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When a plug key is open , the circuit is incomplete and is call open circuit.. To be continued..
The plug key is good for thing in the circuit. The plug key either makes it or breaks it.
Yes, This is a common precaution built into many electrical home devices today. This utilizes a 3 conductor 3 pin plug in which the round center pin is electrically connected to the cabinet or housing of the appliance making it grounded. In older appliances that use the 2 conductor method there may be a chance of plugging in the appliance with the blades reversed and making the housing electrically hot. On newer electric appliances that use 2 blades one is made wider which is the ground connection for the plug. The newer appliances can also be made safer yet through the use of double insulation.
If the gap is small then you may get 'arcing'. This is where the electricity will jump from one point to another (cable end to cable end). This could cause a fire. If the gap is too large for the electricity to jump then in effect there will be no-circuit.
The three prong plug incorporates a ground wire for safety. If there is a short circuit in an appliance that has a three prong plug, the current will travel back to the electrical panel and either blow the fuse to that circuit, or trip the circuit breaker to shut power down on that circuit.
When a plug key is open , the circuit is incomplete and is call open circuit.. To be continued..
The source in electric cuircuit is having sex with a woman.
The plug key is good for thing in the circuit. The plug key either makes it or breaks it.
An incandescent light bulb. An electric heater. A simple resistor. Basically most things that heat up when a current is passed through them do so due to the resistive nature of the load.
Yes, This is a common precaution built into many electrical home devices today. This utilizes a 3 conductor 3 pin plug in which the round center pin is electrically connected to the cabinet or housing of the appliance making it grounded. In older appliances that use the 2 conductor method there may be a chance of plugging in the appliance with the blades reversed and making the housing electrically hot. On newer electric appliances that use 2 blades one is made wider which is the ground connection for the plug. The newer appliances can also be made safer yet through the use of double insulation.
If the gap is small then you may get 'arcing'. This is where the electricity will jump from one point to another (cable end to cable end). This could cause a fire. If the gap is too large for the electricity to jump then in effect there will be no-circuit.
Plug a plug in an outlet :)
Yes, but care should be taken to plug the BBQ unit into an outlet on a appliance rated circuit, 20amp min. , usually the ones serving the kitchen counter areas.
The three prong plug incorporates a ground wire for safety. If there is a short circuit in an appliance that has a three prong plug, the current will travel back to the electrical panel and either blow the fuse to that circuit, or trip the circuit breaker to shut power down on that circuit.
A jack is a connector socket designed for the insertion of a plug. The plug can connect input, output, or auxiliary devices to the amplifier circuit.
A jack is a connector socket designed for the insertion of a plug. The plug can connect input, output, or auxiliary devices to the amplifier circuit.
no