dauto said:
It is an excellent analogy. You must've misunderstood post #3. The resistor does slow down the motion of the electrons reducing the current just as a constriction in a straw slows down the flow of water.
what if i tell you it doesn't ? well usually it does but not necessarily , actually in circuits with different resistors , current flows faster through resistors of low Cross section area , to maintain a steady current , anyway its NOT about speed of electrons
back to OP
the way i like to think about it is as follows
imagine a train that is composed of 3 carriages , as the train was moving , you exert a force in the carriage in the middle that slows it down * let's for the sake of our argument consider the velocity of the train to be analogous to the current intensity * anyway , as you slow down the carriage in the middle , what is going to happen ?
since the carriages are connected with some bond that can neither expand nor compress
once you slow down the carriage in the middle the carriage will slow down the other carriages , the force will be propagated quickly to the carriage in frfont of it and the carriage behind it , slowing them down just as much as the carriage in the middle was slowed down , thus the train carriages keep moving with the same velocity
now back to the current point of view
forgive me for connecting ideas of current and velocity but it was just to serve the purpose of the analogy , anyway
in the current , suppose you have 3 resistors , then a fourth resistor appear out of no where , what is going to happen is that at the point where the charges enter this 4th resistor , the current will decrease at this point where it is forced to enter a resistor , thus causing a build up of charge that happens in an infinitesimal amount of time , this build up of charges pushes the charges behind it , and these charges push the charges behind them and it goes on to the start point of the circuit .
of course all of this happens in very small amount of time that is too small to be noticed .
just like the 3 carriages , if you slow down the first carriage , it will cause the coupling between the first carriage and the second one to compress , and of course since the coupling is sturdy it will not be compressed * or it might compress for a very small amount of time * so the force propagates through the coupling and slow down the second carriage , and the same happens to the third carriage .
hope this helped
btw in this analogy , the coupling is analogous to the electric force between electrons
and in case you didnt know what a coupling is
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Railway_coupling