This is easy enough but understand that the current output is very weak and will normally only power a low-watt light bulb for a short time. What you'll need is two clean copper wires (about eight inches long), a lemon (room temperature) or a potato (warmed but not cooked), a small low-watt light bulb, and two highly conductive and fairly stiff rods.
You just hook the wires to the light and to the conductive rods and incert the rods into the ends of the lemon or potato. Sometimes it even works better if you complete the circuit for a few seconds by just touching the wires together before you hook them up to the light. ( it just starts the chemicals inside so that you get a stronger output of electricity)
you could put 2 little chrismas lights in to a potato and some wires put it on ur mantel piece and turn of ur lights and plug it in ur wall (ur) your)
The potato has the most electric charge in it.Use a multimeter to measure the electric charge. Some fruits or vegetables are close to be the most electric charge, but it's not at least high enough compared to the potato I used.Out of all fruits (lemon, apple, banana, etc...), the potato has the most electric charge in it. All the other fruits or vegetables are close, but the potato wins it all! :PYou could use a multimeter to measure the electric charge. Test all the fruits and vegetables to find out what the charge is. :)
Onion and potato are vegetables; lemon is a fruit.
In the short run, a lemon. For the carbs, and in the long run, a potato.
Not sure what you mean with "lemon circuit", but in an electrical circuit, the switch can be just about anywhere.
a potato because it has more density and oils
no
If you compared a potato with a lemon they wouldn't be much alike so it is probably a base.
A Lemon because more acid btw hii !:) Amanda cristian isaih
you suck like a vaccum cleaner! :d
Yes!! William A. Borst invented the potato clock in 1983.
It can better sweet a sweet potato because it already has a lot of energy used inside it