Strange.....or is my understanding of electricity so poor...!!??Sure it does.
Works well.
I have been doing that for 40 years.
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Do you have a diagram or similar to describe??
Strange.....or is my understanding of electricity so poor...!!??Sure it does.
Works well.
I have been doing that for 40 years.
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Granted. However DC does not rectify to AC.I think power "converter" it the word I am looking for.
"Rectifier" is a poor choice of words.
DC input, AC output; can be done several ways.
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It would require some type of triggered device to generate AC from DC.Granted. However DC does not rectify to AC.
Maybe I need to relearn my knowledge or understanding of electricity !!!!!????I had a teacher tell me "there is no AC".
AC is varying DC.
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I think his umbridge was with your use of " rectifier " when you obviously meant "inverter"Sure it does.
Works well.
I have been doing that for 40 years.
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Teacher had it backwards lolMaybe I need to relearn my knowledge or understanding of electricity !!!!!????
Or how resistive loads vs inductive loads derate AC switches. I have some controllers that will handle 15amp resistive but only 3 inductive.I guess you could classify AC as voltage that is changing in polarity, and current which flows both directions, which DC does not do.
But like I tell people, current is current, and that is what you have to watch in power distribution systems, regardless of AC/DC.
In electronics you have to watch voltage and current, since electronics tend to be very sensitive to both.
If you read the fine print in the sales brochures, you can use AC rated electrical equipment on DC systems, but you have to de-rate it, since there is no zero voltage point in DC systems, and so contacts have to open under full voltage, and you get a lot more arcing.
I have seen people confused about whether a motor is 1-phase or 3-phase.
I can tell from the sound of it running, and the look of it.
3-phase motors are very smooth, since they produce a constant torque as the rotate.
And rotating motor shafts can look stationary under fluorescent lights, so you have to always assume a 3-phase motor is running, and avoid contact with any moving parts.
Yes, the word I had in mind was "inverter", not "rectifier".
Blogging along this morning, until the coffee starts peaking, then I will try to do something useful, like mow the grass.
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I added a 20 amp ON/OFF light switch to a 120VAC belt sander that I had, and used it to switch the motor on and off.Or how resistive loads vs inductive loads derate AC switches. I have some controllers that will handle 15amp resistive but only 3 inductive.
I thimpfks these guys are just misusing the word 'rectifiy'. We first language English speakers understood that the original person meant "inverter". When I was a kid (yesterday), we had radios in cars that had ancient technology for the radio for the amplification of the weak radio waves. That dark ages technology was called the "tube", or in Britain and other places, the 'valve'. Anyway, to make the radio work well, it was necessary to have the voltage changed from the car's 6 volt (yes, we remember those 6 volt cars--always more trouble than the 12 volters) to something else. This was done by a device called the 'vibrator', which in the 70's was turned into another hand-held type of device for home use. The vibrator was simply a magnetic switch that allowed the battery electricity to flow in the normal direction for a moment, but in doing so, it would trigger a magnet to switch the direction of the electricity. This would happen about 60 X per second..Maybe I need to relearn my knowledge or understanding of electricity !!!!!????
When I was a kid (last week) I knew nothing about how tubes (valves), transformers or electricity in general workt. Had I known, I could have built my own radios (besides the crystal radios that I did indeed build). I bought a kit that you could build 18 projects with, it was fun, the only problem was that it was soldered together and each time had to be UN-soldered to build another project. Today, of course we have many techniques available, my favorite of which is the bread-board,Or how resistive loads vs inductive loads derate AC switches. I have some controllers that will handle 15amp resistive but only 3 inductive.
I thimpfks that the subject of real education is so IMPORTANT, I will risk the ire of being off topic. Likewise the recovery of an important food species. Notice the two subjects are like a marriage, two become one which makes three! LOL@Richard Hed
Yes, off topic, weaving all over the road and barely staying out of the ditches. I doubt GT minds.
But speaking of learning and kids books, I was in the 7th grade and checked a book out of the library on "Experiments for kids," or something like that. One of them involved winding a little step-up transformer, a few short pieces of pipe, a battery, and some sheet metal to make a key. The wires from the output went to the 2 pipes. A person holding the 2 pipes would have their arms jump whenever the key was tapped. Great FUN! I brought it to school, added an extra battery, and found as many suckers as I could to hold the pipes. I was not one of the cool kids, so I was enjoying the attention. Finally I got to one of the real tough guys. He hesitated a bunch and finally put his hands behind his back and said, "ok, ok, you proved me chicken." Best day ever in the 7th grade, LOL.
At a christmas party, my nephew put a shocking toy in my hand. not know what it was , I pressed the button. It shocked me, but when I get something like that done, I generally react without thimpfking--it was very heavy and I threw it across the room. lucky to not hit anyone as the room was packt with peanut eating popcorn popping people. It's never smart to attack me, as i immediately react that way./It was kinda like a heart ICD device with no safety instructions.
I ordered one of those shocking books from the back of a comic book, and used it to shock many fellow students, and even a teacher or two.At a christmas party, my nephew put a shocking toy in my hand. not know what it was , I pressed the button. It shocked me, but when I get something like that done, I generally react without thimpfking--it was very heavy and I threw it across the room. lucky to not hit anyone as the room was packt with peanut eating popcorn popping people. It's never smart to attack me, as i immediately react that way./
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