MisterBill2
- Joined Jan 23, 2018
- 27,527
GOOD LUCK, you will need a whole lot of it.
with your helpGOOD LUCK, you will need a whole lot of it.
respectfully --whats with the uk 240 Volts THATS NOT IN QUESTION-Please talk English with common sense .I assume without knowing you have a British 240 VAC 50 Hz line is this what you are dealing with?
You are very adamant about usnng an AC/DC bridge to sort out your diodes but you have not told us where on the bridge you want to measure the wattage or how the result will be used. I have over 60 years of experience in making electronic measurements and I have no idea how measuring the wattage in any part of a bridge circuit could be used to compare diode characteristics. Can you explain this in a little more detail please? We can not answer your questions if you do not give us enough information to work with.respectfully --whats with the uk 240 Volts THATS NOT IN QUESTION-Please talk English with common sense .
All I had asked for help (( as I have seen all who on this forum do write about their elctronic problems and these people do get help ''True''.
At the start all I had ask of this forum for help ,,,
By telling I wanted:- by using DC/AC volts mixed with DC/AC Current to make a Watt meter
[[all I get is insulted]] use this in connection with a Wheatstone bridge to help me sort out loads of mixed signal diode and loads of mixed rectifiers-to match these by using a Wheatstone bridge ,,,
Not to be insulted ..
Ok whats the reason I am being insulted no help when all the 100 threads do get help and i get abused something is very wrong with this forum this is true ...
Wendy, read posts #26 and #33, they describe briefly the intended application. It is unusual, different from what I have seen before. AND I just came up with a cheaper alternative that will be better than a wattmeter, providing better results. The switching will be complicated but the measuring will be quite simple. AND not so expensive.I assume you are measuring the power of an appliance. As it happens their are many types of Watt meters. First we must define what you are measuring. Line voltage in the USA is 120VAC (Volts Alternating Current) at 60Hz (Hertz). Britain uses 220VAC at 50Hz. If this still Greek to you, understand this basic beyond just being a beginner. You have some serious learning to catch up on. We will help get you up to speed if you desire, but please loose the attitude.
A good Reference:
Lessons in Electric Circuits
That is probably the case, but since one big part of this forum is helping others with answers to questions, that is OK. And I do try to provide useful answers. Ialso try to tell when an answer is a guess, and when an answer is based on a guess..It is if you are not familiar w/ electronics. My thought is our TS isn't.