I can't go down to the basement until tomorrow to check on whether or not that battery is shorted out because the dogs will go nuts and wake up everyone, but look at it like this. Two batteries wired in series. Connect the free terminal of one battery to one side of a headlight bulb. Connect the other side of the headlight bulb to one leg of the motor. Connect the other leg of the motor to the free terminal of the other battery. You have made a loop, and the light will light up and the motor will run. Now connect the bad battery in parallel with the light and suddenly the light goes out and the motor won't run. Why? Look at it from THAT perspective, because that is what is happening. Add a second light in parallel with the first and still nothing will run. But when you add a THIRD light in parallel with the first and second, it comes on, and the motor runs.
It's as if I'm matching POTENTIALS. Each light is a potential, and when I get enough of them, suddenly the circuit is complete and everything works. Just throwing things out there guys.
This is definitely a GOOD battery for these experiments, because it took between 10 and 15 minutes of the setup just sitting there before the motor magically came on with no load connected. SInce I KNOW from experience that my motor will start IMMEDIATELY tomorrow, I will go ahead and play with two transistors in parallel. Matt, the one 47 ohm resistor I had in the circuit today got hotter than heck, even though nothing ever worked. Now I know it didn't work because of the weird battery behavior and not because my circuit was wired incorrectly, but I am concerned about how hot that resistor was. Too hot to touch. Should I have used two of them?
Dave
It's as if I'm matching POTENTIALS. Each light is a potential, and when I get enough of them, suddenly the circuit is complete and everything works. Just throwing things out there guys.
This is definitely a GOOD battery for these experiments, because it took between 10 and 15 minutes of the setup just sitting there before the motor magically came on with no load connected. SInce I KNOW from experience that my motor will start IMMEDIATELY tomorrow, I will go ahead and play with two transistors in parallel. Matt, the one 47 ohm resistor I had in the circuit today got hotter than heck, even though nothing ever worked. Now I know it didn't work because of the weird battery behavior and not because my circuit was wired incorrectly, but I am concerned about how hot that resistor was. Too hot to touch. Should I have used two of them?
Dave
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