(9:38) this spoon potentiometer is one of the best physics demonstrations ever!! You can see the wire getting hotter when there's less resistance, and you can conclude that more current flows through
sure ohms law does work here but for a given temperature. A wire of a given length will have a specific resistance and this resistance is a function of temperature so a thermal runaway will result in resistance runaway till the wire breaks.
As an industrial electrician i love the way that im still entertained by your antics even though I can see whats about to happen. If these vids were around 25 years ago i would have been doing all this in my teens. Great content
I love the fact that when Medhi high fives his daughter, it makes the same sound as a fuse popping. Which in turn causes him to react with the same scream he would make if a fuse had blown. Either coincidence or an Easter egg, I love it.
i think neodymium is much more resistive than copper it will heat up much more especially in the use case of this video with high current and hot stuff around rechargeable batteries or just batteries in general isnt a good idea
If you pass current through the casing of those magnets, be aware of the heat that this current would generate, and make sure that the magnets won't reach their Curie temperature, at which they'll lose their magnetic property. Best of luck to you.
@@ozonesama Oh neat, I didn't know about that! So how gradual is the degradation before that point? I guess what I'm asking is if magnets are mostly fine until a certain threshold and only tend to stop working above that point, or if long term low grade heat will decrease the effectiveness a lot too?
@@idontwantahandlethough It depends on the materials involved, I guess? I saw in that video ( th-cam.com/video/rOgGJaO5C00/w-d-xo.html ) that Nickel could rapidly switch back-and-forth between ferromagnetic and non-ferromagnetic, and if you know how MiniDiscs used to record data, it used a laser heat source, so it can be a very quick process, once that material's Curie temperature is reached. If you stay quite bellow that temperature, I don't think that, even by repeated prolonged exposure, you'd loose magnetism.
If you watch his videos from the perspective that everything that happens is intentional, (which I'm pretty sure is the case) you'll realize that Mehdi is a legitimate genius. Seriously.
saw this youtube short the other day: how to make a 300W inverter. Step 1: make a case out of plastic Step 2: add electrical socket Step 3: insert 300W inverter circuit board into case Step 4: wire to electrical socket
here i thought he would finally speak time travel and fringe like talking, since we know he watched it in 2000's era, but nope, once again no time travel talk from someone who could... lol
I hope you know you're the inspiration I needed to go back to school and learn to be an electrical engineer. Your work is awesome, and your affect on people is even greater. Thank you for the entertainment and education you continue to provide!
Hi Mehdi, the foam cutter you built is a very useful tool, yesterday I tried to build one at home using a car booster that outputs 4 amps of current and I ended up with a blown fuse ahah However I tried again with a diffent DC power supply and it worked!!! Keep making videos like these where we can learn a lot of things from broken tools
9:48 - Mehdi just invented a hair dryer. It's like that meme: Thinking quickly, Dave constructs a homemade megaphone using only some string, a squirrel, and a megaphone.
A mild mannered engineer accidentally electrocutes himself one too many times? We are basically watching an extended supervillain origin story. I’m here for it.
A story that has been going on since, what, 2012? I forgot how long Electroboom has been making videos, nor I cant remember when was the ESD video was. Point is, it has been a long time (or short depending on yoir standards)
You forgot to list the mica paper among the interesting parts a broken hair dryer has. The mica can resist temperatures well over 200 °C and is electrically insulating. This combination makes special enough to make noteworthy. If you ever need a structural element in your heater design, mica is a good choice.
@@itzfuazz4198 This is an issue with all refractory materials, so it's a given. From silica based bricks you get silicosis. Famously, asbestos causes asbestosis. Refractory mortar is acidic and burns you lungs and eyes. Ceramic wool is carcinogenic. And so and and so forth. If you're engaged in this kind of hobby, it's good practice to inform yourself of material hazards. I, for one, think that it'd been safer for Mehdi to make his foam cutter with the mica. What kind of plastic is that clamp made of? Does it gas out formaldehyde when it's getting burned by the hot wire? You see, it's easy to overdo it with the safety cautions with just about any material. Even water can be toxic, if you drink like 3 gallons of it at once. And people have done it.
@@JoshuaNorton The wire will conduct heat slowly to its outer ends wrapped through the plastic holes but it isn't heated by current farther out than the leads are attached. But yeah, I'd get a hacksaw frame and come up with some kind of insulator to mount the wire onto it with.
Real talk im a grown adult and even I want to buy and put together a couple things from kiwico. They may be for kids but ngl it looks really fun and I love science stuff.
This man is a fantastic teacher. Both showing practical elements of electricity as well as demonstrating what can go WRONG in a relatively safe manner. He knows what he’s doing.
I fought wild fire for years.... I once heard a reporter asking another fire fighter a question about the state of the fire. The fire fighter replied: "Well, you see, the thing is... Trees are wood. And wood burns." Then he just turned around and walked away. The look on that ladies face was priceless... So good.
The "some fluid dynamic effect" may be the Venturi effect, increasing fluid flow speed drops the pressure , lower pressure in the tube lets atmospheric pressure outside the tube force the smoke into it...then again what do I know, I'm also an electrical engineer ;)
I'm not sure about the technical defintion of the venturi affect, or anything, but I can say for sure the root cause is the boundary conditions of the tubes. At the point where the inner tube discharges into the outer tube, you have fast moving inside flow, butting up against slow moving outside flow. The velocity of the flow can't change instantly, so you have a gradient across the edge, so they outside cannot be zero, it must have some greater-than-zero flow rate to satisfy the boundary conditions. Also, fast moving air has an inherently lower pressure, which can also work to 'pull' the air in through the outside tube. These 2 ways of looking at this could be mathematically identical, they are the same thing from 2 perspectives, or they may both share some portion of the force for the flow.
"Sucking" device based on a Venturi effect is called aspirator or vacuum ejector, or simply ejector. For example sandblasting machines suck sand just like that.
In prison in the 1990s I once harvested nichrome wire from a wirewound resistor from a broken CRT television. Then used the nichrome wire to build a soldering iron. Then I could easily soldier televisions I was repairing. 99% of the time when the televisions broke it was an electrolytic capacitor in the vertical or horizontal deflection circuits. You could touch a working capacitor to the ones on the circuit board without removing the old ones and when you found the right one the picture would work properly. Then remove and replace the bad capacitor. This could be done without soldering, but then sometimes the picture would go out again and the owner would have to jiggle the television. After awhile jiggling would not fix the problem. Soldering the capacitors in place worked much better. I usually charged 3 bags of coffee, about $8 to fix another inmate's television. Another benefit was it provided me an extra unspoken level of protection. Since I was the only person who could repair electronics in my housing unit, mostly televisions, radios, and headphones, the other inmates didn't want anything to happen to me. Also I gained some trust and respect from other inmates since this was 100% illegal, but the guards never found any of my parts or tools. I had a bag of capacitors, a hex wrench to remove the bolts to take apart the televisions, and the previously mentioned soldering iron. It also helped that I weighed 235 pounds solid muscle from lifting weights 6 days a week.
You can make a foam cutter with a transformer from a old boom box, a dimmer switch to control temp. And I used kanthal wire for the cutter. I made a top out of some 2x4 and ply wood with and a brace to hold the wires with pvc. Used some other minor parts (screws and such). Works great for making foam forms to do aluminum casting
7:30 -The fluid dynamic effect is: if a Fluid gains kinetic energy, it must lose pressure...so the smoke is "pushed" by the air at atmospheric pressure into the tube, which is at a lower pressure due to the airflow inside.
Would love to see a series of videos on CRTs. I'm interested in building a CRT from scratch. While I've researched the topic I would love to have more information on how to control the beam, how to determine the voltages needed for deflection, what temperatures are required for the heater, etc... You do such an excellent job of explaining things that a video or series of videos from you would be beneficial!
That foam cutter looks extremely interesting as someone who builds RC foamies. The typical storebought foam cutters are usually a rod that makes it extremely hard to do anything but straight cuts cleanly.
Hi, ElectroBoom, as a electronics student, videos like this really helps me to know what I can do with my electronic scraps here in my home. Great video btw
just remember to never go above 60V DC until you've learned to work safely with electronics. Over 60VDC and over 120VAC can kill you if you get stuck/touch them.
@@yutub561 ah, I always do projects (especially Arduino related) but sometimes software exhausted me a lot, videos like this helps me to not think too much about heavy electronics stuff. Just a light and slightly funny video.
@@Lbnxd as long as your fuseboard is up to date, you'd struggle to set your house on fire anyway, unless you grossly mismatched load/wire gauge/fuses. "Electronics student" implies you're, like... you know. novice. don't use more than 3 wagos per cable run or you'll cause a fire because contact resistance kthxbye
sometimes when the water heater bill not working, I use it as a water heater after I fill the bath and get in. Honestly great and cheap. You should definitely try it!
Mehdi, I love how you take things apart to see how they work. I feel like that kind of curiosity is something we all need to embrace and encourage, particularly among kids.
Years ago I repaired the fan speed control resistor in my 1985 Honda with some surplus nichrome wire I had salvaged from some appliance that died. The fan speed had two open wound resistors wired in series . one resistor measure .25 ohms and the other .50 ohms. I was able to make new resistors and replace the two broken ones. I wound the nichrome wire around a nail then slid it off and opened the coil so the wire didn't short out on itself. Worked like a charm. And this is why I salvage anything that could come in handy some day.
Once you’ve tuned your power for your engraver, you can just make a battery pack with a switch! And if you know you can use different settings with different materials, you could use a pot or microcontroller for variable settings [the MCU option would be better for many variable options or if you wanted power monitoring too]
I made a Silver melting forge out of a trashcan and a Hair Drier. strong enough to mix Brass, Melt Silver... Cant quite get gold and Copper to stay molten but made me lots of pretty aluminum sodacan bars and brass casts
"Some fluid dynamic effect" is called "entrainment". It's demonstrated nicely with a Dyson fan. These things are ridiculously expensive though, and I'm not sure why, because they're also highly "planned obsolescent". I know this because I found one in the trash and fixed it. Basically it is made in such a way that a user couldn't clean out air filters when they got dirty. The air flow is eventually reduced to near zero and then it hits the trash can. In order for me to get to air filters I had to un-solder the 12 wires going to the control PCB and solder them back on after I removed the old filters. I didn't bother replacing them, - as they were made from foam (!) I mean you charge in excess of $400 for a fan with air filtration and you're too cheap to put a decent HEPA filter in it! Now it's just a compressor powered fan (and it was always just a fan, foam that mattresses are stuffed with is no air filter. So, if you're planning on wasting your hard earned $ on a Dyson fan, - now you know what kind of environmentally damaging SCAM you're paying for in order to dazzle your friends with a fan that supposedly has no blades (yeah right, that compressor inside is bellows-operated by little elves) . You're welcome. 😉
I just love how ElectroBOOM is not only an amazing electrician and content creator, he also seems like such a lovely father and has fun with his family while still entertaining millions around the world! big ups to the one and only!!!
I've only stumbled onto your video's two days ago and i've not been able to stop watching. thank you, you have made me want to expand my mind and learn something new. thanks again made my 41st birthday today more interesting
You can also make a light bulb out of the filament too (well maybe an alert light bult) and it'll help keep you items of interest warm too.... You can make an incubator heater from it too.
Dear mehdi .. I am writing to you from Italy 🇮🇹 I have been following you for years now and every time when I see your videos I laugh out loud .. In Italy with your facial expressions your mimicry you could have been a comedian and success was guaranteed .. Come to Italy to visit us ..
@@alessandroapicella6328 nooooooo credo siamo in tanti.. 😂 Cmq tu che sei italiano sai benissimo che mehdi in italia poteva essere il nuovo alvaro vitali è troppo troppo troppo divertente.. Ha proprio la mimica facciale del comico..
I made a smoke generator with hairdryer nichrome wire wrapped around a piece of thick wick material which was soaked in mineral oil. It creates a thick white smoke for use in diagnosing leaks.
That thermal breaker operates similarly to a flame rollout on a gas furnace, except the flame rollout has to be manually reset, and if it’s a rollout, you need to check for issues with the flue and/or a cracked heat exchanger among other potential deeper problems.
@crazysaturn0805 Or just remove the main power supply and stick straight 110v or 240v on the board. It'll protect your outlet from accidental activation and creates bonus forbidden fog too and fireworks just for fun. Lol
I would personally use my hairdryer's heating element as a seat warmer like you first did it in your seat warmer video
I waited for a few years for him to light his ass on fire. It did not disappoint :)
Dont forget the hot glue
its a very safe and useful DIY. I agree with this choice
@@canonip3000 ah lots of poisonous gasses
Man your Bam bam will Love the fire 🔥
(9:38) this spoon potentiometer is one of the best physics demonstrations ever!! You can see the wire getting hotter when there's less resistance, and you can conclude that more current flows through
@koiun dwrru He's actually such a genius, making a hairdryer from scratch so that the viewers get an "aha!" moment, like I had.
sure ohms law does work here but for a given temperature. A wire of a given length will have a specific resistance and this resistance is a function of temperature so a thermal runaway will result in resistance runaway till the wire breaks.
@@ulrichraymond8372 the less resistance by heating is not that much to make it run away.
@@TheFearedTurtle das a bot
That foam cutter looks insanely useful, the "official" ones are usually pretty expensive.
Also, "insanely useful" seems like a bit of a stretch, lol. I can't think of a single time I ever needed to cut squiggly lines into a piece of foam
@@PimpedKoalas you use it to sculpt foam for all kinds of things. Not just for drawing squiggly lines in things.
@@PimpedKoalas >not useful for you >not useful for anyone else. that's how the world works right?
@chuggs I mean if you can burn your house down with 2 AA batteries you probably shouldn't touch anything that's using electricity
Steel wool and a 9v is often used as a firestarter btw
As an industrial electrician i love the way that im still entertained by your antics even though I can see whats about to happen.
If these vids were around 25 years ago i would have been doing all this in my teens.
Great content
Hahaha that's the magic in it, I know he is going to get shocked but it still makes me laugh so much.
I love the fact that when Medhi high fives his daughter, it makes the same sound as a fuse popping. Which in turn causes him to react with the same scream he would make if a fuse had blown. Either coincidence or an Easter egg, I love it.
PTSD
11:40 is the time
*mehdi
No, it’s probably because she hit him too hard
@@thegrumpydino67nobody cares
An Electroboom and ElectroCute collab will always be wholesome. Puts a smile on my face every dang time
Yeah and same
electrocute? yikes
@@Stickers2Go That's... That's what Electroboom calls her
@@Stickers2Go surely a new viewer
@@Stickers2Go welcome to the family
The magnet connecting batteries trick blew my mind completely, I was thinking how to get rid of battery holders for a project some time ago
i think neodymium is much more resistive than copper
it will heat up much more especially in the use case of this video with high current
and hot stuff around rechargeable batteries or just batteries in general isnt a good idea
If you pass current through the casing of those magnets, be aware of the heat that this current would generate, and make sure that the magnets won't reach their Curie temperature, at which they'll lose their magnetic property. Best of luck to you.
not a great idea for a long time, magnets lose their magneticity when exposed to heat over time
@@ozonesama Oh neat, I didn't know about that! So how gradual is the degradation before that point? I guess what I'm asking is if magnets are mostly fine until a certain threshold and only tend to stop working above that point, or if long term low grade heat will decrease the effectiveness a lot too?
@@idontwantahandlethough It depends on the materials involved, I guess? I saw in that video ( th-cam.com/video/rOgGJaO5C00/w-d-xo.html ) that Nickel could rapidly switch back-and-forth between ferromagnetic and non-ferromagnetic, and if you know how MiniDiscs used to record data, it used a laser heat source, so it can be a very quick process, once that material's Curie temperature is reached. If you stay quite bellow that temperature, I don't think that, even by repeated prolonged exposure, you'd loose magnetism.
"Wood is not fire resistant."
-ElectroBOOM, 2022
What does he know? He's not a firefighter.
Do you know?
top 10 things said after burning your house
I think he made an electric lighter 🤣🤣🤣
bro found out what other physicists couldnt
"wood is not fire resistant" I love learning new things from Electroboom .
lol 100 likes but no comments weird
If you watch his videos from the perspective that everything that happens is intentional, (which I'm pretty sure is the case) you'll realize that Mehdi is a legitimate genius. Seriously.
Of course he's a genius, he gets everything he wants to work the way he wants
@@sayori3939 if he wants to explode he will explode
Everything that happens is as planned its not plausible for him not to expect anything different that want he shows.
Everything but the Jacobs Ladder falling on him.
This man has everything planned out before it even happens, your birth included
"I'll make a hair dryer using only a potentiometer, a spoon, and a hair dryer"
You forgot: a potentiometer made out of a hairdryer...
@@blahorgaslisk7763 Hopefully the spoon is not harvested from a hairdryer
saw this youtube short the other day: how to make a 300W inverter.
Step 1: make a case out of plastic
Step 2: add electrical socket
Step 3: insert 300W inverter circuit board into case
Step 4: wire to electrical socket
1y9
169
normal people: living day to day.
mehdi: surviving from video to video.
( I know he is a professional and is mostly safe but still....)
mostly
Yeah emphasis on "mostly", he wasn't joking when he said he really almost kicked the bucket with his Jacob's ladder incident...
@@cheaterman49 yeah I remember that one. Every time there is a large gap between videos I think something bad might have happened.
Props to Mehdi for showing how to do things the wrong way first so that we learn *exactly* what happens when you do it wrong.
@@cheaterman49 I mean, when you get professional in something you can safely mess with it even if there's no safety involved
Can we all take a moment to appreciate the Heated Entertainment electroboom has given us. I love it
It takes a lot of Passion and Skill to make a scripted Video looking this random and improvised!
No. We can't.
🥵
This is what I have.
Take it or leave it.
heated (literally red hot heating elements)
here i thought he would finally speak time travel and fringe like talking, since we know he watched it in 2000's era, but nope, once again no time travel talk from someone who could... lol
I hope you know you're the inspiration I needed to go back to school and learn to be an electrical engineer. Your work is awesome, and your affect on people is even greater. Thank you for the entertainment and education you continue to provide!
Nice!
(But how would he know that…? 🤔)
Hi Mehdi, the foam cutter you built is a very useful tool, yesterday I tried to build one at home using a car booster that outputs 4 amps of current and I ended up with a blown fuse ahah
However I tried again with a diffent DC power supply and it worked!!!
Keep making videos like these where we can learn a lot of things from broken tools
9:48 - Mehdi just invented a hair dryer. It's like that meme: Thinking quickly, Dave constructs a homemade megaphone using only some string, a squirrel, and a megaphone.
Wow! A Dave the Barbarian reference in the wild!
A mild mannered engineer accidentally electrocutes himself one too many times? We are basically watching an extended supervillain origin story.
I’m here for it.
He does also burn himself quite a bit
He does this on purpose. Its more entertaining
A story that has been going on since, what, 2012? I forgot how long Electroboom has been making videos, nor I cant remember when was the ESD video was. Point is, it has been a long time (or short depending on yoir standards)
Doncha first gotta have an ScD or PhD in Mad Science to be a supervillain?
@@stickinthemud23 How do you think Mehdi got to Canada from Iran?
You forgot to list the mica paper among the interesting parts a broken hair dryer has. The mica can resist temperatures well over 200 °C and is electrically insulating. This combination makes special enough to make noteworthy. If you ever need a structural element in your heater design, mica is a good choice.
It's also really healthy and good to inhale!
@@itzfuazz4198 really?
@@noobkiller9478 i belive that was called irony
@@itzfuazz4198 This is an issue with all refractory materials, so it's a given. From silica based bricks you get silicosis. Famously, asbestos causes asbestosis. Refractory mortar is acidic and burns you lungs and eyes. Ceramic wool is carcinogenic. And so and and so forth. If you're engaged in this kind of hobby, it's good practice to inform yourself of material hazards.
I, for one, think that it'd been safer for Mehdi to make his foam cutter with the mica. What kind of plastic is that clamp made of? Does it gas out formaldehyde when it's getting burned by the hot wire?
You see, it's easy to overdo it with the safety cautions with just about any material. Even water can be toxic, if you drink like 3 gallons of it at once. And people have done it.
@@JoshuaNorton The wire will conduct heat slowly to its outer ends wrapped through the plastic holes but it isn't heated by current farther out than the leads are attached.
But yeah, I'd get a hacksaw frame and come up with some kind of insulator to mount the wire onto it with.
Real talk im a grown adult and even I want to buy and put together a couple things from kiwico. They may be for kids but ngl it looks really fun and I love science stuff.
Snap Circuits by Elenco is made for 8 years of age and up, Snap Circuits Jr. for 5+, and even teens can get a kick out of it.
@@coastersaga obvious ad is obvious
@@iwanttwoscoops He could get Snap Circuits for his daughter.
This man is a fantastic teacher. Both showing practical elements of electricity as well as demonstrating what can go WRONG in a relatively safe manner.
He knows what he’s doing.
Perfect cut at 5:46
Make it sharpers
10:36 facial expressions this man is capable are simply astounding
Electrocute is slowly learning from the best already.. "of course, I can make everything"
You too could do this if you electrocuted yourself every day 🤣
10:33
I fought wild fire for years....
I once heard a reporter asking another fire fighter a question about the state of the fire. The fire fighter replied: "Well, you see, the thing is... Trees are wood. And wood burns." Then he just turned around and walked away. The look on that ladies face was priceless... So good.
Those who can, do.
Those who can't, teach.
Those who can neither do nor teach, become reporters.
Who asked
@@rogerrabbit80 Nah, those who can't do or teacher become... _managers!_
@@AppleGameification k
@@AppleGameification I ASKED
3:36 loved the piano
Showing how to make a potentiometer with using a spoon was actually quite helpful in understanding the concept! Thank you very much.
I quite like the idea of a neo-mehdi-um magnet. Can't quite figure out if it would be flame and shock resistant, or prone to exploding though.
4:48 you've just made an electric match!!
Torch starter
The "some fluid dynamic effect" may be the Venturi effect, increasing fluid flow speed drops the pressure , lower pressure in the tube lets atmospheric pressure outside the tube force the smoke into it...then again what do I know, I'm also an electrical engineer ;)
Hmm i see, venturi equation gave the efflux value of fluids flowing out of an orifice... I reckon it is the king Bernoulli itself
But then everything else is developed on Bernoulli's theorem so may be venturi would be more precise?
I'm not sure about the technical defintion of the venturi affect, or anything, but I can say for sure the root cause is the boundary conditions of the tubes. At the point where the inner tube discharges into the outer tube, you have fast moving inside flow, butting up against slow moving outside flow. The velocity of the flow can't change instantly, so you have a gradient across the edge, so they outside cannot be zero, it must have some greater-than-zero flow rate to satisfy the boundary conditions. Also, fast moving air has an inherently lower pressure, which can also work to 'pull' the air in through the outside tube. These 2 ways of looking at this could be mathematically identical, they are the same thing from 2 perspectives, or they may both share some portion of the force for the flow.
"Sucking" device based on a Venturi effect is called aspirator or vacuum ejector, or simply ejector. For example sandblasting machines suck sand just like that.
The real five minute crafts.
Twelve minutes Three second cracfts
Useful 5 mins craft
In prison in the 1990s I once harvested nichrome wire from a wirewound resistor from a broken CRT television. Then used the nichrome wire to build a soldering iron. Then I could easily soldier televisions I was repairing. 99% of the time when the televisions broke it was an electrolytic capacitor in the vertical or horizontal deflection circuits. You could touch a working capacitor to the ones on the circuit board without removing the old ones and when you found the right one the picture would work properly. Then remove and replace the bad capacitor. This could be done without soldering, but then sometimes the picture would go out again and the owner would have to jiggle the television. After awhile jiggling would not fix the problem. Soldering the capacitors in place worked much better. I usually charged 3 bags of coffee, about $8 to fix another inmate's television.
Another benefit was it provided me an extra unspoken level of protection. Since I was the only person who could repair electronics in my housing unit, mostly televisions, radios, and headphones, the other inmates didn't want anything to happen to me. Also I gained some trust and respect from other inmates since this was 100% illegal, but the guards never found any of my parts or tools. I had a bag of capacitors, a hex wrench to remove the bolts to take apart the televisions, and the previously mentioned soldering iron. It also helped that I weighed 235 pounds solid muscle from lifting weights 6 days a week.
Can’t wait to try my new hair cutting 💇♂️ foam dryer 👌
could be useful in your Liberty costume, a little touch up here and there ...
9:08 Mehdi is the type of guy to say “stop it” to a fire
Edit: 1 MORE LIKE!!!
Among other ways of trying to keep it under control, I might add.
Well there is also a guy saying stop it to fireworks/firecrackers
And it stops.
Did it :)
It is gone
4:36 A Fire Resistant item, "Wooden Stick" 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
🤣🤣
🤣🤣
I swear I have never learned and laughed at the same time so much in my life. I love this channel
You can make a foam cutter with a transformer from a old boom box, a dimmer switch to control temp. And I used kanthal wire for the cutter. I made a top out of some 2x4 and ply wood with and a brace to hold the wires with pvc. Used some other minor parts (screws and such). Works great for making foam forms to do aluminum casting
7:30 -The fluid dynamic effect is: if a Fluid gains kinetic energy, it must lose pressure...so the smoke is "pushed" by the air at atmospheric pressure into the tube, which is at a lower pressure due to the airflow inside.
11:38 it sounds like a High Five on High Voltage
Would love to see a series of videos on CRTs. I'm interested in building a CRT from scratch. While I've researched the topic I would love to have more information on how to control the beam, how to determine the voltages needed for deflection, what temperatures are required for the heater, etc... You do such an excellent job of explaining things that a video or series of videos from you would be beneficial!
There is a guy on TH-cam who made his own clock crt, maybe check out / comment on his channel might point you in the right direction
The FULL BRIDGE RECTIFIER!!!! It's just amazing...
That foam cutter looks extremely interesting as someone who builds RC foamies. The typical storebought foam cutters are usually a rod that makes it extremely hard to do anything but straight cuts cleanly.
That's what I was thinking
Hi, ElectroBoom, as a electronics student, videos like this really helps me to know what I can do with my electronic scraps here in my home. Great video btw
just remember to never go above 60V DC until you've learned to work safely with electronics. Over 60VDC and over 120VAC can kill you if you get stuck/touch them.
You have to be an "electronics" student to be helped but this video?
@@yutub561 ah, I always do projects (especially Arduino related) but sometimes software exhausted me a lot, videos like this helps me to not think too much about heavy electronics stuff.
Just a light and slightly funny video.
@@dimitar4y yeah mate, don't worry haha. I even do electrical wiring in my home. safety first of course.
@@Lbnxd as long as your fuseboard is up to date, you'd struggle to set your house on fire anyway, unless you grossly mismatched load/wire gauge/fuses. "Electronics student" implies you're, like... you know. novice.
don't use more than 3 wagos per cable run or you'll cause a fire because contact resistance kthxbye
Hoo boy, still remember when ElectroCute was just a wee toddler.
We'll be witnessing her growing up at this rate
I'm in shambles, how fucking long have I been subscribed for lol
His electric guitar is still my favourite.
In high school, I tried making foam cutter without adding resistor.
It turned into lightbulb.
sometimes when the water heater bill not working, I use it as a water heater after I fill the bath and get in. Honestly great and cheap. You should definitely try it!
“But the tip of this thing is a little too wide”
*Continues to touch the engraver*
😂😂💀
This guy is a genius teaching applicable electronics with comedy and something everybody has at home making it seem easy enough.
10:47 Ah yes 100 year old children just a normal day on earth.
Mehdi, I love how you take things apart to see how they work. I feel like that kind of curiosity is something we all need to embrace and encourage, particularly among kids.
Years ago I repaired the fan speed control resistor in my 1985 Honda with some surplus nichrome wire I had salvaged from some appliance that died. The fan speed had two open wound resistors wired in series . one resistor measure .25 ohms and the other .50 ohms. I was able to make new resistors and replace the two broken ones. I wound the nichrome wire around a nail then slid it off and opened the coil so the wire didn't short out on itself. Worked like a charm. And this is why I salvage anything that could come in handy some day.
Once you’ve tuned your power for your engraver, you can just make a battery pack with a switch! And if you know you can use different settings with different materials, you could use a pot or microcontroller for variable settings [the MCU option would be better for many variable options or if you wanted power monitoring too]
Used to watch him years ago, he never disappointed me. Keep up the great content!
It’s shocking that he can still make good content after all these years.
Who is "him"
You *used* to watch him?! So today you didn't watch? Just commented?!
@@windowsxpmemesandstufflol shocking, you say?
@@itskoby the video ideas just struck him all these years
I'm sorry that "Suck Off" joke was so funny I have no idea what exploded at 6:35, rewinding! ❤️
I love how ElectroBoom always sees a positive side of a failed experiment
He also sees the grounded side
I made a Silver melting forge out of a trashcan and a Hair Drier.
strong enough to mix Brass, Melt Silver... Cant quite get gold and Copper to stay molten but made me lots of pretty aluminum sodacan bars and brass casts
"Some fluid dynamic effect" is called "entrainment". It's demonstrated nicely with a Dyson fan. These things are ridiculously expensive though, and I'm not sure why, because they're also highly "planned obsolescent". I know this because I found one in the trash and fixed it. Basically it is made in such a way that a user couldn't clean out air filters when they got dirty. The air flow is eventually reduced to near zero and then it hits the trash can. In order for me to get to air filters I had to un-solder the 12 wires going to the control PCB and solder them back on after I removed the old filters. I didn't bother replacing them, - as they were made from foam (!) I mean you charge in excess of $400 for a fan with air filtration and you're too cheap to put a decent HEPA filter in it! Now it's just a compressor powered fan (and it was always just a fan, foam that mattresses are stuffed with is no air filter. So, if you're planning on wasting your hard earned $ on a Dyson fan, - now you know what kind of environmentally damaging SCAM you're paying for in order to dazzle your friends with a fan that supposedly has no blades (yeah right, that compressor inside is bellows-operated by little elves) . You're welcome. 😉
The "HA! That's my daughter!" REALLY MADE ME LAUGH HAHAHH she's just like you! XD
6:05 Mehdi just made the Taser tree
5:50 the lick-ten-burger figures make a fashionable comeback!
But without the dying hazard!
8:45 Loop-a Doop-a Loop-a Doop-a Loop-a Doop-a Loop
2:00 I love how he goes from upset to happy at the new knowledge
4:54 new information discovered, it's life changing 🤯
Who would imagine he would evolve so much, i remember him setting his mustache on fire 😀
Remember when he set his ass on fire
@@Drion086 th-cam.com/video/iik25wqIuFo/w-d-xo.html here you go
HE HAD A MUSTACHE?!?
@@idontwantahandlethough he did
@@Drion086 He deleted the videos but you can find both reuploaded just search "How to remove your mustache". He uploaded 2 videos like it
I just love how ElectroBOOM is not only an amazing electrician and content creator, he also seems like such a lovely father and has fun with his family while still entertaining millions around the world! big ups to the one and only!!!
The fact that he get shocks every time but he does it for our happiness
This was probably my favorite episode of yours. Inventive and hilarious as always. Keep it up Mehdi!
6:58 ...doesn't get much truer than this in our modern age!
Exactly. But since he said it with a touch of humour, people dont tend to take it seariously..💡💡
2:02 "it BLOOOH like a fuse "
Electroboom
Hii
9:30 never knew I needed a trusty spoon... such wisdom
"Wood is not fire resistant"
I have never heard words spoken so truly in my life
Airflow on tube is due to bernoulli’s principle / air viscosity
Now that's how you do sponsored adverts! Also a standing ovation for putting it at the end of the video
Reminds me of the wood burning pencil I had as a kid... Its basically a soldering iron with a brass tip to burn into wood. Never used it.. lol
3:06 you said: neoMEHDIyum magnets ? xd
Electroboom is the best guy in TH-cam of talking, building, and surviving of his electric stuffs.
I've only stumbled onto your video's two days ago and i've not been able to stop watching. thank you, you have made me want to expand my mind and learn something new. thanks again made my 41st birthday today more interesting
5:59 please don't die😂
Plenty of cool ideas! Now try make something to blow warm air on your hair to dry them
این یارو مو نداره
I love that the High five slap from her sounded like a spark when something you made blows up, even with the "aaouuch" lol
Maybe Electroboom was Electrocuted? :P
This channel will never not make me laugh.
wow the duck was amazing!! great video as always!
Lost it when you went full circle to putting the fan and the resistive wire together and "wait, that's just a hairdry-"
4:05 how to make an incandescent light bulb!!
My favorite guy! Hands down best balance of hilarious and educational! Wish I could shake hands with you sir!
You can also make a light bulb out of the filament too (well maybe an alert light bult) and it'll help keep you items of interest warm too....
You can make an incubator heater from it too.
0:04 whoa whoa whoa whoa whoa whoa stop stop stop pause
idk
Dear mehdi .. I am writing to you from Italy 🇮🇹 I have been following you for years now and every time when I see your videos I laugh out loud .. In Italy with your facial expressions your mimicry you could have been a comedian and success was guaranteed .. Come to Italy to visit us ..
Allora non sono il suo unico fan italiano!!!
@@alessandroapicella6328 nooooooo credo siamo in tanti.. 😂 Cmq tu che sei italiano sai benissimo che mehdi in italia poteva essere il nuovo alvaro vitali è troppo troppo troppo divertente.. Ha proprio la mimica facciale del comico..
@@alessandrocacciapuoti7666 in effetti
6:22 FUUUUUUULLLL BRIDGE RECTIFER
Hey
4:55 the fireplace which literally uses woods to increase flames
Hmmm yes it looks like it's made from material
I made a smoke generator with hairdryer nichrome wire wrapped around a piece of thick wick material which was soaked in mineral oil. It creates a thick white smoke for use in diagnosing leaks.
2:25 4:13 5:46 8:13 He keeps on burning his hand for god sakes
Electroboom is one villain origin story away from becoming a mad scientist
he even has the name
Electroboom as Doofenshirmtz
4:09 reminds me when i put same same wire in two sockets of switch board ! Pufffff 💥 ! 😂
"hi, today we want to get into the amazing world of an hairdryer :D!"
_brutally murders said hairdryer_
The art he created in the wooden board is like you are looking at a hole and you see civilization inside for me
That thermal breaker operates similarly to a flame rollout on a gas furnace, except the flame rollout has to be manually reset, and if it’s a rollout, you need to check for issues with the flue and/or a cracked heat exchanger among other potential deeper problems.
3:51 Technically, *anything* is a fuse if you try hard enough.
I can use air as a fuse?
Even PC's can be fuse to. Just put you game graphics on the highest setting.
@crazysaturn0805
Or just remove the main power supply and stick straight 110v or 240v on the board. It'll protect your outlet from accidental activation and creates bonus forbidden fog too and fireworks just for fun. Lol
@@crazysaturn0805you mean power resistor?
4:28
We need a fire-resistant material maybe a stick?
Logic: adios
Hes just not a genius, HE'S AN ARTIST!!
He isn't just a genius, he's also an artist*
try again
@@dimitar4y he is an Artistic Genius
@@dimitar4y Yeah bro sorry, I hope you happy
i love the little detail of his hand smacking into the kiwico logo at the end there
@08:40 - Finally! (I was mentally shouting that at him at least twice before)