Currently a junior level mechanical engineering student who just finished a course in electronics, as an ME, i cannot fathom this kind of work. super impressive, especially at your age. Keep doing this and keep it up and dont listen to any negativity and you will go places. And when you get to the point of making resumes, applying to collegs, "homemade osilloscope out of snap circuits and CRT tv" will definitely catch some attention.
Don't let anyone get in the way of your passion and willingness to learn. With the knowledge you have already; even 5 years from now you could either being going to trade school (Good money) or just keep it as a hobby which is okay. Just don't let that spark burn out, you're a smart kid!
You're amazing, and it's fantastic to see Snap Circuits being used for projects like these! If you haven’t already, consider exploring community events like Hak4Kidz, DEF CON, or Open Sauce-you’d have a blast and fit right in! Thanks for sharing your work with us; I’m excited to see what you create next!
You should get a 3D printer and learn 3D modeling. I got my first one at 12 years old (I'm 16 now), it's a great hobby to get into. I learned onshape since and it is great for designing mounts, and more. You can get a Bambu labs A1 mini for under 200 bucks
I Love Your Videos! To see someone else with the same enthusiasm as me for learning and electronics is awesome. I remember when I was 14 building electronic projects and spending hours learning the fundamentals, tinkering and coding. Keep Up the Good Work!
I wonder if you could just add a manual bypass for the horizontal deflection, so you can adjust settings and then "enter scope mode". Idk if your components allow it, but you could always try to get the beam moving faster for more temporal resolution, I assume the rounding of the square is some impedance or capacitance related issue? Not sure though, haven't read up on analog scopes much. Could also try to get the horizontal deflection higher with a small signal amplifier
you should get some bread boards, their different from snap circuits but im sure youd be more than ok using them. their just a lot cheaper and a lot more compact
With a tube TV is it even possible to make it work more like a classic oscilloscope? I feel like it might be interesting to see what oscilloscope music looks like with it either way.
Nice video, Adrian! Love the snapcircuit system tests you do! I noticed the donation link on your channel. Is there any way to get into contact about discussing how to send you some equipment? I own a small alarm company and have some spare parts if you'd like them.
reminds me. i went to preschool with battery and bulb device i designed to have intermittent contact and therefore flickered a bit. and showed this to teacher. i also did read 9th grade end of primary school physics books by then. preschool is below 7yo. no idea how old people are here. at 12yo i repaired antenna cable splitter in boarding school dorm that someone broke. it was nothing i was seen before but i told i need to climb up to ceiling and give me some wire so i can attach this stripped screw joint. later i learned it was f connector. mind you, this was estonia right after soviet union collapsed. so i did all this. and still do. however i still don't have any job somehow. i also have autism diagnosed at age of 12yo. now i'm 41yo. perfect tech skills, no people. btw i was bullied at school a lot. only one later openly realized and admitted it was bad. you see, he felt bad since i helped him to repair car stereo power supply in their room and they still bullied me. anyway good luck with life
It’s not stupid at all. Crts are awesome, anybody who says otherwise just can’t handle their AAA story games with no gameplay not looking good. I’ve been looking to get a CRT for bit
Bullocks, the one thing that this misses to make it properly usable is a trigger mechanism and/or a frequency adjustment on the top to bottom (normally left to right) line. A buffer on the input might be nice too as not to affect the source signal but with those it has all the basic functionality of an oscilloscope. (i.e. giving you the ability to view an analogue signal) Did a great job so far and shows he understands what he's working with.
I hope your parents read the comments because they should be immensely proud of you.
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I am studying a branch of electrical engineering in college and what you are doing is already beyond my knowledge. Keep up the good work !!!
Currently a junior level mechanical engineering student who just finished a course in electronics, as an ME, i cannot fathom this kind of work. super impressive, especially at your age. Keep doing this and keep it up and dont listen to any negativity and you will go places. And when you get to the point of making resumes, applying to collegs, "homemade osilloscope out of snap circuits and CRT tv" will definitely catch some attention.
Don't let anyone get in the way of your passion and willingness to learn. With the knowledge you have already; even 5 years from now you could either being going to trade school (Good money) or just keep it as a hobby which is okay. Just don't let that spark burn out, you're a smart kid!
You're amazing, and it's fantastic to see Snap Circuits being used for projects like these! If you haven’t already, consider exploring community events like Hak4Kidz, DEF CON, or Open Sauce-you’d have a blast and fit right in! Thanks for sharing your work with us; I’m excited to see what you create next!
very impressive projects considering your age,
stay curious and be safe around high voltage, It's easy to get complacent
the oscilloscope video was awesome
Crazy how you're able to do this🔥🔥🔥
You should get a 3D printer and learn 3D modeling. I got my first one at 12 years old (I'm 16 now), it's a great hobby to get into. I learned onshape since and it is great for designing mounts, and more. You can get a Bambu labs A1 mini for under 200 bucks
I Love Your Videos! To see someone else with the same enthusiasm as me for learning and electronics is awesome. I remember when I was 14 building electronic projects and spending hours learning the fundamentals, tinkering and coding. Keep Up the Good Work!
I am an EE graduate student and I wanted to say that I am impressed by your work. Keep staying curious but also don't forget about the safety!
How is bro so chill😭
Super sick stuff dude. Keep doing what you love.
Nice work buddy. From your coolest uncle.
Keep being awesome and may you rise to ever greater heights.
Much love!
this is so friggin cool
You're the man
You should get into working with breadboards.
I would love doing this stuff
I wonder if you could just add a manual bypass for the horizontal deflection, so you can adjust settings and then "enter scope mode". Idk if your components allow it, but you could always try to get the beam moving faster for more temporal resolution, I assume the rounding of the square is some impedance or capacitance related issue? Not sure though, haven't read up on analog scopes much. Could also try to get the horizontal deflection higher with a small signal amplifier
Nice video you can rotate the deflection coil on the CRT so that the line is the right way.
Dude, this stuff is awesome! honestly you should be very proud of yourself
You are a legend
Good work dude congrats on 1k!
i wish I was as cool as you when I was your age, never stop tinkering bro
5.4k subs in 2 weeks on youtube is insane, hope you become rich very fast
Congrats on almost 5k!
Keep it up 🔥
you should get some bread boards, their different from snap circuits but im sure youd be more than ok using them. their just a lot cheaper and a lot more compact
With a tube TV is it even possible to make it work more like a classic oscilloscope? I feel like it might be interesting to see what oscilloscope music looks like with it either way.
cool good job
Nice video, Adrian! Love the snapcircuit system tests you do! I noticed the donation link on your channel. Is there any way to get into contact about discussing how to send you some equipment? I own a small alarm company and have some spare parts if you'd like them.
reminds me. i went to preschool with battery and bulb device i designed to have intermittent contact and therefore flickered a bit. and showed this to teacher. i also did read 9th grade end of primary school physics books by then. preschool is below 7yo. no idea how old people are here. at 12yo i repaired antenna cable splitter in boarding school dorm that someone broke. it was nothing i was seen before but i told i need to climb up to ceiling and give me some wire so i can attach this stripped screw joint. later i learned it was f connector. mind you, this was estonia right after soviet union collapsed. so i did all this. and still do. however i still don't have any job somehow. i also have autism diagnosed at age of 12yo. now i'm 41yo. perfect tech skills, no people. btw i was bullied at school a lot. only one later openly realized and admitted it was bad. you see, he felt bad since i helped him to repair car stereo power supply in their room and they still bullied me. anyway good luck with life
can u build a full fire alarm around the whole house??
100k special? oh you'll get there. decked out garage and all
As stupid as this sounds I game on CRTs. There is no delay and they are brighter and there is a LOT more contrast on them
It’s not stupid at all. Crts are awesome, anybody who says otherwise just can’t handle their AAA story games with no gameplay not looking good. I’ve been looking to get a CRT for bit
Try to make doom using snap connects
How did you build those snap circuits and make them work?
how did you build this!???
by the way, the comments on your latest video (fun with flippers) are off
if you had 1k the day before yesterday just know you gained 4k in the last 2 days
i started watching you when you had like 10 subs
i just realized i never subbed
jesus christ your college applications are gonna be crazy
THE CHAD CHIN 🗣️🗣️🗣️🗣️🗣️🗣️🗣️🔥🔥🔥🔥💯💯💯💯💯
How do people just make channels from nothing and get thousands of views from nowhere???
You obviously don't know anything about O scopes, read a book kid!
Bullocks, the one thing that this misses to make it properly usable is a trigger mechanism and/or a frequency adjustment on the top to bottom (normally left to right) line.
A buffer on the input might be nice too as not to affect the source signal but with those it has all the basic functionality of an oscilloscope. (i.e. giving you the ability to view an analogue signal)
Did a great job so far and shows he understands what he's working with.
Ignore this troll, Adrian. Some people love trolling people who are passionate about their work.
@electroboom I think you need to see this.