Are you asking if cars transform into robots in real life? They don't.
Scientist are actually making Bumblebee but he isn't a Camaro. I am not going to tell you weather or not there are alien robots. That I Will leave up to you to decide
actualy it is, the japinese made a real transformer.
Go to photograph if you see a transformer
Sadly, Transformers aren't real. But, Bumblebee in most certainly a 'Transformer.' The real name for a 'Transformer' is Cybertronian.
Their not real...but mermaids are. P.S I'm a girl
The inductance of the transformer is much higher than the resistance of the transformer, resulting in very low real power losses (in watts), but some reactive power (vars).
his name is Shea LeBeuof. Nice isn't it?
An efficient transformer will convert more than 99% of the input energy into output energy, therefore wasting less than 1%.
Totally transformers are not real but there planet is real but it is full of dark energy.Anyway if they we're real then you can call the transformers i mean autobot's
Sounds more like a "homework" or "test" question, rather than a real-world question, and vague, at that! Could you re-phrase your question in a better, more-precise context, or check it for typos? Right now, your question seems to ask "What's the advantage of using a transformer, instead of using a transformer-coupled circuit?"...which makes no sense, since a "transformer-coupled circuit" USES a transformer.
Dino is the ferrari italia,but the real name is Mirage.
It doesn't really matter which way around you use a transformer, the primary winding is ALWAYS whichever winding you connect to the supply, and the secondary winding is ALWAYS whichever winding you connect to the load. For either connection, the turns ratio will ALWAYS equal the voltage ratio for an ideal transformer (or close enough for a real transformer).
No. A transformer doesn't source or sink energy, or convert energy from one form to another.The ideal transformer merely changes the parameters of an electrical current, with no effect on energy levels.A non-ideal (real-life) transformer decreases the energy in the electrical circuit, because its lossesrob some of the energy and turn it to heat.