3kg / tonne of Rebar up to 20mm & 1.5kg / tonne above 20mm
1,000 kilos. A it will still weigh the same
3kg per tonne of bar
8 kg
1 roll of tie wire is equivalent to 45 kg.
how many feet of wire is in a slinky? 80 feet
Because resistance is inversely proportional to the cross sectional area of the wire and directly proportional to its length. R = p*L/A, where R is resistance (in Ohms), p is resistivity (property of the material, in Ohms*m), L and A are length and area of the wire. And if you think about it, it makes perfect sense. In thick wire electrons have a lot of 'room' to move, they do not obstruct the path. If you imagine it is like a road with many free lanes - cars move fast and freely i.e. low resistance (or more scientifically, like many wires in parallel). Where as length is proportional to the resistance, since every small segment of wire adds more resistance to the total (many wires in series).
The current at every point in the series circuit becomes slightly less, because the increased length of wire adds slightly more resistance to the loop.
That's how every electric generator works.
1 roll of tie wire is equivalent to 45 kg.
As it has been explained to me there only purpose is to support and separate the rebars in their respective locations. Other than that, they are doing the same thing as wire mesh... displacing concrete.
Decision making is a life wire to every organization
12*65/130
You don't. Every circuit needs a return wire back to the source.
depends on your cage - wire bottom - once a week. Solid bottom - every day.
Sounds like you'll need to replace or repair every wire and tube that was cut.
Wire made of many strands is 'cable'
sounds like the memory wire and acc wire are backwards
how many feet of wire is in a slinky? 80 feet
One
how many meters in 1 kilo of tie wire