Thevenin & Norton Examples - Thevenin Equivalent Circuit Theory - Part 1
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Uploader Comments (drjctu)
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you, sir, have saved my life.
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All Comments (23)
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Thank you for posting this, it's much appreciated
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Thank you so much! If only my lecturer had this kind of clarity!
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Wtf they bullshit so much in books, but your video could teach this concept to a 5 year old. Thanks Dr J
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One of the most helpful videos I have ever seen. Thank you!
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My god, even if i have a lecturer 50% of what you are made of, id be grateful.
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@ksoadc7890 yeah dude this stuff is hell. Im mechanical engineering but I still have to take this class. wack!
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You seriously sound like the person who sounded Microsoft's voice.
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thanks ........i'm going to part two......thanks
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matty bell is a bell end
pallyboro 2 years ago
@pallyboro If you are going reduced a circuit down to one independent source and one resistor then it's either the Thevenin or Norton equivalent but not both. However, as you reduced the circuit, you can use a combination of Norton or Thevenin depending on the circuit and how you want to analyze it. Dr J
drjctu 1 year ago 2
In 5:34 is he implying that the current in the thevenin equivalent is the opposite sign of the current in the norton equivalent?
stefandye 2 years ago
Very good catch..StephanDye. My bad. This should be v=vs-i*RT. Sorry about the confusion. I'll annotate it on the YouTube video. Dr J
drjctu 2 years ago