nothing as pennies do not fit into the wall outlets...they will however fit into CAR 12V ROUND outlets
Normally nothing, as long as the insulation is intact and the other end is protected from the weather. If the cable is unprotected, it may start arcing at the bare ends. If your consumer unit is protected by a breaker, it may trip out. A fuse may blow. As long as the outlet conforms to code, nothing should happen there.
Grounding is a direct path (that is, a wire, usually green) from the electrical outlet or switch back to the service panel, which sends stray current back to the service panel and then to the power plant along with the normal alternating current. This gives stray current a means to return to earth (which is what all electricity wants to do). If this path were not available, stray current would remain static until a pathway showed up (like, your finger, which would result in a shock). So, grounding protects you from dangerous shocks. Bonding is connecting any metal or electrically conductive material to a grounding wire. An electrical outlet is attached to a metal box. A grounding wire is connected to the outlet. Its purpose is to return stray current from any device plugged into the outlet--like a toaster--back to the service panel. Connecting the metal box that contains the outlet to the outlet's grounding wire also grounds the box, so touching the box doesn't give you a shock. The connection is made with a wire screwed to the box, then connected to the green wire grounding the switch or outlet.
In this experiment, the control group would be the penny! The independent variable is the substance/water on the penny, and the dependent is how many drops the penny takes.
Answer why does the person who made a circuit a probably connect the wires to a penny
it also carries curent from the outlet
nothing at all. only if its a moisturized peice of cheese, then maybe it will melt, but hayy that might be pretty cool
The outlet would be the more often recommended place for it.An electrical timer can be placed anywhere within the circuit. Usually the timer would be placed at the front end of the circuit.
most likely a bad wire or a lose connection on the back of the outlet!
nonmetals are the best insulators
j
Standard 120 volt 15 amp outlet. 300 watts is not a high current demand.
Back up generators
because the circuit has to many outlets on it
A non-metal, butlook inyour science book. :)
No, the pin configuration would not allow this to happen.
You'll fry it
One would want to use outlet covers as part of baby proofing measure or just to protect one's self against electric shocks and danger, to protect the electrical system.