sunny1982,
You want to find the impedance of the circuit looking into it from RL. You do that by dividing the open circuit voltage by the short current. That is a basic definition of circuit impedance. Once you know the circuit impedance, you match it with RL for max power transfer. Changing RL from 0 to ∞, and calculating the voltage and currents at those values by implementing K's law with loop equations, gives the open circuit voltage and short current.
Yes, if you cannot understand how to apply it, ask for clarification.
Ratch
What do you mean by set RL to ∞ and set RL to 0?
You want to find the impedance of the circuit looking into it from RL. You do that by dividing the open circuit voltage by the short current. That is a basic definition of circuit impedance. Once you know the circuit impedance, you match it with RL for max power transfer. Changing RL from 0 to ∞, and calculating the voltage and currents at those values by implementing K's law with loop equations, gives the open circuit voltage and short current.
So are these are all the equations I should add to complete this task?
I1 = -(120*(96+7*RL))/(11112+1279*RL)
I2 = -(375*(24+RL))/(11112+1279*RL)
I3 = -9000/(11112+1279*RL)
Yes, if you cannot understand how to apply it, ask for clarification.
Ratch