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Prince Rupert’s Drop vs Hydraulic Press

46,443,667 views • 1 year ago •via X (Twitter)

9 Comments

𓃶's profile picture
𓃶1 year ago

We finally found the final boss for a hydraulic press

Hologram_'s profile picture
Hologram_1 year ago

that was chuck norris tear drop from the only time he cried.

Detective Tiger's Stories's profile picture
Detective Tiger's Stories1 year ago

Prince Rupert’s Drop was created by dropping molten glass into cold water, the rapid cooling causes the exterior to solidify into a teardrop shape while the interior remains under high compressive stress. This structure gives the drop extraordinary strength—its bulbous end can withstand significant force or even hammer blows without breaking. However, the drop’s tail is its Achilles' heel. Even a slight nick to the tail can cause the entire structure to explode into tiny fragments. This phenomenon occurs because the internal tension within the drop is released all at once, leading to its rapid disintegration.

Mark Stevenson (World History)'s profile picture
Mark Stevenson (World History)1 year ago

Prince Rupert's drops are damn weird things. Extremely tough on the bulbous end but you can snap the tail with your hands, making the entire thing explode. Made by dripping molten glass into cold water. Outside cools and hardens first then the inside cools and contracts creating an area of negative pressure inside. I've seen these things stop bullets.

florian meier's profile picture
florian meier1 year ago

you can easily break the stringy end and this is what happens in slow motion:

HeatForum's profile picture
HeatForum1 year ago

this the first time i see the press lose 😳

Savage®'s profile picture
Savage®1 year ago

Minion vs hydraulic press

Gadgetify's profile picture
Gadgetify1 year ago

I remember this from a while back. Pretty trippy.

Akrasia's profile picture
Akrasia1 year ago

This video is misleading af. I might even community note it. There is no way that those base plates are steel or anything harder. My guess they've used aluminium which is far softer.