You never measured the incident voltage. And you refused to measure the
end of the inductor, with the capacitor removed (even with the 15 pF, it should
tell us something about Vi).
This may be true, but are you saying that a capacitor can reflect an
RMS voltage wave that is greater than the one that charges it?
Yes indeed. Resonant circuits achieve this with ease.
...Keith
Absolutely incorrect! If capacitance is defined as Coulombs/Volt, then
how are you getting more coulombs than you put in? Remember, i said Root Mean
Square voltage.
How does a capacitor reflect more power than you feed it?
It's almost time for me to cut out of this discussion, if you still don't
understand me.
Slick
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