 Hey there YouTube. This is one of those, you know, wondrous little finds. It may or may not find an eBay but I found out an eBay. It's from a seller joinus2010. This is a high quality mini oxygen bar. They spell ionizer wrong. I'll show it in a second. It's an ionizer USB 12 volt car auto fresh air purifier. Oh, sounds good. I've got a couple of daughters, a couple of grandsons, maybe these could go in there. In the lighter. Think of the cars, neither of them smoke. That might be a good little bike. Looks quite impressive. Show you the advert. I can't click through to it. See that one anymore. I don't know why you can't see that very well. At least I can't see it very well. It could be my eyes. Not very expensive. Two pounds. Two pound each I believe. Yeah, well, I was playing around with it and I've had a few of these ones that you can just plug in anyway. So I give it 12 volts and I wondered and I noticed, oh, okay, we can take it apart. So my curiosity being my curiosity, I decided to take it apart. Now that's just the little nipple thing out the end and this is what if I just put that there for a second. Look for any of you can actually see that circuit. You can probably see what's on it already. This, I'm not sure that just goes in and makes the earth connection I presume. There we go. And it lights up inside there. Nubbly blue. So we know it has an LED. 12 volts, probably resistor. And it does. It's a camera action thing. It's absolutely rubbish, isn't it? So there we go. And up it goes again. Honestly, I think Microsoft designed this camera like this just to anyway, let's get past that. I didn't say what I was going to say. I thought it and well, you don't really need to hear it. But this on here is a transistor as far as I know. It looks like a transistor to 90 case. It's got some markings on it. At the top, it says C945. Just below that it says 331. But that's it. That is the high quality mini oxygen bar, 12 volt auto car auto fresh air purifier from the talented seller. Join us 2010. And if you want to spend £2 on a transistor that's not even actually in the circuit. If you look at that, it doesn't actually function as part of the circuit. So if you want to spend £2 on an LED, which does have a resistor, very good. A couple of springs and a useless bit of PCB. And go ahead. But I wouldn't. I'm going to get my money back. I'm going to phone up PB in a minute and show them what I found and just ask them to sort me out. Cheers for watching guys. Don't get killed by all of these sort of things.