If your telephone came with a charger then yes it uses a small amount of electricity. This is what the charger does, it replenishes the electricity that the telephone used while not connected to the charger.
Yes. A personal computer uses only a small fraction of the amount of electricity that an elevator uses.
No you will not reduce the amount of water, when you use electricity from a 'water driven' power station. You only use the energy of 'falling down' (potential energy is lost).
Vizio seems to give off the least heat and use the smallest amount of electricity.
they have like a million kids.. who all eat.. and use electricity, and computers, and telephones etc.. PLUS they're going through a divorce, which is expensive anyways.
The newer LED based LCD televisions use the least amount of electricity.
yes it does, because the computer will still use a small amount of electricity while on standby mode
First make it conduct electricity by adding a small amount of sulfuric acid.then use 2 inert electrodes to electrolyse the electrolyte.remember to collect the gas evolved
The amount of electricity fairy lights uses depends on how many are in use. They generally use about a watt a light, which means that a lot of lights will take quite a bit of electricity.
Care to ask that in slightly better english? France use: Cars Electricity Vibrators Trains Telephones Computers Nuclear Power Stations The frog easy de-legger
As long as IT is functioning correctly, IT will use exactly the amount of electricity It was designed to use.
The TV when gaming is using the same amount of electricity as TV when your watching it, but the console and any other accessories you use while playing, use an extra amount added on to the amount of electricity the TV uses. So yes, playing video games on TV will cost extra electricity.
Many common home appliances draw a small but constant amount of electricity to enable the "instant on" feature (televisions, most notably). But they use such a small amount of current it's questionable how much difference you'd see in your bill.