Can Lego create a Vortex in a Sphere?

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Published 2022-08-20
Building and testing different Lego mechanisms to create a water vortex inside an enclosed plastic ball.

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
Gamepad: amzn.to/3R1ypMD
Magnets: amzn.to/3QEJNyq

Camera used for this video: amzn.to/3Hxisci
Microphones used for this video: amzn.to/3HpIxdY

Please note: I get a commission if you buy via Amazon or BuWizz link above. Thanks for your support.

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)
  • the best thing about these videos is how they just get progressively more overkill and insane I love it
  • @skivvy3565
    That lego cat was so well put together its movement Almost looked real.
  • @Qtheman3456
    Bro made a sci-fi power core out of lego, water, and food colouring. Respect.
  • @swarmer7208
    With every passing day, we get one step closer to a lego particle accelerator.
  • @anomatoor
    That last one looks like some sort of sci-fi portal or reactor thing. Its really amazing what you can do with lego!
  • @bitter2day
    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.
  • @ongmingyuan
    It was really nice to see the coloured water spinning around. The contraptions look really futuristic… .
  • @cgrind3000
    This was 1000x cooler than I thought it was going to be, crazy to see the mechanism evolve and how complex the engineering is
  • @DuhBla
    I never knew spinning coloured water inside spheres with lego pieces could go this hard.
  • @alanl890
    Its insane how beautiful visuals this machine can create. Awesome stuff man. Would love to see a second version where you maybe backlight the spheres by having the light bounce of from the background or you put little lights inside the spheres and have the room completely dark :)
  • @dementry.
    It progressively gets more insane and I love it
  • @LordToxygene
    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.
  • 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.
  • What an awesome thing to build at home. Definitely a conversation piece with that final model. Very cool proof of concept
  • @BalloonFarts
    This dude gonna find some new particles creating himself a Lego Hadron Collider.
  • @isobarkley
    hearing the bricks snap in place without seeing your hands is some satisfying editing magic
  • @flox5670
    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
  • @dantepaler9534
    I want to say this and i will say this "The things we do for science"