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In the express laundry, laundry service provider deliver service in instant manner or as per your desired date and time but in the case of normal laundry, laundry service provider take usual time that laundromat describe in their service table.
Uh... like 30 minuets
Washing machines vary, but on the regular size washers it is usually about ten minutes. The large washing machines take longer.
Consider the following - a submerged object displaces its volume, but a floating object displaces its weight. You also know (or can assume) the load is evenly distributed. So you can take the weight of the load (the horse) and apportion the displacement evenly across the boat. Now you are better prepared to calculate the answer.
0.1
take the laundry to your mum.
Try this: (3 x 1.25) + (3 x 1) = 3.75 + 3 = 6.75 $6.75
The number of Kilowatts needed will vary according to the stock tank heater itself and how much use it receives.
The maximum would be 200 x 240 = 48 kilowatts assuming you had normal 3 wire service. However, your home would never use that much. Average would probably be about 3 or 4 kilowatts, depending on time of day and your heating and air-conditioning systems. Your electric utility bill probably tells you how many kilowatt-hours you used in a month. Just divide this by 730 which is the number of hours in the average month, and that will give your average load in kilowatts for that month.
I was so mad when my mother told me to take put, and fold the laundry. One of the many chores that I have, is doing the Laundry
That depends on how many light bulbs are in the bathroom and how much power each of them use.
I can do a load of laundry in about 30-45 minutes in the washing machine and about 1 - 1 1/2 half hours in the dryer.
First of all, 'kilowatts' is a rate of using energy, not an amount of energy. Your electric companydoesn't charge you for 'kilowatts'; they charge you for 'kilowatt-hours'.But we'll let that pass for right now.The number of kilowatt-hours, or kilowatts, that a house uses really kind of depends on what allis plugged in and running in the house. If the family is on vacation and the only things running inthe house are a couple of clocks and the refrigerator, the house is using maybe 0.1 kilowatts onthe average.If everybody's home, it's a weekend in the winter, it's freezing outside, the missus is cookingon the electric stove, the old man is either taking a nice hot shower or else watching the gameon his new 350-inch HDTV, the kids are all in their rooms with their TVs and computers on, thethermostat is set at 75 and the electric baseboard heaters are trying hard to keep the housewarm, and there's a load of laundry going, that house could be using 15 or 20 kilowatts right now.Dad would like to take a nap, but that dang noise coming from the spinning electric meteris keeping him awake.
You could take the laundry outside and wearing eye proptection, shake it well. However, is it worth the risk if you don't get it all and how would you know if you did? I agree with the above poster. Unfortunately it's best to just throw out the laundry because tiny pieces of glass can work their way into your skin and cause infection. It's not worth trying to save the laundry!
This depends how many kilowatts are running through the element, but it can take anything from one to two hours.
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do not run water when your brushing your teeth, take shorter showers, put more laundry in each load. wash dishes when the dishwasher is full. there you go -Dr. John A. Sampson