Volvo VNL Service Manual page 15

Electrical general, group 30
Hide thumbs Also See for VNL:
Table of Contents

Advertisement

Group 30 Electrical System—VNL, VNM
Series/Parallel Circuits
A series/parallel circuit consists of some components
in series and others are in parallel. In the figure the
components side by side are in series since there is only
one current path. The two circuits above and below each
other are in parallel since there are two current paths.
Ohm's Law in series/parallel circuits
In series/parallel circuits, the easiest way to find a device
value is to look at each part of the circuit separately.
For the example below, first find the resistance in each
branch. The two 2
and 4
resistance of 6
for this part of the circuit. For the other
2 resistors, 2
+ 1
= 3
To simplify the circuit, think of it as a parallel circuit having
a 6
and 3
resistor.
4
So, (6
x 3
)
(6
+ 3
resistance.
The total circuit current, therefore, is:
4
I = V
R
4
I = 12 volts
2
= 6 amps
The current through each branch can also be determined.
For the branch of the circuit with the 6
4
I = 12 volts
6
= 2 amps
So, for each resistor in this branch, the voltage drop is
found as follows:
V = I x R
For the 2
resistor,
V = 2 amps x 2
= 4 volts
For the 4
resistor,
V = 2 amps x 4
= 8 volts
The sum of the voltage drops in a series circuit equals the
source voltage, so 4 volts + 8 volts = 12 volts.
resistors add to give a
.
4
) = 18
9
= 2
total resistance:
Typical Series/Parallel Circuit
total
Design and Function
W3000493
W3000566
13

Hide quick links:

Advertisement

Table of Contents
loading

This manual is also suitable for:

Vnm

Table of Contents