- #1
Starwanderer1
- 18
- 0
Hi!
A little food for thought for people who like high school physics labs..
In a standard rheostat(I have seen only the cylindrical one..the question is about rheostats of this shape..), we find a metal wire wound over a cylindrical core. The wire is wound with very closely spaced turns and as we know,it serves as a potential divider.
With this sort of construction why doesn't it function as an inductor?
(in any simple DC circuit with a Rh we find the current to rise to the peak instantaneously rather than exponentially as with an inductor, proving that in no way a Rh can act as an inductor)..
I guess the trick lies in the construction, please apprise me of the same..
Reply please..
A little food for thought for people who like high school physics labs..
In a standard rheostat(I have seen only the cylindrical one..the question is about rheostats of this shape..), we find a metal wire wound over a cylindrical core. The wire is wound with very closely spaced turns and as we know,it serves as a potential divider.
With this sort of construction why doesn't it function as an inductor?
(in any simple DC circuit with a Rh we find the current to rise to the peak instantaneously rather than exponentially as with an inductor, proving that in no way a Rh can act as an inductor)..
I guess the trick lies in the construction, please apprise me of the same..
Reply please..