Pumping an iPhone Full of Helium Kills It! Newest iPhone XS, XR, 8 & More vs Helium Poisoning. 2018 iPad Pro Bend Test: • 2018 iPad Pro DROP & B... Original Source: goo.gl/EDqC8y
@TheFallenShadow ahhh it charges so fucking slow ahhh it even dies even tho when its being charged ahhh the charger breaks a week after getting it Edit: Ahhh you have to buy extra shit because of the new iphones removed the headphones plug in and you have to use the charger plug in Ahh waste so much money for a phone that will eventually break its own screen
Nope. Flows to the place with the lease resistance. Which is the speaker holes. The seals around the volume and power has a lot more resistance. Gases also behave differently than liquids. Gases don’t separate into layers relatively quickly like liquids do. Helium can escape the earths gravitational pull, but first it will mix evenly with the air and take a long time to slowly rise up and out of earths pull.
It’s a worrying aspect but it fortunately doesn’t kill the iPhone, simply disables them for a short duration, after a week of leaving it in a well ventilated area, it should return to normal.
@@Drothen- you did you cared because you text back to his comment if you didn't cared at all you wouldn't of text back so you did cared so you basically just lied
lol it’s more of a that was such a bad joke...that you thinking to yourself how does someone come up w this? It’s just funny and stupid at the same time
Helium is lighter than air, so having the vent port at the top of the jar means that the Helium just gets vented out. A better way would have been to have a dip tube attached to the inside from the vent port to the bottom of the jar.
2:55 Around 2% Helium concentration should be enough, if I remember correctly someone on the Applied Science RU-vid Channel tried this and came to that conclusion.
That screen flexing raises an interesting question. If you applied heat to the screen and then used compressed air rather than a prying tool, could you pop the phone apart? Could be an interesting way to get the phone apart without having to jam any tools inside your phone.
Same btw I’m Watching on my IPhone 8 under a Thick blanket cause my dad wanted me to go to bed But I didn't wanna it's so he can't see the phone light. And I’m wearing headphones 🤪
they actually do co-ordinate the time. the reason any electronic device needs a clock is so that it can actually work, by knowing how much time to spend on each cycle. That's why the speed of any processor is called the clock, because it has a deep relationship with the actual clock.
I dont know very wel because i am yust 14years old but isnt helium ligter than air. So air should stay in bottom of the jar. So it should not come out isn't it?
the fact that the iPhone 8 and only the iPhone 8 has this issue leads me to believe they implemented some "safety" mechanism to cut power to the major components if the oscillator was behaving weirdly or not behaving at all, maybe a relic of the old oscillators that don't have this problem... it doesn't make sense to me for the phone to commit not living just because it can't keep track of time, surely it would at the very least light up and then fail to boot due to software freaking out or something since the major components that operate with an oscillator have one built-in (ram, cpu, gpu, etc). Then again, if the oscillator within the ram or cpu was also affected by this... then the total system failure would make perfect sense I suppose... It would be interesting to see if the clock was still ticking on the phones that didn't die. was their oscillator protected or simply isolated from the other major components, was all of this just a stupid mistake in the schematic, and could you expedite the phone's recovery with an air duster. So many questions, so little time.
the thing sold as "helium" in party shops are partially methane because methane is lighter than air (the same way (but not to the same extent) as helium), and partially because methane is cheap (whereas helium is expensive (as long as we don't have fusion reactors))
A clock in a piece of tech is not used to "tell time" LOL, its used to synchronize all components. When people say a CPU clock speed is 3 GHz or whatever, this is what they refer to, so its pretty crucial to normal operation of any computing device.
Garrett Driskill my iPhone 7, supposed to be water resistant, dropped it in a small bowl of water trying to turn it off, completely water damaged, the screen was filled with water and the home button didn’t work for a week, and it wasn’t a lot of water
If i have one iphone X i will keep it in a chamber where no one can even touch it except me and this guy is like.... Let's brake i phone with hammer, let's drop it, etc.
the thing is like the heart of the phone and heleium is like your heart stoping without you actually dieing or suffering serius dammage just puts you to sleep for a while
Space It’s a seal for water. Water has surface tension. Helium is a single atom and does not have surface tension so it can seep into any crevasse that is at least an atom big. So basically anywhere on the phone.