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Smartphone vs. Real Meters for Sound and Light Measurement? 

Brainiac75
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Are there inexpensive alternatives to light and sound meters? How about a multimeter that will measure both lux and decibels? Or what about your smartphone? In this video, I will test if they are any good...
My Patreon-page: / brainiac75
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FULL MUSIC CREDITS
Time codes: 0:01 + 5:35
"Lightless Dawn" Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
ISRC: USUAN1100655
Time codes: 0:57 + 8:25
"Adding the Sun" Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
ISRC: USUAN1900041
Time codes: 2:52 + 10:54
"Perspectives" Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
ISRC: USUAN1300027
Time codes: 7:45 + 8:07
"Newer Wave" Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
ISRC: USUAN2000024
Time code: 9:54
"Peace of Mind" Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
ISRC: USUAN1200099
All music above licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 License
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Time code: 5:03
Mix of two tracks:
1) The Shimmering by fran_ky (freesound.org/s/237363)
Licensed under Creative Commons 0 license
2) "Spacial Harvest" Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 License
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ISRC: USUAN1100653
#Smartphone #Multimeter #LightAndSound

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29 дек 2022

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Комментарии : 420   
@hudibaba
@hudibaba Год назад
yes please make one one for the magnetic sensor
@MrManatres
@MrManatres Год назад
In my country, argentina, I had seen some "qualified" technicians evaluate MRI installations only with the magnetic sensor on the phone hahaha
@Random_4400
@Random_4400 Год назад
Yes
@franciscoj.a.5294
@franciscoj.a.5294 Год назад
@@MrManatres joderme, me imagino que no de dalde
@HighVoltageMadness
@HighVoltageMadness Год назад
@@MrManatres lol
@MrManatres
@MrManatres Год назад
@@franciscoj.a.5294 no me acuerdo el nombre del señor, pero son de radiofisica los que van a evaluar que las lineas de gauss no lleguen a las salas de espera en las clinicas o sectores asi
@LookingGlassUniverse
@LookingGlassUniverse Год назад
I find these side-by-side comparisons you do very helpful- the results are so surprising! Thank you for doing them, and I'd love to see more
@brainiac75
@brainiac75 Год назад
Glad you like it. Guess there is some consumer information value for videos like this. Will have to try the magnetic sensors too :)
@m80116
@m80116 Год назад
The trouble with dB meter apps I tried is that by default they all show different levels. I already had the app shown in the video before and was considering it as one of the most accurate (with no calibration). Probably despite the limited functionality the MM sound meter function might still be more reliable than apps which rely on internal hardware (fine if you have top smartphones, far less if you have 2nd and 3rd tier devices).
@pvic6959
@pvic6959 Год назад
@@brainiac75 what app is this? Im not sure if it was mentioned and i missed it. I want to roughly measure the brightness of a flashlight i have but have nothing to measure with. It doesnt make sense for me to guy a meter for this one off thing
@TheExileFox
@TheExileFox Год назад
It should be noted however that the smartphone will do horribly with certain sounds. It's hard to describe accurately because i'm not entirely sure what frequencies this is happening at. I have never been able to catch it when carrying a proper sound meter. Quite annoying as it's quite common to run into these sounds at random times. If anyone has more details on these "difficult to record sounds" I would like to learn more about them.
@colourbasscolourbassweapon2135
@colourbasscolourbassweapon2135 9 месяцев назад
my subwoofer dual 18inch plays at of the level of 138db ngl@@brainiac75
@daringd3lta574
@daringd3lta574 Год назад
I would love to see the smartphone compared to a real gaussmeter! That would be awesome!
@Eneicia2011
@Eneicia2011 Год назад
Right???
@jennalove6755
@jennalove6755 Год назад
uhh technically they have one in them because of the digital compass
@daringd3lta574
@daringd3lta574 Год назад
@@jennalove6755 Yes
@Ryan_Smyth
@Ryan_Smyth Год назад
LOL! I was just thinking that! I have a 5% Gauss meter (the price difference for a 1% Gauss meter just isn't justifiable for hobbyists like me - they're crazy expensive) so I may just give it a shot & try. And God knows I have enough magnets! I spend way too much money on them. :D
@sashabagdasarow497
@sashabagdasarow497 Год назад
@@Ryan_Smyth have you tried it?
@dvdcd
@dvdcd Год назад
As a live audio engineer, having a spectrum analysis and SPL on your phone if you don't have anything else has seriously saved my butt a couple of times
@Yossus
@Yossus Год назад
In my Physics lessons, I occasionally use the phyphox app, which lets you capture the raw output of all the phone's sensors. It's quite amazing how accurate they can be, and definitely enough for schoolwork! I've had good experiences with the magnet sensors as well.
@ziginox
@ziginox Год назад
+1 for phyphox!
@TheSwaroopB
@TheSwaroopB Год назад
phyphox FTW!
@CrooningRevival365
@CrooningRevival365 Год назад
I always pull out that app when I’m in a tall elevator:p
@Cyberfly100
@Cyberfly100 Год назад
+1 for phyphox! Check how the pressure changes by just moving the phone a few meters up or down. Or use the pressure sensor on an airplane to detect when the toilet is flushed. The accelerometer or noise spectrum analyzer can tell you the frequency of vibrations in your 3d printer. Great app.
@CnCDune
@CnCDune Год назад
Would be interesting to see older phone models in similar tests if possible, not just current gen ones.
@brainiac75
@brainiac75 Год назад
Will consider it. I have access to an S10+ and iPhone 7 too.
@CamcorderHomeVideos
@CamcorderHomeVideos Год назад
@@brainiac75 Do you prefer iPhone, Samsung, or Pixel?
@rebane2001
@rebane2001 Год назад
And a modern but very cheap phone would also be fun to throw into the test
@TeslaLiam
@TeslaLiam Год назад
@@brainiac75 Yes, very good idea. I don't think a test with 10 years old phones would matter. Most people have there phone no longer than 2-4 years.
@TeslaLiam
@TeslaLiam Год назад
@@rebane2001 Absolutely!
@theirisheditor
@theirisheditor Год назад
I'd love to see the sound meters tested at different volume levels. The main issue I found testing different Apps is they vary a lot above around 90dB. Generally the only time I open a sound meter App is when I'm at a loud venue, etc.
@mindtraveller100
@mindtraveller100 Год назад
@@scorpioassmodeusgtx1811 Nothing beats a dedicated microphone.
@neilg322
@neilg322 Год назад
Really interesting, i have wondered about the sensitivity of smartphone sound apps, especially as a sound level meter and where they max out, at concerts etc. A magnetic flux test would be good to see too.
@snowdaysrule
@snowdaysrule Год назад
I really appreciate this one. I've been using the sensor capabilities of my smartphone lately and was wondering just how meaningful the output was.
@JoshuaPlays99
@JoshuaPlays99 Год назад
I've always loved testing the sensors in my phone and have wondered how accurate they really are. This video was great to see and I would definitely like to see a video on the magnetic sensor
@systemdrive7970
@systemdrive7970 Год назад
Again, another amazing video. I really love these side by side comparison videos. Love your videos!
@kartikahlawat413
@kartikahlawat413 Год назад
Yes I do wonder how good is the magnetometer on a cell phone and can only expect a detailed vedio from you............btw love watching your vedios ❤
@brainiac75
@brainiac75 Год назад
Thanks - will need to find the limits of that sensor ;) More to come in 2023!
@CamcorderHomeVideos
@CamcorderHomeVideos Год назад
@@brainiac75 Yay!
@user-zv2gr3tu1l
@user-zv2gr3tu1l Год назад
@@brainiac75 excited
@Da5idc
@Da5idc Год назад
Excellent video - I really appreciate you taking the time to do these type of tests. It's really useful to see if apps are worth using
@micheltenvoorde
@micheltenvoorde Год назад
Of course we would like a video that checks out its magnetic capabilities, would be awesome! Also, I'm curious if your chemical element collection has grown so that you could make another attraction/repelling video? Really liked that series too. Best wishes for 2023!
@Guardian_Arias
@Guardian_Arias Год назад
The suite of sensor on some smartphones are absolutely amazing. I used to use the barometer on my old Galaxy S5 to help me troubleshoot Aircraft Cabin pressurization issues since the phone would often have a greater degree of accuracy than some older pure analog and pneumatic based pressurization systems.
@alexwest1977
@alexwest1977 Год назад
Thank you for this comparison video. I wonder if it would be possible to "calibrate" some of these functions? If a smartphone app had an option for calibration and you had access to a high quality instrument to use as a calibration standard, that would be awesome! Please make a video for the magnetometer :)
@AnalogWolf
@AnalogWolf Год назад
Very well done, technically sound and you also do a great job breaking it down into terms that are easy to understand.
@chassy7072
@chassy7072 Год назад
The amount of respect i have for your work for simply putting safety warnings in your videos is ridiculous. Good work friend
@jasonpatterson8091
@jasonpatterson8091 Год назад
I do know that the pressure meter in a Samsung Galaxy is surprisingly sensitive, and the sensor menu is awesome. It can measure altitude changes of less than one meter based on atmospheric pressure, for instance, less than one pascal.
@cassini-studios88
@cassini-studios88 Год назад
Hi Brian, merry Christmas and a happy new year~ :) I really like your videos! thanks for making them
@brainiac75
@brainiac75 Год назад
Hi tjop. Same to you - hoping for a great 2023!
@cassini-studios88
@cassini-studios88 Год назад
@@brainiac75 Thanks bro :)
@guffyscotland9605
@guffyscotland9605 Год назад
You would not believe it but I was literally thinking about this a few hours ago! I got new headphones and know they're good to 106db (but obviously my ears aren't) and questioned if my phone would even be accurate enough to read that high reliably. Fantastic time to drop this video! EDIT: Just finished the video! I am absolutely astounded by the results, I cannot believe that the *very* multi-purpose smartphone held some level of competency in metering. Obviously I wouldn't trust my hearing or headphones with it, but the fact the range is so broad and remarkably accurate does give me confidence in knowing that I was actually being rather "scientific" in my methods where I relied on a specific Hz (tuning belts on a 3D printer) to get correct tension. This is a really valuable video!
@l.mcmanus3983
@l.mcmanus3983 Год назад
Very cool video. Neat to see the smart phone do that well for light. And that makes sense that is might purposefully be extra sensitive to infrared.
@DEtchells
@DEtchells Год назад
Good video! Yes, I’d definitely like to see how good the magnetic field sensor is! (It’s probably only good for very low gauss levels though, as it’s only there to act as a compass :-/)
@chstoney
@chstoney Год назад
I was working in a laboratory with sound-measuring equipment (SQuadriga 4) and I did a comparison of one of these sound-measuring apps back then too. And I was really surprised by how close the measurements of the phone were to it.
@TheSwaroopB
@TheSwaroopB Год назад
This is a brilliant video!! Thanks for comparing. For anyone looking for the apps used in the video: Lux Light Meter Photometer Pro Decibel X - Pro Sound Meter (Can't share Play Store links since the comments get auto-deleted)
@ashyouknow7420
@ashyouknow7420 Год назад
Thank you bro!! I was really searching for a comment like this. I literally searched "app" in the finder of the browser lol
@GQuack
@GQuack Год назад
Let's see if the smartphone truly is *the* ultimate portable digital multitool that can do so much more and see if that magnetic sensor really is good. If it's good enough for the built-in compass app, it could be useful for amateur work. Keep it up, Brian! And here's to a much brighter 2023!
@usy-
@usy- Год назад
Nice video! Although I do believe you could have mentioned that the readings you obtained are accurate but only for your specific smartphone model (and maybe even unit!) and app used, as there can be great variance between smartphones and even the app used for the SPL reading, for example my phone shows about 10dB below my SPL meter at 1khz using the same app and same weighting, and as well as this the frequency response of the phones microphone is likely not flat, and therefore it wont measure all of the frequencies accurately. Oh and also, if you do want to perform this test on more phones, I have heard that the NIOSH app for iPhones is relatively "accurate", and ive checked my iphone 6s plus against my SPL meter and it was within a few decibels.
@johnniewalker39
@johnniewalker39 Год назад
Oh wow! Didn't see that coming (no pun intended) 😄 And yes, please do a vid on the phone magnetic sensor readings. Happy New Year!
@whitehorsept
@whitehorsept Год назад
Yes please! Would be interesting to test the other smartphone sensors!
@ronsku57
@ronsku57 Год назад
Very interesting topic!
@brainiac75
@brainiac75 Год назад
Glad you like it! I am still surprised by the end result...
@volvo09
@volvo09 Год назад
Indeed! I had read about the accuracy of the light sensors in phones before when researching indoor gardening light measurements, and the tests I saw agreed with these results, for most uses the phone is just fine (with white light). I also learned how the proximity sensor worked!
@Rararawr
@Rararawr Год назад
The phone was closer than I expected. I have the same app on my phone to play around with. Going to an incredibly loud concert tomorrow so it'll be fun to see roughly how loud it really is
@simonmikkelsen
@simonmikkelsen Год назад
What is the name of the app?
@Rararawr
@Rararawr Год назад
@@simonmikkelsen DecibelX
@SQ-619
@SQ-619 Год назад
I'm pretty lazy when I comes to writing comments, but wow, this really shocked me. A dedicated multimeter was actually beaten - in some categories - by a smartphone! Truly incredible. Great job my guy, I really learned a lot from you!
@mindtraveller100
@mindtraveller100 Год назад
There is nothing "dedicated" about a multimeter measuring light or sound...
@dinitroacetylen
@dinitroacetylen Год назад
I hope you have a great new year with many more interesting discoveries!
@Redstoner
@Redstoner Год назад
Try the Photone app which uses the camera and a piece of paper to diffuse the light coming in
@barrupa
@barrupa Год назад
From a quick google search, the TMD4912 light/proximity sensor manufactured by AMS seems to be an infrared based sensor and it's primary function is indeed to be a proximity sensor. It just so happens to be an optical light sensor specialized in sensing infrared light. Interesting to see the sensor choice by Samsung now knowing that it is indeed made to be used for both purposes.
@atonduke7612
@atonduke7612 Год назад
I'm quite surprised with how well the phone did. I'd definitely like to see you test the magnetic sensor and other sensors (compass, gyroscope, g-sensor, ...) on your smartphone.
@plrodgers
@plrodgers 2 месяца назад
Thanks for the video, this is quite interesting. Do add more discussion and videos on other sensors available in cellular phones.
@tramujarie
@tramujarie 4 месяца назад
Amazing video thank you very much.
@audiogek
@audiogek Год назад
Not surprised, I expected the smartphone to do as good as the dedicated meters, within 1% at least. Because smartphones are basically everywhere, that means also in the hands of people with calibrated tools. And over the years a lot of apps got calibrated with those dedicated meters for a lot of phones.
@JGnLAU8OAWF6
@JGnLAU8OAWF6 Год назад
Most sensors are digital and probably factory calibrated to some extent.
@mindtraveller100
@mindtraveller100 Год назад
But any smartphone lacks a dedicated high quality microphone, and that means they´re useless measuring really loud volumes. 80 dB, or maybe 90, they can do. Above that, no...
@audiogek
@audiogek Год назад
@@mindtraveller100 True! Apps use to tell you that, but now that most apps are created for advertising money I'm guessing they don't do that anymore 😏
@mindtraveller100
@mindtraveller100 Год назад
@@audiogek I tried 5 or 6 apps before, all of them only measuring up to around 80 dB. Recently i bought a cheap, and i really mean cheap, spl measuring tool. It reached 118 dB when i placed it a few inches from my studio speakers. And the price? 12 euros (around 12 dollars). Downside, only measures dBA not dBC, so no bass measuring. But for the price, i can´t complain, better than any app...
@tommiller1315
@tommiller1315 Год назад
At the start, I was thinking there is another meter to add to my collection. (Anyway, I couldn't find it for sale here in the UK). Your results have put me off getting one anyway - thank you👍
@vjay4297
@vjay4297 Год назад
Multimeter is calibrated for use in handheld position, and directing the microphone to speaker may have boosted the response as it may be designed/calibrated to sound coming from top side.
@WilburJaywright
@WilburJaywright Год назад
Midway, I want to say, kudos for giving excellent music credits. Thanks!
@fgbhrl4907
@fgbhrl4907 Год назад
You can get cellphones / tablets that have RGB-IR light meters in them -- I've worked on designing some of them. They are calibrated at the factory with light sources (at least, the products I worked on). The use of an RGB light sensor was to change display color temperature -- eg, it would be cool blue under flourescent lights, and warm under incandescent.
@davpro1792
@davpro1792 Год назад
Yes make a video about the Magnet sensor of your smartphone. Would be a very... interesting video!
@mrwojna
@mrwojna 2 месяца назад
Thank you for doing this.
@AlbertoPirrotta
@AlbertoPirrotta 9 месяцев назад
Great comparison !
@Dukefazon
@Dukefazon Год назад
I regularly watch a guy who repairs all kinds of old computery stuff, sometimes CRT monitors and TVs and he uses an app to determine if the CRT is working by looking at a spectrum analizer on his phone. If the TV/monitor doesn't show a picture but the main circuit is working, he can see a peak in the monitor's/TV's operational frequency on his app, very interesting stuff.
@vannhantran547
@vannhantran547 Год назад
Great comparison
@pennyether8433
@pennyether8433 Год назад
What's the name of the decibel meter smartphone app?
@cherokee131
@cherokee131 2 месяца назад
Decibel X
@YTshashmeera
@YTshashmeera Год назад
Yes! I'd love to see a video covering the magnetic sensor
@MeriaDuck
@MeriaDuck Год назад
6:30 even if the pun was not intended, I laughed 🤣
@JustPyroYT
@JustPyroYT Год назад
Great Video! 👍 :D
@Uberhood
@Uberhood Год назад
Hi Brianiac75. How did you find the light sensor service menu? I can't find it on my samsung service menu, only accelerometer and megnetometer for example. Thanks.
@adnanmlivo5885
@adnanmlivo5885 Год назад
I always thought that apps where way off. I guess not. Great video as always!
@Tzmuakan
@Tzmuakan Год назад
i love your videos keep going
@raihanlazuardi6632
@raihanlazuardi6632 Год назад
Yes! Please make a video about the magnetic sensor.
@ronsku57
@ronsku57 Год назад
Yes please make a video for the magnetic sensor on the phone!
@BRUXXUS
@BRUXXUS Год назад
Wow! I'd been curious about the sound level readings from apps for a long time. Pretty impressive! With that phone and app combo, anyways.
@h7opolo
@h7opolo Год назад
i find your exploration of this topic pertinent.
@Kaamszz
@Kaamszz Год назад
Big yes for the magnetic test with the smartphone !!!!!
@Shocker99
@Shocker99 Год назад
I would love you to test other smart phone tests. 💚
@wisteela
@wisteela Год назад
Yes, it will be very interesting to see what the magnetism meter is like.
@viniciusnoyoutube
@viniciusnoyoutube Год назад
Very nice video.
@bbbenj
@bbbenj Год назад
Thanks 👍
@HuskyMan77
@HuskyMan77 Год назад
2:33 That's pretty interesting, on my phone (which is a Galaxy S8) it has both the light sensor and the proximity sensor separately. I also wonder if the light sensor being under the screen in the Galaxy S21+ affects the light readings a little bit, on my S8 it's on the top bezel.
@9Destroy
@9Destroy Год назад
Good video!
@brainiac75
@brainiac75 Год назад
Thanks! More to come next year :)
@ecodev15
@ecodev15 Год назад
yes make the gaussmeter phone video ive always been surprised with the sensors in phones! samsungs older phones used to have heart rate monitors built in (mine does)
@DunOpondo
@DunOpondo 7 месяцев назад
Such tests are the reason I like Samsung flagship phones, portability and accuracy of sensors. Great video 👍🏿
@coriscotupi
@coriscotupi Год назад
Good video. ...What was the sound measure app used?
@GreenAppelPie
@GreenAppelPie Год назад
Now I want a 50w RGB. And I’m not surprised by audio meter in the phone. I played with the capability after using a guitar app, it really is impressive and accurate. I’ve also found aircraft interiors to limit sound to safe levels
@ashyouknow7420
@ashyouknow7420 Год назад
interesting. It's like seeing the world from a new perspective, isn't it?
@handle924
@handle924 Год назад
which app did you use in the video? curious how well smartphones are at measuring low-frequency noise
@glbernini0
@glbernini0 Год назад
Which SPL app was used on the phone? Make & model of phone as well, we shouldn't assume all phones & apps are equally good, THANKS!
@kithpendragon
@kithpendragon Год назад
I use "Physics Toolbox Sensor Suite Pro" to access my phone's sensors. There's a free version that I upgraded from because I liked the app so much. Both versions include access to the camera and microphones, proximity sensor and light meter, accelerometer and gravitometer, and the magnetic sensor. I'd love to see all the phone's sensors put against dedicated devices!
@Splarkszter
@Splarkszter Год назад
One thing to say, usually the expensive ones are accurate and don't drift much, and when they drift, some offer a life-time warranty for calibration.
@asilva781
@asilva781 Год назад
The a and c weightin I remember measures with mores sensitivity frequencies from 500Hz to 5000Hz. May be this is why you have very different measurements with extreme frequencies.
@addusernamehere
@addusernamehere День назад
Great scientific breakdown & comparative analysis. Thank you!!!
@rexthewild1183
@rexthewild1183 Год назад
To be honest… it makes sense that “ a free app from the phone” does such a good job, at least as a sound meter, since the phone has some good microphones that needs to make us sound as good as we can when speaking trough them, so an app just take the raw info from the mic and give it to us on a slick UI, what surprise me is that the proccessors on the phones can tell the frequencies of the sounds that are playing
@THEOGGUNSHOW
@THEOGGUNSHOW Год назад
@Brainiac75 sorry if you already stated this, but what model smartphone did you demo here? Thanks so much for your hard work.
@sebbes333
@sebbes333 Год назад
3:15 Something seams wrong with the leftmost meter, it is 10x lower than the other. Is it set in the wrong mode or something (like measuring "deci lux" or something strange like that (deci = 10))? The middle meter, I can't know if it says 1,06 lx or 106 lx? Or do they ACTUALLY measure that much differently in red light?
@J0rdanXYZ
@J0rdanXYZ Год назад
wow I was looking for an android app for sound levels a day before you uploaded. I'm worried about my hearing after working in a nightclub for 3 years without hearing protection and I was wanting to see how loud the sound was as sometimes it feels like my ear drum is about to burst with how crazy loud it is. Worst part is I'm over at the bar and the speakers are all pointed towards the dance floor so it is so much louder when standing on it compared to the bar area. (wear hearing protection)
@finisek123
@finisek123 Год назад
Great video :)
@brainiac75
@brainiac75 Год назад
Thanks - more to come in 2023!
@Basement-Science
@Basement-Science Год назад
The main issue with the smartphones is that you never really know if your model is as good as another with any particular app. You'd have to test it against a reference meter for everything before you can trust it at all. Of course cheap dedicated tools can also have their issues. For example I have a lux meter that gives me pretty high readings when I shine some 400nm light on it - because the plastic in front of the sensor fluoresces and changes the color.
@ChristopherKlepel
@ChristopherKlepel Год назад
This is very interesting Thank you so much. What apps did you use On the smartphone, they look pretty impressive.
@nefariousyawn
@nefariousyawn Год назад
This is probably valuable information for people that like to build their own lights for aquariums, terrariums, indoor plant growth, etc. Lights marketed for any of these specific applications tend to be more expensive.
@johncoops6897
@johncoops6897 Год назад
Measurements for those applications cannot be made in Lux. That's because Lumens and Lux are weighted measurements that only apply to human vision.
@CTcuber4K
@CTcuber4K Год назад
I used the decibelX app at an airshow for a eurofighter typhoon, it gave a max reading of only around 110 decibels while the actual volume was definitely in the 130-140db range. I would think phones start to struggle when the sound gets really loud, but I can't confirm that as I only have that single test.
@christiangonzalez6945
@christiangonzalez6945 Год назад
Considering that 110 decibels it's permanent damage zone at least its doing their job...
@NLind
@NLind Год назад
Now watch the downloads for Decibel X and Photometer Pro skyrocket, great publicity for those apps! But I would also like to see a comparison for the magnetic sensor.
@asteria1065
@asteria1065 Год назад
Truee!!!
@twycross3
@twycross3 Год назад
Wow yes! Please do a magnetism smartphone VS Gauss meter
@todayonthebench
@todayonthebench Год назад
Smart phone apps though have the big downside of having to rely on whatever sensors the manufacturer decided to put into the device. So it could vary a lot. However, I am not the slightest bit surprised over the spectrum being fairly spot on. The frequency references a phone has access to is fairly decent. Very few quartz oscillators are worse than 0.01% absolute accuracy. However, having access to time things from this oscillator isn't always available, but the audio chip itself will deliver its samples using that oscillator as its own reference. So one can be very certain that if the ADC provides 44800 samples/second that it will be fairly accurate. But exact audio amplitude will depend on a lot of things. Both the manufacturing tolerances of the microphone, amplifier, and ADC. So it could vary a lot. Especially since absolute amplitude isn't particularly important in audio applications regardless. (as long as it is nice and linear it doesn't matter if it has a different amount of amplification.) So I am surprised about the amplitude accuracy. But perhaps they factory calibrate this, otherwise I would expect a 2-10% accuracy there alone, perhaps your phone is just above average. The magnetic sensor part could be interesting to look at. But regardless. I personally prefer using dedicated measurement tools. Both because they are often more adapted to the job, but also because they can be more trusted. (especially as far as traceable calibration goes.)
@Martin_Z555
@Martin_Z555 Год назад
Brainiac75 could you tell me what device you used to get these light spectra on the computer? could really use something like that!
@Sckloste
@Sckloste Год назад
I would love to see a video about the magnetic sensor. I always wonder if it can find stud screws in a wall or maybe even metal detect with it
@snave494
@snave494 10 месяцев назад
What app did you use for the sound tests?
@dcallan812
@dcallan812 Год назад
Smart phones really are getting smart. Great video 2x👍
@brainiac75
@brainiac75 Год назад
Yeah, they sure are getting expensive too. But maybe I understand the price a little better after making this video. They are packed with sensors of decent quality :) Thanks for the early watch!
@JoshuaNicoll
@JoshuaNicoll Год назад
Yes there should be an IR LED near the lux sensor as that's how the proximity sensor works, by reading how much reflected IR there, at least that's how it should work. There are other kinds but that's the IR lux meter one, common on smart phones.
@davidquirk8097
@davidquirk8097 Год назад
I'd be interested to see how the sound level meters compared with one of the high end sound level meters/analysers like the B&K type 2250.
@pmate95
@pmate95 Год назад
I think the result depends on the phone too. I mean, cheaper phones could have worse results. I think it's worth to try different smartphones, and comparing them. Although it's very suprising, that these sensors in your phone are so accurate. Thank you for the video, it was very interesting!
@DustyTheDog
@DustyTheDog Год назад
9:03 I can hear something happening here. It's very high pitched, but it's there. This is the reason I hated being around any CRT screens.
@hishaammuhammad6667
@hishaammuhammad6667 Год назад
Love your videoes 👍👍👍 That accent is goooood
@brainiac75
@brainiac75 Год назад
Thanks - it is a Jutlandic (Danish) accent :)
@hishaammuhammad6667
@hishaammuhammad6667 Год назад
Idk that you remember me
@MrHQQX
@MrHQQX Год назад
I'd love if you made a video about turning a LUX meter into PAR meter. There were some projects online, and I'd be great help for hobbyists, since PAR meters are expensive af.
@Lampe2020
@Lampe2020 Год назад
7:08 What app was it that showed this nice frequency graph?
@MrTurbo_
@MrTurbo_ Год назад
The thing with the db meter apps is that popular phones often get their own calibration profile making them fairly accurate, while less popular phones are often waaaaaay of, making them completely useless, also dedicated db meters often do way better at very loud sounds like 110+ db because the phone mic will clip
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