E=IR is a poor choice of variables for the average person, especially since Ohm's Law is not a math problem - it's a physical concept. There are no Es, Is or Rs on a meter, and having to learn one set of variables for math and another for reading manuals has never made sense to me. Also, using the formula that have volts isolated makes it harder to understand the concept. Volts and Ohms make Amps - so V/Ω=A is better. If they have to do fractions anyway, students should start with this one.
nice i need this LAW for my PHYSICS REPORT ^_^ nice job
menchierob 1 week ago
Thanks For The Help
Macarillo007 3 weeks ago
thanks very helpful
SuperDopeDizzle 3 weeks ago
Thank you for making this easy to understand..... i was trying to read about it, it wasnt clicking. TG for you tube..
navajohnny76 1 month ago
E=IR is a poor choice of variables for the average person, especially since Ohm's Law is not a math problem - it's a physical concept. There are no Es, Is or Rs on a meter, and having to learn one set of variables for math and another for reading manuals has never made sense to me. Also, using the formula that have volts isolated makes it harder to understand the concept. Volts and Ohms make Amps - so V/Ω=A is better. If they have to do fractions anyway, students should start with this one.
bivideo7 1 month ago
And it just happens to be 13:37 long. Awesome video!
Dominoes282 5 months ago