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I am given a circuit to simplify, and because I got stuck I looked at the solution, but it confuses me. The circuit is the following:

schematic

simulate this circuit – Schematic created using CircuitLab

In the solution, the first step that is done is to combine \$R1, R3, R6\$ into an equivalent resistance \$Ra\$. The solution states the following: $$ R_a = R_3 + \frac{R_1R_6}{R_1+R_6} $$ This means that \$R_1\$ and \$R_6\$ are assumed to be parallel. Now I see that \$R_1\$ and \$R_6\$ indeed share the common node \$C\$, but \$R_1\$ lies between \$O\$ and \$C\$, while \$R_6\$ lies between \$C\$ and \$B\$.

At my knowledge-level, I would only assume these resistors to be in parallel if they shared common nodes on both sides, in this case if \$O\$ would equal \$B\$.

This is clearly not the case here. I guess I am missing some theory about resistors in parallel, or I am having some wrong assumptions.

How can it be explained that these two resistors \$R_1\$ and \$R_6\$ can be treated as parallel in this case? Any explanation, as well as references to some related theory is highly welcome.

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2 Answers 2

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In the solution, the first step that is done is to combine \$R1, R3, R6\$ into an equivalent resistance \$Ra\$.

If you are trying to find the effective Thevenin impedance looking into nodes A and B whilst ignoring the load resistor RL, then that is exactly what you do. Trying to find an effective resistance means that voltage sources are short circuited (or set to 0 volts) and current sources are made open-circuit: -

enter image description here

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  • \$\begingroup\$ The name "Thevenin" leads me to a lot of resources that I can study, this is great! Also many thanks for the explanation and visualization of the procedure for finding the effective Thevenin impedance. I will look into that, and comment again if anything remains unclear, otherwise I'll accept this answer! \$\endgroup\$ Commented Dec 29, 2020 at 11:00
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Just redraw the schematic:

schematic

simulate this circuit – Schematic created using CircuitLab

On the left is your original schematic, only slightly re-drawn for better clarity. On the right is what happens when you take the Thevenin equivalent of the two obvious voltage dividers on the left and right sides. (You will find that \$V_{\text{TH}_1}=V_{\text{TH}_2}\$ in this case, though \$R_{\text{TH}_1}\ne R_{\text{TH}_2}\$.)

From there you can further simplify. And then re-find a new Thevenin equivalent and a new divider pair in the end. The whole thing collapses like a house of cards.

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