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Mythbusters - Viral Videos Part 2

Trekker4747

Boldly going...
Premium Member
Myths tested:

Can spinning a tire fast enough catch it on fire?

Can a 7ft Diameter ball of Lego roll down a hill, crash into a car and not cause any damage?

Can 30,000 matchheads in a bucket cause a huge fireball?
 
These viral video things are kind of boring. The subject matter isn't always very good.

Match heads: Yawn. What happens if you light a bunch of match heads at once? You get a bigger-than-usual flame. How is that unexpected?

Also, the parts about taking all day to cut off the match heads made me realize that Mythbusting must be a lot more tedious at times than they make it look with editing.

The cannon thing at the end was kind of interesting, though it had nothing to do with any myth.

And doesn't it sort of undermine the "Don't try this at home" warning when the whole reason this myth was being tested was because somebody tried it at home? Aren't they kind of endorsing and discouraging it at the same time?


Burning tire: I think that, looked at a certain way, they confirmed the myth. The question that was asked was, "Can you spin a tire so fast that it catches fire?" Well, the rubber of the tire did catch fire -- after smoldering for half an hour or so. So technically, the answer is yes. The Mythbusters were assuming the question meant "so that it catches fire while spinning?" But I don't remember that being specified.

However, they did conclusively bust the proverb "Where there's smoke, there's fire."


Lego ball: I figured the YouTube thing was faked. My guess was that they just carved the thing out of light wood or foam or something and just painted it to look like a Lego structure. It even looked like it might've been largely hollow.

I'm disappointed in the Mythbusters' technique. I mean, they needed to wait until they actually gathered the bricks to test whether the block could really have 5 million pieces? Hello? Ever heard of geometry? It's a complex shape, sure, but I'm sure someone with Grant's math skills could've estimated its volume, or they could've built a scale model, dumped it in water, and measured the displaced volume. Then just divide that by the volume of one brick and compute how many bricks it would take. Wouldn't that have saved them a lot of trouble, if they'd known at least roughly how many bricks they'd actually need instead of just going ahead without figuring that out first?

It's cool that they actually put a camera on the ball as it rolled. As for its disintegration, that's the sort of thing I didn't expect but that seemed inevitable once I thought about it. Given all the shifting stresses the ball was under, it shouldn't have been hard to figure out that the rather tenuous friction-based connections between bricks would be under strain throughout the structure. And as I recall from my days of playing with Legos, some bricks stick together more loosely than others.

I think they overlooked a way to test the last part of the myth, what would've happened if that mass of Legos had hit the car. Okay, they didn't have an intact ball, but they could've gathered them all up in a tarp or something and used some kind of construction equipment to lift it up and swing it against the car like a wrecking ball.

Come to think of it, if the ball had hit the car while still intact, it would surely have smashed apart, thereby absorbing a lot of the impact force, so the car might not have been that badly damaged by the weight. So having the bricks contained in a tarp, not free to separate, would not simulate that accurately. So maybe that wouldn't have worked. Although it would have tested the conditions depicted in the myth/video, namely what would happen if an intact mass of Legos that size were to hit a car.


General observation: Mythbusters has been on the air for six years now. That's six years each of experience for Adam and Jamie, adding up to twelve man-years of experience. So shouldn't they change the opening narration from "Between them, over thirty years of special-effects experience" to "over forty years"? True, over forty is technically still over thirty, but generally "over thirty" is meant to imply "under forty" (except when Isaac Asimov talked about his age). They've got over forty years of experience between them now, so they should boast about it!
 
Myths tested:

Can spinning a tire fast enough catch it on fire?

Wasn't surprised on the results with this one, seemed a lot like the "Pants on Fire" myth they did a couple seasons ago.

Can a 7ft Diameter ball of Lego roll down a hill, crash into a car and not cause any damage?

Ugh! The collapse of the Lego Ball was awesome, but I wanted to see it hit the car and THEN collapse! Man!

But they made it pretty clear the "viral video" was fake. Having plenty of Lego experience myself I knew the 5 million, or whatever, figure was ridiculously high. I figured that gluing the Lego together would give the ball more/better structure and stength but probably too permanent a solution for this "myth" if everyone wanted their Lego back.

Can 30,000 matchheads in a bucket cause a huge fireball?

Kind of a boring, if impressive one with the 1m match heads at the end and then the cannon (which I'm surprised worked so well.)

All and all kind of a "meh" episode. There's far better "viral videos" out there I think they could've tested than these three.
 
Everytime they showed that lego video it looks like the ball flattens out on the bottom in a way that just seemed "wrong". I really wanted some of that lego ball to hit the car, that really stunk. They almost should have saved those matchheads for later in the episode to have something that kind of worked.

Maybe they had four million smaller bricks in the middle? :lol:

They seemed to get that ball rolling pretty easily for as much as they were dismissing that.
 
Yeah but in the video there was something about the way it moved and it was being pushed that seemed... "off" like it wasn't really a ball that weighed 3000 lbs.

I also think they should've ignited the match heads from the bottom-up rather than from top to bottom. I think the flame would've been more impressive that way.
 
It occurs to me they could've called this the "millions episode." Two of the three myths involved assembling one million things: a million matchheads, a million Lego bricks.
 
i liked it...but it was average...nothing special....i knew the lego ball would crack....the matches thing was awesome....the rest were forgetible
 
I have not seen this yet but thanks for starting the thread, Trekker, I was a bit distracted yesterday.
 
Hey, they could do a myth that combines all three of these: if you built a ball out of a million Lego bricks and a million match heads, could it roll downhill fast enough to catch fire? :D
 
Just for the record.

Explosive Matches - Confirmed. Using the heads from 30,000 safety matches, placed inside a bucket and lit with a slow fuse created a ten foot high fireball that accurately recreated the one seen in the video. (Adam and Jamie also created a much larger fireball with one million match heads and then used 60,000 to create a makeshift cannon out of an old gas canister and a bowling ball)

Lego Boulder of Doom - Busted. The myth from the video was broken in to three parts. It did not take five million pieces to build a 7 foot ball, it only took 1 million and gathering that much Lego proved to be extremely difficult, and also took a large number of volunteers over two weeks to build. The ball in the video appeared to be easy to push around but the Mythbusters' ball weighed around 3,000lb. Finally, the ball was shown rolling down a San Francisco street and striking a car, causing no damage. Using a similar road, the ball rolled but fell to pieces before getting half way towards the car.

Spinning Tire Fire - Busted. No matter what method was used, it was not possible to cause the tires on the car to catch fire.
 
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