JET ENGINE with NO MOVING PARTS

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Published 2023-09-30

All Comments (21)
  • @tetronaut88
    You should make an Integza Nerf Gun. Powered by rockets or something and probably illegal in many parts of the world.
  • @96armycrazy
    I think a video about you learning to weld better, so that your jet engines can fully shine inhouse would be awesome! The process of your learning and tips you pick up along the way would be amazing to see!
  • @daveysmith3944
    I’m so envious at people who understand how the math side of these things work, I’m studying electro mechanical engineering next year and I’m bricking it for the algebra side of things. No matter the questions I ask chatgpt or the YouTube videos I watch, or the book I read, it just doesn’t sink in. It’s like I’m trying to speak Japanese without knowing how to.
  • @johngriffith6350
    Hi Integza, love the material and ideas. Keep them coming! Apologies if you’ve done this already but I would love to see a practical demonstration of a rocket motor idea I was once told about. Essentially, it’s an integral hybrid fuel motor. The solid fuel component is a hydrocarbon. Typically heavy oil mixed with an epoxy resin. During preparation, this mixture is held in a cylinder, turning on a centrifugal turntable, turning at a modest but, appreciable r.p.m. The oxidiser component can be liquid oxygen or nitrous oxide and is injected from the bottom into to the liquid phase as it spins in its mould. The oxidiser often helps to activate the epoxy. Another initiator may also help. The end result is a honeycomb of oxidiser bubbles within a solid fuel matrix. The purpose of the spin is to form a density gradient of bubbles with more at the centre and fewer at the outside. This is supposed to aid initiation, and also to permit thinner walls in the reaction chamber is the solid fuel mass remains a structural component until the end of the burn them, I reducing rocket mass. I’ve only ever heard this talk of and have never seen it done. The strikes me as an excellent practical experiment for your channel.
  • @Hixie101
    Can we all take a minute to appreciate how well made that spot welder looks, despite the obvious home made nature of it. Maybe future video show how it's made! Edit: Do i have the most upvotes? P.S. I love tomatoes
  • @Darren053
    I think you should try a peroxide rocket thruster! The thrust can be quite amazing! Edit. I mean using itself as thrust by decomposing with catalyst. You can get very high pressure whith it! Edit2. It is a different mechanism!
  • @kjamison5951
    Your dedication to your art of engineering goes above and beyond. When you want something, you learn about it and then learn how to do it. I know engineers who are not happy to teach beyond their grasp. Great work my friend!
  • @cjcassar2196
    Integza, you should be given a medal or acknowledgement from NASA for single handedly inspiring a generation of Rocket Scientists to go out and change the world!
  • @HyperspacePirate
    Your spot welding technique is actually used in some pretty advanced aerospace applications. The centaur upper stage rocket is a "balloon" of ultra-thin stainless steel sheet metal (around 0.020") that's joined and sealed with tens of thousands of spot welds. It's so thin that it has to be pressurized or it'll collapse under its own weight, but it's the highest performing upper stage rocket in terms of mass fraction
  • Great Video! My suggestion is to build a testing rig for all your engines and see which one has the best thrust to weight ratio! Could be like a tournament between the types of engines.
  • @Rasendori5.0
    I have been wanting to get into 3d printing for a while, this channel has inspired a new hobby lol
  • @dominus6695
    00:45 The vibrating water tube looks like an awesome engine idea. Simpler than a stirling. Just apply tidal engine to it. A floating magnet and a coil and it's done.
  • @jimboboomer3103
    Make a multi-stage rocket solid or liquid fuel, for the solid rockets adding aluminium powder to the resin should make if more efficient such as in solid rocket fuel
  • @anotherlemon1053
    You should try using electrolysis to make a hydrogen thruster! Love your content.
  • @LuckySoulution
    I don't wear gloves either, LOL! Thank you. You inspire and educate this 32-year-old Music-Man tremendously. I wish I had come across your page waaaayyy sooner. Only advice I can give to you. 💯❤ DO NOT EVER STOP DOING WHAT YOU DO, BECAUSE WE NEED MORE PEOPLE LIKE YOU, SO THANK YOU!!!🏁
  • @Gaboncho_
    Man, I was literally just watching the latest video from Stuff Made Here, and he bought a super powerful and cool water jet cutter. It would be really awesome if you could do a collaboration! Love both of you guys, you both really inspire me in my engineering career 💪
  • Video idea: I would love to see that pulse jet in flight! I don't know anything about 3d printing... but I think making a plane for the jet would be amazing to see!!
  • @hbl5776
    I think you should build a test stand ! It would allow you to actually put numbers on your engines. And depending on what you measure it could help you troubleshoot the engines. Interesting videos, keep it up !
  • @BananaFPV
    I would like you to reattempt the first jet engine you ever tried to create with all the knowledge you have learned over the years