HellasTechn
- Apr 14, 2013
- 1,579
- Joined
- Apr 14, 2013
- Messages
- 1,579
I accidently came across this video and after watching it i think that what says is correcrt.
What do you think ?
What do you think ?
I accidently came across this video and after watching it i think that what says is correcrt.
What do you think ?
First, he is wrong from the start. Ohm's law in not V=IR and all its variations
Second, he uses technical slang like "current flow" which means "charge flow flow", and makes no sense. He should say that current exists or is present. Charge flows, but current does not. Charge does not flow twice.
This part i dont understand.
Isnt the movement "flow" of valence electrons "free electrons" what we call electrical current ?
I think we can say Voltage is present but current is not present untill a circuit is complete right ?
Current needs a conduction path, but that is not what I am gripping about. Didn't I make it clear that current is charge flow? Therefore current flow literally means charge flow flow. What is there about that phrase current flow that you don't understand?
Ratch
I will offer that perhaps since he is not a native english speaker he may not grasp what you are pointing out.
Also, the term "current flow" is so often used that it has become understood amongst us lay people. (A quick web search shows that is not just the lay folk...)
The word "current" as defined by Merriam below, is redundant in use when people say "current flow" since this is equivalent to saying "(the flow of electricity) flow"
current
noun
: a continuous movement of water or air in the same direction
: a flow of electricity
: an idea, feeling, opinion, etc., that is shared by many or most of the people in a group
This is well spotted and understood, but its equivalent in my opinion to people complaining about accidental misuse of "their, they're and there" in posts, especially when it's in the proper context. Yes its most correct, but that just takes our focus away from the message of the speaker, author, etc.
P.S. - how long did you stop at the last 'its' that should have been an 'it's'?
He grasped what the video was about and offered an opinion on it, didn't he? Therefore, I assume he knows what I am talking about. Besides, it was the video presenter, not the OP who said "current flow"
I accidently came across this video and after watching it i think that what says is correcrt. What do you think ?
All of the members in this forum know something about electronics, or are interested. Therefore, I would not call the members laypeople.
Ohm's law in not V=IR and all its variations.
Perhaps. But the OP does ask for our opinions on the matter as he states he is unsure after watching it. (states "I think").
I disagree. A layperson is someone without professional or specialized knowledge in a particular subject.There are many members here who are very highly educated in electronics, some may have doctoral degrees. In contrast many other members come here to ask question's about more simplistic matters such as how to power a LED. I would consider them as well as myself as laypeople.
Splitting hairs. According to the textbook I consulted, "V=IR is sometimes called Ohm's Law, but only when referring to materials or devices for which R is a constant independent of voltage - i.e. metal conductors.
How often does a technician apply Ohm's Law to nonohmic materials during troubleshooting?
That is true chopnhack. I neither support nor weaken what is stated in the video.
The only thing that i say i agree with is that maybe it would be better to use Ω and A instead of R and I. But again it is no big deal.
About my comment on part of your post i just wanted to point out that in my personal opinion it is better to use the term current flow or charge flow rahter that current being present or existant thats all.
Not what I said, reread the definition I provided.Just because some of us don't do electronics for a living doesn't make us laypeople.
The splitting hairs comment was aimed at your comment of "Ohm's law in not V=IR and all its variations." The textbook is new and quite clear as I quoted previously.Splitting hairs? The formula is a definition, and the law is a property of a material. That should be quite a distinction in anyone's opinion. Get a new textbook.
My point exactly. A technician does not need the same level of minutiae in his study of the matter to service the equipment he will be working on versus someone doing research in the field of electronics. And this is what the presenter was doing as I remarked in post #5.He doesn't. A tech is usually not concerned with the property of a material during troubleshooting.
I kind of agree with him......Because I have difficulties even with basic math...But.....Hmm, what do you all think about what he says in the first minutes of the video about when should the math be taught to the students ?