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Current Voltage Resistance

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Cable Selection Considering Over Current and Electric Shock

Electrical cables are like the veins of all electrical systems. As veins carry blood in our body, they carry electricity to run a number of appliances. The selection of electrical cables should be done according to the current, voltage and power requirements.

While selecting a electrical cable, you must keep two things in mind.

  • The cable you choose should be able to carry the current load without overheating. The cable should withstand the extreme conditions of temperature during its entire working life.

  • The cable should provide sufficient sound earthing, to allow the fault current to trip the MCB or fuse in a short time, and to limit the voltage to which people are exposed to a safe level.

The two major safety hazards that needs to be controlled in a wiring system is Over-Current and Electric Shock. Protection against over-current also provides protection against electric shock. Over-current is the increase in the amount of current above the level for which it is designed. Over current are very dangerous as they lead to a risk of fire.

When current flows in electrical cables it is normal that they become warm, and heat is generated. The level of heat generated by electrical cables is safe only when it is kept within reasonable boundaries. The standard PVC-insulated cables are designed to run at temperatures up to 70 degrees Celsius. Anything beyond that can be a risk.

Overload occurs when the current flowing is too high for the system. They don't impose any immediate damage to the cables or surroundings. The danger is supposed to enhance if the duration of the overload remains for a longer period. In that situation, due to overheat the covering will melt leaving the bare conductors exposed. The heat can lead to cause fire. The main reasons for overloads in domestic setting are : plugging a heavy duty appliance into a supply insufficient for that, and using too many consumer appliances at the same time.

A short-circuit occurs when live and neutral or live and earth that bypasses an appliance is connected. This connection will have a very low resistance and the current flowing can be hundreds or thousands of times higher for the system. This is called short-circuit current or the fault current. The short-circuit can happen if the wires in a mains electrical plug become loose and touch one another. Handling short-circuits is not only important to protect cables, it is a part of the protection against electric shock too.

In domestic installations, short-circuit protection and overload protection both are provided by the same device, either an MCB or a fuse. An RCD can be used for additional shock protection. When the amount of current flowing exceeds a specified limit for a certain time, the fuse will break in the fuse or the MCB will trip. In both the cases, the circuit will be opened and there will be no further flow of current.


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Help on Physics (Current, Voltage, Resistance, Power e.t.c)?
Can someone tell me how to calculate current of a circuit and voltage of a circuit? And does the current or P.D run appliances (V=IR) ANY HELP ON THIS TOPIC?

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I am having a hard time understanding this please help! Electricity and magnetism?
Rearrange the equation current=voltage/resistance to express resistace in terms of current and voltage. Then solve for the following: A certain device in a 120-V circuit has a current rating of 20 A. What is the resistance of the devise (how many ohms)? The wattage marked on a lightbulb is not an inherant property of the bulb but depends on the voltage to which its connected, usually 1110 or 120 V. How many amperes flow through a 60-W bulb connected in a 120-V circuit?

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Vocab for Science?
How do you explain Electric Current, Voltage, Resistance, Series Circuit and Parellel Circuit to a 5th Grade student?

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What is the same in identical branches of a parallel circuit?
current, voltage, resistance or all three?

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How do I learn all this in a week?
We're doing electric circuits in physics and it is making absolutely no sense to me! Usually I'm really good at physics but I don't understand any of this, even though it's pretty basic. (like current, voltage, resistance, series, parallel...) Any ideas how to learn it? Like physics websites or anything?? please help!?!?!

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Probability density function for current?
I asked this question wrong before. If I have voltage and resistance densities, both with normal distributions, that produce some current, how do I find f(v,i), the joint pdf of CURRENT through the resistor, given that current=voltage/resistance? I know nothing about the current except that it is produced by the voltage/resistance combination.

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Is there a way to prevent my deep fryer from shorting out my electricity every time I use it?
I live in an old (converted) house and every time I use my deep fryer the power cuts out for quite a few outlets and light fixtures. Apparently virtually my entire apartment is on the same circuit as it takes out virtually everything except my computer. The more things I unplug the more it seems to lower the chances of this happening; if I unplug everything I'm usually fine, but if I unplug none it usually doesn't even finish preheating before it blows. I have to get dressed and go outside to reset the circuit. Merely turning these things off seems to have less or no effect. It's my understanding that circuit breakers are set off by excess current and surge protectors limit the amount of voltage protecting from surges and spikes. Since current is directly proportional to voltage (I=E/R; Current=Voltage/Resistance; Ohm's Law) would simply using a surge protector solve this problem? Obviously extensive electrical work isn't an option since I'm a renter.

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