Several oscillator designs use a tapped coil in the tuned circuit. The most common is the Hartley oscillator.
a circuit in which secondary coil alone is tuned
an Hartley oscillator uses a tapped inductor ( i.e an inductor with an additional connection at a suitable position in turns of the coil. ) with a specific tap ratio as per the circuit gain and design. For Low Frequency oscillators large inductances are required which have large number of coil turns. It is possible to get suitable ratios for such values hence this circuit is prefered.
No because hartley uses inductors which are bulky and economically not feasible to obtain tuning inductors as compared to colpitt's which uses capacitors which are relatively very cheap and small.
no, in an ac circuit the coil provides impedance but the DC coil needs some resistance to limit the current
A blowout coil connected in series with contactor's auxiliary contacts that shunt around the main contactor contacts. The coil is out of the circuit when the main contactor contacts are closed and in the circuit when the main contactor contacts are open.
A Colpitts oscillator is the electrical dual of a Hartley oscillator. The Hartley oscillator is an LC electronic oscillator that derives its feedback from a tapped coil in parallel with a capacitor. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Colpitts_oscillator http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hartley_oscillator ~MECHASUN~ A Colpitts oscillator is the electrical dual of a Hartley oscillator. The Hartley oscillator is an LC electronic oscillator that derives its feedback from a tapped coil in parallel with a capacitor. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Colpitts_oscillator http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hartley_oscillator ~MECHASUN~
a circuit in which secondary coil alone is tuned
An oscillator works in different ways in different electronic equipment. For example, there is a quartz oscillator in a quartz watch that can keep track of the time. A pendulum of a clock is an oscillator that goes back and forth using potential and kinetic energy.
an Hartley oscillator uses a tapped inductor ( i.e an inductor with an additional connection at a suitable position in turns of the coil. ) with a specific tap ratio as per the circuit gain and design. For Low Frequency oscillators large inductances are required which have large number of coil turns. It is possible to get suitable ratios for such values hence this circuit is prefered.
No because hartley uses inductors which are bulky and economically not feasible to obtain tuning inductors as compared to colpitt's which uses capacitors which are relatively very cheap and small.
Coil tapped humbuckers definitely sound different than real single-coils. You can get usable clean tones with coil tapped humbuckers, but it won't be the same.
If question is about a transformer's tapped coil then the taps are a way of getting different voltages from one transformer. The end of the transformer's coil is the common point and the taps to this common point will give different voltages depending on where in the coil the taps are taken from.
it is a tea with something floating on it.......
The most common ways are:Mechanically, by placing a coil in a rotating magnetic field, or a rotating coil in a fixed magnetic field. This is how AC power is generated.Electronically, using an oscillator circuit. This is how sinusoidal waveforms are produced in all sorts of electronic equipment.
AnswerOscillator that uses two passive elements for the timing. Namely resistor and capacitor.AnswerIt's an oscillator whose frequency-determining "tank" does not contain an inductive element, like a coil. These are good for extremely low frequencies--down to a few Hertz--but LC oscillators are better at radio frequencies.AnswerAn Rc oscillator is an oscillator that uses 3 or more phase shift networks, ( a network of a capacitor and resistor) as a frequency determining network (tank circuit) and a transistor to amplify that output, that only allows a certain frequency through by only letting the frequency that is able to shift 180 degrees out of phase through. And also has a feedback network from the collector (of the transistor) circuit, to compensate for circuit loss to oscillation.
colpitts oscillator has two coils in series and one capacitor in parallel. hartley oscillator has one capacitor and one coil in parallel
A tapped inductor is a coil to which electrical access is available at more points than only the two ends. Connection points are provided at one or more points on the coil that are between the ends. Each such point is called a 'tap'.