I like the smell of ozone. It's really fresh, like when there's a strong storm close by that smells of ozone. It's always a great time to go outside with a metal rod and collect electrons for later use.
You are a big reason I got an Ozone generator. And I have learned a lot about resistors, bridge rectifiers, and alot about how led lights work and how lighting was done in the past.
I worked in home restoration (water, fire, mold, and biohazard remediation) and I'm repeatedly amazed at how small super high output ozone generators have become. We had been using one with electrodes sandwiching six inch glass tubes, with the whole apparatus being about 6 cubic feet. When I left, the company I was working for was all aflutter about getting one the size of a toaster, and now this.
I have one of these. They really do produce a metric ASS LOAD of ozone in seconds with both plates running. You definitely do not want to be in the same room. I bought it to cure a flea infestation in a house I moved into. Fixed the problem within a week.
Yep, I have one in a plastic box with a 4" fan and it is certainly an efficient way of getting odours out of a car. I leave it running for 10 minutes with the air-con on recirc and that's all it needs (well apart from the half hour airing out afterwards).
Yup, I have one that lives in a cardboard box unused because it generates _so much ozone_ . I powered it up initially and ran it for about 30 seconds outside on my patio, and it took several minutes for the ozone smell to dissipate.
@@Wirralguy your car has an ozone generator built into the air vents to prevent mold otherwise it would smell real bad after a while (it isn't perfect) BMW have the best ones.
Our local farmer uses a box with TWO of those (and a 120mm p.c. fan) to produce enough ozone to fumigate barns / storage areas. He finds it excellent for residue-free control of everything from fungi / moulds to the "larger" pests - particularly cockroaches. They may be immune from everything else, but ozone does them in quickly and efficiently. Also great for reducing the pong in the milking parlour during quiet times (and of course is a great sanitising agent!)
I've often wondered if the very enhanced oxidation potential of ozone (in combination with the usual Aussie hot, dry summer weather) might increase the risk of spontaneous combustion in e.g. silage? Since most of the heat's produced by microbial metabolism (and the ozone kills off the microbes), the reduction in local heat generation might offset the oxidiser effect of the ozone? Almost worth a small (undergrad. level) research project perhaps?
The other day they were showing a post office warehouse on the TV, it was about the combined effect of lock down and Christmas season coming and basically they were a bit overwhelmed with packages. The warehouse manager was being interviewed and he was talking very calmly and seriously. At the same time you could see packages occasionally flying in the background as employees were supposedly "sorting" them :D
I've been using O3 for refreshing my house for years. My first generator involved a 2 kilo neon transformer, metal windows screen and a Prego sauce jar. Ghetto as, but it really worked. A timer is a must. O3 is not safe for pets and people.
That thing is belting out RF, I'm surprised the camera didn't shut down in protest. I bet there were people in Ireland hitting their TVs trying to work out why the image had just vanished ;-) Can't imagine it was subjected to any safety tests.
@@KetansaCreatesArt 'honey why is our electric bill, uh. How do you say, a a stack of with a bunch of zeroes on it?' '😬heating maybe _idk the always on ozone generator maybe, idk._
I used one of these to replace the failed 60hz AC HV transformer in my old commercial ozone generator. 85 Watts! into 4 3x5 inch double sided stainless mesh on ceramic plates. (I binned the originals) It will run you out of the room in a couple of min. Good thing it has a timer. My generator had originally a .5A breaker on the HV side. I had to change it to a 1A since its pulling 85 watts now. Mine seems to be one power level down from the one that you have, judging from the length of the heat sink. the 40 W one has a heat sink about 1/2 the length of the case. Mine is about 80% of the length of the case. Yours is the big dog!
I have 2 of those mounted on a board with a fan blowing across them, They produce an enormous amount of ozone. On the side of the units they suggest 12g/H, but who know how much they are really producing, all I know is its a lot. For removing cigarette smells from houses or urine smells from old public toilets it does an amazing job.
Hey BigClide, thanks for that video. I bought that same Ozone-nator, however mine was advertised as a 12V device. Thanks to you, I opened it up and saw, a 400V Cap, which lead me to belive it was a 230V generator. Hooked it up to mains voltage, ducked for cover, turned it on and it worked. But it suffered the same damage as yours, top plate cracked. Thanks again, have a good one.
It's likely ultrasonic noise that we can't hear but it drives the microphone absolutely mad with interference, a few people have tried to exploit that to make microphone jammers
About 2 years ago I assembled the exact same unit in a small wooden box with a fan and timer and I do use it from time to time to sterilise rooms in my house. A great Covid killer!
@@TheDarkness344 yah most places are 240... That still doesnt explain how or why you have 4000v coming through a cellphone wire. if it was just discharging a capacitor then maybe. but just saying the circuit makes magic.
@@TheDarkness344 I love how your the one to speak up. 4000v from a 240v source with no step up transformer. yah its the circuit. still nice to know the UK still in a fairytale
I couldn't make heads or tails of this schematic. Thank you for the explanation. It's a clever circuit, very good at what it does. I have one of these ozone generators (albeit it runs on 12V, but I imagine it works largely the same), and it indeed uses a lot of power, some 80W in my case. I imagine I could put it in an old PC PSU case for insulation, fanning and cooling.
Watching this stuff never gets old for me. I remember as a kid taking random stuff apart but ultimately being baffled by this or that. These journeys are way better because I have a guide! :D
Same here! Man, wouldn't it have been absolutely wild to have had access to resources like Big Clive, AvE, and EEVblog (among many others excellent engineering-focused channels) when we were kids?? I can't imagine how different things would be. I wanted to get into so many technical projects and concepts growing up, but there was no Big Clive a few mouse clicks away to explain all this stuff in a clear way. I hope (but I'm sure it's futile) kids today on some level realize how lucky they are. I sure realize and appreciate how lucky I am, even as a dude in his early 40s, to be able to tap into the expertise and mastery that giants like Big Clive altruistically provide. Bottom line, it's just awesome! Not much more to say. Appreciate your comment so much @stridermt2k. Take care
Finally :D 7 months ago I searched through all your creations of discreation to identify the blown up parts in what used to be a key element for my homemade diesel particle filter reversing process.( Im not a big fan of car brand workshop rules) Since I did not find it here, I put it on the "see u later shelf" and guessed that it was just a matter of time. At least for once or so, I was correct and finally have identified the blasted part. Thank you so much ! =) The story may easily ended here, but things are not always as easy as expected. Wise from the blast in my past, before powerup I measured fwV of the NPNs whom probably was the main cause rather than collaterals, and I had offcourse only some smaller MJE13005 as a somewhat almost nearby complimentary. But I have like a ton, or at least a small bag full of IRF 740 "N" mosfets, and I cant really see why they wont do the job just as good. But something one not can see, can just as well only be an issue regarded blured vision from these marvelous bewildered beverages one may randomly endeavour. I have also a lot of the bigger IRFP460 that could be tried, but my main consern is to rather understand whats going to happen, rather than just learn by "Trial and terror" so my question for you is that if I am missing some details, could you please give a minute and mention what I may ignore, then it would be just as highly appreciated by me as probably my dear tenant, whom gets unusually scared everytime the main fuses randomly blow by complete mysterious manners. Best regards Eivind.
Thanks for the review. It started at 130 Watts and crept up to above 161 within a few seconds. No doubt if you had left it on much longer it would have gone up in smoke.
Just took delivery of one of these... Featuring the classic black as L and red as N... Can confirm RCD in our consumer unit is functioning correctly...
Hi Clive. I've had a pair of these for well over a year. One 120v🇨🇦 and one 12v. I didn't like them being out in the open so I made square glass "tubes" for them and added small fans. If odour is any indicator, the 120v one produces more ozone than my small (-ish) commercial unit! I haven't had the right testing equipment, but I recently bought some. Now all I have to do is figure out where I put the things! They were on display (they sat on a shelf near my work table), but I think I must have moved them to storage. Now they may never be found. Don't store things unless it's in translucent plastic containers! Of course after watching this, I'm going to have to waddle through the snow into my storage and try and find them. Sigh. I don't know whether to curse you or thank you for the renewed interest. I think thank you is probably the strongest and most accurate at the moment. Until I land in the snow! 🤣
Found one with 2x3.5g plates that seems to have a socket to facilitate replacing the plates and spares available on AliExpress. Ordered and fingers crossed it'll survive shipping - thanks for the review!
i use the Enclosed fan types for my workshop, i modded mine with 4 units and placed em in a 220mm computer fans 2 at front 2 at back, these do work very well for dirty shops to get the smell out, sadly it does perish my belts and rubber seals of my doors. also these units are built to place into Used cars to "remove" that cigarette smell. keep in note! these units the one you bought has a VERY low life span, one plate lasts only 100 hours tops before they burn out. is why there cheap cause you need to replace em after the time is met.
@@paolom.6011 to answer that question, ozone O3 is a gas byproduct, so if the object is sealed or wrapped in a airtight bag or non permissible materials it should be fine. its just hard as these things spew alot of this gas and is impossible to cover or remember what objects that can get affected by it prior to use. so far i learnt this too late and alot of my power cables and rubber seals in my machines are damaged cause the treatments. so careful running these if ya can and remove any items that maybe sensitive to the Ozone if ya can if possible
My first job in 1974 at Mullard Research labs was screen printing conductive inks on ceramic substrate material. The ink was fired like a pottery glaze at high temperature.
@@whoeveriam0iam14222 because it's unheard of clive doing stuff very late (relative to his timezone, of course) and why would he have to build it at the same time when ex&fi is awake? ^^
I've used a portable ozone generator that looks like that but in a case with a fane to kill the odors in rooms and cars. Also works good to kill off mold in basements. Wipes out many bugs as well.
Clive thank You for taking one of those apart. I got one and was wondering what was under the cover. I found that when you have a fab blowing air over the plates that run somewhat more on the quiet side. I would like you to try and see if with a fan the HPPI would read the same or if it will change the readings or not.
Crazy how much power they are putting through it - wonder how long you could run it for before it self destructs? More than 5 mins? Wonder what the power consumption levels off at it was still ramping up when you pulled the plug.
I have one exactly like that, it works fine after I installed it inside a big steel case for a server power supply. Conveniently it already has the fans to run air through.
Several mechanisms have been suggested for the bactericidal action of ionizers including electrical phenomena, effects of negative and positive ions and electrostatic repulsion. Negative and positive ions have indeed been shown to have bactericidal effects. In addition, since ozone is generated along with ions, these may contribute to the bacterial killing. In this study, we used a newly developed ionizer, which generates a relatively low concentration of ozone, to determine whether its effect on bacterial cells were due to ions or ozone, and, if ions, how the ions exerted their effects. Results The effect of ions on bacterial killing was compared with that of the ozone produced using an ion trap to remove the ions. The ionizer had the ability to kill the bacteria, and ion capture dramatically reduced its bactericidal effect, indicating that the ozone generated had little or no bactericidal effect under these conditions, and the ions produced were responsible for almost all the bacterial killing. Operation of the ionizer increased the level of 8-oxo-dG, a marker of oxidative DNA damage, and decreased aconitase activity, which is known to be sensitive to ROS. The ionizer further affected the adenylate energy charge of bacterial cells. Removal of the ions with the ion trap greatly reduced all these effects. Conclusion These results indicate that negative and positive ions generated by the ionizer are responsible for inducing oxidative stress and so reducing bacterial survival.
I've had two of these and one of them was broken from the box. Most terrifying chinese things I've ever had. To be fair one of them did work for a while.
4 роки тому+1
I have two of those, and paired with an oscilating fan they work remarkably well
Just a warning, ozone is VERY dangerous in even moderatly low concentrations. I use mine to help remove the smell when a rodent has died and i cannot retreive the carcass.
Bought a pair of these type a few years ago, have them in a box with a fan. Extremely powerful as a "ozone shock" generator have sanitized more than one car with it. Got a sketchy video on the tube about that.
Oh FUCK YEAH, I have 4 of these to plan to build my own o-zone generator from them! I work in laundry plant and we bought one 900$ portable ozone generator and one 4000$ ozonating locker to dessinfect all what comes for cleaning, and they all use these! My mate hooked one with a compressor and infuses 15 ton of water in his indoor pool with it. I NEED to build one of these to start professional washing laundry linen with ozone. Very excited for this video!
I bought the same module about a year and half ago from Amazon for a project (had to return it 3 times too as each one arrived with a busted top ceramic plate) but eventually got one that wasn't cracked. Was only 8 pounds when i bought mine too pre coof... the ceramic plates are very very fragile... any slight bending on the metal backing substrate will crack them as they are bonded on with some thermal type goop. I consider myself sufficiently clued up with electronics and safety to not hurt myself but was actually a little surprised how easy it was to buy such a thing that can easily cause severe harm from a mainstream website. Probably since the coof people have been buying more of these types of things as I've seen these things advertised as antiviral etc? I think you covered it really but they will overheat and die without proper cooling, electrical safety is non existent unless designed into a suitable project, the ozone emission is insane, easily very bad for your respiratory system if you don't know what you are doing.
without having any specific knowledge i would hazard a guess at no. There will be a limit at how quickly the air can be replenished. Otherwise you will run out of O2 to convert into O3. Wish I knew how to do subscript.
@@suprlite its 50hz not 60 as i live in the uk and measured the mains before it says 50hz lol 100hz through the bench as it doubles when it passes through something its sitting on also known as vibration . n Clive has 50hz as i seen it in most of his videos on the meter . no frustration here just letting ya know . yh u may get 60hz in the uk but i never herd that before
The conductive coating is probably metalization. Typically it will be molybdenum and some other metals to form an alloy that can then be deposited on the ceramic.
Black coating is most likely glaze (possibly quartz based) and solder is most likely zinc or even ZAMAK based solder. at these power levels you can get to temperatures that would soften even normal (soda-lime) glass.
I mean they described it as a a DIY device, and it doesn't have a plug on it so I'd imagine it was implied that it needs a fan in an enclosure to be used properly. presumably to build your own ozone generator
The amount of power that thing dissipates is immense though, I wonder what airflow is needed to keep it cool, and how much it pulls with both plate sets
@@bigclivedotcom I know that some 'medicinal herb growers' sometimes put a few ozone generators inside their fan ducting to help reduce any unwanted odours. 👍 Given the fact that most of them also steal the electricity, the insane power consumption wouldn't be such a worry 😂
Those produce HUGE amount of ozone when new but may not last too long (especially in high ozone level environment). My diy sterilizer cabinet has one that is pretty worn out and does not produce that much ozone. It needs a replacement unit any day (that I have a few). Ozone is great for sterilizing stuff like FFP2/FFP3 masks that can be sometimes hard to find or at least very costly. I never knew last year how much FFP2/FFP3 respirators I'd be using in a daily life. For any DIY solution, make sure you know what you're doing. Studies indicate a need for enough dose + humidity. If you put way too much ozone, rubber bands will fall of respirators and the screws will oxidize badly. Don't ask how I know, just debug better your software :)
@@termivan The question is how long will it last. My 65 liter cabinet has had one from the beginning of the pandemic and it is still going on well. I've used levels of about 70-150ppm for about 1-2 hours weekly or twice a week. It runs with PID controll and the duty cycle is probably something like 25%. (It just tops up ozone when it is used or decomposes and more at the start of cycle. One with 3 ozone generating plates is overly powerfull for that) Plenty of use hours and I have a spare at hand for the day it will fail. The generator is inside cabinet ie. not just generating ozone that is blown away but exposed to ozone all the time. It still goes strong but produces less ozone (I'd guess like half) than when it was new. It has taken some very high level cycles though, like way over 2500ppm that already corrodes metals like screq heads visibly. (no way to say how high, I can measure only up to 2500ppm) This can give you some idea of what kind of abuse it has taken.
plates show a condenser effect. As it removed 2 plates, the resonance frequency deteriorated and power consumption increased. If he worked a little more, it would burn. It normally draws power due to 80w. Its approximate frequency is between 15-25 kHz. dielectric plates are broken. There was a short circuit and the power continued to increase
I think the ozone capacity of that thing is probably measured in 100's of cubic feet per minute, and the real question is how long does it take to get to a lethal concentration in a typical room after someone powers it up. And the irony is thats actually not a joke. It probably could kill you after a while. Edit: Puts out 24g/h, which means in a typical room it wont take long to get to a lethal concentration.
If I had to guess, its probably a copy of a generator used in either a large HVAC system or some form of industrial process or sterilization unit, which just makes it all that much more terrifying, and desirable to obtain.
@@mysock351C If you figure a 3m x 3m x 3m room, roughly 10ft cube, would contain 27m^3 of air. Looks like std air has a density around 1.204kg/m^3 so 32.5kg of air, or 32500g. If we take your 24g / 32500g we get 0.000738, or a concentration of 738ppm! The CDC estimates that 50ppm for 60min would be lethal to humans, and the recommended exposure limit for an hour is 1ppm. I don't blame Clive for evacuating.
Wonder if you could regulate these with a simple dimmer? The power factor is almost unity and the current isn't high. Maybe a circuit with a simple relay could be used to regulate them too. Might try an build a PWM triac controller if that would work best.
16:04 anyone know what the component is at the top right hand corner; running upwards, vertically from the left leg of the green capacitor. (Curious as, when I opened up a knackered one, this glass shrouded component was properly burnt out) Cheers
These things are awesome, but they come broken 40% of the time. Also, in my experience the transformers die prematurely, but a fan keeping them cool helps some. Edit: So there's more than a xformer in there? Interesting. Mine are all potted up.
so would it be a bad thing to make a bunch of solar powered ozone generators and leave them in areas where the ozone layer is thin so theres some naturally powered man assisted replacements going on?
Simple! :) Can't you measure inductance to get the ratio of the windings in the transformer? I could be wrong thought. How would these plates perform on the normal voltage multiplier ladders? For DIYing if nothing else.
Wish me luck! I found this video while doing research. I have a commercial ozone generator, and it's not working right. It's very simple, and I think it just needs a new capacitor. Problem is, I don't know the specs on it, and the existing capacitor is potted in a black epoxy. I'll test it, and if it fails, tear it apart to attempt to find the numbers.
I brought a Chineseium ozone generator yesterday with this cheap HV unit in it. Opened the cardboard delivery box, and a piece of wire fell out of the enclosure. The combined switched IEC inlet was potted with silicone, and what they called earth bonding to chassis was a blue neutral wire that was extremely dangerously spot welded and glued to the stainless steel enclosure
They often fail to follow any wiring colour standard. I'm surprised the earth was connected at all. If it's a fused plug, check the fuse is even in circuit.
@@bigclivedotcom what makes it even better is that since adopting it, I've never once had to explain what it is so either your channel is so well known in our circles that it's becoming a standard or it's so obvious that it should be a standard - the BC rectifier
Thanks Clive, I am glad you requested a refund for something so dangerous. It should as you said have a case and a fan and of course be packaged so much better than just a box.
@@SG-ps1sq oh okay i didn’t know he was trolling or deleting any comments. So I guess I won’t be using this in my house. I thought it might help get rid of the steam from showering or something.
@@Alexander_l322 As the donald says big dumps... (i have an auto-timer wich triggers it for 30 seconds after the light goes off. the ozone is VERY strong.)
@@SG-ps1sq be assured I am not trolling, it works perfect against odors and potential mold. But as stated, you should wire it that is not operation while somebody is inside. Since there is no daylight it is an easy task: 30s on after the light has been switched off.
if you want these to last for a long time in the UK it's worth putting them on an autotransformer to step the voltage down to 220V. They don't last very long at all when on a 250V supply.
can you please start putting the full part list in the description of you videos. what is the watt of those resistor and voltage of 2.2nf and 10nf capacitors? number of turns around that ferrite core and wire gage. also what is the wire gage of the primary winding of the transformer. with these informations we could actually reveres engineer it. thanks .
The GOOD sellers list these as a replacement plate for the Ozone generators that are in the box with fan and timer. Bad sellers sell them claiming it can be used as it is,which is totally🚫 UNSAFE...!🚫
Really nice work, as always :) One question, if the circuit is reminescent of those of halogen lamp drivers, and it is self oscillating at high frequencies do you think it would be possible to dim the power via a Leading-Edge Dimmer circuit? Or do you think it would mess up with the self starting oscillation? My guess is that it should be possible down to a certain threshold where the circuit would not self start (and I wonder what would happen there, if there would be some kind of damage). Cheers!
I know your question wasn't directed towards me, but I hope you find my answer helpful. I'd use a trailing-edge dimmer with that circuit. A leading-edge dimmer would pose additional stress to the circuit's capacitors.
@@mattmoreira210 Hey Matheus, thank you very much. If that is so, do you thing this circuit could be dimmed somehow? Maybe using a simple transformer would be the simplest option right?
These really are intended as components for replacements in existing high powered ozone generators or to build your own around. Yep they do need a fan. To move the ozone around about the room. They should clearly state that these things are intended as replacement parts. That I suppose you could DIY around.
Ozone... isnt it that smell i used to get from the model railway as a kid when the engine is just about to move after buzzing and humming at the low voltage ? rgds Don
Just one question. Why on earth does it use 150 watts? It has to be made for warehouse disinfection or something. It will fill a room with ozone in a few minutes.
I like the smell of ozone. It's really fresh, like when there's a strong storm close by that smells of ozone. It's always a great time to go outside with a metal rod and collect electrons for later use.
Especially if you ignore that it's poisonous lol
@@gs425 I don't think the ozone is the danger here...
It's not so great in this kind of quantities. Smells awesome outside when naturally produced, but holy crap it stinks when there's a lot.
I love the smell of old skool copiers and model trains creating ozone. Maybe not healthy but a Corona discharge of ozone keeps the viruses away 😎
That's some good old fashioned pixie wrangling like they did in the old days.
Even the regulars here can benefit from your knowledge....repetition makes perfection.
You are a big reason I got an Ozone generator. And I have learned a lot about resistors, bridge rectifiers, and alot about how led lights work and how lighting was done in the past.
I worked in home restoration (water, fire, mold, and biohazard remediation) and I'm repeatedly amazed at how small super high output ozone generators have become. We had been using one with electrodes sandwiching six inch glass tubes, with the whole apparatus being about 6 cubic feet. When I left, the company I was working for was all aflutter about getting one the size of a toaster, and now this.
I have one of these.
They really do produce a metric ASS LOAD of ozone in seconds with both plates running. You definitely do not want to be in the same room. I bought it to cure a flea infestation in a house I moved into. Fixed the problem within a week.
Yep, I have one in a plastic box with a 4" fan and it is certainly an efficient way of getting odours out of a car. I leave it running for 10 minutes with the air-con on recirc and that's all it needs (well apart from the half hour airing out afterwards).
Interesting use to kill a flea infestation... kinda makes sense. I got me thinking to deal with bugs in my home office. Pretty attractive idea.
Yup, I have one that lives in a cardboard box unused because it generates _so much ozone_ . I powered it up initially and ran it for about 30 seconds outside on my patio, and it took several minutes for the ozone smell to dissipate.
@@Wirralguy your car has an ozone generator built into the air vents to prevent mold otherwise it would smell real bad after a while (it isn't perfect) BMW have the best ones.
@@stonedsavage7814 very few if any cars have that system.
Our local farmer uses a box with TWO of those (and a 120mm p.c. fan) to produce enough ozone to fumigate barns / storage areas. He finds it excellent for residue-free control of everything from fungi / moulds to the "larger" pests - particularly cockroaches. They may be immune from everything else, but ozone does them in quickly and efficiently. Also great for reducing the pong in the milking parlour during quiet times (and of course is a great sanitising agent!)
I've often wondered if the very enhanced oxidation potential of ozone (in combination with the usual Aussie hot, dry summer weather) might increase the risk of spontaneous combustion in e.g. silage? Since most of the heat's produced by microbial metabolism (and the ozone kills off the microbes), the reduction in local heat generation might offset the oxidiser effect of the ozone? Almost worth a small (undergrad. level) research project perhaps?
It was probably shipped air-mail. That's when it flies through the air into the shipping bin.
On a 737 Max. Those landings can be a little rough.
Red Squirrel yikes
The other day they were showing a post office warehouse on the TV, it was about the combined effect of lock down and Christmas season coming and basically they were a bit overwhelmed with packages. The warehouse manager was being interviewed and he was talking very calmly and seriously. At the same time you could see packages occasionally flying in the background as employees were supposedly "sorting" them :D
@@MrJef06 :D
“Is it a good idea? Nope. Am I gonna do it anyway? Yes.”
Story of my life.
is this plate going to hold a charge. clive: proceed to touching plate.
I've been using O3 for refreshing my house for years. My first generator involved a 2 kilo neon transformer, metal windows screen and a Prego sauce jar. Ghetto as, but it really worked. A timer is a must. O3 is not safe for pets and people.
1:53: That quote sums up this channel. "Is this a good idea? No. Am I going to do it anyways? Yes."
That's why we're here!
That and BigClive being one of the few people who would be excited to buy a broken product!
Conspiracy Theory UA-camrs: ?????
Hey Guys, let me tel you how Homer Simpson is based on Big Clive and how this makes sense.
?????
Profit!!!
I feel like this comment is underrated
he’s less noisy than Electroboom!
Ah yes, the classic method of checking if something has a charge by tapping it with your fingers :)
Its not stupid if it works!
The most convenient and cheap tool, your finger and in some cases your life
Even if something goes wrong, i wont even notice!
Just the sort of thing a naked metal wrench would say
That thing sounds like a whole hive of angry pixies while it's on.
And they are schooching.
That thing is belting out RF, I'm surprised the camera didn't shut down in protest. I bet there were people in Ireland hitting their TVs trying to work out why the image had just vanished ;-) Can't imagine it was subjected to any safety tests.
@@ncot_tech It's from China of course it hasn't had any safety tests.
The purple buzzes are called corona. I have made DIY ozone generator to disinfect parcels from corona. Corona to kill corona.
@@KetansaCreatesArt 'honey why is our electric bill, uh. How do you say, a a stack of with a bunch of zeroes on it?'
'😬heating maybe _idk the always on ozone generator maybe, idk._
I used one of these to replace the failed 60hz AC HV transformer in my old commercial ozone generator. 85 Watts! into 4 3x5 inch double sided stainless mesh on ceramic plates. (I binned the originals) It will run you out of the room in a couple of min. Good thing it has a timer. My generator had originally a .5A breaker on the HV side. I had to change it to a 1A since its pulling 85 watts now. Mine seems to be one power level down from the one that you have, judging from the length of the heat sink. the 40 W one has a heat sink about 1/2 the length of the case. Mine is about 80% of the length of the case. Yours is the big dog!
That looks like the kind of thing you'd mount inside an HVAC system to treat the air for an entire building.
I have 2 of those mounted on a board with a fan blowing across them, They produce an enormous amount of ozone.
On the side of the units they suggest 12g/H, but who know how much they are really producing, all I know is its a lot.
For removing cigarette smells from houses or urine smells from old public toilets it does an amazing job.
Hey BigClide, thanks for that video. I bought that same Ozone-nator, however mine was advertised as a 12V device. Thanks to you, I opened it up and saw, a 400V Cap, which lead me to belive it was a 230V generator. Hooked it up to mains voltage, ducked for cover, turned it on and it worked. But it suffered the same damage as yours, top plate cracked.
Thanks again, have a good one.
love that sizzle sound at 4:37
reminds me of when Big Clive cooked those sausages in that mains cooker
Big Clive makes The Presto HotDogger quite entertaining!
@@bearicade5582 I bet Big Clive could meaningfully improve the design of the infamous BluthCo CornBaller.... one moment, please....
My household uses Big Clive videos to play a game.
In this game,We attempt to say the names of every component BEFORE Big Clive.
It's hilarious.
Clive:"i can hear the buzz"
Microphone: *bbbbbbbbbbBBBBBBBBBBBBBRRRRRRRRZZZZZZ*
you can't even hear his voice ;)
It's likely ultrasonic noise that we can't hear but it drives the microphone absolutely mad with interference, a few people have tried to exploit that to make microphone jammers
i like how ya draw that "lazy rectifier" there's no mistaking what it represents. which is always a plus in my book.
About 2 years ago I assembled the exact same unit in a small wooden box with a fan and timer and I do use it from time to time to sterilise rooms in my house. A great Covid killer!
Broken on arrival. 1000s of volts hanging in the breeze.Gasses its operator.
This belongs on Clive's affiliate page·
1000s? what kinda grid you running in the uk?
@@SavageZebra67uk is ~240V but it gets boosted up by the circuit in the thing and runs around 4000 volts
@@TheDarkness344 yah most places are 240... That still doesnt explain how or why you have 4000v coming through a cellphone wire. if it was just discharging a capacitor then maybe. but just saying the circuit makes magic.
@@TheDarkness344 I love how your the one to speak up. 4000v from a 240v source with no step up transformer. yah its the circuit. still nice to know the UK still in a fairytale
Lol I thought u meant that we had 4000v as mains electricity lol
"Is this thing holding a charge?"
Then he sticks his fingers on it, to find out.
You'd never believe how many of us thought, and would do, the exact same. 🤣
If it did it would be like that cattle prod Clive tested on himself a while back.
I couldn't make heads or tails of this schematic. Thank you for the explanation. It's a clever circuit, very good at what it does. I have one of these ozone generators (albeit it runs on 12V, but I imagine it works largely the same), and it indeed uses a lot of power, some 80W in my case. I imagine I could put it in an old PC PSU case for insulation, fanning and cooling.
Watching this stuff never gets old for me.
I remember as a kid taking random stuff apart but ultimately being baffled by this or that.
These journeys are way better because I have a guide! :D
Yeah, yeah, me too.Ah,as a kid 🙄
Same here! Man, wouldn't it have been absolutely wild to have had access to resources like Big Clive, AvE, and EEVblog (among many others excellent engineering-focused channels) when we were kids?? I can't imagine how different things would be. I wanted to get into so many technical projects and concepts growing up, but there was no Big Clive a few mouse clicks away to explain all this stuff in a clear way.
I hope (but I'm sure it's futile) kids today on some level realize how lucky they are. I sure realize and appreciate how lucky I am, even as a dude in his early 40s, to be able to tap into the expertise and mastery that giants like Big Clive altruistically provide. Bottom line, it's just awesome! Not much more to say. Appreciate your comment so much @stridermt2k. Take care
Finally :D
7 months ago I searched through all your creations of discreation to identify the blown up parts in what used to be a key element for my homemade diesel particle filter reversing process.( Im not a big fan of car brand workshop rules)
Since I did not find it here, I put it on the "see u later shelf" and guessed that it was just a matter of time.
At least for once or so, I was correct and finally have identified the blasted part. Thank you so much ! =)
The story may easily ended here, but things are not always as easy as expected.
Wise from the blast in my past, before powerup I measured fwV of the NPNs whom probably was the main cause rather than collaterals, and I had offcourse only some smaller MJE13005 as a somewhat almost nearby complimentary.
But I have like a ton, or at least a small bag full of IRF 740 "N" mosfets, and I cant really see why they wont do the job just as good. But something one not can see, can just as well only be an issue regarded blured vision from these marvelous bewildered beverages one may randomly endeavour.
I have also a lot of the bigger IRFP460 that could be tried, but my main consern is to rather understand whats going to happen, rather than just learn by "Trial and terror" so my question for you is that if I am missing some details, could you please give a minute and mention what I may ignore, then it would be just as highly appreciated by me as probably my dear tenant, whom gets unusually scared everytime the main fuses randomly blow by complete mysterious manners.
Best regards Eivind.
There are a lot of different transistors with different pin arrangements and characteristics. It's best to try and use the exact original component.
Corona discharge somehow has quite a different meaning on 2020
New name for sneezing
The kung flu
Thanks for the review. It started at 130 Watts and crept up to above 161 within a few seconds. No doubt if you had left it on much longer it would have gone up in smoke.
Just took delivery of one of these...
Featuring the classic black as L and red as N...
Can confirm RCD in our consumer unit is functioning correctly...
The big question is: Will it carbonate?
I thought it was "will it blend?"
No, but it's good at ozonating.
Hi Clive. I've had a pair of these for well over a year. One 120v🇨🇦 and one 12v. I didn't like them being out in the open so I made square glass "tubes" for them and added small fans. If odour is any indicator, the 120v one produces more ozone than my small (-ish) commercial unit!
I haven't had the right testing equipment, but I recently bought some. Now all I have to do is figure out where I put the things! They were on display (they sat on a shelf near my work table), but I think I must have moved them to storage. Now they may never be found. Don't store things unless it's in translucent plastic containers!
Of course after watching this, I'm going to have to waddle through the snow into my storage and try and find them. Sigh. I don't know whether to curse you or thank you for the renewed interest. I think thank you is probably the strongest and most accurate at the moment. Until I land in the snow! 🤣
These things are great. I just recently got one off eBay.
I've had it one day.
They really kill odors great so far.
Found one with 2x3.5g plates that seems to have a socket to facilitate replacing the plates and spares available on AliExpress. Ordered and fingers crossed it'll survive shipping - thanks for the review!
@bigclivedotcom mine arrived as 110V if you fancy seeing how it does with 230V I can ship it over the north sea for you to blow up..
i use the Enclosed fan types for my workshop, i modded mine with 4 units and placed em in a 220mm computer fans 2 at front 2 at back, these do work very well for dirty shops to get the smell out, sadly it does perish my belts and rubber seals of my doors. also these units are built to place into Used cars to "remove" that cigarette smell. keep in note! these units the one you bought has a VERY low life span, one plate lasts only 100 hours tops before they burn out. is why there cheap cause you need to replace em after the time is met.
Could you cover any rubber perishables with something before treatment to save them?
@@paolom.6011 to answer that question, ozone O3 is a gas byproduct, so if the object is sealed or wrapped in a airtight bag or non permissible materials it should be fine. its just hard as these things spew alot of this gas and is impossible to cover or remember what objects that can get affected by it prior to use. so far i learnt this too late and alot of my power cables and rubber seals in my machines are damaged cause the treatments. so careful running these if ya can and remove any items that maybe sensitive to the Ozone if ya can if possible
BigClive - one of the few people who would be excited to buy a broken product!
My first job in 1974 at Mullard Research labs was screen printing conductive inks on ceramic substrate material. The ink was fired like a pottery glaze at high temperature.
I'm guessing the top coating is also a clear glaze which is why it was so hard.
Oh Boi I have a great idea for a collaboration: could you help Explosions&Fire to make an efficient Ozone Generator for Chemistry purposes.
Ah yes, Chemistry.
He already show's a great way
If its a collaboration with explosives&fire this is going to be very informative but boring
Gonna be tough with a 12 hour timezone difference
@@whoeveriam0iam14222 because it's unheard of clive doing stuff very late (relative to his timezone, of course)
and why would he have to build it at the same time when ex&fi is awake? ^^
I've used a portable ozone generator that looks like that but in a case with a fane to kill the odors in rooms and cars. Also works good to kill off mold in basements. Wipes out many bugs as well.
"Are you sitting comfortably? Then, I shall begin."
Watch with Mother
*SIKE! NOT GONNA TALK UNLESS YOU'RE DOING JUMPING JACKS*
😳
15:46
Compenent
Diode
One FR107
two 1n4148 zener
six 1n4007
Transistors
two mj13009
and db3 diac
Me: Wow that thing sounds horrible.
Me, two seconds later: I kind of want one.
Clive thank You for taking one of those apart. I got one and was wondering what was under the cover. I found that when you have a fab blowing air over the plates that run somewhat more on the quiet side. I would like you to try and see if with a fan the HPPI would read the same or if it will change the readings or not.
Crazy how much power they are putting through it - wonder how long you could run it for before it self destructs? More than 5 mins? Wonder what the power consumption levels off at it was still ramping up when you pulled the plug.
I have one exactly like that, it works fine after I installed it inside a big steel case for a server power supply. Conveniently it already has the fans to run air through.
Did you install it standing up or lying on its side? And how do you avoid it arcing to the case?
Several mechanisms have been suggested for the bactericidal action of ionizers including electrical phenomena, effects of negative and positive ions and electrostatic repulsion. Negative and positive ions have indeed been shown to have bactericidal effects. In addition, since ozone is generated along with ions, these may contribute to the bacterial killing. In this study, we used a newly developed ionizer, which generates a relatively low concentration of ozone, to determine whether its effect on bacterial cells were due to ions or ozone, and, if ions, how the ions exerted their effects.
Results
The effect of ions on bacterial killing was compared with that of the ozone produced using an ion trap to remove the ions. The ionizer had the ability to kill the bacteria, and ion capture dramatically reduced its bactericidal effect, indicating that the ozone generated had little or no bactericidal effect under these conditions, and the ions produced were responsible for almost all the bacterial killing. Operation of the ionizer increased the level of 8-oxo-dG, a marker of oxidative DNA damage, and decreased aconitase activity, which is known to be sensitive to ROS. The ionizer further affected the adenylate energy charge of bacterial cells. Removal of the ions with the ion trap greatly reduced all these effects.
Conclusion
These results indicate that negative and positive ions generated by the ionizer are responsible for inducing oxidative stress and so reducing bacterial survival.
Brilliant deduction. Excellent videos!
The holding hands don't matter, Clive. There is no person attached anymore, so no worries
I've had two of these and one of them was broken from the box. Most terrifying chinese things I've ever had. To be fair one of them did work for a while.
I have two of those, and paired with an oscilating fan they work remarkably well
Just a warning, ozone is VERY dangerous in even moderatly low concentrations. I use mine to help remove the smell when a rodent has died and i cannot retreive the carcass.
Bought a pair of these type a few years ago, have them in a box with a fan. Extremely powerful as a "ozone shock" generator have sanitized more than one car with it. Got a sketchy video on the tube about that.
Oh FUCK YEAH, I have 4 of these to plan to build my own o-zone generator from them!
I work in laundry plant and we bought one 900$ portable ozone generator and one 4000$ ozonating locker to dessinfect all what comes for cleaning, and they all use these!
My mate hooked one with a compressor and infuses 15 ton of water in his indoor pool with it.
I NEED to build one of these to start professional washing laundry linen with ozone.
Very excited for this video!
There are o-zone water infusing machines sold on the market the one I got from American eBay is PureWash
thank you for the honesty and knowledge
I have a video with a 12v one of these - you can easily modulate its output with the voltage, .. ended up at 10v for a super minimal output level
I bought the same module about a year and half ago from Amazon for a project (had to return it 3 times too as each one arrived with a busted top ceramic plate) but eventually got one that wasn't cracked. Was only 8 pounds when i bought mine too pre coof... the ceramic plates are very very fragile... any slight bending on the metal backing substrate will crack them as they are bonded on with some thermal type goop. I consider myself sufficiently clued up with electronics and safety to not hurt myself but was actually a little surprised how easy it was to buy such a thing that can easily cause severe harm from a mainstream website. Probably since the coof people have been buying more of these types of things as I've seen these things advertised as antiviral etc? I think you covered it really but they will overheat and die without proper cooling, electrical safety is non existent unless designed into a suitable project, the ozone emission is insane, easily very bad for your respiratory system if you don't know what you are doing.
I wonder if doubling the plates doubles power consumption and ozone production.
without having any specific knowledge i would hazard a guess at no. There will be a limit at how quickly the air can be replenished. Otherwise you will run out of O2 to convert into O3. Wish I knew how to do subscript.
No, adding more plates will overload output and cause voltage to drop. Efficiency will decrease or production may stop completely.
That thing sounds almost terrifying like a tesla coil spark gap
Its just the 60hz mains frequency over the microphone in real life you hardly hear it
50hz*
@@rushb9388 thanks
@@rushb9388 in UK it's 60Hz, whereas mainland europe is mainly 50Hz.
@@suprlite its 50hz not 60 as i live in the uk and measured the mains before it says 50hz lol 100hz through the bench as it doubles when it passes through something its sitting on also known as vibration . n Clive has 50hz as i seen it in most of his videos on the meter . no frustration here just letting ya know . yh u may get 60hz in the uk but i never herd that before
The conductive coating is probably metalization. Typically it will be molybdenum and some other metals to form an alloy that can then be deposited on the ceramic.
Black coating is most likely glaze (possibly quartz based) and solder is most likely zinc or even ZAMAK based solder. at these power levels you can get to temperatures that would soften even normal (soda-lime) glass.
I mean they described it as a a DIY device, and it doesn't have a plug on it so I'd imagine it was implied that it needs a fan in an enclosure to be used properly. presumably to build your own ozone generator
Many of the listings imply putting it on your lounge table.
@@bigclivedotcom I wonder if it's just resellers not really knowing what they're selling. It seems pretty common on ebay
The amount of power that thing dissipates is immense though, I wonder what airflow is needed to keep it cool, and how much it pulls with both plate sets
@@iamdarkyoshi Some people don't care what they do or sell. As long as they're lining their pockets with our money anything goes...
@@bigclivedotcom I know that some 'medicinal herb growers' sometimes put a few ozone generators inside their fan ducting to help reduce any unwanted odours. 👍 Given the fact that most of them also steal the electricity, the insane power consumption wouldn't be such a worry 😂
Those produce HUGE amount of ozone when new but may not last too long (especially in high ozone level environment). My diy sterilizer cabinet has one that is pretty worn out and does not produce that much ozone. It needs a replacement unit any day (that I have a few).
Ozone is great for sterilizing stuff like FFP2/FFP3 masks that can be sometimes hard to find or at least very costly. I never knew last year how much FFP2/FFP3 respirators I'd be using in a daily life. For any DIY solution, make sure you know what you're doing. Studies indicate a need for enough dose + humidity. If you put way too much ozone, rubber bands will fall of respirators and the screws will oxidize badly. Don't ask how I know, just debug better your software :)
how long did it last?
@@termivan The question is how long will it last. My 65 liter cabinet has had one from the beginning of the pandemic and it is still going on well. I've used levels of about 70-150ppm for about 1-2 hours weekly or twice a week. It runs with PID controll and the duty cycle is probably something like 25%. (It just tops up ozone when it is used or decomposes and more at the start of cycle. One with 3 ozone generating plates is overly powerfull for that)
Plenty of use hours and I have a spare at hand for the day it will fail. The generator is inside cabinet ie. not just generating ozone that is blown away but exposed to ozone all the time.
It still goes strong but produces less ozone (I'd guess like half) than when it was new. It has taken some very high level cycles though, like way over 2500ppm that already corrodes metals like screq heads visibly. (no way to say how high, I can measure only up to 2500ppm)
This can give you some idea of what kind of abuse it has taken.
When I heard that buzzing I had the urge to laugh maniacally and yell IT'S ALIVE!!😂😂
plates show a condenser effect. As it removed 2 plates, the resonance frequency deteriorated and power consumption increased. If he worked a little more, it would burn. It normally draws power due to 80w. Its approximate frequency is between 15-25 kHz.
dielectric plates are broken. There was a short circuit and the power continued to increase
Why are some ceramic plates soldered at two points and some only at one point?
@@jafe.ribeiro Think of plates like capacitors. It connects two parallels in series or different. In this way, it obtains an average value.
Would love to see a working one of these that is actually incorporated into a finished project. Be great if you build something like that
8:30 "scratches at a 7, with deeper grooves at a level 8"?
I picked up one of these and i dont like the smell of ozone but it did make my room smell much better
Screw electrical standards I have one of them and their powerful as hell
it is meant to be installed in an air handler plenum
OMG
I was laughing out loud when you turned it on
I swear I could smell the ozone
That thing sounds like walking under supergrid pylons on a foggy morning, just loud scary buzzing!!! :S
I think the ozone capacity of that thing is probably measured in 100's of cubic feet per minute, and the real question is how long does it take to get to a lethal concentration in a typical room after someone powers it up. And the irony is thats actually not a joke. It probably could kill you after a while. Edit: Puts out 24g/h, which means in a typical room it wont take long to get to a lethal concentration.
If I had to guess, its probably a copy of a generator used in either a large HVAC system or some form of industrial process or sterilization unit, which just makes it all that much more terrifying, and desirable to obtain.
@@mysock351C If you figure a 3m x 3m x 3m room, roughly 10ft cube, would contain 27m^3 of air. Looks like std air has a density around 1.204kg/m^3 so 32.5kg of air, or 32500g. If we take your 24g / 32500g we get 0.000738, or a concentration of 738ppm!
The CDC estimates that 50ppm for 60min would be lethal to humans, and the recommended exposure limit for an hour is 1ppm.
I don't blame Clive for evacuating.
@@Chris-du7hi Insane right? Its amazing the number of deadly products that can be ordered off of ebay.
@@mysock351C Looking for them right now.
The worlds most terrifying ozone generator.
i just was waiting for you to test those ozon generators
Wonder if you could regulate these with a simple dimmer? The power factor is almost unity and the current isn't high. Maybe a circuit with a simple relay could be used to regulate them too. Might try an build a PWM triac controller if that would work best.
16:04 anyone know what the component is at the top right hand corner; running upwards, vertically from the left leg of the green capacitor.
(Curious as, when I opened up a knackered one, this glass shrouded component was properly burnt out)
Cheers
These things are awesome, but they come broken 40% of the time. Also, in my experience the transformers die prematurely, but a fan keeping them cool helps some.
Edit: So there's more than a xformer in there? Interesting. Mine are all potted up.
Circuit looks like a funky style of royer oscillator, redesigned to work off rectified mains. They are quite powerful circuits. :)
What used more power: The Ozone generator or everyone's subwoofers playing that sound back?
Technically speaking it would be collective power consumption of the subwoofers.
so would it be a bad thing to make a bunch of solar powered ozone generators and leave them in areas where the ozone layer is thin so theres some naturally powered man assisted replacements going on?
It doesn't quite work like that. But outdoor solar ozone generators would be interesting.
Is this unit not meant to be installed into an AC conduit, or similar?
Simple! :)
Can't you measure inductance to get the ratio of the windings in the transformer? I could be wrong thought.
How would these plates perform on the normal voltage multiplier ladders? For DIYing if nothing else.
How can I diy transformer
Wish me luck! I found this video while doing research. I have a commercial ozone generator, and it's not working right. It's very simple, and I think it just needs a new capacitor. Problem is, I don't know the specs on it, and the existing capacitor is potted in a black epoxy. I'll test it, and if it fails, tear it apart to attempt to find the numbers.
I brought a Chineseium ozone generator yesterday with this cheap HV unit in it. Opened the cardboard delivery box, and a piece of wire fell out of the enclosure. The combined switched IEC inlet was potted with silicone, and what they called earth bonding to chassis was a blue neutral wire that was extremely dangerously spot welded and glued to the stainless steel enclosure
They often fail to follow any wiring colour standard. I'm surprised the earth was connected at all. If it's a fused plug, check the fuse is even in circuit.
@bigclivedotcom used my own IEC lead with a real bussmann 3a fuse in it. Checked continuity to ground and chassis to ensure i didn't get stung
I have adopted the "lazy rectifier" symbol - it's just so much neater than the usual one.
It is a lot neater. Laziness has its advantages.
@@bigclivedotcom what makes it even better is that since adopting it, I've never once had to explain what it is so either your channel is so well known in our circles that it's becoming a standard or it's so obvious that it should be a standard - the BC rectifier
The first motto of the engineer: Be lazy!
Why are some ceramic plates soldered at two points and some only at one point?
Thanks Clive, I am glad you requested a refund for something so dangerous. It should as you said have a case and a fan and of course be packaged so much better than just a box.
Hello. The diode in parallel was missing from the 2n2 capacitor
i am using this in my bathroom (it's one without a windows) since a year. great thing!
I have a bathroom with no window too. I may have to get this... what does it do for you?
@@Alexander_l322 ozone buildup is poisonous and could kill you.
@@SG-ps1sq oh okay i didn’t know he was trolling or deleting any comments. So I guess I won’t be using this in my house. I thought it might help get rid of the steam from showering or something.
@@Alexander_l322 As the donald says big dumps... (i have an auto-timer wich triggers it for 30 seconds after the light goes off. the ozone is VERY strong.)
@@SG-ps1sq be assured I am not trolling, it works perfect against odors and potential mold. But as stated, you should wire it that is not operation while somebody is inside. Since there is no daylight it is an easy task: 30s on after the light has been switched off.
Did you manage to fix it then?
if you want these to last for a long time in the UK it's worth putting them on an autotransformer to step the voltage down to 220V.
They don't last very long at all when on a 250V supply.
are these things to help with the hole in the ozone layer?
No. The ozone layer has to alternate between ozone and oxygen to work.
can you please start putting the full part list in the description of you videos.
what is the watt of those resistor and voltage of 2.2nf and 10nf capacitors?
number of turns around that ferrite core and wire gage.
also what is the wire gage of the primary winding of the transformer.
with these informations we could actually reveres engineer it.
thanks .
Very interesting. Would be good to see that circuit operating in a circuit simulator.
The GOOD sellers list these as a replacement plate for the Ozone generators that are in the box with fan and timer. Bad sellers sell them claiming it can be used as it is,which is totally🚫 UNSAFE...!🚫
You can strip the insulating paint off using HCl. It will continue to work without the coating and it's easier to start without it.
Useful to know, but would probably impact the lifespan of the electrodes.
@@bigclivedotcom that is true
Really nice work, as always :)
One question, if the circuit is reminescent of those of halogen lamp drivers, and it is self oscillating at high frequencies do you think it would be possible to dim the power via a Leading-Edge Dimmer circuit? Or do you think it would mess up with the self starting oscillation?
My guess is that it should be possible down to a certain threshold where the circuit would not self start (and I wonder what would happen there, if there would be some kind of damage).
Cheers!
I know your question wasn't directed towards me, but I hope you find my answer helpful.
I'd use a trailing-edge dimmer with that circuit. A leading-edge dimmer would pose additional stress to the circuit's capacitors.
@@mattmoreira210 Hey Matheus, thank you very much. If that is so, do you thing this circuit could be dimmed somehow? Maybe using a simple transformer would be the simplest option right?
The case and tubing looks just like that used in the airline ozone tube you took apart back last May. Same company? or just standard parts?
These really are intended as components for replacements in existing high powered ozone generators or to build your own around. Yep they do need a fan. To move the ozone around about the room. They should clearly state that these things are intended as replacement parts. That I suppose you could DIY around.
Ozone... isnt it that smell i used to get from the model railway as a kid when the engine is just about to move after buzzing and humming at the low voltage ? rgds Don
They are sold as either 10 or 20 grams per hour ozone generators. What would you use that for? House "fumigation"?
Large area sterilisation while unoccupied.
Just one question. Why on earth does it use 150 watts? It has to be made for warehouse disinfection or something. It will fill a room with ozone in a few minutes.