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[email protected] clare@snyder.on.ca is offline
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Default Another battery charger question

On Thu, 27 Feb 2014 21:27:52 -0500, Tom Gardner Mars@Tacks wrote:

On 2/26/2014 9:20 PM, RogerN wrote:
"Tom Gardner" wrote in message
...

Thanks for all the replies and knowledge. My other battery charger is a
one pound electronic machine. It works OK, supplies 2, 6 and 12 amps and
has all sorts of buttons and lights! What it won't do is charge a totally
dead battery...thus repairing the old Craftsman. It displays: "BAD
BATTERY" and I have to hook-up jumper cables from another vehicle to get a
few percent of a charge to get the electronic charger to work.

I also confess I don't know enough about electronics. Is there a good book
to start with that isn't too stupid yet not over my head? I think I can
still learn stuff.


Comparing to piping, hydraulics, fluidics, pneumatics...

Volts are pressure
Amps is flow
Resistance is opposition to flow, a restriction in the line.
Power (watts) is the product of flow and pressure.

Rectifiers are like check valves.
capacitors are like storage tanks, accumulators or air tanks.
transistors are like pilot operated valves

AC would be kind of like a piston pump with no check valves, the power goes
one way and then the other.
So. using this back and forth fluid could drive a piston one size that is
connected to a different size piston, either increasing pressure and
decreasing volume, or increasing volume and decreasing pressure. That would
be kind of like a transformer, it takes alternating current to make it work.
So if you transformed your pumps force and pressure, it could be changed
after the transformer by adding check valves at that point.

The old fashioned battery charger transforms the line voltage to a lower
voltage at a higher current. Then a rectifier causes it to flow only one
way into the battery.

Magnetic field going through a wire induces a voltage in the wire, not sure
what that would compare to in hydraulics. The magnetic field inducing
voltage has to do with transformers, motors, inductors, antenna, and other.

RogerN




Good analogies Roger!

But past a certain point, the analogy doesn't hold water - - - - .