Types of circuits, Series, Parallel – Cub Cadet ISeries User Manual

Page 130: Series/parallel, Shorts, Opens

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ELECTRICAL SYSTEM

124

Types of circuits

There are three ways a circuit can be wired:

Series

Parallel

Series/parallel

Series

Series circuits are wired so that the current has

only one path to follow. If one component in the system
fails, the circuit will be broken and whole system will
not work. See Figure 7.18.

Parallel

Parallel circuits are wired so that current has multi-

ple paths to follow. If a component in one of the paral-
lel paths fails, the rest of the circuit will keep working.
See Figure 7.19.

Series/parallel

Series/parallel circuits have some sections wired in

series and some in parallel. See Figure 7.20.

What can go wrong?

There are three types of failures that can occur in

an electrical circuit:

1.

Shorts

2.

Opens

3.

Increased resistance

Shorts

A short is when electricity takes a path that it was

not designed to take by-passing a component in the cir-
cuit.

A common example of a short is a wire with insula-

tion that chafed through, exposing the copper conduc-
tor. The bare copper will short the circuit when it
touches a ground source.

Opens

An open is when current can not complete its path

back to the power source. A common example of this is
a burned-out lamp (light bulb) in a series circuit.

Figure 7.18

Switch

Battery

Lamp

Figure 7.19

Battery

Lamp

Lamp

Lamp

Figure 7.20

Battery

Lamp Switch

Lamp

Lamp

Lamp

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