I Finally Discovered Perpetual Motion

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  • čas přidán 30. 03. 2022
  • I show you how to make a ball that seems to roll on its own. Then I show you the egg of Columbus.
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  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 3,1K

  • @rodchallis8031
    @rodchallis8031 Před 2 lety +25099

    Being able to successfully hide the external power source is the key to a really good perpetual motion machine.

    • @Angular777
      @Angular777 Před 2 lety +4

      Hide? They always have the power in plain sight and claim they are getting more power out. No the key to successful perpetual motion machines is getting idiots to believe you!

    • @erencansever8464
      @erencansever8464 Před 2 lety +246

      True

    • @bamanevishwajeet
      @bamanevishwajeet Před 2 lety +81

      😂🔥

    • @work2live756
      @work2live756 Před 2 lety +45

      😂🤜🏼

    • @Capt_Chaos_91
      @Capt_Chaos_91 Před 2 lety +91

      I was so confused at first 😂

  • @blueredbrick
    @blueredbrick Před 2 lety +10834

    "Look, Im not adding any energy to it!"
    Next shot: shows how he adds energy to it ;).
    Love this guy.

    • @TheActionLab
      @TheActionLab  Před 2 lety +2296

      I said *I* wasn't adding energy...very sneaky

    • @blueredbrick
      @blueredbrick Před 2 lety +397

      @@TheActionLab You are paying for the electricity are you not? ;p equally sneaky..

    • @4fr0pl
      @4fr0pl Před 2 lety +128

      He got me there. I was ready to do some party tricks with my ball bearing then man tells me it's actually a magnet.

    • @aiiiia9971
      @aiiiia9971 Před 2 lety +48

      @@TheActionLab 😏 I see what you did there

    • @westonding8953
      @westonding8953 Před 2 lety +16

      @@TheActionLab genius!

  • @abhishankpaul
    @abhishankpaul Před rokem +2029

    Rules for creating perpetual motion machine:
    #1. Always hide the external power source when demonstration is being done
    #2. Make the fundamental working principle of your machine subtle while explaining it to others.
    #3. Never forget rules 1, 2 and 3.

    • @GraysonQuickBuilds
      @GraysonQuickBuilds Před rokem +11

      Ha... Ha... Ha... I've never heard that one before

    • @Hello_there497
      @Hello_there497 Před rokem +51

      Your rule 3 made this comment perpetual as u added 'not to forget rule 3' also.... lol

    • @abhishankpaul
      @abhishankpaul Před rokem +31

      @@Hello_there497you got it. Rule 3 will compel everyone to remember 1st n 2nd rule and at the same time make them remember rule 3

    • @william3371
      @william3371 Před rokem +1

      @Miles Doyle
      I will read this later

    • @hmrdarkhawk8543
      @hmrdarkhawk8543 Před rokem +3

      Also, mind having a decent amount of friction

  • @NaptownClassic
    @NaptownClassic Před rokem +578

    The ending to the egg story is that after he cracked the egg, the onlookers said "Well, anyone could do that!" To which Columbus said, "They can now, once someone showed them how."
    The story has been attributed to tons of people, many who lived well before Columbus. The point was that something which might seem easy to you, once you've seen someone else do it, might be exceptionally difficult for someone doing it the first time.

    • @josephturner7569
      @josephturner7569 Před rokem +20

      Yep. It ain't magic when you know how it's done.

    • @Crazytesseract
      @Crazytesseract Před rokem

      Columbus was a rascal. He ate dog meat from the tribals.

    • @Crazytesseract
      @Crazytesseract Před rokem

      ​​@@josephturner7569 Any technology sufficiently advanced, is indistinguishable from magic. UFOs are possible duocylinder shaped objects that move into and out of 3D space from 4D and higher spatial dimensions. This is not magic.

    • @peterk.4266
      @peterk.4266 Před rokem +2

      Thanks genious, now I feel enlightened.

    • @AnderMartin
      @AnderMartin Před rokem +13

      Columbus was definitly not smart enough to come up with that

  • @duser
    @duser Před 2 lety +4535

    Leave it to Tesla to decide to one up a historic story by combining two physics principals to create sorcery.

    • @gabor6259
      @gabor6259 Před 2 lety +83

      *principles

    • @vincentdreemurr
      @vincentdreemurr Před 2 lety +31

      prips

    • @RandomYT05_01
      @RandomYT05_01 Před 2 lety +153

      If Tesla was born a century earlier, he'd've been burned at the stake.

    • @Yaswil
      @Yaswil Před 2 lety +4

      pri

    • @binita4672
      @binita4672 Před 2 lety +8

      That's how every physicist, at the very least has done.

  • @JamesContos85
    @JamesContos85 Před 2 lety +1988

    You should have saved this for April 1st! That would have made an excellent practical April Fool's joke!! 🤣 🤣

    • @buggmann862
      @buggmann862 Před 2 lety +127

      It's already April 1st
      Somewhere

    • @greego5952
      @greego5952 Před 2 lety +88

      Technically April 1st in some places. New Zealand Australia

    • @alihorda
      @alihorda Před 2 lety +32

      isn't this video made for April 1st?

    • @bettercalldelta
      @bettercalldelta Před 2 lety +23

      @@alihorda it was published on march 31

    • @alihorda
      @alihorda Před 2 lety +42

      @@bettercalldelta for me it displayed April 1st lol

  • @bride4jesus0126
    @bride4jesus0126 Před rokem +381

    It’s not a ball bearing, it’s a magnet…..that explained everything right there! 😅

    • @taragnor
      @taragnor Před rokem +12

      The answer is always magnets.

    • @wiqu10
      @wiqu10 Před rokem +9

      Magnest is a pathway to many abilities some consider to be unnatural

    • @lulz4lulz
      @lulz4lulz Před rokem +4

      ​@jhdhgklfglg It's not, as they don't exist nor are they possible.

    • @sjsj4741
      @sjsj4741 Před rokem +1

      Lmao that got me too!

    • @khululyp
      @khululyp Před rokem

      @@taragnor And the question is always "how do they work?"

  • @stonetrouble5053
    @stonetrouble5053 Před rokem +196

    The egg turned upright not because of friction but because any unrestrained spinning object will spin about its principal axis of inertia. This would also happen with no friction if it was spun fast enough that the torque generated was enough to overcome the force of gravity.

    • @kronosx7
      @kronosx7 Před rokem +12

      There's no such thing as a frictionless surface. The less friction there is, the more speed is required. Still requires friction.

    • @DheRadman
      @DheRadman Před rokem +9

      ​@@kronosx7 the frictionless surface is called space and this effect can be shown there

    • @random1744
      @random1744 Před rokem +4

      @@DheRadman isn’t that not a surface tho /gen
      Like not disagreeing but isn’t a void not a surface 😭

    • @DheRadman
      @DheRadman Před rokem +10

      @@random1744 you're right it's not really a surface, but the only reason we're talking about surfaces here is because you need to place objects on something else while on earth. In space, that restriction isn't there so space itself can serve as the location where something is 'placed'.

    • @scoopsta6141
      @scoopsta6141 Před rokem +1

      @DheRadman Technically space can be a surface if we’re talking about different dimensions of space-time and/or brane theory

  • @flamingmonkays
    @flamingmonkays Před 2 lety +555

    Reminds me of those magnetic "pills" that I used in chem lab to stir certain liquids. :)

    • @liamramsay2264
      @liamramsay2264 Před 2 lety +49

      a magnetic stir bar?

    • @flamingmonkays
      @flamingmonkays Před 2 lety +36

      @@liamramsay2264 Not quite sure what they call them, but that sounds about right. Put the beaker on top of a rotating magnetic field, drop in a stick-shaped piece of metal (which I believe was plastic-coated), and watch it mix.

    • @ItzWaterWheelz
      @ItzWaterWheelz Před 2 lety +26

      Pretty sure it's a stir rod, you place it in a liquid or something you want to mix, put it on a magnetic plate made for it, turn it on then it spins

    • @beepbeepgamer1305
      @beepbeepgamer1305 Před 2 lety +11

      oh yeah the stir bars, we have those in my school lab.

    • @nateplumley6821
      @nateplumley6821 Před 2 lety +2

      You just invented a new kitchen appliance nobody needs. Brilliant!

  • @fira2001
    @fira2001 Před 2 lety +1414

    All content on this channel is so satisfying for the dormant physics nerd in us

    • @Horus2Osiris
      @Horus2Osiris Před 2 lety +7

      Physics nerd inside kept alive and awake by ActionLab! Doesn't hurt...

    • @123jbuster
      @123jbuster Před 2 lety +4

      in*

    • @axywrll6015
      @axywrll6015 Před 2 lety +2

      @@123jbuster dormant physics nerd in us? hmm, sounds about right..

    • @roelfjoubert1128
      @roelfjoubert1128 Před 2 lety +3

      That's so well put. :)

    • @UhKimboze
      @UhKimboze Před 2 lety +2

      Couldn’t have said it better myself!

  • @grantarmstrong2968
    @grantarmstrong2968 Před rokem +60

    I was about to through all my understanding of physics out the window until I realized he just used electromagnetic forces to do it

  • @trm4life
    @trm4life Před rokem +75

    They actually showed us the egg trick in cooking classes in school. That way you could tell if your hard boiled egg was done. If it was still liquid, it wouldn't stand up.

    • @scorchedearth1451
      @scorchedearth1451 Před rokem +3

      You should tap it hard enough on the table so the shell breaks a little bit. 😂

    • @bolwinklemoose1999
      @bolwinklemoose1999 Před 4 měsíci +2

      This is how my mom showed me how to tell if an egg I took out of the refrigerator was hard boiled or not (had a messy episode pealing the shell from an egg I thought was boiled). Spin it. If it keeps spinning, it's bouled. If it slows and stops quickly, it's raw.

    • @bolwinklemoose1999
      @bolwinklemoose1999 Před 4 měsíci

      Set a football on the pavement with its ends horizontal and spin it. It will rise up and spin on one end or the other. It's easier than if you try to spin it on one end or the other from the start. Makes a good tailgate beer challenge.

    • @NICEFINENEWROBOT
      @NICEFINENEWROBOT Před 3 měsíci +3

      @@bolwinklemoose1999 Sometimes, especially if you're new to the trick, you don't know whether spinning should be considered fast (boiled egg) or slow (raw egg). But if you spin it, then stop and immediately release it, a cooked egg will remain motionless, while a raw egg will start moving again, just more slowly. That's because the fluid inside hasn't stopped spinning.

  • @dadrumer
    @dadrumer Před rokem +472

    There is also another point to the egg rising itself up in the air: The flat lying egg has a lot more rotational energy because its moment of inertia is way higher, spinning around that axis, than in the upright position. It still needs friction to rise itself in that position, but the reason behind it is a simple minimisation of energy state.

    • @jonathanbreedlove4286
      @jonathanbreedlove4286 Před rokem +8

      I knew inertia had something to do with it.

    • @coltonsmith3724
      @coltonsmith3724 Před rokem +1

      Sounds like word salad

    • @SedoKai
      @SedoKai Před rokem +4

      It doesn't actually need friction. Over time, a rotating rigid body will always process to its most stable axis of rotation, even in vacuum with no external fields acting on it. As rotational energy is added to the body, quantum effects in the body will increase at a geometric rate, speeding up its procession.

    • @seanmackidd7947
      @seanmackidd7947 Před 11 měsíci +2

      I like this explanation.
      However I disagree.
      I think the friction provides enough resistance to redirect the momentum from its perfect line, and the magnetism causes it to over-correct when seeking to return to the least amount of friction.
      Then opposite magnetic field sends it back even faster, causing it to over correct.
      This continues until all the molecules that make up the egg experience the magnetism exactly equally from both poles.
      At this point the egg appears to be standing motionless at absolute zero between the opposing fields.

    • @dazofthemoo1531
      @dazofthemoo1531 Před 9 měsíci

      ​@@SedoKaiisn't the surface of the flask an external force?
      I understand the aerodynamic reason for it standing up, and the reason if its on a 'flask' in a vacuum. ( I think)

  • @konoveldorada5990
    @konoveldorada5990 Před 2 lety +119

    Plot Twist: *Action Lab thought that today is April Fools.*

    • @an2939
      @an2939 Před 2 lety +2

      It was in my country

    • @thejadedjester4935
      @thejadedjester4935 Před 2 lety +8

      I've become so accustomed to april fools videos being on a different date usually that it actually threw me off that so many people didn't realise that it was simply a matter of them not being in the same timezone.

    • @an2939
      @an2939 Před rokem +1

      @@thejadedjester4935 same lol

  • @paul_warner
    @paul_warner Před rokem +34

    "if you don't give it any friction, it can't rise up" that's what she said

  • @infamousschmuck292
    @infamousschmuck292 Před rokem +59

    it be cool if you could make rings out of magnets, put them around each other and then have them on there and have them spin like that

    • @castilater
      @castilater Před rokem +1

      You mean like a gimbal or aerotrim? (Had to look up the name)

  • @BadMann3rs
    @BadMann3rs Před 2 lety +15

    2:34 "As All Things Should Be" 😂😂😂

  • @SenkJu
    @SenkJu Před 2 lety +23

    3:33 Looks like the egg was actually beginning to stand up just as he cut to another video, lol.

  • @peppep1704
    @peppep1704 Před rokem +7

    "I'VE DISCOVERED HOW TO SPLIT THE ATOM!"

  • @ToBeeOrNotToBeHoney
    @ToBeeOrNotToBeHoney Před rokem +2

    I love these things. I have a miniature top that is basically a brushless motor (magnet in the top_. As the pole passes near the coil it induces current to a transistor which switches on and then adds a tiny bit of power to the coil in the correct polarity for the pole (N/S) which is near the coil. The device is very small and consists of a coil, a 9v battery and a transistor. The battery easily will spin the top for days since it only requires power, and only when the top is near the coil. The top spins in a shallow parabolic dish. electronic are all hidden under the dish.

  • @Frosty_tha_Snowman
    @Frosty_tha_Snowman Před 2 lety +635

    I accidentally created a perpetual motion machine once. My cousin took a Vyvanse out of a buddy's prescription that he left in my room, thinking it was tylenol because it was blue and white, kind of how tylenol is blue and red.. then he went to the ping pong table that had a wall to bounce it back to yourself, and did that for a few hours.

  • @S85B50Engine
    @S85B50Engine Před 2 lety +407

    I initially thought it was something about the ball bearing having very little friction

    • @ranehan7726
      @ranehan7726 Před 2 lety +19

      I mean, it would work better in a vacuum chamber.

    • @flamingmonkays
      @flamingmonkays Před 2 lety +8

      I thought the ball bearing was going to have something else inside, like liquid or a smaller ball with a smaller ball in that. Just kind of reminded me of spherical dice, for some reason.

    • @S85B50Engine
      @S85B50Engine Před 2 lety +1

      @@ranehan7726 yeah, but they already have a low enough friction that they would spin for a while

    • @raphaelklaussen1951
      @raphaelklaussen1951 Před 2 lety +8

      Actually, when he holds the jar in his hand the ball isn't isolated. The small tremor of his hand (we all have that), or the small movements of his hand due to his heart beat can, depending on frequency, pump (or extract) energy into (from) the spinning ball. With a little practice you can do this creating the illusion the ball moves forever on its own.

    • @diamondcreeper0982
      @diamondcreeper0982 Před 2 lety

      Wouldn't the then lose its energy as vibrational (sound) energy?

  • @shreyaschaturvedi8851
    @shreyaschaturvedi8851 Před rokem +3

    Just before balancing the egg it looked liked like it was vibing to the background music 2:28 😂

  • @Yarxxter
    @Yarxxter Před rokem +5

    2:16 sounds like Mr. Krabbs walking

    • @Pinkoshaberibunny
      @Pinkoshaberibunny Před měsícem

      Feels like what planktons robot mr krabs would sound like if it had legs

  • @MrMindBlow
    @MrMindBlow Před 2 lety +1481

    *Great* explanation! Love the content! 🧠👀

  • @shukurenai4034
    @shukurenai4034 Před rokem +85

    The hardest part of building a perpetual motion machine is figuring out where to hide the batteries

  • @jahazbrooga309
    @jahazbrooga309 Před rokem +11

    Understanding spin in macro size shapes is useful for understanding fundamental particles at the quantum level. Keep doing it. Did you like how I put a positive spin on that?

  • @daveevans8004
    @daveevans8004 Před rokem +18

    What if you did that with a symmetrical shape, would it still stand on end? If it's an egg shape then isn't the fatter bottom that has something to do with it standing on its end? I mean, maybe not but that's what I assumed when watching it.

    • @connorclimenhaga2379
      @connorclimenhaga2379 Před rokem

      as long as the mass above the flat surface isn't asymmetrical, because then it would lead too a tilting effect, or if it had too much weigh pinned on too point. Yes its possible but there are also so many other variables determining whether or not that egg, or what ever other shape you have stays up. Good question though!

  • @normalchannel2185
    @normalchannel2185 Před 2 lety +59

    Knew it. I knew that a magnet was being used

    • @hpottergirl317
      @hpottergirl317 Před 2 lety

      I love your username 🤌🏻✨

    • @aboveanonymous4810
      @aboveanonymous4810 Před 2 lety +5

      Thanks for spoiling the video😡

    • @grannysvids
      @grannysvids Před 2 lety

      Cheers mate, that saves me wasting my time! 👍

    • @Gustavo-po9bd
      @Gustavo-po9bd Před 2 lety +3

      @@aboveanonymous4810 Bruh it is super obvious that it was magnets, you though it was magic? metal bending?

    • @diegocorte-real9249
      @diegocorte-real9249 Před 2 lety

      Keep your guesses for yourself next time pls

  • @Dinnye01
    @Dinnye01 Před 2 lety +248

    I love the clickbaity aspect of this channel. With the caveat that it is ALWAYS turns out to be true.

    • @brando3342
      @brando3342 Před 2 lety +27

      @FullMetal This one was not true though.

    • @_Belteshazzar_
      @_Belteshazzar_ Před 2 lety +16

      Do you know what perpetual motion is?

    • @biggerandbetterthings7222
      @biggerandbetterthings7222 Před 2 lety

      I was going to say the same thing! I'm upset he didn't use the word 'Angular Momentum' or did he, IDK, whatever that is, well less confusing then entropy!

    • @KevinSmith-os5yz
      @KevinSmith-os5yz Před 2 lety +2

      Now if only he would take the output energy and feed that back to the input, it would be free energy.

    • @aphish_n_flips
      @aphish_n_flips Před 2 lety +3

      I hate it. I’ll be watching something, see the thumbnail and title, say “that’s not possible”, know that whatever is in the title will probably happen, then have to watch the video 😂 normally as part of the “one more video” routine

  • @A.R.McDuck
    @A.R.McDuck Před 7 měsíci

    That would probably be neat to have a series of 2 millimeter cups stacked on each other, like Petrie dishes, many layers each containing a bearing.

  • @chrismosquad1056
    @chrismosquad1056 Před rokem +4

    Love your content! Always educational and fun! Thanks!

  • @jacksonbernardo670
    @jacksonbernardo670 Před 2 lety +24

    1:57 so... Nikolas Tesla made that complex machine only for a joke?

    • @MlorenDraymeer
      @MlorenDraymeer Před 2 lety +3

      Well to be fair the internet hadn't been invented yet so he had nothing better to do :D

    • @MDILeon
      @MDILeon Před 2 lety +4

      @@MlorenDraymeer there is nothing better to do than that, even with the internet...

  • @danielhama4558
    @danielhama4558 Před 2 lety +25

    Huh? Initially I was thinking "this is Noble prize level stuff!!!" Now I'm concerned that that is not the case.

  • @blumobean
    @blumobean Před 2 dny

    My grandfather was a brilliant man. His 2 sons were also. My father was smart, but very level headed, his brother was a little on the adventurous side. Grand daddy recognized that so he said most everything is possible, but not perpetual motion. He said that it would drive you crazy to start on that road.

  • @hyperboytkl1077
    @hyperboytkl1077 Před 7 měsíci

    This device shows one of the basic principles of motor action

  • @electricairways
    @electricairways Před 2 lety +7

    The fly in my bedroo mat night: 0:14

  • @HaloHeathen
    @HaloHeathen Před 2 lety +61

    3:50 The boxes are awesome. If you have a young child interested in science, these do the trick! I ordered the first box (vacuum), and the syringe (for creating a vacuum) was broken, so we couldn't use it. I ordered it for my nephews, on Thanksgiving day. It really was disappointing, but in the end it was my fault for not opening the package and inspecting beforehand. I tried numerous times to get ahold of them to get a new syringe, being a newly released product, and during the holidays it took 2 months before I received the new syringe. Satisfied with the situation, I was certainly surprised when I received, months later, the second box (self pouring fluid) as well!
    I might be a little biased, but I was still satisfied with my original situation being resolved, and the second box to me shows it's a quality company, and product!

    • @violetflame6596
      @violetflame6596 Před rokem

      You don't need a vacuum. just an electromagnetic field

    • @HaloHeathen
      @HaloHeathen Před rokem

      @@violetflame6596 are you selling one?

    • @violetflame6596
      @violetflame6596 Před rokem

      I do not. I am currently working on a bigger project atm

    • @HaloHeathen
      @HaloHeathen Před rokem

      @@violetflame6596 where do you get one then?
      But, really, if you're working on a bigger project, why don't I just get that instead? What project are you working on?

  • @RoadCaptainEntertain
    @RoadCaptainEntertain Před 7 měsíci

    Eggs can be balanced on end (without cracking it) but only during the spring or fall equinox.
    Your welcome.

  • @sri20141
    @sri20141 Před rokem +2

    Not only from but moment of moment is also playing role in raising the egg , so it spin on its major axis, with low system energy

  • @AtomizerX
    @AtomizerX Před 2 lety +11

    2:05 "alternating AC current" 🤔

    • @Pearier
      @Pearier Před 2 lety

      Yep

    • @wesleyhenderson2621
      @wesleyhenderson2621 Před 2 lety +2

      I was checking comments exclusively for this

    • @AtomizerX
      @AtomizerX Před 2 lety +1

      @@wesleyhenderson2621 I was like "bro, you're a scientist, you should know better!" 🤦

    • @nit-3patidar848
      @nit-3patidar848 Před rokem

      The machine works on 4 electromagnets
      And the AC current is alternated in those 4 elec. magnets

    • @AtomizerX
      @AtomizerX Před rokem +1

      @@nit-3patidar848 Ok, since you clearly didn't understand my comment, let me help you out with a question: what does "AC" stand for? And that's a *rhetorical* question, by the way.

  • @danielpalmer643
    @danielpalmer643 Před 2 lety +92

    I've never heard that Columbus did this with an egg. I've often heard the story that Brunelleschi used this trick to explain how he would build the Duomo in Florence. Vasari gives the whole story. Columbus might have gotten the idea from Brunelleschi.

    • @iz0mbie100
      @iz0mbie100 Před rokem +2

      You're right. He's wrong...

    • @peterholzer4481
      @peterholzer4481 Před rokem +3

      Well the idiom is "the egg of Columbus", not "the egg of Brunelleschi". The story about Brunelleschi is a few years older than the one about Columbus, so it's likely that the author of the latter cribbed the idea from the author of the former. My guess is that neither Columbus nor Brunelleschi ever used the egg trick, but that doesn't matter. The idiom has entered the English language centuries ago, people know what it means, and whether the story it is based on is true or false is immaterial.

    • @danielpalmer643
      @danielpalmer643 Před rokem +2

      @@peterholzer4481 Vasari writes, "It is said that the argument over the egg arose during the meeting in the following way. They wanted Filippo (Brunelleschi) to explain his intentions in detail and to show his model, as they had shown theirs, something that he did not want to do, and he in turn proposed to both foreign and Florentine masters that whoever could stand an egg upright upon a marble slab should execute the dome, since in this way their intelligence would be revealed. Therefore, when Filippo produced an egg, all those masters tried to make it stand upright. Then they asked Filippo to do it, and he graciously took the egg, cracked its bottom on the marble, and made it stand upright." This happened in 1420, but Vasari wrote 100 years later. The story about Columbus was in a 1565 book called 'History of the New World' by Girolamo Benzoni and supposedly happened when Columbus returned to Spain (according to the Wikipedia article, 'Egg of Columbus'). I think that Columbus heard about what Brunelleschi did and copied his idea, but that both stories are true.

    • @aeromodeller1
      @aeromodeller1 Před rokem

      @@danielpalmer643 A little salt on the table will do it.

    • @codis9091
      @codis9091 Před rokem

      @@peterholzer4481 it does matter if neither of them did it. would it not matter if columbus is fictional character and never existed? you are living in a dream world peter

  • @deaddocreallydeaddoc5244
    @deaddocreallydeaddoc5244 Před 7 měsíci

    All high school labs have these to-mix solutions. I have one that I swiped from my community college science class in the '70s. I have a home lab; microscope, too.

  • @Timjstewart
    @Timjstewart Před rokem

    I enjoy your content so much and I also learn a lot from you. Thank you!

  • @zeryez6347
    @zeryez6347 Před 2 lety +22

    Thank you for all these unbelievably great videos, just discovered your videos recently but you’re such great at explaining and making it fun to learn. Thank you for this great work keep it up👍

  • @SonakaG
    @SonakaG Před 2 lety +16

    Honestly my favorite science/experimentation channel on youtube. Super fun to watch every time.

  • @arthur08899
    @arthur08899 Před rokem +2

    Minecraft players:
    Look what they need to do to have a fraction of our power

  • @EnergySponge
    @EnergySponge Před rokem

    It is less about friction and more about the radial symmetry of the egg and inertia. When laying down, the symmetry is not balanced, yet while it is upright, the radial symmetry is perfectly circular. Equilibrium, or we can identify it as efficiency, is always sought, and the upright position satisfies it best.

  • @brando3342
    @brando3342 Před 2 lety +7

    The clickiest of click baits... but I still enjoyed the video haha

  • @ashleyfletcher2543
    @ashleyfletcher2543 Před 2 lety +29

    Love everything you do. I know it inspires me to want to create the ideas locked away in my 50 yr old brain. I think most people with a little intellect have perpetual motion/energy ideas. If only it were not so expensive? Thanks again for inspiring people and I truly hope that there are lots of school age kids being inspired as well

  • @mr.mediocregamer9653
    @mr.mediocregamer9653 Před 7 měsíci

    I feel like if people would incorporate magnets, they'd finally crack perpetual motion. No one's ever tried using magnets.

  • @eestaashottentotti2242
    @eestaashottentotti2242 Před 7 měsíci

    I invented perpetual motion machine. The whole existence.

  • @pineapplekittycat525
    @pineapplekittycat525 Před rokem +9

    3:19 "gu-"

  • @TheGuyWhoNeverAsked
    @TheGuyWhoNeverAsked Před 2 lety +67

    Your videos are so amazing, so easy to listen to and you can easily remember what happens because its explained so well!

    • @theadventuresofkentsawyeri5944
      @theadventuresofkentsawyeri5944 Před rokem

      Did you not see the part where he just lied to you and bullshited you?
      He added energy to make this ball bearing spin, so it is not perpetual motion!
      It's called bait and switch in the business world.
      You should thumbs down this video since he lied to everybody,,,,, not compliment him!!
      Otherwise he'll keep making videos where he's bullshiting everybody.
      And that's not cool!!!
      If everybody wanted to watch bullshit videos, we would just turn on CNN and keep voting Democrat child sniffers into office.

  • @CategoricalImperative
    @CategoricalImperative Před 8 měsíci

    The closest we have to a perpetual motion machine is a satellite in space.
    or, a compass at one of the poles.

  • @ArthurX-eg8bc
    @ArthurX-eg8bc Před 7 měsíci

    Perpetual Motion Machine? I made three confirmed, the next three are in planning.

  • @moakadarkmaster
    @moakadarkmaster Před 2 lety +8

    I was fooled in thinking this was an early 1st April joke, ... But as always awesome topic!

  • @notsoberoveranalyzer8264
    @notsoberoveranalyzer8264 Před rokem +18

    Supposedly there’s a solid theory of being able to use the gravitational pull of a black hole for a p motion device.
    But on such a massive that scale it’s I wonder if a PMotion device would even be usable or relevant, or if we could just harness energy more effectively. Always blows my mind how all complex life ( as we know it) is produced by a fraction of the suns energy.

    • @iCarus_A
      @iCarus_A Před rokem +1

      Isn't that as much a perpetual motion machine as the ISS or any of our satellites? They're always accelerating due to the earth's gravity but it's not really possible to harness energy from it

    • @Corzappy
      @Corzappy Před rokem

      @@iCarus_A They aren't constantly accelerating they're simply going so fast that the gravitational pull of the earth can't pull then down faster than the earth curves away from them.
      Also it's not perpetual motion because you have to dodge space debris.

    • @Temari_Virus
      @Temari_Virus Před rokem

      @@Corzappy Constant speed doesn't necessarily mean no acceleration. A change in direction counts as acceleration too. So while the magnitude of their velocities remains (roughly) the same, they're constantly accelerating towards the Earth

    • @Corzappy
      @Corzappy Před rokem

      @@Temari_Virus If they were constantly accelerating towards the earth they wouldn't be in orbit. If you measure their distance from the surface on one side of the earth compares to the other, they won't be any closer or farther away.

    • @Temari_Virus
      @Temari_Virus Před rokem

      @@Corzappy if they weren't accelerating, they would just travel in a straight line and get flung out into space. It's their acceleration towards the Earth that curves their trajectory and allows them to orbit

  • @cq.cumber_offishial
    @cq.cumber_offishial Před rokem +1

    christopher colombus: look i made an egg balance
    nikola tesla: shut up (creates technology i could never comprehend)

  • @ThePhihn
    @ThePhihn Před rokem +9

    It’s a fun thought to create a PEG but in practice it’s near impossible from what I’ve researched, now it may have changed over the years but you’d need to have a lot of things that we currently can’t achieve with our limitations. Still it’s very fun to play around with the idea, awesome video man! Loved your stuff since I first found your channel!

    • @sylvrwolflol
      @sylvrwolflol Před rokem

      It's not near impossible, it _is_ impossible. If it was possible to create a device which endlessly multiplies the energy put into it, you'd have a bomb that never stops exploding.
      No matter what you work with, generating energy requires entropy to function and generating limitless energy from the energy put in would require negative entropy, creating a paradox which cannot be overcome.
      The closest we could ever get is to create something which lasts long enough that we wouldn't live to see it burn out, like the Sun. But rest assured, it _will_ run out.

    • @dielaughing73
      @dielaughing73 Před 6 měsíci +3

      The laws of thermodynamics haven't been updated recently that i know of

    • @kcbsuiejd
      @kcbsuiejd Před 4 měsíci +1

      Its impossible, not nearly impossible.

    • @NICEFINENEWROBOT
      @NICEFINENEWROBOT Před 3 měsíci

      @@kcbsuiejd But what with the atoms? Spin, long time no stop.

    • @kcbsuiejd
      @kcbsuiejd Před 3 měsíci +1

      @@NICEFINENEWROBOT I get where you are coming from, but they dont literally "spin". its just the name we have to them acting like they have angular momentum despite not having it :)
      for example, you cant extract any energy from it, like you could with an "actually spinning" object

  • @flextimegaming3840
    @flextimegaming3840 Před 2 lety +3

    Perpetual motion: this weapon gains bonus Stability handling and reload speed while the wielder is in motion

  • @shlok8267
    @shlok8267 Před 2 lety +52

    Sir , all your experiments and lessons are fantastic and easily understandable but WHERE CAN WE FIND THE MATERIALS TO PERFORM THESE ACTIVITIES ? WHICH ONLINE STORE ?

  • @chrisgann8986
    @chrisgann8986 Před 6 měsíci

    I made these a lot when i was younger. They are very interesting and fun. We mostly used paper clips. It was part of studying electro magnets. In the lab, I would play with magnetic stir bars like that all of the time. I would the magnetic ball that way too. It is also part of a party trick to do that.

  • @richardfarris2227
    @richardfarris2227 Před 6 měsíci

    The only perpetual motion is the flapping gums of those trying disprove physics.

  • @macgaming001
    @macgaming001 Před 2 lety +3

    Love that the oily egg was just about to lift up

  • @Lara-vk3wc
    @Lara-vk3wc Před rokem +11

    I honestly don't know if Columbus did it as well but the egg story was actually used by Brunelleschi, an architect from the Florence of 1420 that managed to built the highest dome in history on top of Florence's Cathedral (and it still is the highest dome nowadays with a diameter of 45m and 116m height). This story has also been illustrated in many paintings where Brunelleschi asks the other mathematicians and architects, who didn't believe his project was possible, to try and make the egg stand on its end but when he revealed how to do it (in the same way as shown in the video) then the mathematicians started to say that anyone could have done it that way to which he responded "the difference is that you could have done it but I did it, and if you wait for me to show you, then you'll be also able to built the dome"

    • @worldcomicsreview354
      @worldcomicsreview354 Před rokem

      Puts me in mind of all the "Boeing would have", "Roscosmos could have", "NASA should have" naysayers. Yeah, well, SpaceX did.

  • @strataggamer5154
    @strataggamer5154 Před rokem

    The main difficulty in making a perpetual device is deciding how to hide the energy source

  • @util2
    @util2 Před rokem +1

    Perpetual motion of balls happens when you are full angry for something is gone totally bad...

  • @sydneysimon7112
    @sydneysimon7112 Před 2 lety +6

    This is awesome and satisfying to watch, thank you for sharing

  • @calabrais
    @calabrais Před 2 lety +26

    Literally the only perpetual motion video I would ever click on because I knew from you I wouldn't be disappointed. And I wasn't.

  • @Pluto_ice
    @Pluto_ice Před 13 dny

    I may be wrong but I believe the reason is the friction causes the metal egg to begin to rotate around its vertical axis and causes that rotation to continue to accelerate to the rotational speed of the magnetic field which if fast enough causes the the egg to balance on it vertical axis. It’s a bit misleading to say it’s friction alone.

  • @rjlinnovations1516
    @rjlinnovations1516 Před rokem +1

    Excellent ideas. Thanks for sharing your videos. Watching here with full support from Canada 🇨🇦.

  • @crazyworldcreativepassions7754

    Why can I imagine EMPOROR PALPETINE being like: UNLIIMMIITEDDD POOOOWWAAAHHH 😂😂😂

  • @oadka
    @oadka Před 2 lety +3

    This man and his work must be protected at all costs

  • @Steve-vf7se
    @Steve-vf7se Před rokem +4

    Awesome. You've discovered gravity too. Looks good, cool. I like science, you learn anything. I love NASA, super cool. A egg standing up, I like that. Nice work my friend, I've learned tons of it. What if you create a running man figure, you make it never stop running. Just wish I see more

  • @DeadeyeDaily
    @DeadeyeDaily Před 3 měsíci

    "I'm not adding any energy," he says 😂

  • @426F6F
    @426F6F Před rokem +4

    Are the magnetic poles arranged in that sphere just as two seperate neg/pos hemispheres? Also how would the size of the magnet in correlation with the radius it travels matter? Very intriguing video, thanks for the upload!

    • @vinquinn
      @vinquinn Před 7 měsíci

      It is a simple induction motor. The egg forms the rotor and current is induced in it by the alternating field. This field creates magnetism within the egg. This magnetism will be opposite to the base(stator). The egg now rotates.

  • @MajikkanBeingsUnite
    @MajikkanBeingsUnite Před rokem +16

    This is awesome! Love the Tesla connection, that guy always had the coolest ideas :-)
    (Obligatory comment that Columbus didn't discover the Americas, wasn't the first European to visit the Americas, and was objectively a horrible person, but y'all know that.)

    • @personeater2664
      @personeater2664 Před rokem

      First person to get syphilis

    • @Mister_Sun.
      @Mister_Sun. Před rokem +1

      yeah it should be called the Tesla egg, Columbus does not deserve to have something named after him, he didn't even invent it

  • @columnfellow7477
    @columnfellow7477 Před rokem +1

    “The ‘spin’ energy Johnny!”

  • @RayanBaaqeel
    @RayanBaaqeel Před 2 lety +4

    Your experiments are very amazing … thanks 😊

  • @greatPretender79
    @greatPretender79 Před 2 lety +5

    Please keep the magnetic videos coming!

  • @literatedog3642
    @literatedog3642 Před 17 dny

    The hardest part about making a perpetual motion machine, is finding where to hide the motor

  • @eazypeazy33
    @eazypeazy33 Před 10 měsíci

    The egg trick is like a metaphor for everything Columbus did..
    it was all a trick.

  • @tomdeline
    @tomdeline Před 2 lety +16

    Could the friction be all that it needed to overcome gravity and fall into the center of a toroidal magnetic field?

  • @mrbunnylamakins518
    @mrbunnylamakins518 Před 2 lety +4

    That was so cool Thanks You for posting this.

  • @theNimboo
    @theNimboo Před rokem +1

    Lol the frictionless egg was literally rising up anyway right as he cut it ahahahahahah. Totally made a fool of him

    • @unfortunateimperial6019
      @unfortunateimperial6019 Před rokem

      That's because there's no such thing as a frictionless system in our known universe, there will always be friction acting on movement. The demonstration is correct, if the world was frictionless, it wouldn't rise up.

  • @bubbles8871
    @bubbles8871 Před rokem

    So we're still in the stage of "We've discovered perpetual motion... until the battery runs out."

  • @mrxmry3264
    @mrxmry3264 Před 2 lety +9

    0:46 ok, what is hidden under that table?

  • @marcusgriffin279
    @marcusgriffin279 Před rokem +5

    1:34 correction, Columbus didn’t discover America. You can’t “discover” something someone else already owns and is using.

  • @spicydiarrhea5662
    @spicydiarrhea5662 Před rokem

    "I'm not adding any energy!"
    coil connected to power supply: "am I a joke to you?"

  • @nobunagaoda265
    @nobunagaoda265 Před měsícem

    Perpetual motion always requires more than one input. In fact, it always requires THREE. Three sources, and they all have to feed into each other at a steady rate, according to design.
    To answer a future question, the three different sources must of course be differing from one another.
    Gravity, kinesis, wind, water, flame, you name it.
    Keep in mind the ratios of input versus output, minus actual output of energy, and you can stabilize the design to where it CAN work.

  • @pryingeyes1551
    @pryingeyes1551 Před 2 lety +4

    The centripetal force of the balls in a jar is actually how I used to clean my longboard bearings. They'd race around the jar, with their casing staying horizontal, and all surfaces got cleaned without the use of a brush....plus it was a bit fun changing their rate and trying to prevent them from crashing into one another.

    • @jlt131
      @jlt131 Před rokem

      here's me wondering why your long board has bearings.... i was thinking of a surfboard, not a skateboard >.< haha

  • @lanfanslostarm9784
    @lanfanslostarm9784 Před 2 lety +7

    You make science so fun, love your channel and your personality, your passion is part of what makes it fun :)

  • @Nampledamp
    @Nampledamp Před rokem

    Christopher Columbus straight up went "Oh, you think you could've done the same? Well then I'd like to see you... Solve this wacky party trick puzzle!"

  • @Bones_andArrows
    @Bones_andArrows Před rokem

    This came on my recommended and I clicked on it and my first thought was
    “Oh it’s the guy who tried to waterproof water 😂 “

  • @Genetherapy3232
    @Genetherapy3232 Před 2 lety +7

    You are the next best thing to a free energy machine! Love this channel

  • @-Pot4t0-
    @-Pot4t0- Před rokem +3

    "the hardest part of a perpetual motion machine is where to hide the batteries"
    -some random guy

  • @WhatDadIsUpTo
    @WhatDadIsUpTo Před rokem

    So, next, make a miniature flying saucer with hidden radial blades and opposing magnetic poles. As it spins up, it should "fly" until it over-reaches the underlying field strength of the AC magnetic coils.

  • @kaiwheeler64
    @kaiwheeler64 Před 8 měsíci

    I had assumed the egg stood on its primary axis because of the Dzhanibekov effect..

  • @DF-bx9hd
    @DF-bx9hd Před rokem +3

    3:14 that's what she said