MrAl,
No, I disagree. I take energize to mean a completed successful process, not an attempted action, and not just turning on the reverse current. Failure is not an option.
Ratch
Hi again,
Well that is just how *you* take it then. The *act* of trying to do something does not always mean that it was successfully done.
When you charge or energize something you are performing an act, not guaranteeing an outcome. It's true that sometimes you do, but not when the word used to describe the act can mean either outcome. "I applied the force to the object", did it move or not? "I moved the object", we know what happened without asking.
The act of giving energy to means to apply energy. It says nothing about how the object uses that energy.
The act of charging means to apply energy. It implies something but strictly speaking also may not describe how the object reacts.
We can say that there may be little difference there, but...
The act of successful energization means a successful *application* of energy without specifying if it was also a successful *acceptance* of energy as storage.
The act of successful charging means a successful application of energy with also the successful acceptance of energy.
Thus charge can say something more to the point than energize.
Remember the whole point here is to be able to describe the act of successfully charging a battery (or successfully supplying energy to a battery and having it stored).
With energize, in both cases i was able to successfully supply energy, but only one case stored it.
With charge, there's only one successful case and that's where the battery stored the energy.
Thus 'charge' is less ambiguous.
You cant argue both ways, either energize means to apply energy and have it stored, or as with a resistance have it dissipated. Since you agree that you can energize a resistor or a battery, then you cant argue that we have to always use a brand new battery just to be able to energize it! That's totally off the wall
tvtech:
Yes ok we'll have to stop soon. It's been interesting though
