The switches would have to be of a type that could switch out a bulb and at the same time switch in its place a resistor of equivalent value.
Nothing . . . obviously.
Turn on one light and leave it on for a little while then turn it off. Turn the next light on and open the door. Go up and feel the light bulbs..the warm one is the first loth switch,, the one that is still on is obviously the second light switch and the cold/regular temperature light bulb is the last switch that you didn't touch.
120 volt xenon bulbs are fully dimmable just like a regular incandescent bulbs, using regular old 120 volt dimmer switches.
ANSWER: The brightness of both bulbs will decrease. If the bulbs are identical the current will decrease to 0.2 Amps. This is a simple series resistive circuit, the more bulbs you add in series both the amperage and bulb brightness will continue to go down.
The battery should be 4.5 v which is three 1.5 v cells in series. The power in watts depends on the size of the bulbs.
-- If all the bulbs are in series, then the switch can be at any pointin the series ring, and it will control them all.-- If any bulbs are in parallel, then in order to control all of them, theswitch must be between the circuit and one terminal of the battery orpower supply.
Yes. Most flashlights have a series circuit involving a battery, a switch, and a bulb. More complex variants might have two bulbs in parallel, two or more bulbs on two switches, etc. but the basic principle is a series circuit - turn the switch on and the bulb illuminates.
The Lamp colors do not matter to the Kirchhoff formulas. The current consumpion and voltage drops are all circuits care about.
You would need to pull out the heater control panel to get at the bulb holders. Some of the bulbs are micro-bulbs that are actually inside switches. Unless you are skilled at disassembling small electronics and soldering small parts, replacing these might not be practical.
Nothing . . . obviously.
To do something like that you would first have to have each light on it's own smart switch. Then you would need a master switch that would control each of the other smart switches. You can find switches like this at www.smarthome.com
components
yes
it's bulb 3
If a switch is added, all of the bulbs/lights/motors can be turned on and off at the same time, instead of needing several switches. Also, if a bulb is dead, you can't tell what bulb is dead because they are all connected.
light bulbs switches
I have an idea