Extremely fascinating to see how powerful the heat is. At 0:25, you can see the former doll's left eye, literally melting from the atomic bomb's flash before being blasted from the subsequent shockwave. That's fucking metal.
These dummies didn't duck and cover. I hope we get a 4K remaster of the entire fisheye shot of this test with the fireball on the left and a telephone wire/some electrical equipment in front.
@@KillThad Ummm, please do explain what camera was invented at that time that had the ability to film from miles away with such clarity? Also, maybe you know why the house doesn't actually get obliterated? If you notice the pieces of wood that make up the house do not lose their shape at all. Everything breaks along the hinges and nothing bows or snaps. Meaning, a 2x4 (that actually looks like a miniature, because the whole thing was fake af) remains a 2x4 after the explosion. How is that possible?
lol dude these videos are fake and were desinged to scare Russia. do you really believe a house gets knocked over but not telephone poles right beside it? @@KillThad
I'm almost positive I learned what the set-up would roughly look like from watching THIS CHANNEL! Lights, camera, etc., all placed in an enclosure with acrylic or plastic front, then that's all placed behind something more concrete. In this example I'd guess actual concrete ;). Not trying to ruin the party, I'm happy to watch/re-watch some of the best "clips" anytime!
@@GoPoundSalt I sat looking at your comment for a minute and got nowhere. Simply cannot make heads or tails of it. All I can tell is you're attempting to say and/or imply..."something". But that something is impossible to decipher. Because as I'm sure you understand, talking like this is NOT like being face-to-face. Here on YT I am unable to receive any social cues from you that might hint at your (slightest) meaning. Or maybe it's simpler than that, and when you hit *send* you thought I would be able to read your mind. Alas I cannot. Although, perhaps when I go and "work for the government" I'll get access to that kind of tech. Of course I will deny it exists, duh. Simple job security! Well now that I've hopefully cleared-up how you left me with Nothing to go on, could you please try again & just state plainly what you mean? I'm a big boy, I'm certain I can handle whatever it is that you find such a big deal. Maybe it's how dumb I am, or how I'm part of "the system", or how you can't believe how wrong I was in my description, etc. Trust me I can take it, gimme whatcha got. Only please don't respond asking me to go "poud" salt, you would only confuse me more!
@@bryanguzik He's implying that the footage is faked, (part of a wider conspiracy theory that nukes themselves are fake) and that you're a gullible rube for parroting the government's lines. Ignore him.
@@maksphoto78 arghhh. you tease. I had to use maths from your clue 🙂 So putting the two GPS locations into the interwebs gives the ground distance between the explosion and house as 3333m. Quite close. Quite a lot of damage!
Ooof you can see the swaying towards the outside of the house as all the oxygen is sucked out and burned up and before the manikins can melt BOOM. Terrifying.
What are you talking about? That movie doesn't exist, no one never ever made an Indiana Jones 4, and since it doesn't exist no one should ever talk about it. /jk it wasn't that bad but still.
It feels like this was less of an experiment to see what happens to a house during an atomic strike and more an advertisement for the cameras and equipment.
See? This the type of bs that.. y’know what? I’m not even gonna start but what type of material is that house built with cause the thing is STILL standing after that obliterating blast 🤣
Think of it like a hurricane. Houses and objects with a large surface area will be picked up but poles and sturdy concrete constructions will stay in place.
I've seen this footage used in a variety of ways and I think I must have thought they switched to a different camera someplace else when house gets blown away.
Trashed by the Apple-2 device test in a joint AEC and Civil Defense program, called Operation Cue. Rambler home mannequins were donated by JCPenney stores in Nevada.
@nateb69 I believe there were some cinder-block buildings in this test (and in other weapon-effect tests) ... close in, the walls were partially knocked down; further away the windows were blown in and the roof was partially blown off, but the walls stood. Not sure whether any red brick and mortar buildings were tested, though.
@@cliffcannon That's some good info 👍 Modern day nukes would certainly do the job near the main blast radius. I guess the Beirut explosion was also a bit of a glimpse into how a nuke would affect a city centre (despite only being a fraction of the power from a nuke).
@Atomcentral i want to buy th 4k UHD version of Trinity and Beyond, but im worried about not being able to actually download it. is that possible? edit:BOUGHT IT!!! you can choose any resolution to download as an mp4 file. i watched in 2k HDR on my 4k tv from a flash drive and i was truly transfixed. when my dad comes over, we're getting wasted and watching together.
Any practical effects specialist would immediately recognize that this is a miniature house. Look how there is no deviation in the design of the individual pieces of wood. And look how the wood pieces that make up the house remain fully intact after the "obliteration". The only thing that was obliterated was the roof.
@@dredwick you can be 5 miles away from atomic blast and watch the fucking thing. They gave the media tour of the blast site, and then blew it the fuck up in front of the media.