Yes you would use a serial circuit
You would use parallel circuit lights for a Christmas tree because if you used series circuit lights, and one of the bulb blows, the rest of the bulbs will go out.
But with parallel circuit lights, if one bulb blows the rest of the bulbs will remain their brightness.
no
both
Christmas lights , house alarm , and house Christmas lights , house alarm , and house
series circuit
In a series circuit, if any one bulb goes open the rest of the lights will go out. The current flow in a series circuit is common throughout the whole circuit. In a parallel circuit when one bulb goes open the rest remain on due to the configuration of a parallel circuit.
My dad created a parallel circuit when he plugged in the Christmas lights.
They are parallel, or at least you HOPE they are parallel.
No, electric lights come in both parallel and series circuit.
Two receptacles on a branch circuit, each in parallel, both in series with the circuit breaker. The blower motor, ignition transformer, and oil solenoid on an oil burner, each in parallel, all in series with the acquastat (water temperature control switch).
Christmas tree lights, this parallel circuit prevents one bulb failure from turning off the whole string of lights.
Parallel. One light burning out does not stop all current flow to the other lights.
With series Christmas lights, if one burns out, the whole string stops working. With parallel Christmas lights one light burning out only affects that light. This makes it much easier to replace burned out lights in the case of the parallel lights.
Generally in a parallel circuit