I saw the thumbnail and went "why would I watch a video on that?" and then I realized it was Technology Connections and I went "oh boy, that sounds more wonderful, sign me up!" It isn't just the topics and interesting discussion, amigo, YOU are the reason this works.
@logicalfundy7 ай бұрын
@@sub-vibes I watched some flat earth videos out of curiosity, and had to delete them because guess what showed up in my recommendations . . . no thanks. Your watch history is a pretty powerful indicator in the KZbin algorithm.
@2ndfloorsongs7 ай бұрын
@@sub-vibesThank you, thank you, thank you. You have made my day.
@patrickbroyer55187 ай бұрын
@subliminalvibes I don't want to thumbs down a video just to keep ones like it from showing up too frequently in my feed. And I don't want to be fed only more of what ive already seen. How strange that I can't edit the list of tags and weights the algorithm is tweaking with each video I watch. I suppose they'd have to name the tags accurately to facilitate my editing their weighting intelligently.
@Hyraethian7 ай бұрын
Im glad I'm not the only one who has that vertigo feeling.
@decb.79597 ай бұрын
If there's one thing this channel has taught me, it's that the simplest and cheapest way to reliably cycle something on and off is a bimetallic strip coupled to its own output.
@SinHurr7 ай бұрын
In programming, we call this "recursion"
@Bacteriophagebs7 ай бұрын
At a manufacturing level, yes, but if you ever have to build something yourself, you're NOT going to want to make and calibrate your own bimetallic strip.
@2ndfloorsongs7 ай бұрын
@@BacteriophagebsUnless you're not after time efficiency, but are obsessively involved in a mindless hobby. I have actually made my own by metallic strip (he said flexing). I used it to add day and date to my homemade sundial.
@Bacteriophagebs7 ай бұрын
@@2ndfloorsongs Neeeeeeerd! 😝
@cothfi7 ай бұрын
@@2ndfloorsongs Please share a video with us. I'm really curious about how that works.
@albynton7 ай бұрын
My takeaway from this channel is that the bimetallic strip is the pillar of pre-electronic control circuits. Good job for a small piece of metal!
@st0rmforce7 ай бұрын
It's either a relay, a bimetallic strip, or both
@TheMadJagger7 ай бұрын
Piece of TWO metals :D
@RoryGlynn7 ай бұрын
*metals
@2ndfloorsongs7 ай бұрын
@@TheMadJaggerI think the singular "metal" could work in this instance. Since they're welded together, you could think of them as a very coarse alloy. 😁
@I_Santos_7 ай бұрын
@@2ndfloorsongsI started off mildly disagreeing with your definition and then you hit us with “very coarse alloy” and I lost it 😂😂
@MinnesotaGuy8227 ай бұрын
At 5:30, Alec threatened not to go down a tangent, the savage. I held my breath, alarmed! I was deeply relieved when he stayed true to his brand and went down the tangent! By gum, we come for the tangents, nerd stuff and witty observations, dang it! :) Keep up the great work, my man!
@deanhutchins8417 ай бұрын
Maintenance guy for 250 apartments here. I’m glad you went on the tangent about the range elements. I actually ordered 2 today exactly like the one you have there. Reason: one of my ranges ‘hot cooktop’ light is always illuminated…meaning 1 of my elements has shorted. Through the magic of buying 2 of them, I’ll have one in stock for the next time this happens. Love what you do.
@WanJae427 ай бұрын
"My favorite channel is talking about stoves today" ... My friends have learned to expect this sort of remark from me.
@dedaloskprs90137 ай бұрын
Me 2 years ago: "If you excuse me i have to watch an hour long video on dishwasher detergent"
@jasonwomack40647 ай бұрын
This channel really is the adult version of Mr Rogers showing us how crayons are made.
@Pentti_Hilkuri7 ай бұрын
The recent lack of toaster ovens is disturbing.
@dedaloskprs90137 ай бұрын
Personally I miss a good ol' video on automotive lighting. He hasn't done fog lights yet, right?
@WanJae427 ай бұрын
@@dedaloskprs9013 We could do with a good nerdly rant on the difference between fog lights and driving lights. That wouldn't be a snarky video at all. Nope.
@JD3Gamer7 ай бұрын
Home appliances be like “Wait it’s all bimetallic strips?” “Always has been”
@MostlyPennyCat7 ай бұрын
Ooh, I'm gonna go design a pocket calculator that uses only bimetallic strips.
@atmel90777 ай бұрын
@@MostlyPennyCat Well... Calculators are made out of logic gates, logic gates can be made out of relays, a relay is a switch and a coil, the switch and coil can be replaced by a bimetallic strip and a heater (like the ones used to control streetlights), so yes, it's technically possible to build a calculator out of bimetallic strips, albeit a very slow one !
@craigmccune60667 ай бұрын
@@atmel9077 can doom run on a calculator made only of bimetallic strips?
@atmel90777 ай бұрын
@@craigmccune6066 No
@SunroseStudios7 ай бұрын
@@craigmccune6066not at a playable framerate probably, but in theory sure
@dekopuma7 ай бұрын
I love the bit about "I added lights, because it pleases me. I'm not going to show you how." I can't help but assume there's some questionable wiring going on inside that box.
@chaparmusic5 ай бұрын
Yep, I'm sure there is 😁
@BAGELMENSK5 ай бұрын
All wiring is questionable, just depends on the question
@alzimonster4 ай бұрын
I bet someone is sending current down the ground wire....
@the_undead3 ай бұрын
@@BAGELMENSKThe best kind of wiring is the wiring where the most applicable question is, how long until fire?
@SeanG_Ай бұрын
Those lights on the outlet box look like LEDs, which may have a series on voltage of 2-3 V, with a maximum current draw of 20 mA. The AC voltage of 120 or 240 is actually "RMS" (root mean square), which allows convenient representation of some average equivalent constant DC power, but the peak AC voltage is actually higher. For a sine wave voltage provided by wall outlets, the peak voltage is the RMS voltage times the square root of 2, or about 1.4. so the peak voltage of 120 V AC RMS is 169.7 V, and twice that for a 240 V AC RMS pair of wires. If the LEDs are in series with a 169.7 V source, then you need a series resistor to drop 166.7 V (=169.7-3 V) across the resistor, while limiting the current to 20 mA, or 8485 ohms (166.7/0.020). Also, the resistor also consumes a *lot* of power (current squared * resistance), which would be 3.39 W in the "120 V AC RMS" case. Frequently, the 120 V AC RMS level will float up to 124 V or higher, which again would double for the 240 V circuit. It's really inefficient to drive LEDs from higher-voltage sources. I had done it a few times when I was younger, and I'm not proud of it!
@djhsilver7 ай бұрын
"Didn't imagine this script would get so out of hand" my Brother in Christ, you have never written a script that is in hand.
@zendell377 ай бұрын
Clearly because he uses a teleprompter.
@oz_jones7 ай бұрын
@@zendell37 Get your like and think what you did.
@VocalMabiMaple7 ай бұрын
@@oz_jonesthey did good
@jonathanbalko96847 ай бұрын
Idk man, did you watch the one on hurricane lanterns?
@meski427 ай бұрын
That's simmerstats, PID controllers do it better.
@98Timothy7 ай бұрын
I'm a licensed electrician and I tend to just send people to your channel as you explain this stuff better then I ever could 😂
@VishalDudhani7 ай бұрын
You're god's messenger!
@chiefpacman7 ай бұрын
All wrong! You need to gatekeep all the information to keep homeowners calling!
@TheEDFLegacy7 ай бұрын
I'm just waiting for a video on AFCI's!😅
@alanhilder18837 ай бұрын
Where I just tell them that the electricity runs in smoke, when you let the smoke out it doesn't work anymore...;-) Also a lecco in Australia. Most of the new "old style" simmerstats have a neutral link so the extra elements don't affect the "timing". I have seen newer ones but haven't had the time/opportunity to pull one apart. Seems like the main time I'm working on stoves/ovens is just before Xmas as people decide that they may need to cook for the whole family on that day and so it is urgent... ( haven't really needed that one for 3 months, haven't worried about fixing it )
@avcomth7 ай бұрын
I noticed the induction stove at the local Shabu restaurant behaving exactly like this too at low settings. The hot soup would boil and stop boiling alternately in an annoying 5 seconds cycle at the lowest of power setting, I figured it must be a thermostat or something turning it on and off and was wondering why they would cheap out and not use variable current method on the stove until I see him explaining it here that the transformer would have to be excessively large for such load current.
@stuartjoynson99087 ай бұрын
As a Brit who loves puns I can’t believe I left it to Alec to come up with Hobnob. My wife agrees he must be some kind of genius. Cam cam just proves it.
@cecilkorik7 ай бұрын
It's a hob knob cam cam.
@goosenotmaverick11567 ай бұрын
That was absolute gold 😂
@TiredOcean7 ай бұрын
It's such a good joke
@fredbear39157 ай бұрын
I thought it really took the biscuit...
@m1geo7 ай бұрын
I was expecting a biscuit joke, too.
@boredincan7 ай бұрын
With many of my favourite KZbinrs giving up the game lately, I'm glad to see one that say "bugger the algorithm, I'm going to make videos about stuff I like at (mostly) my own pace". Thanks for keeping up the informative entertainment that fits right into my wheelhouse.
@mujtabaalam59075 ай бұрын
Who were your favorite KZbinrs?
@jameshodgetts75414 ай бұрын
@@mujtabaalam5907 im guessing people like Tom Scott. Theres been loads of "knowledge" type youtubers doing "im giving up" over the last year or so.
@baddaytrader3 ай бұрын
@@jameshodgetts7541I wouldn’t say Tom Scott “gave up.” He accomplished a lot, and wanted to enjoy the fruits of his labours. Giving up implies quitting because of not meeting a goal.
@TuralcarАй бұрын
"...about stuff I use so I can expense it"
@chrisj99617 ай бұрын
The best channel on KZbin. Honestly. It’s like how it’s made without the ad breaks. It’s like Tom Scott for objects that fit in my house. It’s like Mr. Rogers for adults. I loved those cutaway books as a kid, and I’ve never changed apparently.
@TheGuitarman19687 ай бұрын
Yep, this channel and Project Farm are two of the most entertaining and educational channels on KZbin.
@JMMC10057 ай бұрын
I'd never consciously noticed the lack of ad breaks, but now you mention it - this is one reason why it's so easy to settle in and watch a half hour video on the seemingly most mundane household objects. One of my all time favourite channels.
@loficampingguy96647 ай бұрын
Holy hell, I never noticed until now how I got a similar feeling from this channel as five year old me got from cutaway books and it all makes sense now
@tyttuut7 ай бұрын
@@tbird-z1rWhy such a cynical comment?
@iTzDritte7 ай бұрын
“Through the magic of buying two of them”🤗🤗🤗 My favorite line in any Technology Connections video!
@Timewastedonyt7 ай бұрын
The line play in my head before he say it🤗🤗
@PayterX7 ай бұрын
Really? Is it basically like a catch phrase from a 1980's sitcom to you? Genuinely curious, because to me I've never thought twice about him saying it in nearly every video. To my brain it always just came off as another necessary information giving line.
@Atmatan7 ай бұрын
@@PayterXWeird strawman argument. Want to try making that point better?
@finlaycameron45537 ай бұрын
@@Atmatan??? That want a strawman argument? He’s just saying he never really thought of it as a saying
@Atmatan7 ай бұрын
@@finlaycameron4553 I don't see OP mentioning implying they thought it reminded them of a sitcom? Braindead argument dude, it's literally a strawman. Like, blatantly.
@Preinstallable7 ай бұрын
I’m calling it. Our old friend, Mr. Bimetallic Strip.
@VJK1027 ай бұрын
And you where right kkkkkk
@PunakiviAddikti7 ай бұрын
You win!
@tapio_m68617 ай бұрын
I am starting to think that none of our world would work without that sneaky little thing.
@oplkfdhgk7 ай бұрын
yeah i also knew it.
@billfargo96167 ай бұрын
A bimetallic strip can't produce pulse trains.
@tiagosartori4337 ай бұрын
The fact that you laid out all the concepts AND presented related connections(ha) while clutching the temperature in Celsius is awesome. Always top content!
@MinecraftTestSquad7 ай бұрын
"I'm not tearing these apart because I need it" Well fortunately, due to the configuration of your stove, there's the magic of having bought four of them :3
@dontquestionjustbelieve57577 ай бұрын
Shit thats so funny
@eDoc20207 ай бұрын
Honestly if he started taking it apart he would most likely find the packet of basic service data. That would include a wiring diagram with the answers he is looking for.
@RobinTheBot7 ай бұрын
@@eDoc2020that's funny
@MrDuncl6 ай бұрын
looking at how clean it was I question that. We had a glass top stove like that and any spillages were very difficult to get off. We now have a glass top induction stove where spillages can be easily wiped off.
@erinfinn2273Ай бұрын
@@MrDuncl Anything burned onto a glass top stove can be scraped off with a razor blade. I got a radiant cooktop off Facebook Marketplace that had a MASSIVE burned on grease ring and since the glass top is harder than the steel used in a razor, you can safely slide the edge underneath the burnt on goop and peel it off. Cerama-Brite is also a fantastic cleaner for glass tops.
@KingcoleIIV7 ай бұрын
"I added the lights because it pleases me" I LOVE the matter of fact honesty lol, they please me too.
@DoctorOnkelap7 ай бұрын
did you get lightheaded?
@jc403377 ай бұрын
This is me designing things at work. Who cares if the LED costs $30? It pleases me.
At lest when Alec adds LEDs you know they wont be blue...
@grammaurai68437 ай бұрын
"Does that mean that this is a hob knob?" "I don't know how I live with me, either" Alec was sure feeling his Wheaties for this script!
@nowster7 ай бұрын
Hobnobs are oat and syrup biscuits (cookies).
@DustinKreidler7 ай бұрын
I burst out laughing at work on that second one. LOL!
@quinton16617 ай бұрын
He's clearly feeling better since the move.
@erikziak12497 ай бұрын
"I don't know how I live with me, either" Like he had a choice. He must live with himself. 🙂
@ABrit-bt6ce7 ай бұрын
@@nowsterChocolate Hobnobs are now on my shopping list. To the store.
@surferdude44877 ай бұрын
As a blind person, I heartily agree with your comment reguarding replacing knobs with touch buttons. I can cook on a stove with knobs. Even with the glass cook-top, I can generally center the cookware on the elements by bo hovering my hand on either side of the cookware and blocking off the heat. With knobs, I can adjust cooking heat by feel. But with those cheap touch buttons, I cant't tell what the stove is doing.
@philippeleprohon48233 ай бұрын
Do knobs with a tapered profile (slimmer on one side and larger on the other) on the handle help know if the knob is pointing one way or another?
@surferdude44873 ай бұрын
@@philippeleprohon4823 There is usually some sort of tactile marking on the indicator side of the knob. It could be a raised dash or a recessed circle. In any case, all burner control knobs that I've encountered have a definite click or detant for the off position.
@philippeleprohon48233 ай бұрын
@@surferdude4487 Ahh, gotcha! Thanks for letting me know!
@JonahDyer7 ай бұрын
Playing the Can Can over the cam cam was brilliant.
@LokiScarletWasHere7 ай бұрын
I love how each video draws more connections to all the previous ones. It's like that's what the channel is about or something.
@paulec2527 ай бұрын
Once we unlocked the latent heat cycle, we started connecting stuff left and right!
@grumpysteelman7 ай бұрын
It’d be even better, if it was focused on something that would seem like magic to someone from the Bronze Age.
@22Kalliopa7 ай бұрын
Yeah, gadget links or something like that...
@Ag89q43G0HyA7 ай бұрын
what if he gets to the point of having no conection to anything else? is it the end?
@theflyingspaget6 ай бұрын
@@Ag89q43G0HyAI would assume by that point different things to connect to would be invented.
@MercurialJester7 ай бұрын
"I don't know how I live with me either." This line was delivered with such a straight face and with zero weight given to it, I had to pause for 5 minutes to catch my breath from laughing so hard.
@randomnobody87707 ай бұрын
@18:45
@seizan88Ай бұрын
Agreed, the delivery is an absolute 10/10 😂❤
@zobook7 ай бұрын
We LOVE and EXPECT and DEMAND for the script to go out of hand. It's what makes this channel awesome!!
@Depl0rable107 ай бұрын
Please never change your humor. "Cam cam" was so funny
@UEGSamurai7 ай бұрын
He said "cam cam" and thought "hmm, that didn't make sense and wasn't funny". That shortly went away when after the cut to the cam lobe and I immediately understood and laughed out loud
@JesusVillanueva7 ай бұрын
I welcome these little breaks that add levity to the normal content dense videos you make. Please don't stop dropping these little gems of word play.
@JonahDyer7 ай бұрын
Did you notice he was playing the Can Can over the cam cam?
@donkmeister7 ай бұрын
@@JonahDyerOne cannot *play* the can-can. The can-can is a *dance*, the tune he played was an excerpt from the overture to Offenbach's "Orpheus in the Underworld". The can-can is simply this tune... With context. 😉
@jackielinde75687 ай бұрын
The only thing that would have made that scene better is if he played the CanCan song in the background at that time.
@nate_07237 ай бұрын
I did appreciate the glass top stove tangent. I was genuinely curious how those were different.
@rubiconnn7 ай бұрын
If you don't have one already, stay away from them. They are such a bad design. I guess if you value looks over function they are fine, but who had the bright thought to cover a cook top with a really fragile material that is also a great insulator?
@username77637 ай бұрын
I didn't realize that they were different until this video. Always nice learning something new. I had assumed they were the same coils just under a glass top to look cool. It being radiated heat instead of conducted heat makes a whole lot more sense now.
@nate_07237 ай бұрын
@@rubiconnn I have used both types and prefer the glass top. Maybe it depends on the brand. It is easier to clean and ive never broken the glass. It seems tough.
@hanifarroisimukhlis59897 ай бұрын
@@nate_0723 Glass is glass and glass breaks. Personally, i wouldn't trust load-bearing glass (except maybe polycarbonate), too risky.
@Ruhigengeist7 ай бұрын
I value ease of cleaning very highly. I don't drop things on my glass-top stove. I'm not worried about it breaking under normal operations. It's by far my favourite kind of stove. I can even toast bread/buns/naan really quickly right on the burner to great results.
@HungerGamesFan007 ай бұрын
"Through the magic of buying two of them" may be my favorite running bit
@guiorgy7 ай бұрын
"And some other stuff"
@rudeskalamander7 ай бұрын
My favorite was when Steve mould copied it
@Kumquat_Lord7 ай бұрын
We will need some merch that is a pair of socks with that on them
@MonkeyJedi997 ай бұрын
@@Kumquat_Lord Maybe a cross-collab with Hank and John Green's sock company?
@sion87 ай бұрын
@@MonkeyJedi99 I would love that and they know each other!
@florians6847 ай бұрын
I just noticed that your channel is basically the same thing as "Die Sendung mit der Maus", a german children TV series where things are explained very simply and with great visualizations. I loved this as a child and i still enjoy watching it today and i use it when i'm curious about how something works.
@Pyxis106 ай бұрын
They explain electronics in childrens programming over there?
@SirRichfield6 ай бұрын
@@Pyxis10This particular programme explains everything. They have a great bit about the basics of the Internet, IP address and all.
@TheZcoffin5 ай бұрын
Reminds me of The Secret Life of Machines
@orchdork7753 ай бұрын
@SirRichfield I wish there was an English version!! The closest thing I can think of is SciShow Kids, but that's a youtube channel and mainly focuses on science rather than everyday things. I wish there were more educational shows for kids in the U.S. where I live. There are some science shows, but they have a totally different vibe, like Bill Nye the Science Guy. I don't mean that in a bad way, because I love that show, I just think it would be amazing to have a program that just answers the endless questions that kids have about everything. Parents can foster a love of learning by just genuinely engaging with those questions and even looking up the answer with their kids if they don't know.
@bwoods3117 ай бұрын
I’ve been a professional appliance tech for over 12 years. I work on ranges of all types almost daily…. and I just learned a shitload! Alec is just the best.
@Gigaheart7 ай бұрын
LIke Greez says, "You don't have to know how something works, to fix it."
@therealromster7 ай бұрын
@@Gigaheart No but it does help fault finding at times.
@cenchloraadums3143Ай бұрын
Looks like the word "professional" has another meaning that's been entirely unknown to me....😂
@ActualLiteralKyle7 ай бұрын
So I didn’t realize my headphones were connected in another room, so I hit play and there’s no sound despite me turning it up. So naturally I reasoned that TC was making a visually striking, avant garde intro to the video. I was here for it, it was very deep and thoughtful. I had no clue what he was trying to say with the piece, but man it was deep. Turns out he was not doing that thing.
@Atmatan7 ай бұрын
Thanks for sharing
@PurpleBaroon7 ай бұрын
Everyone should go back and watch the first 38 seconds without sound. Its so entertaining to think that's what he could have been going for.
@Atmatan7 ай бұрын
@@PurpleBaroon Nah. I'll take your word for it.
@BarafuAlbino7 ай бұрын
I once had a video player break in the middle of a movie and start showing black screen with sound going on as usual. Since it was a horror movie, it took me 20 minutes to understand it was not intentional.
@alex139027 ай бұрын
@Atmatan_Kabbaher shame that literally nobody asked you
@lordmarshmal_06437 ай бұрын
You have now convinced me to always call stove burners "infernal frisbees"
@DoctorOnkelap7 ай бұрын
lets hope electroboom never hears the phrase infernal frisbee
@grn17 ай бұрын
@@DoctorOnkelap Lets hope he does and maybe teams up with StyroPyro to make something (that looks super dangerous but is actually relatively safe when done by professionals) happen.
@AndRew-vo9bz2 ай бұрын
I do love it when you explain stuff.. as a an electrical engineer,electrician now designer I find it so gratifying there is someone who enjoys this stuff like I do
@andrew24737 ай бұрын
Babe wake up, toaster boy is making another connection to… somehow every other video they’ve ever made.
@niacdoial7 ай бұрын
nah, it's missing a tangent on audio/video storage media but still, pretty close
@nurmr7 ай бұрын
I'm sure he could cook up some sort of connection; It's a pretty hot topic. (Sorry. Not sorry).
@jebeda7 ай бұрын
I'm only half way through (I came down to give a thumbs up to whoever might have mentioned the cam-cam) and am now wondering when the heat pump will make an appearance...
@resneptacle7 ай бұрын
Not enough heat-pumpage!
@iamjustkiwi7 ай бұрын
Toaster boy. My favorite super-ish hero!
@corviraptor7 ай бұрын
Technology like this where logic is accomplished through clever use of materials science and geometry is so fascinating to me. I tend to imagine that there's just a PCB or something in these kinds of devices, but I never really thought about how they made electric stovetops work before you could just stick circuit boards in everything. It takes a lot of creativity to engineer things like this!
@johnnolan23067 ай бұрын
I was a repair man for a famous company for about 30 years. When I started working for them, they only had washers, dryers, dishwashers and disposers. Suddenly, they bought another company that made kitchen products. At that time, the cooktops used voltage controlled infinite switches. no matter what the wattage of the element, the switch cycled as expected. It was great because all the elements took the same switch, the only difference was knob direction and mounting screw location. with the advent of disc elements and glass tops, they quietly introduced the type of current controlled infinite switches that you demonstrated in this video. If the guy who ordered the parts didn't look carefully at the part numbers, you would get the wrong switch for the size element and then the fun would begin. I'm not so sure why they became so popular with design engineers but they weren't so popular with technicians. I suspect that by having a resistor in lime with the load made the arc flash a little less noticeable when the switch cycled but, as you shower, it was still there. I actually met a man who claimed that he was a scientist who worked on a project to make the purest tungsten possible so that switches would not flash when they opened or closed. he said that it was not possible to make tungsten switch contacts any purer but another research team had come to the conclusion that pounding switch contacts together at high speed reduced the arc flash to an acceptable level and the modern switch was born. Luckily, the arc flash is conveniently hidden by metal pannels so very few (not nobody_ complain about it
@yossarian006 ай бұрын
Designers and manufacturers today hate technicians and anyone who wants to repair what they paid for
@catsmao5313Ай бұрын
@@yossarian00don't blame the designers it's the company they work for, they dint exactly get to decide if they want to design it that way or not
@neatoelectro36877 ай бұрын
Seeing how far you've come in finding your voice is amazing. I think at this point you might have a really interesting perspective on the actual process of teaching. Thanks for the great videos explaining the everyday things around us! You've really become one of my favorite channels!
@diegomontilva60397 ай бұрын
You are the only channel that manages to keep people interested in a box with a bimetallic strip
@kilpatds7 ай бұрын
"Touch controls on a stove would be like taking away a car's turn signal stalks" ... Excellent.
@Xavior127 ай бұрын
Good thing no major electric car company would ever do that.
@tschuuuls4867 ай бұрын
Even worse is selling said car in a country that uses roundabouts.
@redsquirrelftw7 ай бұрын
There's no way anyone would be crazy enough to do that!
@psirvent87 ай бұрын
@@Xavior12 Tesla did that with the shifter though. (Slide the car forward for Drive and backwards for Reverse).
@jayhom53857 ай бұрын
Having spent 3 months in a rental with a touch control stove, yeah it feels off.
@mathevideos99097 ай бұрын
The Cam Cam with the music and everything: *chefs kiss* Cracked me right up.
@Infinitestudy16 ай бұрын
Great job! That "sand" inside a calrod heater is a magnesium oxide insulating powder. Source: I am a technical trainer that teaches technicians how to work on commercial equipment.
@matt655357 ай бұрын
A tangent... a 100% accepted and demanded tangent!
@r.15997 ай бұрын
"Infernal frisbee", "Zig-zaggy thing"...I'm learning so many technical terms thanks to your videos, Alec. Thank you. 😊
@jurjenbos2287 ай бұрын
I'm looking for an occasion to use "infernal frisbee" in any conversation.
@vigilantcosmicpenguin87217 ай бұрын
That is, of course, the technical term.
@thegingineer07 ай бұрын
He's getting more self aware and more unhinged each video and I'm here for every second of it.
@Hyraethian7 ай бұрын
Your enthusiasm for the mundane and attention to detail brings me a lot of joy.
@maxhammick9487 ай бұрын
32:43 "I added the lights because it pleases me" The best reason to add lights!
@bulbman2567 ай бұрын
Exactly!
@MrDuncl6 ай бұрын
Blinkenlights. They even have a Wikipedia page.
@OmegaErkz7 ай бұрын
I can't believe this. How does Technology Connections make videos about switches, timers, stoves and washing machines and make them so damn interesting?
@michait38667 ай бұрын
The answer is simple and complex at the same time: it's because of Alec😁
@fredbear39157 ай бұрын
@@michait3866 And the fact that these things ARE actually interesting, but you need a great teacher to present them. Thats Alec.
@61rampy657 ай бұрын
Don't forget about heat pumps and, of course, toasters.
@61rampy657 ай бұрын
i was really impressed with how he actually figured out the pinball machine's wiring diagram.
@OmegaErkz7 ай бұрын
@@61rampy65 The one that got me was the video he made about WATCHING PAINT DRY. HOW? HOW WAS THAT INTERESTING? I STILL DON'T UNDERSTAND.
@teslafreak7 ай бұрын
"Why did I think that? I don't know, it never works!".......super relatable sentiment there.
@mikethejrrk7 ай бұрын
The bi-metal strip needs to be at the very top of your thank you list. It gave you your entire career.
@alexbanks95107 ай бұрын
The lamp turning on and off periodically was a paid actor
@paulec2527 ай бұрын
He expensed that too
@roymarshall_7 ай бұрын
Damn the deep state got me again
@nickwallette62017 ай бұрын
Nah, it was AI. Who would pay for actors these days?
@MonkeyJedi997 ай бұрын
"The flashing makes them more noticeable." Obviously. But if a HUMAN does it for the same reason, they get all arrested and stuff...
@vigilantcosmicpenguin87217 ай бұрын
There's actually someone sitting behind the table switching it on and off.
@GeneralJabroni7 ай бұрын
The way you timed the simmerstat going on and off with the script... magnificent.
@oglordblight7 ай бұрын
Me “Hey, you ever watch technology connections?” Every family member “Is that the smart guy in the jacket, seen all of his videos”
@onslaught1477 ай бұрын
I'm jealous of your family. Mine would ask how you even find specific channels on youtube. They just click something random then let autoplay take the wheel for the day. I don't understand how they live.
@SupremeRuleroftheWorld7 ай бұрын
"the smart guy in the brown jacket?" you: "brown is not a color!"
@oglordblight7 ай бұрын
@@SupremeRuleroftheWorld well played
@oglordblight7 ай бұрын
@@SimuLord another well played
@oglordblight7 ай бұрын
@@onslaught147 we are your family now
@JonathanArmstrong5147 ай бұрын
This video really helped me understand why many cooks like natural gas burners as the heat is constant and why the only real replacement is induction stovetops.
@RagtimingMouse14 күн бұрын
I have a 55 year old, open coil electric stove and the thermal mass of the sand really helps to even out the harshness of the duty cycling of the actual element. I never thought I could ever actually like an electric stove, but I'm actually very happy with this one. I have no trouble making a custard without curdling it. Modern glass top monstrosities, though? Absolute nightmare to try to cook anything that is particularly heat sensitive. Not to mention how they warp pans.
@nestorclinefeld93233 күн бұрын
I think induction stovetops also use a duty cycle to modulate power.
@Cthulch7 ай бұрын
you scared me there for a sec when you made it seem like you may not explain the normal resistors lol. I'm happy you've expensed them :) To the potential IRS agent reading through these: we loved the normal resistors part too. Thank you.
@creato9387 ай бұрын
a 36 minutes video about a bimetallic strip on a box, amazing.
@housetent91767 ай бұрын
It’s even better cause it’s like the 5th 40 minute video about a bimetallic strip in a box
@tulsatrash7 ай бұрын
Got to love when somebody manages to create simplicity to achieve incredibly complicated and beneficial things that can be operated in a simple way.
@michaelburkhart87677 ай бұрын
2 Things: 1 - THANK YOU for the commentary about appliances having a control panel with completely flat buttons. I have an induction hot-plate that, if I lift the lid on the pot to stir the contents and a single drop of water falls onto the control panel, the hot-plate completely freaks out, ignoring the human operator's instructions in favor of the random droplet. I also have a microwave with a completely flat control panel, and both appliances drive me completely bonkers because of this! How hard would it be to have some kind of tactile feedback, like raised bumps or squares around the buttons? 2 - Love your snarky sarcasm. That alone keeps me coming back, regardless of the topic. Also love the blooper reel.
@Abrasive-Heat7 ай бұрын
This is the wholesome educational content KZbin was made for. I worked in a shop that repaired these stoves years ago and now I know why they last so long.
@HalLevy7 ай бұрын
KZbin started as a dating site....
@grn17 ай бұрын
@@HalLevy At first I thought this was a random troll but apparently it's true. Another fun fact, The Peanuts Gang started as a small series of cigarette ads.
@CalebFrey7 ай бұрын
I was going to be so disappointed if you didn't explain how the glass-top stoves work. Just as you "threatened" to tangent I was thinking "gee I wish I knew how that works"
@quickbf7 ай бұрын
6:30 Oh, as a repairsman who fixes those exact stovetops, I felt the heat radiatiation right away. What an amusing video this is. Thank you, Alec! I am a long-term subscriber of yours and the pleasure is all mine. I could suggest a topic for a small but interesting video: microwave oven's dish motor. Why is it turning the dish in random direction? Little people noticed that. Keep up the good work, I adore your style and all the puns and references.
@johngaltline99337 ай бұрын
I'm going to guess it's for a combination of some portion making it so food is heated more evenly by turning the other way after stirring it up, and some portion extending the life of the parts by working them in both directions instead of the same way all the time. The earliest ones only turned one way all the time. Every one I've seen that goes both ways always alternates direction each time it is started, not random.
@gydo19427 ай бұрын
@@johngaltline9933 it's probably a single phase AC motor. Those start in a random direction based on the polarity of the power when turned on IIRC. And since it doesn't matter for cooking, the manufacturer didn't bother to do anything about it.
@stewartbladensb7 ай бұрын
It’s so it can catch microwaves more efficiently. Microwaves are actually quite large and bounce around inside. If it only spun one way then it may only catch microwaves in certain spots and cause explosive hot spots. You should also put whatever you’re cooking as far towards the outside edge of the plate for the same reasons.
@eh427 ай бұрын
The random direction changes drives the OCD pedant in me nutz! I place my coffee mug in a very specific orientation so that when the cycle ends, the handle faces me. @ 90 seconds, this is an exact # of full turns, so handle out when starting = handle out when done. @ 60 seconds, this is 1/4 turn short. So depending on the casino odds that day, the handle needs to be either to the left or right for it to face out when done.
@eh427 ай бұрын
I will add - I took apart a small outlet timer gizmo the other day and noticed a small "one way check valve" cam / ratchet / pawl thingy that somehow bounce kicked the little timer motor the other way if it started running backwards. Very clever.
@Paul-od9fr7 ай бұрын
I enjoy almost all of your videos, but this set a new variable bar. It even inspired me to share the link with friends and family. Well done, sir!
@Septimius7 ай бұрын
I remember when my dad explained how the thermostat for our electric heater worked. It was a wall-mounted thermostat, where you simply set the temperature you wanted. Easy enough. It was in series with the heater, so when you reached the temperature, it opened the circuit. Easy enough. But the thermostat had a wall plug?? Oh, my dad loved to explain this one. That current heated up the bi-metalic strip just a tiny, tiny bit inside the thermostat, so that the heater would now believe it was hotter than it really was. Throw any crude timer device on this, and now you have a thermostat with night time adjustment! Today, I have a smart home with 100 devices, rules as complex as the Apollo 11, and besides it knowing if today is a banking holiday or not, it does the exact same thing. There's a real appreciation in rudimentary technology that I wish we never forget.
@kenmicmarkey7 ай бұрын
I don't know how you taught the lamp to have such great timing with your dialogue, but I'm impressed
@N9197U7 ай бұрын
IT WAS PERFECT
@tyler5588067 ай бұрын
Technology Connections: A 2 hour documentary titled: "WHY YOU'VE BEEN USING YOUR LIGHT SWITCH INCORRECTLY" Me: This is gonna be good.
@tichu77 ай бұрын
I did discover a third mode for a light switch. When I was a kid, I'd make the switch settle at a position just between on and off. The light would be about 50% bright and I thought I was saving energy. There would be a neat buzzing from the switch, and eventually the smell of smoke would emit from what was probably arcing from inside the switch. So if there is an incorrect way to use a light switch, I discovered it.
@grn17 ай бұрын
@@tichu7 I'm pretty sure Alec did a video on that. The reason light switches snap open and closed is prevent arcing which can of course cause a fire. Presuming you had incandescent bulbs as a child the bulbs plus the switch would probably be using a lot more energy than usual in that mode (incandescent bulbs are more efficient the hotter they run but also burn out faster, also a video on this channel, and of course a lot of power was also wasted traveling through the not quite large enough air gap in the switch).
@jayl94822 ай бұрын
4:50 The sand is magnesium oxide friend! I used to make heating elements like that, the white insulation powder is almost always magnesium
@pauljones9150Ай бұрын
Oh I never knew!
@ak9836257 ай бұрын
There’s something to be said for simple old school tech. I bought a 50 yo home ten years back. The warranty card in the Beaumark stove manual says it was new in 1994. Has worked flawlessly daily for 30 years so far, thanks to simple devices such as this. Many of my friends have cycled through many “modern” touchscreen appliances.
@kensmith56947 ай бұрын
The same goes for laundry stuff. Motors working a drum with contact things works well. The micro processor based ones contain a little counter counting down the days until the warranty runs out.
@ak9836257 ай бұрын
@@kensmith5694I should add, that I also “inherited” a 25 yo washer and 42 yo dryer with this house purchase. With their old school low tech electricals , they probably also have many decades to go.
@grn17 ай бұрын
@@kensmith5694 If one could prove that they indeed had it programmed that way it would be an easy lawsuit to win (not a legal expert but pretty sure lemon laws apply here). It's more likely that fancy tech is cheaply made and not sufficiently protected against heat, vibrations, and/or humidity which could also be cause for a lawsuit but would be a lot harder to win.
@kensmith56947 ай бұрын
@@grn1 My comment was intended to be semi humorous. There isn't literally a counter.
@grn17 ай бұрын
@@kensmith5694 I figured as much but still wanted to comment on the legal aspect of it. Honestly wouldn't surprise me if one of these was actually found to have a countdown timer.
@Markfps7 ай бұрын
Dude, this is crazy, the amount of thought on such a small and raw piece of technology. Impressive and very well explained
@TheShortStory7 ай бұрын
Instant classic. This episode contains everything we love from Technology Connections!
@jeffreystroman28117 ай бұрын
Our power system is not weird, it's genius, but kudos to you for calling it split phase rather than single phase. Depending on your reference point it's more accurate
@eainmonster7 ай бұрын
On the glass-top stoves, the switching frequency absolutely matters! We couldn't make popcorn on our old glass-top conductive stove, because for popcorn you need 450°-500° F, but the low switching frequency meant that it varied from 290°-600°, which were both bad temperatures.
@dadahlberg37 ай бұрын
This! I found that my glass top stove was great at ruining candy. The temperature pulses were too big and I was not able to control the temperature with enough precision. I burned so much caramel... The coil stove I have now works much better for candy, presumably because the thermal mass in the coil keeps the temperature somewhat steadier. Granted, this is a "but sometimes!" case. In my experience, for non-candy-or-popcorn cooking needs, the glass top stove was adequate.
@meneldal7 ай бұрын
At least you can fix this by using a big block of cast iron on top of the glass and that will keep a constant temperature. It just takes forever to get to temp.
@throttlebottle59067 ай бұрын
typical electric burner problem and far worse in that design. that's why most people like gas type, with an actual knob that directly regulates the gas volume. far more predictable output, although it still requires skill.
@seabream6 ай бұрын
@@throttlebottle5906Well, gas or most modern electric induction hobs. They have a much more consistent heat output at a given setting at the relevant time scales. They're still switching, but with much shorter intervals, much like an electric light with modern dimming as he makes reference to at 34:10.
@Dudeguymansir7 ай бұрын
Thank you, Mr. Connections. I would pay good money to see you perform live. I don’t know what you would perform, but I’m here for it
@stevenbrannen15687 ай бұрын
Maybe at a tech conference. :)
@grn17 ай бұрын
How would he manage to get all the bloopers at the end of the video though, and the great closed captions. I'd love to see a live demonstration where he talks about how to do a live demonstration addressing those problems.
@MrHeisenb3rg7 ай бұрын
I feel like he was talking directly to me when talking about PWM v Duty Cycle operations.
@andersjjensen7 ай бұрын
He was. When producing nerdy content it's a universal law that any miniscule detail left out or any simplification for the sake of brevity will make the entire comment section go "Well, achually..."
@andymouse7 ай бұрын
@@andersjjensen LOL!
@AdamMansbridge7 ай бұрын
He said it just exactly after I thought "that's a lot like pwm, but not at the per wave level"
@akibismarck8230Ай бұрын
I never thought someone explaining how a stove works could be this interesting to me
@catfish5527 ай бұрын
I'd noticed my stove turning the heating elements on and off - both visually and from the hum - and I kind of figured it was doing something like this, so it's great to get the full story! Simple but genius. Appreciate the explanation of glass-top stoves as well, been wondering about how they work.
@laycymgaming7 ай бұрын
I have learned more from your videos about mechanical and electrical functions then any teacher I have met could teach me. Seeing you take apart things and explain every function and purpose for everything will never cease to entertain me and educate me. Thank you!
@marklefler40077 ай бұрын
Microwave ovens also use Duty Cycle Control. And switching power supplies bascially are the same idea, but comparing voltage to trigger the on ane off instead of simple duty cycle.
@TheRailroad997 ай бұрын
SMPS.... Not quite. They are not Pulse width, but frequency modulated. Thats because the energy doesn't transfer when a DC current flows through a transformer, but when that current flow changes
@jorellaf7 ай бұрын
Let me tell you about 'logic'-controlled electric stoves. I have an IKEA cheapo glass ceramic stove with its two burners so close together you actually can't cook in both unless you use tiny pots, and also has these awful touch controls right below the big burner (mercifully they don't get hot). But the worst part is that it's computer controlled, and whomever programmed it was slacking at their job. Whenever you change a burner's intensity, it TURNS THE BURNER ON REGARDLESS OF HOW HOT THE STOVE ALREADY IS. You thought you were going to lower the heat on your food? Tough luck! You get full intensity burner heat for 10 seconds before the thing tries to figure out its proper work cycle. Such a great way to overcook your food. I've given up at this point and learnt to just turn it off instead. Great work guys. You made it so turning off your appliance is the best way to use it. 🤦
@Kromaatikse7 ай бұрын
*First:* I fully agree with you on the touch controls for stoves. I find they're an active liability, because every time a pan decides to boil over because I left the lid on it out of habit (it works for some dishes, not others), it invariably starts operating whatever controls it randomly happens to wash over. And those controls are now covered in boiling water, so I can't safely operate them myself to correct whatever just happened. You can imagine what happens if it washes over the "increase power" button… *Second:* There is actually a very commonly used way to put a big resistor in series with a cooker's heating element to reduce its power output. The trick is to use two or three heating elements in each hob. One common arrangement in the cheaper two-element type is to have the two elements with different power outputs when used individually; this already gives three power levels just be switching them on and off individually, but you can *also* switch them in series with each other for a total power output lower than either element used by itself. This is easily identified by a control knob with discrete positions marked 0-1-2-3-4 (or words with mean something similar); this effectively means Off-Series-Low-High-Parallel. Hobs with 5 or 6 power positions are also common, which use three heating elements and a more complex series-parallel connection scheme. Mine has a 6-position control, which could be: 3 in series, 2 in series, 1 low-power element, 1 high-power element, 2 in parallel, 3 in parallel. A quirk of this type is that the heating power is not evenly distributed across the heating elements in most positions (ie. all except the lowest and highest settings), so it's more common than not to find the elements hidden behind a solid cover, which also acts to spread the heat more evenly. *Third:* Going back to my induction hob, it has two modes in which gentle simmering is theoretically possible. One is to dial in a low continuous power setting, which for powers below 800W, actually uses duty-cycle control on a rather slow cycle. Because induction hobs transfer heat even more quickly than a ceramic radiant hob, this actually means alternating between "violent boiling" and "nothing" every few seconds, unless you have a substantial amount of liquid in the pan to ballast the thermals. Not great when you're trying to make a sauce and starting with just a little bit of butter and milk. I could also try the "temperature control" setting, but this actually turns out to work very like the Simmerstat, even though it logically shouldn't, and the available settings are extremely coarse (the only two useful settings are 80°C and 60°C, with the default being 120°C). Simmerstat-type behaviour is *completely wrong* for an induction hob, again because of the extremely fast heat transfer. So for sauces I fall back on the cranky old resistive hob.
@marco23p7 ай бұрын
My induction stove can detect water boiling over, and shuts down all power. So you can take your time to clean the water off. But yes, I understand your concern.
@aspecreviews7 ай бұрын
I'm puzzled that induction stoves can't discourage or prevent cookware from reaching oil-igniting temperatures (or protecting the coating on a Teflon pan) by reducing or shutting down the power. If you already have a temperature sensor to drive the hot surface indicator lights, that's a no-brainer safety feature in my opinion.
@Kromaatikse7 ай бұрын
@@aspecreviews Induction stoves don't actually heat the surface. They heat the pan directly, and the pan then heats the surface as a side-effect. As noticed in this video, the surface is made of a heat-insulating ceramic. So there is actually no way to accurately determine the temperature of the pan from the *underside* of the surface.
@aspecreviews7 ай бұрын
@@Kromaatikse some of the newer *standalone* single induction burners have "temperature hold" functions that seem to be fairly accurate. I've never seen it on a large induction range though. Are they different surface materials?
@Kromaatikse7 ай бұрын
@@aspecreviews The portable type is what I have, and I can tell you that it is not accurate at all. For example, the 80°C setting (these settings increment in huge steps of 20°C) is good for bringing a pan of water to a gentle boil, ie. 100°C. I really do think that it is just emulating a Simmerstat, badly.
@uncouver7 ай бұрын
"It's electric, Bill" "...Still gets pretty hot"
@irbricksceo7 ай бұрын
This channel has taught me so much, principally, that all magic is just bi-metallic strips!
@Me-zo8yc7 ай бұрын
Did something 'click' for you?
@gargoyle78637 ай бұрын
@@Me-zo8yc nice one 👍😅
@matthunter14247 ай бұрын
Ohhh what about the rice cooker? No bi-Mems there!
@tigerzero52167 ай бұрын
LOL Just like what controls that base board heater.
@acubley7 ай бұрын
Not all, can't forget about buying 2 of something.
@mikegrimaldi58447 ай бұрын
One of the smartest guy on YT with great communication skills and overall quality. Thank you for explaining complicated electrical stuff (I’m a mechanical engineer) to control things.
@ckhound17 ай бұрын
I will never forget when my Mom and Dad bought their Mobile Home in like 05' and it came with a glass stovetop, and someone (either the salesman or someone helping set up the home) made many comments about how horrible these were because they "turned off" all the time. Lol
@hubertnnn7 ай бұрын
They are terrible. If you have a PWM system without some kind of capacitor (like the sand storing heat in the old pipe stoves) then you wont get a stable temperature. No stable temperature = burned/undercooked/both foods.
@spaceshooter007 ай бұрын
@@hubertnnnyeah, I had to buy a VERY heavy cookware to stop my food from being burnt on surface while insides still barely even warm.
@tomdibble89837 ай бұрын
@@hubertnnn This is what cast iron cookware was invented for. (Okay, not literally, but it is certainly a good use of it!)
@JulianA-tr6pt7 ай бұрын
I was going to mention this could be referring to the safety feature to prevent overheating and oil fire (which is annoying and slows cooking), but in 05, hard to say. Not sure if glass tops had that. Coil tops didn't usually have them till mid-late 2010s. See Sensi-Temp burners. Terrible to use. They genuinely turn off all the time and make boiling or high temp searing difficult/time consuming. I've disabled my temp sensors so it runs like any other 1920s-2000s electric range.
@JulianA-tr6pt7 ай бұрын
@@Kevin75668 I didn't usually have issues with them either, but you could tell that sometimes the cooking would just "idle" for a while. I may have exaggerated. A hindrance rather than a huge, major problem, I'll admit, but a few times they frustrated me. I know canners hate these burners. Mine may be a bit older, some may be worse than others. I use cast as well, as far as the skillet goes. I used ceramic terminal blocks internally bolted inside the center piece and tied down the spring loaded top piece to keep it cooler and stop the bell-tone. I don't recommend anyone modify large appliances without really knowing what you're doing - some people mod these burners by just twisting the two wires together and letting them hang inside the center, certain to cause a dangerous situation or blow the infinity switch upon shorting to ground.
@Alex_Vir7 ай бұрын
3:25 here in Germany we got tought about a "Siebentakt-Kochplatte" where three resistors are swiched between seven settings 0-6 where they are in various configurations of series and parallel. Doesn't give you infinite gradients, but I thought worth it to mention.
@DooMMasteR7 ай бұрын
Kochplattenschalterblock ♥
@travertinerphilipp67577 ай бұрын
I think Alec missed out on exploring 7-level stoves in which three different heating elements are switched from all in parallel for maximum power, deactiving a couple resistances on the medium settings and switching all three resistances in line for the lowest setting.
@friede887 ай бұрын
I was looking for this comment :)
@Steezey77 ай бұрын
What??
@ДанилМошарев7 ай бұрын
Seems like parallel-series approach will not work for radiant stoves. Radiation intensity is a fourth power function of temperature, and I think it's crucial for these elements to receive the designed amount of power to radiate efficiently. But several elements is a great way to do it, and it's interesting why not every stove is like that.
@Sparky-ww5re21 күн бұрын
My grandparents brought a turquoise blue GE Deluxe 40 inch double oven electric range in 1967 when they purchased the home, with push buttons for the cooktop elements and there were 5 fixed power levels. The "burner" is composed of two elements with 3 terminals much like a 3 way bulb, a "common" where the two elements were connected, and L1 & L2. By switching 120 or 240V to one or both elements or connecting the elements in series and connecting 120 or 240V, 5 power levels can be achieved. Not what I'd call practical, but everything on the range still worked as of August 2022 when we sold the estate after grandma passed at age 96.
@elvendragonhammer54332 ай бұрын
A friends mom has a stove/oven that she still uses daily, from 1938; (It's a Universal Electric by Landers, Frary & Clark: circa.1922 CMPC) & she was having issues with one of the burners. Unlike the ones you showed, those heating elements are solid iron & have two thick 1/4" phono-jack like connectors (one from each end of the coil) that plugs in under the stovetop. Also, instead of metal clips holding the heating element- the underside "bowl, the clips, & the upper ring" that the pan/pot sits on are all thick, finely glazed white porcelain. Turns out the issue wasn't the burner, but the control knob which had 5 carbon bars Each connected to a different wire, which ran to a large Multi-Stage DC Transformer that had 9 wires, 1 ground & the other 5 wires each being a different voltage & amperage. As each brush closed onto each bar it grounded each new wire through the carbon rod, into the burner, & out to the ground. The oven one was similar, using only 4 wires & bars but at much higher amperage's (avg between 8-14). It was extremely easy to fix, whatever they coated the wires with, (it wasn't that crappy black/brown tar/cloth wrapped crap you find in old houses) the wires were soft & rubbery, without having play inside the wire & with no obvious signs of warping, charring, drying or cracking, all the wires were at least 1-2 gauges larger & thicker than they actually needed to be for the V/A moving through them. There was a bit of cracking & orange-ing of the lacquer used on the power supply, & the info paper attached, I removed the original sticker & re-potted it & the supply so it wouldn't yellow any further. Also replaced two of the old orange bulbs for the burners too. The plastic was actually "Bakelite", but surprisingly it was painted with a black paint & glossed as well, which seemed to greatly increase it's strength- I expected it to snap off in my hands as it has many times before, but it was still very slightly flexible & firm. The rest of the stove was steel, with copper inlay & accents, like the #'s on the dials. Some of the damn best construction I've seen in an appliance, & based on how long it's been running this well, I'm sure it will survive both her, & me.
@m0llux7 ай бұрын
It's just old-school PWM!
@Atmatan7 ай бұрын
Member??? One day before posting?
@kensmith56947 ай бұрын
Not quite because the frequency varies as part of controlling the average. Near the bottom of the range, the on time is nearly constant but the frequency decreases.
@paulmoir44527 ай бұрын
@@kensmith5694 SSSSPWM = super slow spread spectrum PWM?
@johngaltline99337 ай бұрын
As explained, pretty clearly, in the video. PWM is a form of duty cycle, but duty cycle is not necessarily PWM. PWM is a variable duty cycle at a given, constant, frequency. The frequency here is not steady, so it's just plain old, regular type, duty cycle.
@paulmoir44527 ай бұрын
@@johngaltline9933 I feel bad for having to explain the joke, but "spread spectrum" implies an inconsistent frequency.
@badjulie7 ай бұрын
the cam-cam was incredible lmao
@TheSuzberry7 ай бұрын
A man who can give me a good pun has my heart.
@arcaegecengiz7 ай бұрын
What's funnier is that the music playing is called "Can Can"
@ryanpitasky4877 ай бұрын
@@arcaegecengizactually that's the name of the dance which goes with the music, but this is useless pedantry.
@tami68677 ай бұрын
such a beautiful profile pic
@adora_was_taken7 ай бұрын
@@tami6867 madeline celeste
@stewartbladensb7 ай бұрын
9:40 for those who don’t speak American, he is actually saying DUTY cycle, not doody cycle.
@USAltefore7 ай бұрын
It's "Judy cycle" across the pond, right?
@malightydog7 ай бұрын
Nah, it's the Dewey cycle. The dude was crazy, making that decimal system and then being involved in every home appliance for the next century! /s
@nzlotrfan7 ай бұрын
I thought he was saying doody actually haha. Thank you.
@Onewheelordeal7 ай бұрын
You bedder believe it
@stewartbladensb7 ай бұрын
@@USAltefore it’s actually “juicy cycle” over here thank you very much.
@JfromUK_6 ай бұрын
I didn't know if I'd get through 36 minutes on stove tops, but I did, thanks to your diversions that make me feel better about my own inability to stay on track. I enjoyed every one of them. I now realise I've fixed a simmerstat (which was stuck permanently on) without appreciating that's what it's called, or its workings in this depth. I love how you pointed out the slower/faster heating and cooling of the strip according to high or low settings, and how it acts as a proxy to the actual load, just as I was coming to those conclusions in my head. It's crazy how something so unbelievably crude (you said it) works so ridiculously well. A case of "the simplest solution that works is the best solution"! This was worthy of taking a bow, but perhaps that's not your style. Relatively new to your channel. This is "I ask KZbin how stuff works" gold content. Oh also, as a British, "hob knobs" is absolutely correct. At least, it's what I'll try to get into my next conversation about cooking.
@Blinkerd00d7 ай бұрын
I was explaining these to my wife a few weeks ago.... now I can let her watch this to REALLY explain something that she really doesn't care about lol
@whatevername48737 ай бұрын
It instantly reminded me of a memory I had with my grandmother where I told her her oven doesn't get to a specific temperature, it just turns on and off. It freaked her out so much, I felt so bad, she was very worried about her roasts never turning out well and she ended up changing her cooking style because of it
@shawnsg7 ай бұрын
I can already see my SO's eyes glaze over and turn on the "uh huh, really, interesting."
@etunimenisukunimeni13027 ай бұрын
With a device (or a component? whatever) this simple, armed with the Technology Connections watch history, I could pretty much guess what's happening inside within the first minutes. Yet you could not get me to stop watching all of it ❤ This channel has a witty soul and humour as dry as a desert. What's not to love? Whatever you want to make video of, I'm watching it!
@noespell7 ай бұрын
love the tangents, the only reason you've gotten so big are the tangents. you're always either answering a fascinating question or adding very important context
@maym88496 ай бұрын
THANK YOU for going on tangents and explaining everything in explicit detail!!!! Its what i come here for
@Codexionyx1017 ай бұрын
With this video, I think it's official: You've won KZbin. Everyone pack up your camera gear and go home, we've peaked with this guy right here. I should also say about the turn signal buttons that things get more complicated if your car has shift paddles, thus requiring you to reach around them with your fingers without accidentally actuating them or losing your grip on the wheel since you're probably controlling a performance car. Certainly you can do them wrong *cough*Ford GT*cough* but I've never been bothered by them.
@leaf50737 ай бұрын
I just told a client they needed a new one of these YESTERDAY. I'm an electrician and they wanted me to look at their stove. Took me a minute to figure out but i got it. It was EXACTLY the same as the one in your video. The cams on the knob were worn down so it never fully engaged the bimetalic strip.
@becauseimafan5 ай бұрын
Oh crap, that can happen?? 😮 Daaang!
@St0rmcrash7 ай бұрын
Fittingly enough the whole "magic of buying two of them" started with the videos on how toasters work, and the "doneness" control in the Sunbeam Radiant Control toaster works in almost exactly the same way as the simmerstat, it changes the distance/pressure between the contact and bimetallic strip thereby changing how hot the strip has to get to open the contact
@hazonku7 ай бұрын
30:25 I was half expecting you to say "Through the magic of buying a second stove..." Also the second you said "When power returns." Perfectly timed to the light I was VERY tempted to just skip to the outtakes to see how many tries that took. Great video! You never cease to amaze with your content! Also the jokes at the very end were quality dad joke tier.
@marjon17037 ай бұрын
Yes.... Here in Blighty, cooker knobs are often called Hob Knobs. We often twiddle them. Hobnobs are a Biscuit* too. We often eat them. (* Cookie, monsters eat them.)
@tedweird7 ай бұрын
The cam cam aside and follow up line nearly had me in tears
7 ай бұрын
These third wall breaking self-aware shoutouts about the topic's nonsensical, yet very entertaining nature are never getting boring :)
@d1oftwins7 ай бұрын
Isn't it called "breaking the 4th wall"? You know, cause there is a wall left, right and the background, and the 4th wall is the screen oft the viewers. But maybe there is a cinematic term I don't know about yet? 🤷♂