I can see the images just fine from other systems. I use postimg. But I cannot see them from THIS system.
You seem to lack the capacity to discern between levels of gray. It's either all white or all black.
It feels like being in that 70s movie, "The day of the dolphin".
Yes, I was talking about the toroid because that is the way we chose to steer the flux. In the case matter is in the way we can still compute voltage as path integral, by knowing the field. Don't like the toroid in the way? Make a gap. Slide your circuit in there through the gap (remember the elastic membrane? It will be rammed by the flux just like before (yes, yes, there will be fringing, I don't care, what counts it's the flux inside the circuit). Don't like the gap? Use a magnet and shoot it through your circuit - there will be flux lines and we are there.
Now, let me guess, the next objection will be "but if I shoot a magnet through the circuit, how can I be so fast to read the voltmeter?"
So, use a solenoid.
You built a pancake solenoid to put under your Lewin ring, right? You put the hands of the clock in a way that you can access the space where the magnetic field change, right? I would tell you to do the experiment with that, but your system has so much flux leakage that you can only try the orange paths. In fact, your clock hands are examples of orange paths, with the voltmeter at the center.
What is the next objection? That you cannot put a voltmeter inside a circuit branch with a resistor because you cannot drill a hole along the conductor and the resistor and there are no microscopic voltmeters to fit such a tight space?
Do you really think that measurement instruments only works by implementing verbatim the definition of the variable they measure?
Do amperometers count the single electrons and use a tiny stopwatch to measure the current?
Do they necessarily have to sit inside the branch they measure current? Ever seen a current clamp? Never heard of Hall effect?
It is fascinating to see the amount of irrational objection you need to throw to persist in your religious blindness.
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Anyway, take one green path, and one purple path, where you can place your voltmeter even if there is a torus. Along one you read 5V and along the other your read 0V. KVL dies there. Wanna see in the circuit: the branch with the resistor is a green path, the branch with the conductor alone is the purple path. One gives 5V and one gives 0V - and you can show that it has to be that way because if you compute the fields, these values are what you get by computing the path integrals.
Everything checks.
And what is the sum of voltages if you circle the ring? 5V + 0V = 5V, or circulation of E along the ring = EMF.
KVL says: circulation of E along the ring = 0
Faradays says: circulation of E along the ring = EMF
I wonder who is right.
I don't know what you mean when you say "THIS system." Your computer? Your internet system? The EEVBlog system? Your Screen reader? Do you have one of those qwerty monitors?

It is fascinating to see the amount of irrational objection you need to throw to persist in your religious blindness.
Actually you're describing yourself. Do you know how many times I've specifically clearly asked you whether configuration V1 and V2 would cause KVL to appear to hold when measured with a volt meter as described in the following diagram?
https://i.postimg.cc/fTgyDNp0/20211119-030105.jpgYou bob and weave and rant, but you will not answer that question. It's like trying to get a pious priest to cut lose a string of profanities from the podium.
You really seem to have a religious aversion to admitting that KVL *WOULD* give every appearance of holding for both my V1 and V2 configurations as measured with a volt meter.
I even keep giving you the "out" of saying that KVL is only
appearing to hold in this situation. You can just say "Yes it appears to hold, but...." then we can talk about the but.
Look at your leadin:
Do you really think that measurement instruments only works by implementing verbatim the definition of the variable they measure?
Do amperometers count the single electrons and use a tiny stopwatch to measure the current?
Do they necessarily have to sit inside the branch they measure current? Ever seen a current clamp? Never heard of Hall effect?
From that I would say that you do know that KVL would give every appearance of holding, but you can't bring yourself to say it, so you're preparing to argue that even though KVL appears to be holding, it's not actually holding because the meters aren't measuring what I think they are measuring.
Since you asked, I have 5 AC/DC amp clamps ranging from a 2 amp to a 2000 amp unit. I've also worked with hall effect sensors in various projects over the years.
I also have 4 CRT type analog oscilloscopes, and I think the 3 Tektronix ones of them work. The 4th is an old heathkit that was all tube based, it doesn't work. All of them are statically deflected, which is interesting because that actually does measure voltage without an electrical current flowing across the measuring element - the beam of electrons is steered due to the current-less electric field.
Also 2 junky Siglent 2GGS/s DSO scopes, a 2 chan and a 4 chan.
I once offered to send one of the old Tek units for free to a guy in Germany if he paid shipping, he was happy till he found out how much it cost to ship a 50lb large chunk of vintage metal equipment LOL.
Why won't you just admit that KVL will appear to hold in my V1 and V2 configurations in the above linked diagram if measured with actual volt meters, then we can move on to why it's not?
If you haven't the ability to solve a simple ideal transformer step down problem, and you haven't the honesty to admit that KVL will appear to work in a case where you know it will appear to work, then how can I trust you to tell me anything else straight?
Thing is, I can hook up some toroid transformers, make a loop, and measure around the loop, and KVL will appear to hold. So can you. Why not admit it?
Once I see that you have the integrity to admit to observable reality, then you can start telling me what's going on behind that observable reality.
But so far, your entire performance looks to me wild savage religious dance to try and save your Lewin.
As for me, it's not religious. It's just me sayin' Hey, I got volt meters and transformers, I made a loop and measured around the loop and summed the voltages, and it all summed to zero.
You think you can show me that KVL actually fails int he real world with toroidal transformer secondaries? Then for pete's sake DO IT! Otherwise, stop telling me it fails in that situation.
Anyway, take one green path, and one purple path, where you can place your voltmeter even if there is a torus. Along one you read 5V and along the other your read 0V. KVL dies there. Wanna see in the circuit: the branch with the resistor is a green path, the branch with the conductor alone is the purple path. One gives 5V and one gives 0V - and you can show that it has to be that way because if you compute the fields, these values are what you get by computing the path integrals.
Everything checks.
And what is the sum of voltages if you circle the ring? 5V + 0V = 5V, or circulation of E along the ring = EMF.
I'm not exactly sure what topology you have in mind for me to try. I could take some guesses, but wouldn't you know it, KVL would appear to work and you'd say I did it wrong.
So let's do it this way.
I have two nice EI-Core transformers with 200mv/turn, or 100mv/half-turn. If you want me to use a toroid, I can just use half of them.
Or if I have to use a toroid I can get one off ebay.
Please draw me the circuit topology that you want me to test, the one that you think will fail KVL.
Thank you.