Originally posted by: Howard
Damn it, MIKE, stop stealing people's threads.
WARNING: USE ONLY ON HEAT-RESISTANT SURFACESOriginally posted by: Rubycon
I wonder if it scales - say to a few kW. :evil:
Originally posted by: Howard
WARNING: USE ONLY ON HEAT-RESISTANT SURFACESOriginally posted by: Rubycon
I wonder if it scales - say to a few kW. :evil:
Originally posted by: Rubycon
Originally posted by: Howard
WARNING: USE ONLY ON HEAT-RESISTANT SURFACESOriginally posted by: Rubycon
I wonder if it scales - say to a few kW. :evil:
LOL - I'd love to put it on a stage with 60Hz at a few 100W to see if I can make an equivalent of one of those football vibrator tables. A lot of you are probably too young to remember those games. It was a table top sized football field and you had little molded plastic (army man like) players you'd arrange. Plugging in the vibrator made the "field" shake causing the players to "tackle" each other. :laugh:
Originally posted by: Rubycon
Originally posted by: Howard
WARNING: USE ONLY ON HEAT-RESISTANT SURFACESOriginally posted by: Rubycon
I wonder if it scales - say to a few kW. :evil:
LOL - I'd love to put it on a stage with 60Hz at a few 100W to see if I can make an equivalent of one of those football vibrator tables. A lot of you are probably too young to remember those games. It was a table top sized football field and you had little molded plastic (army man like) players you'd arrange. Plugging in the vibrator made the "field" shake causing the players to "tackle" each other. :laugh:
Originally posted by: QueBert
Originally posted by: Rubycon
Originally posted by: Howard
WARNING: USE ONLY ON HEAT-RESISTANT SURFACESOriginally posted by: Rubycon
I wonder if it scales - say to a few kW. :evil:
LOL - I'd love to put it on a stage with 60Hz at a few 100W to see if I can make an equivalent of one of those football vibrator tables. A lot of you are probably too young to remember those games. It was a table top sized football field and you had little molded plastic (army man like) players you'd arrange. Plugging in the vibrator made the "field" shake causing the players to "tackle" each other. :laugh:
mine would just fall over on their own 🙁 I probably only scored one TD the whole time I had that f*cker. It was not fun, and didn't work at all. Unless it was supposed to rattle loudly while the players either went in circles or just fell over. But even with that said, I think I still spent a lot of hours playing with it, I guess I always had hope it would magically start being cool lol
Originally posted by: amdhunter
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I9sD1hmqBFs
Man, I wish I had one of these today...lol
Originally posted by: amdhunter
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I9sD1hmqBFs
Man, I wish I had one of these today...lol
Originally posted by: Perknose
Originally posted by: amdhunter
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I9sD1hmqBFs
Man, I wish I had one of these today...lol
Man, mine was even more ghetto than the one in that video. I wonder if it was made by Coleco.
Originally posted by: amdhunter
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I9sD1hmqBFs
Man, I wish I had one of these today...lol
The resistance of most speakers is above 3 ohms.Originally posted by: RedSquirrel
The only thing I wonder about speakers, electromagnets, transformers etc is how is it that they work, when all it is is a short circuit? Why is it that when you plug a transformer in, it does not trip the breaker or 48v speakers don't blow an amp? Do they add anything special to them such as big resistors? I'm sure if I twirl around wire around a nail and put it on a high voltage source, I will see a very nice light show. At low voltages it works fine but not high.
Originally posted by: RedSquirrel
The only thing I wonder about speakers, electromagnets, transformers etc is how is it that they work, when all it is is a short circuit? Why is it that when you plug a transformer in, it does not trip the breaker or 48v speakers don't blow an amp? Do they add anything special to them such as big resistors? I'm sure if I twirl around wire around a nail and put it on a high voltage source, I will see a very nice light show. At low voltages it works fine but not high.
Originally posted by: Rubycon
Originally posted by: RedSquirrel
The only thing I wonder about speakers, electromagnets, transformers etc is how is it that they work, when all it is is a short circuit? Why is it that when you plug a transformer in, it does not trip the breaker or 48v speakers don't blow an amp? Do they add anything special to them such as big resistors? I'm sure if I twirl around wire around a nail and put it on a high voltage source, I will see a very nice light show. At low voltages it works fine but not high.
A short is a very low resistance path between conductors. Transformers and motors (a dynamic loudspeaker is indeed a permanent magnet motor) have sufficient resistance which keeps current levels in check.
The video in the OP uses 30AWG wire (miniscule!) and sixty turns measuring close to 8 ohms on an ohmmeter. This provides a low enough resistance to actually be able to play something yet high enough resistance so it does not draw too much current from the amplifier's power supply.