How is this a balanced circuit with no current in the common/neutral wire?
The book I am reading states:
If R1 and R2 were not in the circuit, there would be no current in the common wire and the load on each side of the common wire would be the same, or as we say, the load would be "balanced". The balanced load is the same as having the load in series across a voltage of 240 volts.
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I don't understand what the author is trying to explain. It would appear to me that 240v should be still going across that neutral even without R1 and R2. Why would there not be any current at all going across it without those two resistors?
If someone could elaborate this further, I would really appreciate it.
Thank you so much in advance.
The book I am reading states:
If R1 and R2 were not in the circuit, there would be no current in the common wire and the load on each side of the common wire would be the same, or as we say, the load would be "balanced". The balanced load is the same as having the load in series across a voltage of 240 volts.
::"image removed due to hosts image bandwidth constraints"
I don't understand what the author is trying to explain. It would appear to me that 240v should be still going across that neutral even without R1 and R2. Why would there not be any current at all going across it without those two resistors?
If someone could elaborate this further, I would really appreciate it.
Thank you so much in advance.
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