Repairing Faulty Ground Fault Failure

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  • čas přidán 23. 04. 2024
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    By: Mehdi Sadaghdar
  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 1,4K

  • @nortyfiner
    @nortyfiner Před 9 dny +2335

    I was a US Navy mechanic for 20 years. I very often found that when something was malfunctioning, and I took it apart, didn't find anything obviously wrong, and put it back together, it was magically fixed. I think it's because in the process, I accidentally cleaned out whatever bit of debris or tightened whatever loose thing was causing the original problem. Gremlins broke it, gremlins fixed it.

    • @FineBakedPastry
      @FineBakedPastry Před 9 dny +107

      Yeah, sometimes a little bit of dust in the wrong place can make all the difference.

    • @amorpilo9666
      @amorpilo9666 Před 9 dny +59

      The Omnissiah wills it.

    • @herzogsbuick
      @herzogsbuick Před 9 dny +37

      i learned the same thing as a kid working on million dollar machines at a newspaper. the head maintenance guy told me just un-seat and re-seat all the connections, that fixes most problems

    • @AlvinYorkII
      @AlvinYorkII Před 9 dny +34

      As someone who spent over 10 years in the Navy who was allowed to assemble/disassemble a few more electrical components than I probably should've due to my electrical background, can confirm. "Mechanical agitation" is a real troubleshooting step, even if the SOPs don't explicitly say so

    • @Coowwan
      @Coowwan Před 9 dny +13

      Appliance repair here. Yeah that’s happened for me too. Just unhooked everything, looked at the connections, and put them back. Magically fixed.

  • @SamMurphyHSV
    @SamMurphyHSV Před 9 dny +847

    Mehdi is so selfless. He goes around the world to test electrical systems in tourist areas to make it safer for all while letting his own home become neglected with failing outlets. He is the true hero we need!

    • @MrDevianceh
      @MrDevianceh Před 9 dny +31

      cobbler's kids have no shoes

    • @yournews5082
      @yournews5082 Před 9 dny +1

      @@MrDevianceh we dont give a fk

    • @xyzxyzxyzxyzxyzxyz
      @xyzxyzxyzxyzxyzxyz Před 9 dny +21

      We have a saying in my language:
      _"The horse of the smith and the kids of the cobbler, they always walk barefoot."_
      Of couse, it rhymes in my language. The meaning is that what you do as your work, you are less likely to do in private.

    • @Noxedwin
      @Noxedwin Před 9 dny +25

      ​@@yournews5082 That's the proverb.
      _"The cobbler's children have no shoes."_
      You can be stupid if you like, but you don't have to be a dick to other people about it.

    • @lizekamtombe2223
      @lizekamtombe2223 Před 9 dny

      @@yournews5082 Speak for yourself, we care. That you don't care is your own loss. Enjoy your pitiful existence, or not, now we do not care..

  • @LolKillization
    @LolKillization Před 9 dny +849

    Gloves?! My god, that's the first time i see Mehdi wearing protective gear on his hands.

    • @tomholroyd7519
      @tomholroyd7519 Před 9 dny +27

      GLOVES!

    • @Yezpahr
      @Yezpahr Před 9 dny +36

      If he made one mistake and it caught a glowing wire or caught fire somehow he would need to get skin grafts.
      That stuff he used as "protective" gear, well that's literally liquid fire when it ignites, dripping, oozing, splashing is guaranteed. Especially if you handwave in a panic.
      I still shiver at every move he makes even without overthinking it the way I just demonstrated, it's a miracle (oh and a lot of skill) he still has all his digits and original skin.

    • @Ali____m_a007
      @Ali____m_a007 Před 9 dny +2

      🥊

    • @theodoros_1234
      @theodoros_1234 Před 9 dny +15

      He did wear gardening gloves waaayyy back in the Graphite video (I think that's from 2017), but that didn't end very well for him😂 I'd recommend going back and watching that.

    • @edwardhugus2772
      @edwardhugus2772 Před 9 dny +2

      He should consider protective HEADGEAR..........Zap/ Shock/ Bang Head......Repeat.

  • @justinbanks2380
    @justinbanks2380 Před 9 dny +134

    9:31 "warranty terminated if opened"
    🤣

  • @carl67lp
    @carl67lp Před 10 dny +693

    For as often as Mehdi performs his GFCI tests, he ought to 3D print some sort of enclosure that would let him put his probes and resistor all in place ahead of time. Sure, wouldn't make as much of visual spectacle, but it'd be easier!

    • @paisleyprince5280
      @paisleyprince5280 Před 9 dny +50

      It's all part of the pagentry

    • @victormateus7026
      @victormateus7026 Před 9 dny +55

      as long as the enclosure features a ton of live exposed wire i agree

    • @DeletiriousAction
      @DeletiriousAction Před 9 dny

      I strongly suspect most of the shocks/pops are added in post. 🫠 He's got a good schtick worked out, but he's intelligent- he wouldn't actually allow himself to be shocked by say, house current for example.

    • @saiv46
      @saiv46 Před 9 dny +9

      I bought a cheap tester which also happen to test GFCI.
      I didn't have any protection besides sketchy grounding and GFCI in bathroom.

    • @dhpz
      @dhpz Před 9 dny +3

      Bold of you to assume he know how to make 3d model and use 3d printer

  • @samedman1
    @samedman1 Před 9 dny +460

    8:08
    Electrical engineers when they have to work on the most simple valve ever

    • @SafetyLucas
      @SafetyLucas Před 9 dny +54

      Lol I never understood how people have trouble with mechanical devices. You can just look and see how it works, whereas electrical circuits are the ones with invisible operation.

    • @ErrorTH
      @ErrorTH Před 9 dny +29

      and vice versa. I can understand a comple madness of springs and levers, but even a simple circuit requires me to engage 100% jf my brain...

    • @0Blueaura
      @0Blueaura Před 9 dny +2

      @@ErrorTH and here too, I haven't finished any school, yet I can understand the overall mechanism and circuit when it is shown to me, but to think about it from a new project perspective and i wouldnt be able to differentiate an open gate and polarities most likely lol

    • @alexturnbackthearmy1907
      @alexturnbackthearmy1907 Před 9 dny +3

      @@0Blueaura Especially if they are different from what you are used to. Why we cant agree on which is + and which is - exactly?

    • @mangamaster03
      @mangamaster03 Před 9 dny +7

      ​@@alexturnbackthearmy1907conventional VS electron flow notation. Picking one would require engineers and physicists to compromise. We don't get along.

  • @alumaven
    @alumaven Před 9 dny +287

    disassembly then assembly often fixes stuff for me to. great achievement to have.

    • @ghostbiker7391
      @ghostbiker7391 Před 9 dny +19

      yeah especially when it doesn't need the parts that were not put back

    • @anj000
      @anj000 Před 9 dny +5

      It seems he also burned a little bit the small coil inside. You can see smoke 8:21. Not sure if that makes the difference.

    • @Akotski-ys9rr
      @Akotski-ys9rr Před 9 dny +3

      No it’s often frustrating because you’re like why isn’t this piece of shit working so you take it apart, find nothing wrong, put it back together and it suddenly starts working again

    • @DeathToR34
      @DeathToR34 Před 9 dny +6

      @TeodoraTacderen part 2 of waiting your father returning.

    • @FineBakedPastry
      @FineBakedPastry Před 9 dny

      When you disassemble stuff you inadvertently remove dust and debris that might have accumulated on the device that was most likely causing the malfunction. It's pretty common.

  • @Lampe2020
    @Lampe2020 Před 9 dny +142

    14:25 The noticeable delay between "Click!" and "Hijau!" made that shock even funnier XD

    • @kanter1598
      @kanter1598 Před 9 dny +12

      No, no, it wasn't "Hijau!", it was definitely "THE DUCK'S SHIET"

    • @KangJangkrik
      @KangJangkrik Před 9 dny +8

      Lol hijau is green

    • @wowgggearing
      @wowgggearing Před 9 dny +2

      ​@@KangJangkrikhooh bang

    • @BenieTheDragon
      @BenieTheDragon Před 8 dny +3

      I heard "PIECE OF ..SHI--"

    • @abdullahk0405
      @abdullahk0405 Před 8 dny +4

      Seems human pain reflexes are slower than circuit breakers

  • @jmhuene
    @jmhuene Před 9 dny +23

    "I forgot to fix it!" - BUSTED out laughing 🤣 🤣 🤣 🤣

  • @rpercifieldjr
    @rpercifieldjr Před 9 dny +105

    Unfortunately, I have extensive experience with AFCI's and GFCI's. Nuisance tripping of GFCI's is sometimes associated with inductively coupled noise onto the feed lines, such as a compressor starting for an AC or Refrigerator. Another source is that the GFCI is very sensitive to high frequency conducted emissions and will trip. While your Tesla Gun does have very high voltages, they may not be at a frequency that is worst case for the breaker you have.

    • @mb-3faze
      @mb-3faze Před 9 dny +11

      Although tempting to put a GFCI socket on a refrigerator it's usually better not to because that last thing you want is for the refrigerator to de-power (and de-ice) without you knowing. Also, invariably the socket is right behind the refrigerator making it a PIA to reset it.

    • @sadlerbw9
      @sadlerbw9 Před 9 dny

      So, what can be done in the case of noise on the feed lines? Do you just have to try different outlets until you find one that is less sensitive, or can you stick something on the input lines to suppress the noise?

    • @rpercifieldjr
      @rpercifieldjr Před 9 dny

      @@sadlerbw9 Currently there are multiple efforts to define at Agency Level (i.e. UL, IEC, NEC, etc) a way to improve performance of these systems in the real world. One example was when the compressor on a refrigerator started, and the inrush current occurred, this inrush would impress a current in an adjacent wire for the bathroom, and the GFCI would trip. Not the GFCI for the Kitchen but the bathroom. In evaluation it was shown that the feed cable for the bathroom ran in the same holes in the studs that the kitchen did. it was over 12ft of running in parallel. The solution was to replace the breaker panel GFCI breaker with the outlet version in the bathroom. This stopped the impression of a differential current in the wire. This issue affected about 60% of a 600 unit apartment complex. It is very complicated and technically challenging to resolve. Also each case is different.
      You can look for the offending signal source, but may never find it. Many times it requires changing the outlet GFCI and or AFCI to another manufacturer to get a better noise immunity.

    • @filips7158
      @filips7158 Před 9 dny +1

      Why unfortunately? You hated your GFCI job?

    • @filips7158
      @filips7158 Před 9 dny +4

      ​@@sadlerbw9install a higher quality device. Radiated emission susceptibility means insufficient design quality.

  • @TheBigV_008
    @TheBigV_008 Před 9 dny +19

    8:46 - 10:53 Pretending to understand ElectroBoom's explanations makes me feel smarter

  • @mu11668B
    @mu11668B Před 9 dny +71

    You know the thing is going to be a real shocker when Mehdi pulls out insulation gloves.

    • @ashl4848
      @ashl4848 Před 9 dny +4

      Yes. It was really shocking

    • @farhanrejwan
      @farhanrejwan Před 9 dny +1

      @@ashl4848 i see what you did there

    • @ashl4848
      @ashl4848 Před 9 dny +3

      @@farhanrejwan yes, there was no resistance.

  • @NYR14477
    @NYR14477 Před 9 dny +21

    9:33 never heard “thingy”’so many times in a span of a min and half LOL

  • @TechforMusicAI
    @TechforMusicAI Před 9 dny +15

    Here in Uruguay we have a saying: "En casa de herrero, cuchillo de palo" (in a Blacksmith's house, a wooden knife), so you get where I go with this. I always found that the greatest of professionals (specially the most creative) usually tend to be pretty careless about their own workplaces... Maybe because they know exactly when each plug in the house is gonna burst into flames, who knows.

    • @EmuAGR
      @EmuAGR Před 9 dny +3

      Nice to learn it's said in Uruguay too. It's a very popular saying in Spain actually! It might be as old as time.

    • @Toca_waffle843
      @Toca_waffle843 Před 9 dny +4

      in UK, "a plumbers tap (faucet) always drip"
      and "a cobblers child is poorest shod"

    • @EduardoRohdeEras
      @EduardoRohdeEras Před 7 dny +1

      In Brazil "Casa de ferreiro, espeto de pau" means the same! 😂

  • @letMeSayThatInIrish
    @letMeSayThatInIrish Před 9 dny +201

    2:31 Was that head bump even planned? I love this channel.

    • @gabbonoo
      @gabbonoo Před 9 dny +12

      i hope all those shocks dont contribute to early onset dementia >_>

    • @___Bruh__
      @___Bruh__ Před 9 dny +6

      I have a feeling that most things he does aren't planned. One wrong move and you're literally dead.

    • @beastnighttv
      @beastnighttv Před 9 dny +7

      @@___Bruh__ am I tripping or that doesnt makes sense....

    • @TheXxthedamagedxX
      @TheXxthedamagedxX Před 9 dny +1

      ​@@___Bruh__ ​come on bruh, you really don't think he meant to shock himself when he took the glove off then immediately picked up the outlet?... did you know that wwe is real too?

    • @___Bruh__
      @___Bruh__ Před 9 dny +2

      @@TheXxthedamagedxX WWE is proven fake. If you’re gonna make a claim that he fakes all of this, then back it up with something.

  • @CzarnobylPL
    @CzarnobylPL Před 9 dny +23

    Mehdi: remember to keep yourself save
    Also Mehdi: uses all metal pliers while checking GFCI

    • @Okurka.
      @Okurka. Před 8 dny

      Not to mention that LTT screwdriver.

    • @Simon_Denmark
      @Simon_Denmark Před 7 dny

      I mean pliers are usually metal but they need to be voltage tools that have insulation on the grips/handles and screwdrivers need to be insulated until the actual tip.

  • @HighMansx
    @HighMansx Před 10 dny +74

    That's such a smart way of detecting leakage voltage by running Live & Neutral through the coil! Love the video!

    • @DeathToR34
      @DeathToR34 Před 10 dny +3

      "19 hours ago" 💀

    • @Star_mango
      @Star_mango Před 10 dny

      WTF

    • @bruh6000.
      @bruh6000. Před 10 dny +4

      Maybe a member

    • @wc4538
      @wc4538 Před 9 dny +1

      20 HOURS AGO?!💀☠

    • @bladeoflucatiel
      @bladeoflucatiel Před 9 dny

      The better way to measure ground leakeage is to actually disconnect the ground/earth on the pannel and put an ampmeter between the connection 💀💀💀 PLS dont do it.

  • @justinbanks2380
    @justinbanks2380 Před 9 dny +31

    13:48 ah yes, the good old sniff test to see if your electronics are working 🤣

    • @ijtsuken
      @ijtsuken Před 9 dny +4

      this is actually a very strong test of electronics - you can understand whether the white smoke on which it works has escaped
      However, surprisingly, the protector works even after the smoke has escaped

    • @justinbanks2380
      @justinbanks2380 Před 9 dny +1

      @@ijtsuken oh, I know it's a very valuable test as often it will tell something is wrong even before sparks/or smoke. Just funny that (at least on the cut he released) he started with that test, when often that is a second or third test after you've done tests before making power live, lol

  • @isaacbrewer5616
    @isaacbrewer5616 Před 9 dny +12

    I have the same problem with an outlet in my kitchen!!! I also now finally understand how GFCI works and not just what they do! Thanks! Great video!

    • @div0007
      @div0007 Před 9 dny +3

      Make sure you wear gloves before you start playing with that GFCI puppy😅

  • @thedoctor2880
    @thedoctor2880 Před 9 dny +33

    "Oh... I forgot to fix it"
    KILLED ME EVERYTIME

  • @xTerminatorAndy
    @xTerminatorAndy Před 10 dny +157

    HELLO MEHDI!!!! You should ask Big Clive to analyse the circuit

  • @DudokX
    @DudokX Před 10 dny +35

    You are my favourite hotel electric grid reviewer

  • @user-mp2jv5lz1b
    @user-mp2jv5lz1b Před 9 dny +12

    Mehdi never disappointed us. He explains everything so good and clean that even my 10 yo brother understands it. Keep up the great work!!!!

  • @khaitomretro
    @khaitomretro Před 8 dny +3

    4:24 Obviously that's not how we check it. Always use the back of your hand to check the live before grabbing it.

  • @flyviawall4053
    @flyviawall4053 Před 9 dny +34

    That basically means the test button does not simulate the ground fault but only provide energy to the tiny rail gun inside. No worry Mehdi you will be safe🥰

    • @thebaker8637
      @thebaker8637 Před 9 dny +10

      Yeah that’s super weird. In Europe RCD test buttons literally close a circuit between live and neutral outside the sensing coil (through a resistor) thereby directly simulating a fault.

    • @killingtimeitself
      @killingtimeitself Před 9 dny +2

      i suppose its more likely that the closing mechanism will fail rather than the current sensing circuitry.

    • @thebaker8637
      @thebaker8637 Před 9 dny +6

      @@killingtimeitself but simulating a current imbalance will also cause the whole closing mechanism to activate as it would in a real ground fault, and it will also catch issues with the current sensing system itself

    • @killingtimeitself
      @killingtimeitself Před 9 dny +2

      @@thebaker8637 yeah, obviously, either code demands that it only insure the closing mechanism work, or it's simply just not that big of a deal.
      Using a test load would be more reliable though.

    • @Mostlyharmless1985
      @Mostlyharmless1985 Před 9 dny +3

      Most of the idiot light inspection tools have a GFCI test button that does an actual ground fault.

  • @VidaDigital
    @VidaDigital Před 9 dny +7

    Who else wants a Technology Connections / ElectroBoom crossover?

  • @BMack37
    @BMack37 Před 2 dny

    Thank you for this, I often get asked about these in my line of work and haven't really had an opportunity to take a working one apart. I work in this weird little niche bridging electrical and electronics, specifically dealing with high voltage surges that blow up electrical and electronics in people's homes, mostly from lightning strikes and damage from the electrical grid.
    These fail are many ways and you let me understand how they basically all work. One is obviously catastrophic where plastic blows out and electronics are burnt. But they also will sometimes not reset, sometimes they will not hold a reset, sometimes the button is permanently and firmly depressed down, and sometimes the button will be press-able but it won't do anything.

  • @LMitchellAnimation
    @LMitchellAnimation Před 9 dny

    Taking something apart and learning from scratch is always so fun love seeing others do it as well it feels the most authentic and most constructive way to learn for myself at least

  • @Khantia
    @Khantia Před 9 dny +8

    Knowing how it works is the first step you need to take before you can even attempt to fix it. But I generally agree, that sometimes disassembling something and then reassembling it can fix the problem.

  • @jamesapsg
    @jamesapsg Před 9 dny +4

    pov: your house is haunted but you are an engineer 1:20

  • @civildisorder
    @civildisorder Před 9 dny

    This scratched the itch I had as a kid to take things apart and (pretend to) understand how they work. Also appreciated the realization of not fixing the original problem after going through the effort of putting the whole thing back together again.

  • @geraldalexander8093
    @geraldalexander8093 Před 9 dny +3

    Fantastic video! I was literally dealing with this same exact issue last week. I removed the faulty GFCI and pulled it apart (unfortunately I had to destroy the casing to disassemble it) and I saw basically the exact same hardware you saw. I figured out the solenoid coil, and disconnecting contacts, but I couldn't understand what was going on between the line terminals. Thanks to your video, now I know!

    • @memejeff
      @memejeff Před 9 dny +1

      Was it riveted shut?

    • @geraldalexander8093
      @geraldalexander8093 Před 9 dny +2

      @@memejeff Strangely, the case was all plastic. There were 8 plastic tabs that kept it together, but unlike normal plastic tabs that can be pushed aside with a small screwdriver, they had been heated and formed after insertion to make it impossible to disassemble non-destructively. The only way to get past the tabs was to cut either the tabs (which didn't work very well) or cut open the holes they were threaded through (which was much easier, but way more destructive).

    • @memejeff
      @memejeff Před 9 dny +1

      @@geraldalexander8093 wow. I have never seen something like that before. Shame that they made it like that. Sounds like a shockingly complex way of sealing it.

  • @mr.villager_minecraft_noob

    11:15 Dont you think that loos sus lol.

  • @elvara872
    @elvara872 Před 9 dny +4

    From an EU perspective, it's actually crazy to see that only on the outlet in the wall and the size of the circuit just to protect 2 plugs. What I have in the fuse box here works both as a circuit breaker and a GFCI to protect all the outlet in my place and people at the same time. It's crazy how different it is in NA compare to here.
    I would be so lost trying to work in canada or US.

    • @kratz9
      @kratz9 Před 9 dny +1

      GFCI breakers are a thing in the US. Code specifies what needs protection, but both methods are acceptable. Typically only 'wet' (bathroom/laundry/kitchen/garage/basement/outside) locations. One main advantage of the wall plug GFCI is that the state is visible and it can be reset from the point of use.

    • @RonParker
      @RonParker Před 9 dny

      @@kratz9 Current code requires AFCI in most living spaces, so a lot of new construction puts all of the protection devices in the panel. Personally, I prefer it that way, because with circuits shared between multiple rooms, the receptacle with the AFCI/GFCI might not even be in the same room as the point of use, and which room it's in is entirely up to what substances the electrician who installed it was on that day.

    • @mernokallat645
      @mernokallat645 Před 6 dny +1

      Actually, in many european countries it is no longer accepted to use asingle RCD for the whole house. You must use more to avoid loss of power everywhere and several minutes or hours of profanity if a ground fault happens.

  • @calebfleckenstein4825
    @calebfleckenstein4825 Před 8 dny +1

    Medhi, thank you for making the videos you do! Four year ago, as an aspiring college student, I wasn’t sure which path to take. Your videos helped me significantly in making that crucial choice. I am graduating with my Bachelors in Electrical Engineering in a week and I tell everyone you made the choice pretty easy! Keep doing what you do sir!

  • @docsnavely1010
    @docsnavely1010 Před 5 dny

    This is the best explanation/demonstration of a GFI outlet that I've ever seen or heard.

  • @MaxCarponera
    @MaxCarponera Před 9 dny +4

    Suggestion: The tripping solenoid composes a tank circuit with some spurious capacitance on the circuit, making it resonate in a certain RF frequency that coincides with some thing around your house. Might be some radio station or a neighbour using a blender. Alternively, the current sensor can be the one who picks de RF.

  • @kujalavanimalini4199
    @kujalavanimalini4199 Před 9 dny +5

    2:32
    W got mehdi hinting his head to cupboard before gta 6

  • @sypernova6969
    @sypernova6969 Před 9 dny +1

    Mehdi, that was reallly cool. very well explained, and the mechanical nature makes it very easy to understand, congratz on putting it back together, btw. thanks!

  • @MichanaAlerting
    @MichanaAlerting Před 9 dny +2

    This video is giving me dad vibes. Mehdi is just so loveable and seeing him work while explaining things is just like my dad when I help him with stuff.

  • @nnamerz
    @nnamerz Před 9 dny +3

    11:53 Can someone please explain why the power supply didn't get damaged or overheat when Mehdi shorted the positive and negative terminals together? I'm still a beginner in electronics and thought that shorting 10A together like that would either damage the power supply or overheat the wires until they melted.

    • @memejeff
      @memejeff Před 9 dny +2

      The supply has a current limitor built in. It will decrease the voltage according to a curve when it gets near the set current limit keeping it at the limit. The wires are almost dead shorts. If they have a resistance of 100 milliohms then using ohms law, they would drop the voltage by the following. V=IR, V= 10 x 0.1 which is 1 Volt which cant really be dropped since the supply already is below 1V due to the current limitor but assuming it could fully drop the 1V then 1V at 10A would yield the following amount of power in watts: P=IV which would be 10 watts. 10 watts is a very small amount of heat, about the same as a high performance smart phone. It would produce less because the voltage dropped into the millivolts.

  • @coin777
    @coin777 Před 9 dny +14

    14:35 Why are You greenscreened at the last scene? 😂😂

    • @theodoros_1234
      @theodoros_1234 Před 9 dny +4

      Notice on the sponsor ad (a few seconds later) how he zooms himself out into a tiny little man to make space for the sponsor graphics? I'm guessing that's why he used a greenscreen.

    • @Delibro
      @Delibro Před 9 dny +3

      rofl, I just now noticed that, he put himself smaller on his seat to let the other things have space :DD

  • @BillyBoy7380
    @BillyBoy7380 Před 9 dny +1

    Had similar experience with outside receptacles on brick house during high humidity. After much research and testing found that the bare ground wire when folded into box with receptacle was very close to neutral screw. Pushed ground wire neatly away from neutral. Fixed! The ground wire on your test rig is insulated.

  • @danbsj
    @danbsj Před 9 dny +1

    It's nice to see you have so many subscribers.
    We live in a very extrovert world, but this just tells me that we have a ton of introvert nerds out there, and it's nothing to be ashamed about.

  • @Ali107
    @Ali107 Před 9 dny +6

    13:07 *THE ONE PIEECE!!!*

    • @Jim_100
      @Jim_100 Před 2 dny +1

      THE ONE PIECE IS REAAAAALLLL

  • @ashwalker1
    @ashwalker1 Před 9 dny +4

    Your outlet looks really Sad 😧

  • @TheOriginalJoneser
    @TheOriginalJoneser Před 8 dny +1

    As a Master Electrician with an Electronics technician degree, MANY TIMES with the GFCI Receptacles, I have discovered that the lack of space in the box, combined with too many wires and improper installation, can put a forward bow between the mounting screws and the face of the GFCI. and can cause this exact reaction. A few simple spacers under the mounting screws solve this.

  • @honeybadger2371
    @honeybadger2371 Před 9 dny +2

    8:13 "it's so mechanical" every electrical engineers worse nightmare, like when i tried to fix my fans button, those 4 buttons off/1/2/3, so i opened it up but i didn't know how to put it back, i literally need to watch a video on how they work, i need to open it up 3x because i put the "THINGIES wrong💀💀

  • @xyzxyzxyzxyzxyzxyz
    @xyzxyzxyzxyzxyzxyz Před 9 dny +6

    1) _Laughs in europonese_
    2) Remembers, that if we would shock ourselves like Mehdi, we would probably be dead.
    3) Say, shall we call it even?

    • @Okurka.
      @Okurka. Před 8 dny

      If you shock yourself like Mehdi you do also survive; he isn't immune to electricity.

    • @xyzxyzxyzxyzxyzxyz
      @xyzxyzxyzxyzxyzxyz Před 8 dny

      @@Okurka. As a general rule of thumb: No, we don't. The long answer is that it depends on your particular local distribution grid and your particular house. I have 15 A 240 VAC. Getting shocked by that will absolutely kill you if the current happens to pass through your heart. I have a friend who lost his dad from electrocution by simply cutting a live cord he assumed was not plugged in, without GFC.

  • @BeAwareOfElectricalHazard

    He is the most interesting science CZcamsr I've seen

  • @Andyman9279
    @Andyman9279 Před 9 dny

    Yes! I finally understand how gfci switches work. Thanks Mehdi

  • @xnaaloh4437
    @xnaaloh4437 Před 9 dny

    Hi Mehdi I remember your video from a while back on peltier devices when you said you didn’t understand the reason for how they work, I think I finally understand it.
    I think that the peltier effect ( cooling effect upon application of electricity) is due to the conduction bands of 2 different materials being slightly different from each other,
    We can try thinking it through with the example of an electron(e-) moving from a lower conduction band to a higher one.
    So if an e- is trying to move from 1 material to another, it will need to jump to a higher energy level,
    Total energy = Kinetic + Potential energy.
    The Potential energy gained by the e- has to come from the previous material’s particles.
    But since the inner shells of the previous atom should already be filled, none of them should be giving out energy by decreasing their energy level, thus only kinetic energy is loss.
    Meaning a very small temperature drop would be measured per e-.
    This is just from what I managed to read online, I do not have much knowledge about conduction bands, but hopefully this helps :)

  • @yashrajshinde1085
    @yashrajshinde1085 Před 9 dny +3

    14:13 This happens to me too..., And my family thinks I repaired it...

  • @mikethor009
    @mikethor009 Před 10 dny +6

    A bit light on ZAPs this time. But i always love watching your videos.

  • @skylarfandrich9583
    @skylarfandrich9583 Před 9 dny +1

    7:34 Im pretty sure those springs and plasic that fell out were for the tamper resistant shields

  • @johnwiley8417
    @johnwiley8417 Před 9 dny +2

    7:07 Like opening a box of grasshoppers.

  • @lollermann
    @lollermann Před 9 dny +4

    10:53
    Nah dude I gotta buy you a dinner first

  • @wigglesfourthree3390
    @wigglesfourthree3390 Před 9 dny +7

    14:28 way to test the GFCI, made my arm jump. Mostly due to muscle memory and feeling your pain as you jump. I hope to meet you someday so you can hit me with your wand.
    Remember kids, you don't need to FEAR electricity but simply respect it.

  • @akhilkumar.k5650
    @akhilkumar.k5650 Před 9 dny +2

    Thank you for teaching me how to work with electronics properly

  • @tolerancija
    @tolerancija Před 7 dny

    I couldn't believe you actually put it back together. You the man! 😂

  • @blacksmeim8791
    @blacksmeim8791 Před 9 dny +4

    3:45 Is there a reason you don't have a central RCD? Seems dangerous

  • @jackleeyoung24
    @jackleeyoung24 Před 10 dny +5

    I love you Mehdi! ❤

  • @ardianneli1
    @ardianneli1 Před 9 dny

    Great content as always! Thank you!

  • @bahamutbbob
    @bahamutbbob Před 9 dny +1

    We need a collab with Technology Connections to learn more. Through the magic of having two hosts!

  • @seanb3516
    @seanb3516 Před 9 dny +8

    I have observed a Strange Failure mode on my household GFCI Socket (just one).
    The socket is receiving power from a light which has a dimmer on it. Stupid, I know.
    I noticed the GFCI Failed to Activate when the Socket Voltage was down to 87V rather than the expected 110V.
    I don't know if I am correct in this however if I am it would seem to be a very dangerous fail mode.

    • @compzac
      @compzac Před 9 dny

      Ive never seen that before, A GFCI wired after a dimmer switch. my guess would be that either the triac in the dimmer which is trying to reduce the voltage is playing havoc on the sensing. or perhaps the sensing circuit inside wouldnt activate at voltage that low. or even maybe it was active and trying to break the circuit, but the 87 volts instead of 120 was making the coil too weak. knowing what i do about dimmers. Which admittedly isnt too much but i do know that not only do they reduce the voltage but they also reduce the Hertz. so instead of 120 at 60Hz it would have been 87 at like 35Hz and maybe that was causing issues. who knows, thats an odd quirk and probably should be addressed. but I doubt anyone ever would since your never supposed to wire dimmers to anything other than inbuilt lights, as far as i know your not even allowed by code to wire dimmers to non GFCI outlets or at least have to make it plain that that particular outlet is on a dimmer since most dimmers can only handle like 150 to 300 watts of power and if someone say tried to bung a space heater at 1500 watts into the outlet it would absolutely burn out the dimmer circuit and potentially risk a fire in the wall.

    • @sootikins
      @sootikins Před 9 dny

      @@compzac Lamp dimmers do not alter the frequency (hertz).
      Agreed that feeding any outlet from a dimmer is stupid and probably illegal.

    • @leybraith3561
      @leybraith3561 Před 8 dny

      ... Some GFCIs don't cope well when connected to appliances that halfwave rectify the mains. The DC offset component (current only drawn on one side of sine wave) creates a semi saturated state in sensing transformer and messes with tripping. Possibly your dimmer only uses half the sinewave at certain voltages?

    • @eDoc2020
      @eDoc2020 Před 5 dny

      Your example with a dimmer is unreasonable (it's a code violation) but a related situation is a loose neutral connection. That would lead to the GFCI's circuitry being unpowered even though the hot leg of its output is still connected. Touch hot and ground and you'll get shocked but it will never trip. All standard GFCIs share this issue. Some specialty GFCIs require power to activate their output and thus are immune to this problem.

    • @eDoc2020
      @eDoc2020 Před 5 dny

      @@leybraith3561 Half-wave rectification of the output doesn't affect the sensing coil. If there's no ground fault there's no magnetic field and thus no saturation. The issue comes when a fault current is _purely_ DC. Even if the _fault_ is half-wave rectified there is a major AC component and it will trip.

  • @janvesely1938
    @janvesely1938 Před 9 dny +3

    4:30 Buy yourself a headlamp.

  • @Morten_Jaeger
    @Morten_Jaeger Před 9 dny +2

    5:18 missed an opportunity for a good ZAP there.

  • @shadowOrgon
    @shadowOrgon Před 6 dny

    As a mechanical engineer with an electrical minor, I was fascinated to see the inside of one of those. I always assumed there was some kind of device that 'sensed' when current went through the ground wire and thats when it would pop. Never would have guessed there was a comparison circuit between live and neutral but that made so much sense in the world. God I love engineering.

    • @eDoc2020
      @eDoc2020 Před 5 dny

      It actually wouldn't work if it sensed current on the ground wire. If you touch a live wire and a cold water pipe none of the shock current would go through the ground wire.

  • @suspense_comix3237
    @suspense_comix3237 Před 9 dny +5

    Damn, I didn’t know Mehdi was specialized in Mechanical Engineering as well.

  • @dougamolina
    @dougamolina Před 9 dny +4

    9:50 that seems overcomplicated.
    feels like algorithms written by devs that just learned how to code, or overkill design patterns that complicates more than helps.

    • @tomasgarza1249
      @tomasgarza1249 Před 9 dny +3

      I think they can not rely on relays, because a short is expected, so a lot of current draw is expected, relays could get stuck, meaning a person dies.
      Also, current can sometimes weld conductors if high enough, so it makes sense to be spring loaded.

  • @ethandandu
    @ethandandu Před 9 dny +2

    aha, that thingie goes on the other thingie; got it 👍
    i can't believe you put that contraption back together !!!🤯

  • @STEVE_C_1369
    @STEVE_C_1369 Před 9 dny +1

    When Im having a bad day,your videos give me a reason to laugh,AND add a bit of education my way as well.
    Thanks 😁👍

  • @joe125ful
    @joe125ful Před 9 dny +3

    3:49 Exactly!
    EU standard for win.
    9:27 Brutaly owercomplicated...

  • @lioncraft4142
    @lioncraft4142 Před 10 dny +6

    1:50 🤣🤣🤣

  • @tlhIngan
    @tlhIngan Před 8 dny +1

    Ground is not needed for these devices. In fact, if you buy them, there will be a sticker that says "No Equipment Ground" which you put on if the socket is not grounded. Yes, it is code legal to replace a two pin ungrounded outlet with a 3 pin GFCI outlet, and it's safer that way too.

  • @FuzzyPuddingGamer
    @FuzzyPuddingGamer Před 9 dny

    Thars fascinating! I've always wanted to know the inner mechanisms of GFCI

  • @pravardhanus
    @pravardhanus Před 9 dny +4

    So this device will consume some ghost power?

  • @benskev
    @benskev Před 10 dny +15

    Also, mehdi i love your eyebrows, please make a 10hour version

  • @tom4ivo
    @tom4ivo Před 8 dny +1

    You took something apart and put it back together, and there were no extra parts lying around? Truly a god among men.

  • @Akdk-rj6kt
    @Akdk-rj6kt Před 12 hodinami

    Found your channel by accident, haven't watched you in years glad your still making videos subbed

  • @sambishara9300
    @sambishara9300 Před 9 dny +8

    6:16 great Mr.Bean impression

  • @danek_hren
    @danek_hren Před 10 dny +3

    0:13 Mehdi, what is that... Burning effect called? Can't find it!

  • @cannack
    @cannack Před 8 dny +2

    7:16
    me 4 hours into a ``simple 30 minute`` head-light bulb change on my car

  • @O.Salah1
    @O.Salah1 Před 8 dny

    Liked how you used the clamp ameter to explain how gfci works 👍

  • @mohamedmergueb2180
    @mohamedmergueb2180 Před 6 dny +3

    IF TONY STARK HAD MEHDI IN HIS CAVE BOTH OF THEM WOULD BE DEAD

  • @mamawau
    @mamawau Před 9 dny +4

    Mehdi you are an electrician that wants our European protection. So why don't you install it yourself in your own home?
    Could also be a great lengthy CZcams series.

    • @bichela
      @bichela Před 9 dny

      Do we have 30ma whole house RCBO units in the US?

    • @eDoc2020
      @eDoc2020 Před 5 dny

      @@bichela Yes and no. We do have GFCI breakers (RCBO) for branch circuits (or subpanels) but they trip at out safer North American standard of 5mA. I've heard many (but not all) AFCI breakers happen to have built in 30mA ground fault protection but it's not advertised.
      And side note, while standard European RCDs trip at 30mA I thought RCBOs tripped at 12mA. Also note that (AFAIK) the European ratings are must-trip current and American ratings are the nominal trip current. So a 30mA RCD is really a 24mA GFCI and a 5mA GFCI would be called a 6mA RCD.

  • @robertgift
    @robertgift Před 6 dny

    Interesting about Neutral to Ground tripping the GFCI. Did not expecthat. Please show circuit diagram. Wonderful devices have saved lives.

  • @fraaggl
    @fraaggl Před 5 dny

    god I love your channel, the mix of humour and technicity is a killer. Your humour is the best, the fact that if you don't know that this man is a damn good engineer then you can easily take him for a fool. So much humility with such knowledge is the best for me ! Self derision at the max.

  • @Sandithnadawa
    @Sandithnadawa Před 9 dny +3

    It's only 31 minutes ago . How people commented 20 h ago

  • @Astronimicalcat
    @Astronimicalcat Před 9 dny +3

    4:38 look under his armpit 🤣🤣🤣🤣

  • @BoyInTheVoid
    @BoyInTheVoid Před 9 dny

    I love the way Mehdi's reaction always changes and switches everytime he got hurt or shocked😂

  • @johnfrian
    @johnfrian Před 8 dny

    Impressive, going from 100% confusion to explaining how it works in an understandable way!

  • @djrkrahulchannel
    @djrkrahulchannel Před 9 dny +9

    Those from India, mark your attendance quickly.

    • @debangabiswas6427
      @debangabiswas6427 Před 3 dny +2

      Ye sab chapri jaise kaam insta tak hi rakho bhai

    • @djrkrahulchannel
      @djrkrahulchannel Před 2 dny

      @@debangabiswas6427 Kyun, Tu to Aisa bol raha hai jaise Insta pe tu chipka rahta hai 😂😂 or haa mein kuch bhi karun usse tujhe kya 🤔 tu apna kaam kar mein apna kaam kar raha hun 😡😡😡😡

    • @ten132
      @ten132 Před dnem

      Sahi bola bhai. Ye lehen ke bode har jagha bessti karate hain ​@@debangabiswas6427

  • @midnightman873
    @midnightman873 Před 10 dny +4

    46 seconds and 168 views, he really fell off

    • @mcanty
      @mcanty Před 10 dny +3

      7 minutes and 3,547 views, he really fell off

    • @amansarma417
      @amansarma417 Před 9 dny

      26 min 14,500 views, he really fell off

    • @KyberNuII
      @KyberNuII Před 9 dny

      The videos becoming random and very slow production seems to be the reason

    • @Phantomx.
      @Phantomx. Před 9 dny +2

      ​@@KyberNuII it's a joke 😐

  • @distressisafk3550
    @distressisafk3550 Před 9 dny

    bro i just love this guy man, i got soo happy when i saw the upload :)

  • @carlosjuniorfox
    @carlosjuniorfox Před 5 dny

    The proms are easily touchable when live, and energized screws on the sides when you disassemble the outlet and GFCI at the outlet instead of the circuit breaker. The North American outlets are an atrocity.
    In Brazil, our outlets are recessed, so you can't touch the proms while they are energized, the outlet screws are on the back of the outlet protected by a plastic cover, and hard to touch.

  • @TheLunarMan
    @TheLunarMan Před 10 dny +34

    only 170 views in 30 seconds? This guy fell off

    • @achannelwithaprofilepictur6253
      @achannelwithaprofilepictur6253 Před 10 dny +11

      The views aren’t accurate when the video is brand new for some reason… it’s probably something more like 500 views.

    • @jjtb7300
      @jjtb7300 Před 10 dny +3

      2304 that’s why

    • @lxlMrSatan
      @lxlMrSatan Před 10 dny +7

      OMG STOP! EVERY VIDEO HAS THIS NOW JESUS

    • @danek_hren
      @danek_hren Před 10 dny +1

      Stolen 🤓

    • @xtr0city
      @xtr0city Před 10 dny +1

      Fell off what? He looks totally fine

  • @AngelSanchez-un6ef
    @AngelSanchez-un6ef Před 5 dny +2

    6:50 I think earth and neutral are not shorted inside the fuse panel, they are along the distribution line. Normally at the substation. In Spain is in this way.

    • @eDoc2020
      @eDoc2020 Před 5 dny +1

      Different countries have different standards. TN-S (like you describe in Spain) have a connection at the distribution transformer. TN-C-S (like in US/Canada) only have a neutral in the building's power feed and then it's separated into discrete ground and neutral. Some places like the UK have different rules depending on where you are and sometimes even on the same street.

  • @kirilkirov2451
    @kirilkirov2451 Před 5 dny

    Amazing design, that is extremely simple and effective

  • @Tech_Logix
    @Tech_Logix Před 9 dny

    It was great season... enjoyed learning Thanks Boom brother 😂