Yes. Their Black Ice tour is going to New Zealand and Australia in 2010. The tour arrives in New Zealand on Jan 28 in Wellington and ends on March 8 in Perth, Australia.
Highway to hell tour.
When Brian Johnson quit after the black ice tour
Yes, AC/DC opened for Journey during the early years of their careers. Notably, they were part of the tour for Journey's album "Infinity" in 1978. At that time, AC/DC was still gaining popularity in the United States, and this tour helped introduce them to a broader audience.
Today, Angus Young is with AC/DC wrapping up their Black Ice World Tour.
No, he is still alive. It was AC/DC's previous singer that died, Bon Scott.
they r not coming to canada the last concert they did was in 2010 to the black ice tour
Highway to hell tour.
trains can run on both ac and dc. In India trains run with dc and there is a plan to convert them to move on ac by 2010
When Brian Johnson quit after the black ice tour
A grid DC tie is where AC is converted into DC, which is then converted to AC again on the other side. If you have a DC to AC transformer setup, you'd need to add a second one going the "other" way for a full DC tie station.
The awnser and the blizzards supported AC/DC in Ireland.
An AC transformer works by changing the magnetic field going through a coil. The change is unavailable in the case of DC. It is possible to convert DC to AC (with an inverter) and then change the AC voltage to another value and rectify it to get DC at a different voltage.
I actually went to this concert, but can't remember who opened for them.
Yes, AC/DC opened for Journey during the early years of their careers. Notably, they were part of the tour for Journey's album "Infinity" in 1978. At that time, AC/DC was still gaining popularity in the United States, and this tour helped introduce them to a broader audience.
Thunderstruck by AC/DC
A typical AC waveform is symmetrical about a zero crossing point. You can bias the AC with DC such that the AC waveform is symmetrical about the DC voltage.
formula for ac to dc