"Do not try what we do the show at home." "We are experts." "Stay safe." "On this episode of "Mythbusters"..." "bring in the next baby." "There you go." "The team selects six of your ideas." "Strong." "Yes." "On this request-fest special every letter or e-mail that gets pulled ***" "♪♪♪" "The myths emerge will involve fuel bills, thrills and spills." "The result from this are extremely surprise." "Sneeze." "♪♪♪" "I look like a vampire." "Tuxedos and tantrums." "So cover your mouth, buckle up and find out if lady luck has picked you." "All right." "It is party time." "Who are the "Mythbusters"?" "♪♪♪" "Adam savage." "Jamie Hyneman." "Is that hot enough for you?" "♪♪♪" "Joining them, Grant Imahara." "♪♪♪" "Kari Byron." "That's messed up!" "And Tory belleci." "♪♪♪ they don't just tell the myths." "They put them to the test." "If you have ever sent in a myth request get ready because in this hour of viewer power, the tests are at your behest." "What's all this stuff?" ""Mythbusters" request fest." "We have taken fan submissions from stories we should do and put them in the bin and do whatever we draw out of here." "♪♪♪" "All right." "Pick one." "♪♪♪" "♪♪♪ can a super secret Agent spy arrive at fancy party via scuba, unzip his dog suit and arrive ready in a spiffy tux?" "I have seen this several times and I want to know if it is possible." "Your biggest fan..." "I can't read the signature." "That is a great story." "I think we should totally do it." "Do I get to wear the tux?" "Absolutely." "Okay then." "It is a classic cinematic costume conundrum." "Super secret spy slips out of the water and unzips his dive suit, revealing an immaculate tuxedo." "Can he leave you high, dry and ready to party?" "What do you think the plan is?" "Easy." "One of us scuba dives to a party and the other one arrives by normal means." "When we get there and partial judge sees it both past muster." "Exactly." "We need proper etiquette." "I have one right here." "♪♪♪ narratedor, please tell the nice folks at home about the credentials." "Image consultant, author, all-around style guru, bertrand is the perfect person to get ad exam Jamie looking ship shape for their upcoming boat party." "Adam, here is yours." "Thanks." "When it comes to black tie it is really important a tuxedo be absolutely perfect." "Otherwise, you will be mistaken for the head waiter." "Also overlooked are the shoes and really the standard is patent leather." "It's critical." "It's got to be a hand tie bow tie." "♪♪♪" "♪♪♪ it gives a man his individuality." "Finally the white handkerchief." "Need to have the pocket square." "Pocket square, not a napkin." "It is not a dinner napkin." "Jamie, how do you feel?" "I feel kind of tied up like a pot roast actually." "Despite Jamie's discomfort the dapper duo are m empeckably dressed." "♪♪♪" "♪♪♪ for the myth to be confirmed that's standard that has to be maintained." "Regardless of their method of transport to the party." "This penguin providing a comparative baseline will be traveling in comfort above water." "Perfect." "But Agent Jamie Hyneman will be goi going." "♪♪♪ all right." "It is party time." "♪♪♪ request as randomizer, you guys ready?" "Go for it." "All right." "Here we go." "This is hilarious." "Okay." "This letter says... hey, guys," "I heard that if your car tires are slightly deflated only by a few psi, fuel efficiency can tail off massively." "I drive a lot." "I would like to know if that's true." "We get this a lot." "That's only half the story." "Yes, there's some people that say if you have lower pressure you get lower mileage." "There are other people say if you overinflate you get better mileage." "A fuel efficiency myth." "Everybody loves to save money." "We will take a car, bypass the fuel tank and install our own fuel." "One we can remove and weigh so when we know exactly how much fuel we are using during the tests." "Sounds great." "Then we do three tests." "Obviously we start with the control, right pressure." "And then we move on to underpressure and overpressure." "This being myth busters we are going to have to try superlow pressure and super high pressure." "Oh, yeah." "To test the randomly selected viewer request, the team demobbed to a remote location." "We have come to an abandoned naval base." "We are going to lay out a track, drive it five different times exactly the same with five different tire pressures and see if tire pressure really does have an effect on your fuel efficiency." "When we get down to actually driving the car, we can't go crazy out there." "You have to have a very specific route." "We have to drive the same route every time at the same speed and exact same way." "What's more, the weight of the car cannot change between tests." "That's the only way we will be able to compare our results." "Okay." "This is fuel efficiency, tire pressure, start out with our control test, 35 psi which is the manufacturer's recommended pressure." "Let's get to driving." "In charge of making sure Kari sticks to the course is back seat driver Imahara." "Stop and hold for ten seconds." "Each of the requisite stops and periods of acceleration are carefully timed to ensure consistency between the runs." "With the control complete, the guys without the fuel cell weigh it and crunch the crucial numbers." "That's 8,916 grams." "Okay." "Let's take it down to ten psi an do the test again." "The next two tests will be at the extreme end of the tire pressure spectrum." "Okay." "Here we go." "Underinflated at 10 psi, handling is adversely affected." "You are now at 50." "You can actually... it feels squirrely." "But the team completes the identical circuit safely." "And move on to the extreme overinflated test." "60 psi." "Hit it." "Overinfrags to t... overinflation is not recommended." "♪♪♪ the tires will wear unevenly." "But according to some fans, it is supposedly more fuel efficient." "Now, I get the reasoning behind this." "It makes sense." "Okay." "You fill your tire to 60 psi and getting less contact with the road because the tire is bulging, less of a footprint there." "You are getting less rolling resistance and, therefore, you are possibly getting better fuel efficiency." "That's the theory." "The number crunching will have to wait." "Because on the next two tests, the guys are working within real world parameters of 15% above and below the control." "Feel like we have been here before." "Let's get to the results." "Okay." "What have we got?" "Okay." "So for the plus 15% overinflated tires at 40 psi, we consumed 6.2% less fuel." "Makes sense." "In the case of the 15% underinflated at 30 psi we consumed 1.2% more fuel." "Confirming the myth the numbers for the extreme tests are even more extreme." "Basically flat tires increase friction and, therefore, increased fuel consumption." "But when it comes to saving money, the raw numbers don't tell the whole story." "And here's why." "What we are finding with the underinflated tires, consuming more fuel." "And this makes sense." "When you consider the tire contact patch." "Which is the actual serviurfacet makes contact with the road." "When the tires are underinflated the contact is larger." "It increases friction and makes it harder for the engine to move the car." "If you really break this down to saving money, well, in a year, drive 10,000 miles and you are only saving about $76." "If you weigh that against the fact you may get a blowout and put your life in danger, you are not saving anything at all." "Drive around with your tires inflated to the recommended air pressure." "That's your best bet." "Next on "Mythbusters"" "will our scuba diving spy come up dry?" "Any minute now." "Kari, Grant and Tory take Internet claims." "Results are extremely surprising." "This is the fan inspired request-fest special." "Agent Hyneman wearing his tuxedo under his dive suit is on his way to gate crash a boat party." "Let's recap." "The myth is a spy could scuba dive and arrive ***" "♪♪♪♪♪♪" "♪♪♪ and attract no attention at all." "No one would be any wiser." "In order to test this I'm in control and I'm here on this boat having dressed myself above deck while James Franklin" "Hyneman, secret Agent is scuba diving here under the water." "When he arrives he will take off his gear and will have both of our tux essay cessed to see if they pass muster." "♪♪♪" "The challenge Jamie is facing is a spy worthy 40-minute swim at a maximum depth of 60 feet covering almost a mile." "A tough task for an unrumpled tux, one Adam thinks is beyond Jamie." "Mr. Hyneman has 5,000 under his belt," "I will wager this is a first for him." "I will further wager that it is not going to work very well." "He will come out of the water and his tux will look not only did he spend three days in the rain in it but slept it in every single night." "Right on cue, our man of action surfaces." "Adam slips out of his dive suit and incredibly the initial impression is Agent Hyneman is not just completely dry in terms of sea water and sweat but unflustered and suitably daper." "Mightily respectable." "I'm blown away." "Your suit looks fantastic." "I have to say this story falls into the realm of the are elephants afraid of mice category." "I thought we would throw Jamie in scuba gear, throw him under water and come up and we would laugh at how horrifying his tuxedo would look." "Noptd only is he dry as a bone I have a hard time finding anything wrong with his entire get-up." "♪♪♪" "♪♪♪ million dollar question is would Jamie pass muster at a formal gathering?" "I would say absolutely." "Absolutely." "Nicely done, act Hyneman." "Thank you." "You're very welcome let's crash your party." "Absolutely." "Randomizer, give us something good." "Okay." "Hi, guys." "In the past you have done shows about whether certain every day items are bullet practice or not." "I have three more for you that I have read about recently." "One, a hair weave." "What?" "Two, a laptop." "And three, a fridge door." "Okay, that's random." "Wait, wait." "He has also got some links to the relevant newspaper articles." "Yes." "Thanks to our eagle eye viewer the team will lock, load and take aim at these three separate claims." "Nine millimeter rounds will they be stopped stone cold by a fridge?" "Is it possible a hair weave would stop a 45 caliber pistol dead in its tracks?" "Could your laptop really block a point blank blast from a shotgun?" "One of our favorite places to come and we have all of our targets laid out here." "Laptop cases, wigs, weaves, laptops, and, of course, the firepower." "Shotgun and a 40 caliber pistol." "This should be a fun day." "First to face the firing squad of truth is the laptop." "Here's Grant with the well the details of this myth are a little sketchy." "What we do know is it is from four or five years ago." "So we have a best-selling lap tore from four, five years ago." "Get inside of this average briefcase we are going to fire at it from three to four feet." "Point blank range." "And if it penetrates this, it goes into the ballistics gel and we know that this is not bulletproof." "All right." "Ready to load?" "Lock and load, baby." "We are about to fire a bird shot from 12 gauge shotgun into this computer at point blank range to find out if this is bulletproof." "Fire when ready." "May feeling is we don't have enough space to allow that shot to spread out." "It will be coming out in one large mass and I think it will punch a hole right through this computer." "In three, two, one." "Unfortunately for our ballistics gel victim," "Tory's prediction, like Kari's shooting, was dead on." "That went right through the laptop and destroyed the ballistics gel." "It's not all that surprising." "Laptops are designed to be portable and most of the components are fairly lightweight except for one." "Try aiming for the battery." "All right." "This time I'm aiming for the battery." "Will that make a difference to the 12 gauge shotgun?" "Firing bird shot at 1,200 feet per second." "In three, two, one." "What?" "What?" "What just happened?" "We may have stopped a bird shot." "You are kidding me." "No." "No way." "No." "Way." "Incredibly in complete contrast to the first test, the ballistics gel was spared." "There's no exit wounds on the bag." "If you had the computer in the right position when the guy fired the shotgun you would probably stop the bird shots." "I will tell you what, the results from this are extremely surprising." "I mean, we are really close range with a .12" "gauge shotgun." "Hits the battery you live." "Knocks the wind out of you but once you recover, you need to get up and buy yourself a lottery ticket because this is a very lucky day for." "Did you if you hit the battery your computer is bulletproof." "That's incredible." "You have to be incredibly lucky but this one is applause zblibl totally blausible." "Plausible." "Totally awesome." "After the break, adam and Jamie spread colored goo for you." "We love experiments that use forces of nature." "Like sunlight." "We are here to test that power." "Where's Tory?" "Hey, I'm over here." "I'm just utilizing the power of nature." "Impressive, not quite why we are here." "He's soaking up the power of the sun because this car, exactly the same thing." "I think he has been in the sun too long." "What are you talking about?" "It is ball the roof, man." "It is a solar panel and has 36 solar cells." "Sun's power into electric tris pit." "Keeps the car cool plus it is mobile." "Portable solar power." "Think about what that could do." "No more dead cell phones." "I can power up my laptop, solar powered robots." "Even watch my outdoor television." "Possibilities are endless." "I can even use my solar powered hair dryer to keep my hair looking good." "Okay, solar power, not magic." "Say sunburn." "Did you see my hair?" "It is magic." "My turn." "My xwrany and me loved the episode but can you please tell us the safest way to sneeze without spreading germs." "Sincerely, Thomas." "I think we can tote dloy that." "We can do that." "The Mythbusters sneezed for science before which made for unpleasant viewing." "That little silver booger there, too." "♪♪♪" "Remember, you have been warned." "Now we are going to be testing techniques for stopping sneezes from spreading their germs, bacteria." "That's what this is set up to test." "Jamesy and I will wear white suits." "Stand here at the apex and we will sneeze." "Our mouths will be filled with colored liquid like before." "We are going to try to prevent the spread of the sneeze with three different methods." "Open hand." "Two, into the elbow." "Three, something no gentleman should be without, a handkerchief." "We are going to be looking at our sxuts on the floor to see which one works the best." "Snaezing ineezing into the o" "I predict this will be a horror show." "Swig and sniff" "that's one." "Yeah." "♪♪♪ outer loop for each style," "they are going to unleash a sample of three sneezes." "That looks horrible, doesn't it?" "I look like a vampire." "Adam's face is a picture but it is the canvas that tells the real story." "I see spots up to eight feet away, dude." "It did spread quite a lot." "There's a lot of markings here." "I would saying is gl hand not so good." "Yeah, not so good." "Not so good and then some." "Even with his hand directly in front of the oncoming sneeze," "Adam can't begin to contain the explosion." "I'm pretty clear sneezing into your hand is meant as a courtesy to those around you to keep from spreading your germs on them." "As far as I can see, it is quite effective at doing exactly the opposite." "I noticed there's almost no red dye on me at all and crap loads all up a round me." "If I was on a subway, I'm typhoid Mary." "With the hand getting thumbs down, can the elbow do any better?" "To find out, it's over to Jamie and he will be sneezing in green." "Now we wait for the sneeze to take effect on Jamie's nose." "Slowly it irritates inside." "Three sneezes later and the results are very impressive." "Yeah, I seep only two drop lets and one on your shoe and let's look at your elbow here." "That's totally localized to you, man." "You know what, it is all on my arm and not on my hand." "So I'm not as likely to spread it around." "Doubly effective." "Hands down, the elbow is a highly effective tech affect with virtually the entire sneeze contained on each of Jamie's sneezes." "But can the hum billion hankie do better still?" "It is back to Adam and for the final test, he's sneezing in blue." "How did we do?" "Tiny, tiny, tiny dot of blue there." "At first it seems like the hankie may be victorious until..." "I see some on the hankie." "Look, it's penetrated all the way to both sides." "Penetrated both sides and perhaps most damningly, it is on my hands." "Ready to spread to the next person whose hand I shake!" "The sneeze seeped through contaminating Adam's hand making it a poor technique and it gets worse." "Let me mbke one more thing clear." "♪♪♪ imagine you sneeze and then all day long you keep on putting it in your pocket and pulling it back out public giving people change from your pocket, handing them youren and phone." "Talking on your phone." "Spreading germs." "Yeah." "It is not just a rorshack test it is a petri dish." "♪♪♪" "The hanky has hit the skids." "This flu season, which method are you using?" "The hand?" "The elbow?" "Or the hankie?" "Elbow." "I totally agree." "It is the elbow." "Now you know." "Coming up..." "pretty strange family." "Will a rig really help you keep your head?" "One." "♪♪♪" "Kari, Grant and Tory are tackling a trio of ballistic tall tails." "They already have proof a laptop could be bulletproof." "Next, they are tackling the widely reported story that hair extensions could extend your life." "We look like a strange family." "We are a strange family." "Since our bulletproof hair weave myth was ripped straight from the headlines, we are lucky enough to have a few details." "They used a 40 caliber pistol." "We know they shot through the back window of the driver's side." "So sounds a little crazy to me but I guess we will see if a hair weave can stop a bullet." "More than the firepower to make it through a windshield, head rest, through a hair weave and ultimately through the rest of the dummy." "Here we go." "Three, two, one." "All right." "Let's go check it out." "Inside the car it is not long before the all-too damning evidence is discovered." "It actually went through her head and pulled the hair weave through her head." "No way!" "Welk one thing is for sure." "Hair weave is not bulletproof." "This is amazing." "Check out this evidence." "Right here, the bullet goes in through the weave." "You will notice that it pulls the weave through the head and brings the weave with the bullet out the other side." "This is very busted." "This is not a bulletproof weave." "And through the back window the head rest and then into the weave." "It is busted." "The woman was shot at and did find a bullet in her weave." "So what happened?" "This myth seems somewhat suspect to me from the beginning." "If I could ram my finger through the hair weave, a bullet is going to go through it especially a direct hit." "Now, I'm sure that the woman did find a bullet tangled up in her hair." "I'm just thinking maybe something else happened." "Maybe it ricochet and landed back in her hair weave and thought that's what saved her." "The likeliest scenario the bullet ricocheted around the car before winding up in the weave of the intended victim." "What could be next?" "Let's see." "Dear Mythbusters." "I heard people refer to something they think is easy as being like taking candy from a baby." "Here's what I want to know." "Is it really that easy to take candy from a baby?" "Regards, childless in Ohio." "I wondered about that myself." "It is just like you to wonder that." "It is a familiar phrase that supposedly illustrates a simple and easily achievable task." "The idea being that the baby is defenseless in the face of mean mustac mustache candy grabbers." "♪♪♪" "♪♪♪ how will we measure how difficult it is to take candy from the baby?" "The first thing that comes to mind is grip strength." "That's what I'm looking for." "To measure that, I figure we will need to design some kind of a device that grabs the candy and then can record how much force it takes to pull that candy out of the baby's hand." "Tiny candy grabber." "The guys will reduce the myth to a single quantifiable measurement." "Grip strength." "Look at that." "With the force gauge attached to Jamie's candy grabbing arm, that can do just that." "Basic will you each of the babies ranging in age from 6 to 18 months will be given candy and then Jamie will see how much force is required to take that candy from their sticky, supposedly helpless little hands." "What do you think?" "Do you think it is a good height for grabbing?" "Seems about right." "If we are going to test this thing on real babies we should get a baseline." "How easily it is to pick up candy." "Is that why you have that?" "Yeah." "I found this kid in one of your boxes labeled babies up there and thought we would place a lollipop on his chest and pick it up." "What could be easier than that." "Okay." "He won't give you any resistance, will you?" "As it turns out not much at all." ".08." ".08 of a pound." "That's our baseline." "That's the easiest possible thing to do, just pick up a lollipop." "Cue the first baby." "Hello." "Hi." "How are you?" "This is Cole." "Our first subject," "Cole, is 6 months old." "With a little prompting from" "Adam he soon grabs hold of the sweet stuff." "That's it." "Yes." "Exactly." "All right, Mr. Hyneman, it is all yours." "Okay, Cole, get ready to surrender your candy." "What do you think of that?" "3.16 pounds." "Nice work." "Strong like bull." "3.16 pounds is a huge 40 times increase on the control." "An indication that this myth might not be as straightforward as it appeared." "Bring in the next baby." "Theory compounded by the next subject." "10-month-old Ruby." "That's it." "♪♪♪" "are you scaring her with your robot arm?" "That seems to be the problem." "That and the fact that Jamie is trying to steal her candy." "What's that?" "With Ruby obviously uncomfortable, the team decides to move on." "But it should be noted that by utilizing her key baby power, crying, Jamie failed to relieve her of the candy." "Maybe it is not so easy after all." "Coming up the team tackles a sweet tasting tall tale that may well end in tears." "It is the final installment of the request-fest bulletproof myth." "One of our viewers led us to this story when it kicked off in the kitchen, our lucky survivor hid behind a fridge door." "Which supposedly proved impenetrable to several nine millimeter rounds." "Who is signing for these refrigerators?" "Why would a refrigerator door possibly be a good shield against bullets?" "Well, there is steel throughout the door." "You can tell because you can put a magnet on it." "It might be able to stop the bullet or at least slow it down so you won't get hurt." "That's good." "Right there." "That's good." "To give the myth the seal of authenticity, Tory brought the entire contents of his fridge." "This one doesn't have any mold." "That's still good." "This is Pesto." "Or..." "I don't know." "Maybe it is just turned green." "It is not entirely realistic." "But a shell of full of jars and canned goods will give the myth the best chance possible." "Okay." "This is bulletproof fridge door in three, two, one." "Nice shooting." "♪♪♪ good." "I saw stuff flying." "I don't know about you guys but I don't think there is anything bulletproof about that refrigerator." "I'm not hiding behind the refrigerator." "Next time I'm in a gunfight." "Let's go check it." "Oh." "Crazy." "I would have to say those are the lethal shots." "Check thing out." "Plastic from the door." "Now that looks painful." "Not just painful." "Lethal." "The ballistics gel is riddled with nine mill rounds, plastic shrapnel, glass shrapnel, and mustard." "Leaving the myth busted." "But the guys aren't giving up just yet." "Middle of the door is thin subpoena that all there is to this door, metal and plastic?" "I think just the cover here." "Yeah." "You know what?" "The older fridge mate have finger gate steel and multiple layers of it." "All right." "Let's move on to the other refrigerator." "Yes." "Going old school cooling with a fridge from the '50s." "This thing is gorgeous." "What a shame." "But more important than the design aesthetic is its mass." "Oh, my goodness." "This is very, very heavy which I think is a good sign." "This thing is solid." "What might this old refrigerator be a good choice for bullet practice shield?" "Modern refrigerators have thin gauge steel and plastic." "When this was made they didn't have all of that." "They had this." "Steel." "And a lot of it." "We know that this fridge is double wall." "Have you at least two layers and hopefully that's barely thick gauge steel." "That's what my money is on." "*** this is old fashioned refrigerator door versus nine millimeter." "Here we go." "Three, two, one." "Looks like it went through." "Yeah, I think so." "Damn." "Yes." "The evidence has cooled the team's optimism." "The old fashioned fridge, like the modern one, has clearly failed on the bulletproof front." "Now that's a shot." "Through the door and through the condiments and hitting the aluminum bar." "These brars not stopping the bullets." "They weren't even magnets and still passed right through." "I thought we had some hope here but this is all busted." "Bust." "Totally bust." "We ruined a fridge for nothing." "♪♪♪" "Up next, the candy kleptomania continues." "Kari, Grant and Tory tackal tasty tale of beverage bashing." "♪♪♪" "♪♪♪♪♪♪" "♪♪♪ *** your turn." "All right." "Spin it up." "Randomizing." "Okay." "All right." "This one says I know you like beer." "So you'll like this one." "I have seen a video after guy taking a beer bottle out of the freezer and the beer is in liquid form." "He bangs it on a countertop and the beer instantly freezes." "Is this true?" "If so what's going on." "I definitely heard this one." "All right, well, let's get beer in a freezer and go for it." "There are a number of instant beer freeze viral videos doing the cyberspace rounds." "And supposedly if you leave a bottle of beer in the freezer for a while, then give it a short sharp shock, presto, an instant frozen beer." "It is a challenge that guys can't resist." "We are at the Mythbusters lab to test the frozen beer myth." "First we are going the need... beer." "It has to be in a glass container and at the right temperature." "Then we will take the bottles of beer, stick them in the freezer, for different amounts of time, and see exactly how long it takes to get an instant beer freeze." "With varying reports on the duration and temperature required for" "♪♪♪ successful insta freezing the guys are covering their bases." "Experiment begins." "Internet research told us the butter zone for the super cool instant frozen beer is two hours." "Since every freezer is different we will do an experiment with this one." "Four beers in the freezer and *** take them out at different intervals and see if we find the perfect time formula for frozen beer." "A number of different theories as to consider this nen on happens." "The beer has to be on the edge of freezing." "By addi iing kinetic energy in form of shock, it causes bubbles" "♪♪♪" "♪♪♪♪♪♪ and cause it is beer to freeze instantly." "It is 5:00 somewhere in the world." "Another theory is super cooling." "That's when the beer is in its liquid state but its temperature" "♪♪♪ is below the freezing temperature." "Once the beer is agitated, it disturb it is molecules, *** creating sites." "That allows the ice crystals to form." "♪♪♪ the ice crystals have more surfaces for more ice crystals to form, cascading effect that will solidly freeze this beer." "Both of those theories depend on the beer being at or below its freezing point." "All right." "It is time to pull the first beer." "Which is some way around 32 degrees fahrenheit." "Beer number one, two hours." "All right." "Smack it." "Ready?" "Wow." "I think you broke the beer." "You almost smashed the bottle." "Check the thermal camera." "Yeah." "Okay." "I have 44.1 degrees." "That's in the even close to being freezing." "We have to leave it in there longer." "Okay." "Next beer." "Let's wait for the next interval." "With the time lapse time machine in full effect, it is time for the next test." "Ready for 2 1/2 hours?" "Yes." "Smack it." "Here we go." "One, two, three." "But the mythical instant beer freeze is proving elusive." "Thermal camera sing reading 39 degrees." "Still not cold enough." "Even at two hours and 45 minutes, the beer right at its supposed freezing point..." "we are at 32 degrees." "This might work." "All right." "Freezing." "Ready to smack it." "Yeah." "There's still no sign which rules out Grant's theory that on the point of freezing, the formation of bubbles suddenly reduces the temperature and a tipping point is reached." "All right p." "This beer has been in the freezer for three hours." "Okay." "Let's see what we have." "Okay. 31 degrees." "Which is promising." "Because this will be the first test with a still liquid beer below its freezing point." "Hit it." "Okay." "Here we go." "Ready?" "Yes." "Look how well that works." "Instant ice crystal." "Instant frozen beer." "It works." "Look at that." "You can really freak some friends out with this one." "What a great party trick." "Totally." "Watching the beer go from liquid to solid is really, really beautiful because it just grows like those little sand crystals that used to happen when you were a kid and fills the bottle up." "It is one of those really cool experiments because anybody can do it." "You can do it at home and it doesn't need explosives or professionals around." "It is just a beer." "Yes." "Simple, satisfying try-at-home science." "Kari knows why." "It looks like the winning theory here is super cooling." "We have the beer at its liquid form but the temperature is just below freezing." "When you agitate the beer, the water molecules are disturbed and ice crystals start to form and creates more ice crystals and create more ice crystals, cascading, creating a slushy beer." "It works." "One for the Internet." "That's cool." "So what are we beg to do with all the experimental beer and slushy drink we have?" "I have an idea." "Yeah." "♪♪♪" "♪♪♪♪♪♪" "Adam and Jamie are tackling the viewer requested mini myth that taking candy from a baby is really as easy as the idiom implies." "Let's get another baby." "All right." "The next baby!" "Meet anika." "At 14 months she appears to have a candy retention skill the younger kids don't have." "Evasion." "That's pretty good." "She's crafty." "You are being excellent." "♪♪♪ you are doing great." "Good job." "We are encountering resistance from the babies in the form of evasion." "They are not being as docile as we hoped and they are holding the lollipop away from Jamie's test equipment." "These babies are crafty but I think we can outsmart them." "She wants to hold on to it." "As it turns out around here the babies are smarter than the tv host because annika decides to pull out the" "Biggs gun in the baby arsenal." "No." "Now she sees you." "Guilt." "Have you gone and scared her." "I think we have to give her a little while." "Sweetie, it is totally okay." "It is totally okay." "With Adam and Jamie on the back foot and annika in position of the candy the guys are forced into a change of tactics." "There we go." "Works like a charm." "Given that the babies don't seem to like this mechanical thing coming in close on them I tie ad string on it to be able to remove the candy more remotely and yet the same grip strength measurement." "Once annika gets a good hold, her and Jamie begin a tug of war." "Take it." "Did candy is leaving me." "What is going on?" "1.08 pounds." "She doesn't want to let go." "Sweetie." "Jamie, keep taking it." "♪♪♪ okay." "Sweetie." "Don't take my candy." "Very well done." "I feel terrible." "I'm very sorry." "Adam and Jamie were successful with a force reading but guilt ridden which means it is time for the final test." "Frankie." "Our 18-month-old baby was difficult at first." "Shy." "Took a little time tool get used to crew, camera, big microphone." "Once we got her out of the chafr which definitely didn't like into her mom's arms, she actually warmed up a fair degree." "I think we are close." "Okay." "Here I go." "It go my goodness." "Uh-oh." "Like fishing." "Got a reading." "1.79." "Broke." "High-five." "Awesome." "I got a reading." "That's a result." "And that's a wrap." "Bye, Frankie." "♪♪♪" "Which means it is time to ponder the results." "While the youngest baby registered more strength the babies seemed more inclined to use strategy to resist and wouldn't let me get hold of the candy in first place." "♪♪♪" "What according to the myth should have been a simple task, the easiest task of all simply wasn't." "Evasion and guilt strategies made it tricky and at times very difficult." "I feel terrible." "Ultimately the experiment was designed and executed to compare grip strength." "So the final result comes down to the numbers." "Where does that leave us?" "Well, if you remember our" "♪♪♪ control it took ." "08 pounds of force to just lift our candy." "When you average the grip strength across all of the babies we tested it came in at a shade over two pounds to take the candy from them." "That means that it was 25 a times more difficult to take candy from the babies than it was to just pick it up and that to me says that this myth is thoroughly busted." "What do you think?" "I agree." "Get out of the stroller and give me my monkey back." "♪♪♪" "♪♪♪♪♪♪"