Op-Amp (Operational Amplifier) Practice Problems

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  • čas přidán 7. 07. 2024
  • Josh stated in the op-amp intro tutorial that operational amplifiers (op-amps) are really quite easy because of the two golden rules of op-amps but didn't give any examples of how to use those rules. In this tutorial, Josh goes through three practical operational amplifier practice problems to show how to utilize those rules to simplify circuit analysis with op-amps.
    Parts of the video:
    0:00 Introduction
    0:30 Review of the 2 Golden Rules
    0:55 First Practice Problem
    4:45 Second Practice Problem
    7:33 Third Practice Problem
    10:27 Summary
    11:54 The toast will never pop up
    Missed the op-amp introduction tutorial? Check it out here: www.circuitbread.com/tutorial...
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Komentáře • 114

  • @memirandawong
    @memirandawong Před rokem +18

    Mistakes make this learning experience even more real!

  • @zjmullan
    @zjmullan Před rokem +7

    great video man, reminded me of how the ideal op-amp calculations work after almost a year of not doing them

  • @sirhuman560
    @sirhuman560 Před 8 měsíci +7

    amazing explanation and bringing us in your mind to let us learn how to think while solving problems. thank you!

  • @monfry2675
    @monfry2675 Před rokem +4

    All understandable in a easy way ! Thanks good buddy !

  • @kaleevans1692
    @kaleevans1692 Před 15 dny +1

    Best description on op amps I've found yet... And I've looked around a lot. Subscribed! Thank you sir🙏🏾

  • @andrewpervez3009
    @andrewpervez3009 Před 9 měsíci +3

    Excellent and straight forward. Thank you.

  • @sunrayseducation
    @sunrayseducation Před rokem +3

    Sir, thank you for this explaination and including the mistakes that I do.

  • @maneki9neko
    @maneki9neko Před rokem +5

    very clear explanation. Thank you for taking the time out of your life to do this.

  • @menkveld3565
    @menkveld3565 Před 6 měsíci +1

    I never understood anything about those things. Seeing those 2 rules being applied made it all click. Thanks!

  • @phionadesitter1203
    @phionadesitter1203 Před rokem +2

    excellent explanation 👍🏽

  • @INONAuto
    @INONAuto Před 8 měsíci +2

    i am writing on the 9th nov ,you saved me from lot of anxiety

  • @memirandawong
    @memirandawong Před rokem +4

    Truth be known, I'm obsessed with this device (and the transistor, LOL). I was a circuit board designer (mechanical layout of circuits) for years and was always impressed by the many uses I've see with op-amps. This video instills great confidence! Thank you for the time you put into making these videos!

    • @CircuitBread
      @CircuitBread  Před rokem

      Nice! Op-amps were so confusing to me at first but once I started to figure them out and saw how incredibly useful they are, I admit I got a bit obsessed as well.

    • @followthetrawler
      @followthetrawler Před 2 měsíci

      I was also a PCB layout draughtsman - never ceases to amaze me how we were just seen as monkeys with tape (yes I am that old) when in fact we could quite often have to fully understand the circuit design to lay it out properly - we in fact had the same skills as the circuit designer - and then some. Nice video chap.

  • @chuckbenedict7235
    @chuckbenedict7235 Před rokem +23

    I was confused about the sign of example 1 until I realized equation 2 should be (0-V0 ) = (50 microamps)(25K ohms), yielding V0=-1.25V. The voltage drop across the 25K resistor is 0-V0, which is the tricky part. In example 2, its strange to think about negative resistance (IMHO), so I'd suggest R = -V0/i1. It's the same math, just seems to better reflect what is happening in the circuit. In example 3, I believe the equation to compute V0 should be 2-V0 = (1mA)(5K) = -7V.

    • @mustafanaber
      @mustafanaber Před 10 měsíci

      thanks for corrections, It made me understand. But In example 3, third equation; where is 5V comes from? Am I missing something?

    • @andy2a2m
      @andy2a2m Před 9 měsíci +1

      from what you said 2-V0=5V, V0 will be -3V not -7V

    • @100subswovideos2
      @100subswovideos2 Před 8 měsíci

      the answer is actually 7 volts

    • @gsiqhaiqj1169
      @gsiqhaiqj1169 Před 4 měsíci

      @@mustafanaber 1mA*5k ohms

  • @thomaslacey1001
    @thomaslacey1001 Před 2 lety +1

    Thanks 👍

  • @boonedockjourneyman7979
    @boonedockjourneyman7979 Před rokem +1

    Good job.

  • @klevisimeri607
    @klevisimeri607 Před rokem +1

    Thank you!

  • @Bianchi77
    @Bianchi77 Před 11 měsíci +1

    Cool video, well done, thank you for sharing it :)

  • @remcooosten2542
    @remcooosten2542 Před 8 měsíci +2

    Nice video, thanks.
    In the last example, I think you have 1mA flowing through 2kΩ + 5kΩ, which gives us 1mA * 7kΩ = 7V

    • @gsiqhaiqj1169
      @gsiqhaiqj1169 Před 4 měsíci

      we dont know the voltage between the non inverting input and output, but we know that between the non inverting input and ground we have a 2V voltage drop, therefor we can calculate the curent that goes from node that connects the 2K and 7K resistor to the ground, which is 2V/2k=1mA. If 1mA exists that node, then 1mA needs to entry that node, and the only way is through the 7k resistor (KCL)

  • @michaeldrake2512
    @michaeldrake2512 Před rokem +1

    This doesn’t have nearly enough views! I would literally lose sleep over how op-amps worked and circuit analysis in general. Thanks to this I’ll sleep peacefully now.
    I really feel that the theory for electronic circuits is made overly complicated by those that are teaching this but the way you’ve explained this was straight to the point!
    Perhaps that’s something to do with limited application of their skills outside of an academic course.
    I think it’s brilliant you leave your mistakes in because, even though it’s simple algebraic operation still so easy to make a mistake. Seeing the reasoning is good

    • @CircuitBread
      @CircuitBread  Před rokem +1

      Thanks! I'm still self conscious of my mistakes but I hope they help people somehow. And, particularly, I'm glad this was helpful to you!

  • @gkdresden
    @gkdresden Před 4 měsíci

    These were more the theoretical problems with op amps. The practice problems are much different, like:
    - the input current is not really zero, especially not in the case of bjt op amps
    - in certain cases you need to take care of the input offset voltage, especially in the case if you use op amps as comparators.
    - when you operate with pulse voltages at the inputs you have to make sure, that the operating voltage stays stable, even if you need to operate with a certain capacitive load at the output. So you have to use stabilization capacitors between the Vcc and GND pin of your op amp or two of them if you operate with a symmetrical operating voltage. Otherwise your circuit will fall into oscillations
    - the nonlinearities of the op amp input circuit can demodulate rf. So if you want to build up an audio amplifier it is sometimes necessary to use a low pass filter at the signal input to suppress rf interferences to avoid that you have some closely located radio station music in the background of your audio amplifier output.
    - if you need higher voltage amplifications (for microphone or phono signals), you need to make sure, that the gain bandwidth product doesn't compromize your amplifier at the higher frequencies. Also the input referred voltage offset and noise voltage become important in such application cases.
    etc.

  • @Zzzzzzzzz678
    @Zzzzzzzzz678 Před 3 měsíci +1

    Seeing you get a bit lost in the solution made me feel slightly better about myself, lol. But it was well explained, and I've subscribed to your channel.

  • @wediadi6788
    @wediadi6788 Před rokem +2

    Another method of calculating Vout using the gain of the opamp. Gain=Vout/Vin, since same current I1 is flowing through both resistors, Gain=R2I1/R1I1=R2/R1=25Kohm/10Kohm=2.5. Vout=Gain*Vin=2.5*0.5=1.25V. The sign of Vout should be negative because the input on the inverting port of the opamp is higher than that on the non-inverting. So Vout=-1.25V

  • @liliaoakeley4402
    @liliaoakeley4402 Před 9 měsíci +1

    circuit bread #1 fan right herreeee

  • @armisol00
    @armisol00 Před 4 měsíci +2

    how do u calculate in the third practice problem the 2 volts. cause i dont understand that part

    • @bunnie7556
      @bunnie7556 Před 3 měsíci +1

      So because there is a voltage divider you use Vin ( R2 / R1 + R2 ) to get Vout. Which is 3v ( 8k / 4k + 8k ) giving you Vout of 2v.

  • @andy2a2m
    @andy2a2m Před 9 měsíci

    To anyone that is still confused:
    In example 1:
    the 25k ohm is the feedback resistor Rf,
    the 10k ohm is the input resistor Rin,
    Because the supply is connecting to negative side, which means the signal must be inverted and amplified,
    The multiplier is Rf / Rin = 25k ohm / 10k ohm = 2.5, again, it is inverted, so it is -2.5
    So the final answer, the output is 0.5V * -2.5 = -1.25V

    • @andy2a2m
      @andy2a2m Před 9 měsíci

      In example 3, because the current path is only one way, so, we can use 1mA multiply by 2k + 5k ohms (they are in series, no current going into op amp as the rules stated), the answer is 0.001A*7000ohms, 7V !

  • @grzesiek1x
    @grzesiek1x Před rokem

    2:41 a small question as I have already seen similar explanation but one thing is not allowing me to sleep ;) why don't we add those resistances? I knoe that no current enter the inverting input of OpAmp but I see two resistors here 10 k and 25 k but we calculate current for the one of them 10k ? I don't get it. Normally to calculate the current I would add all resistors and divide it by the voltage right? for example 5V / 10 000 ohms + 25 000 ohms to get the total current ..or we just treat that 25k resistor as an "invisible" resistor for the moment to calculate the right output of the op-amp or something like that?

    • @CircuitBread
      @CircuitBread  Před rokem +3

      That's a great question. The reason we only calculate the current for the 10K resistor is because, in this question, we know the voltage across the 10K resistor (because we know the voltage at the inverting input) but NOT the voltage across the 25K resistor (because we don't know Vo). So, given what information we're given, we cannot calculate the current through both of them from the beginning. But we know they have the same current through them so we find the current through the 10K resistance and, with that information, we find the voltage across the 25K resistor, giving us Vo.

  • @WalyB01
    @WalyB01 Před 7 měsíci +1

    Putting the formula their gives your brain more power to calculate other stuff. Basically like working memory on a pc. Weirdly enough we are wired quite similarly

  • @KyleMalcolm24
    @KyleMalcolm24 Před rokem +2

    I am a bit confused between Example 2 and 3. How come in example 2 it is 0 - Vo but in example 3 it is Vo - 2V? (I am asking about the Vo being subtracted vs not)

    • @CircuitBread
      @CircuitBread  Před rokem +2

      Great question! It is somewhat arbitrary. As long as you state your current flow assumptions correctly, you can do it either way. So, in example 2, I assumed that current was flowing from the inverting input to the output. Whereas in example 3, I assumed that the current was flowing from the output to the inverting input. That's the only reason. I could have assumed the opposite and swapped those, but then the sign of the current (whether it was positive or negative) would have flipped, because my assumption of the direction would be different. Does that help?

    • @Cookingcousin
      @Cookingcousin Před rokem +1

      I’m confused on that too actually, if you assumed current is flowing from high to low when solving for current down the 2kohm resistor wouldn’t it be from positive to negative across the 5kohm resistor as well (from the negative terminal to Vout)

  • @adarshsk099
    @adarshsk099 Před rokem

    Why in second problem o -vo was taken but in last problem it was opposite?

  • @dawsonbrown3957
    @dawsonbrown3957 Před měsícem

    I am confused about the negative voltage, do you have a video that explains what that negative voltage means?

    • @CircuitBread
      @CircuitBread  Před měsícem

      This confused me when I was in college as well - we discuss it briefly in our intro video and are actually doing final review of another script that will touch on it again (at our pace, it will probably be another 1-2 months before it's published). Here's the one we did awhile ago: czcams.com/video/zH-5ls0YAI0/video.htmlsi=hKlGOWLUR6hBOgak

  • @monoc4d
    @monoc4d Před rokem

    Great video... I was struggling with op amps, your video help me enormously.
    I have a question. How at 6:41 you get negative R? I rewatch that part many many times and still don't understand.
    Thanks!!!

    • @CircuitBread
      @CircuitBread  Před rokem +1

      Hi there! This is a problem that I've seen a lot and have definitely done myself. It goes back to first step where we show the equation as (0 - Vo)/R = i1 It is very easy to drop the 0 and forget that the negative sign stays! So that's where it's simplified to -Vo/R=i1 and then that negative sign switches over to the other side. Does that help?

    • @magicflour
      @magicflour Před rokem +1

      Another way to state it is that (conventional) current always flows from a higher voltage to a lower voltage. So the zero volts at V+ *has* to be higher than what Vo is. Thus Vo must be negative valued.

    • @prabhjotsingh6941
      @prabhjotsingh6941 Před 2 měsíci

      @@CircuitBread if we subtracted 2v from Vo in equation that would give -3v. is this correct?

  • @magicflour
    @magicflour Před rokem

    Another thing I would explicitly state for the pedagogy of circuit theory is that you should never do nodal analysis on Vout as it does not have the same assumptions for conventional nodes in that current does not accumulate in any node. I find that some of my tutees did not know this because it was simply implied but never clarified.

  • @astrophotographysometimes2303

    at 9:08 why did he find the current across i1?

  • @wediadi6788
    @wediadi6788 Před rokem +2

    My question is why do'nt we consider the 25K resitor when we are calculating I1? Isn't the same current I1 flowing through both resistors?

    • @abrahamjones3635
      @abrahamjones3635 Před 9 měsíci

      That's exactly what I was thinking, if you found an answer please let me know.

    • @gsiqhaiqj1169
      @gsiqhaiqj1169 Před 4 měsíci

      We have .5V from the source to the non inverting input, not from the source to the output. That means that between the source and non inverting output (where the potential is 0V) we have a .5V voltage drop, therefore we can calculate the current that goes through the 10K resistor. The voltage between the source and output is 0.5V+1.25V=1.75V, and if we apply ohm law we have i=1.75V/(10k+25k)=50uA, I hope this make it more clear@@abrahamjones3635

  • @thespencerowen
    @thespencerowen Před rokem

    How did you get 1ma across the 5k resistor in problem 3? Shouldn't that be 0.4ma ?

    • @CircuitBread
      @CircuitBread  Před rokem

      Hi Spencer! Since we know the inverting input is at 2V and the resistor to ground is 2K ohms, we know that the current through that resistor is 1mA. As the 2K and the 5K resistors are in series, the current through the 5K resistor has to also be 2mA. And that's how we find the output voltage of the op-amp. I hope that helps!

    • @thespencerowen
      @thespencerowen Před rokem

      @@CircuitBread Ah thank you. I was following the current from the wrong pin so I didn't notice that they were in series.

  • @georgeifarouq1082
    @georgeifarouq1082 Před rokem

    Hi for example 1 could you explain why the current going through the 10k and 25k resistors was defined by 0.5V/10k Ohms instead of 0.5V/(10k + 25k) Ohms?

    • @CircuitBread
      @CircuitBread  Před rokem +2

      Hi Georgei! The important thing here is to remember that the inverting and non-inverting inputs to the op-amp are the same voltage level. Since the non-inverting input is tied to ground, you can assume that the inverting input is tied to ground. Thus, the current going through the 10K ohm resistor is found by (0.5-0)/10K. And, since you know no current goes into the input, you know that same current has to go through the 25K ohm resistor. I hope that helps!

    • @Hamza__E
      @Hamza__E Před rokem

      @@CircuitBread I had the same question and you cleared it up perfectly! Thank you so much! Also, I just want to say how thankful I am that you answered this. Even though the video was uploaded 11 months ago.

    • @mcpoogle9058
      @mcpoogle9058 Před rokem +4

      Im actually still confused on this; if no current flows into the inputs then the only current path would be through both the 10k and 25k resistor right? So wouldnt the current flow be defined as .5 / (10k+25k) ?

    • @gsiqhaiqj1169
      @gsiqhaiqj1169 Před 4 měsíci

      @@mcpoogle9058 hi, I know this is an old comment but i will explain anyway. We have .5V from the source to the non inverting input, not from the source to the output. That means that between the source and non inverting output (where the potential is 0V) we have a .5V voltage drop, therefore we can calculate the current that goes through the 10K resistor. The voltage between the source and output si 0.5V+1.25V=1.75V, and if we apply ohm law we have i=1.75V/(10k+25k)=50uA, I hope this make it more clear

  • @BaviBavii-jw4dn
    @BaviBavii-jw4dn Před 3 měsíci +1

    Hi sir!! I'm bavithra from Tamilnadu.I had a Cadence interview on April 28. I watched your video I was very useful sir. Thankyou sir for teaching me in understandable manner.But I need your help sir I didn't have enough materials to practice these type of problems.Can you refer any book for preparing my interview sir? Thankyou sir. I hoped you will reply to my comment sir.

    • @CircuitBread
      @CircuitBread  Před 2 měsíci

      I'm glad you found the information helpful! For further study, you can explore our textbooks available at www.circuitbread.com/textbooks. Utilize the search bar on the left to quickly locate topics of interest.

  • @Jonhalloum
    @Jonhalloum Před rokem

    In exercise 1, since this is a non inverting amplifier, couldn’t we use (25/10)0.5 ?

    • @CircuitBread
      @CircuitBread  Před rokem

      Kinda! This is actually an inverting amplifier and the equation for Vo/Vi is -R1/R2, so we could do -(25/10)*.5 to get the final output a lot faster. For most situations, you'd just use this equation to make your life simpler, but the idea was to show how to solve for op-amp problems utilizing the characteristics of an op-amp. For this, the learning is in the process more than the result. Hope that helps!

  • @paulwood3460
    @paulwood3460 Před rokem

    Nice one. Suggest always to put a zero in front of a real number that only has a fractional part I.e 0.5 not .5
    I was scratching my head because I thought it was 5 👍

    • @CircuitBread
      @CircuitBread  Před rokem +2

      That has caught a couple of people - I'll try to remember to do that in the future. Thanks for the feedback!

  • @HS-cu6iw
    @HS-cu6iw Před 2 lety +1

    hey! love the vid! I seem to be getting -12.5V for question 1 because my i1 value is 500mu Amps, not 50mu Amps..?

    • @CircuitBread
      @CircuitBread  Před 2 lety +2

      Thanks! Did you happen to use 5V instead of .5V? That seems to be the most likely cause making your current 10x what it should be.

    • @HS-cu6iw
      @HS-cu6iw Před 2 lety +2

      @@CircuitBread omg i cant believe i missed the "." 😂..reminder for me to pay close attention! Thanks again, btw perfect release time; I am prepping for my exams and opamps a big chunk of it!

    • @danielkioko5378
      @danielkioko5378 Před 4 měsíci

      Had missed it too.

  • @TomVanGaever
    @TomVanGaever Před rokem

    In the first problem, the output should be -12.5V, not -1.25V. The closed loop amplification of the inverting amp is -2.5 not -0.25 (Acl = 25k/10k)

    • @CircuitBread
      @CircuitBread  Před rokem +2

      The output should be -1.25 but you are correct about the amplification. I think the confusion comes from the input voltage, which is .5, not 5. .5 * -2.5 = -1.25

    • @test89267
      @test89267 Před 10 měsíci

      I also felt in this trap. Did calculations with 5v instead of .5v

  • @StevieOU812
    @StevieOU812 Před 5 měsíci

    I am confused, how can there be a -1,25 volts on the Vout? Shouldn't that be positive? Just need some help. Sorry for the dumb question.

    • @StevieOU812
      @StevieOU812 Před 5 měsíci

      I think I get it, it is a negative signal compared to ground? Correct?

    • @CircuitBread
      @CircuitBread  Před 5 měsíci

      Exactly! 0V or ground can be somewhat arbitrary. It's just a reference point and to have a negative voltage just means the voltage is lower than that arbitrarily chosen reference voltage level.

  • @fernandogallardo3477
    @fernandogallardo3477 Před rokem

    For practice problem 1, 5V/10K-ohh is not 50 micro-amps, it will give 5e-4.

    • @CircuitBread
      @CircuitBread  Před rokem +2

      Phew, you scared me! I hate it when I mess up my math. In this case, you are correct with your math but you're reading it wrong. You're using 5V, not .5V. In the question, it is .5V/10K, which does give us 50 microamps.
      Thanks for the scrutiny and feedback, I *do* like to be corrected when there are mistakes, so don't hesitate if you see anything else that looks out of place.

  • @jameskidd7906
    @jameskidd7906 Před rokem

    I m the 555 th person liked this vid . 555 a great symbole for the great ic 😅 thank sir for the vid

  • @bilisuma_b
    @bilisuma_b Před 5 měsíci

    me waiting for the toaster to pop up...................
    what's the use of the toaster at the end? I didn't get it. 😂

    • @CircuitBread
      @CircuitBread  Před 5 měsíci

      Haha, it’s amazing how many people comment on the toast not popping up. The toast/toaster is just part of our branding and we were originally going to do a bunch of different outros but never got around to it, so for a lot of our videos we just have the toast going down. I guess it adds some suspense. 😅

  • @yahyaalhashmy1313
    @yahyaalhashmy1313 Před rokem +1

    can you explain how you dropped volts using simple math in 3rd question, when 3 volts passes 4R it drops one volt and when it passes thro 8R it drops 2V, how?... I ain't no math genius

    • @CircuitBread
      @CircuitBread  Před rokem

      The 3V are dropped over 12K ohms total. I'm not sure if it helps to think about it this way but, with 3V, it's easy to divide that 12K ohms into three parts and you will drop 1V per 4K ohms. So you'll drop one volt over that 4K resistor - giving you 2V at the non-inverting node. This is a semi-intuitive way to look at it but may not be the best when approaching it for the first time. The more rigorous way to do it would be to look at it like a voltage divider. I recommend checking out our tool on this that can help you calculate it, shows the actual equation, and can let you play with it until you get a better intuitive feel for what's going on: www.circuitbread.com/tools/voltage-divider

  • @mickhursey4802
    @mickhursey4802 Před 2 lety

    It would be useful for dunces like me if you explained the 'obvious'🤔 simple maths, I have no idea how you got your 5V from in the last equation

    • @CircuitBread
      @CircuitBread  Před 2 lety +1

      Dang! It's always hard to find the balance between boring people with too many details or confusing people with too few details. Sorry that the balance wasn't quite right for you...
      For that, what happens is that the 1mA on the right gets multiplied by the 5Kohms on the left (to cancel it out of the denominator on the left), so .001A*5000Ω = 5V.

    • @mickhursey4802
      @mickhursey4802 Před 2 lety +2

      @@CircuitBread Thanks for that. Not a complaint, I loved the pace of the video just my math isn't up to scratch so ended up rather confused😮‍💨

  • @ramupattu9444
    @ramupattu9444 Před měsícem

    I1 = 5 /10 k
    = 0.5 milli amps or 500 micro amps (not 50 micro amps)
    Voltage drop across 25 k ohms= 0.5 ma* 25 k
    = 12.5 volt
    Vout = - 12.5 v

  • @sebastiandelbanorollin5482

    How is Sergei these days?

    • @CircuitBread
      @CircuitBread  Před 2 lety +2

      It's complicated and I don't know how much of his personal life he'd want me to share but he's alive, healthy, and unbelievably stressed and sad. When I met him he was living in Mariupol and there'd be times we were talking during the 2014 Crimean invasion that there'd be explosions in the background, so that's why he moved to more central Ukraine. But Mariupol is where he grew up and he still has family there, so it's heartbreaking to see it as an active warzone.

    • @sebastiandelbanorollin5482
      @sebastiandelbanorollin5482 Před 2 lety

      @@CircuitBread sorry to hear that. send him best wishes and thanks for his great work.

  • @sejlahadzic9712
    @sejlahadzic9712 Před rokem

    kilo -> k
    Kelvin -> K

  • @bendtrom7200
    @bendtrom7200 Před rokem

    I don’t want to be the wise guy because I am not. Perhaps there is a small math error in the above video in the beginning 2:25 minutes in the video? U (Volt= V) / R (Ohm = Ω) = I (Amperes = A) therefor 5V/10KΩ i.e., 10000 Ω = 0,5 milli amperes or 0,0005 Ampere or 500µAmpers (Micro Amperes) not 50µAmpers. So 0.0005A x 25KΩ = 12,5 V not 1,25V.
    Ω=ohm symbol

    • @CircuitBread
      @CircuitBread  Před rokem

      Hey Bendt, I had no idea this was going to cause so many problems when putting this problem together but there have been many comments on this. The period in front of the .5V seems to be missed very easily. So, your math is totally right but with the wrong input. It's .5/10K not 5/10K, so the answer in the video is actually correct. I appreciate you taking the time to provide the feedback!

    • @gsiqhaiqj1169
      @gsiqhaiqj1169 Před 4 měsíci

      @@CircuitBread yeah, putting .5 instead of 0.5V was a mistake, easy to overlook the point.

  • @ravichandransrinivasan5453

    The gain is 2.5 so output voltage is -12.5 v please edit video

    • @CircuitBread
      @CircuitBread  Před rokem

      The input voltage is .5, not 5. So -2.5 *.5 = -1.25 not -12.5V - those decimal points can be easy to miss!

  • @Speed-dq2sn
    @Speed-dq2sn Před 6 měsíci +1

    🤨

  • @panospanos8140
    @panospanos8140 Před 5 měsíci

    whats up with the toaster

    • @CircuitBread
      @CircuitBread  Před 5 měsíci

      The fact that we show a toaster or that the toast doesn’t pop up?

  • @ChrisLee-yr7tz
    @ChrisLee-yr7tz Před 2 lety

    9:04
    Do some quick Meth? No thanks, it's too early.

    • @CircuitBread
      @CircuitBread  Před 2 lety +2

      😂 And here I get on my kid's case for speaking clearly...

  • @kelvinbyabato
    @kelvinbyabato Před 5 měsíci +5

    try to be careful with your solutions, so many errors and we are learning from you.

    • @xxbatman69xx98
      @xxbatman69xx98 Před měsícem

      People make mistakes as long as he catches them it’s fine

  • @tensorprodukt
    @tensorprodukt Před 7 měsíci +1

    its not 50 micro amps .. its 500 micro amps ... so the output should be -12.5 V I suppose

    • @gsiqhaiqj1169
      @gsiqhaiqj1169 Před 4 měsíci

      we have 0.5 V, not 5V, it's easy to mistake because he put .5

  • @neverhavingfun
    @neverhavingfun Před rokem

    👁🔺

  • @Motivational_women1
    @Motivational_women1 Před 26 dny

    His answers were wrong

    • @CircuitBread
      @CircuitBread  Před 26 dny

      All of them? Any of them? Could you let me know what you're referring to? We've had questions in the past about these but it seems like the biggest mistakes he made was not investing in handwriting practice.