A little bit of knowledge about electricity is a good thing to have. Here’s a primer on understanding the difference between a parallel circuit and a series circuit.
November 10, 2014
A little bit of knowledge about electricity is a good thing to have. Here’s a primer on understanding the difference between a parallel circuit and a series circuit.
A: When two electrical devices are connected into a circuit that is supplying energy, they can be connected in one of two ways: in a series or in a parallel.
A: Say you’re looking to put up a string of lights on your backyard patio.
If they are hooked up in a parallel circuit, one single charge would go through the external circuit and pass through one of the light bulbs. So here if that same path is broken, the electrons would just take another route to continue along.
A: Sure. One common analogy to explain parallel circuits is the “tollbooth analogy.”
Or you could expand your tollbooths via a parallel system, so you open up two more tollbooths beside the first and in total have three tollbooths side by side, providing the flow of cars with one of three possible throughways.
*Not only is it dangerous, it may even be illegal in some provinces, such as Québec, to do your own electrical wiring. The solution: consider hiring a master electrician.
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