You would connect them in series to double the output voltage.
basically a diode flows an exponential curve Vs current if you try to double the voltage drop by increasing the voltage it should self destruct
In that case, the current will also be doubled. This follows from Ohm's Law (current = voltage / resitance)
No, the amperage does not necessarily double when both the current and voltage are doubled. Amperage (current) is determined by Ohm's Law, which states that current (I) equals voltage (V) divided by resistance (R). If both voltage and current are doubled while resistance remains constant, the new current would actually be four times the original current, not just double.
In a resistive load circuit, the power = multiplication of voltage and Current. By increasing the voltage power will not be increased. Power is defined by the load as per its design. If the voltage is higher the load current will reduce. However running a load at double the rated voltage is not good for the device. Insulation may fail.
If you double the voltage in a circuit, the power is quadrupled, assuming the resistance stays the same.
You will get double the voltage.
In parallel no, the voltage is the same the amps double. If hooked up in series the voltage would double and then the charging system would need to be changed.
If you connect them in series the Voltage will double but the Amp Hour Capacity stays the same. Click the link.
Yes, the amps stay the same but the voltage doubles. If you connect in parallel the volts stay the same and the amps double.
No, the series connection of batteries does not double the voltage. The voltage increases with each additional battery connected in series.
Connecting two 12 volt batteries together in series would doubled the amp hours ie 125amp hour +125amp hour = 250amp hour and the voltage stays the same at 12 volts. Connect them in parallel and the voltage will double to 24 volts and the amp hours will stay the same ie 125 amp hours.
You need to keep the batteries in parallel. The positive poles of the battery are to be connected together. Also the negative poles need to be connected together. This will maintain the voltage at 12 volts and also give you double the endurance when discharging the batteries when connected to a load.
You conect them in parelell. Positive to positive, negative to negative, with either a 12 or 6 volt system. if you conect them in series you will double the voltage.
That is called a parallel connection and will double the power if the batteries is the same size and the same voltage, the voltage will be the same as one battery, so if it is two 12 volt batteries the voltage will be 12 volt. It is dangerous to connect two batteries of different voltage in parallel like a12 volt and a 6 volt the 6 volt will then draw current from the 12 volt and it can overheat and even explode.
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basically a diode flows an exponential curve Vs current if you try to double the voltage drop by increasing the voltage it should self destruct
If the voltage is doubled and the resistance is constant, Ohm's Law states that the current will also double. This is because the relationship between voltage, current, and resistance is linear, and increasing the voltage will directly increase the current flow.