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<blockquote data-quote="RobGMN" data-source="post: 8923135" data-attributes="member: 683408"><p>Does your book tell you how to get multiple outputs from a transistor, or several transistors running in parallel?</p><p>Does it tell you that two wires touching each other are bridged?</p><p></p><p>If so, please feel free to give us the ISBN on that reference manual. The author must have been VERY stupid.</p><p></p><p>This might be from Circuits 102, but it says: "A transistor consists of three terminals: the <strong>base</strong>, <strong>collector</strong>, and <strong>emitter</strong>. Through these terminals, the transistor can control the flow of current in a circuit."</p><p>If there is only one emitter, HOW does it become "multiple" outputs?</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="RobGMN, post: 8923135, member: 683408"] Does your book tell you how to get multiple outputs from a transistor, or several transistors running in parallel? Does it tell you that two wires touching each other are bridged? If so, please feel free to give us the ISBN on that reference manual. The author must have been VERY stupid. This might be from Circuits 102, but it says: "A transistor consists of three terminals: the [B]base[/B], [B]collector[/B], and [B]emitter[/B]. Through these terminals, the transistor can control the flow of current in a circuit." If there is only one emitter, HOW does it become "multiple" outputs? [/QUOTE]
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