Sunday, June 16, 2024

Study Aid Review: The Circuit Analysis Tutor: Volume 3

 


Volume 3 of Jason's circuit analysis tutor set includes the material that comes just about at the halfway point of a Circuits I class. Specifically, source transformations, Thevenin and Norton equivalent circuits (both with dependent and independent sources), maximum power transfer, and superposition. These concepts are built from and/or use the various techniques of simplifying circuits like Kirchhoff’s laws, node voltage, and mesh current, which is covered in the first two volumes. This covers about two weeks, give or take, worth of material that will be presented in class (depending on what your professor decides to focus on). In my class, this material was covered just after our second exam which was basically a mid-term exam. Like volumes 1 and 2, this set just covers DC circuits and does not include circuits with AC sources.

The set follows much the same format as Jason's other math and engineering lessons. He introduces a topic and then goes through several example problems, working them out step-by-step. I personally find his explanations very easy to follow and was able to comprehend them a lot better than I did reading the textbook. In fact, many times I found that the textbook made more sense after I had watched Jason's videos. So, if you learn best by watching example problems done, and do not mind watching what is essentially a simulated lecture, then this is a good study aid to use.


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