How to make a waveform visualizer

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  • čas přidán 27. 06. 2024
  • Not quite an oscilloscope, but even something outdated as a CRT TV can be an invaluable learning resource for an electronic enthusiast to experiment on.
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  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 59

  • @Pandangus
    @Pandangus Před 4 lety +6

    Best video I've seen on the subject. Thanks a lot!!

  • @noahauman
    @noahauman Před rokem +3

    very uniquely awesome. well done.

  • @jakenbaked87
    @jakenbaked87 Před 5 lety +1

    Your videos are dope, im surprised you dont have more subscribers

  • @DarkVaderlightsaber
    @DarkVaderlightsaber Před 4 lety

    Very cool videos man!

  • @rodrigonegrelli
    @rodrigonegrelli Před 3 lety

    Congratulations, beautiful work, I'm also building one ... Greetings from Brazil!

  • @chhupparustom
    @chhupparustom Před 3 lety +8

    Nice! Did you connect just one channel to the vertical deflector? Can you also show how to make a XY or wave visualizer from those small CRT tubes available on eBay? Thanks!

  • @janmarek3408
    @janmarek3408 Před 9 měsíci +2

    Or don't disassemble the TV and use a small effect: Analog Reason GR3. Or GR2 to the Eurorack for multiple curves at once :)

  • @mntlpics
    @mntlpics Před rokem +2

    Yeah, it's weird, I keep getting glitchy images of my past showing up. Literally from birth to as recent as when I typed this. I like it, but very unexpected. I KID! I want to try this so bad but am very afraid of blowing myself up. When you are discharging with the screwdriver under that rubber seal, are you touching a screw post of something? Really great video!!!

  • @Dogface1984
    @Dogface1984 Před 22 dny

    thanks

  • @koenignero
    @koenignero Před rokem

    This is crazy

  • @plop386
    @plop386 Před rokem

    for coil result are different because one line is 50/ 60 Hz depending on where you live.
    the other one is 17 000 Hz ish so it's way to faster and looks fuzzy

  • @the_musicalfreakshow
    @the_musicalfreakshow Před 2 lety

    I have a question regarding the signal input from the audio cables. Is it possible to simply cut the wires to the speaker, and then run those up to the horizontal coil? Will that give the same effect as following the traces to find the amplifier and attaching the inputs from there? I ask because I am not too concerned about getting sound from the monitor itself, I only want the waveform.

  • @AgingCaves
    @AgingCaves Před 2 lety

    So I hook up my audio cables to the horizontal points, I left the vertical. It wiggles a little bit when I start the TVA bed the music, but then after a few seconds, the tv makes a high pitched squeal and shuts itself off.
    Am I missing something? I think i might need resistors for the open horizontal wires. How can I do that? What do I need?

  • @hardminder
    @hardminder Před 4 lety +1

    Hi maybe you can help me, I tried making an oscilloscope with an old tv by plugging both deflection coil on different audio jacks socket (a lot of people do that to have both X and Y axis displayed at the same time when you play music). What I get when I turn the tv on is the initial dot in the middle but it stays super small but becomes really really crazy bright and after a few seconds i hear a pop, the display shuts and after a big static noise appears coming from the back of the tv and continues until I unplug the tv. Any ideas on what's wrong ? Any tips would be greatly appreciated. Thanks

    • @SciCynicalInventing
      @SciCynicalInventing  Před 4 lety +1

      Sounds like you have your high voltage horizontal wires not connected to anything. I mention in the video that sometimes when you mess with the tv coils it wont operate correctly due to the high voltage wires being disconnected and shorting out somewhere. So usually you can get away with using a giant resister across those high voltage lines to fool the tv into thinking its connected to its yolk coils.

    • @AgingCaves
      @AgingCaves Před 2 lety

      @@SciCynicalInventing so we would need to connect the two horizontal wires together with a resistor?

  • @kino.berlin
    @kino.berlin Před 3 lety

    Hey, thanks for posting this, even though there are a number of videos about doing this, your's is the only one that mentions the tv not working after cutting the coil cables, so i was wondering if you could just enlighten me a bit more.. I am doing an osciloscope, so both vertical and horizontal coils, and when i turn it on, if shows the dot in the middle, but just for a second and shuts down, which i figure is the same thing that would cause it not to turn on at all..
    So the question is, how do i determine which resistence is strong enough for this purpose,?
    And also, when i know the right resistence to use, i connect the positive and negative of the vetical, toghether, with the resistence in between, and the same for the horizontal, correct?
    Dont really know anyone that knows about this kind of stuff, so would really appreciate if you could help me, cheers!

    • @SciCynicalInventing
      @SciCynicalInventing  Před 3 lety

      No worries, so as a starting point I would measure the resistance (ohms) of the horizontal and vertical coils and that would be the rough value of the resistor that you would want to use to trick the board into thinking its connected to those coils. The resistors get connected to the wires running from the baord that originally went to the coils yes. High wattage resistors are a must, maybe like 5-10 watts at least. Now i say measuring the coils will give you a ROUGH resistance value because you are dealing with an AC current so theres reactance (resistance based on frequency) to consider. You can google that to find some equations to help you calculate it if you want to go that deep. If all else fails its not that hard to drive the tube and flyback with your own circuits. Flyback circuits are plentiful and for the tube you just need 2-5 volts DC for the filament and maybe 20 - 60 volts DC between the anode to cathode. Thats all just from the top of my head so take it with a grain of salt but hopefully that helps. Cheers!

    • @patrickjjankowiak1649
      @patrickjjankowiak1649 Před 3 lety

      @@SciCynicalInventing It is probably shutting down because of a protection circuit finding a fault in the horizontal deflection and high voltage section. The correct fix is to measure the inductance of the horizontal deflection coil and then substitute an inductor of that value to the set. The horizontal deflection circuit in this set includes a tuned circuit affecting horizontal retrace pulse width and high voltage level. That circuit is intimately connected in the power supply system and is not to be treated lightly. A resistor is not only wrong but dangerous to the set and renders it unsafe to operate. Also, no TV set of this general class should be run without the horizontal deflection coil connected OR an equivalent inductance substituted to the set. Note that the substitute inductance must not saturate.

    • @patrickjjankowiak1649
      @patrickjjankowiak1649 Před rokem

      @@MusicaCatolicaMIDI If the brightness is low, then it is possible that the absence of the horizontal deflection coil's inductance has also removed much of the energy storage mechanism used by the flyback-type high voltage supply, resulting in a low voltage.
      If the protection circuit was operating, the high voltage would be shut off and you should not get any trace on the tube. You can measure the voltage with a high voltage probe. They are now easy to own because there's little use for them today outside of we who like cathode ray tubes and general high voltage fun.
      Now, it may be possible to disable the safety protection, either by 'fooling' the detection circuit or by some interesting hardware hackery. I sincerely discourage such actions because the protection circuit, annoying as it may seem, is there to prevent the HV from rising above a pre-set limit according to X-ray exposure levels defined by regulatory agencies.
      It also tries to prevent further malfunctions in the TV set due to excessive high voltage, and to prevent fires and their toxic fumes. Hopefully the output device and fuse would blow quickly.
      Because of the vast number of ways television and monitor HV and deflection protection circuits are designed and implemented, it is not possible to provide specific information on how to defeat them. One who is experienced with TV set troubleshooting could figure it out from the schematic or by examining the set itself. No repair personnel I have known would create a permanent workaround to avoid the protection circuit. But there is always one LOL.

  • @ThePlaza666
    @ThePlaza666 Před 3 lety

    is there any way you can show us how to hook up the speakers and the amp

  • @munsonatl
    @munsonatl Před rokem

    I have seen it say that you can't convert newer CRT TVs. You make a remark about how this can be done. Could you potentially reiterate? Thanks for the amazing video!

    • @SciCynicalInventing
      @SciCynicalInventing  Před rokem

      I assume you mean the part where I was talking about leaving the horizontal wires unconnected and how the TV may not work properly or at all if those wires remain unconnected. So if the TV doesn't want to operate I was saying you could maybe get away with connecting a high wattage resister to trick to the TV into thinking you still have the coil connected. Of course you would need to measure the resistance of the coil and then find a resistor that close to that value. Another thing that could work is just making your own inductor with the proper resistance and inductance to simulate the coil, that would also trick the TV. Hope that helps!

    • @munsonatl
      @munsonatl Před rokem

      @@SciCynicalInventing Excuse me, I would like to seek out a sufficiently old CRT TV so I can get around the problems of converting a newer TV. Do you know if a TV from the 1980s is sufficiently old? This information would be greatly helpful!

    • @SciCynicalInventing
      @SciCynicalInventing  Před rokem

      @@munsonatl I dont see why it wouldnt work, so yes.

  • @chikoavena3407
    @chikoavena3407 Před 2 lety

    So to discharge it, that rubberish "hat" should be lifted or removed?

  • @TrinityCodex
    @TrinityCodex Před rokem

    Ro Ro, rotate the yolk!

  • @TibiGrotta
    @TibiGrotta Před rokem

    is there any way to let the tv and the oscilloscope both working?

  • @Turker922
    @Turker922 Před rokem +1

    how powerfull my amplifier should be

  • @windify2712
    @windify2712 Před rokem

    I did pretty much the same thing and instead of waves I'm getting that line to move up and down in sync to the music. How can I fix this?

  • @taliqhill7114
    @taliqhill7114 Před 3 lety

    a little late to this but what happens when u play a vhs tape in that model tv while ur playing audio with the oscillograph. im pretty much trying to know how to play videos thru a homeade dirty video mixer and have audio scanned while video is playing at the same time on the crt

    • @taliqhill7114
      @taliqhill7114 Před 3 lety

      sorry if my question is confusing im just starting to grasp this stuff! thx

    • @patrickjjankowiak1649
      @patrickjjankowiak1649 Před rokem

      It is clear enough. As we know, the video signal from a player is based upon a raster scan divided into a set of time-wise lines that are repeated in succession, each one carrying brightness and color information. A full 'frame' is composed of two 'fields', one after the other, which are interlaced, but that is getting off track and has only to do with the video's resolution which is irrelevant for your purpose. For your purpose, one field is a complete image and requires 1/60th of a second to complete.
      So, if your deflection patterin takes 1/60th of a second to complete, you will stretch out that image (the field) along the complete track of the pattern. You will not see any sort of image, but rather areas of varying coloration and brightness, and of course the 'blank' timing parts of the video signal that do not reach the CRT screen. (note 60Hz or 59.9Hz is the USA NTSC standard, others use about 50Hz, YMMV). A trick is to synchronize your deflection waveform to exactly the same speed as the video you are playing back. Then, the video scene will be stationary in relation to the deflection waveform and the movement of colored areas will be seen to correspond with the action on a separate TV monitor that is displaying the output of the playback device. Sub-harmonics of 60Hz will also 'freeze or synchronize the pattern to the incoming signal.

  • @NerdlabsSci
    @NerdlabsSci Před 3 lety

    Mine isn't working. the line is about an inch long and it is just getting longer and shorter along with the music. Reminds me of a vu meter. how do i fix this? can u reply soon?!!!!!!

  • @UPandUNDER16
    @UPandUNDER16 Před 3 lety

    Hello, i made this today, but is to sensitive, i put minimum volume and the wave is to big, how can i made the wave more small in amplitude? So is more aesthetic

  • @kurtancheta2907
    @kurtancheta2907 Před 4 lety +1

    Im doing this on my old tv rn

  • @subhasisdas7306
    @subhasisdas7306 Před 4 lety +1

    When I got shock from crt tv after never touch it

    • @JusticePreyHDM
      @JusticePreyHDM Před 2 lety

      Discharge the parts first so that you will not get shocked.

  • @enigma7070
    @enigma7070 Před 3 lety

    Instead of turning the yoke, can't you also just swap the horizontal and vertical connections to the coils?

    • @Fvgh12345
      @Fvgh12345 Před 3 lety +1

      no, the refresh rate on the horizontal is to fast to display a nice sine wave, the refresh of the verticle however does which is why its neccessary to rotate it. he explains and demonstrates that in the vid as well

    • @enigma7070
      @enigma7070 Před 3 lety

      ​@@Fvgh12345 But if the coils themselves are identical, then it shouldn't matter if you swap connections directly at the coils. The source doesn't switch X & Y.

    • @Fvgh12345
      @Fvgh12345 Před 3 lety +2

      @@enigma7070 I believe it has to do with something in the board, he demonstrated in the vid and im not sure how he would have got that with the configuration without something in the board causing it. I just made one a couple hours ago out of a small storm/emergency tv and just followed what he did, works great! Next one might switch it up just to see what happens

    • @SciCynicalInventing
      @SciCynicalInventing  Před rokem +2

      Sorry for the really late reply, but to answer your question: I've tried this before (swapping wires instead of rotating yolk) and it works but the line/waveforms on the tv end up shorter. Meaning that the coils for x and y are not exactly the same, thus why I say to rotate the yolk because it gives you a line/waveforms that are the entire width of the TV.

  • @albertorendo9723
    @albertorendo9723 Před 3 lety

    What happen if i send audio signal to both direction? Do I get a "3D effect" image?

    • @SciCynicalInventing
      @SciCynicalInventing  Před 3 lety +1

      Yes, using an audio amplifier you can connect the left channel to the horizontal coil and the right channel to the vertical one and play around with frequencies on the channels to produce 3D images. Search "lissajous figures" or "oscilloscope music"

    • @albertorendo9723
      @albertorendo9723 Před 3 lety

      @@SciCynicalInventing ok, thank you very much

    • @patrickjjankowiak1649
      @patrickjjankowiak1649 Před rokem

      @@SciCynicalInventing There are some patterns generated on normal oscilloscopes that appear to be 3D and drawings. To display on an electromagnetic deflection display as in this video here, lower frequencies can be used, or more exotic deflection amplifiers made. There are many entertaining youtube videos of pictures and shapes drawn on oscilloscopes. Many also play the audio tones used, for an extra dimension of experience.

  • @rizwanmalik3659
    @rizwanmalik3659 Před rokem

    Hi new idea to Make circuit of oscilloscope that run on video input composite of TV with out open any tv or any other device.
    it make on working tv or video input based devices or monitor but not used A2D based circuit like Arduino or other digital circuit
    Useing analoge circuit this is awesome new idea to make every video based devices into oscilloscope.
    Can make tow different frequencies horizontal and vertical,and then distrube by injecting measuring signal work oscilloscope.

    • @patrickjjankowiak1649
      @patrickjjankowiak1649 Před rokem +1

      There are some similar, old articles on Video Oscilloscope converters/adapters that generate a proper video signal of a black screen with a single brightness pulse placed within the raster and moved about in time related to the timing of the video signal so that H and V deflection of the bright location in the raster is possible according to the analog H and V inputs to the adapter.
      The bandwidth of the oscilloscope thus created is quite low but it is an interesting thing to do and no doubt there is plenty of room for new ideas. Most of those articles are from the 1960s to 1980s electronics hobby magazines. Similar interesting and related topics are text generators for TV sets as well as do it yourself pong-type and similar types of very early DIY video games designed forTV sets, wherein shapes were moved around on the screen by voltages. The older circuits for similar projects use less 'special' ICs and more discrete parts, have much analog circuitry, and are a source of information for bringing to life such an idea.

  • @18psutton
    @18psutton Před 2 lety

    Make me one

  • @zhenghangmin
    @zhenghangmin Před rokem

    but how to control the speed

    • @culture0453
      @culture0453 Před 4 dny

      Dipende dalla frequenza e dal segnale.. e da quanto il segnale viene filtrato in ingresso

  • @youwatchwhatyouwant
    @youwatchwhatyouwant Před 9 měsíci +1

    Electrical safety should be improved mate