Calculating Replacement Resistance Rv (Ohm)

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Homework Help Overview

The discussion revolves around calculating the replacement resistance Rv for a circuit containing multiple resistors with given values. The original poster describes the configuration of the resistors and expresses confusion regarding the calculations leading to the expected result.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory, Problem interpretation, Assumption checking

Approaches and Questions Raised

  • Participants explore various combinations of resistors in series and parallel, questioning the correct order of operations and the interpretation of the circuit layout. There are attempts to clarify how to combine resistances and verify calculations.

Discussion Status

Some participants provide guidance on the correct approach to combining resistors, while others express their own calculations and results. There is a recognition of differing outcomes, with some participants noting their own calculations leading to different resistance values.

Contextual Notes

The original poster mentions constraints related to image size for circuit diagrams, which may impact the clarity of the problem setup. There is also a reference to the teacher's expected answer, which adds to the confusion regarding the calculations.

SD43
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Homework Statement



I need to calculate the replacement resistance Rv (Ohm) of the following
R1 = 12 ohm
R2 = 8 ohm
R3 = 6 ohm
R4 = 4 ohm
R5 = 9 ohm
R6 = 12 ohm
R7 = 4 ohm

I've been trying to include a picture that I've drawn in paint but apparently a couple of lines exceeds the 100Kb line. So I'm afraid I'm going to have picture the drawing in your mind.
R1 and R2 are right next to each other so it's alright if you put them together so 12 + 8 makes 20 Ohm
Under R1 and R2 there's R3
Directly under R3 there's R4.
Next to R4 on the right side there's R5
Under R5 there's R6
Between R5 and R6 there's R7 which isn't parallel to them.
I'm sorry for the confusion, but there's just no other way.


My teacher said the answer should be 9,7 ohm with lots of variables behind the 7

Homework Equations



1/Rv = 1/R1 + 1/R2 + 1/R3 + 1/R4 + 1/R5 +1/R6



The Attempt at a Solution



1/20 + 1/6 + 1/4 = 7/ 15
15/7 = 2,14

1/9 + 1/12 = 7/36
36/7 = 5,14
5,14 + 2,14 = 7,28
1/4 = 0,25
0,25 + 7,28 doesn't make 9,7

If you just use the equation 1/Rv = 1/R1 + 1/R2 ... you should get 41/45 which again doesn't make 9,77.

So after 2 days of being puzzled I decided the internet was a good place to find the right way to get to 9,7
 
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Welcome to the PF. We really do need to see a diagram in order to help you on this one. Once you've drawn it in Paint, save it as a PDF, and that will reduce the size enough to post. If you don't have an easy way to save-as a PDF, you can download PrimoPDF for free.


EDIT -- Oops, I think I meant save it as a JPG file. PDF might compress it too, but JPG is the traditional compressed picture file format.
 
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Thank you, I never knew I could save images as JPG.

Anyway I attached the file and it's oddly enough only 9,7 Kb.
 

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Ah, that helps a lot.

You are correct in your combination of R1-R4, but then you try to combine R5 (9 Ohms) as if it were in parallel with R6, but R9 is in series with the running total resistance that you have for R1-R4, and you need to do that series addition before you have a clean parallel combination with R6. Just be careful about the combinations, and try again.


EDIT -- BTW, I also get 9.7777777... as the answer.
 
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I'm sorry, but I keep getting 9,8 as the answer without any variables behind it. So what I do is 12 + 8 = 20
1/20 + 1/6 + 1/4 + 9 = 9,46666667
9,46666667 + 1/12 + 1/4 = 9,8

Though it's close it's still completely false. What am I doing wrong?
 
SD43 said:
I'm sorry, but I keep getting 9,8 as the answer without any variables behind it. So what I do is 12 + 8 = 20
1/20 + 1/6 + 1/4 + 9 = 9,46666667
Watch out. The equivalent resistance of the three resistors in parallel will be

[itex](\frac{1}{20} + \frac{1}{6} + \frac{1}{4})^{-1}[/itex]

You must take the inverse before going on to add it to the 9 ohms!
9,46666667 + 1/12 + 1/4 = 9,8
No. The result of combining R1, R2,R3 , R4 and R5 will be in parallel with R6. You must calculate that before adding the result to R7 (it seems as if you wanted to treat R7 as being in parallel. It's not)
 
I did what you said
1/20 + 1/4 + 1/6 ^ -1 = 2,14
2,14 + 9 = 11,14
1/11,14 + 1/12 ^ -1 = 5,77
5,77 + 4 = 9,77!

Wow thanks! So do any of you know sites where I can practice these sort of questions because I'm getting a final test for physics about this the law of Archimedes, pressure and significant numbers.
 
SD43 said:
Wow thanks! So do any of you know sites where I can practice these sort of questions because I'm getting a final test for physics about this the law of Archimedes, pressure and significant numbers.

This website is a little unfinished, but look under the DC circuits section for some more info on resistors, etc.

http://hypertextbook.com/physics/electricity/
 
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