![Embarrassed :oops:](./images/smilies/icon_redface.gif)
Although I will say I didn't really look over that much of forces and charges, and Norton/Thevenin
We got 14th, and I agree, this test was COMPLETELY unexpected. It was the first test that asked questions about Norton circuits, and had absoulutely NOTHING about magnetism/electrostatics.Bozongle wrote:Really bombed Shock Value at nats... 24th place and I ended up completely failing the test. I don't know why, I just had a brain fart, all the stuff I thought I knew I just completely forgot....
Although I will say I didn't really look over that much of forces and charges, and Norton/Thevenin
That's what I thought. I was a little confused at what they meant when they said "what resistance will have the most power." We said 0 ohms, implying that they meant most current because voltage is constant anyways (9v battery.) I did the first resistor network very fast because I programmed my calculator to do parallel resistors using a cell sheet, but my calculator turned off part way through due to inactivity and had to reconfigure itself, and ended up glitching out for the rest of the test, and my partner only brought a 4-function...Voltage wrote:The resistor circuit construction actually went by pretty quickly for me. Maybe I'm just good at guessing. But the Norton and Thevenin stuff completely threw my teammate and I off. We ended up just doing regular voltages and resistances and hoped we were right.Also, the thing about what resistance gives the most power got us a bit confused. Were they talking about the power put out of the battery (too easy) or the power dissipated by the resistor? (hopefully somebody can answer this question for me
)
Still got 4th though.
Also, while we were going out my teammate asked the proctor whether anybody had gotten a perfect score yet. He said no.
You programmed your calculator to experiment with a set of resistors until it got the right equivalent resistance?! Wow. I could do that on a computer, but my experience with programming my HP50g is not to that level. It's too bad that your calculator glitched up.Toms_42 wrote:That's what I thought. I was a little confused at what they meant when they said "what resistance will have the most power." We said 0 ohms, implying that they meant most current because voltage is constant anyways (9v battery.) I did the first resistor network very fast because I programmed my calculator to do parallel resistors using a cell sheet, but my calculator turned off part way through due to inactivity and had to reconfigure itself, and ended up glitching out for the rest of the test, and my partner only brought a 4-function...Voltage wrote:The resistor circuit construction actually went by pretty quickly for me. Maybe I'm just good at guessing. But the Norton and Thevenin stuff completely threw my teammate and I off. We ended up just doing regular voltages and resistances and hoped we were right.Also, the thing about what resistance gives the most power got us a bit confused. Were they talking about the power put out of the battery (too easy) or the power dissipated by the resistor? (hopefully somebody can answer this question for me
)
Still got 4th though.
Also, while we were going out my teammate asked the proctor whether anybody had gotten a perfect score yet. He said no.
I realized that too late, and we ended up doing much more poorly than I had hoped (14). It's pretty easy to do a program on a Ti-89, but it took it a little while to do each calculation. (I may experiment with trying to make it look mostly at the decimal value than just brute forcing it. Usually I do it manually using another cell sheet that purely calculated equivalent resistance of a set of resistance.Voltage wrote:You programmed your calculator to experiment with a set of resistors until it got the right equivalent resistance?! Wow. I could do that on a computer, but my experience with programming my HP50g is not to that level. It's too bad that your calculator glitched up.Toms_42 wrote:That's what I thought. I was a little confused at what they meant when they said "what resistance will have the most power." We said 0 ohms, implying that they meant most current because voltage is constant anyways (9v battery.) I did the first resistor network very fast because I programmed my calculator to do parallel resistors using a cell sheet, but my calculator turned off part way through due to inactivity and had to reconfigure itself, and ended up glitching out for the rest of the test, and my partner only brought a 4-function...Voltage wrote:The resistor circuit construction actually went by pretty quickly for me. Maybe I'm just good at guessing. But the Norton and Thevenin stuff completely threw my teammate and I off. We ended up just doing regular voltages and resistances and hoped we were right.Also, the thing about what resistance gives the most power got us a bit confused. Were they talking about the power put out of the battery (too easy) or the power dissipated by the resistor? (hopefully somebody can answer this question for me
)
Still got 4th though.
Also, while we were going out my teammate asked the proctor whether anybody had gotten a perfect score yet. He said no.
There were two questions concerning the "what resistance gives the most power" sort of thing. On the first one I just put down 0 ohms. For the one at the end of part 2 I found myself putting a bunch of zeros in. My partner looked over my shoulder and asked whether I was sure. I thought about it for a while, and that's when I thought "Oh! Maybe they're talking about the power dissipated by the resistor!". Net result: I put 0 for the part 1 question and calculated a number for the part 2 question.
The problem being discussed went something like this (here's the part where somebody scolds me for getting the wording wrong):Schrodingerscat wrote:If it was asking for what resistor would dissipate the most power when plugged into a circuit, the answer is one that is equal to the equivalent resistance of the remainder of the circuit. It is called the Maximum Power Transfer Theorem.
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