How Many Donuts Does it Take?

Published on January 15, 2024
Duration: 1:00

This video tests the impact power of the Grimburg Gavel, a CO2-powered less-lethal launcher. It successfully penetrates six donuts and causes significant damage to a computer monitor, pineapple, and watermelons. A controversial human impact test demonstrates its effectiveness for self-defense, resulting in a large bruise on the volunteer.

Quick Summary

The Grimburg Gavel is a CO2-powered, semi-automatic less-lethal launcher firing .68 caliber rubber balls. Tests show it penetrates six donuts, damages hard targets, and causes significant bruising on human impact, indicating effectiveness for self-defense.

Chapters

  1. 00:00Intro: Grimburg Gavel Overview
  2. 00:09Donut Penetration Test
  3. 00:16Hard Target Testing (Monitor, Fruit)
  4. 00:30Swiss Cheese & Human Impact Test
  5. 00:48Results: Bruising & Effectiveness

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the Grimburg Gavel?

The Grimburg Gavel is a less-lethal launcher powered by CO2 cartridges. It is designed to fire rubber balls or other kinetic projectiles and operates in a semi-automatic fashion.

How powerful is the Grimburg Gavel?

The Gavel demonstrates significant impact power, capable of penetrating multiple donuts and causing damage to hard targets like monitors and watermelons. A human impact test showed it can cause substantial pain and bruising.

What kind of projectiles does the Grimburg Gavel use?

The Grimburg Gavel uses .68 caliber projectiles, primarily rubber balls. It is powered by CO2 cartridges for propulsion.

Is the Grimburg Gavel suitable for self-defense?

Based on the impact tests, including a human subject test showing significant bruising, the Grimburg Gavel appears to be an effective less-lethal option for self-defense.

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