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Shaving cream expands when air enters the cream as it is forced out Shaving cream expands when air enters the cream as it is forced out
No, its forced by an electric blower...otherwise it wouldn't be forced air
Wood or charcoal fires and lots of forced air from bellows can heat ore above the melting point of iron (1811°C) .
Natural gas burns at approximately 3,000 degrees Fahrenheit, in an adiabatic (no heat loss) measurement. This is plus/minus 100 degrees F. Adiabatic means that the temperature is measured without any heat transfer, either to a boiler, the air around it (in a forced-air heater, for example), or other heat exchange device.
Air is matter but heat is energy.
No, in Canada, a forced air heating system is most common as it is relatively low cost source of heating. With a forced air heating system, heat is usually delivered through a metal duct system throughout a house or building.
No, furnaces are forced air heat. Boilers are hot water heat.
A forced air heating system uses a furnace to heat air, which is then distributed throughout the building via ductwork and vents.
You must have a heat pump with electric auxilliary heat.
Shaving cream expands when air enters the cream as it is forced out Shaving cream expands when air enters the cream as it is forced out
Convection.
No, because it is a heating system, not a cooling system
Forced convection are used in car radiators, cooling towers, air cooled heat exchangers etc.
This means there is a blower attached to the system that forces the heat into the home.
Yes,It depends if it is gas fired or electric.
no heat would flow
no heat would flow