What's the Distinction Between Electrical and Electronics?

AI Thread Summary
The distinction between "electrical" and "electronics" lies primarily in their functions and applications. "Electrical" refers to devices that use electricity for power, such as electric motors and incandescent light bulbs, often involving higher voltages and mechanical components. In contrast, "electronics" pertains to devices that process information at lower voltages, utilizing components like transistors and semiconductors. The discussion also touches on the gray area of older technologies, such as vacuum tubes, which some may classify as electronic despite their differences from modern solid-state devices. Overall, electrical engineering focuses on high-voltage applications, while electronics deals with low-voltage circuits and information processing.
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What is the difference between the words " electrical " and " electronics"?
 
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The difference is subtle, but typically the word "electrical" is used to describe something mechanical which uses electricity for power, such as an electric motor. The word "electronic," on the other hand, is typically used to describe devices which process information, typically using small voltages.

- Warren
 
Hmmmm. So my radiant 'electric' heater is neither. It has no moving parts (not mechanical) and does not process information. Same would go for an incandescent light bulb.

Anything that uses electricity can be considered electrical. From here on is where it gets into a gray area.

I may not remember this correctly but it seems I was told that in order to qualify as electronic the device has to control or manipulate the electric current at the electron level such as a transistor as opposed to a set of contacts. Many people don't consider vacuum tubes or any electrical technology older than the transistor to be electronic or 'solid state' but some are. An incandescent light bulbs behavior can really only be described by discussing electrons. Technically you could say the same thing about a set of contacts, so who knows...

My 2 cents, probably worth less than that.
 
well when the first day i entered into the class , our instructor asked the same question
but he answered on the basis of frequency as it recurs to me.
electrical things operate at no or very less frequency whereas electronics operate at high frequency
 
I would say that frequency has nothing to do with it.
 
Back in Engineering School we used to say that electrical deals with kilovolts, ohms and amperes and electronics deals with volts, kiloohms and milliamperes.
 
It's generally known that electrical is for mains supply and up. And electronic is for lower voltage circuits.

Examples of Electrical Engineering: Mains loops, heating, lighting, electrical appliances, vehicles, industry, etc - basically anything using at least mains cable wire.

Examples of Electronic Engineering: Timers, radio, audio/video equipment, gadgets - basically anything using wire measured using awg (e.g. 28awg)

Then there's micorelectronics which refer to chips/IC's and programming, etc.
 
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The difference is this: "Electronic" means that electrical current flows through devices that use either semiconductors or a vacuum: eg, vacuum tubes, bipolar transistors, FETs, etc.
 
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