The voltage will be double that of one dry cell. The current will be that of one dry cell.
There is addition of voltage. Dry cells have 1.5 volts irrespective of there size. if the cells are added as same polarity in series it will add if are parallel then voltage remains same
Literally, Lithium is an element. Cells which have Lithium in them are dry cells.
Below are two DC sources in series. | | ___ __ | | ___ __ | |
YESAnswerNot necessarily. The current depends on the potential difference and the load resistance. If you connect cells in parallel, you do not effect its voltage or the load, so the current is unaffected (although the battery's current 'capacity' will increase). If you connect the cells in series, then you will increase the voltage and the current will increase.
A "dry" contact is a contact that is not initially connected to a voltage source. It could be stand-alone, such as a pressure switch mounted on a boiler. Or, if the contact is mounted as part of an electrical unit that has a power source, then the "dry" contact has no pre-wired electrical connection to that power source. For example, a magnetic motor starter may have an extra contact that is not connected to the control circuit that starts and stops the motor. However, when the motor starts, the "dry" contact changes state, because the mechanical action of the starter moves the contact. This "dry" contact could then be wired to devices/circuits that are separate/remote from the motor starter circuits. I do not recognize the term "no volt contact" but I suspect that it is the same thing. A specific type of dry contact in the USA is a "form C" contact which is a three wire contact: Normally Open(NO), Normally Closed (NC), and a Common (C).
Battery Pack.
That would be a battery.
The voltage increases in this case.
"series" ... high voltage
"series" ... high voltage
it explodes if two a series batterys connected in parrallel to another forth circuit , this may result in you changing your pants...
There is addition of voltage. Dry cells have 1.5 volts irrespective of there size. if the cells are added as same polarity in series it will add if are parallel then voltage remains same
7.5 Volts
If dry cells are connected in parallel, they will supply more current to the bulb, which will cause it to glow for a longer period of time, but at the same brightness as if only a single cell were used. When the cells are connected in series, the voltage is increased, which will cause the bulb to burn more brightly. If the voltage is increased past the safe point for the bulb, its life will be shortened and it may burn out rapidly. In series, the voltages add. In parallel, you essentially have a larger cell of the same type (cell as in battery of one).
1.5v+1.5v+`n batteries. You didn't say how many cells, but if they're wired in series, the voltage is additive. 7.5 volts
Approximately 7.5 volts, under no-load conditions, assuming that each cell is exactly at 1.5 volts each (which I assure you, it doesn't really happen that way in the real world, but it's close enough).When cells are connected in series, the voltage is the sum of all individual voltages. In this case, with 5 cells in series (each at 1.5V), the total voltage would be 1.5V*5 = 7.5V
Highly unlikely. You could not generate enough amperage to start the engine. Of course with enough batteries connected together in series & parellel it is possible but not practical.