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Help - Ohm's Law and Transformers (1 Viewer)

mememe11

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Mar 20, 2009
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transformers have conservation of energy, hence V_1I_1=V_2I_2 but how can u get more voltage but less current; assuming ohmic resistors, by ohm's law if resistance is the same (as my teachers tell me it is) Voltage and current are proportional and i always thought of current as depending on how large voltage is. i asked my teachers but they couldn't/wouldn't tell me :S
and then... my teacher contradicted what she said earlier about more voltage = less current.
cos there was a question, 2008 HSC paper, q10 - would you use a step-up or step-down transformer for a transistor.
and my teacher said "step down" because u want low voltage and thus low current by ohm's law

:cry:
need help big time
i asked a phys sub, he said it was all about impedance matching but i didnt really get what he was going on about - didnt really answer my question.

p.s. yes you can apply Ohm's Law to AC even though it gets more complicated. think impedance is the key to the answer? *confused*
 

mememe11

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yes i know, that doesnt exactly solve the ohm's law "discrepancy".
 

mememe11

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prolly cos u have boring teacher~ i can sympathise :(
but phys itself is awesome, lol
 

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