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I'm not a huge fan of building electronics into buildings for the exact reason shown here.  If something fails you can end up with defective energised electronics sitting inside a wall.

As with many similar items, when they go bang like this it often obliterates any clue as to what initiated the failure.  It's just one big sooty skidmark inside.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UpiSk4S7mZU

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This was sent to me by a friend who had been using it for a while, but after refitting it during redecoration it failed catastrophically with sparks. That does make me wonder if something happened during the process that either resulted in ingress of dirt/liquid or a bad connection causing arcing, which can sometimes trigger circuit failure. It would have been nice to go in a bit deeper, but when these things blow up they often cause a chain reaction due to conductive plasma bridging adjacent pads and tracks. That can destroy the evidence of which component initiated the failure. Not helped in this case by a very densely packed PCB with a black silkscreen, making the analysis even harder. I might guess at MOSFET failure with subsequent destruction of current sensing resistors. I'm not a huge fan of built-in electronics. It means that in an instance like this, the densely packed electronics can fail dramatically with the awkwardness of it still being built into the house wiring with no easy way to remove or replace it without electrical skills. For charging USB devices I recommend using good quality plug-in chargers, and better still, plugged into a fused adaptor or extension. Supporting the channel with a dollar or two on Patreon helps keep it independent of YouTube's quirks, avoids intrusive mid-video adverts, gives early access, bonus footage and regular quiet Patreon live streams. https://www.patreon.com/bigclive #ElectronicsCreators

Comments

John Hiesey

It would be interesting to get a non-exploded one and find out what component went boom

Mike Hughes

Could a power surge or spike have caused it to explode, or is there any protection to mitigate one?

Curtis Hoffmann

Fire control officer: "We couldn't find any unnatural causes for the fire in this USB box. It was just a normal part of the designed-in features. No reason for panic, people! We suggest you just buy a fork and a bag of marshmallows and sit back and enjoy the fireworks."

Ymir the Frost Giant

"one big sooty skidmark" - sounds like the IoM TT!

bigclive

I may have ordered what I think is the same type to explore closer.

Anonymous

I could be wrong, but I noticed what looks like a big shiny piece of loose shmoo where it might not belong. It shines around the 2:10 mark, but is more easily located by being at the very top center of the video starting at 2:45 or so.