We Dropped 100,000 Ping Pong Balls From ARENA ROOF!
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Published 2021-08-27
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All Comments (21)
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Not gonna lie, all the ping pong balls in that stack at the beginning gave me cheeseball vibes and now I’m hungry
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The first slowie of the balls coming down looked like a fireball coming at you, a moment of darkness as it envelops you, then the flaming tail. Amazing.
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You guys should make a video “ We dropped 100,000 Cheeto balls from ARENA ROOF!”
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0:04 Oh how fun!! 2:03-2:15 LMFAO 2:45-2:53 Reminds me of a screensaver! 4:11 OMG! 6:10 WOO, GOOD JOB! 7:00 Awww :( 10:01-10:13 What a blast but I imagine OUCH too 11:32 Oh hi Rexy. 13:11-13:18 Sounds like someone just jumped in water. 13:34 SO COOL! 13:53-14:02 LMFAO 14:29-14:33 Omg you went so far!! Best phantom shot so far! Beautiful!
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That Phantom was a phenomenal investment for you guys. It's given us slo-mos like we've never seen before. Makes me wish we had it back when you did the rubberband ball vs Maxwell. Maybe it's worth trying it again at some point?
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Who else can't wait for the bouncy ball drop?! 🙋♀️🙋♀️
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I swear, me just being American and listening to these guys' australian accents just adds so much more fun and delight to these videos. Like at 9:31 the way he said that just made me laugh so hard.
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R.I.P Doug Tamatea, March 21st, 1966 - October 14th, 2017. R.I.P Maureen Mauger, September 22th, 1969 - October 14th, 2017.
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The fact that the last drop behaved like a liquid is so cool
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I never realized how much I missed gaunson's "get the bell on" until I heard it today
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The angle from 13:35 shows how when there are a concentration of balls, i.e. the central column, that they accelerate faster than if they were individual balls. It would have been interesting to measure wind speed at ground level about where the circle of balls ended up because I suspect that this would have caused quite a downdraft. This is interesting because it is the same principle and probably very similar physics to microbursts from storm clouds, where this almost perpetual cycle of downward particles and air keep acting on each other causing downward acceleration, which eventually spreads out into damaging straight line winds. OK, I am a big nerd, but love this sort of stuff, LOL...
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9:48 this might be the most visually appealing and beautiful thing you fellas have ever recorded. It's mesmerizing. It truly looks a like you're rocketing through innumerable solar systems. Well done.
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Scott may be the only one without a world record. But he's still my fav HR member. #BondyFTW
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This needed to be in 4K. Also, how do you not just automatically let Gaunson try for his own Guinness world record when you already have one of your own? Serves you right, Brett! :p
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14:17 that impact noise tho
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Australia's electricity is generated at 50 hertz of alternating current per second. That means it starts at zero, rises to its peak voltage, returns to zero, reverses direction, rises to peak voltage, returns to zero to complete one cycle. The generators do this 50 times a second. That also means that the average light has its voltage rise, fall, reverse direction, rise, fall 50 times a second. Which means the light goes from brightest to dimmest twice every cycle or 100 times a second. The Phantom camera was catching that dimming and brightening of the lights (flickering) as the electricity went through its cycling and made the rise and fall of voltage obvious by making the flickering of the lights easy to see. That shows how fast the Phantom camera was taking pictures of the scene and how good it is at capturing light in order to get good pictures. This is the first time I have seen this particular aspect of a Phantom camera's capability and it is nothing short of impressive.
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Just as he said "I've got this high-pitched noise in my ear. Kind of like-" my brother came screaming down the stairs and nothing has ever been funnier
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Less than 20 seconds in and I'm just thinking of how the balls look like cheese puffs
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The slow-mo shot from right under is perhaps one of the coolest shots I've ever seen in my life. Well done boys!!!
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I love how people found hundreds of ways use tiny balls that were made for ping pong but now used for world records❤