sophiecentaur said:
Post #2 gives perfectly reasonable rules for working it out.
guigabyte said:
A series connection is one where the current has no other path other than to the next component.
guigabyte said:
Parallel is when both the positive and negative sides of each component are connected to each other.
In my day we worked countless homework problems to drill it into our heads.
The mechanics of doing it make it intuitive.
One usually needs to reduce a circuit like yours to its simplest equivalent , perhaps to find the load on a battery. Or perhaps just to accustom himself to reading circuit diagrams. We old guys forget when it was all so new to us.
Here's the step by step process you should go through for your circuit, actually redrawing it for every step.
That's how you learn to think like an
electron oops make that 'think like a charge carrier' .
Then some wise guy will hand you this
and ask you
"Are that battery and that resistor in series or are they in parallel ?"
Which deserves the reply :
"Mr Wise Guy, I'll answer that question with a question. Who said the terms series and parallel are mutually exclusive?
Kindly rephrase your question using conjunction AND not OR . Then my one word reply will be 'Yes' . "
Those two thoughts from post 2 work very well. Ask them as questions and trace out the current path.
I've used them since 1961.
old jim