Mark1978
Veteran
- Location
- Shouldham, West Norfolk
Explains the blackened out look seen then. Have you tried Maplins for a replacement. See if its worth repairing?
Just out of curiosity, is the capacitor marked Made In Australia?
And are the following a rough guide size? The housing is about 2" in length and 1 1/4 in diameter.
I would be surprised if 240V was involved. My guess (and I have not looked this up) is that a battery feeds the unit, which chops the voltage, this will be fed into a (step up) transformer. The output of this will be a relatively high voltage ,low current, to give a shock.
I doubt if the transfomer will have blown. The capacitor may have broken down, but I would plump for the transistor that does the switching.
Just Googled and some are mains powered, so what do I know, Ill shut up!
How long did it last & do you have the plans?I built a simple device that did exactly what you described once using four diodes to form a bridge rectifier circuit, a relay (wired in such a way that once powered, it would switch and break the circuit to itself, and the rest of the circuit, where it would unswitch and regain power again), an old transformer recovered from an old soldering iron power supply ( I used this as a step up transformer) and a large capacitor....
It was fun while the relay lasted![]()
How long did it last & do you have the plans?
Just put an ohm meter across the capacitor and it reads 0, so i guess that means it's shorted out and knackered. I'll see if i can find a replacement.
Hand held?It lasted a few weeks of incessant use, I don't have the plans but I could easily re-think them up again!
Hand held?
Just a bit too big for the hand then.It was built inside a plastic housing with two metal probes on the end of a half a metre of plastic trunking extending from the plastic housing. It ran on a small 2Ah 12V sealed lead acid battery.