He was advised and helped by his uncle Charles Wheatstone who invented the piece of electrical apparatus known as the Wheatstone bridge. |
|
The Wheatstone bridge is unsuitable for measuring very small resistances, of a few ohms or less. |
|
Scales using strain gages that I have observed have used Wheatstone bridges in structures differing from my structure. |
|
Leeds and Northrup of Philadelphia made an array of Wheatstone bridges, some with plugs and some, like this one, with dials and some plugs. |
|
In using a Kelvin bridge, you must follow precautions similar to those given for the Wheatstone bridge. |
|
This modified Wheatstone bridge is connected to a dual phase lock-in amplifier as shown above. |
|
This lesson describes Wheatstone bridges, megohmmeters, and clamp-on ammeters. |
|
A Kelvin Double bridge is a variant of the Wheatstone bridge used for measuring very low resistances. |
|
The Wheatstone bridge consists of four resistors connected together in a diamond orientation. |
|
The Wheatstone bridge is balanced when there is no p.d. between the midpoints of the voltage dividers. |
|
This procedure is for certification of five-dial Wheatstone bridges complete with maintenance procedures. |
|
The Wheatstone bridge is an electrical circuit for the precise comparison of resistances. |
|
The British telegraph, invented by Cooke and Wheatstone utilized 6 wires which actuated five needle pointers attached to five galvanoscopes at the receiver end. |
|
Because metal foil gauges are deposited onto their polyimide backing, they are often sold in prearranged Wheatstone bridges, rosettes, and other patterns. |
|
Easy-to-read units are industry compatible with any two-arm, 350-ohm Wheatstone bridge pressure transducer. |
|
Series 2 for dry-air applications acts directly on the silicon chip and comes into contact with the strain gauges of the Wheatstone bridge. |
|
This imbalances the parallel current in the Wheatstone bridge and is reported as directly proportional to the flow. |
|
A foil strain gage wired in a fundamental Wheatstone bridge circuit is at the core of the sensor to provide excellent temperature stability. |
|
In 1840 Wheatstone was using a magneto that he developed to power the telegraph. |
|
It took English inventor Charles Wheatstone to squeeze both chords and keyboard together in one squeezebox. |
|
|
One of the most important appointments was that of Charles Wheatstone as professor of Experimental Philosophy. |
|
So John went home and reinvented a nineteenth-century instrument called the Wheatstone pseudoscope. |
|
Two strain gauges were mounted on each of the arms, and then coupled with a Wheatstone bridge. |
|
The output from the temperature-compensated Wheatstone bridge was displayed on a voltmeter calibrated in kilonewtons and recorded with a video camera. |
|
Chevron has signed an agreement to supply Japan's Kyushu Electric with liquefied natural gas from its Wheatstone project in Australia, the firm said. |
|