How ELECTRICITY works - working principle

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  • Опубликовано: 31 май 2024
  • In this video we learn how electricity works starting from the basics of the free electron in the atom, through conductors, voltage, current, resistors, led, to capacitors and transformers.
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    #electricity #electrical #engineering

Комментарии • 1,9 тыс.

  • @EngineeringMindset
    @EngineeringMindset  6 лет назад +507

    ⚠️ *Found this video super useful?* Buy Paul a coffee to say thanks: ☕
    PayPal: www.paypal.me/TheEngineerinMindset

    • @apurbabiswas7218
      @apurbabiswas7218 6 лет назад +16

      Great animations. Nice work

    • @Bluuuuuuuuuuuu
      @Bluuuuuuuuuuuu 6 лет назад +7

      How about how does Basic Memory work???

    • @MrAquinas1
      @MrAquinas1 6 лет назад +18

      I am an engineer, but I haven’t seen all your videos. I still recommend them to students. For purposes of the home handyman, I hope you cover an explanation of why the AC in basic home wiring has a hot wire and a neutral wire if alternating current means alternating flow of current. My rough and dirty explanation to friends, just so they learn to be safe, is that one side is active and the other, a current carrying ground, is passive, but never take wire color for granted. Always identify the hot wire and account for why it is the hot wire in whatever box you find it.

    • @molestedmango
      @molestedmango 6 лет назад +3

      Does RUclips not pay revenue for ads anymore?

    • @ten7875
      @ten7875 6 лет назад +2

      if the electric current is the flow of electrons, then the electric current should also flow from the negative terminal to the positive terminal, but why the electric current flows from the positive terminal to the negative terminal

  • @IETCHX69
    @IETCHX69 6 лет назад +6189

    How smart am I ? Smart enough to know , I need to watch this twice .

    • @ieatcops699
      @ieatcops699 6 лет назад +353

      my teacher pointed out this comment lol

    • @mr.e0311
      @mr.e0311 6 лет назад +202

      The more you learn the more you realize you didnt know!

    • @EngineeringMindset
      @EngineeringMindset  6 лет назад +1810

      No one is born with knowledge, we accumulate it over time. Keep learning.

    • @tigershade1
      @tigershade1 6 лет назад +240

      at least 10 times for me

    • @LolLol-ch7sl
      @LolLol-ch7sl 5 лет назад +182

      That doesn't matter. Read, watch, listen etc until you understand. Never ever give up.
      I am jealous you can understand it after only watching it twice, for most things I need to read/watch it 3/4 times. I have only watched it once and I don't know everything I need to know from this clip.

  • @Learnwithme.07
    @Learnwithme.07 3 года назад +800

    4th year in electrical engineering now. Still come back to these.
    Always good to refresh the basics 👍🏽

    • @heptex8989
      @heptex8989 Год назад +19

      Do you know any good references to Regular and Advanced level guides for electric engineering? I dont mind if its physical or digital

    • @metaverseplayer
      @metaverseplayer Год назад +8

      I’m getting into an EEE Msc and I feel less imposter syndrome reading this.

    • @tastyDungeon
      @tastyDungeon 9 месяцев назад +33

      ​@@metaverseplayeradvanced students will often forget the basics because they store the information and don't actively use it anymore because their mind is occupied by more advanced matters. There is no shame in going back to the basics often. Computer programmers do this too, googling the most basic stupid questions.

    • @Shaqiliciouss
      @Shaqiliciouss Месяц назад +1

      @@metaverseplayer im graduating from my MSc in molecular medicine in a few months and I still sing the mitosis rap in my head to remember, and need to google whether the DNA double helix is left or right handed. The more advanced you get, the more you zoom into highly specific and advanced subjects and forget the (often simple) basics. It's just how the brain works. Look throught a microscope for too long and you forget what the big picture looks like.

  • @elizaclouds
    @elizaclouds Год назад +284

    This actually made me tear up, I’ve been struggling to understand how electricity works for years, and I’ve been panicking and trying to learn it because my exam is coming up in a few months. I can’t thank you enough for this. Genuine life saver.

    • @romaniaforever7103
      @romaniaforever7103 8 месяцев назад +4

      Have you passed your exam?

    • @elizaclouds
      @elizaclouds 8 месяцев назад

      @@romaniaforever7103 Yes I got 9-8 in science and now I'm doing it for my A Levels!

    • @do_ubleS
      @do_ubleS 8 месяцев назад

      And I wonder??

    • @wonipage.
      @wonipage. 2 месяца назад +1

      i felt so depressed yesterday that i caught fever and my anxiety went super high that whoever i talk to, i tear up not knowing. I CANT THANK HIM ENOUGHHHH

  • @sohailislam3416
    @sohailislam3416 3 года назад +2309

    I'm not joking I swear these videos explain more than a teacher does in a year in a span of 10 mins

    • @firebladetenn6633
      @firebladetenn6633 3 года назад +117

      That’s because these videos are actually trying to teach you.

    • @firebladetenn6633
      @firebladetenn6633 2 года назад +26

      @CensorsRtheRealFascists True, but individual teachers can be exceptions. Like a teacher who has and still does work in the field trying to make sure you understand not only what it takes to pass the necessary tests, but also how to do the real world job.

    • @ryan24a73
      @ryan24a73 2 года назад +1

      school loves AI no heart

    • @roppypeck8934
      @roppypeck8934 2 года назад +22

      I went to electronics communications school in the early 80s. Agreed. This guy is a great speaker/teacher. Very easy to comprehend. The teachers we had were only good at confusing us and we had to figure most of it out ourselves. Maybe that's what they wanted. Love this channel. 👍

    • @bmark6971
      @bmark6971 2 года назад +13

      Higher education is dragged out on purpose for tuition. You can learn many of the things in these videos by working in an electric motor shop and actually caring to do research about what your doing. 10 months and I know more than most electricians I fix things for.

  • @DannTeBg
    @DannTeBg 4 года назад +431

    I wish we were taught with videos like that in school, i would've paid much more attention...

    • @DonSanchez
      @DonSanchez 4 года назад +34

      Yeah it feels like this 10 minute video teaches more & better than an hour or more in school lessons...

    • @gavinsgolfs5288
      @gavinsgolfs5288 3 года назад +3

      I’m doing this for a school assignment I don’t wanna do it I could watch it if I didn’t have some one telling me to

    • @Benpolter7
      @Benpolter7 3 года назад

      Ehhh that’s just u

    • @dangerzara
      @dangerzara 3 года назад +4

      no you wouldn't

    • @aungyethu6560
      @aungyethu6560 3 года назад +3

      School is a waste of time if you actually wanna learn.

  • @jovetj
    @jovetj 5 лет назад +453

    Key point I think was overlooked: the more electrons in the outermost shell, the stronger the nucleus holds onto them. This is why materials with just one valence electron (living in the outermost shell) make the best conductors of electricity-they are the loosest held by the atom. Valence electrons even make the atom smaller.... an atom with two valence electrons will be just slightly smaller in diameter than the atom with one less proton/electron: the nucleus holds the electrons tighter and closer, which makes the atom's diameter slightly smaller. The metals copper, silver, and gold are excellent conductors because they have one valence electron and the size of the atoms is a "sweet spot" for how loosely that valence electron is held.

    • @gregsteiner7204
      @gregsteiner7204 3 года назад +4

      I thought it was the more protons makes the atom shrink in size due to more centrifugal force

    • @onichan924
      @onichan924 3 года назад +21

      I though electrons existed in a cloud of probability.

    • @jovetj
      @jovetj 3 года назад +35

      @@onichan924 Yes, their precise location in space is probabilistic, but the probability outside of those shells is practically zero.

    • @Ethanpca
      @Ethanpca 3 года назад +3

      This was the exact question I was wondering! Thanks for answering it!

    • @stevenl7878
      @stevenl7878 3 года назад +24

      Just remember this is his first video and his audience may not be electrical engineers or scientists so the balance of detail vs general principle is always a compromise.

  • @johnnytightlips991
    @johnnytightlips991 3 года назад +49

    Anyone else trying to teach themselves basic science because they weren't paying attention in school all them years ago?

  • @turd_
    @turd_ 4 года назад +482

    I just need you to know that you're saving my ass in online physics rn

    • @yijiezeng7533
      @yijiezeng7533 4 года назад +18

      same i literally can not understand online physics lessons

    • @AlbertoRivas13
      @AlbertoRivas13 3 года назад +5

      same here lmao

    • @ryan24a73
      @ryan24a73 2 года назад +7

      school wants gayness

    • @coralcreates
      @coralcreates 17 дней назад

      @@ryan24a73?

  • @haroldbowman1363
    @haroldbowman1363 5 лет назад +744

    Great educational videos. Wish these were available 10 years ago when I was teaching. Very powerful teaching aid. Thank you for your work.

    • @sai63836
      @sai63836 3 года назад +18

      Tbh ive learned more about physics from these videos then in school its literally so easy to under stand compared to the 100 year old out dated garbage we call the education system

    • @immaculatesquid
      @immaculatesquid 3 года назад +7

      @@sai63836 school produces employees nothing else. corrupt agreement between high schools colleges and government to solder young adults with debt that will weigh them down into their 30s and 40s. I guess one good thing is that half of all debt is acquired by grad school students, can't say they don't know what they're doing.....

    • @ryan24a73
      @ryan24a73 2 года назад +2

      my dad is just like you thanks for serving an protecting

    • @eastasiansarewhitesbutduet9825
      @eastasiansarewhitesbutduet9825 2 года назад

      @@sai63836 But much math and rigor were skipped over. If your goal is just to understand then these videos are good enough. Definitely not good enough if you want to be a professional in the field.

    • @andie_pants
      @andie_pants 2 года назад

      Airman Bowman (I cannot tell your rank by your photo, hence the overall USAF honorific), I thank you for your educational service.

  • @yasmine9046
    @yasmine9046 3 года назад +57

    In school we spend too little time on the basics so we drag a lot a "not so solid knowledge" for years. Thanks, from France, for these amazing videos

  • @MainesssBanda-md6wc
    @MainesssBanda-md6wc 8 месяцев назад +6

    I used to tell my late Papa that I will be an engineer one day others say you are a girl can you not follow another career you know what engineering is a talent i am able to fix phones, speakers and touch light iam 19years old iam hoping soon to go to university never give up on your career you are strong the way you are .

  • @jonmoore8777
    @jonmoore8777 Год назад +61

    I work as an industrial electrician. This channel has been very informative at a slightly more professional level than typically relayed in the field. Much appreciated.

    • @jakewilkins5986
      @jakewilkins5986 Год назад +1

      That’s what I’m looking to do, can I ask you some questions? I’d love to get a perspective on it

    • @rendyyt2268
      @rendyyt2268 Год назад

      Please recommend other channel like this to learn about electronics more🙏

    • @sreeharim9676
      @sreeharim9676 Год назад

      ​@@rendyyt2268 found any??

    • @enriqueosorio3731
      @enriqueosorio3731 9 месяцев назад

      @@sreeharim9676 LunchBox Sessions, they have a website too. It requires a subscription but definitely worth it

    • @almarazmichael11
      @almarazmichael11 3 месяца назад +1

      ​@@jakewilkins5986did u end up getting into electrical?

  • @heavymeddle28
    @heavymeddle28 5 лет назад +134

    I'm 47. Work in construction and love to "destroy" things and put them together. Almost like a speed freak... But I've always been "dyslexic" when it comes to electricity and stuff like that. This video helped me more than the school did about electricity. Cheers to that☺

    • @Aerox90
      @Aerox90 4 года назад +5

      I'm 30, and I love to "build" stuff!
      ...that I later end up destroying due to the result being terrible... 😂 But that adrenaline-rush is probably more driven by "hate" in my case... 😋😏

    • @dp0813
      @dp0813 4 года назад +6

      You know your "dyslexia" is actually natural & intuitive, because Ben Franklin got it wrong. He simply guessed which direction the "fire" in the wires was flowing but he guessed wrong so now our conventions of positive & negative are backwards. So your intuition is actually correct, but also probably why it's hard for you to grasp EE concepts. Don't give up; stay positive (which is really the "negative" side of a battery....lol!)! 🤓👍

    • @ilovegoldendoodles1975
      @ilovegoldendoodles1975 4 года назад +1

      Lol I’m 14 and I’m still having to watch this

    • @heavymeddle28
      @heavymeddle28 3 года назад

      @Amber Newell because its fun.

  • @OskarPiano
    @OskarPiano 5 лет назад +118

    This is the first movie that CLEARLY explains all presented concepts. The visual aspect, the order, the simplicity and grouping of subjects (e.g. just stating that the wire generates a field and counting different setups of cables and indicating just relation of strength of the field between setups).
    This comment applies to all electricity related videos. This is a modern (adjusted to psychology of learning) video that I am keeping for my children to use it as best material for teaching the concept.
    The only thing I am sorry is that there isn't many of such quality materials for more concepts.
    This video is perfect as well the other ones of yours about electricity.
    This comment also refers to the speed of voice, the intonation clearly marking start, middle and end of sentence. It refers to separate intonation when doing a digression.
    This is a world class educational video.
    It is so good it is a pleasure to watch it more than once... again... just for pleasure that everything is so clear.
    Last thing. I believe you are able to explain it so nicely because among different advantages you really understand it and others either lack the teaching skills or real conceptual knowledge.
    This means this is a great video showing HOW to teach.

  • @salfred8252
    @salfred8252 Год назад +44

    I remember being 16 and sitting in physics class not grasping any of these concepts in the slightest and feeling like a failure whilst watching my peers make sense of what was being said. Almost ten years later, in an attempt to earn my bachelors, I've started self learning before i begin my program and this channel is a god-send. Simple yet thorough explanations paired with incredibly helpful illustrations and I'm actually finding myself enjoying the topics.

    • @AudioMixedVideoAMV
      @AudioMixedVideoAMV 10 месяцев назад +2

      I hope you clear it man 💪

    • @salfred8252
      @salfred8252 10 месяцев назад +3

      @@AudioMixedVideoAMV Thanks a million. I start in a month and I'm kinda nervous about being in a classroom after all this time. Thanks for the encouragement. All the best to you too.

    • @user-rl1jp2qf3d
      @user-rl1jp2qf3d 5 месяцев назад +2

      YOU CAN DO IT U ARE sTRONG AND BRaVE

    • @aferretwithatophat1882
      @aferretwithatophat1882 2 месяца назад

      What grade is this taught in? I don't go to school, but I'm hoping when I do I won't struggle again

    • @salfred8252
      @salfred8252 2 месяца назад +1

      @@aferretwithatophat1882 Fifth form, which I would imagine is 9th or 10th grade? I had to it for my first university semester

  • @ericamartinez8229
    @ericamartinez8229 3 года назад +56

    I CANT THANK YOU ENOUGH!!! I was struggling with the theory and how it worked. This helped me understand how electricity flows. I am in school for appliance repair and this has been a struggle, until now! Is it all beginning to make sense! Thank you!!!

  • @rajivkrishnatr
    @rajivkrishnatr 6 лет назад +524

    My high school syllabus in 10 mins. Only if I'd understood these things so clearly back then, I'd have been a better engineer... 😰

  • @Postal268
    @Postal268 3 года назад +93

    This has answered so many questions I have had for a long time. I even became an electrician apprentice at one point cause I figured I would learn something about this, sadly not a single electrician there even knew the electricity was the flow of electrons... They knew nothing about the science just how to wire a house, which was also useful knowledge I am glad I learned.

    • @benardmusyoki4174
      @benardmusyoki4174 3 года назад

      Really?

    • @WeirdTruckerGirl
      @WeirdTruckerGirl 2 года назад +10

      I feel like they were taking the piss. Since you’re an apprentice they probably were messing with you.

    • @danieliglesias1314
      @danieliglesias1314 2 года назад +1

      As a apprentice you’ll put with all the bs from ass holes who think they’re better than you but ignore them and self educate like I do 👍🏻

    • @CreativeKrist
      @CreativeKrist 2 года назад +12

      That’s actually very common in trades, most electricians focus on the practical knowledge that’s gets the job done like electrical codes and techniques. It’s not necessary to fully understand the science behind it but it does set you apart from the rest if you decided to inform yourself on electrical theory. Most Journeyman and master electricians have at least a basic knowledge of this stuff.

  • @johnjacobs6234
    @johnjacobs6234 4 года назад +39

    Electrons actually move very slowly through a wire connected to some voltage source. What really happens is the electric field sloshes the electrons in the direction we call the direction of current flow and the electric field propagates very close to the speed of light. Slightly less since it's not a vacuum.

    • @painpage5519
      @painpage5519 8 месяцев назад +1

      correct, the picture is wrong

  • @WavySoldierGuyPS
    @WavySoldierGuyPS Год назад +6

    No joke. I've been studying electricity for like about a year and half. I'm trying to pass my BAC (French college degree, I'm French) in technology since I wanna become a cyber-security expert so I have no electronics background, only IT and programming background... I'm forced to learn electronics since it's apart of my program, and in 1.5 year, I never learnt anything from my professors. You, in one video, taught me more than them in 10 minutes. Big gg! +1 sub!

    • @EngineeringMindset
      @EngineeringMindset  Год назад +3

      Great to hear the content helps. You seem fluent in English, but just incase we also make them in French here: ruclips.net/user/Mentalit%C3%A9Ing%C3%A9nieur

    • @WavySoldierGuyPS
      @WavySoldierGuyPS Год назад +1

      @@EngineeringMindset I'll surely check it out! English is like a natural language to me, been talking in it since I was 9 years old since I moved out of France to Australia for about 8 years so I have absolutely no problem understanding English or writing in it. However I'll surely check out the French one for the vocabulary, thank you for that small attention! 👍

  • @uwekonnigsstaddt524
    @uwekonnigsstaddt524 4 года назад +16

    Refreshing my mind from high school (37 years ago) when I took Radio & TV repairs classes.

  • @EnterJustice
    @EnterJustice 3 года назад +3

    Great video, short & to the point as it should be!
    ---------
    01:30 INSULATOR: atoms without free electrons in valence shell
    CONDUCTOR: atoms that can pass electrons - surround with insulator (e.g. copper wire inside rubber)
    02:15 Atoms are passed randomly in any direction
    Connect conductive material to CLOSED circuit with power source -> 03:09 VOLTAGE (pushing force, analogy: pressure in water pipe) forces electrons to move in same direction, trying to get to the other terminal
    03:23 VOLT= work (Joules, heat/light) per group of flowing electrons (Coulomb)
    03:59 AMP = unit of current (analogy: flow of water in pipe), 1 Amp = 1 Coulomb/second
    04:37 RESISTANCE (unit = Ohms) = restriction on flow of electrons -- factors: length (longer = more resistance), thickness (thicker = less resistance), material (copper has lower electron collision rate than iron -> copper offers less resistance), temperature (hotter = less resistance)
    In circuits without inductances or capacitance Ohm's law: Voltage (V, in Volts) = Current (I, in Amps) * Resistance (R, in Ohms) -> Current = Voltage / Resistance & Resistance = Voltage / Current
    Power (P, in Watts) = Voltage * Current
    04:59 RESISTORS restrict flow of electrons, e.g. protect other components or create light/heat (05:16 high enough collission rate of electrons due to resistance => incandescence)
    05:40 INDUCTOR - coiling a wire intensifies its natural magnetic field as current passes through it -> electrons in wire become affected.
    More turns in coil / iron core / more current ---> stronger magnetic field ---> electromagnets + induction motors
    06:27 AC GENERATORS; passing magnetic field THROUGH coil -> induced electromotive force -> induce voltage, cause current to flow if in circuit
    06:52 TRANSFORMERS: induce voltage from primary coil (in circuit with AC generator) over into a secondary (proximate but not touching) coil (in CLOSED circuit). => allows to increase/decrease voltage between primary and secondary coil by changing amount of coils on either side.
    07:38 CAPACITOR ("condensator" in multiple languages): separates positive and negative charges across 2 plates if connected to power supply -> build-up of electrons in electric field ... interrupted power supply -> charges released (power source for few seconds) + pair back up again
    08:17 ALTERNATING CURRENT (AC): current flow backwards & forwards as terminals are reversed, most common (wall sockets,...)
    DIRECT CURRENT (DC): current flows only in 1 direction (batteries, handheld devices, solar panels)

    • @thefallen7287
      @thefallen7287 3 года назад

      Wow thx for the notes can you please explain at the generator part that 1st current through a coil was causing mag field then he said mag field generates emf and then causes current in the same coil so how that works I mean there was already current flowing through source before so now we don't need source? And will this mag field provide current now to the circuit?

    • @EngineeringMindset
      @EngineeringMindset  Год назад

      Check out NEW resistor video, everything covered! ➡️ ruclips.net/video/DYcLFHgVCn0/видео.html

  • @jacemenezes6155
    @jacemenezes6155 11 дней назад +1

    Thank you for helping me understand what my school barely put in the effort to explain.
    This is so useful!!

  • @Farseer1995
    @Farseer1995 Год назад +9

    I'm a car mechanic and I have become fascinated with electricity recently. I also am reading 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea in which you can see how electricity in the 19th century really mesmerised the scientific and public world. These videos are really helpful for a beginner to start understanding what electricity is!

  • @alpanasrivastava2415
    @alpanasrivastava2415 3 года назад +6

    RUclips suggested me this gem after 3 years!!!!🙄🙄
    .
    .
    There must be any open circuit or highly resistive path... 😜😜😜😜
    Hats off guruji... 🙏🏻🙏🏻
    Crystal clear explanation 👍🏻

  • @Abdullah-mg5zl
    @Abdullah-mg5zl 4 года назад +33

    *summary:*
    - the electrons in the valence shell (outter shell) of some atoms can flow from one atom to a neighboring one
    - if you create an *electric potential* (aka *voltage*) difference across a *conducting* wire, the electrons will flow in one direction through that wire
    - if you cut out a small piece of the conducting wire, and replace it with a *resisting* wire, the resisting wire will get hot as electrons flow through it
    - you can use this concept to create things live electric stoves, heaters, etc
    - there are certain resisting material, that when heated up, will produce a lot of bright light, you can use this to create electric light bulbs
    *units:*
    - *voltage* is a measure of electric potential difference between 2 points in a conducting wire
    - the unit of voltage is *Volt*
    - a Volt is the number of joules of energy given of as 1 coulomb of electrons flows from one point to the other
    - a *coulomb* is just a really large number
    - *current* is a measure of how many electrons are flowing through the wire per second
    - the unit for current is *Amps*
    - 1 Amp is 1 coulomb of electrons lowing past a certain point in your wire per second
    *briefly covered stuff:*
    - an *inducer* is a coil of wire, that generates a magnetic field in response to current going through the wire
    - the magnetic field creates a voltage in the opposite direction as the current
    - this is how AC (alternating current) is produce
    - *AC* is when you move electrons in one direction in the wire, then in the opposite direction, then in the original direction, then in the opposite, and repeat
    - *DC* (direct current) is when electrons move in the same direction the whole time
    - a *capacitor* builds up charges as current flows through it (when current stops flowing, the charge dissipates)
    Thanks for this video! Extremely well made!

    • @tashitsenkyap21
      @tashitsenkyap21 4 года назад +2

      Abdullah Aghazadah Man U deserved the MVP on comment section

    • @Abdullah-mg5zl
      @Abdullah-mg5zl 4 года назад

      @@tashitsenkyap21 Haha :P, thanks man

    • @doctorscalling9479
      @doctorscalling9479 4 года назад

      Fest hos abdullah, abdullah åh ah

    • @aginpatrick
      @aginpatrick 3 года назад

      Sorry for the basic question: when you say "magnetic field creates a voltage in the opposite direction as the current", can you explain what does mean *direction* for voltage? I understand that a current has a direction (direction of flow of electrons) but what does direction mean for voltage?

    • @qrstuv8819
      @qrstuv8819 3 года назад

      gosh thank u man i really needed this for my task lol

  • @adgaming4484
    @adgaming4484 Год назад +40

    Bro explained my entire physics syllabus in 10 minutes better than my teacher could do in a year 💀👏🏻

  • @embeddedsystemsguy
    @embeddedsystemsguy 4 года назад +28

    Easy to learn things when the teacher has a calming accent

  • @dinogrenadier16
    @dinogrenadier16 3 года назад +25

    It’s been a few years after college for me, so I’m starting from the beginning to recap on things I’ve forgotten. I appreciate the time and effort you’ve taken to make these comprehensive videos to be easily understood

    • @benjisea
      @benjisea 3 года назад

      Same here! One gap semester and my brain is toast. New subject to learn

    • @viv1dre4m33
      @viv1dre4m33 9 месяцев назад

      Wait what do u do now

  • @j.maxwaddell2557
    @j.maxwaddell2557 3 года назад +13

    Paul thank you for these great teaching/learning videos. The time, planning and production to create all these wonderful videos is tremendous and greatly appreciated. Thank you again. I learn and gain a much deeper understanding of the study of electricity with each video.

  • @GururajBN
    @GururajBN 2 года назад +3

    The ease with which the narrator describes the subject shows that he is the master of what he is talking about. Many thanks for this instructive video.

  • @AnonymousPerson-tf3kk
    @AnonymousPerson-tf3kk 3 года назад +7

    I'm in 7th grade and I'm trying to learn about electrical engineering so I can learn how to build my own machines. Building machines is a very special interest for me and I mainly wanna learn about these things to make my family proud. This video was very helpful 100/10!! :D

  • @DreamKeeper.
    @DreamKeeper. 3 года назад +7

    When I was a kid my dad used to work at a hospital and he was allowed to let me visit during lunch. One day we were sitting at a picnic table set up just next to a transformer. Being the curious kid I was I asked my dad what “the big green humming box” was. He told me it’s a transformer. I simply replied “oh.” When I had to go home so he could go back to work I went up to the transformer and said “your secret is safe with me”

    • @hillcountrygarage
      @hillcountrygarage 9 часов назад

      LOL! I wondered where this comment was going! Good one!

  • @shubhamraj1881
    @shubhamraj1881 2 года назад +6

    I have watched multiple video of your today, all are of electromagnetic. These videos not just clear the basic concept but the live diagrams make it really easy to visualise. Also you talk about their usage in daily life makes it interesting. Thank you

  • @phylwilton1966
    @phylwilton1966 3 года назад +10

    Best background lesson I've ever had on my desk! Comprehensible, easy to listen to, very well illustrated. Thank you so much. I can't count the times I've backed up to confirm that I actually "get it" for the first time in ever!

  • @Antonio-bc2ue
    @Antonio-bc2ue Год назад +19

    Your videos are just amazing! Great explanations and animations. Thank you very much for your work!❤

  • @glenne690
    @glenne690 6 лет назад +9

    Ever since I started watching these videos, they have been a great help to me, and learning a lot better than the ones I watched in College. Thanks for the videos, I'll be viewing more of them!

  • @stevenl7878
    @stevenl7878 3 года назад +5

    Excellent job! I watched several of your videos now and you have done a top-notch job explaining electricity and electrical engineering!

  • @RohitSoni1
    @RohitSoni1 2 года назад +12

    just wow! i'm blown away by how good these videos are, loved the capacitor and battery analogy!

  • @sailor7025
    @sailor7025 2 года назад +4

    Best electrical videos on the internet - exceptionally explained. Thank you for all of your efforts!

  • @tmo7734
    @tmo7734 3 года назад +5

    Thank you. This is an excellent channel, one of the few that can explain electricity in easy-to-understand terms. Many can’t.

  • @docphibz739
    @docphibz739 6 лет назад +19

    This is one of the best videos I've ever seen on electrical theory

  • @shreyasgosavi9647
    @shreyasgosavi9647 2 года назад +4

    So many concepts covered in a single video !!! GOod job man... Looking forward to complete the series ..

  • @saralseth5997
    @saralseth5997 3 года назад +14

    Wish you were my school teacher. would have definitely done something huge in physics !

  • @RocketLR
    @RocketLR 5 лет назад +4

    This is exactly the picture i had in my head!!! Thank you for confirming my speculations! I've been looking for this type of videos to connect the gaps i have in my head!!!! Thank you!

  • @nalagnathus7190
    @nalagnathus7190 5 лет назад +7

    Your channel is amazing I’m having so much trouble with my level one HVAC course i’m a visual learner and this is helping me so much! Thank you for all your videos

  • @yousifaliraqi7039
    @yousifaliraqi7039 3 года назад +2

    I wish I had a teacher which explains these basics exactly like you , Thanks and appreciated !

  • @limsthomas11
    @limsthomas11 2 года назад +1

    I spent a little time writing this comment. But no words could express my full gratitude. Thank you so much.

  • @amiduallie6225
    @amiduallie6225 Год назад +10

    Amazing and incredible graphics and animations with a brilliant explanation. That's extraordinary!

  • @CrosswireHunter
    @CrosswireHunter 6 лет назад +8

    cool video, it helps not only kids, it refreshes engineering students too. thx a million.

  • @mahmudapon8681
    @mahmudapon8681 2 года назад +1

    RUclips channel is one of the best tutorial channel for electrician

  • @VonGOMD
    @VonGOMD Месяц назад

    I’m a 1st year hvac apprentice and I just want to thank you for what you do bro. Your videos are a lifesaver 👏🏾

  • @virginiamoore1200
    @virginiamoore1200 6 лет назад +17

    When discussing current you state Ampere = coulomb should be ampere =coulomb /second

    • @dixanms
      @dixanms 2 года назад

      Also, One Coulomb is just equal to the charge on 6.241 x 10^18 protons

  • @Bluuuuuuuuuuuu
    @Bluuuuuuuuuuuu 6 лет назад +7

    This Really helped me! Great Video.

  • @GGTaino
    @GGTaino Год назад +1

    I just got acepted to take the electrical course. I’ll finish this playlist at least 5 times before the classes start in April just so I have a little above the basics

  • @devinhernandez8727
    @devinhernandez8727 Год назад +5

    Thank you so much Sir for this amazing knowledge. This is really going to help me in my apprentice electrician journey. Thank you so very much.

  • @highenergyprotons
    @highenergyprotons 6 лет назад +8

    Great video. It explained what I have learnt in 1 year physics class in just 10 minutes.

  • @MsMSB2012
    @MsMSB2012 5 лет назад +17

    Thank you! I dropped out of studying the sciences because I couldn't visualize it. This is so helpful.

  • @Liz-ls5xm
    @Liz-ls5xm 6 месяцев назад +1

    Currently doing up a boat! I've got electricians doing the work but when they ask me questions I'm baffled. Came by, watched, got schooled now I'm going to go answer their questions. Also, my Dad is an engineer and as a kiddo he could never explain anything to me as simply as you just did. Thank you so much, Liz

    • @benrossy2k
      @benrossy2k 6 месяцев назад

      Same here learning all of this so I can fix up my boat!

  • @md.nooralam9342
    @md.nooralam9342 Год назад +1

    Absolutely easy to understand...
    Love and thanks from BANGLADESH.....

  • @davinchi4007
    @davinchi4007 6 лет назад +8

    Subscribed! Love your video sir . i love electricity. Im an electrician and hope to become an electrical engineer one day. Thank you for sharing your knowledge!

  • @JH-tk6ge
    @JH-tk6ge 4 года назад +7

    Awesome! The atomic level really helps my understanding. Nobody has ever tried to explain electricity to me at the atomic level. I love how resistance is described as the "number of electron collisions with other atoms". That is much easier to understand than the text book definition "measure of its opposition to the flow of electric current". Thanks!

  • @AshutoshKumar-xx3qq
    @AshutoshKumar-xx3qq 3 года назад +1

    Hy , The Engineering Mindset I am from India and I watch most of the video. And then i think you are great teacher.

    • @EngineeringMindset
      @EngineeringMindset  Год назад

      Thank you, do you know we also have a Hindi channel? ruclips.net/channel/UCg4k338hz9U8jnD5SXPO5jQ

  • @ssmaxbalboa
    @ssmaxbalboa 2 года назад +1

    Once I Done Watching All Electrical Engineering Basics Videos, I'm Going To Treat Myself To One Of Your Hoodies. These Videos Really Got Me Learning Like I'm In University. Great Job!

  • @killerbludd11
    @killerbludd11 4 года назад +3

    Such beautifully organized and straight forward information. Thank you 🙏🏾

  • @thesunflowchannel1995
    @thesunflowchannel1995 6 лет назад +4

    Love it. It's boring for us that have known this material, but for a curious kid it's exactly what the internet should be used for.

  • @lifereviews74
    @lifereviews74 2 года назад +5

    New subscriber here.
    Just learning how electricity works. Have to watch it a couple of times. Its like learning a new language. Hope i can last in my quest of upgrading my knowledge on this subject
    Thank you sir for the lesson.

  • @Lonech
    @Lonech 4 года назад +1

    I took a Circuit Analysis class and it was so painful to grasp the concepts of how electricity works. Great professor, but the content was hard to pin down. This was a great video for clearing up misconceptions that I've been having for the longest time, thank you.

  • @josephacolletti
    @josephacolletti 4 года назад +23

    Great videos
    But you need to correct the ‘current slide’ ~4:30
    1A=1C/s=6.242E18 electrons/s

    • @housefish3205
      @housefish3205 4 года назад

      Joseph Colletti I figured this comment would be here. 1A does not equal 1C, but rather 1C per second. 1C is a measure of number of electrons, not based in time.

    • @internetguy8075
      @internetguy8075 4 года назад +2

      Thank you, I had to rewatch a couple of times as I'm relearning the basics. Eventually figured out that what he said was right, but the slide was wrong.

    • @loveofgod5537
      @loveofgod5537 4 года назад

      At 4:30 is the number just wrong on the slide?

  • @phyoeiwai8426
    @phyoeiwai8426 5 лет назад +13

    Thank you so much for this video.It's really helpful and excellent.

  • @waters.create
    @waters.create 3 года назад +1

    What an amazing video! Nothing is unnecessarily over complicated... just flows

  • @skabbymuff111
    @skabbymuff111 3 года назад +4

    Brilliant, this series is exactly what I need. Thanks!

  • @Beautiful_Sound_1995
    @Beautiful_Sound_1995 2 года назад +16

    Yeah, i don't get it.

    • @asingh4152
      @asingh4152 Месяц назад +1

      Its ok me neither and I am EE

  • @RolfLunheim
    @RolfLunheim 3 года назад +5

    Great video. Unfortunately, as in the video explaining current, the presenter mixes up charge (measured in Coulomb) and current (measured in Ampere), stating that Ampere=Coulomb and that coulomb is a certain number of electrons per second, which is not the case. Since this is very basic stuff, it ought to be corrected.

  • @Laughingman9432
    @Laughingman9432 6 месяцев назад +1

    my dad is a master electrician and EE and he said you explain things better than any teacher

  • @Juddmann007
    @Juddmann007 Год назад +2

    There is definitely a difference between doing work and knowing what youre doing when working. Thanks for sharing!

  • @waterboy2602
    @waterboy2602 6 лет назад +6

    Really good video! Would love to see your other videos on electrical theory, which you refer to...

  • @aryastark5177
    @aryastark5177 6 лет назад +184

    Excellent video. Seriously.

  • @cmac6136
    @cmac6136 3 месяца назад

    Im in school for electrician apprenticeship amd your videos have helped us a lot. We watched multiple videos on this channel. Thank you.

  • @jopiluis3382
    @jopiluis3382 4 месяца назад +1

    I'm leaving this for tomorrow 2 MINUTES IN because I've noted down so much info already!! This is wild!!

  • @davecao908
    @davecao908 3 года назад +5

    One of the best videos I've seen on electricity. I learned more from this 10 minute video than I did going to 13 years of school or in my 26 years of my life.

    • @rubenornesa8405
      @rubenornesa8405 3 года назад

      Glad you liked the video, but what the hell were you doing in school to learn less than 10 minutes worth of a good video in 13 years?

    • @davecao908
      @davecao908 2 года назад +1

      @@rubenornesa8405 playing video games and watching anime

  • @kennethpurtell9330
    @kennethpurtell9330 6 лет назад +5

    That was very informative and well presented. Thanks.

  • @i.ak.1684
    @i.ak.1684 10 месяцев назад +1

    I love these videos. I found a fascination for engineering this year. I’m sure, that’s what I want to do, when I finish my Abitur. But I didn’t pay much attention in most classes in my scholar career, up until now. So I have a lot of catching up to do. The learning platforms that are meant to make learning easy either simplify until things get inaccurate or move wayyy to slow. I knew this channel teaches a lot of, regarding engineering, but I didn’t know this channel teaches all I needed to know, including basics. And since it is engineering I am interested in anyway, it’s straight from the horses mouth. Awesome.

  • @grey2463
    @grey2463 Месяц назад

    i wish that i knew about this video when i was taking an electrical physics course in uni, this explains the basics very WELL unlike the professors that didnt know how to explain it to us , i remember when they drew the circuits they were very abstract, the 3d model in this video makes it way much clearer for the mind, when i tell you i took the course twice and watched a lot of videos and nothing helped me because no one taught me the basics as you did, thank you very much, subscribed and liked

  • @gazisalahuddin8681
    @gazisalahuddin8681 6 лет назад +7

    I wish you a great success....thanks a lot for sharing this knowledge

  • @stutipriyashadangi1237
    @stutipriyashadangi1237 3 года назад +4

    Thank you for making such useful videos. Because of this video I understood so much on electricity and it's working. THANK YOU ONCE again....

  • @Shashikant2705
    @Shashikant2705 2 года назад +1

    Watching this video and seeing all the comments.. I'm simply loving it...

  • @JacobVersus
    @JacobVersus Год назад

    Thank you so much! I just started my electricians apprenticeship and this was very helpful!

  • @rajkiran5490
    @rajkiran5490 5 лет назад +4

    When I was listening to your videos, realized how much I don't know..You have explained very beautifully from the microscopic core aspects of this subject.
    Each time I understood a concept in this video, it felt very Good.. I realized learning is the best way to feel Good..
    Keep going... we are there to support you!

  • @Anju-sri
    @Anju-sri 3 года назад +4

    I'm 12 th , and your video makes me understand the topics more clearly
    Thank you 💖

  • @clipz9352
    @clipz9352 2 месяца назад

    6 years have passed and this video is still helping people. Absolute legend. Keep it up! 💯

  • @TheSilverBallerina
    @TheSilverBallerina 2 года назад +1

    way clearer explanation than any engineering book I've ever encountered

  • @vanessankcellnobtchute9120
    @vanessankcellnobtchute9120 Год назад +3

    GREAT explanation, thanks for taking your time to make this beautiful animation (I know it's a hard work).

  • @maccullete6491
    @maccullete6491 6 лет назад +335

    Dude I got one :) 3 buddies decided to get drunk one weekend. Mr. Proton, Mr. Neutron and Mr. Electron. Went in got drunk and then asked the bartender for the tab. Barkeep goes "For Neutron, no charge but there will be a charge for Mr. Electron here" Mr. Proton got mad and asked "What?! no charge for my buddy Mr. Neutron?! Are you positive?!" Bartender replied "No, but you are"

  • @crazyconan28
    @crazyconan28 2 года назад +1

    So much knowledge in just 10 minutes. Thank you!

  • @ih8bombs
    @ih8bombs 3 года назад +2

    You do an exceptional job with your material and class flow.

  • @BudgiePanic
    @BudgiePanic 4 года назад +5

    In a 10 minute video you elegantly sum up 6 weeks of teaching in a first year engineering paper

  • @etheswithaj.aghoghovbia4541
    @etheswithaj.aghoghovbia4541 Год назад

    Had to believe guys like this are out there. What's my business with classrooms when i gat this in my PC? You're the man I swear. These are saving grace where teachers are getting us confused

  • @KiwiMaker
    @KiwiMaker 4 года назад

    yay Thanks! watching this after class. helped me to understand electricity.