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Lightup switch on remote wire
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<blockquote data-quote="Rashaddd" data-source="post: 5068874" data-attributes="member: 592162"><p>Hmm...what happens when you have lets say a 20 ohm and a 1000 ohm load wired in series with eachother? Do they each get their respective amounts of current still? How can you be ******* multiple amounts of power or current through the same wire at the same time? It'd have to be the same current going through both loads wouldn't it? Which means voltage would have to change? Which means a 20 ohm load will have to significantly step down voltage in order to keep current flow the same as through the 1kohm load, which means in terms of my amp/switch, the amp is a several thousand ohm load, and my switch is a 24 (i checked), so lets say back to my original example, if we started with 12volts, the 20 ohm load sees 2.88 volts while the biggest load sees the full 12 volts, no?</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Rashaddd, post: 5068874, member: 592162"] Hmm...what happens when you have lets say a 20 ohm and a 1000 ohm load wired in series with eachother? Do they each get their respective amounts of current still? How can you be ******* multiple amounts of power or current through the same wire at the same time? It'd have to be the same current going through both loads wouldn't it? Which means voltage would have to change? Which means a 20 ohm load will have to significantly step down voltage in order to keep current flow the same as through the 1kohm load, which means in terms of my amp/switch, the amp is a several thousand ohm load, and my switch is a 24 (i checked), so lets say back to my original example, if we started with 12volts, the 20 ohm load sees 2.88 volts while the biggest load sees the full 12 volts, no? [/QUOTE]
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