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#1
The Newcomer's Forum / Re: Another "new" book
April 27, 2025, 11:16:07 AM
Mucho gracias hermano  <3)

All of this reminded me of my dad and two gringo (mucho barracho) buddies drove a car to Costa Rica.
I had a lot going on at the time and chose not to even try and wrap my head around it I simply told him "ok yeah well you'll never be seen again"

:loco

They completed the trip which purpose was to deliver a car 🚗 and returned.  He had hours of VHS camcorder footage including several instances of military 🎖�🪖 instructing him to put the camera away.  xP
#2
The Newcomer's Forum / Re: Another "new" book
April 27, 2025, 05:44:54 AM
Thank you sir I can probably send you this one if you like  :tu:

I'm not a big seller on the bay but I have sold a few things lmk I will be glad to do it gratis of course.

I did skim through the content a bit one thing I noticed he likes making a voltmeter lead with a small capacitor in series
#3
The Newcomer's Forum / Re: Stuff that blew my mind
April 26, 2025, 01:15:50 PM
Thanks guys
I'm gonna use this thread to post stuff that I was surprised to learn.

Like how a dc power supply is a ground to ac.

 xP
#4
The Newcomer's Forum / Stuff that blew my mind
April 24, 2025, 10:48:08 PM
A zener diode can act like a normal diode when it is forward biased

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 xP

Seems kinda obvious now that I think about it.

 :grr  :lmao:
#5
The Newcomer's Forum / Another "new" book
April 20, 2025, 02:37:12 PM
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About the author  :tu:

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Contents

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Its rad  :trouble

I got pretty excited looking at H. Then I looked at the others and got even more excited.

Its like the ten commandments of transistors

 xP  :loco

#6
Sorry just thinking out loud  :loco

For the longest time I was thinking that making contact with components of an energized circuit with the leads of a (handheld) multimeter was gonna be a short
 xP
Well...now I know that IT IS NOT
And the (I presume) explanation for that is there is no current introduced between the leads only potential
(I'm sure there are limitations to this concept)

So I'm wondering how people can slip up and short something out  :grr while probing with their multimeter leads and it occurred to me that what happens is they contact two parts of the circuit WITH THE SAME LEAD

 :'(

And....that IS a short.   xP
#7
Quote from: g1 on March 23, 2025, 10:28:05 AMA nice visual reminder that voltages are always in respect (or reference) to something else.  In this case it was ground (common) but it does not necessarily have to be.

For bonus points:
1) what are voltages at A and C with respect to B.
2) what are voltages at B and C with respect to A.
 :)

Ok I see G1 actually got me because on number two node A is at ground  :dbtu:

Anyhow here are my answers

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Anyhow thanks for playing I'm not kidding when I say I was intimidated by this  :lmao:  :loco

Now I (kinda) understand what you guys are going through when you ask someone trying to fix something to measure voltages and report back  :trouble

#8
The Newcomer's Forum / Re: Open circuit voltage
March 26, 2025, 03:20:19 PM

Yes.  You could look it up, or you could solve for X: 
8.76/12.80 = x/(x+6)
[/quote]

More homework from G1  :tu:

I tried it with the original equation and got a 13 so I looked it up and it said 10 so I retried it using a different denominator and got closer

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 xP
#9
Ok I wanted to turn in my homework for bonus points but I was like wow I better do the original assignment  xP
And yes I've seen the answers but it's been a while so here we go.
First I wanted to check a similar scenario on my bronco and I felt sorry for my hf meter so I verified some suspicions
Positive voltage
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Negative voltage
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I think I see 🙈 a trend

So here we go I filled out my worksheet and yes I was scared  :loco  :lmao:  :grr
The way i did it in each case I started at ground then went from there

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Fun fact....one time I had a 36v trolling motor for my boat and reading about and trying to figure out how to connect it and the three 12v batteries blew my mind.

 :grr
#10
The Newcomer's Forum / Re: Open circuit voltage
March 25, 2025, 07:30:54 PM
Ok I'm back with some results
It dawned on me that I had a decade resistor box so I was like hey that's pretty rad I can just dial in where voltage starts to roll off  :dbtu:

Unfortunately I looked at it and it only goes to 1000k (which I presume is one megaohm)  :grr

Anyhow I started looking around and quickly found a 1M ohm resistor
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Ok cool so let's try 2M ohm
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Ok....there we go

I needed something in between so I looked around and found I think a 220k ohm resistor and added it to the 1M ohm 
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And the multimeter is already taking notice of the increased resistance...I think  :loco
#11
Preamps and Effects / Re: CD4049UBE Headphone Amp
March 25, 2025, 12:12:49 PM
Man that's crazy awesome  :dbtu:

I was gonna comment on your soldering skills which look hella awesome  <3)

For real looks like point to point wiring on an old tube amp.   :tu:

But then seeing that last post I'm floored  :dbtu:

Looks like you clearly have the dexterity skillz to accompany the acumen  8|

I'm way beyond impressed  8)
#12
The Newcomer's Forum / Re: Open circuit voltage
March 24, 2025, 05:59:18 PM
Ok I have a plan  :grr

I'm gonna go back and increase the resistance in series with (+) and try to discern where voltage begins to drop.

I presume my meter has a 10 megaohm resistance so possibly it's gonna change at the 1 megaohm stage.

 xP
#13
The Newcomer's Forum / Open circuit voltage
March 24, 2025, 02:10:57 PM
I did an experiment to try to prove a point to myself or a forum member or a complete stranger  :loco

The point I wanted to make was an open circuit can be constructed and as long as it's open the voltage will remain the same.

Unfortunately I have failed in that endeavor but fortunately succeeded in learning or affirming stuff I have read about.

I plugged in a constant dc power supply 13.8 v and tested voltage  xP

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Next I grabbed a resistor added it to the open circuit and got some good results  :loco

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So life is good yeah I'm intrigued and fascinated and life is good

But then I got greedy by grabbing a large value resistor and that's when everything fell apart  :grr  :lmao:
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And no I don't understand it but I'm thinking it has something to do with my meter's (internal resistance?)

So yeah I'm off to try and learn about that  :tu:
#14
The Newcomer's Forum / A game for newbz (like me)
March 22, 2025, 09:22:38 PM
Ok I know this is mere childs play for most here but I thought it was cool 😎

Guess the voltages for A,B, and C in each

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 :loco
#15
The Newcomer's Forum / Re: LED 💡 light bulbs
March 20, 2025, 03:14:19 AM
What would RULE is a variac that not only allowed adjustable voltage but adjustable frequency as well  :dbtu: now that would be killer  :trouble  xP