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Roy Lewallen wrote:
Spike wrote: Can this be the same idiot who thought that a spring/damper combination was the mechanical equivalent of a coil and capacitor, on the grounds that they both exhibited resonance? from Aero Spike I'm that idiot. Actually, one of the very many. The equations for the two systems are identical. Roy Lewallen, W7EL, ROW, ASI (Reg's Old Wife and now Aero Spike's Idiot. The titles just keep accumulating. Of course I'm also a proud member of the OFC.) Posting under the sock-puppet "Airy R. Bean", he said the following quoted below, and to which I was referring. I leave it to you to spot the glaring error. I very much doubt you said anything like this. The original message was posted in sci.physics at 9:53 am on 21st January this year. "Reactance is characterised by the storage of energy. In the case of the capacitor, you might think that your AC source is the only voltage source in your circuit, but after the first 1/4 cycle, the capacitor acts as a voltage source and starts to give back the energy that it has stored. The combined result of the two voltage sources, your AC excitation and the capacitor itself, accounts for the out-of-phase current waveform. (This bothered me for years! How could the current be non-zero if the AC driving voltage was zero?!) The same analogy applies to springs and to shock absorbers; the spring stores energy when stretched; the shock-absorber stores energy when compressed. Both the spring and shock absorber will return energy at some time and this exhibit reactance!" from Aero Spike |