yes
Usually the power provider will conned the wires to the transformer. If your house if fed over head, your service will attached to an insulated attachment point on the house or service mast. Then they will pass through the meter, and then into the main breaker in your electrical panel. If your house is fed underground the service wire will be burred underground and enter the electrical meter from the bottom If you can elaborate a little more I can give you a more precise answer
The 'is a' relationship is expressed with inheritance and 'has a' relationship is expressed with composition. Both inheritance and composition allow you to place sub-objects inside your new class. Two of the main techniques for code reuse are class inheritance and object composition. Inheritance [ is a ] Vs Composition [ has a ] Building Bathroom House class Building{ ....... } class House extends Building{ ......... } is a [House is a Building] class House { Bathroom room = new Bathroom() ; .... public void getTotMirrors(){ room.getNoMirrors(); .... } } is a has a [House has a Bathroom] has a Inheritance is uni-directional. For example House is a Building. But Building is not a House. Inheritance uses extends key word. Composition: is used when House has a Bathroom. It is incorrect to say House is a Java - Fundamentals 19 Bathroom. Composition simply means using instance variables that refer to other objects. The class House will have an instance variable, which refers to a Bathroom object.
An object is created from a class, like a house made from a blueprint. The object will therefore be of the type of its class. For instance, a String object will be of type String, which is defined by the String class.
You should be able to search the NEC on the internet. However, local code may play a role in whether or not you can use aluminum in an underground application. The other consideration would be whether or not it's listed as a `direct burial wire`, which is to say, is the insulation manufactured to be buried underground. I'm not a big fan of aluminum, and if you're trying to save some money now, you'll most likely end up having to replace it within 5- 10 years. There's also been a lot of house fires attributed to aluminum wiring as it tends to overheat easier than copper. So search the code on the internet, search your local codes and then go with copper direct burial cable anyway. You'll be happier in the long run. But yes, local amendments notwithstanding, the standard NEC does allow aluminum conductors with the proper insulation rating to be used underground. If it is installed in an underground raceway, it must be listed for wet locations, or for direct burial if buried.
I did this exact thing in 2000. had a 4 ft crawl space under a 25 x 20. $18,000. No plumbing. I contracted every thing out except painting , insulation and heating duct work. what a great family room. m_stevens@roadrunner.com
Alot of them use a sonar-like sensors that emit soundwaves to help them "see".
The room underground in a house is commonly referred to as a basement.
House of Lords - Lords of the Underground album - was created on 2007-08-21.
the underground railroad.
yes it is
CO2 sensors in houses are used for detecting when there is too large of an amount of carbon dioxide there is in a house. These sensors go off and the fire department comes.
the houseyard system is a system that a house is build underground
get to ligt house and get hurt
i think yes but i am not sure
there are underground passages like ants
windows
in the underground house