Author Topic: EEVblog #751 - How To Debunk A Product (The Batteriser)  (Read 3085778 times)

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Offline Mr.B

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Re: EEVblog #751 - How To Debunk A Product (The Batteriser)
« Reply #8100 on: January 09, 2017, 06:45:29 pm »
Not sure what to do with the other ones for now...

There are quite a few people on this forum that would appreciate some for testing.
They will share their results with the community.
I am pretty sure there are a number of people in the EU, so that will make postage cheap.
I approach the thinking of all of my posts using AI in the first instance. (Awkward Irregularity)
 

Offline Fungus

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Re: EEVblog #751 - How To Debunk A Product (The Batteriser)
« Reply #8101 on: January 09, 2017, 06:57:11 pm »
See you again in few months  ;D

Not sure what to do with the other ones for now...

Surely you own something that doesn't take months to discharge a battery.

(If not, either go to a local toy store and get something or send a few to somebody else...  :) )
 

Offline Delta

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Re: EEVblog #751 - How To Debunk A Product (The Batteriser)
« Reply #8102 on: January 09, 2017, 07:21:24 pm »
RFZ, please try them in an AM radio...
 

Offline RFZ

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Re: EEVblog #751 - How To Debunk A Product (The Batteriser)
« Reply #8103 on: January 09, 2017, 08:01:33 pm »
RFZ, please try them in an AM radio...
Thx, good idea! I should have a FM/AM radio that takes 4xAA... Just have to find it now ;D

Btw. the test with the clock / weather station looks like a complete fail. So far, it fails to receive a time signal or a temperature signal from the outdoor sensor. I'm pretty disappointed because I really believe this device could benefit from the batteriser :(
 

Offline daveake

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Re: EEVblog #751 - How To Debunk A Product (The Batteriser)
« Reply #8104 on: January 09, 2017, 08:28:55 pm »
Btw. the test with the clock / weather station looks like a complete fail. So far, it fails to receive a time signal or a temperature signal from the outdoor sensor. I'm pretty disappointed because I really believe this device could benefit from the batteriser :(

Sounds similar to
 

Offline Hensingler

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Re: EEVblog #751 - How To Debunk A Product (The Batteriser)
« Reply #8105 on: January 09, 2017, 08:41:07 pm »
Btw. the test with the clock / weather station looks like a complete fail. So far, it fails to receive a time signal or a temperature signal from the outdoor sensor. I'm pretty disappointed because I really believe this device could benefit from the batteriser :(

I already posted in the testing thread:

"What does the clock work on where he is? Probably WWVB at 60kHz with 70kW output for the whole of the united states. You are trying to pick up a tiny signal on an internal ferrite rod antenna then stick a pair unshielded inductors carrying 10s of mAs of current spikes a couple of inches away - what do you think is going to happen? "
 

Offline Twoflower

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Re: EEVblog #751 - How To Debunk A Product (The Batteriser)
« Reply #8106 on: January 09, 2017, 08:57:26 pm »
Btw. the test with the clock / weather station looks like a complete fail. So far, it fails to receive a time signal or a temperature signal from the outdoor sensor. I'm pretty disappointed because I really believe this device could benefit from the batteriser :(

I already posted in the testing thread:

"What does the clock work on where he is? Probably WWVB at 60kHz with 70kW output for the whole of the united states. You are trying to pick up a tiny signal on an internal ferrite rod antenna then stick a pair unshielded inductors carrying 10s of mAs of current spikes a couple of inches away - what do you think is going to happen? "
Probably his clock is not looking for the US time signal but the DCF77 from Mainflingen Germany. Transmission frequency is 77.5kHz with 50kW. Different station, probably same problem.  >:D According to your flag (UK) you might be able to receive that station.
 

Offline EEVblogTopic starter

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Re: EEVblog #751 - How To Debunk A Product (The Batteriser)
« Reply #8107 on: January 09, 2017, 09:16:21 pm »
Btw. the test with the clock / weather station looks like a complete fail. So far, it fails to receive a time signal or a temperature signal from the outdoor sensor. I'm pretty disappointed because I really believe this device could benefit from the batteriser :(

Our first failure with an RF device?
I've got a AAA weather station, will have to try them.
 

Offline SL4P

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Re: EEVblog #751 - How To Debunk A Product (The Batteriser)
« Reply #8108 on: January 09, 2017, 09:24:16 pm »
The recent posts lead me to ask...
"I wonder what Batteriser/roo's initial design test & validation was performed with...?"

- Don't say 'Probes the Monkey" - that was simply a demo platform.

Of course we all know the answer, but how on earth could someone who claims to have various certificates be so completely and utterly wrong on virtually every level of his product design, engineering and development?   (Forget the truth-in-marketing - that was worse than a joke.)
Don't ask a question if you aren't willing to listen to the answer.
 

Offline Cerebus

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Re: EEVblog #751 - How To Debunk A Product (The Batteriser)
« Reply #8109 on: January 09, 2017, 09:36:17 pm »
Btw. the test with the clock / weather station looks like a complete fail. So far, it fails to receive a time signal or a temperature signal from the outdoor sensor. I'm pretty disappointed because I really believe this device could benefit from the batteriser :(

I already posted in the testing thread:

"What does the clock work on where he is? Probably WWVB at 60kHz with 70kW output for the whole of the united states. You are trying to pick up a tiny signal on an internal ferrite rod antenna then stick a pair unshielded inductors carrying 10s of mAs of current spikes a couple of inches away - what do you think is going to happen? "

The poster, RFZ, is in Germany, so the most likely time transmitter is DCF77 near Frankfurt am Main, very definitely not WWVB on the far side of the Atlantic Ocean. It's a nominal 50 kW and is easily receivable in London (I used to use a wristwatch that synced from DCF77).
Anybody got a syringe I can use to squeeze the magic smoke back into this?
 

Offline djos

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Re: EEVblog #751 - How To Debunk A Product (The Batteriser)
« Reply #8110 on: January 09, 2017, 09:38:30 pm »

Our first failure with an RF device?
I've got a AAA weather station, will have to try them.

It's a shame we don't have radio time clock broadcasts in Australia as I've got a AA weather station with radio clock functionality from Oregon scientific that I'd have loaned you for a test. :(

Offline RFZ

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Re: EEVblog #751 - How To Debunk A Product (The Batteriser)
« Reply #8111 on: January 09, 2017, 09:39:22 pm »
Hey all: The clock in question uses DCF77 (77,5 kHz) and 433 MHz for the outdoor sensor. Both still without a signal...

I found my AM/FM radio that takes 4xAA batteries. With the batterisers on I found some FM stations and they sounded normal to me... On AM (5-15MHz, 146-281 KHz, 531-1602 KHz) I just got lots of noise and buzzing sounds, but I'm not sure if there are any AM stations I could possibly receive... Since the radio won't power on correctly without the batterisers (point for them, but I guess it's because the batterisers make better contact on the badly corroded tabs) I have to clean the tabs and also make a more repeatable test setup because I can even hear my phone changing the AM sound when recording next to the radio...
 

Offline FrankBuss

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Re: EEVblog #751 - How To Debunk A Product (The Batteriser)
« Reply #8112 on: January 09, 2017, 10:00:12 pm »
I found my AM/FM radio that takes 4xAA batteries. With the batterisers on I found some FM stations and they sounded normal to me... On AM (5-15MHz, 146-281 KHz, 531-1602 KHz) I just got lots of noise and buzzing sounds, but I'm not sure if there are any AM stations I could possibly receive...

I can hear at least 3 radio stations on AM without too much distortions with my cheap AM/FM radio here in Cologne: a German station, and I guess BBC UK, and something which sounds Spanish. But quality depends heavily on the time of the day. Maybe buy some fresh batteries, just to compare it with the Batteroo sleeve. Because EC Projects and you reported problems with the radio controlled clock, I wouldn't be surprised if AM radio sounds awful.

FM radio is usually a lot stronger, so that it should not be that worse. Nice anecdote: I know someone who says he could hear an occasionally bus contention in a digital system he was testing with an AM radio, which didn't show up on a scope (this was the old times, without the cheap modern scopes nowadays with millions of waveforms per second, if you were lucky and got a digital scope at all).
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Offline madires

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Re: EEVblog #751 - How To Debunk A Product (The Batteriser)
« Reply #8113 on: January 10, 2017, 09:53:47 am »
Btw. the test with the clock / weather station looks like a complete fail. So far, it fails to receive a time signal or a temperature signal from the outdoor sensor. I'm pretty disappointed because I really believe this device could benefit from the batteriser :(

That's #2 for the radio clock category. The outdoor sensor is usually 433MHz. A few more and we can conclude that Batteroo sleeves don't work with radio clocks or weather stations. Please check other short range devices in the ISM bands too.
 

Offline McBryce

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Re: EEVblog #751 - How To Debunk A Product (The Batteriser)
« Reply #8114 on: January 10, 2017, 10:11:16 am »
As I discovered when designing and building my DCF77 Radio Nixie Clock - Any DC/DC Boosters anywhere near the antenna pretty much wipe out the signal.

McBryce.
30 Years making cars more difficult to repair.
 
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Offline Hensingler

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Re: EEVblog #751 - How To Debunk A Product (The Batteriser)
« Reply #8115 on: January 10, 2017, 01:15:38 pm »
As I discovered when designing and building my DCF77 Radio Nixie Clock - Any DC/DC Boosters anywhere near the antenna pretty much wipe out the signal.

As expected. Anything using a ferrite rod antenna will likely be very badly affected. That doesn't explain 433MHz problems. Probably the substantial and unexpected ripple from the batteriseroos messing up synthesiser PLLs.
 

Offline bktemp

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Re: EEVblog #751 - How To Debunk A Product (The Batteriser)
« Reply #8116 on: January 10, 2017, 01:38:23 pm »
That doesn't explain 433MHz problems. Probably the substantial and unexpected ripple from the batteriseroos messing up synthesiser PLLs.
Only the more better ones use a superhet receiver with a PLL synthesiser, a simple (super)regenerative receiver is more common, because it is cheaper and needs less power. The ripple of the Batteriser probable affects the operation or the low level output signal of the regenerative receiver.
 

Offline f4eru

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Re: EEVblog #751 - How To Debunk A Product (The Batteriser)
« Reply #8117 on: January 10, 2017, 05:20:46 pm »
You are trying to pick up a tiny signal on an internal ferrite rod antenna then stick a pair unshielded inductors carrying 10s of mAs of current spikes a couple of inches away - what do you think is going to happen? "
That Batteroo admits they didn't do any EMC testing ?

Offline amirm

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Re: EEVblog #751 - How To Debunk A Product (The Batteriser)
« Reply #8118 on: January 10, 2017, 07:04:02 pm »
Can't Dave or someone else with a spectrum analyzer quickly measure the radiated emissions pretty easily to add some meat to the discussion here?

And are there any regulatory marks on the packaging or the product?
 

Offline AndyC_772

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Re: EEVblog #751 - How To Debunk A Product (The Batteriser)
« Reply #8119 on: January 10, 2017, 07:08:47 pm »
Nobody has shown pictures of any that I've seen. A complaint to regulatory authorities could, if they have the capacity to investigate, end very badly for Batteroo.

What's particularly odd is there's no real reason why the Batteriser should fail regulatory testing. They *could* have had EMC and safety testing carried out, and it *could* have passed. It's just not that technically difficult, or expensive, or time consuming.

The evidence suggests they just haven't bothered, and that's pathetic, IMHO.

Offline Hensingler

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Re: EEVblog #751 - How To Debunk A Product (The Batteriser)
« Reply #8120 on: January 10, 2017, 07:53:01 pm »
Can't Dave or someone else with a spectrum analyzer quickly measure the radiated emissions
No one can 'quickly' measure anything which is why test labs charge $1000+ a day.

Nobody has shown pictures of any that I've seen.

They did radiated emission testing on a prototype with a stupid 1k load. The results are posted on their website.

The testing was garbage with the switcher spending most of its time shut down and the other problem is what is a realistic test environment? What is a realistic antenna to hang on it to represent a worst case application? How do you do anything below 30MHz?  Do you say it needs to have a remote load and do conducted on the wires?
 

Offline amirm

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Re: EEVblog #751 - How To Debunk A Product (The Batteriser)
« Reply #8121 on: January 11, 2017, 06:06:12 am »
No one can 'quickly' measure anything which is why test labs charge $1000+ a day.
That's a different animal.  Not asking for a controlled environment to measure compliance.  We know the frequency of the RF transmitter for the weather station.  A spectrum analysis of before and after batterizer would show its contribution pretty easily.  Dave has the Rigol analyzer which easily covers 433 Mhz as does his Tek scope.
 

Offline bktemp

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Re: EEVblog #751 - How To Debunk A Product (The Batteriser)
« Reply #8122 on: January 11, 2017, 06:59:29 am »
I don't think Batteriser violates EMC rules.
Most likely all the problems with receivers is the low frequency ripple (the burst rate of the PFM operation). It is below the EMC testing range, but many battery powered devices rely on the batteries as a clean power supply. DCF77 or the regenerative rf receivers require a really clean power source (<10mVpp ripple) to operate correctly, otherwise the sensitivity will be reduced or they won't work at all.
 

Offline dr_frost_dk

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Re: EEVblog #751 - How To Debunk A Product (The Batteriser)
« Reply #8123 on: January 11, 2017, 09:07:20 pm »
Awesome comment, hope someone posts the video again on the indiegogo page
« Last Edit: January 12, 2017, 12:20:38 am by dr_frost_dk »
 

Offline StuUK

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Re: EEVblog #751 - How To Debunk A Product (The Batteriser)
« Reply #8124 on: January 12, 2017, 08:26:31 am »
Awesome comment, hope someone posts the video again on the indiegogo page

Crikey, $19 either an idiot or someone who wants to test them....
 


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