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Does someone have an explanation for this?

979,864 views • 1 year ago •via X (Twitter)

10 Comments

Marco Kelly's profile picture
Marco Kelly1 year ago

It looks like the liquid inside the cup is absorbing the heat from the flame, preventing the cup itself from burning

James Griesbach's profile picture
James Griesbach1 year ago

The liquid absorbs the heat and keeps the cup from burning. It works fine with water and other containers. I’ve done it with water in a styrofoam cup with no problems. I’ve seen people boil water in grocery bags too.

Nstig8r's profile picture
Nstig8r1 year ago

Strawberry juice is the main ingredient of the Spacex rocket heat shields.

Zperlond's profile picture
Zperlond1 year ago

Imagine if it was pineapple juice. We could launch it to the sun and it wouldn't burn.

The Immortal's profile picture
The Immortal1 year ago

Plastic cups vs hot ball

Rich-Marz's profile picture
Rich-Marz1 year ago

The juice makes it self healing? Or it’s magic

Ancient Paths YT's profile picture
Ancient Paths YT1 year ago

Ok but can we talk about strawberry juice? Lol That is not a thing. Atleast not in USA.

SaltyRooster's profile picture
SaltyRooster1 year ago

It works woth water too. No strawberries needed. I've cooked eggs in paper cups inside of fires multiple times. The wax (now plastic) that keeps the paper from getting soggy can't burn off because the water keeps it from doing so. Heat is transferred to water.

Call me Ben, but don't call me late for supper's profile picture
Call me Ben, but don't call me late for supper1 year ago

Water transfers heat better than air. It's why we use water as a heat transfer (hydronic heating) and air as an insulator.

Tim 🏴‍☠️🏴Decentralize and nullify 🏴🏴‍☠️'s profile picture
Tim 🏴‍☠️🏴Decentralize and nullify 🏴🏴‍☠️1 year ago

Strawberry juice has flame retardant properties, that's why fire fighting aircraft drop it on forest fires. 😏

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