James Dyson was not the first person to invent bagless vacuum. It was a company called Rexair but they went to water filtration. Or you can say Filter Queen was first.
I‘m no engineer but I thoroughly enjoyed watching the informative video explained in layman‘s terms. Subbed, and will be checking out your other videos!
Learning how a washing machine works so that I can make my own in 20 years when every company treats essential products and tools as “services,” and use unnecessarily complex computers to kneecap my devices if I don’t pay their monthly subscription.
My primary issue with this video is that when he speaks upon the flintlock tinderbox/flintlock tinder lighter he shows us a photo of a modern butane gas lighter that is shaped as a flintlock. Funny but also inaccurate. The flintlock lighter had the barrel removed and in place had a tinderbox designed to catch the sparks from the flint while while holding tinder. They were no more dangerous than a cap gun
He is doing no justice to this video by **COMPLETELY INCORRECTLY PRONOUNCING THE WORD!** NO, IT'S NOT JUST *MERELY* ABOUT ACCENT, HE IS ACTUALLY SAYING THE WORLD COMPLETELY WRONG! IT SOUNDS like he is saying "fricium" or "ferricium" when the word is ACTUALLY PRONOUNCED "FAIR-ROW-SER-REE-YUM" . HE IS MISSING AN ENTIRE SYLLABLE and it is ferrOCERIUM, not ferrUcium!
Having a hard time googling this question. Can someone tell me what effect causes the wick to soak up or draw in fuel from the cotton? (yes, the wick is absorbent, but there is an excess of cotton which is far away from the wick. I can't remember the cause of that fuel being drawn towards the wick when it's not in the cotton that's right next to the wick)
I see no reason why dryers could not be 120v in the us all you would have to do is put a few more lower powered heating elements and a few more fans and it could work
...and there are jet lighters and today also USB charged lighters that use the heat energy generated due to resistance of certain metals to electricity. The electricity passes to the metal molecules but the resistance creates some energy to warm up the metal. Its the same as the traditional car lighter. Great video!