nothing...
When connecting a volt meter to a light bulb to measure the voltage of the light bulb, run a third wire from where the wire enters the bulb to one terminal of the voltmeter and a fourth wire from the other side of the bulb to the other terminal of the voltmeter.
I would expect the light bulb to fail.
Nothing will happen to circuit..... as usual the circuit would be supplying 220v(if india) and certain current...but there is no bulb to consume power...
If you added the batteries in parallel, then the bulb would stay on for a long time and nobody would get any sleep. If you added the batteries in series, then the voltage across the bulb would eventually become excessive and the bulb would burn out.
The glass of the light bulb is not conductive, so the circuit would not be completed. You would need to join the wires to the positive and negative contacts on the base of the bulb for the circuit to work.
The switch is not needed.
When connecting a volt meter to a light bulb to measure the voltage of the light bulb, run a third wire from where the wire enters the bulb to one terminal of the voltmeter and a fourth wire from the other side of the bulb to the other terminal of the voltmeter.
When connecting a volt meter to a light bulb to measure the voltage of the light bulb, run a third wire from where the wire enters the bulb to one terminal of the voltmeter and a fourth wire from the other side of the bulb to the other terminal of the voltmeter.
Nothing much will happen except the same bulb will not blow..
The bulb won't work.
it would be ok in a circuit which didn't need a light bulb.
Nothing, for electricity to flow there has to be a voltage difference, ie connected from one end of the cells to the bulb, AND from the other terminal of the bulb to the other end of the cells.
Nothing would happen.
The ground terminal on an H3 bulb is typically the metal tab or contact on the base of the bulb. It is usually connected to the vehicle's grounding system to complete the electrical circuit.
I would expect the light bulb to fail.
When one wire or terminal is not connected to a light bulb, it is not possible for electricity to complete the circuit. When a circuit is not completed, the bulb will not light. An off switch, for example, breaks the circuit.
Center terminal is connected to the positive from the battery. Outside is connected to ground (-).