This Is Why We Don’t Toss Out Broken Microwaves | Remake Projects
2022 ж. 21 Мам.
14 805 539 Рет қаралды
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Extremely talented, this is not your typical project. Very cool btw. As soon as I saw the gauge of wire I knew it was going to be good. 😍👍🙌
Showing instructions on this without going over safety precautions is extremely irresponsible.
You can d!e from misusing a microwave in dozens of ways, some not even including the transformer
mine steea11 wörqx -:- alldi€ ^ ^ öh decäydce ´think ^ ^ is gr8 but hm star wär€$ ?
😊@@dinkvjr
You need to verbally explain why and show how to manually discharge the microwave capacitor prior to removing the transformer. There is enough stored power to electrocute someone whether it is plugged in or not.
yeah, pretty irresponsible here, if there was ever a need for a disclaimer, this would be it
@@namaan123 Not his responsibility. Anyone that does not understand how electricity works should not mess with this anyway. Plain and simple. I knew someone trying to make a wood burner from a old microwave and it killed him. Luckily I thought he was a idiot before and he only improved the gene pool as far as U am concerned. I think it is a sue happy world and it is freaking common since try at your own risk. Would you watch a youtube video showing openheart surgery and try to save a buck on your wife if she needed it? You people drive me nuts.
A little heads up on the dangers of disturbing the insulators in the magnetron wouldn’t go amiss either.....
In his defense nowhere in his title does it state that this is instructional video or a how to. In which case anybody that doesn't have a basic understanding of current, voltage, capacitors, transformers, inductors etc shouldn't be trying to replicate this process in the first place.
Here is your disclaimer: BEWARE - GOING OUTSIDE, STAYING INSIDE OR DOING ANYTHING AT ALL MAY RESULT IS PERSONAL INJURY.
Remember, if you've got lathes and welders and assorted tools and materials, don't throw out an old microwave because you can use part of it to make a wire hot.
LOL. Like that comment. But....amazing what people do, if they have the right tools
😁🤣
Imagine how fast that could re-heat a cold mug of coffee... ☕ ⚡
Pretty sure you can buy a spot welder for < $100
@@Shockmeslow Can't buy the satisfaction of creating one though. And for sure your Harbour Freight tool won't look anywhere as neat or cool as this one 😝
25 year electrician here; Although impressed with the OP's ingenuity and craftsmanship, I sincerely wish there were a stern warning on how extremely dangerous playing around with transformers, capacitors, and a few other components found in appliances/machines are and how they are absolutely lethal if you do not KNOW precisely what you are doing. Please be careful out there folks. Electricity is brutally unforgiving to ignorance & complacency.
This video is exactly why I throw out broken microwaves.
Why is it ppl get tatooz?
People have died doing this!
I made it to 1:05 before I checked out and gave this stinker a thumbs down like the other 43 thousand people and counting who feel the same way. Nope.
Another good tip, salvage the magnets from the magnetron tube. They're thin, but strong donut shaped magnets that fit perfectly inside the bottom on an oil pan and will collect and hold any metal fragments from being recirculated back through the engine.
This probably the most valuable information out of this whole video.
Salvaged transformer can be valuable. I kept a magnet from a klystron tube, that sucker will rip a tool out of your hands
@@marcopolo9446 only do it if u know what u are doing. Or it may endup badly
Oil filter has entered the chat...
Put the magnets on the outside of the pan. I doubt if stuck to tge inside bottom theyd come loose but not worth the risk
As a electrician I would’ve never advised anyone to do this in their hobby:-) high voltage components are to be respected.
🐈
id imagine you arnt much fun at parties🥳
Yeeeee doggy sumna beech I blurb en ko evrythang
But there is a sticker, so it is safe.
But learning and understanding such things develops respect and knowledge, ignorance on the other hand creates danger and higher risk. I understand what you mean though. There should be a lot of attention to the risks and dangers in these sort of videos.
So, old micro parts, 6000 dollars worth of tools, 70 hours labor...and you can have a neat little...welding machine?
Finally a video for those of us who have been stockpiling copper billet. Thanks Grandpa for the advice you gave me as a young lad!!! Now all I need is a machining lathe and a broken microwave.
😆🤣😂
You can do all the machining shown in the video with hand drill and a grinder. Use your brain Waldo .
@@blainebyrnes17Or a hand drill and a bit of sandpaper, or... just sandpaper. But dopes would rather complain than fail
You can easily get what you need. Just go to any college apartment block at the end of the year. They leave their old machine lathes in the parking lot when they move out.
. . . and a death wish. Good luck mate.
Update from heaven… this killed me
This is dumb There are 8 million viewer no one will ever try to do this It's hard and useless and a waste of many These projects are for YT videos only and not worthy in real life so stop talking about safety
I was going to say it looked like a Doctor Kevorkian special.
Death by boredom
There’s no way you can die from 3 V unless you just burned through your body for some reason. You can stick your tongue to the electrodes and it won’t do anything but when you put some kind of metal to it that heats up.
lol
Great job except, running a power cord through a hole in a bare metal sheet is a no-no! Over time it will chafe through to the conductors and shorting mains power. Buy yourself a cheap gromet or a flexible sleeve and a "P" clip to secure the cord on the inside of the enclosure for strain relief!
Henry, you do have a point there👍
@@repentandbelieveinJesusChrist3 There's a time and a place. Wrong video.
@@Michael-Archonaeus AMEN
@@Michael-Archonaeus In his defense, one might go meet meet the maker rather more quickly if one followed the examples of mains power routing in this video.
@@abrahamevangelista4215 You're right LOL
I feel like the amount of time it takes to make this machine, and the danger it puts people in during the construction, makes it more reasonable to go out and buy one brand new. Not to mention I have no clue what he did in the video because there was no narration or explanations to anything he did. But that is impressive that he can build that stuff and I would want him with me during a zombie apocalypse!
Either that, or far, far away during a zombie apocalypse...
@@theredscourge yeah this guy would be one of the rare people to die from a self inflicted accident during a zombie apocalypse
Yeah him and his shop full of tools. Can you carry all that in a bugout bag. No.
The video illustrates the construction techniques in an amazingly precise and efficient way. I'm truly impressed. But then I know how to use tools to make and repair things. This is probably baffling for a novice, but these are a long way from novice projects.
Relatively few viewers will know what the few smaller parts are and the specs they must meet. Even fewer will watch this and be able to visualize the wiring diagram that is not provided. The only people who are likely to take this project all the way to the point of powering thing up are the ones who understand how it works and know what all the parts are. Omitting details was probably intentional.
My dad was always keeping the parts and pieces of whatever. Organized, too. I love this stuff!
Bless him ‼ at least there a few of us,, reasonably intelligent humans, , , with the requisite, mechanical proclivity, talent/creativity, , environmental respect/ecomical frugality , , , of salvaging&recycling/repurposing fully functional components of nonfunctional, apparatus , , , given the economy of ready accessable protected storage facility, , , but to posess the requisite self control to realize the necessity, ,of considering cost of. storage vs. the cost of purchasing new, similar components, whenever needed ,, ,,, nonmanditory, , accumulation/collections can become extremely/prohibitively , expensive to store, ,after a time ,, , ,, , &relocating such accumulations/ collections can be financially& physically demanding!!! AND, , such accumulating collecting Can readily become addicting!!! one MUST confront the, , fact that collection is rarely cost-effective. I'm speaking from personal experience !!!
If anyone tried this and is not experienced with electrical equipment, please be careful, microwaves have large capacitors that can discharge if handled improperly and injure or cause death.
You mean you're not supposed to open it with a sledgehammer?
@@evanflagg8386 I think a ax would be safer.🪓
It's a small mf value, but hi voltage.
@@vortexan9804 hi in current.
I never had a problem. I taken many apart.
Nailed it! *house up in flames in the background*
I couldn't and wouldn't build such a device, that being said it was an entertaining watch and your craftmanship is top notch. thank you for posting.
that was a really cool video , I love that he's so meticulous about his project ! and yes like alot of people saying down in the comments , you can buy a wire thingy or whatever for less than a 100$ but how cool is it to make something so nice and well made by hand as efficient as that tool and also from an old microwave mainly !!! he has tools and showing people at least how to be creative so show some respect people !
Good point.
..it didn't really explain anything, and is overly complex for what it is. The video is designed to to be needlessly long and sensational to maximize revenue..it's almost as bad as 'ancient aliens'.
Goes without saying that it is extremely dangerous to handle a high voltage source like this. These guys know what they are doing, but they haven't explained any of the safety measures they put in place. Working with microwave oven electronics is no joke and should be taken very seriously.
I guess in this case it goes vice versa, meaning they use the transformer to produce high current with a normal voltage level. So it is pretty safe unless you touch those electrodes.
As shown this is equivalent to an arc welder that is being intentionally shorted out. You could get burnt by the thin copper wire fairly easily, but there's essentially no risk of electrocution if it's constructed as shown (with a grounded cage around the transformer. The highest voltage is whatever is coming out of the plug, so it's no more dangerous than a toaster. If the transformer isn't modified, however, (when he cuts the thin wires off and replaces them with a few loops of very thick wire) then the thing is an electrocution waiting to happen - high voltage, no way for grounding the high voltage side to trip a breaker, exposed conductors = bad, bad news.
@@ButterfatFarms it almost went without saying but then he said and at that point it had come and gone with saying
I don't think these guys are aware that the magnetron contains a fair amount of beryllium oxide, which is brittle and toxic to breathe. They're not handling these microwaves safely.
Oh, Ok ! With that advice I'll give it a Go !
Fantastic! Next time I have a microwave go out on me, instead of discarding it, I'll buy 40k worth of equipment to make a flashy KZhead video!
Super Smart, Not many people have your skills! Plastic repair is great for obsolete parts! That is a great little spot welder!! Thanks for sharing!
Also for saving money. A lot of us do not want to buy expensive or new parts, for an aging-anyway car.
Ver la facilidad con la que hace las cosas y lo increible que es haciendo ese trabajo con los materiales que uno derrocha me vuela la cabeza
This single video contained more work than I have done in my entire life. I need a nap after watching.
😂😂
LOL 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
Holy hands and eyes Batman! No PPE and the housing isn't grounded AND I didn't see a fuse anywhere! "Pure luck" has kept this guy alive so far! Wowsers!
Imagine a brave new world without pages of saftey warnings, legal disclaimers and product liability lawyers... Free your mind and your body will move out of California...
Must be a tough way to go out 😮😮😮😮😮
then make one your safety mods, c'mon get to it
That wasn't luck, dude knew what he was doing. And the main is fused and grounded, except maybe in USA.
Im just glad that any 6th grader can see this ~ and discover the wonders of ( High Voltage )@@sablatnic8030
This is great.. And sure.. One wouldn't want to stumble along with this.. And truthfully.. I think any younger kid/adult that tried this.. Would never make it to the end out of being forever impatient. And say ol boy does already have a spot welder.. But is tired of "friends" asking him to barrow it.. Now he has a loaner tool to hopefully pacify said friend... And look at the bright side.. If the machine did fail.. He doesn't have to worry about said friend asking to barrow anymore tools. Good build.. My favorite is how smooth and efficient you pull it off. People just don't understand the satisfaction from using a tool that you built yourself.. And be able to complete a job or some work using that tool with zero hangup...nothing is better as far as tools go..
As a welding inspector, I can tell you that spot welding requires a specific amount of pressure to form proper spot welds. But still cool.
For some reason I like that enclosure made for that transformer on the first one, is pretty nice and simple yet robust enough and looks good. I like how you held the mesh on.
Just ignore the two exposed bolts on the bottom of the ‘wand’ section.
As a comment said, its enough stored electricity in the microwave to make anyone trying to remove it without guidance a deadly shock. Cool project, but it would be more useful as a point welder. For an experienced person this would be pretty safe, but as an tutorial for newbies its a death sentence
blah blah blah
I think point welder is too difficult...a relay might be to slow...and power mosfets are tricky!
@@frostyjim2633 Yeah, what's the worst that could happen? I die, well that wasn't that bad of a result
@@na9565 lol, that depends on your Life A/ D
Correct. The capacitor can hold 3-5000 volts causing instant death.
Very innovative... If you can think it, you can build it ! Creativity like this can make you very wealthy if applied to practical uses and solves a genuine problem. Good Job !👍
Awesome! You should look into "air assist" kits made for CO2 laser engravers. They're self contained air pump systems designed to discharge a positive flow of pressurized air out though a small hose with a jet nozzle at the end. You could route the hose along the electrical leads and mount the nozzle inside the handle aimed out at the work, so anytime the power is on and you're branding into wood, the constant jetblast of air instantly extinguishes any open flames that flare up, plus it burns a much nicer, more defined line into the wood because the stream of air cools down the materials work surface, and prevents the red hot wire from "singeing" the wood around the area where you're actually burning the lines.
You need a cable grommet (or similar plastic retention) for the mains cable entry to protect it from being cut through by the sharp metal case hole and potentially making the entire metal case live at 110/220v if the house earth is bad.
More than just the grommet. I would have applied some fiberglass tape to each of the inside edges of the transformer core window so they couldn't bite into the secondary winding's insulation.
The first one is even worse... you hold on a plastic, that is melting @5:51 and right below that there are metal parts that have like 10 000v? because the wires go trough the transformer... and because the wires go trough the transformer, if you get shocked the house ground/fuse won't know a thing... to it everything seems ok edit: It wouldn't have 10kv because the upper winding was removed and replaced with heavy wire, but still.. this is in no way safe
For UL approval, you need a proper clamping strain relief.
Cable Gland, to be precise ....
it's a good thing you showed up
It's such a humbling feeling to watch someone work and not have the slightest idea on what they're doing. There's so much to learn still
I prefer to use the word terrifying, especially when dealing with high voltage microwave transformers and capacitors but okay.
@@3nigma.3nc recognizing danger still requires recognition. Although reading everyone's comments about stored charges in the capacitor I am curious how this dude didn't die
In life we tend to think of genius as someone who is a scholar or mathematician. While that may be true, genius is also apparent in so many other aspects of life. This video to me is genius as I would have no idea as how to go about putting all the facets of the build into a working conclusion. Thanks for sharing, Amazing.
This was so much more fascinating without reading the description first. I had no idea where it was going and was along for the ride.
This video is exactly the reason why I toss out broken microwaves
With the prices these days, I would rip out the copper and sell that.
🤣🤣🤣
This is so dangerous a friend of mine died using one microwave transformer tying to do experiments like frying food with electricity or those "wood patterns" people makes. He must have been experimenting with crouching on the floor, got electrocuted, and fell on the thing he was doing. The family says when they found his body, he was irecogniscible and the thing almost causes a fire. I didn't know him well but he always was nice to me, he was an electrician so he always had components and tools lying around. I would have never expected him to go down that way.
We are only Human, one mistake it's all it takes and we are gone.
Not a great attudide to have , this is very dangerous
@@homienat3374 : Still it was a mistake from his friend and I have seen it countless times. it will continue to happen.
Just shocking.
Good on you knowing how to complete the project just think about the idiots out there that think they are qualified to do this , ie 12 year old teenagers???
Fun to do. Quite a lot of work to rescue just the transformer. Although if you build something yourself you can also repair it, which is worth a lot. Wicked skills man, keep it up.
Neat build. I'd recommend that you ground the metal enclosure around the transformer though.
*Me as I started watching:* "Oh good, I have a broken microwave I've been wanting to do something with" *Me after watching:* "Do you want another one for one of your videos?"
Title: This is why we don't toss out broken microwaves Guy: Immediately tosses out almost entire microwave
the only valuable part of the microwave is the magnetron. That is the part he removed. Once it is removed, the rest is no longer a microwave.
@@marks6663 actually he's only using the transformer, , not the magnetron
@@marks6663 tsk tsk tsk....
All projects done very nicely,clean & Professionally made! VERY NICE!!👍
Undeniably my favorite MOT re-purpose video! 🤩👍
I find it quite funny that this guy does have access to lots of really expensive devices, but apparently not to a simple heatgun for shrinking heat shrinks ...
He used one at 12:33
I thought the same thing In the first part of the video.
Free Energy , Rodney, FREE. Imagine how much you could sell that for ?😉
Just a little tip, when you're drilling something on a lathe start the hole with a center drill, it doesn't matter if your tailstock is a little out of alignment, it will always drill a perfectly centered hole in your stock, then you follow up with the drill bit. Great project though, MOTs can do so many things it's incredible. There should have been a PSA about avoiding the microwave capacitor though, those can cause lethal shock even when the microwave is off and unplugged. I've never seen plastic body panel repair like this though, it's a great idea, the wire keeps the cracks held together, pretty nifty. Though to be honest I always cringe a little when I see a MOT secondary get chopped out, I'm a High Voltage hobbyist and I don't really do low voltage high current stuff lol. I just built a 1.7KJ capacitor bank with a MOT charge circuit, should be pretty fun😁.
You're a falling star, man... that's why we don't see as many as before when we look at the sky😃 I made one myself and it's working fine. But I didn't include that relay on my assembly. Could you send me the specs of that item, plase? Mostly appreciated. Regards.
You posted two great things my friend. Advice on the CAP is spot on and I forgot about center punching when end drilling myself and will be doing that later on! So thank you for posting. :)
i nodded off...
@@amiga2025 you must've been watching from a NASA employee break room, ehh? You're a funny person 😂
The caps have a discharge resistor built in, so long as you aren't taking it apart right after it was plugged in it's not a worry. I suppose you'd have to be cautious if you're in the habit of testing electronics before scrapping them, personally I get mine straight from a junk heap so there's never residual charge to worry about.
Amazing work flow. That transformer can do some crazy stuff., which was where I thought this video was going. Enjoyed it.
That's totally awesome. I'm going to start collecting all the microwave ovens i find thrown out around my neighborhoods. Thanks for your videos love. Them 😉👍👍👍
Beware of the ceramic stem to the magnetron. It contains Beryllium and if broken and you inhale the dust, you can get a disease called Berylliosis which is incurable and seriously affects your lungs. So if the microwave is smashed, let it go to the trash, it's not worth your lungs.
I especially like watching you run the big 1/0 cable and loop it through the transformer, even it up, and then cut two pieces off the wire instead of pulling it back through and giving you one long piece to reuse for something else later.
I was bothered by the same thing.
Coiled wires build current
@@raymondtyler88 that one flew right over your head bud. He's complaining about the guy not feeding the cable through so he wouldn't waste it by cutting leftovers on both sides, but have one long piece instead. That cable isn't cheap.
Step one: This is why people are dying at home
I love your building techniques. Fast and efficient with minimal tools. That's how I roll too. I learned from you how to make a case with sheet metal, bending, and drilling.
Dude that dropped microwave slo-mo opening was a real surprise. Absolutely brilliant and boy did it get my attention!
I was all like "I have a broken microwave! Let's see..." Then I saw I'd need significantly more tools and, more importantly, skill to do anything like this.
And you end up with.. A wavy-hole-burning machine? I'm sure there must be some application for it but none that will ever cross my path :D
@@foobarbazbaa5598 its for branding. You know, shapes? Not just a curvy line. Also did you notice there was a second creation? Seems a lot more useful. But like adam said, these take skills. And should only be attempted by people with the knowledge to do so.
I see it as a demonstration of ingenuity and resourcefulness. They are really not making use of specialized or unusual tools, apart from their brains. Try something out like this, and you will probably learn a lot.
@@foobarbazbaa5598 The plastic 'welding' might be useful, not sure if you skipped past it to the burning lines into wood.
@@foobarbazbaa5598 sell it to a collision repair shop.
That's some serious dedication to video editing. 3 camera angles for the glue.👏👏👏
thanks for the tutorial. took me 3 days but i love my new welding tool
Best microwave transformer video I have watched yet! Keep it up.
06:10 you could have avoided: it is very bad for young people. Also there is no warning about the danger of the charged HV capacitor PS : Furthermore, if the magnetron is broken, beryllium is released which is very dangerous for the lungs 
I see Dead ignorant people 😒
Who the hell cares. Simple. If you do not know what you are doingleave it alone. Tired of youtube police in comments.
what is the best way to discharge the HV capacitor safely, in your own words?
@@theRhinsRanger The capacitor in microwave ovens is shorted by a 10-MOhm resistor, so it should discharge itself within a minute of turning the power off. However, you don't want to bet your life on that, do you? High-voltage resistors can fail. So you need to actively discharge the capacitor to be safe. Rules number one and two in working with high voltage: keep one hand in your pocket (to make sure you don't touch HV with one hand and ground with the other), and wear insulated shoes (so your feet don't complete the circuit either). So put on a pair of insulated shoes and ONE dry rubber glove (the heavy kind, not a surgical glove), grab a pair of needle-nose pliers with insulated handles, put your un-gloved hand in your pocket, and hold the two points of the pliers against the two terminals of the capacitor to connect them. Do it again. If you have a voltmeter, it wouldn't hurt to use the probes to measure the DC voltage on the capacitor, as long as you hold both probes with one hand. Warning: some high-voltage capacitors can actually charge back up to dangerous voltages by themselves, so it's wise to (a) discharge and measure a second time after a minute or two and (b) short the two terminals together with a wire after discharging to make sure it stays safe.
@@paulkolodner2445 I've literally disassembled dozens of microwaves (something like 40) for a project, never had a single one store residual charge by the time I was finished disassembling it. Aside from the built in discharge resistor caps always have some internal leakage, they will self discharge with time. Besides that I've never heard of hv caps 'self charging' in what situation did you have this occur?
I kept my old microwave but threw out my Milling machine dammit
Great youtube movie. Very educational. One thing I would like to see edited in future is please include the codes for electrical and electronically parts to be purchased. It wil make getting the parts so much easier. ( on screen as u fit them)Thanks
Remember the time we build a spot welder out of an old microwave? It made accidental contact, shorted out, and exploded in a hellish shower of liquid metal? Man what an amazing Shop fire that was!
Notice the safety shielding in these projects. That puts them a big step above most.
So put a slightly under-rated self-resetting circuit breaker and an RCD in. Duty cycle down, safety way up. There's no need to cry.
This comment was a year old...@@Bobo-ox7fj
A bit excessively, , , SENSATIONALIZED!!!
I had no idea it could be used for that. You do amazing work so detailed. I can tell your very passionate about your work
Could and should are very different things. It's a very inefficient and dangerous way to do this.
It's sad how many people watch this and don't realize the improper and oftentimes unsafe use of shop equipment. Not to mention that you can purchase a better spot welder for what this build would cost.
Along the amount of time it took to build it!
This video is obviously stylized and not really an instructional. I hope everyone gets that
Not to mention the 2.5k benchtop lathe.
These videos should be banned, censored, and taken down. Throw them in the bin with firearms video
@@LadySalemRaven So Dave, you don't know one end of a screwdriver from the other, do ya? Any DIY person finds these vids to be instructive and entertaining. Naysayers are usually people without these specific talents.
Awesome ideas for the guys that have every tool under the sun. Thanks from me, my hammer and ratchet set.
Wow, these seemed SO useful!!! Seriously though, who is going to make these at any point in their lives? Even the spot welder seemed useless.
Totally amazing… not something I have interest in usually, but watched every second. Really cool engineering.
Very nice video. I had never considered cutting out the secondary and rewiring for super low voltage/high current. There are some other ways to re-imagine a working microwave if you're handy enough to build a waveguide. When you can fabricate for yourself both mechanically and electronically the world is yours.
It'd be great to meet some savant/ocd (who can't stop working on projects or he'll lose his mind) with those skills and help him write patents!
@@Cracktaculus the items he made are already in production, he cant patent them
There's one more: Mechanically, electronically and 'micro controller firmware - lly '. Of course there's nothing electronic about this project - just mechanical and basic electrical. (The relay is not electronic. Purely electro mechanical device.)
While this is safer than using the high voltage secondary, it's still a dangerous project that should only be attempted by people with ample electronics knowledge and safety. WATCH OUT FOR THE HIGH VOLTAGE CAPACITOR WHEN DISSASEMBLING ANY MICROWAVE!
@@CoolAsFreya If the microwave oven hasn't been powered for some time, like a few hours, there is a resistor across the capacitor to ensure it remains discharged when the magnetron is not running. Just to be extra safe in case it is holding some charge, it can easily be discharged by shorting a screwdriver between the two contact terminals on the cap.
I don't think these are meant to be DIY for the masses, but just an engineer providing entertainment of what they can do with their expertise dealing with recycled electrical components. You'll probably wanna get an electrical engineering degree or some type of certification in dealing with electric components before embarking on such an enterprise. I love these types of videos and I wish I had such skills!
This is a much better project than the old cutting board every mom got from their kid in junior high wood shop. 😆
So we took an old magnetron, and with thousands of dollars of tools, made it, a tool. Nice work.
No magnetron was harmed in the making of this video.
Transformer
There really should be safety warnings in this video. Taking apart a microwave can be very dangerous especially if you aren't aware of the hazards such as the capacitor and the magnetron. Safety in hobbies should not be dismissed.
Yeah. I was a total idiot and never knew what those safety Allen keys screws were for. I wish they said on the key you buy at the store if you use this to take apart electrical devices chances are they used those screws to keep people out! I was an idiot and just opened up a microwave and proceeded to take it apart and throw away all the inside components. Later I read about the cancer dust and was like well I don't think it was close to my face at any point....not that close anyways. But I had a legit nervous brakedown for like 6 months paranoid I was going to get skin burns or skin cancer etc because my dumba$$ didn't read any of the warning labels. At least I didn't cut anything apart like this guy.
Discharging the capacitors is number one safety mask is another precaution needs to be taken seriously. I think I would just make a low voltage high current transformer you can make a fast charge battery charger.if you use the transformer as it is you could power a Tesla coil but you better know what you are doing. My friend made one with a neon transformer but the glass capacitor broke he made the plates too large and the cap arced around the other side and cracked the glass. Making larger insulator's is not going to affect the capacity but is much safer. Well lesson learned and I have no clue if he ever fixed the project. High voltage is nothing to play with. 73
@@netmaster88 hell ya...
Yea, there is "Don't try this at home!", but that really doesn't convey the risk of something like like fucking with a microwave power supply if you don't already know exactly what you are doing.
yeah, some of this stuff is beyond dumb, the plastic welder? what? just fucking what? boxes it all in and then leaves towo huge copper contacts sticnking out the front? the guy isnt well.
Man I'm just jealous of the workshop, I would build so much random stuff like this. But the bumper, I would've just used some tape, baking soda and super glue lol
The shop is a major piece of the production. Big views, no politics, no misinfo, etc. This is Hollywood Production in the age of KZhead without having to pay the big name actors. It takes years for the everyday man or woman to amass such a shop and property to secure it in.
So creative and talented! Thank you for sharing
Videos like this are exactly why we need like:dislike ratios! I have the extension installed to see them. I do not normally look at the comments and I thought this project looked interesting (I am no electrician and do not have a mechanical mind), but I saw the ratio was a bit low and checked the comments. It turned me off from even attempting something like this. Cool project, appreciate the video, but I am glad I saw the ratio.
@@kuturak I agree. I skipped through the video, it took me less than 2 minutes it was a waste of my time. But hey, it has over 9 mil. views. It looked interesting so it hooked me into clicking it.
But how else will they hide public opinion on the interweb to the machiavelian things going? Who cares if the general public gets electrocuted lol
I look at it like watching Jimi Hendrix playing. I can enjoy it while knowing I can't do it. This guy obviously has massive experience.
@@DIGIPIX55 He doesn't... He'd know not to heat heatshrink with a flame like he did near a component like a relay, and also use earthing in metal cases, use grommets for live wires entering a piece of sheet metal, and use the proper tools for crimping on the termination lug points for heavy duty cabling...
It has 2:1 like to dislike ratio
I am very impressed with your two projects. In my case I repair a lot of the busted down microwaves that i run across. But your video really tells us what we can do with the write offs.
So you're a random microwave repairer wondering what to do with the spare parts?
@@reinbert so am I. thats how I introduce myself at parties.
@@nyrbsamoht Almost wet myself laughing.
@@reinbert 🤣🤣😅🤣😅😂
@@nyrbsamoht 🤣😅😂😅🤣😅😂
Mom comes home and says, “Hey you brats, where’s the microwave?”
just beautiful, thanks for your work
Let's hope no one accidentally remove themselves from this realm with this project
You had me captured through the whole video. It's just to clever around every turn. Thank you for sharing I loved it ❤
Very nicely done video! For those of us that understand what you are doing it gives us great inspiration, but for those who are frightened by no warnings - - well, you are obviously on the wrong site - - just shut your eyes and change the channel so your sensitivities won't be violated!
GR?EAT BUILDS!!!!!! I really like how you show how easy it can be to build these tools from scrap and other inexpensive items, without having thousands of dollars worth of other tools. The end result is a tool that would be worth several hundred dollars.
Very nice. Just one advise. On the second build it's very important to connect the mains ground wire (yellow/green) to the metal case.
It is also very dangerous not to use any strain relief for the mains cord touching the metal case!
why wait to the second build i didn't see it but someone mentioned they put the cable through just a metal hole without a gromit and it had the potential to short out I did mention an earth ground wire on this one somewhere in the comments they mentioned the metal was sharp so this might be the only one built id do it to this one probably but I am kinda lazy, oh she'll be right mate 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤔🙄🤔🤔🤔🤣🤣🤣🙃🙃🙃
@@abcdefgh1279 strain relief wow I've never heard these terms used for electronics I like it, you can touch the mains but its a bit shocking I've managed to do it 3 times its a shocking experience but it let's you know your alive 🤯
@@lawfullysuspicious1225 the ole 60 hz shuffle is a unique dance because its the only dance that has cuss words in it.
And all the nerds go wild!
I like the spot welder. That would be very handy for someone doing lite gauge projects.
Yes like the theory behind this useful gadgets,but on ebay you can buy them very cheap from china.you spent more in materials building something you can get for 40 to 100 bucks.Depending the gadget
It would be good for steel and stainless, but not aluminum or copper. You need capacitor discharge to spot weld aluminum or copper or brass.
@@pauleohl very true,, but I suspect that trying to build a capacitive discharge spot welder is beyond what most garage mechanics should be working on.
@@WesleyJolly i done set my garage.on fire
would work well for building battery packs
This guy’s skill is unbelievable good. 👍
That is badass and top-notch I don't have much time to do much of anything but that provoked me to go ahead and give it a try I'll let you know too cool
The "Broken Microwave" parts are only 5% of this build. Be nice to have a tool & die shop fall on me too! Another great video with a title that just may be stretched beyond reality. How about "Microwave Spot Welder for under $200 (pluss a Tool & Die Shop) ? ? ?
a tap and die set cost next to nothing.
@@Tommyfrommyspace Got a line on a lathe that costs nothing?
The most amazing parts of the video are when he remembered to put the heat shrink tubing over the cables before attaching the connectors and/or soldering. I can't even count how many times...
what happens otherwise?
@@udance4ever You have to remove/de-solder the connections. It's an annoying inconvenience that happens all the time. It's a long running joke for anyone that's ever done it (pretty much everyone).
I know! That is so frustrating to realize that after you admire the perfect solder joint and then realize "oh shit!"
@@baysickleebuck such a polite answer. My dirty mind couldn't get out of the gutter-
That is why they make elechickens tape
Wish I had your skills and knowledge, very inspiring and impressive.
Dude the effects at the beginning of this were so epic I'm going to watch this video randomly LOL
So I built the first one and the fire brigade wants to know what started the fire so I gave the chief inspector a link to your video. My mum isn't happy but our insurance will buy us a new house that's brand new so it all works out in the end! I know she didn't like our old loo anyways. Great video!
😂👌
I used to work for the old Sears Service, when I started in the shop one service tech was on leave due to be electrocuted by touching the wires of the microwaves he repaired, was an old man. when he came back one day we went to morning break and he returned alone to work, we came back from brake and he was blue laying on the floor and passed away of electrocution.
Reap / sow .
My uncle died literally the exact same way. Was a sears repairman and was killed repairing a broken microwave in the 80's.
@@ATCrogerwilco : Where did he lived?
Sears: the only place it makes sense to opt for going to a brake instead of a break!
This is very informative and thank you for sharing experiment.
After about Twenty Months our Expensive Microwave/Convection Oven Quit, on the Microwave side. I unplugged the oven took the cover off. Found a Blown Fuse, matched it up at Radio Shack. About 18 months later that fuse blew. Couldn’t find the spare fuses. As I was looking at the Wiring Diagram I noticed it called for a higher amp fuse? Checked the circuit, found that was correct. Replaced fuse, it hasn’t blown in many years. The Oven Quit again. Found a bad door micro switch, swapped it with the cover micro switch, and jumped out, that switch. Ordered new micro switches and changed out both door interlock switches. Placed Cover Switch back in place. Still working today.
With respect..I wish young kids could see and understand this project..it incorporates electrics, metalwork, spot welding process and recycling all in 14 minutes !!! Totally Handy we need people like you to train our youngsters..Top marks Great presentation....
Until some kid ends up dying because he compeletely ignores all normal reasoning and thinks hes untouchable.
Microwaves are the number one killer of electronics hobbyists so maybe not "this" project.
@@ARVash Its all down to training not only in skills but safety
Neat woodwork too.
@@georgestyer2153my point is that microwave transformers can be dangerous in unpredictable ways even when you're practicing good safety. I could enumerate the ways but let's just say it's not the number one killer of electronics hobbyists because they were being reckless. There's a lot of things that can go wrong that are impossible to go wrong in other still dangerous electronics projects. I get that this is high current and low voltage which is somewhat safer but high current comes at the risk of lines being unable to turn off. Insulation can melt and suddenly you're dealing with 120v. Breakers don't always trip when they're supposed to. There are projects that most people should not be doing in a garage because they have a normal garage and even good safety is not enough, you need impeccable obnoxious levels of safety. Could someone do this safely? absolutely. However I would never trust a kid or teen even under tight supervision with a microwave transformer. Even people with field experience who know how to work safely have gotten bit by this one because it is unintuitive all the ways that things can go wrong. If you don't have experience with high current / high voltage in a job setting I would pass on this one. Speaking from experience, I took down my videos on microwave transformers. I realized after that I was fine only due to an abundance of caution and even then you're leaning on the due diligence of the electricians who built your house and your own willingness to test everything. High current means that a breaker trip can be a house fire has already started. If you're in a shop with trained professionals maybe you'll be okay, but people try this in their garage and sometimes they're not.
Many are stating the various hazards with making this sort of video, all the things that should have been included, etc. I agree with all of them. But if we look at this as an idea video for someone who is electrically qualified (there are millions of us out there) then it is the perfect level of detail, plus it remains entertaining for viewers who will never try this but still find it interesting. Practical repurposing of everyday items into much more expensive tools is a very valuable bit of knowledge for folks that pursue various home engineering projects. People saying this should be banned should be banned themselves.
Unfortunately you have to account for everyone nowadays. I’m still confused on why gas cans say “FLAMMABLE”. If you don’t already know that I doubt you know how to read.
@@jamin8901 Nah, just disclaimers and we're all good. Otherwise the competent couldn't come anywhere near YT.
Needs a gigantic disclaimer at the start of the video at the very least, there is only a "do not try this at home" at the bottom of the description. This is dangerously negligent and videos like this have got people killed before and will in future.
Love the cabinet - perfect for radio project box.
This great, I will send you my microwave you do all the 200 easy steps!
its not the microwave transformer i gotta save. It's owning a machineshop, welding supplies and a jet propulsion laboratory to build it.....and alot of skill......that is a pretty cool invention you made💯
I know the capacitor should have a bleed resistor on it, but I always short it out just in case.
Why is this the only comment I've found about this?
@@joshauatolly4065 Because everyone who didn't think of it themselves got electrocuted
Very often that bleed resistor is open circuit so to discharge the capacitor is absolutely vital.
Honestly the amount of times I could have died cause I took apart microwaves when I was little and didn’t know you need to discharge the capacitor Honestly not just microwaves I did other dumb stuff as a kid like putting wires in the plug and thinking how funny it was that sparks flew all over the carpet and my bed then proceeding to do it 10 to 15 more times it’s a miracle nothing ever got burnt down it’s also a miracle I didn’t get electrocuted cause the wire had no casing
Has everyone in these comment section got thousands of pounds/dollars spare to buy all the tools you'd need to complete these projects? Nevermind almost committing suicide in the process. This should be banned.
Wow ! Great idea . Can you do one on how to make your own solar panels . That would be vary helpful .
GREAT DEVICES and the best craftsmanship on any homemade project I've seen!!!!!
Then you must have a white stick.
Nice work! Sadly I just threw out an old microwave I just replaced recently and now I’m kickin myself 😂 instant sub from me, you have some great ideas 👍🏻 thanks for this!
on the other hand, throwing it out may have saved your life.
Сварочный аппарат - крутой. Очень качественное видео. Смотреть одно удовольствие. Продолжай в том же духе!👍🏻
This is some awesome next-level Dr Frankenstein work, and I found it VERY entertaining to watch the wizardry! I’m only curious on what kind of background you have to make this video, it seems like a very experienced mix of several fields, e.g. electronics, machining, etc. I’d really like to know. I liked and subscribed! ✌
No just from a locked ward and off your meds,😂