Mehdi Sadaghdar

Mehdi Sadaghdar

The logo of Sadaghdar's channel and website, ElectroBOOM
Personal information
Born 1980 (age 3536)
Iran
Nationality Canadian
Occupation Electrical engineer
Website www.electroboom.com
YouTube information
Channel ElectroBOOM
Years active 2007 - Present
Genre Science, comedy
Subscribers 811,997
Total views 62,278,643
Subscriber and view counts updated as of October 29, 2016.

Mehdi Sadaghdar is an Iranian Canadian[1] electrical engineer[2] and YouTube personality.[3][4] His videos are "hilariously painful tutorials" of electric experiments during which he often receives electric shocks.[5][6][7][8] As of August 2016, his channel ElectroBOOM has more than 800,000 subscribers.[9] His most viewed video with over 7 million views is a tutorial on how to make a coilgun.[10]

He was born in Iran in 1980[1] and currently resides in Vancouver, Canada.[11] He earned a degree of Bachelor of Applied Science (B.A.Sc.) from the University of Tehran in 1999 and a degree of Master of Applied Science (M.A.Sc.) from the Simon Fraser University in 2006.[12][13]

References

  1. 1 2 "Göz göre göre çarpıldı!". Akşam (in Turkish). 2 September 2013. Kanada'da yaşayan İran asıllı bir mühendis Mehdi Sadaghdar....
  2. Goodman, William (26 August 2013). "How NOT To Make An Electric Guitar (VIDEO)". The Huffington Post.
  3. Dunn, Michael (18 August 2014). "Engineer goes BOOM". EDN.com.
  4. McNamara, Paul (4 January 2013). "Video about ESD both shocking and funny". Network World.
  5. Golden, Geoffrey (7 March 2013). "5 Hilariously Painful Tutorials By Mehdi Sadaghdar". CraveOnline.
  6. Goodman, William (7 March 2013). "Painful lesson on the difference between major electrical currents (AC and DC)". CBS News.
  7. "9 How-To Videos Gone Horribly Wrong". smosh.com. 17 April 2013.
  8. Plafke, James (5 January 2013). "Guy hilariously teaches you to be careful of electrostatic discharge". Geek.com.
  9. "Mehdi Sadaghdar - YouTube". Mehdi Sadaghdar on YouTube. 29 October 2016.
  10. "Just Try and Make Your Own Coil-Gun (Accelerator)". Mehdi Sadaghdar on YouTube. 18 January 2013.
  11. "YouTube science demonstration takes comic turn". The Daily Telegraph. 4 January 2013.
  12. Sadaghdar, Mehdi (Spring 2005). "11-Bit Floating-point Pipelined Analog to Digital Converter in CMOS 1.8 μm Technology" (PDF). sfu.ca. Simon Fraser University.
  13. "Mehdi Sadaghdar M.A.Sc. Graduate 2000-2006". sfu.ca. Simon Fraser University.

External links

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