kira506
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I'm talking about the primitive rheostat with coils and a slide and such , why when we inc. The resistance of rheostat does Vext inc and Vint dec. ?
Of course it's different! I = V/R always and it's that total series resistance that counts.("Unless the current is different
sophiecentaur said:This is a bit like trying 'grasp' how the supermarket bill works. It's down to the sums and the very basics of electricity more than anything. You will be able to feel that you have a grasp when you follow the sums through.
Have you drawn the circuit?
Mark the rheostat as R1 and the Load as R2. If Vin is the supply voltage then
The total current I through the two resistors will be Vin/ (R1+R2)
This current is, of course, dependent upon the two resistor values.
You say:
Of course it's different! I = V/R always and it's that total series resistance that counts.
Clearly, I will get greater as R1 goes down (i.e. as the total resistance decreases).
So the current through the load will increase (Same current round the whole loop)
That means that the volts across the load Vout = IR2, will increase because I has increased.
Naturally, if the volts across the load have increased, the volts across the rheostat will have decreased because there is the same total supply voltage across the two resistors and it's the sum of the two volts.
The smaller resistor gets the smaller share of the total voltage.