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Groups > sci.electronics.misc > #4866

Mystery Flashing Superball

From neverland@GoodeveCa.net (Pete)
Newsgroups sci.electronics.misc
Subject Mystery Flashing Superball
Date 2018-04-18 01:40 +0000
Organization Berkeley, California
Message-ID <pb67lo$3f0$1@gioia.aioe.org> (permalink)

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Many years ago, at some Expo or other, I acquired a flashing plastic
ball that seems rather different from the usual ones I've seen.
(Apparently a promo from RapidMind, which was bought by Intel long ago,
so there's no use going to the source!)

For a start, it's translucent (uncoloured) plastic but perforated,
with the outer holes going all the way through.

I always assumed that like all the others it just had a battery
and a motion sensor plus a chip to control the flashing.  After
being tucked away for those many years, though, it no longer
flashed when bounced.  I just thought the battery had given out.

However, I was idly bouncing it more extensively a couple of weeks
back, and was astonished to see it flashing again, and getting
brighter the more I bounced it!  I deliberately left it alone for
a few days and tried again.  Once more the initial flash was dim
or absent and got quite brilliant again after more shocks.

This behaviour is entirely consistent over several repeats, so
I'm wondering if it could possibly be an ultracapacitor and some
kind of piezo charging circuit. The relevant voltages and currents
seem all wrong for this though.

I also have a couple of examples of the more common "Magic Ball"
-- similarly acquired, and also apparently now dead.  I cut one
of them apart and found the expected couple of watch batteries
and a spring tremblor.  I also found that removing and reinserting
the batteries brought it back to life!  (Yes, the contact was
thoroughly corroded.)

The behaviour is different, though.  The revitalized ball is always
at full brilliance (though I can't actually bounce it, as it's in
two halves!).  I suppose it's conceivable that the mystery ball just
has a corroded battery contact, that somehow becomes more conductive
each bounce, but it's remarkably consistent for that. I do *not*
propose to cut it apart!  Too intriguing.

Has anyone else got experience or knowledge of such a beast?

Ta,

	-- Pete --

[I somehow get reminded of the "Interocitor" of ancient days... (:-))]

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Thread

Mystery Flashing Superball neverland@GoodeveCa.net (Pete) - 2018-04-18 01:40 +0000
  Re: Mystery Flashing Superball Jon Elson <elson@pico-systems.com> - 2018-04-24 14:16 -0500
    Re: Mystery Flashing Superball neverland@GoodeveCa.net (Pete) - 2018-04-25 02:15 +0000

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