Re: Where do the extra volts go on a regulated 12v system?
Electricity for dummies (remember I'm just an accountant with an irrational curiosity about electricity):<br /><br />Voltage is nothing more than a difference in the state of charge between two points (surfaces? terminals? sorry, terminology escapes me). One terminal is willing to give up electrons, the other is hungry for 'em. Add a conductor to create a circuit & they will flow (that's called current). If the conductor is too small or otherwise doesn't conduct very well ("inefficient"), inadequate gauge wire, or a light bulb filament, for example, you will have an electron stampede, like rock & rollers trying to get into a Who concert. That creates friction which makes the conductor get hot. If it's a light bulb filament, you see the heat as light; if it's an inadequate gauge wire, you see it as smoke when the insulation starts to melt, or a fuse will blow, disrupting the circuit. <br /><br />Volts that get converted to heat energy leave the circuit never to be seen again (well the actual electrons don't just disappear, but that's a whole nuther subject). <br /><br />The efficiency with which a conductor is able to conduct is referred to as resistance, more efficient = low resistance, less efficient = high resistance.<br /><br />How much current (measured as "amps") is in a circuit depends on the voltage (measured as "volts") and resistance (measured as "ohms"). Electricians for some reason use the letter "I" to represent current, "V" for voltage and "R" for resistance.<br /><br />I = V / R (the Iguana sees the Vulture over the Rabbit)<br />R = V / I (the Rabbit sees the Vulture over the Iguana)<br />V = IR (the Vulture sees the Iguana & Rabbit side by side)<br /><br />That these relationships always hold and can be measured fascinates me. <br /><br />I know this is a very simplistic explanation. <br /><br />About current: it's not that electrons enter one end of the wire & speed along at the speed of light to the other. It's more like a water hose full of marbles; one drops out the end creating a space, the next one moves up, and so on. "Current flow" is actually defined as the opposite direction of electron flow, believe it or not, it's the direction of "hole flow." Obviously this system was not designed by accountants!<br /><br /><br />"Resistance is futile" (Seven of Nine)