This is not going to be a normal video. We're sending garlic bread
to the edge of space! Loads of people have launched
loads of objects on balloons, usually as publicity stunts. But despite a lot of
breathless press releases those objects haven't
been launched into space. Most standards organisations agree
that space officially starts at the completely arbitrary
KΓ‘rmΓ‘n Line, 100 kilometres up. And balloons like that one
only get about a third of the way there. And we're definitely not
sending anything into orbit. Orbit requires tens of thousands of
miles-an-hour of speed. That's what all the rockets are for. - We're using a weather balloon. It's a large one, actually, today. We're going as high as we can
with this payload. It's very cold on the way up. It gets warmer as you approach
that sort of altitude. So it's coldest just above the jet stream and then getting slightly warmer again. It gets back down to about zero
about where the balloon will pop. - The idea that all those publicity stunts
actually made it to space is helped by the fact that the fish-eye lens
on some of the cameras that they use means that the curve of the earth
looks a lot more dramatic than it really is at that height. Now we're using cameras that
correct for that, so what you'll see on screen
is more or less what you'd see up there. So we're not saying "space",
we're saying "the edge of space". Which is basically just a marketing term,
but the atmosphere's so thin up there, about 1% of the pressure at ground level,
that it's close enough. Why garlic bread? Because it's delicious, and because someone already sent pizza
up in a balloon a few years ago. - This garlic bread is delicious. It's homemade.
Well, apart from the baguette. I did some homemade garlic butter on there
with some real nice Parmesan on it. Although I did make it at
5 o'clock this morning! So it's going to be in near-vacuum. It's going to be possibly frozen. I mean... We're going to send half up
in the sky with the balloon and then leave half on earth
for a real comparison taste test. - As it goes up, the atmosphere is getting
thinner and thinner and there's less and less air pushing in. The balloon itself will
get bigger and bigger. So eventually the balloon will pop and the equipment will
parachute down to the ground and we'll go and recover it. We normally predict the landing spot
to within about five miles when we launch the balloon. We're tracking the balloon using some radio trackers. They send a signal with a
GPS position to the ground and that's put on a map and we chase
the balloon's predicted landing spot. I've done lots of
high-altitude ballooning. I've been doing it now for about 10 years. Never lost one. Sent one to
its doom a couple of times. - All sorts of food items have been
launched into the stratosphere. The BBC sent wedding cake up
as part of a children's show but the punchline at the end was
that no one actually ate it. I've yet to find any balloon-launched food
that was actually eaten after landing. And the main reason for that is
you have no idea where it's going to land,
what it's going land in, or what animals will have got to it first. - The box I've designed has a GPS
and a little servo, and a piece of string and some springs. As it comes down it closes
the servo 1000 metres above the ground. - So now we have to get in our cars
and go chasing the payload. It's just coming in to land somewhere
about half a mile ahead so, Barry, keep your eyes on the sky. I've got to keep my eyes on the road. You reckon we're okay to park here? Let's go. - It's just on the end of that row there. - Let's do it. - Oh dear!
- I think this is the way. Well, at least we've got
two cameras, I suppose. Yay, I think they're still running. - Oh,there we go.
- Lift it up, oh. - Oh, yes!
- Yeah. - Alright so this is your original? - Yeah, yeah. - That's really good. - Not bad, right? - Space bread... - Is it cold? - It's not that much... oh! No, that tore completely differently. So that one ripped;
that one went [tearing sound]. This one went click. - It's definitely got an icy middle. - Oh wow. - I don't know. I mean...
- That has been frozen. That's been frozen in the stratosphere. - You can sorta see the colour
of the middle of them. It's whiter, isn't it? - This went to the stratosphere
and I'm eating it! Sort of. Thank you very much to Steve Randall
from Random Aerospace and to Barry Lewis from My Virgin Kitchen. I don't actually know what I did on this. I'm basically DJ Khaled at this point. - Yeah! Yeah. DJ Garl-ed? No, it didn't work. I was gonna say garlic bread. - We're done, we're good.
- Yes. Sorry. Thank you, folks!
Completely pointless. Love it.
I love how straightforward and un-clickbaity this channel is. Also, no jump cuts, no drama, no overreactions, Tom really is a fantastic Youtuber.
I can see the Sun headline now: "UK responds to USA's publicity stunt of launching a car into space by launching Garlic Bread into space". Your move USA..
How do they go retrieving the payload if it lands in private property? Are you allowed to simply enter someone's paddock without permission to collect your space bread?
/r/garlicbreadmemes
I know the reddit demographic would like Tom Scott more, but this is a good time to link to myvirginkitchen, Barry made the bread!
https://youtu.be/jYPYbIO9BLE
We have truly peaked as a species.
I got a real kick out of seeing Barry on this video. I don't really know any British YouTubers other than he, Ashens, and a couple of Ashens' buds.
βHomemade, albeit for the baguetteβ
So 50% homemade? LOL