Basic Electrical Test 12 Questions

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The discussion centers on a request for help with 12 electrical questions and 15 mechanical questions, both linked in the original post. Respondents emphasize the importance of understanding underlying principles rather than just seeking answers to random questions. They suggest that the poster should clarify specific areas of confusion and engage with the material more actively. Additionally, there are recommendations to study concepts like Ohm's Law, resistors, capacitors, and the behavior of DC supplies. Overall, the consensus is that focused learning and problem-solving will yield better results than simply asking for answers.
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Hello there,

I have these 12 simple electrical questions that I am having a lot trouble with.

Would anyone please be able to perhaps have a look at them and give me there thoughts?

The link is:

http://acamic.50megs.com/electrical.pdf

You could either reply, or send me an email to damclay_64@hotmail.com

Thanks in advance.

Regards,

acamic01
 
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Basic Mechanical Test... 15 Questions.

Hello there,

I have these 15 simple mechanical questions that I am having a lot trouble with.

Would anyone please be able to perhaps have a look at them and give me there thoughts?

The link is:

http://acamic.50megs.com/mechanical.pdf

You could either reply, or send me an email to damclay_64@hotmail.com

Thanks in advance.

Regards,

acamic01
 
Our thoughts?

I think if there are specific things that are confusing you
about the principles / mechanics of doing particular
problems then you should describe what's
specifically confusing you along with example cases of
what manners of situations cause the confusion.

Just sending a list of a bunch of really very technically
unrelated questions from a bunch of areas of electronics
doesn't help anyone resolve your sources of confusion
about the principles.
 
So I'm guesing you won't help?
 
Help clarifying confusion about specific physical / electrical
principles, yes, usually if I have time.

Help by just giving a list of 50 answers to a series of random
and various questions? No, that wouldn't help you learn
anything more than working through all the similar
practice problems your texts probably include along with
the published answers to them.

There's no substitute for taking the time to do a bit
of studying and experimentation to try and understand
something. Occasionally people can provide better
explanations than those that may be given in certain
texts / references, though.
 
Your link does not work for me. I get a permission error.

You are not going to get the kind of help you are asking for on this site. We require that you show some of your thoughts on the problem I would suggest that you do what you can on your "simple" questions, then post specific questions about the difficulties you encounter.
 
It looks like a physics concept test. These are extremely important (given the modern understanding of physics teaching), and they don't work if students are exposed (familiarised) with the specific questions in advance. That, and the way you've censored parts of the scan makes you look guilty of something.
 
as xez said in your other post, its not good for PF members to answer your question like the way you want. you ll have to be very specific. please try to come up with the problem that you are having solving the problem, not with the set of problems that you haven't even tried yourself
 
acamic01 said:
Hello there,

I have these 12 simple electrical questions that I am having a lot trouble with.

Would anyone please be able to perhaps have a look at them and give me there thoughts?

Besides the excellent recommendations of the other PF helpers, my thoughts on your electrical questions are the following:

The first set, begs the question. How familiar are you with Ohm's Law? You probably will want to research this relationship and how it works.

You also will want to look up resistors and capacitors (and while you're at it, inductors), how they combine in series and in parallel.

Another concept you may want to look up is, "how do DC supplies combine when wired in parallel or in series?" (this one may be easily verified empirically, by wiring two small batteries in each configuration and measuring between their poles with a voltmeter).

Finally, read up on AC and DC motors. Once you understand the areas I've mentioned, answering these questions will become trivial.
 

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