Welcome to Instrumentation & Control! If you have and interest in or are currently studying in Instrumentation / Electrical Engineering or completing an apprenticeship or even an Instrument technician looking to brush up your knowledge prior to interview then you this is the channel for you. I have been in engineering both in onshore and offshore chemical and petrochemical industry for 13 years and have lots of different experience I am happy to share with you. From subject overviews to in-depth information there should be a video that interests you, so check them out!
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The other day I had something happen for the first time. I was getting 60 mA in my 0-20 mA loop. I would assumed too high of resistance somewhere but it’s a first
This channel is awesome. Great explanations. I’ve been doing E&I work for over 10 years and I still learn new things everyday. I look up videos to review and refresh things I haven’t done in a while and found this channel while looking up an EH FMR52. I wish I had this channel years ago when I was brand new to the industry.
I highly recommend a solenoid magnet too. It’s a lot better than carrying around 3 9v batteries for that instance you need to actuate a solenoid locally. I’d say that falls along the lines of a “specialty too,” but every technician will encounter a need for it at one point or another
I've encountered this part where lights are controlled by a computer and I found that there are relays in the DB fed by 24V DC while controlling lightning arrangements working on 380V AC
Best intro, now I want to watch every video you have on plcs, I'm an electrician(installation electrician) but I got into an industry that does not deal with plcs and now I want to shift to that,
Im leaving the pipe fitter / welder trade and just accepted an apprentice instrumentician job at the chemical plant i work at, so ill be viewing this channel to train
Resistance change with heat that is why light control is much better but will public trust engineering in military that is the reason for using resistor in circuit
"What makes the operator trust the instrument"? Answer: they don't. Operators ALWAYS know better. That's why they're operators. I once saw a reactor operator who didn't believe what an instrument was telling him, so he tapped on it. I had to point out to him that tapping on a computer screen really wasn't going to work, but since I was just an instrument tech and he was a reactor operator, he just ignored me and kept tapping. Odd!y enough, the reading didn't change.