Originally posted by: soydios
i'm not sure that the fire would stop at that exact point on the toothpick, but the balancing is real, because the center of gravity of the forks is on the rim. same principle as this: http://www.physics.brown.edu/p...lids/demos/1j2022.html
Originally posted by: gingerstewart55
Originally posted by: soydios
i'm not sure that the fire would stop at that exact point on the toothpick, but the balancing is real, because the center of gravity of the forks is on the rim. same principle as this: http://www.physics.brown.edu/p...lids/demos/1j2022.html
If you notice, he used a metal cup, so naturally the toothpick would quit burning exactly at the point it did.....the metal, when the burning toothpick reached its rim, instantly transferred the heat away from the toothpick outward into the mteal.....faster than the toothpick could sustain combustion, which is why the burning quit.
Bet if you used a glass tumbler, the toothpick would keep burning and the trick would fail.
Originally posted by: jagec
Repost, it's real, and the reason the fire goes out has more to do with lack of oxygen than anything else. Those painted toothpicks don't burn very well when they're surrounded by air, when you hold them against something that blocks the flow of air, they stop burning entirely.
Originally posted by: soydios
i'm not sure that the fire would stop at that exact point on the toothpick, but the balancing is real, because the center of gravity of the forks is on the rim. same principle as this: http://www.physics.brown.edu/p...lids/demos/1j2022.html
Originally posted by: ManyBeers
Why does he burn the toothpick? The forks were balancing fine before he lit the toothpick on fire.

 
				
		