This is one of the MOST underrated channels on TH-cam. You Guys deserve FAR MORE subscribers. But, you WILL Get there, slowly but surely. These animations are critical not only for ALL engineering students but also for anyone interested in everyday technology.
This is just another one of the few hundred newer channels that actually has not a single human in the loop between the topic from one post until the next one. Even the upload is done via API through a series of scripts. It is all AI models creating scripts, animations, voices...everything. Just one example of glaring shreds of proof besides the question, which is clearly just the developers requesting a prompt for more user engagment... Listen to the next 10 seconds after @1:18 everything is perfectly pronounced and articulated then "...while incorporating a safety lock to prevent accidental being used by children." This dude who speaks otherwise perfect precise english with an unidentifiable androgynous dialect is just going to let something that horrifying slip by? No way. I'm not against this but we just need to make sure we all understand that "You Guys" are neither people and especially not capitalized Guys. Just a chatbot with video. I'm probably just replying to a bot anyway.
@@JaredBrewerAerospacedid you even listen to that part you mentioned? He literally say "accidental use by children" just with a slight pause between "accidental" and "use".
Matchsticks are far cheaper, zero refill, and zero repair. Try repairing gas lighter with six springs. Even getting the springs aligned can consume entire day.
@@kumardigvijaymishra5945 On butane lighter can be used to light more fires than a score of match boxes. Those springs probably get thousands of cycles before they're too worn out to work. And they're cheap enough why would anyone bother to repair it? Get a new one.
@@cavalieroutdoors6036 That's not entirely correct. When butane lighters ar lit, they generally produce excess fire because butane has higher energy content than matchstick. Unburnt matchstick shaft can be reused to ignite more candles; butane lighters don't have such mechanism. I like butane torches because one can turn the knob and regulate the fuel consumption. Such isn't the case with butane lighters.
I've been opening lighters since I was a kid. I started with a lighter that uses spark from a rod and a grooved cylinder. Those only have 3 springs. Crickets lighter are often non-refillable. I always refill my lighters too until the piezoelectric ignition stops working or any parts are not working properly. But I still keep them so that when my new lighter has problems, I can salvage parts from the old one.
I guessed 7. Than thought you'd tricked us with only 3. Than double played us with the 4th 5th and 6th. Cool to see how many moving parts even simple seeming things can have. Incredible quality animations with unlimited potential this channel.
Love how you guys deconstruct common items and open a window into the amazing engineering that makes even the simplest aspects of our daily lives possible. You guys rock!
I’ve ALWAYS had trouble with many lighters similar to this in particular around refilling time to realise, thanks to your brilliant video, that the “rest period for the fresh gas injection” might have had a lot to do with it! I thank you Sir! 👍👍👍
Usually, they don't. At least two of three are bad out of the box, the one that works typically takes a lot of force to activate the piezoelectric device. You then get a flame, if the gas hasn't leaked out since it left the factory in China.
My guess was 5. Literally not even an hour ago my spouse had to refill a butane torch, which I assume works much like this only with the ability to get to higher temps. You two are a great channel for information and I do not care how long you take as long as the videos keep being informative and interesting.
Much more interesting from the inside than it seems from the outside! I store my gas lighters in the freezer at minus 18 degrees Celsius when I don't need them so they don't lose gas. I also put lighters in the refrigerator before refilling so that the pressure in the tank is lower than in the refill cartridge and the gas is refilled quickly and without much loss.
Brilliant animation and explanations, as always. We learn more with such a well-made short video than with hours or reading a book. Total respect to you both, keep up the great work !
I use the empty lighters to start my grill. I do not know how old it is but it still starts it up. I took apart one where it was just a regular lighter built in with extensions.
I was the master of Teardowns when I was 10 and started to discover and analise different different stuff, most specifically electronics and stuff that is flammable. I knew all this information before this video was even launched when I was 11 Years old XD
That is such a cool thing that how quartz crystals could be positive and negative and make a charge like that when you smack them together super cool man
I feel like the swaying back and forth at the beginning was a bit too much. I don't know if ot was that the lighter occupied too much horizontal space in the frame, and so it felt crammed, or if it was the focal length making the tip of the lighter move too much as it passed by and hard for the eye to follow, or maybe the frequency and speed of going from one side to the other was too much and it felt restless. Anyway, nice to meet y'all, fantastic work as always
While the refill valve *is* often used to add fuel to the lighter, we can't forget its other, arguably more common use: accidentally getting butane all over the place and making the entire place smell like gas
I want to say that the construction of the safety button is uncommon, atleast here in sweden, never seen that construction with a "disabling" trigger that still can be depressed (but doesn't work) in locked mode. Maybe there is different standards in different countries, but on our gas lighters here in sweden the safety lock button instead physically locks the trigger completely, it cannot be depressed at all without pressing the safety button. Theres 2 variants, one that is based on a catch on the safety button, engaging a hole in the trigger. Then the safety button is located ABOVE the trigger, between the gas outlet and the trigger. Other variants have a slot in the trigger, where the safety button has a rod with a thicker portion (that does not allow the slot to pass), and then a thinner portion (that does allow the slot to pass), depressing the safety button aligns the thinner portion with the slot, allowing the trigger to be depressed. These types have the safety button located BELOW the trigger, between the gas canister and the trigger. Then there is the variants with the slider, which is a toggle switch, located below the trigger on the side. Then its just a L shaped hole in the trigger, and a pin on the safety lock switch which rides in the L-shaped hole, You can propably imagine how that works, when the trigger isn't depressed, the unlocked safety button pin is in the corner of the L. when the safety button is moved to the locked position, the pin moves horizontally in the L, and then the trigger can't just physically move. When trigger is in unlocked position and trigger is depressed, pin of safety button is moved along the vertical slot of L.
guessed 6. I saw 4 springs at first, realized there's 2 valves, and the thing behind the trigger looked like it had 2 springs so all in all 2 springs in the butane release thing, 2 valve springs, then 2 springs for the piezoelectric thing
So only the “safety” button engages the butane valve, and the main button can still depress the piezo hammer = you would have a choice of spark or flame with that particular design 🙂
I still don't understand how the disk at the end of the porous rod regulates the gas flow. Is it porous too? How does the pressure of the threaded housing affect it? How does the housing pressure affect the disk's throughput?
I guessed about six, but then decided to guess a higher number to account for ones I overlooked and came out at eight. You saying there'd be more than we'd think was probably involved in that.
My only idea is that some of the motion might be better illustrated in 3/4 view, not just pure planar view. Also, yes, the piezoelectric material is good for tens of thousands of strikes, but the plastic components in a sub-$1 lighter are not. In 50 years I've only had two last long enough to be worth refilling. (I'm well aware I'm buying cheap quality lighters.)
They are made so cheaply that they are more likely to fall apart before they need extra fuel. The plastic housing is flimy and the wire soldering is shoddy as well. It makes them inexpensive but also prime landfill material
the gas lighter just convinces you it works
😂
No it doesn't.
This is one of the MOST underrated channels on TH-cam. You Guys deserve FAR MORE subscribers. But, you WILL Get there, slowly but surely.
These animations are critical not only for ALL engineering students but also for anyone interested in everyday technology.
check out animagraphs
This is just another one of the few hundred newer channels that actually has not a single human in the loop between the topic from one post until the next one. Even the upload is done via API through a series of scripts. It is all AI models creating scripts, animations, voices...everything. Just one example of glaring shreds of proof besides the question, which is clearly just the developers requesting a prompt for more user engagment... Listen to the next 10 seconds after @1:18 everything is perfectly pronounced and articulated then "...while incorporating a safety lock to prevent accidental being used by children." This dude who speaks otherwise perfect precise english with an unidentifiable androgynous dialect is just going to let something that horrifying slip by? No way. I'm not against this but we just need to make sure we all understand that "You Guys" are neither people and especially not capitalized Guys. Just a chatbot with video.
I'm probably just replying to a bot anyway.
@@JaredBrewerAerospaceDid you even watch the whole video lol
@@JaredBrewerAerospacedid you even listen to that part you mentioned? He literally say "accidental use by children" just with a slight pause between "accidental" and "use".
What does the blue wire do and its function was not mentioned in the video....
Is it a ground wire?
Re,piezo electric lighter s
It's amazing how all of these come together are sold for 1-2USD each, thanks to engineering for mass production. It's cheaper than match.
Matchsticks are far cheaper, zero refill, and zero repair. Try repairing gas lighter with six springs. Even getting the springs aligned can consume entire day.
@@kumardigvijaymishra5945 On butane lighter can be used to light more fires than a score of match boxes. Those springs probably get thousands of cycles before they're too worn out to work. And they're cheap enough why would anyone bother to repair it? Get a new one.
@@cavalieroutdoors6036 That's not entirely correct. When butane lighters ar lit, they generally produce excess fire because butane has higher energy content than matchstick. Unburnt matchstick shaft can be reused to ignite more candles; butane lighters don't have such mechanism. I like butane torches because one can turn the knob and regulate the fuel consumption. Such isn't the case with butane lighters.
Thank you for clear explanation of how a piezoelectric gas lighter works
only 2 guys are behind these videos? neat. keep up the good work! very well done
I've been opening lighters since I was a kid. I started with a lighter that uses spark from a rod and a grooved cylinder. Those only have 3 springs. Crickets lighter are often non-refillable. I always refill my lighters too until the piezoelectric ignition stops working or any parts are not working properly. But I still keep them so that when my new lighter has problems, I can salvage parts from the old one.
I guessed 7. Than thought you'd tricked us with only 3. Than double played us with the 4th 5th and 6th. Cool to see how many moving parts even simple seeming things can have. Incredible quality animations with unlimited potential this channel.
The fact youre doing this all by hand is crazy. You got my sub
Love how you guys deconstruct common items and open a window into the amazing engineering that makes even the simplest aspects of our daily lives possible. You guys rock!
This channel is now my second favorite when it comes to educational animated videos. The first being Jared Owen Animations.
Learning is Eternal.
is my life long lesson.
Technician>Engineer>Inspector
I’ve ALWAYS had trouble with many lighters similar to this in particular around refilling time to realise, thanks to your brilliant video, that the “rest period for the fresh gas injection” might have had a lot to do with it!
I thank you Sir!
👍👍👍
I love seeing how far just mechanical pieces can get us, without even using software at any point
Usually, they don't. At least two of three are bad out of the box, the one that works typically takes a lot of force to activate the piezoelectric device. You then get a flame, if the gas hasn't leaked out since it left the factory in China.
My guess was 5. Literally not even an hour ago my spouse had to refill a butane torch, which I assume works much like this only with the ability to get to higher temps. You two are a great channel for information and I do not care how long you take as long as the videos keep being informative and interesting.
Love your simple, concise, and highly instructional videos.
Much more interesting from the inside than it seems from the outside! I store my gas lighters in the freezer at minus 18 degrees Celsius when I don't need them so they don't lose gas. I also put lighters in the refrigerator before refilling so that the pressure in the tank is lower than in the refill cartridge and the gas is refilled quickly and without much loss.
BRILLIANT EXPLANATION, ON POINT!
You are changing my live with your videos. Thank you
Top notch CAD modeling
this is the best educational channel
i guessed 5 and I hope that you guys continue this content thank you so much for satisfying our engineer curiosity ❤
good
Brilliant animation and explanations, as always. We learn more with such a well-made short video than with hours or reading a book. Total respect to you both, keep up the great work !
A beutiful CAD design down there. Like it.
Wow! Amazing job guys! Thank you very much!
Goldeneye pause music works great to the intro of the lighter spinning
It takes a lot to make such animations !
I use the empty lighters to start my grill. I do not know how old it is but it still starts it up. I took apart one where it was just a regular lighter built in with extensions.
Nice explanation!
Great video, we need more creators like you guys to make us a little more informed about the world around us.
I love these videos. Well done, and thank you to you both.
Great video, thank you
I would have guessed 3 before seeing the video, maybe 4 at the most.
I then guessed 5 after you showed the deconstructed cross section.
Amazing and informative thank you
I was the master of Teardowns when I was 10 and started to discover and analise different different stuff, most specifically electronics and stuff that is flammable. I knew all this information before this video was even launched when I was 11 Years old XD
That is such a cool thing that how quartz crystals could be positive and negative and make a charge like that when you smack them together super cool man
thanks to your superb video, i'm smarter, it's an ingenious invention and your overview is great.
I get excited when I see you've got a new video out. Appreciate your work!
Amazing production of the whole video.😊Continue it 👏
Love your channel. Always share your videos.
Great job!
Amazing work! Thank you!
It's nice being able to put a face to the great content, two in fact! :)
Guessed correctly. And learned why I need to wait after filling!
I feel like the swaying back and forth at the beginning was a bit too much. I don't know if ot was that the lighter occupied too much horizontal space in the frame, and so it felt crammed, or if it was the focal length making the tip of the lighter move too much as it passed by and hard for the eye to follow, or maybe the frequency and speed of going from one side to the other was too much and it felt restless.
Anyway, nice to meet y'all, fantastic work as always
I guessed 4 springs 😒. Nice work guys always enjoy your videos!
good work bro
Maybe a bit more detail on how piezoelectric materials work? Nice work, anyhow.
amazing work keep going 💪
Thank you for this video !
daym. didn't knew a lighter was this complicated.
Would be very interesting to see how a pneumatic impact wrench works.
Really like your channel, have shared it with others
This would be alien magic to a medieval peasant.
thanks
Thank you very much for the videos
Love the video
I was taught in college that it is pronounced "pee-ay-zo-electric". These are great videos by the way.
very cool keep it up
While the refill valve *is* often used to add fuel to the lighter, we can't forget its other, arguably more common use: accidentally getting butane all over the place and making the entire place smell like gas
My guess was 3. And dang. To think there's so many springs in this.
How many people actually bother to refill. I can never get the 2 parts to mate correctly so gas goes everywhere.
I want to say that the construction of the safety button is uncommon, atleast here in sweden, never seen that construction with a "disabling" trigger that still can be depressed (but doesn't work) in locked mode. Maybe there is different standards in different countries, but on our gas lighters here in sweden the safety lock button instead physically locks the trigger completely, it cannot be depressed at all without pressing the safety button. Theres 2 variants, one that is based on a catch on the safety button, engaging a hole in the trigger. Then the safety button is located ABOVE the trigger, between the gas outlet and the trigger. Other variants have a slot in the trigger, where the safety button has a rod with a thicker portion (that does not allow the slot to pass), and then a thinner portion (that does allow the slot to pass), depressing the safety button aligns the thinner portion with the slot, allowing the trigger to be depressed. These types have the safety button located BELOW the trigger, between the gas canister and the trigger.
Then there is the variants with the slider, which is a toggle switch, located below the trigger on the side. Then its just a L shaped hole in the trigger, and a pin on the safety lock switch which rides in the L-shaped hole, You can propably imagine how that works, when the trigger isn't depressed, the unlocked safety button pin is in the corner of the L. when the safety button is moved to the locked position, the pin moves horizontally in the L, and then the trigger can't just physically move. When trigger is in unlocked position and trigger is depressed, pin of safety button is moved along the vertical slot of L.
I LOVE your videos!
Good
Awesome
Informative
guessed 6. I saw 4 springs at first, realized there's 2 valves, and the thing behind the trigger looked like it had 2 springs
so all in all 2 springs in the butane release thing, 2 valve springs, then 2 springs for the piezoelectric thing
Great videos!
4:00 But presumably the safety lock mechanism has no effect on the spark generator so it could still be used to ignite an oven's gas burners?
was waiting for this
6 springs
im just sick like that
So only the “safety” button engages the butane valve, and the main button can still depress the piezo hammer = you would have a choice of spark or flame with that particular design 🙂
I love this cahnnel
I love your chanel
55…This isn’t a guess, just a nonsense comment. New sub
I still don't understand how the disk at the end of the porous rod regulates the gas flow. Is it porous too? How does the pressure of the threaded housing affect it? How does the housing pressure affect the disk's throughput?
i only guessed 4 springs! forgot the refill valve and the 2nd spring in the igniter!
nice nice nice
How do the crystals recharge themselfs after each use?
Cool!
I guessed about six, but then decided to guess a higher number to account for ones I overlooked and came out at eight. You saying there'd be more than we'd think was probably involved in that.
Only six springs?
My only idea is that some of the motion might be better illustrated in 3/4 view, not just pure planar view.
Also, yes, the piezoelectric material is good for tens of thousands of strikes, but the plastic components in a sub-$1 lighter are not. In 50 years I've only had two last long enough to be worth refilling. (I'm well aware I'm buying cheap quality lighters.)
Topmoumoute ;)
TOP LIKE
🙏🏼🇧🇷🙏🏼
🇧🇷👍🇧🇷
how Turkey automatic OK table work ?
I’ve never refilled one of these things.
They're not usually refillable, some are though
What a waste.
They are made so cheaply that they are more likely to fall apart before they need extra fuel. The plastic housing is flimy and the wire soldering is shoddy as well. It makes them inexpensive but also prime landfill material
Some of them are, some of them don't.
I swear, just yesterday I tried to fix one to no avail
4 springs
My guess for the springs- 9
Edit: guess I was wrong.
hello
0:51 Seven springs I guess
6:12 Many lighters have a spring at the tip, where the spark generates, at the end of the gas line.
6 springs
cant you just remove the spring to the safety lock
Just drop your comment here to help the channel 😁
Amazing channel, btw
if the spark generator supposedly has such a long lifespan why do these things never last longer than a few months even with proper refilling
I guess it's 5 springs.
6.