Parallel Circuits
Parallel Circuits
UNDERSTANDING &
CALCULATING
PARALLEL CIRCUITS -
EXPLANATION
A Parallel circuit is one with several
different paths for the electricity to
travel. It's like a river that has been
divided up into smaller streams,
however, all the streams come back
to the same point to form the river
once again.
The parallel circuit has very different
characteristics than a series circuit.
For one, the total resistance of a
Parallel Circuit is NOT equal to the
sum of the resistors (like in a series
circuit). The total resistance in a
parallel circuit is always less than
any of the branch resistances.
Adding more parallel resistances to
the paths causes the total resistance
in the circuit to decrease. As you
add more and more branches to the
circuit the total current will increase
because Ohm's Law states that the
lower the resistance, the higher the
current.
BASIC RULES
A Parallel circuit has certain characteristics and basic
rules:
1. A parallel circuit has two or more paths for current to
flow through.
2. Voltage is the same across each component of the
parallel circuit.
3. The sum of the currents through each path is equal
to the total current that flows from the source.
4. You can find total resistance in a Parallel circuit with
the following formula:
1/Rt = 1/R1 + 1/R2 + 1/R3 +...
Rt = R (t)otal
5. If one of the parallel paths is broken, current will
continue to flow in all the other paths.
1
1 1 1
-
-+-+-
=
R1 R2 R3
Rt
Therefore:
1
1 1 1
-
-+-+-
=
4 4 2
Rt
Now that you know this you can figure out the total
amperage (It) using Ohm's Law:
I total (It) = 12V / 8 Ohms = 1.5 Amps
Therefore the total amperage between the two resistive
paths must equal 1.5 Amps (Rule 3). Now we can figure
out exactly what each path is pulling using Ohm's Law
once more. Remember that the voltage is the same
everywhere in a parallel circuit. So we know the voltage
and the resistance:
I1 = 12V / 12 Ohm = 1 A
I2 = 12V / 24 Ohm = .5 A
We figured the total amperage (It) previously, so now we
can double check if the figures are correct:
I1 + I2 = It
1A + .5A = 1.5A - check
Reference: https://www.swtc.edu/Ag_Power/electrical/lecture/parallel_circuits.htm