: Occasionally, the term surfaces in archival film or theater reviews from the late 20th century as a localized or misspelled shorthand in print.
: In older academic archives, "ttrar" sometimes appears in OCR (text-recognition) errors for university yearbooks, such as the 1951 Moundbuilder from Southwestern College, where it appears in descriptions of faculty members like Mr. Myers. : Occasionally, the term surfaces in archival film
: Players often discuss "Ttrar" in the context of Master League PvP battles or its efficiency as a "Shadow" Pokémon, where its damage output is significantly boosted. : Players often discuss "Ttrar" in the context
: It also measures "exciting current," which can pinpoint problems in the transformer's core, such as unwanted circulating currents or unintentional grounds. 2. Gaming: Pokémon's "Ttrar" Gaming: Pokémon's "Ttrar" In the Pokémon Go and
In the Pokémon Go and competitive battling communities (like r/stunfisk ), "Ttrar" is a common slang abbreviation for , a powerful Rock/Dark-type Pokémon.
In the world of high-voltage power systems, refers to the Transformer Turns Ratio testing equipment, such as the Three-Phase TTR® used to ensure transformers are functioning correctly.
) for three-phase transformers and display the percentage of error compared to the nameplate rating.