Comment on fabrique du verre incassable ? | C'est Technique
Glass is everywhere. Windows, cars, screens… and even in fiber optics. But do you know how it's made? In this episode of "It's Technical," we went to Aniche (Northern France), to a glass factory, to discover how it's manufactured using a giant furnace and how its strength is tested with all sorts of objects. We even reveal the unexpected components found inside glass. Welcome behind the scenes of glassmaking. ******************************** Find a new video and four new shorts every week on our channel. #staycurious Follow us on social media: Instagram: http://expl.tv/Instagram TikTok: http://expl.tv/TikTok Facebook: http://expl.tv/Facebook Snapchat: http://expl.tv/Snapchat

▶︎
How the US captured a president in 1 minute 44 seconds | ATLAS

▶︎
How a 5-Ton Temple Bell Is Forged to Ring for 1,000 Years | by @kingprocess

▶︎
Pourquoi les prisons ressemblent à ça ? | ATLAS

▶︎
What's really inside a bank card? | It's Technical

▶︎
L'incroyable ingénierie derrière la conception des métros

▶︎
Comment sont fabriqués les billets de banque ? | C'est Technique

▶︎
Nucléaire : comment la France sécurise (à tout prix) son uranium

▶︎
Les Trois Gorges : comment 40 milliards de tonnes d'eau ont déplacé l'axe de la Terre

▶︎
La machine de fusion française qui explose tous les records scientifiques

▶︎
On vous a menti sur la fin du Concorde

▶︎
Sans ces câbles sous-marins, Internet n'existe plus | C'est Technique

▶︎
Comment l’or français a échappé à Hitler

▶︎
Inside Dyson’s Overengineered £1000 Hand Dryer

▶︎
Comment c’est fait : Les Billes – L’incroyable processus de recyclage du verre en millions de billes

▶︎
The Best Murrine Pattern I've Ever Made - Narrated Glassblowing Process

▶︎
This Is How The World's Strongest Anchor Chains Are Made | by @Satisfyingtech116

▶︎
Pourquoi les criminels achètent ces téléphones 6000$ ?

▶︎
How it's done: The Banknotes – The incredible making of millions of dollars every day!

▶︎
Comment c'est fait : Le Verre (Du Sable au Cristal à 1600°C)

▶︎
