Hi everyone - if you want to see Kushal's written tutorial that this was based on (to get more detail and some different examples), go to: www.circuitbread.com/tutorials/introduction-to-control-systems-1.1 Have a great one!
I feel like I've learned more in this single video than in my whole control system course in uni This channel is definitely going to be a banger, just wait for the UA-cam algorithm to make some adjustments !
That was absolutely awesome the way you thought of how you think when you were talking. The way you were explaining control systems with two examples of a soda/beverage machine and a human baby is ingenious and clever. It's not boring at all, I can listen to a Ted Talk about electrical engineering or mathematical/physics computation simulation with Scilab/python3/Julia/R language. You can be a great college/university professor in physics, electrical engineering, computer engineering, and computer science.
The one with the op-amp as an example? That was, indeed, an example of positive feedback. That was a poor decision after just talking about how negative feedback is typically what you want with your op-amps, wasn't it? Good catch, thanks!
Hi everyone - if you want to see Kushal's written tutorial that this was based on (to get more detail and some different examples), go to: www.circuitbread.com/tutorials/introduction-to-control-systems-1.1 Have a great one!
I feel like I've learned more in this single video than in my whole control system course in uni
This channel is definitely going to be a banger, just wait for the UA-cam algorithm to make some adjustments !
Thanks for the kind feedback!
Great introduction to the journey of Control Theory.
Awesome made more sense than 6 weeks of lessons 🇬🇧
This channel is gonna hit millions soon.
That was absolutely awesome the way you thought of how you think when you were talking. The way you were explaining control systems with two examples of a soda/beverage machine and a human baby is ingenious and clever. It's not boring at all, I can listen to a Ted Talk about electrical engineering or mathematical/physics computation simulation with Scilab/python3/Julia/R language. You can be a great college/university professor in physics, electrical engineering, computer engineering, and computer science.
Good content
Great video. Very informative!
Loved all the examples! Excited for this series 😁
Thanks, Uma, so am I! Kushal has done such a great job on the written tutorials, I really just hope to do them justice.
BJT fundamentals
Construction, basic operation, transistor configurations, and limit of operation. More videos to come and stay safe!
The way of teaching is osm 😀
Excellent explanation
Amazing stuff,
I think I'm gonna take controls in my future semesters :o
Hey Shemsy - it is a fascinating field and can take you into so many different career paths!
Wasn’t that first diagram showing feedback incorrect. It was positive feedback
The one with the op-amp as an example? That was, indeed, an example of positive feedback. That was a poor decision after just talking about how negative feedback is typically what you want with your op-amps, wasn't it? Good catch, thanks!