Windevoid
Senior Members-
Posts
202 -
Joined
-
Last visited
Content Type
Profiles
Forums
Events
Everything posted by Windevoid
-
Did Alexander the Great and Christopher Columbus exist?
Windevoid replied to Windevoid's topic in Speculations
"evidence that all the historical evidence is faked" What does that mean? What exactly is evidence? -
Did Alexander the Great and Christopher Columbus exist?
Windevoid replied to Windevoid's topic in Speculations
The knives might have traveled on the Silk Road to their destination in Nepal, Pakistan or India. -
Did Alexander the Great and Christopher Columbus exist?
Windevoid replied to Windevoid's topic in Speculations
But the Silk Road I think started to exist at about the same time. -
I was reading this thread: http://lunaticoutpost.com/Topic-Alexander-the-Great-Greek-or-SouthSlav?page=1 And I thought. Did Alexander the Great really even exist at all? So I made this thread just for that. Did Alexander the great exist? How about Christopher Columbus also? Well Christopher Columbus probably existed I think, but Alexander the Great? I think they found Greek knives in Nepal.
-
At the negative side of the battery/wire, I guess.
-
You have to zoom in more.
-
I found this on Google Earth in Egypt, but what is it? 22°47'51.75"N 31°32'39.42"E I at first thought it was a construction project, but I don't see any bulldozers or small foreman offices. And I don't think sand dunes look like this.
-
If "they" ("electrons") were pushed, "they" would just leak out like crazy all of the time, but "they" don't.
-
It seems like the "electrons" are pulled rather than pushed. And the batteries would "allow" the current to flow.
-
I suppose, in this idea, the battery chemicals would gain energy instead of losing it. So if you reacted them you'd get more energy than normal. I think.
-
Ancient Egyptians and pyramids......evidence?
Windevoid replied to Windevoid's topic in Speculations
Men that weren't Egyptian. Maybe men of a society advanced enough to easily build the thing and had a reason to build it. After all, don't Egyptians cover their tombs with paint and writing and pictures of gods and daily life? I guess that for these Giza pyramids, there might have been men that weren't Egyptian. Maybe men of a society advanced enough to easily build the thing and had a reason to build it. After all, don't Egyptians cover their tombs with paint and writing and pictures of gods and daily life? -
Ancient Egyptians and pyramids......evidence?
Windevoid replied to Windevoid's topic in Speculations
Where did they record it and how? I never heard or seen these other evidences at school nor on PBS. -
I didn't see a history category, so I decided to post this here. How much evidence is there that the Ancient Egyptians built the pyramids? I think there was a cartouche written, but I heard someone say this may have been faked. Did the Ancient Egyptians record the pyramids' building anywhere?
-
It seems back to the theory I learned for parallel circuits in high school and college.
-
But I had a strange idea once. Maybe the power of a circuit doesn't come from the battery. Maybe it comes from the wires, and it forces chemicals in the battery to react, rather than chemicals in the battery reacting and forcing the wires and lightbulbs to react.
-
It's a Mastech MS8268. All seems normal now. I think. But I had a strange idea once. Maybe the power of a circuit doesn't come from the battery. Maybe it comes from the wires, and it forces chemicals in the battery to react, rather than chemicals in the battery reacting and forcing the wires and lightbulbs to react.
-
Oh, the amps just don't show up on the Amp hole.
-
But it still measures only 1 milliamp even to the resistor with the least resistance. Wit the 2 to 3 amps it should say like 20 milliamps or higher due to the supposed bias to lower resistance. It looks like the amps still can't get through yet.
-
It may be a design flaw. The multimeter shows volts as amps even when amps is chosen and the amp holes are lit up.
-
But now the amps don't seem to be going through the resistors. Maybe the battery does need more power. An ammeter between the end of the resistor and the battery now reads zero. But yet reads a number if connected to the other side of the resistor.
-
I think my multimeter just ran out of battery. Same voltage all through. But now the other batteries died so amps aren't lasting long enough to test right now. Not doing it yet on the amps, maybe it needs lots of power in the battery to do this. It doesn't appear to be doing it now. I remember measuring it doing that last night, though.
-
Yes, almost the exact same amps.
-
-
Which program can be used to make and export images of circuit diagrams?
-
I think that this is the right place for this post. So this isn't thread derailment. In my tests of parallel circuitry just now, with 12 resistors, it seems that each resistor in parallel with each other resistor in the circuit was having the exact same amps as the input amperage, so I suppose it's like 2 amps in with 24 amps useable. And a resistor LED measured at 150 kohms lit up, parallel with 11 resistors with resistances between 100 ohms and 8 kohms. It's as if the very resistance itself was being negated as a concept in this circuit. Volts seem have the same effect. Normal theory says the current is supposed to divide according to resistance in parallel circuitry, with the sum of all of the component currents of the parallel circuit coming into and out of the circuit at the voltage source/entrance wire, but that doesn't seem to be the case. It seems the current of the component currents of the parallel circuit is equal regardless of resistance, and that one component current alone equals the current at the voltage source/entrance wire instead of the sum of all of the component currents of the parallel circuit.