That is a heck of a lot of mechanical/packaging engineering. The people who designed this really have an excellent ability to work in three dimensions.
This looks like a very expensive design. All those connectors to be wired and fitted. So much electronics for such a simple function. It appears to lack a user replaceable air filter. I think it is over engineered.
The electrical and mechanical design is next level. So much happening in a small package. I would have never guessed from looking at the outside that so much was going on in the inside. Thank you for sharing with us.
I'm actually relieved to see the amount of internal shielding. As cars become increasingly complex, with high-speed and low-speed data buses and individual modules scattered about that all need to communicate on wired networks, errant noise can wreak havoc on a vehicle's operation. Not to mention the potential impact on radio reception (AM/FM/DAB/HD RADIO/RDS) and cell phone reception... And not just on the installed vehicle, it could very well be enough to interfere with a nearby vehicle. (I've had a vehicle's stock turn signals cause FM static in time with the on-state of the lamps, great job on shielding, Stellantis!) Having that precisely-shaped shield, and seeing it tied to the vehicle's chassis ground via the screw and negative power lead, proves they've actually put significant thought and engineering into this product, in the hopes of minimizing any potential issues. This wasn't some "generic ionizer module shoved into a cup-holder-sized case," this was a product that had some intelligent teams working together to build an excellent product. As I've come to expect from a subsidiary of Matsushita.
That is some very complex and sophisticated engineering for an ionizer. I'm sure the engineers and designers had fun with it. It makes me want to overcomplicate something simple... like, maybe I'll design a rolling pin that has 50 parts and complex assembly that works and looks like a giant wooden dowel, but at 500x the cost. haha
Hehe, 200 quid of internal spinning weights and guv'nors instantly wiped out by a usbC socket full of bread dough and flour :) Clearly needs a wireless charging dock.
Regarding the high voltage diodes. I remember one time getting some fairly high voltage diodes in an assortment of all kinds of parts I think it was like a boxes of surplus components through some company or another or they have gotten these from someone else in a bunch of stuff can't remember. However the how voltage diodes absolutely had it stacks of the eagle discs you could clearly see this since the diodes were basically translucent plastic tubes with end caps. By the way one time I was curious about internal construction of a large ball like diode so it took a hammer to it literally. Load behold it was a disk like structure with Leeds attached in some manner as well. From what I've heard I don't know if this is correct or not just what I've heard from others. Is essentially the discs or punched out of a sheet of the PN Junction material that's essentially a flat sheet or a ribbon something along this lines. And basically these are just stacked in some manner as to be able to create a high voltage diode of Norris ratings depending on the number of discs stacked. I even saw something once I don't know how old this component was or was from it's just something that I got from somebody as just something interesting it was a resistor that was built in a similar fashion except pallets of a carbon black material who knows what exotic piece of equipment this was from for the age of it. Also with the diodes mentioned before that I received there was a bunch of these what looks like glass enclosures resistors except the prices did not look like a carpet material more like a gold color I'm suspecting Patricia temperature sensor porcelain quite exotic. A lot of really Oddball and interesting components in the mix. So which of course we're not even labeled . By the way speaking of high voltage inverters light in this video except on a lower voltage scale. I saw this three-letter component in something in the back of my brain told me to connect 12 volts to two different pins keep in mind this is on a circuit board that was just a drunk board may have you been Surplus as well. And I heard a bit of a wine running at 12 volts and realize this was some type of inverter what's the my surprised it was able to run neon pilot light bulbs weird for sure. Oh and yeah there was that time that was trying to fry the it's not out of a calculator that failed after years. Turn the diode into a light bulb note not an LED but incandescent bulb essentially silver high-pitch sound from the thing too just oddball. If you can't fix it or replace it for much have some fun with it! And yeah one time was working on a calculator that had rechargeable batteries oopsie with that board how to remove an oopsy. Bear in mind this is before lithium batteries were used. Yep I accidentally short circuit in that one burn the traces clean off the board however not the problem not repairable not even worth trying to do so much wrong with it not to mention would have to find a way to use some something other than the charge Jack provided I had never seen a plug like that before or since alone odd voltage of adapter think it combines both power and battery charging in same power supply if I'm not mistaken 3 wire plug low voltage of course
Way back in the 1970s, I repaired a color TV that used a similar (but much larger) ceramic & deposited carbon resistor to supply the focus voltage for the CRT. The manufacturer connected the thing from the CRT anode voltage (30KV!) to ground, and tapped the resistor for the focus voltage. As one might imagine, the resistor opened up after a while. Replacing the resistor restored the focus.
Thinking back to the early 2000s, there were still CRT televisions. As soon as I turned it on, white smoke filled the room. I unplugged it and disposed of it. We had a short in ours. It didn’t trip the breaker.
Could you imagine that most Trinitron tubes from the mid 1980's onwards, had a similar resistor inside the tube, as part of a potential divider for the horizontal static convergence...
It's crazy to think someone sat and thought about how to build this thing, All the wire and chips and board is one thing but the housing with all the tracks and pieces and holes to allow airflow and then it clips together to make 1 unit, The wire and power system is 1 thing but someone designed all that housing, When I take things apart im just as amazed some time with the housing because someone sat there and figured all this out on a paper '' computer ''
It's not just that someone designed the shell. They passed the model to the next department where it got redesigned into a mouldable shell that considers the assembly procedure as well. Probably number of test moulds to dial in tolerances. Pretty advanced stuff.
Wildly complex. Thanks Big Clive! Looking it up I found one on Amazon for almost $100 Pricey little guys. Apparently Lexus includes the Nanoe tech in the AC systems.
Ex Toyota tech here, Toyotas have it too (same business as Lexus after all), never been so deep though. Funnily some older Toyotas used competing Sharp Plasmacluster units!
@@ekummel Usefulness and quality? You are kidding, right? It's a useless piece of junk! ... It may be Panasonic branded, and have some decent parts in it, but it's still useless! ... Anyway, that's my opinion, and clearly yours differs, but everybody is entitled to one! Big Clive has "usefulness and quality!" ... Everybody loves Big Clive!
I looked up the patents and it seems the rounded tip may be related to panasonic's special sauce- dunno if its the case for this one, but the electrode is designed to be cooled by a peltier module so that it condenses water from the air. The high voltage then atomizes the water that collects on the tip, creating a mist of negatively charged water droplets. Edit: come to think of it, that explains the ground potential electrode too, as it would be in contact with it, the peltier module would best be at a similar potential to the electrode to avoid arcing, and a 0v,5v power supply is easier to make than a -10000v,-10005v power supply
As I was walking this a couple of things occurred to me. That resistor reminded me of the thin film resistors that are used in multimeters to make a voltage divider. And the way they make the corona with the ball reminded me of the top of a tesla coil in a way. It would make a place for electrons to collect to a specific potential before you actually got some kind of discharge or current flow.
I would have thought the carbon granules would be there to adsorb any large charged molecules which have been split apart by the corona discharge. That gives the ozone longer to work on them and once neutralised they would be released back to the air.
Parents still use a Panasonic 50" plasma they bought in 2006. A heavy, robust piece of equipment. I believe it was assembled in Mexico, Panasonic must have really nailed down their QC. And they have an 80's Panasonic boombox that's repeatedly baked and froze every year in the garage but still works fine (except for the tape player who's belt long ago disintegrated).
There is a design school never to use a few simple components if a lot of complex ones will do the job, but this air purifier is extreme: all that electronics to control a high voltage generator and a fan.
It seemed to me like an exercise in emulating transistors with mcus 😂 I guess that's what you get when universities shift focus from circuit theory to embedded systems
As a kid I had a Panasonic cassette tape recorder/player, that thing got dropped, wet, or dirty on a regular basis. It survived until well past my teens, my mom used it to record college lectures. I think once I replaced the drive belt.
i'm watching this on a panasonic tv. ive never had a bad panasonic household product. 30 years ago my panasonic cordless drill was a bit wanting. but back then all cordless brands were a bit wanting.
@@tncorgi92 I have my father's 1970s Panasonic 8-track recording deck, it still works really well - I need to adjust the azimuth and slap a new belt on it (original belt), but it DOES work, amazingly none of the lamps have burned out yet! Our 1978 Panasonic 15" CRT TV finally died in 2013, probably something easily-repairable, but its failure was what shoved us into the HDTV era. Sometime in the late-80s, the dial lights burned out, so it was either tune-with-the-VCR, or shine-a-flashlight-at-the-dials. 😆
I've had 4 Panasonic TVs in over 35 years they never broke down, just kept going until technology made them obsolete. CRT, the Standard Def Plasma , HD Plasma and now an OLED.
It might be over engineered but at least it acts as a reminder of what we lost when we turned our backs on real Japanese engineering - think of that next time your Chinese tat breaks down after two weeks 😂
I've been thinking. In the last 3 or 5 years a product category popped up which didn't exist before, cordless airbrush. A tiny little compressor that is sat right underneath the airbrush itself, and these are normal airbrushes used in scale model painting. They are scary cheap, and while i've seen plain USB ones in the past, now they all include a battery, seems like. I wonder what the compressor and power unit is built like.
The little air pumps in desktop and wrist worn blood pressure cuffs (sphygmomanometers) are tiny little swash-plate diaphragm pumps, very cute and might be similar to the airbrush units. The pressure sensors are sometimes quite elaborate because they measure the cuff pressure AND the pulse beat signal with the same sensor so it needs a wide linear range and fast response to small changes. The capacitive ones are sometimes just a membrane over a PCB conductor that drives an RC oscillator.
@@KallePihlajasaari I have had several wrist worn manometers fail on me (material fatigue in the flexible cuff sandwich) so i have torn them down, and been curious about harvesting pressure measurement IC from them to use for something of a kind. But the pumps in those are absolutely tiny. It looks like the airbrush has a lot more stuff inside probably a bulkier motor. I wonder how much or how little i can get away with, been thinking of putting a foot switch controlled air pump on my desk, i could use the inlet as vac tweezer and the like and use the outlet for airbrushing.
I'm in New Zealand and have a used Japanese import Toyota Corolla which has a Panasonic Nano E air con system. My wife is Japanese and she says the pronunciation is actually 'Nano E'
Very complex little piece of technology! I'm guessing this thing actually does what it says it does. A massive amount of design work went into creating this little device! I researched this a bit and it sounds impressive and was quite a bit cheaper than I expected. Seeing how this thing is built now has me thinking about buying one. We see a lot of devices out there that make all sorts of claims and when you tear into them, you know the claims are mostly hype. I don't think that is the case here,
I guess another reason for wanting to capture the ozone with the carbon filters, besides people getting a bit weary from the smell is that ozone is very corrosive. While it's small amounts, if the unit is sitting in a car it'll be surrounded by all manner of plastics and polymer coatings that might start to degrade over time in the immediate vicinity of where the unit is. I don't know how much effect it might have, but in theory it might which is probably enough for marketing to slap a couple of filters in there.
I had a repurposed corona discharge wire from an old analogue photocopier that was continuously running in a workshop at a pretty high voltage and current (would glow an eery blue in the dark) and after about a year or so when I went to examine it I could see that all nearby iron parts had a fine coat of rust. Ozone is a real problem for many things, plastic as you say is quite vulnerable and can become brittle with no signs of other damage so adding the ozone filter is a good idea in a closed space like a car. I think I saw a hint of an 8 hour timer so you could turn it on when you exit the car and it would sanitise it over night and the ozone would not build up.
With the rounded emitter you get a better distributed and less intense electrical field or corona and I wonder if this increases the life of the electrodes and makes if more efficient?
Are those two extra wires going to a Peltier element? Some of these units cool the tip to encourage condensation to form. I also wonder if the carbon granules are more to do with moisture capture? Very interesting device.
I wonder if this is what that “Delusional Design” eBay thing with the strangely sturdy welded case was trying to copy. Particularly the blower-type fan mounted upright in the middle reminds me of that. The difference being that this is actually functional.
18:16 That is the kind of diagram in which physics teacher delight - drawing a van der Graaf generator with small pieces of ali foil spurting off its top. Maths teachers have their equivalent - the saggy boob diagram.
Inventory control manager: How do we get rid of all these components that have been here for years, including these fans and bags of carbon? Engineers: We'll make a complicated filter for cars that looks like a cup but really just blows air on the driver.
panasonic has room air purifiers with nano e. and a lot of their air cons got that too. i have 5 panasonic aircons with the nano e function and i think they all use the same board for everything hence all that selection option with jumpers.
Those soldered headers really confused me for a minute when I was fixing my onkyo receiver. Board that held the relay/speaker connections had one, whereas other stuff in it had ones that could be unplugged. Tugged at it, wiggled all the usual stuff. Wouldn't come off and then realized it wouldn't and de-soldered it.
Had to read that several times before my damaged brain got it right... at first glance I thought you said "emulating transistors with mucus". Obviously, that's snot right 😂😂😂
I would say that the rounded electrode tip allows greater high voltage and thus greater plasma current with lower risk of arcing. It’s far easier to generate high voltage in a small relatively safe package than it was when that Russian fellow invented the concept, so much so that arcing can be a problem. The carbon is probably there to catch oxides of nitrogen and any organic odor molecules in the car cabin air. Ozone reacts with activated carbon to make carbon dioxide but the activation energy is pretty high meaning it proceeds better at elevated temperatures, hardly at all at shirtsleeve temperature.
Exceedingly Japanese, this design, but beautifully made and engineered. I seem to recall something about these units - a claim that they not only purify the air but are beneficial to health as well due to "special ionization" or something like that. Interesting device.
Trust Panasonic to make something complex. But I've looked at their room unit demo, very impressive. They left some things (i remember dog food) in a sealed room with one of their bigger nanoe units, completely odorless room when you went in. Then saw the price, nevermind.
Looks (to me) like the "needle" is a tiny globe to produce a much larger corona and therefore, a larger a number of ionised particles flying around. Rather over the top for a car unit.
Such an overload of components and complex design. I just roll down my windows for 5 seconds and all the air in my car has been replaced by fresh outdoors air.
That is SO much effort to go to, for such a feeble active part. The microcontroller alone looks like it has enough I/O to control the Apollo Command Module. It must have cost an absolute fortune in injection moulds and styling/3D design time. Then again, that is what probably sells the product to the consumer.
Thanks Clive. Only you can take a hundred quids worth of complicated tech and reduce it down to just a small willy and a lady garden. 😂😂😂 Brilliant. Cheers 🍺
In some ways, we are so alike. I enjoy, and find it a challenge, to take things apart. Some things are great puzzles, trying to determine how the mfg. assembled the device. My GF believes me to be wizard when I just go into repairing something.
That is a heck of a lot of mechanical/packaging engineering. The people who designed this really have an excellent ability to work in three dimensions.
I have some wireless Panasonic webcams for the barn that are going on 20 years old and noticed some similar packaging cues. Interesting consistency
It just goes to highlight the difference between a good brand and the others.
@@CommanderZx2nice to see that the name brand isn't just the same guts as the cheapie, re-badged, as is so often the case.
Look at the difference between Chines made stuff and Panasonic, the Chinese have as few parts as possible and Panasonic as many parts as possible.
This looks like a very expensive design. All those connectors to be wired and fitted. So much electronics for such a simple function. It appears to lack a user replaceable air filter.
I think it is over engineered.
It looks like what id expect from Panasonic label. No false or spoofed claims. And it has a squirrel cage fan, impressed.
The electrical and mechanical design is next level. So much happening in a small package. I would have never guessed from looking at the outside that so much was going on in the inside.
Thank you for sharing with us.
I love that these videos aren't scripted, just a very clever man rambling on. Case in point - "...the case, as is the case in this case..."
You must admire the amount of stuff they stuffed in it. Compact design.
It is well over complicated, not even bother to use a connector, you still think so?
@@lifeai1889 The amount of over engineering is impressive for the small space. No necessarily better. LOL. Must have been designed by NASA.
Every component must be high quality as the failure rate would be high.
Ripping apart something legit instead of scammy. One of the best videos since Fanny Flambeaux.
Who's Fanny?
That was a spendy little unit. You're too good to us, Clive
The level of complexity of ordinary modern electronics is fucking insane
"The needle point emitter.. or the case as the case is in this case."
Try saying that fast 10 times in a row!
Great video (as always) Clive ❤
I'm actually relieved to see the amount of internal shielding. As cars become increasingly complex, with high-speed and low-speed data buses and individual modules scattered about that all need to communicate on wired networks, errant noise can wreak havoc on a vehicle's operation. Not to mention the potential impact on radio reception (AM/FM/DAB/HD RADIO/RDS) and cell phone reception... And not just on the installed vehicle, it could very well be enough to interfere with a nearby vehicle. (I've had a vehicle's stock turn signals cause FM static in time with the on-state of the lamps, great job on shielding, Stellantis!)
Having that precisely-shaped shield, and seeing it tied to the vehicle's chassis ground via the screw and negative power lead, proves they've actually put significant thought and engineering into this product, in the hopes of minimizing any potential issues. This wasn't some "generic ionizer module shoved into a cup-holder-sized case," this was a product that had some intelligent teams working together to build an excellent product. As I've come to expect from a subsidiary of Matsushita.
I was thinking the same thing. This was clearly designed from the ground up for use in a modern vehicle.
That is some very complex and sophisticated engineering for an ionizer. I'm sure the engineers and designers had fun with it. It makes me want to overcomplicate something simple... like, maybe I'll design a rolling pin that has 50 parts and complex assembly that works and looks like a giant wooden dowel, but at 500x the cost. haha
Hehe, 200 quid of internal spinning weights and guv'nors instantly wiped out by a usbC socket full of bread dough and flour :)
Clearly needs a wireless charging dock.
@@bethaltair812Needs a Neon lamp in it too for style.
Not to forget to pot nastily some of it for the sake of oddity 😅
Hot melt glue too - lots of it.
this is one of the most interesting teardown yet bigC
Ok, the schematic at 21:45 - you’re trolling us Clive. Clearly a lady looking down at her décolletage and her “vibrio motor’
Thanks for confirming it's not just my 6yr old brain that sees these things.😂😂😂 Excellent, Cheers 🍺
Regarding the high voltage diodes.
I remember one time getting some fairly high voltage diodes in an assortment of all kinds of parts I think it was like a boxes of surplus components through some company or another or they have gotten these from someone else in a bunch of stuff can't remember.
However the how voltage diodes absolutely had it stacks of the eagle discs you could clearly see this since the diodes were basically translucent plastic tubes with end caps.
By the way one time I was curious about internal construction of a large ball like diode so it took a hammer to it literally.
Load behold it was a disk like structure with Leeds attached in some manner as well.
From what I've heard I don't know if this is correct or not just what I've heard from others.
Is essentially the discs or punched out of a sheet of the PN Junction material that's essentially a flat sheet or a ribbon something along this lines.
And basically these are just stacked in some manner as to be able to create a high voltage diode of Norris ratings depending on the number of discs stacked.
I even saw something once I don't know how old this component was or was from it's just something that I got from somebody as just something interesting it was a resistor that was built in a similar fashion except pallets of a carbon black material who knows what exotic piece of equipment this was from for the age of it.
Also with the diodes mentioned before that I received there was a bunch of these what looks like glass enclosures resistors except the prices did not look like a carpet material more like a gold color I'm suspecting Patricia temperature sensor porcelain quite exotic.
A lot of really Oddball and interesting components in the mix.
So which of course we're not even labeled .
By the way speaking of high voltage inverters light in this video except on a lower voltage scale.
I saw this three-letter component in something in the back of my brain told me to connect 12 volts to two different pins keep in mind this is on a circuit board that was just a drunk board may have you been Surplus as well.
And I heard a bit of a wine running at 12 volts and realize this was some type of inverter what's the my surprised it was able to run neon pilot light bulbs weird for sure.
Oh and yeah there was that time that was trying to fry the it's not out of a calculator that failed after years.
Turn the diode into a light bulb note not an LED but incandescent bulb essentially silver high-pitch sound from the thing too just oddball.
If you can't fix it or replace it for much have some fun with it!
And yeah one time was working on a calculator that had rechargeable batteries oopsie with that board how to remove an oopsy.
Bear in mind this is before lithium batteries were used.
Yep I accidentally short circuit in that one burn the traces clean off the board however not the problem not repairable not even worth trying to do so much wrong with it not to mention would have to find a way to use some something other than the charge Jack provided I had never seen a plug like that before or since alone odd voltage of adapter think it combines both power and battery charging in same power supply if I'm not mistaken 3 wire plug low voltage of course
Way back in the 1970s, I repaired a color TV that used a similar (but much larger) ceramic & deposited carbon resistor to supply the focus voltage for the CRT. The manufacturer connected the thing from the CRT anode voltage (30KV!) to ground, and tapped the resistor for the focus voltage. As one might imagine, the resistor opened up after a while. Replacing the resistor restored the focus.
Thinking back to the early 2000s, there were still CRT televisions. As soon as I turned it on, white smoke filled the room. I unplugged it and disposed of it. We had a short in ours. It didn’t trip the breaker.
@@rebeccaalig1856 probably the mains suppression capacitor, as some manufacturers used paper capacitors that were prone to letting the smoke out.
Could you imagine that most Trinitron tubes from the mid 1980's onwards, had a similar resistor inside the tube, as part of a potential divider for the horizontal static convergence...
It's crazy to think someone sat and thought about how to build this thing,
All the wire and chips and board is one thing but the housing with all the tracks and pieces and holes to allow airflow and then it clips together to make 1 unit,
The wire and power system is 1 thing but someone designed all that housing,
When I take things apart im just as amazed some time with the housing because someone sat there and figured all this out on a paper '' computer ''
It's not just that someone designed the shell. They passed the model to the next department where it got redesigned into a mouldable shell that considers the assembly procedure as well. Probably number of test moulds to dial in tolerances. Pretty advanced stuff.
Love these Panasonic and Sharp air purifiers. Nice industrial engineering.
That’s very neat, you have to admire the designers spatial awareness and all to fit into a drinks holder , these are not cheap but I can see why .
Wildly complex. Thanks Big Clive! Looking it up I found one on Amazon for almost $100 Pricey little guys. Apparently Lexus includes the Nanoe tech in the AC systems.
Ex Toyota tech here,
Toyotas have it too (same business as Lexus after all), never been so deep though.
Funnily some older Toyotas used competing Sharp Plasmacluster units!
Cool design. An air purifier built in to the housing of a flesh light :) sweet. x
Thanks for several years of your videos, Clive. Lindsay (NSW, Aus)
Thanks. That's very generous of you.
Wow! Impressive engineering and implementation.
Mork calling Orson, Mork calling Orson? Nanoe, nanoe.
And my breath is so fresh.
The Japanese are really serious with these things and really go out their way.
Mork has two of these
Nice. 👍
That is a very well put together item. You can really tell the quality of this item!
Quality, but useless? 👎🤣
@@marcse7en how do you figure? The device seems to have quite a bit of usefulness and the quality of the device seems to reflect it's usefulness.
@@ekummel Usefulness and quality? You are kidding, right? It's a useless piece of junk! ... It may be Panasonic branded, and have some decent parts in it, but it's still useless! ... Anyway, that's my opinion, and clearly yours differs, but everybody is entitled to one!
Big Clive has "usefulness and quality!" ... Everybody loves Big Clive!
I looked up the patents and it seems the rounded tip may be related to panasonic's special sauce- dunno if its the case for this one, but the electrode is designed to be cooled by a peltier module so that it condenses water from the air. The high voltage then atomizes the water that collects on the tip, creating a mist of negatively charged water droplets.
Edit: come to think of it, that explains the ground potential electrode too, as it would be in contact with it, the peltier module would best be at a similar potential to the electrode to avoid arcing, and a 0v,5v power supply is easier to make than a -10000v,-10005v power supply
As I was walking this a couple of things occurred to me. That resistor reminded me of the thin film resistors that are used in multimeters to make a voltage divider. And the way they make the corona with the ball reminded me of the top of a tesla coil in a way. It would make a place for electrons to collect to a specific potential before you actually got some kind of discharge or current flow.
Wow, the complexity of this unit is amazing! Also, the price. 😅👍
I would have thought the carbon granules would be there to adsorb any large charged molecules which have been split apart by the corona discharge. That gives the ozone longer to work on them and once neutralised they would be released back to the air.
Panasonic. Great Japanese company. Still one of the best, even if they are struggling in the mainstream Western markets right now.
That's a ridiculous amount of circuitry for such a simple function.
My last television was a Panasonic plasma 42”. Sure was a good picture. Left it at the house we moved from 13 years ago. No TV since, and loving it
Parents still use a Panasonic 50" plasma they bought in 2006. A heavy, robust piece of equipment. I believe it was assembled in Mexico, Panasonic must have really nailed down their QC. And they have an 80's Panasonic boombox that's repeatedly baked and froze every year in the garage but still works fine (except for the tape player who's belt long ago disintegrated).
There is a design school never to use a few simple components if a lot of complex ones will do the job, but this air purifier is extreme: all that electronics to control a high voltage generator and a fan.
It seemed to me like an exercise in emulating transistors with mcus 😂 I guess that's what you get when universities shift focus from circuit theory to embedded systems
Now that was interesting thank you Clive.
Neat and good job and agree there is much more subtle complexity to the Japanese products more well thought out.
"What is that? Is that important? I don't know, it's just a little rubber thing." Classic Clive.
At 15:46 diagram I love your glasses. First thing I had seen in it. Kidding aside, love your content. Be well.
Panasonic kit is generally pretty good. Our Panasonic a/c units have lasted a VERY long time without any "non-user fixable" problems.
If any company can make something overly complex....its Panasonic!!!
As a kid I had a Panasonic cassette tape recorder/player, that thing got dropped, wet, or dirty on a regular basis. It survived until well past my teens, my mom used it to record college lectures. I think once I replaced the drive belt.
i'm watching this on a panasonic tv. ive never had a bad panasonic household product. 30 years ago my panasonic cordless drill was a bit wanting. but back then all cordless brands were a bit wanting.
@@tncorgi92 I have my father's 1970s Panasonic 8-track recording deck, it still works really well - I need to adjust the azimuth and slap a new belt on it (original belt), but it DOES work, amazingly none of the lamps have burned out yet!
Our 1978 Panasonic 15" CRT TV finally died in 2013, probably something easily-repairable, but its failure was what shoved us into the HDTV era. Sometime in the late-80s, the dial lights burned out, so it was either tune-with-the-VCR, or shine-a-flashlight-at-the-dials. 😆
I've had 4 Panasonic TVs in over 35 years they never broke down, just kept going until technology made them obsolete. CRT, the Standard Def Plasma , HD Plasma and now an OLED.
@@jamesm90 , ive got a 2 bar floor heater that is so old its a panasonic that was made by them when they were still called national.
Definitely something Mork would be calling Orsen about.....! 😉
It might be over engineered but at least it acts as a reminder of what we lost when we turned our backs on real Japanese engineering - think of that next time your Chinese tat breaks down after two weeks 😂
Very cool! Thanks Clive!❤
Trippy looking at the reverse image of the circuit board
Amazing how complex compared to the Aliexpress little 12v couple of doll hair jobies.
Pretty sure the metal is a ground plane, in case it gets wet and you get a 12kv shock to the nads while driving
Nice one Clive. I'm amazed at how complex this is. Seems well made though. btw any plans for an occasional live stream with the mbc.
Working long hours at the moment, so no streams for a while.
You actually drew a nob 🤩
But joking aside; a lot of thought went into designing that unit!
I was looking at something more ladylike above. 😮
@@nigelanscombe8658 the more you look, the more you see! 😅
Cal me a child but I saw BOTH! Cheers 🍺
I've been thinking. In the last 3 or 5 years a product category popped up which didn't exist before, cordless airbrush. A tiny little compressor that is sat right underneath the airbrush itself, and these are normal airbrushes used in scale model painting. They are scary cheap, and while i've seen plain USB ones in the past, now they all include a battery, seems like. I wonder what the compressor and power unit is built like.
The little air pumps in desktop and wrist worn blood pressure cuffs (sphygmomanometers) are tiny little swash-plate diaphragm pumps, very cute and might be similar to the airbrush units.
The pressure sensors are sometimes quite elaborate because they measure the cuff pressure AND the pulse beat signal with the same sensor so it needs a wide linear range and fast response to small changes.
The capacitive ones are sometimes just a membrane over a PCB conductor that drives an RC oscillator.
@@KallePihlajasaari I have had several wrist worn manometers fail on me (material fatigue in the flexible cuff sandwich) so i have torn them down, and been curious about harvesting pressure measurement IC from them to use for something of a kind. But the pumps in those are absolutely tiny. It looks like the airbrush has a lot more stuff inside probably a bulkier motor. I wonder how much or how little i can get away with, been thinking of putting a foot switch controlled air pump on my desk, i could use the inlet as vac tweezer and the like and use the outlet for airbrushing.
My car is already dusty, imagine if I filled the air with negative charges and all the dust floating around fell, I’d be cleaning the inside forever.
Have a positive charge plate somewhere 😅
typical Panasonic - high quality stuff
I'm in New Zealand and have a used Japanese import Toyota Corolla which has a Panasonic Nano E air con system.
My wife is Japanese and she says the pronunciation is actually 'Nano E'
Very complex little piece of technology! I'm guessing this thing actually does what it says it does. A massive amount of design work went into creating this little device! I researched this a bit and it sounds impressive and was quite a bit cheaper than I expected. Seeing how this thing is built now has me thinking about buying one.
We see a lot of devices out there that make all sorts of claims and when you tear into them, you know the claims are mostly hype. I don't think that is the case here,
Complex, yet ruthless, design. The air is being pulled though the carbon by the granules (12:26), ouch!
I guess another reason for wanting to capture the ozone with the carbon filters, besides people getting a bit weary from the smell is that ozone is very corrosive.
While it's small amounts, if the unit is sitting in a car it'll be surrounded by all manner of plastics and polymer coatings that might start to degrade over time in the immediate vicinity of where the unit is.
I don't know how much effect it might have, but in theory it might which is probably enough for marketing to slap a couple of filters in there.
I had a repurposed corona discharge wire from an old analogue photocopier that was continuously running in a workshop at a pretty high voltage and current (would glow an eery blue in the dark) and after about a year or so when I went to examine it I could see that all nearby iron parts had a fine coat of rust.
Ozone is a real problem for many things, plastic as you say is quite vulnerable and can become brittle with no signs of other damage so adding the ozone filter is a good idea in a closed space like a car.
I think I saw a hint of an 8 hour timer so you could turn it on when you exit the car and it would sanitise it over night and the ozone would not build up.
With the rounded emitter you get a better distributed and less intense electrical field or corona and I wonder if this increases the life of the electrodes and makes if more efficient?
Panasonic engineer: To (hopefully) protect my job I fit some complexity! I bet 2 555 chips would have done the same?
Are those two extra wires going to a Peltier element? Some of these units cool the tip to encourage condensation to form. I also wonder if the carbon granules are more to do with moisture capture? Very interesting device.
This was a SHARP video
I like how they use a standard DC jack so you could use it at home with a suitable 12v DC power supply.
I would rather buy a engineered product like this made in Japan, than a cheapo attempt at a clone. Thanks for the video!
After seeing what's inside this, I want one. I can see using this in the home with a different power supply.
The rounded needle is referred to as being a bell, or a bell-end, of you will 😂
Oooo Matron! 🤣👍
peace be upon you sir
Maybe the "blunt needle" is to reduce any erosion of the point due to the discharge. (but I would expect that to reduce it's effectiveness)
wow clive these things aint cheap i went looking but with all the circuitry inside your getting moneys worth outa it
WOW😳😱 many electronics to to blow the air.
Thx , great at every time
I wonder if this is what that “Delusional Design” eBay thing with the strangely sturdy welded case was trying to copy. Particularly the blower-type fan mounted upright in the middle reminds me of that. The difference being that this is actually functional.
"Needle" tip may be coated with some rare metal activator to help for better corona discharge.
That complexity would cost hundreds of $$ 40 years ago.
Awesome Video Big Clive🙂🙂🙂🙂🙂🙂🙂🙂🙂🙂🙂🙂🙂🙂🙂🙂🙂🙂🙂🙂🙂🙂🙂🙂🙂🙂🙂🙂🙂🙂🙂🙂🙂🙂🙂🙂🙂🙂🙂🙂🙂🙂🙂🙂🙂🙂
Great teardown of something that did not appear so technical from the outside. The added porn drawing kept my interest.
18:16 That is the kind of diagram in which physics teacher delight - drawing a van der Graaf generator with small pieces of ali foil spurting off its top. Maths teachers have their equivalent - the saggy boob diagram.
Inventory control manager: How do we get rid of all these components that have been here for years, including these fans and bags of carbon? Engineers: We'll make a complicated filter for cars that looks like a cup but really just blows air on the driver.
panasonic has room air purifiers with nano e. and a lot of their air cons got that too. i have 5 panasonic aircons with the nano e function and i think they all use the same board for everything hence all that selection option with jumpers.
Those soldered headers really confused me for a minute when I was fixing my onkyo receiver. Board that held the relay/speaker connections had one, whereas other stuff in it had ones that could be unplugged. Tugged at it, wiggled all the usual stuff. Wouldn't come off and then realized it wouldn't and de-soldered it.
With it passing air through it, and the shape reminiscent of certain "personal entertainment devices", you can call this thing a Panasuckit... :P
I'm reminded of that Tom Scot video where he goes to the research lab where they test bear proof bins.
If seems to me Panasonic mastered emulating transistors with mcus
Had to read that several times before my damaged brain got it right... at first glance I thought you said "emulating transistors with mucus". Obviously, that's snot right 😂😂😂
@@Bloke-in-Stoke bwahaha, your version sounds better
Famous last words "ooh, that doesn't feel great..."
You missed the most amazing part. The nanoe module has a tiny peltier underneath the needle that cools it and creates condensation on the knob.
I sussed that out afterwards. Initially I couldn't work out what the near short between the base wires was for.
I would say that the rounded electrode tip allows greater high voltage and thus greater plasma current with lower risk of arcing. It’s far easier to generate high voltage in a small relatively safe package than it was when that Russian fellow invented the concept, so much so that arcing can be a problem.
The carbon is probably there to catch oxides of nitrogen and any organic odor molecules in the car cabin air. Ozone reacts with activated carbon to make carbon dioxide but the activation energy is pretty high meaning it proceeds better at elevated temperatures, hardly at all at shirtsleeve temperature.
Serious engineering if you compare some Temu unit.
That Panasonic ionizer is slightly ahead of its time. You could get a large charge from it if you so desired.
Nanu, nanu. Mork calling Orson; come in Orson.
although air purifiers for cars is totally unnecessary cabin filters are literally designed to do the same
i admire the engineering of this product
I believe that electrode is called a “dingus” 👍
Exceedingly Japanese, this design, but beautifully made and engineered. I seem to recall something about these units - a claim that they not only purify the air but are beneficial to health as well due to "special ionization" or something like that. Interesting device.
I have no idea what this device is or does, and the explanation of the electronics really went over my head.
But I enjoyed it all the same!
Thanks :)
Wow a Panasonic product still made in Japan!!😄
Designed in Japan. Probably made in China.
Trust Panasonic to make something complex. But I've looked at their room unit demo, very impressive. They left some things (i remember dog food) in a sealed room with one of their bigger nanoe units, completely odorless room when you went in. Then saw the price, nevermind.
Looks (to me) like the "needle" is a tiny globe to produce a much larger corona and therefore, a larger a number of ionised particles flying around. Rather over the top for a car unit.
10yr old Clive at the back of the bran new TV set.
Holy cow Batman! No human designed that.!
I’ve been wondering what the nanoe tech was 👍
Such an overload of components and complex design. I just roll down my windows for 5 seconds and all the air in my car has been replaced by fresh outdoors air.
That is SO much effort to go to, for such a feeble active part. The microcontroller alone looks like it has enough I/O to control the Apollo Command Module. It must have cost an absolute fortune in injection moulds and styling/3D design time. Then again, that is what probably sells the product to the consumer.
The illustration is kind of art in itself. I'd sell it for 20k quid.
Thanks Clive. Only you can take a hundred quids worth of complicated tech and reduce it down to just a small willy and a lady garden. 😂😂😂 Brilliant. Cheers 🍺
Panasonic engineers are saying to themselves, "Take THAT Clive!"
In some ways, we are so alike. I enjoy, and find it a challenge, to take things apart. Some things are great puzzles, trying to determine how the mfg. assembled the device. My GF believes me to be wizard when I just go into repairing something.