A fuse is the simplest protective device for over current in an electric circuit.
Most typically, the most common and easiest-obtainable protective device is - a fuse. A fuse is such a device that is designed to break the circuit if certain conditions are met (typically a level of voltage, current, or a combination of the two).
Most typically, the most common and easiest-obtainable protective device is - a fuse. A fuse is such a device that is designed to break the circuit if certain conditions are met (typically a level of voltage, current, or a combination of the two).
moct is device measure the current by means of faraday's effect..
A Fuse
An ammeter is a device that indicates the presence of an electric current by measuring the flow of electric charges through a circuit.
A microphone is the device that changes sounds into electric current.
"Rated current" is the current the device (motor or transformer?) is designed to handle at full load. "Tripping current" is the current where a protective device (fuse, breaker) will open to protect the device from overload/overheating. "Tripped current", may be the current the tripping device measured prior to making the decision to trip, if you are reading this from a digital protective device like a relay or OCR.
an inverse time protective device is a protective relay with definite minimum operating current and definite minimum operating time for a given current. the device will ensure that increasing current in a fault, that the operating time will be decreased. Preventing an overload.
ammeter, which is understood as an amp meter
electric genarator
An electronic device uses electric to represent coded information. Variations in the current are converted to codes used by the electronic device.
The earth connection in an electric kettle is a safety measure to protect against electric shocks. It helps to divert any leaked current to the ground, preventing it from flowing through a person if a fault occurs in the kettle. This protects the user from potential electric hazards.