Mechanical circuits: electronics without electricity
Ғылым және технология
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Spintronics has mechanical resistors, inductors, transistors, diodes batteries and capacitors. When you connect them together with chains, they give a really good intuition for how circuits works.
Spintronics: upperstory.com/spintronics/
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I wanted to make the circuit equivalent of Braess's Paradox but I'm not sure it's possible with these components. Might need to make some mods! The sponsor is Private Internet Access: Get 82% off and 3 extra months free piavpn.com/stevemould
@Prisal1
Жыл бұрын
cool
@michaeldawson33
Жыл бұрын
This nigga really out here looking like Daniel Radcliffe and Steve Buschemi had a butt baby.
@catsby1000
Жыл бұрын
I backed their kickstarter, I can't wait to get mine
@PaVIThRa9188
Жыл бұрын
can you make an Astable transistor multivibrator?
@BobBob-ye4vz
Жыл бұрын
cool video
I like how this captures the "everything is a resistor" "everything is a capacitor" "everything is an inductor" aspect of electrronics. Like yeah the 'resistor' has a load of 'resistance', but all the rotating parts do. They also all have some mass and intertia, so they all have some 'inductance', etc
@SteveMould
Жыл бұрын
Yes, good point. It's very easy to see the stray everything.
@wassollderscheiss33
Жыл бұрын
You do know that "Steve Mould" is an AI, right? You can see that quite clearly in the characteristic third AI eyebrow at minute 15.
@randal_gibbons
Жыл бұрын
@@wassollderscheiss33 wow! good eyeballs. I can't tell what's causing the unibrow. Any idea?
@wassollderscheiss33
Жыл бұрын
@@randal_gibbons I don't know. My only goal was to write something Robert Miles might read ;-)
@argentonath
Жыл бұрын
@@randal_gibbons a good unibrow is mandatory for discussing FULL BRIDGE RECTIFIERS
That little blue link in the chains makes such a difference in comprehension of the whole model. That was an extremely smart design choice. Little visual design choices like this are what make me happy or drive me nuts with stuff I see every day.
@SteveMould
Жыл бұрын
Totally. So many times I thought "that's really well thought out"
@Palmit_
Жыл бұрын
same. but i automatically think when i encounter unmarked moving items, to dab some tippex or paint on them. or even use my cheap (sub £20 ) tachometer with one of it's reflective stickers. but the convenience built-in, can't be argued with.
@HelloKittyFanMan.
Жыл бұрын
@@Palmit_: "...With one of IT IS reflective stickers"?
@theBestInvertebrate
Жыл бұрын
@@HelloKittyFanMan. is that a joke? I thought unnecessarily correcting people's grammar on the internet was dealt with years ago.
@HelloKittyFanMan.
Жыл бұрын
@@theBestInvertebrate: "Correcting"? Where? And who are _you_ to me? And even if your claim were somehow correct, though it's not, then: 1. why wouldn't making sense be necessary, and 2. since when should the venue type matter?
I remember an electricity exercise in school where we compared a car shock absorber behavior with an RLC circuit and showed how with the right frequency of currents or bumps on the road, both could enter in resonance. It made me realize how every systems, mechanics, electric or chemicals are interconnected and basically about energy transfer. I still failed that class but had a nice mind blown moment :D
@skulikiii
7 ай бұрын
Yeah, same differential equations for both systems. The two systems are called Duals.
@ShiningForce07
6 ай бұрын
yes, basically its all about Physics, theres not such thing in nature as Chemistry thats an artificial construct by man. Like there's no such thing that 2 dimensional object everything has at least 3 dimensions, 2D is for exemplifications only.
@ingenuity23-yg4ev
6 ай бұрын
@@ShiningForce07physics is also a construct by man, and maths is at the core of that. you can't reduce a discipline without adequate knowledge of it beforehand
@waynegarfield6607
4 ай бұрын
A shock absorber is a frequency damper, its electrical equavelant is a capacitor...it smooths out the back emf oscillation in switching currents as to reduce arcing at switch contacts.
I just gave it to my 8year old son as a christmas present. And we both found it very cool to play with, and I as a electrical Engineer found it very intuitve and thought to my self that it must be possible to build a computer with enough ressources with all of that. Well. Now youtube recommend me your video and you just have done the basics for that. Great Job, great video!
@theodorejackson7760
Ай бұрын
Just be sure not to use a cheap chain like that, or you might get a system error. A rubber band for wind-up motor shmafety?
@kevintan5497
20 күн бұрын
im pretty sure mechanical computers exist and did develop for a time but they went out of fashion since electronics were cheaper to produce and more efficient
I've never clicked so fast. A physical description of an invisible process. Loved the breakdown!
@calholli
Жыл бұрын
Another cool analogy is: You can take everything that was done here and replace the chains with oil lines, and have all the same logic applied hydraulically, or even pneumatically with pressure instead of voltage. The interesting dynamic of how it applies force to a motor for example: electrically you can spin a motor magnetically, where as hydraulic/ pneumatical systems can spin a motor kinetically. Electricity has volts/ current/ resistance, where as fluids have pressure/ flow/ volume, volume has length/ width/ height, a Kinetic system has mass/ velocity/ inertia, a magnetic systems has attraction/ repel/ conduction, a thermal system has temperature/ pressure/ conduction, a mechanical system has torque/ velocity/ friction, friction has pressure/ temperature/ velocity, states of matter have solid/ liquid/ gas, time has past/ present/ future, space has length/ width/ height, velocity has distance/ time/ vector (direction)... on and on; It's easy to see how many of these qualities overlap and how many systems shake hands with each other-- and that's without even stepping into chemical and nuclear interactions. The shear complexity of what is possible within the laws of physics with only a finite amount of elements, is literally brain melting when you try to think about it deeply.;
@PlasmaChannel
Жыл бұрын
@Infinity What can I say, I enjoy a good video!
The Electroboom reference when you discussed the full bridge rectifier really got me going. Overall this was a nifty demonstration!
@mandarbamane4268
Жыл бұрын
14:58 lmao good one (it should be illegal to comment without timestamp)
@MrRandomSuperhero
Жыл бұрын
Literally laughed out loud; I love the loving punchy vibe in the KZread science community.
@eduardomoroyoqui622
Жыл бұрын
you mean the FUUUUUUULL BRIDGE RECTIFIEEEEEER!!!!! LOOOOL
@Papperlapappmaul
Жыл бұрын
Yep that FULL BRIDGE MONOBROW really got me.
@joelevi8531
Жыл бұрын
I thought it was a video artifact at first! I went back a couple of times to make sure it was really there. ;)
I've long thought of Inductors as "spinning up" like a flywheel, just to keep straight how they work in my head. It's really neat to see them make that analogy into reality.
I am incredibly late to this, but I wanted to mention how impressive I find these. I feel as if these could significantly lower the age at which children could learn about circuits, and perhaps just as importantly they can make learning about them fun.
Had me laughing like a a madman at "full bridge rectifier". Thanks for the video. Great content, as always!
@thewiseturtle
Жыл бұрын
The newest make-up craze will be the Full Bridge Rectifier, to make everyone look like Bert from Sesame Street, right?
@ragnarlindell7447
Жыл бұрын
+1 on that from me! 👍 Took half a second of "whats with he's..." Thats a great reference!
@Stupid_Status
Жыл бұрын
ElectroBOOM!
@LuisCaneSec
Жыл бұрын
Same! I guess talking about a full bridge rectifier requires a monobrow.
@strongbgood
Жыл бұрын
That had me rewinding to check he didn't have that on the whole time
14:57 he just had to pull out the unibrow for the full bridge rectifier!
@ArturdeSousaRocha
Жыл бұрын
Made me think of ElectroBOOM.
@Vandalfoe
Жыл бұрын
@@ArturdeSousaRocha Thanks. I noticed it and it was sooooo familiar but I had to check the comments for the light to come on. Thanks so much.
@thobetiin8266
2 ай бұрын
I laughed so hard on that
@entirelyscrapped
Күн бұрын
did you see this man in your dreams?
@entirelyscrapped
Күн бұрын
Actually that thing scared me 😅 He suddenly appears with unibrow but ignores it, like in some creepy videos where all seem to be usual but you know that something off.
This brings back a lot of memories. When I studied systems modeling in the 1990s I got carried away with Bond Graphs which abstract the domain using flow and effort variables, and allow you to implement a system design in electronics, mechanics, fluidics, or other domains that have analog component equations. It was "fun" translating different systems to see what it would look like. If you want to get intuition about this stuff, I highly recommend bond graphs.
This is amazing! I have always found helpful the mechanical analogies as they helped me in the beginning to get a feeling for electronics but the fact that you can build and feel it makes it so much more intuitive! Awesome content!
😂😂😂 "the Veritasium shaped elephant in the room" and later the unibrow (ElectroBoom) joke when talking about the FULL BRIDGE RECTIFIER. 😂 It was epic! The end segment was remined me of Alan Turing's mechanical computer (which broke the Enigma and helped to win WW2).
@TestarossaF110
Жыл бұрын
Yeah, hahahahha!!! this video was soo good! (this should be a video that teachers can show to their students (or vice versa).)
@SandroSmith
Жыл бұрын
You spelled it wrong, mate. It should be FULL BRIDGE RECTIFIER!!!
@nenufarsalamander1062
Жыл бұрын
Actually, it wasn't Turing's, but he indeed upgraded it and pushed to its limits. What is funny, is that something like 100 years earlier Charles Babbage invented a mechanical computer, but never got it done.
@atticmuse3749
Жыл бұрын
ah that's what the unibrow was for! I was very confused
@MrScorpnok
Жыл бұрын
The FULL BRIDGE RECTIFIER made me crack up, didn't see that coming
I had an A-Level physics teacher who told me that if you were to have a 100% accurate model of something, then you would just have the thing itself. All diagrams, models, descriptions, analogies, abstractions etc. are going to have some level of imperfection about them because they are not the thing they are trying to explain, but in many cases that's exactly why they are helpful tools in allowing our meaty skull-contents to gain some understanding :)
@thewiseturtle
Жыл бұрын
A common saying is "The map is not the territory." Every map is useful for something, and not useful for most everything else.
@oldvlognewtricks
Жыл бұрын
In Statistics, the phrase is: “All models are wrong; some are useful.” Credit to George Box for that one.
@coolkid4804
Жыл бұрын
I came to that same conclusion a while ago about the universe. The truth is just the universe itself, and we are fragments of it experiencing.
@Bayonet1809
Жыл бұрын
Sometimes the thing itself is not even a 100% accurate model of all such things, due to natural variance. So, say you had a complete model of the human body, which would just be a human body, that could only be a single human body, which is not a complete model for every human body. So how could you ever get a complete model of every human body when each one is slightly different? Here, a model which is actually abstracted from the thing itself (the human body) could be more accurate in representing the totality of human bodies. This is making me think of the Platonic Realm of Forms.
@thewiseturtle
Жыл бұрын
@@Bayonet1809 Only the thing itself is a model of the thing itself, not other things, even very similar ones. Becuase, yes, your body and my body are quite different.
First thing that came to my mind with inductor was dampers or a flywheel on a car. Also loved the little easteregg with full bridge rectifier. With your demo I understood how it works way better.
The rectifier part is too good. So subtle, well played LOL I’m a mechanical engineer that designs ECU’s so this is a great crossing of world’s. Fantastic video, I too appreciate a good analogy.
One thing i absolutely love about this is its appearance. It's not some basic colors and simple flat shapes with sans serif text; the colors are metallic and blend well together, the pieces all have etched patterns in them, and the text matches. This is such an elegant, almost Victorian like toy
@itsd0nk
Жыл бұрын
The aesthetics of this thing are all brilliant. Really smart industrial design was put into the whole package.
@LKonstantina915
Жыл бұрын
thats why it costs $100 for one set haha
@srpenguinbr
Жыл бұрын
@@LKonstantina915 I think it can be target to teachers and schools as a cool demo, so the cost is more affordable to them
@downsonjerome7905
Жыл бұрын
@@srpenguinbr teachers get shit pay man and they'd prolly need multiple sets. I don't think many of them would want to drop several hundred on this
@oscarlove4394
Жыл бұрын
@@downsonjerome7905 you know teachers dont have to pay for the props and teaching materials out of pocket right? The school would cover that if it was a teaching aid.
I want to say two things; 1) Great video! I would love to play around with one of those kits. 2) I saw what you did @ ~15:00 with the sight gag about full bridge rectifiers, and I fully appreciated it. I just didn't want you to think your efforts went unnoticed.
@ImranAli-yl9ws
Жыл бұрын
Mehdi would be proud 🤣
@thairinkhudr4259
Жыл бұрын
I was SHOOK when I saw that 😂😂😂
@Arrow912
Жыл бұрын
fascinating how our brains immediately notice that something is off...its just one second or so.
@Gameboygenius
Жыл бұрын
Noticed that too. Could've used a bit of reverb but I guess he wanted to keep it subtle.
@tolentarpay5464
Жыл бұрын
Ah, I'm so glad you mentioned that! I really didn't know what to think about "the monobrow"...
That was excellent. Been trying to get my head around what electricity is and how it works for ages. Definitely getting a spintronic. Thanks 👊🏽
Aliens that haven’t discovered electronics and hear Humans using their mechanical circuits as analogies: 👁️👄👁️
Loved the uni-brow during the full bridge rectifier 😂😂
Steampunk entusiasts could easily take this idea and make a basic, real, steampunk computer. Maybe they'd need to scale it down somehow to make it practical but still. It'd be amazing.
@dog-ez2nu
Жыл бұрын
just needs a wind up every now and then.
@sb0373
Жыл бұрын
@@dog-ez2nu isn't that where you place a steam engine instead of the manual winder?
@Zenovarse
Жыл бұрын
Isn't that just a differential analyser
@TheClintonio
Жыл бұрын
@@Zenovarse I believe the mechanism in that machine was different but insofar as they would both be mechanical computation machines yes, very much.
@__-fm5qv
Жыл бұрын
@@dog-ez2nu Or perhaps, as its steampunk, a steam engine. Could be the "battery" or sorts. Perhaps in this miniturised version a small steam turbine would suffice. Could also be a cool plot device that if steam pressure drops or the turbine is damaged in some way you end up with limited power, both spin volts and spin amps would be reduced. Which could result in reduced performance, slower computation, but also perhaps increased number of errors for circuits that require a certain range of timing to work.
This helped me finally go from knowledge to understanding of capacitors being used to protect inductors like in electrical motors.
This is the best KZread movie I have seen in a while and I've been around, guys. Thank you!
oh my god what a golden idea. the creativity that went onto building the components as gear mechanisms and getting them to work together is nothing short of amazing.
@calholli
Жыл бұрын
Another cool analogy is: You can take everything that was done here and replace the chains with oil lines, and have all the same logic applied hydraulically, or even pneumatically with pressure instead of voltage. The interesting dynamic of how it applies force to a motor for example: electrically you can spin a motor magnetically, where as hydraulic/ pneumatical systems can spin a motor kinetically. Electricity has volts/ current/ resistance, where as fluids have pressure/ flow/ volume, volume has length/ width/ height, a Kinetic system has mass/ velocity/ inertia, a magnetic systems has attraction/ repel/ conduction, a thermal system has temperature/ pressure/ conduction, a mechanical system has torque/ velocity/ friction, friction has pressure/ temperature/ velocity, states of matter have solid/ liquid/ gas, time has past/ present/ future, space has length/ width/ height, velocity has distance/ time/ vector (direction)... on and on; It's easy to see how many of these qualities overlap and how many systems shake hands with each other-- and that's without even stepping into chemical and nuclear interactions. The shear complexity of what is possible within the laws of physics with only a finite amount of elements, is literally brain melting when you try to think about it deeply. .. ;
@toomanyhobbies2011
Жыл бұрын
So naive. Electronic circuits were derived from mechanical devices. Do some reading.
@alveolate
Жыл бұрын
lego technic needs to buy this company or at least access to their IP
@xaytana
Жыл бұрын
@@alveolate There wouldn't be any IP protection when it comes to the basic components themselves. Spintronics itself is derivative work of concepts that exist in the public domain, you can't patent a sprocket or chain, nor one-way mechanisms such as clutch bearings and ratchets, etc. The only IP protection would be the book that goes along with the set under copyright, and how the set itself is modeled as you can't make a 1:1 reproduction. What use Lego would get out of these kinds of components are not covered by IP protection. Plus there's the blatantly obvious issue that these kinds of gearsets would have an insane amount of frictional losses if they didn't have bearings. Technic will never have bearings for quite obvious reasons. While it might be a decent idea, it just would not work in practice. Plus there's too many issues with how Spintronics approaches certain concepts, which results in bad analogies, something Lego would probably avoid when it comes to educational building systems.
Paul Boswell, the creator, is an AMAZING guy who also did a mechanical computer, “Turing Tumble”-I could not recommend his work more highly. Thanks for giving him some well-deserved publicity.
@Enigma758
Жыл бұрын
"Turing Tumble" is a copy of "Digi-Comp II" from the 1960s by John Godfrey.
@user-pr6ed3ri2k
Жыл бұрын
111,1+1th
@derekdjay
Жыл бұрын
You can imagine how brilliant this Spintronics thing is, when a third-party youtuber is making a (nonsponsored)video on it!
@ohsweetmystery
Жыл бұрын
👍 Absolutely brilliant! But I think they should reconsider using stamped anodized aluminum pieces (gears) instead of plastic and design a better drive than the chain they have now.
@CristiNeagu
Жыл бұрын
Considering he made that simulator free and open source, he deserves it.
so many pieces fell in place watching this video, thank you! this was brilliant!!
You gave me the answer to an old self question about what happened to energy when you conect a charged capacitor in parallel with a dischargedone!! Nobody did it in my life before! Steve I thank you a lot!! 😃 People with the same lack of knowledge like me, see at 12:55
The Mehdi mini-cameo almost made me spit coffee on the monitor. That was brilliant!
I really appreciate you for making this analogy between electrical and mechanical systems. It really helps me better understand Control systems.
@khalilahd.
Жыл бұрын
Same. Really cool video ❤
@krissp8712
Жыл бұрын
Well, he presented it but it looks like you can get your own set of models to try out too!
Just loved when you said that "we know that Quantum Mechanics is wrong" because that's exactly the opposite of what basically every physicist would say, they almost invariably say "we know that General Relativity is wrong... because it's not quantized". I also sit on the side of the fence where it seems that QM is wronger than GR, even if this one might need quantization at the limit of (maybe) Plank scale volume-time (which is so extremely tiny that it's almost indistinct from seamless anyhow).
An interesting thing about this is that you also get some of the parasitics with the ideal components. Things have friction, so there's resistance, and then there's also parasitic inductance in the inertia in the chains and the wheels. And probably also there's parasitic capacitance in components as the plastic flexes and acts like a spring.
At university, learning control theory, we analyzed electrical circuits and mechanical systems using transfer functions and a popular exercise was to make an analogous mechanical configuration to a given circuit and vice versa. This is exactly this. The resistors are friction elements, capacitors springs, inductors masses, voltage a force and current speed. I really loved these similarities, as they give you an additional insight on how everything works.
@eletrotheory8398
Жыл бұрын
I did have the same subject, good times back then
@GiovanniBR1234
Жыл бұрын
It's the same thing because they share the same models/equations. Still in some areas (like thermal), they miss some components. Dynamic systems are everywhere in nature but some models (like transfer functions) are impossible
@kevinwantstoshred
Жыл бұрын
Sounds like you had a good control theory prof, must have been nice! Mine really wasn't so great 😕
@sureshkumar-cc1jq
Жыл бұрын
Force voltage analogy , force current analogy
@hieuhienhoa29
Жыл бұрын
Sound like Ogata's "system dynamic " book 😂
The full bridge rectifier was pretty impressive to see work, not to say the flip flop! I’d love to see some logic circuit being built on that, not just a gate. I’m in sheer disbelief of how great looking this project looks! Great video!
@SportyMabamba
Жыл бұрын
*F U L L* *B R I D G E* *R E C T I F I E R*
@solidSchmaltz
Жыл бұрын
The eyebrow was the most impressive part of the rectifier.
@randyollmann4202
Жыл бұрын
Why did he do the mono-brow thing?
@DespaceMan
Жыл бұрын
Probably can use mechanical devices for some of the logic gates AND, OR, XOR, NOT, NAND, NOR, and XNOR
@calebrey
Жыл бұрын
The monobrow was the cherry on top
7:49 This is absolutely brilliant ! Beautiful !
Wow, this is beautiful! Thank you for sharing this excellent analogy!
I LOVE that you mentioned the Veritasium video because the biggest problem with analogies is that they're fundamentally incorrect in many ways. However, simplified models have proven useful many times over for solving problems intuitively while ignoring lots of extraneous details (frictionless surfaces, anyone?). Appreciate you touching on both sides of the equation. :)
@zzzxhrg
Жыл бұрын
Yeah, analogies help us feel more familiar with the actual works under the hood, while at the same time, getting some work done. They're not actual explanations of how reality actually works, but may be close enough to get our work done. Actually, I doubt we'll ever be able to really understand reality. It's too far beyond our capacity. All we'll ever have is closer, and closer, and closer, analogies... But the real truth will be hidden from us forever
@GregConquest
Жыл бұрын
@@zzzxhrg A meta-analogy seems in order. Maps are getting closer and closer to the territory, but the map can never be identical to the territory. Moire patterns in graphene lattice are analogous to sub-atomic phenomenon as well. This is mysterious. It seems it can help us to model some interactions, and maybe learn new things about sub-atomic particles, but we don't know if they're a perfect analogy or not.
@jursamaj
Жыл бұрын
I mean… did you think that anybody likely to be watching this video would be unaware that analogies are imperfect reflections of their subject? The only perfect reflection of a thing is the thing itself.
@HuFlungDung2
Жыл бұрын
@@zzzxhrg Yes, words themselves are explained by other words which are explained by other words. We're always trying to explain what we mean, or what something means, because absolute truth is difficult when words cannot do what is required. I get a chuckle out of listening to Jordan Peterson stringing together sentences of $10 words, trying to explain his ideas in the most appropriate language.
@Iconoclasher
Жыл бұрын
Analogies are meant to convey information so the average can get some mental picture of what's going on. I use the "water in a garden hose" analogy to explain to people the properties of amperage and voltage. Most people don't know the difference. When I explain amperage is the number (amount) of flowing electrons and the voltage is the pressure behind those electrons, it clicks with them. Of course it's flawed but it conveys a message and gives a mental picture nature of electricity.
When I was in 3rd year of university studying software engineering I took a course as an elective with a very misleading title of "Systems and Simulations" I went into it thinking we would be learning how to design and program simulations on a computer. It turned out to be a course geared for electrical and mechanical engineers. We learned about this exact thing using electrical systems to simulate mechanical systems and vice versa and it blew my mind despite never actually being able to apply this in my field and it really helped me really understand the power of the math I was forced to learn in first and second year in a less abstract way that those courses weren't able to do.
@buffuniballer
Жыл бұрын
We did the same, I took it 3rd or 4th year of my EE degree program IIRC.
@jvon3885
Жыл бұрын
Next, take a writing class, so I don't run out of breath reading your work....don't take this comment wrong, I'm not being mean.....The fact I have to apply a disclaimer shows just how misunderstood the internet has become or can become when people are reading other people's writings as they tend to take them the wrong way therefore giving the reader a bad taste in their mouth and this ultimately creates a hostile environment to where two people now become enemies and this will usually bring in other posters who either feel the need to defend the OPs comment against the commenter or stand with the opposing side and this will create a back and forth between two or more strangers who by the time they are done reading will find themselves completely out of breath and nothing accomplished but that's not this I just found myself out if breath reading your comment and seeing that you went to university figured you might look at a writing class as you probably write a lot in your field of choice at least I think you would......Breathe....anyways just having a little fun at the expense of others.
@beautifulsmall
Жыл бұрын
the power of math, fastai
@buffuniballer
Жыл бұрын
@@jvon3885 if I could like this a dozen times, I would.
@Electedsphinx40
Жыл бұрын
@@jvon3885 just take a breath it's not that hard
You won my heart with your discussion of models.
This is amazing! It makes so many things I've studied much more concrete.
This is when you realise how clever the Engineers were during the Steam era. This is what they used to regulate pressures etc.
@Seedzification
Жыл бұрын
did they tho
@oliverkrohn8309
Жыл бұрын
Bruh they regulated pressures through a combination of relief valves which are automatic, sometimes steam whistles which are manual and by putting less fuel in the firebox when u want pressure to go down and more when you want it to go up but they did not use these.
@snez3538
Жыл бұрын
@@oliverkrohn8309 bro thought steampunk was real ☠☠
@lungkoygallo7351
Жыл бұрын
@@snez3538 bro's study on mac dolands
@josea.r.avelino181
Жыл бұрын
It's not how clever engineers were yesterday, it's how stupid engineers are today.
Fun fact: the concept you covered in your paper is actually the basis for the circuit that makes up the kick drum sound in the Roland TR-808 (an electronic drum machine know for being featured in every rap song ever made). The circuit is called a Bridged T-Network.
@theorixlux2605
Жыл бұрын
@Repent and believe in Jesus Christ forgive me father for I have sinned. Sorry daddy, I've been naughty.
@sophiacristina
Жыл бұрын
And almost all EDMs too... :)
@zee_space_wolfy
Жыл бұрын
@Repent and believe in Jesus Christ I feel like god needs to repent to me, tbh.
@shoumeekbose4662
Жыл бұрын
I am an electrical and electronics engineer, a physics teacher and a musician and music producer ( 808 is🤘), so the joy i got from watching the video and then this comment of yours. Oh my Krishna! what a blissful start of the day. Thanks to all the knowledge sharers (my day is made) ❤
@sophiacristina
Жыл бұрын
@@shoumeekbose4662 Sigproc4life!
This was more helpful than i expected. Ill admit its got its own learning curve to understand the analogy and im sure is far more helpful if youre using the pieces yourself, but inductance and capacitance both are things ive struggled to really grasp. I understand the descriptions of them but struggle with having a good full understanding of them. This demonstration helped a bit with both. Specifically the filtering part. For me, my interest in electronics has been mostly tube guitar amps and while ive built several, theres always so much missing information or misunderstood information since ive had no formal training. Id be very curious to see different portions of a simple guitar amplifier circuit built with this.
I once went through a book of switchmode regulator topologies and mapped how they could all be applied in mechanical gearboxes using springs, flywheels and clutches. Personally I relate current to torque and voltage to angular velocity which just means you swap inductors and capacitors in these examples and has the benefit of mapping perfectly to permanent magnet dc motors voltage and current characteristics.
A 555 timer might be simple enough to build in spintronics, and would probably be spectacular to look at.
@satibel
Жыл бұрын
there's 28 transistors and 11 resistors so it'd have to be simulated probably.
@stevelknievel4183
Жыл бұрын
@@satibel A 741 op amp would be easier. The resistor count drops to 20! (So still too complex to make cheaply!)
@derisis13
Жыл бұрын
@@stevelknievel4183 any kind of operational amplifier would be great. To see it in action would make those winky foxes more understandable
@Robert_McGarry_Poems
Жыл бұрын
My vote too!
@stevelknievel4183
Жыл бұрын
Just realised I forgot a capacitor.
The subtle ElectroBOOM reference killed me. Incredible video as always!
I often teach people basic electronics using mechanics to describe how some circuits or components work. Some of the Spintronics stuff is just fun to watch or things are done in slightly different ways from the descriptions I use which makes them even more interesting. My favourite comparison is hybrid transformers or magic-T waveguide which works the same as a differential. I see varieties of these things almost everywhere and used in all kinds of things. There is one thing I'd love to see you try with spintronics is a negative resistance device. The typical example in electronics is a Tunnel Diode. As you will be aware the negative resistance is more of a behaviour of the device than an actual real world resistive value. As we increase the voltage across a resistor, the current flowing through it also proportionally increases. In a negative resistance device, at a certain voltage, a further increase in voltage causes a decrease in current. This of course does not continue forever and at some higher voltage the differential current will return to a positive value. It might be interesting to explore some other non-linear mechanics to see what unusual behaviours can be generated.
11:43 I play the synthesizer, and its so neat to see what a very simple high pass filter *actually* looks like. With all my fiddling with analog synths, i never stopped to think about how a high pass filter worked. And as a cherry on top, the next thing you showed was an oscillator, which i also didnt have a good idea of mechanically, even though its. Yanno. *The thing that makes the sound* loI Just further goes to show me that i need to learn more about circuits to actually understand how to shape sounds exactly how i want to, and this is a brilliant tool to help with that!
I'm an electrical engineer and at uni we studied mechanical circuits as analogies of electronic circuits, since that was what we were more familiar with. E.g. a mass-spring circuit could be modeled as a LC circuit. A force would translate to a voltage supply, and so on. We also modeled some hydraulic stuff with electrical circuits equivalents, e.g. a water tank could be considered a capacitor.
@loganrussell48
Жыл бұрын
I was confused about water tank being considered a capacitor, but I guess if you're filling it from the bottom then the analogy holds. idk why that took me so long to realize
@georgehelyar
Жыл бұрын
I was lucky enough to do a GCSE course called "systems and control", which was half pneumatics and half electronics, and it was really interesting to see how you could do the same things in both, and even mix them together. In the same way as you can make a crude timer with a capacitor and a resistor, you can do the same thing with a reservoir and a valve, for example.
@radnukespeoplesminds
Жыл бұрын
Im a biomedical engineer and we had a course where we learned to model mechanical fluid and biomechanical systems as circuits and differential equations
@sven711
Жыл бұрын
Funny … I had no issues understanding LC circuits but still struggle with mass-spring circuits 😂
@yuanheli307
Жыл бұрын
Yes. Those spinning things in the video just makes my head hurt, while the electric circuits are perfectly understandable.
I'm amazed at how accurate it is just on principle, even passive inductance just works because the fundamentals are so accurate. It's crazy
@QuantumHistorian
Жыл бұрын
Second order linear differential equations are going to do what second order linear differential equations do, no matter the medium.
A lot of great definitions explained very well, great video
i´ve never seen a water-model in my head before. Thanks for showing this, its amazing how easy it is.
So nice that Mehdi was willing to appear in your video!
@asdftwef
Жыл бұрын
for those that missed it, it's at 14:57 or here kzread.info/dash/bejne/g6afy6yTe63MoLw.html
@goldfishdoc1999
Жыл бұрын
I was searching for this comment
@goldfishdoc1999
Жыл бұрын
the univrow was great but he should have shouted FFOOOOOOOLLL BRIDGE RECTIFIIIERRRR!!!!
@brianlance
Жыл бұрын
@@goldfishdoc1999 would have been too obvious. Loved the subtly of how he did it. :)
The "transistor" piece is voltage controlled, so it's actually more similar to an FET rather than a "basic" BJT transistor, which is current controlled.
@mememachine5244
Жыл бұрын
Was litearlly just thinking that, its a nice set but really it dosnt work for the more advanced compnents in electronics.
@PSYCHIC_PSYCHO
Жыл бұрын
What would happen if someone was to pass a 12V current through a fart?
@ortzinator
Жыл бұрын
@@PSYCHIC_PSYCHO a what? Lol
@PSYCHIC_PSYCHO
Жыл бұрын
@@ortzinator How many nuclear-warheads would it take to obliterate a fart? 🤪
@juliusmolina
Жыл бұрын
Spintronics webpage clarifies it behaves like a FET
Hi Steve Mould, I am so wowed by this video. Such a out of the box thinking. The most important statement which resonated within me is that one had to pick the right model for an explanation. Since you've asked for ideas, I have a simple thing to ask. Please show us the basic concept of resistivity of the electrical wires where by increasing the length and decreasing the cross-section, resistance can be increased. Kudos to you.
@alfredomulleretxeberria4239
11 ай бұрын
The closest concept I can think of in mechanics is buckling, which is the change in shape of a static element that is proportional to its second moment of area (moment of inertia) and inversely proportional to its length, squared. The higher the slenderness ratio (length:area ratio) a structural element (such as a column or an arm) has, the more likely it is to deform and potentially collapse. Likewise, a cable is very likely to burn up if an extremely high electric potential is passed through it. A bird's nest can be made of small branches and twigs, but a tall bridge needs to be made of tall, thick, strong columns in order to withstand the weight of heavy trucks and the destructive forces of earthquakes and cyclones. Likewise, thin, small wires might be good for cellphone cameras, but city power lines must be thick and large so as to carry large currents that will supply many homes and commercial buildings.
My eleven year old is currently using this kit to build his first circuit “puzzle.” So far, so good. He loves puzzle games and wants to be an engineer of some kind when he grows up, but he’s not sure what kind. We’ll see if electrical engineering or mechanical engineering is his thing. Thanks for this overview. Anything that can get my school-averse kid to actually have fun while learning something new and using his natural curiosity and problem-solving skills with enthusiasm is awesome.
I would love to see a series (pun intended) about each of the commonly used logic gates represented with spintronics. Makes me feel like a Turing complete wall clock might actually be possible.
@he3004
Жыл бұрын
this technically means a mechanical computer is possible, (although too big to be of use) it still would be amazing to see it
@Cryo_Gen
Жыл бұрын
@@he3004 been built before, would be cool to see them in spintronics though
@jimmyneutron129
Жыл бұрын
@@he3004 i think the ones who created spintronics also created a mechanical turing machine
@jucom756
Жыл бұрын
The original automatic computer was a mechanical computer.
@123Peter
Жыл бұрын
@@he3004 Charles Babbage built several mechanical computers in 18xx.
That fact that since high-school you have been explaining science with hydraulic systems is extremely wholesome, I love your videos:)
Really enjoyed this! Would've been a great way of inuititing electrical circuits as a visual thinker. I'm glad to know I can still learn to build simple computers using this form of reasoning.
THIS IS ONE OF THE MOST INNOVATIVE AND GENIUS PHYSICAL APPLICATIONS TO ELECTRICAL THEORY AND MECHANICS THAT EXISTS. GENIUS! This is absolutely brilliant. I suffered through Robotics and Embedded Systems degrees with the massive learning curve it takes to learn and understand these concepts and laws. I am a 100% visual learner and this would have helped me tremendously back then. I've already placed my purchase. Every kid is getting this for birthdays and Christmas now!
I love this! And also the cheeky electrboom reference with full bridge rectifiers :)
Loved the Mehdi costume for the full bridge rectifier!
@0neIntangible
Жыл бұрын
FULL BRIDGE EYEBROW
I love this man! I have solved poly rythms, and your analogy was mine before finding de mathematical formula for Swing.. that is your 3 masses showing the product of a binari string dent by dent mechanism... this is love ❤
That teacher who helped you publish is the real MVP
I have literally never understood LC circuits until 8:42, and it suddenly completely clicked. Thank you so much for this Steve, this is one of your best videos so far!
I've been imagining something like this for over a decade and always wondered if I could make money by inventing it. Someone beat me to the punch but regardless, this is so sick I couldn't stop smiling throughout the entire video. It's like a dream. Pure glee!
@caiocc12
Жыл бұрын
The genius is not always in the idea, sometimes the genius is in how to turn the idea into a viable product
@calholli
Жыл бұрын
Another cool analogy is: You can take everything that was done here and replace the chains with oil lines, and have all the same logic applied hydraulically, or even pneumatically with pressure instead of voltage. The interesting dynamic of how it applies force to a motor for example: electrically you can spin a motor magnetically, where as hydraulic/ pneumatical systems can spin a motor kinetically. Electricity has volts/ current/ resistance, where as fluids have pressure/ flow/ volume, volume has length/ width/ height, a Kinetic system has mass/ velocity/ inertia, a magnetic systems has attraction/ repel/ conduction, a thermal system has temperature/ pressure/ conduction, a mechanical system has torque/ velocity/ friction, friction has pressure/ temperature/ velocity, states of matter have solid/ liquid/ gas, time has past/ present/ future, space has length/ width/ height, velocity has distance/ time/ vector (direction)... on and on; It's easy to see how many of these qualities overlap and how many systems shake hands with each other-- and that's without even stepping into chemical and nuclear interactions. The shear complexity of what is possible within the laws of physics with only a finite amount of elements, is literally brain melting when you try to think about it deeply.''
@ideegeniali
Жыл бұрын
@@caiocc12 Also talent is not something innate. It's hard work and determination to keep doing and perfecting and adapting and perseverance until reaching the goal. That's what genius and talent is to me. It's determination and perseverance and hard work. I see determination, perseverance and hard work in these spintronic. That's why i'd say product is genius and people who made it were talented. Very same applies to this YT channel!
Bravo, nice information, it is fun to know someone develop this !
I wish I had the money to buy a bunch of these kits, and donate them to the local middle-schools. This feels like the perfect stepping stone for 10-12yo kids who might not be able to grasp the invisible rules that make electronics work, but would absolutely grok a mechanical abstraction (of an abstraction). I absolutely love both the concept and execution. This is such an important teaching tool.
This is such a crazy eccentric idea, and I like the steampunk style of it too. I think it's also a useful bridge between electronics analogy and mechanical design. Wonderful, insightful video!
@jamescomstock7299
Жыл бұрын
I didn't even think about how this would fit so amazingly into steampunk. Thanks for the insight!
The Mehdi eyebrow during the Full Bridge Rectifier bit made me do a spit-take
The look of these parts give me strong nostalgia for Bionicles and Beyblades etc. The toa iruini bionicle is a great example, the colors and textures aren't THAT close, but the inductor reminded me of that one
This model is so much more intuitive than anything my college professors have ever taught so many details that took so long to understand all packed into a set.
Epic nod to Electroboom. :) Edit : A circuit suggestion: basic h-bridge motor controller. (As seen in under 5v circuits via transistors) Seems ironic to simulate a circuit designed to control rotations via an emulation of electronics done *VIA* rotations.
@diegogaviria3863
Жыл бұрын
meta spintronics
@joshuagorden9487
Жыл бұрын
😂 came to find this, I was so distracted by the brow until he said full bridge rectifier 😭😭
I've never heard of spintronics but my area of concentration in mechanical engineering is Mechatronics. What you show here is only scratching the surface of system dynamics, which is a study in engineering that mathematically represents electrical, mechanical (translational and rotational), fluid and thermal systems with the same math. There are mathematical equivalences between all of these domains. Just as there are between magnetic fields, gravitational fields and electrostatic fields. I made these connections early on in my physics studies and was excited to see it all tied together in the system dynamics approach, which is the foundation of Mechatronics.
Excellent, a very good place to learn Mechatronics, keep it up and all the best..
The eyebrow @15:03 kills me
@matem817
Ай бұрын
Same😂 electroboom moment
This is beautiful. One of the things I have trouble explaining to people without a lot of immersion in physics but who need this for their work exams is exactly high pass and low pass filters. They cannot "visualize" it. I am really thinking of getting this for that purpose
@aurelia8028
Жыл бұрын
Yeah, I had to do an experiment in Uni where we built a high-pass filter and I really didn't get how tf it worked, but this here is much more grounded (no pun intended) and easier to understand.
Watching this while working on Circuits homework. Really cool stuff, I need to tell my professor about these.
First time watching and love the content absolutely amazing stuff. Glad I found this by accident 🙂
The uni-brow at around 14:57 to coincide with the full bridge rectifier segment is Python-esque and I'm here for it.
@MarkTillotson
Жыл бұрын
Python2 or Python3 though?
I forgot how fun this stuff was. It's been years since my elec tech classes, but I still get a little thrill seeing some of the stuff I learned there. It's honestly surprising how much joy I got the first time I got an led to turn on with a bread board.
@whannabi
Жыл бұрын
Hope this video led you to try it again
@calholli
Жыл бұрын
Another cool analogy is: You can take everything that was done here and replace the chains with oil lines, and have all the same logic applied hydraulically, or even pneumatically with pressure instead of voltage. The interesting dynamic of how it applies force to a motor for example: electrically you can spin a motor magnetically, where as hydraulic/ pneumatical systems can spin a motor kinetically. Electricity has volts/ current/ resistance, where as fluids have pressure/ flow/ volume, volume has length/ width/ height, a Kinetic system has mass/ velocity/ inertia, a magnetic systems has attraction/ repel/ conduction, a thermal system has temperature/ pressure/ conduction, a mechanical system has torque/ velocity/ friction, friction has pressure/ temperature/ velocity, states of matter have solid/ liquid/ gas, time has past/ present/ future, space has length/ width/ height, velocity has distance/ time/ vector (direction)... on and on; It's easy to see how many of these qualities overlap and how many systems shake hands with each other-- and that's without even stepping into chemical and nuclear interactions. The shear complexity of what is possible within the laws of physics with only a finite amount of elements, is literally brain melting when you try to think about it deeply....
It's beautiful and tangible with a great analogy on how electronic components work... The only thing that kept me thinking how can a mechanical action explain wireless energy or wireless connection 🤔. i can't really call it a downgrade technology as long as the logic is there, I can feel the excitement when building these gears. Thumbs up to this
Thats an amazing analogy! The more you think about it the better you realize the analogy is.
That mehdi cameo was unexpected lol. I always love these little surprises you put in your videos!
@stevekoontz8609
Жыл бұрын
I felt like I was taking crazy pills that no one else was commenting on it, until I saw your post!
I love how different physical concepts describe each other. Really makes you think about what determines the rules of our universe and their similarities across materials.
@Cathal7707
Жыл бұрын
Lots of things in physics, electronics, economics, biology, science in general, can be described with linear dynamical systems. Even more things can be described by non linear dynamical systems. Understanding these systems makes you extremely powerful.
Magnificent video sir.Please more videos on spintronics.
AMAZING! That's the right way to learn electronics or anything in life. Thank you God bless you.
I'm just so impressed with this kit! Not gonna buy one (probably), but it seem just amazing to me. The ingenuity, the amount of cleaverness and engineering needed to come up and make all these components, the attention to detail. Just wow! Every time you showed another component I was like "No way! That's incredible!".
@freakonomicon2085
Жыл бұрын
The great thing is there's a browser based simulation on their website. It has a problem with floating point accuracy when dealing with circuits that spin really slowly, which can cause perpetual motion, but otherwise it's fun to play around with once you understand the concept
14:58 That electroboom reference couldn't get any better
This is amazing, whoever designed this deserves an award
This is a very neat science and technology toy. Good for both teaching, and experimentation.
Back in the late sixties, My Dad was working for Honeywell as a mechanical engineer in the aerospace division. He was working on a EMP proof re-entry guidance system for ICBMs. The concept was to use fluid dynamics as a form of current to mimic electronic circuits. I don't know if it was successful, but he brought home some very weird little components. Among them were fluid amplifiers which were made of some kind of clear plastic that had a figure visible that looked like a stick figure of a man. The head was where the flow would come in. The "legs" were where the flow would exit, depending on how the "arms" were affected.
@electron2601
Жыл бұрын
That's awesome. I would love to be able to see those components.
@oO0Xenos0Oo
Жыл бұрын
There are devices like that in the automotive industry as well. Automatic gear shifting in some older cars was purely done by "computing" different oil pressure values (inputs) in a maze like valve island to decide which gears should run or be hold in place (outputs). Modern transmissions added computer controlled electric solonoid vaves on top to be more precise.
@mrfrenzy.
Жыл бұрын
@@oO0Xenos0Oo There are still many cars on the road today with hydraulic logic in the gearbox. Check the "Precision transmission" youtube channel for very nice breakdowns.
@peterpiper216
Жыл бұрын
Sounds like aliens or UFOs
@analog_guy
Жыл бұрын
Those components were used in a field of endeavor called fluidics. Using fluidic components interconnected with small plastic hoses, the mechanical engineers pointed out they could do the same functions as could be done with electrical circuits. The fluidic "circuits" were fascinating to watch in action. The mechanical engineers also pointed out that fluidic circuits were immune to the effects of EMP (electromagnetic pulse, as from a nuclear bomb) and EMI (electromagnetic interference), and fluidic circuits could achieve electrical isolation. The mechanical engineers were fond of building "me too" fluidic logic circuits to mimic various electrical logic circuits and demonstrating their fluidic creations at shows. The electrical engineers scoffed at fluidics because the electrical engineers recognized that electrical circuits would win out over fluidics due to orders of magnitude more speed, orders of magnitude smaller size, orders of magnitude lower cost, and the fact that there were electrical solutions for dealing with EMP and EMI, and isolation could be achieved in electrical circuits by magnetic, electromagnetic, and optical coupling. We know now that electrical circuits achieved overwhelming dominance, but there probably remain some niche applications for fluidics today.
Very cool kit, seems like a great learning tool. I especially liked the representation of an inductor as a flywheel, had never thought of it like that before and it makes a lot of sense.
Holy hell, the monobrow out of nowhere was pure genius. Electroboom would no doubt be honoured.
4:56 I love those units being a hint as to how all the different components work. A farad is 100 m/N, where N/m would be the units of a spring constant, so spin capacitance is like the inverse of spring strength. N * m, or force times distance, is just energy or work, so spin Watts are J/s or just regular Watts, which is very cool. Most interesting of all, spin Henris are 0.01 N * s² / m. Note that because m/s² is acceleration, multiplying by s² / m is like diving by acceleration. So this can also be expressed as N/a: force divided by acceleration. Newton's famous equation says F = ma, so we see that N/a is just kg; 1 spin Henri is actually 0.01 kg or 10 grams. I think this result is fascinating!
I probably would've pursued electrical engineering if I played with something like this as a kid. This and a voltmeter. I used to disassemble and reassemble my toys as a kid, but I could never understand how the electronics worked inside them. Knowing which was what and why the things were used the way they did would have been really nice growing up. The farthest I ever understood electronics back then was that there was positive and ground.
@dickJohnsonpeter
Жыл бұрын
When I was a kid we had these 300-in-1 or 500-in-1 electronics boards where you could make hundreds of different electronic devices and experiments with all the supplied components that stuck into a big breadboard but they were very clever and designed for kids to be able to easily make electronic circuits. Of course back then RadioShack had a section in the back of the store with shelves of every electronic component that you'd want and anything else you'd need so I started making my own things, mainly trying to make my own synthesizers, a solid state guitar amplifier and distortion pedals but even with such an interest in electronics I moved on. We just don't normally take an interest we have as a kid and carry it into a career in adulthood.
@craggslist
Жыл бұрын
Same. I used to disassemble and hopefully reassemble all my toys. I wanted to know how they "tick"
@fddw3832
Жыл бұрын
i think many kids did that. thing is theres more to it than i would have thought back then... mechanical stuff is much more understandable at a low level imo
@ommsterlitz1805
Жыл бұрын
Well this spintronic confuse me even more about how i though electricity worked i prefer the analogy of water going through pipes
This is so incredibly fascinating, and I'd love to play around with this type of stuff. Even just by this video, I feel I got a way better idea of how circuits work! The engineering behind this is so cool!
I didn't even plan on watching anything of this sorts but I loved it!
I sure wish that these were the toys given with a happy meal as I was growing up! These are absolutely brilliant!