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Jul 2016

I have a 12v 15amp power supply, and I have 5 appliances. I want to build this circuit in parallel, so voltage here is constant.(12v)So i’m not going to mention voltages. The first appliance uses 10 amps.The 2nd uses 2 amps. And the 3rd, 4th, and 5th each use 1 amp. How would I distribute the current so that each appliance gets what is required? I thought of a way, It would probably work theoretically but maybe not practically. In other words I’m not sure it’ll work. I thought of taking 15 wires, and soldering them to the positive terminal, do the same for the negative terminal. So right now each wire is carrying 1 amp. Then, I would take 10 of these wires (10 positive and 10 negative of course) and connect them to my first appliance which uses 10 amps. Then connect 2 wires to my 2nd appliance, and 1 wire each to my 3rd, 4th, 5th appliances. Will this work? Thanks in advance, Mitch

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    Jul '16
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    Jul '16
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Why don’t you just get wires that can handle more current? Then you just need 5 wires rather than 15 of them. You don’t have to worry about dividing up current. The appliances will just draw however much current they need as long as you have enough of it.

Mitch: Hello. If you hook up a 12V power supply to several loads (appliances) in parallel (that part is critical), each load will draw the correct amount of current it requires. As long as your power supply is rated to handle the total current load of all items attached to it, you should not have any issues. Your wiring should be rated to carry at least 3-4 times the current being drawn through it. You may want to watch this to learn more about basic DC circuits. 2. Basic DC Series Circuit - YouTube 53

Hi Mitch,

if the voltage is fixed

the total current amount will depend only on the load requirements (as long as the power supply can maintain that power)

for example for your application : 12V, 15A, you need a 180W power supply.

If you got at least this power supply unit and you put it in parallel with all your 5 loads, each of them will suck the current needed because the voltage generator only fixes the voltage. The current depends on loads.

Hi,

Thanks for replying,

Will each load draw the amount of current it needs even if I’m not using a board that distributes power?

Basically, what you guys are saying is that i can connect a load that uses 2 amps max to a power supply 12v @ 15 amps and the load will take only what it needs to work, without getting “overpowered” and burning?

Hi,

Thanks for replying,

Will each load draw the amount of current it needs even if I’m not using a board that distributes power?

Basically, what you guys are saying is that i can connect a load that uses 2 amps max to a power supply 12v @ 15 amps and the load will take only what it needs to work, without getting “overpowered” and burning?