arl146 said:
nothing in my textbook about it .. professor briefly went over it today in class. there's like 4 formulas that he got.
I1R1=Va-Vb
I1R1=Vb-Vc
I2R2=Va-Vd
I2R=Vd-Vc
where c is the left corner of the 'diamond' , a is the right corner, b is P in our case, d is P' in our case .. R is our R3 and R3 in his example is my R4
Those can't be right. Your professor might have done something like the following,
but you seem to have made some errors in copying them.
Assuming that the equivalent resistance is wanted between the points where the battery is connected.
There are 2 unknown voltages, in the points P and P'. The points connected to the battery are at 8V and 0V.
If you know these unknown voltages, you can compute all the currents in the 5 resistances, The current between two points is the potential difference between
those two points divided by the resistance between them.
for example, the point connected to the battery is at 8V and the point P is
at V_P, so the potential differenct between them is (8-V_P) and the current
through it: I_1 = (8 - V_P)/R_1
When you've computed all 5 currents as a funtion of V_P and V_P', you can than use Kirchhoffs current law in the points P and P' to get 2 simultaneous equations for V_P and V_P', which you can solve.