A quick look at a site that supplies LED lights suggests replacing the flasher or installing a load resistor in parallel with the lamp. I don't think the faster flash rate would hurt anything except possibly shorting the life of...
5 Answers · Science & Mathematics · 28/08/2007
...inductive. Think, for example, about the wires to a sensor in your car . To make the simplest example, a sensor might have just one wire with the...
2 Answers · Science & Mathematics · 17/05/2007
... us more. How big does this need to be? What systems do you know or want to use. What do you mean the lights come on...
2 Answers · Science & Mathematics · 11/07/2010
...a relay, in most cases, to carry the high current associated with the car 's electrical system . Check the voltage going to the switch. Check your...
2 Answers · Science & Mathematics · 04/09/2011
the photo is low resolution, hard to see. What is charging the batteries? Is this in an auto? you could skip the negative leads and just draw them as ground. Those appliances would run down a battery in less than an hour...
5 Answers · Science & Mathematics · 17/03/2009
Sure, an EM pulse associated with a nuclear blast as already mentioned, also a narrow beam burst from a AN/SPY1-D Radar (Aegis class warship) will work quite nicely, it's called "fratzing". The shielding on an...
6 Answers · Science & Mathematics · 17/06/2008
... (sometimes referred to as electrical and electronic engineering) ... primarily with mechanical systems like engines. I know... who works on car engine designs for Ford...
6 Answers · Science & Mathematics · 27/04/2007
The magnetic field is created by the electrical current (Amperes) passing through the wire. ... says, the ignition coil from a car serves no purpose. It produces a high...
2 Answers · Science & Mathematics · 16/11/2010
Yea, or an EMP (electomagnetic pulse), creates a very strong electric and magnetic field that overwhelms the maximum electrical characteristics an electrical system can handle, breaking it.
1 Answers · Science & Mathematics · 01/10/2010
it is 18.5029J, see wolfram: http://www.wolframalpha.com/input/?i=integral+t%3D0+to+t%3D1+of+%285e%5E%28-2.3t%29+-5%29*14*cos%283.7t%29dt
2 Answers · Science & Mathematics · 23/12/2012