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Shake up flashlights |
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| Feb7-06, 11:38 PM | #1 |
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Shake up flashlights
So I got one of those flashlights that you see on TV where you just shake them up and they will work...no batteries. I have to say, its a pretty impressive and it is a good demonstration of an induced current from relative motion between a magnet and a coil.
Anyone else play around with these or take them apart? |
| Feb8-06, 02:59 PM | #2 |
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I laughed so hard the first time I saw a commercial for one of those...
I think it was the first, and only time I'll ever see Maxwell's equations on my tv screen. Truly absurd.
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| Feb9-06, 11:43 AM | #3 |
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I'd never heard of those things until my boss bought one for my 93-year-old mother who kept killing her batteries by leaving the light on. While the light isn't terribly powerful, it works well and is extremely handy. (And I didn't need to take it apart to see how it works because the case is transparent.
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| Feb13-06, 05:35 AM | #4 |
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Shake up flashlights
My mother in law offered me one of those things too.
Pretty neat, actually ! |
| Feb13-06, 08:10 AM | #5 |
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They look like a neat idea, and with LED's and better lenses/focusing you can get a good bright beam where you need it. THe only question I have is how long does the light last on a "charge" before you have to shake it again. I personnaly haven't seen them in action for any period of time longer than a few minutes.
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| Feb13-06, 08:31 AM | #6 |
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I bought a few that I'll keep in an emergency kit (or 'Bush DefCon Red' kit, as I like to call it).
I'm always finding flashlights with dead batteries because I use them so rarely. I dont know how reliable these things are though. |
| Feb13-06, 09:01 AM | #7 |
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The one I have takes a couple of minutes of good shaking to get started then requires frequent shakes to keep it going. I don't think you can run it for as much as 5 minutes without a shake. I am not sure if this is typical or just mine, I have had it for over a year so was pretty early in the scheme of shake up flashlights.
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| Feb13-06, 11:01 AM | #8 |
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Hahaha, I’ve never heard for these flashlights before I’ve read this :) … Almost never, I’ve saw one in some Chinese shop, and I was exalted, what a smart idea :), so salesman started to talk how flashlight is powered by magnetic power :) transferred through this plastic here :), I sad jeah, jeah, and proudly bought one. And of course, I couldn’t find peace until I’ve cracked it, and saw that magnet is really just peace of some nonmagnetic metal, and coil is connected to nothing :). So, it was fake, I went to that salesman just to inform him that lamp is fake, but I didn’t convince him, because his theory doesn’t need wires for that magnet to power up the lamp, and everything is perfectly ok :)
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| Feb13-06, 11:24 AM | #9 |
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I've used one before and it lasted for about 5-10 minutes between shakes. I like them a lot but I haven't actually bought one. I just don't use a flashlight often enough to warrant it.
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| Feb13-06, 12:49 PM | #10 |
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the commercial is funny
on part is way over the top... they show this cop, and he holds up a very small flashlight (AA size) and says "this flash light cost me $200 and has to be recharged every day" wtf? who would pay $200 for a AA flashlight that needs to be recharged every day?about the light, whats the word on how long it stays lit? |
| Feb13-06, 02:34 PM | #11 |
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I just gave mine a 2 minute shake up to charge it. Within 2 minutes it had dimmed enough to require more shaking.
I see this as more of an exercise machine then a flashlight. |
| Feb13-06, 04:06 PM | #12 |
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| Feb13-06, 04:56 PM | #13 |
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| Feb13-06, 08:52 PM | #14 |
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There are real ones, fake ones, and in between ones.
The fake ones are cheap and don't even have a real magnet in them. They run off flat button batteries that you can't see unless you open the thing up. The in between ones have both batteries and a cap that you charge when you shake it. I have this kind. I shorted the cap out to see how much imput it gave to the system and it was noticably dimmer without it, operating just by the batteries. It took quite a bit of shaking to recharge the cap to full charge. As far as I can tell, the cap discharges slowly right into the LED through some resistors. I think this one will become permantly very dim once the batteries are low. I have never examined a "real" one (advertised on TV), but I suspect they also work by charging a cap that discharges slowly through resistance rather than by charging a battery. |
| Feb17-06, 02:40 PM | #15 |
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I have a "real" one (not a hybrid with batteries as well). It's pretty good. Half a minute of shaking gives you about five minutes of light, and when it is off it seems to retain charge indefinitely. It's a neat design. Yeah, watch out for knockoffs thsat just have metal slugs and coils of wire in them for show.
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| Feb17-06, 03:54 PM | #16 |
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| Feb17-06, 05:08 PM | #17 |
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How can I tell the diff? |
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