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On Jan 31, 12:20*pm, "Antonio Vernucci" wrote:
Yesterday, while repairing my antenna, something came to my mind I had never focused on before. Let us consider a bipole, that is a "black box" having TWO terminals and including plain passive elements only (like capacitors, inductors, ... , no diodes or other special devices), arranged the way you prefer, it does not matter. In my mind it was quite clear that, when fitting such a bipole into a circuit, the sense makes no difference, i.e. one can reverse the two terminals with no consequence. As a matter of fact, the bipole has an equivalent impedance that remains the same independently of the way it is put in the circuit. Yesterday a case occurred to me in which this is not actually true. Instead of directly telling which it is, just for fun I wonder whether anyone can figure out a case in which a bipole may not be reversed without consequences. Not difficult, but it anyway requires some thinking. Although probably unnecessary, let me recall that a filter is typically a THREE-terminal device (IN, OUT, GROUND), not a TWO-terminal one. 73 Tony I0JX Rome, Italy I have a circuit I've been working on lately which has a simple series LC in it, no other connection to the node between the inductor and capacitor. It turns out that the order of the inductor and capacitor makes a big difference in the circuit performance. I anticipated that it would, and put them in the intuitively obvious order, only to find out that it was the wrong order! A proper model cleared things up quite nicely. However, in no way would I call that particular part of the circuit a "two terminal" network. The effect is the same as Wim mentioned. Cheers, Tom |
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