If you feel that 3 videos per week isn't enough from our channels now there is SOLUTION to your problem! Anni has her own channel and there is new video every Tuesday! And the channel just hit 10k subs! Here is link to Anni's channel ru-vid.com/show-UCC5vubsnFBpy-lFB8S8rZEg
I came here to check if someone knows the name of the cat ? I love cats, and this creature is some "cool cat" on the frozen lake. I read more of the comments, the cat appears to be Nelli ?
You have officially made hydraulic press an extreme sport, it’s crazy to think about all the things you have crushed, I never thought I would love to see things crushed so much! 👍
I thought I'd get tired of your videos in a few months. It's been a year and some and I still laugh my ass off (duct tape glasses :)) ). I love you guys, keep up the good work.
ElectronicRedPanda ...o my bad!!! Lol.. I'm in the states where it might get 20 F at the absolute coldest. Rarely do we see snow in Georgia. I love snow!!
2:49 An extremely dangerous Nelli stealthily enters the frame with no one to deal with it. (Jaws music would work well.) 6:55 "Hey, I've got an idea. I have some thermite..." (perfect for your next shirt) On the next attempt at this, you need to also crush two tablets, one playing the Hydraulic Press Game and one playing the Frozen Lake game.
I think it's probably something like this. The air in the winter is very dry and when the warm water raises from under the ice the air next to it warms up since water transfers heat pretty well. Then when the "warm" moist air gets away from the "warm" water it gets too cold and can't hold so much of water any more and the water condenses to small water/ice droplets that are visible as an steam looking thing. Google can probably make better guess but something in those lines :D If you have big river or something like that and that cold weather it looks really nice.
Basically water is constantly evaporating at any temperature. The boiling point is simply when the water cannot be heated any farther without converting to a gas. This is why spilled water even at room temperature with eventually evaporate. However the air is so cold that the evaporating water is far warmer in comparison to it and begins to rise, and cools down rapidly so to the air temp condensing into the visible vapor we see. Source: I'm a chemist.
I love how you're wearing a T-shirt outside surrounded by ice and snow, Lauri. You'd feel right at home in Canada where it's currently -19°C in my region.
We have bit of an like first day of spring now since temperature was over 0C last night and we have some rain today that melts snow quite fast. But it should be again something like -10 on nights at next week :D
Compressing ice is really neat stuff. ~1500 bars it will convert to "liquid" and at 4000 bars will change back to another solid form. The power of ice in large quantities is impressive... look at Norway's Fjords.
It's actually bit more complicated. I tried to video about that but I had some problem with the tools. But the pressing ice back to liquid sucks energy from the material lowering the temparture so you have to have just right temperature on the start to have enough energy available to let the ice melt but not be already water on the start.
Beyond the press absorption/release of latent heat during phase changes is responsible for all kinds of mayhem. It would make for an interesting series of videos.
I was fascinated by the visible cracking of the ice, that could be seen by the underwater camera. Should definitely revisit this idea after having more steel cylinders ready!
Lauri: hey, I've got idea. Anni (thinks): oh no. Lauri: it's really good idea! Anni (thinks): don't do it. Lauri: I have some thermite. Anni (thinks): oh ffs.
I made hole for it and waited that the lake freezes around in and hold it in it's place. The steel parts inside of the ice were much larger than the press tool
there were appendages perpendicular to the vertical components of the frame which dug into the ice i.e. a horizontal square tube welded to the bottom of the frame anchoring it in place
A duck mussel perhaps? They're common in Finland. You can first see it move at around 9:02, and there's another one on the right side of the screen that moves at 9:05.