Sir ,can you make a video on why does current decrease on increase in voltage in transformer bcz I'm confused that since voltage is pressure to flow electron than more voltage means more pressure that must result much electron to flow
Hello I have made a donation of £10 to say thank you for the quality info. Could I make a request if possible please could you make a video on Generators and everything I need to know about them as I work in a data centre. Thank you
I became an electrical engineer 40 years ago. If you wanted to learn the things covered in this series you had to go to college... or spend a boat-load of time at the library. Those who grew up on TH-cam have no idea how fortunate they are that stuff like this is at their fingertips. Your videos are tremendous, as well as an outstanding foundation for anyone going into the engineering field.
TH-cam is awesome, as a gen z I do appreciate it. Years of knowledge and experience at your fingertips and the only person you have to ask is a computer. There's no need to spend years of your life and hard earned money studying something you might become uninterested in, youtube lets you learn an infinite amount of things for free and you wont be under the pressure of a money investment. I think it makes society better even, as easy access to learning gives people the freedom to educate themselves despite limitations they may have. For example, limited money, different learning style, different optimal learning conditions, and the limitation that applies to everyone, time. I choose to spend my time on earth learning. If learning and growth rise above hate and ignorance, we will live in a more beautiful world.
I speak 3 languages, searched it in french and korean, understood nothing, went to school and learned for hours, still nothing really gets in mind, but your 10min vid is so well explained. I regret not knowing you sooner
Hell yeah, comments like this don’t make me want to go buy a course or go to school just to learn electricity . Think about it half the time these colleges are teaching you something even in highschool . They pull up a dam you tube video
I've never understood this so well! With an electrician for a dad and a brother who grew up soldering circuits for DIY electronics, I've always gotten confused when they hand me an electrical tester and tell me to go diagnose something. It's been explained to me dozens of times but now it makes sense! Thank you for the visuals and animations, they made all the difference. Now I can't wait to go watch your other videos and finally understand what they're saying when they talk about their latest projects :)
Teaching something is very different from understanding it. They may just be poor teachers. Lucky for us we have channels like this who can convey information in a easy to understand manner. I feel that TH-cam is becoming a true university to those who want to learn.
@@willspeakman2461 I agree with your last part. I recently got interested in learning about electronics and I'm gaining all my knowledge from TH-cam only.
After years of trying to wrap my head around these calculations and watching dozens of youtube videos on the subject, this video finally makes it all clear to me. Thank you so much for this! Can't wait to watch more.
@@EngineeringMindset I'm wondering if Ohms values are allowed to be less than 1, or even zero (super-conductors). It seems weird to me that current from a 9V battery could be 90 amps if the resistance was .1ohm.
I just found your channel and it's such a godsend. I have attention problems and can't focus on monotonous slides for too long, but your videos have enough movement/color/fun facts to keep me engaged. Thank you for this content!
this must've taken time out to make the videos you have. unlike other youtubers who take 10 minutes to make a video, it is so helpful to know that someone takes their time to explain thoughtfully. Thank you!
Great video. I've been studying ham radio for a year now, going for my final license (extra) next month. Having started with zero knowledge in electronics, this series has been most helpful. Thanks!
I’m 47 years old and I just relearned this thanks to your video series. I’m going to A&P school in like a month. Thanks you for a taking these videos in the manner you did. It works really well for my brain. 9:49
Great explanation. I like to visually remember it as a water dam. Current being the water flowing, resistance being the dam, and voltage is the resulting buildup of water that can't pass.
THANK YOU!!! I understood quickly. Great job explaining to beginners. I went from zero to understanding and applying ohms law in a matter of minutes. Loved the problems in the end, and the answers provided on the site. I appreciate that you really like to teach.
Yes, I can. First of all I want to say a big thanks to you, your videos are really helpful❤❤❤ Problem 1 V = 120, R = 240; I = ? Solution: I = V ÷ R I = 120 ÷ 240 = 0.5 Answer: 0.5A Problem 2 V = ?, R = 240, I = 0.958 Solution: V = I × R V = 0.958 × 240 = 229.92 Answer: 229.92V Am done!
Just brushing up for a ham license. It'd been a long time since I used ohm's law. I constantly use P=IE, but not so much on Ohm's law. Thank you for making it simple to remember.
As an industrial electrician w 80hd...math / ohms law does not come naturally but essentialtoknow. This video....the triangle...the thumb method....HUGE help...thank u 👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼 🤜🏽🤛🏻👍🏻
Brilliantly explained. Sat in a class all morning being talked at and just could not grasp it at all. Watched your 10 min video and now understand it fully. Thank you dude.
I learned all this stuff in depth through my training in the US navy. Ive forgotten some of the more extreme stuff by now but i'd say even that is more simple than people think. I have personally used the VIR circle (with the addition of a P for wattage equations) to build many car stereo systems. Maybe i'm just a nerd but its fun to see it in action and feel physical results from your brain work.
This channel is fantastic. Taking everything step-by-step and, in my opinion, perfect order, with just enough review to focus the lesson but not enough to grow repetitive.
I am watching this video 4 years after it was posted. I am currently a youtuber, but i am still in school. This was absolutley most detailed explanation to circuits EVER!
This is the one that did it for me. I "Knew" Ohms law but I couldn't really conceptualise current v voltage and how that changes with resistance. And now I can understand. Thanks, big help.
Kudos to you! We went through this subject recently, but i had this crippling need to understand *why* this works like that and that works like this, instead of just trying to memorize information i havent fully understood. Now i understand!
*summary:* - voltage and electromotive force (EMF) are the same thing - the relationship between current, voltage, and resistance is I = V / R - given a circuit - we can decrease the current and voltage by adding a resistor - we can increase the voltage and current by adding a battery (in series) - we can increase the voltage and current by removing a resistor
@@davidwitte8469 watts = total of volts x amps, they call it watts... is the total power 🔋its in the basic video series... im a slow learner, I had to watch each of them slowly and think about them to catch all details.
@@ChinhLe-jm1mf If voltage and/or current are time-varying, and the user meant active power, and in your formula you used instantaneous voltage and instantaneous current, or if you used and in your formula you used RMS voltage and RMS current, then your formula is wrong. (P =/ V_rms I_rms, P =/ v(t) i(t).) If voltage and/or current are time-varying, and the user meant instantaneous power, and in your formula you used instantaneous voltage and instantaneous current, then your formula is correct. (p(t) = v(t) i(t).)
Thankyou for giving us this information for free! I'm about to start taking electric vehicle tech classes this fall and I'm using these to familiarize myself with electricity so I'm not struggling too much.
Omg, this video was super informative and easy to understand, not to mention the little history lessons in between. This is by far one of the best youtube channels. Thanks.👍🏾
double the voltage automatically doubles the current (1amp=1coulomb) FOR a GIVEN resistance. Current in a given conductor is LIMITED to the diameter of the wire. Great basic video. Thank you.
I only got my GCSE for Advanced Science about 5 years ago and somehow in that time, everything I ever learned about electronics fell out of my head. Presumably to save space for 22 years worth of weird porn. Of course I had to get really into repairing old video game consoles right now in my life and I really could have done with the GCSE knowledge instead - so thank you for making such easily accessible content. You're a god.
Ya he’s right those who grew up on TH-cam have no idea how lucky they are. I’m 49 and man I had to learn music and everything else by books and ear. I sometimes feel I’m to old to start learning about electronics. But I’m going to try anyway. 🤔
1:09 Another good way you can remember the relationships is through algebra. You just gotta remember one relationship and then you can solve for the rest. For example, let's say I remembered V = IR and I want to solve for current, I can isolate I by simply dividing both sides by the current. After solving for I, you should get I = V/R. Hope that's useful!
If you are European (hence, you know basic math) you just need one equation. Moving current or resistance to one side or another of the equation gives you everything you need to know. Great video.
Dude!!!!!!!!! Thank you. I get it. That diagram explains it. You explained it so well. Thanks man. I been doing electrical for 6 years and never truly got it. Until now. Thanks man 4reals
I actually understand! Not only that but applied what you taught me and solved problem at the end!🎉. 10 minutes ago I had no idea what a ohm was even after googling it. Then I find you and I'm using uhm in a equation and understanding how I got the CORRECT answer. 😊. Wonderful Thank you . Might binge your channel and shock my boyfriend with my new knowledge.. 😅😊❤
Very very very useful informations, learned a lot from your videos and I really appreciate your effort to educate people better than school. I'd like to see a video how batteries works and why do they discharge rather than just pushing electrons infinite times? Why after certain charging/discarghing cycles the batteries aren't good anymore?
Sometimes science is just turtles all the way down: 'Why do engineers use (j) = sqrt(-1) instead of (i)?' 'Because 'i' was already taken.' 'What is 'i' used for?' 'Current.' 'Why do we use 'i' for current? Why not 'C'?' 'Because 'C' was already taken...'
reminds me of why the local drive in your computer that has its operating system installed on said drive, is called the "c" drive, because "a" and "b" were taken, both a and b were used for floppy drives. "d" is the optical, or was rather, then everything else like flash drives continue from there.
may favorit Y tuber as of today, i secure my job today bcus of your simple to understand videos, im very thankfull cuz i learnd alot to your videos that my old self failed listeting to school(in college) that never interest me.
Im starting my intro electricity module soon and this is surely gonna help me a lot. The explanation is really cler and symply to understand.. thank you very much.
Thank you so much this is my first time doing physics and I was just introduced to ohm's law and I was very confused but this helped me alot I even went ahead of my class❤
I like to "remember" the V=I*R formula differently: What is the current? - It's how much voltage "survived" getting lowered (divided) by the resistance. A lot of resistance means not so much voltage "survived" therefore current is low. => I = V/R What is the resistance? - It's the voltage lowered (divided) by the current. Low current implies there is a lot of resistance; high current implies there is a tiny bit of resistance. When the voltage is higher and current lower it means that something has "stopped" the current from becoming big by the voltage, and it's the resistance. Likewise, if the voltage is lower and the current very high, it implies that almost nothing "stopped" the current from being big. => R = V/I (this one sucks perhaps) What is the voltage? - It's how massive the current and resistance are together. You have a lot of voltage if there is a lot of resistance or a lot of current or a lot of both. It's like the power of a clash between the current and resistance. => V = IR I just prefer to use logic instead of remembering meaningless things By the way, as a person who loves math, whenever I see math in electrical engineering videos I suffer, it's so weird to me LMAO
Knowledge is open in the web whenever you want. Most young nowadays is taking this for granted. They can be anybody they want on any field you are interested to pursue if only... UNFORTUNATELY.
Thanks alot. Actually in my O - Level sschool we don't learn much about physics due to shortage of teachers but i still love physics. Problem 1, I/ current = 0.495.. Or 0.5 A Problem 2, V=229.92A.
Great video, thanks. Helps me greatly with refreshing my very rusted knowledge. By the way: internationally you might see U as symbol for current as well. From latin "urgere", urge/push. I hope today they teach with SI-units, but in my days, we learned "Ohm's triangle" as U over R*I.
⚠️ *Found this video super useful?* Buy Paul a coffee to say thanks: ☕
PayPal: www.paypal.me/TheEngineerinMindset
Sir ,can you make a video on why does current decrease on increase in voltage in transformer bcz I'm confused that since voltage is pressure to flow electron than more voltage means more pressure that must result much electron to flow
In India we r not using PayPal, do u use Google pay !? If yes post that link too.
Can you make a translation of these useful scientific videos into Arabic because my English is not good please.
Hello I have made a donation of £10 to say thank you for the quality info. Could I make a request if possible please could you make a video on Generators and everything I need to know about them as I work in a data centre. Thank you
Thank you for your support, Tomaso. Much appreciated. It's on the list :D
I became an electrical engineer 40 years ago. If you wanted to learn the things covered in this series you had to go to college... or spend a boat-load of time at the library. Those who grew up on TH-cam have no idea how fortunate they are that stuff like this is at their fingertips. Your videos are tremendous, as well as an outstanding foundation for anyone going into the engineering field.
Thank you, glad you enjoyed. I wish I had these videos too when I was studying, it's one of the drivers to keep us going.
Ok boomer
Just shows how bad boomers have been doing their jobs all these years
TH-cam is awesome, as a gen z I do appreciate it. Years of knowledge and experience at your fingertips and the only person you have to ask is a computer. There's no need to spend years of your life and hard earned money studying something you might become uninterested in, youtube lets you learn an infinite amount of things for free and you wont be under the pressure of a money investment. I think it makes society better even, as easy access to learning gives people the freedom to educate themselves despite limitations they may have. For example, limited money, different learning style, different optimal learning conditions, and the limitation that applies to everyone, time. I choose to spend my time on earth learning. If learning and growth rise above hate and ignorance, we will live in a more beautiful world.
Amen, tenentenegrao!
problem 1 =0.5 A(120/240)
problem 2 =229.92(240x0.958)
I know I’m late but ur a real one for this
I = 0.5 V = 229.92
@@renegroulx7029 wtt the i got. V=31992
0.958 is simply =958
nd 958x240 is = 31992V
Wtf holy crab 😔
hahahah@@rickyyyyy....7034
I speak 3 languages, searched it in french and korean, understood nothing, went to school and learned for hours, still nothing really gets in mind, but your 10min vid is so well explained. I regret not knowing you sooner
you don't need to flex that you know 3 languages
@@MiG-25IsGOATYou think like a high schooler
Just started a course at university called electrical circuits, and this was 10x better than the two hour lecture the professor gave.
Hell yeah, comments like this don’t make me want to go buy a course or go to school just to learn electricity . Think about it half the time these colleges are teaching you something even in highschool . They pull up a dam you tube video
Literally THE BEST EVER VIDEO OF EXPLAINING PHYSICS TO ME IN MY ENTIRE LIFE. I'm not even lying!
If only these videos existed when I was in school.
Never too late to learn
@@EngineeringMindset Exactly
Ok boomer
@@burgumil0742 damm bro
@@EngineeringMindset really great😻
I'm an Electronic Engineer and this was very informative and a good quick refresher course. Thanks 👍🏾
:) tukliya
I've never understood this so well! With an electrician for a dad and a brother who grew up soldering circuits for DIY electronics, I've always gotten confused when they hand me an electrical tester and tell me to go diagnose something. It's been explained to me dozens of times but now it makes sense! Thank you for the visuals and animations, they made all the difference. Now I can't wait to go watch your other videos and finally understand what they're saying when they talk about their latest projects :)
Teaching something is very different from understanding it. They may just be poor teachers. Lucky for us we have channels like this who can convey information in a easy to understand manner. I feel that TH-cam is becoming a true university to those who want to learn.
@@willspeakman2461 I agree with your last part. I recently got interested in learning about electronics and I'm gaining all my knowledge from TH-cam only.
After years of trying to wrap my head around these calculations and watching dozens of youtube videos on the subject, this video finally makes it all clear to me. Thank you so much for this! Can't wait to watch more.
same condition
MAN THANK YOU SOO MUCH . YOU SHOULD BE DAMN PROUD OF YOURSELF KNOWING HOW MANY PEOPLE YOU HAVE HELPED .
Dude I absolutely love your videos, so clearly explained & well edited!
Thank you, glad you enjoy
I agree 100 percent fantastic videos and explanation
@@EngineeringMindset I'm wondering if Ohms values are allowed to be less than 1, or even zero (super-conductors). It seems weird to me that current from a 9V battery could be 90 amps if the resistance was .1ohm.
Bro, I’ve been searching forever for a lesson that explains this for dummies, and you hit it right on the nail. Thank you my friend for this video
I just found your channel and it's such a godsend. I have attention problems and can't focus on monotonous slides for too long, but your videos have enough movement/color/fun facts to keep me engaged. Thank you for this content!
Wow I thought I was the only one
@@mothusimoletsane8334 we're three now
@@layku4348 Four.
@@Greg-lo1tl Make it five.
6
These videos have helped me alot during my eletrical training at my new job. I appreciate your time and effort you put into them!
Do you work residential? Industrial? What do you specialize in?
I am a civil engineer and your videos really help me with the basic concepts of other streams of engineering.
Same here 🤝
Thanks!
Thank you, again, Ben
this must've taken time out to make the videos you have. unlike other youtubers who take 10 minutes to make a video, it is so helpful to know that someone takes their time to explain thoughtfully. Thank you!
Great video. I've been studying ham radio for a year now, going for my final license (extra) next month. Having started with zero knowledge in electronics, this series has been most helpful. Thanks!
I’m 47 years old and I just relearned this thanks to your video series. I’m going to A&P school in like a month. Thanks you for a taking these videos in the manner you did. It works really well for my brain. 9:49
Great explanation. I like to visually remember it as a water dam. Current being the water flowing, resistance being the dam, and voltage is the resulting buildup of water that can't pass.
THANK YOU!!! I understood quickly. Great job explaining to beginners. I went from zero to understanding and applying ohms law in a matter of minutes. Loved the problems in the end, and the answers provided on the site. I appreciate that you really like to teach.
:)
Watching you from Ethiopia,,, your videos are far better than my instructors here...honestly! Cheers man!
This is a true an "open free educational channel" for people who can not afford educational fees ,many thanks for this channel and keep
the good work.
Very true indeed
Yes, I can.
First of all I want to say a big thanks to you, your videos are really helpful❤❤❤
Problem 1
V = 120, R = 240; I = ?
Solution: I = V ÷ R
I = 120 ÷ 240 = 0.5
Answer: 0.5A
Problem 2
V = ?, R = 240, I = 0.958
Solution: V = I × R
V = 0.958 × 240 = 229.92
Answer: 229.92V
Am done!
Just brushing up for a ham license. It'd been a long time since I used ohm's law. I constantly use P=IE, but not so much on Ohm's law. Thank you for making it simple to remember.
As an industrial electrician w 80hd...math / ohms law does not come naturally but essentialtoknow. This video....the triangle...the thumb method....HUGE help...thank u
👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼 🤜🏽🤛🏻👍🏻
Brilliantly explained. Sat in a class all morning being talked at and just could not grasp it at all. Watched your 10 min video and now understand it fully.
Thank you dude.
Very nicely explained! I could never listen to a teacher talk about something for 10 minutes and pay attention but I could for this!
This guy is very good at explaining,he uses examples ,he illustrates...kudos bruv
Your taste in multimeters is great. I wish I had this video about 2 years ago, it would have helped immensely.
Check our new Multimeter tutorial out ➡️ th-cam.com/video/4lAyzRxsbDc/w-d-xo.html
I learned all this stuff in depth through my training in the US navy. Ive forgotten some of the more extreme stuff by now but i'd say even that is more simple than people think. I have personally used the VIR circle (with the addition of a P for wattage equations) to build many car stereo systems. Maybe i'm just a nerd but its fun to see it in action and feel physical results from your brain work.
This channel is fantastic. Taking everything step-by-step and, in my opinion, perfect order, with just enough review to focus the lesson but not enough to grow repetitive.
broooooo i learned more from you in 1 h than 4 days of science class
I am watching this video 4 years after it was posted. I am currently a youtuber, but i am still in school. This was absolutley most detailed explanation to circuits EVER!
I love this vid, the most useful part was the triangle formula. Saved me a bunch of time.
one of the best OHMs videos on youtube
First problem is 0.5 a
Second problem is 229.92 v
thank you
@@anthonynguyen569 no problem dude
@@anthonynguyen569 keep up the work
Out of all the videos I have watched this is by far the best one that helped me to understand the formula for Ohms law! TY
You are a born professor.
Excellently explained.
You deserve more than the world gives you, you are a kind soul indeed
As someone who has no idea about anything electrical, I find this tutorial so helpful. Thank you so much
This is the one that did it for me.
I "Knew" Ohms law but I couldn't really conceptualise current v voltage and how that changes with resistance.
And now I can understand.
Thanks, big help.
This was a very interesting and enlightening video, to me, a layman!
Very clearly presented and understood!
After all these years, I finally understand what this concept really is..thanks for this vidoe..it was worth watching
I’m learning more from these videos then from my teachers at trade school! thank you 👏🏼
Amazing, this video is fantastic.
Explanation + animation = understandable
Thx u a million ❤️
Very simple way of teaching with illustrations. Anybody can understand eashly.
Thnks brother.
That was a good 10 minute quickie
this stopped my depression
lmfao
This s so cool. I finally understand what is current, voltage and resistance.
Great way to learn..all videos are so simple yet knowledgeable
Kudos to you! We went through this subject recently, but i had this crippling need to understand *why* this works like that and that works like this, instead of just trying to memorize information i havent fully understood. Now i understand!
this channel is a legit lifesaver
*summary:*
- voltage and electromotive force (EMF) are the same thing
- the relationship between current, voltage, and resistance is I = V / R
- given a circuit
- we can decrease the current and voltage by adding a resistor
- we can increase the voltage and current by adding a battery (in series)
- we can increase the voltage and current by removing a resistor
What about watts? When I buy bulbs, I look at watts not ohms.
@@davidwitte8469 watts = total of volts x amps, they call it watts... is the total power 🔋its in the basic video series... im a slow learner, I had to watch each of them slowly and think about them to catch all details.
V=RI
.•. The voltage increases as the resistance increases as well as the current increases!
Voltage is not the same as EMF.
@@ChinhLe-jm1mf If voltage and/or current are time-varying, and the user meant active power, and in your formula you used instantaneous voltage and instantaneous current, or if you used and in your formula you used RMS voltage and RMS current, then your formula is wrong. (P =/ V_rms I_rms, P =/ v(t) i(t).)
If voltage and/or current are time-varying, and the user meant instantaneous power, and in your formula you used instantaneous voltage and instantaneous current, then your formula is correct. (p(t) = v(t) i(t).)
Thankyou for giving us this information for free! I'm about to start taking electric vehicle tech classes this fall and I'm using these to familiarize myself with electricity so I'm not struggling too much.
Omg, this video was super informative and easy to understand, not to mention the little history lessons in between. This is by far one of the best youtube channels.
Thanks.👍🏾
double the voltage automatically doubles the current (1amp=1coulomb)
FOR a GIVEN resistance. Current in a given conductor is LIMITED to the
diameter of the wire. Great basic video. Thank you.
I only got my GCSE for Advanced Science about 5 years ago and somehow in that time, everything I ever learned about electronics fell out of my head. Presumably to save space for 22 years worth of weird porn. Of course I had to get really into repairing old video game consoles right now in my life and I really could have done with the GCSE knowledge instead - so thank you for making such easily accessible content. You're a god.
Reading these concepts was confusing. These videos are a god send.
Ya he’s right those who grew up on TH-cam have no idea how lucky they are. I’m 49 and man I had to learn music and everything else by books and ear. I sometimes feel I’m to old to start learning about electronics. But I’m going to try anyway. 🤔
Your videos are truly helping me becoming a sound engineer, thank you so much
This video broke down all the things I didn't understand for easy understanding .
I'm going to pass my test
1:09 Another good way you can remember the relationships is through algebra. You just gotta remember one relationship and then you can solve for the rest.
For example, let's say I remembered V = IR and I want to solve for current, I can isolate I by simply dividing both sides by the current. After solving for I, you should get I = V/R.
Hope that's useful!
I just started a electrical school and this is helping me so much! Thank you
Electrical apprentice here and I just gotta say thank you for your time and effort
If you are European (hence, you know basic math) you just need one equation. Moving current or resistance to one side or another of the equation gives you everything you need to know. Great video.
Dude!!!!!!!!! Thank you. I get it. That diagram explains it. You explained it so well. Thanks man. I been doing electrical for 6 years and never truly got it. Until now. Thanks man 4reals
I actually understand! Not only that but applied what you taught me and solved problem at the end!🎉.
10 minutes ago I had no idea what a ohm was even after googling it. Then I find you and I'm using uhm in a equation and understanding how I got the CORRECT answer. 😊. Wonderful
Thank you . Might binge your channel and shock my boyfriend with my new knowledge.. 😅😊❤
Very glad to hear
Very very very useful informations, learned a lot from your videos and I really appreciate your effort to educate people better than school. I'd like to see a video how batteries works and why do they discharge rather than just pushing electrons infinite times? Why after certain charging/discarghing cycles the batteries aren't good anymore?
Someone by this man a drink!! Thanks mate I owe you one.
yh
Dammit, this video series is fantastic!!!... if only i had access to it "BACK IN MY SCHOOL DAYS" Orz
I'm starting a new job and there is a lot of electrical and this helping me understand it a lot faster thanks man.
Sometimes science is just turtles all the way down:
'Why do engineers use (j) = sqrt(-1) instead of (i)?'
'Because 'i' was already taken.'
'What is 'i' used for?'
'Current.'
'Why do we use 'i' for current? Why not 'C'?'
'Because 'C' was already taken...'
lmao j is joules btw
reminds me of why the local drive in your computer that has its operating system installed on said drive, is called the "c" drive, because "a" and "b" were taken, both a and b were used for floppy drives. "d" is the optical, or was rather, then everything else like flash drives continue from there.
Because in math we use” i “as an imaginary number so for eliminating this confusion we use “ j ” for current
Actually 'i' stands for current intensity
Thanks dude. I comprehended more from you video than I did from 4 hours of a text book.
may favorit Y tuber as of today, i secure my job today bcus of your simple to understand videos, im very thankfull cuz i learnd alot to your videos that my old self failed listeting to school(in college) that never interest me.
Im starting my intro electricity module soon and this is surely gonna help me a lot. The explanation is really cler and symply to understand.. thank you very much.
Thanks you saved my school career with this video :D
Thank you so much this is my first time doing physics and I was just introduced to ohm's law and I was very confused but this helped me alot I even went ahead of my class❤
I'm returning to electronics and the explanation here, particularly of the VIR triangle, is second to none.
The triangle's a bit overwrought. Just remember V=IR and math out whatever else you wanna find, I or R.
@@doc9448 Thank-you!
This video is excellent. If only electronics and math in school were explained and taught this way.
i have seen many videos but i have no words for this.
This video has helped me get a better understanding of ohms law thank you
I really appreciate your time in explaining this formula it has been a great honor and useful advice .Thank you Rey
this TH-cam channel made me true electrical engineer. Thank you
you explained it so simple anyone can do it. two thumbs up.
I like to "remember" the V=I*R formula differently:
What is the current? - It's how much voltage "survived" getting lowered (divided) by the resistance. A lot of resistance means not so much voltage "survived" therefore current is low.
=> I = V/R
What is the resistance? - It's the voltage lowered (divided) by the current. Low current implies there is a lot of resistance; high current implies there is a tiny bit of resistance. When the voltage is higher and current lower it means that something has "stopped" the current from becoming big by the voltage, and it's the resistance. Likewise, if the voltage is lower and the current very high, it implies that almost nothing "stopped" the current from being big.
=> R = V/I
(this one sucks perhaps)
What is the voltage? - It's how massive the current and resistance are together. You have a lot of voltage if there is a lot of resistance or a lot of current or a lot of both. It's like the power of a clash between the current and resistance.
=> V = IR
I just prefer to use logic instead of remembering meaningless things
By the way, as a person who loves math, whenever I see math in electrical engineering videos I suffer, it's so weird to me LMAO
Your giving away information that is worth thousands for free!
my teacher is a ultimate barker this just taught me the whole unit in 10 minutes your a wizard bro
yay I got the right answers! I have 0 background with electricity, but want to learn, confidence is boosted!
Knowledge is open in the web whenever you want. Most young nowadays is taking this for granted. They can be anybody they want on any field you are interested to pursue if only... UNFORTUNATELY.
I'm about to be going to school for electronics. Tryina refresh myself on the basics as much as possible first. Im so exited lol.
Thank you so much i am righting a physics test tomorrow and really needed the help
Thanks alot. Actually in my O - Level sschool we don't learn much about physics due to shortage of teachers but i still love physics.
Problem 1, I/ current = 0.495.. Or 0.5 A
Problem 2, V=229.92A.
Also, C is used for the constant of light speed, which is often used when designing circuits with high precision requirements
well explained i love you
THE ENGINEERING MINDSET
Great video, thanks. Helps me greatly with refreshing my very rusted knowledge. By the way: internationally you might see U as symbol for current as well. From latin "urgere", urge/push. I hope today they teach with SI-units, but in my days, we learned "Ohm's triangle" as U over R*I.
Man you're a legend thank you alot for that free content
Best engineering teaching channel
Great video to keep the basics fresh. I know it’s a good few steps ahead but do you have any plans to do videos on Kirchhoff and Thevenin?
Absolutely