Added: 5 years ago
From: Optomystic
Views: 47,267
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  • Tay Zonde needs to try this!

  • Wow uoauoa. I had no idea. Thank you for sharing that. I'll pass that along to Steve. I'm very interested to hear what his response might be. As for me, I haven't touched the stuff since that day and certainly won't after reading your info. Thanks again...

  • @Optomystic i have no problem with your experiment, i laughed when I heard your "zeuslike" voice, i was only afraid of the comments that ask "where to buy it".

    One thing is an experiment done under control

    Another thing is a bunch of people that think only on how cool it is and where to buy because they want a zeuslike voice like yours.

  • @uoauoa well dont worry Sulphur Hexaflouride is expensive

  • yeah yeah... very funny.... but it is not funny for the earth...

    from wikipedia:

    According to the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, SF6 is the most potent greenhouse gas that it has evaluated, with a global warming potential of 22,800 times that of CO2 when compared over a 100 year period. Sulfur hexafluoride is also extremely long-lived, it is inert in the troposphere and stratosphere and has an estimated atmospheric lifetime of 8003200 years.

    Ah... and this is a banned gas...

    Hi

  • @uoauoa ok thats great and did you know that wikipedia is made up of random people from hillbillys with landlines to you and me anyone can add something on wikipedia ok so its not that correct and for the "extremely long-lived, it is inert in the troposphere and stratosphere and has an estimated atmospheric lifetime of 8003200 years" hell man no human has been around for 8003200 years to know LOL if you ask me it is bullsh*t to frighten you from using it

  • @genmaxpain ok i know it is made up of random people, but if you read well it is an estimated, i repeat... estimated... , lifetime. Obviously none can prove that it is true a lifetime like this and I hope that you didn't have a look only on that bullsh*t estimated time. everyone can think that the meaning of this "8003200" is only a very looooong loooooooong looooooooooooooooong time...

  • @uoauoa @genmaxpain ppl, it has an atmospheric lifetime of 3,200 years

  • Where can I buy this? I'm trying to find it on the internet...

  • If sound travels faster or slower through that gas in your pharynx, then why doesn't it slow down when it gets into the regular gas of the room and then sound the same as it should if you just breathed regular air???? OOHHHHHH SNAAAPPP BITCHESS BECAUSE YOU ARE WRONG!!! If you throw a ball throw air, then it hits water (more dense, right?) it slows down because of the increased resistance. And a reminder, sounds waves are fundamentally different that Electromagnetic Spectra, duh!

  • because the sound is being produced in your voice box...you are hearing the sound from the voice box...not the sound in the air.

  • seen it yesterday! lets chat

    im on cam and bored Hz

  • He is so wild! Having met him lets me know his intent.

  • fun!

  • actually to remove the sulphur hexaflouride from ur lungs ur supposed to breathe deeply in

  • I saw Steve Spangler speak yesterday at a conference -- he's great!

  • well, that was pretty cool. i really want to try that sometime.

  • Please don't be confused, this guy probably is just misspeaking, but sound travels faster through a medium that is more dense.

  • haven't yet thought much about it, but it does seem off... things sound higher when they are at a higher frequency, which means more waves going per time, which is a faster vibration... if I play a note on the piano or trumpet or sing it into water, air, a heavier gas, a less-dense gas, wouldn't it still have... no maybe the medium would affect the frequency

    ... guess i should just look this up, lol

  • Please dont be confused drantiwar1 is a presumptous dumbass and doesnt realize that in GASES the MORE DENSE the gas is the SLOWER sound travels and in GASES the LESS DENSE the gas is the FASTER sound travels. And the next time you wish to tell some1 with a degree that their wrong just shut it

  • i heard if you inhale too much sulfur hexaflouride the gas won't leave your lungs....

    there was a story of some college kids and one of them almost suffocated, so what they did is get the kid who was suffocating and make him stand on his head, making the gas go out of his lungs... thats intense.

  • Woot! Hexaflouride!

  • its sulfur hexaflouride, i think the sulfur makes a difference.

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