the blinkers on my s10 go faster when hooked up to a trailer.. the way i imagine it is that with the trailer lights its pulling more power/ amps which makes the metal thing that makes it blink get hotter faster and when it gets hot it pops up opening the circuit vus making it turn off then it cools fast to close the circuit making the lights go on vus a blinker... that my theory that is subject to failure.
Ohms Law states that, "in an electrical circuit, the current passing through a conductor, from one terminal point on the conductor to another terminal point on the conductor, is directly proportional to the potential difference (i.e. voltage drop or voltage) across the two terminal points and inversely proportional to the resistance of the conductor between the two terminal points."
In mathematical terms, this is written as:
I = V/R
So what does that mean? Well...
- I = Current measured in Amps.
- V = Voltage measured in Volts.
- R = Resistance measured in Ohms.
In this case, the voltage is constant at 12 volts. This can not change. The only things that can change is I and R but they have to stay in proportion with each other since the outcome must still equal V. So, as one increases the other must decrease.
Now depending on how the lights are wired, they will either increase or decrease the resistance.
For Series Circuits R(Total) = R1 + R2...
For Parallel 1/R(Total) = 1/R1 + 1/R2...
This ends Electronics 101...