Does Glass Break Faster than a Bullet? - The Slow Mo Guys

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  • čas přidán 13. 12. 2022
  • Gav and Dan decide to have a race between two things that happen instantly to the human eyeball. Both contestants make it to the finish line in one frame of a normal camera, thankfully the high speed cameras are paying attention.
    Second channel petabyte vid - • Unboxing a Petabyte
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Komentáře • 4K

  • @BitchenMarsRockstar
    @BitchenMarsRockstar Před rokem +1790

    The arrows turning into one purple one when they meet is a really nice touch.

    • @Puss1man
      @Puss1man Před rokem +44

      It's the little things

    • @VPN14494
      @VPN14494 Před rokem +18

      Also notice how the radius of fractured glass starts from small and gets larger as it moves forward...

    • @reanbowlerd5988
      @reanbowlerd5988 Před rokem +12

      @@VPN14494 well thats not something they did, its just how the glass broke

    • @sub0mc49
      @sub0mc49 Před rokem +1

      669th like

    • @itiscujo
      @itiscujo Před rokem

      Wow that's a great name lol

  • @willg9106
    @willg9106 Před rokem +5865

    Dan is probably a candidate for the "most glass smashed by a single person" record at this point

    • @squatchjosh1131
      @squatchjosh1131 Před rokem +164

      Well there is super humman, whose youtube channel is devoted to front flipping onto fluorescent light tubes and such for all the juggalos and juggalettes out there

    • @thereverbix9029
      @thereverbix9029 Před rokem +92

      @@squatchjosh1131 most glass smashed by a single person (non-self destructive)

    • @S....
      @S.... Před rokem +97

      @@thereverbix9029 I don't think Dan counts as non-self destructive...

    • @squatchjosh1131
      @squatchjosh1131 Před rokem +11

      @@S.... *Tony Hawk video intensifies*

    • @TheZohan907
      @TheZohan907 Před rokem +4

      *Nick Lowe has entered the chat*

  • @silverblast404
    @silverblast404 Před rokem +291

    The bullet travels in a straight line, but the glass splinters out cracking every inch as it goes on. Its like racing someone who's running literal circles around you, after having lapped you.

    • @GeorgeDCowley
      @GeorgeDCowley Před rokem +25

      To be fair, it can go forwards and outwards at the same time, I think.

    • @sankang9425
      @sankang9425 Před rokem +35

      Nah, The cracks are not traveling. The shockwave is, and the cracks just follow.

    • @Dr.IanPlect
      @Dr.IanPlect Před rokem +3

      Silver Blast; tripe.

  • @kuboskube
    @kuboskube Před rokem +824

    This was a fantastic video experience. No fluff, no faffin' about, straight to the point, amazing video editing, great explanations for how you chose to edit the clips.
    Very proud of you guys for this one. Good job!

    • @jonslg240
      @jonslg240 Před rokem +1

      Are they trying to tell us the speed of sound is faster in glass than air?
      I don't get it.. 😂

    • @kuboskube
      @kuboskube Před rokem +2

      @@jonslg240
      I don't remember why, but yes, the speed of sound is indeed faster through solid objects than through liquids or gases.

    • @skylarkesselring6075
      @skylarkesselring6075 Před rokem +2

      ​@@jonslg240 speed of sound changes depending on what the sound is traveling through.
      For example, speed of sound is quite fast in metals, partially responsible for why metal stuff is so loud when you hit it

    • @USGovsOwnersRtheRealEnemy
      @USGovsOwnersRtheRealEnemy Před rokem

      Well, not straight but they did get to it.

    • @kenziebalhatchet
      @kenziebalhatchet Před 9 měsíci

      @@jonslg240it is

  • @TimeBucks
    @TimeBucks Před rokem +619

    What a great combination

  • @guitarsimon1
    @guitarsimon1 Před rokem +2350

    Dan’s firearm discipline is always a joy to see.

    • @pomx2900
      @pomx2900 Před rokem +215

      British Army training.

    • @SnakeMan448
      @SnakeMan448 Před rokem

      He's usually such a messy goofball, and then the guns or explosives come out and then he's absolute all business.

    • @CookingWithCows
      @CookingWithCows Před rokem +329

      It's almost like proper vetting and training for gun owners makes everyone safer

    • @himedo1512
      @himedo1512 Před rokem

      @@CookingWithCows if you need training to not be a moron, wellllll

    • @matthewalvarojr.2634
      @matthewalvarojr.2634 Před rokem +61

      @@CookingWithCows preposterous

  • @he-who
    @he-who Před rokem +518

    I looked it up and apparently the fastest cartridge is the .220 Swift, which has a published speed of about 3181mph. So it’d be really close to the glass breaking. I’d be curious to see it

    • @bok1080
      @bok1080 Před rokem +26

      About the closest factory ballistics would be the 22-250 rem with 35gn projectiles (factory ballistics of 4250fps) the glass is approximately 4600fps in this video, there are wildcat rounds that are faster, gs custom in south Africa had one to 5200fps

    • @TheLtVoss
      @TheLtVoss Před rokem +14

      Well if we'll go all out on guns I would think supcaliber rounds out of tank cannons cann be faster than the glass breaking
      Since I recall same numbers form the Leo2A5 and following models the muzzle velocity of the APFSD round out of the rh120 l55 is about 1750m/s so the 9mm on top of the glass breaking soo yeah ther is probably a gun and round at about 1436m/s so the exact same speed

    •  Před rokem +19

      @@TheLtVoss Not to mention how cool it would be to see Dan fire the Rh120 L/55 - I'm sure they can borrow one of those for a vid.

    • @MrChickensnatcher
      @MrChickensnatcher Před rokem +1

      That and shoot the glass.

    • @caedmonswanson2378
      @caedmonswanson2378 Před rokem +3

      Should shoot the glass with the bullet to get a real-time comparison

  • @OfficialSamuelC
    @OfficialSamuelC Před rokem +84

    The gun safety etiquette Dan always has is great to see. Many could learn from that, as in learn to be doing the most basic thing you should do when handling firearms. So many shout safe before even checking the chamber is clear because it’s just an automatic thing they through out after each shot, with the assumption that it will always be safe no matter what.

    • @gilliganallmighty3
      @gilliganallmighty3 Před 11 měsíci +7

      A lot better then a certain actor/ producer and armorer.

    • @Dragongaga
      @Dragongaga Před 5 měsíci

      @@gilliganallmighty3 I can't remember if they said, but I hope that studio armorer got fired

  • @joshuasims5421
    @joshuasims5421 Před rokem +548

    I appreciate how they always leave in all of Dan’s firearm and pyrotechnics safety steps, calling out ‘safe’ etc. What a pro!

    • @hippokrampus2838
      @hippokrampus2838 Před rokem +50

      I love it too, one because it shows that they care to do it right, and two because it shows how to do it right!

    • @inoob26
      @inoob26 Před rokem +9

      Basically most people who uses firearms in a recording session does that...... I hope?

    • @nigelsmith7366
      @nigelsmith7366 Před rokem +8

      He did not pull back the slide the check the breach after he dropped the mag out before putting it on safety.... Watch any professional or experienced firearms user he will pull the slid back once or twice to make sure that the breach is empty before he/she safes the gun... Yes I know he only put 1 bullet in the mag and put it on safe but for the sake of 1.5sec physical check of the breach is just good safe procedure

    • @isaacorwhatever4329
      @isaacorwhatever4329 Před rokem +19

      @@nigelsmith7366 does it need to be slid back if its already slid back?

    • @PerpetualCamel
      @PerpetualCamel Před rokem +37

      @@nigelsmith7366 watch it again. He looks to see where the casing went, looks into the open slide, and then calls safe.

  • @coryman125
    @coryman125 Před rokem +542

    I think the biggest thing we learned from this video is that even if what you're filming isn't anything new, it's still gonna be fun just watching your banter

    • @BariumCobaltNitrog3n
      @BariumCobaltNitrog3n Před rokem +4

      Bri'ish banta as weww. Although they are more RP than scouse

    • @f.cscootriders
      @f.cscootriders Před rokem +6

      I reckon these guys could film paint drying in slow motion and make it interesting.

    • @BariumCobaltNitrog3n
      @BariumCobaltNitrog3n Před rokem

      @@f.cscootriders It's more interesting if you speed it up and put it under a microscope. czcams.com/video/OW5wB8rJ8Zc/video.html (60 Symbols)

  • @LeonardMeltsner
    @LeonardMeltsner Před rokem +21

    The discussion about the speed of sound in a solid (like glass) wraps back around to Gav's old question about the speed of push in a lovely way.

  • @rickintexas1584
    @rickintexas1584 Před rokem +27

    I was definitely surprised by how much faster the glass was. That was cool.

    • @CorePathway
      @CorePathway Před 6 měsíci

      3:30 Different speeds of sound. Mind blown

  • @sebastianhaas5863
    @sebastianhaas5863 Před rokem +482

    One small thing I love about the slow mo guys is they always let things play out, like the bullet traveling all the way to the other side, without cutting or fast forwarding, just giving the aweseome footage the respect it deserves :D

    • @joshuasims5421
      @joshuasims5421 Před rokem +5

      Absolutely!

    • @jacobkeyser8628
      @jacobkeyser8628 Před rokem

      I think they have like a 4 hour video of a glass measuring cup shattering

    • @gokulnair
      @gokulnair Před rokem

      @@jacobkeyser8628 19 hours and 5 minutes more like 😂

  • @Daedivh
    @Daedivh Před rokem +660

    Slow-mo speed comparisons is a surprisingly interesting AND satisfying thing to watch. Think you guys stumbled onto a goldmine with this one.

    • @DragonOfTheMortalKombat
      @DragonOfTheMortalKombat Před rokem +6

      Yeah the glass cracking part was amazing, wished they had a faster rifle bullet instead.

    • @narref04
      @narref04 Před rokem +1

      Next is a 223 cartridge.

  • @sneakyreviewswithjosh
    @sneakyreviewswithjosh Před rokem +26

    When you eventually get the chance (hopefully not in Texas) you guys should film snowballs hitting glass and exploding in slow motion. I bet that would look amazing!

  • @paulcousins6535
    @paulcousins6535 Před rokem +17

    The production quality in your videos is top shelf. Highly informative, and highly entertaining!

  • @mudgernz1
    @mudgernz1 Před rokem +360

    The stunt safety in me is so happy watching Dan fire a single readied round and still checking the chamber is clear before calling safe.

    • @the1anonymouse
      @the1anonymouse Před rokem +54

      Not just stunt safety but general firearms safety

    • @ruthlessluder
      @ruthlessluder Před rokem +2

      Common sense

    • @greatercanada3020
      @greatercanada3020 Před rokem +5

      You would be surprised...

    • @Cptjonmiller
      @Cptjonmiller Před rokem +19

      Well he was in the military, and that habit stays. Much like the trigger finger habit with anything that has a trigger.

    • @distantignition
      @distantignition Před rokem +21

      I've noticed that some of the most dangerous stuff that happens isn't people new to handling something dangerous, but the people have handled it so much that they think that safety rules are for the new people.

  • @ZoonCrypticon
    @ZoonCrypticon Před rokem +820

    For a next video, could you use a spring loaded glass crusher in the middle of a great sheet of glass, to see the circular propagation of the material-wave? And in a following experiment two or even three "epicenters" on the same sheet of glass which get triggered at the same time. Would be interesting to see 2 or 3 circular waves meeting each other, when the conducting medium already fails.

    • @souhung69
      @souhung69 Před rokem +11

      That would indeed be quite amazing. I hope they see this comment

    • @d4rk0v3
      @d4rk0v3 Před rokem +3

      I second. Like their comment.

    • @lavendec
      @lavendec Před rokem +21

      They would have to be extremely in sync to actually see multiple crushers

    • @MrBattlecharge
      @MrBattlecharge Před rokem +9

      Not sure how that would appear on playback, as their field of view gets thinner as the camera speed gets faster. So you might not be able to see everything at fast speeds or you see everything but it happens to quickly to see anything interesting at slower speeds.

    • @nikmrn
      @nikmrn Před rokem +1

      @@d4rk0v3 What?

  • @ClanImprobable
    @ClanImprobable Před rokem +115

    I endlessly love how endlessly amazed you two remain after all these slow mo years.

  • @napolitano7150
    @napolitano7150 Před rokem +1

    The quality of this video is incredible. Thanks

  • @laserfloyd
    @laserfloyd Před rokem +220

    I always thought it'd be interesting to see slow-mo of metal being machined. There are some channels that run the 120 or 240fps but using one of those insane macro lenses to get right up to the cutter and see how the metal reacts seems like it'd be interesting.

  • @bluegizmo1983
    @bluegizmo1983 Před rokem +162

    There are definitely some ammos that would come very close to keeping up with the glass breaking. For example, the 4,000 Feet per second (2,727 MPH) 35gr .223 ammo, or the 4,300 feet per second (2,931 MPH) .220 Swift ammo.

    • @michaelstancek8611
      @michaelstancek8611 Před rokem +10

      I was going to comment, my dad used to hand load custom 220 swift rounds that were absolute heaters that would probably come close to the same speed as the glass

    • @camaro25
      @camaro25 Před rokem +4

      I was also thinking they should use a rifle instead. That round would probably keep up with the breaking glass.

    • @CCW1911
      @CCW1911 Před rokem +5

      The 223 WSM would be close in factory loadings, or if you went wildcat there is the 22 eargesplitten loudenboomer which is the 378 Weatherby Magnum necked to 22.

    • @Spillerrec
      @Spillerrec Před rokem +18

      Dan certainly gets confused, it is not an order of magnitude faster (at least with the most commonly used base of magnitude of 10) as it is around 4 times faster. Which is a lot, but still feels like in the realm of possibility. Him casually throwing that ball certainly is an order (or two) of magnitude slower than a bullet though. While numbers are hard to get a feel for, apparently the video comparison didn't do it for Dan either.

    • @Lexicon_
      @Lexicon_ Před rokem +13

      .220 Swift and .22-250 are both ludicrously fast with certain loads, .22-250 may even by slightly easier to find.

  • @Carlosramirez-he4zi
    @Carlosramirez-he4zi Před rokem +4

    You guys are the real gem of youtube, the real gem of youtube.

  • @polinanikulina
    @polinanikulina Před 7 měsíci +1

    The arrow turning purple is so satisfying! I also love the music of the glass after it's cracked.

  • @patrickchampagne436
    @patrickchampagne436 Před rokem +365

    I'd like to see a time lapse of Dan's lab coat over the years. It has been through alot 😆

  • @tyler1234321
    @tyler1234321 Před rokem +274

    I will never get tires of seeing things in slow motion especially when it's shot this well. Your personalities are such an amazing addition to already great visuals.

    • @CaptainPanick
      @CaptainPanick Před rokem +11

      You may never get tires but I will never get tired of seeing things in slow motion. ;)

    • @tyler1234321
      @tyler1234321 Před rokem +8

      @@CaptainPanick now I have to leave the typo lmao

    • @CaptainPanick
      @CaptainPanick Před rokem +8

      @@tyler1234321 Maybe one day our smartphone keyboards will predict correctly what we intend to say right? lol

    • @ddegn
      @ddegn Před rokem +2

      Some of these videos have a magical quality.
      Being able to see things we normally can't, can make the images look supernatural.

    • @NoNameAtAll2
      @NoNameAtAll2 Před rokem +1

      tired*

  • @clintlewry9806
    @clintlewry9806 Před rokem +3

    As usual, that’s some seriously quality slow-mo, keep it up gents!

  • @user-vy1ie8my5h
    @user-vy1ie8my5h Před 8 měsíci

    This is great stuff. Visually amazing and very educational. . As usual, that’s some seriously quality slow-mo, keep it up gents!.

  • @austinclark2541
    @austinclark2541 Před rokem +64

    A .220 Swift is the closest bullet with a speed comparable to the speed of sound in glass. Would be very interesting to see how close they are!

    • @ians.2941
      @ians.2941 Před rokem +11

      The fastest published .220 swift was 4,665 FPS through a hand load (from p.o. Ackleys reloading handbook) The glass breaking in this video is moving at 4713 FPS. So pretty close but the glass is still slightly faster

    • @21babydew
      @21babydew Před rokem

      The only rounds I can think of are modern smooth bore cannons shooting apfsds at speeds of over 1500m/s some over 1700m/s beyond that you would need a rail gun to go faster

    • @oskar8413
      @oskar8413 Před rokem +5

      The only rifle round that could beat the glass I think would be something ludicrous like the .22 Eargesplitten Loudenboomer. Yes it's a real wildcat cartridge lmao

    • @driftertank
      @driftertank Před rokem

      @@oskar8413
      P.O. Ackley was a mad genius...

  • @KnightSlasher
    @KnightSlasher Před rokem +380

    Seeing the glass and the bullet moving at the same time is really interesting and nice to see, combined that with the speed the Flash has some competition

    • @NarturArkano
      @NarturArkano Před rokem +1

      But the Flash runs faster than time!

    • @UnlovedD2
      @UnlovedD2 Před rokem +2

      220 Swift should have exactly the same speed as glass

    • @i-_-am-_-g1467
      @i-_-am-_-g1467 Před rokem

      Now do the same thing with a .408 Cheytac (3500 ft/s), .50bmg (4000ft/s) or the big daddy .220 swift (4665 ft/s)

    • @i-_-am-_-g1467
      @i-_-am-_-g1467 Před rokem +1

      @@UnlovedD2 this

    • @queueeeee9000
      @queueeeee9000 Před rokem

      Not even close

  • @reissmain6573
    @reissmain6573 Před rokem +1

    Been watching you guys since I was a kid, makes me so happy watching this

  • @FrankJordanBeatbox
    @FrankJordanBeatbox Před rokem +9

    Amazing video as always :)
    I'd love to see you guys look at certain workshop tools.
    I can imagine it would be rather mystifying looking at how a tool might cut through wood/ metal as if they were butter in slowmotion :)

  • @xKold
    @xKold Před rokem +598

    The .220 swift can reach speeds of upwards of 4000 ft/s. Or Mach 4. That's the closest you might find. I happen to own a 6.5 creedmoor rifle, it pushes 3020 ft/s. I think there are some rifle cartridges that will give glass a run for its money!
    Love the videos guys! Would love to see this revisited!

    • @BeetleBuns
      @BeetleBuns Před rokem +25

      it would have to be a pretty hot .220 swift load, the glass is shattering at 4714 fps. I think the fastest factory load I've seen for .220 was 4600 or something

    • @Mrx1080
      @Mrx1080 Před rokem +9

      There would be wildcat calibers that would be faster I'd imagine, but yeah I suspect the glass would beat everything commercially available.

    • @jakeryan6638
      @jakeryan6638 Před rokem +6

      @@Mrx1080 Put the ol .17/50 incinerator in the lineup

    • @sbreheny
      @sbreheny Před rokem +22

      From what I've read, there seems to be a practical "wall" at around 4600 feet/second. You can push it faster but accuracy is very poor, the bullets often break up, and barrels only last a few shots. .220 Swift is the fastest round in large-scale production as far as I know, and it is only about 300 fps slower than this "wall" which was achieved with the stupidly silly ".22 Eargesplitten Loudenboomer "

    • @DudeOfCoolness45
      @DudeOfCoolness45 Před rokem +1

      Is that muzzle velocity or downrange?

  • @ricmanchas5799
    @ricmanchas5799 Před rokem +26

    The .220 Swift is a semi-rimmed rifle cartridge developed by Winchester and introduced in 1935 for small game and varmint hunting. It was the first factory-loaded rifle cartridge with a muzzle velocity of over 1,200 m/s, just under Mach 4.

    • @potatojake197
      @potatojake197 Před rokem

      I was just about to suggest this, hopefully they can get their hands on some

    • @r2-d2-e2
      @r2-d2-e2 Před rokem +2

      Checkout the .22 Eargesplitten Loudenboomer

    • @raygumm
      @raygumm Před rokem +5

      Doing the math of that cartridge in ft/s (4000 ish) vs the glass (4700ish) the 220 swift wouldn't be quite fast enough unless it was loaded pretty spicy which i reckon could be a tad dangerous. I recommend a Kentucky Ballistics collab.

    • @SoftwareSimian_
      @SoftwareSimian_ Před rokem +2

      Its watermelon slowmo time!

    • @WayStedYou
      @WayStedYou Před rokem

      @@raygumm its much faster with modern powders the 4000fps load is from the 1930s,, you can reach 4400 with factory ammo now

  • @cottsak
    @cottsak Před rokem +3

    There is so much under appreciated talent in these videos that has absolutely nothing to do with filming things at high frame rates 🤣🤣🤣

  • @DistiIIer
    @DistiIIer Před rokem +1

    Awesome video. I'm hammered right now, and I was amazed 👏

  • @awdies
    @awdies Před rokem +7

    Garand Thumb, Kentucky Ballistics, Demolition Ranch would all be great collabs.
    Great stuff as always!
    Cheers,
    T

    • @unfitcheetah
      @unfitcheetah Před rokem +1

      I was just going to say with the full range of guns and ammo available to Demo ranch this would be an incredible collab. But you are correct Granad, Kentucky or even the AK guy would make amazing videos.

    • @tychothefriendlymonolith
      @tychothefriendlymonolith Před rokem +1

      You forgot Gun Jesus.

    • @awdies
      @awdies Před rokem +1

      @@unfitcheetah I would lean toward Garand as he's really informative with his overviews. And he's kind of in the same realm as slo mo being teaching/learning.
      But I'd take anyone tbh.

  • @Seraph.G
    @Seraph.G Před rokem +120

    I love how the glass stays in place for about as long as it takes the bullet to travel the full distance

    • @supermaximglitchy1
      @supermaximglitchy1 Před rokem +7

      gravity has his own speed wich is way slower than a bullet

    • @morimetz
      @morimetz Před rokem

      That's clearly a fast forward at the end 😄

  • @rianmacdonald9454
    @rianmacdonald9454 Před rokem +1

    I don't know why, but I loved watching the slow motion of that glass. It clicked something in my mind watching it spread like that.

  • @nathanhaywood273
    @nathanhaywood273 Před rokem

    I just love you two! Y'all are so great

  • @DerpyGrump
    @DerpyGrump Před rokem +29

    “I do have some bushy wings on me.”
    What an amazing Dan quote.

    • @codybarnes3548
      @codybarnes3548 Před rokem +3

      The way Gav completely lost his train of thought looking at him had me rolling 😂

  • @Frost-jz6ee
    @Frost-jz6ee Před rokem +97

    I love that these guys have never lost their consistency. Never changed and never needed to. Just a perfect channel imo

  • @heldthelever
    @heldthelever Před rokem +3

    One of the few remaining consistent creators from the golden age

  • @juanmiguelsebastian1477
    @juanmiguelsebastian1477 Před rokem +2

    This experiment is now my new found knowledge. I never thought that a shattering glass would actually be able to beat a bullet. After your explanation on the speed of sound in different mediums, I recalled my lessons in science class. The speed of sound changes depending on the mediums state of matter. The more compact atoms are the easier sound and vibration travels

  • @Dr.Nikolai27
    @Dr.Nikolai27 Před rokem +143

    Just wanted to include the mind-blowing fact that in the first shot, the bullet is going at 343 m/s or 768mph, which is the EXACT speed of sound at 20°C! What a phenomenal coincidence and representation of the speed of sound!

    • @duncanjsparks
      @duncanjsparks Před rokem +2

      I wondered this and googled the speed of sound and then checked back at the bullet speed 😮

    • @TesserId
      @TesserId Před rokem +6

      Google says to expect "between 990 and 1350 feet per second." With the speed of sound being 1125 fps (343 m/s). That makes it reasonable median. So, I'm not shocked, except that it came out pretty close to _exact._

    • @doomsdayrabbit4398
      @doomsdayrabbit4398 Před rokem +2

      Given the time this was shot, it's probably exactly that temperature outside.

    • @WayStedYou
      @WayStedYou Před rokem

      it would've slowed down a bit by the end of the 6ft

    • @Black.Sabbath
      @Black.Sabbath Před rokem

      What does that mean? No sound?

  • @blobfish.
    @blobfish. Před rokem +55

    3:28 Dan's explanation here of the speed of sound comparison was so simple and interesting!!
    Bullet: faster than sound in air, but slower than sound in glass. I never knew how that worked until now and Dan summed it up so nicely.
    That's my one thing learnt for today! I can turn my brain off now (and it's not even 8am hahaha)

    • @Lucas-dy4or
      @Lucas-dy4or Před rokem +7

      Yep that’s how it works. As sound is longitudinal it relies on particles vibrating each other to produce a wave. Seeing as air particles are ‘free’ and there’s lots of space between them, the speed of sound in air is much slower than a liquid or solid, where the particles are always touching. Seeing as they’re always touching it allows for much faster ‘transfer of vibration’. Something that makes a lot of sense but you’d never think of it had someone not told you :D Hope the crude explanation was helpful

    • @blobfish.
      @blobfish. Před rokem +2

      @@Lucas-dy4or fantastic explanation, that makes perfect sense! Thank you! 😊

    • @InsanePigeon
      @InsanePigeon Před rokem +2

      It's interesting that he mentioned the speed of sound because the bullet in the first slow motion was going nearly exactly the speed of sound in air.

    • @racer927
      @racer927 Před 11 měsíci

      ​​@@Lucas-dy4orSound being faster in solid ground can be heard in one video where they were disposing 100 tons of old explosives and when they went off, the camera picked up the rumbling of the exposions through the ground before the shockwave in the air reached it.

  • @PaulRubino
    @PaulRubino Před 10 měsíci

    This is great stuff. Visually amazing and very educational. 👍

  • @sitschi3949
    @sitschi3949 Před rokem +19

    You could try Darts hitting a dart board wayyy to fast! That would look cool in (macro) slow motion as well :p

  • @applianceman6194
    @applianceman6194 Před rokem +168

    What is amazing is the bullet left the screen just as the kick back of the gun Dan was holding was just starting. Makes one curious how far the bullet travels for Dan to recover from the kick back and has the weapon level again. That would be amazing to see.

    • @taliakuznetsova7092
      @taliakuznetsova7092 Před rokem +11

      It reminds me how the an-94 fires bullets so fast (with it's special semi auto mode) as to land more shots before recoil hits the user. This video really puts into perspective how viable a concept that was (although it didn't hit mass use for many reasons)

    • @bvoyelr
      @bvoyelr Před rokem +6

      Unless he's an AMAZING speed shooter, the bullet would travel about 100 meters before Dan would be ready to fire again -- that'd be a quarter second split, which I think is pretty close to as good as you can get before you get into competition speeds.
      The current world record is .10 second splits (give or take -- it was 5 shots over .57 seconds). In that case, each bullet would travel 40 meters before the next shot went off. (This is ignoring the fact that the shooter wasn't using 9mm, and I'm actually unsure of what caliber he was using, but presumably it was a slower load, so it'll be in the same ballpark as 9mm)

    • @WayStedYou
      @WayStedYou Před rokem +1

      @@taliakuznetsova7092 it fires them before the rifle starts recoil in a 2 round burst*

  • @Ping_JJT7
    @Ping_JJT7 Před rokem +168

    Been watching since 2012 and haven’t watched a single video of SlowMoGuys where I don’t enjoy it. Always awesome content. Thanks for all the videos and the efforts you put into it.

  • @glakagz
    @glakagz Před měsícem

    Super Cool comparison. Thnxs SloMo guys

  • @aaronchristman6627
    @aaronchristman6627 Před rokem

    I like your video's some I love! this one was a good one short and enjoyable thank you!

  • @colinmacvicar2507
    @colinmacvicar2507 Před rokem +401

    I’d like to see the comparison of different types of glass breaking. Like regular, tempered, laminated and even rupert drops.

    • @TheWebster109
      @TheWebster109 Před rokem +16

      Regular glass and laminate glass would be pretty boring as they would just crack or fall apart and not explode like tempered glass

    • @tarantulamadness6191
      @tarantulamadness6191 Před rokem +3

      @@TheWebster109 and rupert drops are tiny, they would instantly break from one side to the other lol.

    • @inflatablewolfie
      @inflatablewolfie Před rokem +43

      @@tarantulamadness6191 Nothing is instant if you have a fast enough camera.

    • @khuedinhvan1986
      @khuedinhvan1986 Před rokem +1

      ok

    • @grahamstretch6863
      @grahamstretch6863 Před rokem +2

      @@tarantulamadness6191They have done the Rupert drops, or at least someone has, I’ve seen them.
      Found the video for you, not slo mo guys sadly. czcams.com/video/X3o71W4uNHc/video.html

  • @genericinternetperson
    @genericinternetperson Před rokem +34

    I love when we get a good relatable speed comparison, more of this kind of stuff is always welcome!

  • @du_auch_da4520
    @du_auch_da4520 Před rokem

    This footage is absolutely amazing

  • @nutbuster7896
    @nutbuster7896 Před rokem +7

    Hey guys awesome content. I was wondering if you could do a video about seeing a magician’s trick of changing an object to another in super slow motion lol

  • @somecunninglinguist
    @somecunninglinguist Před rokem +20

    I can't believe that when I started watching this channel the technology didn't really exist to watch glass break like this and now we're here

  • @Bernwon
    @Bernwon Před rokem +29

    That comparison side by side really quantifies the speed of the glass breaking. You could have said the speed and it wouldn’t mean nearly as much as something like this! Love it.

  • @hyperthreaded
    @hyperthreaded Před rokem +43

    Interesting how shape of the wavefront in the glass goes from round to almost straight because it forms a circle around the initial cracking point at all times

    • @thoatran2718
      @thoatran2718 Před rokem

      ok

    • @Beschaulichkeit
      @Beschaulichkeit Před rokem +1

      I wish I had the words to describe this from a mathematical perspective. Something about the angle that defines a given section length at a given radius?

    • @alexabc220
      @alexabc220 Před rokem +5

      @@Beschaulichkeit I think because the glass cracks in a circle from the point of damage. Imagine the initial break being the centre of this circle. As it then enlarges, the edge of this circle appears straight because the circumference is so large. A bit like saying the earth is flat, no it’s just large

    • @sergey1519
      @sergey1519 Před rokem +5

      ​@@Beschaulichkeit "curvature is inversely proportional to the radius" is the magic words

    • @Beschaulichkeit
      @Beschaulichkeit Před rokem

      @@sergey1519 Thank you!

  • @Tribulation88
    @Tribulation88 Před rokem

    Amazing video as usual guys of the slow disposition! I'd love to see you film Riccardo Merlini drumming, he's so fast you can't see what's going on... like in the 400 BPM range, it's insane! I know your video's are filmed way in advance, but that collaboration would be amazing.

  • @djafk
    @djafk Před rokem +23

    It's always super cool that glass breaks internally completely before collapsing.

  • @justinlong5892
    @justinlong5892 Před rokem +18

    I love Dan's firearm knowledge and discipline.

  • @shabumkinspleen1971
    @shabumkinspleen1971 Před rokem

    Always awesome guys!

  • @NVpcGuy
    @NVpcGuy Před rokem +4

    I would love to see you guys do a collab with the Hydraulic Press Channel! His slow-mo shots are often inadequate to show the detail of the explosions he creates by crushing things and I think it would be awesome to get your cameras to show some of his explosions in super slow-mo!

  • @Skinflaps_Meatslapper
    @Skinflaps_Meatslapper Před rokem +14

    The cartridge you'd want to use to compare speed is a .22-284, it's a way overbored cartridge, and loaded with a 60gr bullet they'll hit 4400fps (3,000mph). Lighter bullets will approach and sometimes exceed 5,000fps (3,400mph), so you'd be able to beat the glass in a race with the right load. Also, the lightweight bullets (40gr or so) have a tendency to rip themselves apart soon after departing the barrel, which is why heavier match bullets are the usual load for this cartridge...only a handful of heavily jacketed bullets will handle the speed and centrifugal forces coming out of a 1:7 twist barrel. Having a bullet disintegrate midair would be an awesome thing to capture on camera, but it's an unpredictable event that might happen right out of the barrel, 50 yards out, on impact with a gnat, or not at all. I guess you could score the bullet before loading to make it a little more predictable.

    • @russelltalbot9439
      @russelltalbot9439 Před rokem +2

      Dear slow mo guys: please listen to this guy! It would be so cool to see a bullet rip itself apart! However: a few tweaks to his request. 1: it might be hard for you to get a 22-284. So get a 22-250 as they are everywhere. Hornady makes a 35 grain ntx bullet in the “superformance” line that will achieve 4450 fps. It still won’t be as fast as glass, but much closer.
      Second: if you CAN use custom bullet loads, then please do what he is suggesting as either of these calibers (with custom loads) can achieve speeds high enough to catch this glass, AND have the potential to rip itself apart! That would be so cool to see in slow motion!!
      Also: food for thought there are ample rumors that a .17 Fireball in R&D had several test rounds that were vaporizing as soon as it left the muzzle. (Or at least tearing itself apart.)
      Please, please try this! Listen to this guy, he knows what he’s talking about, I just added to it. Thanks for the fun content!

    • @ke5clr
      @ke5clr Před rokem

      Agreed. Seeing a bullet over rev and tear itself apart in slow motion would be really cool. I can easily accomplish this with my 22 creedmoor and light weight bullets. The problem of course would be figuring out when the catastrophic failure will happen.

    • @WayStedYou
      @WayStedYou Před rokem

      That would be much harder to find than a 22-250 at 4400fps factory loading

    • @Skinflaps_Meatslapper
      @Skinflaps_Meatslapper Před rokem

      I'm from Texas, only a few hours away from these guys, and I happen to have two guns available in .22-284. I don't mind bringing them out and loading up some real barrel burners if they're interested.
      The .17 Rem, .204 Ruger, .220 Swift, and .22-250 can all be loaded to ridiculous velocities, but the .22-284 has them all beat by a good margin. In its introduction, Bob Hutton was getting 6,585fps from a 15gr iron projo and 50 grains of 4227, the iron was necessary to keep the projo intact at those speeds and with the lower density of iron they could keep the weight down while maintaining a reasonable aerodynamic shape. Titanium might be a good replacement candidate for iron if one wanted to recreate those velocities today. It's by no means a practical cartridge, but if you're wanting to launch extremely low BC bullets that look like miniaturized ICBM's at mach 5, or take a small bullet and send it to legitimately hypersonic speeds, it's probably the most practical cartridge you can find.

  • @th3ycallmearr0w8
    @th3ycallmearr0w8 Před rokem +22

    I think it would be cool to revisit this with maybe 5.56 and 7.62x51. Also if you can, the 220 swift is one of the fastest bullets and thus has the best chance to keep up to the glass.

    • @hypervanguy
      @hypervanguy Před rokem +3

      Yup 220 swift will beat it

    • @doshjavis6194
      @doshjavis6194 Před rokem +6

      Published velocity for the 220 Swift is 1422m/s. And the glass was shown at 1436m/s. So maybe on a good shot and a slow break, it might have a chance, but not likely.

    • @Shezestriakis
      @Shezestriakis Před rokem +3

      Is there a bullet with a velocity of ~4,700 ft/s? About 66.5% faster than the Barret they showed in the short clip at the start. That's what you need according to my terrible math.

    • @hypervanguy
      @hypervanguy Před rokem +2

      @@doshjavis6194 ya . Sorry it would be close . Nothing exact . Depending on the set up barrel , barrel length and other factors it could be faster or slower then the published speed

    • @lunam7249
      @lunam7249 Před rokem +1

      @@Shezestriakis 22-250.... 1 mile per second....still to slow to keep up with broken glass

  • @notahotshot
    @notahotshot Před rokem +1

    Gan and Dav, you two never disappoint.

  • @DangerNoodle16
    @DangerNoodle16 Před rokem +1

    If I’m ever making a movie I’m getting these guys to shoot the action. They’ve got this perspective on things you don’t usually think about

  • @vichetkim4487
    @vichetkim4487 Před rokem +19

    It's crazy to think spacecrafts go even faster than the speed of the glass shattering

    • @ericpayne9091
      @ericpayne9091 Před rokem +5

      Top speed of the Parker Solar Probe is about 133 times faster than the glass break. Unbelievable

  • @waelsenani8180
    @waelsenani8180 Před rokem +7

    6:24 Dan got that light skin stare

  • @mem8er
    @mem8er Před rokem +1

    Really cool. A comparison to Destin's baseball gun might be funny😏

  • @agumelen
    @agumelen Před 9 měsíci

    This is so amazing! Glass cracking speed is like the Flash.

  • @Xanderviceory
    @Xanderviceory Před rokem +123

    I'm a glass blower and glass cracking is the worst part of my day, but I've always been obsessed with how fast it cracks, I absolutely love your videos on it. I was told by an old timer in the industry that the uniqueness of the sound is that it causes a micro sonic boom, thats why when in our noisy shop and a tiny piece of glass cracks you can "feel" the tink sound from across the studio. I dont know if its true but it sounds quite compelling. I dont know if your resolution at max speed would be able to pick up on that

    • @Xanderviceory
      @Xanderviceory Před rokem +18

      Since glass cracks at Mach 4.1 It seems reasonable that theres some form of "sonic boom" involved unless I'm way off on my maths

    • @jesper164a
      @jesper164a Před rokem +1

      @@Xanderviceory They have made videos of glass cracking in even more slow motion than this.

    • @Skinflaps_Meatslapper
      @Skinflaps_Meatslapper Před rokem +16

      The initial movement of the glass when cracking far exceeds the speed of sound in air, so it would create a sonic boom. However, the amount of movement is so slight that it probably wouldn't create a pressure wave big enough to see on film. Any sort of sonic boom is a compression event, meaning the sound it makes is not the same as a sound wave...you're hearing and feeling a shockwave rather than sound propagation. That's likely why you're able to feel it from a distance, because shockwaves act differently than sound waves.

    • @musiciseverything120
      @musiciseverything120 Před rokem +2

      @@Skinflaps_Meatslapper woah I've never thought about that. In what way are they different?

    • @Skinflaps_Meatslapper
      @Skinflaps_Meatslapper Před rokem +9

      @@musiciseverything120 In a visual representation, a soundwave is generally a nice curvy sinusoidal shape, whereas a shockwave is a square or sawtooth shape. Soundwaves are a gradual increase and reduction in pressure whereas a shockwave is a violent and abrupt overpressure event all compressed into a very short burst. The sonic boom of aircraft is basically all the sound that the aircraft makes in flight concentrated into a single pressure wave, so rather than it being spread out over a period of time, it happens all at once. That's why a near supersonic jet won't blow windows out but the same jet flying just a little over the speed of sound will.

  • @aaronhume
    @aaronhume Před rokem +81

    I think the closest rounds you will come close to the speed of the glass shattering are: .17 Remington (or possibly .17 Remington Fireball), .223 Winchester Super Short Magnum aka WSSM, .220 Swift, .224 Weatherby Magnum, .22-250 Remington, and .204 Ruger... most of which are very uncommon rifle rounds. I think the .204 Ruger may have the best chance here based on reloading data in my book.

    • @mk5edc-477
      @mk5edc-477 Před rokem

      Yeah. Just read the same article.

    • @skullandcrossbones65
      @skullandcrossbones65 Před rokem +13

      G'day, Found this on a quick search from Wikipedia, " The .220 Swift remains the fastest commercial cartridge in the world, with a published velocity of 1,422 m/s (4,665 ft/s) using a 1.9 grams (29 gr) bullet and 2.7 grams (42 gr) of 3031 powder"
      That is 46FPS slower than the glass and would vary betweel loads, Atmospheric conditions and firearms used.

    • @WayStedYou
      @WayStedYou Před rokem +1

      204 ruger with 32 grains at 4400fps

    • @WayStedYou
      @WayStedYou Před rokem

      @@skullandcrossbones65 get a 26-30 inch 220 swift and it should be faster than the glass

    • @skullandcrossbones65
      @skullandcrossbones65 Před rokem

      @@WayStedYou G'day, I am satisfied running a .223 Rem, If I think that won't do the job I have a .270 Win that will take care if anything "Down Under".

  • @boywonder6659
    @boywonder6659 Před rokem

    Absolutely fascinating.

  • @rayoflight62
    @rayoflight62 Před rokem

    My compliments for this unique demonstration!
    Regards from the UK,
    Anthony

  • @puzzzl
    @puzzzl Před rokem +16

    For those interested, the timing of the glass breaking starts when the bullet is 77% of the way across the span.

  • @MrTheBigNoze
    @MrTheBigNoze Před rokem +34

    I love how Dan is still rocking his tattered and destroyed lab coat after all these years 😂

    • @workingguy6666
      @workingguy6666 Před rokem +1

      He has replaced it numerous times.

    • @blobfish.
      @blobfish. Před rokem

      @@workingguy6666 he hasn't replaced it. He uses a different one for their CZcams originals and TV show, but this one is the original. :)

    • @stephanieparker1250
      @stephanieparker1250 Před rokem

      I think he keeps it hermetically sealed between videos.

  • @technofete
    @technofete Před rokem

    the second visual was absolutely amazing

  • @GibsonFender
    @GibsonFender Před rokem

    You guys are the best thing about the internet

  • @pyglik2296
    @pyglik2296 Před rokem +215

    It's amazing that the glass breaking is so much faster than the bullet, but the bullet still has a plenty of time to leave the frame before the glass starts falling down.

    • @tritamtran7264
      @tritamtran7264 Před rokem +1

      ok

    • @jjones2582
      @jjones2582 Před rokem +7

      Yep that was particularly interesting too. The glass falling seemed a lot slower than the bullet, even though in real time it seemed to fall almost instantly.

    • @danhtranquoc3745
      @danhtranquoc3745 Před rokem

      ok

    • @coolbluereview
      @coolbluereview Před rokem

      Atleast the bullet is faster than gravity.

    • @jjones2582
      @jjones2582 Před rokem

      @@coolbluereview - That's probably not the right way to say that since the speed of gravity is considered to be the same as the speed of light.

  • @DragonHide94
    @DragonHide94 Před rokem +54

    Well, after converting for fps, your glass is breaking at about 4700 ft/s. There are actually a few sub .22 cal cartridges with factory loads which exceed 4000ft/s, and a couple that are pushing 4500ft/s... I think it would be interesting to see roughly equivalent bullet to glass velocities.

    • @glock17games
      @glock17games Před rokem +7

      .220 swift is probably the closest you can find with out beeing too niche / boutique altought its been fading ever since the 223s came around

    • @DragonHide94
      @DragonHide94 Před rokem +7

      @@glock17games supposedly Hornady's Superformance line have .22-250 and .204 Ruger loads that run 4400 ft/s, and I feel like that's about as fast as you'll get from factory loads.
      I also just remembered seeing someone on CZcams loading .300 Win Mag with saboted .223s and pushing over 5000ft/s, so that's another option. (Punched holes clean through 1/2 inch ar500 plate at 200 yards...)

    • @TonyHilliardSedona
      @TonyHilliardSedona Před rokem +2

      .17 Flintstone Super Eyebunger 4,798 ft/s (1,462 m/s)

    • @ericspooner
      @ericspooner Před rokem +1

      22-243 middlestead it is possible to go faster with a 30 gr bullet, but this takes hand loading, and also runny pretty toasty.

    • @__photi__
      @__photi__ Před rokem +1

      Was just about to comment about wanting to see it done with a .220 swift load

  • @chadquigley227
    @chadquigley227 Před 8 měsíci +1

    Great idea , great execution and great video . I loved it . Although I don’t think it’s a fair comparison . The speed of something breaking and the speed of something traveling through space are two completely different things . But again , fantastic video .

  • @filipmusialek6315
    @filipmusialek6315 Před rokem +6

    I’ve been spinning coins a lot recently and no matter how hard I try I can’t wrap my head around how it would look when they hit each other and ultimately either both fall or one fall, I think it would be really interesting to see what it would look like when they hit each other and what the factors are which result in one or both coins falling down

  • @Sgt_SealCluber
    @Sgt_SealCluber Před rokem +5

    The glass brakes at roughly 4700 ft/s and the fastest round I could find is the .22-250 Remington. Specifically the Hornady 35gr NTX bullet at 4,450 fps. You might be able to get a hand load up to 4700, maybe.

    • @feedbackzaloop
      @feedbackzaloop Před rokem +1

      Imagine Hornady making custom loads to exactly match the speed? That would be a collab!

  • @HoneyBadger7590
    @HoneyBadger7590 Před 6 měsíci

    Love your content 👍

  • @carlavery7132
    @carlavery7132 Před rokem

    DANG! That was cool! Great job!

  • @predictorbibulous3327
    @predictorbibulous3327 Před rokem +7

    The thing i want to see is a bullet hitting a tire that is spinning very fast. Sort of like in the movies when someone shoots the tire of the bad guy as he's speeding away. I've always thought to myself "hold on" i'm not sure it would go through that easily, there is too much energy diverting it away at impact. Now i really want to know what happens when a big fat slow 9 mm hits a spinning tire with lots of tread on it at like a grillion fps. Depends on the angle but in the right conditions I don't think it would go through.

    • @BeetleBuns
      @BeetleBuns Před rokem +2

      I've always kind of wondered about that myself, but never had a wheel that I don't care about just lying around to try. +1 for this idea

  • @michaelhurley212
    @michaelhurley212 Před rokem +3

    A .220 Swift would be close at about 1400m/s. Awesome vids fellas, keep it up.

  • @ormet999
    @ormet999 Před rokem

    love your videos! you should do a video with the Hydraulic Press Channel

  • @backtothestoneage
    @backtothestoneage Před rokem

    Simply Awesome!

  • @Vickie-Bligh
    @Vickie-Bligh Před rokem +5

    What a great combination. 2 of my favorite episodes combined into one. Well done, lads.

  • @tharnjaggar6018
    @tharnjaggar6018 Před rokem +3

    Great video Guys, thank you. Amazing how after so many years you're still finding such great ideas for new content. Congrats!

  • @Arsenico13
    @Arsenico13 Před rokem

    Well... I liked this video. This comparison was very well made

  • @jasonyoungblood9359
    @jasonyoungblood9359 Před rokem

    Great comparison!

  • @gusterblack6946
    @gusterblack6946 Před rokem +4

    We love seeing you guys, thanks for the amazing slow mo shots!!!

  • @derrickbennett935
    @derrickbennett935 Před rokem +9

    I always get so excited when I see a notification for a new slow mo guys video. One of my favorite channels on CZcams.

  • @Allan_aka_RocKITEman
    @Allan_aka_RocKITEman Před rokem

    Great video, guys.

  • @spiesonmars
    @spiesonmars Před rokem

    Sooo satisfying seeing that glass break!

  • @zsavage1820
    @zsavage1820 Před rokem +11

    WOW you guys never seem to disappoint.. you 2 are just getting better and better... love the content and been a fan for a few years, Merry Xmas to you and yours from me and mine.. SLOW MO GUYS fan for life... :)