The problem with the chemistry in fight club is that there are just way easier ways make explosives then this with household items
@bcubed728 ай бұрын
Yeah, but the *symbolism* of blowing up fat cat's money with their own fat! Or that's what I'm guessing.
@adamjutras70248 ай бұрын
Styrofoam is much better than orange juice.
@kulled8 ай бұрын
than*
@chilling_at_pontiff8 ай бұрын
Definitely do not mix aluminum foil with toilet bowl cleaner in a water bottle. Definitely do not hold onto it if you do. It's a self detonating mixture.
@adamjutras70248 ай бұрын
@@kulled happy now...
@jegeva61058 ай бұрын
"I will not give details" on nitroglycerin production ... a de-hydrating-acid... proceed show show which one on the next slide... 👌
@Nagria21127 ай бұрын
you can literally google it. its not that hard or complicated to figure out with chemistry knowledge.
@nikaX20005 ай бұрын
Finding which acid it is won't be a problem, the process itself is really hard and complicated, should be done in controlled temperature, there is something called "run away nitration", and many other complications, don't try to just add all ingredients, best case you won't get any product, worst case would be rapid unplanned disassembly of glassware
@Lux1588 ай бұрын
"The acid mix is often referred to as mixed acid" This one is gold.
@justinbremer22818 ай бұрын
No, aqua regia dissolves gold, lol
@Ignis_16 ай бұрын
@@justinbremer2281 Glad someone said it
@danielgreen63026 ай бұрын
Well, at least he's not calling Us idiots
@citizenVader7 ай бұрын
I used to demonstrate napalm in the armed forces here in Denmark, and the stuff is very flexible in terms of efficiency. It doesn't need much air to reignite and never try to put it out by clapping the burning area. You will only spread the substance. You actually have to cut the natural way to combat the heat, and that is the other factor because military grade napalm is full of aluminium and magnesium, and this makes it burn very hot.
@Ezequiel-lh4ub11 күн бұрын
Kudos to you for typing "aluminium", americans look really retarded by writing "aluminum"
@mistercornell47558 ай бұрын
i like the way you showed the chemical structures, most chemistry channels just show a blank black model for a few seconds if we're luckly the atoms will be colored
@assassin96248 ай бұрын
I love when he said "it's science time" then scienced all over the place
*The problem with FIGHT CLUB is that all of those companies have backups to quickly regain any lost information.* It's a nice plot though.
@tractordude2348 ай бұрын
Yeah that's not actually the plot of fight club though
@thomasg43248 ай бұрын
@@tractordude234 I never stated the plot. I complimented the plot.
@highlander7238 ай бұрын
Don't forget Tyler had people everywhere He probably had some people in IT departments that were making sure those backups were completely annihilated as well. Don't forget this movie came out back in 1999. backups and cloud servers weren't exactly a thing back then I mean don't get me wrong they were but not as much as they are today. So I find it totally conceivable that when the buildings were destroyed probably infiltrators in the IT departments that were in charge of the off site backups probably simultaneously destroyed those as well.
@thomasg43248 ай бұрын
@@highlander723 I'm talking about the bunker backups which are fully automated. And the movie doesn't show it, so I wouldn't infer it.
@highlander7238 ай бұрын
@@thomasg4324 You know I've had some time to think about it and I don't think he would have had to destroy the backups at all. remember what happened after 9/11 How much the stock market fell How much citizens were traumatized How much companies were trying to secure themselves. If Tyler pulled off what I think he pulled off this is 9/11 * 100 lots of buildings went down not just the twin towers. It would have happened in every city in America. What good are backups if the The companies that use those backups are in such poor condition they're unable to enforce anything true given enough time you might bring back most of them.... But it's during that time I wonder what's going to happen
@jamesfedheld10518 ай бұрын
You and Nile are carrying the chemistry/alchemy side of youtube
@jab91098 ай бұрын
Check out Explosions and Fire (and Extractions and Ire)
@charlesh85368 ай бұрын
@@jab9109 beat me to it
@chindichorr8 ай бұрын
@@jab9109 If you need some Azidoazide Azide that is!
@air85368 ай бұрын
Also thought emporium
@air85368 ай бұрын
Also NightHawkinLight
@lvcifer-cloverfield8 ай бұрын
I love detailed step-by-step guides for things like this. Videos like this actually keep me from fucking around and finding out, now that I know what's gonna happen if I mix gas with soap I'm much less inclined to finally try it
@Dismem7 ай бұрын
Gay
@lvcifer-cloverfield23 күн бұрын
@@Dismem Joyful even!
@LampsAreCool8 ай бұрын
Welcome to the watch list boys
@superbruce137 ай бұрын
We love it here what you talking about
@user-vy2xw2ub7g5 ай бұрын
First time?
@OLDSKOOLSNIP3R4 ай бұрын
Dangit
@markedis59028 ай бұрын
Really good vid. Where you suggested leaving soap for a few days, in general home made soap is left for a few weeks as most people don’t have laboratory heated stirring. Commercially the logistics and distribution chain allows the soap to ‘mature’.
@mistercornell47558 ай бұрын
look if the soaps age is on the clock.......
@jeffreyyoung41048 ай бұрын
As a young person many decades ago, a friend who was much older and experienced in the military from World War II gave me an education in chemistry with household and industrial sources of chemicals that I remember mostly today. With the soaps of today and yesterday, some chemicals have been removed that were quite common yesterday. One is Phosphorus, because it caused algal bloom in lakes and rivers, as well as too much water plant growth. Phosphorus is what makes soap cut through grease and oil. Even by using trisodium phosphate, the growth problem is still bad, so substitutes were made, yet don't work as well as the phosphorus of yesterday. And is why we don't see the Dawn dish soap saying it works to remove oil from wildlife or dishes, like ducklings and filthy dishes, but they still show the old recordings of the ducklings being washed in old Dawn. But you can find soaps and detergents that have phosphorous in them, if you look in the automotive sections of certain stores. I use such soaps and detergents for cleaning cars and stuff with lots of grease and oil contamination, otherwise I use the phosphorous free for other uses without oils and grease, altho I don't have to worry about water contamination with the phosphorous, as my location does not have any routes to the rivers or lakes, and the phosphorous makes the grass grow greener! As far as napalm and explosives, making them without using substitutes or even bad substitutes, like OJ, you get a better product, and a safer product, if you follow the modern process to make them. And yes, plastic labware is very important, when working with chemicals that could cause rapid deflagration or detonation!
@egodeath20076 ай бұрын
It’s good that your location isn’t right next to a river but you are mislead by that fact, you should still worry about water contamination. If it touches grass, it will touch groundwater and groundwater pollution is actually a big global problem. Your single case won’t make that much of a difference but the big picture is important and you should still be cautious about the effluence you produce reaching soil. In China for example, insufficient groundwater protection has led to 60% of all of China’s groundwater being unusable for human consumption. Also, polluted groundwater is significantly more hard to clean up than surface water like rivers and lakes.
@jeffreyyoung41046 ай бұрын
@@egodeath2007 I don't worry about contamination, as it has already been contaminated by gasoline additives and industrial waste which was mishandled for 50 years or more in the area. Even my deep well is contaminated!
@c_mac_o_fficial8 ай бұрын
We used to make the styrofoam/gas type back in the day. The scary part about that compound is, to put it out you have to smother it completely. Pouring water on it just causes the burning mixture to break off into smaller, separate burning puddles
@dariuslisandru-pp6lp3 ай бұрын
If there's anyone that doesn't have high school chemistry knowledge, for the nitroglycerin he adds the glycerin to a nitration bath which is most commonly made by mixing sulfuric and nitric acid. Just make sure you wear the proper PPE and don't put anyone else in danger.
@MannoMax8 ай бұрын
2:18 you were propably looking for a picture of a guy with a flamethrower, but the pic is actually a mill worker with an oxygen lance, which is, in itself, a very interesting tool
@Derederi8 ай бұрын
Exactly. Oxygen lances are amazing.
@WheelerScientific8 ай бұрын
I know, I used it due to me liking the fire colors and it being a free use stock image, did not find a flame picture I liked that was a free use stock.
@MannoMax8 ай бұрын
@@WheelerScientific Ah ok 👌 Great video btw 👍🏻
@黄蟮2 ай бұрын
Bro, have you ever made oxytocin?@@WheelerScientific
@黄蟮2 ай бұрын
Bro, have you ever made oxytocin?
@butter77345 ай бұрын
I have a good one for you. In Lost they find old sticks of dynamite and they say that because they sat so long nitroglycerin formed on the outside of the dynamite sticks. They said the slightest disruption will set it off and I always wondered if that was accurate.
@dinadaughtry89935 ай бұрын
Yes it is
@Pipinoilbreve8445 ай бұрын
The intro with the walter white quote is fantastic. Fight club and breaking bad is the perfect duo
@armstrongskyview28104 ай бұрын
Fantastic video and very interesting. It's great to find real videos to expand one's understanding of chemistry and learning.
@inferno9010Ай бұрын
The issue with the movie is that they purpously messed up the recepies as to "not promote violence". Most of the actual recepies were in the book that the movie is based on
@jimkimbrell48788 ай бұрын
The best description: if there is an unintended dissimulation of glass ware. Yes, I know very well about intended and unintended dissimulation of glassware.
@tracybowling11568 ай бұрын
Your channel just gets better and better!
@garethevans97898 ай бұрын
A little paint thinner fixes styrene getting too thick.👍
@LLDJ_7 ай бұрын
i love how the start is quoted from breaking bad
@ivanyurkinov8 ай бұрын
love the wise cracks. however the advice to use plastic and the reason why was the funniest thing ive heard all month. but its serious advice at the same time. we all know there are those who find things out the hard way. by the way glycerin can be found on the shelf in some wallgreenes you dont have to bother with soap unless you like to use it for your laundry to keep things white
@MM-jn2ny8 ай бұрын
Def do more or these types of videos. You made it quite easy to follow/understand everything as well as getting people interested in watching. Only reason I clicked on this was because I love the movie fight club, but I stayed for the science haha
@WheelerScientific8 ай бұрын
Glad you enjoyed!
@philouzlouis20428 ай бұрын
Nice video, From what I remind from my search onto the subject as a teenager was that "Napalm" comes from "Na palmitate" or what is the same "sodium palmitate"... thus a mix of a gooi soap and gasoline. :o) I like the idea of Al-palm (aluminium (3+) palmitate); but it could work with Ca-palm (calcium (2+) palmitate). ;o) Regards, PHZ (Philou Zrealone from the Science Madness forum)
@nobodynever78847 ай бұрын
Not to be pedantic, but did you use 100% gasoline or e90 which is 10% ethanol?
@chemistryofquestionablequa62528 ай бұрын
This is really thorough and well explained, great work! I always chuckle a little at them making THAT MUCH dynamite using human fat in Fight Club. I think the orange juice recipe was probably the producer trying to not quite tell people how to make napalm, but still be kinda close. Btw, there are several different napalm varieties, some of which do involve polystyrene. The original aluminum palmitate one is my favorite though, it’s not quite as bad for the environment.
@Polkem18 ай бұрын
oh so the aluminium naphthenate and aluminium palmitate can be used separately to thicken gasoline, I thought they were used together 🤔
@chemistryofquestionablequa62528 ай бұрын
@@Polkem1 with the first napalm formulation napthenic acid and aluminum palmitate were used together to my understanding. There are just a bunch of forms that all get lumped under the name “napalm” because they’re all jellied fuel incendiaries.
@Polkem18 ай бұрын
@@chemistryofquestionablequa6252 oh I see, it’s quite difficult to find any ratios/percentages online which were industrialised.
@anonimoqualquer55038 ай бұрын
Oh yes Good that a incendiary weapon inst that dangerous to the ecosystem
@minhducnguyen92768 ай бұрын
@@anonimoqualquer5503 In the words of Hank Hill: "That's a clean burning hell I tell you hwhat"
@GMCLabs7 ай бұрын
If you made biodiesel instead, you would have gotten a better glycerin yield. That's what they should have done in the movie instead. Heck they could have made "green" ANFO! Also just think of the pucker factor involved with demolishing a building with just nitroglycerin!
@dinadaughtry89935 ай бұрын
Imagine the pucker factor in the early days of building the railroad when they were moving large quantities of nitroglycerin by horse and buggy across the wild West to the mountain they were going to blast out of the way, they had to have some brass nads
@knightsilverthesoulsenjoyer7 ай бұрын
Wheeler: This napalm just isn't that effective Also Wheeler: Here's how you make REAL NAPALM
@intellectualiconoclasm32648 ай бұрын
Point of clarification during the conflicts in Viet Nam and Korea, the US switched over to polystyrene and deisel. It was vastly cheaper and worked just as well or better. There weren't as many flame-throwers as boms using the stuff. So maybe they used polystyrene for dropped ordiance, and soap for the flame-throwers.
@SearchforKevinWestleyonYT7 ай бұрын
Please do Oppenheimer next, I found this video to be very useful
@MoxxoM8 ай бұрын
Nowadays it's probably way easier to get copious amounts of glycerol by opening a vape store and nobody would care. But then, and now, it probably would be far more troublesome to get the barrels of nitric and sulphuric acid needed to perform this feat for the private citizen. If you can get those in large quantities, you won't have any trouble getting the glycerol far easier and cheaper.
@wouldiwasshookspeared40877 ай бұрын
Yeah, the nitric acid was really where that movie fell apart lol
@whateverppl12295 ай бұрын
having the balloons pop muted aside for the really loud one is quite cruel
@ShaneSaxson8 ай бұрын
One of my favorite movies! Good job man!
@michellecullen85303 ай бұрын
Thankyou so much for showing ppl what real napalm is.. it's been so frustrating hearing all these ppl refer to petrol and disolved styrofoam.. so much bad information on KZbin so thankyou so much for this you just got my subscription and like 🙏💜🕊️
@MmmHuggles8 ай бұрын
The DIY looks a lot like the white creamy man juice, just flammable.
@AoiTheLaughingMan8 ай бұрын
"A rapid unplanned disassembly of glassware" holy hell I'm using that with my colleagues
@WheelerScientific8 ай бұрын
One of my favorites, besides "Preforming Percussive Maintenance" aka hit it with something.
@Metaldetectiontubeworldwide7 ай бұрын
Palmoil has 12% mystricin oil in it ❤❤❤❤❤ Wow
@graywolf26948 ай бұрын
The things you find on KZbin, pretty sure I was on a list already but now I am for sure.
@WheelerScientific8 ай бұрын
Eh, there are worse lists to be on.
@DarenMiller-qj7bu8 ай бұрын
Awesome vid muh dude. Since we're all on a watch list i say go for breaking bad.
@WheelerScientific8 ай бұрын
Will do!
@CharlieMacklin18 ай бұрын
Great job, this is the closest video describing actual napalm as compared with folks making improvised gelled fuels. I happen to have experience with flamethrower operation. Here's a few tips. The improvised gelled fuels using ivory soap or similar (sodium palmitate) type soaps is thixotropic; meaning it will thicken over time. Due to this, the shelf life of the flamethrower fuel, when loaded, will eventually thicken to the point of being like mud, and will render the flamethrower inoperable. Your aluminum palmitate based soap will work much better; notice the viscosity is better and it is less "chunky", plus, it will not overly thicken when stored. I happen to have a patent document describing the production of napalm and your method is very close; there are a few differences, such as the fatty acid mix being composed of palmitate, oleic acid, and napthenic acid, that later of which is hard to come by ;) Regarding polymeric napalm, using Styrofoam or polystyrene, what we see kids making only will not function in a flamethrower, because gasoline only contains about 2% BTEX (benzene, toluene, ethylbenzene/xyline) however, it can be made into the proper viscosity for a flamethrower by the following procedure: First, mix toluene and gasoline (approximately 25% toluene and 75% gasoline), then, add to it the Styrofoam until a syrup-like viscosity is achieved. This is a great flamethrower fuel with good range, I got 110 feet in my tests. That being said, any variations in viscosity can cause poor ignition or conversely, if it is too thin it will affect range. Generally I would prefer the real stuff as it is less contamination to the environment than all that toluene and plastic spewing everywhere. Also, the plastic based napalm, if left to sit several years, will harden into basically a solid plastic putty, again, that could be a real pain to get out of the flamethrower. Probably the simplest, cheapest, and quickest flamethrower fuel is approximately equal parts of used motor oil 33%, gasoline 33%, and diesel 34%. It doesn't have the range or staying power of napalm, but it is cheap, fast, and won't clog the device.
@AHHHHHHHH217 ай бұрын
Thanks this will really help
@MattsProductions8 ай бұрын
I would love to see The Walking Dead, there is a particular episode where they are in an underground lab and they use nitric acid to sterelize the zombie remains, also i feel like you can find something else Also would love to see (probably wont happen becuase long synthesis) Saving Private Ryan, specifically the Sulfa drugs (sulfur antibiotics) I think Sulfanilamide is doable Also love your vids
@Artman20045 ай бұрын
Does the aluminum sulfate still create hydrogen when reacting with the lye in the soap?
@mephysto20318 ай бұрын
The military napalm burns better because the military adds magnesium which will ignite and even burns even under water. I can't remember off hand what temp magnesium burns at but I believe it's 1800 degrees making water not able to put it out. It burns so hot it actually separates the hydrogen and oxygen giving it fuel to keep burning. I know this because of my WW2 veteran grandfather.
@GerManBearPig7 ай бұрын
Also Magnesium will consume the oxygen from CO2, so dont even try to put out burning Mg with a CO2 extinguisher
@FernandoCapeletti-wr1xw7 ай бұрын
"Military" napalm is better than this guy's because there is coordination with chemists and technicians in the area. Napalm does not contain magnesium, you must be mistaken with the other incendiary agents.
@jackbreeazy67108 ай бұрын
Well, the first rule of fight club. Is never talk about fight club. Since we broke rule number one already. I guess, this guy is right and it's just easier to make nitroglycerin...
@James-iu2km8 ай бұрын
Sorry, minor pyromaniac/nerd here.... the "Napalm" that *_others,_* not myself, played with back in the day was a mix of Styrofoam cups and gasoline. Just kept adding cups to a folgers coffee can of gasoline... is what *_they_* did, so I *_heard..._* anyways. After letting the mixture sit for a day and separating the pure gasoline on top, the VERY sticky goo on the bottom was... quite interesting. If you took a metal table spoon of it and lit it on fire, it would burn for just under 5mins. Not sure Modern Styrofoam cups are made from the same materials as in the past though.
@Ontheregz7 ай бұрын
I used to do this same exact thing when I was a kid lol. I used the styrofoam cups and packing peanuts to make mine.
@SnakeHoundMachine7 ай бұрын
That's what everyone heard. But it's still not actually napalm
@derrekvanee45678 ай бұрын
*Bonded? Bound?* nice work again go to your happy place!
@Handles_arent_a_needed_feature7 ай бұрын
Was the recipe to make napalm really necessary?
@thatguy13798 ай бұрын
I worked at a soap making company for years, you can buy glycerin from soap making companies and skip many of those steps with the salt and filtering. Also nitroglycerin is one of the major ingredients in modern smokeless powder or so I'm lead to believe, but as for modern explosives it's all rdx or something cooler.
@WheelerScientific8 ай бұрын
Well if in the movie they bought glycerin I would have.
@bryanhawk60528 ай бұрын
Rapid unplanned disassembly! Lol
@ErikPelyukhno8 ай бұрын
Welcome back to the FBI watchlist boys! Also, 6:06 looks a bit sus 😅
@darthdiabetes12505 ай бұрын
"Rapid unplanned disassembly" is probably my new favourite term for explosion
@dinadaughtry89935 ай бұрын
Would like to see a video on how to make a clean burning, safe propellant like the commercial smokeless powders for rifle cartridges, you can make one component, nitro cellulose but it is not safe to use by itself and also a good stable primer compound that is not corrosive or to toxic
@Noone-lw6ge2 ай бұрын
The nitration reaction can be done in much lower temperatures, it reduces the yield but makes it a little safer. But still very dangerous.
@twiggy271119768 ай бұрын
Good video. Keep them coming. You hit just the right amount of knowledge without going full chemist 😂
@JRScience8 ай бұрын
Great Video. Of course we're focused on the chemistry of using the glycerine byproduct in the Saponification process which turns out isn't the easiest byproduct to extract. Going outside of the scope of the movie and focusing on the isolation of glycerine from animal fats, it seems like the Transesterification process used in biodiesel production would give you much better yield of glycerine which is already separated. And you get biodiesel which also has its own place in energetic chemistry.
@WinXPsp.38 ай бұрын
Wouldn't it be easier to just buy the glycerin? It's not like it's very expensive.
@JRScience8 ай бұрын
@@WinXPsp.3Yes it would be.
@LogjammerDbaggagecling-qr5ds7 ай бұрын
Bro theres no reason to censor nitroglycerin production. The recipe is on wikipedia for anyone who never took chemistry, and anyone who took basic chemistry already knows how to make it. It's not really possible to transport any dangerous amount because of how sensitive it is, so its actually not very likely to be used nefariously. The larger the quantity, the more sensitive it becomes to shock, so its pretty self limiting.
@KesenaiOsore7 ай бұрын
i just watched through the orange juice napalm section and have a few things to point out, + i am just an amateur chemist, i might get this wrong, but the orange juice mixture isn't really "napalm" its just likely a super quick equivalent to the sugar rocket mix where you mix sugar with a oxidizer, the sugar is naturally present in the orange juice, and this keeps the mixture burning while the other counterpart produces oxygen consistently to create a flame that it hotter than usual and combusts better, i might be wrong, i am just assuming that something in gasoline is a oxidizer, i don't know, and i have another thing to ask instead of point out, theoretically if you creating a formulation of thermite (Al + Fe2O3) and your napalm mixture, wouldn't this create a napalm with a superior heat?, the only 2 downsides i can think of are solubility, where the thermite mixture does not dissolve in the napalm mixture, which due to both of the ingredient of the most common mixture of thermite being powders, they probably wont, and another is that because it is burning hotter, it will consume the fuel more quickly, and hence negate the point of making napalm anyway, what do you think?
@hillgamingofficial8 ай бұрын
Making soap is one way of doing it however you could instead use Methanol making biodiesel which has applications elsewhere and glycerol whilst also making it easier to seperate by distillation
@TheRealSilkyJohnson7 ай бұрын
DIY napalm is wild
@bb52428 ай бұрын
A friend in high school tried to make nitro in his parents' basement 35 years ago. All he got was a cloud of yellow smoke/gas which might have been chlorine gas--not good
@ChucksSEADnDEAD8 ай бұрын
Yellow smoke is typically nitrous fumes. NOx starts coming off the reaction if you mess up, if it starts turning orange and red that means RUN because it can spontaneously blow.
@geekswithfeet91377 ай бұрын
Better to dissolve in water and than add isopropyl and (additional) salt out. Isopropyl is the easiest solvent to recover as its azeotrope is barely evident.
@pyrothefirst8 ай бұрын
The movie "blown away" has some interesting kabooms 🤯
@Rara-ul7rw8 ай бұрын
Dude, what would be a good solvent for the white deodorant stains ?
@engineer02396 ай бұрын
Making explosives is soooo much easier! Ever wondered why on Hydrogen peroxide its always stated to never mix it with organic solvents? Well, now you know.
@cheofdoom26277 ай бұрын
Glycerin isn't the big deal to get. It's the nitric and sulfric acid in the needed concentrations, that are hard to get even if you would try to make them from all day products with a chemistry setup. Also you could make something that explodes from many organic compounds, if you pass it through a reaction with the two acids. So yes, you can make explosives from soap but also paper, sugar and a bunch of other things. And if you read this and ever stumble across these acids, don't try to make explosives. What you get is mostly dangerous and unstable. Anyway, thank you for this interesting video.
@mattmcd35237 ай бұрын
Awesome video! Great mix of nerd and bro teehee. Thank you ❤
@WheelerScientific7 ай бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it!
@jimparsons68038 ай бұрын
Cool. Never really gave it too much thought. I was interested in plastics and sulfas, as strange as that sounds. You can make cars with plastics, and paint, and save lives with sulfas. A lot of chemistry in those two ideas. Liked the presentation.
@AdamSpFX7 ай бұрын
Great video! Here's a question; in the original Terminator movie from 1984 Sarah Conner and Kyle Reese make explosives using moth balls, corn syrup, ammonia - can you make any real explosive using these ingredients?
@deadpavuk76572 ай бұрын
Ideas for other videos: Methamphetamine from Breaking Bad, nuclear bomb from the movie Oppenheimer
@Isambardify6 ай бұрын
You can just buy glycerin though. It would probably be easier to get than litres and litres of concentrated nitric acid. The soap part just seems like an unnecessary step.
@placeholerwav5 ай бұрын
Yea, I tried it today and from a liter of canola oil I got less than a milliliter
@TheSpookiestSkeleton8 ай бұрын
in the book they talk about making plastic explosives and the reason there's no explosion at the end of the book is because Tyler used a method which the narrator says has never worked for them
@iRReligious7 ай бұрын
Oh yeah! Breaking Bad! Do that one please! There are so much drugs in there
@AJDAREENPLAYZ.4 ай бұрын
I used powder from fireworks and some clay I found to make what I think is a c4 kinda too powerful though , and the play doe ore clay fragments almost killed me. So my tutorial on making explosives.
@M3rl1n1777 ай бұрын
In the next episode, I will show you how to optimize the jet of your homemade heat warhead to achieve maximum penetration.
@WheelerScientific7 ай бұрын
That's at lease four episodes away.
@M3rl1n1777 ай бұрын
@@WheelerScientific in that case i cant wait for future episodes 🤣
@iiiKingLongSwipeiii7 ай бұрын
You can also make napalm with laundry detergent liquid
@MostlyPennyCat6 ай бұрын
And brain chemistry, because the protagonist is nuts.
@NuScorpii7 ай бұрын
The original script for the book had true recipes for napalm etc, but it was strongly recommended that he change them slightly for the final version.
@petevenuti73558 ай бұрын
It would have helped if you nitrated the frozen oj before mixing with gasoline 😜
@ChadBruyns-qt4bq8 ай бұрын
did you quote walter at the start of
@WheelerScientific8 ай бұрын
It took longer than expected for someone to get that reference.
@chromodyn77695 ай бұрын
What type of burner was that at 8:20 the multiple peaks looked useful for heat distribution
@WheelerScientific5 ай бұрын
It is just an alcohol burner I made with a flask and some string.
@dream_weaver62078 ай бұрын
"Anyone with high school chemistry knowledge could figure it out" This was part of a test I wrote in high school lol
@cameronpesta7657 ай бұрын
I thought Napalm was short for napthalene which is a mix of naptha and styrene which the military then adds magnesium and what all other accelerants
@YunxiaoChu5 ай бұрын
Can’t you use more orange concentrate
@andyf42928 ай бұрын
you can make napalm b with petrol and expanded polystyrene
@BaconIover693 ай бұрын
Yes but can you fertilize your lawn with old motor oil?
@jk_2023.8 ай бұрын
Thanks for the tutorials!
@ValdVincent8 ай бұрын
Famously the recipes in the book and movie were censored. The OJ replaced the Styrofoam (a crude form of napalm, much easier to make), and for the other one, lets just say there are easier way to make that using typically lye, and salt peter.
@pastaalalamborghini8 ай бұрын
...napalm has other delivery methods than a flamethrower. Thicker, heavier material is advantageous for some other delivery methods
@renzpampag87065 ай бұрын
May I ask if the concentrations of the solutions in this video are all in 1 M?
@joonashannila87517 ай бұрын
The storyfoam thing been known for a long time yeah.. I am already a middle aged man, but I used to play with that stuff as a kid in our yard
@lenargilmanov78934 ай бұрын
I think Chuck Palahniuk deliberately wrote an incorrect recipe to create napalm so that whoever used it would fail. Also, NaOH doesn't react with human skin as rapidly and violently as shown in the movie.
@gunraptor8 ай бұрын
This video earned a sub. Well done.
@janich94068 ай бұрын
The "candle" was a bit close to ... everything, did your cam survive that? But seriously: A funny and interesting video. I love such things, because sometimes they are pretty exact in films and other times - some "fantasies" seem to be part of the hollywood way of making a film, but I have to admit that I just love good old Hollywood, I came to the conclusion, that it's just not necessary to criticize All I can, I prefer to respect it the way it's done ... but however, a nice more professional cheap and simple tool for igniting things at a distance wouldn't be too much high-tech at once - but no critique!
@alger81818 ай бұрын
Well done, sir!
@WheelerScientific8 ай бұрын
Glad you liked it!
@MarkusMöttus-x7j2 ай бұрын
I think it should be mandatory to pass along this information when working with the infamously dangerous chemical nitroglycerin. One could technically say that the reason as to why Alfred Nobel invented the dynamite is because of an explosion in his factory in Stockholm where he lost his brother and a large number of workers.. Imagine the size of that explosion.. Remember this was a factory that ONLY produced nitroglycerin...
@ericscholem66295 ай бұрын
Your eBay chems are great haha. Didn’t know you had a YT channel
@ctakitimu7 ай бұрын
Shout out to Alfred Nobel!
@calzstevenson70178 ай бұрын
Dissolving polystyrene into gasoline also makes kickass napalm, also called gangsters napalm due to its use in firebombing rival clubs