On Feb 2, 2009, at 3:57 PM, William Donzelli wrote:
Again,
that's all very well if you're doing something sufficiently
complex and well-defined. If you are investigating the effect of
putting what is basically a tuned circuit across the supply to a
non-linear load, where a) it's simple enough to build, and b) it's
not
clearly defined enough to model, then you're far better just
warming up
the soldering iron and breaking out the 'scope.
Until the boss sees that you screwed around in the lab for an hour or
two getting all the parts and building the test circuit, rather than
spend fifteen minutes at your workstation in your cube, just to get
the same results.
Heh...I think you have those time estimates reversed.
-Dave
--
Dave McGuire
Port Charlotte, FL