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The dense potting resin used in this module made it VERY hard to explore. I pretty much destroyed it in the process, which is a shame as I'd like to have extracted the data from its protection chip.

Perhaps that can be done in the future now I know the pinout of the connector and the nature of the internal usage counter.

https://youtu.be/Rtt9FuNIccw

Files

Exploring the expiry timer on a Sharp plasmacluster module.

The plasmacluster air cleaners must be one of Sharp's most successful products. They're MASSIVE in Japan, with almost every home and public space having one. The other prominent Japanese companies have their own variants on the technology too. They're basically just an advanced air ioniser with some very bold advertising claims. In reality, devices like this do emulate nature in the way it creates active air molecules by natural phenomena. It's why outdoors air is always "fresher" than indoors air where the active molecules deplete rapidly and do not normally get replaced. The most common method of freshening the indoor air is to produce a very faint electrostatic discharge that does mind-boggling things to air. It literally strips molecules apart into individual atoms, and they can recombine in either stable molecules or unstable variants like hydroxyl radicals (a molecule composed of a single atom of oxygen and hydrogen) or other active molecules like ozone (O3 - three oxygen atoms) and hydrogen peroxide (H2O2 - two atoms of oxygen and two of hydrogen). The amounts generated are usually lower or equal to natural outdoor air. The short lived unstable molecules can deactivate viruses and oxidise pollutants - returning to stable molecules in the process. The first units used to use sharp metal needles to create the plasma, but modern units use tufts of carbon fibres, as they are long lasting and very efficient. Part of the reason I got this unit was to see how the construction has changed, and what was being used to expire the modules after a preprogrammed amount of use. Unfortunately the unit was so well potted in hard resin that I damaged the circuitry in the process. Otherwise I'd have explored the data on the protection chip. I'll keep an eye open for an affordable module or dead unit to see if I can read the data. If you enjoy these videos you can help support the channel with a dollar for coffee, cookies and random gadgets for disassembly at:- https://www.bigclive.com/coffee.htm This also keeps the channel independent of YouTube's algorithm quirks, allowing it to be a bit more dangerous and naughty. #ElectronicsCreators

Comments

Tomáš Kováčik

I bet that if you connect empty i2c eeprom it will start to work, i have 1500e medical device which do init with empty eeprom and start counting again,

Mike Page

Assuming it is a standard 24Cxx device, you could take a snapshot of it when newish and restore the "fresh" data whenever the LED starts flashing. That's assuming there's no additional nonvolatile data in the PIC used for tracking or checksumming or whatever. There has to be a facility to accept replacement modules.

Gordo

Noe that you know the pinouts, you can sniff the I2C (of the next near-dead HV module) with your low-cost decodes-everything Chinese scope and see what's being discussed. - it would be remiss of Sharp not to have incorporated some sort of checksum on the EEPROM and show they're not trying to rip us off hard enough if they didn't do that. Mike (with the electric stuff) has an high-definition industrial X-ray machine, I'm sure he'd image the inside of potted stuff if you asked him.