• shiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiit
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    222 days ago

    I ordered one of these off Ali Express. An oscilloscope app showed it was about 40Hz vibration from the weight on the motor, far far from being ultrasonic. Got a refund, it ended up in the recycling.

  • @[email protected]
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    122 days ago

    If you need an ultrasonic cleaner, just go to harbor freight, they have decent ones for cheap. I bought one a few years back for carburetor parts a few years ago, and it does a great job

  • @[email protected]
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    22 days ago

    Everyone knows that ultrasonic cleaners are great

    Mate, wtf is an ultrasonic cleaner?

    Edit: this is a rhetorical question, I’ll read the article.

    • @[email protected]
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      122 days ago

      I got one a while ago and they are great for cleaning small objects, and glasses. Basically ultrasonic sound waves get send through water, small cavitation bubbles form and rip off the dirt.

    • @[email protected]
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      22 days ago

      I can attest that they are great. I use them daily for cleaning stuff at work. Much bigger ones than these tho.

      Ironically he says cleaning electronics will damage them, but thats exactly what im doing. The frequency and strength is the important part here. He generally has no understanding of electronics and makes some stupid nonsense claims about the circuit of the real one, but thats not the focus of the video so idc.

      • @[email protected]
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        122 days ago

        Few years ago at work, people were using them to clean electronics after soldering, etc. but once, they did it on a board with a MEMS device, a gyroscope and accelerometer chip. Took them a while to figure out while none of them worked until they narrowed it down to the ultrasonic cleaner…

        • @[email protected]
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          222 days ago

          Yeah that makes sense that those would break. Its quite aggressive, but most standard smd components dont care. Its even kind of a good QC test in my experience, because if anything wasnt attached properly it will get detached in there.

  • Ebby
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    122 days ago

    I found one of these fakes on the shelves at CVS!

    I’m pretty proud I got something banned after a letter.

  • @[email protected]
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    21 days ago

    I got an AC powered unit off Amazon a couple of years ago. How can I tell if it’s fake? Jewelry comes out bangin’, but I’ve wondered it if should work even better.

    Wife got this stuff last week and it seemed to make a dramatic difference.

    OTOH, I can’t see this thing having a legit transducer. Anyway to tell without tearing it down? Guess that’s easy enough if I really care.

    Should I try something rusty? Should a “real” one work for that? Also, it gets the water pretty hot. Is that an indicator?

    • @[email protected]
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      118 days ago

      From the video a good tell is having a metal basin, also the waves in the liquid when turned on should be grid like rather than wavey waves, finally put some tin foil in and it should come out with wee little holes in… YMMV I guess

  • @[email protected]
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    022 days ago

    I bought a fake one off of Temu. It was so cheap why not.

    Instantly knew it was fake once it was in my hands. Tried it anyway. Clearly just vibrating.

    Returned it. They told me to keep it…

        • @[email protected]
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          321 days ago

          No, but there’s an incredibly strong correlation between cheap and fake, and that correlation gets stronger the larger the gap between the price and the “usual” price.