this is what youtube should be, people recording themselves just having fun and not a money maker
@SpeccyManАй бұрын
I agree.
@romancharak3675Ай бұрын
Looks like a ton of fun, Julian !
@TheEmbeddedHobbyistАй бұрын
Can you keep adding converters until all the power in the cap is lost in the inverters. Should not take to many 😅😂
@TheEmbeddedHobbyistАй бұрын
Try using batteries the leds will flash for a lot longer, ❤
@RichardincancaleАй бұрын
Maybe the dud cap is stuffed with coke - should be quite profitable if so!!!!
@Elberto71Ай бұрын
On the ZK6522, what is the 2 port connector next to the display connector for? Just labelled EXT
@MiniLuv-1984Ай бұрын
Its a shame that, with those spindly legs they are not built for handling very heavy currents.
@notsurtАй бұрын
Is there some special property of supercaps that the LEDs don't need a current limiting resistor?
@JulianIlettАй бұрын
It's a special property of the leds. The flashing chip also provides current limiting.
@davadoffАй бұрын
12:04 Large pulse current will shorten life of capacitors. AA high current will waste energy from cell internal resistance (guess energy loss: zinc chloride AA >90% & alkaline AA >50%, depending how high the current is of course; NiMH less, not sure the amount).
@frankowalker4662Ай бұрын
Looks like you're having fun. Nothing wrong with that.
@SpeccyManАй бұрын
My playground is either my Raspberry Pi 5 or my Z80 based SBC built from a kit.
@moormoor4281Ай бұрын
Thanking you most kindly
@RobinRastleАй бұрын
What a waste of time, pointless other than to show the fake products you get. You didnt measure ESR, very important nor try and estimate the actual capacity of the items by timing at constant 1A ie to determine the capacitance value of my capacitor I simply have to measure the time interval in seconds while charging or discharging at 1A between 1 Volt and 2 Volts. Or 1.5 Volts and 2.5 Volts, any 1 volt differential should yield the same result.(As long as my charge current is constant) So my 100 Farad +-20% capacitor should take between 80 to 120 seconds to go from 1 Volt to 2 Volts. Not rocket science