Electric Screwdriver Failure Analysis and Teardown
Here’s a story about an electric screwdriver that no longer had any drive.
Here’s a story about an electric screwdriver that no longer had any drive.
Found a cabinet loomed with gold plated cable goodness and loads of type IV metal cassettes. The looming job on this was simply fantastic, and the labeling was almost overdone.
Just tearing apart an electric toothbrush. Don’t follow my mistakes and you could easily open a similar one and replace the battery or clean the internals or so on.
Drill stopped working. Was it the brushes? Find out!
A small battery-op Christmas light set on the blink — or rather, not working.
Quick and easy fix!
A very short video to test a new stop motion workflow.
Yes I know the frame rate is too low, I wanted this to go by quickly. Also wire without tack is really hard to work with.
And for all you number people: IT’S IN 4K! YEAH. PIXELS AND STUFF.
It’s just a super quick teardown of a generic DVD drive.
How I made my TI-55 calculator work. THE THING HAS AN LED BUBBLE DISPLAY.
Want to breath new life into an old calculator? The TI-55 was one of the best in the line of scientific calculators with statistical capabilities back in the 70’s.
The TI-55 has an LED-stick using LED chips mounted and bonded to the printed circuit board, and has some 12-digits instead of the 9-digits of other calculators from the same time period.
The TI-55 calculator used a rechargeable battery pack rather than using a 9V battery, so when the rechargeable no longer worked, your battery was dead. However, the voltage and current used in the rechargeable works out to be still, 9V capable, so this video shows how one can easily adapt the TI-55 for use with a standard 9V battery.
Look an HP 97 Calculator! A what? Batteries are shot and the internals are a bit wonk, I fix the inside, make it look great on the outside, and power it up! Then promptly set it on a shelf again. Sorry HP 97 Calculator.
Cleaning out my first mechanical keyboard! Picked it up for dirt cheap! A Dell AT-101W, or “Big Foot”
This is a very old video.