Hello I make videos about natural science (especially geology), engineering projects, and whatever other stuff I'm doing. Tag along if you want :) - Jack
This is unbelievable. I work at the puzzle company that makes this puzzle. AND I personally designed this puzzle from the artwork acquired from the other gentleman !!!! Small world 😃
Wouldn't clear glue work better? So it's more clear? Or is clear glue not strong enough? My son and I are half way done with a 1500 Piece puzzle and we didn't put it on a backing piece like you did. So it might be harder for us to move!
Great idea but my cat loves cardboard boxes so probably not a good idea for me. I have a ventilation system for a grow tent Im currently not using. I may buy a small grow tent to fit my printer and hook that up.
Try 1:1 PVA/Water mix and pour over the top of puzzle which has been placed over the backing piece (I use foam board). Brush into puzzle and wipe away excess glue from the surface using lint free rag. For a 1000 piece 50x70cm puzzle I find a 100ml mixture just right. In a single step you'll glue the pieces together and also to the backing board.
would be easier to put it all on a piece of paper (on a hard flat ground, like an anvil), and then either take a hammer or a metal rod and roll and grind the matchheads ive done it and it works amazing, no need to buy any chemicals (tho thats the most effective method) and less risk of explosion and yes ik its a 7yr old vid
why the hell did you dilute the matches ffs all you did by adding water to them was weaken it's potential. you should have ground the heads off using a pair of pliers lol then crushed it to a fine powder.
Hi Jack, although your methods were pretty spot on, sadly I don’t think you found any micrometeorites. These might be a little large as well, you’ll want to focus on the fraction between .2-.4 millimeters. Great video nonetheless. :)
Very beautiful pieces especially the “pearl”. Those vitreous coatings and that orange peel skin along with the same identifiers on large meteorites should be visible on small ones as well. Stone meteorites seem to bring the money unfortunately very hard to find once fusion crust falls off, essentially looks like any other rock. Look for anything shiny, fusion crusts usually black, but range from light brownish (lunar), to red (rusted iron), Mars can have its unique crust, green could be Venus? Interplanetary crust and inside range I believe UV will work on very specific types of meteorites, worth a try. Check out the meteorite they think is from Venus. It’s got a green fusion crust, very little metal, mostly stone. Worth an absolute fortune.