Added: 1 year ago
From: alexgeekcouk
Views: 211,444
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  • I think this is a step-up transformer! 

  • I am very happy to see the vidoe from you, hopefully the others also are happy for You Transformer Animation

  • I Love The Video It Can Increase My Knowledge 2 animations made with blender showing how electric transformers work The first shows how it looks with conventional current

  • Steady I Really Like This Video 2 animations made with blender showing how electric transformers work The first shows how it looks with conventional current

  • Good, I like that you share this video, I wish success always 2 animations made with blender showing how electric transformers work.

  • Nice Video That You Share , So Very Nice Thanks You 2 animations made with blender showing how electric transformers work. The first shows how it looks with conventional current

  • I Really Like The Video From Your Created and animated in Blender, minor edits in Adobe Premiere Willing to make some more of these if people request them, Perry.

  • Your Video Is Very Useful Sharing Transformer Animation

  • I'm currently learning motorcycle repair. I've learned that in an ignition system, voltage is multiplied thru an ignition coil that has 2 coils, a primary and a secondary. To multiply the voltage high enough to create a spark, the current passes thru the Primary ignition coil first (which may have 150 windings) and than thru the Secondary (which may have 20,000 windings). Is this video of a transformer that would decrease voltage output? And, is that why the primary has more coils?? thanks

  • This is an excellent visual on electron flow in a transformer circuit. Perry, I hope you do more of these visuals on electronics theory.

  • Good !

  • good wwork

    

  • maldito

  • if i understan it right the primary coil is the one with the high voltage but with a lower current and the secondary is the lower voltage with a higher current wich means the lower volt on the secondary the higher the current gets right?

  • @TheChrisey He fails to state a lot in here. If you have less windings (loops of wire) in the second coil than the primary coil (the powered one) you get less voltage out the second coil. If you have more windings in the second coil, then you get more voltage. So, if you have 10 volts in the primary coil. and you have 10 times the windings in the second coil then you will get 100 volts out of the second coil.

  • @wcemichael Then were does this extra 90 volts come from? 

  • @bma852 I'm still learning this stuff too. If you have a magnet pass over 1 wire you will get Y volts. If you pass a magnet over 1 wire with 1 loop (2 wires) you will get Y x 2 volts. if you pass over 5 wires you will get Y x 5 volts & so on. so if you have the same magnetic field passing through 1000 loops you will get Y x 1000volts. but there is some kind of current trade off. not sure what it is. I saw a YT vid, 10watt floresent bulb powered by a 1.5v AA battery using a "joule thief". amazing

  • @wcemichael Thanks!

  • @bma852 From the magnetic field induced by the primary. DUH!

  • What is the arrow that goes around the iron ring represent?

  • @kamikrazi123 It represents the current which changes direction continues, this because transformers only work with AC (alternating current)

  • @kamikrazi123 not the current. it's the flux, magnetic flux.

  • @hualimz oooh I get it now, just doing the right hand rule for both coils?

  • @kamikrazi123 exactly

  • @hualimz you mean like the flux capacitor!?!?!?

  • @thewii552 I dont know what is flux capacitor but Flux in Magnetic Circuit can be compared to Current in Electrical Circuit

  • @hualimz back to the future i powere my flux capacitor with dried cambodian breast milk from the finest cambodian tities

  • @kamikrazi123 A poor attempt to show the magnetic flow. This is an AC current slowed way down (normaly 60x per sec) and when the current is reveresed so is the magnetics on the steel square. When a magnetice field passes through electrons, it pushes them creating voltage. the more wires (or windings) the field passes, the more electrons are pushed, and more voltage is made.

  • @wcemichael Why do you guys use 60 Hz over there in America? In Europe everything is 50

  • @hardstyle905 For the extact same reason we drive on the right side of the road in the U.S. and the left side in England....I guess we just picked a number that sounded good to us and stuck with it. With a whole ocean between us 100 years ago, I guess we never stopped to ask "HEY, we're going to do this, what are you guys doing over there?" If there is another reason, I'd have to look it up.

  • @hardstyle905 America > Europe therefore American Hz > European Hz.

  • @4x4cherokee Electricity was invented in Europe... so nah. America sucks ass.

  • @hardstyle905 Two things. 1) Electricity was discovered, not invented. 2) To be precise electricity was discovered by the ancient Greeks. You seem like a very small minded fool.

  • @hardstyle905 pretty sure electricity was never invented retard. The way it is used and stored ya but to say Europe 'invented' electricity shows how uneducated you Europeans are. Is not lightning electricity? Idiot

  • @4x4cherokee Go put a bullet through your head you fucking pedophile child molesting piece of shit.

  • @hardstyle905 Huh? Electricity has been around pretty much from just shortly after the big-bang, long before there were people around to come up with a concept called "Europe" (referring to a small piece of the surface of an insignificant planet).

    Electricity was *discovered* not invented.

  • @4x4cherokee Just like your pathetic imperial system. What kind of fool would define a unit of distance by the size of his foot? LMFAO. Idiots.

  • @hardstyle905 I'm assuming that by "you're pathetic imperial system" you're referring to America. The foot was used by the ancient Egyptians (I'm not sure if they were the ones to first use the unit). In that day and age the unit changed with every new ruler. Whenever a ruler with a rather large foot was in power properties tended to overlap which obviously caused problems. This led to the standardization of the unit.  So in short you have called an ancient civilization idiots--congrats.

  • @hardstyle905 To the best of my knowledge, 50 Hz in Europe was just a simple decision, no real reasoning. In America 60 Hz was used due to time being base 60. Since time is base 60 and Hz is directly related to time, it makes calculations come out a bit nicer than at 50 Hz.

  • damnit i thought this was a transformers video not a transformer video

  • An electron moves down a wire at less than 1 meter per MINUTE.

    Electricity is a result of mass to atomic energy conversion. That is how and why you get a voltage shock wave that moves at the speed of light - acceleration or amplification of speed.

    Put a Leedscalnin PMH type coil in the middle and you now have a rubber band with no back EMF and the acceleration will square the output. E=MC2

  • Nice coils.

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