I'm studying electrical engineering and it gives me something to really look forward to.
May your sine waves forever oscillate!
Looks like scope for improvement. If you are still looking for a cuddle partner, I hope you get to meter.
Cool. I have interest in studying that too, though I likely never will.
@Mike403 good luck !
May the (electro-motive) Force be with you.
Have fun! ☺️
Maybe you could give m e some pointers, LOL
@waynewv Do Not cut the red wire!
very, very cool. Study hard and have fun!
@Mike403 Wish you all the best!
Good luck!!
That's exciting! Good luck!
@snuggleme123 @geoff1000 @JasonCuddles @pmvines @Sheena123 @waynewv @Sofia_Sweets @ILikeWarmHugs @Mennahugs - Thanks all. It's extra important for me to stay busy right now with all that is going on.
Can you help me out? I have a problem with the electric windows in my car.
@UKGuy What exactly are the symptoms ? Some / all not working ? Driver / local control only ? One or both directions ? Slow / intermittent / inop ?
I had to design an amplifier circuit using this simulation software. The top waveform is the input signal while the bottom is the output(amplified signal). I get to put together the actual circuit in the lab next week.
@Mike403 I may be mistaken, but I think the output will be inverted. The input voltage increases the Base current, and hence the Collector current, giving a lower output voltage ; and the gain is R2 / R4 = 10.
@geoff1000 - A circuit I did prior to this which was simplier, did have the output inverted. I'm using Multisim in that photo which is used by electrical engineering professionals and it simulates an actual circuit. The software cost about $3,000.. (not for students who are learning it)
@geoff1000 The signals was inverted when I put together the actual circuit. I dont know why it wasn't in Multisim.
@Mike403 Glad to know my brain hasn't completely atrophied. 😊
Best guess is that Multisim was showing the signals independently, and hence starting each at a standard point in its cycle ; rather than both synchronised to the same time, and hence showing the relative phase.
I find electronics is like cooking, and equally rewarding for the same reason ; you start with very basic ingredients, mix them together, and create something useful.