- Dec 9, 2000
- 16,528
- 4
- 0
I've been at a noise suppression conference all week for nuclear instrumentation and at the end, the guy brought up something about an inductive kick from a relay.
he said in one of his classes he asked about this question and someone said well, you have your standard V=L*(di/dt) so current can't change instantaneously which causes the arcing, but then he said no, that's wrong, the collapsing magnetic field from the inductance causes the voltage which causes the arc, but he's just explaining the same phenomenoma with two different definitions, both of which seem like they could be derived from the other. i'm not sure, this guy was really weird. he basically questioned everything i had learned in my EE curriculum, he had a crazy explanation for everything. i think he even questioned maxwell at one point.
couldn't you argue both for the inductive kick in relay?
he said in one of his classes he asked about this question and someone said well, you have your standard V=L*(di/dt) so current can't change instantaneously which causes the arcing, but then he said no, that's wrong, the collapsing magnetic field from the inductance causes the voltage which causes the arc, but he's just explaining the same phenomenoma with two different definitions, both of which seem like they could be derived from the other. i'm not sure, this guy was really weird. he basically questioned everything i had learned in my EE curriculum, he had a crazy explanation for everything. i think he even questioned maxwell at one point.
couldn't you argue both for the inductive kick in relay?
