How to film the inside of a microwave (2 ways)

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 29. 11. 2018
  • The first 76 people to sign up at brilliant.org/stevemould/ will get 20% off an annual premium subscription.
    Filming what's going on on the inside of a microwave is tricky. Here are two ways you can do it. Also, a really easy way to make a plasma in a microwave!
    Patreon: / stevemould
    Twitter: / moulds
    Instagram: / stevemouldscience
    Facebook: / stevemouldscience
    Buy nerdy maths things: mathsgear.co.uk
  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 897

  • @SteveMould
    @SteveMould  Před 5 lety +259

    I do live microwave filming as part of a stage show with Festival Of The Spoken Nerd. Our latest show is available on DVD, HD download and floppy disk: fotsn.com/ycpandvd

    • @JoseAlbarracin10
      @JoseAlbarracin10 Před 5 lety +2

      You can't polish a Nerd!

    • @Adam-lc6mk
      @Adam-lc6mk Před 5 lety +2

      Luckily The video on codys lab is still up or had been put up again
      czcams.com/video/KTdjHMWD_t8/video.html

    • @ScopeofScience
      @ScopeofScience Před 5 lety +18

      Did the math... thats around 42kg worth of floppy disks.

    • @icebluscorpion
      @icebluscorpion Před 5 lety

      you don't need expensive carbon fibre tissue... with a match and some fibre of iron wool to self ignite the matches head in the closed running microwave, this will light the match and than the flame will boost to a bigger plasma cuz flames are plasma too... you will get a dense plasme ball, don't use a beaker, uae some thing like the beaker but with thiker walls because otherwise it will melt thruogh the beaker and the microwave ofen should be a robust one, because the dense plasmaball will over load it substantially

    • @maxximumb
      @maxximumb Před 5 lety +2

      @@JoseAlbarracin10 You might not be able to polish a nerd, but Steve's new haircut smartens him up a lot.

  • @manmansgotmans
    @manmansgotmans Před 5 lety +365

    - fixable?
    (image of broken glass)
    - *Oh*

    • @AttilaAsztalos
      @AttilaAsztalos Před 3 lety +3

      Easily. All it takes is... erm... uhhh... a time... machine...?

    • @F_L_U_X
      @F_L_U_X Před rokem +1

      Yeah, dude... We all saw the video.

  • @LiLi-or2gm
    @LiLi-or2gm Před 5 lety +210

    A note about using mesh screen vs. a perforated metal sheet as an attenuator: The woven nature of wire mesh results in what is effectively, a tiny resistor at each intersection of the wire mesh due to very small contact areas, and oxides on the surface of the wires. This results in ohmic heating and thus the hot spot as noted. Perforated metal doesn't have this problem.

    • @samtux762
      @samtux762 Před rokem

      Sir, you have more than 1M subscribers. You have decent income to buy microwaves everyday.
      How did you end up with a nasty piece of work (your wife) that dares to blame you over a cheap microwave?
      Is she a billionare? Or are you allowing her to abuse you because of sexist (antimen) laws regarding mariagee.
      Check out An Ear For Men channel. I would save you (not her) if we run into the aftermath of World War III. You will save modern science. She can blame Men and have bedtime with you once in a while. She Just doesn't worth you. She should be modest and loving. Not bitching over a cheap microwave.

  • @alexjackson2771
    @alexjackson2771 Před 5 lety +555

    Honestly the screenshot of the chat is all I want in a relationship or in life in general

  • @theCodyReeder
    @theCodyReeder Před 5 lety +1166

    Turns out that my remade video is available; at least for the time being.

    • @greenthizzle4
      @greenthizzle4 Před 5 lety +39

      Cody'sLab can you send me some mercury

    • @Chiaros
      @Chiaros Před 5 lety +35

      All my favourite youtubers are bunching up... nice.

    • @sabayonz
      @sabayonz Před 5 lety +6

      i remember cody when saw this video title, and he is here!

    • @RutvikPhatak
      @RutvikPhatak Před 5 lety +1

      I've seen tons of your videos but I can't remember this one. Can you (or anyone else) please tell me what that one was?

    • @mattgsm
      @mattgsm Před 5 lety +1

      Link?

  • @matthewtrott
    @matthewtrott Před 5 lety +169

    This is the best explanation of a camera aperture I have ever seen!

    • @nova_vista
      @nova_vista Před 5 lety +10

      I had so many classes about this in school but never truly understood it. This really blew my mind.

    • @EdwardMillen
      @EdwardMillen Před 4 lety +12

      Yeah I only just realised I didn't know/fully understand this. And now I do. From just a couple of minutes in a video which I thought only gonna be about a completely different topic :)

  • @heke0
    @heke0 Před 5 lety +45

    Your wife's a champ. Love the "Oh." as a reaction to the shattered glass. :D At least you now have a separate microwave oven for experiments! ... At least I hope you got a new one for Lianne.

  • @ScopeofScience
    @ScopeofScience Před 5 lety +101

    I've built a digital camera but still had my mind blown with the aperture method. So cool!

  • @jamelia2208
    @jamelia2208 Před 5 lety +389

    Steve Mould, Nile red and Codyslab. 3 of the best channels on youtube

    • @maxximumb
      @maxximumb Před 5 lety +40

      Don't forget Mark Rober, Big Clive, Smarter Every Day and Tom Scott.

    • @jamelia2208
      @jamelia2208 Před 5 lety +22

      @@maxximumb And This Old Tony, AvE and Scott Manley

    • @redapplefour6223
      @redapplefour6223 Před 5 lety +23

      @@maxximumb also don't forget brady haran's many channels, other people in the math and physics side (vsauce (and related), physics girl, 3b1b) and primitive technology

    • @lucianomaia9460
      @lucianomaia9460 Před 5 lety +23

      Also Captain Disillusion, ElectroBOOM, and Technology Connections :)

    • @bgdu93
      @bgdu93 Před 5 lety +15

      The Thought Emporium, Styropyro anyone?

  • @TommyCallaway
    @TommyCallaway Před 5 lety +90

    What a fascinating way to explain how aperture works.. anyone who makes video should watch this.

    • @kiwi9065
      @kiwi9065 Před 4 lety

      A reason why i dont Like this comment : 69 likes

  • @10_Bit
    @10_Bit Před 5 lety +34

    2:55 everything seems normal
    3:00 wait a second... Did he lose hair during the process of making the video?
    4:08 his hair reappeared...?
    4:00 ahhhh nvm...

    • @AuGrrr
      @AuGrrr Před 3 lety +1

      Either he is dome type of alien or he is aging forwards and back very fast

    • @NatesToolbox
      @NatesToolbox Před 3 lety

      Radiation ☢️ 😂

  • @GiacomoPaganini997
    @GiacomoPaganini997 Před 4 lety +2

    2:49 that final "oh" it's poetry ahahah Lianne is an angel

  • @Yossus
    @Yossus Před 5 lety +6

    I've found that physicists are very good at explaining how exactly things did go wrong, with no ability to predict them beforehand

  • @MrEDMeaner
    @MrEDMeaner Před 5 lety +3

    I studied photography, but you still managed to give me an a-ha moment when you said 'it's more like a pinhole camera' when you closed down the aperture down. I've never heard that simple explanation before!

  • @badorastrome5418
    @badorastrome5418 Před 5 lety +40

    2:58 before shaving
    2:59 after shaving
    Thats the effect of Microwave
    it turn you into Time Machine

    • @rodparker6530
      @rodparker6530 Před 4 lety +1

      Going to say “Wave dynamics!” whenever I need a haircut and a shave.

  • @iKlalter
    @iKlalter Před 5 lety +58

    2:55 instant haircut :)

  • @ma5t
    @ma5t Před 5 lety +23

    I have to say this is one of the best educational CZcams videos I've ever seen! (and I've seen a lot!) You touch on so many different topics, all of which are combined by a really cool theme, and the presentation of your explanations - the wording, the graphics, the humour, etc. - is sublime!

    • @SteveMould
      @SteveMould  Před 5 lety +4

      Hey thanks! That really means a lot.

  • @aidanwansbrough7495
    @aidanwansbrough7495 Před 5 lety +6

    11:25 "Ohhhhhhhhhhhhhh...." I thought that when you explained why cameras narrow the aperture! Loved the video, really fun to watch and interesting as always!

  • @JustinWPruett
    @JustinWPruett Před 5 lety +12

    Steve Mould, you are freaking awesome.

  • @djdrav
    @djdrav Před 5 lety +24

    The continuity on this vid hurts my brain 😂 good work as always though 👍

  • @JBOutdoorliving
    @JBOutdoorliving Před 3 lety +1

    I love the pinhole camera, in my room in the morning I can see outside without opening my curtains, theyre sun blocking (makes your room dark) so it basically mimics the box and pinhole idea

  • @waluigiliishere8842
    @waluigiliishere8842 Před 5 lety +5

    He is the only one capable of cutting and uncutting his hair in the same video..... a true god of science

  • @WithYouIDisagree
    @WithYouIDisagree Před 5 lety +60

    NileRed mentioned in a Steve Mould video??? Woah

    • @satansbarman
      @satansbarman Před 3 lety +1

      I just came here from the NileRed video he mentioned, in which Steve was mentioned 😆

  • @DynestiGTI
    @DynestiGTI Před 2 lety

    7:11 this whole segment about the pin-hole projector and the camera lens was beautiful.

  • @km5405
    @km5405 Před 5 lety +2

    I don't know how I got pointed to your channel but I like it a lot. I love how you don't dumb things down and explain it step by step.

  • @sapiensesciencecerveau2523

    There is a math trick worth trying to get better pictures through the mesh : fast Fourier transformations.
    I used the field of view/aperture trick a lot for taking pictures of animals thought a wire mesh in zoo, and although those mesh are a lot bigger you can have decent results.
    Seems like a DSLR with a wide aperture performs good enough for HD videos, but there might be a way get good results with less performant hardware.
    Recently while scanning a lot of old family photography, some of them where on a textured paper and needed to find a way to get rid of that pattern. That's when I discovered the marvels of fast Fourier transformations.
    I wonder how an FFT filter could improve a picture/film made through a mesh, but I believe it could be incredible.

  • @lescarneiro
    @lescarneiro Před 5 lety +3

    Steve, I could watch you for hours! Love your style and explaining method! Keep the videos comin'!

  • @CEOofNothingTakes
    @CEOofNothingTakes Před 5 lety +89

    The secret techniques have been released to us plebeians.

    • @maxximumb
      @maxximumb Před 5 lety +2

      If you watch the Slow mo CD in a microwave video and scroll down to TheScott10012's comment asking how it was done 1 year ago, you'll see I explained it. Just seemed nobody believed me. If I remember correctly I mentioned the method on other videos / comments too, but I'm far too lazy to go find them now.

  • @georgew.9663
    @georgew.9663 Před 3 lety +3

    WOOOOAAAAAHHH thank you so much, I knew that making the aperture smaller expands the plane of focus but I didn’t know how or why, and I never bothered to look it up, but you explained it so concisely and intuitively and now I see exactly why, awesome!!

  • @psychosoma5049
    @psychosoma5049 Před 3 lety

    The face you're pulling when you freeze for the warning made me actually lol in real life. I love a good half-eye pic.

  • @NWRIBronco6
    @NWRIBronco6 Před 5 lety

    I super appreciate that you show things going wrong / breaking, as well as it working! It's affirming and informative to know that stuff breaks when you make and record these cool phenomena. :)

  • @tompetroff
    @tompetroff Před 5 lety +3

    Stumbled upon your channel. Glad I found it. You’re a good teacher. Your method is very fluid. Good job. Subscribed.

  • @klemenstrupeh8072
    @klemenstrupeh8072 Před 5 lety +10

    After more years I'd like to admit of photography i finally understand basics of optics.

  • @adcurtin
    @adcurtin Před 5 lety +1

    thanks for the awesome explanation of aperture! I knew what it was used for, but now I know why it works and will be able to remember it a lot better.

  • @AgnostosGnostos
    @AgnostosGnostos Před 5 lety +2

    The trick with very open aperture and the micro oven grill at 8:50 is very useful at Zoos.
    Very bright full frame telephoto lenses, more than 85 mm with large aperture, larger than f/2.8 can disappear the cages. The longer focal length and bigger aperture deliver better results. It is a trick of optics.

  • @sailorjerry3720
    @sailorjerry3720 Před rokem

    @Steve I enjoy the way you edit your videos almost as much as the content.
    Thanks!

  • @davidcassar3336
    @davidcassar3336 Před 5 lety +1

    I'm a prototype engineer/machinist for the Uni of Sydney and made a solution for this problem for one of the researchers. Basically we used a tuned length and diameter tube port into the microwave that allows physical access in and out while it's running while attenuating all the microwaves :)

  • @HungryGizmo
    @HungryGizmo Před 5 lety

    excellent, was waiting to find out how you did it. I suspected the pinhole trick, but never thought about the precision focus - so simple, it's great.

  • @joeykauhi7938
    @joeykauhi7938 Před 2 lety +1

    I never thought I'd learn so much about cameras when I started this video. Very intuitive explanations.

  • @ACPushkin
    @ACPushkin Před 5 lety +56

    Time Travel confirmed: Steve turns 8 years younger at 0:16 :O

    • @ACPushkin
      @ACPushkin Před 5 lety +7

      and the older again at 2:58

    • @maxximumb
      @maxximumb Před 5 lety +1

      Proving you can polish a nerd, even if the effects only have a short half life.

    • @scudlee
      @scudlee Před 5 lety +3

      Of course, phone+microwave=time travel

    • @mouli570
      @mouli570 Před 5 lety +1

      @@scudlee Hououin Kyouma is BACK!!!!

    • @mateofoulkes499
      @mateofoulkes499 Před 5 lety

      I wonder when did he time travelled to steal Anthony Hopkins eyes

  • @castillelarkin
    @castillelarkin Před 5 lety +2

    Who remembers the CZcams channel, "Can I microwave this?" This video is far superior

  • @750kv8
    @750kv8 Před 4 lety

    Beautiful plasma capture, well done!

  • @EKUL34
    @EKUL34 Před 4 měsíci +5

    thumbs up for slow mo guys research

  • @Calvarydima
    @Calvarydima Před 4 lety

    In years I knew about the depths of field but just didn’t bother understanding how it works , you’ve just explained it so brilliantly easy

  • @john_john_john
    @john_john_john Před 5 lety +8

    0:17 that's the fastest I've seen hair grow. Steve Mould hiding hair growth techniques from the general population.

    • @scatdawg1
      @scatdawg1 Před 2 lety

      It goes back short later on !!

  •  Před 4 lety

    I love your channel. These are amazing experiments!

  • @jigartalaviya2340
    @jigartalaviya2340 Před 5 lety +20

    Explanation for haircut change.
    First universe: Long hair.
    Second universe: Short hair.
    This video is a glitch in multiverse.
    What other proof do you need??

  • @CodeKujo
    @CodeKujo Před 5 lety

    I love the progression from complicated to simple. Classic research.

  • @e2rqey
    @e2rqey Před 4 lety +11

    That "oh" was priceless 🤣😂🤣😂🤣

  • @MohamedAnsari_H
    @MohamedAnsari_H Před 5 lety

    I'm glad I stumbled across your channel mate, Great videos

  • @Supreme_Lobster
    @Supreme_Lobster Před 5 lety

    Great video Steve, looking sharp!

  • @phxtonash
    @phxtonash Před 5 lety

    I'm glad you mentioned Cody's lab. I was thinking the exact same thing at the same time. By the way I found your Channel few days ago and have been watching most of your videos. Really like them

  • @ReedHarston
    @ReedHarston Před 5 lety

    And finally I understand how pinhole cameras work! Your explanation and graphic made it super simple and easy to understand. Thank you! Thank you!

  • @georhodiumgeo9827
    @georhodiumgeo9827 Před 5 lety +1

    Metal is fine in the microwave. It’s not about metal, it’s about heat dissipation. If you put tin foil or a metal can in the microwave heat will build up in spots on the metal, make plasma, then arc. This is because of how thin the metal is and how quickly heat builds up in spots.
    If you leave a thicker, rolled steel fork in your food no problem (not cast iron too many holes and voids). No it will not break your microwave. The magnetron puts a fixed amount of energy into the faraday cage. If that energy is absorbed better by a piece of metal the magnetron doesn’t get hotter it’s output stays the same.
    Only 2 things will break your microwave.
    1 putting something in the faraday cage that heats up to the point that it melts or breaks the faraday cage.
    2 running the microwave empty, this causes all energy to build until the microwaves find imperfections in the faraday cage to escape through damaging the faraday cage.
    The safety mechanisms in the microwave prevent it from running if the latches or faraday cage are broken, therefore broken microwave.

  • @HalfBoxStudios
    @HalfBoxStudios Před 5 lety

    Steve this could not have been timed better.
    You uploaded this while we were watching the recording of you doing this live for FOTSN...!

  • @chrismofer
    @chrismofer Před 5 lety

    your explanation of a camera obscura is perfect! it's a strange concept to try to put into words.

  • @MrAwawe
    @MrAwawe Před 5 lety +29

    Steve's hair hates continuity.

  • @dabj9546
    @dabj9546 Před 5 lety +9

    Oh I should have thought of that! That's what I do to take photos through a fence in a zoo or something.

  • @kins749
    @kins749 Před 4 lety

    Always wondered what the science behind that mesh was, thanks!

  • @giganetom
    @giganetom Před 5 lety +6

    The waves you describe as exponentially decaying over the mesh are called evanescent waves ;)

  • @josephblattert6311
    @josephblattert6311 Před 5 lety

    Love your channel and Nilered!

  • @darkdragons82
    @darkdragons82 Před 5 lety

    dude I love your videos, keep on

  • @CameraCapers
    @CameraCapers Před 3 lety

    Your video has peaked my interest. Subscribed!

  • @laurawillits176
    @laurawillits176 Před 5 lety

    That was great fun! Glad I found your channel.

  • @rklauco
    @rklauco Před 5 lety

    This was excellent video for camera light physics explanation :) Thanks :)

  • @adamw4671
    @adamw4671 Před 5 lety

    wow! very high quality content! earned my immediate subscription

  • @jek__
    @jek__ Před 3 lety +1

    0:42 Absolute perfect, there are no better words for what a human does with their life :)
    "I dont think theres an intuitive way to explain it " This from the guy with a channel that has a bunch of better and simpler descriptions of complex physical phenomena lol, you can do it

  • @gabewrsewell
    @gabewrsewell Před 5 lety +1

    finally, been waiting for this video for so long

  • @RikusNel
    @RikusNel Před 3 lety +1

    Just a note on the mesh.... It acts a collection of very small and very short waveguides... These waveguides do not support any modes at the microwave frequency of the oven and it will die out exponentially when it tries to pass through.... So basically what you have is a very large surface area High Pass filter that passes frequecies that is a few orders of magnitudes higher than that of the microwave... like visible light.... The reason why they dont make it to pass exactly at the microwave frequency is because the cavity where you put the food in acts as a resonant cavity for an oscillator (the magnetron being the active component). This resonator resonating frequency is a function of the cavity dimensions, but also the permitivity of the material inside of the cavity... Thus the frequency and deadspots and modes generated inside of this cavity is quite unpredictable to be exact, but will always fall inside of a range that is below the cutoff frequency of the mesh... :)

  • @edeggermont
    @edeggermont Před 5 lety +1

    I waited soooo long for this episode!

  • @landonjennings6969
    @landonjennings6969 Před 5 lety

    Great video of plasma!

  • @123gostly
    @123gostly Před 5 lety

    This was really amazing!!

  • @TheRausing1
    @TheRausing1 Před 5 lety

    I like your vibe, man !

  • @gameboydmg-0014
    @gameboydmg-0014 Před 2 lety

    Amazing how much he changes looks during each cut

  • @cypher686
    @cypher686 Před 2 lety +2

    @4:06 that’s maths calculation must have taken an age with the amount of hair he grew

  • @konchatzi
    @konchatzi Před 5 lety

    Been waiting for this.

  • @zm7160
    @zm7160 Před 5 lety +1

    Amazing videography technique @2:58 : "The Haircut Cut"

  • @WolfzyArts
    @WolfzyArts Před 5 lety +20

    His hair changed out of no where, had to go back to make sure i wasnt high or sum 💀

  • @GeovaniNogueira
    @GeovaniNogueira Před 4 lety +4

    3:00 min into the video and... voilà!!! Magical hair cut happens!

  • @ahmedgaafar5369
    @ahmedgaafar5369 Před 4 lety

    excellent work young man.

  • @xenontesla122
    @xenontesla122 Před 5 lety +10

    I'm sure Matt Parker would be happy to see that 4th power at 3:46!

    • @XHappyKillerX
      @XHappyKillerX Před 5 lety +5

      Aah! I got unconciously excited when I saw the 4th power, but could not explain why. Didn't Matt mention in some video once that 4th powers are somewhat uncommon in physics?

  • @phonologyfreaks
    @phonologyfreaks Před 2 lety

    Great videos!

  • @lucidtrip3439
    @lucidtrip3439 Před 3 lety +1

    So a microwave can melt glass in 2 second but my hot pocket is still cold after 2 minutes

  • @I.Fumblebee.I
    @I.Fumblebee.I Před 5 lety +4

    "oh"
    - every wife ever

  • @dw4353
    @dw4353 Před 5 lety +2

    Thanks, I can now film myself from inside a toaster whilst it’s in the bath.

  • @Akkbar21
    @Akkbar21 Před 4 lety

    I love your disclaimer in your British accent. Sounds more official than it would with my accent.

  • @lidarman2
    @lidarman2 Před 3 lety

    This video, revisiting it, gave me an interesting viola moment of how evanescent waves are related to diffraction which means how boundary conditions of Maxwell's equations are related to diffraction. Evanescent waves are the limit of the number of slits going to infinity and the size going to zero which is similar to the infinite series to represent a decaying exponential.

  • @ViriyaSP
    @ViriyaSP Před 2 lety +1

    I'd say the easy way to explain wave unable to pass through the mesh, is like filtering water. the water that passes is way less. in the wave, most of the wave would end up hitting the metal mesh.

  • @RafidW9
    @RafidW9 Před 4 lety +2

    7:48 goddamnit you just summarised two whole chapter in my physics book when I was in 8th grade. Why were my physics teachers so bad??!

  • @nonamenoname2618
    @nonamenoname2618 Před 4 lety

    The mesh isolation method is applied in many other situations, beside microwave ovens. E.g. radio telescopes (telescopes, that take images with radio waves and not with visible light) are also meshed for the sake of weight reduction and stability. The difference is that radio telescopes reflect the light instead of isolating it.

  • @qbasic16
    @qbasic16 Před 5 lety

    Awesome channel!

  • @mikewilliams6025
    @mikewilliams6025 Před 5 lety

    Being so nice to Cody after he threw that shade at you in the original video. Peace on earth and goodwill toward men.

  • @nucspartan321
    @nucspartan321 Před 5 lety

    Great video

  • @OhJeezMC
    @OhJeezMC Před 4 lety

    I find disappearing a metal mesh with DSLR optics way more interesting than any boring plasma inside a microwave. Mind blowing.

  • @kieran461
    @kieran461 Před 3 lety +2

    "The reason waves cant fit through small holes is kind of tricky, i don't think there's an intuitive way it explain it" Here's one: If they're too big, they don't fit.

  • @sakithree
    @sakithree Před 4 lety +1

    5:04 "For me, that's fine" -note crazy eyes of excitement...

  • @RideGasGas
    @RideGasGas Před 3 lety

    Just doing some rough calculations. Microwave ovens output between 600 W and ~1500 W depending on model. Radio frequency exposure limits vary around the world as to power density in millwatts per centimeter squared mW/cm^2 and as to exposure time. In the US, the general population limit is 1 mW/cm^2 averaged over a 30 minute period.
    So, let's say you have a 1000 W oven. Converting 1000 W to mW gives you 1,000,000 mW. Assuming you have all the 1000 W of energy is bouncing around the inside of the oven and is available at the enlarged hole in the mesh for the camera (it's probably not, but figuring worst case), you would need to attenuate the RF energy by 1,000,000 times to reduce the 1,000,000 mW down to 1 mW. That is a factor of 10 to the 6th power or an attenuation of 60 dB. That is a factor of 100 more than the 10 to the 4th power you've estimated.
    Since the hole is 1 cm in diameter, the area is 0.785 cm and the power density at the hole would be 1,000,000 mW x 10^-4 / 0.785 cm^2 = 127.3 mW/cm^2 using your estimate of a factor of 10 to the 4th power reduction from the 1 cm diameter hole.
    As stated, the power levels drop off exponentially with distance from the hole and there is a time averaging function over the 30 minutes so if one is only running the microwave oven for a few seconds here and there over the 30 minute period, that helps.
    All that said, would I try this if I had a spare microwave to play with, probably. But I'm a EE who works with radio waves and who has a spectrum analyzer and other test equipment to perform RF measurements to verify everything is safe. For the average person, as they say, your mileage may vary . . .

  • @emersonlamond1024
    @emersonlamond1024 Před 5 lety

    I love your wacky experiments and also the little behind the scenes mentions of how your wife is just... "... um ok hun, I love you but... please don't burn down the house... "

  • @francoisrd
    @francoisrd Před 5 lety +2

    The hair continuity in this video is amazing :)

    • @DazMataz
      @DazMataz Před 2 lety

      The hoodie and it's hood over his left shoulder is the only constant!

  • @artyemsie
    @artyemsie Před 3 lety

    I love this guy!