Change the title to "Different uses for explosives", because no science or explanations behind their mechanics were shown.
@heraclitus61002 ай бұрын
Thank you. I'm skipping this one because of this comment.
@johnallen78076 ай бұрын
I must admit I was expecting more detail on the different types of explosives, their uses and how they are made.
@pkkerley60286 ай бұрын
had to keep it simple for the presenter
@PaulWhitcomb-ty6md6 ай бұрын
I'm curious, what would you do with such information?
@psidvicious6 ай бұрын
@@johnallen7807 Yikes 😬 Careful, the YT censors usually lose their minds with comments like that.
@Smokey420Greenleaf6 ай бұрын
congrats this comment just got you put on at least 5 different watch lists and a no fly list or two 🤣
@johnallen78076 ай бұрын
@@Smokey420Greenleaf Nah! I doubt it, I'm Army qualified already!
@OzzieBenzC3006 ай бұрын
I thought this would about chemical composition and different applications for each one. 😔
@janedoe61816 ай бұрын
Me too. I’m so disappointed!
@7000fps6 ай бұрын
Same here ! going by the title thats what I thought.
@CaptainKedah6 ай бұрын
You want to watch the Classified Stuff about Explosives, Are you that Stupid? No Government, KZbin...etc will ever allow that
@rwo54026 ай бұрын
Many would be terrorists are also disappointed....
@tolgamatouk72066 ай бұрын
Lmao 😂
@marc-andreservant2016 ай бұрын
I see a problem with the medical delivery device in particular. It basically generates a jet injection injury, and similar devices that have used other techniques such as high pressure pumps have been proven to cause splashback of bodily fluids onto the nozzle, so the next patient might get AIDS along with the intended injection. We already have massive economies of scale that make safety needles dirt cheap (where a single use needle automatically retracts or a cover is deployed once used, which prevents both intentional reuse and accidental needlestick injuries).
@Hippucytees6 ай бұрын
Yeah, splashback is a major problem.
@TheOneAndOnlySatan6 ай бұрын
It all depends on what you eat, black beans mixed with cabbage creates some earth shattering shit
@oneoflokis6 ай бұрын
😂😂😂
@katlegokgethiliphoko6 ай бұрын
😂 what😭
@WhuDhat6 ай бұрын
Brussel sprouts tequila and mendudo literally broke my toilet
@notyouraveragegoldenpotato6 ай бұрын
Oh man. Kimchi. Fermented kitchen cabbage😂 can attest
@matdyke50466 ай бұрын
Popeyes spicy chicken and red beans and rice
@benchapple15836 ай бұрын
I was hoping to see 'the science of explosives' and how different explosives work rather than a list of their uses.
@kennethmiller23336 ай бұрын
The automotive use reminds me of the Cartridge Activated Devices we use on aircraft. For instance, the cargo hoist on an MH-60S has a CAD to cut the cargo hook to keep the aircraft from going down in case the cargo hook becomes entangled. As for explosive-driven injections, anyone who's been through boot camp is familiar with the idea.
@BenTrem425 ай бұрын
NB: Here *_"hollow charges"_* is used for what we _(?we?)_ call "shaped charge".
@janedoe61816 ай бұрын
There was no science of how different explosives work in this video, as the title implies. Very disappointed!
@willo77346 ай бұрын
Really interesting documentary. The part about the explosives being used in car technology for safety kinda blew my mind. The precision there is amazing.
@innominatum99066 ай бұрын
I work as a machinist and a couple of years ago we made a lot of parts for a company located in Israel. This company was producing airbags and the machine we made parts for was dosing out the small amounts of explosives that is used in those airbags. We were told that the airbag factory in Israel where this machine was operating was under VERY strict rules to always be close to/facing outwards toward the Mediterranean sea. Why? Because accidents were happening and a close proximity to water was deemed necessary =)
@teresashinkansen94026 ай бұрын
Considering how regulated everything is in Germany, the paperwork and bureaucracy for anything related to civilian usage of demolition agents must be an absolute nightmare.
@oeliamoya97966 ай бұрын
In triplicate? Nope. Germany had to invent a new word for 9 copies. Cuz NIEN NIEN is already taken. It means No
@Farweasel6 ай бұрын
In today's Britain the systems are simpler - *No one can do ANYTHING* 🙄
@ryanpayne77076 ай бұрын
And it is all physical paper...
@robertthomas43292 ай бұрын
You handle high explosives, but your afraid of heights.
@miinyoo6 ай бұрын
As far as I know, the Chinese didn't use explosives for war but instead used them to ward off evil spirits. I also read they were used in celebrations.
@BlackHearthguard6 ай бұрын
They had explosive arrows and multiple arrow launch racks that used black powder. Interesting stuff.
@FurtiveSkeptical4 ай бұрын
Many middle eastern and european cultures believed in burning gunpowder or the shooting of a firearm in a room/house to clear evil spirits/bad fortune. Particularly in the case of a newly built house or newly acquired home.💨
@JaystarzgamingАй бұрын
Fireworks.
@disorganizedorg6 ай бұрын
6:14 Doesn't black powder, as a low explosive, deflagrate rather than detonate?
@michaelripley45285 ай бұрын
Yes that is the term of Black powder😎
@wallykramer75666 ай бұрын
This video would have better titled something like "Different uses of explosives" rather than the present title ("How Different Explosives Work") which suggests focusing on their inner structure or chemistry. I can understand their use of a British narrator who pronounces _aluminum_ so Britishly which sounds so odd to my ears!
@ryanpayne77076 ай бұрын
"Gran-ite....Gran-ite" ITS "GRAN-ET," DAMIT! LOL
@gbulmer3 ай бұрын
The narrator was likely pronouncing the word _aluminium_ and not the word _aluminum._ The spelling and pronunciation is _aluminium_ outside North America. AFAIK, the British chemist Sir Humphry Davy first discovered and named the element "aluminum" about 1807. However, he was also naming elements potassium and sodium, and was encouraged to change the name to follow the same '-ium' pattern. Hence, about 1812, he named it "aluminium". AFAICT, North America used both spellings until the early 20th century when the USA opted for _aluminum,_ while other countries stayed with, or adopted, _aluminium._ Both spellings (and hence pronunciations) are accepted by chemists. Summary: the narrator is not mispronouncing the word you think she is saying, but correctly pronouncing the name used outside North America. Best Wishes. ☮
@TheBeefSlayer6 ай бұрын
Car Airbags. I have heard of cases in the USA where Men that smoke a tobacco pipe while driving have had it driven through their mouth and out the back of their head by airbags killing them instantly. I’m surprised we haven’t seen this in a Hollywood Movie yet that I know of.
@wakkowarner73916 ай бұрын
Smoking kills.
@BlackHearthguard6 ай бұрын
Sounds like an urban myth... I wonder if it's true...
@TheBeefSlayer6 ай бұрын
@@BlackHearthguard I think it’s definitely possible. 🤷🏼
@BlackHearthguard6 ай бұрын
@@TheBeefSlayer I agree it's possible, whether it's happened or not is the question, lol
@andyf42925 ай бұрын
tobacco is really dangerous!
@abnurtharn29276 ай бұрын
No boom today. Boom tomorrow. There's always a boom tomorrow.
@housellama6 ай бұрын
Ivonava!
@stephencampbell93846 ай бұрын
@@housellama is god!
@Ma_X645 ай бұрын
The Chinese invented black powder, but it is not an explosive, because its burning speed does not exceed the speed of sound, which is precisely the determining factor in the classification of substances into explosive and propellant. In addition, the Chinese did not perceive gunpowder at all as something capable of causing explosions, and used it exclusively in rockets and fireworks. It was the Europeans who came up with the idea of placing gunpowder in a closed volume in the form of mines under walls. Most likely, this was due to the experience of careless handling of gunpowder in warehouses.
@jonelectronics5103 ай бұрын
I think you are getting mixed with terminology. Gunpowder is an explosive, but the form of a low explosive which ignites through deflagration. Whereas a high explosive (such RDX etc) is detonated by a shockwace travelling faster than the speed of sound. Chemically they are very different but both types can sometimes be either depending on how they are either ignited or detonated. Equally, the bases of nearly all fireworks are from chinese military application, the song dynasty was using gunpowder in all sorts of military weapons well before europe.
@Ma_X643 ай бұрын
@@jonelectronics510 Where I live it's not an explosive according to classification government standard gives. I think this approach (based on the ability to energetic reactions at speeds faster than the speed of sound) is logical. Otherwise, pressurized gases will have to be classified as explosive substances too. Despite that I can understand the logic which the USA standardization system has. I think this is more convenient from the law's POV.
@gawadroit50106 ай бұрын
watching this video: they about to put me on a list lol
@alexdrockhound94976 ай бұрын
theres youtube channels that show you how to manufacture them.
@coodudeman6 ай бұрын
@@alexdrockhound9497 lol so you are saying you are already on that list, eh?
@alexdrockhound94976 ай бұрын
@@coodudeman had to sign myself up for it when i got a silencer
@Farweasel6 ай бұрын
@@alexdrockhound9497 And monitoring to see who watches them Or at least, I HOPE there is 😋
@ShannonDove-sy7ye6 ай бұрын
I been searching "explosives" for 20 years now, sometimes searching 20 key words a day. Sometimes for 6 hours a day, including lunch breaks. I might be on a list i guess
@mike9rr6 ай бұрын
Shout out to my alma mater, Missouri University of Science and Technology (the people with the green shirts as St. Patrick is the patron saint of engineers and I have no idea why). Anyway, it was formerly Missouri School of Mines and Metallurgy, so a natural progression there. My first introduction to how explosive energy works in relation to rock formations was in 1970 with the Geophysics Department. We have come a long, long way. BTW, if they didn't say it loud enough, "Don't try this at home." LOL!
@Pootycat83596 ай бұрын
16:01 This reminds me of what the TV show "60 Minutes" did. They wanted to show how Ford "Pinto" gas tanks would explode when the car experienced a rear-end collision. But they just couldn't get those Pinto tanks to explode! HOW could they convince people that those cars were evil, nasty, unsafe death-traps, when, uh...they weren't? Of course! Attach some dynamite & a detonator to the tank, and then, "BOOM!" when the car was hit from behind!
@andyf42925 ай бұрын
they did it on Mythbusters.. basically unless you rig the tank with explosives, they Don't explode. 80s action films lied to us
@Pootycat83595 ай бұрын
@@andyf4292 Not just 80s movies & TV shows. In almost every chase scene, crashing cars blew up, no matter when the show was produced. In the 1980s, i hung out with a bunch of people who were machinegun dealers & collectors. One of the fellows owned a junk yard, and he'd periodically haul out a junked car for our shooting pleasure. It would get worked over with everything from 9mm & .45 rounds, to .50 cal. bullets from a belt-fed Browning M2. The gas in the tanks would burn, but never explode. And I think it was the 70s when Hollywood discovered "foo gas." Ah, lots of flames & black smoke, from alleged high explosives, which in reality, produce white or gray smoke, and flying debris.
@cr100015 ай бұрын
@@Pootycat8359 Sometimes, the explosion happens before the car actually hits anything. As when car goes off a cliff, and goes 'boom' in mid-air.
@GlennsFastReviews6 ай бұрын
Fascinating! Thank you!
@ScoutSniper31246 ай бұрын
Explosives can bring about great feats in human intelligence in mere microseconds. I learned this as a 10 year old when I held onto a lit firecracker a bit too long. No real damage but hurt like hell. In a millisecond I went from uninformed to NEVER FORGET to NOT do that again.
@TehPwnerer6 ай бұрын
Maybe you should put your so-called dust sprinklers upwind or MUCH closer so they might have ANY chance of affecting the amount of dust. As is looks like an awful lot of expense for absolutely no effect
@greybeard9x445 ай бұрын
An excellent story, much enjoyed!
@ophthojooeileyecirclehisha49176 ай бұрын
thank you so much for your help and science and generosity
@lindafoxwood90916 ай бұрын
Most amazing video! Thank you all for your work on this movie.
@Polkem16 ай бұрын
4:44 that’s a beautifully made shaped charge, wow.
@dianapennepacker68546 ай бұрын
I feel like they always look like that. Just perfect. "Hey Jim what do you do?" "I polish shaped charges that slice entire groups of people in half, and can penetrate a tank at up to 50m. Gets confused as a laser weapon."
@tuunaes6 ай бұрын
@@dianapennepacker6854 Hollow/shaped charge has short stand off distance before metal jet dissipates/spreads. (hence "cage armour") It's explosively formed penetrator which has stand off range by using explosion to shape metal plate into slug shooting it at speed of 1-2 km/s.
@dianapennepacker68546 ай бұрын
@@tuunaes Sure. And EFPs also use a copper conical piece just like that.
@LuMaxQFPV6 ай бұрын
This is a dumbed-down video more about history than explosives technology.
@stephencampbell93846 ай бұрын
Was this for a children's channel? If so it's excellent. If aimed at adults, I'm terrified these people can vote. Also, that'a a very realistic AI voice......I assume AI because nobody with an English accent has ever referred to Granite as if it were a mineral composed of nans.
@Farweasel6 ай бұрын
Whereas someone with 99.5% perfect English as a second language might well do so Or even a native English speaker wanting to be clear to folk who have English as a second language?
@stephencampbell93846 ай бұрын
@@Farweasel Pronouncing it wrong is not clearer.
@Farweasel6 ай бұрын
@@stephencampbell9384 Well, It works for the NATO phonetic alpahabet ...so I wouldn't be too emphatic about that
@gbulmer3 ай бұрын
I'm a native English speaker, born and bred in England. I've heard two pronunciations of "granite": gran-ite (rhymes with "polite"), or gran-uht (rhymes with "planet") for decades. I wouldn't AssUMe it was AI based purely on the pronunciation of a word which has multiple extant pronunciations. However, there is no credit for a narrator in the closing credits. Best Wishes. ☮
@johnchonka20526 ай бұрын
8:21 they make special cutting tools that are not made out of metal to minimize a chance of static electricity causing an explosion
@ldgilman6 ай бұрын
In basic training, in the US military, they had air pressure injectors. We were told not to move during injection, otherwise there would be a cut, bleeding and a permanet scar.
@midbc1midbc1996 ай бұрын
It's crazy how easy it is to make explosives.......black powder and nitroglycerin are easily made with store bought supplies that are not government regulated in any way
@ryanpayne77076 ай бұрын
Dude, you could make high explosives with just stuff bought over the counter from your local pharmacy. Its a bit scary.
@MrJohnverkerk6 ай бұрын
Mouse in the basement: " Cool, a new hole for me to move into."
@budchin13 ай бұрын
Awesome guy-stuff.
@jimsvideos72016 ай бұрын
Thank you for the film itself and for all of the work it takes to capture and assemble it. The editing in particular was a treat.
@renefranzen15096 ай бұрын
Flakem Steel
@Smokey420Greenleaf6 ай бұрын
why are you thanking this channel? all they did was steal a bunch of work done by other companies and smash it together into one video. most of this video is actually discovery channel content.
@BlackHearthguard6 ай бұрын
I was expecting something on the differences between high and low explosives, compositions, etc. The information presented was interesting and entertaining, but it was not what it said on the tin.
@straighttalking20906 ай бұрын
Great video. Excellent work by both the explosives experts and the video maker/s.😀
@loopymind23 күн бұрын
Paul was the inspiration for "Cody" in Tropic Thunder, wasn't he?
@kidheadcase6 ай бұрын
She keeps saying the word granite incorrectly. Weird
@buggsy56 ай бұрын
There are also a few factual errors. The major one was where it was stated that black powder detonates.
@michaelripley45286 ай бұрын
@@buggsy5 And fuse instead of wire🤷🏼♂️
@babboon57646 ай бұрын
@@buggsy5 You're just not hitting it HARD enough buggsy
@babboon57646 ай бұрын
@@michaelripley4528 And Ped Ant instead of pedant?
@buggsy56 ай бұрын
@@babboon5764 What does that have to do with whether BP detonates or not? Keep in mind that many explosives do not detonate - they just deflagrate.
@koori30856 ай бұрын
Nothing about the science of explosives, just their applications. Still, a cool video. Thanks.
@SWIFTY_WINS6 ай бұрын
0:22 - Ughhh?... Rocket engines are not "explosions/explosives", instead they use deflagration to provide their thrust.
@ryanpayne77076 ай бұрын
That's not the point. They're talking about using explosives to produce ultra-pure silicon carbide for aerospace applications. And we still use explosives to separate rocket stages.
@DavidFMayerPhD3 ай бұрын
Most explosives are used for non-military purposes, such as mining, road-building, tunneling, ...
@edmoon3603 күн бұрын
Gran-ite! I’m turning into my dad with my petty annoyances. Great video.
@PU238Wave4 ай бұрын
I bet his job is a blast!
@asbergan4 ай бұрын
Hey, Spark! If you rename this video "Different Usage of Explosives" it would be more accurate. Then you can then create a new video focusing of the chemical composition and how different explosives work, which seems like many would want.
@colinofay72376 ай бұрын
What is the top secret film theyre shooting? (Its mentioned a few times, the car is exploded at about 25:00)
@Farweasel6 ай бұрын
Its the one with the car which explodes at the end Only - Noting the green screen background, it won't look like its doing that in an industrial unit yard {I admit, yep, I'm curious to see how it works out 'on screen' too]
@stargazer25046 ай бұрын
"How explosives are used" - Fixed the title for you.
@rickstav90244 ай бұрын
Spectacular
@zebo-the-fat6 ай бұрын
Explosives won't take us to the stars, a few planets maybe but not the stars :)
@coodudeman6 ай бұрын
well... if Star Trek is to be believed... antimatter can.. and it is very explosive.. lol
@Moonlightshadow-lq4fr6 ай бұрын
@@coodudeman Star trek is real, very real. Every night it is on the tell LIE vision!
@coodudeman6 ай бұрын
@@Moonlightshadow-lq4fr lolol you win .. i cede the battle!
@ryanpayne77076 ай бұрын
Step 1: Get into orbit You can't do that with a single stage rocket, and something needs to separate the stages.
@knight4linuxАй бұрын
Tropic Thunder get there inspiration from this special effects expert? 😂
@williesnyder28995 ай бұрын
Undercooked falafel made with dehydrated onion flakes as an evening meal while on an overnight camping trip with my girlfriend and her friends (one of whom was the cook!) So far as I know…I was the only one of our lot to blow up like a overpressurized mail order surplus weather balloon! Oh my…!!
@tuttebelleke6 ай бұрын
Fantastic video, but title should be adapted!
@04u2cY6 ай бұрын
@ 49:00 CDI, hold my beer will show you how it's done.
@gsaats6 ай бұрын
Car battery safety feature! Great!
@Kenneth_James5 ай бұрын
How is it rapid? 1000 years between a Nameless Chinese alchemistmaking black powder accidentally and Alfred Nobel's 1896 invention of nitroglycerin
@paulsullivan31546 ай бұрын
Click bait again. No explosives like the description lead us to believe.
@tylerlormand56446 ай бұрын
NO NOBODY IS DUMB ENOUGH TO THINK THEY WERE GONNA LEARN HOW TI MAKES A BOMB....OH WAIT YOU ...........
@oeliamoya97966 ай бұрын
14:05 and i thought those actors were running from real bullets. I mean they ARE paid in the millions
@Moonlightshadow-lq4fr6 ай бұрын
CNN NBC BBC FOX NEWS say it is real so it has to be real!
@Mark_Bickerton6 ай бұрын
"So called hollow charge"... what? "So called" is a sarcastic prefix to indicate that you dont believe what is being said after it... the BBC use it a lot!
@tylerlormand56446 ай бұрын
NO SO CALLED IS USED WHEN CANT REMEMBER......R U DUMB?
@gbulmer3 ай бұрын
I don't hear it that way. It's a technical term, and the speakers are German, so it's being translated. In English, I'd call it a "shaped charge" because that's a generic name for that technology. I assume the translation is accurate, but "hollow charge" is a less familiar term. Best Wishes. ☮
@Mossyz.6 ай бұрын
What a blast
@LilyKittyCatto6 ай бұрын
Am i on a watchlist now? :(
@Polkem16 ай бұрын
A list from law enforcement, no.
@abcdef-qk6jf6 ай бұрын
A healthy curiousity should not lead to any problems if you live in a democracy and your activities reflect it.
@NateKK76 ай бұрын
We all are lol, the question these days is who isn’t on some watchlist somewhere. I can almost guarantee I’m on at-least half a dozen lol, I know for a fact I’m on two one with the ATF and one with the FBI (don’t ask which ones). Let them waste their time, don’t commit a crime and you wont have a problem.
@Farweasel6 ай бұрын
*'No, of course not'* [Keep track of this one Sargent - She's hiding something for sure]
@quikdraw52036 ай бұрын
Yes, yes you are.
@barretharms6556 ай бұрын
Hollow charges, okay, this is what you mean shaped. Charges literally knives inexplive form. Actually I consider them quite beautiful because they do something that they're not supposed to do. They explode inward but not imploding
@ryanpayne77076 ай бұрын
I've always heard them referred to as shaped charges.
@007080466 ай бұрын
Some lithium fires happen due to a short in the wires but in car accidents a punctured battery can trigger a full fire too or dendritic can form in a battery cell after time and short the battery from within one of the thousands of cells . One battery shorts out the others and fire spreads throughout . The detonator device will only cure the first problem .
@toddmarshall75735 ай бұрын
"BOOM". Interesting title. Also the stock symbol for DMC Global Inc. (BOOM) which among other things "The NobelClad segment produces and sells explosion-welded clad metal plates "
@stockie65 ай бұрын
Great video , do wish they integrated dub overs for the german speaking sections as i am dyslexic (boohoo) but the presenter did well for adding context
@mlgraccoon23116 ай бұрын
Kinda curious if anyone knows what movie that bmw got blown up for
@Pimentel486 ай бұрын
With so much need for housing, for young and not so young people, why destroy instead of completing DWELLINGS? Only in very RICH countries!!!
@stevenpace8926 ай бұрын
A park has more value than an uninhabitable old building. I agree there is a need for more housing in cities, but older buildings will always need demolition. The new land use for the lot should be decided based on the local need
@Farweasel6 ай бұрын
Several folk have asked 'Has viewing this put me on a Watchlist. And several replies say 'Should be OK in a Democracy'. Well ........ My favourite Parable is the tale of the Medieval King: 'Merlin', he said, 'You are my most trusted advisor - The ONLY person I know will speak truth to me. And, well, I KNOW I'm Paranoid ,,,,,, but ,,,, *Speak honestly - Am I Paranoid ENOUGH'* ?
@explorerryan6 ай бұрын
Mining can be done with water and liquid nitrogen too
@Farweasel6 ай бұрын
Its reckoned much of the stone blocks for the Egyptian Pyramids was quarried by drilling a hole, ramming a piece of dry, very tightly fitting wood in then watering it. I suspect Stonehenge and other ancient monuments might have done the same?
@explorerryan6 ай бұрын
@@Farweasel thanks that is a great option too
@chavdarnaidenov26616 ай бұрын
Masterful demolition. But whose idea was it to liquidate so much living space among such lush greenery? That's at least 300 housing units!
@bertarissen65683 ай бұрын
The “science” is not always appreciated; I made one about explosives and had to remove it.
@ajaysalgaonkar6856 ай бұрын
Missouri SnT a collage with a mining and explosives deportment 0:39
@Uri1000x16 ай бұрын
The title could be "How Various Explosives Work".
@ricksorensen94806 ай бұрын
Yes, I accidentally invented a new kind of rocket fuel,,5 crystal burgers, lots of hot sauce and a 6 pack of beer,,when I set it off in the restroom I had to hold on to the handicap bars to stay down because of the massive thurst,,I won't be doing that again...WOW...
@markramsell4546 ай бұрын
Wanted more detail. How big were the desired rocks vs the actual rocks in the quarry? What angles were the buildings supposed to fall at and when vs what happened. I wanted to evaluate the results rather than counting on your rosy commentary. It was nice but I have no idea if it worked as expected. The building did not work as expected, they got lucky.
@markrainford12196 ай бұрын
They would say it worked exactly as planned.
@misium6 ай бұрын
Thats a fine solid concrete apartment building. With the housing prices going up, I dont like the idea of demolishing it. Im sure there is space to build the new fancy buildings other places.
@misium6 ай бұрын
A green park? For the homeless?
@Iris_and_or_George5 ай бұрын
20:02 "Just checking the walls"
@toddmarshall75735 ай бұрын
1:30 "...Martin Hopfer will carry out this task...": Does he know why WTC7 fell down?
@bishopp146 ай бұрын
29:36 It's exactly the wrong way round. Savage...
@brianmurphy87906 ай бұрын
Demolition expert handing his company to someone scared of heights. 🤦♂🤣
@makumbuko15 күн бұрын
Actually explosives are older than chinese inventions.. you have to decrypt the ancient Indian scripts to understand they used firebombs and rockets thousands of years ago..
@jamesfry89836 ай бұрын
The ironic thing being the Chines alchemist's where looking for something to extend life, when they found something that's very good at ending it.
@bikedawg6 ай бұрын
I WANNA BE A BLASTING ENGINEER WHEN I GROW UP!!!
@michaelripley45286 ай бұрын
Stay out of any crime, be good with Math 💯😎
@ryanpayne77076 ай бұрын
"Great, here's a hammer drill. I'll need 500 1/4"x20" deep boreholes by the end of your shift."
@s.e.wagger38886 ай бұрын
Nearly as good as the "Twins". But I guess more planning went into that controlled demolition.
@thomasmaughan47985 ай бұрын
Explosives can do so much mo! Take off to the stahs. Our wold would be different. I replayed it to confirm there's just a bit of an "r" in "our". But apparently nowhere else.
@maxxmich4 ай бұрын
the water fountain didn't do its job in containing the dust
@Gazr9656 ай бұрын
Very interesting look on how explosives have developed in diversity for the good. Gaz UK.
@petergadd77976 ай бұрын
A fantastic watch , who needs movies.
@goldenegg106329 күн бұрын
0:00. Yeah and along time before that people managed to make giant monolithic structures only giants could make, . but somehow pulled it off without laser cutters and giant cranes . . Funny how messed up our history is..............
@jogadadigital81606 ай бұрын
Existem problemas que só resolvem com uma explosão. Quebrar rochas , desmanchar edifícios. Abrir vãos. E desmanchar montanhas.
@ryanpayne77076 ай бұрын
Or nukes. There were actually plans to use nuclear warheads in large scale civil engineering projects back in the 50's. They were abandoned due to the issues posed by fallout.
@morgantisdale69286 ай бұрын
This was pure 'made for TV' fluff with zero science.
@logic.and.reasoning6 ай бұрын
Dumbed down for the average. I've helped out in quarry blasting, but we mainly ran my mates fireworks and special effects company together. Understanding pressure waves, shock waves and boundries, it's extremely complex unless you've been taught and shown it. I loved our special effects work. Always something new and challenging. I also did custom fabrication work for Warner Bros on Batmobiles, the Flintstones car, and a few rides. Love a challenge, and love to work out the risk assessments. Done well, the danger is very limited. But, always ALWAYS have WAY too much insurance 😅😊
@TheBech796 ай бұрын
Bullshit😂
@pittyman6 ай бұрын
0:22 they also take lives in Takata airbags. ;)
@ryanpayne77076 ай бұрын
Or when people transform them into "car claymores" by covering them in plastic gemstones.
@HDRW6 ай бұрын
The voiceover wasn't credited - it sounded rather like Davina McCall but I wonder if it was AI? The pronunciation of Gran-Eyet rather than Gran-It was a bit strange..
@coodudeman6 ай бұрын
i do love kah pahks.
@royedmundson38335 ай бұрын
Any one else ever heard of this rock I've never ever heard of before, Gran eyte ? ? ? ? ? ? ?
@PerriPaprikash3 ай бұрын
the sexual tension between Martin and Ulrike is very explosive!
@johnchonka20526 ай бұрын
3:59 why did she say so-called Hollow charge
@tuunaes6 ай бұрын
Because there's literal cone shaped empty space (with metal lining) in "output end" which is used to focus (part of) energy of explosion.
@ryanpayne77076 ай бұрын
@@tuunaes From what I've seen, everyone else calls them "shaped charges."
@Hippucytees6 ай бұрын
Is " Gran Aight " any relation to " Grannit? "
@erictjones4 ай бұрын
They still kill an destroy.
@ErnieMathews6 ай бұрын
Almost all of this was new to me, but the how of explosives wasn't there.