I got magic sand wet with a vacuum chamber See the full video here: • Can Magic Sand Get Wet... Subscribe to my main channel here: / @theactionlab #shorts
Bro is really out here neutralizing anomalies Edit: I like how RU-vid keeps giving me notifications saying "somebody liked your comment." Like, yeah, a couple people did.
Imagine this guy at 6 years old gets in an argument with a kid at his birthday party, he takes the kids magic sand and sticks it in the vacuum chamber to unmagic the sand
lol, just leaves it in the kiddy pool for the other kid to figure out on their own. The "wtf" look on that kids face. Definitely gonna grow up believing that everything around is a Lie!!
It's not really wet at the end, that's why it's crumbling instead of clumping like sand does when it gets wet. Nothing binding. The sand isn't absorbing the water, it's just no longer holding the air. If you take it out of the water, pretty sure it will still be normal sand.
I'm not sure about that. Regular sand doesn't clump together when completely submerged. It looks just like the video. Wet sand outside of water clumps together due to the water clinging on the outside of the grains, not because the tiny rocks are absorbing anything. Sand is just tiny quartz crystals after all. I do wish he had pulled it out at the end. I want to know if it can regain its hydrophobia.
@@Mathenaut I'm not trying to disagree with any further knowledge you have on the subject, just that your explanation didn't make sense to me. I don't think, from this video alone, we can tell if the vacuum chamber turned it into regular sand or not. He just doesn't show enough of it's new or old properties. Do you know why magic sand is hydrophobic? I haven't found a good explanation yet. Edit: typo
@@MaskedReviews It's just sand mixed with a hydrophobic compound that binds at the molecular level. It literally can not absorb water, even if there is no air around.
*”Wet.”* 209 likes in 10months It’s been 2 years. 284 likes and I am 10 (turning 11 this Dec. 15). Back then, I didn’t know what ‘wet’ meant but I do know, soo
I bet you this guy would be a blast with young children. "Look! I broke your science toy! Your magic sand is now just regular sand! Want to see how many other of your toys I can break?" (Loud crying ensues)
The magic sand will be magic again as soon as he takes it out of the water. He didn’t destroy the hydrophobicity. Once it has access to more air, it will be dry again.
@@Paul_Bedford its said that the human(also depening on age) is based of 50-80% water and I just went with the highest rate, because I feel like a saggy jellyfish everyday
Being hydrophobic is perfectly reasonable. Every year approximately 320,000 people are killed by water. Water also spreads disease, and if you include water borne disease deaths, that number skyrockets into the millions every year. How many people does sand kill?
“It is now wet” Like he’s been waiting since he was a child, biding his time so he could finally conquer the magic sand. Yes…yes, it is now wet, he can finally rest, rest among the wet sand.
If it were fully “dried,” it would return to its original properties. The hydrophobia didn’t exactly disappear with the vacuum, but a lot of its effect did, surrounding the sand with water. The water is not electrostaticly bound to the sand, thus not “wet”
It is still hydrophobic, it just couldnt keep the air around it anymore in the vacuum. If it gets into contact with air then it can get its air layer back.