I'm curious to know why you think this is possible. Did you just start a new job and the boss decided to engage in a bit of hazing?Hello everybody,
I am working on the project which basically should measure the phantom load of the chosen device. How can I measure the input voltage and current without ampere/voltage/multimeters? Is there advice about how to do it? Thanks!
This is my capstone project. I am trying to find out the way to do it for a couple of days, so I decided to cheat on it and ask here I hope that there is an answer to my question.I'm curious to know why you think this is possible. Did you just start a new job and the boss decided to engage in a bit of hazing?
In the words of the Man in Black: "Get used to disappointment".This is my capstone project. I am trying to find out the way to do it for a couple of days, so I decided to cheat on it and ask here I hope that there is an answer to my question.
Truly -- you speak in riddles.Oh there is a way to find it without measuring.
Sure - I have the patience of a stone.He did say it was homework. So let him think it over.
I do not why I impressed you like this, so I am sorry if something is wrong. Me and my team spent a couple of days to find the answer out and I used this thread as a last resort. What was the reason to think about me in this way?Well if he was intelligent enough maybe he could do some applied circuit analysis to find the theoretically calculated values of the "phantom load" for each device in the house. I got the impression he is too ignorant and lazy to do that. But then, who am I to judge. I do have a sneaking suspicion as to who this "new member" actually is.
so I decided to cheat on it and ask here
Obviosly, it was just a game of words. I am allowed to collect information from an every source which I have tried to do. Do not see any reason to judge people according to just one sentence.