It always fascinated me how "instantaneous" events like clipping a wire, a piece of glass shattering, etc.. have so much going on when magnified and slowed down. It's like entering a dimension that exists in between seconds of time. The aluminum wire clip clip illustrated this other dimension. You can see the metal change from the initial pressure and then bunch up on itself as it is cleaved. The top part remains seemingly unchanged as the material below it is pushed up, almost as if the top of the wire were sinking. So much happening in the blink of an eye. Thank you for the video.
Only atoms that can touch each other are the same atoms. Examples are Nickle cutting nickle or copper cutting copper. When you see nickel cut aluminum you're actually seeing the nickel separating the atoms from each other:D
Two questions: 1 - Were the sounds added after/produced or original? 2 - Can you please do the same experiments in the dark? I bet there will be some interesting phenomena appearing.
The question you are asking about the dark room ... You will observe nothing else because the energy will be dissipated in sound and shock. To see or notice something you need to increase A LOT the instantaneous energy delivered to the object. Not doable with these kind of experiments
Watching how things break is actually one of the most important part of material science. There is sooooo much detail in this short video, which is just fascinating!
Dude you are the king of this genre, and quit possibly the original inspiration for this style. I'm surprised you dont have millions of subscribers!! The idea, creativity, editing, manual sound effects and the overall atmosphere is very awesome. Nice work! keep it up! *subscribed
Hey, thank you very much for the kind words!! Until recently, I paid attention only to Instagram and TikTok, but now it's RU-vid time:) I will try to please you with new crazy videos !:)
Its so much better when you mute the volume to avoid the stupid, unrealistic sound affects. Its not a creaking ship or a stretching rope.. its a damn piece of metal!
It reminds me of the Earths mantle. The rock is hot but still solid, yet its moving like a slow motion liquid due to the massive pressure and the core's heat.
@@The_Object is it really expensive because ive been learning photography and ive always wanted to do stuff like this but idk what would be a good camera to start in order to do this stuff
@@TheyLuvMikey317 Canon Rebel is a very good camera for the price and one of your best bets for a cheap quality camera. Pair it with a good lense too and you'll be able to get these kind of shots.
it´s interesting how metal can move apart from itself and then still stay a solid with the same strength, like at 0:56 it moves over itself but is instantly together again.
I believe that the space between the atoms is being forced to be reduced by the pressure, at some point you can't keep doing it so that's why the objects break because too much energy has to be release somewhere
In the close up, it looks like the objects are soft enough to be sliced easy by the bliers but in reality, it takes a lot of pressure that can break your arms lol
0:33 These sound like sounds that could be used in movies especially that screw , sounds like an old house full of creaky wooden floor boards. Just the sound can give a good imagination.
hate to burst your bubble but all the sound effects are VERY fake. you can clearly hear they are bag rustling sounds or creaking wood, which are far from what small pieces of metal would sound like