SteveGrenard said:EDOLPH--do you know how to spell schrodinger yet?
Well, I know enough to capitalize it.
Where did I try to spell that particular krauts name?
SteveGrenard said:EDOLPH--do you know how to spell schrodinger yet?
CFLarsen said:Again, Steve does not supply sources for his extensive quoting.
Ed said:But, what is the relevance? He is just frothing, I think. It is best not to post when one is frothing. Embarassing, don't you know.
JamesM said:Steve, I read the material about the impedance meters you've provided, but I don't see the bit where it states that the impedance is measured in volts. Or was this material not meant to illustrate that?
CFLarsen said:Am I understanding this correctly?
Steve is claiming that impedance is measured in volts, because the battery in the impedance meter is?
Please tell me I am wrong. Please.
SteveGrenard said:The problem James is the usual misquoting and misattribution or deliberate play dumbo misunderstanding practiced by certain clowns on this board. I have never said that impedance is reported or measured in anything but kilo ohms.
I think that I quoted you accurately. Incidentially, one would correctly say that something is measured in Ohms, the kilo simply refers to the scale. Ohms is the unit.
Let me know if you understand this as it appears that the TBK-Ed-Claus do not.
I said that in human testing of the impedance provided by the skin, an electrical current, denominated actually in microAmperes and frequency, (microvolts also)
Frequency in in Hertz, not microvolts.
is used to determine that resistance. This test current is sent through a referential electrode, picked up by a seeking or exploring electrode placed on the spot you wish to determine impedance for and then measured in kilo ohms on the device. These electrodes, when operational, measure microvolt level
currents (10 to 300 microvolts )
OK, got it now. Except if you are measuring current the unit is amperage, not volts. You are measuring changes in potential difference (volts)
produced by the human body and then record these with respect to frequency and amplitude on a calibrated chart recorder, oscilloscope (cal=50 microvolts per vertical cm) or chart recorder program on a PC which is the std nowadays.
If you scroll back you will see that I have repeatedly ephasized that impedance meters read out in ohms, well actually kilo ohms is more convenient (cuts down on the# of zeros one has to write where human skin impedances are concerned).
Ok. I see what happened. Steve just learned the procedure by rote so the actual units and stuff are memorized without understanding. Simple screw-up. Hence the immortal "resistance AKA impedience" statement.
SteveGrenard said:I said that in human testing of the impedance provided by the skin, an electrical current, denominated actually in microAmperes and frequency, (microvolts also) is used to determine that resistance.
CFLarsen said:
Frequency is measured in microvolts??
Jeff Corey said:Now that really Hertz.
Ok Steve, I understand that. Just one question. To be totally clear, when you say thatSteveGrenard said:
I have never said that impedance is reported or measured in anything but kilo ohms.
Let me know if you understand this
do you mean that the potential difference and frequency that is associated with the current is measured, rather than being a measure of the current itself? This would also make sense of your statement about currents being at a microvolt level. It would be unfortunate if whatever discussion remained feasible between the interested parties here was held up by these rather minor points.in human testing of the impedance provided by the skin, an electrical current, denominated actually in microAmperes and frequency, (microvolts also) is used to determine that resistance.
SteveGrenard said:Read it again. The test current is in microamperes, at certain frequencies (millionths of a volt.)
SteveGrenard said:The resistance/impedance is measured by sending this test current through the system. Remember we are not measuring a pre-existing reistance through an inanimate wire or circuit here. We are doing this in people. Human bodies. I have never said that the resistance is not denominated in kilo ohm units. To the contrary, I specifically always said it was.
SteveGrenard said:I think what we have here is me explaining how it is done in people and you not interested in that ---
SteveGrenard said:TBK: If one knows the impedance and current, microvolts can be calculated.
Indeed except people are not circuits in the conventional sense. We do NOT know what the impedance is for a particular patch of skin we are interested in using.
Hence we need to send in a test current a
known number of microvolts through the electrode at a gven amperage and frequency and then determine the impedance. Same equation, different unknowns. Geez.
SteveGrenard said:Wrong Ed. Get it through your noggin that the impedance of a point on human skin is not set, it is NOT adjustable and it is not predictable. LOL. It is an unknown we are trying to find, establish, determine, measure so we can then lower it to obtain a better electrical current signal from the activity of the brain, heart and/or muscle activity.