Introduction to Resonance and Passive filters

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Hello, and welcome to Al's electronic classroom. alan alan best here, this is a best right there. Okay, we've got another course up here on this platform, it's called resonance. And if you've taken my reactive components courses, you'll know that when we talk about resonance, that's when the capacitive reactance of a circuit equals the inductive reactance of a circuit circuit equals inductive reactance equals capacitive reactance. And I explain the properties the phase angle, the real power. When we're in a series circuit, or a series resonant circuit, or a parallel resonant circuit, we talk about the phase angle.

All right, and again, This is a advanced course, you need to have a background. If you haven't taken any of my previous courses, you need to have some math skills. You need to understand ohms law, you need to understand capacitive reactance, inductive reactance, you need to understand the difference between alternating currents and voltages and DC currents and voltages. All right. So if you don't have that, and if you feel you're lacking on quite honestly, if you take this course you're going to be lost. Alright, so if you want to get into this, if you want to get into the vocation of electronics and understand it, and so forth, my suggestion is, go to the platform.

This is L spin elsewhere on the instructor. If you search on my my name, it'll give you a listing of all the courses that I've provided. All right. And the other thing is, at the very first section of my courses, I do two things. Number one, I give you a little blurb on how you should study for my course of courses. All right, what's the best way what I feel is the best way to understand them, and get the most out of them.

All right, and then that's a separate video. So I won't go into it here, I suggest you look at that, you'll see what I mean. And then in that same section, there's an Excel spreadsheet spreadsheet in the order in which you should take my courses Now I'm not saying you have to take them. I don't really know you, I don't know your skills and your background. All right, but if you go through them, I and then go to the course description that I put up that accompanies these courses, then you should get a feel of what you should or should not know. All right, and then you can make your own decision.

Termination. Alright, on always here, I answer my email daily, if you have a problem or whatever, you need some, some extra help, send me an email, I'll do the best I can to get get ahold of you or make arrangements somehow. And we can get these straightened out. And I've done that for several students out there. And I'm more than happy to do it because I'm trying to make this ago. I love this school.

I love what I do. And I'm trying to help as many people as I can that want to get into this vocation, and understand the subject of electronics. So we're at the very beginning, I, I've got one more course to put up here and it's my core courses. All right, we started way back when with a brief history of electronics with electronic basics. And I'm just going to add that that was a very, very, very basic course. All right.

And that course was for someone are a person who knows absolutely nothing about electronics, zero, zilch. I. And so that was very basic, but as my courses progress, they get more and more detailed. All right. Okay with that said, I hope you enjoy this course it's on resonance again, it's on series resonance, parallel resonance. We talked about the cue of the coil, the bandwidth, how to find the resonant frequency and so forth.

So with that said, myself and bass messages looking around you, we wish you all the best. And take care. We'll see you in the course. Bye Bye now.

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