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Shunt Resistance Concept Core Idea Your meter can only safely carry a very small current: 300 μA is its full-scale deflection (FSD) limit. But you want to measure a much larger current: 5 A. So you cannot send all 5 A through the meter — it would burn out. What do we do instead? We use a low-resistance shunt connected in parallel with the meter. Small current → through meter Large remaining current → through shunt Key Principle Both meter and shunt are in parallel, so: Voltage across meter = Voltage across shunt How current splits Meter takes: 300 μA Shunt takes: almost entire 5 A Why it works From Ohm’s Law: I = V / R Meter has higher resistance (75 Ω) → less current Shunt has very small resistance (~0.0045 Ω) → more current flows Big Picture Protecting the meter Extending its range Turning a microamp device into a 5 A ammeter Summary A shunt resistor allows a small-current me...