the ham sandwich was added to stick the vehicle to the ground, because as we all know, pigs don't fly
@Avetho9 ай бұрын
*_Genius._*
@corystansbury9 ай бұрын
*clapping* gif
@1471SirFrederickBanbury9 ай бұрын
yes ham, the ultimate downforce generator, which also brings laminar flow somehow. Dont ask why...
@theproceedings40509 ай бұрын
Well, except occasionally starting on Tuesdays from eight in the evening to four in the morning on Wednesday.
@herressen12719 ай бұрын
What about porco rosso?
@albertpolak7869 ай бұрын
The best way to stop people saying "you did it wrong" is to intentionally do it like 40% wrong and give the design another safety factor of 2.5
@syedusamamanzoor18389 ай бұрын
😂
@TastyGnocchi9 ай бұрын
60% done right of a safety factor of 2.5 means at least done 150% times right. Sounds good to me
@andreasteriovsky98399 ай бұрын
@@TastyGnocchi Or good enough...
@Universecentral19 ай бұрын
Or there's the threat that your mean comment may become a part of the product, and you will be blamed if something goes wrong.
@TastyGnocchi9 ай бұрын
mean? ironic yes but not mean. @@Universecentral1
@JerryRigEverything9 ай бұрын
I shall send you a new JerryRig knife.
@antiLGTBQ9 ай бұрын
can i get one too jerry
@lemagicbaguette19179 ай бұрын
It's gonna end up who knows where.
@gabbermaikel9 ай бұрын
wil it be a forged jerryrig knife? Or just a normal? And do they come precoated in some resin? Like if i where to buy 1 do i have to buy my own resin to get all over it or is that included?
@dispositivosdesalomao78749 ай бұрын
hey jerry can i send you a pair of flipflops from brazil? matt got his pair already when me (and other guys) found his addres LOL
@antiLGTBQ9 ай бұрын
@@dispositivosdesalomao7874Hey man you may have harmless intentions but they definitely do not like having their address known and have things sent to them.
@xylafoxlin9 ай бұрын
I've never been more honored to replace a resin-infused ham sandwich
@hunterm99 ай бұрын
I LOVE the fact that you started super strong and immediately jumped ship when you ran out of precut fibers, and just started sticking random shop junk in the composite. That's exactly how all my projects go; ambitious, logically designed, and completely randomly assembled depending on my level of motivation.
@Brizyy9 ай бұрын
the fact that the incompetent comment ended up right next to the fucking ham sandwich that you had to dig out is just pure comedy 😂
@marscruz9 ай бұрын
Throw in some synergic regurgitation… just for the heck of it.
@trailingrails99539 ай бұрын
@@marscruza lot of people forget that part of the carbon-resin-synergic regurgitation ratio, then their forged part just ends up being rather insipid.
@marscruz9 ай бұрын
@@trailingrails9953 They don't teach that in school. You have to learn it from an old master or just drink too much on Friday night.
@adamm27169 ай бұрын
i was in physical pain at some points, top notch youtube content
@JGuraan9 ай бұрын
We can all feel that pain. After all, who doesn't remember the first time they had to rework a forged HSRP (Ham-Sandwich-Reinforced-Plastic) composite?
@davidcarlsson13969 ай бұрын
@@JGuraan We will all forever know the smell through our monitors, no matter if it's one or 100 years from now.
@nonedead19285 ай бұрын
The „HSRP“ was definitely up there, but the 10mm socket had me nearly throw up. I once found one in the concrete of a pedestrian bridges hollow body… And there weren’t even any 10mm bolts anywhere on that bridge…
@miquelllorca83089 ай бұрын
When i tought this could not get more unhinged, the sandwich came in...
@dracomenda29 ай бұрын
And came right back out 😂
@soangry9 ай бұрын
i thought for sure he was just pretending to put the sandwich in. Cue my head shaking when he opens the mold and there's the sandwich.
@systemsbroken9 ай бұрын
In the "High End" Cycling world (specifically by Trek Bicycles) it has been called "OCLV", or Optimum Compaction, Low Void. We always called it "Optimum Cracking Low Value" as it had a far higher failure rate than a standard weave.
@catmadscotАй бұрын
My '95 Y22 is actually still in one piece! OK, the geometry kinda sucks compared to a modern XC bike, but I still take for a spin now and again.
@aaronb79909 ай бұрын
'Printed it 0.7% bigger'. My Uncle used to hand sculpt sand cast masters. He said it took many revisions to the mold to get the final dimensions correct for the same reason. When you/Matt said 'printed it 7/10s of 1% bigger I just imagined the amount tme and work that kind of adjustment used to take. Such a cool time to be alive.
@thomasrussell46746 ай бұрын
This is like trying to mould a cube. Some plastics naturally consolidate after moulding and don't make good sharp edges. Sometimes the cube mould has to be more acute and sharp pinched at the edges and corners and by the time it comes out the cube is a simple 90⁰ all round, not that you would have guessed from the mould.
@20766492 ай бұрын
Old f1 engines casting molds where hand made in wood too.
@samnelson35269 ай бұрын
Aerospace engineering student here - that 'transition' piece in front of the vertical stabilizer is not for drag reduction, it is for stability in a stall-spin scenario, or rather, it prevents a stall spin from developing. Cars obviously don't have aerodynamic stalls, but it adds area to your vertical stabilizer so it will help you track straighter. And it looks cool!
@Lynxtro9 ай бұрын
It’s a vortex generator right?
@kinfongyeung54009 ай бұрын
@@Lynxtro the right term you want to search is dorsal fin
@PatrickKniesler9 ай бұрын
Cars may not have stalls, but they do have spins. Its good to know he'll have a better chance of recovery if he starts spinning while driving at 100mph+.
@Splarkszter9 ай бұрын
@@PatrickKniesler *tiny breeze blows down from the mountain* car: *lol*
@tophatvideosinc.58589 ай бұрын
Person who also ran a drag simulation in fusion360 here. Can confirm it also reduces leading edge drag at the base.
@tomtomtomtomtomtomtomtoom9 ай бұрын
This feels like an April Fools video. I seriously hope you have something even more hilarious in store for April 1st!
@Hookmodo9 ай бұрын
I had to check the date and make sure I hadn't time skipped
@PatrickKniesler9 ай бұрын
Matt is probably still seething after reading your comment.
@toadbroz309 ай бұрын
April 1st he is giving away the Viper, I'm calling it now. @tommasoimperio6474
@rexhorning72289 ай бұрын
Day drinking while working on projects! How I miss the good old days.
@bartoes69029 ай бұрын
Watch his april 1st video be the most serious vid he's done to date. Would be fun
@alekonicolacakis70029 ай бұрын
"Guessing is enough engineering for me" is the motto of engineering students everywhere
@nebdaar9 ай бұрын
Luckily it's not. Greetings from Germany. Engineer ofc
@zakr11879 ай бұрын
@@nebdaar*student
@alekonicolacakis70029 ай бұрын
that and, "not good, but good enough"
@robconstant7979 ай бұрын
As someone who didn't finish my engineering degree, I can say that engineering is useless. Just make it bigger, it will be fine.
@spacedbro9 ай бұрын
The engineering degree makes your guessing pretty good ... usually.
@joshmnky9 ай бұрын
Strong "Just Rolled In" vibe to this episode, especially when replacing the ham sandwich with spray foam.
@senditkevin9 ай бұрын
Yes.
@sathos9 ай бұрын
Customer denied repairs and consumed the sandwich remains 😂
@clist94069 ай бұрын
We hammered and pried then remembered it was screwed together . This is my new favorite channel
@crackedemerald49309 ай бұрын
genius matt, the ham sandwich will be cured in the salt flat, making it inert.
@tophatvideosinc.58589 ай бұрын
Have you eaten deli ham? That shit is cured af lol
@playmaka20079 ай бұрын
Alongside a tasty meal.
@myownsite9 ай бұрын
@@playmaka2007A succulent chinese meal?
@FAB11509 ай бұрын
You created the composite of all composites: Resin, carbon, paper, rage, foam, steel, aluminum, and ham
@KellyWu049 ай бұрын
And I believe some bread.
@daviddanyi17059 ай бұрын
One could argue that the ham sandwich IS carbon composite in itself...
@myself2489 ай бұрын
I felt the Matt/matte joke coming about 0.6 seconds before it landed, and I have concluded that is the optimal timing for maximum pun pain. Well done.
@alskjflaksjdflakjdf9 ай бұрын
Oh man... I remember listening to it and it sounding strange, but didn't figure out why until now. To be fair, Matt's videos always sound strange so maybe I shouldn't be surprised.
@ionstorm669 ай бұрын
Forged is stronged for complex shapes that you dont have a custom weaved mat for. The chopped fiber soup gives a random layout that helps prevent weak points caused by poor weave alignment in the mat with complex geometries. You could layer multiple standard weave mats in the correct orientation for each section of part, but that adds weight and thickness for the overlaps. You can also make custom weaves so that it aligns with the part geometry, but that adds a lot of cost and complexity.
@nicktune12199 ай бұрын
The easiest, fastest, best, and cheapest solution for this is to instead CNC aluminum (or magnesium). But carbon fiber is seen as a "fix all" so shit like this exists. I have never once even thought about making a forged carbon fiber part.
@SeanCMonahan9 ай бұрын
@@nicktune1219To play devil's advocate here, there are some cases where subtractive manufacturing won't cut it (ba dum tsh). It's possible that other design requirements rule out aluminum.
@TheEvilAdministrator8 ай бұрын
@@SeanCMonahan I mean, even if machining can't produce the part by itself, cast-then-machine probably can.
@Lazerecho7 ай бұрын
You could make it forged, or make it better 😂
@trevorjlewis9 ай бұрын
I have 45 years working with composites, and I have to say this was just brilliant, a perfect example of "fuck about and find out". Brilliant. The part looked totally acceptable in a Picasso kind of way.
@GingerPiston9 ай бұрын
That superfast matte pun was top tier.
@nickcoul6999 ай бұрын
I half expected the ham sandwich to absorb the resin like a sponge and become the strongest section.
@TheRealAlpha29 ай бұрын
I've seen enough Evan and Katelyn DIY resin projects to know that _never_ works out to plan.
@Corvus.26069 ай бұрын
the bread on it's own would have (probably) worked, but the water in the ham stops the resin form curing.
@celeron559 ай бұрын
If it was dried first, then sure. But moisture doesn't work well in this application. Plus the ham is greasy, that's bad also. So, it just doesn't work.
@Mister_Brown9 ай бұрын
@@celeron55yeah he shoulda freeze dried it
@athmaid9 ай бұрын
@@TheRealAlpha2I'm already mentally preparing for resin pumpkin part 23 with shocking results lol
@samuelb69609 ай бұрын
You would think a ham sandwich was the weirdest thing added to a layup, but I know of a boat with a guy's grandmother's ashes mixed into the resin.
@TheRealAlpha29 ай бұрын
I'd argue his Grandma (rip) is far more structurally sound than that ham sandwich.
@shred18949 ай бұрын
I'm gonna need the story behind that boat my guy. I'll crack a beer before reading it.
@samuelb69609 ай бұрын
@shred1894 I worked for schooner creek boatworks the customer for a boat we were building named the boat after his grandmother "Maggie Brown" and wanted her ashes put into the boat somewhere so my boss had one of the guys hollow out behind where our bronze schooner creek badge was going and mix the ashes with epoxy and fill the void with it.
@jacksmith77269 ай бұрын
You can sex toys with ashes mixed in the resin if you what to get really weird
@shred18949 ай бұрын
@@samuelb6960 Ah, I didn't expect a reply so quickly and I didn't have a beer to crack open. But that's a much better but less entertaining story than I expected.
@ImaginativelyUnimaginative9 ай бұрын
Actual composites engineer here. This is an absolutely fantastic use of my favorite "Fancy Plywood"
@000gjb9 ай бұрын
A Mike Patey video on his "Scrappy" bush plane aircraft build in carbon fibre showed fibreglass being used between metal components and the carbon fibre to prevent corrosion - food for thought. Mike Patey builds awesome race planes and other aircraft projects. Very gifted individual.
@lincolnloftus49197 ай бұрын
You're entirely right Fiberglass is often used to prevent Galvanic corrosion in composite materials
@jon-williammurphy97809 ай бұрын
My old VP of engineering was a smart dude. We were ME/EE/FW engineers for hire and had to design things fast and reliably. He said, to be confident in your design you should have at least one of these: 1. Experimental proof that it works (TIW) 2. Robust simulation TIW 3. An expert says TIW and why 4. Someone else who actually researched it does it that same way. 5. If it’s fucked you can easily pivot to something else that works (but is probably more expensive) So your stabilizer transition thing is legit under article 4!
@scottcates9 ай бұрын
TIL TIW
@jordancurnow89819 ай бұрын
Not gonna lie, had to check to make sure it wasn’t April 1st half way through the video.
@sterneno11079 ай бұрын
"But that is a problem for future Matt" seems to be your favorite words!
@TheAngryConsumer9 ай бұрын
You need to sell a sticker that says "This was a problem for Future Me"
@papalazarou54289 ай бұрын
I use that comment on a daily basis
@TheRealAlpha29 ай бұрын
His favorite, until he IS future Matt.
@shred18949 ай бұрын
Either that or "Good Enough".
@jasonb65709 ай бұрын
@@TheAngryConsumer Future Me always hates Past Me. Past Me can be a real dick.
@acrain79 ай бұрын
This is genuinely my favorite video you've made, this is commitment to the bit on a whole new level.
@uberschnilthegreat229 ай бұрын
Those intermediaries are, if I remember correctly, actually pretty much an extension to the vertical stabilizer. Early P-51D's had issues with yaw stability due to transitioning from a razorback design to a flush bubble canopy, so later variants would extend the base of the vertical stabilizer to regain it.
@ABROOKSH9 ай бұрын
The 10mm socket joke… so obvious but so, so good. You sir are very good at what you do.
@davidcarlsson13969 ай бұрын
To be honest it will turn out to be the one you will always find.
@improprietary19 ай бұрын
You joke about engineered wood but plain OSB walls in the utility room is becoming trendy
@__dm__9 ай бұрын
no fucking way, doesn't it splinter and break apart unless it's covered?
@resignator9 ай бұрын
Garages too.
@roflchopter119 ай бұрын
Surely you can't be serious...
@DustyKornphartz9 ай бұрын
I am serious, and stop calling me Shirley. kzbin.info/www/bejne/lYukqnaYipiii5o
@huninmunin17329 ай бұрын
Just sand an varnish them I wouldn't do it but some prefere
@maxthecheesecheeseboy96059 ай бұрын
I’ve found that wetting the fibres out by mixing them in resin before inserting them into the mould is pretty much essential to achieve a full wet out on larger components
@justinlabarge81789 ай бұрын
Right, but how do you stop the sandwich from Absorbing all of your resin?
@tophatvideosinc.58589 ай бұрын
Its looks to me like that "essential" part was not only skipped, but turned out just fine. Ill trust matt the engineer on this one.
@billcodey14309 ай бұрын
Too much information!
@strider_hiryu8509 ай бұрын
buddy, he added a ham sandwich and pointed out how cheap & disposable "forged" carbon fiber is. you've already put way too much engineering in the first 10 words of this comment than Matt has done on this entire project. use your expertise for good, not for KZbin commenting. or don't. do whatever. i'm not your mother.
@clapanse9 ай бұрын
@@tophatvideosinc.5858He wouldn't have had the pinholes if he'd premixed it, so "turned out just fine" is a bit of a stretch here. Then again, honestly, given the structural loads involved in this, I'm sure this'll work just fine regardless.
@jorehir9 ай бұрын
1:11 It keeps the air attaches to the rudder at high yaw angles, like a LERX. The high sweep virtually decreases the Angle of Attack to the incoming airflow, lowering the chances of stall. At very high angles, it may even generate a vortex, with similar positive effects. Structurally, it increases the contact area with the fuselage, securing the rudder in its place. As for forged carbon, it was conceived to eliminate the manual labor involved in normal carbon fiber manufacturing, lowering its cost. It's called "forged" because it supposed to be pressed on the mold by a press-forge, which would also cure it. It's a strong material, but not as strong as regular carbon fiber. But it surely looks shiny and glamorous.
@xxwookey9 ай бұрын
'Engineered wood' includes a lot more than just OSB, MDF and chipboard. Plywood, LVL (Laminated Veneer Lumber'), Blockboard, CLT ( Cross Laminated Timber), fancy finger-jointed window frames, Glulam beams. It may be kind of crummy at the bottom end (actually OSB is generally amazing) but the nice stuff really is engineered quite a lot and has impressive characteristics. But well done on the silliness of filling your forged part with random crap. Classic.
@yuiop-y9r9 ай бұрын
Haminar flow
@seantheberge54569 ай бұрын
LOL!
@scottcates9 ай бұрын
Best Comment Award
@ShootingAir9 ай бұрын
"....Because it's hilarious"... yes, yes it is. You made me leak from my eyeballs.
@darksu69479 ай бұрын
It's ok my dude. Just let them purdy little cryballs leak if they want to. I won't think any less of you 😁
@tbh90889 ай бұрын
The transition from the fuselage to the vertical tail has no aerodynamic advantage. A professor in engineering school told us it was the result of needing to increase the tail area for lateral stability after the initial design and/or test flights were performed. It was cheaper to add this structure than redesign the empennage completely. It may also allow a lower tail height to reduce roll coupling.
@Kalimerakis9 ай бұрын
Thats also what I remember. In some twin engine planes (don't remember which) they added it after switching to more powerful engines, as it needed more longitudinal stability for engine-out scenarios. Also it does have the aerodynamic advantage of adding stability, I don't know if it has the advantage of reducing drag. Probably not as a longer chords (low aspect ratio) generally are less efficient in the lift to drag ratio. It might be structurally more stable as there is less of a lever arm and more area attached to the fuselage.
@Pieliker969 ай бұрын
It can also act as a LERX for the Vstab and increase effectiveness / delay stall at high sideslip angles, particularly helpful for countering engine-out thrust asymmetry on multi-engine planes
@tomcoon90389 ай бұрын
Also a common method of adding needed stability after adding floats to a plane. The increased forward drag of the floats necessitates increasing the tail area.
@paullowell33429 ай бұрын
That would make sense if it wasn’t also on new planes. Which it is
@Dovorans9 ай бұрын
@@paullowell3342Don't underestimate the degree to which looking cool has driven vertical stabilizer design, it's one of the few places on an aircraft you can play around and not have it bite you.
@jacobhaagerup78169 ай бұрын
When restoring a 1969 Alfa Romeo Giulia I came across a half eaten pepper UNDER the original paint under the back seat cushion, so there is presedent for this kind of composite.
@LIONGOD9 ай бұрын
it always makes me happy to see composites done right
@Chilled_Mackers9 ай бұрын
You sir, are a legend. I enjoy the subtle jokes, never ham fisted - they are the bread and butter of the channel.
@Sir66Hugh9 ай бұрын
These jokes are leaving me salty.
@sooyster40339 ай бұрын
I think the sandwich was a little...er...."ham fisted" you might say
@PuerRidcully9 ай бұрын
Adding tungsten to lightweight carbon - good thinking, Matt.
@rocketsurgeon119 ай бұрын
It's a land speed car...weight really isn't that big a deal, plus he needs to balance out the CG...or something. ;)
@digbysirchickentf23159 ай бұрын
@@rocketsurgeon11 I'm starting to worry about Matt.
@shred18949 ай бұрын
@@digbysirchickentf2315 I'm starting to worry about Future Matt.
@MrRedstoner9 ай бұрын
@@shred1894 I'll go ahead and leave worrying about Future Matt to Future Me
@emmajnation-emma9 ай бұрын
@@rocketsurgeon11except you want the centre of mass ahead of the centre of aerodynamic pressure for high speed stability. Which is useful for land speed record cars.
@Johnny_OSG9 ай бұрын
Matt, that small triangular piece in front of vertical stabilizer is a leading edge root extension. At high yaw angle it creates a stron Vortex that energies the airflow impacting the main stabilizer increasing the critical angle of attack thus preventing a stall and increasing directional stability. The same principle is used in many modern fighter jets in front of main wings - F18s etc. When pulling hard manouvers you can observe vortices shedding and condensation on the main wing. Notice how they are still attached to the wing even at extremely high angles of attack. It is important to encorporate this design into your land speed car as it will help you not spin ass forwards
@thomashanson66039 ай бұрын
I was looking for this comment, I was gonna say the same thing.
@unpaidintern66528 ай бұрын
So he was absolutely right in the assesment that smart people did a giant load of math to figure out that it has to be there.
@s4dg9 ай бұрын
1:10 this is called a strake, and yes, it's to reduce drag, but a different type of drag from where the wings meet the fuselage.
@reinbeers53229 ай бұрын
That little extension to the vertical stabilizer was often added to increase directional stability in aircraft. You can see it being added in the later P-47 models. Also reduces drag!
@gaeel3309 ай бұрын
Engineering is about optimising. Optimising for performance, for durability, for cost, for ease of use, etc... Sometimes one of the optimisation factors is humour...
@Splarkszter9 ай бұрын
Nah, here we optimize how much and for long we use our brain.
@observingtheworld89899 ай бұрын
@@Splarkszter So for exactly half a sentence then?
@rondobrondo9 ай бұрын
This sounds like something Data would say lmao
@Chippie-O9 ай бұрын
The only thing I can think you've done wrong in this build Matt is not re-forging the "good enough" sticker, but that "Superfast Matt" paint is pure freaking gold bro.
@Schismarch9 ай бұрын
It’s like the part is an embodied shitpost to grief your haters. I loved it. It also looks pretty cool.
@im1fadedRob9 ай бұрын
Randomly found this video recommended. Started chuckling at the MrBeast bar going into the carbon fiber. Laughed my ass off at the ham sandwich. 10/10, you got a new subscriber.
@luislongoria66219 ай бұрын
So strange no one remembers chocolate liquor
@cHAOs99 ай бұрын
New sentence unlocked: "Dig out the ham sandwich from the forged carbon fiber vertical stabilizer"
@Skwisgar23229 ай бұрын
One of these days, future Matt is gonna beat the crap out of past Matt.
@glenns56279 ай бұрын
I can speak from experience, it's the other way 'round. Future me (when he arrived) said, OMG I hurt, who beat the crap out of me? Oh ya, it was Past me, doing stupid shit...
@playmaka20079 ай бұрын
But current matt has left future matt an offering of a ham sandwich and a 10mm socket to stave the violence.
@darthtrump44289 ай бұрын
Dear lord, i feel bad for what that guy Future Matt will have to endure...
@dikkie10009 ай бұрын
I have no idea what Future Matt has done to Present Matt, but i imagine it must have been terrible.
@jasonb65709 ай бұрын
Fuck that guy. He always figures something out.
@nathanschaefer51489 ай бұрын
The intermediate part before the rudder is a vortice generator exactly like a delta wing, it causes a large notice to generate at high angles which increases drag in the back of the aircraft and increases the stabilizing lift force by up to 80pct over just having the plain rudder alone. This was discovered around the time of WW2 but not understood at all until the 60s, by the 70s it was being built into the strakes of combat jets like the f-16 and f-18
@andrew88959 ай бұрын
Real vs fake: what commonly referred to as "forged carbon", and what is a type of carbon fiber SMC material (chopped carbon fiber) that are pressed with extremely high pressures in engineered steel die into shape as the high-temp resin sets as different. In his example and most of the others that Fake it "Fake Forged Carbon fiber " are just pressure molding the composites, emulating the process, only slightly. This is one step up from a carbon wrap, nice work!
@andrewpease36889 ай бұрын
The ramp in front of the vertical stabiliser develops a vortex at the intersection which keeps the airflow attached at high angles of attack. I would guess that this is a good thing for a race car
@johnl55259 ай бұрын
The sandwich brainfart. Were you trained at Boeing by any chance?? All hail the algorithm.
@Wojtgaw9 ай бұрын
that 10mm socket caught me of guard
@jasonb65709 ай бұрын
That's the part that you found surprising?
@Wojtgaw9 ай бұрын
@@jasonb6570 You can expect anything surprising in life, but not to find a 10 mil
@riffzifnab92549 ай бұрын
No one expects the 10mm socket, because it's never there when you need it.
@RealBLAlley9 ай бұрын
Has anyone _not_ lost a 10mm socket?
@hexapodium9 ай бұрын
The long transition-y bit is a leading-edge root extension, they help keep the wing (or tail) un-stalled at higher angles of attack. On fast jets they're usually on the wing and result in being able to do more top gun type things; on slow jets on the tail, I think they help prevent and recover from spins and other 'stalled tail' situations where there's a big apparent crosswind, which is potentially a very bad day. On the land speed car, I *hope* the plan is to not run it with a 90mph crosswind (seems sketchy but idk) so it should be less of an aerodynamic factor and more of a coolness-enhancing one; there might be some benefits to moving the tail's centre of pressure a bit lower. A short literature search has turned up nothing on the merits of a ham sandwich for yaw stability, but I hope the Ig Nobel committee is paying attention.
@mememaster1479 ай бұрын
Yeah, the vertical tail root extension is specifically an anti-spin feature. AFAIK if you go into a spin it acts as a vortex generator to create vortex lift on one side of the tail to resist the spin.
@Maximum_7779 ай бұрын
When you added the sandwiches, I actually saw it coming, I knew the moment I saw them that you were going to put them into the mold, however I didn't think you'd actually leave them there! I thought it was just going to be a gag, but nope, you actually let it cure like that. I really thought at that point you were going to fully commit, until it rotted and forced you to dig it out, but at least you didn't do that. Top notch content.
@MrJeepmarine7 ай бұрын
Me watching video: Wow, this guy is smart! Me when the ham sandwichs go in: Ummmm, maybe not....
@Dovorans9 ай бұрын
Fun fact: the main reason most GA aircraft's vertical stabilizers aren't just rectangular in planform is that marketing found that tapered and swept vertical stabilizers sold better. For manufacturers like Mooney the tail profile is simply part of the brand image, like how BMW uses kidney grilles. All that being said, the dorsal fin does help keep the vertical stabilizer from stalling at high side slip angles.
@aria89289 ай бұрын
Aside from the sandwich, the other inclusions are actually really cool looking and i liked them a lot.
@gsmdo88369 ай бұрын
Brilliant - you continue to be my favourite channel, by producing hilarious and off the wall content, yet somehow producing working vehicles...
@link74179 ай бұрын
Granted I don't watch many channels in this category, but I'm honestly impressed by how much Matt actually gets done along whit the jokes/mucking about and in a 3 car garage
@ChrisOnez7189 ай бұрын
this makes me happy. i always assumed that the weave pattern is what in part adds strength.
@fixedskidz9 ай бұрын
The bit of the tail that you call an "intermediate transition into the stabiliser" is to avoid completely stalling the fin at high angles of yaw. So its a safety measure for aircraft in cross winds and probably isn't very helpful on your car. But it does look very cool!
@fixedskidz9 ай бұрын
bloodhound lsr does have a fin that looks like that though so maybe there is some benifit I"m not aware of!
@chesspiece819 ай бұрын
Matt your "close enough" method is absolutely hilarious.
@shadowgattler9 ай бұрын
Good enough. It's good enough. Come on.
@jamessmith84809 ай бұрын
I haven't laughed this hard at the internet in a long time. Thanks SuperfastMatt!
@swealer9 ай бұрын
Matt, from the bottom of my heart: THANK YOU! that hilarious video was just what i needed after this week! Edit: Okay, i didnt see the "superfastMATT" and the 10mill joke coming at the end, but boy, those were great :D
@SynchronizorVideos9 ай бұрын
The 10mm socket was a genius touch. I hope he finds a way to leave that visible in the final product.
@adamcravets54089 ай бұрын
I don’t think I’ve ever subscribed to a channel after seeing only one video until today.
@delanopotgieter99729 ай бұрын
"Guessing is enough engineering for me" I have not laughed this hard in ages. I mamaged a lodge in Africa some years ago and fixing shit often had me thinking pretty much the same way. Stay awesome
@alexchasewilliams9 ай бұрын
Hey Matt, the strake forward of the vertical stabilizer is for stability at high yaw angles. It generates a vortex that keeps the flow attached on the low pressure side. Source: Aerodynamics for naval aviators.
@freeidaho-videos9 ай бұрын
The superfast matt paint job is absolutely some of your best humor.
@roflchopter119 ай бұрын
That actually looks pretty cool. I thought the forged carbon fiber was also supposed to be "thin" like normal carbon fiber, with either a foam core, no core (hollow) and/or bonded to a complimentary stiffening piece like car hoods.
@jeffmcdonald1019 ай бұрын
This is thin compared to something less thin.
@roflchopter119 ай бұрын
@@jeffmcdonald101 I mean, yeah. Thats true of everything, except maybe a sphere or cube.
@Raven749479 ай бұрын
Sandwich core
@kadmow9 ай бұрын
- the rake on a modern Cessna tail - merely looks cool - modern, post ~1960, (the turtledeck faring is functional) What was the benefit about using chopped carbon for this bulk filling - why not use chopped glass?? (cheaper) and about as heavy and "strong".. - ok, black is cooler...
@spinalgrey36009 ай бұрын
Why you don't use pressure washer to remove food from your carbon fiber?
@joyitas9 ай бұрын
The end product looks really clean, hilarious!
@majasservice71419 ай бұрын
I love your dry sort of humor and would like to have my posting glued inside one of your artworks. At last I like most the story from the pikes peak, allaround. my garage is also full of projects and I watch your videos, which are grat!, and hope to find some inspiration and motivation. hand
@DuckAutomata9 ай бұрын
This is essentially one of those KZbin videos where they fix a toilet using ramen. But this time it's an aerodynamically stable ham sandwich. Billiant!
@eljefeamericano43089 ай бұрын
For better or worse, this video was my introduction to your channel. The part of me that is meticulous to a fault hated so, so much of this... But the part of me that appreciates dry, cynical humor convinced the other part to go take a nap so I could be entertained. Then I saw the Viper... Very cool. It's the kind of crazy thing I'd have loved to do in a video game. Here, you've done it in real life. I'm now subscribed.
@senatorchinchilla53899 ай бұрын
So its more of a "forgery" forging than a "highly compressed molten metal" forged. I was also very intrigued to hear your 3D print shrank, because we've been experiencing the same thing at work. Every part that needs a dimension held was coming out tight.
@louisvaught24959 ай бұрын
What's particularly annoying about the term is that you can actually forge carbon fiber, using heat and/or compression molding to control and improve fiber alignment. The thing everyone calls "forged" carbon fiber is just basic chopped compression molding.
@scratchfisch64259 ай бұрын
3d printed parts usually shrink a bit, although the exact amount is dependent on the material used. Some slicers can be configured to account for this, but in my experience, for critical tolerances it is usually easier to account for this shrinkage during modeling and test the most critical dimensions (for example friction fits for bearings) with some test prints. AFAIK, shrinkage is a common phenomenon in all plastics, and can even be much more severe in other processes (like injection molding).
@SwainixFPV9 ай бұрын
The shrink (or expansion) depends on the material used, I think he's using ABS which shrinks/warps quite a bit during the print, but for example Silk PLA will foam the tiniest bit and if you flow calibrate it you'll usually end up with lower flow values than other PLAs. You can calibrate dimensions quite well otherwise, but worst case you print measure and adjust in the slicer settings.
@aaronb79909 ай бұрын
My Uncle used to hand sculpt sand cast masters. He said it took many revisions to the mold to get the final dimensions correct for the same reason. When he said 'printed it 7/10s of 1% bigger I just imagined the amount tme and work that kind of adjustment used to take.
@shaneferrell78529 ай бұрын
Oh... My... God....
@jasonb65709 ай бұрын
His brilliance is almost frightening.
@SynchronizorVideos9 ай бұрын
They should have sent a poet.
@RayTX13379 ай бұрын
Damn, nearly 400k subscribers. Feels like it was yesterday when I discovered this channel.
@plwadodveeefdv9 ай бұрын
thanks for sharing your discovery with all of us!
@CodyBunker9 ай бұрын
I've watched countless videos from countless KZbin channels. Some really great content. This is the first channel I might become a patreon member. Such great stuff
@capnthepeafarmer9 ай бұрын
"Guessing is enough engineering for me" God, I feel that so much!
@andhag9 ай бұрын
I think Xyla Foxlin would be proud.
@Stuffandstuff-9999 ай бұрын
I was half expecting her to turn up halfway through the video and send Matt off to make coffee while she made the part properly.
@MarianoLu9 ай бұрын
100% also he added her merch to fix the problem and that is Certified Good Enough!
@3landii9 ай бұрын
All of my garage/work shop walls and ceiling are OSB. I can hang a nail or a shelf anywhere I want without looking for a stud, and it's much more durable than drywall. Additionally, our utility/laundry room is a psuedo-tornado shelter with two layers of 3/4" OSB subflooring. Skim-coated it with a couple of thin coats of drywall mud and it looks just like sheetrock but WAY stronger. So, yay for forged wood...
@jesusfreakpl9 ай бұрын
OSB accents sound epic. dumb people, please make this happen! for the memez!
@pbe69659 ай бұрын
it's already happened, I've seen it before
@pguth989 ай бұрын
kzbin.info/www/bejne/eHi7Y5RqgcdqeKcsi=sCFCJ-I0J_2iqgpm&t=142 not the worst thing I've ever seen, but I still wouldn't choose it, personally.
@chineseredneck12119 ай бұрын
Don't know if you are using epoxy, but brown packing tape is more poly resin resistant than clear tape.
@christianseidler22529 ай бұрын
I remember when forged Carbon Fiber came out on the Huracan Performante, a famous german car KZbin went to italy and Lamborghini told him how great this stuff is. They said they started Development with Airbus or Boeing (can’t remember what which one) but they slipped out in the process. And I kept asking myself, if this stuff is so great, why did an airplane manufacturer abandon it? And why Are they only putting it in places where it only has visual effect but no mechanical load, if this stuff is so much better? As I learned more about composites in the following years I learned that forged carbon is only a marketing tool with no benefits for the customer. The only benefits Are for the company, they upsell their production scrap and it is easier than laying real composites in a way that it looks good. Whoever came up with that idea at Lamborghini to upsell a „failed“ experiment as something so great really should get a marketing medal.
@blalor769 ай бұрын
Absurd and bizarre and perfect.
@demedlinjr9 ай бұрын
Just like this comment 😂
@NONo4439 ай бұрын
This is hilarious 😂
@randgrithr73879 ай бұрын
9:51 Without seeing this video, you would not be able to convince me this was not a randomly generated sentence.
@Jeremy-dr3is9 ай бұрын
I can't explain how a 10mm socket I lost 15 years ago in a navy shipyard wound up in your piece but I'll pay shipping......
@MattsAwesomeStuff9 ай бұрын
My hope is that some day at some small event, someone will need a 10mm socket, no one will have one, and you'll be like "Grab the hammer, there's one embedded in my stablaizer fin", and when they're like "Why would you do that?" you can be like "Not so crazy after all, WAS IT?" And they'll have to admire your boyscout genius of being always prepared. Also half a preserved sandwich in case theyre hungry.
@timbobo84599 ай бұрын
10:35 I wish you filled the ham sandwich void with ramen. That would have been hilarious. The foam was still funny thought
@cyrkielnetwork9 ай бұрын
Honestly it looks super cool. Perfect ratio of junky and slick and areo. Now I want my bike look like this.
@derjaxxer9 ай бұрын
I just discovered this channel and i really wasn‘t ready for this
@NotYou93117 ай бұрын
The added fin-like transition piece on many airplanes, usually on the vertical stabilizer (commonly referred to as the "rudder")...is called a "fillet". It is added to add surface area to the vertical stabilizer, without adding height to the "fin" (which might not always be practical). What it does is improve directional stability - in "yaw" (which is the horizontal plane). If you see an early version of an aircraft, without one....then a later version, with a fillet added...you can bet that the early version did not display enough (yaw) directional stability. Fillets can be added to any of the tail surfaces, both horizontal stabilizers (elevators) and vertical (rudder), if needed. Most often, though, they are added to the vertical stabilizer.
@georgerobartes20087 ай бұрын
That additional transition is installed to increase fuselage surface area to reduce tail wagging . They first appeared in the NA P51 D Mustang during WW2 . You can buy the thin PTFE impregnated glass fibre sheet at the cheap supermarkets as baking sheet used in domestic ovens . There is a thicker black coloured sheet too . I use it for moulding and for high tech gaskets in engines .
@christopherdean13268 ай бұрын
The fact that you're talking about cool stuff is almost a bonus. Your dry humour makes almost anything worth listening to.