No, the license plate light is wired in with the rear tail lights, not the brake lights.
It is not legal, but if it is private property and you have permission from the owner, all lights say go!
In a series circuit, there is only one path for the current to flow through. In a parallel circuit, there are multiple paths for the current to flow through. For example, most old Christmas lights are series circuits. If one light in the whole strand of lights went out, then all the lights would go out. This is because once one resistance is out, the circuit is no longer complete, so the current can not flow. An example of a parallel circuit could be your household lighting. When you turn on your kitchen lights, your bathroom lights don't turn on with it, do they? That is because it is a parallel circuit. In a parallel circuit, there are multiple paths for the current. It doesn't matter if one light is on and another is off because the current can go through another way. In a series circuit as you increase resistance, the voltage and current decrease. In a parallel circuit, as you increase resistance, the voltage and current increase. Think of a series circuit as a one-lane road. The car would be the current, the gas in the car would the voltage, and the traffic lights would be the resistance. Since you are on a one-lane road, as you keep stopping at traffic lights, you aren't going very fast or far. Now, think of parallel circuits as a multi-lane road (or highway). The car is the current, the gas in the car is the voltage, and the traffic lights (or closed roads, or accidents, anything that would slow you down on the road) are the resistance. When you are driving and one road is closed, you don't have to stop because you can continue driving and go on a different road to reach your destination.
Not if it is a normal school day. Judges don't think kindly of people that speed around kids. And since there are pavement markings, multiple signs and warnings, it's pretty hard to convince them that you didn't see any of them. And what was blocking the lights or signs? A school bus? I had a friend come within inches of death when a car ignored the warning lights.
On my 97 neon the radio and interior lights are on a 10 amp circuit breaker located on the under hood fuse block. It is labeled "interior lights". I pull this breaker any time the car sits unused for two days or longer. If this is not done the battery will be drained. I do not have a light stuck on and have tried to locate the drain with no luck except that it is in this circuit.
Check bulbsTailights are usually common to the parking and dash light circuit
Should be the same circuit for parking/tail/dash lights
The dash lights and tail lights on a 1988 Honda Prelude are wired into the same circuit. Open, frayed, or burnt wires in any of the systems can the lights to ceased functioning. Check the number 13 10A fuse in the cabin fuse box, if blown take a spark testers and look for any shorts in the wiring.
because your speed gas ect. is all digital. the warning lights are not. your circuit board on the back of the cluster is probably fried.
The good news is the brake lights still appear to work even when this warning is displayed. Does anyone know if the brake lights are at risk of not coming on when you hit the brakes?
Sounds like a combination of: [1] A short circuit in the driving light circuit, combined with a [2] Auto resetting circuit breaker[instead of a fuse].
Same circuit/fuse as the parking/tail lights.
The warning lights on a Honda Accord are the same as the warning lights on most other cars.
None of the dashboard lights work on my 1988 Prelude. Why?
Yes it will but your lights will be different.
If the lights are the load of the circuit, then the lights will be off if the circuit is open.
An amber bulb warning light in a Fiat indicates that a lightbulb check needs to be conducted. In this situation, checking the headlights, tail lights, and license plate lights would be advisable.
There are several warning lights on a 1997 Grand Am. Some of the warning lights are the ABS system, oil lights, and the check engine light.