Ok ill unlearn
Did you watch the video? This is not an electrician explaining how to fix a thing. It is an electrical engineer explaining why a circuit behaves a certain way and which design change is necessary.it is all nice, but first of all do not learn from youtube to make electricians work, it is not a game, you can pay hard price for it.
and usually source of the problems are different to each situation, you can maybe solve the problem with the resistor, but you did not find the actual source of it.
The efficiency of today’s LEDs allow any ‘trapped’ energy to power the lights. Long power cables act as a small capacitor, storing small amounts of energy. That small amount of energy will power certain LED lights under lights off conditions. LED’s don’t require much power to run…as i see, from the comments, none of you here told me the answer how the cables work as a capacitor, with how long distance from the nullpoint will able to generate the minimum amount of voltage that will ghostlight the leds constantly.
and as i told, solving the problem is not equal with correcting the source of error.
did you read the link i put here with kromagnons problem? error was the same but the solution was simply changing his old shit extension cord .. where is the polarity change in that situation?
It's AC. It changes polarity 50 times per second.Ask for quantitative measurements. It doesn't matter. Qualitative analysis is sufficient for the problem.where is the polarity change in that situation?
I did answer half of your question.okay thanks, but i did not ask this
how much is the difference ( i would like to see something in the measure i gave .. nF/km), and how long cables from nullpoint will generate it.
I’ll be honest with you, I can’t find the post so I have no idea what the problems they had.so it does not matter, if the timer breaks the N or the L.... you still did not read my link about kro magnons problem