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I Tried JAPAN'S SUMMER TECH and It Was... 

Tokyo Lens
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Japan is full of weird summer tech & today, we're trying it out!! Use code "LENS" to get $5 off of your first #Sakuraco box: team.sakura.co/tokyolens-SC2307 or #TokyoTreat box: team.tokyotreat.com/tokyolens... now! Experience Japan from the comfort of your own home!
Today we are buying as much of Japan's summer tech and tech wear around the area of Akihabara, Tokyo as we can get our hands on, and trying out everything from portable fans, to digital ice, and more!
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*Where to Send Stuff* - As of 10.2021
Norm Nakamura - Tokyo Creative Redhorse Corporation Co. Ltd
1-10-5 Yokoami, Sumida-ku, Tokyo
Kokugikan Front Bldg 2F
130-0015
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5 авг 2023

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Комментарии : 1,4 тыс.   
@TokyoLens
@TokyoLens 10 месяцев назад
What was YOUR Favorite piece of summer tech? Join the discussion below (And can you find my secret second comment? It'll be hidden in the mix of comments below!!) Use code "LENS" to get $5 off of your first #Sakuraco box: team.sakura.co/tokyolens-SC2307 or #TokyoTreat box: team.tokyotreat.com/tokyolens-TT2307 now!
@TokyoLens
@TokyoLens 10 месяцев назад
(this is not the secret second comment lol but it DOES have some good and fun info when you find it!!)
@aihoshinoirl
@aihoshinoirl 10 месяцев назад
@@TokyoLens👁️👁️
@KirstenReusch
@KirstenReusch 10 месяцев назад
Favorite piece of summer tech is the intriguing ice plate fan. By touching it to heat regulating points on your body, you might achieve some relief. I view most of it skeptically because we had just manual uchiwa in August/September 2016 on Miyajima, felt we were cooling down, but wound up with heat stroke instead. An umbrella for shade and a nice breeze are my go to summer relief strategy.
@ginsann
@ginsann 10 месяцев назад
definitely not the weird pink thing 😂
@NortherlyK
@NortherlyK 10 месяцев назад
Oh that belt clip/ pocket fan looks promising.
@trevorgurley5632
@trevorgurley5632 10 месяцев назад
I never understood the old women walking around my town with umbrellas, but decided to give it a try. It was a huge improvement, and made last weekend in Tokyo at least a bit more bearable 🙂
@FrankRimes
@FrankRimes 10 месяцев назад
Oh umbrellas definitely help! Yeah I felt a bit weird opening up an umbrella when there was no rain in sight. But that feeling didn't last for very long. It was quickly replaced with the thought: Man if I didn't have this umbrella, I'd be dead by now!
@melancholydm
@melancholydm 10 месяцев назад
Can never go wrong with a portable shade.
@southcoastinventors6583
@southcoastinventors6583 10 месяцев назад
Is this a serious post because even farm animals know to stand under a tree when it gets hots
@johnpatrickbas556
@johnpatrickbas556 10 месяцев назад
Using umbrellas to cover yourself in a hot day is common here in the Philippines. I don't know if other tropical countries do it, but for us, it is normal.
@lookitskazzy
@lookitskazzy 10 месяцев назад
Part of it is to block UV and avoid tanning, but another component of it is indeed to reduce heat by increasing shade. Highly recommend it.
@DividedZone
@DividedZone 10 месяцев назад
I don't think I've ever seen someone use a selfie stick behind themselves as they walk to give it a third-person video game view. Just like the products in this video, that was so cool!
@TokyoLens
@TokyoLens 10 месяцев назад
where's the stick?
@DividedZone
@DividedZone 10 месяцев назад
@@TokyoLens 🤔🪄
@aihoshinoirl
@aihoshinoirl 10 месяцев назад
@@TokyoLens up your-
@ltsiver
@ltsiver 10 месяцев назад
I thought he had a friend recording.
@kev16
@kev16 10 месяцев назад
Its an insta360
@k_redacted5353
@k_redacted5353 10 месяцев назад
Honestly, what I usually go for in hot weather is longer sleeved linen shirt, they absorb sweat well, and if the sleeves are longer, the sun won't be directly hitting your skin!🤩 Fun linen fact!: linen is one of the only types of fabric that gets Stronger when it is wet; this is why linen was used for the sails of ships!
@MindfulProgramming
@MindfulProgramming 10 месяцев назад
linen is life!
@fabiospringer6328
@fabiospringer6328 10 месяцев назад
History would probably prove you right! How do you imagine an Arab in the middle of the desert during the middle age? Or a Mongol before that? Both using long sleeves. They are masters of hot weather and probably knew what they were doing.
@runeseaks
@runeseaks 10 месяцев назад
One of the worst fabrics to wear in summer is what a good many t-shirts and clothing are made of these days: Polyester! Imagine wearing plastic on your body and hoping you'll stay cool! Cotton is up there with linen as being meant for summer weather and breathable, but companies cheap out with the polyester. 😥It's so hard to find 100% cotton clothing anymore.
@fuzzyturtlez8994
@fuzzyturtlez8994 10 месяцев назад
@@fabiospringer6328 keeping yourself wet is key to keeping yourself cool. any bit of movement and breeze is welcome. we sweat to cool ourselves down so it all just makes sense
@silkvelvet2616
@silkvelvet2616 10 месяцев назад
I agree, a tank top covered by an oversized linen shirt is perfect, light and breezy, topped off with an umbrella even 40C can be a little bearable
@kazik5785
@kazik5785 10 месяцев назад
As someone who lives in a place where summer is much like August in Tokyo, I chuckled at a lot of those options. The fan on the back did seem best. When it just gets so humid, it is so hard to cool down because the sweat doesn’t evaporational cool anymore. Just makes it feel like you stood in a shower with your clothes on.
@TokyoLens
@TokyoLens 10 месяцев назад
SECRET SECOND COMMENT!! The Tokyo Lens Patreon SUMMER SALE is here for ALL TIERS!! www.patreon.com/posts/patreon-summer-87277076 And with everything from meetups at the studio, to the discord, events, adventure planning, secret livestreams, and so much more... this is the perfect year to hang out here on Patreon with me!! We are going to have an amazing time! If you're new... I recommend getting caught up on the backlog of videos, posts, podcasts, livestreams, and discord that already exists!! Hundreds to additional pieces of content just waiting for you!!
@ghostebyte
@ghostebyte 10 месяцев назад
I'm new here and already working on catching up :D Became my favorite activity in the evenings
@aihoshinoirl
@aihoshinoirl 10 месяцев назад
omg :0
@sarahramos2919
@sarahramos2919 10 месяцев назад
So tired that I read it as TIGERS not TIERS…. My first thought was, “Tigers? We’re pigeons!” Have a wonderful week and do take care!
@beepboop4846
@beepboop4846 10 месяцев назад
Didn't expect to find it but here we are!
@aihoshinoirl
@aihoshinoirl 10 месяцев назад
I’m also new here and looks like some great videos. :3
@Aikibiker1
@Aikibiker1 9 месяцев назад
Honestly that umbrella with the fan on it you didn't test sounds like the best idea. Shade and airflow in the same package.
@Asianandproudtobe
@Asianandproudtobe 10 месяцев назад
I think the small thing at 15:19 with the cooling plate is most effective if you put it on your pulse points. Running cold water over them also cools you down pretty quickly. It's just a temporary thing though
@killiansonck6278
@killiansonck6278 9 месяцев назад
That was my exact thought, I also run cold water on my wrists when it's hot.
@TheYoshieMaster
@TheYoshieMaster 9 месяцев назад
It looks similar to the Sony REON POCKET. That one is designed to be placed between your shoulder blades where there's a lot of circulation. There are accessories for it like a tshirt with a mesh to let it vent out the back, or a plastic holder that goes over your shoulders. You can hold it in place for a long time like that. The fact that you can barely feel the fans is a good thing! The fans blow out the hot exhaust air from the peltier, so you want to feel them as little as possible! I was in Japan in winter and I bought a reon pocket because I was just curious about it. I live in Australia so I thought it might be useful during my own summer. Sadly I have found that it's not hugely effective at cooling. But if you put it in heater mode it's actually very effective!
@Ursusskincare
@Ursusskincare 9 месяцев назад
Hi Yoshie i also a pocket reon gen 2 and as you mentioned it working really better for cold days than for cooling in summer.@@TheYoshieMaster
@thierryvt
@thierryvt 7 месяцев назад
it's probably a peltier type device so the fan he's hearing is not to cool down him but to cool down the device.
@captainobvious9188
@captainobvious9188 10 месяцев назад
The fan vests work especially awesome in the dry desert (Las Vegas) type heat. Keeps the intense sun off of you but ventilates out instead of just absorbing it against your body. It’s like being in the shade all the time, rather than like AC.
@larkreid7960
@larkreid7960 10 месяцев назад
If I recall correctly Japan's summers are humid. Which could explain why it didn't work for Norm.
@annaburch3200
@annaburch3200 10 месяцев назад
Yeah, I definitely think the dry vs. Humidity sorts of heat makes these items work differently.
@captainobvious9188
@captainobvious9188 10 месяцев назад
@@annaburch3200 Nothing really helps other than actual lower temperatures and humidity, but I would think keeping the sun’s heat directly off you and venting it out would still help a little.
@annaburch3200
@annaburch3200 10 месяцев назад
@@captainobvious9188 yeah. My husband was born in the CA high desert. They had a swamp cooler for his house. I remember the first time I visited in the summer, I washed my hair, stepped outside and it was dry. Lol!! I went to Vegas in 109° for a conference. The only time my eyeballs felt hot. 😄 We're in Seattle, so it's pretty mild, but we did get to 118° two summers ago. 🤪 That was not fun. We don't have AC. 🥵
@j134679
@j134679 9 месяцев назад
@@captainobvious9188 humid heat is way worse. With desert-type dry heat, you only need shade as the source of heat is only the sun (deserts are very cold at night). With humid tropical heat, it's just like you're being steamed. There is no escape aside from towels & spare clothes to change into midday.
@With_Me_JAPAN
@With_Me_JAPAN 10 месяцев назад
Japan used to avoid the summer heat by using wind chime, bamboo blinds, foldable fan etc..and now I realized how much creativity and technologies are used for summer tech! But your advice of carrying hand towel everywhere definitely helps I think! Hope you will actually utilize some of the items and enjoy your summer😆✨
@Chonky_boi265
@Chonky_boi265 10 месяцев назад
Yuka has entered the chat. Yay!
@aihoshinoirl
@aihoshinoirl 10 месяцев назад
omg!
@steemlenn8797
@steemlenn8797 10 месяцев назад
I always wondered if people get annoyed by the wind chime ^^
@RobotsRuleTheWorld
@RobotsRuleTheWorld 10 месяцев назад
The neck icer and the handheld one most likely work via a Peltier element/thermoelectric heat pump (basically one side heats up and the other cools down). The fan you hear is to cool the element inside, so that the metal part can get cold. Not sure how effective those can be in the full sun. 😅
@seshpenguin
@seshpenguin 10 месяцев назад
Yea, Peltier coolers do work for what they're designed for, but they are pretty inefficient and need a ton of power (and a big heatsink to handle the hot side, something like a PC CPU cooler in size). Basically, not gonna work in a portable form factor like those ones!
@consensus688
@consensus688 10 месяцев назад
yeah they are power hungry so very ineffective at that size
@Youssii
@Youssii 5 месяцев назад
Ice towels (or cool towels) that you wet and wring out are amazing. They protect you from the sun, you can wipe sweat away, and if it heats up it will cool down instantly if you just shake it out for a few seconds.
@fabbrains
@fabbrains 6 месяцев назад
Thank you for preserving Japanese history and tradition in this way. I'm very impressed. I was also taken care of by this shop. It makes me happy to be loved by people from other countries.
@gracesandford1274
@gracesandford1274 9 месяцев назад
Just arrived back from two weeks in Japan and the heat was no joke. I had no idea about the tech until I was in Japan and saw it everywhere. The free, promotional uchiwa you get at train stations worked better than any electric fan we tried. Also, stay hydrated! Pocari Sweat made us feel a lot better in the heat. Thanks for another great video, Norm! :)
@EyesforSkies
@EyesforSkies 10 месяцев назад
LPT, wet t-shirts/dunking your arms upto the shoulder works wonders for cooling! Evaporation is how the body tries to keep cool through sweat, supercharge this effect by just using water!
@jb0258jr
@jb0258jr 10 месяцев назад
The towel advice is something I'm going to take very seriously if I ever go to Japan in the summer
@TokyoLens
@TokyoLens 10 месяцев назад
100%
@j134679
@j134679 9 месяцев назад
& a spare shirt/underwear or 2
@Wasaled
@Wasaled 9 месяцев назад
I don't see why the whole point of your body sweating is to cool you down, that's why we sweat. There's a disease called Anhidrosis where a person is unable to sweat and it's potentially life threatening because of the inability to dissipate heat from the body. You shouldn't wipe sweat away unless you're drenched, all you're doing is making it worse for you if the whole point of you doing that is to cool down.
@Sepricotaku
@Sepricotaku 3 месяца назад
So I know it's 6 months old but it's good advice either way, not just in the summer I was there last year and almost none of the public restrooms have a way to dry your hands in them so carrying a towel is a must, in the summer, carry 2 lol.
@Curiouscrazy
@Curiouscrazy 10 месяцев назад
The heat is the reason why I've booked my trip to Japan in October! Hopefully much nicer weather. I already live in a tropical Asian (Singapore) country but we don't use any summer tech. Wonder why that is, since its regularly 38 deg c. We just live in air conditioning mostly LOL.
@TokyoLens
@TokyoLens 10 месяцев назад
smart choice lol
@Natural_Infinity
@Natural_Infinity 10 месяцев назад
same me too, coming from indonesia with always hot humid polluted weather i would only wanna go to japan during non summer season, but i still bring my foldable umbrella regardless because might need for rainy days
@cheeriox_6191
@cheeriox_6191 10 месяцев назад
Will also be going in october ahaha but from america LOL
@Curiouscrazy
@Curiouscrazy 10 месяцев назад
@@cheeriox_6191 NICE I will be in for the jidai matsuri in Kyoto! Have a good trip! Check out if you will be there during the dates of the jidai matsuri it looks amazing.
@EsotericBibleSecrets
@EsotericBibleSecrets 10 месяцев назад
I'm in America. I thought the seasons were reversed on the other side of the world. Shouldn't your summer be just starting in October?
@BigBodyBobProductions
@BigBodyBobProductions 10 месяцев назад
Literally every construction worker I have ever seen has those vests
@TokyoLens
@TokyoLens 10 месяцев назад
100% lol
@IndustrialFaith
@IndustrialFaith 9 месяцев назад
I was in Akihabara back in 1994 and it was just a giant gadget-filled swapmeet with storefronts. Glad to see it's spirit hasn't changed!
@youtubeyoutubeyoutube9961
@youtubeyoutubeyoutube9961 10 месяцев назад
Japans return system cracks me up when I think about people in America returning dried up Christmas trees in February back to Costco and getting full refunds.
@martinvalencia798
@martinvalencia798 10 месяцев назад
What I brought to Nagoya and Gifu a few weeks ago was a cooling towel and a portable clip fan. Worked fairly well.
@Zimgirgaz
@Zimgirgaz 10 месяцев назад
The second item (cool metal to the neck) was sold here in the US around the early to mid 90's. The theory was to apply cool to your carotid arteries at the neck in order to reduce your core temperature. Not enough surface area nor sufficient cooling to achieve the desired effect. Another one available at the time was a neck fan applying air for the same setup. The difference was water resevoirs (you fill) that act like a swamp cooler. Again, insufficient. Overall, I really liked this ep! You've confirmed the belt clip shirt cooler for me. Some are using it here in the Cali bay area.
@AngryDemonBowser
@AngryDemonBowser 10 месяцев назад
Even though i only experienced heat at around 33 degrees in Japan, I can't help but say that getting a cold bottle of water and putting it in an insulated bottle is a major 10 out of 10 especially when you pour some of the water on your wrist, it feels heavenly.
@The_Lone_Aesir
@The_Lone_Aesir 9 месяцев назад
I second this. Whenever I left my hotel room for the day I made sure my vacuum insulated bottle was filled with ice water.
@helvetiqa
@helvetiqa 10 месяцев назад
Towel, cooling wipes, taking lots of breaks to cool down, and lots of hydration! Cheap and effective. Also OMG that colorful bus you passed at @16:06 was SO FUN.
@whyamiwastingmytimeonthis
@whyamiwastingmytimeonthis 10 месяцев назад
And a sun-protective umbrella. Seriously, those are life-changing.
@SmallBlogV8
@SmallBlogV8 10 месяцев назад
Yeah I low key hoped he would tell us about that bus.
@KevinSchmidt-sj2rk
@KevinSchmidt-sj2rk 10 месяцев назад
This was a fun and enjoyable video. As odd as many of these items appear to me, it celebrates creativity to innovate, a willingness to take chances, and an openness to trying something different. Hope there is another video like this in the future.
@FioFirefox
@FioFirefox 10 месяцев назад
I can also vouch for the belt fan you showed. I have one which is identical to yours and it works surprisingly well when placed on the back of one’s belt.
@StormCrusher94
@StormCrusher94 10 месяцев назад
I've never experienced Japan's heat and humidity, but what I tend to do when it is hot and I do something outside a wet towel around the neck. The water evaporates and by laws of thermodynamics it gets cooler. What I'd might try is just having a parasol though, limiting direct exposure to the sun.
@kazik5785
@kazik5785 10 месяцев назад
Lack of evaporation is the biggest issue in the level of humidity there. If the water in the towel is cooler than the air, you get some heat transfer. Otherwise, you just get wet. Blocking the sun is a big help though.
@lostinthemeta9266
@lostinthemeta9266 10 месяцев назад
The tech I use is..... just not going to Japan in the summer. I lived there for a few years a while back. I think the experience permanently increased my tolerance to heat; I am perfectly comfortable in rooms others find unbearably hot.
@southcoastinventors6583
@southcoastinventors6583 10 месяцев назад
North Hokkaido could work
@mgancarzjr
@mgancarzjr 10 месяцев назад
Terrible advice! Everyone should visit in July and stay away in March/April.
@--Paws--
@--Paws-- 10 месяцев назад
I was actually hoping for a video like this; thank you for making it. I wasn't expecting it to be specifically Japanese but a summer-tech list of things from anywhere.
@jpizzleforizzle
@jpizzleforizzle Месяц назад
As an Arizona resident of a little more than 3 years, i can say there's not much you can you. 1. With low humidity, evaporative cooling shirts and hats are ok if you can keep them wet. 2. Lightweight clothing, hats, umbrella, sunscreen. 3. Stay hydrated. 4. Build a tolerance for heat, but always be mindful of heat exhaustion symptoms.
@user-py7mz8oj7o
@user-py7mz8oj7o 10 месяцев назад
you need to use the included usb charger for the neck fan. It uses an older standard that newer cables usually don't support.
@jhmdesign
@jhmdesign 10 месяцев назад
We were in Tokyo the past two weeks and it was wildly hot. Cooling wipes helped now and again but it was just awful out. The fans + cooling rings seemed to be the most popular by far.
@jakeconnelly2441
@jakeconnelly2441 10 месяцев назад
Fun fact: Logitech in Japan is actually branded Logicool because there was already a company using Logitech when they started business in Japan.
@fleetingimmersion
@fleetingimmersion 10 месяцев назад
This is the comment I was looking for, because I worked at an electronics store for many years and that was absolutely Logitech's packaging. Thanks for the fun fact.
@stelioshz
@stelioshz 10 месяцев назад
Those things are getting more and more popular outside of Japan (and some asian countries), and I'm really happy for that! As someone who is really strugling with the summer heat, I'm thinking getting one of these fans, but the world would look me strangely haha Hope you are great Norm! Stay hydrated!!
@kellimshaver
@kellimshaver 10 месяцев назад
My son's been vending at a lot of outdoor shows this summer. We kept it simple with the "cooling tech" - a couple of Frogg Togg cooling towels and an Igloo cooler of ice water to occasionally dunk them in. It works great.
@BathoryBat
@BathoryBat 10 месяцев назад
I started working in a warehouse/factory setting again this year, and it has me walking around outside (in florida) several times a day (which makes me want to cry with how hot it is), and the only thing I've tried so far that has helped is wearing a linen/cotton blend shirt. Full linen would be better, but full linen is also expensive. Linen is just a very absorbent material, so you don't end up feeling quite so sticky
@sarahramos2919
@sarahramos2919 10 месяцев назад
I couldn’t help but laugh a the mini emotional rollercoaster from the multiple endings. Each one was better than the last. 😆 Always carrying a towel is by far the best takeaway, literally and figuratively, from my most recent trip to Japan. Even using it stateside as I melt into a puddle in Kentucky surrounded by the dulcet sound of screeching cicadas. Thank you for another great video! Take care!
@Lux-hp6ht
@Lux-hp6ht 10 месяцев назад
So happy I got to meet you when you were recording this! You inspired me to come to Japan! Meeting you on my first day in Tokyo was a great way to start it off! Thank you for the continued amazing content
@callnext9314
@callnext9314 10 месяцев назад
omg. thank you so much for testing all of those gadgets!! i was tempted by them but didn't think they actually worked. now i know!
@lydiakies9053
@lydiakies9053 10 месяцев назад
I have a "cooling towel", but honestly, what has worked best for me is a wet bandana. Tie it on my head, or around my neck like a girl scout..... It's washable, reusable. Also, creating my own shade with an umbrella is just classy.
@bork0992
@bork0992 10 месяцев назад
It's nice to see a lot of different options (wished some worked a little better!). It's about 43C in Florida this upcoming week and there's not a whole lot of cooling tech in stores. I borrowed someone's neck fan for some yard work and it actually worked surprisingly well (not as well as I wished though). Will be looking into that shirt fan
@nightlyoko626
@nightlyoko626 10 месяцев назад
Also dying in Florida I hate it here lmao
@JZHassan
@JZHassan 10 месяцев назад
I wanted to try the Makita brand fan vests/coats I saw some construction guys in Japan wearing when we were in Kyoto a few years ago. Those things are probably nuts. I work in a hot indoor environment so I don't have the sun to contend with but the temp often goes up to 95-100F.
@jeanifertsukamoto1320
@jeanifertsukamoto1320 10 месяцев назад
I was in Japan in July. We used a cooling neck towel with a fan and an umbrella at Disney Sea. It made the day much better.
@usamaepekonis
@usamaepekonis 10 месяцев назад
This is such a cool video. I am such a huge fan
@TokyoLens
@TokyoLens 10 месяцев назад
thanks!! In the hot summer, we need huge fans lol
@ZakkieVR
@ZakkieVR 10 месяцев назад
I had a feeling that clip on waist fan would be a good option, easy to attach and simply bows air up into your shirt! I imagine the more expensive vests are actually quite good too
@brokfan4eva
@brokfan4eva 10 месяцев назад
we had a bad week of hot weather where we were in similar temps (we tend to get higher with the heat index, one day it felt like 114F, and the humidity gets to nearly 100% which makes it feel sticky, moist and so uncomfortable being outside for more than a minute). the heat streak broke last weekend, and it's been unseasonably cool (temps in the low to mid 70's), and raining a lot but we desperately need the rain for the crops. I hope you are drinking lots of water and taking breaks in cool areas when you go out and about Tokyo!
@CoversbyPatYam
@CoversbyPatYam 9 месяцев назад
I wanna go back to this video if ever I encounter summer in Japan. Here in the Philippines, it's very humid and feels like summer almost all year round, especially from March-May
@yossisureta2578
@yossisureta2578 10 месяцев назад
Towel😂😂😂 Love your sense of humor!! Another fun video❤ Hope you stay safe since it has been crazy hot all around world again this year💦thank you for all your hard works always🤲🏻
@Z3R0FiR3
@Z3R0FiR3 10 месяцев назад
I recently bought one of those bladeless neck fans (like the one you had that didnt charge) on amazon and I gotta say it works... decently. I work in a laundry where it's 90+ Degrees Fahrenheit all throughout the summer and the fan on medium to high setting makes things slightly better. It's no industrial sized fan in your face cool, but it feels like wind in your face during a car ride with the windows down.
@donutmon
@donutmon 9 месяцев назад
the neck hoop is actually very good in in Canada because it's not usually hot enough that the material melts so it stays cool-ish most of the time XD Thank you so much for trying this; I've always wondered how well these all work given how many different designs they got
@ThisOrThat13
@ThisOrThat13 10 месяцев назад
I love episodes like this. My first taste of Japan as a child. My Mom gave me a book The Bug Bento Box of Unuseless Japanese Inventions. Been hooked ever since.
@xenoliving3951
@xenoliving3951 10 месяцев назад
THANK YOU SO MUCH FOR THIS VIDEO. As someone who can't get throughout winter here without a heated vest, I was very curious about those cooling vests.
@hinchlikescake7592
@hinchlikescake7592 Месяц назад
Umbrella is so underrated when the sun is out and is intense. In asia its pretty normal to see that, whereas elsewhere.. it may looks a little odd. It blocks out heat and protects skin from harmful UV. I also have a lot of portable fans and the most effective one I found is the one focusing on the core. I use the Gongtian (quite a big brand in HK) blower fan and have it dumping air up to me under my shirt; like the one you have, and it works really well. Even with direct sunlight, 30C plus with crazy humidity, it makes it much more bearable. Drinking loads of cold liquids helps as well.
@mitch-zf5cz
@mitch-zf5cz 9 месяцев назад
The little fan that goes up your shirt seems so good, nice and simple, nothing fancy and it works
@minuteofyourtime
@minuteofyourtime 9 месяцев назад
I was in Japan twice this summer (Tokyo in July, Osaka, Kyoto and Nara in August) I can confirm that nothing will ever work. I too bought several fans, neck thingy and the neck ice too. Anything with a fan will just blow hot air so it is essentially cooking you under the sun. They will cool you fast inside the train or mall. The neck Ice......works for a few mins but the heat will melt it fast and it will be extra weight on your sweaty neck very fast. :)
@WhiteWulfe
@WhiteWulfe 10 месяцев назад
Depending on how long they last, I could see those belt clip fans being insanely useful as a delivery driver. Being able to clip something and have it blow cool air along my back (or even just side) would be quite the treat, as we spend half the day outside of the air conditioned cab of our Hinos (or worse, in the polytop back of our trucks, which are great at trapping heat inside)
@hellraizer44
@hellraizer44 10 месяцев назад
I've tried the neck fan, the neck fan with a cooling plate and the fan that goes under your shirt. I've used them for a week or so, it's better than nothing but to be honest a hat or umbrella with a portable handheld fan is probably the better option. I did got a compliment when somebody thought the neck fan with the cooling plate was a headphone.
@chrism7395
@chrism7395 10 месяцев назад
Waggling your fingers in cool or room temperature (*not cold*) water is surprisingly effective at cooling down. Your fingers act like radiators cooling your blood which then goes back into your body, helping to cool your core. It's important to ensure that the water isn't too cold relative to the outside air or your body will think it's fallen in an ice lake and reduce blood flow to your extremities to try and prevent an imaginary hypothermia/frostbite risk.
@kathrynlebda780
@kathrynlebda780 9 месяцев назад
"On. Slightly more on. And aggressive" is my new favorite way to rate items 😂 I would totally try the back fan. SWEAT TOWEL FOR THE WIN. When my sister visted me I greated her at the airport with a hand towel and we used it the entire time we were in Shikoku. We still joke about it 🤣
@NKunihisa
@NKunihisa 10 месяцев назад
My favorite summer tech items are the cooling bedding. I brought them back with me to the states and I use them every summer. I picked them up at Nitori ages ago but they still keep me cool every summer
@GinaHara
@GinaHara 10 месяцев назад
I love the ice ring, you do need to leave it in the freezer for several hours. But it makes a huge difference cooling down your veins in your neck. Also, a UV blocking umbrella is game changer for sure!!
@ValkyrieTiara
@ValkyrieTiara 9 месяцев назад
yeah I was definitely thinking Norm didn't leave it in the freezer long enough, and then he waited until after he was out in the heat for a while before he tried it. Not surprised it didn't work.
@nicekit
@nicekit 9 месяцев назад
i used to use this 'ice towel' basically it is just special fabric towel that when it is 'wet' it will give out a cooling sensation but doesnt give out wet patches on your clothing :D
@chinwei87
@chinwei87 10 месяцев назад
Thanks for sacrificing yourself to make this video!! I was really intrigued by the vest thing thankfully you tested out the effectiveness of it.. I work outdoors and I have a neck fan, portable fan (slightly bigger) and also handkerchief on standby
@AnthonyStJames-yn8nr
@AnthonyStJames-yn8nr 10 месяцев назад
These portable cooling devices are interesting, thanks for testing them out to satisfy our curiosity, Norm! stay cool! Coming from Southeast Asia where summers are more punishing, people just tend to use umbrellas with UV protection, folding fans and good old ice cold water. Those three things are our proven and tested portable cooling tech. It really baffles me to see in the news that people are walking outside in the midday sun without any umbrella and are overdressed.
@samanthalst
@samanthalst 10 месяцев назад
Norm the entire video: "And I feel--nothing" 😂 Another gem from Norm; the dedication in exposing yourself to the 40 deg for this video is ✨chef's kiss✨
@kevinluff5254
@kevinluff5254 10 месяцев назад
Can only imagine how warm it is in July / August. Was hot enough in June when I was there. An umbrella / hat and cloth are probably the best bets... sometimes simple is the way forward 🙂
@fresh_rage
@fresh_rage 10 месяцев назад
Thank you so much for testing all of this stuff! I WAS wondering what i should order online to fight the heat and humidy and it does seem like nothing can be done outside besides suffering 😀👌
@michaelgmail5968
@michaelgmail5968 10 месяцев назад
loose thin layers are the best method, keeps the sun off, and when your sweat sticks to the clothing, it stays to your body, conveying the heat away from you
@jfdewoluwe
@jfdewoluwe 10 месяцев назад
I bought a hand fan and it's not too bad. The best is a small towel that you wrap around a cold bottle of water and you refresh when you have a chance plus frequent trip to stores with airco :)
@auberginebear
@auberginebear 10 месяцев назад
I like the pocket fan for under the shirt, but I'm very interested in the cooler neck ring that activates in water. On my current budget, the only cooling device I could afford this year is a folding fan with a lovely purple flower and butterfly motif, but if I were in Japan, I'd be more likely to get an umbrella with a fan attached, although only once I no longer need a walker.
@peehandshihtzu
@peehandshihtzu 10 месяцев назад
Something I discovered this year is cooling uv resistant shirts. They are really made to block or cover your skin and protect from uv but are really thin and breathable. They really have a nice breezy effect because they enable enhanced evaporative cooling of your skin as you perspire. I was skeptical but honestly haven't gone 1 day this summer without wearing one. I originally got them for sleeping in but find myself with a whole stack of them now for everyday use. Also not getting sunburnt is nice. Look up UPF 50+ UV sun protection clothes. :)
@dianechaniewski293
@dianechaniewski293 9 месяцев назад
Hi Norm, this was great (as always)! Thanks for sharing Japan's summer tech with us. I'm glad that at least one thing was effective. I can't wait for your next video. Thanks for all you do. :)
@SireShib
@SireShib 10 месяцев назад
at 8:13 its so nice to see you really kept the stuff from that super tiny electronics store once they closed. 💕💕
@WayneHendersonVO
@WayneHendersonVO 10 месяцев назад
Thanks Norm! Informative and entertaining as always.
@elflass5544
@elflass5544 10 месяцев назад
Having lived in a hot climate for so long, it was interesting to see all these and how functional/not they were. I definitely always carried (& still sometimes do) a parasol when outdoors; everyone always commented on it, but it wasn’t just for style, it was for shade at outdoor events or when I used to walk in the downtown area of my town. It’s cool that so many of these devices are USB charge not battery powered! Stay cool and hydrate, Norm!
@michaels3003
@michaels3003 9 месяцев назад
This is what the ☂️ was originally invented for, some relief from the sun, not from rain.
@IshaanKumar
@IshaanKumar 10 месяцев назад
What a fun insightful video! Thank for doing the hard work and sharing this with us!
@Ferhernando
@Ferhernando 9 месяцев назад
As someone who lives where it gets very hot in the summer like over 40c on the regular I find it funny but interesting that so much technology goes into this issue but the best solutions are the simplest: light bright airy clothing non polyester, pref a size up so it is loose, shorts or a skirt, and a big hat or umbrella. 😄
@Sunila_DragonladyCH
@Sunila_DragonladyCH 9 месяцев назад
One thing that works great unless you are in a very humid place are these towels that people use for sports, like jogging or in gyms. You humidify them and the fast evaporation will be really refreshing. Otherwise, I always carry an umbrella and I now have a small handheld fan that really saved me in concerts or in meetings
@blortmeister
@blortmeister 10 месяцев назад
Thanks! I've always kinda wondered about some of this stuff. Good to get a review.
@jomarlanthonyejim6018
@jomarlanthonyejim6018 10 месяцев назад
Ahhh tokyo looks so pretty in the Summer. As a person living in the Philippines, I can imagine how scorching hot is the summer there tho.
@Pawelism
@Pawelism 10 месяцев назад
I think the fan in the last 'cooling plate' device is to expell the heat, rathen than cool you off. If it's something like a seebeck / peltier device, it works to make one side cool and one side hot so the fan is likely just meant to control the temperature of the 'hot' side.
@thestringquartetcompany
@thestringquartetcompany Месяц назад
Possibly, the fan jackets vary in quality and effectiveness, depending on how much you spend. Some are expensive! Another option is a vest with phase change material, or make your own, with a fishing vest and insert cooling packets in all the pockets.
@magicarp79
@magicarp79 9 месяцев назад
Back in July, I only brought UV parasol and a portable mini fan. Those two actually worked.
@ThisChaoticKnight
@ThisChaoticKnight 10 месяцев назад
I'd say a towel, hand fan and an umbrella is my go to for hot sunny days. Nothing like some personal portable shade. Also, linnen clothes are the best for hot weather. It wicks away moisture but still stays cool. Anything polyester is death.
@user-py7mz8oj7o
@user-py7mz8oj7o 10 месяцев назад
you're not supposed to freeze the plastic neck ring. It's supposed to cool you off as it changes from solid to liquid at 28°
@perdomot
@perdomot 10 месяцев назад
Love seeing the electronics stores as I always spend a lot of time there ❤
@chrisgrey7904
@chrisgrey7904 10 месяцев назад
That cold plate one might be one id be tempted to pick up. One of the tips I was given for dealing with heat was to run cold water on your wrists and its rather effective, I imagine the cold plate would work kind of similarly.
@japanese-spider-man
@japanese-spider-man 10 месяцев назад
This is a very useful item for people who work outside for long periods of time, as it prevents the air inside clothes from becoming a sauna by pushing out the air heated by body heat, rather than making the air cooler like air conditioning. Other products also use vaporization heat to lower the temperature, so they do not produce cold air as well, but rather prevent the temperature from rising.If you are expecting something like an air conditioner, you may be disappointed, but as a heat stroke countermeasure, it is less likely to get hotter than your body temperature, so it is effective to a certain extent.This is the reason why many construction workers and people who work outside wear them. I've heard that fewer people are collapsing from heat stroke than ever before. And as mentioned in the video, it is very much dependent on the performance of the battery and fan, so the cheaper the item is, the less effective it will be.
@ShadowStalker2009
@ShadowStalker2009 10 месяцев назад
As someone who works outside, specially in this summer heat. A video like this is great info. Definitely gna be checking out that belt fan.
@chuzzthefuzz1908
@chuzzthefuzz1908 9 месяцев назад
Sitting in the height of New Zealand winter, your video doesn’t give me anything I need, except I love watching you!
@monkeywentbananas
@monkeywentbananas 6 месяцев назад
What I love the most about Japanese culture is You can still display your wares in front of Your shop and people don't steal them! There's still hope for humanity!
@rachelmalley-smith5654
@rachelmalley-smith5654 10 месяцев назад
Never been to Japan, but in the UK we hit 40°c last year...not good in a country where air con only mainly exists in supermarkets! The thing i found to work best was a UV protection Golfing umbrella... instant shade and heat repellant, it was a godsend!
@southcoastinventors6583
@southcoastinventors6583 10 месяцев назад
Is it a electricity cost thing or environmental nonsense
@DavidCruickshank
@DavidCruickshank 10 месяцев назад
@@southcoastinventors6583 Neither. Why would a historically temperate country with cool summers invest in air con? Climate change is quickly heating up the country and the country is being very slow to act.
@southcoastinventors6583
@southcoastinventors6583 10 месяцев назад
@@DavidCruickshank There probably hasn't been cool summers in Japan since the last ice age, summer has always been hot unless you live in Northern Hokkaido. Cities heat up the climate more than anything else that and the poor insulation present in most homes, climate change really has nothing to do with why people aren't using air conditioning
@gur262
@gur262 9 месяцев назад
​@@southcoastinventors6583it's similar in Germany. Some newer houses have ac most don't. Electricity costs money and iif there's no ac it's not Like you could upgrade too easily. Would have to have the ac snorkel out the window. Can't close it then. Or gotta make a cover...then the temptation to actually do that is over n I was using a big fan instead.
@ReneNielsen72
@ReneNielsen72 10 месяцев назад
The fan that clips on to the belt,was my favorite from the get go.
@hellokane
@hellokane 8 месяцев назад
I spent 3 weeks in Japan in August, and the best thing ever were these Uniqlo Airism Mesh tees that I bought in Uniqlo Canada. They're kinda sneaky see-through, but you don't notice it when it's on your torso. Dries super fast, unless you completely saturate it (as with pretty much any shirt), but it dries in an instant when you get into the AC. Also, wisdom of umbrellas. Carry your shade with you.
@GentHoChan
@GentHoChan 9 месяцев назад
lol i literally just took off the exact black fan you reviewed the best. i ride with it on my back every day as i commute by bicycle to work. it's pretty solid and cheap too
@cassie.m.0723
@cassie.m.0723 8 месяцев назад
#1 cheapest and easiest way to cool down; loose linen or cotton clothes that covers your skin to reduce direct sun exposure, sun sleeves, umbrella for portable shade, a wet cloth around your neck to help cool your blood as it goes through those two big arteries. It may feel contradictory to out on more clothes and exposed less skin when it's hot out, but if the clothes is loose amd breathable, being fully covered actually helps to keep you cooler. Direct sun exposure is the fastest way to get badly overheated amd burned
@TokyoLens
@TokyoLens 8 месяцев назад
none of that does anything in extreme humidity
@eh9618
@eh9618 9 месяцев назад
honestly, my advice coming from someone living in the tropics.. bring an umbrella for shade, make sure it's bright colored so it doesn't absorb heat faster from the sunlight, and bright loose and baggy clothing, enough for air to move freely through your clothing while also covering your skin to avoid directly sunlight.. and also water and sunscreen, you don't want to increase your risk of skin cancer or dehydration
@PouncingAnt
@PouncingAnt 9 месяцев назад
Most effective thing is still a damp cloth. Better with a fan too. It's not that often that it's so humid in Tokyo that evaporative cooling stops working* . But when it does, grab a frozen bottle of drink or a Coolish at a convenience store and wrap the cloth around it. If the cloth feels too warm usually flapping it around a little cools it considerably. The cloth will also prevent sunburn on your neck. * even at 70pc it seems useful to me, and humidity doesn't so frequently top that while temperatures are above 32 or so.
@brittani_boo
@brittani_boo 9 месяцев назад
This was super insightful to watch. Here in Florida the heat index has read as hot as 111º F, it's humid, and I have thick hair. I can't stay a shut in all summer! Would love to try out one of the products you tested this year to stay cool outside. Thanks Norm! : )
@grandor8852
@grandor8852 9 месяцев назад
The neck fan you return is a good type of cooling gadget. I bought one for this summer and is working great, costing me around $22 CAD
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