Friday, January 13, 2017

Week One

Not Shocking People: Lesson 1


Week 1

1. What is the class format?   The class is set up over three days: Monday, Wednesday, and Friday. 

Monday:

Class starts discussing the take home quiz assigned the previous Monday. The lab for that week is then discussed with the class, led by Professor Tolga Kaya, from which the students separate into their separate groups of two and begin work on the lab till the end of class, during such time work stations are cleaned up and work is wrapped up.

Wednesday: 

The class spends this day working on the lab discussed on Monday.

Friday:

This day is spent discussing and commenting on each groups blog.

2. What are the important safety rules?

Any and all safety rules established by an instructor/supervisor/company/ext. should be followed and are all important to be followed for the safety of the operator and all others who may be in contact and/or in the immediate vicinity of anything being worked with. With this in mind, for the class environment of EGR 393, all the rules established by Professor Tolga Kaya in his syllabus should be followed with equal necessity and promptness.

For arguments sake, there will be a few named as the most important:

  • When working with an experiment or project, there must be no power applied while it is being assembled or dissembled, and all high voltage points must be discharged to ground with an insulated jumper.
  • Do not work alone when working with energized equipment.
  • Do not simultaneously touch two pieces of equipment. 
  • Do not wear accessories that have metal components(i.e. ring, watch).
  • If standing on a damp or metal floor or have wet hands, do not touch electrical equipment. 
  • Know where the fire extinguisher, med kit, and phone are in case of emergencies.

3. Does a circuit kill?

Yes, a circuit that has a current between 0.1 to 0.2 Amperes will kill. Current above 0.2 have the potential to kill but will more likely lead to severe burns and respiratory failure(stop breathing), which can both lead to death.

4. How do you read color codes?
















5. What is the tolerance?

Tolerance is a measure of the variation from a specified value given on a piece of equipment. For example,

6. Prove all your resistors are within the tolerance range.
The represented resistance in the color code compared to the measured resistance, and the actual deviation of the measured value compared to the represented value.

7. What is the difference between measuring the voltage and current using a DMM? Why?

Apart from needing the positive lead being placed in a separate input when measuring current or voltage, when measuring voltage through a resistor, the leads must be placed on both ends of a resistor while the circuit is live. However, when measuring current, one must disconnect power and break the circuit, connecting one lead to each end of the break, removing hands, and turning on the power supply.

8. How many different voltage values can you get from the power supply? Can each one of them be changed to any value?

You can supply three different voltage values at one time with the power supply provided in Professor Kaya's class. Two of the supplies, the ones labeled A and B, can be changed from 0V to 25V. 

9. Practice Circuit Results

Voltage measurement 

Voltage measurement connection


Current measurement 


Current measurement connection

10. How do you experimentally prove Ohm's Law? 

Ohm's Law: V=I*R => R=V/I
With the resistance predicted to be a fairly constant value, the idea is that as we increase the voltage , the current should go up proportionally, meaning that according to Ohm's law, the resistor value never changes.
We measured the current of a circuit using two resistors at five different voltages. The idea is that the current will rise as the voltage does, making it so that the calculated resistance stays the same. As you can see by our measurements, the current does increase, and when seeing the calculated resistance values, the resistance remains within tolerance.

11. Rube Goldberg circuit

12. Draw the circuit diagram for the Rube Goldberg machine set-up.

(Made using Digi-Key)

13. How can you implement this setup into a Rube Goldberg machine? 

When light is shined on the photo-resistor, the motor will run making a fan spin. The fan will blow over the first of many dominoes that will trigger another section of the Rube Goldberg machine.




7 comments:

  1. i think your blog is organized well. so it is a good start.

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  2. Your group provide a good amount of photos and some good explanations. Good job on the table also.

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  3. Group 7
    Your blog has a really good details but it is missing important information in some questions(question 10 needs to be added more information). other than that, your work is great.

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  4. I liked how detailed your diagrams are, and the detail you put into your lab report.

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  5. This comment has been removed by the author.

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  6. Nice use of Digi-Key to make your circuit diagram!

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  7. Be consistent on captions. Other than that it is a very nice blog. Citing Digikey was a nice touch. Nice tables.

    ReplyDelete