The cause of the Bored Ape UVC eye burn incident?

  Рет қаралды 366,064

bigclivedotcom

bigclivedotcom

Күн бұрын

The first thing I want to say is that if you were affected by this incident then you are NOT going to suffer permanent eye damage. The significant wavelength here (254nm) only affects the very surface of your eyes and skin. It's an unpleasant experience - but literally a daily job hazard for welders, so you're going to be absolutely OK. Your favourite painkiller will help with the discomfort.
This is the second incident involving the use of exposed UVC germicidal tubes in a public area recently. The last one was the Hypebeast fashion label event which bizarrely was also in Hong Kong. I wonder if there's a connection between the two events.
From what I can see in the random pictures of the event I found online, the stage itself does not look a hazard. It seems to be using conventional LED based lighting fixtures that are either using deep violet LED washes or generic RGBW fixtures. These do not pose a safety issue.
The TOILETS however are a different story. It's a cool bit of theming, but the correct tubes to use for the effect they wanted are blacklight (actually a bright blue) or blacklight-blue (deep violet) tubes that convert the dangerous wavelengths to visible and near-visible light using phosphors and filters.
It looks like they've used UVC germicidal tubes, which means it was the most sterile toilets EVER but at the expense of "user comfort".
The people who spent a lot of time admiring the artwork or queuing in the affected areas are the most likely to have been affected.
Surely the people setting the event up must have experienced issues? Maybe they just didn't know what caused them. There was an interesting case where a maintenance operative replaced the UVA tubes of an insect zapper in a restaurant kitchen with UVC germicidal tubes and caused lots of skin and eye irritation for the staff for a long time until a savvy customer alerted them to the cause.
UVC tubes are an essential part of water purification, air purification, hospital sterilisation and food-factory machine self-sterilisation. But should never be exposed for direct viewing or skin exposure.
For reference, the Bored Ape Yacht Club is an NFT (Non Fungible Token) investment "thing" where there is an archive of 10,000 computer generated cartoon ape themed images based on a series of fixed combinations of colours and features. People buy the intellectual property rights to an image for a surprising price (peaking at over 3 million dollars for a single image so far) as a form of currency.
In 2022 The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission began an investigation into the Bored Ape "currency" because they forgot they only represent the American dollar, and that they have as much right to regulate crypto currencies as they have to regulate the Euro - and as such should keep their nose out of it.
Personally I think that all currencies in the world are completely fabricated and the only true currencies are trade-skills and knowledge. The tricky bit is getting the most skilled people to appreciate their own value.
So in summary. If you ever see a completely clear fluorescent tube or compact fluorescent lamp with a strangely alluring cyan/turquoise glow, then avoid looking at it. And if other people are exposed then it may be worth raising it as a safety issue.
This does NOT apply to neon signs that sometimes use the raw mercury vapour glow as a feature colour, but use tubes made of soda or lead based glass that inherently blocks the UVC wavelength. They are usually safe to view directly.
If you enjoy these videos you can help support the channel with a dollar for coffee, cookies and random gadgets for disassembly at:- www.bigclive.c...
This also keeps the channel independent of KZbin's algorithm quirks, allowing it to be a bit more dangerous and naughty.
#ElectronicsCreators

Пікірлер: 1 900
@brianpowell2298
@brianpowell2298 10 ай бұрын
“Computer enhance” with printed photos gave me a hearty chuckle. Never change, Clive.
@RFC3514
@RFC3514 10 ай бұрын
We're living in a simulation, those "printed" photos are just being rendered by the GPU.
@Tuning3434
@Tuning3434 10 ай бұрын
@@RFC3514 Does that mean I am God, cause for sure they are rendered by my trusty GPU at this moment.
@RFC3514
@RFC3514 10 ай бұрын
@@Tuning3434 - Nah, you're just an NPC.
@Aconitum_napellus
@Aconitum_napellus 6 ай бұрын
​@@Tuning3434 I'm God.
@treelineresearch3387
@treelineresearch3387 10 ай бұрын
I'm so completely unsurprised an incident like this happened at a Bored Ape NFT event.
@a_british_lass_stream_archives
@a_british_lass_stream_archives 10 ай бұрын
right, comedy at it'a finest
@pfefferle74
@pfefferle74 10 ай бұрын
I'm sure you can already buy the NFT rights to this incident.
@MadScientist267
@MadScientist267 10 ай бұрын
*NPC 🙄
@sirduggins
@sirduggins 10 ай бұрын
They only noticed something was wrong when big black spots started appeared on their JPG.
@greenaum
@greenaum 10 ай бұрын
Is that still a thing? I'd love to know their exit plan when they cash in and buy actual yachts, in a market based entirely on the "bigger fool" theory. Then again it's not like actual stock markets, and the better part of the world's economy, isn't depending on the same theory.
@Kaaputenen
@Kaaputenen 10 ай бұрын
They are creating scarcity and therefore value by reducing the number of healthy eyeballs
@filthylucreonyoutube
@filthylucreonyoutube 10 ай бұрын
Best subtle dig of the thread 🤣
@lasagnahog7695
@lasagnahog7695 10 ай бұрын
They've created business opportunities for eye doctors!
@hugegamer5988
@hugegamer5988 10 ай бұрын
People who overpaid for a link to poorly rendered artwork can’t see it anymore, so now they will have to put their money in a blind trust.
@AMH793
@AMH793 10 ай бұрын
Bad eyesight increases demand for NFT’s
@Sonny_McMacsson
@Sonny_McMacsson 10 ай бұрын
They'll need audio and braille NFTs now.
@keithbroughton4476
@keithbroughton4476 10 ай бұрын
If, in fact, it is found that unfiltered UV lighting was used at this event, the producers need to be held to account for exposing people to potentially harmful UV radiation with no warning. Good work Clive!
@railgap
@railgap 10 ай бұрын
Irresponsible laser display operators are giving people permanent retina damage and nobody is doing a thing about it, so I wouldn't hold your breath.
@JamesHalfHorse
@JamesHalfHorse 10 ай бұрын
If this was in the US lawyers would have felt a disturbance in the force and been all over it.
@cartoonhead9222
@cartoonhead9222 10 ай бұрын
They're all broke anyway, that's why they are trying to pump and dump their ponzi scheme.
@ecyor0
@ecyor0 10 ай бұрын
Crypto and accountability are like sodium and water, so it'll be entertaining to watch.
@bigclivedotcom
@bigclivedotcom 10 ай бұрын
The reckless use of lasers is increasing. Some of the stuff being sold online, and used by DJs with utter disregard for safety is already causing permanent eye damage..
@larry785
@larry785 10 ай бұрын
When I was about 16 years old I was given an old military UV light. I played around with it for about 30 minutes. I was fascinated because it would make regular window glass glow green and other interesting phenomena. The next morning, my eyes felt a bit irritated, and then I went to go outside and instantly I have severe pain in my eyes. My friend convinced me not to go to the hospital. It took about two weeks to go out in daylight and six months to stay in daylight. It took about 20 years for my eyes to fully heal.
@ThisUsernameSystemF-ckingSucks
@ThisUsernameSystemF-ckingSucks 10 ай бұрын
Unreal, someone convincing someone else in pain not to see someone about it.
@ilivetoflyxD
@ilivetoflyxD 10 ай бұрын
I can attest it bloody hurts. I once was an absolute idiot and by reflex looked into a UV lamp to check if it was on as it wasnt illuminating things....... thankfully I only felt like my eyeballs were on fire for about a week and it was a very short exposure but honestly I wish it was better labelled, It looked quite a bit like a normal light and I was not paying attention.
@millsyinnz
@millsyinnz 10 ай бұрын
Holy shit., that is no good. There needs to be more education on the dangers of UV lights.
@Snwy-hb6rm
@Snwy-hb6rm 10 ай бұрын
@AIuzky You literally rape dogs.
@Shotblur
@Shotblur 10 ай бұрын
​@AIuzkythe funny thing about ethics and morality education is that people will still intentionally do what they know is unethical and immoral if they personally feel it's justified. you can teach a student math for 13 years but you can't make them like it
@cleanpowerelectric
@cleanpowerelectric 10 ай бұрын
I got a heavy dose of arc flash decades ago in my welding apprenticeship. My instructor simply smiled and oddly enough told me to go home and rent a bunch of videos. Why? Because for the first 24hrs it hurts more to close your eyes than to leave them open and the only thing to do was stay up until the eyeball sunburn started to heal. Never made that mistake again. Thanks for bringing up a painful memory Clive! 😂Cheers.
@whitemonkey7932
@whitemonkey7932 9 ай бұрын
Yep it's said you never get it twice....
@ShadowDragon8685
@ShadowDragon8685 10 ай бұрын
You actually did that disaster (well, event) teardown! I _had_ been wondering about the bored ape debacle. I would reckon that these tubes were _cranked_ out because of Covid-19, then became surplus to requirements, and got sold and resold through some dodgy channels, winding up in a party/event organizer's stock.
@testboga5991
@testboga5991 10 ай бұрын
excellent point!
@monad_tcp
@monad_tcp 10 ай бұрын
a case of mass hysteria it seems, no one needs those lamps
@marklatimer7333
@marklatimer7333 10 ай бұрын
Poetic justice then?
@Scapestoat
@Scapestoat 10 ай бұрын
@@monad_tcp boo and hiss
@danwhite3224
@danwhite3224 10 ай бұрын
That is a good point I'd imagine the manufacturing of UVC tubes spiked because of the pandemic. As you say, I'd imagine companies had a lot of surplus and so sold them on marketplaces such as Alibaba (so not necessarily dodgy). The lurid blue glow and the effect it has on UV-reactive surfaces, plus the fact that they were probably fairly cheap, likely swayed people into buying them who had no real idea about the dangers of these lamps. Also, those fluorescent fixings were likely already installed so they probably just took the original tubes out and replaced them with the UVC ones.
@SpaceCop
@SpaceCop 10 ай бұрын
Props to Clive's printer for putting in the work and looking great doing it. His enlarged photographs are a major learning assist in all of his videos.
@talyrath
@talyrath 10 ай бұрын
I got eye damage just from looking at the printouts! 😂
@TechGorilla1987
@TechGorilla1987 10 ай бұрын
@8:46 - I have told this before, but I had occasion to observe a welder doing some hard facing of a crusher rotor as I was going to do a second shift welding the same. During my lessons, I ended up holding a rectangle welding helmet glass in front of my eyes as there was not an extra welding helmet. The next day, I came in with a slightly askew white rectangle over my eyes in the middle of a face that was very red and sun burnt. The welding lens had protected a perfect rectangle size section of skin around my eyes. The fellas in the shop sure got a kick out of that. I learned a valuable and quite painful lesson.
@Erin-000
@Erin-000 10 ай бұрын
😂
@K-Anator
@K-Anator 10 ай бұрын
I once spent a shift doing tack welds in my booth. Stick the plate in position, turn head to the right, close eyes, squeeze trigger, repeat ad nauseam for about 10 hours. I woke up the next day with the worst sunburn I've ever seen a human being have in real life across the entire left side of my face, and closing my eyes be damned, I still got flash burn in that eye. It's been 13 years and vision is still noticeably degraded and on particularly sunny days my left eye will involuntarily keep itself closed and full of tears.
@o0OMouseO0o
@o0OMouseO0o 10 ай бұрын
I've stopped two artists from using UVC lighting in their installations and after they watched your previous video they changed all their equipment and were very grateful for this advice.
@greenaum
@greenaum 10 ай бұрын
They need to put better labels on the boxes they sell these in, and perhaps some warning on the cap of the tube. Maybe a compulsory verbal and written warning to anyone hoping to purchase them.
@FindLiberty
@FindLiberty 10 ай бұрын
DING DING DING DING DING - We have a winner! *Thank you* for noticing, stepping up and speaking out to protect the public.
@MadScientist267
@MadScientist267 10 ай бұрын
​@@greenaum1 word. "China"
@greenaum
@greenaum 10 ай бұрын
@@MadScientist267 Well.... yeah. Yeah I know completely what you mean in 1 word, and the different aspects of what it means in this case. But besides the corruption, and the scamming, which we might sum up with "sewer oil", there's the incompetence and lack of regulation, or selective enforcement of it. But in this case I think "Aliexpress" or "Shenzhen" might also be good words. You can buy everything and anything, from the vendor-tinkerers in the markets, when they're not digging through the reject bins round the back of the factories. Might be somebody got a good price buying almost-direct, and the stuff didn't come with any sort of information or proper packaging cos it wasn't intended to be sold to end-users. Not that it would matter, probably if it was, but we can at least hope that a proper lighting supplier would know not to sell germicidal UV-C lamps to someone holding a concert. Ordering over the web would be another missing link in the chain, as far as proper information getting passed down. So yeah, "China" covers a multitude of fuckups, even ones that aren't scams.
@adamrak7560
@adamrak7560 10 ай бұрын
- people flee just because of mention of radiation - also people: use dangerous ionization radiation emitting UV-C tubes for fun....
@birdbrain4445
@birdbrain4445 10 ай бұрын
It's pretty scary to think something like this can just happen at an event you're attending. My mother as a child growing up in Bangladesh gave herself permanent eye damage staring at welders doing their thing outside of her family's home; in 1960s-1970s Bangladesh I can't imagine knowledge and safety precautions about such things were that widely known or practiced. Great video as ever; super insightful. Let's hope event organisers finally learn from these serious cases of negligence.
@mrosskne
@mrosskne 10 ай бұрын
what do you mean, learn? they know the lights are harmful, they don't give a fuck.
@millsyinnz
@millsyinnz 10 ай бұрын
I remember as a 6 or 7 year old, walking with my father down by the local port. There were some guys doing some welding on one of the structures, and all of a sudden, my dad started screaming and yelling at me not to look. He went absolutely apeshit, telling me I would go blind. Ever since, I have never looked at anyone welding.
@birdbrain4445
@birdbrain4445 10 ай бұрын
@@mrosskne I'd like to hope that even from a business standpoint they'd see the error of their ways here but, that is wishful thinking sadly so, good point. In that case, I hope other measures are taken to stop this from happening again.
@LeCharles07
@LeCharles07 10 ай бұрын
It shouldn't and the folks harmed by this likely have a winning lawsuit on their hands.
@lasarousi
@lasarousi 10 ай бұрын
It's hilarious to think the socially needy individuals are getting injured by their inability to exist without being surrounded by a crowd
@stevepoling
@stevepoling 10 ай бұрын
In my youth I had a factory job where I was assembling some parts while standing in front of a sheet of unfinished gray steel. Behind me another worker spent the day welding bits of steel tube together. I never looked at the arc of his welding. The next morning I was frightened to discover bloodshot eyes. It seems that that flavor of sheet metal was reflective in the UV, but not in the visible spectrum.
@whatilearnttoday5295
@whatilearnttoday5295 10 ай бұрын
If you find yourself going to an event that looks anything like this... You have bigger problems than eye damage.
@A_Simple_Neurose
@A_Simple_Neurose 10 ай бұрын
Brain damage, Herr Einstein?
@RKingis
@RKingis 10 ай бұрын
At least you'll be ready clean!😊
@mediocrefunkybeat
@mediocrefunkybeat 10 ай бұрын
The problem is that nobody would be able to tell the difference even if they were brain damaged...@@A_Simple_Neurose
@isaacm1929
@isaacm1929 10 ай бұрын
@@A_Simple_Neurose Also, shitty finances.
@MisterChaneb
@MisterChaneb 10 ай бұрын
Weren't they also possibly a bunch of closet racists? and nazis or some shit?
@tedmich
@tedmich 10 ай бұрын
I worked in a science research lab and we had a entire cell culture room that ran through a sterilization cycle with INTENSE UVC after about 10PM at night. We had huge signs posted warning no entry but staying late one night I saw the janitors calmly working in the light.
@bigclivedotcom
@bigclivedotcom 10 ай бұрын
That's alarming that they worked in the light.
@nonamepasserbya6658
@nonamepasserbya6658 10 ай бұрын
Screen those suspicious janitors! They could be from rival companies sabotaging your work like the bio solar incident
@ExperimentIV
@ExperimentIV 10 ай бұрын
i didn’t expect you to make a whole second video about this! both events were hosted by Hypebeast (it was a BAYC x Hypebeast crossover event), and it’s frightening that they did it again in only 5 years. my dad has UV-B tubes in a lamp for medical treatments for a skin condition, and as a kid (since he’s had the lamp my whole life), i was warned to never play with it and never enter the room when dad was doing “[his] light.” for the majority of the life of the bulbs, he can only expose the front and back of his body for 30 seconds each side, and those are only UV-B! the cyan glow - even just in the video - is beautiful, but i would just use RGB LEDs to get close enough
@atomicthumbsV2
@atomicthumbsV2 10 ай бұрын
UVB is interesting; it doesn't burn you like UVC does, and it can be used for treating skin conditions, but because it penetrates deeper than UVC, it's very good at giving you skin cancer with overexposure.
@StubbyPhillips
@StubbyPhillips 10 ай бұрын
I looked up "Hypebeast." *It all makes sense now.*
@goamarty
@goamarty 10 ай бұрын
I converted an old UV + IR sunlamp for PCB exposure (and EPROM erase). But when I used it, I set a timer and left the room as there was a strong smell of ozone. I can not imagine how sombody could have used this to voluntarily irradiate his skin with this lamp, eye protection given or taken.
@zyeborm
@zyeborm 10 ай бұрын
​@@goamartyif you're getting ozone you're probably in uv-c range UVB is normally enough to erase eeproms AFAIK I think even UVA will do the job. This guy's dad most likely had something that was basically a tanning bulb not a uv-c bulb. Again most likely, though the 30 seconds is a bit odd. The only thing I could think of that'd use uv-c would be some sort of treatment resistant microorganism but I've never heard of that. UV for vitamin d and a bunch of other stuff sure
@goamarty
@goamarty 10 ай бұрын
@@zyeborm The lamp was intended as a tanning lamp and for Vitamin D production). It was really old (from the 1970ies). It had a high pressure quartz mercury arc lamp. The IR radiator was used as resistive ballast for the tube. I replaed it with two parallel chokes from old fluorescent tubes. Originally you could position two glass cylinders, probably soda lime for UVC-block, in front of the tube. There was a scale on this control, which suggested to keep 75 cm distance to the tube WITHOUT the glass cylinders and 50cm, if you close them in front of the tube. I know, the EPROM erasers used clear mercury vapor tubes and the dose for erasing them was specified at 254nm (so UVC). For PCB exposure UVA would have been sufficient. But this lamp was available and not used any more for it's intended purpose.
@fracnis6309
@fracnis6309 10 ай бұрын
Reminds me of this freakish room in our uni's botany department where they measured UV shock response of algae, plants and trees. The place was a polished stainless-steel box filled with UVC tubes and the door looked like an airlock into a space station. There were so many bright yellow UV radiation warning stickers it made quite the cool wallpaper.
@M1chael_
@M1chael_ 10 ай бұрын
they can't see their nfts losing value daily so overall it's a positive experience for them!
@amaruqlonewolf3350
@amaruqlonewolf3350 10 ай бұрын
Well this has won the internet today for me.
@alexanderhowarth6460
@alexanderhowarth6460 10 ай бұрын
I'm not an NFT guy but FYI the low for BAYC was in Early September and they're up over 50% since then. If I didn't think Ethereum was fucking stupid I'd probably have bought an ape on this news lol
@trashtrash2169
@trashtrash2169 10 ай бұрын
After falling 1000% the months prior, I'm sure.
@frstwhsprs
@frstwhsprs 10 ай бұрын
LMFAO
@rorysimpson8716
@rorysimpson8716 10 ай бұрын
Imagine going to a party for an organization that brought you financial ruin just to drink crappy well drinks and go blind.
@scout8145
@scout8145 10 ай бұрын
I really admire that you treated this teardown completely seriously, given the circumstances! It would have been so easy to dunk on the NFT bros for doing something irresponsible, but you’re right, it most likely happened due to lack of awareness of the danger of these bulbs. I respect your ability to hold any judgement and focus on the important parts.
@Nachos-sk7od
@Nachos-sk7od 10 ай бұрын
This reminds me of another interesting fact that carbon arc lights emit significant UV radiation. A science group was attempting to create one in the lab and was satisfied with the super bright arc it produced, only to experience sore eyes and extreme skin rash indicating UV burn damage in the following days.🤕
@filanfyretracker
@filanfyretracker 10 ай бұрын
I think properly designed mercury vapor bulbs are actually designed to burn themselves out if the UV glass breaks, because they are basically a type of arc lamp but have glass that blocks UV around the actual bulb making the light.
@MrDuncl
@MrDuncl 10 ай бұрын
@@filanfyretracker Another one I have read about was Mercury Arc Rectifiers which were commonly used before high power semiconductors became available. On those the light is an unwanted by-product and they should be used in a lightproof cabinet.
@psirvent8
@psirvent8 9 ай бұрын
@@MrDunclMercury arc rectifiers are made of ordinary glass that blocks UVC though. Looking at one shouldn't cause arc flash or sunburn as only UVA can make it through the gass, still it can cause eyestrain and contribute to cataracts and macular degeneration later on, therefore it's still better to not intentionally look at a mercury arc valve for extended amounts of time and this also applies to blacklights by the way.
@ImnotgoingSideways
@ImnotgoingSideways 10 ай бұрын
I worked somewhere where we were making a medical device which was loaded with these tubes internally to self-disinfect its interior. Someone decided to swap a couple tubes for white light to temporarily make it easier to see inside. Likely 2 out of 8 tubes. The remaining 6 UVC tubes still in place. Every engineer came back the next day complaining of sunburns and sandy eyes. I found myself quite shocked that nobody on the team (including a MSEE) had a clue there were 3 defined levels of UV and the dangers of UVC...
@funx24X7
@funx24X7 10 ай бұрын
"Looks cool but ultimately harms you" is an incredibly apt description for NFTs
@iandawkins2182
@iandawkins2182 10 ай бұрын
As a welder I have had arc eye so many times. It's not much fun and I used used cold tea bags on my eyes to help.
@piccalillipit9211
@piccalillipit9211 10 ай бұрын
My dad used to get it all the time in the power stations in Britain welding in cramped conditions they couldn't use the masks. Back in the 70's they were very bulky. I now live in Bulgaria and the trick they use here is to pee in a cup and wash their eyes out in urine. And bizarrely it seems to work
@user-me6td1up1m
@user-me6td1up1m 10 ай бұрын
Fortunately, I haven’t been through that experience, but I’ve seen a few people who have been hired to do some home repairs in our neighbourhood who almost certainly have. It seems their approach to on-site safety is to just sort of shield their eyes with one hand while the other hand is welding.
@lesmaybury793
@lesmaybury793 10 ай бұрын
Same here back in the 1970s. I tried the old spud trick and it seemed to work. Although the discomfort doesn't last long, UV exposure will excelerate formation of cataracts which I now have.
@86BEAMS
@86BEAMS 10 ай бұрын
how on earth do you get arc eye... as a welder 20 years and i never even saw anyone even close to getting it
@piccalillipit9211
@piccalillipit9211 10 ай бұрын
@@86BEAMS Usually if you're welding in confined spaces, even if you have a mask on it can reflect off stainless steel vessel behind you and enter the mask. Or if there is a team of welders working you get it from their arc whilst your mask is up.
@Kisai_Yuki
@Kisai_Yuki 10 ай бұрын
Yep, there's multiple accounts saying that people who were "near the toilets" got sunburns. Couldn't have happened to nicer guys, but they'll live. Reddit and Slashdot I believe also both pointed back to your channel on the UV lights when this story popped.
@Dan-vq4pz
@Dan-vq4pz 10 ай бұрын
I read part of the Slashdot regurgitation article and thought: "man, this really sounds like that fashion event Clive talked about with the UVC lamps".
@jbaidley
@jbaidley 10 ай бұрын
Some friends of mine, over in Dubai ran a nightclub for the ex-pat community (the authorities turned a blind eye to alcohol made and drunk by foreigners provided they didn't sell it to the locals) and decided to buy some UV lamps for it. They ordered the wrong sort. They ordered the sort used in tanning salons. Quite a lot of people had sunburn in the morning.
@randalalansmith9883
@randalalansmith9883 10 ай бұрын
Bug zapper tubes were also called "white black light" because it was all the UV of a blacklight, plus a wider spectrum. The queue for Space Mountain at Disneyland Anaheim was lit with them in the 80s. And I used them for deco at home with a 15" desk lamp. I also remember swapping them into a battery powered camping lantern that supported flo tubes.
@JeffGeerling
@JeffGeerling 10 ай бұрын
Similar annoyance that many lower budget productions skimp on laser safety and don't take pains to position them correctly so they don't hit people in the eyes!
@bigclivedotcom
@bigclivedotcom 10 ай бұрын
That's an increasing hazard.
@psirvent8
@psirvent8 9 ай бұрын
@@bigclivedotcomThat I got unfortunate enough to experience when going to a party a couple days ago. Should I try reporting the place to the authorities or not ? Green laser, got me in the eyes quite a few times, I tried closing them when the beam was coming but still got a few exposures nonetheless. Let's hope I'll not get permanent damage to my eyes. Other people also got hit quite good as I could see but they didn't seem to care in the slightest.
@IxodesPersulcatus
@IxodesPersulcatus 10 ай бұрын
Sufficiently advanced stupidity is indistinguishable from malice. I guess the organizers should be subject to inspections on the matter now, as public safety is at risk.
@VeraTheTabbynx
@VeraTheTabbynx 10 ай бұрын
bUt MuH dEcEnTrAlIzAtIoN
@mrrooter601
@mrrooter601 10 ай бұрын
@@VeraTheTabbynx Actually, proper decentralization would solve this problem. That would require people (a separate party) to say, confirm safety regulations are being followed, and when confirmed they would receive a reward. If the host was found to be in a breach of the set safety regulations they would be fined. I know it can be hard to think rationally for some people, so I hope this explanation helps, and that you get some help :)
@VeraTheTabbynx
@VeraTheTabbynx 10 ай бұрын
@@mrrooter601 Thank you but I don't need help. And you're correct! Proper decentralization would actually have a lot of oversight from multiple independent agencies, none of which are given veto power. Unfortunately the idea has been badly misconstrued as free of governing or regulatory bodies, as those are seen as centralized. Kinda funny a community like BAYC itself follows a central leadership.
@phlogistanjones2722
@phlogistanjones2722 10 ай бұрын
This occurred in CHINA. They care not one whit about "public safety". One might have thought the world would have caught on by now....
@osakeleto
@osakeleto 10 ай бұрын
​@@VeraTheTabbynx ..it does seem like you need some kind of mental help
@phillipsvanderwesthuizen800
@phillipsvanderwesthuizen800 10 ай бұрын
An old Ophthalmologist once told me the following, knowing that I fabricate stuff and was looking at him with red arc eyes (crack in the helmet glass): Ultraviolet is highly irritating but non penetrating, but beware, Infra-Red is non irritating but highly penetrating. So don’t gas weld without eye protection too.
@sam.p12345
@sam.p12345 10 ай бұрын
I think the issue is more that for IR, non-irritating intensities are not damaging, whereas damaging (burning) intensities are irritating. So there’s no overlap between damaging and non-irritating with IR, unlike with UV.
@tarnvedra9952
@tarnvedra9952 10 ай бұрын
Plus just the brightness of the weld is damaging.
@voidseeker4394
@voidseeker4394 2 ай бұрын
I don't think that's true information at all. IR has very low energy (lower than visible light) and can't cause ionization and molecular damage. The only thing IR can do is heat up your skin(and cause conventional burns in extreme cases). Now, there is still hidden danger in it - you can't see IR, so you can't tell how bright the IR source actually is. You might be staring at the equivalent of 200W IR flashlight not knowing that because you can't see IR. UVC, on the other hand, has much higher energy than visible light, let alone IR. UVC borders X-ray on the spectrum, and has a potential to cause ionization and molecular damage, and provoke skin cancer. Pretty much any dose of UVC is unhealthy, although it can't really avoided, because sun radiates it too. Also it is quite penetrative. Not as penetrative as X-rays or gamma radiation, but much more penetrative than visible light.
@voidseeker4394
@voidseeker4394 2 ай бұрын
Normal open fire mostly produces IR, some visible light, but no UVC. It can be very hot near the campfire, but it's impossible to get a "sunburn" from it, no matter how long you've been near it. "Sunburns" are specifically UV damage.
@voidseeker4394
@voidseeker4394 2 ай бұрын
Well, okay. I might need to correct myself. IR might be slightly more penetrative than UV due to wave effect... stuff. But the point stands - IR can't ionize, cause molecular damage and can't generally cause cancer. It's really near harmless. But UVC is not, it's very harmful.
@darksunrise957
@darksunrise957 10 ай бұрын
If that WAS actually a bathroom (modified for the event, though), is there any chance that those lights were already there FOR DISINFECTING, like they were designed for, but usually only run when the venue was closed? And maybe a staffer came in, saw that there were already "Blacklights" installed, and flipped the disinfecting light switch without confirming with anyone?
@stepheneyles2198
@stepheneyles2198 10 ай бұрын
I think that if they were for disinfecting, they would have been mounted in a location which needed disinfecting - i.e. near the floor, rather than around the perimeter of the roof!
@kotakuk6533
@kotakuk6533 10 ай бұрын
I doubt, generally disinfecting lamps have the cover so that only top n bottom exposed. But who knows.
@cambridgemart2075
@cambridgemart2075 9 ай бұрын
There's a lot of paint splashed about, I'm guessing that was fluorescent paint which would glow under UV(A)
@TheGreatAtario
@TheGreatAtario 10 ай бұрын
What timing! Buddy of mine brought the story to my attention and I responded by showing him your video about UVC bulbs from about 5 years back. Then a brief bit later and Big Clive is Johnny on the spot!
@AndrewHeinrich1612
@AndrewHeinrich1612 10 ай бұрын
the moment I heard what had happened at that event, I immediately thought "oh, it was UVC tubes", immediately thinking of all the videos you've made over the last few years. I'm very glad you made one about this, and hopefully there's some accountability and prevention of further incidents in the future
@microwave221
@microwave221 10 ай бұрын
I used to work with lighting balloons, and they would usually have HMI lights in them to provide the cold white part of their spectrum. You never wanted to be able to see one while it was on, even for fairly brief testing, but all it took to filter out the high UV was a thin sheet of the airtight sailcloth we used as a diffusion and outer envelope.
@gregorythomas333
@gregorythomas333 10 ай бұрын
Those that do not learn from history are doomed to repeat it :(
@mysock351C
@mysock351C 10 ай бұрын
In high school we used to kick basketballs up into the HID lights to purposefully pop the outer envelope, and most of the time, about half of the bulbs were missing their outer glass and the gym had that really cool blue hue to it. Never knew back then how dangerous it actually was to have them like that.
@markhodgson2348
@markhodgson2348 10 ай бұрын
Population density self regulation sad but true
@kimvibk9242
@kimvibk9242 10 ай бұрын
True on so many levels these days...
@nicholaswouters1203
@nicholaswouters1203 10 ай бұрын
Those that dont clear their history are doomed to explain it
@philtype-r810
@philtype-r810 10 ай бұрын
And those that did learn from history are doomed to watch the others repeat it
@TrappedinSLC
@TrappedinSLC 10 ай бұрын
I just want to mention that there are over the counter eyedrops (at least in the US) which probably do something quite similar to the potato trick only they're actually, you know, intended for eyes. The brand I get is TheraDrops but it's basically just water with an eye-safe starch in it which I assumes helps retain the moisture on the surface of the eye longer. I use them because I just have chronic dry eye, but my son accidentally got a bit of snow blindness skiing last winter and the drops really helped him too, they're very soothing. (He'd put the drops in and then put a cool damp compress over his eyes.)
@gingivitis9148
@gingivitis9148 10 ай бұрын
Huh i would have never pegged starch as an extremely gentle moisturizer
@graemezimmer604
@graemezimmer604 10 ай бұрын
Interesting story Clive, thanks. I used a big UV tube to erase EPROMs for many years, but never got a burn as I kept them in a drawer, and was always careful not to look at them. I have managed to zap myself a few times with my welder though. Not fun at all.
@samuhell14
@samuhell14 10 ай бұрын
I'm genuinely curious how can UV light wavelength can erase EEPROM memory. Maybe the radiation does? Was is to actually erease to then reprogram the chip or to destroy the chip?
@Suiseisexy
@Suiseisexy 10 ай бұрын
@@samuhell14 It just has to change a single charge, yeah? I would imagine it's the same mechanic as solar panels
@M4RC90
@M4RC90 10 ай бұрын
@@samuhell14 EPROM, not EEPROM. EEPROMs are the Electrically Erasable ones, those do not need UV light to be erased and in fact cannot be erased by UV light, because they don't have a window exposing the chip. From the Wikipedia article about EPROMs: EPROMs are easily recognizable by the transparent fused quartz (or on later models resin) window on the top of the package, through which the silicon chip is visible, and which permits exposure to ultraviolet light during erasing. To erase the data stored in the array of transistors, ultraviolet light is directed onto the die. Photons of the UV light cause ionization within the silicon oxide, which allows the stored charge on the floating gate to dissipate. Since the whole memory array is exposed, all the memory is erased at the same time. The process takes several minutes for UV lamps of convenient sizes; sunlight would erase a chip in weeks, and indoor fluorescent lighting over several years.
@IanGrams
@IanGrams 10 ай бұрын
@@samuhell14 not EEPROM (Electrically Erasable Programmable Read-Only Memory) but the predecessor EPROM (Erasable Programmable Read-Only Memory). Here's the pertinent part from the wikipedia page on them: "The programming process is not electrically reversible. To erase the data stored in the array of transistors, ultraviolet light is directed onto the die. Photons of the UV light cause ionization within the silicon oxide, which allows the stored charge on the floating gate to dissipate. Since the whole memory array is exposed, all the memory is erased at the same time. The process takes several minutes for UV lamps of convenient sizes; sunlight would erase a chip in weeks, and indoor fluorescent lighting over several years." You can recognize an EPROM from an EEPROM in that the former has a transparent fused quartz or resin window on the top through which the silicon chip is visible and UV light can pass through.
@Fractal_32
@Fractal_32 10 ай бұрын
@@samuhell14EPROMs not EEPROMs, EEPROMs are electronically erasable hence the extra E at the start.
@gan314159
@gan314159 10 ай бұрын
"have I gone too technical yet?" Immediately produces spectrograph. Please don't change Clive, it's certainly what I'm here for.
@therealchayd
@therealchayd 10 ай бұрын
IMHO Someone needs to make fluorescent tubes that emit just those visible wavelengths as it is quite a cool colour and it seems a lot of set designers like to use it.
@bigclivedotcom
@bigclivedotcom 10 ай бұрын
Philips first electronic compact fluorescent lamp (which was very complex) was promoted with a clear glass version in the electrical retailers. Because it was ordinary glass they were safe to view as they blocked the UVC.
@NaoPb
@NaoPb 10 ай бұрын
​@@bigclivedotcomthis reminds me of the tubes I've seen that were coated in fosfor on one side, and clear on the other. But I'm not sure if they were safe.
@PhilXavierSierraJones
@PhilXavierSierraJones 10 ай бұрын
Well, time for them to produce a tube like that with a big "ICE LIGHT" stamp on it that signifies that it's safe to look at!
@samuelfellows6923
@samuelfellows6923 10 ай бұрын
😐 ~ I also like that colour [pale sky blue] if the tube was just glass it would be safe.
@KJ6EAD
@KJ6EAD 10 ай бұрын
There are LEDs in several wavelengths around 430nm, usually called ice blue, pale blue, etc.
@caseyisvoodoo619
@caseyisvoodoo619 10 ай бұрын
I appreciate the consideration that those who are underinformed might think that the harmful radiation is coming through their phone, and you aknowledged that without sounding condescending at all. Truly a gem of a channel 💙
@tdurmon
@tdurmon 10 ай бұрын
All the welders I know refer to it as “burning your eyes.” My grandfather was a welder, and my dad and uncle are welders. I was probably 13 years old when, while working one summer at my dad’s shop, my eyes were burned. It’s hard to avoid catching those arcs, especially when two or three welders are working simultaneously on different projects around one shop area. I got it bad! The pain didn’t set in until later that night, whilst I was at church. There is definitely a delayed reaction. For a 13 year-old boy, it was excruciating pain. It kept me up all night long in absolute misery. I’ve been ever so careful, ever since. It’s an experience you shall never forget!
@funnlivinit
@funnlivinit 10 ай бұрын
I've had arc flash very badly when I was foreman of a 9 man + 1 woman crew working in tight quarters together. It was very painful. With strong sensitivity to light. To the point that I had to wear sunglasses at night because the brake lights from cars in front of me were too bright. It did cause permanent damage in the form of cataracts. My eye doctor said that it bloomed my existing minor Cataracts. I had to undergo lens replacement surgery in both eyes at the age of 41.
@psirvent8
@psirvent8 9 ай бұрын
Are you sure about a single exposure being enough to cause early cataracts ?
@funnlivinit
@funnlivinit 9 ай бұрын
@@psirvent8 It was a repeated exposure. Many times over a couple of months. Some were worse than others.
@psirvent8
@psirvent8 9 ай бұрын
@@funnlivinitYeah, makes more sense actually. Thank you for the reply.
@jcxtra
@jcxtra 10 ай бұрын
Great investigation from the pictures, Clive! I think you're right on the money. I got welders flash when I was a young lass, my dad welded stuff and usually made me wear a mask but one day I looked without one and the sandy feeling later was not nice, thus learning why welding masks are used :D
@citizenscientist1284
@citizenscientist1284 10 ай бұрын
I’m amazed that the bored Ape Yacht Club was able to find something that caused more eye damage than their hideous nft’s.
@bertblankenstein3738
@bertblankenstein3738 10 ай бұрын
And here i thought a 1hr Big Clive video of a UV light could sterilize my room.
@alastairward2774
@alastairward2774 10 ай бұрын
As soon as I read the news about the concert I knew I'd seen something about these lights on Clive's channel before, good to see an update.
@TopEndSpoonie
@TopEndSpoonie 10 ай бұрын
Great detective work there Clive. Good work.
@Big74Mike2012
@Big74Mike2012 10 ай бұрын
I got to experience the eye burn that comes from UVC exposure a few weeks ago!! Intense pain, tears and/or snot streaming down my face, girlfriend demanding I go to the ER at 2am, etc., etc., etc... Good times, good times!!
@Autistic_Artist
@Autistic_Artist 10 ай бұрын
As a blacklight artist I have had to educate people over the years about this topic.
@londonlore5881
@londonlore5881 10 ай бұрын
This is beyond excellent Clive. Thanks very much for making and posting this. 👍
@jonnyphenomenon
@jonnyphenomenon 10 ай бұрын
UV eyeball burn is no laughing matter. During one of my earlier forays into circuit board making, I was using a UV lamp to expose the emulsion on the copper clad boards. Spent ALL day struggling to get the exposure times right and attempting to develop them with potassium carbonate. I found out around 1am that I was in big, big trouble... It was excruciatingly painful, and quite terrifying. I actually thought it was a chemical burn from the developer for a long time until I learned about the dangers of that wicked UV lamp. It doesn't take long to get a burn from it either, but it takes a long time for the effects to manifest. Be nice to your eyeballs. You will miss them when they are gone...
@bigclivedotcom
@bigclivedotcom 10 ай бұрын
That should have been a UVA lamp?
@jonnyphenomenon
@jonnyphenomenon 10 ай бұрын
Yeah! I learned that the hard way...
@psirvent8
@psirvent8 9 ай бұрын
@@jonnyphenomenon If it was really UVA and not UVC you most likely didn't get sand in the eyes but more of an eyestrain like you can get from too much screen time but over only minutes instead of hours. It also depends on how powerful ther UVA source is and how far you are from it.
@psirvent8
@psirvent8 9 ай бұрын
@@bigclivedotcom Can still hurt the eyes if powerful enough/and or you are too close to the source. You do not want to look at a 400W mercury vapor blacklight without protection at close range for example.
@lolopez8319
@lolopez8319 10 ай бұрын
i want to thank you for taking the time in this video to identify how germicidal lamps look to outsiders 🙏🏽🙏🏽 as soon as i saw the news and after doing further research into germicidal lamps and the other events involving them i was so scared of going to like a party and accidentally ending up even more disabled than i already am without ever being able to know 🙏🏽🙏🏽🙏🏽 so thanks for helping quell my anxieties
@niagarawarrior9623
@niagarawarrior9623 10 ай бұрын
i really like this channel quite a bit, its kind of amusing to see you taking the time to explain that filming a UV light wont project UV through the phone / monitor.
@markiangooley
@markiangooley 10 ай бұрын
My little condo here in Florida has 40-watt tubes in the kitchen and bathrooms, each in a single-tube fixture with a magnetic ballast. A couple of years ago I found LED replacements that work in the fixtures and replaced all the real tubes. Definitely have to have the proper side facing outwards. Some of the ballasts aren’t working properly and trashed any actual fluorescent tube in a few months of use, but the LED fake-tubes don’t care and work okay in all the fixtures. Great for a lazy man like me.
@nightcatarts
@nightcatarts 10 ай бұрын
I wanted to do the same in my garage but somehow the prior owners managed to fit two tubes of varying sizes & neither one has LED replacements available. I had to dismantle the entire affair & put up two new LED tube lights, discovering what they'd done to the wiring in the ceiling below my bedroom.. Kinda glad I didn't give up on that one.
@wtmayhew
@wtmayhew 10 ай бұрын
I just checked a hanging fluorescent magnetic ballast fixture in my basement which dates from the late 1960s. It is designed for two 48 inch self start T12 tubes. I have two warm white T8 LED tubes installed. The power consumption is 70 VA or about 69.5 Watts. That gives a power factor around 0.98. It surprised me to see such a good power factor. It doesn’t matter so much in a home setting because billing is usually actual Watts and a default power factor correction is applied to the bill. A business with a lot of lights could really benefit from the drop-in LED tube replacement to improve power factor even though LEDs don’t reduce actual Watts consumed by much. I also checked a hanging 5000 Lumen LED fixture which was LED from the outset. It is consuming 60 Watts and has a power factor of 0.89. You’re actually better off keeping your old fixtures with magnetic ballasts and swapping in LEDs as the fluorescent tubes burn out. That is something I did not expect to find.
@Acehigh-Jenkins
@Acehigh-Jenkins 10 ай бұрын
Thank you for telling us things to look out for if we happen to be at events so we just leave. I don’t care how much I paid for a ticket my sight is priceless!
@piccalillipit9211
@piccalillipit9211 10 ай бұрын
*ITS HARD NOT TO LAUGH* that not only did these muppets lose their money on the NFT's they lost their sight from the NFT's
@katrinabryce
@katrinabryce 10 ай бұрын
I’m more concerned about the people who worked at the event. They were just doing their job.
@piccalillipit9211
@piccalillipit9211 10 ай бұрын
@@katrinabryce VERY good point, yes they were just earning a living. Poor sods.
@hugegamer5988
@hugegamer5988 10 ай бұрын
Time for a blind trust.
@yuricopperhooves
@yuricopperhooves 10 ай бұрын
Now they have just as good eyes for everything else as they have for investments. 🤣
@LarixusSnydes
@LarixusSnydes 10 ай бұрын
It's temporary blindness, but highly unpleasant. It's not unlike being subjected to someone pouring a constant flow of sand into your eyes. Now for the visitor's, they lack vision on a non-physical level, investing in those worthless energy wasters.
@TheWtfnonamez
@TheWtfnonamez 10 ай бұрын
To put it in perspective, I use a UVC box to sterilise items. Whenever I get a new bulb, I use the banana skin test I learned on this channel. Well if a small UVC bulb can give a banana sunburn in 10-15 minutes, god help your retina after a few hours near a large bulb.
@khulhucthulhu9952
@khulhucthulhu9952 10 ай бұрын
so cool to see an in-depth analysis if fluorescent lamps like that! sad that it took two incidents to get there
@brianallen9810
@brianallen9810 10 ай бұрын
I've had my eyesight permanently damaged from calibrating indicia detectors that were installed in postal letter cancelling machines ( Automatic Facing and Cancelling System ). They were used to detect stamps on envelopes, postage stamps are tagged. They did not give us any warning about the devices nor did they give us any protective glasses to use. Be warned, these are not to be played with.
@bjornroesbeke
@bjornroesbeke 10 ай бұрын
This PSA makes me think about photography class in school. Such a lamp was used to develop negatives. Obviously the first thing 14-year olds do when the teacher says "NEVER look at the lamp when it's on"... is to look at the lamp when it's on.
@psirvent8
@psirvent8 9 ай бұрын
Being into film photography as well I have yet to hear about the use of UV light to develop negatives. If you're talking about the film negatives, first you spool them inside a developing tank in complete darkness and then you can process them under normal light. For the next step, which is printing the photos on paper in the darkroom, you have safelights that can be red or yellow and I don't get how they could be harmful to the eyes. I suppose if you were to stare at one for extended periods of time it could cause some harm, however the same would also happen with any ordinary lightbulb as well. Then you have the enlarger and inside is nothing more than a ordinary white lightbulb that shouldn't cause much harm as looking at the projected image on the baseboard is actually part of the job, also I have yet to have heard of people getting eye damage from that. Maybe you were doing cyanotypes or other alternative processes that required UV back then ?
@bjornroesbeke
@bjornroesbeke 9 ай бұрын
@@psirvent8 I'm not entirely sure, as photography wasn't of much interest to me, but it was a requirement to go into web development/media (2005). Iirc, it's 2 films laid on top of eachother with an optional mask in between. The actual developing was done using chemicals, but creating the image was done by shining this bright UV light at the films.
@psirvent8
@psirvent8 9 ай бұрын
@@bjornroesbekeThank's for the reply. The process you just described looks like some sort of film duplication to me but I'm not really sure and I also have no experience in that. Wasn't one of the films already developed before the UV exposure ? In that case it would have been a duplicating process where the second or bottom film would be blank and the chemical processing would occur after the exposure.
@bjornroesbeke
@bjornroesbeke 9 ай бұрын
@@psirvent8 Well, yes! You are correct. One of them was already developed, and through an optional mask, a negative image was formed on another piece of film. Perhaps i shouldn't have used the word "develop" in my first comment.
@berndp3426
@berndp3426 8 ай бұрын
@@psirvent8 UV lamps in photolabs? Never have heard of this. When I was in such labs during education/lessons about photography with practice and also during a vacation job they had pale greenish lights everywhere (for doing black and white lab, since b/w papers are relatively insensitive to darker green and blue light actually). Elsewhere, a deep red light was used. For doing colour work you need much denser longwave colour filters in the lab area to prevent colour paper from becoming damaged while you are making paper copies with the exposer.
@EthansSmallHands
@EthansSmallHands 10 ай бұрын
Man, I was really curious about that incident. You did such a great job explaining everything so simply. Such a great channel. I'm glad to be subscribed all these years. Happy holidays!
@DobieTanpaw
@DobieTanpaw 10 ай бұрын
I've gotten Photokeratitis once... But for me it was from being exposed to reflected UV Laser radiation. 355nm is UV-A, but it still gave me the same symptoms, probably from the higher intensities.
@dancoroian1
@dancoroian1 10 ай бұрын
"NFT Owners and 'Art' Enthusiasts Blinded After Attending First Ever In-Person Event" is an excellent Onion headline 🤣
@maximusironthumper
@maximusironthumper 10 ай бұрын
Excellent bit of sleuthing BigClive! Must be 20 years since I've had arc eye but that was from a welder not a dodgy toilet.
@supershid464
@supershid464 10 ай бұрын
"computer, enhance the image!" *pulls out another physical photo*
@mikenco
@mikenco 10 ай бұрын
I've had arc-eye a few times. Best thing is sleep. Write the day off and go to sleep, normally eases by the next day.
@sometimesleela5947
@sometimesleela5947 10 ай бұрын
Yep, eyes seem to heal alot faster when just kept closed. I've gotten way too many corneal scratches and it never pays to keep working through the day. Alot less chance of scarring, too.
@beaker-yt
@beaker-yt 10 ай бұрын
"Hello. How can I help you?" "I want to buy some UV light tubes." "Which wavelength do you need?" "Uh... ultraviolet? What do you mean?" "Let me ask differently: What do you want to use them for?" "Uh... we're building this toilet installation..." "Ah! A sanitation light. Then you need these germicidal tubes. Do you know the safety precautions and rules for operating these?" "Uh... Yes! Of course! What a stupid question!" "Okay, here you go..." Wouldn't be surprised if it happened this way.
@psirvent8
@psirvent8 9 ай бұрын
Me neither.
@leybraith3561
@leybraith3561 10 ай бұрын
Good to see someone doing a sensible appraisal of the incident Thanks, hope this gets picked up by 'the algorithm' .. much good could be done. Well done for a calm informed voice of reason. Maybe (shudder) you could produce a 'short' in order to get it to the masses.
@seriosertyp8145
@seriosertyp8145 10 ай бұрын
UVC lamps and Cherenkov Radiation are the most captivating blue tones. A blue glow that makes you feel like Icarus.
@tinkerbot4148
@tinkerbot4148 10 ай бұрын
I expect the UV lights were there to make the green paint glow in the dark, but the camera flash destroyed the effect.
@thequarkchronicles2486
@thequarkchronicles2486 10 ай бұрын
“Computer, enhance the image!” [flips over new sheet of paper] This is an s-tier bit and it will never not be funny
@restojon1
@restojon1 10 ай бұрын
Arc eye is no joke. I restored cars and motorcycles for most of my working life and the last time I had it I was welding the chassis on a prewar vauxhall. I was using the works mask but unfortunately it was faulty so, as I was happily flashing away doing the 200 odd stitch welds to add strengthening plates to the chassis and new suspension hangers etc, the mask wasn't reacting in time, just by a fraction of a second. Those fractions of a second added up over the day and I noticed the halo/corona effect around the headlights of oncoming cars on the drive home and then, late that night, the burning gravel started. Worst case of arc eye I've ever copped. My eyes puffed up like I'd told Mike Tyson a bad joke about his mum. Took a good few days to get going again. Don't mess with UV light/welding. Always wear a quality mask. I have a wide angle true colour mask of my own now.
@squelchstuff
@squelchstuff 10 ай бұрын
As AvE might say - "Don't stare at the pretty blue light with the remaining eye" Keep up the good cause Clive.
@Shady97342
@Shady97342 10 ай бұрын
Hey I mentioned this yesterday! Thanks for doing a video on it. I think you're on the money especially with being able to see the standing wave pattern in the bathroom photo. I see another comment mentioned it was the same promoter as last time that helped with this event too (Hypebeast). That's crazy they made the same mistake twice especially with the bad publicity they received the first time.
@bigclivedotcom
@bigclivedotcom 10 ай бұрын
Or did the publicity turn out to be profitable?
@steveroberts1861
@steveroberts1861 10 ай бұрын
I used to work in a printing firm where we had purchased a flat bed printer. It used UVA and UVB to cure the inks. Wow were my eyes sore after the first day of use. We did have glasses to wear when observing the print head area where the light was located. We made sure to use the glasses from then on.
@psirvent8
@psirvent8 9 ай бұрын
You got sore eyes with the glasses on ? Or is it because you didn't wear them the first time ?
@steveroberts1861
@steveroberts1861 9 ай бұрын
@@psirvent8 Sorry, that wasn't written well. Having to wear glasses for eye correction, I didn't use the protective glasses often enough due to having to swap over all the time. I did from the following day on though.
@psirvent8
@psirvent8 9 ай бұрын
@@steveroberts1861Thank's for the reply. Yeah, I see the issue, maybe the protective glasses didn't fit over your prescription glasses so you had to swap them. But how did you manage to see when wearing the protective glasses ? I also play with UV lamps at home and wear ski goggles to protect my eyes however I don't see really well since I have to first remove my glasses. I'm currently looking to get a face shield that blocks all wavelengths of UV so I can keep my glasses on.
@steveroberts1861
@steveroberts1861 9 ай бұрын
Yeah always swapping glasses. The reality was the UV was contained pretty well so we would only use the protective glasses when doing colour and detail tests where you were in close vicinity to the print head and lamps. As far as me being able to see, I am long sighted so I had to be quite close to the print I had just made. No real issue there.
@psirvent8
@psirvent8 9 ай бұрын
@@steveroberts1861Ok I see. Thank's.
@alticia
@alticia 10 ай бұрын
one good line a professor of mine always said when it came to light from fluorescent tubes was something along the lines of "don't look straight into the light whilst you can still see". and that was meant at regular fluorescent light tubes, not even ultra violet ones
@huyopo
@huyopo 10 ай бұрын
What if they didn't use UVC light, but so many people who bought ugly apes for like 300k$ already had severe eye damage to begin with and just want to recoup some losses?
@Your-Least-Favorite-Stranger
@Your-Least-Favorite-Stranger 10 ай бұрын
im convinced its a cash kink. First they buy nothing and brag, then they blind themselves and pay a huge medical bill (standby, waiting to see if they brag). Im convinced this is just a money kink
@thewhitefalcon8539
@thewhitefalcon8539 10 ай бұрын
​@@Your-Least-Favorite-Strangerthey didn't buy nothing, they bought an invitation ticket to parties for people who bought invitation tickets
@jonothanthrace1530
@jonothanthrace1530 10 ай бұрын
"Have I gone too technical yet? Yes." Clive, you're a treasure.
@StubbyPhillips
@StubbyPhillips 10 ай бұрын
*So many obliviots!* Just a little understanding of what things are and how stuff works in the most general sense would do so many people so much good. I have come to realize that most people know absolutely nothing about pretty much everything (excluding sports, celebrities, fashion and Apple products.) Too bad we don't gather them together when they're young and provide them with some basic skills and information in a way that makes them curious and imaginative (and useful) instead of giving them the totally incorrect notion that learning and knowing stuff has to be tedious, boring and pointless. OK, so I never really learned how to deal with run-on sentences, but I know some other stuff.
@stargazer7644
@stargazer7644 10 ай бұрын
Think of how stupid the average person is, then realize half of the population is stupider than that. The average person is a bumbling idi0t.
@dfram01
@dfram01 10 ай бұрын
Thanks for bringing the UV, welding and sun burn topic up. I have been practicing optometry for 43 years and can absolutely confirm that there is something magical about waking up at 2 o'clock in the morning from the pain. The concept of using potato or cucumber slices over the closed eyes or potato juice in the eye works because they are cooler than the eye, which helps bring down swelling, and they also help to draw out some of the extra fluid from the cornea, which is causing pain by compressing the nerves in the cornea. The best solution though is don't get the exposure. Wear appropriate protection.
@peterjameson321
@peterjameson321 10 ай бұрын
Great video BC. People need to know how bad UVC is so bad for the eyes.
@melopuss375
@melopuss375 10 ай бұрын
Hype fashion and NFT events blinding people has to be some kind of poetic divine justice.
@namesolonggood1sgone
@namesolonggood1sgone 10 ай бұрын
PSA: You can get a 365nm type "BL" blacklight that has the same UV profile as the purple blacklight tube, but it allows the pretty blue light through its white phosphor envelope. Perfectly safe and quite cool looking.
@psirvent8
@psirvent8 9 ай бұрын
Aren't you talking about the tubes used on bug zappers or to cure nail polish or resin ? (Basically all applications where you need UVA but not for the glowing effect)
@namesolonggood1sgone
@namesolonggood1sgone 9 ай бұрын
@@psirvent8 Bug zappers yes. I think the nail polish curing lights use UVB lamps
@psirvent8
@psirvent8 9 ай бұрын
@@namesolonggood1sgone Nail polish curing lights use UVA as well. UVB is to my knowledge only used in reptile lamps and tanning tubes. (And maybe some industrial processes as well...)
@Rotsuoy
@Rotsuoy 10 ай бұрын
Great video! I loved your investigation! KZbinr Atozy did actually confirm that he was at the event and the event confirmed they were cleaning uvc lights, so your were correct. There's also been reports of people having much more severe problems while others, such as Atozy didn't have as big of a reaction, so if the lights were just in one area that would make a lot of sense.
@BlairdBlaird
@BlairdBlaird 10 ай бұрын
From reports of various commenters on the internet (so grain of salt and all), this seems like a recurring issue in lower-rate events in china. The link between two events in HK is likely this: contracting a private event to low-bid chinese events provider, but issues in mainland china get no foreign press.
@GRBtutorials
@GRBtutorials 10 ай бұрын
Noted: bring UVC spectrometer and safety goggles when going to an lower-rate event in China.
@techgecko3372
@techgecko3372 10 ай бұрын
@@GRBtutorials Might also bring a radiation detector, when they find out UVC is bad, they might switch to Cherenkov radiation (that very pleasing blue glow of a nuclear reactor).
@bornach
@bornach 10 ай бұрын
Have NFT apes fallen so much in value that owners now have to choose the lowest bid events provider? Should we set up a fund raising charity for them?
@1978garfield
@1978garfield 10 ай бұрын
@@bornach No.
@DavidMulligan
@DavidMulligan 10 ай бұрын
1:40 "Have I gone too technical yet? Yes." Coffee nearly exited my nose. I have no complaints about the technical depth of your videos, nor your sense of humour.
@jtoomey04
@jtoomey04 10 ай бұрын
Saw a bunch of reports of this online and immediately thought of you. So happy you are aware and addressing it!
@aplaceinthestars3207
@aplaceinthestars3207 10 ай бұрын
Light sanitation box thingies were ubiquitous in Korea, so I'm not surprised that there'd be such a lackadaisical treatment of these in Asia when they're so commonplace.
@robroysyd
@robroysyd 10 ай бұрын
the thing I don't get is UVC doesn't make many materials fluoresce like UVA does. You'd think the people using those lamps by mistake would realise there was a problem and investigate and then there's the smell of ozone.... I do have some of those cheap paper indicators. My UVC lamps are the real deal. I do have glasses with plastic lenses so never suffered any arc flash like problems. I've found UVC reasonably useful for dealing with mold problems.
@thebrowns5337
@thebrowns5337 10 ай бұрын
Maybe they just liked the cool blue/cyan colour rather than after a true blacklight/UV effect?
@robroysyd
@robroysyd 10 ай бұрын
@@thebrowns5337 Maybe. On the stage with all the other light it'd be hard to see. decades ago I lit a whole dance floor with UVA and there was a forest of hanging glowing in UV boxes at eye level. Add some fog and it was very disorenting, a trip without the acid . We even had a UV strobe!
@GRBtutorials
@GRBtutorials 10 ай бұрын
Many UVC lamps come with a filter for the lower wavelengths that cause ozone production, so there might have been no odor.
@politicallyambiguous8424
@politicallyambiguous8424 10 ай бұрын
I think they might have been Ozone-free UVC bulbs, which has a coating on it to block the specific band of UVC that produces ozone. Still releases more than enough UVC to sterilize surfaces though, and burn people. I don't know how someone can think such lights are safe to have out in public though. I bought a bunch of UVC tubes to sterilize rooms in my house and basement, and there were warning messages written all over them.
@gamingdogetv1531
@gamingdogetv1531 10 ай бұрын
"The tricky bit is getting the most skilled people to appreciate their own value." I love this wisdom on my Saturday morning! Thank you!
@Morberis
@Morberis 10 ай бұрын
Lmao the Bored Ape NFT club eh. I want to be surprised but I didnt have a high opinion before this.
@eefneleman9564
@eefneleman9564 10 ай бұрын
I had this twice as a kid. Once from looking at welding and once from looking too much into the sun (don't ask). Intense discomfort, yes. And having to wear sunglasses when exposed to ordinary daylight.
@UpLateGeek
@UpLateGeek 10 ай бұрын
I'm wondering whether this would be worse or not as bad as getting sunburnt eyes? When my Dad was young, he experienced sunburnt eyes after a long day of sailing. He described it much like you did, woke up in the middle of the night feeling like he had sand in his eyes, but it lasted more than a day, and eventually the skin on his eyes actually peeled off like sunburnt skin. The upshot was that my grandparents admonished my parents for not letting me wear sunglasses while we were out on sunny days, since they were worried my glasses would somehow focus the sunlight and give my eyes sunburn. Eventually my parents did buy me sunglasses, which as a very young kid I thought were much cooler than glasses.
@nyetloki
@nyetloki 10 ай бұрын
It's the same process as that.
@skeetsmcgrew3282
@skeetsmcgrew3282 10 ай бұрын
Actually glasses do worsen eye damage from sunlight, however slightly
@mrtechie6810
@mrtechie6810 9 ай бұрын
​@@skeetsmcgrew3282polycarbonate lenses block UV. I tested my glasses at the lab at work!
@mastafoo886
@mastafoo886 10 ай бұрын
there is no part of me that is shocked that a bunch of tech bros drunk on the sauce of their own scam didn't do due diligence with the lighting of their event.
@tuopeeks
@tuopeeks 10 ай бұрын
Normally large UV-C tubes state "Protect Your Eyes" printed at an electrode end.
@JasonLihani
@JasonLihani 10 ай бұрын
I love that you have to explain that it's safe to look at a video of the light lol. Just like Styropyro having to explain that shining a laser into the camera won't blind you lol
@stuartgmk
@stuartgmk 10 ай бұрын
😅
@bigclivedotcom
@bigclivedotcom 10 ай бұрын
Never underestimate the comments left by flat earthers.
@psirvent8
@psirvent8 9 ай бұрын
@@bigclivedotcomFlat earthers, Lol
@gblargg
@gblargg 10 ай бұрын
0:52 I'm so glad you explained this (especially the part about my monitor not being able to produce it, phew!) because I was shielding my eyes when you turned that on. This part was hilarious.
@ChrisIsEditing
@ChrisIsEditing 10 ай бұрын
Hi, Lighting Tech here! All the fixtures on that stage look like standard stage lighting fixtures, none of those look out of place or are harmful in any way. (Unless you decide to touch one, because then you might get burnt, since they do get very hot.) There is no way on earth that a qualified lighting tech and relating crew would ever install UV-C fixtures. Regarding the fluorescent tubes in that bathroom, my personal belief is that some manager or other person that did not have a good understanding, installed random tubes they bought off ebay or something. I HIGHLY doubt that any event company would ever keep UV-C fixtures in their inventory. The only type of UV event companies use, would be UV-A blacklights. If you see UV-C fixtures being used at an event, this most likely will never happen at an event you go to, but if it does, notify the event manager, a lighting tech, or security even. Then just get out of there, don't put yourself in danger please.
@c0d3r1f1c
@c0d3r1f1c 10 ай бұрын
You are assuming these troglodytes hired a competent lighting crew. Cryptobros are both incredibly incompetent and supremely confident in their own intelligence.
@Tokanova
@Tokanova 10 ай бұрын
You really think a 'qualified' lightning tech worked on this pathetic event? I doubt it.
@ChrisIsEditing
@ChrisIsEditing 10 ай бұрын
@@Tokanova Yeah doubt it either
@garbo8962
@garbo8962 10 ай бұрын
Worked with UV lamps at three different jobs. First one was at a meat Packer where they had a special temperature & humidity controlled refrigerated room with UV lamps to age meat up to one year. Second time at a large candy plant where they had them in corn syrup storage tank room. In a huge 12 story ambutory care building they had them inside of air handlers. I noticed several not working and asked the building engineer when was the last time they replaced them in this 4 year old building. Said never. Told him we always replaced them once a year. They ordered replacements and first big wooden box of them cost over $5,000. We did have an e!ectrical burn his eyes some when he ignored warning label on lamp covers.
@Mriya6
@Mriya6 10 ай бұрын
I had to laugh at the opening when you explained that we're safe from the UVC because our monitors can't reproduce it. I feel sorry for anyone who needed that explained: Do they think if they watch a video of a tanning bed they'll get a tan? Or if they watch a video of the sun they'll be instantly vaporised? XD
@GothBoyUK
@GothBoyUK 10 ай бұрын
There's a town in the US that banned solar panels because 'it would suck up the all the energy from the Sun'. I can therefore definitely believe people think they can get a tan through a monitor. 😂
@frankowalker4662
@frankowalker4662 10 ай бұрын
@@GothBoyUK Oh FFS. 🤣
@aspuzling
@aspuzling 10 ай бұрын
I once watched a video of a black hole and got spaghettified.
@clivequinn8978
@clivequinn8978 10 ай бұрын
I still squint when someone arc welds on KZbin, force of habit.
@stevemurnane1892
@stevemurnane1892 10 ай бұрын
@@clivequinn8978 Me too!
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