Scary 1920's high voltage thing (LOUD ELECTRICAL NOISES)

Ғылым және технология

This is pleasingly freaky. It's a 100 year old piece of electro-medical apparatus that probably predates most electrical appliances.
This thing is NOT child safe (or even adult safe). It has exposed electrical contacts that can deliver a significant electric shock. That's just how they did stuff in that early electrical era.
It needed a few broken solder joints resoldered and an improvised replacement for the old capacitor, but still works. The circuitry is very typical of that era, with a coil and magnetically activated circuit interrupter causing pulses of current through a step up transformer. It's very similar to a violet ray or violet wand unit. The high voltage is used to create ozone by applying it across two pieces of metal mesh on either side of a tubular glass insulator. The resultant capacitively coupled charge causes a corona discharge as it breaks the air molecules apart. In the process of recombining they create ozone and many other exotic air molecules that have a sterilizing and deodorising effect as they revert back to more stable molecules.
Ozone is an essential part of natural outdoor air at very low levels to maintain a level of sterility. It is useful to generate similarly low levels indoors, but this unit produces higher levels that are not recommended for continuous inhalation. A rough rule of thumb is that if you can smell ozone there's too much. Modern low level air cleaning units tend to use a very high airflow to mix the active air molecules into the room.
I was expecting the power consumption to be quite high, but it's actually around 5W and produces a reasonable amount of ozone. I'm not sure how long it is intended to be run for continuously, with it's continually vibrating and sparking electrical contact.
The name written on the bottom of the unit looks like A-Massey or Massoy written with a stylish flourish. It could be the name of the builder or the customer it was being made for.
If you like high voltage stuff then you may find it interesting that Jeff Behary of The Electrotherapy Museum fame is currently trying to rehome the GE 3 million volt lightning lab (He's already got the parts from it). If you can spare a few dollars He would appreciate the support:-
www.gofundme.com/f/Saving-GE-...
If you enjoy these videos you can help support the channel with a dollar for coffee, cookies and random gadgets for disassembly at:- www.bigclive.com/coffee.htm
This also keeps the channel independent of KZread's algorithm quirks, allowing it to be a bit more dangerous and naughty.
#ElectronicsCreators

Пікірлер: 964

  • @JCGver
    @JCGver Жыл бұрын

    That thing is an antenna short of being a sparkgap radio. I can't even begin to imagine just how much electric noise that thing puts out.

  • @ernestsmith3581

    @ernestsmith3581

    Жыл бұрын

    With an antenna connected to the top grid, ground to bottom grid, and a key in the DC input line it would put out a nice fat, buzzy mcw signal near (all around) the frequency your antenna wire is a quarter wave.

  • @stickyfox

    @stickyfox

    Жыл бұрын

    how much would you like?

  • @realblakrawb

    @realblakrawb

    11 ай бұрын

    You could hear it on the mic..... A lot of rf 🤣

  • @grnbrg

    @grnbrg

    11 ай бұрын

    Looks more like a low(ish) voltage tesla coil to me.

  • @charmio

    @charmio

    7 ай бұрын

    ​@@grnbrgIt is kinda similar to a Tesla coil, however the schematic is far closer to a spark gap transmitter. In fact they're practically identical.

  • @gerrybvr
    @gerrybvr Жыл бұрын

    I can remember my mother routinely using one of those pendant plugs for her clothes iron during the 60's. When I asked about the green wire sticking out of it, my older brother informed me "Oh, you don't need that one".

  • @ConstantlyDamaged

    @ConstantlyDamaged

    Жыл бұрын

    /o\

  • @barrieshepherd7694

    @barrieshepherd7694

    Жыл бұрын

    Along with the 'multi' bayonets, with switch on the side, so you could have the light and the iron on at the same time. My grandmother had one permanently installed with a long 'catinerary' wire running across the ceiling mounted clothes lift/rack down the side of the window to her radio.

  • @gerrybvr

    @gerrybvr

    Жыл бұрын

    @@barrieshepherd7694 Yes we had them too, now that you mention it. I should have also mentioned the house, built in the early 50's, originally only had 2 sockets. 15A round pin jobs, one in the kitchen and one in the sitting room and a two way NDZ fuse board for power and lights.

  • @stuartajc8141

    @stuartajc8141

    Жыл бұрын

    @@gerrybvr My Gradparents house had those huge 15A sockets, but also the tiny 2A 3 pin ones IIRC

  • @barrieshepherd7694

    @barrieshepherd7694

    Жыл бұрын

    @@gerrybvr My grandmothers lived 4 miles apart but each had a different main power outlet, one a round centre earth pin with a vertical L and horizontal N rectangular pin in a line (a bit like I O - ) and the other similar but with all the pins in the same orientation but offset ( - O _ ) Both plugs could only connect in a similar way but appliances could not be moved from house to house!

  • @mysock351C
    @mysock351C Жыл бұрын

    6:00 I love how Clive suddenly sounds like his voice is coming off an old shellac record once it turns on. If it doesn't cause everything in the house to stop working, sometimes even permanently, then it isn't vintage (DANGEROUS) enough, and no fun.

  • @MrDuncl

    @MrDuncl

    6 ай бұрын

    I thought it was more like a Dalek.

  • @iangrice329
    @iangrice329 Жыл бұрын

    Bloody hell, that's just the noise you need in a sick room 😮

  • @bigclivedotcom

    @bigclivedotcom

    Жыл бұрын

    It's the sound of miracle healing.

  • @chryseus1331

    @chryseus1331

    Жыл бұрын

    You'll recover faster just to get out of there.

  • @bethaltair812
    @bethaltair812 Жыл бұрын

    Things with lampholder plugs rarely disappoint, especially medical tat!

  • @PerspectiveEngineer

    @PerspectiveEngineer

    Жыл бұрын

    Got a screw in my waffle iron now

  • @rayoflight62

    @rayoflight62

    Жыл бұрын

    At the time, households had light bulbs screwed in a lamp holder with no provisions made for other electrical appliances. Therefore, any electrical device which wasn't a light bulb, had a socket mimicking the screw part of a light bulb, to pick up electricity from the only connection present...

  • @PerspectiveEngineer

    @PerspectiveEngineer

    Жыл бұрын

    @@rayoflight62 boy l used to know this off the top my head... Vibrator, toaster, iron, fan, and waffle iron

  • @hjalfi

    @hjalfi

    Жыл бұрын

    All we need now to complete the collection is a piece of hundred-year old electric medical tat which is either radioactive, or emits X-rays, or both!

  • @tbelding

    @tbelding

    11 ай бұрын

    I bought two lampholder plugs less than a year ago, specifically to plug a LED flood-light into the switched socket.

  • @DIYDaveOK
    @DIYDaveOK Жыл бұрын

    The woodwork craft in that box is wonderful; finger jointed corners, mortised hinges, roundover molding routed into the top, all solid wood. There's less actual wood in most contemporary $1,500 coffee tables sold these days at "Chic Du Jour" trendy furniture house.

  • @wtmayhew

    @wtmayhew

    Жыл бұрын

    Funny you should mention the cabinetry. I was just chatting with friends about a 1923 Crosley model XJ TRF medium wave radio set. The radio cost $65 which is the equivalent of $1,536 US in 2023. The wood cabinet was optional and cost $16 which is the the equivalent of $285 now. So for at least Crosley, the craftsmanship came with a considerable price tag.

  • @wtmayhew

    @wtmayhew

    Жыл бұрын

    I have an old Edison portable cylinder phonograph which was made about 1910. The cabinet on that thing is a similar work of art with a domed wood cover. The mechanism is also hand decorated. The Edison still plays cylinders well and as far as I can tell everything including the leather belt and sapphire stylus is original. I doubt many devices made today will still be working without modifications 113 years from now. Batteries not included … because it doesn’t need them.

  • @gcewing

    @gcewing

    Жыл бұрын

    But then there's the crudely cut out hole in the top panel for the air duct. It looks like they took an existing box made for something else and repurposed it.

  • @JtagSheep

    @JtagSheep

    Жыл бұрын

    @@gcewing It could have been inteded as the box for a music box or a jewelry box if it was repurposed.

  • @Willy_Tepes

    @Willy_Tepes

    Жыл бұрын

    Furniture and houses are literally made of paper and sawdust these days.

  • @G7OEA
    @G7OEA Жыл бұрын

    As someone who lives on the coast of the Irish sea, i can smell it from my house. And now the phrase plankton fart will forever be etched in my brain. Thanks, Clive.

  • @bigclivedotcom

    @bigclivedotcom

    Жыл бұрын

    Enjoy breathing in that fresh bracing plankton-fart.

  • @JackHudler

    @JackHudler

    Жыл бұрын

    Plankton farts is CO2. Humans cannot compete with the ocean for CO2 production.

  • @Loreroth

    @Loreroth

    Жыл бұрын

    The ocean actualy absorbs a significant amount of global co2 and produces oxygen as a result

  • @lesallison9047

    @lesallison9047

    Жыл бұрын

    🤣😂🤣😂

  • @Shaun.Stephens

    @Shaun.Stephens

    Жыл бұрын

    @@JackHudler Actually (phyto)plankton fart is most likely O2. High concentrations of O2 can smell like O3. There is more phytoplankton than there is zooplankton (which produce CO2) so... Well you get it right?

  • @sarkybugger5009
    @sarkybugger5009 Жыл бұрын

    I remember my Dad getting the house rewired in the late 60s. All the old wiring was lead sheathed, rubber insulated stuff, and decidedly dodgy. Round pin sockets in the kitchen and living room, and bugger all anywhere else. I spent hours stripping cable, to make fishing weights from the lead. All the new sockets were a luxury. I got to have a bedside light and a _wireless!_ Not long after that, we got double glazing and central heating. No more Jack Frost on the windows, no going out for more coal in the rain, no more emptying the grate. Kids today... 😉

  • @bigclivedotcom

    @bigclivedotcom

    Жыл бұрын

    Lead sheathed vulcanised india rubber cable. Very brittle these days, and sadly still in daily use in many homes.

  • @Lumibear.

    @Lumibear.

    Жыл бұрын

    This is what always makes me smile when kids say ‘you had it so easy back then when houses were so cheap’, yes, but by todays standards they were also barely functional. We first lived in a rural area in a farmhouse. Things have changed so much so fast over my years it’s beyond comprehension to anyone under 30 that a 50-something English guy could’ve experienced this as a child, they think such things happened over a century ago or something, but: Every week day during winter, I emptied out the ashes and relit the coal fire every morning, which melted the ice that formed inside the single-glazed wooden framed windows (that needed painting every summer), and as well as the house the fire slowly heated the hot water tank, so we were washing in freezing cold water every morning, me still in my bed socks because otherwise the draught under the bathroom door froze my toes on the already cold tiles, then we all helped Mum mop up the puddles forming on the sills before changing out of our heavy night wear and dressing for school under the bed covers. Every time it rained we’d get water seeping in through the cracks around the ill fitting windows and doors, especially if it was windy too, and we’d get a leak in the roof at least every other year, which Dad fixed when the weather allowed. We never had fitted carpets or wallpaper because they’d only rot, if needed, Mum dried the damp out of the rugs and mats in front of the dying fire overnight, and redecorating in summer was painting directly onto the flaking plaster and wood to cover up the water stains and mould. Living by candlelight was common due to a dodgy electrical supply and frequent strikes, and it always went off during a thunderstorm. As we didn’t have gas we’d cook on the coal fire then. We mostly lived off stews & soups in winter because they were relatively easy to make, but I liked hot malted milk and buttered toast the best. Lastly, we didn’t get an inside loo fitted until the mid to late 70s, it was decreed we had to and the council made huge holes in the walls and garden for the outside plumbing, I was about 6 or 7 I think and I recall that my Mum thought it was most unsanitary and was convinced it would leak from beneath it. Now people think a fast food chain running out of gravy is a news worthy crisis.

  • @wafikiri_

    @wafikiri_

    Жыл бұрын

    If you think lead sheathed, rubber-insulated wiring was old . . . I know of a house in my village that still has some early-20th-century silk-wrapped, ceramic-beads shrouded wiring and old-style "really turn" on and off switches. I repaired one of those, that's how I know.

  • @POVwithRC

    @POVwithRC

    Жыл бұрын

    ​​​@@Lumibear.Houses were way cheaper ten and twenty years ago. None of us are complaining about how cheap they were in the bloody neolithic period. Don't get it twisted.

  • @mfbfreak

    @mfbfreak

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@Lumibear. Better a shitty house than no house at all. But also, remember that people who complain about their parents having housing already in their early 20s, they're talking about people who had their first house around 1970 or so. While there were still plenty of dilapidated 19th century houses out there, it also was the big apartment block boom and those 1950s-1970s built apartments were terribly isolated to modern standards - but generally safe, well heatable thanks to pre-oil crisis fuel prices, and most of all very affordable. Finally, even if you have a crappy drafty leaky house, you can do things about it. Isolation is pretty affordable. You just have to put some of your own labor into it and enough people are very willing to DIY if that means they'll have a house of their own.

  • @paulhall9811
    @paulhall9811 Жыл бұрын

    In the mid 80s I used to visit my Great Uncle. His house was a throw back to the 1950s. The central light fitting had so many adapters it looked like it had bakelite and brass hemorrhoids. He still had a gas powered fridge.

  • @zzoinks

    @zzoinks

    8 ай бұрын

    Wow, a gas powered fridge! Now that's amazing

  • @user-jo3gj1jx3e

    @user-jo3gj1jx3e

    8 ай бұрын

    The absorption type of fridge needs a heat source which can be gas, electricity or whatever. Electrolux fridges work on this principle and are popular in caravans because they are silent.@@zzoinks

  • @JohnnyDanger36963

    @JohnnyDanger36963

    7 ай бұрын

    ​@@zzoinksmost rvs have propane gas refrigerator

  • @dashcamandy2242
    @dashcamandy2242 Жыл бұрын

    Video went public 9 minutes ago... Woo-hoo, I'm nice and early to a Big Clive video! The wooden cabinet is a prime example of some unknown workers' craftsmanship; nice handmade joints, deep luscious lacquer. I doubt the builder had the slightest inkling that the device he handcrafted would still look fresh a century later!

  • @bigclivedotcom

    @bigclivedotcom

    Жыл бұрын

    Or that it would be shown on tiny little handheld display units connected to a global network of endless data. Including lots on woodworking.

  • @askjacob

    @askjacob

    Жыл бұрын

    I can only think it did not get used much, as I am sure the ozone would have loved eating up the finish (as well as attack those gold labels too)

  • @SeanBZA
    @SeanBZA Жыл бұрын

    1920 likely would have been 100VDC or 200VDC, with power provided by a nice big mercury arc rectifier at the substation down the street. The substation is across the park from me, with the rooms still there, just empty, that held the mercury arc rectifier, and the second room that held the transformer that provided traction power, using the rectifiers, for the trolley car system that used to run in the city. You still find bits of the special rails in use as mountings for crash barriers, or used as mounting poles, with the cable still in the street as well, too hard to dig up, though a lot got repurposed for AC use, as they used a regular 4 core paper insulated cable already in use in volume, and simply used 2 conductors in parallel for the DC power rail.

  • @miketrissel5494
    @miketrissel5494 Жыл бұрын

    You are a man beyond your years, Clive. I spent a goodly amount of my years, repairing elevators from as early as 1908. There were no schematics, and it took common sense and seat of the pants , digging, to make essential things work. You made a real nice schematic from a mechanical circuit board.😄

  • @bigclivedotcom

    @bigclivedotcom

    Жыл бұрын

    You'll find an old EM lift/elevator slate panel in my videos.

  • @paulperry7091

    @paulperry7091

    4 ай бұрын

    I worked in a building with a very old elevator - it had a wheel with brass contacts to detect when the floors of the building were level with the lift floor. Except when pigeons in the building attic shat on the mechanism, leaving the lift stopping about a foot too high. So the lowest ranking office worker was on call for "pigeon duties".

  • @jeffreymorris1752
    @jeffreymorris1752 Жыл бұрын

    The wonder to me isn't that this old gadget had an effect on your microphone circuit, but that it didn't completely knock that signal into the dirt. It's like 50 EMPs per second or whatever frequency the thing runs at. Modern circuits and error correction are solid af.

  • @Miata822
    @Miata822 Жыл бұрын

    Years ago out at a flea market in the country I saw a beautiful vintage electroshock therapy unit. It came with all the accessories, wires and electrodes, and a lovely instruction manual describing how to treat mania and hysteria with the device. Sometimes I wish that I had bought it, but at the time I didn't trust myself not to try it out on someone. Probably a good choice.

  • @napalmholocaust9093

    @napalmholocaust9093

    Жыл бұрын

    I saw a great bayonet once. I came to the same conclusion 😃

  • @frankowalker4662

    @frankowalker4662

    Жыл бұрын

    Yeah, it's so tempting to something like that. But like you, I'm bound to test it. (probebly 'accidently' on myself. LOL)

  • @MysteriumArcanum

    @MysteriumArcanum

    Жыл бұрын

    As someone who is interested in old medical quack devices I definitely would've bought it

  • @CheradanineZakalwe

    @CheradanineZakalwe

    Жыл бұрын

    My granddad had one. I wonder what happened to it.

  • @frankowalker4662

    @frankowalker4662

    Жыл бұрын

    @@MysteriumArcanum TBH, so would I. Ha ha.

  • @tomvarley4344
    @tomvarley4344 Жыл бұрын

    DC was prevalent at the time, a colleague from the seventies worked as an apprentice in the thirties and accidently switched 1000V DC (which was a supply for industry in Trafford Park) onto the domestic grid around Salford. The result was it burnt out all the radios in the area and cost his company a small fortune.

  • @SteveW139

    @SteveW139

    Жыл бұрын

    An interesting and unusual way of tendering one’s resignation.

  • @beamer.electronics

    @beamer.electronics

    Жыл бұрын

    One apprentice found the following day strapped across the 1KVDC supply. 🤕

  • @tbelding

    @tbelding

    11 ай бұрын

    @@beamer.electronics - trolley tracks.

  • @sometimesleela5947
    @sometimesleela5947 Жыл бұрын

    Ashamed to admit I had to look up "Wireless Accumulator". Apparently before houses were all hard-wired, it was common to have a lead-acid batttery or two for your home electrical needs that you'd take to a garage or hardware store to have charged.

  • @qcsupport2594

    @qcsupport2594

    Жыл бұрын

    Aha - I was imagining it was one of those hand crank radio things.

  • @user-ix1tq1ec9w

    @user-ix1tq1ec9w

    8 ай бұрын

    I was wondering about this, myself

  • @Loscha
    @Loscha Жыл бұрын

    Tbe extreme 50hz voice amplitude modulation makes you sound like the Hurdy Gurdy Man!

  • @bigclivedotcom

    @bigclivedotcom

    Жыл бұрын

    It was a bit fierce.

  • @trustnoone81
    @trustnoone81 Жыл бұрын

    I'm an economist. The next time I have to use the expression "adjusting for inflation" I'll make sure to say "in relative terms to the current era". It just sounds way more majestic!

  • @johnwelbourn3811
    @johnwelbourn3811 Жыл бұрын

    Fantastic Clive, more videos like this please. BTW, as a kid, our house was full of dangerously overloaded lighting sockets, with bakelite plugs. I'd had several potent shocks by the age of ten

  • @penfold7800

    @penfold7800

    Жыл бұрын

    ...and then you became an Electrician!?

  • @micahnightwolf

    @micahnightwolf

    Жыл бұрын

    I got a rather nasty zing off my grandmother's electric alarm clock plug at the ripe old age of two. And Clive was right. Something about being nearly killed by electricity as a child drove my interest in it through the roof later in life.

  • @SUPRAMIKE18

    @SUPRAMIKE18

    Жыл бұрын

    I remember my grandfather cleaning out the attic of old stuff, he found an old electric shaver with a lamp socket plug and screwed it in a socket to test it, the thing revved up higher than any shaver I've ever heard and every light in the house dimmed, the old electric motor blew itself apart before he could turn it off, all this happened in the space of about 3 seconds lmao

  • @Leroys_Stuff

    @Leroys_Stuff

    Жыл бұрын

    Can concur you learn quick

  • @kwacz

    @kwacz

    5 ай бұрын

    @@SUPRAMIKE18 might not have been standard 110 volt ac. could have even been for the old 25 cycle ac or even a lower voltage dc power. some of these motors would run on dc or ac. The dc fed into some homes was a much lower voltage.

  • @ecospider5
    @ecospider5 Жыл бұрын

    It is always amazing to me what electrical stuff they were able to make before 1920. They only barely understood the basic components of resistors, capacitors, coils, and motors. They did a lot with very little. They didn’t really even understand radio communication yet.

  • @WJCTechyman

    @WJCTechyman

    Жыл бұрын

    No, but computers were just coming on the scene then.

  • @ItsMrAssholeToYou

    @ItsMrAssholeToYou

    Жыл бұрын

    Ur mom didn't understand radio communications yet.

  • @ottonormalverbrauch3794

    @ottonormalverbrauch3794

    Жыл бұрын

    See if you can lay a hand on an Ionofane tweeter, it was a plasmatweeter that also produced ozone ( besides the highest and very low distortion high sound frequencies). I had one in the eighties that I donated to a loudspeaker afficianado.

  • @davelowets

    @davelowets

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ottonormalverbrauch3794 Those things stunk the room up with ozone fairly quickly... 🫢

  • @johnrehwinkel7241

    @johnrehwinkel7241

    Жыл бұрын

    I disagree, Hertz had a decent understand of radio communication in the 1880s. By the 1920s, we have vacuum tubes, oscillators, tuned circuits, people understood antennæ, bandwidth considerations, magnetics, well enough to mass produce radio sets that worked well.

  • @totherarf
    @totherarf Жыл бұрын

    Back in the 1920's you would need to buy electrical devices rated for the voltage in your area! In Manchester UK we had a duct system in the pavement with 5 busbars all at different voltages so when you hooked up to them you chose the voltage from any two of the 5 to give the requested voltage! I have heard stories about repair teams walking the streets after some rain had wet the pavement looking for eather dry patches or steam to find where the busbars had warped after faults and were gently touching each other generating heat! They would mark the dry flags with crayon and a repair team would be dispatched. The times have changed a bit! ;o)

  • @g8xft
    @g8xft Жыл бұрын

    I remember seeing double socket adaptors for light sockets - with a bulb and an appliance (like a toaster or iron) in use simultaneously.

  • @napalmholocaust9093

    @napalmholocaust9093

    Жыл бұрын

    I still use them. Let me put the carbon monoxide detector at the ceiling.

  • @lesallison9047

    @lesallison9047

    Жыл бұрын

    I was using one when I needed extra light about 4 years ago, and I still keep it in my useful electronic equipment collection.

  • @Shaun.Stephens

    @Shaun.Stephens

    Жыл бұрын

    Me too. Then again I was a child in the 1960s...

  • @dougbrowning82

    @dougbrowning82

    Жыл бұрын

    You can still buy those socket adapters in Canada. Screws into a light socket, with a socket for the bulb at the other end, and plug sockets on either side.

  • @g8xft

    @g8xft

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Shaun.Stephens me too

  • @pjaj43
    @pjaj43 Жыл бұрын

    My late aunt used to tell the story of when she was doing her teacher training in Eastbourne, she was out walking by the sea when she heard a holiday maker say "Ah yes, you can smell the ozone". What said holiday maker didn't know was that, in those days, Eastbourne discharged its sewage through a big pipe that ran down the beach and into the sea, the open end of which was exposed at low tide. They were stood right by it.

  • @tin2001

    @tin2001

    Жыл бұрын

    That's pretty funny.... Now if you'll excuse me, I feel a big fat ozone coming on.

  • @zzoinks

    @zzoinks

    8 ай бұрын

    Did people swim near it?

  • @darylcheshire1618

    @darylcheshire1618

    7 ай бұрын

    The ozone smell of the sea is probably iodine from drying seaweed.

  • @JohnnyDanger36963

    @JohnnyDanger36963

    7 ай бұрын

    Sewage is the opposite smell as ozone. Ozone us fresh ,not stinky Waves generate ozone.

  • @leybraith3561
    @leybraith3561 Жыл бұрын

    I have vague memories of a Bakelite lampholder double adaptor in our (1960?) dining room overhead hanging lampfitting. We were using 2 lightbulbs in it at the time but I remember being puzzled when my Grandfather said that it used to be used for the iron. That memory probably reinforced by the room's only powerpoint subsequently being the source of my ... First Mains Zap...

  • @tactileslut

    @tactileslut

    Жыл бұрын

    Doesn't everyone remember his first 240v zap and exactly which thing gave it?

  • @zzoinks

    @zzoinks

    8 ай бұрын

    ​@@tactileslutwhat could you get zapped by?

  • @tactileslut

    @tactileslut

    8 ай бұрын

    @@zzoinks Well, zoinks, jinkies, in my case it was the plug of an alarm clock, which had two unsleeved round pins and plugged into an adapter which completely defeated the safety features of the common British plug and socket.

  • @iamjadedhobo
    @iamjadedhobo Жыл бұрын

    The equipment build in that era was almost a work of art in itself. Nothing was mass produced and even a medium sized city could support a local manufacturer.

  • @nickwallette6201

    @nickwallette6201

    Жыл бұрын

    At the equivalent of 500 pounds for a spark generator, you can see why. :-)

  • @imark7777777
    @imark7777777 Жыл бұрын

    I love seeing these weird old pieces of history it's almost the equivalent of real life steampunk, electricity and complex circuitry all made in this wood handcrafted box.

  • @Nono-hk3is
    @Nono-hk3is Жыл бұрын

    I love those box joints! Beats a plastic housing any day of the week. (Aesthetically, at least.)

  • @terryhayward7905
    @terryhayward7905 Жыл бұрын

    The reason for plugging it into the light socket was that in the early days, you were supplied with ONE light free, and almost everything had a light socket connecting plug, even electric irons had them. Fuses back then were not like todays fuses, and they would take a large enough current to be really dangerous.

  • @lukedoherty8062

    @lukedoherty8062

    Жыл бұрын

    To be fair the fuses used then are pretty much the fuses a lot of houses with a Wylex fuse box we’re using till the 1990s and a lot of house probably still have today

  • @OaklynHall
    @OaklynHall Жыл бұрын

    They used to plug electric irons into the light socket too! In a 1920's/30's house the lighting circuit was expected to deliver some serious current compared to the ultra efficient LED lights of today. I've still got an adaptor/splitter that allows you to plug things into the light socket, some of the "lighting adaptors/splitters" even had switches on them so an electrical appliance could be left plugged in (alongside the light bulb or "globe" as it was referred to back then) and switched on when required.

  • @TopEndSpoonie
    @TopEndSpoonie Жыл бұрын

    I think that you should have demonstrated the babies ability to get shocked.

  • @bigclivedotcom

    @bigclivedotcom

    Жыл бұрын

    It's very hard to get hold of babies for these tests.

  • @ABaumstumpf
    @ABaumstumpf Жыл бұрын

    The sound distortion from the coils and arcing - marvelous

  • @Alan2E0KVRKing
    @Alan2E0KVRKing Жыл бұрын

    I remember as a kid in the 70's my Dad plugging the Xmas tree lights from a light fitting. So still being used in the 70's in our house!

  • @bigclivedotcom

    @bigclivedotcom

    Жыл бұрын

    Likewise the 60's.

  • @Chrisamic

    @Chrisamic

    Жыл бұрын

    In the 60's we had a 240V light string on the Christmas tree. The tree was tinsel mind you, one of those horrible silver things. I remember we had one of the light socket double adaptors but they were falling out of use by then.

  • @samuelfellows6923

    @samuelfellows6923

    Жыл бұрын

    Far more easier with the light switch, than bending down the side of the Christmas tree to the switched socket to turn on the fairy lights, nowadays it is done with; a 24h socket timer/a smart socket controlled by a smartphone, an artificial RGB LED tree/fairy lights controlled by a phone

  • @reggiep75
    @reggiep75 Жыл бұрын

    Loud electrical noise always signals entertainment!

  • @jeffdayman8183
    @jeffdayman8183 Жыл бұрын

    You can hear the quality when it's running! It's doing something good, we can tell. 8^) For folks of the time, used to hand cranking cars and hearing them start, this was a familiar kind of feedback from an appliance / tool. Love it, but I am glad I am on this side of the monitor. (I've used up 7 or so of my lives tinkering with old 1930's - 1950's electric stuff already) Cheers! PS the buzzing would make a heck of a cell phone ringtone....

  • @mrpdude84
    @mrpdude84 Жыл бұрын

    Basically a violet wand that discharges across electrodes to create ozone. Cool Wagner's hammer ❤❤

  • @TechGorilla1987
    @TechGorilla1987 Жыл бұрын

    @12:07 - Plankton Fart. That will forever be incorporate in to my lexicon when describing certain people I know.

  • @arthurmann578
    @arthurmann578 Жыл бұрын

    Help your children breath easier while keeping them awake all night from the constant noise! A device that only Helen Keller could love! 😂

  • @jamesgilbart2672
    @jamesgilbart2672 Жыл бұрын

    Fascinating glimpse of 1920s life! It's amusing that high levels of ozone are harmful to the lungs and actually cause the very symptoms the device makers claimed it would treat.

  • @echothehusky
    @echothehusky Жыл бұрын

    Nice unit! I have a vintage home 'tanning' lamp from the same sort of age that gives off alarmingly high levels of UVC and ozone. Certainly not safe for use in the home. (or anywhere else for that matter!) That ozone unit will work on DC, the wireless accumulator being a rechargeable battery. I have the remains of a 110V radio accumulator stored here somewhere.

  • @andygozzo72

    @andygozzo72

    Жыл бұрын

    i have an unused(never been filled) vintage 2v accumulator

  • @echothehusky

    @echothehusky

    Жыл бұрын

    @@andygozzo72 Nice!

  • @gloomyblackfur399
    @gloomyblackfur399 Жыл бұрын

    Wanting "artificial sea air" is so wonderfully British.

  • @memejeff
    @memejeff Жыл бұрын

    Magnificent piece of machinery. Another one that I must hunt for. Its always super fun to see stuff from the old era. It fascinates me since it was only 100 years ago yet info from that era is so diluted.

  • @radio-ged4626
    @radio-ged4626 Жыл бұрын

    Love this. Please do as many early electronic gizmos as possible. The weirder the better. 😮😂❤

  • @cybermaus
    @cybermaus Жыл бұрын

    And to think, in those days all they needed to do to simulate sea air was remove the arsenic laden wallpaper. It was later found the reason people felt so much better after being at the shore for a few days is because they were out of their houses with said wallpaper for a few days.

  • @Ralphs-House
    @Ralphs-House Жыл бұрын

    Oh I love 1920s home gadgets. Always crude in terms of build and incredibly optimistic from any sales people. Built to last, has to look like furniture but reassuringly potentionally lethal. All prerequisites for the modern 'housewife' of the era. Full mains voltage beauty-aids being the most common. My family had a 1920s toaster, meant to plug into the light socket (judging by the plug). We used it only briefly as all the elements were exposed but it looked fantastic.

  • @jensschroder8214
    @jensschroder8214 Жыл бұрын

    finally a device from that time that complies with the safety regulations!

  • @18robsmith
    @18robsmith Жыл бұрын

    Oooooo a combined RFI & ozone generator, just what every home needs.

  • @JPN76
    @JPN76 Жыл бұрын

    The multi strand iron wire core was how they made laminated cores back then. Each strand is laminated, just like the plates in a modern transformer to insulate them. I've made a few replacment cores for old ignition coils, and one of the best things to use is pieces of laminated wire coat hanger. Usually the original is much smaller diameter wire though.

  • @paradiselost9946

    @paradiselost9946

    11 ай бұрын

    welding wire, preferably for oxy welding, and better yet... florists wire, often comes pre wrapped. and is about 0.5mm. the thinner the core wires the faster the field collapses. plates work but arent so good as they still suffer bad eddy current loss. magnetic field in collapsing cuts the length of the core, creating eddy currents in each strand, through its diameter. larger diameter, larger eddy current, and larger resultant lenz law opposing collapse. the plates of a normal transformer are good for 50-60hz. audio transformers get thinner laminations, but also run low flux densities as they want linearity. the induction coils about creating the largest magnetic field possible then "popping" it... ferrites are really good but the choice of material matters. and so does the geometry, there is an ideal length/diameter ratio.

  • @mernokallat645

    @mernokallat645

    11 ай бұрын

    I think even back then they had a high resistance low hysteresis loss alloy, not just regular steel.

  • @darksu6947

    @darksu6947

    8 ай бұрын

    ​@@paradiselost9946You sound like a fun guy to hangout with.

  • @simplybeanjelly
    @simplybeanjelly Жыл бұрын

    I love how mechanical old electronics were. Simple, yet got the job done. Very cool bit of engineering. It's neat seeing stuff from 100 years ago.

  • @d00dEEE
    @d00dEEE Жыл бұрын

    Very nice! You should look into getting one of those shoe store fluoroscopes, from the 1950s and you can generate X-rays to go along with all that ozone.

  • @bigclivedotcom

    @bigclivedotcom

    Жыл бұрын

    I think the UK store Clarksons had those. The only machine they had left when I went there as a kid was their scary "automatic foot gauge". You put your foot into a recess and then metal plates would automatically slide in with a loud motor noise and the result was projected onto the top display. It was a bit scary. The first few times I snatched my foot out of it as it closed.

  • @jonbob2

    @jonbob2

    Жыл бұрын

    Called the "Dana Device". kzread.info/dash/bejne/hpWt06mJp7XOedo.html They still had one in the Durham branch of Clark's in the 90's. I loved it; it felt like stepping into the future when I was a kid.

  • @Graham_Rule
    @Graham_Rule Жыл бұрын

    I love the idea of just plugging this into the light fitting. It reminds me of my mum's "travel iron" that could plug into a standard bayonet fitting (or, via an adapter, even one of those absurd Edison screw light fittings that foreigners sometimes used). Of course, there was an unswitched splitter that allowed you to use the original light bulb alongside the iron. This could also allow my dad to use his electric shaver while illuminating the hotel's room. I doubt that any consideration was given to supply voltage, never mind power factor.

  • @davidg4288

    @davidg4288

    Жыл бұрын

    My grandfather used to live in an old house (in the US) where ALL the electrical receptacles including the ones along the baseboards were Edison sockets that would fit a standard light bulb. There might have been safety covers, most were filled with adapters that would accept a standard 2 prong US plug. No grounding of course. I've not seen anything still wired like that since then.

  • @mernokallat645

    @mernokallat645

    11 ай бұрын

    @@davidg4288 Those sockets were actually invented by William Sawyer and Albon Man in 1878. edison stole the idea from them.

  • @darksu6947

    @darksu6947

    8 ай бұрын

    ​@@mernokallat645Edison was a wonderful person and would have never done such a thing. Just ask Nikola Tesla.

  • @mernokallat645

    @mernokallat645

    8 ай бұрын

    @@darksu6947 You can read about the war of currents on wikipedia. It is well documented that edison electrocuted animals and advocated for using the electric chair as the main method of execution to scare the stupid american public from alternating current. edison was one of the most evil person who ever lived. Just ask any radical animal rights activist. Animals are much more important than humans.

  • @brucepickess8097
    @brucepickess8097 Жыл бұрын

    Yes operates on DC as well as the advertisment said it would operate from a "Wireless Accumulator" . Accumulator (battery) for HT supply rail for radio typically arround 90-120 V DC.😏

  • @ozonesama
    @ozonesama Жыл бұрын

    Another great video on the topic of ozone, with a charming touch of retro-quackery, thank you very much.

  • @samuelfellows6923

    @samuelfellows6923

    Жыл бұрын

    That would be “antique-quackery”

  • @andyreact
    @andyreact Жыл бұрын

    This is fantastic 👍

  • @Ni5ei
    @Ni5ei Жыл бұрын

    These are the kind of things I love to pick up at flea markets. Me: So what is it? Seller: I have no idea, it's got a plug on it. Me: Hm, interesting. Well since we both don't know what it is and what it does I'll take the chance and give you €10 to find out. Seller: Okay, sold! I've bought several weird and medical devices over the years like that.

  • @bigclivedotcom

    @bigclivedotcom

    Жыл бұрын

    My cheapest violet ray unit came from a seller who had tried it out and copped a full-on electric shock as a result. Probably by using the metal rod electrode option.

  • @AMDRADEONRUBY
    @AMDRADEONRUBY Жыл бұрын

    Nice a vintage artificial sea air from my good old friend Clive ! You're the best

  • @tubastuff
    @tubastuff Жыл бұрын

    Reminds me of an old automotive "trembler" coil used on the Model T. Love the box-joint enclosure!

  • @martinploughboy988
    @martinploughboy988 Жыл бұрын

    Many houses in my youth did not have electrical sockets upstairs, but did have electric lights. We, like another has mentioned, had an adaptor so we could use the light at the same time as something else, like a kettle. I also remember buying WWII kit that was vibrator powered. It had a canister, like a big capacitor & contained a system such as in the one described. It was used to generate high voltages for valve equipment. For that reason I suspect the Thing was intended for DC.

  • @dcallan812
    @dcallan812 Жыл бұрын

    has it got a CE mark?? 🤦‍♂🤣🤣🤣🤣 This nice bit of very early electrical equipment would really trigger the Karens out there. I remember my gran using an adaptor to plug in an iron and a light bulb at the same time. into the ceiling lamp holder ⚡ great video 2x👍

  • @bigclivedotcom

    @bigclivedotcom

    Жыл бұрын

    This would be a perfect gift for Karens.

  • @hectorpascal
    @hectorpascal Жыл бұрын

    Local radio hams are gonna REALLY love you powering that up for any length of time. IoM is a very sought after HF DX competition location!

  • @bigclivedotcom

    @bigclivedotcom

    Жыл бұрын

    There's a house one street away that has a huge antenna slung right round the garden perimeter.

  • @kevinthomas1707
    @kevinthomas1707Ай бұрын

    It's fun looking over the past era tech that you come across

  • @frankowalker4662
    @frankowalker4662 Жыл бұрын

    I love old equipment like this. Most of the time they roughly did what they said they did, while looking very ornate in hand crafted cases.

  • @jerril42
    @jerril42 Жыл бұрын

    I'm curious what the RF interference on this thing would be like. Interesting historical device. Thanks Clive.

  • @halbvoll1
    @halbvoll1 Жыл бұрын

    Wow, amazing, thanks for sharing this rare thing with us

  • @bobroberts2371
    @bobroberts2371 Жыл бұрын

    You are missing the point of having the switch where it is. This device also doubles at a magic power saver device

  • @PenryMMJ
    @PenryMMJ Жыл бұрын

    The price might seem expensive, but when you look at the quality of that cabinet (solid wood, hand made dovetail joints, nicely trimmed, French polished) you'd be up around the same price just to make the box today.

  • @ABaumstumpf

    @ABaumstumpf

    Жыл бұрын

    The box was made as cheap as you can get and with modern production that wouldn't even be 20$ worth of box.

  • @madmanmapper
    @madmanmapper Жыл бұрын

    The box looks suspiciously like a small phonograph. Whether it would've been AC or DC in those days really depended on your local power plant. A lot of plants in America and the UK were still running DC. 240v hadn't been standardized yet in the UK. Maybe not even in America. Early days of electricity indeed. Also, yes, MFD or MF stand for MicroFarad (uf).

  • @mernokallat645

    @mernokallat645

    11 ай бұрын

    Even frequencies were not standardized. North America had some 25 Hz power plants. The Ganz Works in Hungary used 42 Hz. And some other power plant supplied 40 Hz in Europe. Some even older carbon arc light circuits used 125 or 133 Hz.

  • @wimwiddershins
    @wimwiddershins Жыл бұрын

    This is brilliant! Zappy fun for all the family.

  • @iftheseoldbeastscouldtalk7796
    @iftheseoldbeastscouldtalk77965 ай бұрын

    You have to love the paper art portraying the "everything branched from the one light socket" period of electronics history before wall sockets were very useful and widely produced.

  • @jeffreyyoung4104
    @jeffreyyoung4104 Жыл бұрын

    Hi Clive! I suspect the switch that turns off the vibrator is for AC current not needing the impulses to run the device. Other than that, it reminds me of my attempt at ozone generation, and I still remember the pungent smell! Once was all I needed to know I didn't want it filling my room with it!

  • @KeritechElectronics
    @KeritechElectronics Жыл бұрын

    The first thing I saw when you lifted the cover were the prochronistic capacitors, haha! Real deal vintage electrical dodginess, looks like the dodgy Chinese stuff you get on Aliexpress has a century old tradition. Electrical safety my ass! On the other hand... it's built in a manner typical of 1920s electrical engineering, or like Glasslinger's retro radios, which is fine in my book. Reverse engineering wise, it's basically a more advanced version of Ruhmkorff's inductor with a separate vibrator relay and step-up transformer.

  • @zh84

    @zh84

    Жыл бұрын

    Today I learned the word "prochronistic" 🙂

  • @stephenreeves9025

    @stephenreeves9025

    Жыл бұрын

    @@zh84 it is a word "belonging to a later time" isn't it

  • @mernokallat645

    @mernokallat645

    11 ай бұрын

    Its not a Ruhmkorff inductor. A Ruhmkorff inductor works like the igniton coil. This uses 2 resonant LC circuits, it a Tesla coil. I disagree with your comparison to aliexpress. This is everal orders of magnitude safer than most chinese phone chargers or extension cords sold cheaply.

  • @hinspect
    @hinspect Жыл бұрын

    Great Video! When first starting Electronics school, I made a negative ion generator circuit with an ignition coil from an old Chevrolet!

  • @macgvrs
    @macgvrs Жыл бұрын

    A fascinating little machine. It is scary how they did things back then. Sadly, it wasn't limited to back then. I saw an older home around the late 80's, I think, but I saw an outlet adapter screwed into a light socket with extension cords going in all directions. I couldn't believe it. I was stunned.

  • @markboyle9941
    @markboyle9941 Жыл бұрын

    The lamp socket reminded me of my grandmother using an electric iron plugged into the lamp socket! She even had a system where the upstairs lights had to be plugged into a socket downstairs (two round prongs of course, all bakelite) to get power. My grandad had wired the house when they first got electricity (100 vdc) from a local power station. This remained in situ until she died in the mid 90s!!! Amazing it never went on fire...

  • @dennis-nz5im

    @dennis-nz5im

    Жыл бұрын

    No wireless accumulator?

  • @markboyle9941

    @markboyle9941

    Жыл бұрын

    @@dennis-nz5im sadly not. The shop that sold those was long gone by the 80's and she always rented a TV from Radio Rentals. There was a big Murphy radiogram in the front room though.

  • @napalmholocaust9093
    @napalmholocaust9093 Жыл бұрын

    500 bucks no doubt. Even on the bottom where a secondary wood would be used, it is still mahogany.

  • @davida1hiwaaynet
    @davida1hiwaaynet Жыл бұрын

    Fascinating piece of kit! It sure seems to work well! When it comes to 100 year old electrical items, I will keep to my antique motors and refrigeration!

  • @christopherdesbaux5950
    @christopherdesbaux5950 Жыл бұрын

    This is my favorite video so far, I wish I could like it twice!

  • @tonyweavers4292
    @tonyweavers4292 Жыл бұрын

    They made things to last in those days.

  • @paulmurgatroyd6372

    @paulmurgatroyd6372

    Жыл бұрын

    Even the bad things.

  • @lukahierl9857

    @lukahierl9857

    Жыл бұрын

    The devices lasted, the humans not so much

  • @paulmurgatroyd6372

    @paulmurgatroyd6372

    Жыл бұрын

    @@lukahierl9857 Because of the devices. 😄

  • @ernestsmith3581

    @ernestsmith3581

    Жыл бұрын

    Recaping needed. Clearly some components are just problematic.

  • @colday74
    @colday74 Жыл бұрын

    Looking at the flyer at the beginning, it says Connect to electric light or 'wireless accumulator'. Clive, what is a wireless accumulator and why haven't you taken one apart yet?

  • @bigclivedotcom

    @bigclivedotcom

    Жыл бұрын

    Just a fancy name for a battery.

  • @georgescott6967

    @georgescott6967

    Жыл бұрын

    wireless accumulator = radio battery

  • @pnadk
    @pnadk Жыл бұрын

    I love to see vintage electronics. Very interesting device and advertisement.

  • @maj1285
    @maj128511 ай бұрын

    I wish you have a follow up video on such device and its effect in modern radio equipment. For some reasons, vintage electrical equipment looked creepy, even haunted.

  • @McTroyd
    @McTroyd Жыл бұрын

    Speaking of ham radio, that could easily serve as a spark gap transmitter. You'd be simultaneously pounced by every radio regulatory authority in the entire planet -- I think the Ofcom is headed your way now -- but in a pinch, it would work for Morse code. The preppers would be proud. 👍

  • @FatNorthernBigot
    @FatNorthernBigot Жыл бұрын

    Does it also banish "bad humours" and the "vapours"? 😂 If I remember correctly an ozone generator is great for removing the smell of erm... Jamaican organic materials.

  • @saalkz.a.9715
    @saalkz.a.9715 Жыл бұрын

    Mmmm, a fresh breeze of planktonfart 👾💨 😂

  • @ebradley2357
    @ebradley235711 ай бұрын

    I came here for the loud electrical noise and Clive did not disappoint!

  • @jackalovski1
    @jackalovski1 Жыл бұрын

    I would love to see you try and make one of these yourself using modern components

  • @davidg4288

    @davidg4288

    Жыл бұрын

    I kind of did make one inadvertently. I made a "plasma globe" out of an incandescent light bulb and some high voltage, I had to try several clear bulbs to find one with the right gas in it, probably argon. I produced the high voltage using a DC power supply, an automotive ignition module, and a flyback transformer (aka line output transformer). It looks really good but produces too much ozone so I can't leave it on long.

  • @johndododoe1411

    @johndododoe1411

    Жыл бұрын

    He didm years ago. His design was essentially a diode-capacitor voltage multiplier pumped by the mains frequency . Very simple solid state design with no coils or transistors .

  • @ehsnils
    @ehsnils Жыл бұрын

    A brave man powering up a high voltage device from the 1920's.

  • @JHX1
    @JHX1 Жыл бұрын

    Wow, that is quite a lot of money for back then, could have been a nice trip and stay at the sea.. And.. "the Sickroom" got to love it!

  • @kenw.1112
    @kenw.111211 ай бұрын

    Love your videos BigClive! ❤😊

  • @theelmonk
    @theelmonk Жыл бұрын

    Lovely! |I've got a violet wand of similar vintage. Where did you find it ?

  • @bigclivedotcom

    @bigclivedotcom

    Жыл бұрын

    This one came from eBay a while ago.

  • @markfergerson2145
    @markfergerson2145 Жыл бұрын

    Almost exactly the same circuit as the “Violet Ray” device I bought at a flea market some years back. Only difference is that the high voltage transformer is built into a sort of fat wand with a heavy cloth wrapped rubber insulated cord going back to the vibrator and capacitor. It originally came with a set of single electrode gas filled tubes (which I don’t have) and it generates quite a bit of ozone.

  • @bigclivedotcom

    @bigclivedotcom

    Жыл бұрын

    If you look on eBay for darsonval you can maybe find a newer version with glass electrodes that may be compatible.

  • @MrCobo04
    @MrCobo04 Жыл бұрын

    I can remember seeing my granny ironing with her ‘new’ electric iron plugged into light socket

  • @bobair2
    @bobair2 Жыл бұрын

    Plankton fart probably! I love your description of seaside atmosphere! Ozone has it's use. Thanks Clive.

  • @g8xft
    @g8xft Жыл бұрын

    Interesting to see no interlock to prevent it running when open.

  • @wisher21uk
    @wisher21uk Жыл бұрын

    Fantastic Clive it’s in good condition too love it 😊

  • @TheLowerman
    @TheLowerman Жыл бұрын

    Really like the reviews of vintage electronics

  • @stagggerlee
    @stagggerlee Жыл бұрын

    Very cool! More when you can? Thanks for another great video!

  • @P61guy61
    @P61guy61 Жыл бұрын

    Excellent. Thanks

  • @MrTconquest
    @MrTconquest Жыл бұрын

    What a beautiful instrument

  • @snakezdewiggle6084
    @snakezdewiggle6084 Жыл бұрын

    Cheerz Clive, a bit of a blast from the past. Still have my Ceiling Lamp Double Adapters. A lamp and clothing iron. But only arfter the 7 o'clock news on the old wireless. ;)

  • @marcogenovesi8570
    @marcogenovesi8570 Жыл бұрын

    It's fun to explore old electrical devices, they are ofthen sketchy and whimsical