HOW IT WORKS | Bicycle locks, Tea lights, Avocado harvest, Wrapping paper | Episode 23

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How it Works - Episode 23
- Bicycle locks: to keep your bike where it belongs
- Tea lights: these are mass produced for when it has to be nice and cozy
- Avocado harvest: see where these delicious and healthy fruit come from
- Wrapping Paper: When christmas is coming this will be everywhere
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and now i realize why i have such a massive patchwork of knowledge, i feel a sleep with a playlist of these. . . .neat :3

MaxwellRodgers
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I live in South Africa and I'm pretty sure we get the undersized and damaged avos on our shelves as well as them being pulped and used as nutrients to further the plantation's growth.

kittycatcrunchie
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*reads the wrapping paper trivia*
Well, if Guernsey's whole needs covered- can't do it in a more festive way. ;)

brianm
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I could pick that bike lock in about 7 seconds. The Lock-picking Lawyer taught me.

chloehennessey
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Thanks for sharing this video. I also like how you set up the playlist.

NoahDiamond-Firearms-LLC
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That sound at 4:59 sounds like a magazine and sounds so satisfying lol

dangal
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Nice, I like Abus locks. Their hard to pick as well

AlbertLebel
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The Lock Picking Lawyer wouldn't even bat an eye at that bike lock.

LuckyRubbrDucky
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Allyou need is a small scissor jack to just bow out the middle of the D and the pin pops right out. Or use a sharpie and metal tube pick.

patricksanders
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I live in South Africa and avocado is damn expensive it can cost as much as R20 for 1 avocado (about $1.20)
At home I have an avocado tree and when its ripe it can produce about 90 avocados which I mostly give away

sbongadlamini
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Now with battery powered cuttoff tools all these locks are done in 2 seconds.

robertkat
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13:33 "weird looking avacado coming down the belt"

scalz
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the comparison between the round and square iron bar was not fair. the square had a much bigger

austrorus
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A cordless grinder with an abrasive cutting blade would cut that hardened steel easily.

nosnowflakeshere
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In America we call them U locks but D lock makes more sense...just like every other word lol

howtohuman
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I bet the rejected avocados would make great hog feed !!

augustuswayne
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LOL! Those locks are worthless with the right crook. 30 years ago I had a high dollar bike I was particularly proud of. I bought a high dollar Kryptonite lock. One morning I went out to ride my Fuji to class... and it was gone. All that was left were some shards of the lock. It would appear the thieves either packed the lock in dry ice, or liquid nitrogen... and then just broke it with a hammer. I verified this with a new lock and dry ice.

stu
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D locks are easily opened with keys which only have one or two tines at the end.

MylesNicholas
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Some years ago, sitting in a bus in NY, I watched a well dressed guy holding a crow-bar, wrapped in brown paper. In about 10 seconds, he broke the lock on an expensive bike on the footpath. The bike was quicky handed off to another dude who rode off with it. Thieves had the routine down flat

grandpacocky
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So that would be about 135, 999, 999, 999, 999, 983, 423, 331, 328 tealights to equal the light output of the sun. Rough math but really

ryanfunderburg