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An RC network does NOT have a frequency, it does not produce any repetitive signal which you can measure. If you don't believe us, connect your 1K and 0.01uF capacitor is series across the input of your frequency counter and see what it tells you. Try then in parallel and see if it makes any difference.
What it produces is DELAY in voltage change because the resistor limits the flow of current into and out of the capacitor. To measure the delay you have to look at the signal entering the RC network and the signal leaving it and see how much time difference there is between them. A frequency counter is useless for that, you need an oscilloscope, ideally one with a dual trace. You look at both signals and count the time divisions on the X-axis to see how much time difference there is between the input and output waveforms.
I will say this: if you are going to the trouble of measuring time constants like that, it would be quicker to remove the resistor and capacitor from circuit and test them conventionally and it would almost certainly be more cost effective to simply replace them altogether.
To measure the delay you have to look at the signal entering the RC network and the signal leaving it and see how much time difference there is between them.
use a clock/stopwatch and see how long it takes for the voltage to go down and rise up again. The reciprocal of the time in seconds will be what you call frequency.
He is waiting for "HELL to freeze over".It's gone quiet, maybe he's still waiting... :wink:
Brian.
Since they are simply a resistor and a capacitor then why don't you measure the resistance and capacitance?
An RC network does not make a frequency.
An RC network does not make a frequency.
An RC network does not make a frequency.
Use a 100k series resistor feeding a 10uF capacitor to ground. Apply DC to the free end of the resistor and measure the DC voltage across the capacitor (to ground).Since it doesn't make a frequency, what kind of TIME or DELAY is this?
No.An RC network TIME DELAY is not the same kind of TIME you find when you have a DC alternating waveforms, like pulse or squarewaveform, you can measure the time delay between pulses and the time of the period of the waveform
NO!Mostly TIME Delay you can convert into frequency, am I right?
Connect it as the frequency-setting RC in an oscillator circuit.How can I trick the RC network into having a frequency?
What is the "VIA" of an RC network? A VIA is a path on a pcb from one side to the other side.Can I use a Test Signal to inject into the VIA of the RC network to measure the TIME DELAY
Correct.Frequency= The SPEED OR RATE of alternating polarity swing , Cycling back and forth between polarity or a voltage
Yes, in an oscillator circuit.The Charging and Discharging Rate or time can be converted into a frequency?
The RC network can produce a frequency when it is the frequency-setting parts of an oscillator circuit.The RC network itself is not a frequency or a time delay
NO!You have to inject a Test signal to make the RC network into a frequency?
The voltage will slowly rise then when it reaches 63.2% of the input voltage its time should be exactly 1 second.
Mostly TIME Delay you can convert into frequency, am I right?
NO!
How can I trick the RC network into having a frequency?
Connect it as the frequency-setting RC in an oscillator circuit.
The Charging and Discharging Rate or time can be converted into a frequency?
Yes, in an oscillator circuit.
You are completely WRONG again.1 seconds time = 1hz frequency
Maybe you also have trouble understanding English.Why No? When is a TIME delay different than a Time than you can convert to frequency? I guess I don't know the difference between these two TIME's
Get rid of the word, "convert".So a Time delay you can't convert to frequency? but a time period you can convert to frequency?
How can you have a delay between two waveforms? If you have a single waveform made with 1 millisecond repeating pulses that occur every 1 millisecond then one cycle takes 2 milliseconds and the frequency is 500Hz.I guess what you guys are saying is if you have 2 waveforms and the time delay is 1 millisecond part from eachother , 1 millisecond = 1khz, there is no frequency at 1Khz between the 2 waveforms that have a time delay apart from each other. It's just a 1 millisecond time delay
An RC network is not periodic and is not an oscillator. An oscillator is a circuit with a transistor or IC. An RC network sets its frequency.When an RC network is "periodic" it's considered an oscillator?
Yes, the waveforms in an oscillator repeat over and over so they are Periodic.When an RC network is periodic , meaning it's charging and discharging Periodic , than you can measure the frequency only if it's periodic?
A Wien bridge oscillator, a classic Cmos oscillator, a phase shift oscillator, a Bubba oscillator, a 555 oscillator and many more oscillators have their periodic frequency set by an RC network.Most RC networks are not periodic ? only in an oscillator or timer circuit like a 555 timer?
It is called a time delay circuit. A monostable (can be made with a 555 timer IC) can be a time delay circuit.Since an RC network is not periodic, what is it called when a circuit is has a TIME delay but isn't periodic?
You must look at an oscillator circuit to see how the RC network is connected. Many RC oscillators produce a frequency that is not accurate.So If I connect an Oscillator circuit ACROSS in parallel to an RC network , I can then measure the frequency of the RC network from the Oscillators circuits output? So I would have my fluke meter frequency counter on the output pin of the oscillator and the oscillator will be across in parallel to the output of the RC network in circuit
That makes no sense. Instead maybe you connected an RC network properly in an oscillator circuit and measured the frequency of the oscillator.What I just did was convert an RC network that is not periodic into a periodic frequency so i can measure the frequency of the RC network that is in circuit
A capacitor that charges to 63.2% of the DC voltage has no frequency because it is not oscillating.
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