this post was submitted on 27 Jan 2024
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A voltage divider is a resistor in series
Isn't it multiple parallel resistors in series? Shit, am I forgetting everything from my EE classes a decade ago?
Remember that voltage divides between series elements (Kirchoff's Voltage Law) while current divides between parallel ones (Kirchoff's Current Law). A voltage divider is literally as simple as two resistors in series, each having a voltage across it proportional to its own resistance divided by the total resistance.
I thought a voltage divider is 1 resistor in series and another in parallel? That way you have 2 resistors in series while the component in question sources it's voltage from in between the 2 resistors, dividing the voltage based on the proportion of the resistances of the 2 resistors. Kinda like dividing up a waterfall into 2 waterfalls of separate height that add up to the same total as the original waterfall, and then putting a turbine going from between the waterfalls to the bottom so you only get the lower waterfall's portion of the energy compared to the original waterfall's full height.
The component in question, in this case the speaker, can be treated as the second resistor.