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![]() "Gord Beaman" wrote in message news ![]() Jim Yanik wrote: I fail to see how the separate thermocouples outputs will be "averaged",because any individual TC cannot rise in output,as all the others parallelled will prevent any rise in voltage.Or current would flow from a higher V to a lower one,just as if you wired batteries of different voltages together,you end up with circulating currents until all cells are of equal voltage.. Seems to me that parallelling them is only for the possibility of an individual thermocouple to be burned out or open. Jim, as I mentioned before they do average. If you connected say flashlight batteries of slightly different voltages in parallel then quite high currents would flow because their internal resistance is low but thermocouples have comparatively high resistance therefore limiting the current that will flow. Which makes a higher voltage. Quit while you are ahead, Gord, Danno has been hitting the bong. |
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"Tarver Engineering" wrote:
"Gord Beaman" wrote in message news ![]() Jim Yanik wrote: I fail to see how the separate thermocouples outputs will be "averaged",because any individual TC cannot rise in output,as all the others parallelled will prevent any rise in voltage.Or current would flow from a higher V to a lower one,just as if you wired batteries of different voltages together,you end up with circulating currents until all cells are of equal voltage.. Seems to me that parallelling them is only for the possibility of an individual thermocouple to be burned out or open. Jim, as I mentioned before they do average. If you connected say flashlight batteries of slightly different voltages in parallel then quite high currents would flow because their internal resistance is low but thermocouples have comparatively high resistance therefore limiting the current that will flow. Which makes a higher voltage. Quit while you are ahead, Gord, Danno has been hitting the bong. Yes John... ![]() -- -Gord. |
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