Who is hackett science channel




















This is the main reason why I do not smoke pot- it dulls my hate. Also, it would make hippies think we have something in common. I hate consumerism. I hate cheap crap in all of its forms.

I hate fast food. As a result, this episode should be comedy gold. There are a couple of cool builds here- thermite for cooking, a french-fry machine made from a potato gun and a hot water heater- and I hurt myself, pretty badly, with a plasma torch. Like I said, comedy gold.

Unable to use a conventional kitchen, Hackett has no choice but to use machine shop tools to prep and cook his fast food. To industrialize the French Fry making process, he uses an oversized potato cannon and a hot water heater. Without a heat source to cook his burgers, Hackett is forced to turn to science. Using an unconventional recipe of rust and metal, Hackett creates a degree fire to cook his burgers.

All of this industrialization equates to one thing, a Hackett Burger Value Meal. In an effort to see who, exactly is into the show, and how to get more of them to watch it the Science Channel is tweaking the scheduling no Stuck with Hackett last week, a double dose this week.

The final result, while cool, kind of pales in comparison to the setting and a couple of the intermediate builds. The setting was an airplane junkyard- not the big ones you have seen in movies etc I have seen one of those too- out in the Mojave Desert, miles and miles of parked airplanes stretching to the horizon, like the toy collection of a god with OCD or some kind of convoluted metaphor about the decline of American power but still pretty vast, seeing how it is full of AIRPLANES, which are not small things.

The junkyard was only ordered-ish, with some parts hydraulic cylinders, airplane bathrooms well ordered, and other piles of casually stacked airplanes. I was excited and happy in the railroad junkyard where we filmed EP1.

Railroad obtainium is pretty neat, but is gross, oversized garbage compared to airplane junk. Airplane parts are some of the best-looking, most finely engineered stuff in the world. The parts and the whole need to be reliable, strong, able to withstand horrific conditions that nothing on the ground will ever experience, unless it is in the moment of a catastrophic accident, and then, after all that, the thing needs to FLY.

Think about that. See your car, your bike, hell, even your fancy pocket computer? Imagine that the well-honed piece of machinery you are holding or looking at can do all that it does, but in the degree cold and mile an hour windchill, with no oxygen, and STILL FLY. Even the rattiest, most tore-up airplane parts are more finely engineered than anything you will ever run into in everyday life.

As a font of obtainium it was heaven. One great thing about doing this show is that I get to build stuff from my List you know- the grand, sprawling, always growing, never ended list of cool shit you want to build or learn or do.

On this episode I make a waste oil furnace, a really clever, simple way of turning waste oil like, from oil changes into useful heat. In this case, I use it to fire a foundry and melt metal to cast a part.

Additionally, there are some interesting bits about mechanical advantage and pulleys, and a bit about fluid dynamics. Hope the science made it into the edit.

I also got to move heavy shit by myself and rail against the seedy world of modern aviation, a reference that I think only Julia will get.

Unfortunately, he hates air travel: the noise, the service, the fatal crashing. Fortunately, the junkyard hangs on the edge of a dry lakebed, the perfect place for another, more Hackett-friendly mode of transportation: a dirt boat that will sail the land at dangerously high speed, using wheels instead of water. This past weekend was Maker Faire , a regular, traveling celebration of different types of nerd. Maker Faire has been happening for a few years now, starting as a Bay Area thing five or six years ago.

This was the second annual New York City iteration. Last year was far, far more interesting. Well, last year there was this:. Safety Third! This year, we were barely asked back, too little and too late, and the event suffered for it. Pretty sure I met all of them, all twenty or so. Photos were taken, hands were shook, one autograph was signed. Also, I gave a talk on Teevee stardom as a means to an end for Makers:.

Video of the talk is online. Hackett wants to enjoy all the modern conveniences of suburbia, but now he has to generate power on his own. He starts with DC power, making a chemical battery that he hopes will give him enough juice to turn on the TV. When the battery fails to provide the power he needs, he goes to the next level, fashioning a windmill out of PVC pipe, a treadmill motor, and bits of obtanium.

Combining an old car engine with the motor from a table saw, Hackett hopes that AC power will give him what he wants most: TV. New episode on the air wait- what term does one use for the dissemination of a television show over cable?

No, it does not go through the air. No, it will be cast in a tight, controlled, only-to-cable-customers-who-opted-for-the-package-with-the-Science-Channel way, not in the old-school, available-to-anyone-with-rabbit-ears-on-top-of-a-monochromatic-Zenith kind of way. Too hip. Goes out? Yeah, that works. New episode goes out Thursday, September 8th, pm Eastern time.

Here are some photos and video clips of Episode Four. In this one, I make electricity, using obtainium to create electric power via chemical and mechanical means. This has been an interest of mine for a while- I have sitting in my shop an induction generator made from an old air compressor motor and a lawnmower engine; I have taught workshops in Canadia on converting obtainium E-Waste: Junked, outmoded printers and scanners- dig into them, and you will find a trove of super-well engineered stepper motors that can generate clean, rectifiable AC, spun by wind turbines made from PVC pipe and soda bottles into off-grid, low-or-no-cost cell phone chargers; and taught a class at NYU that dealt with generating, storing, and using purpose-generated power.

Hackett ha agito come il capitano della squadra rossa. In ogni episodio, i ragazzi avrebbero indagato sui limiti di oggetti di uso quotidiano su larga scala, come limousine blindate, barche per aragoste, autocisterne, autobus e altro ancora.

Hackett e Tippett avrebbero condotto test estremi su uno di questi oggetti fino a quando non trovavano il suo punto di rottura. Hackett era uno dei dieci concorrenti che si contendevano un posto per essere uno dei prossimi "Mythbusters".

Crediti dell'autore Scienza popolare Hackett scrive una rubrica regolare per Popular Science in cui affronta i problemi con l'ingegneria fai-da-te. Chris Hackett artista Article November 12, For more information, check out our Channel Packs. For more information, check out our Movie Packs. Yes, Cox has many live TV channels including local news, sports and weather - and networks that feature award shows and weekly series.

If you're moving to a new home in Hackett, trust Cox to assist to make it fast and easy. If you feel comfortable installing your services that may be an option - we'll evaluate your home and recommend the best option.

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