Added: 1 year ago
From: wonderingmind42
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  • THAT IS SO COOL!!!!

  • I suppose it's just combusting where the oxygen is. It's used to the oxygen inside the jar, so that 'wall of flame' follows the oxygen, while the jet out the top is just using up the atmospheric stuff :)

  • I believe there is invisible flame in between the visible flames.

  • where there is an inflow there must be an outflow ergo when you breath into the jar you are outflowing the co2 and replacing it with no less than 50% oxygen light it again all the flamable o2 is exhausted ,repeat

  • Percentage of CO2 in breathed out air is only about 5% more than the surrounding air.

  • as for blowing on the flame - we only blow out around 40% c02 as i remember - also when you blow into the bottle - you're moving air so there would be a cusion of "fresh" air infront of the air you blew - as for the double flames, it's got limited oxygen in there so while it's only burning as much as the fuel/oxygen mix can sustain - the rest is blown out of the top as superheated air due to expansion - meeting new air and burning the "residual" fuel :)

  • answer, jet of flame is exiting bottle from pressure build up inside, it burns extra bright cuz as it leaves, it takes on fresh air which is fuel

  • You would need to put a lid on it with a slightly smaller hole that what it has now for it to have enough back pressure to work

  • I love how his laugh kind of mimics the sputter of the flame.

  • The best way to demonstrate what is going on inside the bottle is to cut the bottle vertically in half and partially submerge it underwater. Then cause a disturbance on the top of your subm. bottle and watch the waves as they travel inside the bottle.

    The exact same wave principle applies to the video demonstration. The reason you see the flame on top is because the wave travels so fast inside the bottle that the flame appears stable. It's not. It's a repeating cycle.

  • fire is so beautiful

  • OWWWWW...my ears.....

  • As to the pulse rocket effect, that is caused by the venturi, or the bottle neck. Simply put, velocity increases as pressure decreases.

    (sorry spotlightman, I see you already answer the question.)

  • So, like, nobody here has ever taken a CPR course? It's not like we breathe out 100% CO2, otherwise we'd be doing more damage to victims. The bottle was above the HEL (higher explosive limit.) Everyone knows that fire doesn't burn with out oxygen (the fire triangle is heat, oxygen, and fuel.) The bottle was saturated with fuel and didn't have enough oxygen, and by exhaling into the bottle. It's also why the last one was the coolest, it had a ultra rich mixture.

  • i do this shit with my lighter and a soda bottle all the time not nearly at powerful tho

  • your breath is only about 3% CO2

  • co2 allows gasses in jar to vaporize better, some ignite in jar and push less vaporized out to ignite in better ozygen layer, release of vapors sucks in more ox around edge and keeps ignition going untill equalized???

  • I think initially the mixture was too rich. By blowing into it, you put some of the fuel out....bringing the fuel to oxygen mixture to where it needed to be.

  • there are a lot of dunce people replying to this video. many claim to have some great answers when they dont know the difference between 1 part oxygen and 0 parts anything else, and 2 parts oxygen and 0 parts anything else.

    i have no genius answers but i would really like to know what the fuel being used here is.

    an answer from wonderingmind would be great if possible.

    thanks guys

  • yes it due to global warming, now go pay your carbon taxes!

  • its because its trying to use up oxygen

  • My theory on the CO2 is simply that we don't breath out even mostly CO2. Couldn't if mouth to mouth resuscitation is to do any good, now could we? You may know chemistry well, but catch up on your biology and biochemistry, dude.

  • kk not sure if im right or if im even close ... so you light a match drop it in.. the gas or whatever from the match or previous flame. vs. our co2 we emit from breathing out then becoming instantly famable? i really dont get it?:| chemistry was never my thing.

  • Comment removed

  • to clarify: hydrogen from the fuel replaces carbon bound to oxygen in co2 creating C and h2o or CO and h2o in an exothermic exchange reaction.

    My apologies for the incorrect terms, haven't studied chemistry for a while.

  • My theory: carbohydrate reacts with co2 -> h2o =first firewall

    At top hot combustible gases (and water vapor) is ejected and ignited "re-burning" the carbon from before and the un"burned" fuel.

  • Dumpert +1

  • dumpert

  • My guess to the two areas of combustion would be lack of oxygen. There is some oxygen in the bottle but not enough to burn all the vaporized fuel. When the gases expand some of the fuel is driven out the top and combusted with the outside air. 

  • i have a answer for the last question i think the mixture after the first burn still has fuel vapors but no oxygen when it exits the bottle there is more oxygen and it is still hot enough to relight a second time. :)

  • i know one answer lol .......after u have ignited it u have used the oxy left in the jar.........humans dont use %100 percent oxy in a breath....u just replaced the oxy thats all.........don this myself hahah

  • The flame is to hot for you to see it)

    Red Flame is about 3000 C

    Blue Flame is about 4000-5000C

    But flame that is about the Blue color you can't see at all... only with special camera)

  • Its because the head of the bottle is too thick to act as a flame arrestor so the deflagration can travel in and out of the bottle. What you see inside the bottle is a contained explosion, the pressure inside is really high. If the pressure inside is above the rupture pressure of the plastic bottle (unlikely) you'll really get it in your face badly lol.

  • i think there are 2 flames because as the flame rushes down it is also pushing up fuel and the top flame burning may cause a vacuum

  • the next time you make one of these large pulse jets, can u put a scale under it to see the force output? thank you :)

  • the flame starts the burning down though the jug which burns all the ox out of the jug causeing pressure pushing the flame from the jug the flame keeps burning atop the jug because its geting ox from the air around the jug where as the flame burning down only has the ox in the jug when its gone it stops burnuing heat alows exses gases to exscape the top keeping it atop the bottle and burning with out side air or ox, ok now we know, my name for this is "reductive heat burn"

  • Normal air carries 18% oxygen, and expired air carries 16% oxygen.

  • heated gas expanding is causing the pressure on the jet of flame at the top, unburned gas is mixing with o2 to give a good flame, the flames creeping downwards are at the line where the o2 and gas are mixing due to density.

    by blowing in the bottle you created a convection current to an extend which caused the o2 and gas to mix slighty better causing a faster burn

  • THIS IS THE PPAAIINNKIILLEEERRR

  • Basic answer its an afterburner, the main ignition is the gas creeping down the bottle yet the unburned portion dose not have the fuel to air ratio to ignite until it reaches the mouth of the just in which it ignites from the underbelly flame.

  • thats really cool

  • its like a syringe, when the flame sheet goes down a hole forms leakin high presurized fart........guess not

  • There is still like 10% O2 in what we breath out.

    And what is created in the Jar is probably CO not CO2

    There is just not enough O2 in the jar for all of the gas, what is left gets ejected and burns later and does creat CO2.

    I think it also explains why the flame going down into the jar goes so slow, and what comes out of the top has so much energie.

  • "Probably caused by global warming, no doubt." xDDDD. I love how you poke fun at yourself...

  • the air you breath out is heavier then the gas so by blowing into yar it helps the gas ignite at the top please tell me if this is right or wrong and if its wrong what is the right awnser (im 16 and dutch so please forgive my english :) )

  • yes then u dont have fire if u take out one of the 3 yea. oxygen, fuel and heat source. but on a sample like fireworks the powder u have in there with like firecrackers has already O atoms bounded to the molecule so thats y fireworks burn without oxygen in the combustion chamber. well it is there like i said :) but thats not the case here :D funny pulse yet man xD i did that with a milk jar once :P

  • The flame out the top might be a combination of expanding air in the bottle while some of the fumes got spit out at the same time. Blowing into the bottle makes turbulence and splits the two flame fronts.

  • Here is a nerd answer for you. The reason is because we dont breath out pure CO2. we only use 4% of the O2 we breathe. The air we breathe is 21%; that means that you breathe out 17%. The reason the fire did not lite was because it has no O2 to oxidize. when you blow into it, you gave it just enough O2 to lite up. To have fire you must have three things: Heat, Fuel, Oxigen. You cut one of these and you have no fire.

  • @masczone If you are correct that: A) we only use 4% of the O2 we breathe b) The air we breathe is 21% [02] Then, we breath out 20.16% oxygen. We use 4% of the 21%, so, 21*(1-0.04) = 21*(0.96) = 20.16 More examples: if we used no oxygen what-so-ever: We use 0% of the 21%, so, 21*(1-0) = 21*(1) = 21 if we used 50% of the 02 we breathe: We use 50% of the 21%, so, 21*(1-0.5) = 21*(0.5) = 10.5
  • @amcnea Sorry, let me clarify the specifics. When I said 4% usage I mean we breathe out 17% O2. In other words we consume 4% of Total PP. not 4% of 21%. I hope that makes sense. And out of the 4% we absorb, we consume 100% of it. that is why you can breathe inside a small plastic bag for a short time. in fact, if you were locked inside a sealed room, you would not die of lack of O2. You would die of CO2 poisoning, hypercarbia, acidosis, ect. unlike carbon Monoxide, which causes Hypoxia.

  • Here is a nerd answer for you. The reason is because we dont breath out pure CO2. we only use 4% of the O2 we breathe. The air we breathe is 21%; that means that you breathe out 17%. The reason the fire did not lite was because it has no O2 to oxidize. when you blow into it, you gave it just enough O2 to lite up. To have fire you must have three things: Heat, Fuel, Oxigen. You cut one of these and you have no fire.

    :P

  • Because their is more fuel in the bottle then air to burn it. Hence as the flame goes down the container burning, it leaves fuel behind. Since combustion causes expansion of the gas, this forces some fuel out the top which mixes with oxygen in the room and ignites.

    Furthermore after the flames reaches the bottom of the bottle and stops, this stop the expansion. Hence, air is now drawn into the bottle as the air re-compresses and you see the secondary ignition inside the bottle.

  • Maybe the fuel is not completely burning, and is being exhausted out the top, where there is enough oxygen for it to finish burning, And the cause of it being "shot" out is the expanding air because of the heat

  • Close inspection reveals a very thin but continuous sheet of flame starting at 47 seconds and ending at roughly 50 seconds, the bottom flame and top (which are one and the same) burn out simultaneously. Pausing the video reveals a distinct difference between a bluish ignited hue and a clear/black hue in the as yet un-ignited bottom portion.

  • when the gas ignites it expands. where from one side the fire is still trying to reach the bottom of the jug, it has no where to expand to so it blows it out he top

  • @Witets your exactly right

  • I think it might be an invisible flame?

  • because there are 2 places where the accelerant is igniting. the top where the fumes are mixing with the oxygen. then inside the bottle where the denser parts of the chemicals are

  • you used too much fuel so you added some air in to the bottle.

  • i would guess that the gass ignites and expands, but then again what do i know

  • Are you a wizard?

  • My guess:

    The pressure created from the bottom ignition overwhelms the flame and pushes excess gas to the surface and when it creates a stronger fuel to air mixture at the top, you get the jet effect from the gas ultimately igniting. It's hard for me to explain how I see it in my mind lol

  • ¸lol,becouse explozion itself pushes the air,ive made few potato cannons but sadly i dont have the camrea to record :P

  • its the same combastion area but You see it as two because pressure inside of that bottle that was made out of burned oxygen is to high. it spread flame on the side of inside the botle (if You know what i mean) on a really high pressure and much higher flow speed so You can't see it. on the bottom is slow burning mix of fuel and air that makes flame going towards top of the bottle where it has contact with new air and becoming more stable flame for you to see it again..

    OR SOMETHING LIKE THAT :)

  • one thing I can say for certain is that it was not caused by global warming 

  • Here is my solution to the two areas of flame:

    The "sinking" flame is cause by the ignition of the fuel in the container (duh).

    The upper is because not all of the fuel was ignited in the initial reaction. The sudden compression, as the exhaust (with unburned fuel) goes through the nozzle, ignites the reaction.

    Thus resulting in the seemingly unexplainable two flames:)

    p.s. I'm only 15, that's not to bad for 15 :)

  • thermodynamics heat rises and as the espaing vapors heat up they rise and out of the opening but as more vapor try's to rise it forces the vapor still ignited out and the down burn is the vapor getting burned off in a being the gas was denser than the air when you added co2 to the mix the burn came down then the jet up

  • @jamrow708 ehh... how ever true that may be (thermodynamics) this is more about the Expanding air, you solution, i think, is too slow to be this answer. As for the still ignited vapor... I'm pretty sure we'd see it.

  • @MyRoomStudio1 well what kind of fuel was he using is the question and ya thermodynamics does explain how heat and fire move the thegas burns of and downward obviously the gas is denser than air the fire burns off the less dense particals first working it's way down at the same time forces the gas up and is ignited there being the source of ignition and is funneled out like a jet turbine forces air and fuel then ignites it well you can do this with a beer bottle and butane lighter

  • @jamrow708 Okay. I'm pretty sure it's methyl alcohol, or however you write it. and I sorta had a hard time following that. Could you repeat that, only with punctuation, and not call the fuel "gas", 'cause the air is a gas too. It got kinda confusing.

  • @MyRoomStudio1 no I will not use puncuation it takes up space ,and i did not know what the fuel was I thought he left that part out to ward off firebugs and moron kids from doing that and do talk to me right young man I am work when I post and do not have much time I gave you respect so give me mine and when can continue this debate the gas o2 help burn off the vapor from the methyl alcohol it is not the liquid but the gas or vapor that ignites and the o2 does burn

  • @jamrow708 Haha, sorry. At least you have enough sense to know how to check my age. wait.... you post while you're at work?? ummm... I'll give you some respect and let you Work instead of having to be on youtube.

  • @MyRoomStudio1 it's a tech job and when I get a brain cramp I relax and go on the web and do me my fav thing

  • @jamrow708 oh, and yeah, it's ethyl alcohol... did you even watch the first part of the video???

  • you blew the air in to increase the amount of fuel vapor in the container

  • That was......Awesome.

  • We breathe out like 2% less oxygen than the air around us contains. Furthermore it creates some flow which mixes the gasses a little.

  • You cover the whole at the top slightly. It will allow the jet to actually run for a while. About 15 seconds

  • i think its because there is fire in there and at the rim of the jug..........

  • always global warming 0_o haha

  • i did this before, its alot louder than you think

  • i should have read the comment before i think krispern is right^^ and sry for double and now triple post^^

  • well i´m studying chemistry and my idea to the question is: (i assume your fuel is carbon based, so for ethanol this would describe it): 2 C2H5OH + 5 O2 >> 4 CO + 6 H2O due to the lack of oxygen carbon monoxide is being formed which reignites with the oxygen at the top, when you look at hot charcoal you can also see a little blue flame over the piece of charcoal which is actually carbon monoxide. so 2 CO + O2 >> 2CO2 (it is also called the boudouard-equilibrium or balance) just an idea...

  • well i´m studying chemistry and my idea to the question is: (i assume your fuel is carbon based, so for ethanol this would describe it): 2 C2H5OH + 5 O2 >> 4 CO + 6 H2O due to the lack of oxygen carbon monoxide is being formed which reignites with the oxygen at the top, when you look at hot charcoal you can also see a little blue flame over the piece of charcoal which is actually carbon monoxide. so 2 CO + O2 >> 2CO2 (it is also called the boudouard-equilibrium or balance) just an idea...

  • when the gas is ignited it expands, thus pressure becomes greater on the inside,hence the blue angle

  • I hope the alcohol is detonating when those loud pulses of sound occur.

    Also, about the breathing of air in the tube. If ethanol vapor has allowed to settle, there will be density gradient in the jar, its vapor density is higher than of air. So breathing is stirring the gases inside. I would at least think this some contribution.

  • Comment removed

  • The air you breathe in has about 20% of oxygen, the air you breathe out has about 16% of oxygen, so the difference is not that big for a flame. The jet on the top is because not all of the ethyl alcohol gets burned up in the jar due to lack of oxygen, so as the gasses expand inside the jar and push all vapors and exhaust gases out, the air mixes with everything thats pushed out and helps to burn all thats left to burn.

  • My guess as to why you breathed into the jar would be that, whatever gas you were using to "make the jar go woosh" (as you expertly explained it... lol!!) was a heavy gas and began to sink to the bottom. by breathing into the jar, you stir up the gasses back to the top again so that the flame can catch.

  • @VioletPhoenixflames8 that would also explain why the more you did it, the less it "wooshed" and made pretty colors and not I would assume didn't burn as hot. Because the more you did it, the more gas you burned, and the less about to gas TO burn was in it.

  • @VioletPhoenixflames8 I didn't claim to be a doctor. You even said that oxygen is present when we exhale, that's all I was saying. Oxygen is needed for fuel to burn. By blowing oxygen into the jar it allows the flame to ignite once more. Its not a guess like you suggested, its fact.

  • The reason blowing into the jar helps is because we do not exhale 100% CO2, otherwise CPR would not work. The reason why the flame is burning out the top and also traveling down the jar is that there isn't enough oxygen for the complete combustion of all fuel inside the jar, due to heat expanding inside jar when the flame burns, the excess fuel is forced out of the top where there is enough O2 to continue burning unburnt fuel.

  • @mattymagoo22 actually Matt, if you have ever taken a CPR class, you will learn that the breaths into a person actually do pretty much close to nothing to revive the person.

  • If u have ever taken a CPR class, u will be told that the breaths that u give people don't do anything. The chest compressions are givin to help jump start the heart, but the breaths are givin to also do just that AND to help coax the lungs into inflating on their own again. Though u are right, we do not beath out 100% C02, that fact has nothing to do with CPR actually working in any way. besides, breath is not flamable. no matter what, you still only have 5 min to revive someone.

  • "Everyone knows we breathe out CO2" - not quite. That's a "Just So" story misunderstood by many. We also breathe out O2 as we do not absorb 100% of what we breathe in :P

  • This experiment recreates the anus after eating Taco Bell with Jallapinos and hot sauce.

  • @toddshere its spelt Jalapeños not jallapinos :P

  • @Delcaroll Its spelled SPELLED not SPELT HA HA HA on you!

  • Comment removed

  • @toddshere especially with the sput-sput-sputter at the end XD

  • This experiment recreates the anus after eating Taco Bell with extra hot sauce.

  • Man i would love to be in that jar..

  • @SadCarnage1224 you are...lol

  • the fire out of the top is the burning gases that is being expelled along with a high concentration of alcohol vapor.

    the 'wall of flame' is pushing some hot gases up and out of the bottle, which is the proof of this reaction.

    this works in pretty much any container with a small opening and a large surface area inside.

  • is this the same concept that has been applied to the Anti-Lag system (ALS) of a turbo rally racing car?

  • It's a lot of fun hearing you laugh after each attempt! Must be infectious too because I laughed also.

  • Hahaha global warming!!

    that's funny..

  • Lesson 1: don't leave your child with this video, a big jug and a box of matches, alone at home.

  • As I said below, this works because you have a rich mixture in the container. Probably very rich given the amount of secondary burn you get outside the container. If you "lucked out" and got a stoichiometric air fuel mixture in the container instead of a rich one, all the burning would happen inside the container and much more vigorously probably exploding the container and sending glass shrapnel in all directions. You might wish you were wearing more than safety goggles if that happens.

  • Not sure if someone else answered it already, but it's pretty simple. The reason you get two flame regions is you have a rich air fuel mixture in the container. The downward flame burns only until all the oxygen is consumed, but the exhaust still contains fuel which will burn when it encounters oxygen outside the container, assuming there is an ignition source which there is (the burning air fuel mixture already there).

  • By the way, this works with am empty grand marnier bottle, even better if you stick a straw in it and shoot the stray into the ceiling.

  • it is because there is nothing in that bottle at all, but you are actually gandalf the white and are using magic

  • It probably separated because of the Co2 that was put into the jug when you breathed out and into the jug...thats my best guess

  • You're making fun of global warming. That's horrible. That's like making fun of 2012. 1 star.

  • lol! This is awesome. I love that sound.

  • 1man 1jar?

  • only work for stink breath people :D

  • I think it might have to do with the Leidenfrost effect where the ethyl alcohol had reached boiling point and steam separated the alcohol and the surface of the bottle causing it to move around the bottle and expel at the same time.

  • e.c because the pipe is filled with air.

  • Oh yeah! we did this in chemistry last year! it was a blast! :D

  • im 10...im gunna try this and show it to all my friends that are also 10 but im also gunna put some gas at the bottom too, so it will be cooler.......

  • wow i thought that was really cool.

  • 5 stars

  • i am soo going to try this

  • Good Day, eh!

    Hey, I remember doing this,..only with old windshield washer fluid jugs. I'd use them to store oil products, recycle the oil,..then take the bottles home to rinse clean with petrol. I'd drain the petrol,(to re-use for other cleaning purpose).. and use a match to burn out the fumes,..so I can recycle cleaned poly-jug... 1 in particular took off like a crazy rocket..WHOOOSH!! Scary! YES..wear safety glasses!! or a face shield..

    I have done other REALLY crazy things,..make a BOOM!XD

  • Also its separated because there is oxygen that has not been used for combustion at the bottom of the jar, while there is oxygen at the opening of the jar coming from the atmosphere. The air in between has already been combusted and therefor was depleted of oxygen

  • yu blow in to move oxygen into the jar, which is needed for combustion

  • The wall is created as the liquid down the sides burns down. The flame at the top is caused by burning the alcohol in the air and the heat from the wall burning. (apologies if my other comment was posted I wasn't sure if it went through)

  • The flame comes from the top 'cause it is bigger than the gas causing it to be forced out the top.

    Or it's 'cause heat rises.

  • There are 2 mediums, gas and liquid alcohol. The flame at the top is caused by burning the alcohol in the air and the wall going down is the liquid being burned as it spreads down. Secondarily, as the liquid burns it also adds to the flame at the top because the expanding air and heat must go somewhere.

  • Now that's what i call fire in a jar ! Good video man !

  • when the fire moves down the pressure it creates pressure

    and the pressure forces the air out the top which creates the flame

  • Yup, it's global warming alright xD

  • I am going to try this.

  • WoW! scared my son.. lol he keeps saying "wow wow wow" and pointing at the screen. (he's 1 1/2 years old )

  • GOOD SHOW THANKS FOR YOUR TIME

  • My science teacher did this.

    All you have to do is coat the jug in alcohol. And pour it out. Set it on fire. and you also get drinkable water!

  • It is because you did not give the genie your list of 3 wishes yet, hence he was still sitting in there waiting for you.

  • Best answer so far!

  • @wonderingmind42

    haha oops a tad late on the reply but thanks! :D

  • @UrLaoBei anyways does it matter the best comment is this one that I am replying to the dude said so by far

  • @jamrow708

    thanks! :) 

  • Comment removed

  • While the flame is going down the jug, the air inside the jug is being heated. Warming up air means it expands, and there's only one way out: the top of the jug. But there are probably remains of the alcohol left in that expanding air, making it burn again when it exits the jar (because thats where you lit the stuff, so there has always been a flame there). Same reason you see the jar turning blue again when it's finished: air cools down and goes back in.

    That's my theory :p

  • I think that since alcohol sometimes burns with an invisible flame, then that is what is going on with the wall of fire. It is only visible near the edges of the flame, but the rest is just burning invisibly.

  • 42...theres ur solution

  • Back in my wild party days of my early 20s, I used to mess with my friends that way every time I emptied a bottle of 190 proof. Only that little half-liter liquor bottle makes a nice little "too-oo-oo-oot" noise when you do that.

  • It's the Al Gore factor.

    He's in cahoots with the devil, so he has a lot of power over fire and evil things. That's how he started global warming.

  • this is the same thing as you would

    lift your leg and let,r rip with a bic!!!!

    ahhhhhh!

  • oxygen depletion. painfully simple really.

  • My science teacher did this for us in class a few days ago. I volunteered to go up and light (I didn't know what was going to happen, never seen this before). I jumped. :(

  • Because u r all nerds! xD jkjk

  • Blue flame's the hottest.

  • re bueno

  • when u light it,the flame creeps down creating high heat and pressure in the middle between the flame at the bottom and the top, pressure must leave the only way it can,so it goes out the top of the jar,then cause its very very hot,when leaveing the top of the jar,the heat mixes with the air and it combusts,and then the flame hits the bottom,an equalizing thing happens,so now since it's hotter in the bottel,the flame goes back inside and uses all the rest of the fuel it can and it then goes out

  • b/c it produces oxygen and oxygen is wat a flame feeds off of?

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  • The two areas of combustion are the areas which have the highest level of oxygen, the bottom of the jug because of the oxygen from your breath not asorbed by your lungs and out the top of the jug because of the oxygen in the normal air. Its not that there is no combustable ethy in the unburning area its just that it has simply used all availble oxygen. :

    )

  • 1 star for being a global warming alarmist.

    also reported for dangerous acts

  • @ThinkerMister11 lol your a giant fag

  • well, maybe it is Johny Walker, Patron, or maybe brazilian Cachassa 51... after any of those, it will defnatelly help the fire wen u blow in the container.

  • its endo and exo lol

  • cddsfdfdfadsf

  • xxx

  • you've been drinking lots of Tequila and when you blow in the jug it's like trying to put out a fire wit buckets of gasoline. lol

  • OXYGEN.

    u must not know anything chemistry.

  • CO2 + sperm = boom

  • its also called a backdraft. they made a whole movie about it. its called "backdraft".

  • To put it in layman's terms. :^)