Ruined?! What Happened to Adam Savage's Mercury Spacesuit

Ғылым және технология

One of Adam's very first spacesuit replica projects was a NASA Mercury program Navy Mark IV pressure suit, but the materials he chose to recreate its iconic silver fabric have since completely deteriorated! That's why Adam is so thrilled to unveil his newest Mercury suit replica, constructed by costumer Christine Knobel (who worked on Adam's xEMU concept suit). Adam couldn't be happier with this latest iteration, and commences work on weathering the suit to make it look as if it's been part of the space program since the 60s.
Find more of Christine Knobel's work at / thestarflower
Adam's xEMU suit build: • Adam Savage's EPIC Spa...
Adam's first Mercury spacesuit: • Adam Savage's Mercury ...
Shot by Adam Savage and edited by Norman Chan
Music by Jinglepunks
Subscribe for more videos (and click the bell for notifications): kzread.info_c...
Join this channel to support Tested and get access to perks:
/ @tested
Tested and Adam Savage Ts, stickers, (de) merit badges and more: tested-store.com
About Tested: www.tested.com/about
Meet Adam in Person: www.tested.com/events
TikTok: / testedcom
Instagram: / testedcom
Twitter: / testedcom
Facebook: / testedcom
Discord: / discord
Amazon Storefront: www.amazon.com/shop/adamsavage...
Intro bumper by Abe Dieckman
Thanks for watching!
#adamsavage #space

Пікірлер: 496

  • @tested
    @tested22 күн бұрын

    Find more of Christine Knobel's work at instagram.com/thestarflower/ Adam's xEMU suit build: kzread.info/head/PLJtitKU0CAejUJOkTX4TYXt4mVhFzqS5H Adam's first Mercury spacesuit: kzread.info/dash/bejne/k4CDuLVuds-Xf7w.html

  • @AerialTheShamen

    @AerialTheShamen

    10 күн бұрын

    This crumbly plastic coating likely was not vinyl but polyurethane! PU can be as delicate as latex and the residues are more toxic. At least some types of PU are the definitely worst rubbery plastic you can imagine. E.g. headphone foam rubber crumbles after 10 years of light and ozone exposure, some tacky (typically black) paints on electronic case plastic turn sticky like tar, and also elasthane threads in clothing turn crumbly after some years of wear and room air exposure. With your space suit I could imagine that also the metallic coating (aluminium paint?) and possibly even acids from that tea bath may have deteriorated the rubber. Soft PVC foil barely turns crumbly if properly stored (no heat, no extreme sunlight, no contact with other rubber etc.). I collect inflatables and never had PVC ones decompose in unexpected ways (beside print rubbing off).

  • @SuperKingslaw

    @SuperKingslaw

    9 күн бұрын

    Did you use archival quality tea?

  • @remotecamper9113

    @remotecamper9113

    7 күн бұрын

    COST Buddy?? WE ALL have our passions, and we can ALL laugh at the $$$ of our passions.... I once paid over $3K for a type of pistol that sells for $1300. because I wanted one and I didn't think they were importing them anymore.....Then they still do, just a delay......

  • @mfree80286
    @mfree8028619 күн бұрын

    ADAM! These suits aren't ruined, just modify them a little bit, insert a skeleton, and pass them off as the pilot pressure suits from the original "Andromeda Strain"! You wouldn't even have to put the hard parts back on, at least not the rubber bits, because the 'space critter' ate them.

  • @DoctorX17

    @DoctorX17

    7 күн бұрын

    Happy little accidents…

  • @flyingardilla143

    @flyingardilla143

    6 күн бұрын

    My head went to one of the Scooby Doo episodes where a skeletal dude is wearing a space suit.

  • @Theduckwebcomics

    @Theduckwebcomics

    3 күн бұрын

    Cover of Defcon 4

  • @robbydonaghy8735
    @robbydonaghy873523 күн бұрын

    25:10 Fun optical illusion of Adam standing on a little table.

  • @donaldvincent

    @donaldvincent

    22 күн бұрын

    I love that! Thanks for noticing & posting for the rest of us.

  • @samueltaylor4989

    @samueltaylor4989

    20 күн бұрын

    That’s hilarious!

  • @DoctorX17

    @DoctorX17

    7 күн бұрын

    Haha, yeah, I didn’t notice! I did wonder why he got out a table tho, lol

  • @SuperMilkfloat

    @SuperMilkfloat

    4 күн бұрын

    ha ha ha😂😂 thats brilliant its a little adam standing on a big table

  • @AInWisco
    @AInWisco23 күн бұрын

    I love that any time anyone brings up G4's revival the reaction is always the same: "Welp!"

  • @Sinebeast

    @Sinebeast

    23 күн бұрын

    That's sadly what will happen anytime you take potshots at your customer base for internet points.

  • 23 күн бұрын

    ​@@SinebeastNah, it's just the gamers.

  • @Chris-pt6hh

    @Chris-pt6hh

    23 күн бұрын

    TIL there was a G4 revival

  • @jtjack111

    @jtjack111

    23 күн бұрын

    It was a perfect example of not having the excuse of "Toxic gamers review bombed us!!". It was just that both the average viewer AND G4 fans were disgusted by what they saw, and simply changed the channel.

  • @Sinebeast

    @Sinebeast

    23 күн бұрын

    @@Chris-pt6hh You didn't miss much. IMO It was just nostalgia bait (the good old 'member berries) with mediocre content.

  • @daviddrake4715
    @daviddrake471522 күн бұрын

    When you asked what tea you were using my mind immediately went in Captain Picard's voice "Tea, Earl Gray, Hot!"

  • @isstvan82
    @isstvan8223 күн бұрын

    The weathering talk reminded me that while I was working on my ghostbusters jumpsuit, I had polished my jumpboots while mostly asleep and did not notice I had left a lot of big gobs of polish on them. When I put the outfit on to see how things worked so far, the polish ended up getting onto the legs and staining it. I tried to clean it out, but it ended up smearing since I didn't know what to do. It ended up getting worse, and worse. By the time I was done, I sat back and realized that it ABSOLUTELY looked better with the smears since they had happened so organically. They literally looked like some rookie had gotten polish on their suit and then panicked trying to clean it off before they got into trouble.

  • @armastat

    @armastat

    13 күн бұрын

    Which, unsurprisingly, is exactly what happened. lol.

  • @isstvan82

    @isstvan82

    12 күн бұрын

    @@armastat Ha! true.

  • @Theduckwebcomics

    @Theduckwebcomics

    3 күн бұрын

    Reminds me of when I was modifying a motorbike helmet to make it into a cyberpunk thing for a photoshoot. I had this idea to make it shiny black and ultra glossy. I messed up the paint and the gloss coating- no matter how much I sanded and polished it or how long I left it to dry the gloss coating took the paint and wrinkled it all up. (I also got bad advice on the paint from where I bought it). In the end I decided to lean into the mistakes and just add more and it worked beautifully. It ended up looking like a beaten up weathered thing from some future battlefield.

  • @TheIdeanator
    @TheIdeanator22 күн бұрын

    Adam is the Bob Ross of weathering. I want more of this exact kind of thing. 30+ seasons of "the joy of weathering"

  • @PeachPlastic

    @PeachPlastic

    21 күн бұрын

    I want and support this request.

  • @marcelsirer

    @marcelsirer

    20 күн бұрын

    "They will say, I screwed it up with the tea, no no no I call it a happy litlle accident. Plus it will get clearer as it dries"❤

  • @armastat

    @armastat

    13 күн бұрын

    hear hear +1

  • @juts89
    @juts8922 күн бұрын

    How divisive is wanting things weathered. I love the brand new look.

  • @wildsmiley

    @wildsmiley

    22 күн бұрын

    When it comes to space suits, I guess it's like this - Clean, brand new look: it looks like you're all dressed up and ready to start the mission or a part of the mission. Weathered, grimy look: it looks like you're doing the mission right now, or you just did, or it happened at some point in the past. It's a matter of individual taste, I suppose. I prefer weathered, but I get the sparkling new look, too.

  • @Marc83Aus

    @Marc83Aus

    19 күн бұрын

    Considering adams background in effects and model making, aging and weathering is a major component of making good props, though of course theres instances where clean and futuristic is wanted rather than the dark 'lived in' look like star wars, aliens etc. I do agree that the brand new mercury suit looks awesome, very futuristic like buck rogers, but for a more 'retro' aesthetic a used museum piece look is perfectly valid. I'm sure adam has seen the real mercury suits in meuseums, look up what john glenns suit looks like, lots of stains on the white parts.

  • @THE_BaconPirate
    @THE_BaconPirate23 күн бұрын

    Does anyone else find the following rather soothing; the sound of Adam stomping across that apparently hollow shop floor, it just feels comfortable like an old piece of well-worn in clothing that just fits right every time you pick it up and put it on....

  • @cycoholic

    @cycoholic

    23 күн бұрын

    The floor is indeed wooden and hollow. If I remember correctly, part of the floor was slopped, so he needed it all level. Thus the entire floor was raised a bit and floored with plywood.

  • @treborrrrr

    @treborrrrr

    19 күн бұрын

    Actually I'm the exact opposite. I find the stomping sounds stressful.

  • @caitlinomalley80

    @caitlinomalley80

    10 күн бұрын

    @@cycoholic yep, it was slightly angled, and the cave is in an old fire station apparently. One of the first things he did, was had a raised and level, incredibly heavy duty wood floor installed. I say incredibly heavy duty, as it supports several tons worth of machinery, not counting the hardware store stuff, or all of the other stuff in his shop.

  • @pcj3405

    @pcj3405

    8 күн бұрын

    @@caitlinomalley80 Exactly what i was wondering and why i came to the comments. Does Adam have a video covering this issue?

  • @caitlinomalley80

    @caitlinomalley80

    7 күн бұрын

    @@pcj3405 I don't remember exactly, but there is a video, where he talks about how the cave was set up, but that was definitely a few years ago at least.

  • @aserta
    @aserta23 күн бұрын

    Yup. Figured this would eventually happen when Adam first showed this suit ages ago. I saw the vinyl and thought... "Man, Adam is going to be heartbroken about this one day." My mom used to moonlight as a clothes designer when she went to her second Uni. And she had a few pieces that were still left in her collection. Back in... 1999~2001 ish, she fought with the same thing. The vinyl let go. She was so upset over it too. Luckily, i knew a really good leather shop who dyed some leather with the same weight apparent and did the swap work.

  • @PeachPlastic

    @PeachPlastic

    21 күн бұрын

    Yeah. Before I even clicked on the video, I muttered at my phone screen - "the fkn pleather self-destructed". It truly is heartbreaking when that happens. In my case, the piece it happened to wasn't self-crafted, but nevertheless a coat I cherished. I also just discovered that a hand-crocheted heirloom shawl that was most likely made by either my grandmother or one of her siblings somewhen between the 60's and 80's started falling apart, because the yarn is synthetic. It's literally coming apart without any external force. The cruelest irony is that I never wore it - for fear of accidentally damaging it. An inherited acrylic painting is doing the same. We can't put any faith in these plastics. You don't know what 10 or even 5 years do to material until you see it for yourself.

  • @susanadair3360

    @susanadair3360

    21 күн бұрын

    How sweet are you!

  • @5naxalotl

    @5naxalotl

    20 күн бұрын

    i'm reminded of the rubberized coating that got put on a lot of consumer electronics in the eighties (maybe 90s) ... lovely tactile surface, seemed really high tech at the time, but eventually it slowly liquefied as polymer reverted to monomers and plasticizers. people are always asking what miracle chemical reverses the process, but of course there isn't one

  • @audi4444player

    @audi4444player

    14 күн бұрын

    @@5naxalotl it's usually possible to rub off that coating with alcohol, the plastic is sometimes really cheap underneath but at least it's not all sticky, I've got some things I use regularly ish that I've done it with, thank god you rarely see it anymore. I wish adam talked more about the suit materials.

  • @armastat

    @armastat

    13 күн бұрын

    rubberizing makes it even worse. real rubber is organic. by that I mean it relies on chemical bonds not just structural bonds.

  • @rogerphillips6702
    @rogerphillips670223 күн бұрын

    Does anyone else watch Adam weather things with a paint brush and go "this is like watching Bob Ross doing a cosplay costume. Except Adam is hoping for happy accidents." ? Lol. Keep on Bob Rossing Adam!

  • @THE_BaconPirate

    @THE_BaconPirate

    23 күн бұрын

    Happy little stains

  • @henrycopeland7316

    @henrycopeland7316

    23 күн бұрын

    I watch him and learn about ageing things, then I watch other model makers doing things and thinking why don’t they watch Adam weathering things with water colour paints…

  • @JamesSheridan1

    @JamesSheridan1

    22 күн бұрын

    Was about to post the same observation :) He's totally channeling Bob Ross

  • @thomasbecker9676

    @thomasbecker9676

    22 күн бұрын

    He's not doing anything special.

  • @THE_BaconPirate

    @THE_BaconPirate

    22 күн бұрын

    @@thomasbecker9676 neither did Bob Ross. But we loved him too.

  • @lastlifecrisis4980
    @lastlifecrisis498022 күн бұрын

    I love how, no matter where you set up a workspace, in every shot there is a wash of items in the background that can evoke a myriad of memories and stories!

  • @THE_BaconPirate

    @THE_BaconPirate

    19 күн бұрын

    That's intentional. It has always been part of Adam's plan for constant engagement.

  • @moseszero3281

    @moseszero3281

    16 күн бұрын

    @@THE_BaconPirate I don't think its intentional at all. I think the shop just has so many tools/items that there is no where to put a camera that doesn't have a background full of stuff. Just watch him organize stuff or build tool shelves/tables. It's all about functionality. Or at least 99% about function.

  • @THE_BaconPirate

    @THE_BaconPirate

    16 күн бұрын

    @@moseszero3281 I would agree with tools/shop supplies, it's the collection of memorabilia that gets placed for the way it looks in a particular place. Adam has said before the remodel that people come in on the reg and seem as if they are walking into a museum lol. He is aware of that, and in such placement of "stuff" so it can be seen.

  • @armastat

    @armastat

    13 күн бұрын

    Its a sign of a well visited shop. a working shop if u will.

  • @kadirbeneathmomoteh854
    @kadirbeneathmomoteh85423 күн бұрын

    Adam's narration while he was brushing tea onto the suit really made me think of Bob Ross, in the best way possible

  • @CraigInNC
    @CraigInNC22 күн бұрын

    Is the new suit upgraded fabric that will last longer?

  • @timreimer5451
    @timreimer545122 күн бұрын

    The Kansas cosmosphere has an amazing display of the progression of all the space suits from Mercury on.

  • @MaestroPrep
    @MaestroPrep23 күн бұрын

    Actually.. Now youve got a dystopian space suit with vibes of desolation and struggle... You cant make aging like that look natural.. it just is... I for one dig the rotted aged look...

  • @rustedbeetle
    @rustedbeetle23 күн бұрын

    Spectacle has always been hand in hand with science. NASA's budget has often reflected popular interest in what's going on. When the shuttle launches became mundane in popular culture, the budgets were shrinking. Sometimes it takes movies to get people interested again.

  • @timothywaterworth8649
    @timothywaterworth864922 күн бұрын

    Love to see a photo showing the eye chart in the capsule.

  • @Bluenoser613
    @Bluenoser61322 күн бұрын

    Adam's love of things is so fun to experience

  • @donaldevans5752
    @donaldevans575223 күн бұрын

    Wow what a fantastic video , the suit is brilliant , so so well done Adam .

  • @billienomates1606
    @billienomates160623 күн бұрын

    Had the same happen to a replica WW2 sheepskin bomber jacket and overtime the leather look layer just exfoliated itself.

  • @user-ri4hy1qw4l

    @user-ri4hy1qw4l

    23 күн бұрын

    Yeah fake leather dont last too well.

  • @xliquidflames
    @xliquidflames23 күн бұрын

    ...and I do grin a little every time I talk into my smart watch to give it a voice command or take a phone call because I saw the Dick Tracy remake in 1990 when I was a kid. There _is_ a virtuous cycle between culture and science.

  • @celticarchie
    @celticarchie22 күн бұрын

    Your 'ruined' Mercury suits could be just weathered from a stranded Adam Astronaut in a cool 1970s Sci-Fi movie! :D

  • @tomholroyd7519

    @tomholroyd7519

    22 күн бұрын

    Just put a skeleton inside it and leave it someplace

  • @celticarchie

    @celticarchie

    22 күн бұрын

    @@tomholroyd7519 - Exactly! :D

  • @davidmarden4789

    @davidmarden4789

    22 күн бұрын

    Like Dark Star, one of David Bowie's last videos

  • @MrSqu1nty
    @MrSqu1nty22 күн бұрын

    Nice edit. I've rarely seen editing used as the joke, you did an excellent job!

  • @johnthedatascientist7585
    @johnthedatascientist7585Күн бұрын

    Great Video, I love the "dirty" humour.

  • @GeoffreyEwart
    @GeoffreyEwart21 күн бұрын

    Great music slice... Weathering IS Jazz

  • @njones420
    @njones42022 күн бұрын

    Pleathers do the same thing ... I bought a nice bed a few years back, which was advertised as "real leather" headboard, it now looks just like your suit :)

  • @rgiordano8224
    @rgiordano822422 күн бұрын

    Live in North Tarrytown, now Sleepy Hollow in mid '70's. Love your videos!!!!

  • @holmes2210
    @holmes221021 күн бұрын

    We are not deservig of adam, honestly how did we end up with a tv star thats an actual down to earth person that shows us all the amazing things we would struggle to find elsewhere. You inspire me every video I watch. I dont know how many of these comments adam actually reads but if you read mine, I'd like you to know youve made a big difference in my life and I cant thank you enough

  • @armastat

    @armastat

    13 күн бұрын

    His foray into TV acting is the aberation, not the otherway around, lol

  • @zacharywolter
    @zacharywolter8 күн бұрын

    I wish my craving and excitement for knowledge and creating could be rewarded enough I might have a life a fraction of Adam’s

  • @xliquidflames
    @xliquidflames23 күн бұрын

    6:59 That whole point he's making, ending with, "There's always been a virtuous circle between culture and science," articulates something I find myself saying a lot. It's just that he said it much more eloquently. Every time I see a reveal of some new high tech car, a new humanoid robot, a breakthrough medical advancement, or some other new thing that might have seemed impossible just 10 years ago, I always share it on my social media. Those posts always come with some wording from me about how we are truly living in the science fiction world that we've always imagined we would live in. Science fiction is becoming science fact. I have seen people who work in the field of robotics criticize Tesla's robot Optimus, the Boston Dynamics' robot Atlas, and their new one they just revealed, Atlas 2. They'll say something like, "A humanoid robot is not practical. The most efficient robot is one that is specialized for a specific task. Why are they building a humanoid robot?" And they're right. Most robots doing work today are very specialized like the robotic arms that assemble cars. They do one thing very well and they aren't humanoid. But my response to their question of why build a humanoid robot is always, "Have you seen The Phantom Menace or Star Trek The Next Generation?" Humanoid robots are just what we _want_ to build. Nobody cares if it's the most efficient way to make a robot. Efficient robots will and do exist. But the cultural consciousness has been expecting a humanoid robot to exist for a hundred years. Now that we have the technology, engineering, and material science prowess to do it, we're gonna do it. All of that is a long winded way of saying, "There's always been a virtuous circle between culture and science."

  • @xliquidflames

    @xliquidflames

    23 күн бұрын

    I remember watching the 1990 remake of Dick Tracy and wanting a smart watch. Twenty-five years later, I have one. The flip out communicator from the original Star Trek is just a cell phone. The Space X Starship looks exactly like every space ship from 1950s fiction. It's shiny metal with flaps that stick out the sides and it lands standing upright by throttling its engines just like all the ships in those old movies and cartoons. People are _still_ trying to crack flying cars. The new take on them is to build them like person sized drones. Maybe they'll finally crack it this time. The list of stuff from science fiction that we can actually own today is endless. And it's so exciting. If one of the great science fiction writers like Jules Vern or H.G. Wells could somehow time travel to now and see everything we've created, they'd probably just say, "Yep, that makes sense."

  • @thoughtengine

    @thoughtengine

    22 күн бұрын

    @@xliquidflames I still have to wonder why quadcopter airframes aren't being used as regular passenger aircraft anyway.

  • @thoughtengine

    @thoughtengine

    22 күн бұрын

    Asimov's robot series states that if you made a human-like robot, you could have your worksite or home stocked with normal tools and supplies and a robot shaped like you would simply use the tools as you would, rather than have a thousand robots each suited to a single task just to clean your house, before you even go off to work. It may be possible that a cephalopoid or other multi-limbed frame may be more suited to do more than one task without major hardware reconfiguration, but this remains to be seen.

  • @KazyEXE
    @KazyEXE22 күн бұрын

    A spaceship is only fictional until it's built.

  • @gospyro
    @gospyro22 күн бұрын

    I was so glad to hear that dressing a mannequin is a PITA to everybody!! I have a couple different costumes I keep on mannequins and I always dread taking them off to wear them and even more so, dread putting them back on the mannequin when I'm done!

  • @badbob1982
    @badbob198217 күн бұрын

    Being reminded again of G4 going down the tubes for a second time.

  • @sharxbyte
    @sharxbyte22 күн бұрын

    Spectacular color match on that dye. Now I kinda want a space suit. but I'm in a tiny apartment *sigh*

  • @Mythilt
    @Mythilt22 күн бұрын

    Looks pretty nice, some differences from what I remember of the spare suit we had in the building I worked in at WPAFB, I think they finally moved it to the museum about a year after I left. I was always amazed at how small it was, always thought the astronauts were all taller.

  • @greggv8

    @greggv8

    20 күн бұрын

    They were shorter men because 6 foot plus guys wouldn't fit in the Mercury and Gemini capsules. 5' 11" was the absolute maximum. Now it's 6' 4".

  • @stevelyons1962
    @stevelyons196222 күн бұрын

    Will Adam do a look at or a build of the suits from "For All Mankind"?

  • @Marc83Aus
    @Marc83Aus19 күн бұрын

    Thats a nice zipper, I own a vintage m65 field jacket and the solid brass teeth are very satisfying to use. Thankfully nylon doesnt age like vinyl does otherwise I couldnt appreciate this thing over 50 years after it was made.

  • @scottjarnagin348
    @scottjarnagin34822 күн бұрын

    a few years, I remember you starting The Martian, Ares III, Watney space suit and then never posted an update to it.

  • @thomasbecker9676

    @thomasbecker9676

    22 күн бұрын

    It's dead. When I worked at that shop in 2019, all the parts were gathering dust in a corner. The seamstress that was there designing the soft parts is long gone, as is the master mold-maker, as well as several very talented 3D sculptors.

  • @henrycopeland7316
    @henrycopeland731623 күн бұрын

    Adam, do you get to see the UK Repair Shop restoration program at all? The bear ladies, who repair Teddy Bears and Dolls, have a mix of tea chart specially for dying new bear fur to match in with older aged furs… I also think you would love Steve the watchmaker, and Dom the metal worker. (Who has his own you tube channel and book on tools).

  • @1683clifton
    @1683clifton22 күн бұрын

    Variegation, thanks man. That's a good word! and as always I was entertained

  • @LostButMakingGoodTime
    @LostButMakingGoodTime22 күн бұрын

    When Adam is in the zone, he attacks - yes, best word - attacks the piece with all the delicate physical subtlety and finesse of a heavy metal roadie rushing in to replace a bad patch cable. Jackson Pollock would be proud. 🤣🤣🤣

  • @cmorgan2239
    @cmorgan223922 күн бұрын

    So sorry. You two have been a big part of my evenings. Peaceful videos. Thank you.

  • @tweakingheavily
    @tweakingheavily23 күн бұрын

    just came from the lav mic video, and how you say its more meaningful to connect with the audience via the onboard mic on the iPhone. I can assure you that you are 10000% correct Adam! when you lean into the cam, it does make a world of difference to me feeling like im really there!

  • @waterboy181
    @waterboy18120 күн бұрын

    Adam When the first Canadians arrived in Afghanistan during te war we were famously ill equipped for the environment. The troops were wearing green CADPAT uniforms but that was workable. The worst part was the fact that they all had a bright white Tilly hat for head wear. The Regimental Sargent Major took one look at the hats and decided that the troops were all walking around with a bright white target on their heads. Before going out on their first patrol he told the cook to get out his biggest pot… a cauldron really. He told him to boil up the biggest nastiest pot of coffee ever created. They boiled the hats for a few hours in the coffee. The result was nicely camouflaged hats with the pleasant odour of coffee. Your tea trick is the genteel version of our combat proven coffee.

  • @TheHungrySlug

    @TheHungrySlug

    4 күн бұрын

    haha, take hat of and suck on it for a caffeine boost. The thought of a squadron all wearing bright white that contrasts against the surroundings, is funny because of how the oversight came to be. No one questioned the white hats before they were added to the uniform crate? Like an "uh, Sir. Are we sure the troops won't get spotted wearing these?"

  • @newt2010
    @newt201020 күн бұрын

    Well said as always Adam. Great info

  • @hieronymushieronymus8768
    @hieronymushieronymus876822 күн бұрын

    2 questions, what was the original OG mercury suit material, and what was the fabric you all settled on as a replacement that is going to hold up instead of sluffing off like the last replica?

  • @Gubbinsmcbumbersnoot
    @Gubbinsmcbumbersnoot18 күн бұрын

    I love how every time Adam goes off screen to grab something, you just hear a bunch of loud clanging noises, and then he comes back into frame with a friggin space suit lol. this man is a real life cartoon and it’s great

  • @guildedpickle4755
    @guildedpickle475523 күн бұрын

    Love ya, man. Keep rockin on

  • @technicalmadman2986
    @technicalmadman298610 күн бұрын

    Cool peice of kit👍👍

  • @nathkrupa3463
    @nathkrupa346322 күн бұрын

    Great video sir

  • @clivemacken552
    @clivemacken55223 күн бұрын

    Love the suit builds it’s a shame regarding the deterioration of the suit does weathering effect the properties of the suit as your using tea which is a biodegradable liquid?..

  • @colinbartlett8335

    @colinbartlett8335

    22 күн бұрын

    It's the nature of the material it dissolves and peels away from the backing material. From inside. Doesn't seem to matter Older iron on t shirt transfers do the same. Being thinner happens quicker.😑

  • @Chris_Montgomery
    @Chris_Montgomery22 күн бұрын

    I love the knowledge that Adam is agnostic about black tea. Somehow this just tickles me (13:19 to 13:26)

  • @roguecthulhu6002
    @roguecthulhu600222 күн бұрын

    I may be worthwhile to your viewers to note that the tannins in tea react with sunlight.If you weather something with tea (such as book pages) , and then take it out in the sun, it will darken significantly.

  • @johnreynolds5594
    @johnreynolds559422 күн бұрын

    How often do you move the buckles and D-rings, to vary the wear and color on the straps?

  • @roryoutdoors5431
    @roryoutdoors543123 күн бұрын

    The Right Stuff is my fav telling of the space race - not sure about the historical accuracy but it still holds up as a good movie! Got a stick of Beeman’s? ✈️

  • @hlynkacg9529

    @hlynkacg9529

    23 күн бұрын

    The book by Tom Wolfe is excellent and by all accounts very accurate. The movie takes some liberties with the timeline, moving things around to add drama but is still pretty faithful.

  • @TheMaestroso
    @TheMaestroso23 күн бұрын

    That's an example of a new favorite term I learned: inherent vice!

  • @manuellujan666
    @manuellujan66621 күн бұрын

    Seeing you and Kevin in the suits for the G4 relaunch was really awesome. Kevin is crazy talented and naturally funny in a special way wish G4 could have come back the way it was. I guess we have to let some things go.

  • @MrGaldrian
    @MrGaldrian23 күн бұрын

    "50 shades of grime - guidebook to weathering" by A. Savage :D

  • @DAK59
    @DAK5919 күн бұрын

    I'm sure Adam takes it into account but didn't mention it. Extra aging should be applied around touch points. Even if your hands are clean, oils are transferred to the fabric. The oils yellows and attracts dirt.

  • @Broadshore
    @Broadshore8 күн бұрын

    First off.. The Master Stemstress Christine Knobel! I bow to you! Must pay Homage to the Master Stemstress! Also, Adam? I'm surprised you don't have like a Tub for cattle. Those Metal Tin Tubs from Tractor Supply?

  • @Razgriz85
    @Razgriz853 күн бұрын

    For the tea staining just insert the "There are no mistakes, just happy accidents." Bob Ross quote.

  • @JurneeJakes
    @JurneeJakes20 күн бұрын

    If you’re interested in amazing suits to build, the Captain Power series (it was better than the name implies) from the 80’s had amazing suits of armor, and was the first TV show to have actors interact with cgi characters.

  • @DavidMunson
    @DavidMunson18 күн бұрын

    Exactly the same thing happened to a film changing tent I had. Very, very similar outcome. Also happened to a silver bounce panel. Disappointing and costly to replace!

  • @dmprdctns
    @dmprdctns8 күн бұрын

    Oh, no! I dropped everything to watch this video as soon as I found it!!!

  • @adidasDC
    @adidasDC21 күн бұрын

    Was recently looking for a blanket to have in my car that I can pull out and throw on the grass for the 1yr old to hang out idk why I never thought about a bedroll, just bought the v2 glad I caught that last 30 seconds of video, can’t wait to try it out

  • @chaswalker2038
    @chaswalker203819 күн бұрын

    Will the new suit deteriorate like the old ones or has the fabric improved?

  • @adambacon8353
    @adambacon835321 күн бұрын

    Ever time Adam shows or talks about his spacesuits I think of the Robert A Heinlein story "Have Spacesuit Will Travel."

  • @lawrencemahalak6824
    @lawrencemahalak682423 күн бұрын

    Same thing happened with my self-made BSG Viper flightsuit. Unfortunately, like you said, t’is just a thing with vinyls.

  • @SirWhiteRabbit-gr5so
    @SirWhiteRabbit-gr5so23 күн бұрын

    Much of the NASA space suits were made at ILC in Dover, Delaware.

  • @makerpadwanwkp5782
    @makerpadwanwkp578222 күн бұрын

    speaking of space suits did you ever finish the collaboration with frank on the matt damon martian movie space suit

  • @NORTH-ZONE-tz7dd
    @NORTH-ZONE-tz7dd2 күн бұрын

    I don't know what the clinking was in the back ground, but the person sounds like he has a good vocabulary approx-24:52.....loved the suit by the way.

  • @andrewmackenna568
    @andrewmackenna56822 күн бұрын

    Thank you Adam. I don't recall if I have recommended a remarkable upload on KZread for the spacesuit enthusiast. 'The Spacewalker' - (Time of the First Ones/ Age of Pioneers). Uploaded by Ayush Cinemaxstudio, an account of Alexi Leonov's career, directed by Dmitriy Kiseler et al (2017). Wikipedia is useful for the background story. Unfortunately it was incorrectly titled as 'The Martian Full Movie In HD Quality'. But if you haven't seen it - it is one of the most epic recreation films made on the international circuit. It is so well directed it doesn't need subtitles, and there is no glorification of smoking - except the amazing reentry sequence. -Andrew Mackenna, Christchurch, New Zealand

  • @LoLSmileyFACE650
    @LoLSmileyFACE6505 күн бұрын

    just pausing at 13 mins in to comment as I had a thought. but one of the magic things I've seen with quite a few of these types of "weathered" items. you saying how you will never get every spot weathered. I think adds to the realism. the amount of times I've seen real antique objects pulled from sheds and such with spots on them that look completely untouched by time while the rest of it looks like it's been... well. stored in a regular shed. is kinda crazy. that's just a thing that happens and it makes the whole picture feel more real to me.

  • @EcoGearhead
    @EcoGearhead15 күн бұрын

    Thank you for the Bob Ross tutorial. 🎨

  • @gobigrey9352
    @gobigrey935222 күн бұрын

    So is the new suit vinyl again or something different that lasts linger?

  • @nathantron
    @nathantron21 күн бұрын

    I wonder how Movies make workshops look legitimate. I imagine someday someone will have to make Adams shop for a show, and they will have to weather and wear everything to make it look like it's real. A true paradox will be born that day. XD

  • @thomasbecker9676

    @thomasbecker9676

    16 күн бұрын

    It'll just be CG.

  • @armastat

    @armastat

    13 күн бұрын

    love it. i would not be mad about it being in the Smithsonian someday next to the workshops of Edison or Dr. Frankenstein..

  • @thomasbecker9676

    @thomasbecker9676

    13 күн бұрын

    @@armastat Dr. Frankenstein is fictional.

  • @armastat

    @armastat

    12 күн бұрын

    @@thomasbecker9676 Yes, Yes it is.

  • @slawsonize
    @slawsonize23 күн бұрын

    In some historical shots of Alan wearing his suit there is some type of over layer on the shoulders. Any ideas what they would be for?

  • @jeromethiel4323
    @jeromethiel432321 күн бұрын

    I used to have a leather bomber jacket. That jacket lasted me over 12 years, and had a lot of character by the end. There was axle grease on one side, chicken grease on the other, plus my own hair oil on the collar. Plus a couple of small rips and tears that happened over those 12 years. Broke my heart when i had to retire that jacket. It eventually just was in too bad a shape to continue to wear. And repairing a leather coat is more expensive than buying a new one. Which is sad, but it is what it is.

  • @sidsunder
    @sidsunder17 күн бұрын

    such a fun and informative video. love the suit and the history behind it, you truly know how to tell a story. but, please tell us what material you used to replace the vinyl? I am super curious and thank you for all you do :).

  • @anthonytesta3716
    @anthonytesta371622 күн бұрын

    Hello Mr Savage, hey do you use dry transfer decals?

  • @thoughtengine
    @thoughtengine22 күн бұрын

    I've seen certain brands of model AFV kits that do the same thing; whatever that stuff is, it doesn't need to be hit with much UV light to deteriorate; the plasticiser can come off the core polymer leaving it brittle and crackly and greasy, and worse, is also a solvent for polystyrene, so it will damage the plastic parts. This has been known to happen to brand new kits in the box.

  • @krystalreverb
    @krystalreverb5 күн бұрын

    Is it weird that I kind of teared up a little when he said “Fictional spaceships are important because they can make real spaceships inspired by them” or something similar, and it just spoke to me because THAT’S THE POINT. Star Trek figured this out. They actually thought out what a spaceship would need to survive as a Space Navy vessel. They based it on naval vessels that were largely self-sufficient. It was brilliant. And a lot of what we have now wouldn’t be possible without that kind of fictional base to jump off of.

  • @Mythilt
    @Mythilt22 күн бұрын

    The Enterprise space shuttle did fly (well, glided.) It was used for landing tests. It just never went into orbit.

  • @armastat

    @armastat

    13 күн бұрын

    am still extremely upset over that and think NASA made a poor PR move with not allowing it into space.

  • @darylmorning

    @darylmorning

    3 күн бұрын

    ​@@armastatIt unfortunately wasn't built for that. The Enterprise was not possibly space rateable, sadly.

  • @Trashed20659
    @Trashed2065916 күн бұрын

    I saw a model of the mother ship from Close Encounters at the Smithsonian years ago. I wondered why, but was grateful to be able to see it. I guess I reasoned that SciFi was a driver of science, and so the two are connected. Great Easter egg on that ship... a miniature C-3P0 and R2D2 were attached to the outer rim top side! SciFi congratulating itself!

  • @apollolux
    @apollolux21 күн бұрын

    If you regularly find yourself with high-quality replica clothes/wearable gear, I think it would be a groovy idea to have a patch that says "REPLICA" in large letters with the "Savage Industries" logo under it that you can have sewn on the inside of the jacket/pants/etc like a secondary clothing brand or something. That way, it will also survive trips to the laundry. :)

  • @criggie
    @criggie22 күн бұрын

    I'm gutted Adam didn't try it on, and then cruise the Mission on the one-wheel.

  • @dosesandmimoses
    @dosesandmimoses21 күн бұрын

    Same happens with “faux leather” - great tip Adam!

  • @JohnAlberts827
    @JohnAlberts82722 күн бұрын

    How did you do the research to make one of these suits? I really want to make a MC-2 pressure suit but I’m not even sure where to start.

  • @TheRegisteredNerd
    @TheRegisteredNerd18 күн бұрын

    In my experience coffee has worked better for aging fabric. The oils in it adhere to the fibers better I I think. Also, allowing the grounds to sit on the fabric will create create deeper areas of color so it's not too even.

  • @blar2112
    @blar211222 күн бұрын

    no weathering beats the real thing, so if the thing im working with can take it i just put it in the most inconvinient spots while im working on other stuff, so when im handling and pushing or kicking it around to get it out of they way it weathers itself to perfection.

  • @armastat

    @armastat

    13 күн бұрын

    Unfortunately people tend to get upset about work clothes dissapearing, police get in involved and prop masters tend to have short careers when they go out and 'procure' the real thing.

  • @messylaura
    @messylaura22 күн бұрын

    the deteriorated suits will be great for props

  • @jasonpowley4913
    @jasonpowley491322 күн бұрын

    Oh well I guess we can add the several *that's another build* references to the gargantuan list we've accumulated of builds that never materialise. One day.

  • @builderdex
    @builderdex22 күн бұрын

    Question about setting up the mannequin,.. How does the post go in? A hole in the suit? How would a museum handle such a thing? would they just shrug and cut the smallest hole possible? I have a store mannequin holding up a cosplay and left off one of the boots because that is where the post connects with the base. 🤔

  • @zechsblack5891

    @zechsblack5891

    6 күн бұрын

    Did he cut it? I figured maybe these suits tend to have some level of butt access for the human that could be used.

  • @gregwright392
    @gregwright39221 күн бұрын

    That's cool!

  • @duanethepirate
    @duanethepirate23 күн бұрын

    Looks like a space moth got ahold of your space suit!

  • @JoeBieniecki
    @JoeBieniecki22 күн бұрын

    Whenever the talk turns to vintage NASA patches my stomach rolls. As a child in the mid to late sixties I would visit my uncle in Holyoke MA who owned what I think was called Interall. They made patches for NASA and they always had overruns for quality control. I would be allowed to pick a few patches to take home. My dad had a plastic ice bucket with an Apollo 8 mission patch on it. etc... literally dozens of "real" NASA patches passed through our hands and later into obscurity..

  • @jeromefeig4209
    @jeromefeig420922 күн бұрын

    Many plastics and rubber compounds are susceptible to oxidation disintegration from our normal atmosphere. Think in terms of a rubber band in a desk drawer that is not subjected to any light. The "dry rot" will inevitably appear as cracks as well as brittle. You need an oxygen free enclosure to reduce/prevent this decomposition. I would be more than honored to advise you of this technology privately if you wish.

  • @battymax
    @battymax22 күн бұрын

    Love it. What was the new material for the new Mercury Suit? Was it the name vinyl-covered material or an alternative longer-lasting fabric?

  • @MGower4465
    @MGower446519 күн бұрын

    I can't think of the Mercury suit without thinking of the photo of the Mercury 7 - with two of the astronauts wearing regular work boots painted silver. They didn't even move those two to the back row to cover it up. Of course, anyone who has researched it knows the Mercury astronauts never wore their flight-ready suits until launch day, to ensure they were not damaged.

Келесі