I think 1 volt/bar when expressed in db you need to add 200 db to get reading in volts per micro pascal.
Where are you typing it? In a MS Word document go to "Insert" on the menu bar, click on "symbol" and scroll down until you see the micro symbol and click on it. In MS 2003 it's about 8 lines down in that menu.
Yes, as long as the bar fridge wattage is less than 650 W
There is 220 volts between the two poles. If you are running 2 wires (black and white) + ground then you hook black to one pole and white to the other. Put red or black electric tape on each end of the white wire and wrap around wire for 3 inches or so next to the connection so the next person will be able to see that the wire is hot and not a neutral.
Washing machines in the U.S. operate on 120 volts. That requires a single pole 20 amp breaker and wired with 12/2 w-ground wire. Black to the breaker, white to the neutral bus bar, and copper ground to the ground bus bar.
To obtain the amp of the copper bus bar, multiply the width of the bus bar by the thickness of the bus bar to obtain the current carrying capacity of the bus bar.
There are 100000 pascals in 1 bar. So 1 pascal = 1.0E-5 Bar
A bar is 100,000 pascals
100,000 (just type "1 bar in pascals" into google)
1 mega pascal= 10 bar. .1 megapascals= 100,000 pascals= 1 bar. They're just different by a factor of 10 (or 100,000 if comparing to pascals).
Units of Pascal, Torr, or Bar are commonly used to measure pressure. These units represent the force exerted by a fluid or gas over a given area. Pascal is the SI unit, Torr is commonly used in vacuum measurements, and Bar is used in meteorology and industrial applications.
A horizontal line, placed above a symbol.Also (in physics), a bar is a unit of pressure. 1 bar = 100,000 pascal.
1 pascal=newton/square meter ie, 1pa=1N/m^2 1 bar= 100kpa 1 bar= 10^5 pa
A bar is a unit of pressure, not a unit of weight, nor of mass. A bar is 100,000 pascal, or 100,000 newton / meter2.
Earth: about 100,000 Pascal at sea level. 100,000 Pascal is also known as 1 bar. Venus: about 92 bar at surface level.
There is no specific unit for "water pressure". The unit for pressure in general is the pascal; 1 pascal = 1 newton / square meter. In practice, the "bar" is often used, but that's not, strictly speaking, an SI unit. 1 bar = 100,000 pascal, and it is approximately equal to 1 atmosphere.
Well Pascal invented the syringe and the hydraulic press, Meet his wife in a bar and Died of Tuberculosis at the age of 39. He also invented the first calculator
No, it is not equal. Conversion factors 1.000 kg/cm2 = 0.9807 bar = 0.9678 atm.