Larry asked the question I didn't dare, lest I got categorized as being
in permanent blonde mode....
Relieved to see it wasn't only me that wondered....
Seeing as the bottle of peroxide is on the table now, does anyone else
find the use of a downward pointing arrow for GND instead of -V as
confusing as I do when it sometimes turns up in a schemo?
Is there a good reason for it?
"Standards are marvellous, That's why we have so many of them......."
:-)
Dave
in permanent blonde mode....
Relieved to see it wasn't only me that wondered....
Seeing as the bottle of peroxide is on the table now, does anyone else
find the use of a downward pointing arrow for GND instead of -V as
confusing as I do when it sometimes turns up in a schemo?
Is there a good reason for it?
"Standards are marvellous, That's why we have so many of them......."
:-)
Dave
On 8 Jun 2007, at 16:08, Louis van Dompselaar wrote:
> The "D.U.T." is in a confusing place. It is meant to indicate
> the transistor in the diagram. The arrow that it is next to is just
> the ground connection.
>
> > continuing in the 'dumb' question category, Jim's diagram only shown
> > on connection for the Device Under Test. Could someone 'fill in the
> > blanks' as to how the dut is actually connected?
>
>
>
>
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