Solving an Electrical Problem: 79.2V Answer

  • Thread starter Thread starter mugzieee
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Electrical
AI Thread Summary
The discussion revolves around a practice problem where the expected answer is 79.2V, but the original poster is struggling to reach this conclusion. A key point raised is that the user has only two equations for three unknowns, which is insufficient for solving the problem. It is noted that a supermesh is incorrectly applied due to the presence of a current-controlled voltage source, which complicates the equations. After reviewing the work, another participant successfully solved the problem, confirming the answer of 79.2V and providing the correct current values. The conversation emphasizes the importance of having the right number of equations to solve electrical problems effectively.
mugzieee
Messages
77
Reaction score
0
hello. I was reading through the chapter, and i came across a practice problem. The given answer for the problem is 79.2V. I attemted to solve it, but i don't get the same answer. ICould you guys please help me out and tell me where i am making a mistake? Thanx in advance

http://www.freeimagehosting.net/uploads/th.d669771024.jpg
 

Attachments

Last edited:
Physics news on Phys.org
Might want to just print screen, copy/paste and upload the work to imageshack or something.
 
Last edited:
first off you can't solve these 2 equations that you have, because you have 3 unknowns and 2 equations. You need another equation.

I see you used a supermesh for mesh 2 and 3, however you don;t need it. That is a current controlled voltage source there. This is why you are missing one equation. It would be a different story if there was a current source there.
 
I can't open your file or get any of your links to work to see the Circuit Diagram.
 
cyrusabdollahi said:
I can't open your file or get any of your links to work to see the Circuit Diagram.

They aren't linked correctly, so you have to copy and paste it. Copy and paste the 3rd link and edit it to a basic URL.

teknodude said:
first off you can't solve these 2 equations that you have, because you have 3 unknowns and 2 equations. You need another equation.

my mistake, i looked at your work briefly and just saw the two numbered equations. I did the problem this time and get 79.2V. Your currents should be i1 = 3.08A i2=2.27A and i3=1.98
 
Last edited:

Similar threads

Back
Top