This took me totally off guard. I installed a passenger mirror on a 2010 f150. Before I let it go I thought I would check to see if the heat in the mirror was working. So I grabbed my Snappy infrared camera and pointed it at the mirror. To my surprise rather than seeing the heat grid signature I saw an infrared reflection in the mirror. So clear I could see the all the way to the person sitting in the drivers seat ??!!!. Huh... Does this really work this way ? I guess it makes sense. Energy is energy, just because you can't see it, it's still there right ? But I didn't know it would reflect in a mirror. I tried it a few more times, but I installed that mirror outside where there was a larger temperature difference. In the shop it doesn't show up so good. So before I went home tonight I tried it again outside, aiming at a truck mirror ( It's not science if you can't duplicate your results and it was getting near 40 degrees outside). Perfect !!! Yes it works. Cool , this means your infrared camera will work around corners if you have a mirror.
Great Moments In Science
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Another great use for your Thermo Diagnostic Imager. If your shop has a boiler system for heat with heated floors you can quickly diagnose trouble areas. Our shop has multiple zones and it is difficult to keep thing evenly heated. The first cold air of the season and the front offices were cold, a quick look around and I found the pump for that zone to be inoperative just by scanning the pipes. Each zone also has a mixing valve which can be manually adjusted to control temperature. This is a lot easier to get everything even now that I can compare pipe temps quickly. -
build your own plasma cutter !!
Ok, so it's only good for cutting aluminum foil. But you could always scale it up a bit. Take four 9 volt batteries connect them in series, get two test leads a piece of foil and a lead from a refillable pencil. Then have some funComment
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No strings attatched
You too can levitate a screwdriver. The air passing over the top of the screw driver creates enough of a pressure differential (vacuum) that the screwdriver will stay in position in mid air. At least until there's some turbulence and it starts to spin.Attached FilesComment
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Check out this cool experiment. I took my inductive heater, put the biggest coil on it. Then took some copper wire and coil it up tighter so it would fit inside the inductive heater coil. Then I hooked up my Vantage Ultra to the ends of the coiled up wire to see how much voltage the inside coil of wire would pick up. About 6 volts alternating current at about 110 Hertz. I also attached a 194 light bulb to the circuit to see if there was enough power to light it up. Just a little dim. Next I gotta try different gages of wire to see if I can increase the output. Pretty cool !!!!Comment
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I knew I could do better than just 6 volts AC so I improved my design. I coiled up some 22 gage magnet wire, built a circuit of a 4 diode rectifier bridge and added 5, 50 volt capacitors in series. Now I got 150 volts of nice smooth DC .Comment
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A nice early spring day and things can get out of control pretty quickly. This + This = Propulsion.Comment
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Ha Ha What would happen if you substituted a waste spark coil for the present coil and run a extra spark plug wire to a spark plug threaded into section of pipe near exit with a ground wire back to engine and inject some carb cleaner just before the plug at back for additional thrust?Last edited by Witsend; 02-17-2017, 06:55 PM.Comment
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Ha Ha What would happen if you substituted a waste spark coil for the present coil and run a extra spark plug wire to a spark plug threaded into section of pipe near exit with a ground wire back to engine and inject some carb cleaner just before the plug at back for additional thrust?
I think your referring to an afterburnerComment
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