Комментарии:
Find the hidden Lego minifigure
ОтветитьI understand none of this but it’s entertaining
ОтветитьImagin how long it took to mak ethis video, this video was made 4818479q years ago and the time laps took this lo g
ОтветитьWonderful
ОтветитьPlease share MTBF for this device
ОтветитьBlud waited 1 billion years for one video
ОтветитьAwesome clock!
ОтветитьYou really should make a hands-on tutorial dedicated to this!
ОтветитьI am in awe of this channel...
ОтветитьI didn’t realise the video changed and i’m here like, how is this supposed to go up a slippery surface? 😂
Ответитьthis made my day thank you omg
ОтветитьI too like my Lego with a side of existential dread.
Ответитьgear will broke in some time
Ответить👀wonder if you rotate the last digit
Ответитьyou creamed your pants while making this didn't you
ОтветитьSpeechless, been impressed by your videos many times , this , no, I mean. No words
ОтветитьIf this set were for sale (like a LEGO building set in the store) it would be an instabuy if it would cost a maximum of 250 euro's.
ОтветитьWow❤❤❤
ОтветитьHail to the Lego king
ОтветитьI had to lego of my preconceived notions of time and space to understand this beautiful machine.
ОтветитьStarting from the smallest unit of time to the largest unit of time.....
Ответитьwhy would u say that 24cm is too short and than go for 18cm? bruh
ОтветитьGenius
Ответить“Bro hold on lemme pull out my clock”
The clock:
Fun fact - In 1901 A.D. One Greek diver of a team exploring a sunken wreck off the island of Kythera stood on a small object among the debris, causing serious damage to his foot, which hurt for around ten to fifteen minutes.
Upon closer inspection of the retrieved item by the Emergency Services who responded to the call it was revealed to be a piece of ancient LEGO.
Furthermore, since LEGO wasn't known to have been available in Kythera during 1901, a secondary diving team was sent back down to the site of the wreckage to investigate some more, finally, they happened upon what we now know of as the 'Antikythera Mechanism' a small distance from where the original diver was injured.
The object, of course, had simply fallen off of this!
Finaly, the mystery was explained and so it goes that no questions were left unanswered. Yay!
Very good:)
ОтветитьHow does it both wind and still continue to tick?!
Is the weight pulling down doing the work?! If it's going back up how does that work!? Ugh I'm confused! lol
Tell me when my eon long timer is done
ОтветитьI would buy this if it was available!
ОтветитьNow this is dedication literally took 3 millennia to make this video 👍
ОтветитьThank you for indirectly teaching me how a clock's pendulum works. I've always wondered how it keeps ticking at the same rate instead of losing momentum, and now I know.
ОтветитьYou are literally a genius🤯
ОтветитьI think you might be a genius
ОтветитьNice one again ! i am not into lego but love you videos !!!
Ответитьcan maybe make a instruction for how to make it or a item list what u used in the build?
ОтветитьThis video is simply fenomenal!
Wonderful work!
Thanks for posting this gem.
this is art
ОтветитьI think he might also have built a Lego-Time-machine
Ответить..
.
lifetime display got too real for me
ОтветитьDoes your design take into account a leap year?
ОтветитьYou could make one of the dials out of bismuth (half-life 2x10^19 years) and indicate that when this dial comes all the way around, it will be thallium. And maybe then melt into mercury.
ОтветитьNow watch the lego wear out / disintegrate within a life time (c8
ОтветитьThis is actually beautiful.
ОтветитьCan't believe people before some hundreds of galactic years built and recorded for future generations.... truly inspiring 😔
ОтветитьДаже если довести эту вещь то автоматизма то она не будет бесконечной, так как подвижные детали сотрутся
ОтветитьBro took “telling time” to a whole new level💀
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