Has anyone done it lately. I am trying to help my lad but the questions he has do not have answers and they are basically ambiguous crap so I can't tell what the answers should be.
This is a question:
" A red and a green LED are connected in parallel through a suitable series resistor to a variable voltage power supply.
Explain what will happen as the voltage across the LEDs is increased from 0v to over 2.1V"
In this circuit the "suitable resistor" is not defined.
What would actually happen with this circuit is that if you choose a resistor suitable for providing enough current for both LEDs then the LED with the lower forward volt drop will start to conduct, clamp the voltage across it and prevent the higher voltage LED from ever lighting, the lower voltage LED would allow too much current to flow and will fail possibly by going short and the fire starts. I can't believe that this is the answer they want but cannot find which answer they do want. I think this is from last years OCR A level paper but I am not sure.
Another one:

This requires you to make an assumption, will this be that both batteries are connected at one end to give a 12 volt battery or will it be that they are connected in parallel or are you supposed to say it is two 6 volt batteries?
What about the next bit, are you supposed to say "power supply" and leave it at that or are you supposed to say change the voltage and rectify (or rectify and change the voltage) or any one of the other 50 answers there are to this stupid thing.
Transformer and bridge rectifier, resistor and diode, switched mode power supply.
Exam questions with ambiguity are friggin useless unless you know the guy that is marking it.
This is a question:
" A red and a green LED are connected in parallel through a suitable series resistor to a variable voltage power supply.
Explain what will happen as the voltage across the LEDs is increased from 0v to over 2.1V"
In this circuit the "suitable resistor" is not defined.
What would actually happen with this circuit is that if you choose a resistor suitable for providing enough current for both LEDs then the LED with the lower forward volt drop will start to conduct, clamp the voltage across it and prevent the higher voltage LED from ever lighting, the lower voltage LED would allow too much current to flow and will fail possibly by going short and the fire starts. I can't believe that this is the answer they want but cannot find which answer they do want. I think this is from last years OCR A level paper but I am not sure.
Another one:

This requires you to make an assumption, will this be that both batteries are connected at one end to give a 12 volt battery or will it be that they are connected in parallel or are you supposed to say it is two 6 volt batteries?
What about the next bit, are you supposed to say "power supply" and leave it at that or are you supposed to say change the voltage and rectify (or rectify and change the voltage) or any one of the other 50 answers there are to this stupid thing.
Transformer and bridge rectifier, resistor and diode, switched mode power supply.
Exam questions with ambiguity are friggin useless unless you know the guy that is marking it.


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