A 'Triton Electric Shower' is a shower that can draw on a cold water supply and heat it on demand. It differs from other showers in the fact that it can use cold water and heat it itself, instead of relying on a boiler to heat the water first.
Electric showers only take water from the mains cold water supply. They heat the water when you turn the shower on, by passing it over a heating element inside the shower - in a similar way to how a kettle works. When you shower, you don't use up and stored hot water - so electric showers are ideal for families and households where there is a limited supply of hot water. Electric showers are always ready to use, any time of the day or night
You possibly didn't adjust the heat control ring when you assembled the control shaft.
I will heat my food after i take a shower. I am going to heat my food after I taker a shower. I am heating my food after I have a shower.
The unfortunate answer to this is that you can't. They transfer almost all the heat to the water. The shower unit itself hardly gets warm. It is worth descaling an electric shower if you live in a hard water area as this will improve the heat transfer. Also most showers have only one heat setting which is on full all the time and the temperature is regulated by increasing or decreasing the water flow. Therefore the only way of reducing the electricity usage is to fit a lower wattage shower. However this will have a lower flow and you might spend more time in the shower so making the overall costs the same or even greater.
Power showers are more energy efficient in most cases. In a power shower, only a pump is used to pump hot water from a boiler to the shower head as opposed to an electric shower, which has to heat up the water first before being used. Electric showers therefore are not as energy efficient as power showers.
An electric stove-top, hot water in a shower or bath, grabbing cold stuff out of the freezer/fridge... there are a lot.
To answer this question the voltage of the shower is needed.
Well, as far as I know, there is no 'gas' A/C. The A/C will be electric, regardless of the type of heat used. Whether electric heat or gas heat would be more economical is really dependent on your electric and gas utility rates and the efficiency of the appliances involved.
"Converting" an oil furnace to electric will not be economically practical. You'd be far better off getting a "ground source heat pump" and having someone install it for you. They're much more efficient than the older style electric heat that uses resistor heating elements.
Electricity and water don't mix. You should not have a socket in the shower.
No. electric motors aren't heat engines.