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Too much power is likely to burn out the bulb's filament, or shorten the bulb's life. A resistor of suitable rating, placed within the circuit, would help reduce the voltage to a more suitable level
If you mean the term quite literally your television remote most likely has parallel batteries.
The house would most likely burn down whenever a power surge hit.
If you keep all of them in series, then each component in your circuit will have more voltage across it and more current through it, and will dissipate more power (heat). If you keep all of the batteries in parallel, then they must all be rated for the same voltage. Nothing about the circuit's performance will change, but it'll be able to operate longer before the batteries die.
It will most likely be damaged beyond repair! Circuit boards will burn out as will motor/relays. And it could start a fire!
If this is a question about a flywheel diode, it is there to prevent excessive voltage buildup when an electronic swich is opened, so if it is not working (open circuit) there is a chance of a further fault developing in the circuit.
It depends on the remote, but it's usually 2-4 batteries and they are most likely to be AAA batteries.
On a fault condition of the circuit, the current most likely will not be removed. If this happens components in the circuit will most likely act as a fuse and will components will be completely destroyed. This is why the manufacturer recommends what size of fuse to use in their equipment and this fuse size should always be used.
was composed sometime during the eighth century
Parallel circuit
Placing batteries in the freezer will likely damage them.
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