@@OriginalCircuit NO, DO NOT run this through any kind of isolation. Running this through isolation prevents the GFCI/RCD from triggering and saving your life. Isolation is the last thing this thing needs. Isolation also has zero benefits to this project.
I feel like as an extra precaution if you were going to use a normal piano, which is out of wood, I would say pre-treat the wood before putting anything that could cause a fire in it, like either do one of the Japanese methods I have seen which involves treating the wood with a coating that makes a layer of glass that makes the wood pretty hard to burn, or pre-burn it so it is blackened so it also has a harder time igniting and burning, if possible do both.
Repent and trust in Jesus. He's the only way to Heaven. We've all sinned and deserve Hell. Sins like lying, lusting, etc. Repent and trust only in Jesus, and you will be saved! You can be saved because he took the punishment for our sins on himself when he died on the cross, just like someone can pay your speeding fine in court, and you get off free. Romans 3:23 John 3:16❤❤❤
I'm working on a tesla coil piano that will play the notes through electric arcs. This was just to clear the piano from strings cus we won't need them. But it ended up looking 3x cooler than I expected. Also, when I took the thumbnail, three strings snapped. In case you wondered what actually happened with the string damage
I hoped Medhi besides giving advice also reacted to the end result. Could not think otherwise than he should like this and wished he did this by himself.
Repent and trust in Jesus. He's the only way to Heaven. We've all sinned and deserve Hell. Sins like lying, lusting, etc. Repent and trust only in Jesus, and you will be saved! You can be saved because he took the punishment for our sins on himself when he died on the cross, just like someone can pay your speeding fine in court, and you get off free. Romans 3:23 John 3:16
@@GamerChillz this is probably the most accurate, along with the fact that the spark might also vibrate the string. Pretty sure the pitch of the electrical spark itself wouldn't vary in any definable way if my knowledge of electrical physics is right (admittedly fairly limited, as my formal education in it is only basic Uni level. If someone with an actual uni degree in electrical physics or similar disagrees with me, listen to them instead)
@@settratheimperishable4093 Hypothetically you can make a circuit that varies pitch based on resistance (which would vary by string length if you hooked the strings up in a certain way). But, that''s pretty certainly not what's happening here (not that I know electronics well enough to be certain).
I have never seen a resistor glow like that, and something about it happening twice and being completely unaddressed both times is truly part of the magic of these videos.
When the key is stuck the capacitor doesn't charge so the charging current constantly flows through the resistor instead of stopping when the capacitor is charged. The boring fix would be bigger resistors or less charging current. The slightly more exciting fix is to just solder as far away from the board as you can, so they still glow red hot but it doesn't catch the wood on fire. I bet electroboom calculated they would get a bit hot and that's why he said not to touch them, but he didn't account for keys getting stuck
I've only seen glowing like that from my (solid steel dummy fuse) in my car after i kicked my wiring harness and 500amps went through my glovebox light wiring
Have you ever seen a ceramic cooktop? Thats bascially a resistor glowing.. or looked into a hairdryer to see the red wire? Also resistors. Edit: Thanks for pointing out the typo 🤦
Thunderstruck is such an appropriate song for this piano! Lol. As an electrical engineer, I got cold sweat from you discharging the caps or plugging the prototype in for the first time. Speaking from experience, I get this hallow feeling in the stomach before I test a prototype that has a chance of catastrophic failure. All in all, this is a great piano! It actually sounds good in the video despite being hard to hear in real life.
As a electronics enthusiast and engineer (but not officially in electronics) I got cold sweat seeing someone work on this particular circuit with the plug seemingly in😅 Especially if it's a first time. Also I'd hate to work on something with so much "high" voltage capacitors I could touch😂 Hate those on ic's I work on even though they've never zapped me. And incredibly fitting song indeed, didn't even realize even though the original was playing in my head😂
Now *this* is a collab I absolutely _never_ expected and never knew I needed. Two chaotic engineers together is absolutely amazing! Next up you ought to try and get a hold of Wintergatan, I imagine you two could make some amazing mechanical piano contraption.
@@AlexandrBorschchev His decision to abandon the MMX was only about 6mos ago. He's done trying to make an instrument. He has fully transitioned into a production mindset. It's not about the MMX anymore, to him. It's about perfection, and he's clearly willing to scrap the entire project, because he doesn't think he can make it perfect.
@@badsamaritan8223 but he still is a musician that wants to experiment with "different" instruments. Yes, he's not sure whether he will eventually build MM3, but he has already built some really creative instruments himself and he won't stop doing that. So I'm not sure on what basis you claim that he can't be saved
As an Electrical Engineer I admire both your level of cringe around high voltages and your level of insanity!! That's something I thought only I would be mad enough to make! Those circuit boards were beautiful, amazing job all around.
my grandpa is a master electrical engineer for many many decades at this point and extremely anal about occupational safety, and this would probably make him lose it lmfao
The Tampa Bay Lightning hockey team always has a piano in stadium at the games that is played live to hype the crowd up. This piano fits their theme 1000%
Mattias: "But there's one tiny problem." Me: "The piano is wood and could cause a fire-" Mattias: "I've never worked with electricity before." Me: "OH."
I can see a future where metal bands start commissioning pianos with Mattias. Rammstein gets a keyboard that shoots a flame jet whenever a key is pressed. Dillinger Escape Plan gets a piano with Fibonacci tuning. Dimmu Borgir gets a piano with razors instead of hammers. And so on. Only Mattias would be up to the task. It's always impressive, really. What a joy to watch your new project come to life :D
Military gets a piano that coordinates artillery salvos. Physics department gets a piano with lasers instead of strings, that vibrate the air according to frequency needed (The piano villan might go blind after this)
I can see Jordan Rudess getting some insane combination piano/pedal steel guitar, including the ability to change dynamics on sustained piano notes like you can do with a guitar's volume pedal.
I think the reason your hammers weld together is because you are effectively using them as a switch causing inductive feedback causing a voltage spike high enough to weld the contact points, the solution is to add a diode in reverse bias to the end of your string, however that will clamp your voltage so you need to choose a proper diode that will produce a good enough arc but not weld the contacts.
Suggestion: put some plexiglass or other clear material as a casing around the hammers and strings, so A, its less likely to shock you, and B, it will muffle some of the pop sound while still letting you see the sparks. You could even try putting a colored material to see if you can make the flash different colors.
@Ian Visser You're unlikely to get that type of glass in a large enough pane to cover the whole piano, but it's possible to pilfer the glass from a few dozen welding masks and tesselate them in some fun patterns with silicone to fuse 'em together. Think of it like medieval glasswork- back in the day, glaziers couldn't get consistent large panes like we do nowadays, so they made smaller 'blobs' of glass and connected them with lead lines.
It might also save your life if one of the strings gets damaged enough to break. Those strings are under an insane amount of tension and could cause a lot of damage if they release in the direction of you
This man has ONE gimmick and freaking never stops amazing me. Everytime you upload something new I always have to watch cause i already know it's going to be time well spent.
FULL BRIDGE RECTIFIER! Like you said, I'm surprised not more people have thought about making something like this irl. It's just a shame you can't hear properly so it must be hard to keep playing.
12:27 "Electroboom warned me about this problem. However, during the hundreds of hits on the prototype, the hammer never fused with the string even though I used actual piano strings on it. That's why i was so surprised by it doing it on the piano. But i guess it has something to do with either the strings not being under tension on the modell or that the hammer action on this piano doesn't have the same impact/bounce as the action on this piano. Idk"
7:30 when he said "I don't even know how to solder" it was the funniest thing ever as a electronics enthusiast my self I remember when I was learning to solder, I was in my garage and ended up burning my self multiple times with my dads soldering iron.
Hearing you play the Wii Sports theme while being inches away from death was the most morbidly funny thing I’ve seen. You deserve a lot of respect for taking a crazy idea and executing it to completion (without executing yourself😅).
I don't think we can even realize how much work hours, effort went into this, how much frustration and difficulty was overcome, so this is absolutely precious.
For someone who works with PCBs and hardware, your soldering was very impressive, especially for a first time. Incredible video idea and incredible work ethic
Yeah the part where he soldered everything except the wire and the solder was in one big blob refusing to stick was so relatable. Only thing missing is melting the components with your soldering iron because the goddamn solder won't stick. Source: I suck at soldering. Especially piezo speakers, DC power connectors, constan wire and some other stuff
Yeah I also loved the ethics:) A waste of time and a waste of resources just for a herd of ignorant a$$holes with the attention threshold and the environmental awareness of a housefly (That is usually the TikTok niveau) ... just to make a buck of it. To round that up: why not visit the landfill in Africa, where all this waste will end up? This will possibly sponsored by Henkel? ... Naaaah, I guess not:)
The fact that you did this with no prior electrical experience is both terrifying and impressive. I've taken two electronics classes and I'm still nervous using low voltage circuits lmao, mad respect to this
@@hellbach8879 The Dunning-Kruger effect is a cognitive bias in which people with limited competence in a particular domain overestimate their abilities, which he didnt as he stated he knew absolutely nothing. Seems like you´re suffering from the same syndrome. :)
Ive welded over plywood and 2x4s alot. they dont catch on fire until there is a high concentrarion of sparks hitting one area over and over for a good while, like itll start smoking and shit first. That being said, if you played a chord in repitition, it could definitly catch on fire lol
fortunately, the wood was thick enough and the wood fibers weren't fraying to actually catch a spark. sparks dont carry enough heat long enough to light solid wood on fire. need kindling of some sort (think of wood shavings). constant electricity through wood on the other hand....
The fast flash text in 12:27 if anyone is wondering: "Electroboom warned me about this problem. However, during the hundreds of hits on the prototype, the hammer never fused with the string even though i used actual piano strings on it. That's why i was so surprised by it doing it on the piano. but i guess it has something to do with either the string not being under tension in the model or that the hammer action on this piano doesnt have the same impact/bounce as the action in this piano. idk."
If anyone's curious, for future reference, you can play TH-cam videos frame-by-frame by pausing and using (I think) the comma and period keys. It's good for those fast text moments.
Just wanted to say this was the most wholesome thing ever. As a beginner in electrical engineering myself it was very cool to see you learn about the electronics, improve, and even enjoy some of the soldering work. It was very cool to see you proud of your work. You should be, it looked amazing. Good job man
@@WingMaster562 and? It's completely fair use to take somebody else's clip. It shows him in the video, it's not like he's taking credit for the footage. Please stop getting upset over nothing and look into fair use
Considering you've never soldered before, that was actually a half decent job. Sure it's not pretty but the connections all look good. You can also definitely see your progress. Now when a wire breaks, you'll be like some of us and get excited because you can easily fix it yourself.
First we had ElectroBOOM's electric guitar, now we have an electric piano, next we need some kind of electric percussion and then we've got a whole band. The name of the band should definitely be ACDC, or because of the full bridge rectifier, maybe just DCDC
Dude, mad respect. You had an idea and even being scared and lacking experience, you did it anyway and got help as needed. You probably also learnt a lot! PS: I read the tags of videos, lol
I feel like that teacher is both intrigued and terrified of you being her student XD but she seems to be a sweetheart for being excited to see your projects
Mattias. I just discovered your channel. And I wanted to let you know: “Actually now when I think about- no. Why start thinking now?” Is my new life motto.
This is the most cursed engineering project I have ever seen- and I’m a fan of Electroboom so that’s saying a lot! Also, she’s you’re actual piano teacher now! That is SO cute!
first ask the craziest person in that subject you know on how to do it and then ask someone who is still sane and let him do the major calculations for you. the first one you just asked the questions to know what you should be extremly carefull about and how to not do it if the other person wants to do it in another way.
@@Altropos i did a thing does things surprisingly save and "predictable" and makes it look dangerous. sure what he shows isn't "save" but if done right it isn't that dangerous either.
I absolutely love the trial and error and problem solving involved in this project. I'm so glad I've been here to watch your journey from essentially the beginning!!
Pianos are classified as a percussion instrument due to the hammer action. Even though it uses strings, it isn't a string instrument because the strings are hit, not plucked or strummed. Same reason why brass bells are percussion instruments and not part of the brass family, despite being made of brass.
@@cheeseboy847 It depends on the way pianos are being applied. Generally, pianos have more of a hand in complex, solo repertoire the way other string instruments do - but in different circumstances when they are used to create a background environment, they definitely are.
A few ideas for improvements if you intend to feature this piano again: If you add an inline circuit breaker, you can eliminate the problems with the resistors lighting up like that. Also worth noting that your resistors could stand to either be higher resistance (ohms) or higher wattage. More ohms means the caps will charge more slowly but will make the whole system a fair bit safer, higher wattage will allow the capacitors to charge faster without the risk of the resistors burning when the keys stick. Might also be worth a single big heavy resistor on the input to limit the system as a whole, it won't use as much current on startup and when playing many keys at the same time or in quick succession.
@@mars5train601 Good call, but I was looking mostly at the fact that the resistors were burning under sustained draw, the reduced inrush would be added bonus. Perhaps both would be a good idea?
Thanks! Yes I was thinking of adding the a fuse in the circuit but I got lasy and just skipped it... For the resistance, I wanted the piano to charge faster than you could physically play the keys on this particular piano. You can play around 5-7 notes per second on this one. With the doubled up capacitors each capacitor charged to 3T in 200ms so anymore resistance and the charging would be too slow. The reason I didn’t want to make it ”more safe” was because the word safety and a project like this is not really compatible 😅even if we doubled the resistance, the resistors would start glowing like that either way when they fused. Only difference would be the piano would also charge less epic time. This video looked a bit spontaneous, but there was a few weeks of me an mechatronics engineer just discussing every possible way we could make this. Appreciate the ideas🙏
Electroboom warned me about this problem. However, during the hundreds of hits on the prototype the hammer never fused with the string even though I used the actual piano strings on it. That’s why I was so surprised by it doing it on the piano. But I guess it has something to do with either the strings not being under tension on the model or that the hammer action on this piano doesn’t have the same action/bounce as the action on this piano (Really love when Tubers show a paragraph of important detail in mess than a microsecond.
Some suggestions from an electronic designer: - place one 330 Kiloohm resistor (2 watt) in parallel on each capacitor, this modification allow the self discharge of all capacitors within few minutes (for safety purposes!). - place one 10 Ohm - 5W resistor in series with each hammer to limit the current (this should decrease the risk of a welded hammer) - buy a variac to adjust the input voltage (to adjust the intensity of the sparks) - put some grease on both the hammer and the cord (to decrease the risk of welding) - replace the 270 Ohm resistors with 1000 Ohm - 20W resistors (or two 2200 Ohm - 10W in parallel) and place them few millimeters above the board to avoid burns issues - have fun! 🙂
You had an idea, and despite every obstacle and the fact that you had extremely little relevant experience, you went out and did it anyway. Absolutely incredible. You're a true youtube hero
When you play this instrument not only is it an impressive sight to see, but it's like you're playing 2 instruments at once! Piano and some electric percussion instrument!
I remember when you first had to hire pianists and people to view your crazy builds, now you get them volunteering to try them out! You have come a long way Mattias!
I'm an electrical engineer. It is hunting me to watch what you're doing to the instrument, but this is exactly the piano to play some AC\DC. Nice project. I'm impressed you didn't get (much) electrified. Cheers
You need to make an album. Mattias Krantz and his electric piano, featuring such pieces as "Electric Blue Danube", "Total Eclipse of the Spark", "Theme to The Legend of BZZZelda", and the immortal classic, "Current Flows in You". The sales would be shocking.
There are 3 types of sounds in this: 1. The sound of the strings (the actual piano sound) 2. The mechanical sound of the metal hitting metal 3. The electricity sound of the sparcs The level of creativity it's really huge here. This guy is a combination of art, creativity, science, engineering, curiosity, bravery and ambition. I really hope he doesn't get decouraged ever because his ideas can be weird or too hard to make them. There's nothing wrong with not knowing how to something, what he proves here amongst other things is that you'll never know what you can do if don't try it. It's fun to do crazy things or inventions, it doesn't always matter the practical aplicability. He deserves more subscribers, he makes very good content, he works very much, he's content is entartaining and informativ and he spends a lot of money to make the content. Much apreciation from me 😊
I wish you could hear them IRL haha. The peaks of the audio gets so limited here. I was seriously suprised how loud it was, it was really like having fireworks pop just in front of you!
This was very enjoyable to watch. I love seeing the process, and for someone who has never worked with electricity, wow, very impressed with what you did. And you sense of humor or calm demeanor is very engaging.
The chaotic nature of the project itself and the off-screen meticulous planning really comes through. I’m equal parts terrified and curious about making my own
Let's call it an electric spark piano. If you give it to a really talented musician, you know like the kind that make their own musical timeless pieces, I am sure that person would be able to produce music that benefits from the sparks.
The most dangerous thing here, is hooking up the whole circuit directly to the mains. If you want to use this in the future as well, a isolation transformer is highly advisable! (read; mandatory!) Without it, it can actually be a lot more dangerous than just the high voltage itself. ☝ Besides that, very cool idea! 😎👍
We discussed this a lot while making the project and I spent many days reading a bout isolation transformers. But I was not convinced they were a good idea. I get that I could pretty much touch the piano without getting chocked. But IF i closed the circuit with two hands, I would die because there would be no cgfi working anymore. Compared to the house that has such a fast cgfi that I would only get a terrible chock. But now when I think about it, I wonder if cgfi even worked for this piano 🤔🤔
@@Mattiaskrantz The answer is no, it wouldn't, at least not for the entire circuit. You're charging caps, then discharging them, so the only place where GFCI would help is before the caps.
@@Mattiaskrantz Isolating the circuit from the mains has a different purpose, and is an absolute mandatory requirement from CE or UL safety standards (for good reasons!), unless you can double isolate the circuit (like LED bulbs, or like coffee machines etc). The simplest (but definitely not complete) explanation, all has to to with sudden peaks (called transients) on the mains that can come from other devices (like appliances). These transients can be very high and are enough to fry you as well as a part of the circuit in an instance. We are talking about a couple of thousands of volts. A CGFI does not protect you from those transients. Btw, in Europe those don't even exists, and are often called RCBO. They basically detect the imbalance between live and neutral. Which won't help much in some situations, when the danger happens on the secondary side of the circuit. For that reason most homes in at least Europe have a ground breaker instead. I am not a fan of any CGFI or RCBO solution at all, but technically they are allowed within standards. Speaking of breakers, maybe I missed it, but the absolute bare minimum protection is always a fuse. Again, it think it's a really fun project. But as a professional electronics engineer with experience in HV circuits, I would never work on non-isolated circuits (even with low voltage circuits). I don't know the exact power of this whole circuit, but proper isolation transformers aren't that expensive. In this case CGFI or RCBO won't protect you, since all the stuff happens on the secondary side anyway (after the bridge rectifier) while running the risk of having serious lethal transients coming from the mains grid.
@@p_mouse8676 Aah ok I think I get what you’re saying! But it makes me think… like my logic was that, a piano like this thinking about safety was no point. Since if I touch the let’s say three hammers by accident I get a discharge of 6st 100uf capacitors at 330V maybe even two times before I’m able to react. I would pretty much not survive that? Maybe. So I’m thinking the first step would probably be to put a plexiglass in the front of the piano. The mainscircuit was for the most part a bit harder to access at least by accident. But ofc, this project is objectively a terrible idea! Thanks for the advice I’ll print and read it in more detail later 🙏🙏
I didn't think you could go further once you put those hammers on the piano, but after this I know you can do much more! I wonder what kind of crazy project you will bring us next
This is just awesome! As someone who is both a piano player and studying electronics this makes me happy! :D I'm actually curious if this made you more familiar with basics of electronics like reading wiring diagrams, how each component works and what it does and so on?
Thank you! Yes definitely. Well not this project so much, because it all went so smoothly. But a longside this I was working on a tesla coil piano and I spelt many days reading electronic books to problem solve. I might talk about that next project:D and good luck with your studying, electronics was actually really fun
At 13:38 the resistor was glowing because one of the hammer was continuously touching one of the string (hammer got welded to the string) as a result continuous flow of the current occured and heated the resistor enough to glow... Anyways great project...!!👍
Of all the videos I’ve seen in TH-cam, never have I ever thought that I’d see a collab between a pianist, and an electrician (who’s also known for blowing things up)
This is the most ingenious and beautiful thing I have seen lately! You are a legend, my friend. All piano concerts should be done like that from now on! Haha
I was freaking out so much about how much of a fire hazard this is, to have a mini lightning strike in a chamber of wood, and then he recommended taking it out in the woods so he could play outside, and I just died inside.
Join discord to see what the f I am doing to my poor piano currently. discord.gg/mattiaskrantz you’ll see me in engineers-only (i’m an engineer)
Matt
How do you come up with these kinds of videos?
Also
Make more!
I think Mark Rober can turn this into a really good one! He has a robot piano but He's in US tho.
Run the piano through a variac, so at least it's isolated... still terrifying, but isolated.
@@OriginalCircuit NO, DO NOT run this through any kind of isolation. Running this through isolation prevents the GFCI/RCD from triggering and saving your life. Isolation is the last thing this thing needs. Isolation also has zero benefits to this project.
I feel like as an extra precaution if you were going to use a normal piano, which is out of wood, I would say pre-treat the wood before putting anything that could cause a fire in it, like either do one of the Japanese methods I have seen which involves treating the wood with a coating that makes a layer of glass that makes the wood pretty hard to burn, or pre-burn it so it is blackened so it also has a harder time igniting and burning, if possible do both.
HAAA HA HA! This is awesome! Thanks for including me in the design, although I ACCEPT NO RESPONSIBILITY FOR ANYTHING! :D
First megdi pegdi
I don't know if anyone would accept responsibility for a madness of this scale, lol
فک کنم این پیانو باعث شه مهدی بره پیانو یاد بگیره
was the dr. Livsey impresion on purpose or no?
Even Electroboom got out crazied
Beautifully terrifying!!!
Found the next thing to add to your one-man-band, eh? Vulo's gonna love it!
I agree
Don't get any ideas.
Hahaha I knew you would love this!
Ohi didn't expect to see you here
As an electrical engineer, seeing those resistors glow red was terrifying
I thought that was a feature!
If you've never made a resistor (or other component) smoke,are you really an EE though? Putting the magic smoke back in is the hard part.
if it glows, it means its on!
All resistors (including the metal within any other component) are light bulbs if you drive them hard enough.
I used to be a resistor, but the cops yelled at me to stop resisting and put me on the ice. I'm a superconductor now.
Matthias: "like, should I worry about it?"
ElectroBOOM: "yes, you should!" *cue maniacal laughter*
Lol
ElectroBoom epitomizes "don't attempt to do this at home, we're professionals, we know what we're doing"
greatest introduction of a electric maniac in a movie
Repent and trust in Jesus. He's the only way to Heaven. We've all sinned and deserve Hell. Sins like lying, lusting, etc. Repent and trust only in Jesus, and you will be saved! You can be saved because he took the punishment for our sins on himself when he died on the cross, just like someone can pay your speeding fine in court, and you get off free.
Romans 3:23
John 3:16❤❤❤
@@christianweatherbroadcastinghell has all the cool people anyway, heaven sounds super boring
I'm working on a tesla coil piano that will play the notes through electric arcs. This was just to clear the piano from strings cus we won't need them. But it ended up looking 3x cooler than I expected. Also, when I took the thumbnail, three strings snapped. In case you wondered what actually happened with the string damage
Jesus, what chaos.
Crazy cool work my dude. I love every one of your videos.
im glad u included electroboom. He's the craziest but funniest guy I had ever watched. Also I love ur vids. its satisfying to watch.
What if you did piano with leds that light up when you play? I think that would look cool. 🙂
I can't wait to see your Tesla Coil Piano in action. I am just learning to make my first few coils so I might learn along with you 🙂
The fact that you got ElectroBoom to guide you in building this is goddamn legendary
☝️👆Congratulations you have been selected among One of my lucky winners today
Dm to claim your prize🎁
I see it on the result, remembers me about the electric guitar.
ElectroBoom have created literal electric guitar, of course he loves the idea of literal electric piano
I'm horrible with names. I introduced this video to someone by saying "crazy Swedish piano guy worked with crazy Persian electric guy."
@@evanrudibaugh8772i mean, if someone reccomended me video by saying this, i would 100% watch it.
Wasn't ever expecting this collaboration, I am all for it.
Me too
@Nexodus That image is my profile pic on some websites XDD
Also, I want more from these two!
Yeah this is collab of the year
Mehdi has a good competition now. ⚡
I hoped Medhi besides giving advice also reacted to the end result. Could not think otherwise than he should like this and wished he did this by himself.
Time to play "Through the Fire and Flames" on this instrument. It's like it was made for it!
And then make Herman Li react to it.
Or Twilight of the Thunder God
Or Valhalla calling me. Cause, well um, why not enter the halls of Valhalla on a bursting piano of electric mayhem. Thor might like it. Maybe?
@@CyberWanderer101at the very least you can be sure Loki would find it entertaining.
Repent and trust in Jesus. He's the only way to Heaven. We've all sinned and deserve Hell. Sins like lying, lusting, etc. Repent and trust only in Jesus, and you will be saved! You can be saved because he took the punishment for our sins on himself when he died on the cross, just like someone can pay your speeding fine in court, and you get off free.
Romans 3:23
John 3:16
if you listen closely, you can actually hear that the sparks are making their own pitches and music actually sorta matching with the notes he plays
If I had to guess it's probably something to do with the length of the strings.
frequency is inversly propotional to length that is why the sound of sparks vary with the lenght of string
@@GamerChillz this is probably the most accurate, along with the fact that the spark might also vibrate the string. Pretty sure the pitch of the electrical spark itself wouldn't vary in any definable way if my knowledge of electrical physics is right (admittedly fairly limited, as my formal education in it is only basic Uni level. If someone with an actual uni degree in electrical physics or similar disagrees with me, listen to them instead)
I just like the sounding of the sparks in time with the keys. Good observation though!
@@settratheimperishable4093 Hypothetically you can make a circuit that varies pitch based on resistance (which would vary by string length if you hooked the strings up in a certain way). But, that''s pretty certainly not what's happening here (not that I know electronics well enough to be certain).
I have never seen a resistor glow like that, and something about it happening twice and being completely unaddressed both times is truly part of the magic of these videos.
When the key is stuck the capacitor doesn't charge so the charging current constantly flows through the resistor instead of stopping when the capacitor is charged. The boring fix would be bigger resistors or less charging current. The slightly more exciting fix is to just solder as far away from the board as you can, so they still glow red hot but it doesn't catch the wood on fire.
I bet electroboom calculated they would get a bit hot and that's why he said not to touch them, but he didn't account for keys getting stuck
as if it wasn't "thrilling" enough
I've only seen glowing like that from my (solid steel dummy fuse) in my car after i kicked my wiring harness and 500amps went through my glovebox light wiring
Have you ever seen a ceramic cooktop? Thats bascially a resistor glowing.. or looked into a hairdryer to see the red wire? Also resistors.
Edit: Thanks for pointing out the typo 🤦
@@ReMixRoudy Resistors I think you mean.
Thunderstruck is such an appropriate song for this piano! Lol. As an electrical engineer, I got cold sweat from you discharging the caps or plugging the prototype in for the first time. Speaking from experience, I get this hallow feeling in the stomach before I test a prototype that has a chance of catastrophic failure.
All in all, this is a great piano! It actually sounds good in the video despite being hard to hear in real life.
It’s not Thunder Struck, it’s Lightning Strike
As a electronics enthusiast and engineer (but not officially in electronics) I got cold sweat seeing someone work on this particular circuit with the plug seemingly in😅
Especially if it's a first time.
Also I'd hate to work on something with so much "high" voltage capacitors I could touch😂
Hate those on ic's I work on even though they've never zapped me.
And incredibly fitting song indeed, didn't even realize even though the original was playing in my head😂
“Why start thinking now?” - this seems like a phrase that deserves fame.
Now *this* is a collab I absolutely _never_ expected and never knew I needed. Two chaotic engineers together is absolutely amazing! Next up you ought to try and get a hold of Wintergatan, I imagine you two could make some amazing mechanical piano contraption.
that would be so cool!!
Wintergatan has fallen down the Elon hole. There's no saving him.
@@badsamaritan8223 That was like a year ago dude...
@@AlexandrBorschchev His decision to abandon the MMX was only about 6mos ago. He's done trying to make an instrument. He has fully transitioned into a production mindset. It's not about the MMX anymore, to him. It's about perfection, and he's clearly willing to scrap the entire project, because he doesn't think he can make it perfect.
@@badsamaritan8223 but he still is a musician that wants to experiment with "different" instruments. Yes, he's not sure whether he will eventually build MM3, but he has already built some really creative instruments himself and he won't stop doing that. So I'm not sure on what basis you claim that he can't be saved
As an Electrical Engineer I admire both your level of cringe around high voltages and your level of insanity!! That's something I thought only I would be mad enough to make! Those circuit boards were beautiful, amazing job all around.
my grandpa is a master electrical engineer for many many decades at this point and extremely anal about occupational safety, and this would probably make him lose it lmfao
One improvement to make is to have a gap under the resistors for better heat disipation.
I love how in the beginning of the video he was holding the hammer with a wooden handle with a pliers 🤣
I like how anyone who has remotely any skill with electronics is somewhat into the happy farm already
I love that ElectroBOOM can just reach off to his side and suddenly be armed with a capacitor and means to charge it
He is a madman after all, of course he can.
So his capacitors aren't pre-charged? Tv editing: "Here's one that we prepared earlier..."
And laugh maniacally after saying how dangerous it is.
The Tampa Bay Lightning hockey team always has a piano in stadium at the games that is played live to hype the crowd up. This piano fits their theme 1000%
Mattias: "But there's one tiny problem."
Me: "The piano is wood and could cause a fire-"
Mattias: "I've never worked with electricity before."
Me: "OH."
For a guy who never did this and that he's fairly good at tackling those subjects. That's a talent
It's the kind of 'OH' you heard from the enemy of John Wick.
This has to be the wildest thing you've made yet. I've never felt so nervous for someone I don't know.
Thank you for feeling nervous for me🙏 I was quite nervous myself at times
I can see a future where metal bands start commissioning pianos with Mattias.
Rammstein gets a keyboard that shoots a flame jet whenever a key is pressed.
Dillinger Escape Plan gets a piano with Fibonacci tuning.
Dimmu Borgir gets a piano with razors instead of hammers.
And so on. Only Mattias would be up to the task.
It's always impressive, really. What a joy to watch your new project come to life :D
Military gets a piano that coordinates artillery salvos.
Physics department gets a piano with lasers instead of strings, that vibrate the air according to frequency needed (The piano villan might go blind after this)
@@mechadrake assume the mathematician gets a piano
@@chri-k assume the mathematician gets a piano had me ROLLING
I can see Jordan Rudess getting some insane combination piano/pedal steel guitar, including the ability to change dynamics on sustained piano notes like you can do with a guitar's volume pedal.
Golden ratio tuning would be about minor sixths between every note
I think the reason your hammers weld together is because you are effectively using them as a switch causing inductive feedback causing a voltage spike high enough to weld the contact points, the solution is to add a diode in reverse bias to the end of your string, however that will clamp your voltage so you need to choose a proper diode that will produce a good enough arc but not weld the contacts.
I'm not sure what I'm more impressed by, the commitment and courage, or the fact you actually LEARNED PIANO!
@Zac Clark thanks! My boyfriend drew it :3
Meh - i guess there is another option available: Beeing impressed by he survived it!
@zacclark3807 Good luck!
The fact that you're actually taking piano lessons from that piano teacher now is the most adorable and heartwarming thing to see
"It exploded!"
"It's supposed to!"
Suggestion: put some plexiglass or other clear material as a casing around the hammers and strings, so A, its less likely to shock you, and B, it will muffle some of the pop sound while still letting you see the sparks. You could even try putting a colored material to see if you can make the flash different colors.
@Ian Visser You're unlikely to get that type of glass in a large enough pane to cover the whole piano, but it's possible to pilfer the glass from a few dozen welding masks and tesselate them in some fun patterns with silicone to fuse 'em together. Think of it like medieval glasswork- back in the day, glaziers couldn't get consistent large panes like we do nowadays, so they made smaller 'blobs' of glass and connected them with lead lines.
It might also save your life if one of the strings gets damaged enough to break. Those strings are under an insane amount of tension and could cause a lot of damage if they release in the direction of you
I'm not sure, but I think the flashes would damage the plexiglass, and eventually it wouldn't be clear anymore
@@fableagain Yeah, the sparks would probably start melting the plastic slowly but surely
@@MrCh0o If not that, the fumes and dust will stick to the glass.
You're getting dangerously close to an "I set my house on fire by making a flamer piano" episode
This man has ONE gimmick and freaking never stops amazing me. Everytime you upload something new I always have to watch cause i already know it's going to be time well spent.
FULL BRIDGE RECTIFIER!
Like you said, I'm surprised not more people have thought about making something like this irl. It's just a shame you can't hear properly so it must be hard to keep playing.
Foolbridge Rectumfryer!
I was so happy to hear the other guy say that at 7:47
Now do a duet with Mehdi and his electric guitar…
BTW, you’ve gotten much better at playing. Loved the Zelda song.
Thank you friend🙏 Zelda was pure nostalgia to learn!
@@Mattiaskrantz BANG! Beeeeeeep! Beep, Beep Beeeeeep! FBeep FBeep FBeep FBeep!
@@Mattiaskrantz right after zelda, was that merry go round of life from Howl's moving castle? That is a really beautiful song.
@@ahayesm 😂👍
@@Crazy___Ginger Thank you for dropping the name, I just listened to it and started crying a bit. Such a lovely piece
this piano really helps to keep your posture while playing 😂
Someone needs to pitch this to a piano teacher
12:27 "Electroboom warned me about this problem. However, during the hundreds of hits on the prototype, the hammer never fused with the string even though I used actual piano strings on it. That's why i was so surprised by it doing it on the piano. But i guess it has something to do with either the strings not being under tension on the modell or that the hammer action on this piano doesn't have the same impact/bounce as the action on this piano. Idk"
I was about to post that 😂
Thank you. Even at 0.25x I was having trouble pausing on the SINGLE FRAME that shows this
@@claws61821 Pro tip for anyone seeing this: On Desktop you can use , and . to go back and forth a single frame :)
@@claws61821 I was on mobile and somehow managed to snipe it second try!
@@claws61821 the , and . keys allow you to go frame by frame if on pc.
Thunderstruck is the perfect song to play on this
☝️👆Congratulations you have been selected among One of my lucky winners today
Dm to claim your prize🎁
Thunder!
Or Burnin down the house
Imagine we play Rush E with this Piano
@@MW-ic7lrThere's also a Franz Ferdinand song called "This Fire."
19:39 You can't hear what you're playing? Just turn up the volume. It's an electric piano after all...
7:30 when he said "I don't even know how to solder" it was the funniest thing ever as a electronics enthusiast my self I remember when I was learning to solder, I was in my garage and ended up burning my self multiple times with my dads soldering iron.
that was the most out of depth I have ever heard a human being find out they are.
Hearing you play the Wii Sports theme while being inches away from death was the most morbidly funny thing I’ve seen. You deserve a lot of respect for taking a crazy idea and executing it to completion (without executing yourself😅).
15:03 is the timestamp
It's the Mii Maker theme.
I really like that the piano teacher is now a regular character in these videos
Missing the piano tech in this one, though 😭
@@hawkins347 Wym?
@@hawkins347 aww yeah you're right that is sad
@@hawkins347 he'd cry.
The most surprising collab ever, never knew I needed it so much. Thank you, very cool.
I was just as suprised when electroboom answered my mail. Thank you🙏🙏
Next step has to be a collab with "i did a thing". They both have the same reckless disregard for their own safety and sanity
@@Mattiaskrantz He probably just didn't want you to get yourself electrocuted.
@@ircubic I mean mattias was pretty safe but i did a thing would literally put his face in the sparks
I don't think we can even realize how much work hours, effort went into this, how much frustration and difficulty was overcome, so this is absolutely precious.
For someone who works with PCBs and hardware, your soldering was very impressive, especially for a first time. Incredible video idea and incredible work ethic
I know right.
Sure better than me as a kid and the last part better than my prototypes on Chinese perfboards at times😂
Yeah the part where he soldered everything except the wire and the solder was in one big blob refusing to stick was so relatable. Only thing missing is melting the components with your soldering iron because the goddamn solder won't stick.
Source: I suck at soldering. Especially piezo speakers, DC power connectors, constan wire and some other stuff
But he used so muuuuuuuch solder!!!
Yeah I also loved the ethics:)
A waste of time and a waste of resources just for a herd of ignorant a$$holes with the attention threshold and the environmental awareness of a housefly (That is usually the TikTok niveau) ... just to make a buck of it. To round that up: why not visit the landfill in Africa, where all this waste will end up? This will possibly sponsored by Henkel? ... Naaaah, I guess not:)
Ethics are a waste of time, we're all gonna die anyway
The fact that you did this with no prior electrical experience is both terrifying and impressive. I've taken two electronics classes and I'm still nervous using low voltage circuits lmao, mad respect to this
Dunning-Kruger
@@hellbach8879 The Dunning-Kruger effect is a cognitive bias in which people with limited competence in a particular domain overestimate their abilities, which he didnt as he stated he knew absolutely nothing.
Seems like you´re suffering from the same syndrome. :)
Your reactions were priceless. I kept thinking sparking and wood don't work well together
☝️👆Congratulations you have been selected among One of my lucky winners today
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Indeed, especially very old, dry wood coated with varnish
Ive welded over plywood and 2x4s alot. they dont catch on fire until there is a high concentrarion of sparks hitting one area over and over for a good while, like itll start smoking and shit first. That being said, if you played a chord in repitition, it could definitly catch on fire lol
fortunately, the wood was thick enough and the wood fibers weren't fraying to actually catch a spark. sparks dont carry enough heat long enough to light solid wood on fire. need kindling of some sort (think of wood shavings). constant electricity through wood on the other hand....
well they do.... just not in your favor lol
This is how Mind Electric was meant to be played
The fast flash text in 12:27 if anyone is wondering: "Electroboom warned me about this problem. However, during the hundreds of hits on the prototype, the hammer never fused with the string even though i used actual piano strings on it. That's why i was so surprised by it doing it on the piano. but i guess it has something to do with either the string not being under tension in the model or that the hammer action on this piano doesnt have the same impact/bounce as the action in this piano. idk."
Thank you!
If anyone's curious, for future reference, you can play TH-cam videos frame-by-frame by pausing and using (I think) the comma and period keys. It's good for those fast text moments.
Just wanted to say this was the most wholesome thing ever. As a beginner in electrical engineering myself it was very cool to see you learn about the electronics, improve, and even enjoy some of the soldering work. It was very cool to see you proud of your work. You should be, it looked amazing. Good job man
Did he forget to credit Stryopyro at 1:49 or intentionally didnt?
@@WingMaster562 he is not required to
@@Lumalee but he seems to be the type of guy that values giving credit to other people's work, especially a fellow youtuber.
@@WingMaster562 and? It's completely fair use to take somebody else's clip. It shows him in the video, it's not like he's taking credit for the footage. Please stop getting upset over nothing and look into fair use
@@Lumalee never said anything about legality, this is about ethic than anything.
Man, you are so persistent. I'm always amazed how you always seem to deliver on an idea, when others might just say "good enough"
Considering you've never soldered before, that was actually a half decent job. Sure it's not pretty but the connections all look good. You can also definitely see your progress.
Now when a wire breaks, you'll be like some of us and get excited because you can easily fix it yourself.
First we had ElectroBOOM's electric guitar, now we have an electric piano, next we need some kind of electric percussion and then we've got a whole band. The name of the band should definitely be ACDC, or because of the full bridge rectifier, maybe just DCDC
definitely DCDC. can't name it ACDC or someone's gonna get to know a few lawyers
Actually, the full bridge rectifier turns AC into DC. So AC/DC is actually appropriate, although keep in mind the lawyer thing lol.
yea the whole thing about lawyers is they don't care that it makes sense really :(
Electric mayhem
what about jazz that can shot spark?
This is just becoming a straight-up engineering channel and I'm absolutely loving it
When you change your Major from Music to Electrical Engineering half way through….
It always was.
Dude, mad respect. You had an idea and even being scared and lacking experience, you did it anyway and got help as needed. You probably also learnt a lot!
PS: I read the tags of videos, lol
"I don't even know how to solder" 😂
i even can smell this burning
Tags? I don't see any
@@Ikxi you need a browser extension or a computer science degree 😂
The fumes from soldering are actually just tree sap.
Or vaporised metal.
Depends on the brand.
10:31 The very visible progress from the first to the last soldering point is just 👌👌 sooooooo satisfying.
indeed , totally looked pro at the end
when doing a thing, you slowly figure it out in progress
"I really thought I've discharged all of them. Now I have" - That is the added bonus of a collab with ElectroBOOM. ;)
I feel like that teacher is both intrigued and terrified of you being her student XD but she seems to be a sweetheart for being excited to see your projects
Try putting the sparking bits in a glass case to muffle the snaps. Also, you can use hard rubber for the keys to eliminate need for gloves.
Mattias. I just discovered your channel. And I wanted to let you know: “Actually now when I think about- no. Why start thinking now?” Is my new life motto.
lol yeah why start thinking now you already so deep down that rabbit hole
This is the most cursed engineering project I have ever seen- and I’m a fan of Electroboom so that’s saying a lot! Also, she’s you’re actual piano teacher now! That is SO cute!
the reason he takes piano lesson
Indeed
I think you mean blursed.
Your*
It’s the effort that’s put out in these videos… how do you do this without dying
first ask the craziest person in that subject you know on how to do it and then ask someone who is still sane and let him do the major calculations for you. the first one you just asked the questions to know what you should be extremly carefull about and how to not do it if the other person wants to do it in another way.
He is on the life 7 of 9
He needs a collab with I did a thing, who is even more extraordinary at not dying.
@@Altropos I do not think that collab is survivable :D *puts on safety flipflops
@@Altropos i did a thing does things surprisingly save and "predictable" and makes it look dangerous. sure what he shows isn't "save" but if done right it isn't that dangerous either.
I absolutely love the trial and error and problem solving involved in this project. I'm so glad I've been here to watch your journey from essentially the beginning!!
19:04 rhythm is really brought out here. It's a percussion instrument at the same time almost. It adds in the same way tap dancing does.
Pianos are classified as a percussion instrument due to the hammer action. Even though it uses strings, it isn't a string instrument because the strings are hit, not plucked or strummed. Same reason why brass bells are percussion instruments and not part of the brass family, despite being made of brass.
@@cheeseboy847 It depends on the way pianos are being applied. Generally, pianos have more of a hand in complex, solo repertoire the way other string instruments do - but in different circumstances when they are used to create a background environment, they definitely are.
@@laurynk4209 I can see what you mean. It could be both due to it resembling a harp or lyre, but one played with percussive tools.
This was beautiful. Also for those wondering the virtual instrument sounds amazing y’all should definitely give it a shot.
Thank you brother 🙏🙏🥹
Very good
Yeah @Mattias Kranz you're basically Styropyro but with pianos 😆
A few ideas for improvements if you intend to feature this piano again:
If you add an inline circuit breaker, you can eliminate the problems with the resistors lighting up like that.
Also worth noting that your resistors could stand to either be higher resistance (ohms) or higher wattage.
More ohms means the caps will charge more slowly but will make the whole system a fair bit safer, higher wattage will allow the capacitors to charge faster without the risk of the resistors burning when the keys stick.
Might also be worth a single big heavy resistor on the input to limit the system as a whole, it won't use as much current on startup and when playing many keys at the same time or in quick succession.
Found the friend that encourages people to pursue obviously terrible ideas.
And I’m here for it.
On that last point, an inductor would be better suited to help with inrush, since it limits large changes in current draw
@@mars5train601 Good call, but I was looking mostly at the fact that the resistors were burning under sustained draw, the reduced inrush would be added bonus.
Perhaps both would be a good idea?
Reading your discussion about how to optimize this piano makes me wish this is pursued to make ready for market.
Thanks! Yes I was thinking of adding the a fuse in the circuit but I got lasy and just skipped it... For the resistance, I wanted the piano to charge faster than you could physically play the keys on this particular piano. You can play around 5-7 notes per second on this one. With the doubled up capacitors each capacitor charged to 3T in 200ms so anymore resistance and the charging would be too slow. The reason I didn’t want to make it ”more safe” was because the word safety and a project like this is not really compatible 😅even if we doubled the resistance, the resistors would start glowing like that either way when they fused. Only difference would be the piano would also charge less epic time. This video looked a bit spontaneous, but there was a few weeks of me an mechatronics engineer just discussing every possible way we could make this. Appreciate the ideas🙏
Electroboom warned me about this problem. However, during the hundreds of hits on the prototype the hammer never fused with the string even though I used the actual piano strings on it. That’s why I was so surprised by it doing it on the piano. But I guess it has something to do with either the strings not being under tension on the model or that the hammer action on this piano doesn’t have the same action/bounce as the action on this piano
(Really love when Tubers show a paragraph of important detail in mess than a microsecond.
i hope we see more of the piano teacher, shes so energetic i love it
"Now everything explodes..."
nice pfp
get her to play some
@@fily-jpg Thanks
.
the piano teacher's reactions are golden
Should I touch this?
NO, DO NOT TOUCH ANYTHING!
I haven’t even got to that bit yet, and I can already know I’m going to agree…
Some suggestions from an electronic designer:
- place one 330 Kiloohm resistor (2 watt) in parallel on each capacitor, this modification allow the self discharge of all capacitors within few minutes (for safety purposes!).
- place one 10 Ohm - 5W resistor in series with each hammer to limit the current (this should decrease the risk of a welded hammer)
- buy a variac to adjust the input voltage (to adjust the intensity of the sparks)
- put some grease on both the hammer and the cord (to decrease the risk of welding)
- replace the 270 Ohm resistors with 1000 Ohm - 20W resistors (or two 2200 Ohm - 10W in parallel) and place them few millimeters above the board to avoid burns issues
- have fun! 🙂
Also install a small isolation transformer to prevent the entire metalwork of the piano from becoming live.
@@eDoc2020 he mentioned it
Also, don't let children around this piano
@@lilyofluck371 Or adults. Or pets
@@jimi-w or the monsters under your bed
You had an idea, and despite every obstacle and the fact that you had extremely little relevant experience, you went out and did it anyway. Absolutely incredible. You're a true youtube hero
When you play this instrument not only is it an impressive sight to see, but it's like you're playing 2 instruments at once!
Piano and some electric percussion instrument!
Fun fact, a piano IS a percussion instrument!
8:25 And that is the moment a new electroboom has been born
I'm pretty sure he just awakened something within him.
@@Kyriakos703 the only thing i know awakaned inside him were his pain receptors
5:24 was the moment he stepped on the path of no return
@@Kyriakos703 He definitely just discovered something about himself. 🤣
I remember when you first had to hire pianists and people to view your crazy builds, now you get them volunteering to try them out!
You have come a long way Mattias!
I'm an electrical engineer. It is hunting me to watch what you're doing to the instrument, but this is exactly the piano to play some AC\DC. Nice project. I'm impressed you didn't get (much) electrified. Cheers
You need to make an album. Mattias Krantz and his electric piano, featuring such pieces as "Electric Blue Danube", "Total Eclipse of the Spark", "Theme to The Legend of BZZZelda", and the immortal classic, "Current Flows in You". The sales would be shocking.
the amount of anxiety this video gave me is unreal, but it's such a cool piano and I'm glad you were able to make it fairly safely!
I agree 100% hahah. I’m not sure if it was very safely 😅 Thank you!
There are 3 types of sounds in this:
1. The sound of the strings (the actual piano sound)
2. The mechanical sound of the metal hitting metal
3. The electricity sound of the sparcs
The level of creativity it's really huge here. This guy is a combination of art, creativity, science, engineering, curiosity, bravery and ambition. I really hope he doesn't get decouraged ever because his ideas can be weird or too hard to make them. There's nothing wrong with not knowing how to something, what he proves here amongst other things is that you'll never know what you can do if don't try it. It's fun to do crazy things or inventions, it doesn't always matter the practical aplicability. He deserves more subscribers, he makes very good content, he works very much, he's content is entartaining and informativ and he spends a lot of money to make the content. Much apreciation from me 😊
At least @Electroboom is there to help because he will make sure no one will die, but there will be pain.
17:36 is so beautiful. The music and the sparks lighting up his face and twinkling in his eyes.
what song is this?
i need to know what's this song. I just love it
@@brandonma5565 Here is the song Fabrizio Paterlini-Rue des trois frères
Yeah it's like a movie scene
You need a heatsink for each resistor and pair of caps. That will ensure they don't overheat and burn out.
This is spectacularly insane! The world would be such a dull place without people like this and their ideas!
The percussion from the sparks was a really cool addition.
I wish you could hear them IRL haha. The peaks of the audio gets so limited here. I was seriously suprised how loud it was, it was really like having fireworks pop just in front of you!
That's very interesting! The sparks add some kind of a percussion to your playing!
Would definitely be fun to see it made a digital instrument!
I thought the same when I heard it!
Your piano lesson is probably going so great! Your playing is so good like there is a spark and electricness to your playing.
This was very enjoyable to watch. I love seeing the process, and for someone who has never worked with electricity, wow, very impressed with what you did. And you sense of humor or calm demeanor is very engaging.
The chaotic nature of the project itself and the off-screen meticulous planning really comes through. I’m equal parts terrified and curious about making my own
Let's call it an electric spark piano. If you give it to a really talented musician, you know like the kind that make their own musical timeless pieces, I am sure that person would be able to produce music that benefits from the sparks.
spark gap piano?
Invite Martin from Wintergatan! I think it would fit his style of music!
And then there was one
Honestly I'm kind of surprised that you didn't end up turning the harp of the piano into a giant electromagnet
Correction, he didn't RECORD turning the harp into a particle accelerator
That would be awesome to watch at a concert!
As an IT student watching you making your first electronic project with electric charges is hilarious :D love it !
The most dangerous thing here, is hooking up the whole circuit directly to the mains.
If you want to use this in the future as well, a isolation transformer is highly advisable! (read; mandatory!)
Without it, it can actually be a lot more dangerous than just the high voltage itself. ☝
Besides that, very cool idea! 😎👍
We discussed this a lot while making the project and I spent many days reading a bout isolation transformers. But I was not convinced they were a good idea. I get that I could pretty much touch the piano without getting chocked. But IF i closed the circuit with two hands, I would die because there would be no cgfi working anymore. Compared to the house that has such a fast cgfi that I would only get a terrible chock. But now when I think about it, I wonder if cgfi even worked for this piano 🤔🤔
@@Mattiaskrantz The answer is no, it wouldn't, at least not for the entire circuit. You're charging caps, then discharging them, so the only place where GFCI would help is before the caps.
@@Mattiaskrantz you can probably wire one or many GFCIs directly inside your electric circuit.
@@Mattiaskrantz Isolating the circuit from the mains has a different purpose, and is an absolute mandatory requirement from CE or UL safety standards (for good reasons!), unless you can double isolate the circuit (like LED bulbs, or like coffee machines etc). The simplest (but definitely not complete) explanation, all has to to with sudden peaks (called transients) on the mains that can come from other devices (like appliances). These transients can be very high and are enough to fry you as well as a part of the circuit in an instance. We are talking about a couple of thousands of volts.
A CGFI does not protect you from those transients. Btw, in Europe those don't even exists, and are often called RCBO. They basically detect the imbalance between live and neutral. Which won't help much in some situations, when the danger happens on the secondary side of the circuit. For that reason most homes in at least Europe have a ground breaker instead. I am not a fan of any CGFI or RCBO solution at all, but technically they are allowed within standards.
Speaking of breakers, maybe I missed it, but the absolute bare minimum protection is always a fuse.
Again, it think it's a really fun project. But as a professional electronics engineer with experience in HV circuits, I would never work on non-isolated circuits (even with low voltage circuits). I don't know the exact power of this whole circuit, but proper isolation transformers aren't that expensive. In this case CGFI or RCBO won't protect you, since all the stuff happens on the secondary side anyway (after the bridge rectifier) while running the risk of having serious lethal transients coming from the mains grid.
@@p_mouse8676 Aah ok I think I get what you’re saying! But it makes me think… like my logic was that, a piano like this thinking about safety was no point. Since if I touch the let’s say three hammers by accident I get a discharge of 6st 100uf capacitors at 330V maybe even two times before I’m able to react. I would pretty much not survive that? Maybe. So I’m thinking the first step would probably be to put a plexiglass in the front of the piano. The mainscircuit was for the most part a bit harder to access at least by accident. But ofc, this project is objectively a terrible idea!
Thanks for the advice I’ll print and read it in more detail later 🙏🙏
16:23 "Now that I think about... no, why start thinking now"
I love you man :D
I think it's really really awesome that electroboom helped with this. He's awesome and so are you!
I didn't think you could go further once you put those hammers on the piano, but after this I know you can do much more! I wonder what kind of crazy project you will bring us next
A nuke inside the piano.
This is just awesome! As someone who is both a piano player and studying electronics this makes me happy! :D I'm actually curious if this made you more familiar with basics of electronics like reading wiring diagrams, how each component works and what it does and so on?
Thank you! Yes definitely. Well not this project so much, because it all went so smoothly. But a longside this I was working on a tesla coil piano and I spelt many days reading electronic books to problem solve. I might talk about that next project:D and good luck with your studying, electronics was actually really fun
what I love about this channel is it's basically A music channel slowly becoming a maker one
That performance was electrifying. Bravo!
I think you could tune the sparks like a music Tesla coil, but that would be quite complicated
I’ve worked on that for months actually!
At 13:38 the resistor was glowing because one of the hammer was continuously touching one of the string (hammer got welded to the string) as a result continuous flow of the current occured and heated the resistor enough to glow...
Anyways great project...!!👍
Of all the videos I’ve seen in TH-cam, never have I ever thought that I’d see a collab between a pianist, and an electrician (who’s also known for blowing things up)
This is the most ingenious and beautiful thing I have seen lately! You are a legend, my friend. All piano concerts should be done like that from now on! Haha
I was freaking out so much about how much of a fire hazard this is, to have a mini lightning strike in a chamber of wood, and then he recommended taking it out in the woods so he could play outside, and I just died inside.
YEP.......
Yeah this was 100% a fire hazard.
@@Mattiaskrantz lol
The sparks almost act as percussion to the piano
18:15 Yeah, it's allways a smart idea to blow air at a glowing hot thing, thats exactly how you start a fire :D :D :D :D
It's both beautiful and terrifying at the same time.