If you enjoy the torture of electronics I'm sure you'd enjoy real human torture. Pm me and experience the true world of pain and watching others suffer. They have USB killers human version of cattle prods and such.
No where close. The fuse in the fuse box is meant to withstand a much larger electrical surge. A little USB that creates a small static shock through a port is basically hitting metal shield with pine straw.
The USB killers draw power from the device it is plugged into then discharges it back into the device, and it will fry a lot of non Apple devices. Apple is just about the only company that has proper protection in their ports.
EverythingApplePro I watch all your videos and i love it but this time i like to share something with you. 3:07 you are saying " Apple really built in surge protection like crazy on new iphone 10." Actually its not the surge protection that prevents the damage caused by usb killer. It's because apple does'nt want you to use any external product using iphone's power so, they do'nt provide output power on lightning connector. Hence, no power, no capacitor charge, no damage. Surge protection comes in when usb killer's caps charges and that power is sustained by the phone without damaging it like samsung galaxy note 9 did in this video. If you really wanna test surge protection of apple device charge that usb killer with that protection circuit from galaxy note 9 and then fed it to i phone. one more thing i am note here for that apple and samsung debate, i am just clearing you misconception regarding Apples surge protection. Peace!
I was listening to the audio during that part, I didn’t hear the click when it was plugged into the Samsung note 9 that happens when the power rapidly discharges into the device. I think the note 9 might be sensing the fact that there’s a large capacitive load on the circuit, and not supplying power. That would explain why the spark worked but not the discharge into the phone.
@@TheMe26 I'm pretty certain that the battery can withstand the current to charge other devices. Otherwise such a feature wouldn't be on those devices. Besides, charging usually occurs at 2 amps. If it handles that, it'll handle a 2 amp discharge.
Thanks so much, I was about to put the usb killer in my phone but now I know it may do damage. I was also going to put an EMP on my phone but now I know it may do damage. Thank you so much!
@@OhSoTiredMan For the last time the Note 7 fiasco was in the past and it hasn't happened since. Apple products blow up, bend, break, etc. way more than Samsung phones, anyways. Just no one talks about cause, you know, it's Apple..
Apple:IM POWER NO ONE GONNA STOP ME USB Killer: *cries* Vivo:Im more powerfull than Iphone USB Killer:Hah i will kill u in zero seconds! Vivo:🌋🌋🌋🌋🌋🌋🌋🌋🌋🌋🌋🌋🌋🌋🌋🌋🌋🌋🌋🌋🌋🌋🌋🌋🌋🌋🌋🌋🌋🌋
Lol, genius.. he already said that before testing itself that "it's the result of the phone after durability test" that's y its acting like that,.. and USB killer didn't to anything to the device