I see if it is possible to make a can out of pure elemental tin and if it can be used for canning. Help me make videos by donating here: / codyslab Follow me on Facebook: / codydonreeder SubReddit: / codyslab
vincent dude, calm the fuck down. Stop being such a pompous prick. We all know what atomic numbers are because we all went through middle school. We were making a joke and the joke was funny until you decided to show up.
Indubitably, yes. Quite the factitious inquiry i would outmost recant myself. Fair played Good Sir, have a quaint day... (Now imagine a group a 1800's Brits sitting in a pub with their top hats and dressed proper, having a smoke(pipe of course) stating random facts, and the rest of the group chimes in with their own versions of some ridiculous way of saying, "yes"... Thats what was going through my head...lol). 🎩Good Day🎩
This is the only video on RU-vid to demonstrate authentic "tin foil" to create a "tin can" that is opened by "tin snips." And true solder "tinning." :)
I feel like I need a complete tour of your pantry... those jars could be salt, pepper, or garlic, but knowing you they could also be some rare isotope of adamantium held in suspension...
cody is breaking new ground here, making thick tin foil out of actual tin, using tin snips to cut actual tin, and making a tin can out of 100% tin! what an absolute mad lad!
The rest of the world: it would be cool to grow my own food and not used canned stuff. Cody: I made my own can and put veggies inside that I grew myself.
Funny, but if you think about it, this isn't REALLY the rest of the world. Not long ago, it was extremely commonplace to grow your veggies and can them for the winter. Most people used mason jars around here (for the ease of sealing them), but others would take old food cans and just re-seal them. It's not as common as it used to be, but it still goes on today. My grandparents still can most of their garden crops, and my parents do as well. I can any green beans I manage to grow out on my balcony. So, what Cody did was very... "Cody" (and I love him for it), but it's really not that far out there!
yeah, i live in butfuck florida, so it's easier to grow our own shit and trade with neighbors than to drive hours to wallmart, so we grow our own. i grow starfruit, most common veggies, bok choi, and i grow a vaariety of peppers to make my own hot sauce for my neighborhood. i also grow beefsteak tomatoes, cabbage, okra, and cucumbers for pickling
That's not really why Joseph. It's the problem of embrittlement the metals used in an engine block. You wind up having to mix it with something like gasoline just to combat that effect. The cleanest additive I could find when experimenting with lawnmower engines running hydrogen was Eucalyptus Oil, which has the added benefit of cleaning the engine and a pleasant mint like aroma when burning. However nothing stems the problem off enough for it to be a viable replacement for fossil fuels.
HI electronicsNmore, you are one of my very first subscriptions when i first discovered and began to use You Tube. Still watching your vids as they come out, awesome work.
I don’t really know why but I find Cody’s videos wholesome and fulfilling, making my life complete. Like the can looks so crappy and it’s so basic but it’s really beautiful to see it being made from scratch and the thought that’s gone behind making it in the first place. Even down to seeing how he lives his live, it truly makes a good example of the alternative way to live. I fucking love Cody’s Lab 🤘
The world needs as many first-principles thinkers and tinkerers as it can get. Cody's deep curiosity and seemingly boundless energy is an inspiration to everyone who tries to keep the kid alive inside..
Cutting wire, metal and other random things that are usually made of not-tin simply because aluminium and steel is more commonly used for stuff these days.
Cody, instead of eating the beans in a year, may I suggest you make a video testing them for botulism? Beans are an excellent medium for growing one of earth's most poisonous compounds. Boiling the beans next year prior to eating them should denature or detoxify the botulism, however.
soulassassin0g I really enjoy his farming videos and I’m looking forward to the next one. I think that’s because it is a video series with a long continuity, similar to his mine videos.
Err it is a farm isn't it? Depends where he is, his family has a farm where most of his early videos were done, but I think he lives in town when he is studying, but he still does a lot of filming on the farm/ranch/mine, whatever it is.
well its just a mass of land thats why he did the mining videos since the mine is part of his ranch i think you'd maybe call it he has a vast bit of fielding to his family i think his dad must own the land but cody works on it aswell as his videos
Cool! It’s a tiny version of the huge tandem cold rolling mill I operate at my job. We roll aluminum coils for the building and construction markets, along with license plates, commercial cookware, and other stuff. In fact, there’s more than a 75% chance that I rolled the license plate on your car down to the final gauge. We have most of the state government contracts for license plate coil in the US. 👍🏻👍🏻
Sometimes I cry about how pure this channel is. I've been watching you since I was 13 and it still entertains me. Honestly you are my favorite channel .
That was very cool thanks for sharing! Makes you really appreciate that while it can be done this way (and that is awesome) that we don't have too do it by hand anymore. Modern conveniences are so often over looked and underappreciated until we know all that it would take to recreate them from scratch.
PKMartin But what about cinching lead pipes with a lead pipe-cinch? How much lead can a lead pipe-cinch cinch if a lead cinch can cinch lead? Or, transporting molten lead? How much lead can a lead pipe pipe if a lead pipe can pipe lead?
First thing I thought of when I saw it. That ingot he made before was crying out to be flattened. Heck, why not make a gold can too? Pretty sure that would have gotten enough views to pay for any losses. ; )
I'm sure we could calculate it. Pretty damn long, but limited by the minimum thickness of the roller setup. If you continue with manual pounding, apparently gold leaf can be as thin as a few atoms thick.
What's is the reduction on the gear train? Motorheads watch this channel too, so you can't leave us hanging on stuff like that. Also, doing a big chunk of gold would be cool.
Im pretty sure this is the first video i ever saw of cody. I got hooked right away even tho im d7mb and dont understand most of what he says. But his channel is awesome.
It comes from the old latin name : stannum (Sn). Lead was plumbum (Pb). Sodium was natrium (Na). Potassium was kalium (K). Antimony was Stibnite or something like that (Sb). Tungsten was wolfram (W). Iron is ferum (Fe). Gold is aurum (Au). Silver is argentyrum maybe (Ag). Mercury is hydrargyrum (Hg). Copper is cupprous or something like that (Cu).
Drunken Hobo but nihonium is its Japanese name. The English just took it over. I see what you’re saying don’t worry but still you get what I’m saying right?
Dear Cody’s lab, Cody could you please make a updated version of your lead acid battery video and try and make a small battery, i don’t know like a(n) AA sized or at least a 9 volt sized (doesn’t have to be 9v just the same size like a single small cell). I think this could be a cool Challenge but you can do it and I really liked your other lead acid battery videos you made. Thanks
" as a cool experiment " , it has been done before, as is been done industrially better than cody could do with his current equipment. He has more interesting projects to fill his time with, and don't take as rudely as i'm making it.
Coworker who is trimming their nails in the office while simultaneously loudly clicking one of those foam disc shooters, complained about the three seconds of torch noise...
He has a lot of gold and a gold coffee cup is way more than enough. It is also recyclable. The only problem is how to weld gold. Maybe melting it like he has done with tin?
Wonder when folded joints were first made air tight. nice work on the pure tin. cuts like lead. .Great Pantry. Lacking hoof clippers in my kitchen but now I see the use I will buy my parents some .always a pleasure to watch.
Depends, if your roller has only one driven wheel it has a slight bias to stretch that side more. If your roller has both rollers geared to turn together then you shouldn't have to flip the material if they are parallel. Edit, I was thinking more of straightness as in flatness. I fully agree with Cody if we're taking about a bend in the material width-wise.
Can you try looping the tin through the mill and and rolling the can cylinder from one continuous sheet? I guess you would have to disassemble the mill to remove it in one piece, but I'm curious to see if you can cold weld the tin. And if you want to do something really cool, roll out a long piece then twist one end 180degrees and roll a mobius strip of tin through the mill.
Tin is so malleable that you wouldn't have to disassemble it, you could just trim it close with a small overlap then just bending it off. If you don't bend it too hard it might even go back to its shape on its own but adjusting it would be really simple
I've watched this vid before but didnt catch it the first go round. That is not only the first actual TIN can I've ever seen, but also the first time I've ever seen any one snip tin with tin snips.
@@Gabriel-re6tf it doesnt have to be canned ... you can get it from a cutting board ... or your sink ... it comes from improperly cleaned or sterilised things ....
@@0623kaboom No, botulinum(or botulism) is an anaerobic foodbourne illness. It grows in canned foods/preserved foods that haven't been cleaned or sterilised properly. It can also grow in cooked foods stored in oil that are stored at a temperature that's too low. It doesn't have to be canned, but it does have to be a low or no oxygen environment.