Thứ Tư, 23 tháng 5, 2018

News on Youtube May 23 2018

Hey, Kris and Grant this is Philip Law here and I kind of have like a split

question for you guys. I feel like I'm some sort of a perfectionist and so

sometimes, I want to make the video just right but there's that balance between

productivity and perfectionism. So I wanted to hear both of you guys's

opinions on how much time do you take to prepare for video and what do you feel

is like the right amount of time? My whole life. Ooh... That's deep right Steve?

Listen, if you are... Grant and I you couldn't have two more totally opposite

channel creators, here in front of you to give you an answer here. So it's going to be

totally opposite. It's going to come down to your industry. I know for me what I do is

I share information. So it's true. I've been preparing my entire life but that

also means that when I actually turned the camera on,

I actually just waited for Nate to tell me this topic that would be most

important for you and then I start talking. So already possess the knowledge.

Already possess the information. There's no preparation. It's just showing up and

going. But I know that if you're making something, it can be an entirely

different story. Hm-hmm... That's right. You know we typically spend anywhere

from eight hours to eight months preparing a project. Depending on how

long it takes to prototype. Play with it, develop it. We also have a mastermind of a 30 of the best

minds I could find that we bounce ideas back and forth on. So, it actually could

take quite a long time to put together a project that's ready to be filmed. Just

for fun, got to say this. His mastermind is awesome. I've met some of these people.

He's gathered geniuses from like everywhere. These incredible super nerds,

you put them together. These people could probably take over the entire world and

yet they're donating all that awesomeness to the King of Random

channel. That's right. We're just in the process of figuring out how to monetize

it without Adsense. So we can tap into that brain trust and really you know

dominate our little territories here. But you know it doesn't hurt to take a few

minutes just to outline. You know, even though you spent your whole life

preparing for these things, I have spent my whole life tinkering now and thinking

as well. So we can come up with a lot of things on the spot. But to just to take a

moment to organize, collect your thoughts and pick out topics that you want to

address, can make all the difference in how your quality content comes across. I

totally agree with that. I think honestly, the best answer that I could give you is

that for me I prepare until I feel comfortable enough that my brain doesn't

have to try to remember everything. In fact,

once in a while, behind the video that you can't even see it. I'll put some

cheat words up so that I actually don't have to engage my mind in thinking too

hard because I'll actually want my mind in my heart engaged with you I want to

be connected with you. I want to be actually asking as I'm sharing this

information how's that going to be best received by you? What's your experience

that I'm creating? So be prepared enough that you know your stuff whether you

have cheat sheets or not. So how much time do you need to prepare for a video?

And the answer is - as much time as you feel you need. Friends, thank you so much

for joining us today. Listen, do you hear it? Alright. No. I think I just heard it.

That was the bell. Ring the bell. You rung the bell. You did subscribe and if you

wanted to get all the pro expert knowledge on how to crush it on YouTube

at a whole new level, then get with Grant and I. Check the link in the description

below. We'll see you there

For more infomation >> How Long Does It Take To Make A Video? - Duration: 3:13.

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How Much Is Your EPL Club Worth? Part One - Duration: 4:51.

For more infomation >> How Much Is Your EPL Club Worth? Part One - Duration: 4:51.

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How Much Porn Do You Watch? - Duration: 1:37.

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For more infomation >> How Much Porn Do You Watch? - Duration: 1:37.

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Does it matter how you order your filtration equipment on a float tank? - DSP 155 - Duration: 7:49.

>>Graham: Today's question is, "I was looking at all of the stuff attached to my float tank,

and wondering if the order that the filtration equipment goes in matters?

Is there a reason the pump is coming before the filter?"

>>Ashkahn: Okay, yes.

>>Graham: There totally is.

Don't mess with that yourself, you know?

Leave it to the professionals.

>>Ashkahn: Yeah, like are you going to be rearranging it?

What's going on here?

Yeah, these things are generally placed in a specific order, and you typically see them

in the same order when you look at not just float tanks, pools, spas, hot tubs, all that

sort of stuff.

>>Graham: And it's totally arbitrary, there's actually no reason for those, just everyone

kind of decided to do it one day.

>>Ashkahn: One dude did it the first time, and then everyone's been doing that, so.

>>Graham: No, That's not true.

>>Ashkahn: So here's how it goes: you guys ready?

>>Graham: Yeah, lay it down, Papa Kahn.

>>Ashkahn: Basically, the water's being sucked out of your float tank at some place, and

often, the first thing you see is the pump.

Sometimes, the only thing you see before that is that little like strainer basket thing.

Sometimes, these are connected to pumps, sometimes, they're plumbed as a separate piece.

They're called hair and lint pots or leaf traps, or all sorts of different names like

that, referring to.

>>Graham: Yeah, depending on whether they're used indoors or outdoors, I guess.

>>Ashkahn: And that's basically, you know, to catch big things so that they don't go

through your pump and the rest of your filtration system, so that obviously wants to come before

the pump.

>>Graham: Hair, earplugs, pine cones.

>>Ashkahn: There are like leaves and rocks, are what they're used for in other settings.

So, you know, that's kind of the first thing in line to try to grab big stuff, if that

makes sense.

And usually, the next thing you see is the pump.

And pumps, their kind of force is in a suction side of things.

Like they're sucking water in, is kind of the way they're doing things, and that force

is pushing it through the rest of the system.

And so they typically don't like to have to suck water through too much other stuff.

So, as a result, you usually see the pump be the first thing so it can get, you know,

the water moving, and push it through the rest of the system.

>>Graham: And I was also surprised at that when I was first learning about the order

of things.

Because it really seems like you'd want the pump after the filter, if that's at all possible,

right?

Like it's like a big hair and lint trap, right?

Like throw in the pump after the filter if you can, just means everything gets filtered

before it goes in there.

>>Ashkahn: Uh-huh.

>>Graham: Less chance of things getting stuck.

>>Ashkahn: Less hair, specifically going in.

>>Graham: Yeah, yeah, yeah exactly.

But, yeah, that's not.

>>Ashkahn: It just seems to put too much, a little bit of strain on the pump if it has

to suck through a filter media or something like that.

>>Graham: It's like sucking out of your glass through a really long straw.

>>Ashkahn: Uh-huh.

>>Graham: Like it's just not as smooth, yeah.

>>Ashkahn: We have a piece of cotton at the end of it.

So, you have the pump, sometimes you have the hair and lint trap if you have one of

those, then it goes the pump, and then, often what you see after that if you have a flow

meter is the flow meter.

Certain flow meters really wanna go directly after the pump, other ones wanna go in different

places, other ones don't care about where they go.

But, that's kind of the most conventional place you see it, is right after the pump.

You see, if you have one, a flow meter.

And then, you get into the actual, at this point, like all that's happened is we're moving

water.

And if you, have a flow meter, you're seeing how fast it's moving.

Like that's all that's going on so far.

So now, we're actually getting to the point where the solution, or the liquid, is being

cleaned in some way.

And basically, you have two different types of cleaning.

You have an actual filter that's filtering physical stuff: hair, skin cells, oils, things

like that.

And you have some sort of treatment system that's dealing with microorganisms.

>>Graham: UV, Ozone, bromine feeder, something like that.

>>Ashkahn: Right, killing things like E. Coli.

And so, generally, the way that you see it is that treatment system goes after the physical

filter.

And that's just because you want your treatment system to be as effective as it can be.

So, if you're trying to treat the solution before the filter, then, you're trying to

kill all sorts of stuff that's just about to be caught in a filter.

Or it's kind of dirtier than it needs to be.

The hair can obstruct, the oils can obstruct things like UV penetration, the chlorine can

be eaten up by trying to get onto all that stuff.

Hydrogen peroxide, all that sort of stuff.

So it's kind of like filter first, get as much of the gunk that the filter can stop

out of the way before we start hitting it with kind of these treatment systems to deal

with these different microorganisms.

And then, at the point that you're there, with the treatment system, depending on what

you have, you kinda want to do things in different orders.

So, often if you're using UV and Ozone together, people like to put the Ozone in before the

UV system.

Because, you know, if there is any hydroxyl radicals being formed from the Ozone and the

UV interacting, then, you obviously want the Ozone in the system when it's in the UV chamber.

So that's kind of the method they'll go about doing it.

If you have chlorine or bromine that you're using and you have a UV unit, a lot of times,

mostly what you see, is people putting in the chlorine or bromine after the UV because

UV can actually eat up some chlorine.

So kind of ideally, what you're doing is hitting the UV and then injecting it with chlorine

so you're not kind of diminishing the chlorine you're putting right into the system.

>>Graham: Yep, and I think that actually the chlorine and bromine feeders tend to go the

very last in the system, almost regardless.

Like that's kind of the last thing that you want to happen at the end of all the equipment.

>>Ashkahn: Which makes sense because they're a residual.

You kind of just want them out, mixed into the whole thing, doing what they're doing

out in the whatever, pool, spa, if it's in a float tank, in the float tank.

That kind of logic makes a little bit more sense for pools and spas, where there's actually

a big body of water that needs a residual.

>>Graham: It's not getting sucked back up immediately three minutes later, yeah, yeah.

>>Ashkahn: Yeah, exactly.

But that's the general idea, you wanna filter everything, then you wanna put the chlorine

in so that it's kinda, it's not being used up by anything else as it's passing through

the system.

So, even things like heaters, a lot of pools have heaters.

Some float tanks have in-line heaters.

We'll often go before injecting chlorine or bromine.

And you know in kind of most float tanks, that's pretty much all of the equipment, and

then it just plumbs right back into the system.

>>Graham: Yep, that's the bulk of it.

I couldn't even, I was trying to think of some joke of something else we could catch

on there, you know?

But nothing was coming to mind, so I guess we can just let it slide this time.

>>Ashkahn: So yeah, I think that's generally the order here.

You have the pump, is the first thing, with maybe something before it to catch big objects,

the flow meter typically after it to kind of track how fast the liquid is moving.

Then, you're doing the physical filtration to try to kind of do a first pass, get a bunch

of gunk out, then you're doing your treatment system in a specific order, depending on what

combination of things you're using.

Then, you get that right back in the float tank.

>>Graham: Alright, and if you have other questions, shoot 'em over our way.

Go to floattanksolutions.com/podcast, and I mean you, if you're listening to this, you

go over there right now.

You go over there, and you send us a question.

For more infomation >> Does it matter how you order your filtration equipment on a float tank? - DSP 155 - Duration: 7:49.

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What is too small for a 4 tank float center - DSP 153 - Duration: 8:05.

>>Graham: Here we go with today's question.

The one coming in is, "I'm looking at a pretty small space for a four-tank center, a little

over 1,000 square feet.

How small is too small?"

>>Ashkahn: How small is too small?

Okay.

>>Graham: I mean we started Float On with four tanks and a little under 1,000 square

feet.

>>Ashkahn: Yes, which was too small.

>>Graham: It was ... That was not big enough.

>>Ashkahn: It was too small.

So that small is too small.

I think I can say that.

>>Graham: The things that you don't have space for that you might think that you do as you're

building out are things like storage for just about everything you can throw in the float

tank center.

>>Ashkahn: I mean that's really the one that took us the most by surprise; storage and

a back workspace.

We'd figured out we wanted the rooms to be a certain size cause the float tank has to

fit in there.

And we still screwed that up.

It'd be nice to have a little bit more room around the filtration system when you want

to go work on something.

>>Graham: That's what I was going to say for point number three too, was just the ability

to actually access your pump systems.

>>Ashkahn: Alright, well let's hold on for point number three then.

Let's start with point number one.

>>Graham: Storage.

>>Ashkahn: Okay.

Storage.

Storage, you just need a bunch of stuff.

It's surprising how much stuff you need for a business that's focused on nothingness.

It's insane.

The salt is huge, right?

The more salt you can buy the cheaper you get it.

So that's a big chunk of things.

And we just started putting salt into our lobby, just making giant salt stacks all around

the lobby area.

>>Graham: They have salt furniture that people can sit on.

>>Ashkahn: That's right.

Salt people working the front desk.

>>Graham: And then the other thing, really honestly, it's a lot of space in order to

do the types of cleaning that you need to do, right?

So things like actually cleaning off all of the neck pillows in between every person and

sanitizing them.

That actually takes a lot of space to allow them to dry.

An area to dump your filters into a big filter-soaking area and let those both soak and then leave

room for them to dry afterwards.

>>Ashkahn: Definitely way more utility sink space.

I did not realize how much having a giant awesome utility sink was the greatest thing

in the world.

>>Graham: We started with a very, very tiny utility sink, which we later upgraded to a

slightly larger but still small, one-bay utility sink.

And that was not nearly enough.

>>Ashkahn: No.

We're still ... We have a nice three-bay stainless steel utility sink with wings on either side

of it.

And I still kind of want it to be bigger.

I want 12-bay ... You just have a giant, huge utility sink running the entire expanse of

a wall.

It sounds awesome to me.

>>Graham: When your staff needs to take a break they just go chill out in one of the

utility sink bays.

>>Ashkahn: Yeah.

One just has Otter Pops in it waiting for you, just totally decked out.

>>Graham: So 1,000 square feet is not enough to make any of that happen.

>>Ashkahn: Just forget about that space.

>>Graham: So what was point number two, other than storage?

>>Ashkahn: So we had storage.

Point number three is on its way.

>>Graham: You're the one who said point number two.

>>Ashkahn: I said point number two?

>>Graham: Yeah.

>>Ashkahn: Um-

>>Graham: So point number three was being able to move around your pumps, and actually

being able to access them and do pump-related repairs and things like that.

And even now that we have a little more room-per-float space that we have in our facility, it's still

a little tight.

It's one of the biggest things that we recommend a larger space for, is actually being able

to do everything that you'd want around your pumps.

Right now it takes us a couple hours to actually disconnect all the parts that tie into a single

pump system, just because we have to unhook everything that's above the pump in order

to get down to it.

It's all kind of stacked and compressed in a way that takes up the least amount of space

possible.

>>Ashkahn: For sure.

And it's not enjoyable either.

It's not just that it's time-consuming.

It's kind of like the idea of going to do something on your pump is like, "Oh man.

Okay.

I'm going to have to sit crooked and twist my arm back behind this thing for two hours

to unscrew this bolt."

It's not really enjoyable work.

>>Graham: No.

So that was point number three.

>>Ashkahn: Point number two: I'm going to make up point number two.

Point number two is the extreme circumstances where you need to get a float tank in and

out of a room or down a hallway.

Those are moments where you really appreciate space.

Being able to have enough space to have a five-foot hallway instead of a four-foot hallway,

or slightly bigger doors, or something like that comes in real handy when you're trying

to navigate a eight-foot or nine-foot tub around a corner.

It doesn't come up very often.

We're not every week pulling float tanks out of our rooms.

But when it does, the difference between pulling a float tank out and knocking a wall out or

pulling the door frame off to get it through is a pretty big one.

>>Graham: Definitely.

Seating for people going in an out of your float tanks is another big one.

If you want a lobby, that's something.

If you want a lobby and a post-float lounge where people can hang out just with people

who've come out of floats, not with the riffraff coming in off the street.

That's kind of nice.

>>Ashkahn: So what's our ... We have six tanks now and how many square feet?

1,600-

>>Graham: We have just above 1,600 square feet with six tanks, and that's still ... We

are on the low, low side of square footage for a float tank center.

>>Ashkahn: And that ... Even that number is a bit deceptive, right?

Cause we have our 1,600 square foot building.

But then in the parking lot behind us, we have a storage until filled with ... ranging

from extra retail items to extra whatever stuff that we have, supplies.

Then we have another storage unit down the street in the parking lot of our office that

just holds our salt.

So that's where all of our salt goes.

And then we have another storage area under our office in the basement.

That's another, I don't know, 20 feet by 8 feet, or something like that, that is full

of our tools and stuff that we don't want to put in our flimsy storage units.

>>Graham: And up in the office we have our actual office space where we can actually

meet.

We have a bunch of our reference materials, and books, and areas where we can use computers

and printers and things like that.

Again, we get by with our float tank center with a little over 1,600 square feet.

But as far as the space needed to run that float tank center, obviously it expands out

actually in many directions outside of there.

>>Ashkahn: It's definitely nice.

It comes with the very obvious compromise of as soon as you have space, your income

is restricted by how many float tanks you can fit into it.

I wouldn't ... I don't think I'd go back.

I'm not sure I'd rebuild our space with five float tanks instead of six, necessarily.

Even knowing what I know now, because when you can put in a source of income versus making

your life slightly nicer it can be a difficult decision to make.

>>Graham: And I would probably look for something a little bigger though.

I'd probably ... I really like our six tanks that we have.

But the idea of having six tanks in a space that also has even 400 more square feet, or

bringing us up into more of the 2,000 square feet region would be really nice for sure.

And so that's actually around what we recommend.

Somewhere in the 350 square feet per float tank room that you want, assuming you're only

running floats, up to around 400 square feet per float tank room, is the minimum that we

recommend for actually having a sane life and sane storage experience in your float

tank center.

>>Ashkahn: How to do it not like us.

>>Graham: So with a four-tank center, what would that bring us up to?

That's about 1,400 square feet for a four tank center that we recommend at the minimum?

>>Ashkahn: With around 400 square feet a tank?

>>Graham: That's at 350.

So then 400 would be 1,600.

So 1,400 to 1,600 square feet in the minimum sense.

So a little over 1,000.

Again, we did it, and it was very uncomfortable, and we had to compromise in a lot of different

places.

So it is doable.

But more space is definitely preferable

>>Ashkahn: For sure.

>>Graham: Thanks for the question, and see you all tomorrow.

>>Ashkahn: Alright if you guys have other questions for us, you can go to floattanksolutions.com/podcast

and submit them there.

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