Hi, Matt ! After watching this video,(and drawing great inspiration from it), I went ahead, and converted a rechargeable philips electric hair trimmer/razor, into a USB powered one. The trimmer, originally had one 1.2 V AAA rechargeable cell inside, which I removed, and in its place I soldered the Voltage Step Down Board (which you have used in this video), tweaking it's output to get around 1.5 Volts. The board now drives the trimmer's motor perfectly & is fed by a portable 5 Volts, 2 Amp Mobile Power bank(Mi Power Bank 10000mAh). Thanks, once again for the inspiration!
You could have just used few LEDs to step down the voltage. Step down board is excessive. As you did not create this board and probably have little idea how it works, you just assembled ready parts. You did Assemble It Yourself, not Do It Yourself.
@@ScienceDiscoverer - I’m sure you’re fun at parties… Did he do it himself or did he hire someone to do it for him? He did it himself, thus DIY. Does DIY Perks ACTUALLY build the circuits to turn the input signal into the picture displayed for his laptop LCD screen or does he buy the pre-made components to run the screen? Is he Assemble It Yourself Perks? Stop being pedantic.
I just finished my own version of this build and it worked out great! easily at least 3x brighter than the built on LED on any of the 5 phones and 3 tablets i tested it with. Had fun building it too
I've been watching a ton of your videos during Covid-19 and I think this is the first one I can accomplish pretty easily... Thank you for everything dude!
The Buck-converter used in this is an MP1584. I found when making this that the MP2307 would be preferable. The MP2307 uses Synchronous Rectification and has a higher switching speed which makes it quite more efficient. It's also smaller than the MP1584. Easiest way of finding it is to search Ebay for "supper mini 3a dc-dc converter".
I honestly just checked your channel about a half hour ago to see if you've uploaded a new video that I may have missed lol I'm glad I was only disappointed for a half hour lol
amc7135 current regulator (at a fixed voltage of 3.3vdc, perfect for LED's), 350ma regulation, and are stackable (thanks to budget light forum), not only safer, but MUCH smaller, and won't pull too much current from OTG port very cool build!
For anybody wondering, this will cost about $20 usd before the mold. The molding he uses ranges from $8-20 but you aren't using all of it on this one project. I'd say you could go cheaper by using epoxy. Maybe the paste epoxy would be a good option. Anyways, nice project. $20 isn't too bad for something original like this. Fun too.
Looking at your phone, dbrand would have been a much better sponsor for this project. Anyway, this is really nice and simple. I might make one for my mum because she's very much into photography
Not really, because you can shrink this project to the size of paperclip and you will not find flash light that small and bright that will fit in your wallet or on your keychain.
I use Galaxy S5, and it works with 3 LEDs 1 watt each. When I walk into the garage at night with this thing on, don't even need to turn on the lights to search for something.
Love your vids. You've come a long way, and have progressed to a very polished look. I would be really interested to see you create a video for a 'Boom Box' build. Those fantastic old radio/cassette boxes with huge speakers etc. Something really creative. Now it's up to you mate! :) GO!
DIY Perks When researching, Google "diy Bluetooth ground loop", as this will retrieve tutorials that tackle a problem that occurs when you use a single power supply to power both the amp and Bluetooth module, the infamous ground loop, which manifests itself through a very annoying buzzing.
And carry 2 cables instead of a thumb-sized device... It defeats the purpouse. You would be better off carrying a flashlight. I just didn't like how big he made it, but that way it is easier to understand by people. I would just get the usb-b connector from old data cable and short the ID and GROUND wires, then find a smaller step-down module(or shrink this one with a dremel) and a smaller led.
this channel keeps getting better and better... kudos to you dude, your content from the past years were great but now its better and sounds more professional.
I don't need this as my phone's light is quite bright but if I did need something like this I think I would turn it into a key chain. That would be more useful than keeping it in a convenient location as it makes more sense to keep a real flashlight in that location, specially if it is not the same place where you keep your phone.
Hey Matt, Amazing video as always, i like the way you film and explain on your videos. Even someone doesn't understand whats going on the video, but still going to continue watching. I have tried that on my friends and they continued watching till the end, questioning my after the video, still they understand 80% of it, because you explain it so well. I'd like to see how you do it. How you film, edit, voice over, etc. love to know. Regards from India.
Very cool, the rubber part is terrible for heat dissipation though. A 3d printed housing and maybe even a heat sink would improve the project. Love your videos.
You are amazing. Each video I am watching is a pleasure! I am not a technician and would like if you could think about something that would be useful and I have no idea if it is feasible: I live in Brisbane, Australia, the Sunny State! I drive for Uber and when waiting in the Sun, the car gets so hot that I must keep engine running for the A/C and it is very annoying. Also when leaving the car in any parking it is an oven when coming back to it. I wonder if a decent "portable" A/C could be build, such as something that would be stuck inside the windscreen with rolling solar cells accross the windscreen all the way. Kind of a roll-in roll-out design for easy storage when not used. You might think I am silly thinking about this, but it would be definitely sold fast if feasible!
Thanks for putting the bit at the end about it warming up and the phone killing the power. As I was watching I was thinking it would get to hot and burn out the LED but you answered the question before I could ask. Cheers.
You should set the voltage regulator first, setting it later will: 1. Runs the risk of damaging equipment that isn't "Smart" 2.Trains people to expect all circuits to protect themselves. 3. Blow up if the first test is on a phone charger.
i would suggest using a warm led instead of a pure white, as the light is much more comfortable to the eyes(looks like a pure white in the video, i could be wrong of course) also, instead of trying to make a light yourself, you could buy a small inexpensive usb light, with a touchpad for a low price, hook it up, and bam, now you can even adjust the light on the fly :)
this might be silly,but I don't have a solder and I don't know how to use one. is there a way to do something like this without, or are they cheap/easy to figure out?
They're actually super easy to use - it's just a hot tip that melts the solder when touched against it. So, if you hold together the two bits that need to be connected and then touch them with the soldering iron, it all melts and joins together. See if you can borrow one from somebody first, and if you find yourself using it often consider buying a cheap one for yourself.
youtube it. there are plenty of little tips most videos should teach you. someone just going out and trying it will make many many sloppy jobs. Although that is how I learned. I suggest practicing on joining small wires together first before taking on something that requires a more delicate touch.
Usually due to terminology and extra technical aspects I'm not too well versed so creators have on a few rare occasion left me behind scratching my head. But I understood every word of this and I actually have two packages of that putty stuff I had no idea what it was for. But I'm ordering the parts if I don't have them here. Thanks man 5 stars
I really enjoy your videos. Your camerawork and audio commentary are very pleasing to hear/watch and I find your content very interesting and easily explained. I even built a portable speaker with bluetooth thanks to one of your other videos :)
Yes the connector itself can handle the current, but the internal phone dc-dc boost driver mostly can't. So there must be overcurrent protection to avoid damaging the otg power circuit.
Drawing too much current over an unprotected phone will cook the traces and fuck the USB port, HOPEFULLY only breaking its OTG capability, but potentially much worse.
micro usb is max 1.8 A however most charge no more than 1A the pcb copper tracers will defiantly burn up if that is exceeded. some 3w leds could go over that ? if it breaks the usb will no longer work once copper tracer has burnt
You havent seen the light in person... I have used that LED and it is waaay brighter than the flash on your phone. Just think logically, this 3W led has a heatsink which heats up significantly and the phone doesn't. If your flash had that power where will the heat go?
my dual led htc one m9 flash is bright enough for the girls i go out with. so i would assume there are a bunch of people that have similar phones and don't need to do this project.
my phone is the same way...the led flash is as bright if not brighter than the one in the video...just download the flashlight app and you're good to go....
your videos are awesome. they are very different and you always give usable and workable ideas. I look up to you for making and improving my videos too. Your ideas are intelligent and your script covers almost everything. Really great!!! very inspiring
Donny Sabri Get a Otg cable, a usb soundcard and a pair of battery powered speaker (3x AA/AAA) connect the soundcard to the Otg cable, open it and add wires to 5v and ground, solder those to the positive and negative terminal of where the batteries used to go. Plug the speakers in to the sound card and hide everything inside one of the speakers. And now you have Otg speakers.
How is there too much product placement? Would you prefer he just used hot glue to make the outside shell lol. He's using what's best for the project, nothing wrong with that.
Colin Java that literally defeats the point in this channel lol no one said this is the simplest option, but on the contrary is it not a good option to have so you never have to charge it or replace a battery? as long as your phone has a charge, you have a light
I wish I had a Sony phone just to have it hanging out the side like that. If I do this on mine it would have to be at the bottom. Yours looks more natural on the side. Very project none the less. Maybe one day you can make a video listing the perfect tools to get started with diy jobs and how to use them. That would be great.
And possible add heat sink behind the led. Also if you dont this to get power from you phone, then you can chance it USB connector and get power from any USB socket. Same method, different connector. Also add switch on the ground wire and you get it go on and off with out removing it from USB socket, that is too far away.
Do u know how to make OTG usb type c cable? I would like to see the video on that. I try to find any source on the internet but not found. I don't know which pin is need pull up or pull down to trigger the host mode.
I love your work and I see why you do this, but the ads are getting more and more intrusive. Again, I know it's not accidental, but I'd advice not to go much further than this.
Note that the USB spec actually only allows you to draw 100 mA unless the device enumerates and configures the port for more current - you can get a small dedicated chip that will do this for you for pretty cheap though.
Adventist that's not how that works. 2 white leds require about 6 volt. USB provides 5 volt, so they "underperform". That's where the typical diode characteristics kick in: letting through less amps when they are "undervolted". With 2.5 volt instead of 3.2 they will use aprox 1/8 of the max current
@@vega1287 yeah, could very well be they don't do anything at all. In my experience it takes a minimum of 2.5 - 2.6 volt to give a visible result. Anyway, they don't burn up either 😂
@@gekkehenkie0001 well as far as i know blue leds start to light up at about 3 volts and a white led is basically a uv blue led with a phopphor infront of it to create white light through flurescencee
Suggesting calibrating a buck converter by intentionally overloading the USB host controller on their phone isn't the best thing to tell your audience of 590k people. Side note sugru was a nice touch, really sold the functionality.
Well, the presenter also repeatedly calls a potentiometer a "micro knob" (lol!) so what do you really expect? Seems pretty clear that electronics is not exactly his forte.
As LEDs have like, 0 resistance, they will gladly accept and pass through any amount of current you apply to them,even if they burn through , thats why they should be driven via Current control not Voltage, the manufacturer lists the forward current for led, you can however limit the voltage as done in this video, but you should check it with a multimeter not trial and error
My phone's flash is about the same brightness and it's nearly 3 years old, to improve on mine with a thing like this, it would drain battery ridiculously fast.
Marcus Coster my Samsung Galaxy s5 neo has probably one of the brightest flashlights, I've been able to decently light up an entire average sized bedroom with it
Hey man, love your videos! Each one is full of some great original ideas 💪 Have you used Capacitive Touch switches before ? I can't find a lot of good quality documentation on using them and I'm wondering if you'd be into using one in a project to show how to use them? Love your work mate
Obbliteration this, although advertised, does not work with the OnePlus 2 (and perhaps the OP3 not either). OnePlus devices don't recognize usb 3.0+ devices. I have to use the adapter from oneplus with micro B cable to have OTG functionality
I would recommend using "proto putty" in place of suguru for price. All it is is cornstarch mixed with 100% silicon and it creates moldable rubber with some food coloring or water as an activator.
Take possible aluminum strip, bend it half, add key ring on the middle, put some thermal paste between just polished surfaces and bolt it to leds heat sink with small machine screws. Then add suguru or what ever over it. This should also extend the usage time of the light before it over heats on point of shutting down. You can make it from steel too to make it more durable, but heat transfer is far less with steel than using aluminum.
Whining about an advertisement you can easily skip which is directly supporting the creator of the video you are watching. Isn't this totally free, interesting and inspiring content enough?
Price of all those parts from amazon inc. shipping is about 50$ For that money we can buy high quality flashlight, with 10W(1000Lm) of power so about 4 times more than that DIY crap. Also that DIY egg will die quickly because there is no cooling for the LED.
You can buy these on ebay for less than $1 dollar USD. There are two types using SMD LED's. One that is a constant brightness and one you can dim as needed. Here';s what they look like -- www.ebay.com/itm/MINI-Touch-Switch-USB-mobile-power-camping-lamp-LED-night-light-White-lamp-WF-/371741972756? -- I have a few of them and use them with a mini/micro usb OTG adapter of approximately the same size. I keep the light plugged into the usb adapter and it fits in a pocket. Much less bulky and only cost $2. Now they certainly are not 3 watt LEDs, but they are still very bright and will light up a car interior, footpath in front of you or tent quite nicely... and gently sip from the battery.
Found it. Here is the one with the touch-dimmer switch - www.ebay.com/itm/MINI-Touch-Switch-USB-mobile-power-camping-lamp-LED-night-light-White-lamp-XW9/272450283507
My phone actually has a very bright flashlight feature that uses the lights from the dual flash. It is a Droid Turbo2. I have found that this phone's gesture feature is incredibly useful when I need a light. All I need to do is shake my phone a certain direction and my light pops right on. Shake it another way and I get my camera app. This is a great diy for devices that don't have as bright of a flashlight.
Lol I have a Nexus 6P. Amazing light, and using an OTG cable with Bought can allow stuff like plugging in a whole MIDI keyboard, a mouse etc, even a USB hub, and a Ethernet to USB cable
Hi, Matt ! After watching this video,(and drawing great inspiration from it), I went ahead, and converted a rechargeable philips electric hair trimmer/razor, into a USB powered one. The trimmer, originally had one 1.2 V AAA rechargeable cell inside, which I removed, and in its place I soldered the Voltage Step Down Board (which you have used in this video), tweaking it's output to get around 1.5 Volts. The board now drives the trimmer's motor perfectly & is fed by a portable 5 Volts, 2 Amp Mobile Power bank(Mi Power Bank 10000mAh). Thanks, once again for the inspiration!
legend. IDK why DIY Perks hasnt pinned this!
You could have just used few LEDs to step down the voltage. Step down board is excessive. As you did not create this board and probably have little idea how it works, you just assembled ready parts. You did Assemble It Yourself, not Do It Yourself.
@@ScienceDiscoverer - I’m sure you’re fun at parties… Did he do it himself or did he hire someone to do it for him? He did it himself, thus DIY. Does DIY Perks ACTUALLY build the circuits to turn the input signal into the picture displayed for his laptop LCD screen or does he buy the pre-made components to run the screen? Is he Assemble It Yourself Perks? Stop being pedantic.
@@ScienceDiscoverer cringe
@@ScienceDiscovererStill couldn't call it DIY, he must manufacture his own LEDs, wires and connectors.
Anyone else think it looks a little bit like the turrets from portal?
thats the first thing i thouth
my lg g3 mini flashlight is brighter than 6w torch, its close to 12w
It looks like a suppository, and that's where the users stores it, when not needed?
+DIY Perks
Hi, do you have links for the "ingredients" for germany too?
+Dheva Senapathy maybe a usb type c Port is the solution. They can be turned around so you have both options. But your phone must have a type c Port.
Honestly more people need to film their youtube videos in 60fps it is much appreciated and very noticeable!
this is literally the most relaxing channel i've ever watched
Joe Manfred ikr i don't give a shit about this project but its so relaxing i cant stop watching xd
I agree
Your voice is so calming and relaxing ^^
I agree your words :)
Is that because he's British?
+WardenMashups visit colinfurze, his voice is much faster, I wonder that's just because of the backround music?
i know that guy
I think Jony Ive is also a Brit. Just go watch some Apple's design videos like the airpod introduction.
I just finished my own version of this build and it worked out great! easily at least 3x brighter than the built on LED on any of the 5 phones and 3 tablets i tested it with. Had fun building it too
Android user 🫵😂
I've been watching a ton of your videos during Covid-19 and I think this is the first one I can accomplish pretty easily... Thank you for everything dude!
The Buck-converter used in this is an MP1584. I found when making this that the MP2307 would be preferable. The MP2307 uses Synchronous Rectification and has a higher switching speed which makes it quite more efficient. It's also smaller than the MP1584.
Easiest way of finding it is to search Ebay for "supper mini 3a dc-dc converter".
excellent, you could add a lens to change the focus too. cheers
Proyectos LED haz el tuyo amigo, lo quiero ver uwu
@@JisooMx e
@Alessandro David you need a life.
@@YusufIslam1 that's automated spam. Report it if you see it.
@@jamesrivettcarnac I reported him too for pornography
I honestly just checked your channel about a half hour ago to see if you've uploaded a new video that I may have missed lol I'm glad I was only disappointed for a half hour lol
phew! right?
iyah me too
A new video using USB-C devices would be really cool! You could go way brighter too since they output more power.
amc7135 current regulator (at a fixed voltage of 3.3vdc, perfect for LED's), 350ma regulation, and are stackable (thanks to budget light forum), not only safer, but MUCH smaller, and won't pull too much current from OTG port
very cool build!
are they linear or switching?
They're linear regulator. Not as efficient as switching regulator.
You could use them after the buck just to limit the current
No way. you just use a sense resistor and error amp back to the buck for current control
Hi ! I use that chip on all of my diy usb torches. 7135 is made for this job and works well.
For anybody wondering, this will cost about $20 usd before the mold. The molding he uses ranges from $8-20 but you aren't using all of it on this one project. I'd say you could go cheaper by using epoxy. Maybe the paste epoxy would be a good option. Anyways, nice project. $20 isn't too bad for something original like this. Fun too.
This gave me ideas for making alot of other peripherals for phones with micro-USB connectors. Thanks!
You could make it even smaller by using the MP2307 buck modules (sometimes called RC buck) which are synchronous and about 1/2 the size
you can make cheap sugru by mixing silicon an baking powder (if you want colour and food colouring)
Starch*
@@IvanOoze1990 starch is correcting which
@@crusaderACR I guess we will never know
but where would you get silicon?
And best thing about this project: Doesn't work on apple device's
Holy shit is tru
Well fuck
I am even more upset I switched to the iPhone, I friggen hate it compared to my old Droid
This includes the iPhone 7.
Good thing Apples flashlights are bright enough already.
Awesome LED project
Reminds of Portal Turrets, "Are you still there?"
Looking at your phone, dbrand would have been a much better sponsor for this project.
Anyway, this is really nice and simple. I might make one for my mum because she's very much into photography
Great idea, but isn't that kind of like having to carry around a flashlight?
Not really, because you can shrink this project to the size of paperclip and you will not find flash light that small and bright that will fit in your wallet or on your keychain.
Great! How? Also, what phone do you have and what are the best features?
I use Galaxy S5, and it works with 3 LEDs 1 watt each. When I walk into the garage at night with this thing on, don't even need to turn on the lights to search for something.
Flashlights need batteries, this doesn't need anything but your phone
I am subscribed to a few diy but your the only one that goes all the way with the builds and links. I love it. thank you very much
Love your vids. You've come a long way, and have progressed to a very polished look. I would be really interested to see you create a video for a 'Boom Box' build. Those fantastic old radio/cassette boxes with huge speakers etc. Something really creative. Now it's up to you mate! :)
GO!
Oh, I actually have something like that already planned ;) stay tuned!
DIY Perks SWEET! Might I encourage you to consider including Bluetooth in your design? :) I'll be sure to watch for the Vid! Thanks!
Bluetooth is the main focus - we're on the same wavelength it seems!
DIY Perks looking forward to it!
DIY Perks When researching, Google "diy Bluetooth ground loop", as this will retrieve tutorials that tackle a problem that occurs when you use a single power supply to power both the amp and Bluetooth module, the infamous ground loop, which manifests itself through a very annoying buzzing.
OR just plug usb led into OTG cable without cutting anything..... right? there are plenty on ALI.
but why
That's not fun
And carry 2 cables instead of a thumb-sized device... It defeats the purpouse. You would be better off carrying a flashlight. I just didn't like how big he made it, but that way it is easier to understand by people. I would just get the usb-b connector from old data cable and short the ID and GROUND wires, then find a smaller step-down module(or shrink this one with a dremel) and a smaller led.
this is a 3w led, not some shitty quality LED.....
they sell USB lights 10 for $2 and tiny little adapters for the cell phone. you can buy basically the same thing ready made for less money.
ChrisD4335 it is not all about the money, how about having while making one if these?
this channel keeps getting better and better... kudos to you dude, your content from the past years were great but now its better and sounds more professional.
I don't need this as my phone's light is quite bright but if I did need something like this I think I would turn it into a key chain.
That would be more useful than keeping it in a convenient location as it makes more sense to keep a real flashlight in that location, specially if it is not the same place where you keep your phone.
Absolutely. It's a no brainer.
how about a DIY laser pointer? one that has a big range
i would love to see that!
that was consist of the same exact thing, except using a laser diode instead. simple, same steps really
with a demo of how to bring down airplanes and cause car accidents
That would actually be pretty great since batteries in laser pointers don't last very long.
Get an 18650 battery pointer!
Hey Matt,
Amazing video as always, i like the way you film and explain on your videos. Even someone doesn't understand whats going on the video, but still going to continue watching. I have tried that on my friends and they continued watching till the end, questioning my after the video, still they understand 80% of it, because you explain it so well.
I'd like to see how you do it.
How you film, edit, voice over, etc.
love to know.
Regards from India.
Very cool, the rubber part is terrible for heat dissipation though. A 3d printed housing and maybe even a heat sink would improve the project. Love your videos.
You are amazing. Each video I am watching is a pleasure!
I am not a technician and would like if you could think about something that would be useful and I have no idea if it is feasible:
I live in Brisbane, Australia, the Sunny State! I drive for Uber and when waiting in the Sun, the car gets so hot that I must keep engine running for the A/C and it is very annoying. Also when leaving the car in any parking it is an oven when coming back to it.
I wonder if a decent "portable" A/C could be build, such as something that would be stuck inside the windscreen with rolling solar cells accross the windscreen all the way. Kind of a roll-in roll-out design for easy storage when not used.
You might think I am silly thinking about this, but it would be definitely sold fast if feasible!
Thanks for putting the bit at the end about it warming up and the phone killing the power.
As I was watching I was thinking it would get to hot and burn out the LED but you answered the question before I could ask.
Cheers.
wooow, thats klever!!! thanks
Once again, high quality content! I enjoy watching your DIY videos very much!
You should set the voltage regulator first, setting it later will: 1. Runs the risk of damaging equipment that isn't "Smart" 2.Trains people to expect all circuits to protect themselves. 3. Blow up if the first test is on a phone charger.
I just happened across your channel yesterday. I've genuinely enjoyed all of your videos so far and look forward to seeing more in my feed!
Good video Matt.
i would suggest using a warm led instead of a pure white, as the light is much more comfortable to the eyes(looks like a pure white in the video, i could be wrong of course) also, instead of trying to make a light yourself, you could buy a small inexpensive usb light, with a touchpad for a low price, hook it up, and bam, now you can even adjust the light on the fly :)
this might be silly,but I don't have a solder and I don't know how to use one. is there a way to do something like this without, or are they cheap/easy to figure out?
They're actually super easy to use - it's just a hot tip that melts the solder when touched against it. So, if you hold together the two bits that need to be connected and then touch them with the soldering iron, it all melts and joins together. See if you can borrow one from somebody first, and if you find yourself using it often consider buying a cheap one for yourself.
how difficult is it to google it up?
youtube it. there are plenty of little tips most videos should teach you. someone just going out and trying it will make many many sloppy jobs. Although that is how I learned. I suggest practicing on joining small wires together first before taking on something that requires a more delicate touch.
How many females have you seen solder anything
you can just buy one on amazon and buy the connector that fits your phone you might even be able to get one that works with a lab top to
Usually due to terminology and extra technical aspects I'm not too well versed so creators have on a few rare occasion left me behind scratching my head. But I understood every word of this and I actually have two packages of that putty stuff I had no idea what it was for. But I'm ordering the parts if I don't have them here. Thanks man 5 stars
This dude's life goal is to make an LED brighter than the sun.
Happy to see you're back
just wondering, what phone do you have
looks like sony z5 compact. Im not sure tho.
on second look its probably just regular z5
Xperia Z3 Compact with a bit of vinyl wrap stuck to the back.
its not the z5. its the z3
so glad you don't have an Iphone. (im serious)
I really enjoy your videos. Your camerawork and audio commentary are very pleasing to hear/watch and I find your content very interesting and easily explained. I even built a portable speaker with bluetooth thanks to one of your other videos :)
Hope all phones have a current limiting feature, so noone will break his USB port trying this...
USB ports in phones can handle 2A.
Yes the connector itself can handle the current, but the internal phone dc-dc boost driver mostly can't. So there must be overcurrent protection to avoid damaging the otg power circuit.
you are correct and most phones dont have protection. they dont even have over voltage protection.
Drawing too much current over an unprotected phone will cook the traces and fuck the USB port, HOPEFULLY only breaking its OTG capability, but potentially much worse.
micro usb is max 1.8 A however most charge no more than 1A the pcb copper tracers will defiantly burn up if that is exceeded. some 3w leds could go over that ? if it breaks the usb will no longer work once copper tracer has burnt
The aluminum plate is for thermal dissipation. Using thermal compound and some way of cooling it would stop the LED from cutting out when it heats up.
am i the only one using phone with "amost-bright-as this project" light built in?
probably
You havent seen the light in person... I have used that LED and it is waaay brighter than the flash on your phone. Just think logically, this 3W led has a heatsink which heats up significantly and the phone doesn't. If your flash had that power where will the heat go?
my dual led htc one m9 flash is bright enough for the girls i go out with. so i would assume there are a bunch of people that have similar phones and don't need to do this project.
my phone is the same way...the led flash is as bright if not brighter than the one in the video...just download the flashlight app and you're good to go....
No, just no.You can't judge by the video, just fooling yoirself
your videos are awesome. they are very different and you always give usable and workable ideas. I look up to you for making and improving my videos too. Your ideas are intelligent and your script covers almost everything. Really great!!! very inspiring
Awesome build, may I request a build.... Turning an laptop touch pad to USB or ps/2
The light gadget is really sweet and handy... but I have to say: I just LOOOVE your Pilea!!!
Why would you need an OTG cable if you cut of the female usb a anyways?
The magic is in the microUSB side
On the microUSB side, pins 4 and 5 are shorted together telling the phone to go into host mode.
@Mikeguy94 wow dude.. THANKS SOOO SOOO MUCH :) If you wouldn't gave that info, I'd try normal micro usb connector and probably fail..
they are not shorted. there is a resistor between them
Máté Varga In a proper one there is a resistor, but they can be just shorted together if you go the DIY route.
Nice project. Your videos are getting better with each new release. Thanks :-)
can you do an OTG external speakers, please? 😄
gosh that would be sooo awesome!
:O I HOPE TO SEE YOUR IDEA ON THIS CHANNEL
Donny Sabri Get a Otg cable, a usb soundcard and a pair of battery powered speaker (3x AA/AAA) connect the soundcard to the Otg cable, open it and add wires to 5v and ground, solder those to the positive and negative terminal of where the batteries used to go. Plug the speakers in to the sound card and hide everything inside one of the speakers. And now you have Otg speakers.
Its possible on android 5.0+ I believe.
Or just use any speaker with an auxillary cord...
Man you are the best!!! you might take some time to upload but it is really awesome watching your videos
Did dbrand and sugru also sponsor this video? But even then, nice video :)
Nope :) that skin is just a bit of vinyl wrap cut to the size of the phone. As for the Sugru, I just had some left over from last year.
Bruh... there is to much Prod Placement ...
How is there too much product placement? Would you prefer he just used hot glue to make the outside shell lol. He's using what's best for the project, nothing wrong with that.
your voice is soothing man
Its clever, but isn't simpler to just buy a small torch that will work without needing a phone attached?
I have a small one on my keyring, uses an AA battery and has adjustable brightness and focus
where's the fun in that?
Colin Java that literally defeats the point in this channel lol no one said this is the simplest option, but on the contrary is it not a good option to have so you never have to charge it or replace a battery? as long as your phone has a charge, you have a light
Honestly I'm never going to make any of these projects because I'm lazy but I love your channel and your voice is very relaxing!
Matt, do a electric skateboard tutorial please? 🙏🙏🙏
Already planned bro, already planned...
ow yes! thanks mate
I would offer to jump in and collab on that, or at least donate some gear if you weren't so far away.
omg. can't wait!
great scott channel recently did something like that.but would love to see DIY perks version
I wish I had a Sony phone just to have it hanging out the side like that. If I do this on mine it would have to be at the bottom. Yours looks more natural on the side. Very project none the less. Maybe one day you can make a video listing the perfect tools to get started with diy jobs and how to use them. That would be great.
Could you modify this to be a reading light? =o
yeah, just lower the current so it is not blindingly bright.
And possible add heat sink behind the led.
Also if you dont this to get power from you phone, then you can chance it USB connector and get power from any USB socket. Same method, different connector. Also add switch on the ground wire and you get it go on and off with out removing it from USB socket, that is too far away.
you won't be needing a heat sink for that..
i hope to see you making a Metal Detector from A to Z :D , including circuitry & all :)
i like your DIY videos even before watching them , keep going
Hi, you could use some (free) Software Apps. They use the Smartphone Hardware (Antenna)...
Play the "Actually" game and chug a drink everytime you hear the word Actually!!! Only a minute in and heard it twice!!!!
that isn't much, actually.
Nice idea mate!
Do u know how to make OTG usb type c cable? I would like to see the video on that.
I try to find any source on the internet but not found. I don't know which pin is need pull up or pull down to trigger the host mode.
Just buy one
Just put a 5K resistor on CC and GND And that should do the trick. Just don't forget to add some extra output caps between VBUS and GND
Ashley Van Steenacker thank you very much
Very cool as always!
I'd rather carry a mini torch and save my precious phone battery power.
Same reason I still use an iPod
Great video, deserves a like.
I love your work and I see why you do this, but the ads are getting more and more intrusive. Again, I know it's not accidental, but I'd advice not to go much further than this.
Note that the USB spec actually only allows you to draw 100 mA unless the device enumerates and configures the port for more current - you can get a small dedicated chip that will do this for you for pretty cheap though.
Why not use 2 Leds in Series instead of the voltage regulator?
Adventist that's not how that works. 2 white leds require about 6 volt. USB provides 5 volt, so they "underperform". That's where the typical diode characteristics kick in: letting through less amps when they are "undervolted".
With 2.5 volt instead of 3.2 they will use aprox 1/8 of the max current
but what about thair breack trough voltage @@gekkehenkie0001
@@vega1287 yeah, could very well be they don't do anything at all. In my experience it takes a minimum of 2.5 - 2.6 volt to give a visible result.
Anyway, they don't burn up either 😂
@@gekkehenkie0001 well as far as i know blue leds start to light up at about 3 volts and a white led is basically a uv blue led with a phopphor infront of it to create white light through flurescencee
@@vega1287 their useable range is on average between 2.9 to 3.2, but they do start emitting light from 2.6 volt, just very little.
I likely will not make the project, but thank you for introducing me to Sugru. Fascinating stuff.
Suggesting calibrating a buck converter by intentionally overloading the USB host controller on their phone isn't the best thing to tell your audience of 590k people. Side note sugru was a nice touch, really sold the functionality.
Well, the presenter also repeatedly calls a potentiometer a "micro knob" (lol!) so what do you really expect? Seems pretty clear that electronics is not exactly his forte.
As LEDs have like, 0 resistance, they will gladly accept and pass through any amount of current you apply to them,even if they burn through , thats why they should be driven via Current control not Voltage, the manufacturer lists the forward current for led, you can however limit the voltage as done in this video, but you should check it with a multimeter not trial and error
If the voltage is limited using buck converters like he did, would it also limit the current? I'm new to electronics
My phone's flash is about the same brightness and it's nearly 3 years old, to improve on mine with a thing like this, it would drain battery ridiculously fast.
it probably isnt,that led is quite powerful.i think its probably his camera adjusting for the difference in light
Alvis Gwa Maybe
Marcus Coster my Samsung Galaxy s5 neo has probably one of the brightest flashlights, I've been able to decently light up an entire average sized bedroom with it
Rans Animation That's the kind of brightness an LG G3 has.
Yup
Thank you really much. I searched so Long for something like this.
this thing is insanely bright xD
Very much so :)
if I used 2 or four of them, how would i have to adjust the circuitry? just finding the right knob position?
Παναγιώτης Συσκάκης thank you :)
Looks very futuristic with the rubber stuff
Refine the design and...sell it!
A smartphone hack that is ACTUALLY USEFUL! I didn't think those words could form to make a sentence such as that. Good show!
It looks like a plastic spoon
It would have to be a funny kind of spoon I must admit. Wouldn't be able to get much on on it really.
that was really cool! finally an actually useful DIY!!
Heh, sucks to be an iPhone user right about now, don't it?
Hey man, love your videos! Each one is full of some great original ideas 💪 Have you used Capacitive Touch switches before ? I can't find a lot of good quality documentation on using them and I'm wondering if you'd be into using one in a project to show how to use them?
Love your work mate
my phone is type C 😥 first world problems...
China is the key
even better! when you do this you can plug it in both ways!
www.amazon.de/Microsoft-MacBook-Notebook-Oneplus-Supported/dp/B00VNA85IA
Obbliteration this, although advertised, does not work with the OnePlus 2 (and perhaps the OP3 not either). OnePlus devices don't recognize usb 3.0+ devices. I have to use the adapter from oneplus with micro B cable to have OTG functionality
An LED is not a 3.0 device so I question your statement but you may be right. But anyway who said anything about 1+ pohnes?
Wow, a diy perk that I've done! Thank you so much for sharing :)
Wow, trying to get better performace than a flashlight without concetrating the light. lolwut
I would recommend using "proto putty" in place of suguru for price. All it is is cornstarch mixed with 100% silicon and it creates moldable rubber with some food coloring or water as an activator.
You could add a loop so that you can keep it on your keys
Take possible aluminum strip, bend it half, add key ring on the middle, put some thermal paste between just polished surfaces and bolt it to leds heat sink with small machine screws. Then add suguru or what ever over it. This should also extend the usage time of the light before it over heats on point of shutting down.
You can make it from steel too to make it more durable, but heat transfer is far less with steel than using aluminum.
i'm impressed with the final design.. keep it up.
I think every YT's channel is sponsoring a company.Like WTH Isn't YT money is enough?
Whining about an advertisement you can easily skip which is directly supporting the creator of the video you are watching. Isn't this totally free, interesting and inspiring content enough?
Lotus It's my opinion.Don't judge it if you didn't agree.
You'd be surprised how much little money you get from UA-cam videos. Usually around a penny for every 20 views...
He made like 375£ Already!
? My view count says 4,000 views. 4000/20 = 200. 200p = £2...
Super neat project !
ps.Now thats some good advertising!
Price of all those parts from amazon inc. shipping is about 50$
For that money we can buy high quality flashlight, with 10W(1000Lm) of power so about 4 times more than that DIY crap.
Also that DIY egg will die quickly because there is no cooling for the LED.
What heat dispenser???
Its even thermally isolated by that plastic.
And no heatsink.
You can buy these on ebay for less than $1 dollar USD. There are two types using SMD LED's. One that is a constant brightness and one you can dim as needed. Here';s what they look like -- www.ebay.com/itm/MINI-Touch-Switch-USB-mobile-power-camping-lamp-LED-night-light-White-lamp-WF-/371741972756? -- I have a few of them and use them with a mini/micro usb OTG adapter of approximately the same size. I keep the light plugged into the usb adapter and it fits in a pocket. Much less bulky and only cost $2. Now they certainly are not 3 watt LEDs, but they are still very bright and will light up a car interior, footpath in front of you or tent quite nicely... and gently sip from the battery.
I have dimmable(by touch panel) usb flaslight.
These are just another reason to do not build that shitty flaslight by diyperks...
I didnt know that it will be shit.
Found it. Here is the one with the touch-dimmer switch - www.ebay.com/itm/MINI-Touch-Switch-USB-mobile-power-camping-lamp-LED-night-light-White-lamp-XW9/272450283507
So well constructed....
Why not just use the led built in for the flash for your camera lol?
This one is brighter
Did you even watch the video?
He just said they aren’t bright enough
My phone actually has a very bright flashlight feature that uses the lights from the dual flash. It is a Droid Turbo2. I have found that this phone's gesture feature is incredibly useful when I need a light. All I need to do is shake my phone a certain direction and my light pops right on. Shake it another way and I get my camera app. This is a great diy for devices that don't have as bright of a flashlight.
""No hay subtitulo en español y no entinedo serias muy amable saludos de mexico""
you videos are getting more frequent that is great
This video is like 3 years old
Lol I have a Nexus 6P. Amazing light, and using an OTG cable with Bought can allow stuff like plugging in a whole MIDI keyboard, a mouse etc, even a USB hub, and a Ethernet to USB cable
Wow. Great video and info. Cool project.