EveryCircuit
Contact
Reviews
Home
MmmAaaXxx
modified 10 years ago

woah

1
5
148
01:28:49
I was just trying to make an silicon controlled rectifier (an SCR), but look what happens when the switch is closed (you might need to wait to see).
published 10 years ago
hurz
10 years ago
You probably don't know, resistors and voltage sources are available with many different properties. Resistors are not only used as 1kOhm there are many more parameter! And that make sense even you don't know why, just trust me. The world has more surprises then a random circuit. You might wonder, but if you understand more about electronic you will maybe one day find out. Today its enough, tomorrow you can start reading something about physics and electrons. Hope that help, and sleep well, see u.
MmmAaaXxx
10 years ago
I know, I know about the proporties, but this app doesn't allow you to access them.
hurz
10 years ago
Take a nap.
colloquiallyineffable
10 years ago
What you have here is not equivalent to an scr. The circuit you have built here is called either a common collector amplifier or an emitter follower. It is a simple current amplifier. The reason your scope appears to go haywire after some time is because the EC scope is auto-ranging and you have no input signal, so the scope zooms in more and more until it finds the noise floor
MmmAaaXxx
10 years ago
The switch is connected to the gate of the silicon controlled rectifier.

EveryCircuit is an easy to use, highly interactive circuit simulator and schematic capture tool. Real-time circuit simulation, interactivity, and dynamic visualization make it a must have application for professionals and academia. EveryCircuit user community has collaboratively created the largest searchable library of circuit designs. EveryCircuit app runs online in popular browsers and on mobile phones and tablets, enabling you to capture design ideas and learn electronics on the go.

Copyright © 2026 by MuseMaze, Inc.     Terms of use     Privacy policy