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Wild_Bill Wild_Bill is offline
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Default Two phases or not?

I didn't check the link.. the thread topic was electrical power.

I assume some of the ****wits in this thread would like to argue that the
outputs of a simple stereo amp (L+/gnd and R+/gnd), with a center channel
(L+ and R+) would be 3-phase.

Still.. it's not electrical power.

A Simple, Practical and Sensible approach to the difference between
electrical circuits, and electronic circuits is:

Electrical power circuits perform work (mechanical energy, heat etc).

Electronic circuits are for relaying information (data, sensing, control of
electrical devices, communications).

I'm done here.. another wasted minute of my remaining time isn't worthwhile
to me.
Have yer fun.

As I suggested in my first reply in this thread, this issue is simply food
(a drug?) for the dimwitted that have nothing better to do.

I can only imagine the good efforts that could have been attributed to real
issues worldwide.. with the time/effort that's been wasted by trillions of
minutes of worthless usenet replies and ****ing contests.

--
Cheers,
WB
..............


"Michael Kennedy" mike@com wrote in message
...
MIke et al

The problem seems to be that after all this dialogue, that so many of
the responders simply don't stick to the basic premise that different
phases by definition have timing differences. Simply reversing the way
of using a phase does not make it a different phase. The timing stays
the same.


Ok I get what your saying.. But do you understand what a phanse
difference is?? It is timing like you said..

Here is an explanation using audio waves. Maybe you can get what I am
saying.

http://www.indiana.edu/~emusic/acoustics/phase.htm