Simple Circuit Schematic

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Beginners guide to electronic circuits and circuit design Simple electronic switch circuit. To get started with the basics of electronics we are going to look at a very basic circuit with a switch that can turn a light on and off.

Finally add the two 470 Ohm resistors along with the two LEDs. I added a picture of a transistor to identify the Emitter, Base, and Collector.

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Connect one wire of the first resistor to the collector of transistor 1. The the other resistor wire then connects to the positive wire of the first LED. The negative wire of the LED is then connected to ground. Follow the same steps for the other resistor and LED. Connect one wire of the second resistor to the collector of transistor 2. The the other resistor wire then connects to the positive wire of the second LED. The negative wire of the LED is then connected to ground.

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Hmm, my post vanished after deleting, hope this doesn't duplicate. Is there a way to make this setup without a breadboard and maybe streamline the wiring? I am looking into wiring up some LED lights to my bike and I wanted to use a hub to power them. Looks like the hub produces 6v 3w and the lights require 4.4 w for 15ft of continuous light length. I wont be using that much length so I was kind of lost on what the calculations would be and was going to wing it with the power match up considering the total produced is a bit less than whats needed.

Anyway, it would be nice to get these lights lit up enough to help me stand out because I have a recumbent trike that sits roughly 26' from road to top of seat off the ground and I would like to be way more visible. F1 2010 no cd patch 1 011. I like tinkering but I was hoping you guys might be able to steer me (no pun intended) in the right direction. I understand the laws of thermodynamics (I think.) which states you cannot make more energy than the energy it takes to produce said energy (or something to that effect). Like taking a solar powered car and adding wind turbines on them. You would far sooner drain the battery trying to reach a speed high enough to reclaim anything substantial with the turbines. Thats at least the way I understand it, but back to the question at hand. Is something like this possible?

Any help with this would be appreciated.