I had written this post hours ago, before reading Jesse's last rant, and delayed till I had the links and the images, but I did not have to change anything except for a few addition to confirm my deductions.
Jesse believes, and all his measurements confirm it, that:
Voltage is induced locally only where "stuff" is "crossing" the magnetic flux, e.g. in a transformer, only the part of the windings that are "inside" the core contribute to the voltage. Hence only the "2R" resistor acts as a "secondary"
Yes, Jesse is a 'lumper'.
He believes that the core is some sort of magical portal, like a stargate, and when you cross it, when you 'cut through it' with your wires, they magically acquire a voltage, that is there independent of anything else.
Dude, stop misquoting me or trying to stuff words into my mouth.
Can you even read? I've been saying that IT MODELS AND MEASURES as I describe. If you can show voltage being induced across a wire from being near an ideal toroid transformer when that wire does not pass through said toroid, then show me!
Otherwise, a toroid models and measures just as I described.
But in the case of the infinitely long solenoid, where he cannot find the entrance of the stargate, he is forced to become a 'distributer', because the 'hole' is now the whole space and the magical source of voltage can now be inside the whole length of the conductors and even of the probes. "The probes become the secondary".
Since an infinitely long solenoid is a mythical creature, then I can just say that my probe wires do not interfere with the physical space of said solenoid, and I can run my probe wires right through the center of the solenoid and still measure the voltage induced across a fractional portion of the secondary turn, just like I did with the Lewin Clock, and KVL still holds.
Edit: read another subsequent message before posting this and he appears to confirm that he jumps between positions depending on what suits him best at the moment
"However Maxwell and Faraday describe the inner workings is irrelevant to the fact that in the real world a close-magnetic-circuit-cored transformer models as if the entire voltage induced happens at the point that the winding passes through the core."
I have a couple of setups he should try to test his belief with his trusty voltmeter.
GREAT! SHOW ME! That's what I've been asking for going on a year now!
But the reason I keep answering him is not to convince him - ironically he is more of a flatearther of the flatearthers he mocks on his channel - but (among other things) to observe the rejection mechanisms when he is cornered.
Or maybe I'm observing your rejection mechanisms when you're cornered -- which are glaring bob and weave and an utter refusal to come to grips with even the observable part of reality.
If you can't even admit that the output of a closed-magnetic-circuit-core transformer gives every appearance of working with KVL, even though it's glaringly obvious to anyone with a volt meter and such a transformer, then how am I supposed to trust anything else you say?
In fact, how is anybody else supposed to trust anything else you say?
First he needed to reassure himself with that exercise on the transformer and you can see the false equivalence (reiterated in several messages, including the last one)
You act like there's something wrong with doing experiments. Maybe if you did some you wouldn't be so wrong.
Doing experiments is good. It helps you know if you got your theory right or wrong.
Alright, the jury is in! bsfeechannel and Sredni couldn't solve it. .
...But don't feel bad if I am skeptical of your opinion about whether my experiment is wrong -- you couldn't even solve a loaded transformer voltage question that I eventually solved.
...He couldn't solve the 10:1 loaded transformer question, like you expertly did.
...that doesn't change the fact that you couldn't solve the transformer quiz
...so if someone solved it better than me I know they are better than me, and if they can't solve it then I know they are no better than me
"See, you did not do my high school exercise, therefore you cannot do it and since I can, the only possible conclusion it that I know all of EM better than you. Even if I have no idea how to compute the circulation of a vector field".
Then he is trying to reject all analytical reasoning because he cannot handle the math.
Stop lying about me. I'm not rejecting all analytical reasoning, I'm saying "Dude, get a grip with reality. Admit the undeniable, then let's talk about the math and why you think KVL isn't holding even though it gives every appearance of holding."
But you refuse to deal with reality.
As to the 10:1 transformer quiz, I didn't take that from any book, I made that just for you guys.
It looks to me like you're trying lead us to believe you could have solved it but just didn't want to spend the effort.
I'm not buying that for two reasons: One is that the amount of effort you put in here just replying to me already is HUGE. What's solving one little problem you've been solving since you were 17?
The other reason is you told Thinkfat he was solving it wrong. That tells me you didn't know how to solve it either, else you wouldn't have told him he did it wrong when in fact he did it right.
You can throw all the math at me you want but that's not going to prove that KVL actually fails.
to the point that when asked if 5 = 0 his answer is:
For exceptionally small versions of five and exceptionally large versions of zero, possibly
That's a bloody lie and you know it. You asked a bizarre question because 5 obviously does not equal 0. I answered as I did as a joke, and put FIVE laughing-hard emojis, WHICH YOU EDITED OUT to falsely present my partial statement as if I had said it in seriousness.
Furthermore, you also took two lines from TWO DIFFERENT posts and put them one before the other to give a false context to my joke.
That's dirty dude, you must be desperate.
What I
really said was:
For exceptionally small versions of five and exceptionally large versions of zero, possibly

And you actually represented me as having been serious! And the emojis are encoded as Colon Dash D D, so you literally edited them out of my sentence entirely changing the meaning.
That's so low.
So, now all proofs he accepts are those that he himself can do with his limited equipment: a pancake solenoid that has a ton of stray field on the outside (it's basically a multifilar coil), and an EI transformer that will have 'returning legs' on both sides of the ring and nearly no space inside the legs. He also once produced a tiny toroidal core in whose hole he could not fit the probes.
Why do you blather on?
You try to slant everything in such an accusatory tone.
I am working with what I have, I don't get paid to do this, I use what I got. I can't just go buy stuff all the time because you're too lazy and uneducated to do the experiments yourself.
If you think there's a different experiment that will "show me the light" then by all means tell me about it!
I don't mind building a long solenoid. Obviously it can't be infinitely long, but how long does it need to be? Would 10 feet long be long enough? I got magnet wire. I can wind it nicely on a 10ft long PVC plumbing pipe. I can even space the wire 0.1 inches between turns and drill a ring of holes around the pipe before winding it so I can pass my probe wire right through the middle so I can measure the voltage across fractional sections of a turn of a secondary, like I did with my Lewin Clock.
And he rejects experiments that could prove him wrong, like building a long solenoid to confine the field and go all around it or even right above it, or using a transformer with a gap big enough to fit the probes...
Now you're just whining. I've put out significant effort to personally verify observable reality. I've put out effort to show my observations. What've you done?
Besides, I don't remember anyone asking me to build a longer solenoid.
Are you saying that would solve the problem for me? I don't mind building a longer solenoid, although obviously it cannot be infinitely long. Just how long does it need to be to satisfy you?
If you cannot prove he's wrong using the limited setup he has, then he must be right.
Stop the BS dude. You're grabbing at straws.
I've done the experiments I did because I thought that was a good way to test observable reality.
And I've also been asking for a year for a working example that showed I was wrong. It's not my fault if so far nobody has such an example for me to try out.
And by the way, I'm not the only one who can do experiments either - if YOU think you have an experiment that will prove your point, you could either ask someone else to do it or do it yourself.
Would it be fair then to say that in the real world, where wires and ferrite/iron cannot exist in the same physical space, that we don't have to worry about our volt meter leads accidentally ending up half way through the cross section of a toroid, and thus in the real world, KVL holds fine
(Even tho he seems to have changed language: now KVL 'have the appearance of holding' and from one of the latest posts: 'I never said that's actually how Faraday or Maxwell describe it, or even that is how it is working'). So, at least he appears to be right.
Look bud, to me, it seems like KVL works in the cases I've described. I set up the experiment, I used the volt meter. I observed observable reality.
But you seem absolutely unwilling to admit that KVL holds when using the output windings of closed-magnetic-circuit-core transformers.
So I'm trying to meet you half way and say "Can you at least agree that KVL
appears to work in this case.." Then we can talk about why you think it's not actually working.
But you even refuse to admit that KVL so much as
appears to be working in said configuration.
You really painted yourself into a corner. Regarding this diagram below:
https://i.postimg.cc/fTgyDNp0/20211119-030105.jpgRegarding diagram above, you said that V2 would work with KVL, but V1 wouldn't. But you also said they are functionally identical.
So you've got yourself in a pickle where even though the two configurations are functionally identical, somehow the voltages will sum to zero in one case but not in the other.
But the most interesting thing I have got from him is his lucid analysis of what in the older thread on this topic I called 'scientific populism'.
"In the mean time, we go on to spread the truth that KVL holds when you correctly probe for loops who's size is much smaller than the wavelength of the frequency involved.
More and more people are making videos on the topic, demonstrating Lewin's error and some of them already know way more math than you and me, and the ones that don't know the math aren't going to be helped by your mathematical definition games.
They are going to be influenced by the low-level information about guys like Mehdi and all the other guys taking the practical approach -- because most people identify much more strongly with the practical approach, and won't be helped by you quoting math [...]"
He is 100% right.
This is how politics has always worked: you don't need to tell the truth or correctly solve problems, far from it, you just need to tell your electorate what they want to hear. Make them feel smart, even if they are dumb as rocks, by using their language and indulging their wrong beliefs. They will adore you and they will give you their vote and their money.
And how do we know that you're not just telling your electorate what they want to hear like any good politician worth his salt?
Like I said before, if people like you want people like me to see you as anything other than a religious zealot for your Lewin belief, then you need to meet them at a level they understand and be willing to answer questions head on and be willing to admit to observable reality.
If you duck and dodge every question and refuse to admit things that are plainly observable, they are gonna think you're a quack.
It's up to you of course, but with the amount of effort you put in, I'd think you'd want good results.
But when we see you bobbing and weaving and avoiding questions and literally refusing to admit to that which we can observe with our own volt meters, we're gonna think you don't know what you're talking about.
Another thing you can do to help people think you're honest and sincere is do some of the challenges they offer you.
Saying you're not going to do their home work is like the biggest copout ever. It raises red flags all over, it tells people that you probably don't know what you're talking about.
"I could but I'm not gonna."
Yeah, no you can't. If you expect people to believe you're honest sincere and know your stuff, you need to be willing to show them that you know your stuff.
And you don't know your stuff. And you know you don't know it, which is why you're so wary of answering questions.
Look, why can't you agree that in the case of a loop composed of resistors and closed-magnetic-circuit-core transformer secondary windings, KVL APPEARS to hold as measured with a volt meter. Why not just admit it?
Then we can go on to talk about why you think KVL isn't ACTUALLY holding even though it appears to be.
The fact is, even if KVL doesn't hold but only appears to, we wouldn't have had such a long conversation, you would have been like "So yeah, it appears to hold, but it's not holding because XYZ..."
How about it? Can you admit the obvious that everyone else can see? KVL at the very least appears to hold in resistor/transformer-secondary winding loops as described above.
Why not admit it?