Re: Amusing problem about DC polarity



I do that all the time. My eyes are not what they were, and if I pick
up something with two pins, it might be a black box, or a little black
diode, or multicolored. If it's multicolored, like stripes, I'm
thinking resistor. Or, one stripe, a diode. 3 pins, transistor.
Although, a bipolar transistor is just 2 diodes. And a phototransistor
only has two pins (sometimes.) Bottom line, stick it on an ohm meter.
First one way, then the other way. If it's DC, you will get 1) a very
high resistance one way, and a not so high resistance the other way, 2)
the same resistance both ways, could be zero, infinity, or other 3) you
get a fairly high resistance both ways, but the harder you look at it,
you can't quite make up your mind which way has the higher resistance
4) your analog ohm meter acts a little funny, but your digital meter
makes no sense at all

1) when you read the lower resistance, look at the red probe. That's
ground. If that answer is wrong, then I'll correct myself right now
and say the red probe is positive.
2) it's a resistor, or open circuit, or closed circuit.
3) you've got your sweaty fingers squeezing the probe leads too hard
and shunting your body resistance across the ohm meter. Don't do that.
4) probably a capacitor
5) your ohm meter doesn't work now. You should have checked it it
with a volt meter first because it might be a battery. And if the box
is black, about the size of a bread box, and weighs about 20 pounds,
it's a 12v car battery, and you shouldn't have had to test it in the
first place.


siliconmike wrote:
Imagine a black plastic box that takes in DC power but has no polarity
markings on its power socket.

The problem is to experimentally determine the correct DC polarity
without opening the box and without letting the box die.

How close can we come?

.



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