Hey.
This is what I did.
I switched some parts due to some dude "me" did the drawing of the schematic quick and standing on his head.
Schematic
Is it gonna work or is it a big no-no?
This is what I did.

I switched some parts due to some dude "me" did the drawing of the schematic quick and standing on his head.
Schematic

Is it gonna work or is it a big no-no?
Pretend R2 and C2 are a single reactance. Call it Z2. Now, Z2 is in series with C1. Call C1's reactance Z1. The impedance of that branch is thus (Z1 + Z2) in parallel with R1. In reverse, the impedance is (Z2 + Z1) in parallel with R1. So, does the order matter?
😀
😀
Drawing schematics standing on his head
Thzar
I could not resist this one 😀. I'm also from sweden so english is not my native languish.
You and your "dude mate" did the same drawing exept he was standing on his head, thats why it was different drawn. ti hi hi 😛
@Sy
As a moderator you are very nice to not laugh to us foreigners.🙂
Thzar
I could not resist this one 😀. I'm also from sweden so english is not my native languish.
You and your "dude mate" did the same drawing exept he was standing on his head, thats why it was different drawn. ti hi hi 😛

@Sy
As a moderator you are very nice to not laugh to us foreigners.🙂
Is it gonna work or is it a big no-no?
Yes, it will work. Series impedances are commutative. (a+b=b+a)
edit: this is a useful trick for finessing circuit board layouts
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