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Unipolar Electricity: What happens here?

Started by Magnethos, December 30, 2008, 03:10:15 PM

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0 Members and 2 Guests are viewing this topic.

AbbaRue

I already explained this circuit before.
The circuit has 2 batteries connected in parallel with one battery.
The 2 batteries in series are charging up the single battery through the lightbulb.
This is identical to the Young effect were one capacitor charges up the other through a motor.
Only this circuit is using batteries and a light bulb instead.

Magnethos

Quote from: AbbaRue on December 31, 2008, 10:46:21 AM
I already explained this circuit before.
The circuit has 2 batteries connected in parallel with one battery.
The 2 batteries in series are charging up the single battery through the lightbulb.
This is identical to the Young effect were one capacitor charges up the other through a motor.
Only this circuit is using a lightbulb instead.

Of course, now I understand this. Thanks.

AbbaRue

If you had a battery charger you could use it in place of the 2 batteries in series.
You would connect the negative terminal of the charger to the negative of the battery.
And then you would connect the positive of the charger to one side of the light bulb.
And connect the positive of the battery up to the other side of the light bulb.
Then you could light the bulb at the same time as you charge your battery.


sparks

When the light goes out all batteries/capacitors should be at same voltage.  Then switch em from series to parallel.  Do it again. :)
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