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  • Опубликовано: 22 окт 2024

Комментарии • 269

  • @RadRider33
    @RadRider33 8 лет назад +64

    I actually had the pleasure of designing a few of the power supplies inside this guy a few years back. Pretty cool to see something you've worked on in a shipping product!

  • @theirisheditor
    @theirisheditor 8 лет назад +4

    The video ad that played before the start of this video here was for this same NI VirtualBench product. For those that haven't seen the ad, it showed how a light bulb improved upon the kerosene lamp, the washing machine improved upon hand washing and that the NI VirtualBench will be the way forward in the lab. If the 4 digit price just needs a decimal point placed in the middle and I'm sure it would... ;-)

  • @matthewrichardson828
    @matthewrichardson828 8 лет назад +5

    @23:00 I've had so many bad experiences using built in ADC's in MCU's that I'll never do it again. I stick to SPI ADC interfaces for resolution and isolation.

  • @hene193
    @hene193 8 лет назад +27

    At 30:00 "496 dollars. US of course" And the image says "All prices are in AUD"
    lol dave :)

    • @EEVblog
      @EEVblog  8 лет назад +13

      +Hene193 DOH!

    • @williammontes5538
      @williammontes5538 8 лет назад

      +EEVblog so which is the right currency?

    •  8 лет назад +7

      +william montes Pesos.

    • @williammontes5538
      @williammontes5538 8 лет назад

      Toni Lähdekorpi Thanks

    • @SidneyCritic
      @SidneyCritic 8 лет назад +1

      Lets put a V8 on a roller-skate, Nah, lets put TWO V8s on a roller-skate.

  • @AmRadPodcast
    @AmRadPodcast 8 лет назад +24

    Pretty impressive quality, but I have to say with that price point I'd just go out and get some Rigol gear, a couple of other goodies and use the rest to book a vacation at the beach.

    • @jakp8777
      @jakp8777 8 лет назад +1

      Good idea. Instead of hiring you, ill hire the chinese and take a vacation while you are unemployed.

    • @AmRadPodcast
      @AmRadPodcast 8 лет назад +6

      +jak p (skiguy09) sounds like a plan

    • @markwebcraft
      @markwebcraft 8 лет назад +6

      +The Current Source You do realize that the rigol gear would not come with "The Smell" right? I dont know how you would get anything done without that.

    • @AmRadPodcast
      @AmRadPodcast 8 лет назад +1

      Mark Webcraft
      Ah, major oversight on my part.Thank you for pointing that out! :)

    • @shana_dmr
      @shana_dmr 8 лет назад +4

      +The Current Source After paying around $4k on Rigol 350 MHz four channel scope and buying couple of other goodies I don't think your vacation will be too festive;)

  • @jeromevuarand3768
    @jeromevuarand3768 8 лет назад +2

    Next to the "Heat Sink Detect #4" arrow, there is a number "4" cast in the heatsink itself, which refers to the screw. So it might just be an assembly hint (like the power supply binding post colours on the front panel PCB). Or maybe the detection is done by testing electrical continuity between two screws.

  • @mikeselectricstuff
    @mikeselectricstuff 8 лет назад +14

    Heatsink sense probably to avoid cooking the expensive FPGA - minimal cost to implement so makes sense

    • @Jeff121456
      @Jeff121456 8 лет назад +8

      +mikeselectricstuff my guess is more than one blew up before they added that.

    • @JamesPotts
      @JamesPotts 8 лет назад +1

      Yeah, those Kintex chips can dissipate a lot of heat if they're "full" and running at a reasonable clock.

    • @iamjadedhobo
      @iamjadedhobo 8 лет назад +2

      +mikeselectricstuff Given all the test pads on both sides of the board, my guess is that this thing is production tested without the heatsink. Of course you don't want it to overheat while verifying it works properly ;)

    • @EEVblog
      @EEVblog  8 лет назад +2

      +mikeselectricstuff Kind of a huge and obvious manufacturing step to miss though, but yeah, nothing wrong with over engineering.

    • @EEVblog
      @EEVblog  8 лет назад

      +iamjadedhobo Could very well put itself in a lower power test mode. In fact the heatsink sense could enable the test mode.

  • @toomasrett3931
    @toomasrett3931 8 лет назад +1

    Hello.
    I have used NI USB-6251 DAQ in the past. My speculation for the extra FPGA processor is to run locally, instead of of of your computers slow USB connection. Allowing all processes to take place simultaneously without any real-time lag between control and read-back of data. I like this tear-down...
    Thanks,
    Tom

  • @chrisridesbicycles
    @chrisridesbicycles 8 лет назад +21

    They must have written the whole software and HDL stuff in Labview so they need this big-ass hardware. ;)

  • @DrFrank-xj9bc
    @DrFrank-xj9bc 8 лет назад

    Really beautifully designed.Thanks for the teardown.

  • @ghargreaves
    @ghargreaves 8 лет назад +2

    The "Blast Shield" around the DMM is actually a shroud for the temperature controlled oven to keep the DMM at a specific temperature regardless of incoming air temperature or exhaust fan speed. The heat sink is large because the scope and ARB are also temperature controlled.

    • @michelfeinstein
      @michelfeinstein 8 лет назад +1

      I didn't see any heaters on the video, did you?

    • @ghargreaves
      @ghargreaves 8 лет назад

      +MFeinstein At 5:55 and 17:00 there's what looks like a row of 1/4W, 1206 resistors on the inside of the shield but the outside of the isolation. You can see it again at 19:57 topside and 20:29 bottomside.

    • @michelfeinstein
      @michelfeinstein 8 лет назад +1

      +The Free Parts Bin that's pretty common on DMMs, Dave even explain them rapidly, it's a cheap way of making a high voltage input resistor... The total voltage will divide itself in each resistor in series, so you can use 10 resistors that have 1/10th the maximum voltage limit each, instead of one resistor that will need to take the whole high voltage itself and usually are pretty expensive.

    • @Graham_Langley
      @Graham_Langley 8 лет назад +1

      +The Free Parts Bin Too substantial for a simple airflow shroud and looks like it could be polycarbonate .

    • @ghargreaves
      @ghargreaves 8 лет назад

      +MFeinstein I wasn't talking about the string of resistors inside the EMI cage. I was talking about the straight resistors outside the EMI cage.

  • @MeakerSE
    @MeakerSE 8 лет назад

    Those thermal pads are not designed to be adhesive, it's just a side effect of the amount of compression they allow for great contact.
    Notebook graphics cards use them on the VRM portions of the heatsink a lot too.

  • @repje2010
    @repje2010 8 лет назад

    Very nice device !! and Dave you did a very nice teardown ! I love it the way you do that :-)
    Greetings, Mark from the Netherlands

  • @PelDaddy
    @PelDaddy 8 лет назад +7

    Nice teardown... Now turn it on!

  • @power-max
    @power-max 8 лет назад +3

    I think I saw some simalar units to these when I was at UVA for an open house, I thought they were a bit cheap and crappy compared to "real" tools, like trying to to bundle everything into one multi tool unit. I'm glad to see those things are actually really well built!

    • @power-max
      @power-max 8 лет назад +2

      Haha, now I am at UVA for EE, and get to use these every week. Software is a bit clunky, disappointed in it, given the quality of the unit itself.

  • @hitechespresso
    @hitechespresso 8 лет назад

    What an impressive and badass instrument!

  • @electronicsNmore
    @electronicsNmore 8 лет назад +13

    Outrageous price for that unit. I'd rather buy another jet ski. LOL

    • @krass76
      @krass76 6 лет назад

      don't think you can make a jet ski count as a bussiness expense though...

    • @martinda7446
      @martinda7446 6 лет назад +1

      Do you think they will overlook the cocaine and hookers?

    • @martinda7446
      @martinda7446 6 лет назад +1

      PS I bought one of 'em lunch.

  • @mikeselectricstuff
    @mikeselectricstuff 8 лет назад +14

    Those look Exactly like PTC fuses... Just not the usual green colour

    • @Jordanma36
      @Jordanma36 8 лет назад

      +mikeselectricstuff can confirm.

    • @Graham_Langley
      @Graham_Langley 8 лет назад

      +mikeselectricstuff Yup. LF = Littelfuse.

  • @battlecoder
    @battlecoder 7 лет назад

    (18:48) I think the heatsink "detect" points are marked on the heatsink itself, because the PCB label matches the "4" engraved on the metal.
    I can't tell if they are testing points other than #4, though. I didn't see connections to the other rings on the PCB (although they could perfectly be in the inner layers I guess).
    I realize this video is kinda old now, but great teardown as usual, Dave! I can't believe I missed this one.

  • @mrstevenund
    @mrstevenund 8 лет назад

    I know NI has had custom chips in the past. I don't know if they still do. We have the 2-channel version at work and love it! I'd love to see how the insides compare to the 4-channel.

  • @Psychlist1972
    @Psychlist1972 8 лет назад +11

    "Thermal Sponge" would be a great band name.

    • @enlishbob
      @enlishbob 8 лет назад

      +simontay1984 Hard core Electro?

    • @mianoso
      @mianoso 8 лет назад +1

      +enlishbob HOT core Electro

    • @jdog987
      @jdog987 4 года назад

      Instant 90's nostalgia with that mention Pete. There is a band called Sponge, and I think we could re-appropriate the lyrics here:
      ♫When I tear-down, so much compound, tiny little screws, I've had it up to here..♫
      ruclips.net/video/L65NNh6vJ_Q/видео.html

  • @colibrimecatronic9922
    @colibrimecatronic9922 8 лет назад +2

    29:57 Dave: "US off course. Yankee money". Digikey:"All prices are in AUD".

  • @shelvacu
    @shelvacu 8 лет назад +9

    "smells like a top quality instrument"
    Uh, Dave, are you feeling okay? Have you had any head injuries recently?

    • @DjZorlag
      @DjZorlag 4 года назад +1

      If the price was lower or country of origin different, surely more negatives would have been found!

  • @obefab
    @obefab 8 лет назад +1

    Exactly the sort of equipment that was bought on my high school.
    Overpriced stuff, that no student was able to use. I think the main intention of the teacher was to spend the budget, even if we just measured the characteristics of some transistors and diods. Wasted money.
    Giving the students a analog oscilloscope most of them would have failed when they have had to change the timescale.
    But for sure there is some AUTO button that does this job for you.

  • @michaelhawthorne8696
    @michaelhawthorne8696 8 лет назад

    Loved that tear down Dave.....
    Looks like that big heat sink with the thermal sponge under it forms its shapes when its applied from new, I bet Ti will have to replace it before it goes on sale to ensure it will mould itself properly. I think to get it to sit right after removal will be difficult.

    • @Graham_Langley
      @Graham_Langley 8 лет назад

      +Michael Hawthorne Agreed - I wish him luck getting it properly back together plus he'll have to replace the phase change pads on the FPGAs.

    • @milleranalytics
      @milleranalytics 8 лет назад

      +Michael Hawthorne Yes, thermal gap pad such as this is typically designed to be a one-time use or it can deform and not provide the proper compression.

  • @Ivo--
    @Ivo-- 8 лет назад +1

    Can't wait for the review!

  • @albinekb
    @albinekb 8 лет назад +6

    Why didn't they make it "modular"? With multimeter as it own board, that way if a student fucks up it's much easier to fix. Just replace the burnt board?

    • @roygillotti4615
      @roygillotti4615 8 лет назад

      +Albin Ekblom A Modular design cuts into the profit margin.

  • @ASilentS
    @ASilentS 8 лет назад +2

    I think I took a BNC splitter from the lab once back at university. Don't think i'd be bold enough to nick a whole bit of kit.

  • @rymannphilippe
    @rymannphilippe 8 лет назад

    Very nice tear down. Would be interesting to see some comments from NI about the huge overpower inside this instrument?
    I understand the professional layout and insane build quality, this ends in an expensive price of shore. Nothing wrong for a instrument for school. But why put this lot of power and memory (money) inside and don't use it???
    This channel grows great and I love every video. Thanks Dave!

  • @OneBiOzZ
    @OneBiOzZ 8 лет назад +11

    i have used kintex FPGAs before ... for 10gb SFP+ transfer of PCIe acquisition cards
    what the hell are they using it for in this?

    • @EEVblog
      @EEVblog  8 лет назад +1

      +Alyx BioHaz It'd a lot'a FPGA that's for sure.

  • @movax20h
    @movax20h 5 лет назад

    31:10, No. This Zynq is not 150 or 200$. It is about 50$ tops. More like 30$. I do have boards, with custom made complex chips, AND Zynq high end dual core ARM and fpga fabric, and it is all 90$ total (with "profit")!

  • @brunofonseca9686
    @brunofonseca9686 8 лет назад +2

    Anatel's decal on the back. Looks like NI has its eyes on Brazil.

  • @raindogred
    @raindogred 8 лет назад +4

    Gilding Lily factor (GLF is high with this one... I believe is exponentially grows with each unit of $1000 > $2000. For an all in one multimeter-scope..L_g = x_0(1+r)^g - done the math..theoreticslly.this one would be audiophile quality as well.

  • @kieferonline
    @kieferonline 8 лет назад

    Just a guess, but I believe the plastic tray around the multimeter fuses on the bottom is to protect students from sticking their fingers further inside the case. That's the one part of the case they're likely to crack open.

    • @vimtut0r709
      @vimtut0r709 8 лет назад

      +kieferonline Maybe, but it makes no sense having the same thing on the opposite site where noone could reach the pcb without opening the case.

  • @williamhayden7711
    @williamhayden7711 8 лет назад +3

    The good news is one day these puppies will be on Ebay for hopefully a great price.

    • @williamhayden7711
      @williamhayden7711 8 лет назад +1

      ***** 8-10 years is my guess. Better off buying dedicated tools.

  • @szoszaty
    @szoszaty 8 лет назад

    Hi Dave, at 36:39 that is an LMK0482x Ultra Low-Noise JESD204B Compliant Clock Jitter Cleaner with Dual Loop PLLs from TI.

  • @matthewlepper3662
    @matthewlepper3662 8 лет назад

    What! Where's the GPIB? What kind of NI product is this? The heatsink on the o-scope board reminded me of a telecom system I once worked on. We had single heatsink spanning multiple BGAs, but in our case, the bottom of the heatsink was milled to match the contours of the components. Since there's still some variation in the final assembled height of components after soldering, we used a two-part thermal adhesive to attach the heatsink to the board. The only way to get the heatsink off was to soften the glue using a heat-gun. Expecting something similar, I thought the heatsink was going to win this time. Cheers from the SIli-valley!

  • @robertbackhaus8911
    @robertbackhaus8911 8 лет назад

    Love the solid screw mount surrounding the USB port. No board flexing as persons jam USB plugs in with unnecessary force. They really have designed these to be abused, haven't they!

  • @jcc4tube
    @jcc4tube 8 лет назад +1

    The Kintex devices have much faster deserializers than the Zynq devices. Maybe they use the Kintex for receiving the many Gbit/sec from the A/Ds and the Zynq so they get the networking and seriously fast ARM cores. The Zynq-010 devices can be had for $50 in the cheapest package.

  • @bluephreakr
    @bluephreakr 8 лет назад +10

    This entire thing, despite it being well-built, appears to be using more expensive kit for the heck of it. I am sure for what it's intended, they could get away with cheaper hardware while keeping the same build quality and results.

    • @bobweiss8682
      @bobweiss8682 8 лет назад +2

      +bluephreakr It's intended for the educational market, where outrageous prices for hardware are the norm.
      Worst part is, after a few months in a classroom, these things will be abused and beat to hell.

    • @EEVblog
      @EEVblog  8 лет назад +1

      +bluephreakr They could, but that's traditional National Instruments for you.

    • @gillianseed4419
      @gillianseed4419 7 лет назад

      thieves usually don't care how the money gets spent

  • @bombapiotr
    @bombapiotr 8 лет назад +1

    Always dreamed about one of these.

  • @tmdrake
    @tmdrake 8 лет назад

    I want this for Christmas!

  • @iankellogg
    @iankellogg 8 лет назад

    good call on the comparators 41:10
    SNx4LVC541A Octal Buffers/Drivers With 3-State Outputs

  • @JetNmyFuture
    @JetNmyFuture 8 лет назад +3

    Some are scared of the price but can you really get a comparable mixed signal scope, 5.5 digit DMM, digital IO, and small 2ch PSU of that quality for any less? Doubt it. This is not a Rigol. The hardware is high-end and I could only imagine the software is likely pretty good.

    • @superdau
      @superdau 8 лет назад

      +JetNmyFuture
      Definitely can't fault the quality.
      But I have a few issues: a "normal" lab power supply and a good DMM can easily be had for less than 1k $ and, if not treated very badly, are useable for a decade and much more. *What happens when NI decides to stop supporting the workbench with its software?* A perfectly fine PSU and DMM hardware, but no way to use it...
      That leaves you with 5000$ to spare, which will get you an equivalent brand MSO+fgen from Keysight/Tektronix (and I would even consider Rigol). Again, a scope will work decades, if treated well, and no missing driver/OS support will suddenly make it an expensive brick. So I would never recommend the workbench over dedicated tools.
      From an *educational standpoint* (I've been teaching electronics to students at uni and for the courses it had been decided to use NI Elvis and myDAQ, which you could see as the low end version of the workbench): it is an *advantage* that all the hardware can controlled by the software, so it makes some tasks, like bode plots or tracing component characteristics, very easy. But the *disadvantages* IMHO *outweighed* it. I don't really know why, but the knowledge of how to use the tools in software did not transfer over to use the real tools. Give the students a real scope or DMM and they were stuck. There's also the quirky issues that sometimes the software has bugs and certain settings give wrong readings. And there's the annyoing issues with hardware not being recognized by the PC, sometimes licencing issues, driver issues after the IT department updated the PCs aso.

  • @solognabologna
    @solognabologna 8 лет назад

    damn the aesthetic design is really nice

  • @timmgiles
    @timmgiles 8 лет назад

    Great tear down and a great piece of kit. I would also like to see what the current version of the software is like - if you get the chance.

  • @badman2oo8
    @badman2oo8 8 лет назад +1

    Nice Breakdown!

  • @uwezimmermann5427
    @uwezimmermann5427 8 лет назад +1

    the Kensington lock will not protect it from being nicked by the students but from being "borrowed" by your colleagues...

  • @shelvacu
    @shelvacu 8 лет назад +1

    "all the electrons are gonna fall out"
    I thought this was gonna get old. It hasn't :D

  • @TheAmmoniacal
    @TheAmmoniacal 8 лет назад

    They should put a 15-19" LCD screen on the unit (whatever the size is), maybe a flip-open solution like a laptop. Would make it massively more practical for little added cost.

  • @rsagdahl
    @rsagdahl 8 лет назад +1

    The price in Sweden is > 50.000 SEK in $ 6.250.
    Should have been gold plated for that sum.

  • @phoenixcrp
    @phoenixcrp 8 лет назад

    Minute 28 I saw it coming: NI vs Dave 1-0 Fortunately, nothing can resist a good screwdriver in a steady hand. Good on you, mate.

  • @pratherat
    @pratherat 8 лет назад

    I'm surprised no mention was made of the board-mounted threaded inserts. I've never seen those before.

  • @Antilevitation
    @Antilevitation 8 лет назад

    looks awesome!

  • @tyttuut
    @tyttuut 8 лет назад

    Did anyone else see that PTC fuse around 10:30? Massive! Never seen one like it.

  • @MDFRESCUER
    @MDFRESCUER 8 лет назад

    Good teardown.

  • @wesleyhayes1847
    @wesleyhayes1847 6 лет назад

    Price point seems high till you consider how it will integrate easily with ni software such as labview or test stand.
    Can imagine it'd be great for school

  • @tritonmole
    @tritonmole 8 лет назад

    I love NI ELVIS II+ workstation. Its like a giant Arduino with 100x more functionality. I wish i could wonder out of the university`s lab department with one in my lap.

  • @MrSergeng
    @MrSergeng 8 лет назад

    @22:00 "Analog Devices AD4610 Very Schmick Low-Noise Low-Everything Super-Duper Whiz-Bang Bob's Your Uncle Operational Amplifiers" LOL Dave, imagine that being the product description on the datasheet :D

    • @Graham_Langley
      @Graham_Langley 8 лет назад +1

      +MrSergeng National Semi's datasheet for the LH0033C and LH0066C was headed 'Fast and Damn Fast Buffer Amplifiers'.

  • @timlipinski2571
    @timlipinski2571 8 лет назад

    Did you use some thermal paste when you put it back together ? Maybe a teardown of an UPS. Thank you for the video ! tjl

  • @kg4boj
    @kg4boj 8 лет назад

    Not a single bodge wire on the board? RF shielding everywhere? Top class high quality FPGA? Probably one of the most beautiful designs I've seen in a long while.

  • @VaughnRhinehart
    @VaughnRhinehart 7 лет назад

    Surprised to see this kind of high caliber design in an educational product. I assume this is made for beginners in electronics because advanced students would likely be supplied separate instruments for each of these purposes.

  • @Keith_Ward
    @Keith_Ward 8 лет назад

    Well there you go Dave, that's why you *always* turn it on first, THEN take it apart. How else are you going to know whether or not taking it apart is what screwed it up?

    • @kg4boj
      @kg4boj 8 лет назад

      +Keith Ward He has confidence in his skills ;-)

    • @Keith_Ward
      @Keith_Ward 8 лет назад

      +Peter “Crackpot Pete” Carlson I have confidence in his skills too ... what if it is bad out of the box? Just saying it's good to have a known reference point.

    • @kg4boj
      @kg4boj 8 лет назад

      Keith Ward
      Believe me, they have enough confidence in his skills to NOT want to send him a bad one.

  • @Keex11
    @Keex11 8 лет назад

    Power factor correction built in? Then as a bonus this will pay for itself after a year. Just leave it plugged in and you'll save money on your bill!

  • @DrTune
    @DrTune 8 лет назад

    at 33:24 Dave goes on about the Zynq and the larger FPGA not apparently having much interconnect but it seems unquestionable that there'd be a ton of that on the inner board layers; your're routing two large BGA FPGAs together in a piece of test equipment, pretty much the only way to go. That thing really does have a fuck-ton of FPGA action going on.

  • @symik3
    @symik3 8 лет назад

    Our school is in connection with National Instruments and they gave our school 7 of these. We are not allowed to use it(first year) but as far as i know the second grades are not allowed too.

    • @symik3
      @symik3 8 лет назад

      +Gerald Musy Probably :D

  • @zaprodk
    @zaprodk 8 лет назад

    At 25:31 i see a bank of SMD-components that look like they 'code' the board version into the board. Either for visual check, or to be read by software.

  • @augustus4711
    @augustus4711 8 лет назад

    Is this thermal conductive foam material reusable? Because, it seems it stays in its compressed form, once used, and there may be not enough mechanical pressure to ensure proper thermal conductivity if reused?

  • @linuxmintman
    @linuxmintman 7 лет назад

    if you could you please take a look at the NI DAQ? It comes in an educational format with a FPGA.

  • @Fan119
    @Fan119 8 лет назад +2

    I don't know how I feel on this thing. I've seen lots of blown up equipment in the labs at uni but now you also blow up 4 other things along with what you muffed up.

    • @SuperAWaC
      @SuperAWaC 8 лет назад +1

      +Fan119 i am not sure what specific use case they are targeting this for, but i doubt they'd make it if their market research didn't indicate a desire for it... but hell, i've been to a couple high schools that could probably swing 5-10 of these for advanced classes...

    • @f7497
      @f7497 8 лет назад

      +Fan119 We had NI's PXI setups in our labs and students would blow cards out of them all the time. Replacing the entire thing would be a financial nightmare.

    • @makomk
      @makomk 8 лет назад

      +SuperAWaC The market for it is educational institutions with broken budgeting and buying processes. Wouldn't be surprised if they ended up sitting in a cupboard somewhere, broken.

  • @mUbase
    @mUbase 8 лет назад

    Hey Dave! Loving the teardown especially!! I'm wondering why, at 43:09 when you are looking at the double sided thermal tape there is a place for a TQFP chip that goes UNDER the heatsink! ?? Why would that be there??

  • @tomsawyer8645
    @tomsawyer8645 8 лет назад +1

    Whew, 350mhz 4 channel, triggered. Sweet! I want one.

  • @mbaker335
    @mbaker335 8 лет назад

    Very very nice. At 38:20 there is an A71L chip in mid field that looks like three of its legs are unsoldered! Odd.

    • @khronscave
      @khronscave 8 лет назад +3

      +mbaker335 And what's with that solder splash(?) around the bottom-right 4 pins of that National Instruments chip?

    • @userPrehistoricman
      @userPrehistoricman 8 лет назад

      +mbaker335 It has? The A71L looks fine to me.

    • @zlotvorx
      @zlotvorx 8 лет назад

      +KhronX Looks like it is "repaired". Bunch of small components not reflowed 100%, others appear cracked (C750 on bottom)...

    • @khronscave
      @khronscave 8 лет назад

      zlotvorx Hastily, perhaps - that thing could've used (way) more flux there :)

    • @zlotvorx
      @zlotvorx 8 лет назад

      KhronX I have a feeling that it's made just to fill a market gap. For sure there is a way to improve it, and in the same time it leaves place to upgrade if needed (or payed for).

  • @PeregrineBF
    @PeregrineBF 8 лет назад +3

    If LabView weren't so terrible, I might like NI more. Their hardware is always nice, but it's almost always been easier in my experience to just use the C bindings their drivers provide. Coding data acquisition and processing in assembly while getting a root canal would be easier and more pleasant than working with LabView on anything of even moderate complexity.

    • @Keith_Ward
      @Keith_Ward 8 лет назад +1

      +SAI Peregrinus Someone always has to point out how another programming language sucks. LabVIEW is just another programming environment that allows quick and easy user interfaces to be created to interface to instrumentation or other hardware. Every language may do something better than another, but there is really is no one best language for everything. It is more of a left or right brain preference to either a procedural or graphical programming environment.

    • @PeregrineBF
      @PeregrineBF 8 лет назад

      +Keith Ward Certainly, that's why I phrased it as a statement of opinion and not objective fact. I would dispute the left/right brain aspect, and that it's linked to being a graphical programming environment. My issues with it don't come from that: it's basically a functional programming language (which I like) but without many of the important features of modern functional programming languages (typeclasses and other type management, monads or similar, better debugging). I don't deny that it's a fast way to make a UI at all, it just makes complex logic harder to manage than necessary.

  • @wolfgangbeginners-mind2853
    @wolfgangbeginners-mind2853 6 лет назад

    It dose have a FFT check out the data sheet, and they go up to 500 Meg

  • @osgeld
    @osgeld 8 лет назад

    you can double that price if you want competent software, the stuff that comes with it is undoubtedly gimped beyond use, and the SDK is designed to be as difficult as possible ... just like ever other NI product I have ever used. Which is a lot

  • @marianoaldogaston
    @marianoaldogaston 8 лет назад

    my guest is that the heatsink detect #4 is just to assembly people make the number 4 on heatsink be in the right side

    • @rymannphilippe
      @rymannphilippe 8 лет назад

      It have a sense wire. I think the big chips will melt without heatsink and hope not power up without sensing.

  • @ChipGuy
    @ChipGuy 8 лет назад

    2 min into video and it already "paid off" for me. Extra earth screw on the back. I am currently doing a project that is gonna need exactly that. Why didn't I think of an extra earth terminal before? DOH Thanks!

    • @EEVblog
      @EEVblog  8 лет назад +1

      +Chip Guy Vids They can be handy.

  • @Nanocosm
    @Nanocosm 5 лет назад

    Is another reason to use an LDO in a bench supply that has a switching pre regulator to have a small output capacitance?
    You have a big cap on parallel with the load on a standard switcher.

  • @gerardojimav4076
    @gerardojimav4076 8 лет назад

    I was waiting for this!!

  • @vehasmaa
    @vehasmaa 8 лет назад

    Its Dave teardown detection they implemented with that heat sink detection :P

  • @260nob9
    @260nob9 8 лет назад

    Hi Yah Dave. Love your tube though tell me? +/- 25V @ 1 Amp = how many Watts?

    • @olafnew
      @olafnew 8 лет назад

      +260 NOB +25V*1А+|-25V|*1A=50W. Dave is absolutely right, as he is counting both negative and positive.

    • @260nob9
      @260nob9 8 лет назад

      Yes cheers though am a little skeptical that the NI VB would produce this?

  • @priestblood
    @priestblood 8 лет назад

    I just bought a Agilent hp
    54645D without the logic leads can you do I teardown of the leads as would like to see if I can make some as I haven't seen any on ebay and I don't want to just put a wire from plug .I am itching to use it

  • @yoda8693
    @yoda8693 8 лет назад

    NI: hardware 10/10, software -1000/10. Luckily there is the perfect support from within MATLAB/Simulink, good libraries to go with C/C++/.NET etc. that makes the investment somewhat more worth the horrendous price of these products (NI that is).

  • @tmdrake
    @tmdrake 8 лет назад

    This sounds cool

  • @steubens7
    @steubens7 8 лет назад

    quality quality quality quality quality quality quality quality

  • @fuzzy1dk
    @fuzzy1dk 8 лет назад

    A Zynq can't be nowhere near $200 in any significant volume, you can get a whole board including 1GB RAM and a 4GB SD card for close to half that

  • @simonfitch1120
    @simonfitch1120 8 лет назад

    Looks like a bit of dodgy hand-soldering at the bottom of that NI chip, @ 38:22. I see flux residue and some solder nastiness.

  • @crapcbm
    @crapcbm 8 лет назад

    BEAUTY !!!!

  • @DAVIDGREGORYKERR
    @DAVIDGREGORYKERR 8 лет назад

    Could they be implementing a SPDIF for connection between the two FPGA chips?

  • @sleepib
    @sleepib 8 лет назад

    That's magnesium, not Al.

  • @pinterelectric
    @pinterelectric 8 лет назад +1

    Because they can!

  • @BMRStudio
    @BMRStudio 8 лет назад

    Soooo when the EEVblog University will open in the new office? :))))))

  • @lodevijk
    @lodevijk 8 лет назад +8

    I'd be more impressed if the thing didn't cost 6k. They say an engineer will do for 5 cent what an idiot will do for a dollar.

    • @AttilaAsztalos
      @AttilaAsztalos 8 лет назад

      +lodevijk Actually, I was wondering what the price might be, so I went "let's see, think 'ludicrously overpriced' - say, $5000... hmm, good start but make it more realistic in its ludicrousness - say, $5700..." Dang, I hate it when I'm right about prices...

    • @kylem7890
      @kylem7890 8 лет назад +2

      FYI, just the MSO part of the Vbench is ~10K from competitors. This is actually the lowest cost 4 channel, 350Mhz scope on the market.

  • @Redsnapper1999
    @Redsnapper1999 8 лет назад

    A snip at £ 4,560 plus 20% vat on top, I'll take half a dozen...

  • @commodork
    @commodork 8 лет назад

    If I had the cash, I'd be buying one of these.

  • @jordanjohnson714
    @jordanjohnson714 8 лет назад

    I think you like it

  • @wi_zeus6798
    @wi_zeus6798 6 лет назад

    Can someone please explain how the +/- 25V is giving out 50W of power? Is it effectively 50V at 1A, when measured across the output?

  • @kenfoland
    @kenfoland 8 лет назад

    It's obvious they have chose the component parts to justify the sales price, without even fully implementing their capabilities.

  • @Galfonz
    @Galfonz 8 лет назад

    Maybe they are using circuit designs from higher end equipment so that they don't have to pay to re-engineer it with cheaper parts. This isn't going to sell in huge quantities after all.

    • @Galfonz
      @Galfonz 8 лет назад

      NI makes professional market gear with much higher specs than this. These are the circuits I was thinking of.