Project 120 lots at once, Project 121 electrical circle – Elenco Snap Circuits Motion User Manual

Page 62

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Project 120

Lots at Once

Rearrange the parts in the preceding circuit to make this one,

which has them connected in a loop. Turn on the slide switch (S1).

The LEDs (D8 & D10) light, but the geared motor (GM), air fountain

(AF), and light motor (M7) do nothing. Snappy knows why.

Project 121

Electrical Circle

-61-

Place the spout

on top of the air

fountain and the

ball in the air flow.

Spout

Build the circuit, but note that the air fountain (AF) is placed over the middle of

the 5-snap and 6-snap wires. Place the spout on top of the air fountain and

place the ball in it. Turn on the slide switch (S1).
Lots of stuff should be happening - the geared motor (GM) shaft spins, the ball

in the air fountain moves (it may rise into the air, or may just spin around),the

light motor (M7) spins and lights, and the LEDs (D8 & D10) are on.
You may place the merry-go-round base on the geared motor, but this is not necessary.

Here five components (GM, AF, D10, M7, & D8) are all connected in parallel, so the

electric currents flowing through them can be different, and they are basically

independent of each other. Electricity flows out of the batteries, divides among the five

components, then recombines to flow through the switch and back into the batteries.

Each component gets what it needs from the batteries (unless the batteries are too weak

to supply enough), and all work properly. Also, if one breaks, the others keep working.
Note: this circuit connects the LEDs (D8 & D10) directly to the batteries without a resistor

or other device to limit the current. Normally this could damage an LED, but your Snap

Circuits

®

LEDs have internal resistors added to protect them from incorrect wiring, and

will not be damaged. They are connected directly to the batteries in this circuit to help

demonstrate how parallel circuits work.

Compare this circuit to the preceding one. Here the same five components (GM, AF, D10,

M7, & D8) are all connected in series, so the electric current flowing through them must

be the same, and each affects the others. Electricity flows in a loop, from the batteries,

through each component, and then back into the batteries. Here the component with the

most resistance limits the flow of electricity. In this circuit the LEDs (D8 & D10) have the

most resistance due to their internal protection resistors (see above). The geared motor,

air fountain, and light motor are unable to function because the LED resistance limits the

current too much, though the electrical resistance of these devices is having an additional

small limiting effect on the current flow.
A second battery holder was added to this circuit because the combined turn-on voltage

of both LEDs (about 1.5V each) may be too high to make anything happen with just one

set of batteries (3V). You can try replacing one battery holder with a 3-snap wire and see

if the LEDs turn on.
Connecting parts in series makes the wiring less complex (especially important when the

components are far apart), makes it easier to protect sensitive devices, and can avoid

wasting energy (making batteries last longer).

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