I you wired a light bulb in to the same circuit you have the possibility of over loading the circuit but other than that it would just be brighter.
A parallel circuit
if the circuit is a series circuit (all loads wired in a single line , one after the other ) then the current will be the same in any part of the circuit . if there are several different paths for the current to take , then each path will carry a different percentage of the total current . when each of these different current values are added together , they will equal the total supplied current.
A defrost control typically.
The last fixture in a parallel circuit is wired the same as the first. In North America, all of the fixtures are wired black wire to black wire and white wire to white wire. The black wire being the "hot" wire and the white wire being the neutral wire.
When a J-K flip flop is wired it is called a master circuit. This is one of 2 groups.
That would be a parallel circuit.
That would be a parallel circuit.
That would be a parallel circuit.
A light controlled by a switch are necessarily wired in "series", meaning that the electricity must pass through all components if the circuit is to operate correctly, assuming you actually have a source of electricity wired in as well.
Because the radio is wired into the headlight circuit instead of the accessory circuit.
its a series connection
the bulb will light up
The lights are wired in parallel.
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.
A series circuit/
Hard wired is where something (Like most ceiling light fixtures) are wired directly to the circuit breaker panel. This is apposed to something like a lamp or a vacuum that uses a plug going in to a wall outlet.
They are wired in series.