Vague...care to expand, or direct to a source so I may educate myself, obviously I'm no electrical engineer ThanksIt's a balance of current/heat/efficiency.
Kirchhoff.
Thanks, I will check it out.I like this series. Going through them myself, since I'm also not an engineer.
specifically about voltage dividers:
Basically, in most applications, the values probably aren't critical and can be picked based on what you have in stock.
Yeah, it's tough. You have to understand enough theory to know when you should actually do the math, and when you can just hand wave away the particulars and go with "probably good enough".Judgment calls like that are so hard to make starting out. It's such a backwards line of reasoning when the rest of EE is so difficult and complicated. You have to learn and understand complex ideas like impedance in an AC circuit to realize it doesn't matter anyway.
What gets me is the formula for impedance as a product of resistance and reactance is the pythagorean theorem. How did they make that one line up?
Yeah, it's tough. You have to understand enough theory to know when you should actually do the math, and when you can just hand wave away the particulars and go with "probably good enough".
The course on that (from the series above) had some "use Thevenin only" example problems to solve, and I'd get halfway and realize I was using Ohm's law, so I'd have to restart.Thevenin