stopdropnrol All American 3908 Posts user info edit post |
trying to figure out how to calculate power distribution with mixed impedance. i have 3 13 ohm (weird huh)loads in parallel with a single 4 ohm load. final resistance is 2 ohms which gives them a shared 100w of power. i know it's not the best thing to mix impedance but it doesn't really matter with this project. just wanna make sure one load isn't seeing 70w and the others seeing like 10wea. 2/28/2009 4:38:33 AM |
A Tanzarian drip drip boom 10995 Posts user info edit post |
You have 3 parallel 13 ohm loads in parallel with a 4 ohm load (i.e. 4 parallel loads; 3, 13 ohm and 1, 4 ohm)?
Using in-my-head math (not known for accuracy):
13 ohm loads: ~16.7 W each 4 ohm load: ~50 W
[Edited on February 28, 2009 at 9:47 AM. Reason : ] 2/28/2009 9:46:54 AM |
stopdropnrol All American 3908 Posts user info edit post |
cool that actually works out they way i wanted. just for future refernce what's the formula u use to get those numbers? 2/28/2009 12:15:33 PM |
BigMan157 no u 103354 Posts user info edit post |
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Current_divider 2/28/2009 12:29:39 PM |
FykalJpn All American 17209 Posts user info edit post |
^ 2/28/2009 12:43:22 PM |
A Tanzarian drip drip boom 10995 Posts user info edit post |
^^
P_total = 3 * (V^2) / (R_13) + (V^2) / (R_4)
P_total = 3 * (V^2) / (R_13) + 3.25 * (V^2) / (R_13)
P_total = 6.25 * (V^2) / (R_13)
P_total = 6.25 * P_13
so...
P_13 = 16 W P_4 = 52 W 2/28/2009 3:10:05 PM |