*MULTIPLE FAILS: 1) This is not welding, it's soldering. 2) **9:30** It's not a 1.5V battery, it clearly says 36V. 3) Like Mama said, "USE YOUR WORDS" instead of PORN MUSIC.*
@leroyolson43497 ай бұрын
I would caution anyone attempting this to wear googles, and have good ventilation, don't breath fumes, and do not use on galvanized pipe, it's interaction with the Zink galvanizing, creates a poisonous gas, witch can make you very sick, Zinc poisoning. Welding is fun, can save you money, but when heating metals, and other materials to extreme temperatures, you can create deadly fumes. Always learn what your dealing with before doing.
@stibbits70877 ай бұрын
Welding chrome plate is even worse than galv. Good thing he wasn't actually welding, just soldering it.
@Injudiciously7 ай бұрын
Personally I prefer Bing's to Google's. As for Witches can make you sick, I guess Snow White is an expert on that. On a serious note, great advice.
@Ihavetruth226 ай бұрын
lol. no one is doing this. 🤪
@delicacydelight7 ай бұрын
Very creative. 36v not 1.5v A dedicated Mini spot welder from Ali Express is much cheaper than a new makita 5AH battery!
@GausDIY7 ай бұрын
Thanks for the info! ❤️
@ScandalistRick7 ай бұрын
Yea dude for real. As cool as this idea is, shorting an 18650 pack is ALWAYS a no-no. Hopefully the BMS fails before the cells, problem with this is that many tool packs balance through the charger and have no internal balancing... So the only thing that can fail is the cells... I am curious how many amps are being pulled at 36V, I wonder if a standard bench power supply with short protection would have enough juice.
@janami-dharmam6 ай бұрын
@@ScandalistRick looking at the PVC wires used for the contacts, I would guess around 20-50A max. this wire itself acts like a fuse around 50-100A
@romymallari91337 ай бұрын
Nice idea. Although your title is misleading. People thought that you would be using a 1.5 v battery to power up your device. What you did was simply make a rod out of carbon rod from a 1.5v cell that would be melted when contacted in metals.
@Ihavetruth226 ай бұрын
lol. its astupidea!!!!!!! lol
@fordman74798 ай бұрын
that's brazing not welding. welding is using heat penetrate the material and fuse it. brazing is sort of using hot material to glue it together sort of like soldering.
@RalfAbbt7 ай бұрын
Exact. My Thaughts.
@leroyolson43497 ай бұрын
Brazing is actually a form of welding, you are using a material that can molecularly bind with another, such as Bras, Bronze, or Copper to Steele, it is not as strong, but in many cases such as using on Cast Iron, will make a totally functional bond.
@laurenceperkins74687 ай бұрын
Brazing is specifically using brass. Soldering is using a tin alloy. You use the tin alloy to bond copper because the tin is slightly eutectic to the copper and bonds with it. Brazing is used on iron and aluminum alloys because brass is slightly eutectic to those and bonds with them in a similar manner.
@laurenceperkins74687 ай бұрын
@@leroyolson4349 No. Yes, both make a bond. But in brazing and soldering the base metal never melts. As such the bond is only at the surface layer of the base metal. Welding melts the base metal for a much deeper, stronger bond. The reason you will generally prefer brazing to welding on cast iron is that cast iron is extremely brittle and the small deformations from the temperature changes in welding will often crack it. The brass, being more ductile, deforms as the piece cools, reducing the stress on the iron, and also requires much lower temperatures, so there's less stress to start with. If you are going to weld cast iron, you'd usually use a nickel welding rod since nickel is similarly ductile, and will alloy with the cast iron around the weld to provide a similar strain relief. Nickel electrodes are pretty expensive though. Alternatively, you can slowly heat the entire piece to a dull cherry-red, weld it with an iron-powder electrode, and then slowly let it cool.
@leroyolson43497 ай бұрын
@@laurenceperkins7468 I agree, but in some cases brazing will suffice. Thank You.
@stevegoodanew3066 ай бұрын
As has been said many times already, this is soldering not welding. Not even sure it's comes up to the class of brazing, that would depend on the material that makes up the undisclosed filler. It's not brazing until you get to about 450 C, so depending on the melting point of that filler would determine the process. Also you are not using a 1.5V battery to do anything other than provide a stick of carbon to create a carbon arc. That arc can be created with any low impedance power source, such as the Li-Ion battery shown... Or, heaven forbid, a welding transformer. You could even jury-rig it with and old toroidal transformer from a busted amplifier and a few turns of 6 gauge wire added.
@AmazingSmart-ngth7 ай бұрын
"Wow, this video truly uncovered a hidden gem in soldering techniques! I never imagined that a simple ingredient like salt could make such a remarkable difference. Kudos to Gaus DIY for sharing this insightful method. It just proves that sometimes, the most effective solutions are the simplest ones."
@Chiapas-x1d2 ай бұрын
Would you be so kind as to tell me what voltage I used with the eliminator and what materials I used for soldering? Thank you very much for sharing the video.
@kikinit9998 ай бұрын
I think that's solder. The liquid is Hydrochloric acid. It makes the surface where the solder will bond to the metal. You just need heat to flow solder, which that DC arc Pokey thingy makes plenty of. Great job on this. I dont know how many times something broke loose and needed this idea.TY Be safe
@jeffmccrea93477 ай бұрын
...Great job on this... NOT A GREAT JOB ON THIS!!! Please see my post above but in case you don't, in a nutshell, dead shorting a lithium ion drill battery with "that pokey thing", (a carbon rod positive electrode from a AA battery), is EXTREMELY DANGEROUS and can cause a fire that is extremely difficult to extinguish. Referencing news reports from several years ago of people's vape batteries catching fire and resembling rocket engines flaring in their pockets. DEFINITELY a dangerous game to play here under any circumstance!!! Safer to throw away that decorative wire rack than to have that drill battery flare up at the end of a 12 inch piece of wire right next to you!!!
@kikinit9997 ай бұрын
@@jeffmccrea9347 I'm aware of the fire that lithium can produce. I agree that a child shouldn't do this and not safe to do in my moms kitchen, but in a pinch or emergency I'd 100% take that risk. Great job on that.
@jeffmccrea93477 ай бұрын
@@kikinit999 For about 1/2 the cost of a ruined drill battery, you could buy a soldering gun or, better yet, a heavy duty soldiering iron that would do the job much safer but to each his own.
@kikinit9997 ай бұрын
@@jeffmccrea9347 Your right Jeff no argument there. I own several. I concede.
@jeffmccrea93477 ай бұрын
@@kikinit999 I'm nothing special. In my life, I've just done gas and arc welding and in 59 years of hobbying in electronics, I've probably gone through 20+ various soldiering implements and 100+ pounds of soldier. I've gotten burned more than a few times and would hate to see that pain happen to anyone else. I've reached for a hot soldiering iron without looking once, grabbing the wrong end killing the surface nerves in my hand before feeling the burn, realizing what I'd done only after looking at the iron in my hand and smelling the flesh burning. It took me weeks of stretching the skin on my fingers and palm to get my fingers to fully open again. In 1976, I was working on a road paving crew when I walked into a cloud of propane leaking from a hot paving machine just as it caught fire receiving 2nd degree burns on my left hand and arm before running back out of it. I've received various comparatively minor but painful burns running my own small welding business out of my garage for a year. Yeah, been there, done that and wouldn't wish it on anyone else.
@TipsDIY89898 ай бұрын
"You're a true inspiration to aspiring creators."
@GausDIY8 ай бұрын
Glad the video was helpful
@primumnilnocere76898 ай бұрын
Klasse, danke für diesen Beitrag ! ! ! !
@GausDIY8 ай бұрын
Ich bin froh, dass dieses Video hilfreich war. Vielen Dank, dass Sie sich das Video angesehen haben
@RichardCarr-zv6bl8 ай бұрын
You should be clearer with your demonstration. What materials are you using
@badiyan8 ай бұрын
Good, some materials are known but not all.
@stevegoodanew3066 ай бұрын
@@badiyan Yes, wondering what that filler is.
@jeffmccrea93477 ай бұрын
. First, you're NOT welding, you're making a fire bomb. Second, you're soldering which is a different bonding process altogether. It's just as good IF you can keep your feet off the repair. Third, that 20 volt drill battery contains lithium ion rechargeable cells. That carbon rod probably only has 1/2 to 1 ohm of resistance in it. Surely not enough to keep those lithium cells from quickly overheating from the dead short that you are causing and catching the lithium metal anode in each cell on fire to burn violently like a flare. Fourth, If you don't know this, then you probably don't know that you do NOT put a lithium fire out with WATER as water reacts with lithium to produce VERY flammable / explosive hydrogen gas and only makes the fire burn hotter. This is why people who do NOT know what they're doing should NEVER abuse lithium batteries as you are doing here. This is also why a fire department will stand back and watch an $82,000 Tesla automobile burn for 24 hours and only try to keep the fire from spreading. This is also why you won't see a carbon arc soldering setup on the market powered by lithium ion drill batteries.
@marka32396 ай бұрын
looks dangerous, if the battery catches fire its not easy to put out. just buy a cheap soldering iron.
@Alotipsalo8 ай бұрын
"Wow, this video blew my mind! I never knew welding steel could be this accessible. Thanks for breaking it down step by step. Your clear instructions make it seem so easy to try it out myself. Can't wait to give it a shot! 💪"
@GausDIY8 ай бұрын
Thank you for liking this video. wish you happy
@wedwedwedding8 ай бұрын
Power source is hidden
@jyrkisohkanen15538 ай бұрын
Not welding but soldering.
@admenzasu8 ай бұрын
What was that liquid that he poured though? I don’t think the label on the container is English.
@davidflanders85168 ай бұрын
@@admenzasu hydrochloric acid
@davidflanders85168 ай бұрын
It's spot welding. Soldering requires solder and flux that acts as a kind of glue. Spot welding, as perfectly represented here, is melting the metal, fusing them together. It's also much lower heat needed to make the bond as it's only concentrated through the electrode, where as solder needs the metal to be hot enough to melt the solder so it flows
@angusmcgil8 ай бұрын
@@davidflanders8516 the liquid he puts on is called a killed spirit its made by putting the zinc casing of the battery into hydrocloric acid and left till thereaction is completely ceased, this is used as a flux.the carbon rod heats and welds kind of guesd you called a hybrid of the toobut its not for heavy material as you need the melt the material then ,and this doesnt really do that
@easyspeak1018 ай бұрын
Looks with that twisted third piece at video end to be melting a length solder and spot weld together.. Give it a try..
@sadunnakipoglu94717 ай бұрын
تحياتي لك وأشكرك وأقدر مجهودك ، تحياتي لك من تركيا .
@csabilibu8 ай бұрын
Great job!!!
@GausDIY8 ай бұрын
Thanks for watching! Have a nice day Bro
@Zhak78 ай бұрын
I like the beating test at the end xD
@joeexclamation52767 ай бұрын
Pretty sure I saw this on an episode of McGuyver back in the 80's! Damn, I'm old...
@1crazypj7 ай бұрын
Neat bit of copper brazing, much stronger than the crappy little tack welds it came with. One thing though, where can you get zinc carbon batteries? Even the 'Dollar Store' only has alkaline batteries, I haven't seen zinc carbon in years
@geoffrundel33437 ай бұрын
I mite get zink batts in indea or Africa if not yes a lemon and some currents
@ethanlamoureux53067 ай бұрын
They’re still sold wherever cheap stuff is found. Look for “Super extra heavy duty” or the equivalent language, where the word alkaline is missing.
@justnpeace7 ай бұрын
What is the material of the wire held on by the pliers doing welding? Tin/Lead?
@ogreunderbridge52048 ай бұрын
TIG brazing spot weld uh,,, kind of deal ? Good for getting unstuck from a pinch without any welding equipment I guess. In place is in place ! :)
@laurenceperkins74687 ай бұрын
Not TIG. More like GCAW. Only without the shielding gas and he's not great at maintaining the arc. So really more just a crude spot-welder...
@trytonez8 ай бұрын
I live in the United States. Can I use a fork instead of the chopsticks?
@thomasmiller26677 ай бұрын
tweezers would work, or needle nose pliers.
@Thaikathoey8 ай бұрын
Excellent 👍
@GausDIY8 ай бұрын
Thank you Bro! Cheers!
@christianboutonnet13817 ай бұрын
Super , What filler metal do you use?
@GausDIY7 ай бұрын
Copper and alminum electrode, special welding head
@christianboutonnet13817 ай бұрын
@@GausDIY Thank you very much for your answer
@mathewsmith14008 ай бұрын
1.5v or 36v?
@terencefranks16888 ай бұрын
possiblt 18v ....
@mathewsmith14008 ай бұрын
@@terencefranks1688 power source looks to be 36v tool battery. The video is missing this critical bit of information
@terencefranks16888 ай бұрын
@@mathewsmith1400 OK - thanks for that !
@omerergincam55938 ай бұрын
24 volt 5 amp trafo
@mahmoudtawfiq83568 ай бұрын
Good idea Fantastic
@GausDIY8 ай бұрын
Thank you for your compliments, I have had a lot of positive motivation to try to make more videos
@michaeljohnson13297 ай бұрын
I have seen a lot of both criticism and compliments on this video and for the most part both are valid. I wouldn't say this is a go to method for doing a repair of this nature, but at the same time you did a great job demonstrating how to make such a repair with materials one might have easy access to in a jam. In my humble opinion I think you are a very intelligent person who made an informative as well as an entertaining video. The only thing I would like to have seen done differently would be some tips on using safety precautions as well as a disclaimer that this is not something to be used as a standard practice but as an emergency repair. Please forgive me if I sounded critical, I did enjoy it and did hit the like and subscribe buttons, I look forward to seeing more of your work. Thank you again for an informative and entertaining video!
@franksmith82518 ай бұрын
Correction Keep Up The Good Work Take Care
@GausDIY8 ай бұрын
Thank you friends! Haave a nicce day!
@ruperthowton50917 ай бұрын
Love the wire strippers ;-)
@bobfellows69746 ай бұрын
😆
@guidoacosta57783 ай бұрын
Que alambre uso para soldar
@GausDIY3 ай бұрын
Specialized solder wire or solder wire
@bobsmith6138 ай бұрын
Because I have been trying to figure out what to do with that random bottle of hydrochloric acid that I have in my junk drawer.
@KimLake18 ай бұрын
Fake!! Not using a 1.5 volt battery. Tore it apart to use the components then used a 12 v or larger battery for the current...................
@angusmcgil8 ай бұрын
its not fake using the carbon as an electrode works and using the lithium battery can supply instant large currents,ive done this aswell many years ago
@normanpeterson39618 ай бұрын
You will always get these comments from people like this. They think they’re experts they don’t try it to see if it works or not. They just put a negative spin on everything. It makes him feel good I guess.
@terencefranks16888 ай бұрын
yes- that was most noticeable !
@engjds8 ай бұрын
Not 12V car battery, it would melt the blades!
@KimLake18 ай бұрын
@@engjds Did you see anywhere that I said car battery? Pretty obvious it is a tool battery.
@franksmith82518 ай бұрын
Super Good Idea Thanks For Sharing Your Skills And Ideas. Very ThoughtFull A 20Volt Electrical Resistance High Temperature Welding And Brazing Device. Sharpening The Carbon Rod Increased The Electrical Resistance With 20 Volt Battery To To Point Of Almost White Heat. Im Going To Try This Idea Out. Thanks For Sharing Your Ideas Keep Up The Good Wood And You Have A Very Good Day.
@sergeibrodsky35327 ай бұрын
Where to find such the battery with graphite rod. All that I inspected here in USA has no rod, but graphite powder at the outer aspect.
@laurenceperkins74687 ай бұрын
Shouldn't be any of them with graphite powder... That would have horrible internal resistance. Some of the larger zinc-carbon cells though have manganese oxide powder as a filler. The carbon rod will be in the middle of that.
@sergeibrodsky35327 ай бұрын
@@laurenceperkins7468 Probably it is not graphite, I see just some black powder leaving marks on fingers. Nevertheless at the center there is only soft black substation. I opened AA cells of several brands with the same result. I have found graphite electrodes on Amazon, very affordable. Is 3mm good diameter?
@laurenceperkins74687 ай бұрын
@@sergeibrodsky3532 The diameter you want depends on how much current you're pushing. You can probably find GCAW welding tables giving electrode size recommendations based on amperage and application. You can also find some videos here from people making their own. If you're not too concerned about purity then charcoal dust with used motor oil as a binder pressed together with a reasonably high pressure and fired hot enough to burn off the volatiles reportedly works acceptably well for making carbon-arc cutting torch electrodes and the like.
@peterhermann93467 ай бұрын
Using the carbon electrode from an 1.5 volts battery for welding is very creative! But i would take another power unit, you can defeat your drill battery with that. Better use a cheap welding machine as power source (Inverter)
@rottiejakeluke7 ай бұрын
Was it just soldier used and, or, did it weld the materials together? Could this be done to weld aluminum???
@Ihavetruth226 ай бұрын
INDIAN KNOW MAGIC. DONT QUESTION.
@jeanbourdiaux14756 ай бұрын
👍Trés interréssant, je vais faire l'expérience dans mon garage, par contre je n'ai pas vue ce qu'était le liquide la bouteille ! étais-ce de l'acide Chloridrique ?
@brownski_ltd98236 ай бұрын
OKAY, great hack - what did you do in a quick review please.
@potaylo7 ай бұрын
The fumes from the acid are very dangerous
@josephyeo69667 ай бұрын
sometimes it is cheaper and safer to buy a new part or get proper tools or pay someone to do it.
@dennish57117 ай бұрын
Is the carbon rod connected to the negatve (-) end? I used a car battery and the aligator clips melted within a few seconds.
@laurenceperkins74687 ай бұрын
Need heavier wiring for more amps. Car batteries will dump at least hundreds of amps, the bigger ones will do thousands. With no arc it doesn't matter which polarity the electrode is. If you're maintaining an arc then the polarity affects which direction the electrode material tends to migrate.
@1954sweetfa8 ай бұрын
If you use two carbon rods ,no doubt you could make a very simple spot welder!
@GausDIY8 ай бұрын
Thank for your sharing!
@darrinjones93877 ай бұрын
Is there any way to regulate this so I don't fuck up the battery pack?
@amirasadollahjamshidi6358 ай бұрын
درود.ایا ازسیم نقره هم میتوان استفاده کرد ؟! یعنی توان ذوب نقره رادارد؟! ممنون
@GausDIY8 ай бұрын
من هنوز با سیم نقره امتحان نکردم
@Sgt.k8 ай бұрын
Pretty ingenious.
@GausDIY8 ай бұрын
Thank you Bro! Cheers!
@JillandKevin7 ай бұрын
Just so everyone knows, this is NOT WELDING! This is soldering or brazing. Welding melts the parent metal together, either with or without parent metal filler. Interesting, but a LONG process!!
@user-qt7oo8wk3x8 ай бұрын
LIAR You use 36V, not 1,5 V
@davewebster16278 ай бұрын
What was the liquid and what was the weld rod
@rickstewart70746 ай бұрын
48 volts works better or (4) 12volt battery's in series, Yeah!
@タルちゃんねる-c4x7 ай бұрын
溶接してる時の捻ってある物はハンダ?スチールワイヤー?
@usakicksass8 ай бұрын
Imagine if we could get people like this in the millions instead of, "FEED ME!!" Edit- Call space X, they're hiring!!
@SouthParkCycle7 ай бұрын
No, they're laying people off.
@yeongzookim80247 ай бұрын
Is it steel or wire or lead that is used for welding?
@Karsnebula17 ай бұрын
Que material es el alambre que usas ? Porque estoy al tanto del electrodo de carbon que trae la batería, pero no se que material es el alambre
@dlbig7 ай бұрын
which is positive and negative??
@momopeho8 ай бұрын
De qué material es la varilla roscada y muy delgada (al final del video) que utiliza para fundirla y pegar la parrilla?
@terencefranks16888 ай бұрын
which solution was poured into that plastic half-bottle ?
@pangrafix8 ай бұрын
Hydrochloric acid.
@lucaaahscrat8 ай бұрын
hydrocloric (muriatic) acid, beware it is an aggressive acid
@rudycorona69647 ай бұрын
pretty cool dude what a smart person you are
@GausDIY7 ай бұрын
Oh man, I saw you 👀👀😁
@diggy-d8w8 ай бұрын
That's pretty cool ....... So do you have to have a 6volt battery or can you use any old battery? I mean can you use a 6-12volt motorcycle or cat battery? Or can you use any type of cordless battery for a drill or saw? What is the metal used to bind the rack? You twisted metal for this repair & I don't know what you used? I subb'd & hit the bell, please try to list materials used somewhere? please? peace
@laurenceperkins74687 ай бұрын
A 6-12 volt motorcycle or car battery would be a much better choice. What he's doing with the lithium cordless drill battery is, in fact, very dangerous. In general a 5AH lithium battery like that will overheat if you draw more than 5A from it. The device he's using will *easily* draw 10x that, maybe more. It's probably only the fact that his wire diameter is too small and his connections are generally crappy that's keeping it from blowing the thermal fuse in the battery pack. Or, you know, if that fails, providing a practical demonstration of just how little difference there is between a lithium battery and a thermite charge... Vehicle starter batteries are designed to deliver *hundreds* of amps. With proper choice of wire size and electrode diameter this basic concept makes a decent carbon-arc cutting torch or, with practice, a usable spot-welder. With a source of CO2 gas for shielding it becomes a (crude) GCAW setup. (GCAW being an alternative to TIG for those who can't afford the much more expensive tungsten and argon.) You can find detailed instructions in "Popular Mechanics" and similar publications from the 70s and 80s when commercial tools of this type were on the expensive side for the home shop.
@diggy-d8w7 ай бұрын
Thank you, I'm not a "welder" & called it cool for the TVshow, " MacGyver's" sake. I know lithium batteries burn up for reasons unknown to me & that some cars/ebikes are torching homes, some even do so w/o being on a charger & that is scary plus they are hard to put out. I'd never actually do these things unless I could prove it safe concerning any fire, explosion, or chemical poison between the elements(science stuff) & the changing of their relationships. It kills people who dabble w/o giving things the proper research. A lot of these MacGyver antics come from parts of the world where waste parts & salvage are cast into poorer communities. ""how little difference there is between a lithium battery and a thermite charge..."" You couldn't have stated this any better than you did = that registered w/ me & again I say thanks b/c as little as I really know, I knew just enough to mention/ask the things I did >> > you saved me much time IF I ever felt forced into one of these Krazy Kewl yet dangerous poor choices...... I hope others read your response as well. it could save lives...... peace & GB Sir
@laurenceperkins74687 ай бұрын
@@diggy-d8w Lithium batteries aren't "hard to put out." They're so close to impossible as makes no difference. Cut off the air? Doesn't matter, they contain both fuel and oxidizer. Cool it off by pouring water on it? Lithium reacts violently with water. Possibly enough so to turn your fire into an explosion with the massive amount of hydrogen gas it will release. Bury it in a pile of sand to contain the heat and whatever molten metal, etc. the fire will create out of your tool and wait patiently for it to burn out. That's about all you can do. The only difference from thermite is that thermite burns just enough hotter to melt some of the sand too.
@diggy-d8w7 ай бұрын
Yeah Mr. Laurence P >> I know just enough that I don't like lithium batteries although they're in my laptop & many other devices we use. Now I think I saw evidence of "thermite" from the Sept. 11th events & there was molten metal running like a water under the debris like 4-6 weeks after the event but your comparison of the two is a powerful statement and I believe it as you've said. OMG, melting metals like steel is crazy to see but it will melt sand into glass fragments? I use a couple of devices that require the 18650's which I charge in an area with nothing that burns around it. I know there's charging bags but most the fires I've seen are in Tesla's / Ebikes, maybe a few in actual chargers. The issues w/ lithium batteries has kept me from buying any transportation that uses batteries but I also think that they're way overpriced & they pollute more than oil/coal or their products. I'm glad you took the time... lol, I've seen just enough to push back any/all desires to use lithium but you've added the resolve I needed to "Just Say NO" ! ty again, peace
@laurenceperkins74687 ай бұрын
@@diggy-d8w Thermite burns between 200 and 300 degrees C hotter than a LiFePo4 battery as commonly used in electric cars. They're both hot enough to melt a lot of things, but the batteries are a little less energetic. The Lithium-ion batteries in your cell phone and so-forth burn about as hot as an oven on self-clean. Dangerous, sure, but not "burn a hole through the concrete floor and drop into the apartment below" level dangerous. That said, you do have to abuse them pretty seriously in order to light them on fire. Puncture them, or heat them up enough to melt the plastic they're made of. As long as you're mindful of the environment you're keeping them in, and don't push them outside their spec (like by using them for an arc welder...) it's pretty safe. The problem with electric cars is that the politicians are pushing them as the solution to everything (because the politicians have invested heavily in electric cars and "green" energy and are looking for any excuse to throw taxpayer money at those things.) They have their applications. For certain kinds of vehicles hauling certain kinds of loads they even make sense. As a general, "everything should be electric"? Only once we have the infrastructure to deal with the fact that an hour of driving a mid-size passenger car uses as much power as the electrical consumption of the average American home for an entire day... Need to really beef up the grid there... Chemical fuel is simply the most efficient and economical way to move that kind of energy around. Even if you stop using fossil fuels, synthesized chemical fuel is still going to be the most efficient storage and transportation mechanism. Diesel oil has 50x the energy storage of our best batteries, and can be stored as long as necessary with minimal lossage. The only battery technology we have with that kind of storage duration use things like molten sodium... Batteries with operating temperatures of 400F aren't exactly consumer-friendly.
@relkarelka7 ай бұрын
Hezká ukázka "jak to také jde"... ale větší /výkonnější/ elektrická pájka udělá stejnou službu.
@tomasgrunero40278 ай бұрын
Con ácido, usar siempre protección , guantes 🧤 y gafas 😎
@GausDIY8 ай бұрын
Gracias por tu recordatorio, te deseo un buen y feliz día.
@1969electrical7 ай бұрын
Que material es el alambre es stainless steel o puede usar cual tipo de alambre
@Tee-ina-Skee-Mask6 ай бұрын
the batteries NEED to be alkaline batteries to have the graphene
@ScandalistRick7 ай бұрын
Why dissolve the battery casing?
@edwardwhatley16037 ай бұрын
Zinc of the battery casing dissolved in Hydrochloric acid-----> yields zinc chloride . . . a common acid flux agent . . .didn't you know ?
@ScandalistRick7 ай бұрын
@@edwardwhatley1603 Believe it or not... I didn't know. That is why I asked the question. Thanks for the answer.
@Dopedruide7 ай бұрын
Absofuckalutely smart Hack:) Brazing or welding who cares if it gonna stick 2gether and maybe the batts are a leftover.Thumbies into the Sky
@GausDIY7 ай бұрын
Thank you for watching! Have a nice day !
@復活修行中4 ай бұрын
It's not a 1.5V battery, it clearly says 36V.
@sandrokawasakininja77428 ай бұрын
Va bene anche per alluminio?
@lucaaahscrat8 ай бұрын
si dice che per alluminio ci vuole corrente alternata o forse polarita' "invertita"....
@pKova558 ай бұрын
The way you hit that thing is very convincing AND WHERE you hit it. On top: using a WOOD-Stick. REALLY?? -- If you are REALLY serious about that, you should hit it somewhere else and with a SOLID Hammer.
@robhart60426 ай бұрын
There are some very good quality and inexpensive ways to do low voltage welding. This is not that would interest me - or anyone else I've ever known or met.
@fkd19607 ай бұрын
Did you tell us what kind of welding wire it is?
@MY-mj2vr8 ай бұрын
Wo bitte ist das eine 1,5 Volt Batterie ? Immer diese Tricks für mehr Klicks ?
@MichaelJager-mv9ng8 ай бұрын
Genau, es wurde ein 36 V-Akku verwendet, wahrscheinlich mit sicher 4,0Ah.....außerdem sieht man nicht um welches Material es sich bei dem "Schweißdraht" handelt !
@jasonl71028 ай бұрын
The 1.5v battery was sacrificed to get the "welding tip."
@alvarosalasc1588 ай бұрын
la bateria de 1.5 es la que desbarata para sacar la barra de grafito.
@thomasmiller26677 ай бұрын
The welding terminal came from the 1.5v battery.
@noureddinebenkouar12717 ай бұрын
انا من الجزائر
@rialtho_the_magnificent7 ай бұрын
battery (1.5V): what type: Zinc-Carbon or Alkaline? Fully charged or a discharged one (you would normally dispose of)? So many missing information......
@TheTimshady3377 ай бұрын
You need the carbon anode feim a dry cell battery. When you put current to it, it makes a lot f heat.
@pangrafix8 ай бұрын
What a mess! That's not a repair. That's a complete fu*k up! Instead of all that unnecessary work, why not just use flux, solder and a simple heat source you can control - like a hand held gas jet cooker lighter, FFS. 🤷♂️
@viejojorgge8 ай бұрын
Leí los comentarios y no me aclaran nada, para mí la batería de 1,5 v. solo se usó para sacar el carbón central, después dice que la energía para soldar sale de una batería de 36 v., también dice para soldar acero, el acero puede ser soldado con hierro o acero, plata, cobre, aluminio o estaño, que es esto último lo que él utiliza trenzándolo...
@duyphucle65798 ай бұрын
Cái dây xoắn để hàn i nốc là dây gì đấy, có phải dây đồng không bạn ?
@viejojorgge8 ай бұрын
Para mí es alambre de estaño y plomo..
@kiccabeagle86908 ай бұрын
👌👍, ma quanto dura la batteria, per i tanti corto circuiti ai quali viene sottoposta?
@lululuamre95928 ай бұрын
Ciao. La presentazione del vidéo non è giusta. La batteria da 1,5v serve solo per estrarre quel pezzo che serve per l'elettrodo. La batteria che dà il voltaggio è la Makita che fà 36v. Dunque non è esatto dire: "saldare con una batteria da 1,5v.
@kiccabeagle86908 ай бұрын
@@lululuamre9592 so bene che il carboncino della pila fa da elettrodo. Mi riferivo alla batteria che, nel momento che il carboncino poggia sul metallo da saldare, viene interessata dalla massima corrente che puo' erogare. Io penso che la batteria, sottoposta a continui corto circuiti, si deteriori in breve tempo. Inoltre, penso che con un trasformatore alimentato a 220Volt con uscita 36Volt, di potenza opportuna, ci risparmieremmo il costo della pila nuova- Cordiali saluti .
@lululuamre95928 ай бұрын
@@kiccabeagle8690 Si, hai ragione. Del resto ci sono moltissimi video in soggetto con un trasformatore di forno a micro-onde. Me ne sono fatto uno. Diciamo che il video di cui si parla, è un esempio di rapida preparazione et può servire occasionalmente se si ha una batteria di 20/36v. Del resto, visto le scintille che provoca il contatto tra due cavi di batteria auto, penso che uno che deve fissare un pezzo di lattina sulle pile che compongono una batteria al litio (per rifarla), due cavi isolati con due punteruoli di carbonio penso dovrebbe bastare.
@kiccabeagle86908 ай бұрын
@@lululuamre9592 grazie, per avermi risposto. Cordiali saluti from Monopoli BA - Italy
@SugaInaleaj7 ай бұрын
saya memperhatikan benda yang dipukul saat demo seperti benda yang lainya. apakah ada masalah dengan mata saya?
@stefano.camuncoli8 ай бұрын
The source of power, are not a 1,5 v battery ( that need only for extract carbon electrod )..... but a makita 5.0 ampere battery !!!! ...... Why this spread of trickery [ or hoax ] culture ? ....only for raise views ???
@momopeho8 ай бұрын
5.0 A is high. How many volts, please?
@tarpanc348 ай бұрын
@@momopeho 5 A 120 V 600 W
@Ayi-ns9rv7 ай бұрын
❤
@Ayi-ns9rv7 ай бұрын
Bicara dan jelaskan supaya mengerti bos apayg di kerjakan!
@aywitb9118 ай бұрын
not 1.5v but 36v glo plug
@tade769Ай бұрын
on ne trouve plus de charbon dans les piles... 😛
@omersamir43988 ай бұрын
من العراق
@Allan577 ай бұрын
i am in new caledonia
@josephdispensa14758 ай бұрын
Why don’t you show the real source of the power instead saying 1 1/2 volt battery , misleading 👎👎👎
@randyedwards32448 ай бұрын
Because if he just told the true story we would not have gotten sucked into watching!
@thomasmiller26677 ай бұрын
They did. The drill battery was the source of the welding power.
@pedrosvaldofrias8 ай бұрын
Chau tu batería de 36 V de taladro. Con el consumo masivo de amperaje, sobrecalentará y se estropeará en poco tiempo. (Goodbye to your 36 V drill battery. With the massive amperage draw, it will overheat and break down in no time).
@gasparreis3038 ай бұрын
Very amazing, but I don't get these carbon rod zinc batteries, I think that in 21 century do not exist !
@GausDIY8 ай бұрын
Near me, stores still sell this type of battery
@jorgeportillo77288 ай бұрын
Vivo en el Salvador
@궁극의자유인8 ай бұрын
제목에 낚여서 보고 말았음. 휴대용 납땜기라고 했다면 good했겠지만...
@solarforfuture7 ай бұрын
hope the 50 dollar tool battery doesn't splode... or die..
@ernestocritzmann89276 ай бұрын
Please go to a Technical School to learn! That's all lousy work made with the wrong tools.
@stevecoppin63967 ай бұрын
a 36 volt 1.5 volt battery !
@ralphgengenbach68498 ай бұрын
Das ist nicht geschweist sondern gelötet
@treesnuggler20108 ай бұрын
Die Rasierklingen sind geschweißt. Bei Wig wird auch Material zugefügt.
@GausDIY8 ай бұрын
Danke! ❤️
@luigimazzardi39957 ай бұрын
😅 1,5 V c'est vite dit... En fait vous récupérez le charbon de la pile utilisé comme anode, et le reste ?????
@丁丁-i1z7 ай бұрын
類似點焊
@bjornjohansson49118 ай бұрын
Sorry, but except the thin razor-blades, there is no welding. The repair is just soft soldering with tin. Nothing else. A blowtorch is better than this battery killing way.
@zenonbiusz8 ай бұрын
Total bullshit. Firstly - no "welding" with a 1.5 V battery, only a 36 V 5 Ah battery (there is only a graphite electrode from 1.5 V cell), secondly, there was no welding, only soldering with soft solder, thirdly, connecting the trunk is fake - the sides were first welded with a normal welder and then soldered.
@alext88288 ай бұрын
You can fool them some of the time but you can't con Edison.
@thomasmiller26677 ай бұрын
The razor blades were spot welded. The rest might be brazed, but I'd like to know what the filler wires were.
@zenonbiusz7 ай бұрын
@@thomasmiller2667 Of course - I agree about spot welding, but that wire melted as easily, as if it were made of tin.
@davea51508 ай бұрын
I'm s that the inly thickness that can weld. Thats sucks
@naomisugar39408 ай бұрын
Muestra bien la conexión
@GausDIY8 ай бұрын
thank bro
@albertocabrera83127 ай бұрын
Argentina
@mingosutu8 ай бұрын
You said: 1.5 Volts?!! Naaah
@giovannivuolo8788 ай бұрын
Non capisco la barretta usata verso ja fine del video se è un pezzo di filo continuo o cosa altro