@@jorgesaxon3781 Nah, Ben Eater would make it on a breadboard and use a 6502. Whereas jdh would make it out of garbage and chewing gum with wires sticking everywhere.
I did the razor blade version back when I was a kid, the article called it a foxhole radio. It used a pencil lead to connect to the razor blade, with the explanation there being that the junction between the steel and graphite provided the diode. (They even recommended an older, rusty blade - heating it like you did would have been a good plan too). I don't know where I got the earpiece, but it needs to be a very sensitive one - normal cheap headphones won't work. But yeah, it was amazing to hear a radio station come through.
It's a shame there's so few AM radio frequencies even being used these days. Even FM is slowly being taken over by mobile phone carriers and WiFi. HAM radio recently lost a huge chunk of available frequencies to them, because the government decided to just "take" them and hand them over for 6G mobile phone usage.
This is definitely one of the negatives of government regulation. They act unilaterally and you have no choice. I'm not sure if there's a solution to that because with no regulation we'd have signals overlapping everywhere, and now we have all these restrictions which make things harder for the little guy and punish them if they step out of bounds.
The working of gauge actually make sense once you understand it- it's how far a wire of that gauge and a specific weight (a pound, I think) will stretch without changing it's thickness. It probably became common because it could be measured fairly early in stsndardization.
You can make a more stable connection by making a loop every few turns. Connect a wire to any of the loops to tune the radio. It does mean there is less resolution in the tuning, but it guarantees a solid and stable connection.
It's pretty cool that you can still use that type of radios. here in Germany they killed all the AM radio stations a couple of years ago, i still have some old AM only radios and i build my own but you only can receive some stations from italy and france maybe at night. We only still got the FM Radio but they're also trying to kill it and then i can't hear any radio at all
Sorry to hear that. I didn't know about that. I have been thinking of make a 3D printed FM radio. It's a little more complicated but I can clearly show each step.
@reapiu8316 They where completely shutdown and then torn appart, the last AM Radio Station was shut down 2016 and since then there is no AM Radio anymore, we still have FM but it's just a question of time when they will also destroy them
@reapiu8316 This is not so easy, you can make a amatuer ham license then you can send with up to 100W or 750W with the big license but not on broadcasting bands. I don't know if it would be possible to make a private radio station for AM, it's possible for FM but there is a lot of paper stuff you need and it cost a lot of money. I build a small Shortwave Transmitter which has only very low power so it can only be received in my own appartment and not from strangers on the outside but even this is technically not legal because i don't have a license to transmit and it is on the broadcasting band
@reapiu8316 it's not really a government thing here it's just an econony thing because they want to sell new stuff therefore they shut down the old stations that you can't use the old radios anymore. If you make an private station that costs a lot of money so they get money from you and that's fine then Oficially they want to shut it down because it needs a lot of energy but the new DAB transmitting needs a lot more energy for the same distance, in fact shortwave is the most efficient, with a single station around 100kW in central of germany you could ged through whole germany and even further
Good video, but when you showed the importance of the diode, you just opened the circuit. No wonder there was no sound. You should have bridged the diode with another wire to show how it would sound without a diode!
I noticed that when editing the video but replacing with a normal wire would cause the same effect. Removing the diode also is to prove the sounds are coming from the printed radio.
@@3DSage thanks, I spent 47 years as an engineer, from early color tv to chips, retired 11 years ago. You might want to show another 10 year old how to do the radio without 3 d printing. A paper towel roll makes a good form for the coil, a small piece of scrap wood to hold everything......
@@3DSage With copper, if you heat it up you can dip it into isopropanol. It reacts with the oxides at high temp and reduces it into copper very quickly!
@@adamrak7560same with acetone(vapors). Just turns the oxides straight back into copper! Make sure to cool it down quickly by dipping it into the pool of liquid.
Perhaps a pinpoint contact with the edge of the windings is better than the foil based wiper, as that will reduce the likelihood of creating shorted turns as you move it along.
Looks pretty good. I wonder if you can add to this to make it a bit better. like having the Tuner be on two pieces of metal and having a string to move the tuner left and right.
Especially old "Transistor Radios" rely on basically the exact same coil idea, but have their own amps included. Probably one of the few types of radio that'll survive the end of the world.
Given that use, how one makes transmitting version of this. Its fine and dandy to listen but if no one is transmitting its really not useful. This could be good shit hit the fan communication method if it can handle EMP.
@@Hellsong89 Well, that's the fun part, you CAN do the same in reverse, you just need the amplifier driving current from a piezoelectric surface (the same earpiece used to receive can also be used as a microphone to transmit) towards the coil instead of away and you can get an (admittedly pretty bad) transmitter. It's the same design principle that led to the "walkie talky". Yeah a hand built one will make lots of noise instead of picking up lots of noise, and as a broadcaster it'll have poor range, but you'll still be audible so it's better than nothing in a disaster. Bigger coils concentrated to a specific frequency start looking more like the modern antenna, combined with stronger amplifiers you get better range at the cost (or maybe benefit?) of spreading your bandwidth occupation.
Hey, i'm gonna try that soon but i have some questions: 1. What are the dimensions of the 3d printed parts? [I currently don't have my laptop with me so i can't try if the pieces would fir in my 3d printer in the slicer software]. 2. Are there cheaper options for the audio thing? I'm trying to make it on a budget and 30€ for a earpiece seems a bit expensive, would it also work with a speaker? Or how could i connect an aux cable to the radio?
M3 threaded rod on compliant/flexing endmounts instead of the paperclip and a screw to turn it and possibly a small ball-bearing instead of the foil....................
Hi very good I made this 27 year before on 3 inch wood wounded with different pieces of wires joint together because those days I don't have long wire it works amazing with out antenna and earth. A diode 50 oham internal resistance. And 300 oham high impedance headphone. Also it convert any signals into power.
you mean ohm? 50ohm internal resistance diode? That would extremely strange for a silicon diode. Have you used homemade oxide diode? Or germanium diode? (Schottky diode is the best for this, if you have one, it only needs about 0.2V to work, but can do with slightly less)
@@adamrak7560 dear in those days i have lot of stock of different old & new components from my father. I tested many many diode and different stuff but only one type diode work very excellent ( it look like in4148 but its colour is green and its internal resistance exact 50 oham). Headphone from airline its impedance 300 ohm . No capacitor, no earth, no antenna used. My concluded after many experiment, different wires joint together and wounded on 3 inch wood pice 1 ich diameter. It tunes automatically natural frequency that catches different frequency and convert into power and signal.
You don’t even need diode. Take a piece of blade from office box cutter knife or from safe razor and heat if with fire. The goal is to make the metal change its color right about in the middle of the piece. This border with weird color in the middle will have semiconductive layer that will act as a diode. Yes, it’s harder to catch the waves, but it’s possible.
My one criticism with this video is that you're effectively saying (0:48) "oscillates back and forth", which to me suggests frequency modulation, i.e. faster and slower along the time axis. When you're talking about amplitude modulation, I think it's far more intuitive to say oscillates up and down. You're not technically wrong, and it's more about what people associate with the description of a "back and forth" movement, and whether people picture that as being along the time axis or perpendicular to that. It's even possible most people here will disagree with me, but I felt that could have been put better.
Small solar panels or hand crank generators are fine too. However it will be not possible to use them without transistors or vacuum tubes, which, sadly can't be made so easily as diodes.
Hold up, why have I never heard of double sided tape appliers? I only ever saw that mechanism being used in erasers XD Also, I can't find any here in Europe, what was the brand you used? (I could only find the 3M one, but with 50$ shipping : P)
Search for Scotch roll on double sided tape. Or just roll on double sided tape. I think these roll on are kind of new. They are so helpful for many project so I hope you find it!
Will the piezo be louder if there is more/thicker copper wire wrapped around the 3D printed plasic part? ps: the first thing what I felt while watching was exitement. The video quality is great, I would love to see more interesting small projects.
Your sink is absolutely the worst kind. Im amazed there is a signal because that faucet is likely not connected to the copper pipe work, usually plastic pipes. Downspouts with the paint removed where the hookup is, flagpole, the valve underneath sinks where it actually connects to the copper, hot water heater, my favorite might be the ground wire in a plug. Its the mouth of the plug. Tuning ur antenna to the proper length is key tho. Longer is not better. It should be half the wavelength. For am of 50khz u can try a 1/16 wave antenna at 1200ft or 374meters. And will work for 100, 150, and 200khz bands. Surely you could divide it again if need be. If ur antenna at any length is a bit out from what u want to receive, it might cancel that particular frequency if its a fee hairs off as to reflect and invert the wave within the antenna. Radio is so cool
Hello 3dsage I've tried something with that before but I couldn't buy that particular diode so if you have a link for that diode could you send it to me Regards Tobias pennings
No the turns of the wire are what give that coil its inductance, there are formulas to calculate the frequencies the coil will resonate at given inductance but for stuff like this its pretty much just try some number of coils and see what works, especially since its all homemade stuff and varies a lot person to person depending what materials you have
@@3DSage I found a workable alternative diode that you can get more easily th-cam.com/video/5y7I7G_a3Qo/w-d-xo.html The 1N5711 works if you put a 2K loading resistor across the earphone.
"...3D Printed Radio..." The first rule of 3D Printing Hype. Whatever noun follows the descriptor "3D Printed" is *always* the wrong word; most typically the noun describes the 'Next Higher Assembly'. In this example, the crystal "Radio" was assembled from parts, including: enamel coated wire, maybe a high impedance crystal earphone, a hopefully germanium detector diode (1N34A?), a metal terminal, a metal slider with metal shaft, I see a razor blade (?) for some reason, and (OMG LOOK!!!) at least one part (the 'chassis') that was 3D printed (could have been carved out of a scrap of wood faster than it took to 3D print, not even an exaggeration). This rule of 3D Printing Hype is essentially universal. The correct noun is rarely used. It's always an exaggeration by implying that the final hand-assembled device somehow tumbled out of the 3D Printer. Utter nonsense. We need to stamp out this nonsense as it impacts the understanding of the proletariat (LOL!!).
The box at the beginning is a wooden box even though the hinge and lock is metal. Almost all items are referred to as one main material even when they contains other parts. I think I just disagree but thank you for watching the video, adding the comment and opinion.
Are you really being pedantic about terminology? The thing that holds the coil and its base where the other components rest upon is 3d printed, making it a 3d printed radio. If you print a large model and use glue you dont go "well its a glued 3d print" or if you use screws "its a screwed together 3d printed part" And I guarantee no one else goes by this "rule"
So when are we going to see the jdh style obsessive build of a computer using only wires and razor blades?
for the transistors he's gonna make his own doped silicon crystals
*Ben eater
@@jorgesaxon3781 Nah, Ben Eater would make it on a breadboard and use a 6502. Whereas jdh would make it out of garbage and chewing gum with wires sticking everywhere.
jdh moment
Tf is jdh?
I did the razor blade version back when I was a kid, the article called it a foxhole radio. It used a pencil lead to connect to the razor blade, with the explanation there being that the junction between the steel and graphite provided the diode. (They even recommended an older, rusty blade - heating it like you did would have been a good plan too). I don't know where I got the earpiece, but it needs to be a very sensitive one - normal cheap headphones won't work. But yeah, it was amazing to hear a radio station come through.
I think you need a piezo earpiece in your radio, so that it's very sensitive to voltage
@@tomclanys That's correct. These earpieces were most commonly used in hearing aid devices and had a 3.5mm jack.
This was really cool to see! Never knew something like this would work without batteries.
Looks like you will need to make another version in 5 years again 😄
I could design a portable enclosed version :)
@@3DSage for a lesser confusing wiring standard use the european version measured in surface area mm2
@@3DSagethis is a great project but is so strange 😊
@@555-xd1fo It's ok to be strange sometimes :)
@@3DSage is it possible to make a FM radio similar to this?
The heck with your radio, I want that box
It is a nice box! Reminds me of a Zelda treasure box. :)
It's a shame there's so few AM radio frequencies even being used these days. Even FM is slowly being taken over by mobile phone carriers and WiFi. HAM radio recently lost a huge chunk of available frequencies to them, because the government decided to just "take" them and hand them over for 6G mobile phone usage.
This is definitely one of the negatives of government regulation. They act unilaterally and you have no choice. I'm not sure if there's a solution to that because with no regulation we'd have signals overlapping everywhere, and now we have all these restrictions which make things harder for the little guy and punish them if they step out of bounds.
The working of gauge actually make sense once you understand it- it's how far a wire of that gauge and a specific weight (a pound, I think) will stretch without changing it's thickness. It probably became common because it could be measured fairly early in stsndardization.
Can you make a box for this to be concealed in to cover the wires? And then you could put a diagram of which station is which.
i have read that this kind of radio was used by soldiers during wars
Very true. They would diy build their own with spare parts.
You can make a more stable connection by making a loop every few turns. Connect a wire to any of the loops to tune the radio. It does mean there is less resolution in the tuning, but it guarantees a solid and stable connection.
i remember it when i saw it 5 years ago. brought back old memories
It brought back old memories for me too! I found it again and I just had to make a new video :)
@@3DSage i suggest you could turn an old school rheostat into a foxhole radio... I think it would work far better ....
So happy to see this! Keep up the good work man, your content is awesome.
Keystone Science!! Long time no see! I hope you are doing well. I'm glad you saw my updated video and thanks for the comment.
That's A Cool Lighter.
actually it's quite hot
This was great (uh... except your "wiper" was driving me crazy!) Hope to see more.
It's pretty cool that you can still use that type of radios. here in Germany they killed all the AM radio stations a couple of years ago, i still have some old AM only radios and i build my own but you only can receive some stations from italy and france maybe at night. We only still got the FM Radio but they're also trying to kill it and then i can't hear any radio at all
Sorry to hear that. I didn't know about that. I have been thinking of make a 3D printed FM radio. It's a little more complicated but I can clearly show each step.
@reapiu8316 They where completely shutdown and then torn appart, the last AM Radio Station was shut down 2016 and since then there is no AM Radio anymore, we still have FM but it's just a question of time when they will also destroy them
@reapiu8316 This is not so easy, you can make a amatuer ham license then you can send with up to 100W or 750W with the big license but not on broadcasting bands. I don't know if it would be possible to make a private radio station for AM, it's possible for FM but there is a lot of paper stuff you need and it cost a lot of money. I build a small Shortwave Transmitter which has only very low power so it can only be received in my own appartment and not from strangers on the outside but even this is technically not legal because i don't have a license to transmit and it is on the broadcasting band
@reapiu8316 it's not really a government thing here it's just an econony thing because they want to sell new stuff therefore they shut down the old stations that you can't use the old radios anymore. If you make an private station that costs a lot of money so they get money from you and that's fine then
Oficially they want to shut it down because it needs a lot of energy but the new DAB transmitting needs a lot more energy for the same distance, in fact shortwave is the most efficient, with a single station around 100kW in central of germany you could ged through whole germany and even further
Good video, but when you showed the importance of the diode, you just opened the circuit. No wonder there was no sound. You should have bridged the diode with another wire to show how it would sound without a diode!
I noticed that when editing the video but replacing with a normal wire would cause the same effect. Removing the diode also is to prove the sounds are coming from the printed radio.
This is something I did be when I was 10 yrs old. I later became an electrical engineer and worked 46 years in the industry.
wow that's phenomenal! You have so much great experience and got to see computers really evolve over the years. You are awesome! 👍
@@3DSage thanks, I spent 47 years as an engineer, from early color tv to chips, retired 11 years ago. You might want to show another 10 year old how to do the radio without 3 d printing. A paper towel roll makes a good form for the coil, a small piece of scrap wood to hold everything......
*@3DSage*
2:42 Try using Vinegar & Salt, then rub with some paper or similar, it almost instantly removes any oxidation on copper.
Yes I mentioned that in the video and that's a great trick to use! Works great :)
@@3DSage With copper, if you heat it up you can dip it into isopropanol. It reacts with the oxides at high temp and reduces it into copper very quickly!
@@adamrak7560same with acetone(vapors). Just turns the oxides straight back into copper! Make sure to cool it down quickly by dipping it into the pool of liquid.
Perhaps a pinpoint contact with the edge of the windings is better than the foil based wiper, as that will reduce the likelihood of creating shorted turns as you move it along.
Reminds me of the "Electronic Playground" I had as a kid, my favourite project was the radio/metal detector
OK that bit about the box cuter blade was cool
Looks pretty good. I wonder if you can add to this to make it a bit better. like having the Tuner be on two pieces of metal and having a string to move the tuner left and right.
Especially old "Transistor Radios" rely on basically the exact same coil idea, but have their own amps included. Probably one of the few types of radio that'll survive the end of the world.
Given that use, how one makes transmitting version of this. Its fine and dandy to listen but if no one is transmitting its really not useful. This could be good shit hit the fan communication method if it can handle EMP.
@@Hellsong89 Well, that's the fun part, you CAN do the same in reverse, you just need the amplifier driving current from a piezoelectric surface (the same earpiece used to receive can also be used as a microphone to transmit) towards the coil instead of away and you can get an (admittedly pretty bad) transmitter. It's the same design principle that led to the "walkie talky". Yeah a hand built one will make lots of noise instead of picking up lots of noise, and as a broadcaster it'll have poor range, but you'll still be audible so it's better than nothing in a disaster. Bigger coils concentrated to a specific frequency start looking more like the modern antenna, combined with stronger amplifiers you get better range at the cost (or maybe benefit?) of spreading your bandwidth occupation.
What's neat is that it can also power an led off from the radio wave it would just be very dim. But it does work.
Can’t wait for the Dolby DTS version.
I need more of these videos!Keep going!
The coolest part of this project for me is the diode at the end 😂
Hey, i'm gonna try that soon but i have some questions: 1. What are the dimensions of the 3d printed parts? [I currently don't have my laptop with me so i can't try if the pieces would fir in my 3d printer in the slicer software]. 2. Are there cheaper options for the audio thing? I'm trying to make it on a budget and 30€ for a earpiece seems a bit expensive, would it also work with a speaker? Or how could i connect an aux cable to the radio?
Wow! Interested Project... Good Luck!
M3 threaded rod on compliant/flexing endmounts instead of the paperclip and a screw to turn it and possibly a small ball-bearing instead of the foil....................
great ideas. That would also work.
great video should be viral
Nice update 👍
Nice sense of humor touch!
Ngl with the way it sounds it would be really good for a horror game
Would be cool to print a radio that perfectly fits the box in the beginning, like a laptop radio
Next a proper enclosure to protect it from oxidation.
Do you mean vacuum? 🙂
I could make a part 3 video and build a portable design. :)
@@3DSage you should make a small 3d printed pcb with an option to use a battery with it :)
@@ithaca2076 if I had the time I would make the slider an old dial with a knob to turn it :)
Your videos are so high quality! I'm a big fan of all of your series
That means a lot so thank you for the nice comment!
Nice to see the same kitty cat 5 years later.
Hi very good
I made this 27 year before on 3 inch wood wounded with different pieces of wires joint together because those days I don't have long wire it works amazing with out antenna and earth.
A diode 50 oham internal resistance.
And 300 oham high impedance headphone.
Also it convert any signals into power.
you mean ohm?
50ohm internal resistance diode? That would extremely strange for a silicon diode. Have you used homemade oxide diode? Or germanium diode?
(Schottky diode is the best for this, if you have one, it only needs about 0.2V to work, but can do with slightly less)
@@adamrak7560 dear in those days i have lot of stock of different old & new components from my father.
I tested many many diode and different stuff but only one type diode work very excellent ( it look like in4148 but its colour is green and its internal resistance exact 50 oham).
Headphone from airline its impedance 300 ohm .
No capacitor, no earth, no antenna used.
My concluded after many experiment, different wires joint together and wounded on 3 inch wood pice 1 ich diameter.
It tunes automatically natural frequency that catches different frequency and convert into power and signal.
It's very informative
Thank you! :)
@@3DSage u r welcome brother and please can u make a detailed video on FM receiver
Very good video, thanks! Where did you get your spring tabs from, please?
search Amazon for 5x9mm springs.
The Exact product I bought is:
"BronaGrand 150pcs Antiqued Brass Silver Crimp Fasteners Leather Cord Ends Caps Necklace Clasp Jewelry Parts 9x5mm"
@@3DSage excellent, thank you very much for this information and an amazing project!😁
dammm now i feel old, i saw the other radio when it came out...
The electromagnetic spectrum… ISSS JUST A NAMEEEE
You don’t even need diode. Take a piece of blade from office box cutter knife or from safe razor and heat if with fire. The goal is to make the metal change its color right about in the middle of the piece. This border with weird color in the middle will have semiconductive layer that will act as a diode. Yes, it’s harder to catch the waves, but it’s possible.
Yes I show that at the end of the video. It works!
My one criticism with this video is that you're effectively saying (0:48) "oscillates back and forth", which to me suggests frequency modulation, i.e. faster and slower along the time axis. When you're talking about amplitude modulation, I think it's far more intuitive to say oscillates up and down. You're not technically wrong, and it's more about what people associate with the description of a "back and forth" movement, and whether people picture that as being along the time axis or perpendicular to that. It's even possible most people here will disagree with me, but I felt that could have been put better.
Very interesting!
the fact that you need no power to use this make this super cool
1:48 its funny to see that the diode example with the LED because LED stands for Light Emiting Diode, which is funny because the LED is also a diode
Nice
Thats so cool!
You should make a version 3 with a built in amp
you should try to make a transceiver but use a dummy load antenna so no fcc problems
yo nice video. howd you make the visuals?
how about a walkie-talkie in that style?
Great minds think alike! 😉
I just realized that’s the headphone that they used is the danks pod reviewed headphone
I just found your Chanel from the original video
Now make an AM transmitter.
Using Arduino works well
@@navysealscopypasta9 Really? I might have to try that!
Just use a scotch bright pad. The kind for scrubbing pots.
Could you make an fm raidio
That would be cool!
A future iteration might include a screw to fine tune the foil.
Does it matter what diode you use?
I have black diodes that I use for full bridge rectifier, will theese work?
I mean this sounds really usefull if you are stranded somewhere, considering it uses no batteries.
Small solar panels or hand crank generators are fine too.
However it will be not possible to use them without transistors or vacuum tubes, which, sadly can't be made so easily as diodes.
How would you modify this project to recieve FM? since it's more common in other countries than AM.
Cant
5:57 “Did you know you can get your prescriptions for less at your local pharmacy”
*TH-cam sponsor* XD
Hold up, why have I never heard of double sided tape appliers? I only ever saw that mechanism being used in erasers XD
Also, I can't find any here in Europe, what was the brand you used? (I could only find the 3M one, but with 50$ shipping : P)
Search for Scotch roll on double sided tape. Or just roll on double sided tape. I think these roll on are kind of new. They are so helpful for many project so I hope you find it!
Next up, a potato powered Walkman.
Seriously, though some kind of cassette player would be cool!😂
You should do a FM 3D printed radio as they are much more common
FM or frequency modulation is much better and newer and in more quantity than AM (which is power consuming and old )
AM is less used than FM
That is a good idea!
Part 2 yeah
Wow when you joined youtube i was only a few months old
thatll only work back when youonly had one radio station in the country . now those things will recieve every available station atthesame time.😮
Will the piezo be louder if there is more/thicker copper wire wrapped around the 3D printed plasic part?
ps: the first thing what I felt while watching was exitement. The video quality is great, I would love to see more interesting small projects.
Yes and and it's best to have a long antenna.
Thank you! I like making these little projects and I have several more in mind :)
Your sink is absolutely the worst kind. Im amazed there is a signal because that faucet is likely not connected to the copper pipe work, usually plastic pipes. Downspouts with the paint removed where the hookup is, flagpole, the valve underneath sinks where it actually connects to the copper, hot water heater, my favorite might be the ground wire in a plug. Its the mouth of the plug. Tuning ur antenna to the proper length is key tho. Longer is not better. It should be half the wavelength. For am of 50khz u can try a 1/16 wave antenna at 1200ft or 374meters. And will work for 100, 150, and 200khz bands. Surely you could divide it again if need be. If ur antenna at any length is a bit out from what u want to receive, it might cancel that particular frequency if its a fee hairs off as to reflect and invert the wave within the antenna. Radio is so cool
Good video 👍👍
Thank you!
So hear me out. What if we use a bolt on that slider part. You can turn the bolt for fine tuning of the station rather than being really careful
we can’t let them kill am radio!
Does any diode work?
thanks i can now create a radio after an apocalypse
Id suggest making one before the apocalypses
Gościu użył dźwięku z bloku ekipy lol
the first thing i said when i saw it was “eeeeeewwwwwwuhhhhwww …unless it’s supposed to look like that”
How long are wire you use?
5:59 "And here you can see exaclty how importnat this diode is"
*proceeds to open the circuit instead of showing what happens if you'd used a wire
It's basically a crystal radio.
5:57 "did you know you can get your prescriptions for less at your local pharmacy?" out of everything how do i hear that
I got a question can a regular piezoelectric buzzer works as an earpiece
Yes regular piezo disc work but higher inductor use parallel to piezo.
@@rizwanmalik3659 thanks for the info
ataching adiode to a LED ( light emitting diode) is very redundant.... you could just flip the LED to make the same point.
Hello 3dsage I've tried something with that before but I couldn't buy that particular diode so if you have a link for that diode could you send it to me Regards Tobias pennings
лампа и есть свето диод
hey, so is one turn of the wire one hert? or hurt i dont know how to say it - sorry
No the turns of the wire are what give that coil its inductance, there are formulas to calculate the frequencies the coil will resonate at given inductance but for stuff like this its pretty much just try some number of coils and see what works, especially since its all homemade stuff and varies a lot person to person depending what materials you have
how do you know how thick your wire needs to be ?
I would wager that the thinner( to a point) the better as it allows you to have more coils.
Make one that auto tunes and scans
Could these types if devices be turned into a generator?
Like catching the radio waves and converting them into power?
@@1x1boop28 yea
Wouldn't be a generator, but a collector. However it would be very very inefficient and ineffective
4:42 idk last generation humour
What is the diode type you used?
Germanium diode. It needs to be because of the low current levels.
@@3DSage I found a workable alternative diode that you can get more easily
th-cam.com/video/5y7I7G_a3Qo/w-d-xo.html
The 1N5711 works if you put a 2K loading resistor across the earphone.
use a germanium signal diode
Lembra do Minecraft do gba?poderia fazer uma versão Snes?
part to yay
6:20 ? FTW?
Diode from razor blade?
W video
Hype
"...3D Printed Radio..." The first rule of 3D Printing Hype. Whatever noun follows the descriptor "3D Printed" is *always* the wrong word; most typically the noun describes the 'Next Higher Assembly'. In this example, the crystal "Radio" was assembled from parts, including: enamel coated wire, maybe a high impedance crystal earphone, a hopefully germanium detector diode (1N34A?), a metal terminal, a metal slider with metal shaft, I see a razor blade (?) for some reason, and (OMG LOOK!!!) at least one part (the 'chassis') that was 3D printed (could have been carved out of a scrap of wood faster than it took to 3D print, not even an exaggeration).
This rule of 3D Printing Hype is essentially universal. The correct noun is rarely used. It's always an exaggeration by implying that the final hand-assembled device somehow tumbled out of the 3D Printer. Utter nonsense. We need to stamp out this nonsense as it impacts the understanding of the proletariat (LOL!!).
The box at the beginning is a wooden box even though the hinge and lock is metal.
Almost all items are referred to as one main material even when they contains other parts. I think I just disagree but thank you for watching the video, adding the comment and opinion.
Bro it's not that deep
Are you really being pedantic about terminology? The thing that holds the coil and its base where the other components rest upon is 3d printed, making it a 3d printed radio.
If you print a large model and use glue you dont go "well its a glued 3d print" or if you use screws "its a screwed together 3d printed part"
And I guarantee no one else goes by this "rule"
Background noise not loud enough as I could decipher a few sentences, thank you.
now do it for tv
jk it probably doesnt work the same way