Bill,
Did you read what I wrote?
Or perhaps you don't believe it? If not, just pick up any textbook on
basic electric circuit theory, where you'll find essentially the same
explanation.
Roy Lewallen, W7EL
Bill Turner wrote:
__________________________________________________ _______
Ok, I grant you that, but as I see it, in a resistive circuit RMS
voltage causes RMS current to flow and the resultant power is RMS power.
Why not?
If DC volts x DC amps = DC power
and
Peak volts x peak amps = peak power
then why does not
RMS volts x RMS amps = RMS power?
If you want to say that RMS power is the same as average power, I can
live with that, but why say that RMS power is a meaningless concept?
Oh well. You guys have given it a good try, but I remain unconvinced.
Perhaps we should move on to the question of whether current flows from
plus to minus or minus to plus. A lot of otherwise good engineers
actually believe it to be the former. I love to hear them explain how a
vacuum tube works. :-)
--
Bill W6WRT
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