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  • čas přidán 24. 02. 2016
  • Dave investigates the piezoelectric effect in multi layer chip capacitors (MLCC's). In this case, on the backlight inverter on his own BM235 multimeter.
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  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 329

  • @Afrotechmods
    @Afrotechmods Před 8 lety +58

    I love that you are honest enough to critique a product with your own brand on it. You are awesome.

    • @maxpert9
      @maxpert9 Před 3 lety +2

      Isn’t that great? an EEVBlog product he didn’t even design.. and doesn’t have a schematic for it. lol

  • @ConstantlyDamaged
    @ConstantlyDamaged Před 8 lety +22

    Ah, there is an easy fix in the works for this. All you need to do, for around twenty years, listen to loud rock/metal music. No more annoying high-pitched frequencies, ever!
    Thanks Motorhead, you really saved my bacon!

    • @power-max
      @power-max Před 8 lety +7

      +Darthane But then you get tinnitus and chronic ear ringing :(

    • @EastyUK
      @EastyUK Před 8 lety +1

      +Darthane Also helps when living with a women?

    • @ConstantlyDamaged
      @ConstantlyDamaged Před 8 lety +1

      Brian Eastwood Can't hurt, and besides, you can just put some music on!

  • @steverobbins4872
    @steverobbins4872 Před 8 lety +8

    Nice video. Thumb up, as usual.
    Here's a story about the piezoelectric effect that some might find interesting. Several years ago I designed a Bit-Error Rate Tester (BERT) that ran at 43 Gb/sec. It included 17 serial channels that each ran at 2.5 Gb/sec, and each channel needed its own separate PLL to produce the 2.5GHz clock, because I had to be able to adjust the relative phase angles. (You can control the phase angle of a PLL by feeding dc current into the loop filter, which I did with a DAC.) The eye patterns would look okay for a few seconds, and then suddenly get really cloudy, indicating jitter. Then I noticed that tapping the side of the chassis with a screw driver made a burst of jitter. I thought is was a loose connection, but it turned out to be piezoelectric. Each PLL circuit had a VCO that got its supply voltage from a low-noise LDO from Micrel, and I used high quality ceramic caps on the output of each LDO. Turns out, just a 5uV shift in the supply due to piezo effect was enough to push the VCO frequency slightly, and it took a few microseconds for the feedback loop to compensate. But a few microseconds is a whole lot of bit periods at 2.5 Gb/sec, and the very slight freq shift caused the phase errors to accumulate (phase is the integral of frequency). The result was that the phase difference between the channels would bounce as must as 35 degrees. Replacing the ceramic caps with low-ESR tantalums eliminated the problem.

  • @WillArtie
    @WillArtie Před 8 lety +3

    I've heard this kind of noise in lots of other products- but you really have to be looking for it. great to see Dave doing this kind of investigation and fix on his branded gear! practice what you preach & openness & transparency and all that! you rock Dave.

  • @Catoblepa77
    @Catoblepa77 Před 8 lety +4

    As a test engineer I found out this problem some years ago while I was working on a SLIC device (a telephone line driver). I had a very nasty background noise which messed up the noise level measurement, we're talking about 100uVrms range noise in the audio bandwidth, very low but high enough to ruin my measurements. All was due to a small filter cap at the end of a differential amplifier in the signal chain, once I changed this to a polyester cap the background noise went dramatically low!

  • @jonkrieger5271
    @jonkrieger5271 Před 8 lety +1

    This was way more interesting than I expected. Such a cool channel!! Its motivating me to get back into electronics :)

  • @TripleJ85
    @TripleJ85 Před 8 lety +79

    You should branch out in to ASMR Dave
    >_>

    • @dan_loup
      @dan_loup Před 8 lety +45

      Dave jones -soft spoken/ASMR/Chinese filter cap driving an LCD booster circuit

    • @BLUFFIRL
      @BLUFFIRL Před 8 lety +3

      I disagree

    • @fpm1979
      @fpm1979 Před 8 lety

      +Chris Bourne Heck, yeah! He might gain more audience this way.

    • @superturkeylegs
      @superturkeylegs Před 5 lety

      Cracking a tinny of Foster's and talking about the piezoelectric effect [AUSSIE ASMR]

  • @mnoxman
    @mnoxman Před 8 lety +2

    Try slipping some bus wire under the cap before soldering, then pull it out to see if you can de-couple the board from the cap. The resonant frequency of the sound should change because the cap you put in is physically bigger. You could also try some GB liquid electrical tape over the cap to see if you can dampen the sound.

  • @NicholasAarons
    @NicholasAarons Před 8 lety

    Awesome Video Dave. Keep up the great work. Nick.

  • @martinda7446
    @martinda7446 Před 8 lety +5

    The line output transformers of older crt pal and ntsc sets oscillated at line frequency 15625 for us in UK with our 625 line 50 frame system. I remember hearing it as a young'n..

  • @brutester
    @brutester Před 8 lety +2

    Buzzing is not a bug. It's a feature - kindly reminds you to not forget to turn the backlight off. It drains the battery

  • @FlyingShotsman
    @FlyingShotsman Před 8 lety +2

    I once worked on a DC-DC switching power supply project that included an over-voltage and reverse voltage protection circuit on the front end. The two circuits worked fine separately, but when combined, the switching frequency of the DC-DC regulator (600 kHz) caused them to couple in a way that made the OV/RV circuit oscillate badly. This caused the two 10uF MLCCs on the input of the DC-DC regulator to scream quite loudly, at a frequency that varied with input voltage. Here's a Dropbox link to a short recording of the sound, as input voltage was varied from 7V to 18V and back to 7V. db.tt/9XAGyHpA (Buzzing MLCCs.m4a, 318kB). This was not amplified during recording; it was clearly and loudly audible from across the room!

  • @steubens7
    @steubens7 Před 8 lety +1

    Mr Carlson's Lab posted a neat video recently about the different types and uses of capacitors, including a bit about the piezoelectric effect

  • @vgamesx1
    @vgamesx1 Před 8 lety

    Thanks for this video Dave, I have a tablet that makes an annoying humming noise like that meter but only if I turn the brightness up, so I'll have to fix that at some point.

  • @davecc0000
    @davecc0000 Před 8 lety

    Just received my BM235 (1st week June 2016). No noise at all.
    Great meter, replacing Fluke 117.

  • @LazerLord10
    @LazerLord10 Před 6 lety

    I had a digital watch that did the same thing with the lcd backlight. If it was quiet enough (such as waking up at 2am) I can hear it from arms length!

  • @LennyCooke636
    @LennyCooke636 Před 6 lety

    As usual great Video, thanks

  • @freshkryp69
    @freshkryp69 Před 8 lety +14

    Im sure I speak for a few out there.. please do a tear down review of some high end home audio amplifiers! :)

    • @Zamsky39
      @Zamsky39 Před 8 lety +6

      But let those be real high end and not some audiophile bullshit like silver cables.

    • @giomjava
      @giomjava Před 8 lety +1

      +ZamaskowanyWolnościowiec Indeed!

    • @lbochtler
      @lbochtler Před 8 lety

      +Freshkryp69 I nominate a bryston amp, they are not exactly home audio, but still high end none the less. (they are for recording and mastering studios btw). OR Arcam, that would be interesting as well.

    • @1622steve
      @1622steve Před 8 lety

      +Freshkryp69 I'd love it - just be sure that you can put it back together. The prices on those things are outrageous!

  • @rocketman221projects
    @rocketman221projects Před 8 lety

    I have noticed this on a lot of my boards. I use ceramic x5r bypass caps and get a click when connecting power or a whine when driving leds with pwm. It only seems to be very noticeable with larger caps (>4.7µF) and packages like 1206 or 1210. The size of the board and location on the board can make a big difference too. The capacitor causes the board to flex, basically turning it into a speaker diaphragm.

  • @Adamisgood24
    @Adamisgood24 Před 8 lety +2

    I used to have a Timex Ironman Indiglo watch, that made the same whining noise when the back light was turned on.

  • @vortex05
    @vortex05 Před 8 lety

    Just curious would you be able to fix this with a standard application of hot glue over the capacitor thus reducing PCB deformation instead of actually replacing the capacitor?
    Sometimes this situation comes up on boards where you don't have the original wiring diagrams and the ceramic caps that are SMD seldom have markings to state what the ratings are.

  • @timturner7609
    @timturner7609 Před 8 lety +40

    I love how hes like "you might be able to hear it" when its louder than the button press annunciator

    • @EEVblog
      @EEVblog  Před 8 lety +51

      +tim turner No, it's not, I amplified the audio in editing.

    • @peeeepsi
      @peeeepsi Před 8 lety

      +EEVblog hey can i still get on of your meters?

    • @Falcrist
      @Falcrist Před 8 lety

      The whine isn't even louder than the beep in the video. The beep is higher pitch, though. Maybe that's why you perceive it as louder.

    • @Subparanon
      @Subparanon Před 8 lety +7

      +tim turner You would be surprised. Some people are not very sensitive to high frequencies even when age related hearing is taken into account. I remember being able to tell if the TV was on in another room and none of my friends understanding the sound I was telling them it made. I think it's more of the mind filtering noise than it is the ears themselves. My head picks up every little blip and bleep in the world around me.

    • @compactc9
      @compactc9 Před 8 lety +1

      +tim turner I've always been more sensitive to most when it comes to these sounds too, I can hear CRT TVs when they're turned on (the high frequency noise, not the sounds you're supposed to hear from the speakers) but as I've gotten older, I've discovered I have tinnitus. If you've heard those ringtones that supposedly adults can't hear (this was a big thing back when I was in HS anyway) my tinnitus sounds like that, but not at a super loud level, so it has made it harder to hear some high frequency sound, as I don't know if I'm hearing something or if its just the ringing in my ears.

  • @RawBejkon
    @RawBejkon Před 8 lety

    Awesome! Is that the same sound i hear when i am at work, loots if servo mortor running there? its a high freq sound and the old people cant hear it at all!

  • @1fertube
    @1fertube Před 8 lety

    Interesting analysis. Cool

  • @Eo_Tunun
    @Eo_Tunun Před 8 lety

    Hm. Remembering that rumour about it being possible to hear CPU activity on computers, I now finally see a possible source for the sound. Still *that* bit only will work in James Bond films.
    Excelent video, Sire! Most instructive!

  • @HaraldSangvik
    @HaraldSangvik Před 8 lety

    Could you cover it in hotsnot to suppress the noise?
    I had an amplifier that made a buzzing sound when i drove it into a test load, it stopped when i touched one of the ceramic caps.

  • @strangersound
    @strangersound Před 8 lety

    Excellent video, Dave! I thought the money shot was when you zoomed in on the high frequency ringing. 16:26 :)

  • @groverasylum9626
    @groverasylum9626 Před 8 lety

    I only recently learned about this property of ceramic caps. I have a small tube guitar amp that I did a bunch of switchable mods on (it's an experimental platform) and this explains why one didn't perform as expected. Guess i should stock up on more low value poly's for my experiments and mods.

  • @HilltopComputing
    @HilltopComputing Před 8 lety

    Will the piezo vibration of the capacitor damage it or affect the capacitance value over time?

  • @funkyironman69
    @funkyironman69 Před 5 lety +1

    @EEVblog Hey Dave, could you please make a video going the other way, investigating how vibrations and shock induce a voltage over the capacitor? There's not much available online, particularly comparison between Class 1 and Class 2 capacitors. Class 1 is meant to be much better, but no one shows test results.

  • @voltlog
    @voltlog Před 8 lety

    interesting investigation, I also had a similar issue on a board with a charge pump ic, same thing, I managed to get much better results with a quality TDK cap but I couldn't make it go away completely. I guess this can only be fixed completely by having a different switching frequency in the charge pump.

  • @botar99
    @botar99 Před 8 lety

    Very very interesting video.

  • @ehjones
    @ehjones Před 8 lety

    The same tone accompanies the backlight on my old Casio G-Shock. It's very very quiet though.

  • @xoxo2008oxox
    @xoxo2008oxox Před 8 lety

    I could hear it all the way up here in the states!

  • @macro820
    @macro820 Před 8 lety

    Thanks Dave, she'll be all right!

  • @doophin4668
    @doophin4668 Před 8 lety

    Well done! thumbs up

  • @AmRadPodcast
    @AmRadPodcast Před 8 lety

    Spot on. If you don't specify component grades or tempco values, mfg's will use whatever's on the shelf. They look at footprint, value and voltage rating first when using house parts.

  • @08Ultrasonic
    @08Ultrasonic Před 8 lety

    +EEVblog Dave! Could you do a video on the effects of probe loading on AC circuits please? And how to negate those effects? Please!!??
    I'm thinking about things like the ringing shown on this video at the switching edges (Eg. @ 16:31)

  • @Mystickneon
    @Mystickneon Před 8 lety

    Got a new GoPro there(the last one fell in the river?).... or at least the case... what did you go with? We have been thinking about purchasing some for outdoors filming, but were concerned with external audio inputs on the camera.

  • @gdahlm
    @gdahlm Před 8 lety

    Wow, for the price point and for my needs the HMO1202 would be ideal, does anyone know when they will start to be available in the US?

  • @electronscape
    @electronscape Před 5 lety

    ok, THIS explains (cant beleive i didn't think ofthis before) BUT those FL Tube SMD style boosters and you get THAT noise!! never figured where this sound came from! ITS SO OBVIOUS to me now! ! LOL Thanks!!

  • @kylelafountaine8164
    @kylelafountaine8164 Před 8 lety +2

    Sounds like my multimeter when using the continuity check function.

  • @josephwatson4616
    @josephwatson4616 Před 6 lety

    Many years ago, I knew a clever engineer who converted ceramic disk capacitors into piezoelectric transducers. I don't know the exact recipe for the conversion but it was something like this. First, he connected many identical disk capacitors in parallel and inserted them into some oil which he heated above the Curie temperature for the ceramic material inside the capacitors. Then he applied a high DC voltage continuously to them as he slowly cooled the oil. Not all the caps performed the same afterward so he sorted through them to select the best ones.

  • @RWoody1995
    @RWoody1995 Před 8 lety

    Wow I just watched eevblog#33 and then you make a video directly related to it a few hours later... spooky.

  • @power-max
    @power-max Před 8 lety

    I have a TI n'spire CAS calculator (a TI-64 on steroids) and it has a color LCD display, I think the resolution is something like 200x300 ish, and when the battery is nearly dead or if the backlight is not at full brightness, it makes similar squealing noises, VERY annoying. I assumed it was an inductor in it part of a small buck-boost converter, I'll see if I can pull it apart and investigate it.

  • @tonyprima7777
    @tonyprima7777 Před 5 lety

    Hi I have a serious question and ask for your generous help. I have a 0805 SMD Non-Polarized Capacitor that I’m working with but don’t know it’s value, I’ve tried reading it in multiple ways but had bad luck when purchasing a capacitor to match the one I need, please help, there are many other videos out there about capacitors but not for this kind. Your reply would be greatly appreciated, thanks.

  • @frollard
    @frollard Před 8 lety +2

    Curious how much 'solution' could be had with gobbing the cap with hot-snot as a physical damper to the sound. I'm guessing the board is resonating enough that it would still propagate.

    • @disposablefar1645
      @disposablefar1645 Před 8 lety

      +frollard I had the same thought, I suppose it should at least dampen the amplitude a little bit. It would definitely be an easier fix than swapping the whole cap.
      Also, could this be a failure mode in the long run, where caps wiggle themselves loose on the board, especially with the less ductile lead-free solder.

  • @tHaH4x0r
    @tHaH4x0r Před 8 lety

    Inductor whine can also happen in DC DC converters operating at far over 20khz. If you overload an inductor it can still produce audible tones.

  • @tzisorey
    @tzisorey Před 8 lety

    Do electrolytics do the same sort of thing? I've always wondered about that high-pitched squeal you get from desktop computers, when the caps start to leak.

  • @MichaelBeeny
    @MichaelBeeny Před 8 lety +14

    Another possible fix could be a nice dollop of silicon to cover and dampen the capacitors oscillation frequency, which insistently clashes badly with my tinnitus!!

    • @Petertronic
      @Petertronic Před 8 lety +1

      +Michael Beeny Good idea, that would probably nail it, and much easier than cap replacement

    • @jamcguire100
      @jamcguire100 Před 8 lety

      This could be why they put hot glue over the inductor of another Brymen teardown Dave did.

    • @zlotvorx
      @zlotvorx Před 8 lety

      +Michael Beeny Pleasant to me, slightly lower in frequency, almost canceled it out.

    • @tubical71
      @tubical71 Před 8 lety

      +Michael Beeny i done this on various units which have backlights, as they usually tent to produce all sorts of ringing...simply a big silicone drop on top will fix that on 80%...sometimes i use hot glue, as it is stiffer and weakens the ringing a bit more...it depends...
      But never use epoxy or alike. if it´s hardened up you´ll never get it off again...and it *amplifies* that ringing tones...

    • @treborrrrr
      @treborrrrr Před 8 lety

      +sporadic -Z Noises like that drive me ever so slightly completely insane :)

  • @yesitsdawid
    @yesitsdawid Před 8 lety

    Hi, I know this is a bit random, but what is a schottky barrier rectifier and what is it used for? found 5 in an old psu

  • @utubeusername1
    @utubeusername1 Před 8 lety

    My UNI-T 60E does a rythmic clicking sound. And even the HP3478A has a continuous very high pitched nearly inaudible whine.

  • @ChristopherMeadors
    @ChristopherMeadors Před 8 lety

    Could the variations be because of the current sensing? Maybe bumping it changes the conductivity of the battery terminals (or spring connectors), so the pump changes frequencies to keep the output to the back light constant.

  • @Tangobaldy
    @Tangobaldy Před 8 lety

    when I was in my late teens I could here things that at 48 I no longer can I here. problem is I can still hear lots things I dont want to hear.

  • @Graham_Langley
    @Graham_Langley Před 8 lety

    That axial inductor (L7) looks like it's part of the piezo sounder drive. One end goes to the collector of a transistor (Q13) and the tracks go off in the right direction.

  • @ChipGuy
    @ChipGuy Před 8 lety +1

    From the looks the capacitor you whacked in there got a much higher voltage rating than the original one. That one was only 6.3 or 10V I guess. So the DC BIAS influence from your cap is most likely smaller which results in a higher effective capacity. That could be the reason for the lower frequency of 3.x kHz you measured.

  • @macdonalds1972
    @macdonalds1972 Před 7 lety +1

    The high pitched whine makes it a genuine EEVblog product.

  • @douro20
    @douro20 Před 8 lety

    The EL backlight driver in my old GRiDPad was very noisy...and it had a relatively low pitch to it.

  • @andygaras
    @andygaras Před 8 lety

    Where is he selling these I don't see it in the Amazon store

  • @davidaz4933
    @davidaz4933 Před 8 lety

    What purpose
    Of the big rectangular black patch
    Located on the left ?

  • @dementedbowine8681
    @dementedbowine8681 Před 8 lety

    could you tell me why a manufacturer would put a glob of epoxy instead of the chip on a multimeter board and is there any diference between the two

  • @1tristan247
    @1tristan247 Před 8 lety

    I have an old pager with a display light and when I turn it on it makes the same noise.

  • @mreyeballz
    @mreyeballz Před 7 lety

    Would a decent blob of hot snot get this cap quiet?

  • @mrjohhhnnnyyy5797
    @mrjohhhnnnyyy5797 Před 8 lety +1

    MrCarlson's Lab did a video with a nice demonstration of the piezoelectric effect of a generic ceramic cap. Also, I would've tried bodging an electrolytic on there, that should fix the problem completely.

    • @hoobiesiamese6468
      @hoobiesiamese6468 Před 8 lety

      +MrJohhhnnnyyy If you have room?

    • @mrjohhhnnnyyy5797
      @mrjohhhnnnyyy5797 Před 8 lety

      Hoobie Siamese Yeah, I meant just temporarily whack it in to see which one of the two makes most noise

  • @VoidHalo
    @VoidHalo Před 8 lety

    My old cell phone used to emit a very high pitched whine, like a CRT whenever I charged it.

  • @robertobrenes5283
    @robertobrenes5283 Před 5 lety

    where can i get that multimeter??

  • @mshahabas
    @mshahabas Před 8 lety

    Yeah I thought about that, so I checked again and there is a noise, so updated my comment!
    There is a permanent noise when u turn the dmm, seems like its a bit quieter than yours and ~3khz, also my 257s has 2 yellow vs yours 3 white!
    Who is really quiet, its my bm869s :)
    Dave, which one u prefer 257 or 235?

  • @Subparanon
    @Subparanon Před 8 lety

    Some of us are very sensitive to high frequency noise and I have thrown things away because they make an annoying high pitched wine. Tenergy makes a great NiMH battery, but their top of the line D cell charger starts screaming the moment you plug it in. I had to move it to my garage. I guess I know what to replace now. I thought it was some kind of voltage converter for the charging circuit.

  • @TechBoss
    @TechBoss Před 8 lety

    I was hoping you would try to solder that LED to the footprint to see if it would work...

    • @leonerduk
      @leonerduk Před 7 lety

      That LED shining out of a window on the back of the unit is almost certainly acting as an optocoupler for some sort of serial data upload. My Uni-T UT61E has a similar mechanism.

  • @shoominati23
    @shoominati23 Před 8 lety

    Hey Dave, could you sometimme show the diagram layer of a memory card or USB stick and explain what each component does? ;)

  • @rickonami
    @rickonami Před 8 lety +12

    1:54 ASMR moment right there.

    • @Fractal80Y
      @Fractal80Y Před 8 lety

      +rickonami tingles

    • @Oerg866
      @Oerg866 Před 6 lety

      Fuck me. Dave needs to make videos like that.

  • @Subparanon
    @Subparanon Před 8 lety

    Wouldn't it be cool if EEVblog did a video talking about his childhood and when he discovered he was a tinkerer and his introduction to electronics. He may have already done one but I haven't found it. I started taking things apart when I was a kid and between that and the library I had a lot figured out.

    • @fede142857
      @fede142857 Před 8 lety

      He actually made a video just like that, a LONG time ago, back in episode #54

  • @MDBrooks631
    @MDBrooks631 Před 8 lety

    my question is does this tone interfere with the testing capabilities in giving a correct and true reading ?

  • @josesanta-maria6992
    @josesanta-maria6992 Před 8 lety +1

    did you ever figured out what was that extraLED pad for?

  • @jordanjohnson714
    @jordanjohnson714 Před 8 lety

    Dave, what OS does that computer use?

  • @tomp2008
    @tomp2008 Před 8 lety

    which network is the IRC channel on?

  • @freedom_aint_free
    @freedom_aint_free Před 7 lety

    "IRONMAN Thriathlon" wrist watches also does make this high pitch sound when you turn on the back light; it's very quiet but if you put it on your ear you can hear clearly...(at least I can!)

  • @maximusmcfire
    @maximusmcfire Před rokem

    Had that sht in a pc mouse. It took me a while to find a source. I thought it was a main ic itself. Fixed by placing some electrolytic cap in parallel with input bypass caps. Thanks, good to know the real physical reason behind it.

  • @08Ultrasonic
    @08Ultrasonic Před 8 lety

    18:35 Isn't the blue trace the microphone? So why is it leading the electrical signal? Surely the acoustic delay would mean that the blue trace is lagging the yellow trace?

  • @Cpt1nsano
    @Cpt1nsano Před 8 lety +1

    You could have used alligator clips with a steel ball in the jaw tip (from a ball bearing) and isolating the bottom of the clip with electrical tape to jumper power to those pads pretty easily.

  • @SarahRWilson
    @SarahRWilson Před 8 lety

    I was curious if you had considered making an acoustical "sniffer" for ferreting out issues like this. the heart of this would be a tiny electret (ELECTRic magnET) condenser mic element. this can be fished out of a cheap headset they sell for phones. Because the element in all likelihood has an omnidirectional pattern, it will hear everything, and with surprising accuracy to boot. you can use this directly with the audio analyzer apps on your phone, or if you want, you can haywire an op-amp based preamp between the acoustic probe, and your test equipment.
    And yes, I agree with you about fan cooled gear. when I'm at work, I am bathed in a virtual sea of white noise.

  • @pvc988
    @pvc988 Před 8 lety

    Can this effect increase over the time?

  • @mitchellpurelife
    @mitchellpurelife Před 8 lety

    very interesting!

  • @noisytim
    @noisytim Před 8 lety

    what network is the irc-channel on ?

  • @Blissy28
    @Blissy28 Před 8 lety

    Hey Dave !

  • @jaywalt1311
    @jaywalt1311 Před 8 lety

    what irc server is the channel on? efnet, dalnet, etc?

  • @moshly64
    @moshly64 Před 8 lety

    So what if ya flux-capacitor is microphonic and you hit 88MPH on a bumpy road ?

  • @redtails
    @redtails Před 8 lety +2

    I used to hear the most annoying headache-inducing, nausea-giving high-pitched buzz coming from nearly all small CRT televisions. I haven't heard it in years because these TVs just don't exist anymore, and also because I'm now older I guess and less susceptible to the tones. I do still hear it in certain chargers and I refuse to use chargers that produce sound.. All in all I find it ridiculous that these sort of things are still real issues in modern electronics.

    • @Ziplock9000
      @Ziplock9000 Před 8 lety

      +redtails I miss CRTs.. the sound you mention, the static charge, the ozone smell etc..

  • @illustriouschin
    @illustriouschin Před 8 lety

    I want one of your cool blue meters Dave.

  • @mshahabas
    @mshahabas Před 8 lety

    My bm257 seems to have nothing! altough its a bit noisy here!
    And backlight is yellow:( I wonder can I change that?...

    • @mshahabas
      @mshahabas Před 8 lety

      +m abraham UPDATE my 257s seems to have it constantly when turned on! switching baclight on changes nothing i.e. ~3kHz appears when u turn the dmm on.

    • @EEVblog
      @EEVblog  Před 8 lety

      +m abraham If it's yellow then it would not need a boost converter. Likely just a LED dropper straight on the batteries.

  • @Electroblud
    @Electroblud Před 8 lety +1

    I can hear a whine from most switch mode power supplies (phone, camera battery, radio,...).

  • @nithinb.u1973
    @nithinb.u1973 Před 8 lety

    please do some electronics tutorial videos !

  • @zlotvorx
    @zlotvorx Před 8 lety

    You could tune them to frequency for people with tinnitus . The one you "ruined" had a pleasant tone, 100-200 Hz lower than my own.

  • @BenjaminEsposti
    @BenjaminEsposti Před 8 lety

    Also, YAY, finally an electronics video, instead of some teardown or mailbag XP
    And also, the audible frequency range isn't exactly dumb. There may be a good reason for it, like losses, switching speed, etc... however yes they very likely could have used a higher frequency ... but, I'm not an IC designer, so yeah there might have been some sort of valid reason.

  • @AriMenachem
    @AriMenachem Před 8 lety

    can you still buy these?

  • @karu2003
    @karu2003 Před 8 lety

    interesting to see the circuit. I would try to use as piezo transducer ab to 100KHz.??????

  • @H-_.9
    @H-_.9 Před 8 lety

    The waveform and sensitivity reminds me of bifurcations in a driven RLD circuit. The chaotic nature is due to the nonlinear diode's capacitance. They are extremely sensitive circuits, especially with stray capacitance.

  • @pavelyat
    @pavelyat Před 8 lety

    You should connect it to a spectrum analyzer, it might produce an interesting waveform.

  • @_BangDroid_
    @_BangDroid_ Před 6 lety

    Get a Noctua fan for that filter Dave

  • @Wisecrackerist
    @Wisecrackerist Před 8 lety

    What about the IR led ?