Amazing Tools That Are On Another Level

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Published 2024-03-31

All Comments (21)
  • @Sicarious
    Ryobi certainly did "not" create the oscillating multi-tool. It was created by GmbH Fein in 1967 as a plaster cast saw. In '85 Fein adapted the design for automotive use and in 2009 the patent expired allowing other companies to produce similar products. The first such clone I remember is the Dremel Multi-Max, certainly not Ryobi.
  • @antheath641
    My dad is a carpenter, mobile home mover and setter Its cool seeing the stuff we use on a daily base get the spotlight
  • @Sparky5869
    That "magical, crystal-hammering, flame wand" is literally a big kitchen lighter with a metal spike on the end. The technology is identical.
  • @runikvarze6191
    The crystal in the piezoelectric ignition is not electrically charged. It converts the energy from hitting it INTO electricity. Like if you could charge your phine by punching the screen.
  • @teazer999999
    Love these innovations. For the "Backup Wrench" (14:24) to save money, make your own. Buy a socket set and weld a piece of bar on the side of each socket.
  • @KazzDovehound
    Why'd I think the diamond core drill was an iron lung 💀 Fr tho, love the vids! Keep up the amazing work, Be!
  • @Addonski
    imagine using diamond drills for diamonds to make new diamond drills
  • @A_Digimomma
    how interesting i didn't know these cool tools existed but now i do
  • @daleakersii6114
    The multi-tool you attributed to Ryobi was actually invented by a man named Fein. I’m not sure of the details, but it can easily be researched.
  • @nickbrutanna9973
    "Industrial Diamonds" are MADE in a factory, they aren't there because they're "too flawed to be made into gems". The process making them isn't refined enough to produce gem-grade diamonds. When they DO decide they want to MAKE gem-grade diamonds, they are good enough to be totally indistinguishable from natural gem-grade diamonds. This is why the "natural" market -- aka DeBeers -- has taken to using lasers to tag the "natural" diamonds, so THEY can claim there is some reason anyone should pay more for a "natural" diamond instead of a man-made diamond that, without the laser-mark, could not be determined to be different.
  • @John-eh6jg
    I just fell down a rabbit hole of your videos on my day off from work haha and it was not disappointing. Very amusing videos . Thanks buddy
  • 9:09 that some sweet pipes there! Not just the metalwork, but also those producing beautiful dulcet tones!
  • @yaboii_98-420
    As a former concrete cutter. I can attest that running a core drill correctly does go through reinforced concrete like butter. Always fun to use but needed to be dead on to avoid issues. Biggest bit I ran was 30" in diameter
  • @timothylegg
    The little marshmallow guy doesn't yell "Amazing!" anymore. I miss that. Now I have to say it for him.
  • @liamnehren1054
    As I have heard it, Industrial diamonds are actually the harder type of diamonds and the ones slapped on rings are the idiot stones which aren't as hard, just pretty. Also the absolute hardest ones are very special created in actually rare circumstances into having a hexagonal structure instead of a cubic one. Normal ring diamonds are kind of overblown, extremely low in rarity etc.