How Do I Solve A Series Parallel Circuit?
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All Comments (13)
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Cant see what you are doing after the first minute or so????!!!!!!!
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Useless!! show the entire problem.. not just the beginning and talk about the rest..
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i wouldve given a thumbs up if this video hadnt just froze a few minutes in
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lol I'm in the midst of rewiring my house lights to dc for LED use... currently its using AC about 640 Watt a hour.. just downstairs :-o
after it should be about 3 watts /hour after I rewire, everythings going in parallel, easy, probably the way its already wired, waiting for my boxs of 1000x 5mm ultra brights ($3 per 1000 lol ebay lol)
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hmm im not very good at this but my answer i got was .109 ;/
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@jaze56jaze I know you probably don't need this anymore, but in the event other people are still curious, he used Ohm's Law, or V=IR (voltage=current x value of resistance), and plugged in the known values:
V = 10V
Total Resistance, or R = 2.45 kOhm
I = 10V / 2.45 kOhm. (The units are in kA, or kilo-amps. The answer should be 4.08 kA.)
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Very straight forward and helpful, Thank you for the video.
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Yeah, I add the two circuits parallel and got 700, then added the 1000 by it via series and got 1700. From there 1700 parallel to the 750, i got 520.4 for total resistance?
hey, why did the video stop after 3 minutes? kinda hard to follow during that time, especially how you got 4.80.
jaze56jaze 1 year ago 6