How to Boil Water Using Magnets

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  • čas přidán 3. 05. 2019
  • The rotation of magnets with different poles creates an alternating magnetic field. In aluminum, this creates an eddy current that heats it up. This is similar to the operation of an induction cooker, only there an alternating field is created electronically with a high frequency of 20-100 kHz. By the way, the magnets are kept cold!
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eddy_cu...
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inducti...
    music: Glen Canyon
  • Jak na to + styl

Komentáře • 3,1K

  • @grain8314
    @grain8314  Před 5 lety +410

    (28 Nov 2021) I added descriptions to the video in 56 languages.
    ---------------------------
    Boiling water with magnets. New edition - czcams.com/video/7wZ8DWu-sw8/video.html
    For those who want to repeat the experiment. For faster heating plays the role of RPM motor and the number of magnets and the radius of the disk. More radius, more magnets, more RPM = more frequency change of the magnetic field N / S. Frequency affects the rate of heating. But if the motor is low-power and the aluminum / copper piece is large and thick, then this piece will brake the magnets and the RPM will decrease. Therefore, choose a balance - motor power & volume of water to heat. If the motor power is insufficient, you can wait a very long time. :)

    • @grain8314
      @grain8314  Před 5 lety +20

      Fried eggs with a taste of a magnetic field :)
      czcams.com/video/ar0X2Ai1ahQ/video.html

    • @UCJDDSW-WWVU1AVj9EmGCAFA
      @UCJDDSW-WWVU1AVj9EmGCAFA Před 5 lety +6

      great

    • @grain8314
      @grain8314  Před 5 lety +16

      Probably need to add that I cut off the bottom of the glass of course. I did not show it in the video, I thought it was understandable.

    • @smartcam3164
      @smartcam3164 Před 5 lety +6

      @@grain8314 i think it will be a good idea to add thermal insulation to the disk it will be faster

    • @grain8314
      @grain8314  Před 5 lety +11

      @@smartcam3164 This is not necessary, because the magnets are at the bottom, and the heat goes up. And between the magnets and aluminum there is an air gap. I touched the magnets with my hand after the water boiled, it is absolutely cold.

  • @thomasblackwell9507
    @thomasblackwell9507 Před 4 lety +165

    I heard about the theory of this in physics class 35 years ago but this is the first time I have ever seen it. Thank you sir for your outstanding effort.

    • @simon6071
      @simon6071 Před 2 lety +4

      Using magnetic induction with a spinning motor is an inefficient way to boil water. A lot of electric energy is lost as waste heat in the motor, air turbulence and noise. Using a heating coil is more efficient. However, the most efficient way to heat water is using a heat pump. Heat pumps can achieve more than 100 % efficiency in producing heat.

    • @buttonup3522
      @buttonup3522 Před 2 lety +6

      @@simon6071 How can it (heat pump) be more than 100% efficient? Does that mean if I feed it with 10 joules of energy it can produce 700 joules for example?

    • @user-vr4zk6wn1m
      @user-vr4zk6wn1m Před 2 lety

      @@simon6071 ерунда) никакой тепловой насос не даст более 100% ) единственный способ получить КПД больше единицы это магнитная индукция)
      czcams.com/video/V2aOZYgRk9c/video.html
      czcams.com/video/5AXgVqAWozU/video.html

    • @Stabacs
      @Stabacs Před 2 lety +1

      this is a similar principle like a microwave oven though. Just that they don’t spin the magnet. Instead they use electromagnets with alternating currents to switch the direction of the magnetic field.

    • @simon6071
      @simon6071 Před 2 lety

      @@buttonup3522
      Heat pump does produce more heat than that can be produced by the electricity supplied to the heat pump. However, the extra heat does not come from the electricity supply. The extra heat comes from the heat in the air after the heat has been concentrated by compression.

  • @stephenhall3515
    @stephenhall3515 Před rokem +5

    A good little demo of uses of eddy currents -- although uneconomic in terms of boiling water. BUT that is the point because we use quite big motors in many things and waste the potential of eddy currents produced in the process of motors doing a 'main job'.
    This is not to be confused with induction appliances and you make that clear. Excellent.

  • @arealivreProjeto100k
    @arealivreProjeto100k Před 2 lety +10

    amazing, these are things we've only learned from independent media congratulations on sharing your knowledge

  • @rodneylong9687
    @rodneylong9687 Před 5 lety +72

    Come on all you nay sayers! This is a great teaching tool for introducing new concepts to young children on magnetism .

  • @debeeriz
    @debeeriz Před 5 lety +981

    l just sat here and watched water boil, l need to get out more

    • @chipsramek3868
      @chipsramek3868 Před 5 lety +19

      debeeriz...but it's scary out there...I've been told.

    • @jackrodgersjr
      @jackrodgersjr Před 5 lety +4

      The blinking lights?

    • @andrewdewar8159
      @andrewdewar8159 Před 5 lety +1

      Is 2 leds in opposite directions so each one comes on in one direction of current flow current direction depend on magnet polarity

    • @MrRasZee
      @MrRasZee Před 5 lety +4

      debeeriz, yer living the dream

    • @davey2k12
      @davey2k12 Před 5 lety +2

      Mee too 😂 😂😂

  • @iLevitation
    @iLevitation Před 2 lety +16

    That is a rather interesting alternating magnetic field design there! LOL! Though likely quite inefficient it obviously is effective. Nice work. 😀

  • @abcstardust
    @abcstardust Před 2 lety +11

    Thank you so much for this informative video! I’m sure those who live off the grid will make good use of this principle

    • @alexp.6145
      @alexp.6145 Před 5 měsíci +1

      Perhaps a windmill/ propeller turning an induction heater to heat water?

    • @abcstardust
      @abcstardust Před 5 měsíci +1

      Sounds great!

  • @55Ramius
    @55Ramius Před 5 lety +27

    I knew why it would heat before you started but you displayed it well. You always stir my interest in making things myself. Thanks !

    • @user-whan
      @user-whan Před 5 měsíci

      If the purpose is simply to boil water, a microwave or nichrome wire will be more useful.

  • @iStormUK
    @iStormUK Před 5 lety +73

    I met Eddy Current once, nice fellow, very misunderstood, and a little bipolar. :)

  • @anthonyfields5928
    @anthonyfields5928 Před 2 lety +2

    Outstanding my guy. Looks great 🔥

  • @menosproblemos6993
    @menosproblemos6993 Před rokem +3

    Thanks! I've been wondering how induction heating was made.
    Fyi for people reading this: Normally one uses switching currents in a copper coil to shift the magnet fields

  • @supermarioisacat
    @supermarioisacat Před 5 lety +12

    gave an upvote because dude had enough attention to detail to polish the edges of the thick aluminum disc underneath the glass!

    • @louistournas120
      @louistournas120 Před 5 lety

      That looked like a chromed part.

    • @leightonwestbury92
      @leightonwestbury92 Před 5 lety

      @@louistournas120 chromed part ....... pmsl wtf ?

    • @louistournas120
      @louistournas120 Před 5 lety

      @@leightonwestbury92 :
      They make the part from iron and they apply a thin layer of chromium using electroplating technique.

  • @steveaspen6773
    @steveaspen6773 Před 3 lety +31

    Just saw , subscribed, and enjoyed your video. While some will be bored with the whole video, or seeing it as child's play, it is one of the best videos I've seen (clean from clutter which makes people think you're hiding something), clean and non controversial. It clearly displayed science and ingenuity at work.
    I've seen other channels that similarly boil water that way but yours isn't hiding anything but rather, conveys to the viewer how to boil water with or without electricity : without- by attaching the wheel to a bicycle chain and powered that way if you're in the wild, need a cup of coffee, and your device boils the water necessary for a great day away from the hustle. In my opinion, a super video.

  • @gsbhatt4649
    @gsbhatt4649 Před 2 lety +1

    Woow , what an idea to explain eddy currents generation 👌 I will use your such idea to explain such eddy current effect to my child and also heating effect through it 👍
    Thanks a lot for your great idea with such simple arrangements 🙏😀😀😀

  • @snakerstran9101
    @snakerstran9101 Před 2 lety

    I have a bicycle trainer rig that works like that: Wheel spins a shaft, shaft has a aluminum plate that spins between two magnet plates, the aluminum plates heats up while spinning, what also happens is that action creates a load making the making the bike harder to pedal. That setup includes a variable load lever to adjust pedaling for easier or harder. It does that by rotating one of the magnet plates a few degrees in relation to the other magnet plate. I assume that alters the N-S relationships of the magnets on each side. And I can say that in a fairly short time the alum plate become too hot to touch.
    What wasn't covered here is the loading aspect. Yes there may be better ways to heat water (this is just a experiment after all) but the motor was being used here to simply create motion for the experiment. This principle is used for a lot of motion control or loading/braking. Slowing things down through regeneration (F1 racing, hybrid cars). Slowing electro-mechanical things down that drop/fall when the motor stops running, which then becomes a generator being pushed by the load, running the generated electricity through load resistors that create heat.

  • @bugsbunny8691
    @bugsbunny8691 Před 5 lety +49

    This really is amazing. You've discovered the cure for insomnia.

  • @paulbergin4239
    @paulbergin4239 Před 5 lety +51

    Cool, you've reinvented the induction cooktop. I like the sound.

    • @tiberionjraxiosn9493
      @tiberionjraxiosn9493 Před 5 lety +4

      this actually looks like an induction cooktop from eras before the digital and electromagnetic ages
      or something from a world where energy waste is actually minimized

    • @brycering5989
      @brycering5989 Před 5 lety +4

      @@tiberionjraxiosn9493 lol but not before the electric motor. which is wasting energy to heat, I would hazard a guess that this method (In the video) is less efficient than a simple element heater boiling water, IE a typical electric kettle.

    • @tiberionjraxiosn9493
      @tiberionjraxiosn9493 Před 5 lety +1

      @@brycering5989 makes sense, but isn't it cool if someone in the past actually made this?
      edit: assuming they used a different thing to spin the magnet disk with much less friction than usual

    • @samueladitya1729
      @samueladitya1729 Před 5 lety +3

      @sparky12x induction heater heat are not 100% transfered to the plate

    • @leightonwestbury92
      @leightonwestbury92 Před 5 lety +3

      @sparky12x nothing is 100% efficient it would defy the laws of physics

  • @gideonlapidus8996
    @gideonlapidus8996 Před rokem

    Exactly what I knew would happen beautiful visual explanation of eddy currents in non ferrous metal

  • @Frank-jn6fu
    @Frank-jn6fu Před 2 lety +1

    Very interesting. I’ll have to try this if I can get the magnets. Thanks for your video.

  • @WaynerNC29
    @WaynerNC29 Před 5 lety +79

    You can see the water swirl in such a way that shows the paramagnetic properties of water. The magnetic vortex, per say, that is created is influencing the bubbles towards the center of the spinning disk. Awesome experiment.

    • @excelsior8682
      @excelsior8682 Před 4 lety +2

      @Blind Bob water is paramagnetic and is physically affected by strong magnetic fields regardless of your armchair scientist knowledge. Please shut up lol.

    • @remoteviewer9352
      @remoteviewer9352 Před 3 lety

      Fero

    • @sridharlaxmi2203
      @sridharlaxmi2203 Před 2 lety

      Yyyyiuouyyyuoiouyiyyiuiyyuyuiyyitu

    • @joshyoung1440
      @joshyoung1440 Před 2 lety +3

      *per se

  • @tallbillbassman
    @tallbillbassman Před 4 lety +3

    Really nice demonstration of induction heating. I enjoyed that.

  • @bozhijak
    @bozhijak Před rokem

    I love it when you can actually hear the magnets taking on the load slow down and pulse in rotation.

  • @mikemorgan4146
    @mikemorgan4146 Před 2 lety +1

    Very clever !! good presentation !! thanks Grain !

  • @iblesbosuok
    @iblesbosuok Před 5 lety +81

    Great! Now I can boil egg with my bicycle.
    Cheers from Indonesia

  • @colleenforrest7936
    @colleenforrest7936 Před 2 lety +4

    This is basically how induction cooking works. Nice to see a construction model!
    Something new to play with :)

    • @chandugowda9604
      @chandugowda9604 Před 2 lety

      Haii broo this experiment is work properly??? & water is boil?? For what I am doing experiment in my collage mini project purpose pls tell me correctly (1 am a mechanical engineering student)

    • @user-hb6bm9bv5l
      @user-hb6bm9bv5l Před 2 lety

      Всего лишь поиграть

  • @Systomd
    @Systomd Před 2 lety +1

    COOL!! Thanks for the demo :)

  • @desperadodave5970
    @desperadodave5970 Před 2 lety +1

    Gas flows are incredible, I can see the flow, thanks

  • @mrchordstriker
    @mrchordstriker Před 5 lety +6

    Dude dude dude this is sooo seeing the trees for the forest. I saw this and did a Picard face palm...a double pfm! Thank you so much for sharing this! Why o why did I not think of trying this. Brilliant and well prepared film! Here's a thought, by placing the rings along the outer rim, the edge of the quarter as it were, one could place an aluminum holder up against the magnets, which could house the glass cup. This way, more field is captured by the larger mass of a cup holder that can surround the cup to a large extent. The extra mass of more aluminum, coupled with more surface area of aluminum to glass for heat transfer, more heat can transfer more rapidly. Great video

  • @TheFinalRevelation1
    @TheFinalRevelation1 Před 4 lety +71

    Michael Faraday and James Joule, both must be rolling in their graves. Brilliant.

    • @Sanguen666
      @Sanguen666 Před 3 lety +6

      dw, im here from the future, year is 2020 and corona virus keeps humanity indoors.
      I know ur past self would never belive it lol.

    • @Chaggy1978
      @Chaggy1978 Před 3 lety +8

      @@Sanguen666 And Flu was completely eradicated lol!

    • @nostalgeek2872
      @nostalgeek2872 Před 3 lety

      The currents of Foucault.

    • @StefanReich
      @StefanReich Před 3 lety +8

      @@Sanguen666 Corona virus did nothing. Politicians did it.

    • @timhofstetter5654
      @timhofstetter5654 Před 3 lety

      ...but not.

  • @stazioneoltrefrontiera-erm8272

    E' l'oggetto più geniale che io abbia mai visto per risolvere il riscaldamento. Ma sei stato proprio bravissimo. Veramente complimenti. Bravo bravo bravo. Bravissimo. Sei stato veramente sorprendente. Questo oggetto può risolvere acqua calda, cottura dei cibi, riscaldamento domestico ecc. Inoltre se lo attacchi ad un pannello solare ottieni tutto questo in modo del tutto gratuito. Sei un grande.

  • @atarotsjourney.4620
    @atarotsjourney.4620 Před 2 lety

    So much did a similar project but with frequency and had a reaction at boiling point 2:30 love your work keep it up mate

  • @harrisongrant1066
    @harrisongrant1066 Před 5 lety +8

    Great video! Gave a very good understanding of the concept. Thanks.

  • @atuckertucker
    @atuckertucker Před 5 lety +12

    We need more people like you in this world.. I’m very impressed,.

    • @grain8314
      @grain8314  Před 5 lety +1

      Thank you!

    • @uni-byte
      @uni-byte Před 2 lety

      ? Magnetic induction is not new. This, while a pretty neat experiment to demonstrate it, is not a practical solution to boiling water. Not by a long, long shot.

    • @Fedreal_Bureau_Of_Investigaton
      @Fedreal_Bureau_Of_Investigaton Před 2 lety

      @@uni-byte why lol

  • @boonphitphanthavong4334

    Wow that is so cool to watch. I've just learned something today.

  • @ace280671
    @ace280671 Před 6 měsíci

    Brilliant demonstration, love it

  • @jsullivan1082
    @jsullivan1082 Před 5 lety +82

    Congrats you've unfurled the secret of induction cook tops!

    • @samueladitya1729
      @samueladitya1729 Před 5 lety +16

      But instead using motor and magnet, induction heater uses alternating current

    • @crazytom
      @crazytom Před 5 lety +10

      No. Induction cookers use AC and require ferro magnetic pans.

    • @obsidian9998
      @obsidian9998 Před 5 lety +2

      It is the amazment of simplicity this principle with Lenz law this was done.

    • @Akyomi777
      @Akyomi777 Před 4 lety +5

      @@samueladitya1729 yeah, but its same thing, motor is spinning magnets which alternates poles = heat
      alternating current also alternates poles = heat
      so yeah its same but different way

    • @daivonclark5151
      @daivonclark5151 Před 4 lety +3

      @Ssam ASMR a moving magnetic field induces an electric current in a copper wire that is within the moving field.
      And if you put a spinning copper gyroscope on top of and at the center a large powerful neodymium magnet that is stationary, the gyroscope will never stop spinning

  • @davidmanser4193
    @davidmanser4193 Před 5 lety +43

    You can boil water by having two spinning circular contra rotating plates that have raised studs. If they plates are in a few millimetre gap water will boil instantly through friction. The wheels can be hand powered by two people or geared. They've have these in the FDNY stations since the 1990s.

    • @joshyoung1440
      @joshyoung1440 Před 2 lety +10

      Link to an example?

    • @SEAPORTLIFE
      @SEAPORTLIFE Před 2 lety +3

      I was a volunteer firefighter once and we used the stovetop.

    • @foyjamez
      @foyjamez Před 2 lety

      In my area, I was thinking about windmills

    • @johnlake1395
      @johnlake1395 Před rokem

      One plate has magnets reversed every other

  • @Richinnameonly
    @Richinnameonly Před 2 lety +1

    Fun science project to learn from but super impractical. Electric current is turned to an alternating magnetic field in the motor. That alternating magnetic field is turned into mechanical rotation of the stator. Than he turned the mechanical force into another alternating magnetic field to induce eddy current in the water. If you removed the stator and stuck the set up inside the motors external coil the same thing would have happened, or just create an induction coil to be powered from the outlit and skip all the rotation.

  • @dudu2406
    @dudu2406 Před 2 lety +29

    Bem interessante, o problema é que está gastando eletricidade, se der pra fazer o esquema um esquema tipo roda de vento ou água, da até pra fazer um fogão ecológico. Top.

    • @chandrahasreddy1729
      @chandrahasreddy1729 Před 2 lety

      Yes. If he used a cycle for that

    • @rodrigosilvasantos2284
      @rodrigosilvasantos2284 Před 2 lety +1

      Achei estranho também, o momento em que ele passou a placa de alumínio, e ela se atraía pelo imã!!!

    • @jhony6390
      @jhony6390 Před 2 lety +2

      @@rodrigosilvasantos2284 todo mundo acha mas o q ignoram é que todo.metal e magnetico .. so q uns reagem.muito pouco como o aluminio q tem seu campo magnetico todo embaralhado dai so funciona em movimento ... pois se tentar encostar um ima gigante em uma placa de aluminio estacionada ele simplesmente cai

    • @rodrigosilvasantos2284
      @rodrigosilvasantos2284 Před 2 lety +1

      @@jhony6390 valeu colega, pela explicação!!!! Essa experiência é um misto de física e química!!!! E quem é leigo acaba ficando boiando!!!!!kkkkkk mas valeu!!! Abcs.....

  • @tamiebasse6595
    @tamiebasse6595 Před 4 lety +21

    An AC electromagnet should also boil the water without moving parts. It's the eddy currents in the aluminum causing it to heat and boil the water. This is the same principal as an induction cook stove.

    • @Stabacs
      @Stabacs Před 2 lety

      Like in a microwave oven :)

    • @aurasensor
      @aurasensor Před 2 lety

      In a similar setup you would need something like twenty electromagnets with alternate polarity. The switching would imitate the rotation of the static magnet plate. No motor would be needed. This might save a lot of input power. An experiment with a steel cooking bottom would be very important. Ideally you would have let's say 12 x 6 Rows of electromagnets which have an angle of 30 degrees. Like the spokes of a wheel.

  • @abdeljalilpr2033
    @abdeljalilpr2033 Před 5 lety +5

    The best channel that share amazing important experiments

  • @edwardpolankool8940
    @edwardpolankool8940 Před 2 lety

    Excelent demonstration!! Congratulations

  • @xemossouthafricahairremova9907

    Fantastic! Absolutely fantastic! 👏👏👏👏👏👏👏 Thanks for sharing.

  • @Flederratte
    @Flederratte Před 5 lety +18

    Great demonstrations! Well done and good video.
    Did the magnets on the spinning disk also feel warm afterwards?

    • @grain8314
      @grain8314  Před 5 lety +13

      No, the magnets are absolutely cold.

    • @user-me8oh2lm6u
      @user-me8oh2lm6u Před 2 lety +1

      Магниты должны были нагреться совсем немного из-за тех же вихревых токов что и подложка из алминия, но из-за движения остыли.

  • @johnburrisfromchicago
    @johnburrisfromchicago Před 3 lety +6

    I’ve started doing research on the importance’s of frequencies and my thoughts led me here, very cool video and a great learning experiment for sure !!!

    • @bradleyhenderson1198
      @bradleyhenderson1198 Před 3 lety

      Keely, Holtz, Chladni

    • @chandugowda9604
      @chandugowda9604 Před 2 lety

      Haii broo this experiment is work properly??? & water is boil?? For what I am doing experiment in my collage mini project purpose pls tell me correctly (1 am a mechanical engineering student)

  • @dimidron798
    @dimidron798 Před 2 lety +11

    Спасибо за наглядный пример.
    Сам хотел провести такой эксперимент. 👍

    • @user-js9sx7pm9m
      @user-js9sx7pm9m Před 2 lety +1

      Как думаешь, реально ли запитать этот двигатель от самого себя, или всё таки будут потери? Склоняюсь что он не сможет создать достаточную мощность.

    • @user-xg2tv2qc1l
      @user-xg2tv2qc1l Před 2 lety

      @@user-js9sx7pm9m Если только анально-орально... а иначе бестолку

    • @user-js9sx7pm9m
      @user-js9sx7pm9m Před 2 lety +1

      @@user-xg2tv2qc1l ну я двоечником был, но больше склонен к тому, что работать не будет, не у одного же меня такие мысли дурные в голове проскакивают, что через редуктора запитывать и прочее, просто мне интереснее смотреть как другие страдают херью, чем самому на неё время и деньги тратить.

    • @normusfull4185
      @normusfull4185 Před 2 lety

      @@user-js9sx7pm9m, не получится, теловые потери слишком большие будут. Даже если обмотки двигателя будут из суперпроводника - не получится.
      Добавлю - через редуктор можно иили прибавить обороты и потерят в крутящем моменте или на оборот, однако любой узел внесёт потери, если тот не идеален.

    • @user-js9sx7pm9m
      @user-js9sx7pm9m Před 2 lety

      @@normusfull4185 ясно, спасибо за исчёрпывающий ответ, лучшее что слышал. Доходчиво.

  • @clarapetebetty
    @clarapetebetty Před 9 měsíci +1

    Thanks for sharing! My class will love it! :)

  • @jerryg50
    @jerryg50 Před 3 lety +25

    Great demo of generating Eddy currents in a metal base to heat water. It is possible to build a high frequency induction unit using a coil of wire with a ceramic plate on top. The coil is fed by a powerful amplifier that is fed by a high frequency oscillator that the frequency and coil are resonant to each other. Then put a steel base pot on top and cook with it. Expensive to build, but is efficient if done right.
    I like induction cooking. Only the pots get hot, and not the ceramic under them. The ceramic heats up by taking heat from the pot, and not from the induction coil below.

    • @bradmason4706
      @bradmason4706 Před 2 lety

      Now I know how to make pure oxygen, could come in handy

    • @gideonlapidus8996
      @gideonlapidus8996 Před rokem

      I use induction cooking all the time more efficient then convection plate

  • @trcostan
    @trcostan Před 5 lety +14

    Physics are the same as an induction cooker! Cool demo

    • @cplenny4281
      @cplenny4281 Před 5 lety

      27kHz

    • @THOMASTHESAILOR
      @THOMASTHESAILOR Před 5 lety

      @@cplenny4281 , maybe like 8 or 9khz.. 10 magnets are half a wave each.. The motor is probably 1760 rpm AC motor.

  • @ZenevYT
    @ZenevYT Před 2 lety +2

    Excelente video, no sabia que se podia hacer asi :), saludos y gracias por compartir.

  • @taboo4188
    @taboo4188 Před rokem +1

    I knew a girl whose dad worked at timken roller bearing. He told how he warmed his ham and cheese sandwich on his machine while he worked... This is like the science project I thought of, when he said that. So cool.

  • @KerbalFacile
    @KerbalFacile Před 4 lety +9

    So you made an induction stove with actual magnets instead of an oscillating electromagnet. Neat.

  • @adrianokuma7943
    @adrianokuma7943 Před 4 lety +31

    This is really cool!. Have you meassured the efficiency of this set up, by calculating the energy consumed by the motor vs the energy provided to the water?

    • @grain8314
      @grain8314  Před 4 lety +2

      Thanks! No, I did not measure.

    • @PAAKISTAN
      @PAAKISTAN Před 2 lety +5

      Apparently, a motor consumes much lesser energy than it is needed to boil the water.

    • @user-hb6bm9bv5l
      @user-hb6bm9bv5l Před 2 lety +6

      @@PAAKISTAN невозможно,в подшипниках есть силы трения,а в индукционной плитке ничего не крутится-не трётся, соответственно КПД больше

    • @PAAKISTAN
      @PAAKISTAN Před 2 lety +1

      @@user-hb6bm9bv5l sorry brother I can't get you. Write it in english plz

    • @runee4334
      @runee4334 Před 2 lety +4

      @@PAAKISTAN Google translate: impossible, there are friction forces in the bearings, and nothing spins in the induction hob, does not rub, respectively, the efficiency is higher

  • @robert9248
    @robert9248 Před 22 dny +2

    Wow, something more interesting than watching paint dry

  • @SimonStuff2000
    @SimonStuff2000 Před 2 lety +3

    Soo.. the Aluminium under the cup was heating the water, not the magnet was heating the water.
    In a microwave the electrons agitate the water, so the water rubbes, and create heat.

  • @damonthomas8955
    @damonthomas8955 Před 4 lety +63

    Why do I find magnets so attractive? It's a question I'll have to iron out.

  • @bairfamilyfarm1336
    @bairfamilyfarm1336 Před 5 lety +84

    Watched this last night, realized this morning after thinking about it that you just made a "mechanical induction heater".

    • @BhimeshSharma
      @BhimeshSharma Před 5 lety +3

      Motor is not just mechanical

    • @mysticalsoulqc
      @mysticalsoulqc Před 5 lety +3

      Looks to be a efficient one. I thought the same. Keep congnitive thinking. The world is not thinking enought.its in the face but not mentioning it. Weird right! Lol

    • @gabrielvieira6529
      @gabrielvieira6529 Před 5 lety

      @Marko yep

    • @jo2lovid
      @jo2lovid Před 5 lety +4

      Not efficient at all. Use the electric power driving the motor through some nichrome wire. That is 100% efficient.

    • @i3_13
      @i3_13 Před 5 lety +1

      Heater?Did the temperature rise? lol

  • @harmonysalem9377
    @harmonysalem9377 Před 2 lety

    Ouaw! Cool. Merci from Montreal, Canada.

  • @charlesrockafellor4200
    @charlesrockafellor4200 Před 2 lety +2

    Cool looking vid, just one question: why does the "steam" _fall_ _down_ (like cool humidity) instead of *rise* (as steam always does everywhere, all around the word, and always has)? One might almost suspect this to be in fact a humidifier rather than a tea kettle, so to speak...

  • @kindwaychasing
    @kindwaychasing Před 5 lety +8

    I never did something like this before, it is incredible.

  • @damname101
    @damname101 Před 3 lety +26

    i just realize that im sitting here watching water boil.

    • @jeffallen3598
      @jeffallen3598 Před 3 lety +1

      I have a video you can watch after this. I use sunlight to grow grass.. After that, i use air to dry paint. Ohhh Science

  • @Adnreus74
    @Adnreus74 Před 2 lety +1

    Это потрясающе! Редко кому удается снизить КПД нагревательного прибора, но автору таки удалось! Теперь электроэнергия тратится не только на нагрев воды, но и на нагрев двигателя. Самое смешное, что вращающееся магнитное поле здесь генерируется дважды. Первый раз обмотками двигателя, второй раз фанеркой с магнитами. Это гениально, брависимо!
    ПС. Жан Бернар Леон Фуко (1819-1868) аплодирует стоя.

  • @michaelclueless
    @michaelclueless Před 2 lety +7

    Two things would have helped the time to boil: Cover the container (basic cooking technique), and insulate the metal disk so the wind from the magnet disk doesn’t cool it.
    I’d power this with a windmill: A spinning magnet disk might be handy for more than cooking, and I can see swapping what’s in the field as needed. Charging batteries between meals, for example.

    • @lanichilds2825
      @lanichilds2825 Před rokem

      Yeah dude
      So if you can heat up sand with a solar panel
      At night you can add water and get energy
      And some Heat

    • @lanichilds2825
      @lanichilds2825 Před rokem

      I live in Texas and our governor like fkd up something with the electricity

  • @VNV67
    @VNV67 Před 5 lety +7

    You know what this reminds me of? Remember that show on TV called Mr. Wizard?
    I am old enough to remember it (71) LOL

    • @grain8314
      @grain8314  Před 5 lety +2

      I was born in the USSR and live in Moldova today, so I don’t know this show, but I found something on CZcams - czcams.com/video/ckBoYRhwfCI/video.html

  • @DrTinkerJim
    @DrTinkerJim Před 5 lety +7

    Another of your very interesting and well done demonstrations .
    Have you tried putting the aluminum slug inside the glass or a beaker?

    • @grain8314
      @grain8314  Před 5 lety +9

      You can find many ways to make eddy currents heat water or something else. I just tried to show it more clearly and spectacularly.
      Russian blogger Igor Beletsky did it even more effectively and with humor. He fried scrambled eggs, tried it and said that it has a bright taste of eddy currents :) czcams.com/video/ar0X2Ai1ahQ/video.html

  • @marriocharles4168
    @marriocharles4168 Před rokem +1

    Grain, this is Amazing!

  • @robinsonantoniosierra8790

    Interesante experimento... muy didáctico... Saludos desde Lima - Perú

  • @fCauneau
    @fCauneau Před 5 lety +8

    Wow !! Thanks !!
    NB : strange to see now, that you could heat your water using the same wheel, coupled to a wind rotor through a belt... much faster than with a Joule heat device ?

  • @MagicGate814
    @MagicGate814 Před 5 lety +24

    I believe it's heating the water by induction. You can also do this with the wireless charger but it's not as awesome as your experiment.

    • @zavatone
      @zavatone Před 4 lety +4

      It's the eddy current that causes it.

  • @user-sy7qb2yq8y
    @user-sy7qb2yq8y Před 2 lety +1

    As a scientific example, the video is great!

  • @heiko7520
    @heiko7520 Před 2 lety +1

    Haha! Mechanic induction oven/cooking plate! Cool!! :)

  • @davidbolha
    @davidbolha Před 3 lety +3

    Well the mysterious Peter Davey's "ultrasonic boiler" still beats this. 😄
    But still thumbs up for the innovative approach. 🖒

  • @JasonWGamingnProd
    @JasonWGamingnProd Před 5 lety +10

    Changing magnetic flux creates eddy current, it then heats up due to the internal resistance of the metal plate
    Cool experiment

  • @melyssagaulke988
    @melyssagaulke988 Před 2 lety +5

    I have heard you can power the whole earth with magnets. I always found magnets fascinating.

    • @EG-cs3wv
      @EG-cs3wv Před rokem

      Magnetism is not an energy but a force. You cannot extract energy from a magnet, but it is possible to transform the ways energy is wasted

  • @jackojb1
    @jackojb1 Před 2 lety +2

    An induction heater. Good experiment.

  • @vdan2507
    @vdan2507 Před 3 lety +22

    By the way, note that the bubbles do not just rise up, but first deflect to the left. Perhaps this is lens distortion, or a deviation in a magnetic field. Try it in a square container so you don't have a lens.

    • @NICEFINENEWROBOT
      @NICEFINENEWROBOT Před 2 lety

      There are vibrations in the aluminum plate that are induced by the magnets.

    • @carlosvazquez4401
      @carlosvazquez4401 Před 2 lety +6

      @@NICEFINENEWROBOT Mechanical vibrations of the aluminum plate are not responsible for the heating. The time varying magnetic field induces a circulating voltage, called emf (Faraday´s law) which in turn moves the free electrons in circles inside the aluminum plate. So there is a circulating current known as Eddy current. The dissipated heat (power P) depends on the electrical resistance R of the plate:
      P = I*I*R, which is partially absorbed by the water and then it is heated.

    • @NICEFINENEWROBOT
      @NICEFINENEWROBOT Před 2 lety +3

      @@carlosvazquez4401 Understood, but I tried to locate the reason for the deflection of the bubbles.

    • @frostedlambs
      @frostedlambs Před 2 lety +1

      thats just a convection current, its how heat moves in a container

    • @frostedlambs
      @frostedlambs Před 2 lety

      @@NICEFINENEWROBOT convection currents

  • @PaulDriverPlus
    @PaulDriverPlus Před 5 lety +9

    It's a generator with a shorted transformer.
    Same as an induction cooktop, only less efficient.

  • @Bianchi77
    @Bianchi77 Před 2 lety +1

    Nice video clip, keep it up, thank you for sharing :)

  • @reypolice5231
    @reypolice5231 Před 6 měsíci +1

    Thank you for your post 😊

  • @nomore4me286
    @nomore4me286 Před 3 lety +5

    Especially in a grid down situation its a hell of alot easier to start a fire than it is to spin a motor with a magnetic rotor to boil water.

    • @user-hb6bm9bv5l
      @user-hb6bm9bv5l Před 2 lety

      А мотор без сети руками крутить?

  • @tyray3p
    @tyray3p Před 5 lety +10

    This is really neat! I'm wondering though, at what point is it that the transfer of heat between the aluminum and the water is what slows down the process the most instead of the time it takes for the aluminum to heat up?

    • @grain8314
      @grain8314  Před 5 lety +1

      Of course, water takes heat from aluminum.

    • @aurasensor
      @aurasensor Před 2 lety

      Why not excite a copper coil IN the water? Would that be possible?

  • @KHOSMOH
    @KHOSMOH Před 2 lety +7

    Esse experimento foi o melhor que eu vi até o momento no CZcams, parabéns!

  • @Eugenemeo1
    @Eugenemeo1 Před 2 lety +1

    Cool job!

  • @tolga24
    @tolga24 Před 5 lety +10

    Thanks for sharin' another genius idea my good sir! Keep it up please ;)

    • @cmill8465
      @cmill8465 Před 5 lety +1

      This most certainly isnt genius. This is the more difficult way to make an induction cooktop stove... He is just doing it mechanically.

  • @user-ig1qo6nb3l
    @user-ig1qo6nb3l Před 5 lety +23

    Retired man finding fun in science!

  • @mkepler5861
    @mkepler5861 Před rokem +1

    not a lot of people realize that the water molecule is positively, and negatively charged. and by flipping that molecule back and forth rapidly can cause molecular friction. hence forth the heat and steam. mike

  • @kimberlysteph3877
    @kimberlysteph3877 Před 2 lety +1

    Since you're still using an electric source, I'll stick to my coffee pot. Thanks for the Kool video .

  • @TechsScience
    @TechsScience Před 5 lety +4

    Heating effect of Magnet
    Hope it's gonna get Viral

    • @markcondrey2297
      @markcondrey2297 Před 5 lety

      It was a misleading caption as the water was heated by magnetic induction in a non magnetic metal.

  • @awesomefacepalm
    @awesomefacepalm Před 5 lety +9

    Replace the permanent magnets with electromagnets and you got yourself an induction heater

    • @awesomefacepalm
      @awesomefacepalm Před 5 lety

      @@ethansgarage7627 true, this one is just mechanical

  • @djToniTontonNewZealand
    @djToniTontonNewZealand Před 2 lety +1

    so fascinating i wish it had a narrator but i like it, not sure whats the metal gadget beneath, things we were never taught in school 50yrs ago. I wish to learn more about science but if you dont have the foundations, i sit here awe inspired but not understanding. Wish i was a kid again.

  • @sergeynemo2833
    @sergeynemo2833 Před 2 lety +7

    Если воды было 20 мл, то на её нагрев с 24°C до 100°C нужно 1,77 Ватт тепла. Но этот мотор за 4 минуты потребил 4 ватта электричества. Вывод: такой способ нагрева воды неэффективен.

    • @happer2009
      @happer2009 Před 2 lety +1

      Естественно. Для нагрева воды самое эффективное это опустить нагревательный элемент в воду. КПД практически 100%

    • @alexeypolovinkin3805
      @alexeypolovinkin3805 Před 2 lety +1

      А если допустить что энергия на вращение столика дармовая? А если электроэнергии нет? Кто сказал что для вращения столика нужен электродвигатель?

    • @sergeynemo2833
      @sergeynemo2833 Před 2 lety +1

      @@alexeypolovinkin3805 если у вас есть халявная крутилка, то конечно можно крутить магниты и греться у радиатора. Но что-то мне подсказывает, что эффективней будет крутить генератор и получать электричество.

    • @alexeypolovinkin3805
      @alexeypolovinkin3805 Před 2 lety

      @@sergeynemo2833 прикол в том, что некий девайс можно носить с собой (Пельтье например), а генератор не поносишь.

    • @sergeynemo2833
      @sergeynemo2833 Před 2 lety

      @@alexeypolovinkin3805 а причем тут Пельтье, мы же магниты крутим?

  • @justinVeemo
    @justinVeemo Před 5 lety +5

    YheA!!!
    *it's good that I was awake*

  • @jessicagriffin6836
    @jessicagriffin6836 Před 3 lety +9

    This is awesome. You would not want to put this on your countertop but it would use less energy to boil water then stove etc. You could make hot water heaters for your basement etc work with this and only use 5 amps of power to heat it.
    So this would be in like a small box next to the tank with 2 pipes going into the box to be heated and convection would heat the bigger tank. Unless you used the total content of the large tank it would keep hot water.

    • @chuckdeuces911
      @chuckdeuces911 Před 2 lety

      Certainly the way we produce energy now is as inefficient as you can get for the sake of profit. At this point everyone should have solar panels at the least but the big energy companies waste more money fighting against it than they probably do to produce it... it's a dark secret that all things we use that a big corporation produces are a bigger RIP off then most people could even fathom

  • @mysticalsoulqc
    @mysticalsoulqc Před rokem +1

    Bravo well done brother!

  • @ferebeefamily
    @ferebeefamily Před 2 lety +1

    Thank you for the information.

  • @scottyd8
    @scottyd8 Před 5 lety +21

    The Faraday electro magnetic induction coffee maker.

  • @samuelbudiyanto2250
    @samuelbudiyanto2250 Před 5 lety +3

    I made it! with N-S in rows and 8 neodymium magnets, use metal cup with cotton and essential oil... Connect to 17V / 20W solar panel, 12V motor from old printer.
    Wow, smells good...
    Great!

  • @okiiPL
    @okiiPL Před 2 lety +1

    Mechanical induction stove. Nice video

  • @naeemsomeone1534
    @naeemsomeone1534 Před rokem

    Thank you for the video ... would be nice to see a calc of the efficiency of such a device