Water Demonstrations Part One --. Siphons // Homemade Science with Bruce Yeany
This set of three videos will take a look at some interesting demonstrations of hydraulics. The use of siphons is a very simple way of using gravity to help move water from one location to another .Several variations of siphons are shown and can easily be duplicated using simple materials
Пікірлер: 422
Can someone clone Bruce and replace all the Science Teachers in the world? Seriously, this is how you get children interested in reality. Keep up the amazing work man.
@Suedocode
5 жыл бұрын
There are lots of bad science teachers for sure, but there are tons of good ones too. Don't replace them all!
@XFourty7
5 жыл бұрын
@@Suedocode Haha, good point ;) Definitely not trying to discredit anyone, Bruce is just a master of motivation and teaching lol. Even at age 30 I can watch these and not lose my attention, still learn something almost every video too! :P
@Reach3DPrinters
5 жыл бұрын
I had a science teacher in high school show me how to make stink bombs! :)
@abrahamcavazos1984
5 жыл бұрын
@@XFourty7 at my 34 years of age I also still enjoy these videos very much and learn new things. Bruce is the man!!!!
@CausingChaos.
5 жыл бұрын
XFourty7 laurel
All science teachers should take notes from Mr.Yeany
@paulbushen4049
5 жыл бұрын
We do 😀
@hubdub9619
5 жыл бұрын
I hear leurel
@RawkL0bster
5 жыл бұрын
Mad Scientists?
@CausingChaos.
5 жыл бұрын
ScornfulSix who is laurel?????
In our school Teachers don't even trying to explain any concept just make us memorise the derivativaton and formula.....I love your explanations
@DerTagTube
5 жыл бұрын
keep in mind that those teachers have to explain every single thing every year again
@mucahclarke6507
5 жыл бұрын
Damn I can tell your language arts teacher ain’t doing there job
@doicaretho6851
5 жыл бұрын
@@DerTagTube Doesn't matter, and in fact your point might actually go against what you were trying to convey.
@DerTagTube
5 жыл бұрын
@@doicaretho6851English isn't my native language.
@DerTagTube
5 жыл бұрын
@@doicaretho6851 okay could u write like u would say it? Basiclly i think if a teacher has gone through several years of teaching they just want to do their job in the easiest way they can . Imagine every year u have to explain every single topic again and always the same questions.
i have respect for this man. He actually likes teaching and tries to bring his students something by, i wish you were my teacher
I have an old 375 gallon koi pond that I've been needing to empty to be able to refurbish and restore. I had no idea how to do it and couldn't find an affordable wet vacuum. After learning this i was able to do it for free with my gardining hose! Thanks Bruce Yeany!👍
Good to see you back!
How is it that you can fit a week of instruction into 10 minutes and it all makes perfect sense?! Brilliant! Thanks, Bruce!
@doicaretho6851
5 жыл бұрын
I know right? We learn and remember more from 10 minute KZread videos than weeks of the same thing in school.
@truthseeker7815
3 жыл бұрын
@@SimonWoodburyForget, interesting, but I disagree
Man if only I had an education where the teachers actually cared about teaching us rather than just trying to get up the school's graduation rate. I missed out on such a huge part of my education that I wish I could get back, but it's never too late to start. Thank you for this video and demonstration to the fluid dynamics of siphons
All i think is why the heck is an amazing teacher like him so underrated?!
0:58 LOL I remember when I thought it was a good idea to put a long straw to a water jug next to my bed that way I didn't have to pick up the jug every time just to drink from it. Then when I laid down, the water start pouring out from the straw on my face LOL.. I was like ahhhhhhhh
@mrniusi11
4 жыл бұрын
lied* down
@rich1051414
4 жыл бұрын
@@mrniusi11 Lay->laid, Lie->Lien Lied is the past tense of telling a fib.
@patata9502
4 жыл бұрын
so you were like "AAAHHH **bubbling noises** "
@NapoleonBorn2Party
3 жыл бұрын
Could’ve worked. You just needed to hang the straw higher than the jug.
@chriswebster24
2 жыл бұрын
@@mrniusi11 You need to get lied.
You can't stop a great teacher from teaching. Good to see you again.
And he's back! Great to see you here once more. Brilliant video
Good to see you post another video Bruce.
Потрясающий учитель! На таких людях держится мир науки! Awesome teacher! Such people hold the world of science!
Bruce, you are my favorite science explainer by far. I'm so glad you're still making videos!
You are great sir I respect you a lot
Knew this was gonna be good as soon as I heard “wooder”
@jaredf6205
3 жыл бұрын
Philadelphia accent
A pleasure to watch! As always!
Great to see a science / physics teacher perform and build interesting experiments with his students! Keep the kids interested!
Why is this so much fun to watch? I leaned this stuff years ago but find it interesting when Mr.Yeany explains it with his toys. He makes it packed full of information but simple and fun.
I love watching these videos and sharing them with my step son. So many fun visual representations of how things work that help me and my son understand the way things work.
For the sliced bell siphon you should put glitter in the water to show roughly how individual molecules of water flow through the siphon
@arturogarcia4722
4 жыл бұрын
Good idea. Before i saw your comment i was thinking the same. Glitter or dust so that you can see the flow of water at any point of the fluid.
I really enjoy watching your videos. Sometimes I pick up information I didn't know I didn't know.
The flying drop siphon is genius. Thank you for sharing. You are greatly helping to improve my teaching to my physical science students.
@YeanyScience
5 жыл бұрын
I can't take credit for it, it has been around as long as I can remember, this was my variation of it. Good to hear that you can use some of what I post.
This made me really grasp the concept of a siphon. Great experiments!!
This is so cool! I am going to mess around with this in the lab to get a better feel of the bell siphon. Your clay one you made is phenomenal! Thanks Bruce!
Liked before watching
Great as always. thank you Mr Bruce.
It's good to have you back As i told you before. You are a huge inspiration for many of us.
Great video as always, Bruce. Keep it up.
Wow, thumbs up, Bruce, really well done! And so interesting to see the historical picture of ancient Egyptians using siphons.
@YeanyScience
5 жыл бұрын
thanks Slater. Always appreciate hearing from you!
Keep it up Bruce! Another great video!
Great! Thank you Mr. Yeany
Wow, your are the best physics teacher i have seen. Greate!
So fascinating! I wish I had teachers like this when I was young.
Awesome video! Thanks for sharing!
Happy to see your videos are back mr Bruce. Best physics teacher!
Love a bit of Bruce
Great video!. Nice to have the kids involved
Bruce Yeany you are a awesome teacher.I am from India and I am impressed your learning actvity
great video! Fun and enjoyable way to learn!
If I had a single teacher like you in high school I wouldn't have dropped out. Nice work man.
Nice work Bruce!
Thank you for helping me figure out a siphon for my future breeding tanks for fish! A bell siphon would work WONDERS at not sucking up tiny fish!👍🏻
I love these videos!!
Nice idea with using the clay to form a waterproof barrier, ingenuity at its finest. Thanks for the idea, i may end up using it one day
gran video gran, explicación, muy inspirador, me suscribo , gracias por tu contenido
This was what science was like for me. Hands on
Muy inspirador e interesante.
I use a Marriott siphon to create a constant flow regardless of water level in the reservoir container. This output is fed into a solenoid type valve which produces water drops used to photograph water drop collisions
@bassnbluegill1406
4 жыл бұрын
@@alphamoonman This is english, you simply don't know what a large portion of the words mean.
@alphamoonman
4 жыл бұрын
@@bassnbluegill1406 www.urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=r%2Fwhoosh
Love you sir More explanation won't be bad
Really awesome and amazing video. I pressed (like) at the first moment of the video, and I couldn't wait till the end.
Thanks for doing these videos!!
Great video!
Awesome experiment!
Really enjoyed this, the range of types was really interesting.
Very nice good knowledge for people. Thanks.
solo conocía la forma de sifón pero las otras wow, muy bien explicado i only knew the first form of siphon, but the others wow, very well explained
In every school are necessary one professor like you!
Bruce your back! I missed you.
Thanks so much for the great explanation
You are awesomee teacher!!!!!
it is a very old concept but still now people are curious about it, its the beauty of science.
I like laminar flow.
@Anehab100
5 жыл бұрын
Do you get smarter every day?
@foo2hp
5 жыл бұрын
@@Anehab100 Yes :D
@Reach3DPrinters
5 жыл бұрын
ha ha... just saw that one. :)
The man loves is siphon. Good video.
Great work , such a outstanding teacher!! You should teach your students about ram pumps in more advanced classes.
I learn a lot more from this channel compared to school.
Excellent thank you.
Awsome video thank you .im currently working on a version of this fountain for my daughter s science fair. But were going to use it to generate electricity .we have a great idea but would like your opinion on something .if we add very small semi boyant beads would they travel through the system without interrupting the the flow of herons foutain
"This is siphoning at its finest" hahaha this sentence killed me
This is so nice, pls become our teacher And greetings from Germany 🇩🇪✌️
Отличная демонстрация.
Damn, your like the coolest science teacher ever
Simple and well presented. The world needs more like this. In the one with test tube and straw, I'm wondering what is the cause of the water inside the tube being higher than level in the main container before the siphon had started. I've got my ideas but I'd like to get your thoughts.
very cool! thanks for making this video! : )
That Bell siphon is also used a one way valve. You fill it up to the half way point and air can only escape rather than get in.
The experiment at 5:30 was seriously impressive. I've never thought about siphons with air gaps working!
I was worried I'd seen the last video. Thanks for starting up again. Keep them coming.
@YeanyScience
5 жыл бұрын
I have more on the way, I've taken some time off to recover from surgery and get myself back on track
Gonna try these with my kids one day
Really Great. What did you use to color the water ?
Бесподобно!!
I am trying to implement such learning in my class too You & prof. Walter lewin are big motivation to me sir... Thanks for being my Dhronacharya( great Prof of ancient India)
@YeanyScience
5 жыл бұрын
I am honored by your words, thank you
Thank you, Bruce. Another fantastic way for me to steal some gas!
I remember being able to buy bell siphon parts for trough style urinals with the high wall tank. I had a old tank from one of those urinals as a kid and would play with it for hours
nice to see this video from bruce laurel
This is useful.
Man, you are so cool! 😎😎😎😎
fascinating! you should design some garden art that uses rain water and amaze the internet
Very illustrative... It occurs to me that using this same effect, you could model the operation of a logic gate, we change the electric fluid for an aqueous fluid... It would be a VISUALLY ATTRACTIVE WAY OF SEEING HOW MICROCHIPS WORK
Nice to see a good science teacher still excited to teach. You could cut a hole in the liter jug you were using and have the kids put their hand over the hole then try it again with the hole open to demonstrate that the experiment requires vacuum at 5:34.
@YeanyScience
5 жыл бұрын
that's I good suggestion, thanks Jake
a teacher to be dreamed about
Siphons never fail boggle my mind.
@YeanyScience
4 жыл бұрын
me too, but not just siphons, I am constantly in awe of most of these demo, never get old
Seems to me, you could make a good water clock using this method ?
Recommended ✔️
Is there a way to create a pressure system that constantly returns the water to the source of the siphon? I'm thinking to create a pressurised waterfall/ pond system without the need for an electric pump...??
Neat!
wait, so you do not have to do any additional manipulations with a tube, just insert it into two containers one filled with any liquid and elevated higher than another or you have to suck the air out from the tube?
if we coil it up and running a magnetic fluid so we have some induction and electricity as well
I found at home that, in a washing machine, the softner in the softner dispenser is cleared through a bell siphon when water is poured on to it =)
I wish that my school would make us do that kind of experiments. The only experiments that our school make is the boring ones.