling around the filament.
They would probably burst and make a big ol’ mess. Especially the energy drink and the petrol ones. The petrol might start a fire after it burst and air gets to the filament.
What was the point here? The filament never burns out in a normal bulb due to lack of oxygen. The others will just burn it out quickly. Fuel won't ignite without a flame or spark either, so...
why every video that I watch "do not try at home" Thinking that each experiment will explode through my laptop or cellphone. Sometimes I hesitate to watch it straight through. Its like watching a horror movie LOL
People probably expected the petrol to explode but you need to realize, that petrol is not flammable. Petrol fumes are flammable but not petrol itself. It's just that when you let petrol sit in an open container at room temperature, fumes will form on top of the container and that's what you will see burning, when you put fire close to it, not the petrol itself and then the heat may vaporize more petrol and that keeps the reaction going. In the video, the hot wire was completely covered in petrol, which cannot burn. And even though the heat will cause the petrol to vaporize and create a lot of petrol fumes, those cannot burn either as they'd require oxygen to burn and there is no oxygen inside of the petrol. That's why cars only explode in Hollywood but not in reality. They can only go up in flames and slowly burn down, if petrol keeps leaking out of the car while the car is burning. The liquid petrol won't even burn and inside a petrol tank is almost no oxygen, so it's impossible for a tank to explode. The explosions in movies are made by putting a real explosive next to a plastic container of petrol and when the real explosive goes off, it first spreads the petrol all over the place as fine drops that will immediately vaporize due to the heat of the explosion and its fumes then go up in flames and that's the huge fireball you see in movies.
How did petrol bulb did not explode ? And did you forgot ? There is something like Death while filming petrol bulb with live electricity😅.Hats off to you bro ❤
Liquid petrol (gasoline and diesel) don't explode. Don't try it at home, but if you fill a cup with any, and put them on fire, which is difficult, only the surface will have a flame, and the liquid will sit undisturbed.
It seemed like electrolysis was so strong, that it was not enough current to burn the filament. Like more current went through the liquid than through the filament.
For my eyes it looks like it actually did burn, but the liquid conducts enough that it kept the current flow through itself only, while the filament dangles underneath.
Probably the longest lasting would be one filled with silicone liquid such as Polydimethylsiloxane which does not boil at high temperature but vitrifies . The filament would then overheat and melt
Only in the earliest incandescent lamps was there a vacuum, and today still in those with low power (under 15 watts), later and to this day they contain a protective gas to inhibit the sublimation of the tungsten. Normally a negative pressure gas mixture of argon and some nitrogen is in incandescent lamps, with more expensive, more efficient krypton.
I remember when I was a kid, my dad would tell me that light bulbs can get damaged or break when put into water. It is because as a kid, I drew one of the light bulbs as a cartoon character telling the other light bulbs to take a bath. This was when I was 6 or 7 years old
Thank you for subscribe. And The petrol bulb couldn't explode because the bulb full with petrol, there is no oxygen inside the bulb and we know to make it explode it's need perfect combination of fule and oxygen
@@user-xz3xf6bc8othen what do carburator do? Gasoline engine use an Electric spark to ignite the air fuel mixture unlike diesel engine that uses the heat produced by compressing said mixture to ignite it
So when exposed to atmosphere you burn it out. As seen from the first one. Now if you can fill them and fix the top again sealing it that would be interesting and explosive likely. The water if you do it with distilled water it might burn for a while till the filament releases enough particles to short it. Truly distilled water won't mess up electronics. I used to work in a place that had super distilled water for nuclear stuff and dropped a drill in the water the drill kept going pulled it out by the cord and i worked perfectly good still!
The red one is not boling, the water is electrolytically decomposed (electrolysis), hydrogen and oxygen are produced (foam). can be confirmed by igniting the gas.
you shouldn't have drilled the bulbs and then expose them to atmospheric oxygen and water vapor afterwards - that contributed to the filaments failing more quickly. Maybe do the experiment setup in an argon-filled glove box instead?
water failed faster than gasoline because water conducts electricity so even though there was liquid to help cool the filament it also allowed more electricity to flow.
The energy drink contains electrolytes (salts/ions) and is undergoing electrolysis; not boiling. IE The water is being decomposed into oxygen and hydrogen.
Wow Allahumma sholli wa sallim wa baarikh ala Sayyidina Muhammadin wa'ala ali Sayyidina Muhammadin fil awwalin wal aakhirin wa fil mala'il a'laa ilaa Yaumiddin
If you add polystyrene to the petrol and inject it into the bulb you'd have an napalm device. You've done it wrong by the way, you drill a tiny hole in the base and only inject enough fluid so that it's not touching the electrodes.
С бензином опасно, если бы лампа проработала секунд на 30 дольше. Многие не представляют, что может произойти даже при таком небольшом количестве бензина.
What will happen when you fill an incandescent bulb with *drink?* This is exactly the kind of FA/FO questions I have wondered before and here we get to see it!
Ok - define "water" bulb! What type of water? Tap, spring, saltwater ? None of those will work. Because they are all conductive. Now, try again with PURE distilled water - i.e. ONLY H2O! Pure H2O is non-conductive, so it should work. Actually, your test should have tripped a circuit breaker by drawing too much current.
It's not clear on the goal. For the petrol bulb to explode, one would fill the petrol to below the filament then the filament would heat up potentially igniting the oxygen and petrol vapour to cause an explosion. As it was filled above the filament, there is no oxygen and so no ignition with the filament simply heating the petrol until fails.
makes sense and this proccess reminds me of combustion engines, so if there was some decent amount of oxygen on the petrol bulb it would explode instantly instead of slowly burning and releasing bubbles?
@@NullCyan It needs a correct air to fuel ratio and some compression to actually explode, otherwise it can burn slower. It will surely burn with a small amount of gasoline in the bottom and let it vaporize, but not for too long otherwise the vapors would take the air's space instead.
It appears that the petrol filament may have come loose from one of its supports.
@@Subgunman yes yes yes
The goal is simple: dude, what would happen if...
The lost one: electrolysis
Yep, it burned out instantly, but then the current went through the drink
Making chlorine gas is dangerous
It is a awesome video. All those liquids are water based (except petroil). Would ve Nice if You try baby oil, destilate water, aceton/alcohol, maybe even motor oil 😅.
Or just hydrogan and oxigen mixed in that bulb
Or lamp oil.
@@kiokayakwould be better... pure oxygen one. Pure hydrogen one, mixed one.
I think it would have been funnier with gunpowder, at least for UA-cam viewers ;-)
I was thinking what if the water had salt in it... but then the energy drink answered that.
I figured that too.
plants crave electrolytes
Und die anderen Mineralien? 😁
Mineral oil would have been interesting
Рядом друг с другом их включать явно не лучшая идея. А если бы какая-либо взорвалась, задев соседние? Ожидал, что с бензином рванёт)
Can you try this again except have the petrol slightly below the filament? Great video though 👌
I can try again check this ua-cam.com/video/A95hJ6-CJBE/v-deo.html
Next time fill one with nitro glycerin 😂
*click*
BOOOM
Nah, fill with Hydrogen gas.
@@may21136 you're worse than devil...
😂@@Basti_2290
@@may21136I did it guess what it didn’t do a single thing because there was no oxygen in the lightbulb and it just worked normally
3:16
Uh-oh the red energy drink is spilling off
I was waiting for it to short out and explode or something 😂😂😂😂
@@tejay9416actually it's boiling hot that caused the energy drink to spill off.
@@intelboydj1Not entirely. Remember that there may be a electrolysis going on producing hydrogen gas due to the disolved Ions.
Я ждал что будут подавать напряжение о нуля вольт и выше, а тут сразу на всю катушку включили 😂
Клёвый ,,кипятильник" с энергетиком
Why anyone would be inclined to perform such a feat is unfathomable, but it was interesting as well as dangerous.
Was completely pointless. And he's lucky the petrol didn't manage to light. This wasn't so much a science experiment as it was a "what dumb thing can I do for views" experiment.
Not really pointless, he demonstrated how a tungten filament fail in air, how it create blue tungsten oxide on water, how petrol is a bad conductor, and how energy drinks have enough salts to be a good conductor.
It's dangerous, but with a proper electrolysis setup, can be a good teaching element on chemistry/physics.
You should try filling up one of these bulbs with alcohol rubbing alcohol
Should he also use bulbs glassing bulbs
And cover it in a binder james binder
Suggesttion: Hook up a stepless transformer and slowly increase the voltage to grid level. Let's see how the various liquids react to slowly increasing filament temperatures. Photonicinduction did that in one video, you can see the water boiling around the filament.
what would happen if you plugged the holes after filling them?
I honestly thought he would..
They would probably burst and make a big ol’ mess. Especially the energy drink and the petrol ones. The petrol might start a fire after it burst and air gets to the filament.
@@deltab9768 ..That would be kool..
The air, petrol and drink ones would explode by the generated pressure if the holes were closed.
What was the point here? The filament never burns out in a normal bulb due to lack of oxygen. The others will just burn it out quickly. Fuel won't ignite without a flame or spark either, so...
Considering the one with petrol had a broken filament. I’m gonna say nothing’s gonna happen in that one.
why every video that I watch "do not try at home" Thinking that each experiment will explode through my laptop or cellphone. Sometimes I hesitate to watch it straight through. Its like watching a horror movie LOL
The petrol bulb sounded kinda like a fluorescent tube starter but without the bubbling
1:30 That specific "Energy Drink" is only a fancy juice to me~
I drink that everyday~
Even rn while commenting this~
Red Bulb gives you wings 😂
Your should try Blinker fluid next :p
You successfully turned your lightbulb into an electric kettle :D
Actually, you need high speed camera.
Mineral oil NEXT
yup this would have been a good one with the transformer fluid
Next time use mineral oil 👍 thanks for sharing!!!
People probably expected the petrol to explode but you need to realize, that petrol is not flammable. Petrol fumes are flammable but not petrol itself. It's just that when you let petrol sit in an open container at room temperature, fumes will form on top of the container and that's what you will see burning, when you put fire close to it, not the petrol itself and then the heat may vaporize more petrol and that keeps the reaction going. In the video, the hot wire was completely covered in petrol, which cannot burn. And even though the heat will cause the petrol to vaporize and create a lot of petrol fumes, those cannot burn either as they'd require oxygen to burn and there is no oxygen inside of the petrol. That's why cars only explode in Hollywood but not in reality. They can only go up in flames and slowly burn down, if petrol keeps leaking out of the car while the car is burning. The liquid petrol won't even burn and inside a petrol tank is almost no oxygen, so it's impossible for a tank to explode. The explosions in movies are made by putting a real explosive next to a plastic container of petrol and when the real explosive goes off, it first spreads the petrol all over the place as fine drops that will immediately vaporize due to the heat of the explosion and its fumes then go up in flames and that's the huge fireball you see in movies.
Нужно было пороху насыпать туда
Very cool experiment 😎
How did petrol bulb did not explode ? And did you forgot ? There is something like Death while filming petrol bulb with live electricity😅.Hats off to you bro ❤
Liquid petrol (gasoline and diesel) don't explode. Don't try it at home, but if you fill a cup with any, and put them on fire, which is difficult, only the surface will have a flame, and the liquid will sit undisturbed.
Не было окислителя в жидкости!
Nice experiment. I suprised when bulb with energy drink did not burn
It seemed like electrolysis was so strong, that it was not enough current to burn the filament. Like more current went through the liquid than through the filament.
Salt content.
For my eyes it looks like it actually did burn, but the liquid conducts enough that it kept the current flow through itself only, while the filament dangles underneath.
0:01 60Hz 사이렌
2:55 50Hz 백열전구 부하소리
In which country is such a socket?
In India 🇮🇳
@@Experimen201 🤔 Thank You!
I like the sheer commitment to completing this silly task. Subbed.😂👍😎
Probably the longest lasting would be one filled with silicone liquid such as Polydimethylsiloxane which does not boil at high temperature but vitrifies . The filament would then overheat and melt
Was the energy drink so much different from the water because of being more conducive? Also what was the blue in the water? I need answers
It doesn't work without a vacuum (the normal incandescent bulb)
Only in the earliest incandescent lamps was there a vacuum, and today still in those with low power (under 15 watts), later and to this day they contain a protective gas to inhibit the sublimation of the tungsten. Normally a negative pressure gas mixture of argon and some nitrogen is in incandescent lamps, with more expensive, more efficient krypton.
Not so much as Vacuum as a lack of oxygen.
Oxygen and energy will melt metal.
Welding.@@Tag-Traeumer
@@ronhobyak9902 no. Welding uses an arc. Oxygen has no bearing on ability to do that. Does the quality of the weld though.
The person that made this video probably knows exactly what was going to happen he was hoping for a lot of views
Awesome ❤❤❤❤
The energy drink was boiling or was it making HHO ?
Nice experiment
That's Mythbusters' level of hilarious, especially the Petrol Bulb.
2:10 Water bulb chirped and blasted
в лампе с энергетиком обрыв спирали и идет электролиз
Изобрели кипятильник
If that petrol bulb would have been sealed, the video title would have been: 'How I burned half my face off and melted my dog'. 😂
I remember when I was a kid, my dad would tell me that light bulbs can get damaged or break when put into water. It is because as a kid, I drew one of the light bulbs as a cartoon character telling the other light bulbs to take a bath. This was when I was 6 or 7 years old
На работе в холодильнике эти все экспонаты музея были у нас)
Бензин надо было наливать чуть недоходя до спирали и поближе лицо подставлять во время включения лампы! Глупые, всему вас учить нужно!
Ну ладно 😂
I expected the bulb with gasoline (petrol) to explode! How the frick did that not happen??? Besides, I'm your 420th subscriber!
Thank you for subscribe.
And The petrol bulb couldn't explode because the bulb full with petrol, there is no oxygen inside the bulb and we know to make it explode it's need perfect combination of fule and oxygen
@@Experimen201 Gasoline does not need oxygen to get ignited! Diesel does!
@@user-xz3xf6bc8otop 5 smartest person
@@user-xz3xf6bc8othen what do carburator do? Gasoline engine use an Electric spark to ignite the air fuel mixture unlike diesel engine that uses the heat produced by compressing said mixture to ignite it
So when exposed to atmosphere you burn it out. As seen from the first one. Now if you can fill them and fix the top again sealing it that would be interesting and explosive likely. The water if you do it with distilled water it might burn for a while till the filament releases enough particles to short it. Truly distilled water won't mess up electronics. I used to work in a place that had super distilled water for nuclear stuff and dropped a drill in the water the drill kept going pulled it out by the cord and i worked perfectly good still!
穴開き電球→すぐに吹っ飛ぶ
水入り電球→水が変色した
何?→燃えたって事は石油か?
エナジードリンク→炭酸ガスの効果か、すぐには吹っ飛ばずにグラグラと煮えてる
3番目はガソリンかな
Why do you destroy lamps, these are classics, now there are leds
For that experiment to work properly... the end one needs to be filled with F5 BP and FP on a 75/25 ratio..
Didn't expect the blue pigment from water, nor the petrol to boil.
The red one is not boling, the water is electrolytically decomposed (electrolysis), hydrogen and oxygen are produced (foam). can be confirmed by igniting the gas.
Current flows in Ionic-Liquit or the Wire goas hot in non ionic-liquit - ergo boil until the wire is on the air and then burn..
Video rất thú vị xin cảm ơn đã chia sẻ
Thank you
Would distilled water make a difference?
最後那裝飲料的燈泡會不會像是在電解水啊?
you shouldn't have drilled the bulbs and then expose them to atmospheric oxygen and water vapor afterwards - that contributed to the filaments failing more quickly. Maybe do the experiment setup in an argon-filled glove box instead?
water failed faster than gasoline because water conducts electricity so even though there was liquid to help cool the filament it also allowed more electricity to flow.
The energy drink contains electrolytes (salts/ions) and is undergoing electrolysis; not boiling. IE The water is being decomposed into oxygen and hydrogen.
O energético me surpreendeu, pensei q por ser a base de agua o resultado seria diferente
The last one is doing electrolysis. Not boiling.
I was expecting the petrol one to explode, or at least catch fire 🔥
and the award goes to the energy drink 😂😂😂
Wow
Allahumma sholli wa sallim wa baarikh ala Sayyidina Muhammadin wa'ala ali Sayyidina Muhammadin fil awwalin wal aakhirin wa fil mala'il a'laa ilaa Yaumiddin
The last session was cut. The filament was broken just before power was applied.
Quite high quality bulbs with one having an extra filament dangling randomly._
It looks like the petrol bulb had a broken filament along with a working filament or something like that
The energy drink one worked like a lead-acid battery when charging because these drinks have electrolytes on them.
В четвёртой лампочке получился бульбулятор 😂😂😂
ummm... why does the petrol one have a broken filament dangling around inside?
Нет мочи Слона.было бы забавно😂😂😂.
ИМЕННО мочи , ИМЕННО слона!:-)))
Немаловажная деталь,- чтобы был трёхлеток, ни как не меньше.
Water bulb is amazing blue reaction 😁
The electrolytes in the "drink" filled bulb basically turns into an hho generator.
as the name suggests, Energy drink for energy lamp.
Can you somehow do it with different gasses?
Try AC vs. DC current.
If you add polystyrene to the petrol and inject it into the bulb you'd have an napalm device. You've done it wrong by the way, you drill a tiny hole in the base and only inject enough fluid so that it's not touching the electrodes.
*Is the energy drink creating hydrogen? It is energizing sodium. This isn't my major, though.*
Probably creating many salts and gases, mainly hydrogen and oxygen, but as it have other electrolytes, a bit of chlorine and organic compounds.
Nice water cooker/bomb
Can you try with salt in petrol? Also try 300w so that filament would survive longer and release more heat?
the hell is the salt for? it won't even dissolve, petrol is nonpolar
@@tsm688Thought it would increase conductivity.
@@test-rj2vl unfortunately not, since petrol is nonpolar. The salt would just sit there like sand.
@@tsm688Tnx for clarifying, didn't know that.
С бензином опасно, если бы лампа проработала секунд на 30 дольше. Многие не представляют, что может произойти даже при таком небольшом количестве бензина.
What you do when you have way too much time on your hands....
It's a shame we didn't see how long before the energy drink failed
It can't be done. There's a partial vacuum in there and to introduce anything into it will break that vacuum, and it will fail
What will happen when you fill an incandescent bulb with *drink?*
This is exactly the kind of FA/FO questions I have wondered before and here we get to see it!
The air inside a lightbulb is pure nitrogen. If there was any oxygen, the filament would burn out immediately like the first lightbulb.
Don't they use argon?
@gaburieruR No. In neon signs, they use neon.
@@Kyleplaysgames567 not neon, argon, who's inert
Water one whas satsfying
Wonder whta would happen if you use nitric acid?
Absolute mad lad.
2:55
Sound like an electric motor, in general 50Hz.
Bro was like: "if you put a energy drink into a light bulb will it give the light bulb more energy? 🤔"
Amazing liquid 💦 filled lightbulbs 💡
Ok - define "water" bulb!
What type of water? Tap, spring, saltwater ?
None of those will work. Because they are all conductive.
Now, try again with PURE distilled water - i.e. ONLY H2O!
Pure H2O is non-conductive, so it should work.
Actually, your test should have tripped a circuit breaker by drawing too much current.
i wonder what mineral oil would look like with this, since computers work just fine completely submerged in it
Preformed?
love the videos ngl the music is kinda annoying tho feel like it would be good as a asmrish video