Want this question answered?
A 240 volt street light circuit is wired in parallel connections. In the base of the street fixture an inline fuse is connected into the circuit that goes up to the fixture to protect the lamp head.
The wire size depends on how much current it will conduct.
Filament. Correct; made of tungsten wire in most incandescent bulbs.
In residential wiring the white wire is neutral on the 120 volt circuits. On a 3way circuit the red is the traveler and the white is neutral. On a 240 volt 3 wire connection the white & black are hot. On a 240 volt 4 wire connection the black and red are hot and the white is neutral.
Depends on the size of the circuit which you did not list.
batteries, wire, connectors, and light bulbs
Most car batteries are 12 volts. They can light 12 volt bulbs. The bulbs in your house are likely 120 volt bulbs. A car battery will not light those without some very special equipment, or unless you were to wire ten car batteries in series.
A 240 volt street light circuit is wired in parallel connections. In the base of the street fixture an inline fuse is connected into the circuit that goes up to the fixture to protect the lamp head.
Modern light bulbs are made of tungsten wire.
A simple circuit contains: Power source - battery, wall outlet Path - wire or other conductor Load - light bulb Start with a small light bulb... see if you have extra bulbs for the car, tail light bulbs for example. Hook one wire to a pole on a 9v battery, then the tip of the light bulb's connection end. Then a second wire on the side of the bulbs connection end, and return to the source.
No, not a good idea. You have to use a 347 volt ballast.
If one wire was to break only one of the bulbs on the circuit would stop working whereas if one wire broke on a series circuit all the bulbs would stop working.
Use 8 gauge wire.
If it is a 110 volt light it can safely run on a 20 amp circuit with AWG # 12 wire.
Its the wire inside of light bulbs.
yes
find the fuse ,if not that then ck to see if you have power to bulbs with a 12 volt light tester if you do have power then then ck your ground wire for contanuity if not your bulbs are bad , if not ck wire connections ,good luck