Guys, I know a lot of you are just trying to help, but there has been some erroneous info given.
Lets try to clear a couple of concepts up. An average glow plug has a resistance of about 1/2 of an Ohm. That is Soooo close to a "dead short" a lot of meters and a lot of people would not be able to discern the difference. An open is infinite resistance. Zero ohms is a very very low resistance. When we get around 1 ohm of resistance it is very difficult to to interpret lower resistances without a special expanded scale meter. You would be hard pressed to find a zero ohm resistor. A chunk of copper wire is getting there, but copper wire has some resistance too, but you sure as heck cannot measure it on an average ohmmeter.
When a load is placed across a power source like in this case putting glow plugs across a battery, the lower the resistance of the glow plugs the more current will flow. And 3 or 4 glow plugs EACH with a resistance around 1/2 an ohm or so will draw a chitload of current the instand they are connected. Now when they start to heat up, and that occurs real quick, the resistance of the glow plugs go up and less current is drawn a few seconds after they are energized than the immediate starting current.
Keep in mind that 3 or 4 glow plugs in parallel, and that is how they are hooked up, will draw more current than a single plug, because resistors in parallel have less resistance than any single plug.
Examples: and open circuit or infinite resistance does not draw any current for a given voltage. A 1000 ohm resistor will draw less current than a 100 ohm resistor. A 10 ohm resistor will draw less current than a 1 ohm resistor. and on down to a zero ohm resistor will theoretically draw an
infinite amount of current.
That's a whole big bunch for those of us that are numerically challenged. of course finding a zero ohm resistor is kinda hard to do, and there is a limit to the amount of current that a battery will deliver, but here is fun experiment. Just drop a nice big wrench across your battery terminals and run like he77. A lot of current will flow, a whole lot of heat and light will be emitted, and hopefully you will be somewhere else when that happens.
So again, just trying to help clear up some misconceptions about the terms and Ohms law. Remember Ohms law is not just a good idea, it is the law.
