Longest worm I’ve ever seen
1:02
2 жыл бұрын
How NOT to catch a goat
2:23
2 жыл бұрын
3 Minutes Face to Face With A Turkey
3:17
Пікірлер
@FacelessMage117
@FacelessMage117 5 сағат бұрын
As a space AND a computer/tech nerd. This was such a fascinating and informative video. I love seeing you and Linus nerd out with a true legend
@majorburke9735
@majorburke9735 6 сағат бұрын
Notice the eclipse guy uses imperial measurements. Fahrenheit and feet. Why? Bc Celsius doesn’t show enough temperature change; and feet are more relatable than decimeters. Metrics is useless for the human experience. Metrics sucks for regular people. We cannot relate to such arbitrary measurements. Humans did not evolve with metrics.
@expeditionbasset
@expeditionbasset Күн бұрын
This is a good American right here
@brantleycoile
@brantleycoile 2 күн бұрын
I'm in it for Reepicheep. And the video was excellent as well.
@bigjay1751
@bigjay1751 3 күн бұрын
This is the best! I could listen to this guy for days. Reminds me grandpa talking about the stuff he did as a lineman back in the 40s and 50s after the war. A lot of it was new technology back then and it’s amazing listening to the stories. This guy here is definitely part of the greatest generation!
@mp6756
@mp6756 3 күн бұрын
This video is for the ages. I have watched it at least 3 times since it's released. And it's still entertaining to watch a legend reminiscing about humanities' most daring and technically challenging undertaking of all time. Thanks SED
@chromenewt1691
@chromenewt1691 5 күн бұрын
What is that Saturn 5 model and how do I get one? Edit: this is my 4th time watching this video. Mr. Talley is incredible to listen to. Hope he is doing well to this day 👍🏻👍🏻
@andrewnorgrove6487
@andrewnorgrove6487 6 күн бұрын
"All this Foolishness " should become a thing ! I like it , as it covers so much in Engineering and Physics 🤗
@pyroactivatorandsensorydev9817
@pyroactivatorandsensorydev9817 7 күн бұрын
looks like a old box camera to me ! so you still can buy the old codack film?
@CatDaddySteve
@CatDaddySteve 7 күн бұрын
Hand made cannot be made by modern engineers
@josephfuller7008
@josephfuller7008 7 күн бұрын
This man is amazing truly amazing.
@georgelincolnrockwell14
@georgelincolnrockwell14 8 күн бұрын
Such a cool video, ruined by the appearance of the little homosexual canadian racemixer
@jstagzsr
@jstagzsr 8 күн бұрын
when smart people have access to money AND have good ideas you get awesome stuff like this. i love to see it.
@williambishop4508
@williambishop4508 8 күн бұрын
I've been trying to figure out what he said when calling his daughter over. Does anyone have any idea?
@user-vk9nn7cs9b
@user-vk9nn7cs9b 8 күн бұрын
AVP 👽 Sweet ,l/ i can't see 🙈 / / right / ...,,,/ i get that/ but s good drilling!/ C.a.d. things/ let's us angle the .... blast... ray ... Line/ but it leads to s reaction /. ..no joke ,/
@hansrajbissessar9098
@hansrajbissessar9098 9 күн бұрын
I love what you do, get smarter every day 🙂.
@terryrogers6232
@terryrogers6232 9 күн бұрын
I was a student in Poughkeepsie getting access to his cast off modules, SLD/SLT. Still remember how to make elementary CPUs and things like bit slice CPU with just a bit more integration. Fun. So I knew of what he was speaking.
@jwkayk360
@jwkayk360 9 күн бұрын
Amazing. Also would love an update on that custom truck project
@dallasmed65
@dallasmed65 10 күн бұрын
I just inherited a trunk full of old cameras and recorders from the 40’s. My great uncle was a journalist in WW2 and nobody in my family wanted them because they didn’t understand them. I’m glad I got my hands on them so I can use them myself and send them to people like this who can fix them up. Truly amazing pieces of machinery.
@Fowlos09
@Fowlos09 10 күн бұрын
I'm sure it's partly a language barrier type of thing but Finns are almost alien in their communication, they are so literal lol. Destin: "can i buy a camera door from you guys? "oh no I don't sell that's someone else, I just check cameras" 🤣 love it
@lilhawkjay
@lilhawkjay 10 күн бұрын
Love your videos on everything, very interesting and educational. Ty
@lilhawkjay
@lilhawkjay 10 күн бұрын
I'm one of those truckers who haul these to farmers.
10 күн бұрын
I've bought two cameras from them. Both absolutely perfect cameras, I love them. Also, film photography is so much fun, there's something magical when receiving back the developed film negatives.
@billmadison2032
@billmadison2032 11 күн бұрын
could you try to tamp the match against the bullet to see what would happen?
@lucashinch
@lucashinch 11 күн бұрын
I wish people would do this more with electronic and HiFi.
@Earl_Poole
@Earl_Poole 12 күн бұрын
I still use a Canon T90, so this hit home. Destin is easily one of the best content creators on YT.
@user-ng8mc1hd8i
@user-ng8mc1hd8i 13 күн бұрын
Randal sent me
@codymoe4986
@codymoe4986 13 күн бұрын
36:07 "We'll get out of your hair, and let you go shoot some rockets." Sick burn, Destin...
@cheeseisgreat24
@cheeseisgreat24 13 күн бұрын
When they were talking about the economics of this technique, I couldn’t help but feel like this technology is actually deceptively far more scalable than stamping, because an increase in throughput for a production run just needs more robot arms, your tools to manipulate the steel are relatively the same, and to increase capacity on any single production run, you just need that code handling the arms to run on more of them, and almost all arms can run all of your company’s products at any time. To increase throughput on stamping you need multiples of the same die, so while the stamping process in and of itself is much faster, you can retool for a different production run or make modifications to a production run in a much shorter time in situ as well as spin up or spin down the number of arms involved in production on the fly, which you cannot do with stamping if you only have one die.
@justjoe7313
@justjoe7313 13 күн бұрын
Another VERY interesting video!
@justjoe7313
@justjoe7313 13 күн бұрын
Love Brandon's accent at 8:30 Such diversity is golden!
@InPropheticTimes
@InPropheticTimes 14 күн бұрын
46:02 "After that the crew was to separate from the Stage-4 booster and do their magic"... I think that's the only fitting answer on how to explain a tiny rocket propelled spacecraft/LM with ZERO boosters left has enough propulsion (from where?) to go 246,000 additional miles to get to the moon, stay in lunar orbit 21 hours and return back another 248,000 miles to Earth. In fact, even with today's technology this would be considered an impossible feat, requiring multiple booster rockets (12 or more, per Artemis specs) just to go there one-way. I don't understand how seemingly intelligent people like Destin or Luke have enough cognitive dissonance to refuse to except the facts at hand. Yes, they made extraordinary progress just to get humans into orbit using outdated rocket technology (which will be useless in SPACE outside an gaseous atmosphere) but how can you ignore the facts that the entirety of the boosters could barely get you into LEO, which is a stationary orbit unless you were to refuel and load up more boosters there... which was the original plan NASA had when they were going for REAL. In fact this is the challenge, which they face today... and the reason NOBODY has been able to have a manned flight back to the moon.
@maxfan1591
@maxfan1591 12 күн бұрын
""After that the crew was to separate from the Stage-4 booster and do their magic"... I think that's the only fitting answer on how to explain a tiny rocket propelled spacecraft/LM with ZERO boosters left has enough propulsion (from where?) to go 246,000 additional miles to get to the moon, stay in lunar orbit 21 hours and return back another 248,000 miles to Earth." Just to be clear, the third stage provided the thrust to accelerate the stack out of earth orbit towards the moon. Six minutes of acceleration was sufficient to allow the command and service module (and the lunar module) to coast to the moon in three days. Once in orbit around the moon, the engine in the service module was sufficient to accelerate the command and service module out of lunar orbit and on a path back to the earth. This is because the moon has much less mass than the earth, meaning its gravity is much less, meaning less force is required to achieve the required acceleration. "In fact, even with today's technology this would be considered an impossible feat, requiring multiple booster rockets (12 or more, per Artemis specs) just to go there one-way." Sorry, but you're mistaking two separate issues. The Artemis 1 spacecraft was accelerated towards the moon by the SLS, and used its own engines to both decelerate into lunar orbit and accelerate back out of orbit to return to earth. The "12 or more" rockets you mention are required for landing missions. This is because Artemis is far more ambitious than Apollo. Apollo landed two men on the moon for three days at locations generally near the moon's equator. Artemis will be landing four people for a month near the moon's poles. This requires far more consumables, and additional fuel to reach a remote part of the moon. "I don't understand how seemingly intelligent people like Destin or Luke have enough cognitive dissonance to refuse to except the facts at hand." Which facts do you think are relevant? May I ask whether you have any relevant expertise in aerospace? Consider that aerospace engineers have no problem with the reality of Apollo. Consider also that thousands of scientists have studied the Apollo rocks, and they know those rocks can't be from the earth. "Yes, they made extraordinary progress just to get humans into orbit using outdated rocket technology (which will be useless in SPACE outside an gaseous atmosphere)" Rockets work just fine in the vacuum of space. In fact, rocket engines are more efficient in space than they are in the earth's atmosphere. "but how can you ignore the facts that the entirety of the boosters could barely get you into LEO, which is a stationary orbit unless you were to refuel and load up more boosters there..." Well, no. In order to get into earth orbit, all of the first and second stages were used up, but only about a quarter of the propellant in the third stage. The rest of the propellant in the third stage was used for accelerating the spacecraft out of earth orbit and towards the moon. "which was the original plan NASA had when they were going for REAL. In fact this is the challenge, which they face today... and the reason NOBODY has been able to have a manned flight back to the moon." I'm not aware of any plan for Apollo which involved refueling in-mission. Von Braun's original idea was giant rockets which would go all the way to the moon and all the way back. The earth orbit rendezvous plan involved only involved rendezvous and docking of the components for a manned lunar landing, but not any refueling.
@Deeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeez
@Deeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeez 14 күн бұрын
Big corporations hate circular economies... huh Apple? X'D
@MrGruffteddybear
@MrGruffteddybear 15 күн бұрын
The Saturn V was a beast. I still enjoy watching videos of them testing the F1's or the actual launches. What an incredible machine.And to have no catastrophic failures at all is astonishing. Goes to show the engineers and people who built them really cared about the finished product.
@amirsadeghi9888
@amirsadeghi9888 15 күн бұрын
we need more footage of Luke Talley speaking about the space programs he worked on... he is full of wonders... he has probably met a few "little green men" too !
@080allanthomas5
@080allanthomas5 15 күн бұрын
Candy 🍬 🍫 🍭
@larkinoo
@larkinoo 15 күн бұрын
I was lucky enough to go through the entire Rocket and Space Museum 2 years ago when one of my best friends flew me out to Huntsville for my birthday. I may have talked with Luke at the Lunar Module display. I tell just about everybody I meet about my trip to Huntsville, and that if they are ever in Huntsville, they need to go see everything at the Rocket and Space Museum, and specifically to see the Saturn 5 rocket and its awe inspiring F1 engines !! Great video !! Thanks !!
@aussiecraig7527
@aussiecraig7527 15 күн бұрын
Gday first time commenting on your channel, firstly you are fantastic always love your videos, secondly I loved this video, Luke..mate sorry for your loss.. but thank you Luke for your efforts changing the world you may not think so but honestly it’s your shoulders that people like musk and like stand on… Dustin I was moved to comment.. love the moon, space and your NASA pool video was awesome.
@MrocznyTechnik
@MrocznyTechnik 16 күн бұрын
I didn't realised that analog film is somehow electric :D. Photon caused photo-electron is doing the job. Just like in CCD sensor!!! :D
@xoversprayurfacex8388
@xoversprayurfacex8388 16 күн бұрын
Machina Labs is truly operating at an unparalleled level. It's conceivable that Aerospace and government manufacturing entities are eagerly seeking to utilize your services or have you manufacture components for them.
@Tejas-zx7ie
@Tejas-zx7ie 16 күн бұрын
It's a well known fact that bullets carry torches.
@adriankoch964
@adriankoch964 17 күн бұрын
Thank you for interviewing Luke, what a great guy. Good job for NASA&Co for letting those knowledgable veterans share their knowledge. I'm sure they enjoy it a lot & it's a lot better than vegetating these great minds away in some retirement home away from people.
@dks13827
@dks13827 17 күн бұрын
Wow.........what a great video. I thank you.
@dks13827
@dks13827 17 күн бұрын
I have studied this since 1965.............and it is wonderful !!!!!!!!!
@michaellane4762
@michaellane4762 17 күн бұрын
It"s absolutely amazing how many industries there are that we never see. Thank-you, this video was amazing!!! The brilliant minds that are out there just amaze me. I wish I had 1/100 th of their knowledge.Mike from Mass.
@moda5629
@moda5629 17 күн бұрын
autist american
@aliasunknown7476
@aliasunknown7476 18 күн бұрын
Is that huntsville?
@danieldoherty8101
@danieldoherty8101 18 күн бұрын
It's been great to listen to someone who knows and understands what's he's talking about, instead of some bumbling idiot, (Elon musk)
@SquadTwelve12
@SquadTwelve12 12 күн бұрын
😂😂😂 tell me about it
@sammartinez4244
@sammartinez4244 18 күн бұрын
Thanks for this video. The company I worked for in CA made the exit cone liners of the rocket motor. Directional carbon liners. I worked on various nuclear rocket cones along with the space shuttle solid rocket booster components. We had many pictures of the Saturn Rocket in the Kaiser Plant.
@user-lw7hw1gw9k
@user-lw7hw1gw9k 19 күн бұрын
I have a 3d printer and i use a asus computer for cad but i also use it for gaming i would love to buy one of there computers but i dont want a desktop. (I am 9)