Tanner Tech is a channel that is dedicated to showing the public how to build different electronics projects. I post different DIY projects and make demonstration videos showing how they work. I also post entertainment videos showing the various failures of different electronic components due to excessive voltages. Instructions for these are linked in the description on Instructables. Follow me on instagram for updates and sneak peeks of unreleased content.
Very helpful. I dont think I could get this thing taken apart without your help. Too bad the m.2 drive I put in does not seem to play nice with this computer.
When I saw this video for first time, i was a broke college student who didn't have money to buy even a multimeter. Today I am about to join my hardware engineering job. Imma buy an oscilloscope now
HI Tanner, Jovel from the Philippines here. Would you know what's the specs of the Speedotron 4803? My secondhand light short because of wrong power voltage and my light guy said the transformer blew up. WOuld appreciate if you have any info or maybe a photo of the schematic - can't find any here. THank you!
I’ve been really lucky with my computer. I think this type of this brand computer is very hardy. I have issues will falling asleep if I’m not doing something that will keep me from falling asleep, but anyway I had head butted mine twice and knocked it off the cabinet it sets on at least 5 times. Well on the 2nd or 3rd time down I cracked the lover corner with a spot that looks like it was struck by a hammer and there are a few sprier web veins, hardly in the way and the thing still ran correctly. Well the other day on it’s last fall and a hit taken in the upper right corner but a little toward the center which also has a few veins off of it. This time it also knocked the on/off switch popped out, and the thing is still running!!! My last one ended up with hard drive issues which we got a new hard drive for. That things were
A twist on the common multi-vibrator, but from what I see, NOT very efficient, especially under no load (power loss in the gate drive resistors). I wonder if there is an exiting fix for this somewhere, I for one have never seen such a thing. I guess it is very popular because it is simple. This was seven years ago! ...WOW!
Your approach isn’t truly random when several particles decay In quick succession you’ll have a range that increments. So what you’d normally do have a free running counter and when a particle hits you’ll take the lsb and shift that into a byte or what ever format you’d want. Then you can’t say with a decent guess that the next number will be higher. And in your cause the numbers are even more predictable because of the 5ms delay and that your counter stops when an interrupt happens.
You reminded me of my work when I started building my own Mazilli's ZVS 13 years back. I used it to charge a huge capacitor bank of my ECD based upon Don Smith's work.
Great video, but the air compressor may be redundant. There is arcing in your tube, which means electricity has broken through the air. If there was a vacuum in the tube, you wouldn't see the arc, only through the phosphor.
Cheers dude, gave me enough clues to replace the CMOS battery - why didn't they make it rechargable ! I'd have definitley cracked something without this vid