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On Tue, 12 Oct 2004 17:10:41 -0500, "Steve Nosko"
wrote: [snip] IF we had 5 volts peak (10 volts peak-to-peak) the cap left side, the base voltage will swing from +0.7 volts to -9.3 volts. WHEW ! Did this work Sure did, Steve! I ran it through a spice program and you're right in every detail. So there's obviously some basic flaw in my understanding of caps. The textbooks say to treat a cap as a short circuit at AC (assuiming its reactance isn't too high at the frequency of interest). That would appear to be grossly misleading as there's a huge difference between the mean voltage levels on each side. It's gonna take me a while to get this trough my thick skull. :-( So what happens when you have a small ac ripple riding on a DC bias? I'll spice it but won't understand it, I guess. :-( -- Fat, sugar, salt, beer: the four essentials for a healthy diet. |