Love it. Especially with the commentary which can only be described as the nefarious whispers of an adolescent super villain on supervised house arrest and a court order prohibiting any chemistry experiments or dismantling of batteries. Shhh.. 🙄 Someone’s coming
Awesome video, if this is of interest to anyone I just recently tried Aleenas tacky glue clear, and I have been quite astounded at the results of it. It is incredibly solid and seems to bond with graphite extremely well.
@@billkabb thanks Bill! this is exactly what I did when my superglue/graphite solution didn't work! the slightly stiffer surface did make a good foundation to glue the aluminum tape though :)
I don't think the tiny contact points of the voltmeter probes are doing this material justice. I would guess almost all the resistance is very close to those points. Suggest putting down two pieces of aluminum foil a couple of inches apart and painting a strip across between them. I'm sure you'll get much lower readings. At the moment, I have some graphite and lacquer drying between two thin wires maybe 3/16" apart. Already, the resistance is down in the tens of ohms, and it keeps getting lower as the lacquer dries. I think my mix is about as wide as your stripes, but since your stripes are maybe 10 times as long, you'd probably be seeing resistances in the hundreds if you had good contact points for the probes. BTW, I"m using Elmer's regular glue instead of school glue. I doubt that makes much difference, but I suppose it might.
IM considering making my own conductive paint for electroplating, since in my country at my scale is impossible to get some. My concern is: would the glue+graphene endure to be submerged for a few hours to last for the electroplating? im considering using copper instead of graphene.
Outstanding re-purposing of recovered battery carbon rods! Printed "thin film" resistors is one possible application for your unique chemistry, cheers.
Thanks! Glad you liked the video! Yes, to use this as a type of resistor is a good idea. I also thought of making paper circuits with using this material.
Better use a lot less graphite or a very long strip. India ink is slightly conductive. Not nearly as conductive as graphite, though. Just the thing to coat ping pong balls with for silly high voltage experiments with a van de Graaff machine. @@SciTyeTech
You can use tap water. I only use distilled water because I wanted to see what is more conductive. Distilled water is not conductive, therefore I wanted more accurate results.
@@anoirbentanfous I will test the conductivity first, will it work on lcd display for mobiles , flex polyamide connector tore off due to its shelf life (polyamide flat flex stuff on which copper tracks )
Sorry....you called it fine graphite powder. So I looked it up, and indeed the primary component is graphite. Why not go to the art store and buy powdered graphite?
I heard instead of dish soap you can use Xanthan Gum powder or honey? I wonder if they would affect the results.. also superglue forms cement-like strength when adding backing soda or any fine powder like coffee ground, can this substitute solder for burnt led lights (we need some resistance in place of the burnt led)
@@hectorcalderondiaz1821 That's not how science works, though. Who told you that, people that don't want us to be able to shield ourselves from RF? What are you, some kind of first level gatekeeper?
Is the baby sleeping in the room? Please don't try to be cool by changing your voice. I don't know about others, but it bothered me. Other than that, it's a nice science experiment. I wonder how it would be if it were tried with copper powder.
Very good informative Video 🙏🙏👍👍👍🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏
Many many thanks!!
@@SciTyeTechdove posso trovare quel tipo di batterie?
Interesting recipie
Yes, and it works well.
Love it. Especially with the commentary which can only be described as the nefarious whispers of an adolescent super villain on supervised house arrest and a court order prohibiting any chemistry experiments or dismantling of batteries.
Shhh.. 🙄 Someone’s coming
lol!!
It's very important, 👍
Yes, thanks
Can we use graphite pencil powder ?
Which is used in charcoal art
Is it useful for conductive paint
Awesome video, if this is of interest to anyone I just recently tried Aleenas tacky glue clear, and I have been quite astounded at the results of it. It is incredibly solid and seems to bond with graphite extremely well.
I would want to do this for my digital piano, i have zero idea about resistance and all that stuff but do u think it would be okay
Thanks for This Explanation❤❤
My pleasure!
very informative,very clear and very efficient video..well done Sir..Greetings from Turkiye..
Thank you very much!
Interesting, but you must measure the conductivity when the paint is dry. Can it stick to rubber of remote control ?
Yes, that's a good idea.
Can I use this for mechanical mod to get more performance and conducting?
This is a very useful experiment! Thanks for sharing!!!~~~
Thank you!
You can use glycerine instead of dish soap, this way you wont get foam
Going to use this recipe to fix some remote control buttons where the carbon pads have worn👍 Thanks for the great tip 😊
small pieces of plain adhesive aluminum tape also works fine on remotes
@@billkabb thanks Bill! this is exactly what I did when my superglue/graphite solution didn't work! the slightly stiffer surface did make a good foundation to glue the aluminum tape though :)
I don't think the tiny contact points of the voltmeter probes are doing this material justice. I would guess almost all the resistance is very close to those points. Suggest putting down two pieces of aluminum foil a couple of inches apart and painting a strip across between them. I'm sure you'll get much lower readings. At the moment, I have some graphite and lacquer drying between two thin wires maybe 3/16" apart. Already, the resistance is down in the tens of ohms, and it keeps getting lower as the lacquer dries. I think my mix is about as wide as your stripes, but since your stripes are maybe 10 times as long, you'd probably be seeing resistances in the hundreds if you had good contact points for the probes. BTW, I"m using Elmer's regular glue instead of school glue. I doubt that makes much difference, but I suppose it might.
Thank you!
You're welcome!
IM considering making my own conductive paint for electroplating, since in my country at my scale is impossible to get some.
My concern is: would the glue+graphene endure to be submerged for a few hours to last for the electroplating?
im considering using copper instead of graphene.
I would say try it. It seems like an interesting idea!
Outstanding re-purposing of recovered battery carbon rods!
Printed "thin film" resistors is one possible application for your unique chemistry, cheers.
Thanks! Glad you liked the video! Yes, to use this as a type of resistor is a good idea. I also thought of making paper circuits with using this material.
Maybe next time if you used a syringe to have more consistency in your line. Thank you for sharing!
thanks brother. this advice very nice.
You're welcome!
What about after it dries
How well does it work in an airbrush?
I am sure it would work well. Just need to make the liquid thin.
Graphite is available in pencile
Yes that's true.
when someone says i'm going to make conductive paint you assume they mean conductive When Dry, but this is why you should never assume....
Is this supposed to lose conductivity when dry?
Can I make an megaohm resistance conductive paint?
Most likely.
Better use a lot less graphite or a very long strip. India ink is slightly conductive. Not nearly as conductive as graphite, though. Just the thing to coat ping pong balls with for silly high voltage experiments with a van de Graaff machine. @@SciTyeTech
And the empty 6volt container can be used for holding pencils, pens, etc. Or it could be repurposed for another battery.🤪
That's a good idea! I could put rechargeable lithium batteries in it.
@@SciTyeTech and can you imagine the amount of power you would get if you filled that sucker up with the coin-sized “2032’s” or similar?🤪
So the Glue wins? It has the lowest resistance.
Yes, and it allows for easy painting.
Try pepper
I am curious why there is a need to use distilled water?
You can use tap water. I only use distilled water because I wanted to see what is more conductive. Distilled water is not conductive, therefore I wanted more accurate results.
Colorado River water already has 2 gms/liter.
@@SciTyeTech 😮
Not only that, but someone elsewhere will be able to repeat the results.@@SciTyeTech
Why on earth are you not leaving it to dry before testing.... it seems pretty stupid because you don't leave paint wet all the time do you😂😂😂
Why do you sound more like Batman 😅
lol!
Why do you measure wet paint ? there is no use for it !
I was measuring conductivity.
@@SciTyeTech But i want to now how it is after drying, that is what is important for the use of the paint ,dirty water is conductive !
It's not the water that is conductive but what is in the water, which will still be there after the water evaporates.
how to repair carbon contact on laptop keyboard frc connector
super glue with graphite powder
@@anoirbentanfous I will test the conductivity first, will it work on lcd display for mobiles , flex polyamide connector tore off due to its shelf life (polyamide flat flex stuff on which copper tracks )
Did it work ?
Sorry....you called it fine graphite powder. So I looked it up, and indeed the primary component is graphite. Why not go to the art store and buy powdered graphite?
I could have. I wanted to use what I already have offhand and show an alternative way to resource it.
I heard instead of dish soap you can use Xanthan Gum powder or honey?
I wonder if they would affect the results..
also superglue forms cement-like strength when adding backing soda or any fine powder like coffee ground, can this substitute solder for burnt led lights (we need some resistance in place of the burnt led)
That is carbon rod not graphite
It effectively is
Why are you whispering?🤫
I wish you didn't shoot the video after everyone in the house was asleep, man. fıs fıs fıs fısss
Why doesn't anyone use powdered aluminum when making conductive paint???
fine powder aluminum is hard to obtain and pretty dangerous as it can self-ignite
Boom! no good
@@hectorcalderondiaz1821 That's not how science works, though. Who told you that, people that don't want us to be able to shield ourselves from RF? What are you, some kind of first level gatekeeper?
@@anoirbentanfous Um, wrong. Amazon.
Is the baby sleeping in the room?
Please don't try to be cool by changing your voice. I don't know about others, but it bothered me. Other than that, it's a nice science experiment.
I wonder how it would be if it were tried with copper powder.
BOO!
@@rodwilkins1614 BOO yourself.
speak up