The slowly closing, yet immensely heavy door on a spacecraft or some other structure that lowers inch by inch, (seemingly) minute by minute, is such a crucial plot element. Stick a bunch of characters ...
Although all of us have thrown out plenty of random household stuff over our lifetimes, very few of us have used an industrial-scale hydraulic press to crush said stuff into dust. An unfortunate fact ...
An curved arrow pointing right. Press Tube is the YouTube channel which shows a 150-ton hydraulic press crushing various objects. They ask viewers to send in items they wish to see crushed. Some of ...
There are lots of ways to unwind. You can go on a walk, call a friend or read a book. But sometimes it rains, friends are busy or your book is boring. What then? I have a suggestion: watch random, ...
Freelance writer Amanda C. Kooser covers gadgets and tech news with a twist for CNET. When not wallowing in weird gear and iPad apps for cats, she can be found tinkering with her 1956 DeSoto. The ...
So reads the YouTube description of this hot new viral sensation. Weekly footage depicting heavy-duty machinery crushing objects as innocuous as an Easter basket and finicky as hockey pucks have ...
Unstoppable force, meet immovable object. In a rather epic showdown between two very serious contenders, the hydraulic press finally met its match. The identity of this mighty foe? A neodymium magnet.
You've probably worked hard this year, so as 2019 comes to an end you deserve to sit back, relax, and watch a bunch of stuff be crushed to bits. Luckily, the Hydraulic Press Channel just shared a ...
The Hydraulic Press Channel is one of the more straightforward channels on YouTube: A guy crushes stuff with a hydraulic press and remarks upon how awesome the destruction is. Sometimes his wife joins ...