One could produce a special high voltage power supply producing output of several hundreds of volts but just being able to deliver a few microamps. That won't operate the monkey either. So would anyone out there (maybe besides batterizer?) tell me that several hundred volts is not enough to drive the monkey?
https://www.eevblog.com/forum/Smileys/default/facepalm.gif Voltage is just voltage but no power. Power is can be seen as something like "Voltage at the presence of n Amperes", so of course you have to draw some current
while measuring the operational voltage. And on top of that batteries don't even have some kind of defined
Power" they can deliver. Instead of Power it is
Energy that a battery has and this means the battery is able to deliver some power for some defined time frame. That automatically means you have to measure the voltage at any given timepoint when the current is drawn by the monkey to get proper values of
power, as power is voltage multiplied by actual current at each given point in time..
In the Video with the snail
a Manager and vice President, Mr. Roohparvar tries to explain what is going on, he just shows that he not even did understand the proper usage of curves and diagrams nor was he asking his engineers for that. Even my teachers and Professors at Germany were teaching me that of course
it has to be the summed up area under the curve! But completely contrary to that Mr. Roohparvar is arguing that you're not just loosing the energy from the area under the curve from the cut-of-point on but tries to tell you it would be the full area of an squared area - not only he can't work with graphs, he seems to confuse voltage, current, and power which are all kind of different things. And, finally, what makes a manager who worked for some "high tech companies" like Western Digital (what do they have to do with batteries anyways?) as expert on physics or measurement methods or proper engineering?
Managers just measure one thing, that is revenue!I hope everyone now has understood how to properly measure all kinds of power supplies and batteries are just one kind of power supplies. That arguing from batterizer is starting to get more and more ridiculous and I can't help but trying to fight the wrong measurement methods by using proper engineering definitely now is kind of riding dead horses.
Batteroo is completely learning-resistent and non informed about proper engineering, otherwise they would clearly show that they would try to defraud their customers by using physical sounding but completely wrong arguments and nonsense to impress with.