Electrical Circuits 1 and Electrical Circuits 2

AI Thread Summary
Electrical Circuits 1 and 2 are foundational courses in electrical engineering that typically cover topics such as resistors, capacitors, inductors, Thevenin's theorem, and various circuit analysis techniques. Students can expect to learn about both passive and active components, including diodes, transistors, and filters, with a focus on both DC and AC circuits. While some participants find the courses manageable, they emphasize the importance of understanding concepts for exams. The courses are designed to be challenging, preparing students for more advanced topics in electronics. Overall, these classes are essential for anyone pursuing a degree in electrical engineering.
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What exactly do they teach in these classes? My second year I will be taking these classes, heard these are some hard classes. Anyone on this forum ever taken these classes?
 
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The course outline doesn't give you any indication of what is covered??
 
256bits said:
The course outline doesn't give you any indication of what is covered??

Noooooo... I won't take this class until my sophomore year of college. I have several friends who took these classes and they keep telling me it's a hard class.
 
Why not grab a textbook from a friend and flip through it.
That should cover resistors, capacitors, inductors, mostly passive components, time constants, thevenin's thereom, RC , RCL, RL circuits, magnetic circuits, and all that energy stuff that goes with it, with DC currents.
Added to the list is diodes, maybe power supplies and filter, a touch on transistors, transformers, sine wave, square wave, transformers, ..power factor, peak power, rms value, ...

Just listing off some topics here as it has been a while.

Your friends are just pulling your leg because the course is a breeze, it is as easy as pie - except for the examination part where you have to put concepts together to obtain the correct answer
 
Pretty generic name that could cover alot. For instance I had two course called Electronic Circuits 1/2 that covered Diodes and transistors and various circuits built using them (Filters, opamps, amplifiers, etc).

I also had Circuit Analysis I/II that covered passive components, KVL/KCL, Thevenin/Norton, tranisent responses, Laplace/Fourier Circuit analysis, two-port networks, etc.

So your classes prolly cover something along those lines. I didn't find these particularly hard (at least compared to other classes, there's rarely an easy EE class lol)
 
Circuits I and II...Electronics I and II are simply the foundation for electrical engineering.

They better be tough...if they are not tough you just wasted your money!

As far as your easy classes...that's in the past. That's what grade school and high school are for!
 
I would be really surprised if a full specification doesn't exist, stating what the courses will contain. If there is a nationally approved exam at the end of them, the teachers will need to know what syllabus to teach.
I have only been involved with UK Science teaching but it is definitely that way 'over here' - and also in Europe.
 
My Circuits I class covered the basics of resistors, thevenin equivalence, op amps, and I believe we touched on the time domain of RLC circuits. Circuits II focused more on your complex equations, filters, and bode plots. I think we touched on transformers as well. Electronics (which was essentially Circuits III) was a more in-depth learning of op-amps, diodes, and mosfets/bjts. ENJOY! MUAHAHAHAHAHAHA
 
DailyDose said:
My Circuits I class covered the basics of resistors, thevenin equivalence, op amps, and I believe we touched on the time domain of RLC circuits. Circuits II focused more on your complex equations, filters, and bode plots. I think we touched on transformers as well. Electronics (which was essentially Circuits III) was a more in-depth learning of op-amps, diodes, and mosfets/bjts. ENJOY! MUAHAHAHAHAHAHA

Yep...sounds about right. Prepare yourself for a boat load of studying if you plan on knowing anything before or after graduation.
 
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