circuit
A circuit diagram is used simplified graphical drawing representing an electrical circuit. It shows the actual wire connections using a block diagram or layout diagram. It does not show a physical depiction of the arrangement of components.
OR diagram is a drawing or plan of the digital logic OR function, it is not able to actually do anything only tell a person something about this logic functionOR circuit is the actual electronics implementing the digital logic OR function, it is actually able to carry out this logic function in a digital device or system
Without the actual circuit diagram (schematic), this question cannot be answered.
To determine the scale of the diagram of the bridge, you need both the actual length of the bridge and the length represented in the diagram. The scale can be expressed as a ratio of the diagram length to the actual length. For example, if the diagram represents the bridge as 1,000 feet, the scale would be 1:4.2 (1,000 feet in the diagram to 4,200 feet actual). If you provide the length in the diagram, I can help you calculate the specific scale.
Without seeing the actual diagram no real answer can be given.LEDs are used to generate light, often as status indicators.
Nothing is utilized in a schematic diagram, a schematic diagram is just a representation of something at a conceptual level. Only the actual thing, in this case an electronic circuit, utilizes anything.
To make things simpler! Imagine if they had to draw an actual transistor or battery everytime... that would have been both time consuming and difficult for the person studying the diagram ( as one engineer's drawing of a transistor may be totally different from others )
If a diagram is smaller than actual size it is called a reduction.
If a circuit is being changed, first make a modified drawing to fulfill the requirement. Once you have the correct modified drawing, get the wiring changed. test the circuit for safety and functionality to ensure what you have done is correct. Compare the modified drawing against the standards you followed.
To find the scale factor of the drawing, first convert the actual length from feet to inches since the drawing's length is in inches. There are 12 inches in a foot, so 8 feet equals 96 inches. The scale factor can then be calculated by dividing the drawing length (4 inches) by the actual length (96 inches), resulting in a scale factor of 1:24. This means that 1 inch on the drawing represents 24 inches in reality.
If a diagram is smaller than its actual size it is called a reduction.
The name for the ratio of a diagram measurement to actual measurements is the scale.