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The Engineering Mindset
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Hearted Youtube comments on The Engineering Mindset (@EngineeringMindset) channel.
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i found your channel by accident about a year ago and i’m so addicted. it reminds me of how i fell in love with electronics and electricity. keep up the hard work 💪🏽💪🏽
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Funny, I just gave a class about this exact subject yesterday! Useful to know in the case of motors, they need to be under full mechanical load for this calculation to be right. A belt conveyor running without transporting any material will yield a low actual HP value, which could mean the capacitor used to correct the power factor would bring the circuit in the capacitive region, with a poor power factor.
50
It’s 1 video per month but it’s always worth the wait. Great content as always!
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What degree of engineering should I choose to become Iron Man?
50
Very informative and easily understood for a novice like myself. The safty factors included are a great way to go..thanks.
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Give this man his own university
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I was waiting for this video since you uploaded the community post. Amazing explanation! I love how you use comprehensive analogies to explain seemingly complicated concepts✨
49
30+ years ago vacuum was the choice driving energy to move blend, mode, recirculate doors and flow valves in automobiles. Actuators are much the choice of engineers since about the early 90s with a mix of vacuum and actuators being found in various models of vehicles within a manufacturer's lineup. Today, I can't think of a single manufacturer that employs vacuum to carry out these functions within an HVAC. Rear climate control has become so common and is much easier to accomplish using actuators ( a servo with a specific design in mind). They've even got smart enough to make the footprint quite universal within a vehicle so that one actuator design fits the door shaft of all the locations. Current monitoring transistors give these actuators the appearance to learn their range of motion when installed. Truthfully it's the control module that learns this range I am more than reasonably certain.
49
as an engineering student, this channel is a gold mine
47
A small solar panel as the input voltage would be sweet.
47
Please do more vids on Automobile engineering.
47
Picking a lock... criminally interesting! 😉
46
My granddad was a physics professor, and I can just imagine how much he would have loved this. I think I'm going to have to get one when I can.
45
Another fantastic video!! Honestly I am loving your content at the moment. Especially the DC motor video! This helped greatly with my recent assignment! Thank you and keep up the good work.
44
Best video i have seen so far informing us about LEDs. Thanks very much for high quality content and the effort put into it. I really appreciate you supported your theoretical background together with circuit diagraghms and also making it on breadboards just to let us see how it looks. It definitely would tale a lot of effort and time. That is very much appreciated.
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Paul. I have to say, you do the BEST job in explaining electrical/electronic components etc.! By FAR, the most thorough regarding function, construction and application explanations. This "Yank" loves your work! Keep it going my friend! Patrick
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Best content on the tube!
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I love "The Engineering Mindset" . Your explanations are so clear and easy to understand. Thank you for doing this!
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Thanks this is what i needed to know about i was always curious about the functionality of those pipes connected to the fans
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Thank you for making this video! I am a wind turbine technician and I watch this channel all the time. When i was in school this channel was great for helping me understand the basics of 3 phase electricity and power generation. Your content is very easy to understand and entertaining with all the animations. I always send people to your videos that has trouble understanding anything electrical. Its great to rewatch videos to brush up on the theory and basics from time to time. Thanks and keep up the great content
42
I love these lectures... I worked on Fighter jets in the Navy...when I was in Navy Electronics school, the instructors were great like the guy on this video.
42
For a long time, LEDs could only be produced in the colors infrared, red, orange, yellow and green. It was not until 1990 that blue LEDs and thus also white LEDs could be developed. I know that back then cars used blue bulbs instead of LEDs for high beam indicators.
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Would love to see communications as a future topic...telephone, cable, ethernet, fiber optic, radio, cell phones, wifi, electromagnetic spectrum etc. I feel I know a ton about more traditional circuits but when it comes to signals and transmitting information it all seems so mysterious to me...
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"All the Power!"
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Interesting. I had not heard of a "consumer unit". In the States, we just call it the meter and the breaker box along with sub panels.
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Thought the title was "How octopuses work", which is why I clicked. Can't say I was disappointed.
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The stuff you're posting are the things that I've always been wondering. Keep it up
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Circuit breakers and fuses are not designed nor intended to protect people. Their purpose is to protect the electrical power system - generators/distribution/transformers and other electrical equipment from damage that could be caused by overcurrent or a "short circuit" fault.
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"Watts up" :D
39
I have no word to explain how much I am impressed by your tutorials. Modern institutes should learn from you. How to teach their students. I am so excited. you guys absolutely incredible. 👏 ❤ love you guys.
39
Nicely done. Many people don’t understand the ground/ neutral scenerios and you explained it very well.
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Finally, something that I knew that exists but could not understand;) thanks mate
38
Love this Chanel. I’m such a simple man and this channel gives me so much understandable knowledge. Thanks.
37
You are wonderful, man. Explaining such a wide spectrum of electronics, in such brief lucidly.
37
Yep, the starter motor is the most difficult to understand motor, just stand behind the linear motor... Nice animation Paul! And thanks to the guy who gives effort to start that engine using hand!
37
You are correct but it goes further! The "Ground Wire" connects different areas so they are at the same potential. This is most evident at the star point on a transformer. The star point is the source of the Neutral connection AND is bonded down to the body of earth, so if you touch a Neutral whilst standing on the floor there is no potential difference, no Voltage and therefore no current will flow! The services in your home and workplace also have an Earth point where the Gas and Water pipes are connected together (there may also be cross bonding at your hot water tank, boiler and sinks). This means that All "Earthed" points are at a similar potential. This may seem obvious but if you have adjoining properties that are fed from different substations there can be a potential between different lives (even on the same phase) and it is the earth connection down to the body of earth that keeps this to a minimum!
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Thanks!
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Love your videos. Even when it's something I think I already fully understand, I often learn something new. 👍
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This guy is a GENIUS teacher....
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i feel this as one of the best technical YouTube channel, learning with clear explanation. Thanks.
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"Right to Repair" is a concern....
36
Just a quick thanks for all your electrical/engineering content - These subjects can initially be difficult to get your head around, but your explanations and animations make learning the principles a whole lot easier. Excellent work and fantastic content!
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Happy Engineer's day 😁❤️
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OK, this was really well explained.
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I wouldn't compare LEDs at 50 Hz square wave with incandescent lights at 50 Hz sine wave. The fillament stays warm enough to be bright for a bit, it has an integrated smoothing through thermal mass. 50 Hz flicker is very much noticeable.
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So it's an arduino in a rugged case
34
My battery powered hedge trimmer uses BLDC motor, they are impressively powerful. No need for noisy, vibrating petrol trimmers now.
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I'm studying Computer Engineering, this video was really needed for me to understand how to go from theory to practice. Also, a bit funny how I looked up the 555 just a few hours before you posted this.
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There's no doubt that driving a manual is the best. Driving a manual is a skill and is more fun.
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At 70 I need things as simple as can be until I grasp the concept.. this was great.. learning new things is hard but still stratifying!
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