They will either pull in or push out depending on the polarity of the DC voltage and remain stationary.
This is a bad idea as the DC resistance of the voice coil is much less than the AC impedance of the voice coil and it is possible to overheat and burn out the voice coil due to the much higher current the DC voltage can produce in the voice coil compared to the AC voltage that would drive the voice coil in normal operation.
A speaker converts electrical energy into sound.
No. Load resistance is the value of the element actually doing the work of the circuit it is connected to. A speaker connected to an amplifier is the load.
A closed circuit works by having electricity flow in a complete circuit or circle or any closed shape.
If you will connect it right, it will work.
Ammeters must always be placed in series in a circuit, otherwise they will not work babes :)
All of the light bulbs in the series circuit would go out.
These jacks are used in audio systems to patch in a piece of outboard gear. When you plug in the cable, the circuit is interrupted and sent to the external gear. When you remove the cable, the circuit 'closes' and sends the signal on through. A headphone jack is a closed-circuit jack. When you plug in your headphones, the circuit to the internal speaker 'opens' and sound is sent only to the headphones. When you unplug them, the circuit to the speaker 'closes' and you hear sound through the speaker again.
You may have accidentally dislodged the circuit by hitting or vigorously shaking the headphones. This can result in one speaker not working.
The purpose of a speaker is to produce sound. With respect to the circuit, it uses up some power, which is provided by other parts of the circuit. The generic name for elements that are designed to consume power is "load".
Crating the Circuit alone would be electric energy and when the speaker is operating it would turn into sound energy.
No. Load resistance is the value of the element actually doing the work of the circuit it is connected to. A speaker connected to an amplifier is the load.
It converts electrical energy to sound energy.
The load that is connected in a circuit is what does the work in the circuit.
A squelch circuit turns off the audio input to the speaker when there is no radio signal being received. This stops the speaker from producing annoying noise when no radio signal is being received.
a speaker polarity is sub mainframe of the ................................
Just like any other speaker.
Answer 1 - Non-funcional SpeakersThere could be one or more of several causes, a few of which that come to my mind follow: A connector plug between the radio and speaker has become loose or disconnected,Corrosion has developed on the metal contacts INSIDE one of the connectors in the circuit,The speaker has become defective or,The circuit INSIDE the radio has become defective.There could be other causes, but these are the major ones that I can think of at the moment. Good luck.
Electricity travels in a closed circuit when it does work.