@@takeyourheart114 this battery's capacity is tiny. It's a cool project sure but it sure as hell isnt practical. Better off buying a commercial solution.
I used to solder under a microscope (for rocket parts and other stuff 😉). This lads soldering steadiness is above average. Not many people can have such a steady hand. The technique is flawless. Kudos on the ingenuity too!
Далеко от розетки не отходи! Lm317 как и любой стабилизатор потребляет гораздо больше, чем часы. И хорошо, если автор заменил резистор ограничения тока на tp4056 на соответствующий аккумулятору. И если в аккумуляторе есть плата защиты. А вообще молодец в части миниатюризации.
There was a lot to talk about like using a voltage regulator , high voltage to low conversion so it can provide amps for a longer period. But for me the best part was how compact every thing was, I have some experience with electronic components and I know how difficult it is to combine them in such a tiny space. Good Work Keep it up.
It is... especially if it scaled up. Thing is... idk why Duracel, energizer nor Rayovc makes Lithium batteries. (Maybe they do and I'm just mistaken. Cuz I mainly buy Energizer AA and AAA rechargeable batteries)
@@ericolens3 I only meant not practical because a typical AA battery has a capacity of about 2500mAh, and this one has 180mAh. If you could scale that up somehow and still fit it within the casing, then sure.
It's really not. however putting the circuit inside of the device itself would allow for a larger battery and the proper protection circuits, and that would be extremely practical.
That's a lot of work just for something like that and you sir have done the most EPIC and splendid job 👏 doing it. Hats off to all the time and effort that went into making this video. Wow! Subbed!
Interesting exercise. Certainly cool as a maker project. However, aside from the questionable handling of the electrolyte, the end results seems not worth the effort. First of all a regular alkaline AA battery is probably good for 1500 mAh, and a NiMH rechargeable AA is easily 2500 mAh and up. The 180 mAh lithium ion battery is really measly in comparison. I also wonder if there is any heat issue when you have to squeeze the voltage from 3V+ to 1.5V. My criticism/doubt aside, I applaud your efforts.
you have to look at the Wh not mAh when comparing different battery voltages/chemestry but I agree that the small Li-ion pack he used is small because he cannot fill the battery space as efficiently as you can when the battery and shell is designed for each other.
He put a pair of the 180 mAh batteries in so its 360 mAh. Pitiful beside the commercially manufactured versions of these batteries which typically have around 1500 mAh capacity and up to 3000 for the versions that use a separate, special, charger. Can't just pop them into any old NiCd/NiMH charger.
This is a cool project, but there are some practical issues. The capacity of the lithium battery is low, so you're not going to get as much energy out of the battery as you would from a regular battery. The LM317 is a linear voltage regulator. It converts the excess energy into heat and has a terrible efficiency. A buck converter is better suited for this type of task, but it puts out dirty DC. Shrinking the charging circuit is *dangerous* if you aren't careful. One mistake and it could malfunction and put the lithium battery into a dangerous state. Lithium batteries are no joke, if they become angry they turn thermonuclear. Consider a slimmer charging circuit and a USB breakout connector instead. I know how hard it is to make electronics fit into a tiny space.
The most likely injury to happen when disassembling an alkaline battery is that you slip and cut yourself. Unless you're working in an oven or surrounded by exposed circuitry. at most you have the potential of some skin irritation due to the chemistry and I would imagine that's only going to happen from prolonged exposure or if you have sensitive skin. It's mostly safe. Just an absolutely inane modification.
I agree. This Penguin dude is an irresponsible d-bag putting out videos that some hayseed might think is useful when they are poisoning themselves. Leave batteries alone you diy fools.
Cute idea, but here's a cray bit of knowledge: You can actually buy rechargable batteries that fit four to a charger, and get four charged batteries at a time instead of just one.
good luck finding ones that are actually the proper voltage. Also, this video is hella interesting even if not the most practical everyday thing. It shows step by step how some of the high tech things we have in today's world can be put together in the real world that most of us rarely think about, let alone visualize.
you can buy these batteries online. But it's neat to see all the stuff they have to have stuffed into them. Didn't expect someone to be able to DIY one.
So, to make a battery, you hollow out a battery, put another battery inside, along with some electronics, and then need to scavenge parts from a third battery
+ you must count the amount of work and time to do it too. It's just pointless to do it and waste your money for like 200mAh which is nothing compared to average 1 dollar battery that can easily store 1500 - 2000mAh which is like 10 times more for 10 times less money
I can appreciate the craftsmanship that went into creating these. I just wonder if there is any real benefit to these. I also had a hard time getting past how annoying the music was.
Fairly certain there's no benefits, seeing the battery circuit bodged together made me cringe, having parts as close as this is asking for parts to overheat.
the linear regulator is going to waste 50-75% of the energy going out of the lithium cell, using a switching converter would have been a much smarter move
@@LazySpaceRaptor just search for buck converter ICs, the low power ones include everything inside the IC itself, they are either fixed voltage or adjustable via external resistors
You would still need an external capacitor. And equipment that uses batteries, typically does not expect a noisy power source. So you really need enough capacity.
@@ButterfatFarms Fair point. But like all things, options are ok. I don’t use a lot of batteries, however in the case of just needing to recharge a single battery for a low usage item, this looks like it would be a valid solution where an additional charger wouldn’t be required.
I can't remember what the cut off voltage is for that voltage regulator but it will basically shut off before the lithium batteries gets completely drained. Low voltage protection would really only be needed if it was connected directly to the lithium battery but its not, and the regulator will stop outputting any power before it drains the better too much.
Only sensible option would be to use switch mode regulator instead of LDO, but such solution is more bulky (especially inductor). At this moment more than 50% of energy is simply dissipated as a heat.
I was scrolling on youtube i came across this video.. this is awesome i can understand how difficult it went, to fit all those parts in such small space It seems like your new channel so best of luck for future👍
Есть готовые решения и готовые модули . Но ваша увелирная работа -искусство . Честно ,мало у кого есть столько терпения ,чтоб столько возиться с микроскопическими компонентами .
Немного кустарный монтаж .. можно все разместить на одной плате .. ещё можно на одну плату параллельно насобирать полтора вольтовые аккумуляторы .. и заряжать от мощного зарядника .. будет больше ампер на выходе ..
instead of potenciometer you could have used normal resistor or two since its role is only to tell regulator how much voltage to output and not much current goes through it
No way, this is from Great Britain. More possible India, Pakistan or Indonesia. Waste???... just throw it in the sea. If you can't see it, it's not there.....😖
Why don't you use SMPS as voltage regulator rather than linear regulator? I saw some of these with really small main boards and great current source capabilities. It would extend lifetime of such battery. Nice project, good job.
Ingenious. You work very carefully. I really like the quality of the solders. Your LM317 controller is great but it stays permanently connected to the battery and of course has a low consumption that will quickly drain the battery. Success in several projects.
Wonderful Video I like The Way You Arrange All the Components in a AA Battery. In Future Video I suggest you while charging the li-ion or li-po battery adjust the CHARGING CURRENT this will enhance the battery health performance.(For example Battery has 450mAh So Charge with 450mA or less) AND TP4056 HAS A ADJUSTABLE CHARGING CURRENT BY CHANGING (R2) RESISTOR.
I totally agree with other's on how tight a tolerance it is to cram all that technology in such a small space. Proper tools make all the difference in the world.
really cool fine work, but totally pointless energy wise, an Nimh battery will provide between 2-3Wh of energy is will provide 240mWh of energy and about 300+ mWh of waste heat. But even so if a thing takes 2 AA batteries it usually will run off one li-ion without reduction of voltage. because 2 AA can provide 3.4V when completly fresh as long as you have a circuit to cut off discharge at like 3V to 2.5V it will be fine (depends on cell).
Gotta watch out for heat though. Some devices draw at a higher discharge rate, and can turn that hot glue into hot goo. Best to use an epoxy to pot the electronics. But yes, protecting the circuits is ideal.
This is really cool but I can't imagine who would ever go through the trouble of doing all this when you can do a couple clicks on Amazon's website and get the same thing.
Nice technical work. However, the battery capacity of the final product is less than a tenth of the duracell, so might not really be all that practical.
2.25 wh 1.5v x 1.5ah is the alkaline battery and 0.67 wh 3.7v x 0.18ah is the li-ion. 25% of the alkalines capacity it have i say if we consider energy losses in the dc to dc converter. =)
@@sugarpuffextrem Not really. You have to compare usable energies. For a decent alkaline battery that's probably more like 1.5V x 2.5Ah = 3.75Wh. For the Li-ion with a linear regulator reducing its voltage to 1.5V, you only have a usable voltage of 1.5V, not 3.7V. So its _usable_ energy is going to be 1.5V x 0.18Ah = 0.27Wh, which is just 7% of the usable capacity of the alkaline.
@@RexxSchneider well i assumed it used a chip than converts the high volt to low volt without any significant losses. I guess the module need a coil and caoacitor to be able to do that properly. I hate linear regulators. Whatcare they good for anyway other than making heat😅
@@sugarpuffextreme3860 You mean use a switching regulator instead of a linear regulator. But that's not what the video was showing you. Read what @Jan Andrysek wrote: "the battery capacity of the final product is less than a tenth of the duracell, so might not really be all that practical." If you're trying to say that using a switching regulator could increase the usable capacity of the battery, that's not in dispute. But what switching regulator are you going to cram inside an AA battery? And how are you going to cope with the horribly noisy output that will screw up a lot of the equipment that expects clean DC from a battery?
Well very nice project and absolutely amazing how you managed to fit everything inside an AA-Battery. But without over discharge protection your battery will die fast. And the capacity is not that high but enough for low energy consuming devices. NiMH Eneloop Batteries have 2000mAh and yours only has 540mAh (compared to NiMH because they only have 1/3 of the voltage)
DIY my @ss! Totally professional work! I may never be able to do it myself. Awesome job dude! I got speechless with the attention to detail. Many cheers!
Eres un Einstein, goliat de las ideas, steven Hawking de los positivo y negativo, ingeniero, prodigio, bruce wayne, cerebro colosal, crack, genio, idiolo. Gran trabajo y buen video.
Vai contaminar sua casa com metais tóxicos quando pode comprar uma pilha recarregável bem barata... uso as da elgin de 2500 mile amperes e duram muito mais que uma duracell.
А зачем оставлять в схеме подстроечный резистор? Логичнее было после настройки замерить номинал подсторечного резистора и заменить его постоянным резистором.
Not as drastically as you think. The LiPo uses a much higher voltage (~3.5-4.2V) which means it can provide ~2W (4V * 0.5A). In comparison a typical NiMh Battery with 2500mA, 1.5V capacity can provide ~3.75W. It's still just half, but less worse than you would expect. Please note, those are very rough calculations and do not include voltage drop during use nor losses during voltage conversion of the lipo down to 1.5V.
@@adrianjost-dev Also, rechargeable. Not needing to buy batteries and instead just plug them in for an hour or two every once in a while is an great advantage. Could be useful in an emergency situation, being able to store power in these batteries. Compared to just getting a normal power bank, you can take these and use them in devices that would refuse a power bank but accept batteries (remotes and flashlights for decent examples)
@@nikos5113 sure, haven't rewatched the video closely and just assumed the 500mAh from the first comment are correct. Then it is really not much capacity. I like those batteries anyway (but the commercial version)
Todo tu contenido es interesante, sigue así y el canal crecerá mucho más..!! Excelente trabajo. EDIT: ¿Cuál es el número de parte del IC encargado de cargar las baterías?
A questão do vídeo, acredito eu, que seja mais educacional e experimental. Vai dizer que não é muito foda o cara soldando os bagulho ridículos de tão pequenos e ainda fazer dar certo? Kkkkkkk
i'll tell u what u should be afraid of: any battery that is stronger than 3.7 volts no matter what (tho u do gotta worry about the wattage cuz my 9v battery is ATLEAST 10x stronger than my 3.7v battery in watts) so watch about for batteries stronger than 1.5 especially the 9v batteries
This video is about how to make a 1.5 battery from a 3.7 battery ? Great idea! Now it would be even better to make a battery for a wristwatch from a car battery - it would be cool in general...
This music bring me back to the old days, like a sailor looking at the horizon remembering when he first step foot on the mighty sea, except it’s me remembering the early days of TH-cam. Lol
This was very interesting! Curious if there is a way to maybe use a battery with more than 180mah in there. What does this generally translate to after voltage downregulation?
I'd just go to the store and buy a pack of 4 rechargeable batteries but this is a really cool project keep up the great work
Lazy
@@takeyourheart114 earning the money to buy the thing isn't being lazy. I just don't see the point of only being able to charge 1 battery at a time.
@@takeyourheart114 this battery's capacity is tiny. It's a cool project sure but it sure as hell isnt practical. Better off buying a commercial solution.
@@TheArachnoBot next video "I installed a USB port in the gas cap of my car to charge my car along with my iphone."
@@takeyourheart114 what??
The most impressive thing is how well you condensed the charging circuit, well done
I would love to see a video dedicated to how that was done. Very impressive
1:15 What actually happens there??
@@ahmadrandhawa238 he just soldered all the SMD components together without a circuit board, to make it super tiny
o thanks
Yeah that was pretty badass
I used to solder under a microscope (for rocket parts and other stuff 😉). This lads soldering steadiness is above average. Not many people can have such a steady hand. The technique is flawless. Kudos on the ingenuity too!
lol
1:15 What actually happens there??
Это в твоей стране считается мастерством пайки? Какой позор!
@@vladimiryakovlev9373Nachuj suka blad fashist okupanty! 🔥💥
Wow such fine work👏
I subscribed you
I love you
@@khorshedalam9095 nema prevod na srpskom ?
Hello inventor 101
Hello Inventor 101
Welcome to another episode of diy pro. Today, we will be transforming a battery into an indoor campfire. Lets get to it
You made my night with your comment. Thank you. 🤣👍
@@FedeG86 I hope you followed the instructions carefully, otherwise you will be cold tonight :)
One of the cooler videos I've seen so far in electronics. I dunno how you can manage to keep your hand that steady. Good stuff.
Keep your mind cool and steady, buy an NiMH battery it works better and last 5x longer
the deadbugged charging circuit looked a bit tight for my comfort, but it turned out fine. incredible soldering skills there.
just get boards ordered ffs lmao
@Seek Him with all your heart and you will find Him it's nice that you're religious but I dont care and don't try to convert me
Далеко от розетки не отходи! Lm317 как и любой стабилизатор потребляет гораздо больше, чем часы. И хорошо, если автор заменил резистор ограничения тока на tp4056 на соответствующий аккумулятору. И если в аккумуляторе есть плата защиты. А вообще молодец в части миниатюризации.
дороговато для одного акума , чтобы спрятать его в часах
Windows için değil de ne ⅝h3@@mamedovich562
😊
Omg how is this possible????
This TH-camr have amazing talent
Those tiny parts soldering and clean looking...wow
There was a lot to talk about like using a voltage regulator , high voltage to low conversion so it can provide amps for a longer period. But for me the best part was how compact every thing was, I have some experience with electronic components and I know how difficult it is to combine them in such a tiny space.
Good Work Keep it up.
Grazie 7hbb
Kiale
اقا منصور هم وطنیم؟
Problem is when you use a linear regulator instead of switchmode you are burning the difference between the input and output voltages.
@@soundspark I have no idea what you are talking about but it sounds about correct. LOL I just know you are right.,
I'm not sure this is overly practical, but I love the meticulous attention to detail! Excellent work!
It is... especially if it scaled up.
Thing is... idk why Duracel, energizer nor Rayovc makes Lithium batteries.
(Maybe they do and I'm just mistaken. Cuz I mainly buy Energizer AA and AAA rechargeable batteries)
@@ericolens3 I only meant not practical because a typical AA battery has a capacity of about 2500mAh, and this one has 180mAh. If you could scale that up somehow and still fit it within the casing, then sure.
It's really not. however putting the circuit inside of the device itself would allow for a larger battery and the proper protection circuits, and that would be extremely practical.
That's a lot of work just for something like that and you sir have done the most EPIC and splendid job 👏 doing it. Hats off to all the time and effort that went into making this video. Wow! Subbed!
Interesting exercise. Certainly cool as a maker project. However, aside from the questionable handling of the electrolyte, the end results seems not worth the effort. First of all a regular alkaline AA battery is probably good for 1500 mAh, and a NiMH rechargeable AA is easily 2500 mAh and up. The 180 mAh lithium ion battery is really measly in comparison. I also wonder if there is any heat issue when you have to squeeze the voltage from 3V+ to 1.5V. My criticism/doubt aside, I applaud your efforts.
Trabajo en electrónica y concuerdo contigo el amperaje final es pobre ... cómo para un control remoto ...
you have to look at the Wh not mAh when comparing different battery voltages/chemestry but I agree that the small Li-ion pack he used is small because he cannot fill the battery space as efficiently as you can when the battery and shell is designed for each other.
He put a pair of the 180 mAh batteries in so its 360 mAh. Pitiful beside the commercially manufactured versions of these batteries which typically have around 1500 mAh capacity and up to 3000 for the versions that use a separate, special, charger. Can't just pop them into any old NiCd/NiMH charger.
This is a cool project, but there are some practical issues. The capacity of the lithium battery is low, so you're not going to get as much energy out of the battery as you would from a regular battery. The LM317 is a linear voltage regulator. It converts the excess energy into heat and has a terrible efficiency. A buck converter is better suited for this type of task, but it puts out dirty DC. Shrinking the charging circuit is *dangerous* if you aren't careful. One mistake and it could malfunction and put the lithium battery into a dangerous state. Lithium batteries are no joke, if they become angry they turn thermonuclear. Consider a slimmer charging circuit and a USB breakout connector instead. I know how hard it is to make electronics fit into a tiny space.
Try a resistor in line for ground
🤓
@@I_also_like_sirens_hehe Nerds rule the world today.
I respect your soldering skills. They are impressive!
Don't ever do this! You could really get hurt depending on the battery chemistry
plus it could explode: sending sharpnels all over, plus not using gloves bothered me a LOT
The most likely injury to happen when disassembling an alkaline battery is that you slip and cut yourself. Unless you're working in an oven or surrounded by exposed circuitry. at most you have the potential of some skin irritation due to the chemistry and I would imagine that's only going to happen from prolonged exposure or if you have sensitive skin. It's mostly safe. Just an absolutely inane modification.
Even the way he was holding the scalpel was bad!
@@_azureAutumn Explosions are only a risk if you're dismantling a lithium battery. Alkaline and regular batteries are nowhere near that volatile.
I agree. This Penguin dude is an irresponsible d-bag putting out videos that some hayseed might think is useful when they are poisoning themselves.
Leave batteries alone you diy fools.
Cute idea, but here's a cray bit of knowledge: You can actually buy rechargable batteries that fit four to a charger, and get four charged batteries at a time instead of just one.
No way! That’s crazy! I did not know that!
good luck finding ones that are actually the proper voltage. Also, this video is hella interesting even if not the most practical everyday thing. It shows step by step how some of the high tech things we have in today's world can be put together in the real world that most of us rarely think about, let alone visualize.
The pack I got came with a 4 micro USB connector adapter, so best of both.
Man you're a son of your mother!
Congrats 👏 👏 👏 👏 👏
you can buy these batteries online. But it's neat to see all the stuff they have to have stuffed into them. Didn't expect someone to be able to DIY one.
180Mah? Totally not worth it, but the precision and accuracy are admirable. Great job anyway!
180 * 2
180*2 and that was at 3.7v i think it would be a bit more at 1.5v
Wow I'm so glad I clicked on this. Your production quality is top shelf. Great work my friend
So, to make a battery, you hollow out a battery, put another battery inside, along with some electronics, and then need to scavenge parts from a third battery
The battery he hollowed would of ended up in landfill
+ you must count the amount of work and time to do it too. It's just pointless to do it and waste your money for like 200mAh which is nothing compared to average 1 dollar battery that can easily store 1500 - 2000mAh which is like 10 times more for 10 times less money
I can appreciate the craftsmanship that went into creating these. I just wonder if there is any real benefit to these. I also had a hard time getting past how annoying the music was.
Fairly certain there's no benefits, seeing the battery circuit bodged together made me cringe, having parts as close as this is asking for parts to overheat.
Craftmanship lmao
Most people do not understand the satisfaction differences betwen buying and making. This is really cool man. I love it.
the linear regulator is going to waste 50-75% of the energy going out of the lithium cell, using a switching converter would have been a much smarter move
aguante PWM, nothing else matters
Share some knowledge please? I'm interested in having more than one option for my voltage.
@@LazySpaceRaptor just search for buck converter ICs, the low power ones include everything inside the IC itself, they are either fixed voltage or adjustable via external resistors
Wow
You would still need an external capacitor. And equipment that uses batteries, typically does not expect a noisy power source. So you really need enough capacity.
Very cool. These are commercially available but seeing how the engineering works is interesting.
Its already exist on Amazon
I wish all batteries were like this… incredible that it’s possible but not done by the industry. Great job 👍
Those 1.2V batteries are worthless. it's better 1.5V batteries for charging, but they are forbidden. it's called corporate fascism.
Ummmmm have you never heard of rechargeable batteries. The last time I hade to buy AA was 4 years ago. You should look into them.
@@Marko_Maxa lol
@@joenasty4395 What I meant by ‘like this’ was rechargeable using a single port… not requiring an additional bit of hardware.
@@ButterfatFarms Fair point. But like all things, options are ok. I don’t use a lot of batteries, however in the case of just needing to recharge a single battery for a low usage item, this looks like it would be a valid solution where an additional charger wouldn’t be required.
All is great, but in that way there is no low voltage protection. Congrats for the work.
I can't remember what the cut off voltage is for that voltage regulator but it will basically shut off before the lithium batteries gets completely drained.
Low voltage protection would really only be needed if it was connected directly to the lithium battery but its not, and the regulator will stop outputting any power before it drains the better too much.
Amazing work, so patient and meticulous !!! And the thumbnail wasn't clickbait 👍👍👍👌👌👌
This is a great idea. I would love to see this mass produced. Except for the LM317 voltage regulator. That is such a huge waste of energy.
Only sensible option would be to use switch mode regulator instead of LDO, but such solution is more bulky (especially inductor). At this moment more than 50% of energy is simply dissipated as a heat.
I think you can already buy batteries like these on amazon and stuff
Batteries exactly like this already exist and have existed for quite a while. Except they have more capacity.
I was scrolling on youtube i came across this video.. this is awesome i can understand how difficult it went, to fit all those parts in such small space
It seems like your new channel so best of luck for future👍
Thanks
Есть готовые решения и готовые модули . Но ваша увелирная работа -искусство .
Честно ,мало у кого есть столько терпения ,чтоб столько возиться с микроскопическими компонентами .
Можно ведь было измерить сопротивление на переменнике и заменить его на миниатюрный, аналогичный СМД резистор.
Работа 👍
Немного кустарный монтаж .. можно все разместить на одной плате .. ещё можно на одну плату параллельно насобирать полтора вольтовые аккумуляторы .. и заряжать от мощного зарядника .. будет больше ампер на выходе ..
Amazing build. Such precision. You ought to be a surgeon with such steady hands. Thanks for sharing this with us.
I do not have the spirit of being a surgeon.😄
Glad you enjoyed watching the video.
Kef halek
Poor conditions are showing how we are genius.😊 Great work. Thank you for video.
That's kinda dangerous and bungled, but still very impressive. How long does this battery last inside the clock you showed in the video?
Hearted comment but no answer xD
@@epsilonadept7301 probly stil measuring
@@epsilonadept7301 they ❤️ all of them, probably low english comprehension and just click instead of read.
the battery discharges the stabilizer faster than the alarm clock , in principle it has a large transverse current
@@sharadkumar8353 probably XD
That is an amazing project, but not easy! Definitely inspiring and challenging!
وقتی ادم سلیقه داشته باشه نتیجه عالی میشه .درود بر شما🌹🌹🌹🌹
ممنون
Very cool! That takes patience and a steady hand. Very impressed!
It might be a little dangerous but I'm impressed at how skilled you are
خوشحالم یه ایرانی بلاخره داره چیزای خوب، تو یوتیوب میذاره
ادامه بده موفق باشی
ممنون❤
Impressive solder skills along with the patience required to do this.
instead of potenciometer you could have used normal resistor or two since its role is only to tell regulator how much voltage to output and not much current goes through it
How are you
He did this so he can fine tune the output.
@@jonathanfairchild once tuned he could measure the resistance across the POT and replace it with the equivalent resistor.
@@jonathanfairchild i know but after finetuning you measure potentiometer and replace it with resistor :)
@@Ezio470 you can also just calculate it, it's a simple ratio.
People, this is what you call a positively insane human 👍
I can 100% guarantee that cost more than an entire pack of rechargeable batteries. BTW, how did you dispose of the original battery contents?
Ok....No more questions.....lol
No way, this is from Great Britain. More possible India, Pakistan or Indonesia. Waste???... just throw it in the sea. If you can't see it, it's not there.....😖
Wow, awesome I know how difficult it's to solder smd components. But really loved your work.. 👍🏽
My first ever TH-cam comment.
thank you
Thank u
You are just genius. The ink on plastic to mark a spot is amazing
Impressionante! seu conhecimento é digno de orgulho.
The first kid to copy your monkey level safety standard is going to lose some fingers.
And that kid is you
Dude, messing with those small parts is one thing AND THEN THE STOP MOTION STARTED 😱
Great project! Is there a low voltage cutoff for the Li-Po-pack?
Nope. LM317 is linear regulator, it does not provides BMS functions like LV cutoff.
@@macieksoft Okay, thank you.
@@macieksoft what if he used other version of tp4056 which has current protection?
It would seem not.
Why don't you use SMPS as voltage regulator rather than linear regulator? I saw some of these with really small main boards and great current source capabilities. It would extend lifetime of such battery. Nice project, good job.
Ingenious. You work very carefully. I really like the quality of the solders. Your LM317 controller is great but it stays permanently connected to the battery and of course has a low consumption that will quickly drain the battery. Success in several projects.
Pretty nice! I'd be concerned with it having no low voltage cutoff on the lithium cell though
Wonderful Video I like The Way You Arrange All the Components in a AA Battery.
In Future Video I suggest you while charging the li-ion or li-po battery adjust the CHARGING CURRENT this will enhance the battery health performance.(For example Battery has 450mAh So Charge with 450mA or less) AND TP4056 HAS A ADJUSTABLE CHARGING CURRENT BY CHANGING (R2) RESISTOR.
Thank you for your attention
The offer is useful and interesting.
Miniaturization at its best. Kudos dude!
I totally agree with other's on how tight a tolerance it is to cram all that technology in such a small space.
Proper tools make all the difference in the world.
I have never seen something like that absolutely amazing work 👏
Wow! Was für eine Mühe dahinter steckt. Aber wahnsinnig gut gemacht 👍 😊
New caption: “how to potentially burn down your house!”
More accurate title: how to explode your entire kitchen
ای بنازمت مغز متفکر به عشق ❤❤❤IRAN❤❤❤
مرسی داداش
It’s more practical for rechargeable 9volts battery, considering the costs of replacing expansive 9volts “carbon” batteries.
Yeah for 9V, 6V and 4.5V batteries it makes a lot of sense, as they have more space and the boost circuit will take the same space.
really cool fine work, but totally pointless energy wise, an Nimh battery will provide between 2-3Wh of energy is will provide 240mWh of energy and about 300+ mWh of waste heat. But even so if a thing takes 2 AA batteries it usually will run off one li-ion without reduction of voltage. because 2 AA can provide 3.4V when completly fresh as long as you have a circuit to cut off discharge at like 3V to 2.5V it will be fine (depends on cell).
Wait until this guy knows about battery chargers.
Use a hot glue gun on the solder joints after soldering to give the components strength and reduce the chance of shorts.
Gotta watch out for heat though. Some devices draw at a higher discharge rate, and can turn that hot glue into hot goo. Best to use an epoxy to pot the electronics. But yes, protecting the circuits is ideal.
The correct thing to use is chloroprene rubber glue e.g. Kafuter 1668 or similar. It's designed for reinforcing components and soldered leads on PCBs.
This is really cool but I can't imagine who would ever go through the trouble of doing all this when you can do a couple clicks on Amazon's website and get the same thing.
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ممنون
Nice technical work. However, the battery capacity of the final product is less than a tenth of the duracell, so might not really be all that practical.
2.25 wh 1.5v x 1.5ah is the alkaline battery and 0.67 wh 3.7v x 0.18ah is the li-ion. 25% of the alkalines capacity it have i say if we consider energy losses in the dc to dc converter. =)
Well, chemical one use batteries deliver much more power per density than lithium batteries
@@sugarpuffextrem Not really. You have to compare usable energies. For a decent alkaline battery that's probably more like 1.5V x 2.5Ah = 3.75Wh. For the Li-ion with a linear regulator reducing its voltage to 1.5V, you only have a usable voltage of 1.5V, not 3.7V. So its _usable_ energy is going to be 1.5V x 0.18Ah = 0.27Wh, which is just 7% of the usable capacity of the alkaline.
@@RexxSchneider well i assumed it used a chip than converts the high volt to low volt without any significant losses. I guess the module need a coil and caoacitor to be able to do that properly. I hate linear regulators. Whatcare they good for anyway other than making heat😅
@@sugarpuffextreme3860 You mean use a switching regulator instead of a linear regulator. But that's not what the video was showing you.
Read what @Jan Andrysek wrote: "the battery capacity of the final product is less than a tenth of the duracell, so might not really be all that practical."
If you're trying to say that using a switching regulator could increase the usable capacity of the battery, that's not in dispute. But what switching regulator are you going to cram inside an AA battery? And how are you going to cope with the horribly noisy output that will screw up a lot of the equipment that expects clean DC from a battery?
Well
very nice project and absolutely amazing how you managed to fit everything inside an AA-Battery. But without over discharge protection your battery will die fast. And the capacity is not that high but enough for low energy consuming devices. NiMH Eneloop Batteries have 2000mAh and yours only has 540mAh (compared to NiMH because they only have 1/3 of the voltage)
The battery in this project is only 180 mah
@@TheArachnoBot Yeah but it has 3.6V while NiMH only has 1.2V
So you have to to multiply it by 3 to compare them
@@lukasoffen2420 Nope. That would be the case for a switching regulator but this has a linear regulator which just converts the extra voltage to heat.
Sir...🙏 You are absolutely GENIUS in his work.👌😘👌😘
DIY my @ss! Totally professional work! I may never be able to do it myself. Awesome job dude! I got speechless with the attention to detail. Many cheers!
yeah, I kinda figured he or she is in the electronics field, more than likely
Eres un Einstein, goliat de las ideas, steven Hawking de los positivo y negativo, ingeniero, prodigio, bruce wayne, cerebro colosal, crack, genio, idiolo. Gran trabajo y buen video.
The art of assembling an extraordinary electronic circuit, amazing 👍👍
One detail you forgot to do ,
You should have removed the crossed bin sign by a non crossed one , Nice work though .
Not bad, very nicely done. However capacity has been severely reduced from 2850 down to 180 mAh
"Wh" is capacity not mAh when you compare between different battery chemistries/voltages
I learned my lesson on not messing with batteries. Shocked myself. 😅
Caraca, se eu soubesse que era "tão fácil e simples" já teria substituído todas as pilhas de casa, como não fiz isso antes?
Kkkkk
Vrdd kkk , seria bom se todas fosse assim mais infelizmente eles qerem lucram nas pilhas, apesar q tem carregaveis mais n dura mt
Vai contaminar sua casa com metais tóxicos quando pode comprar uma pilha recarregável bem barata... uso as da elgin de 2500 mile amperes e duram muito mais que uma duracell.
А зачем оставлять в схеме подстроечный резистор? Логичнее было после настройки замерить номинал подсторечного резистора и заменить его постоянным резистором.
get 0ut !!!!!!!
You are an artist Penguin! your work is fascinating!
There's only one issue I see with this, you've reduced the battery capacity from around 2500 mah to under 500 from what I can tell
Not as drastically as you think. The LiPo uses a much higher voltage (~3.5-4.2V) which means it can provide ~2W (4V * 0.5A).
In comparison a typical NiMh Battery with 2500mA, 1.5V capacity can provide ~3.75W.
It's still just half, but less worse than you would expect.
Please note, those are very rough calculations and do not include voltage drop during use nor losses during voltage conversion of the lipo down to 1.5V.
@@adrianjost-dev Also, rechargeable. Not needing to buy batteries and instead just plug them in for an hour or two every once in a while is an great advantage.
Could be useful in an emergency situation, being able to store power in these batteries.
Compared to just getting a normal power bank, you can take these and use them in devices that would refuse a power bank but accept batteries (remotes and flashlights for decent examples)
@@adrianjost-dev It's not 2W, the batterie's capacity is180mah . 4v x 0.18A = 0.72W.
@@nikos5113 sure, haven't rewatched the video closely and just assumed the 500mAh from the first comment are correct. Then it is really not much capacity. I like those batteries anyway (but the commercial version)
@@nikos5113 Didn't he put 2 of those in there?
Todo tu contenido es interesante, sigue así y el canal crecerá mucho más..!! Excelente trabajo.
EDIT: ¿Cuál es el número de parte del IC encargado de cargar las baterías?
Thanks.
TP4056 lithium battery charger chip
wtf como te respondio el pinbuino¿¿ si abla ingles xdd
EDIT: yo creo que lo tradujo xd salu2 emanuelardo
@@_-zahamwhoo-_ XD
You my friend are a soldering ninja!
Com todo esse trabalhão eu teria comprado a pilha recarregável logo🤣 sem contar que saiu mais caro gastando com o Arduino, fonte, e bateria kkkkk
Kkkk vdd
Que arduino, doido?!
A questão do vídeo, acredito eu, que seja mais educacional e experimental. Vai dizer que não é muito foda o cara soldando os bagulho ridículos de tão pequenos e ainda fazer dar certo? Kkkkkkk
@@hallssoft7967 com certeza kkkk mas eu já desistiria só em abrir kkkkk mas soldar smd é complicado mesmo 🤣
Hola que tal excelente video pero cuál es el diagrama para conectar los componentes del regulador de voltaje? Saludos
Hello
The datasheet file was inserted into the description.
@@PenguinDIY a ok very good thank you and exelent vídeos 👌
At first i thought this was just some more clickbait but no way you blew me away!!!
I feel like the overall cost of this project
Would cost more than a standard 2 pack of rechargable batteries
Making your own is very dangerous
FACIL DIMAIS ,FIZ LOGO 10 PRA DA DE PRESENTE KKKKK
You deserve a like friend 👍.
I'm inspired by you,
Btw love your videos.
Seems dangerous
How
No, not dangerous
bro a 1.5V battery is not scary at all i connected copper wires to it (it didn't get hot in the slightest bit)
i'll tell u what u should be afraid of: any battery that is stronger than 3.7 volts no matter what (tho u do gotta worry about the wattage cuz my 9v battery is ATLEAST 10x stronger than my 3.7v battery in watts) so watch about for batteries stronger than 1.5 especially the 9v batteries
@@Alternate-H123_22 your knowledge is wrong my friend
I liked the edition you made in the micro components of the charger, they are very nice haha
Your invention can change the world
This video is about how to make a 1.5 battery from a 3.7 battery ? Great idea! Now it would be even better to make a battery for a wristwatch from a car battery - it would be cool in general...
This music bring me back to the old days, like a sailor looking at the horizon remembering when he first step foot on the mighty sea, except it’s me remembering the early days of TH-cam. Lol
انصافا به این میگن محتوای با کیفیت و چرا نباید کسی بدونه یه ایرانی همچین محتوای با کیفیتی تولید می کنه
خداوکیلی یه ایرانی با این کیفیت میاد این چیزارو میسازه باید کلی طرفدار پیدا کنه. من که تا میتونم به همه معرفی میکنم
ممنون از لطفتون
ممنون داش فرهاد
Wow wise fellow you are. Your soldering skills are beyond compare you have a rock steady hands
This was very interesting! Curious if there is a way to maybe use a battery with more than 180mah in there. What does this generally translate to after voltage downregulation?
q dijiste
This DIY project is literally fire!
کارت واقعا عالیه عاشق خلاقیتت شدم
مرسی داداش
This is really an out of the box creation