Seemed like a good opportunity to use your thermal imaging camera (hang damp shirt on the hanger, leave it on for a couple of minutes, then look at how uniform the temperature is.
Considering the rest of the product looks fairly well made, I'm surprised that the short moulded plastic hook got past at least two stages of quality control /inspection . As an ex injection moulding machine setter/ operator, this was probably made during the first few machine start up cycles or maybe the material feed ran out but was missed by the operator, also the assembly line & the packing department! For a coat hanger, the hook is the most essential part of the item!!
Great dissection, and reverse engineering Clive. Excellent macro photography, impressive depth. Thanks for sharing and best regards from the Black Country.
I like these videos where Clive doesn't get stuck on the technical aspects (which are great too) but also comments more about the safety, longevity and cleverness of the device, like a mix between Teardown and Review.
That thermal cut-out/switch thing is in fact a thermostat - that's what they're sold as, anyway. That particular type is known as the "KSD9700" and it's all over AliExpress (and probably eBay as well). They're available in temperature thresholds between 15-155℃, with both NO and NC types, and are (supposedly) rated either 5A or 10A at 250V. This particular listing has them for between £0.81-2.10 for 5pcs, plus £1.10 shipping. I suspect it's just a bimetallic switch - certainly you can hear a distinct "click!" every time it turns on or off. I've used a couple of them to add two-stage temperature-regulated fan control to a cheap (£40) 24V/25A (600W) power supply that was supplied with an always-on fan, and that works quite nicely. I don't recall the exact temperature thresholds I used, but I use one of those devices to turn the fan on at around 40-50℃, but initially through a resistor (one of the speed reducer cables that are supplied with higher-end PC fans), and then at around 70℃ it bypasses the resistor to run it at full speed. That PSU is the main supply for my 3D printer and its LED-lit enclosure, so most of the time it's outputting only ~2A to drive the LEDs and the printer's motherboard in standby mode, and having the fan running at full speed for such a low load was pretty annoying!
Not a bad idea, this gadget. I don't travel enough to say whether it'd be useful to me, but I can see the appeal. Thanks for the teardown, Clive, and PLEASE feel better soon!
Anker & others Caveat: this is not a particularly good article, imo, but here it is: appleinsider.com/articles/19/06/21/gallium-nitride-chargers-what-are-they-and-why-theyre-great
Oh my. I need to buy this immediately. I'm a hockey player and often have padded gear and skates that are drenched in sweat. The branded versions of this sort of thing are extremely expensive. This thing seems much more reasonable.
Liked & I've been subscribed for years! Clive, at times like this I'd love to watch the reassembly of the items you take apart. I'm sure there's a chance to explain more about the safety design, longevity & quality of the items that's missing at the end of your videos. Either way, j love your channel dearly. Especially the tales from your previous jobs. The one about the xmas lights for instance. Sadly, the tea urn incident fit straight into my opinion of the dibble. Dirty cop takes on a whole new meaning! Bugger, side tracked again. I'm an Aspie & feel very "at home" on your channel Clive, thank you! And get well soon 😋✌️
This is more reminiscent of something from IKEA than a cheap Chinese product. A lot of care put into layout and function. IKEA would probably have a thicker, more stubborn plastic casing.
Wim Widdershins if Ikea sold it it would work out much more expensive. Not because the product itself would cost more, just because it's impossible to go to IKEA and not come home with £40 worth of bloody candles.
I've been watching you and I think I'm finally beginning to understand this all. Just a little bit, but it's all coming together. Thanks for the knowledge, it's a fun trip :)
I bought some of those "thermal fuse" or "thermal cutout" a while back off Ebay. It's a bimetal switch under the heading of Bimetal Temperature Control Switch Thermostat
Very interesting presentation, the pictures that you show are really fantastic in resolution.. in one of your videos you should show how you take the pictures and what you have to do to get the end product that we see . Your presentations are always interesting and informative
unfortunately it'll blow a lot of air that smells like the inside of your moist work boots into your house. stuffing boots with scrunched up newspaper overnight works pretty well though
Connecting the ground of an appliance to power is always a lot of fun especially if your Appliance is metal and you touch that Appliance and one that is properly grounded at the same time.
I have shoe and glove dryer that is also a timer, heating element, fan and some plastic air channels. Mine is so old that it uses a nichrome wire for the heating element, a mechanical timer, and a slide switch that turns the heater off or on. It is very useful for drying shoes and gloves.
I assume that with the shoedapters you also get a gas mask. Or at least some air freshener. Blowing hot air through shoes is likely to result in some nasty odours.
@@ElectroXa Ah, Clive did mention an ionizer option. Maybe that's what it's for. If it produces enough ozone as a by-product. Then you can rot your clothing from the inside.
Seabreeze Coffee Roasters Designing the piece in 3D from scratch and printing such a complex shape which is not optimized for 3D printing is quite a chalenge. First give it a 1-3 days designing the piece assuming he has experience in that, and then printing it is the easy part, the hard part is the tolerances and support material and cleaning it once printed. Its not all "just 3D print a spare part", and also considering the use case he would have to print it in a heat resistant material, say petg or abs depending on the temperature of the thing.
@@laharl2k Seriously 1-3 days - YOU need to practice more if it takes you that long. That part laid out as a flat question mark would print fine for strength given the layers. There would be minimal heat radiated up given the airflow and fan but ABS would be nicer. Not much of a challenge but a 'real world' use case to try his 3D printer!
Cheesium manufacturing aside, some of the design ideas on this are actually pretty good... not sure I'd have a use for such a device though. I just turn my shoes upside-down on a heater vent in the house and turn the fan on and they dry in reasonable time. Maybe if I traveled a lot more than I do for business this might be useful, but I don't do that anymore. Problem is, the origin of the devices manufacture would leave me uneasy about leaving this thing unattended and trusting it not to burn the hotel down.
I just use a 12in desk fan at low speed and a clothes rack. Everything is dry after maybe 4-5 hours. No heat required - only needs airflow. Can take a few hours longer at lower temperatures though.
Same. If you add a bit of heat though it does speed it up a lot, doesn't even need to be much. Sunny window, radiator... Also be careful to ventilate, we have had some nasty surprises with mildew.
I got butter in my toaster once, I used a death adapter to prevent it tripping the earth by plugging it in with the earth hanging out the other side. I didn't touch the toaster, I just let it burn off the butter and it seemed to fix the tripping problem.
Hello Clive, I appreciate your videos. They are very informative and educational. Could you do a video on LED inverters and/or LED emergency lights (lyfelite)? Thank you
I have a request. It's a little different so you may not want to cover it but it's not terribly far out there. I'm interested in modifying laptop PSUs for different voltages. I have a bunch in the 17V range but I need something in 13.5. I know they're typically controlled with a feedback loop. Something you'd care to look at?
hi clive i just saw an advert for a mini air conditioning machine for your clothes from a company tajima i believe it is that would be a cool review to see pun intended keep up the good work sir
Nice! I've seen these used to help dry out fursuits. They're more gentle than a clothes dryer. Interesting short on that injection molded hook. Those types of defects are usually pretty easy to spot and fix. I'm really curious about the story behind this. Maybe one of the cavities was starting to fail, and they didn't want to bother disabling cavities (making the machine produce parts slower) and/or qc thought is was "good enough" (parts customer must have not been too picky). Either that, or the machine operator was new and didn't know what they were doing.
@@bdf2718 Maybe - If those hooks were also used for another product, that would make some sense. However, if they were custom molds designed for that, then why would assembly use a bad hook? It looks like the rest of the product is perfectly fine. There are a bunch of other plastic parts that are clearly not generic, so there was some money spent tooling that. My bet is that those hooks were custom tooled anyways. Chinese business culture is obviously different (and I'm not familiar with) - which may have allowed for lower quality standards.
@@milestailprower Why would they use a bad hook? Because, largely, the workers don't have a clue what they're doing and are told not to question. The machine produces bad hooks? Not the operator's job to question. Company has no QA so they get shipped. And if somebody notices they get shipped anyway in the hope they won't get returned. Guy on the assembly line gets bad hooks? Not his job to question. Maybe there was a design change. Probably he has no idea what the thing is meant to do or how it's meant to operate. It gets assembled anyway. Producer doesn't notice or doesn't care about the problem, or sells the defective assembled products for parts. Probably knows they'll be snapped up by some eBay merchant happy to sell them on cheap. It makes no sense that a product with a lot of custom tooling for well-designed parts would have such a crappy hook designed in. But it does make sense that people would see what they could get away with if they ended up with some defective parts.
Running it on 110V would cause the fan to operate at half speed. The PTC elements would still heat up to the same temperature but the heat output would only be a half of the value at 230V.
Gave up on Aliexpress. First few orders went through fine. Then the next few just didn't arrive, pain in the neck doing the claims procedure. Gone back to Banggood, out of about 50 orders only had an issue with two, both due to damage, and they were replaced very quickly. OK you pay a little more, and they don't have as wide a range of products.
Thanks Clive. Very neat, apart from it being useless, because of the faulty moulding of the hook. Chocolate fireguards come to mind, for some reason. What peak temperature is reached within the clothing/shoes, please? That could be an area of concern.
Hey Clive... Have you ever made one of those persistence of vision LED whirly things? Something to do for one of your video projects uploads, perhaps... :)
this reminds me of when I tore apart a broken "entertainment projector" and found a separate driver is what I can assume to power the 12 volt 50 watt halogen lamp in it.
I have a Scottish food question. I bought some Stockan's Orkney Oatcakes in my local supermarket (we have a Tesco aisle). I bit into one, expecting a sweet oat based biscuit/cookie thing. Instead it's rather savory. What am I supposed to do with them?
Here's a question in return, can you still get "Mc.Cowan's Highland Toffee"? I used to love it, but haven't seen any in decades. We used to eat loads of it on holiday in the Trossachs. . . . . I'm sure Clive would love your oatcakes. I've never heard of them down here, but I'd give them a spin if I ever came across them - oatcakes, good for the digestion :¬)
I'm not sure. I'm actually in Canada, we just have a small section in our grocery store that carries some stuff from Tesco. It changes regularly, so I'll have a look and see if that's one of the things.
Thank you very much for your wonderful videos. Get well soon and maybe have a look at the air quality in your house. Fungal spores can be a very nasty stuff especially if combined with carbohydrate rich diet, in my opinion anyway ... Best wishes!
@@thomasherzog86 I would go with no more than 5% most of which majority would be soluble fiber preferably and lots of saturated fat ad libitum (that is if one is not trying to loose some wight :)). and protein some 1-2g per kg of body weight . :))
I always wanted a Portable Electric Folding Clothes Hanger Dryer Drying Rack Travel Laundry Rack ! Now I know where to get a Portable Electric Folding Clothes Hanger Dryer Drying Rack Travel Laundry Rack from.
Ahhh, the printouts are messing with my perception again! The soldering looks ugly, but the rest (circuit and case) is actually quite nice and doesn't look like the tried to cut any corners. Not just the things that are needed to run are there, but also those to make it relatively safe and robust.
Today, vast majority of circuit boards that was mechanically soldered looks ugly, mainly by wave soldering process and Pb-Free solder. That's why broken solder joints are much more common problem.
Big Clive. I was wondering if you know anything about designing PCBs? I want to design one for a Electric scooter I have. It does charge externally through it's normal charging port. The battery it will be using is either a flat batter or a cylinder style at 5.2 Ah. Anyway you could help with that?
Hey Clive, considering the reversed supplies for the (assumed) ionizer and fan would it be worthwhile to verify the fan is blowing dry air down into the wet shirt (vs damp air up into the electronics)?
Got a quick question BigClive.... what's the best way to convert UK power to US 120v 60Hz? The 60Hz thing is kinda important, it's for a tool with a weird electronic speed controller..... about the 1.5kW range of output. TIA if you see this :)
@@HeimoVN i have heard your suggestion a couple of times, and like all PC owners I already have *several* high amp 12V rated supplies lying around! Do you know of any good brands or suppliers of pure sine wave inverters? I don't mind buying genuine stuff rather than Chineseium! ;)
If the flex is 1.5m is there enough length on it to hang it on a door or an average height clothes hook/rail etc and still reach the socket? I imagine you have to hang it really close to the socket?
it's twice as fast as wearing that shirt, it produce 130watts while our own body produce 60watts. By that comparison it probably take an hour or 2 to dry that cloth, I've wear wet shirt before.
I don't think it would dry a heavy shirt but it would give you a head start, probably aimed at the business man or traveling salesman who needs a clean shirt every day.
I'm just wondering, should I get one of these instead of using my ceiling fan and a coat hanger! Or as I sometimes do in Winter, instead of using my air-conditioner, though the air-con does actually dry the air, so is beneficial.
Big clive, I bought a multi port ubs charger from a very well known store in Canada that omits a crazy buzzing sound when you plug anything into any port for charging. im wondering if you want it? how do I send it to you?
Get well soonClive, you sound rough my friend, :-( well done for getting through the teardown, i know its crap, been there, but your brain just carries on lol... great vid. not a bad design to be fair too...
theres driers for trainers/boots that have tubes vertical with heaters at the botom of each no fans typically and the heat just moves up through your upside down boots. best way ive found.
@@bigclivedotcomah ok, I assumed you've seen it. well if you ever really want something that you can't get over there I'm sure someone in the u.s. following your channel wouldn't mind helping getting it to you...😉
clive; as for your cold... probably pollen allergies. try some loratadine (claritin.) I wouldn't survive spring and early summer without it... especially when the birch trees bloom. 😭
That stuff is so weak. The Vancenase AQ is the best stuff I've tried unfortunately they saw fit to discontinue it in the USA. So much for the freedom to stick whatever we want up our noses.
This actually looks like a good thing to have at home, and the build quality isn't shoddy either. Plus the price is quite reasonable. I like it.
Seemed like a good opportunity to use your thermal imaging camera (hang damp shirt on the hanger, leave it on for a couple of minutes, then look at how uniform the temperature is.
This thing is great for when you get the cold shoulder
Then you put the boot in.
It's a bad shirt incinerator!
Get well soon Clive. Thanks for sharing despite the cold/flu. Remember to take care of yourself though.
"The Flickerin' Hopi from the Isle of Man" sounds like a character from a Neil Gaiman story
Stan Dudinski it’s only flickering because of the shutter speed of the camera I think
@@hunterton4310 it's also greatly due to the frequency the display 'flickers', Some bulbs flicker as badly as the Hopi as well.
Hey Clive: The converter IC you were looking for is the MPS MP157. Not a dirt cheap part, really.
Considering the rest of the product looks fairly well made, I'm surprised that the short moulded plastic hook got past at least two stages of quality control /inspection . As an ex injection moulding machine setter/ operator, this was probably made during the first few machine start up cycles or maybe the material feed ran out but was missed by the operator, also the assembly line & the packing department!
For a coat hanger, the hook is the most essential part of the item!!
Thats why the deep discount pricing on EBay
A Chinese qc sticker isn't worth the printed sticker its stuck on.
Or in this case the ink used to stamp.
A "Bung for your Bottom Outlet" - Demonitized.
This is the kind of thing thats just designed well. Its nice to see among many cheap novice crap.
Thanks for the tear down Big Clive. I hope you feel better soon.
Great dissection, and reverse engineering Clive. Excellent macro photography, impressive depth.
Thanks for sharing and best regards from the Black Country.
I like these videos where Clive doesn't get stuck on the technical aspects (which are great too) but also comments more about the safety, longevity and cleverness of the device, like a mix between Teardown and Review.
That thermal cut-out/switch thing is in fact a thermostat - that's what they're sold as, anyway. That particular type is known as the "KSD9700" and it's all over AliExpress (and probably eBay as well). They're available in temperature thresholds between 15-155℃, with both NO and NC types, and are (supposedly) rated either 5A or 10A at 250V. This particular listing has them for between £0.81-2.10 for 5pcs, plus £1.10 shipping. I suspect it's just a bimetallic switch - certainly you can hear a distinct "click!" every time it turns on or off.
I've used a couple of them to add two-stage temperature-regulated fan control to a cheap (£40) 24V/25A (600W) power supply that was supplied with an always-on fan, and that works quite nicely. I don't recall the exact temperature thresholds I used, but I use one of those devices to turn the fan on at around 40-50℃, but initially through a resistor (one of the speed reducer cables that are supplied with higher-end PC fans), and then at around 70℃ it bypasses the resistor to run it at full speed. That PSU is the main supply for my 3D printer and its LED-lit enclosure, so most of the time it's outputting only ~2A to drive the LEDs and the printer's motherboard in standby mode, and having the fan running at full speed for such a low load was pretty annoying!
That does make sense, since the risk of this device getting covered with clothing in use is high, and a one-shot thermal fuse would be annoying.
Not a bad idea, this gadget. I don't travel enough to say whether it'd be useful to me, but I can see the appeal. Thanks for the teardown, Clive, and PLEASE feel better soon!
I really enjoyed this teardown. It looks like a clever little product.
I have seen lots of ads on social media for some "gallium nitride" deathdapter-USB charger thing, you should find one of them to tear down...
Who is it made by?
@@techfreak244 i don't remember, I hadn't given it much thought until Clive was talking about how some deathdapters are better than others
@@matthewmiller6068 like anker
Anker & others
Caveat: this is not a particularly good article, imo, but here it is:
appleinsider.com/articles/19/06/21/gallium-nitride-chargers-what-are-they-and-why-theyre-great
Oh my. I need to buy this immediately.
I'm a hockey player and often have padded gear and skates that are drenched in sweat. The branded versions of this sort of thing are extremely expensive. This thing seems much more reasonable.
Faiz Imam Know your feels, need to get one. When padding is soaked in sweat it takes hours to dry. That little thing might do the trick nicely!
Liked & I've been subscribed for years!
Clive, at times like this I'd love to watch the reassembly of the items you take apart. I'm sure there's a chance to explain more about the safety design, longevity & quality of the items that's missing at the end of your videos.
Either way, j love your channel dearly. Especially the tales from your previous jobs. The one about the xmas lights for instance. Sadly, the tea urn incident fit straight into my opinion of the dibble. Dirty cop takes on a whole new meaning!
Bugger, side tracked again.
I'm an Aspie & feel very "at home" on your channel Clive, thank you!
And get well soon 😋✌️
This is more reminiscent of something from IKEA than a cheap Chinese product. A lot of care put into layout and function. IKEA would probably have a thicker, more stubborn plastic casing.
Wim Widdershins if Ikea sold it it would work out much more expensive. Not because the product itself would cost more, just because it's impossible to go to IKEA and not come home with £40 worth of bloody candles.
if it weren't for candles...
If this ever was to be sold by Ikea, it would probibly have a $60.00 price tag, not a $12.00 one.
Clive in my experience those metal ones are one and done's, no reset. Learned that the hard way when i tried to heat shrink it on :P
this is cool you liked my suggestion for a tear-down
Does it work? How long to dry a mildly damp shirt?
I've been watching you and I think I'm finally beginning to understand this all. Just a little bit, but it's all coming together. Thanks for the knowledge, it's a fun trip :)
I bought some of those "thermal fuse" or "thermal cutout" a while back off Ebay. It's a bimetal switch under the heading of
Bimetal Temperature Control Switch Thermostat
Very interesting presentation, the pictures that you show are really fantastic in resolution.. in one of your videos you should show how you take the pictures and what you have to do to get the end product that we see . Your presentations are always interesting and informative
I always wanted to make one of these for drying my work boots.
unfortunately it'll blow a lot of air that smells like the inside of your moist work boots into your house.
stuffing boots with scrunched up newspaper overnight works pretty well though
@@joinedupjon I got a mudroom.
I also planned on putting an ozone ionizer device in it.
Called a "short shot" when plastic part isn't fully moulded.
Yup!
Here! The Hopi has that same dodgy style socket too. I didn't notice till you had them together.
Connecting the ground of an appliance to power is always a lot of fun especially if your Appliance is metal and you touch that Appliance and one that is properly grounded at the same time.
Dry a coat and it goes wrong you've got a blazer !
I have shoe and glove dryer that is also a timer, heating element, fan and some plastic air channels. Mine is so old that it uses a nichrome wire for the heating element, a mechanical timer, and a slide switch that turns the heater off or on.
It is very useful for drying shoes and gloves.
That is surprisingly well-made. Might get one...
A heated coat hanger? Who in their right mind woke up one morning and said "you know... If we only had a heated coat hanger? - Hold my coffee!!!"
lmao, was thinking the same!
The same people who made a power meter named after an indian tribe (the Hopi).
@2:30 the bad injection moulding is referred to as a “short shot”
I LIKE WATCHING YOUR CHANNEL ALL THE TIME
"It's quite nicely made!" Big Clive just boosted the audience for this particular device twofold. ;)
I assume that with the shoedapters you also get a gas mask. Or at least some air freshener. Blowing hot air through shoes is likely to result in some nasty odours.
I feel like it's intended for wet shoes
@@sylashullett428
And that makes it better? I doubt it. You'll get moist *smelly* air permeating the room.
gas mask is recommended, shoes smell nasty 😨 What about UVc and/ or ozone shoesdapters ?
@@ElectroXa
Ah, Clive did mention an ionizer option. Maybe that's what it's for. If it produces enough ozone as a by-product. Then you can rot your clothing from the inside.
Clive you have a 3D printer so print yourself a new Hook ;) Good looking product too on my watch list to grab one at some stage.
Seabreeze Coffee Roasters
Designing the piece in 3D from scratch and printing such a complex shape which is not optimized for 3D printing is quite a chalenge. First give it a 1-3 days designing the piece assuming he has experience in that, and then printing it is the easy part, the hard part is the tolerances and support material and cleaning it once printed. Its not all "just 3D print a spare part", and also considering the use case he would have to print it in a heat resistant material, say petg or abs depending on the temperature of the thing.
@@laharl2k Seriously 1-3 days - YOU need to practice more if it takes you that long. That part laid out as a flat question mark would print fine for strength given the layers. There would be minimal heat radiated up given the airflow and fan but ABS would be nicer. Not much of a challenge but a 'real world' use case to try his 3D printer!
How do you know he has a 3d printer?
@@zeiphon th-cam.com/video/E4EoTkigmLw/w-d-xo.html It needs more use ;)
Always good to see a quality deathdaptor.
The boot dryer is pretty nice down here in Florida's summers. If your boots aren't soaked with sweat, they're soaked with rain and sweat too.
Looks like a Northrop flying wing. Nice airfoil, too. ... cool
Cheesium manufacturing aside, some of the design ideas on this are actually pretty good... not sure I'd have a use for such a device though. I just turn my shoes upside-down on a heater vent in the house and turn the fan on and they dry in reasonable time. Maybe if I traveled a lot more than I do for business this might be useful, but I don't do that anymore. Problem is, the origin of the devices manufacture would leave me uneasy about leaving this thing unattended and trusting it not to burn the hotel down.
I just use a 12in desk fan at low speed and a clothes rack. Everything is dry after maybe 4-5 hours. No heat required - only needs airflow. Can take a few hours longer at lower temperatures though.
Same. If you add a bit of heat though it does speed it up a lot, doesn't even need to be much. Sunny window, radiator...
Also be careful to ventilate, we have had some nasty surprises with mildew.
I got butter in my toaster once, I used a death adapter to prevent it tripping the earth by plugging it in with the earth hanging out the other side. I didn't touch the toaster, I just let it burn off the butter and it seemed to fix the tripping problem.
Great video and breakdown Clive
At least your deathdapters have insulated pins! The ones they send to Australia don't even have those.
neat product! hope they come out with a rechargeable/cordless version.
this looks like a good idea to preheat a winter coat. and boots.
Why would you travel somewhere cold and damp?
It's for when you travel somewhere sunny and end up moist.
And that’s not all! Now, you can smoke salmon, sun dry tomatoes, and dry your Hugo Boss shirt with this amazing invention!
Hello Clive, I appreciate your videos. They are very informative and educational. Could you do a video on LED inverters and/or LED emergency lights (lyfelite)? Thank you
I've made a few videos about the "intelligent" LED emergency lamps.
Pre-fluffed, steady Clive.
I have a request. It's a little different so you may not want to cover it but it's not terribly far out there. I'm interested in modifying laptop PSUs for different voltages. I have a bunch in the 17V range but I need something in 13.5. I know they're typically controlled with a feedback loop. Something you'd care to look at?
Public liability, you would have to be mad to have anything to do with that.
@@FarleyHillBilly I'm sure it's possible to cover it in a way that avoids liability. Clive has covered voltage regulation before.
Why not use a cheap buck converter?
The quality of the circuit photo I actually thought you had your hand on a massive capacitor for a while 😂
hi clive i just saw an advert for a mini air conditioning machine for your clothes from a company tajima i believe it is that would be a cool review to see pun intended keep up the good work sir
Nice! I've seen these used to help dry out fursuits. They're more gentle than a clothes dryer.
Interesting short on that injection molded hook. Those types of defects are usually pretty easy to spot and fix. I'm really curious about the story behind this. Maybe one of the cavities was starting to fail, and they didn't want to bother disabling cavities (making the machine produce parts slower) and/or qc thought is was "good enough" (parts customer must have not been too picky). Either that, or the machine operator was new and didn't know what they were doing.
F...fursuits D:
Or these are factory defect units being sold off cheap.
Keep up the excellent legal work, miles...;)
@@bdf2718 Maybe - If those hooks were also used for another product, that would make some sense. However, if they were custom molds designed for that, then why would assembly use a bad hook? It looks like the rest of the product is perfectly fine.
There are a bunch of other plastic parts that are clearly not generic, so there was some money spent tooling that. My bet is that those hooks were custom tooled anyways.
Chinese business culture is obviously different (and I'm not familiar with) - which may have allowed for lower quality standards.
@@milestailprower
Why would they use a bad hook? Because, largely, the workers don't have a clue what they're doing and are told not to question.
The machine produces bad hooks? Not the operator's job to question. Company has no QA so they get shipped. And if somebody notices they get shipped anyway in the hope they won't get returned.
Guy on the assembly line gets bad hooks? Not his job to question. Maybe there was a design change. Probably he has no idea what the thing is meant to do or how it's meant to operate. It gets assembled anyway.
Producer doesn't notice or doesn't care about the problem, or sells the defective assembled products for parts. Probably knows they'll be snapped up by some eBay merchant happy to sell them on cheap.
It makes no sense that a product with a lot of custom tooling for well-designed parts would have such a crappy hook designed in. But it does make sense that people would see what they could get away with if they ended up with some defective parts.
I had to translate "trainers" from UK to USA English LOL. Love your videos.
Steve D Yeah a bit sneaky that one.
Must have accessory for any fursuiter. I made my own by ductaping 2 big 3d printed fans to a hanger. It blows hard :p
Wow thermal cut out didn’t expect that it actually sounds safe
I WATCH YOUR CHANNEL ALL THE TIME NOW ITS 😎
Running it on 110V would cause the fan to operate at half speed. The PTC elements would still heat up to the same temperature but the heat output would only be a half of the value at 230V.
Why? The fan is 12v and on a regulated circuit.
@@nyetloki You're right, my mistake.
Gave up on Aliexpress. First few orders went through fine. Then the next few just didn't arrive, pain in the neck doing the claims procedure. Gone back to Banggood, out of about 50 orders only had an issue with two, both due to damage, and they were replaced very quickly. OK you pay a little more, and they don't have as wide a range of products.
Thanks Clive. Very neat, apart from it being useless, because of the faulty moulding of the hook. Chocolate fireguards come to mind, for some reason.
What peak temperature is reached within the clothing/shoes, please? That could be an area of concern.
Something New “ The Exploded View a life”👍
The shoe accessories would be great for making your own lightsabre.
Hey Clive... Have you ever made one of those persistence of vision LED whirly things? Something to do for one of your video projects uploads, perhaps... :)
That heating element is whats usually in small space heaters that use that style.
Large space heaters rely on hydrogen fusion.
A bung for your bottom outlet?!? ;)
This would totally never set your clothing and/or closet and/or home on fire.
this reminds me of when I tore apart a broken "entertainment projector" and found a separate driver is what I can assume to power the 12 volt 50 watt halogen lamp in it.
Hope you get to feeling better Buddy!
I have a Scottish food question. I bought some Stockan's Orkney Oatcakes in my local supermarket (we have a Tesco aisle). I bit into one, expecting a sweet oat based biscuit/cookie thing. Instead it's rather savory. What am I supposed to do with them?
Cheese spread works well, or peanut butter.
Nutella
Here's a question in return, can you still get "Mc.Cowan's Highland Toffee"? I used to love it, but haven't seen any in decades. We used to eat loads of it on holiday in the Trossachs. . . . . I'm sure Clive would love your oatcakes. I've never heard of them down here, but I'd give them a spin if I ever came across them - oatcakes, good for the digestion :¬)
I'm not sure. I'm actually in Canada, we just have a small section in our grocery store that carries some stuff from Tesco. It changes regularly, so I'll have a look and see if that's one of the things.
Thank you very much for your wonderful videos. Get well soon and maybe have a look at the air quality in your house. Fungal spores can be a very nasty stuff especially if combined with carbohydrate rich diet, in my opinion anyway ... Best wishes!
He's Glaswegian, he's been eating rubbish food in a hovel for years
Sushi and Champagne are his nemesis.
how much exactly is too rich of carbonhydrates? most recommendations are 45 to 65% of daily nutrition.
@@FarleyHillBilly You don't need to be rich to afford Sushi. We have a pretty top notch grocer that offers $6 Sushi every wednesday.
@@thomasherzog86 I would go with no more than 5% most of which majority would be soluble fiber preferably and lots of saturated fat ad libitum (that is if one is not trying to loose some wight :)). and protein some 1-2g per kg of body weight . :))
@@martins_kreicis
so classic ketogenic diet. thx for the reply.
I always wanted a Portable Electric Folding Clothes Hanger Dryer Drying Rack Travel Laundry Rack !
Now I know where to get a Portable Electric Folding Clothes Hanger Dryer Drying Rack Travel Laundry Rack from.
Wish I had one (or two) of these when I was over in your neck of the woods, It's a bugger to get clothes dry in hotel rooms.
You live in the isle of mann? Cool man! Just assumed you lived in scotland
in winter time you may want to find a warm cloth to put on when you get up from the bed
you could connect to a timer I guess...
Yay the hopi meter!
Still sound ill big man. 👍
It's lingering a long time. That's 10 days so far.
Very handy for soggy cycling shoes, cheaper than a pair of waterproof socks.
Ahhh, the printouts are messing with my perception again!
The soldering looks ugly, but the rest (circuit and case) is actually quite nice and doesn't look like the tried to cut any corners. Not just the things that are needed to run are there, but also those to make it relatively safe and robust.
Today, vast majority of circuit boards that was mechanically soldered looks ugly, mainly by wave soldering process and Pb-Free solder. That's why broken solder joints are much more common problem.
All the sudden my favorite shirt bursts into flames on its hanger
Big Clive. I was wondering if you know anything about designing PCBs? I want to design one for a Electric scooter I have. It does charge externally through it's normal charging port. The battery it will be using is either a flat batter or a cylinder style at 5.2 Ah. Anyway you could help with that?
Hey Clive, considering the reversed supplies for the (assumed) ionizer and fan would it be worthwhile to verify the fan is blowing dry air down into the wet shirt (vs damp air up into the electronics)?
It was definitely blowing hot air downwards through the ports.
Hope you feel Well Again Soon Clife
Got a quick question BigClive.... what's the best way to convert UK power to US 120v 60Hz? The 60Hz thing is kinda important, it's for a tool with a weird electronic speed controller..... about the 1.5kW range of output. TIA if you see this :)
My 2 cents would be to get a US pure sine wave inverter that you can power from a DC source and output 120VAC..
If the frequency is important, it's not going to be cheap. Especially at that power.
Step down transformer, most simple.
@@HeimoVN i have heard your suggestion a couple of times, and like all PC owners I already have *several* high amp 12V rated supplies lying around! Do you know of any good brands or suppliers of pure sine wave inverters? I don't mind buying genuine stuff rather than Chineseium! ;)
You could try a 240V motor, some gears, and a 120V generator. AKA a rotary converter.
It’s all good; I’ll buy one for uk plugs, take it to America and wonder why my clothes take double the time to dry...
If the flex is 1.5m is there enough length on it to hang it on a door or an average height clothes hook/rail etc and still reach the socket? I imagine you have to hang it really close to the socket?
Hope you feel better soon
Cool design. But does it function efficiently. In other words. Well it dry a thoroughly damp heavy shirt ?
it's twice as fast as wearing that shirt, it produce 130watts while our own body produce 60watts. By that comparison it probably take an hour or 2 to dry that cloth, I've wear wet shirt before.
I don't think it would dry a heavy shirt but it would give you a head start, probably aimed at the business man or traveling salesman who needs a clean shirt every day.
@@xponen except our body doesn't produce forced air. So that's not an apple to apple comparison
I'm just wondering, should I get one of these instead of using my ceiling fan and a coat hanger! Or as I sometimes do in Winter, instead of using my air-conditioner, though the air-con does actually dry the air, so is beneficial.
It came with a death-dapter, which is one of the crappier ones. *proceeds to show another deathdapter with charring from a neat little fault*
Big clive, I bought a multi port ubs charger from a very well known store in Canada that omits a crazy buzzing sound when you plug anything into any port for charging. im wondering if you want it? how do I send it to you?
He said bung. Feel better BigClive.
A bung for the bottom outlet no less!
Could you wear it under a jumper to keep you warm ?
Or just run the shoedapters up your pants (trouser) legs....
Looks fairly nice but ultimately let down by the bad track routing near the relay.
10:30 A Chinese product with an extra layer of protection? Golly - whatever next!
Get well soonClive, you sound rough my friend, :-( well done for getting through the teardown, i know its crap, been there, but your brain just carries on lol... great vid. not a bad design to be fair too...
voice smoother than a friction-less surface
theres driers for trainers/boots that have tubes vertical with heaters at the botom of each no fans typically and the heat just moves up through your upside down boots. best way ive found.
The Peet boot dryer. That version isn't sold in the UK.
@@bigclivedotcomah ok, I assumed you've seen it. well if you ever really want something that you can't get over there I'm sure someone in the u.s. following your channel wouldn't mind helping getting it to you...😉
clive; as for your cold... probably pollen allergies. try some loratadine (claritin.) I wouldn't survive spring and early summer without it... especially when the birch trees bloom. 😭
That stuff is so weak. The Vancenase AQ is the best stuff I've tried unfortunately they saw fit to discontinue it in the USA. So much for the freedom to stick whatever we want up our noses.
acrivastine works best for me, and it's bloody expensive :/