Hydrophone Drop Rig

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  • čas přidán 28. 08. 2024

Komentáře • 21

  • @zero2spearo
    @zero2spearo Před rokem +3

    I love how you can get the whole stereo experience when you are throwing the pebbles in at the end.

    • @SoundSleuth
      @SoundSleuth  Před rokem +1

      Thanks! That's why there are two of them!

  • @PunchDuk
    @PunchDuk Před rokem +2

    I’m not an electronics guy, but these videos are making me want to be. Great job explaining, and keep up the good work!

  • @kaipaquin7060
    @kaipaquin7060 Před rokem +1

    So cool! Thanks for sharing the build!

  • @betoblanco603
    @betoblanco603 Před rokem +1

    Just a respectful observation, the epoxy mold method seems to prevent the best contact from the mics with the water first because of the material which conducts vibrations and sound pressure but not as efficient as others and second the capsule it's in the center and not near the surface where it contacts the water. I've seen people use Plastidip, liquid plastic which in my opinion just covers the capsule enough making a more direct contact with the water, it's lighter and not as rigid which conducts better the vibrations. Results in a much more crisp and detailed sound rather than a "boxy" sealed sound.

    • @SoundSleuth
      @SoundSleuth  Před rokem

      It’s actually about the density of the material that the cylinder is embedded in. We want as it close to that of water for cleanest transfer of acoustic energy. My original build that embedded the PCB with the piezo cylinder has received great reviews and sounds excellent. It uses the same resin.

  • @soundhobo
    @soundhobo Před rokem +1

    That’s a job well done 👍

  • @MrHondaguy77
    @MrHondaguy77 Před rokem +1

    I have absolutely no idea how you built this, but I really need one. I inspect pools for water leaks and really could use this. Is there anyway I can pay you to make me one?!?!

  • @WorldPowerLabs
    @WorldPowerLabs Před 6 měsíci +1

    Quick question: with STEMinc apparently out-of-business, or soon to be, do you know of an alternate source for usable piezo cylinders?

    • @SoundSleuth
      @SoundSleuth  Před 6 měsíci +2

      Yes I am about to update the Instructables

  • @Swarmish
    @Swarmish Před 5 měsíci

    Hey, I thought I posted a question yesterday, but I don't see it so I'll try asking again (sorry for the spam if the original does post). I'm just starting to get into hydrophones and built my first one last night using a piezo disc with enclosure that was meant for guitar pickups (scrappily sealed with hot glue). What kind of differences does a piezo cylinder offer vs the piezo disc? Also I did notice the loud hum with my last night build that I tested in my tub. Should adding a copper wire to ground into the water nullify the hum that my build has? I am considering following your build video to make a new pair of hydrophones as I am really impressed by the audio in this video as well as your video for the whales. Thank you so much for sharing your findings in such great detail! I've always wanted to record underwater sounds, so I'm excited to explore this even further.

    • @SoundSleuth
      @SoundSleuth  Před 5 měsíci

      Glad you are exploring underwater sound. You have to have a ground to the water to prevent humm and buzz. I found that out the hard way -- as in after my first build and I had published. To the Disc vs Cylinder. All the commercial ones are cylinders. And actually they keep them hollow which I also became aware of. I plan on updating both builds very shortly.

    • @misterbusiness3964
      @misterbusiness3964 Před 5 měsíci

      I'll also be curious for those updates! Thank you. I've never built one of these, and would buy two from you, but as I understand you are just offering the instructables. Does anyone else sell similar quality hydrophones? Thomas Rex Beverly referred me to someone, but alas, that was a dead end. @@SoundSleuth

    • @SoundSleuth
      @SoundSleuth  Před 5 měsíci

      @@misterbusiness3964 reach out to me via email. ryckebusch@gmail.com

    • @misterbusiness3964
      @misterbusiness3964 Před 5 měsíci

      Email sent!@@SoundSleuth

  • @metaforest
    @metaforest Před 3 měsíci +1

    5-min epoxy is not long-term water proof. It will degrade and soften fairly quickly.

    • @SoundSleuth
      @SoundSleuth  Před 3 měsíci

      It probably isn't the best method but works well for me. Do you have suggestions for improvemnets?

    • @metaforest
      @metaforest Před 3 měsíci +1

      @@SoundSleuth Try JB-Weld it has about the same consistency as 5-min epoxy. There is a 5-min version of JB-Weld as well, but I don't think it cures as nicely as the regular formula.

    • @SoundSleuth
      @SoundSleuth  Před 3 měsíci

      @@metaforest lol I’m pretty sure that’s the brand of five min epoxy I use

    • @metaforest
      @metaforest Před 3 měsíci

      @@SoundSleuth I'm not talking about the clear stuff they make... that is not water resistant. I'm talking about the gray stuff. Totally different chemistry.

  • @dreamcat4
    @dreamcat4 Před rokem +2

    hi, for the cables sealing with epoxy, it might be nice to makke a more flexible cable relief on top of that. so as an extra step, this could be achieved with a polyeurethane based product. for which toluene is the solvent. there might be several pu based products available on the market. however for more information about the method which i heard about, robrenz has an instructional video over on his channel cryptically called 'secrets of goop' here is link czcams.com/video/JU2jsbGNcZE/video.html&pp=ygUPcm9icmVueiB0b2x1ZW5l