I'll add even more cornfusion..
re:
A bad connection or corroded wire adds resistance.
Not always true...
Consider that 1/2 the fat battery cable is bad( corroded,high resistance)), that requires that ALL the starting current(100s of amps ?) has to flow threw the good half. This can create a LOT of heat ( P=IIR law ) and either melt the insulation or burn up the 'good' half of the cable.
From an electrical view a stranded cable should be considered as lots of parallel wires.
It's one reason I always strongly suggest replacing ANY 'maybe bad' cable.
I'm sorry but you're wrong.
That IS always true.
Current flow (amps) is the same throughout the entire circuit.
If you add resistance anywhere in the circuit, you lower current flow in the entire circuit.
If part of your battery cable is corroded that lowers current flow through the entire starter motor circuit. Not just through part of the circuit.
You're thinking of available voltage. That will change.
Take a 12 volt circuit with a single load ( a light bulb).
Measure the voltage anywhere up to the bulb. It's 12V.
Measure the voltage anywhere after the bulb. It's 0V
Measure the current ANYWHERE in the circuit and it will be the same (let's say 6 amps).
Measure before the bulb. 6A.
Measure after the bulb. 6A.
Now add a second identical bulb. Now you have 2 loads.
Measure anywhere up to the first bulb and you'll have 12V.
Measure anywhere between the 2 bulbs and you'll have 6V.
Measure anywhere after the second bulb and you'll have 0V.
Now measure the current ANYWHERE in the circuit and you'll have 3 amps (double the resistance, halve the current).
Before the first bulb is 3A.
Between the first and second bulb is 3A.
After the second bulb is 3A.
The corrosion acts like the second bulb. You're adding a load.
The only difference is the voltage won't be evenly split.
The amount of voltage used by each load is proportional to it's resistance compared to the other resistances.
So if you had an 8 amp bulb and a 4 amp bulb the 8 amp bulb would use twice the voltage of the 4 amp bulb.
*A corroded/bad/loose connection is a load. A corroded wire is a load. You can fix the connections. You can't fix a corroded wire. "Cleaning" the outside doesn't do anything. It has to be replaced.
Twisted stranded wire is obviously made up of lots of small strands of wire twisted tightly together. Current flow depends on the individual strands having as much contact between themselves as possible. When the individual strands are corroded or untwisted they lose their connection. No way to get it back.
This is also why stranded wire isn't all the same. If you have 2 wires that are the same gauge but one has smaller (finer) individual strands than the other, the wire with the finer strands will conduct better and run cooler than the wire with the thicker strands. Even though they're rated at the same amperage (rating is usually based on the gauge of the wire, not the quality). It's also more flexible, especially at lower temps.
Thicker strands are also (very slightly) more prone to corrosion because there's more air gap between individual strands.
And finer wire is more expensive.
So when you're replacing your factory wire with cheap Autozone wire, there's a reason it's cheaper.*