Can Lego create a Vortex in a Sphere?
14,981,776
Published 2022-08-20
Chapters:
00:00 Magnetic Coupling
02:07 Rotation
03:30 2 Axis Rotation
06:02 Outro
BuWizz 2.0 Bluetooth controlled rechargeable battery box: buwizz.com/shop/1-buwizz?ref=155
BuWizz Motor: buwizz.com/shop/buwizz-motor?ref-155
Runcam 5 Orange: amzn.to/3dLdEGX
Sphere: amzn.to/3cbGAaC
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BrickController2 App: bit.ly/3JypnV0
Metal Beam with Bearing: bit.ly/3wjA5cE
Where I get my parts from: www.bricklink.com/v2/main.page
Music: The Sewars - Jeremy Korpas
#bricktechnology
#legotechnic
#lego
#asmr
#engineering
#buwizz
#brickcontoller2
#vortex
All Comments (21)
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Check out my new video: https://youtu.be/NI0rDaEpTvI
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the best thing about these videos is how they just get progressively more overkill and insane I love it
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That lego cat was so well put together its movement Almost looked real.
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Bro made a sci-fi power core out of lego, water, and food colouring. Respect.
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You know it's good when it starts looking like something straight out of a sci-fi movie
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That last one looks like some sort of sci-fi portal or reactor thing. Its really amazing what you can do with lego!
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2 minutes I was like “cool, something neat…” and then I realize that it’s not over. It just continues to expand and get better in idea and trial.
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Dude thats sick. You built such an amazing toy. And probably also a decent Scientific modeling tool for fluid dynamics. Mad props.
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It was really nice to see the coloured water spinning around. The contraptions look really futuristic… .
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This was 1000x cooler than I thought it was going to be, crazy to see the mechanism evolve and how complex the engineering is
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I never knew spinning coloured water inside spheres with lego pieces could go this hard.
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I think he just solved the cold fusion reactor mystery.
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With every passing day, we get one step closer to a lego particle accelerator.
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hearing the bricks snap in place without seeing your hands is some satisfying editing magic
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Honestly, these sort of things remind me of why I was obsessed with lego as a kid. I'm a lead systems engineer working in R&D on trains - they should use this sort of thing to teach young engineers on how to approach design problems, I'm genuinely considering introducing it for concept design work in our labs.
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I did not expect this to be so interesting! Great video! The editing sure kicks in with the snaping and clicking sounds....
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Lets take a moment to appreciate the sound of legos connecting.
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If they made this with quieter motors, I'd love having this as an artistic water feature with lights that just randomly spin up during the day and night.
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I'm more surprised by how sturdy the spheres are for all the force put on them I would've thought they would've split open
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It progressively gets more insane and I love it