O
ObamaOrHillary2008
Guest
Though explanations posted here to questions are very appreciated.
I want to suggest that, instead of a rambling massive paragraph
lumping the entire circuit theory together with volts and amps and
such, to take some time to break everything out with a couple diagrams
here and there. I often don't come out of a massive explanation in
one giant paragraph understanding any more than when I started.
In sci.electronics.advanced, everything is crystal clear language
between questioner and answerer, but here, in basics, breaking it out
a bit with a diagram and possibly a water-type analogy would help.
For instance, how could I make a "circuit" with, say, some plastic
pipes, water, and blowing into it for some type of force? Do timers
and flipflops and oscillators resemble valves? Why is voltage the
same in a parallel circuit? Why does an oscillator need three
connections to the transformer?
My electronics kit gives garbled explanations with plus voltage and
taps and feedback but I don't know what the hell that is. Some
"beginning" books immediately talk about -3 volts here, and + feedback
there, right after the V = IR equation. Geez. I'm glad people know
this stuff so well, maybe born knowing it.
Gets downright frustrating.
I want to suggest that, instead of a rambling massive paragraph
lumping the entire circuit theory together with volts and amps and
such, to take some time to break everything out with a couple diagrams
here and there. I often don't come out of a massive explanation in
one giant paragraph understanding any more than when I started.
In sci.electronics.advanced, everything is crystal clear language
between questioner and answerer, but here, in basics, breaking it out
a bit with a diagram and possibly a water-type analogy would help.
For instance, how could I make a "circuit" with, say, some plastic
pipes, water, and blowing into it for some type of force? Do timers
and flipflops and oscillators resemble valves? Why is voltage the
same in a parallel circuit? Why does an oscillator need three
connections to the transformer?
My electronics kit gives garbled explanations with plus voltage and
taps and feedback but I don't know what the hell that is. Some
"beginning" books immediately talk about -3 volts here, and + feedback
there, right after the V = IR equation. Geez. I'm glad people know
this stuff so well, maybe born knowing it.
Gets downright frustrating.