Vishera
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I understand that an inductor acts as a closed circuit to DC because it's just a coiled wire but why doesn't it act the same way for AC? What does it act as in AC?
NateTG said:You can think of the inductor as working a bit like inertia in stream of fluid: when the rate of flow changes, it 'resists' the change. It creates a voltage difference proportional to the rate of change in current - so when the current is constant then there is no voltage.
jim hardy said:The impedance of a[STRIKE] capacitor[/STRIKE] inductor is JWL
i do that all the time too.