i plan on upgrading my "big 3" electrical system with 1/0 gauge. just need some suggestion on what brand i should go with? i also plan on upgrading to an HO alternator and a deep cycle battery. i have a 2002 Trans Am and i have a Kicker 1250.1 rms is about 650 rms with a JL audio 10w0 subwoofer...
iv been looking at t the stinger audio power wire and ground and some of the cables that i look at had a thick coding of ruber so its not true 1/0 gagepowere and ground
iv been looking at t the stinger audio power wire and ground and some of the cables that i look at had a thick coding of ruber so its not true 1/0 gagepowere and ground
iv been looking at t the stinger audio power wire and ground and some of the cables that i look at had a thick coding of ruber so its not true 1/0 gagepowere and ground
iv been looking at t the stinger audio power wire and ground and some of the cables that i look at had a thick coding of ruber so its not true 1/0 gagepowere and ground
iv been looking at t the stinger audio power wire and ground and some of the cables that i look at had a thick coding of ruber so its not true 1/0 gagepowere and ground
So, it's like you can't divide 1 by 0, so 1/0 is undefined, that's what I think. Now when you take it as a limit, i.e. approaching 0 from positive direction of X-axis would give us the answer positive infinity whereas approaching 0 from negative direction of X-axis would give us the answer...
can 1/0 be viewed as "infinity" or negative "infinity"? What exactly is it?
I'm not looking for a deep philosphical answer, im looking for a mathematical textbook answer :)
I think it does, because a every time the line moves up the y-axis the slope gets bigger and bigger and approaches infinite slope, so wouldn't a vertical line have infinite slope?
Logic-wise, doesn't it make sense that since a a vertical line is well, parallel to the y-axis, its slope is...