Great lyrics, heartfelt and beautiful. A father’s love never fades away… why are so many fathers ostracized for being a loving parent? Do mothers forget that it takes two???
Im states away from both of my boys because of work I'm so used ro being around them everyday ive been gone for a month but it feels like forever since ive heard their laughs or screams or little pitter patter feet there are so many things where i am at that just remind me of them everyday, just waiting to go back home daddy will be home soon my boys daddy misses you so much 😢😢
Thank you so much Mark! I still need to watch the latter portion a few times to have it stuck in memory but the first portion was very clever and easy to remember! Maybe it's worth getting tattooed on my hand :P
Its funny. Im leaning all this for the first time and looking at the wheel for the past month, Ive been saying to myself "I can see that theres an easier way to memorize this but I can also see that I cant see it it yet. Ill wait until this all makes more sense to me then tackle this for easier memory." Well you beat me to it my friend. Excellent content! Thank you for making this easier for me and everyone watching!
i think that was helpful in simplifying the wheel however you sort of lost me at the end portion when your explaining the squared and desirable part. I think further explanation or even example with number would help. wasn't sure what you were squaring and stuff tbh. Im very visual when it comes to learning that why i recommended that.
Mark, this is so simple it's awesome! I'm an instructional designer looking for an easy way to teach this to employees who work with power. I think I've got it! Thanks so much for constructing this easy to follow video. Mitch
Volts doesn’t equal energy. You should be ashamed of yourselves right now. Force doesn’t equal energy. When did RU-vidrs change the definition of volts in ohms law. Wtf happened in history. And who payed you to change the explanation in electrical engineering history.
I like this...but I am very rusty...LOL I would like to see a few more examples with numbers...I suck at math...LOL - but great concept with your reduction!
You sir are a hero. Going for my RI test this Monday and it’s closed book and this is just what I needed. Thanks. The only thing I think would be worth mentioning is when you have the exponents I kind of thought of it as I (amperage) is shared between both wheels and therefore it gets squared in the remaining formulas after the basic ohm’s law formulas. And then the same thing sort of occurred with my thought on Voltage being squared because it occurs twice in your new formula again only happening in the remaining formulas after the easy ones are taken out of the wheel so to speak. Great video.
Taking a test this friday, and I was trying to find patterns. No way! You nailed it with this solution. I knew putting (I) in both groups is the same as " Being in Love. Relationaly. Put the word love in both left and right circles. And. "- In love- replacing current "I". If two people arent showing love or love each other you aren't, "In Love". Haha.. So 4 me its easy to remember it, draw it and relate to this. Im actually "in love" now, with this awesome idea you created. Genius! Thanks... will help out.
It is easy enough to understand using your formula (simply because I'm already accustomed to performing these individually , but I'm not sure how easy yours is to remember. You did a nice job coming up with this and are obviously a problem solver.
I thought i found a better cheat sheet from this but I dont think this will work for every problem How would solve (What is the current flow of a circuit that is delivering 43,200 watts and has 3 ohms resistance?) Need (I) only know P and R ...
Hi Richard, Thank you for giving me some specifics. This is mentioned in the video but might be a little hard to wrap your head around. Using the Ohm's Law side... Put 3 (In "R") where it belongs. Leave (Your desired variable) "I" blank, and put 43,200 in the (Placeholder for calculation) "V". Perform the calculation "P (in V Place) / R", I = √14,400... Now "√14,400 = 120... I = 120 amps. If you wanted "V", you would put 43,200 in the "I" location and calculate accordingly... Please let me know if it helped.
@@MarcMasonMusic Gotcha it does help a bit. This does make it a little easier to remember but I'm a little skepticle so I will try it on more calculations
Hi Ivan, Thank you for the question. With this formula, there is no need to apply the "square". It may be a 2 part process. If you have " i and R " you use that to get " V " (The Ohm side of the formula)... Take " V " to the "Power" side of the formula to use " i and V " to get " P ". Does that help you?
Hello Ri, I'm not sure I understand the question? This single formula combines the Power and Ohms formula, therefore eliminating the need to have any "Squared" formulas. Both the Power and Ohms share the Amperage on the bottom... It is the element that joins both formulas together. Also, Voltage is the same value in both locations... just put it where you need it. As far as the top formula, that is a little more difficult to wrap your head around. To make it more mathematically correct I should have written it as X = √ (P */ R) . Does this help?
@@MarcMasonMusic in your video u showed us the l2 x R how would u do E2 divided by R , on this , does the share amp or voltage always has to be a 2 what if they gave us a 5 on your amp does that mean i would have to multiply the 24 volts to the 5amps ?
This is a great help for me Marc and I appreciate your video. I think you explained it perfectly and if you have any more tips concerning this type of material please post it. Thanks.
This made all of my tests in first year a breeze! Very easy to remember, the second equation is a little more complex but better than having to learn 12 instead of 2. Definitely sharing this
Sir, thank you for this video. It'll help me in my up coming exam for teacher 😁. I had trouble finding ways to remember this. But the answer was in the video ..thank you! More power to you
Thanks for putting this together. It's a very helpful roadmap to the unknown variable. Maths is not my field but need to learn this to change careers. I'm surprised there aren't far more views! Cheers
Thanks Will! It's a rather specialized field so I'm very happy with the number of views and the traction it is getting on RU-vid. I appreciate very much your comment and support!!!
I'm confused as to why the last equation works. The square root of 12 X 3 is not 36. Just the same as the square root of 12 divided by 3 is not the square root of 4...
Thanks for the question. I am not an educated mathematician but I think I see where I went wrong. Maybe I should have written it as "X = √(P */ R)". The "square root" takes place after the multiplication or division. 12x3 = 36. √36 = 6. Let me know if that helps.
@@glenhickox724 Hi Glen, Thank you for the question. So sorry about the delayed response. To be clear... can I have the variables and values you are using? What are the results you have come up with?