About 56 years ago I was inflating a 15" garden tractor tire laying on its side. I don't know how much pressure I put in but I only had about 80psi available. Waiting for the tire to pop the bead on the rim and it popped and went airborne probably 30 feet. Shattered my right forearm and then went through the carport roof and came back down and landed rim and tire on my pickups hood. Will never forget that and have much respect for tires and air pressure to this day.
No joke. I've seen American RU-vidrs glove up, put on goggles, put up safety glass, then create a rig to turn a microwave on from a distance after putting a spoon in it 😂
@@AckiraOh please. It would otherwise be the same content, with a screen shot of a scene. If they can appeal to more people and get more revenue, that's a win for everyone
@@MelodicTurtleMetal yeah, a real screenshot that isn’t just lines of text that steals other people’s work, and as I said, AI thumbnails drive people away from your content because it means your stuff isn’t legit anymore, it cheapens the whole video
It might be known as Garage 54 in Russia, but here in Canada my buddies and I have nicknamed this channel "1,001 Ways to F*ck Up Your Car". Your team has way too much fun and it's contagious! Keep up the great content guys.
Even when burning they don't eject hot rubber. Getting hit with the carcass as it falls apart is dangerous however. Sounds like a zipper when they pop, not fun.
Never seen that happen, but once at a car fire we did see a tyre rupture which sent a wire flying into the fire truck which left a decent dent considering the small wire size
I don't see anything wrong with an Ai thumbnail they never fail to deliver on what the video says. Who cares about a picture ya know. Am by no means trying to start anything I get where you are coming from just saying I don't see a huge problem with it.
@@dannyshane4722 true, BUT that's how it starts, innocent enough at 1st, but then next thing you know you got 5 new channels with ALL AI generated content, audio, video, scripts, etc., it's just like a gateway (drug). AI is already starting to really ruin a good part of YT content, and this all happened in like the last 6-12 months. I don't even wanna think how things are going to be around here in a year or 2... maybe it won't get any worse, cuz at some point the voices and grammar and renderings will all get so good that we really won't be able to tell the difference anymore. that would just be sad.
Lada’s gain 🥇 in value. But what does Coca-Cola say, rather one of our bottles is on the street than that of the competition 🤣🤣🤣 even in the mud it is still advertising!
<a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="576">9:36</a> ah the good old safety car used as barrier to shelter a literal bomb :D I love the style of those videos. Reminds me of the stuff we did when we where young in my little town. <a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="305">5:05</a> this was also gold.. nothing better then the boss is hiding behind his employees to be safe from the bomb 😂
Compressed gas and high pressure liquid are entirely different beasts when it comes to failures. The compressed gas expands exponentially, causing an explosion, whereas high pressure liquid doesn’t compress, therefore doesn’t expand or explode. That’s clearly seen in this video. That’s also why pneumatic systems generally are not super high pressure whereas hydraulic systems can be. The exception might be an instance of contained boiling liquids, which can explode due to the liquid becoming a gas as soon as they rupture and release pressure (things like propane tanks, aerosol can or water heaters are an example)
Guys! Please! Wear eye protection when you do this type of experiment! I want to continue enjoying your content, and you will need to remain healthy for that.
Way back when I was in high school I worked in tire shop. We got a lot of big trucks in. This one guy decided he knew more than anyone else, and inflated a 10.00 X 20 truck tire to 120 psi (normal pressure). The wheel had a split ring to hold the tire on. We also had what is called a cage to roll the tire/wheel into while inflating it. Well, this guy 'knew more' than anybody else in the shop. He 'didn't need no cage, he knew what he was doing". Well, the split ring came off under pressure, flying upwards about a hundred miles per hour, hitting the ceiling and clanging back down, nearly killing him. I think he learned his lesson. He never came back, thankfully.
I had an old split rim come apart on me while airing up a tire one time. I did have it in a tire cage though. Glad I did because it bent the crap out of the cage.
Oh I've seen big 18 wheeling truck tires explode before. It makes these car tires look like a firecracker. Only it wasn't being inflated but it was rolling down the highway and the car in the lane next to it... Well they needed all new windows on the left hand side and pretty much a whole new left hand side. The driver survived with a lot of cuts, some bruises and a pretty good concussion.
I got a older trailer early this past summer the wheels with the lock ring as soon i got it home i pull the valves and deflated the tires. getting new wheels and tires for the trailer.
Good to see it's a Hyundai, not a beautiful Lada. A bit frustrating there weren't gauges attached to the tyre stems, so we would know at what pressure the tyres blew at. The last test was quite beautiful.
When we remove tires in the Aviation industry, all the main tires use split rims and we have to inspect the bolts that keep the rims together or reduce the pressure to 50 psi before removing the main nut that holds the tire on, if God forbid those bolts corrode and end up cracking and the only thing holding that split Rim together is the main nut. If you release that main nut and start to wiggle the tire off she may blow and those tires are as high as your chest and they hold 210 psi, two guys I believe in Atlanta not too long ago were killed because one of their tires blew when they were changing it out.
Now thats a really good video - Especially the trunk tyre - awesome. What about a "faulty" garage air compressor - Bet you could rig one to blow quite nicely
CC'ye bas bu altyazilari acar. sonra ayarlardan altyazilara tikla ve english'e tikla. sonra tekrar ayarlardan altyazilara gir bu sefer "ceviri" secenegini goreceksin. ordan turkce'yi secebilirsin.
That big gas cylinder : You cut the bottom off weld a couple pivots on it for elevation put a half turn rotary valve on the end and make a carriage for it and you can shoot bowling balls with compressed air you need to hook a tank to the rotary valve and fill it as many bars as it will hold put a bowling ball in there and open valve and out pops a bowling ball about 300 kph, YEEHAW.
The first 2 tires didn’t do much because a weak spot in the “rubber” caused the failure. The third tire actually failed at the bead not on a weak spot in the side. When that happens the force is incredible. You are actually ripping apart the steel cable/wire inside of the tire, which takes a lot of air pressure. The fourth tire also had a weak spot on the side. And it looked like the first truck tire also failed on the side. The second one also looked like it ruptured at the bead. You can see where it is separated in several places. That would be why it had so much more force when it failed. In the US, there are two sizes of wheels that are very close, one being a 16 inch rim and the other being a 16.5 rim. The rims are basically the same size, the difference being in the thickness of beading lip. So you can get a 16 inch tire on a 16.5 inch rim okay, you just cannot get it to seat because of the difference in the beading lip. I worked at an auto tire company when I was young and a customer brought in a set of bare rims and wanted new tires put on. He told the salesman that they were 16 inch rims, and the salesman never checked (size stamped on the inside of the rim). Anyway, the salesman pulled the 16 inch tires and the technician started to put them on. He got the tire on the rim and hit the “blast” to seat the bead. The tire made a good seal and he kept airing up,the tire trying to seat the bead. Other people in the shop said it was taking a long time for him to get the bead set, but thought nothing of it. Then all of a sudden they heard, and felt, a big explosion that rattled every window in the building. The steel band in the top bead had ruptured and the force broke part of the tire machine and it took the top of the technician’s head off. The guy never had a chance. This happened at a different location than where I worked, but I showed up right after it happened to pick,up some tires. It was a mess, the “splatter” was all the way to the ceiling rafters and about 30 feet behind him.
Essentially just another day in Russian high school physics class. Next week we learn what happens when you inflate semi truck tires with a hydrogen tank.
We were told in 1978 that truck tyres had enough air pressure to hurl a 13 lb bowling ball 1/2 a imperial mile about 800 meters , so yes never place any part of your body near a tyre when filling them.
God tires exploding will never not be terrifying to me. was On my way to work one morning. headphones and listening to reletively loud music when a tire exploded on a truck about 15 /20 car lengths infront of me. i felt the shockwave as if it were one of my own tires exploding. its crazy just how much energy is stored..
The way those mounted tires ruptured they look like they were re-tread tires. That layer just peeled right off. I've never seen a regular tire separate that much. Even after a blowout.
As water isnt really compressable, the tire will blow out quite alot faster due to the air getting highly compressed at a high speed by the injected water trying to displace the air :)
Just good fun and you guys know how to have fun. never a dull minute, laughter is good for the soul so keep making these videos just be safe while doing this. maybe you could put gun powder in a tire run fuse through valve stem but not to much powder that should make a big bang.
You should try this again with different types of tire sealant, hole repair, and run flat liquids. Slime, armor dolloz (blue is or was claiming to be military rated ) fix a flat and phantom farm are some common brands.
That likely happened at relatively low pressure. When people drive on a deflated tire it massively damages the integrity. Then you go to fill it up again and they fail. Had it happen to me once on an 80 PSI pick up tire, it was like a cat of nine tails but only at 35 PSI or so.
These guys are rock stars. Mythbusters: for safety well be a 1 km away in a bomb shelter with bullet proof glass for this experiment. Garage54: for safety well be in my minivan 500ft away for safety.🤣
I tried the barrel full of water, years ago tied a weight to a M80. It split the seam all the way down the side and the bottom, I expected just a water column. Lucky I wasn’t killed
Here's an idea, convert an overhead cam engine to side valve engine by moving the head sideways so that the valves are over the block. weld on iron to the side of the block to create a channel for the gases to flow from the valve to the cylinder.
I think the damage is done by the rotation of tire and the friction that is created by the tire on the asphalt along with the cylindryical force of the tire spinning.