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Yes, when using a step down transformer the amperage is affected.
You step down voltage from an AC generator with a transformer.You step down frequency from an AC generator with a motor/generator set, or with an inverter. This is not a common thing to do.
Usually refers to a transformer. A step up transformer increases the voltage and a step down decreases the voltage by an amount proportional to the ratio of the windings between Primary and Secondary. A 1:2 ratio is a step up and doubles the voltage. A 2:1 would be a step down and halve the voltage.
Frequency does not change when you use a step-up or step-down transformer. Only current and voltage is changed.
As transformers do not work with DC., the answer is a voltage divider network (step down) or a voltage multiplier network (step up).
Melodies move up, down, or stay the same. They can move by step, skip, or leap in either direction.
Disjunct Melody: is a type of melodic motion. Disjunct motion proceeds by leap from one scale degree to the next by intervals larger than a second. Opposite of that, conjunct motion proceeds by step from one scale degree to the next by intervals of a second.
Disjunct Melody: is a type of melodic motion. Disjunct motion proceeds by leap from one scale degree to the next by intervals larger than a second. Opposite of that, conjunct motion proceeds by step from one scale degree to the next by intervals of a second.
As you go up the scale, the 6th and 7th scale degrees are raised one half step each. On the way down, however, they are normal. It depends on which direction the melody is ultimately heading. When 6th and 7th are raised, the create the feeling of leading towards the tonic (1st), hence the name "melodic".
1. step on scale 2. look down
In a melodic minor scale, the 6th and 7th degree of the scale is raised up 1 half step on the way up the scale. On the way back down the scale, the 6th and 7th are back down to the natural form of the minor.
I found this video on you tube. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hj3OqMzNin4
Transformers are used to step up or step down electricity as it moves from the point of generation to the point of consumption.
To turn a major scale to natural minor, lower the third, sixth, and seventh scale tones a half step. To create a natural minor scale from scratch, it is: whole step, half step, whole step, whole step, half step, whole step, whole step. A harmonic minor scale has a seventh raised by a half step above a natural minor scale. A melodic minor scale has a sixth and a seventh raised by a half step above a natural minor scale.
Starting with the root of the scale, the pattern is whole-step, whole-step, half-step, whole-step, whole-step, whole-step, half-step.
Every scale has a progression! For now, lets speak of a major scale, using the c major scale as an example. STEP, STEP, HALF-STEP, STEP, STEP, STEP, HALF-STEP c to d(step, d to e (step), e-f (1/2 step). f-g. g-a. a-b (3 steps), b-c (half step) of course that's just going up backwards to go down. lets try this with three flats in the scale (Key of e-flat) e-flat to f, f-g, g to a-flat, a-flat to b-flat, b-flat to c, c to d, d to e-flat I hope you can see that the pattern remains constant. Now I am not smart to give you a minor scale, a major or minor scale diminished scale, a blues scale and the like. but there are patterns and when you memorize the pattern for each scale applying it is simple.
Tell your boyfriend that they love you then hopefully they will step down a step on the love scale.