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If appliances were hooked in series there would be a voltage drop across each appliance, and most of the appliances would not receive enough voltage to operate properly. If one appliance was turned off, none of the appliances would receive any power. Most circuits are parallel circuits,

2007-03-21 22:04:14 · answer #1 · answered by Max 6 · 2 0

it has to do with the voltage and current (amps of the wiring . one way hooked up the voltage stays the same but amperage drops, the other way the amps stays and the voltage drops. if your house was hooked up the later way the radio at the far end of the hall would not turn on. and yet the light in the kitchen would pop from too much amps.

2007-03-22 05:07:50 · answer #2 · answered by Ken 1 · 0 0

If we are connect the circuits in houses in series; the voltage distributed willn't enough for the all elctrical sets in this home , also if any electrical short occured in a part of; the current will be exactly cutting . So that, we doesn't connect in series but in parallel.

2007-03-22 06:50:38 · answer #3 · answered by said youssuf 1 · 0 1

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