why you say that "E/R=10ma"
we are not given E and R
Hi again,
Yes, sorry, that was a typo. I have corrected that now and it should read:
"I see you found out that the charging current starts out at E/R, and
defining that as Im, for the first half cycle we get:"
instead of:
"I see you found out that the charging current starts out at 10ma (E/R), and
defining that as Im, for the first half cycle we get:"
The problem came in where i accidentally typed the 10ma from the
worked example instead of just the more general "E/R".
There were a couple other typos too that apparently you didnt see because
i had corrected them already. I believe they are all corrected now.
Also note that this charging current is not the initial current, just the coefficient
in the equation which also happens to be the max current that could be obtainable.
That sure would be magic if E/R always equaled 10ma wouldnt it? ha ha