video thumbnail 3:59
The Brick Double-Domino Effect Explained

2017-03-20

[public] 3.93M views, 56.8K likes, 1.31K dislikes audio only

channel thumbStand-up Maths

If you use bricks as dominoes: you get a second wave going in the opposite direction.

Watch the original brick domino video here:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-BTWiZ7CYoI

I think that is the original upload. If anyone finds a better one, please do let me know.

Support me on Patreon and help me make more videos like this.

https://www.patreon.com/standupmaths

CORRECTIONS

- The overlap length should be 21 - √(21² - 6²) = 0.875 cm not the incorrect √(21² + 6²) - 21 = 0.84 cm I show on-screen. First spotted by Daryl Adriano.

- A correction to my masonry terminology! What I called the width is actually the height of a brick (which makes sense given the orientation bricks are normally laid). The width is the third dimension: how far into the wall they reach. Thanks to Doodle Vids.

- Let me know if you spot anything else!

Music by Howard Carter

Design by Simon Wright

MATT PARKER: Stand-up Mathematician

Website: http://standupmaths.com/

Maths book: http://makeanddo4D.com/

Nerdy maths toys: http://mathsgear.co.uk/