If you recognize that the mnemonic is potentially offensive, why place it in your signature where everyone must repeatedly see it? I understand that it works for you, but why force it on other people?I happen to have some great friends who would be offended by this as well... it's just a tool... get over it.
That's the one I learned. Navy always has a way of making things memorableHeard something similar. Bad Boys Rape Our Young Girls But Violet Gives Willingly. However, I didn't much care for that poem. I preferred Black Brown Red Orange Yellow Green Blue Violet Grey and White. Zero through Nine.
You mean I've been doing it the Navy way all this time ? ? ?There's the Navy way, and then there's the wrong way.
I don't use it often and now that I'm using more SMD resistors... I use them even less. Most times I just look it up, but there have been times when I don't have my phone or access that this mnemonic has come in incredibly handy.If you use the color code frequently enough, you don't need some mnemonic to remember values, or order, for colors.
That's the one I was taught, but with the "Get Some Now" for the tolerance bands.Heard something similar. Bad Boys Rape Our Young Girls But Violet Gives Willingly. However, I didn't much care for that poem. I preferred Black Brown Red Orange Yellow Green Blue Violet Grey and White. Zero through Nine.
I didn't hear about that one until I was in graduate school. But by that point I knew about complex impedance and so just knowing that tells you the phase relationship directly.So, who remember ELI the ICE man?
Voltage leads Current in Inductors, Current leads Voltage in Capacitors.
Oops, posted this before catching up on the thread.
Makes me wonder if you or anyone else here has heard the entire mnemonic for ELI the ICE man...So, what does "get some now" stand for?
Eli the Ice man is awesome so is using your hand to remember the direction of current and magnetic field direction... many others. Hey if you can remember everything that's great... I can still remember what was taught after decades even when though I rarely use them... they're just tools. Why would I get rid of a set of tools... I've been told all you need is a pair of pliers and screwdriver and you can rebuild a car... eh... no thanks. I'll use my tools.
Nope... that's not it
I don't use it often and now that I'm using more SMD resistors... I use them even less. Most times I just look it up, but there have been times when I don't have my phone or access that this mnemonic has come in incredibly handy.
ELI the ICE Man, who lives in a cave,
Knows how inductors and capacitors behave.
Determining their phases is his favorite game.
If you ever need help, just call out his name.

I've never liked those. First off, while PIE is easy to remember because it's a meaningful word, why is someone more likely to remember "EIR" as opposed to "IRE", for instance?these are silly but back to electronics:
Splishy splashy in the sea. Power equals I times V
Twinkle twinkle little star voltage equals I time R
silly and cute, issue being the last value is easier to remember due to the rhyme... but get one wrongs and oops... so the EIR / PIE was easier to remember:
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