Because they are magnets and electronics stick to magnets
The maximum lumens that a 1-watt LED flashlight can have now is 160.
There are many king of flashlights in market, from little to big. There is not a regular grams for you. For example: IMALENT touch screen flashlight EU06 is 172 grams.
the impact was that all you had to do was click a button so many people started to buy more flashlight's compared to lanterns
Man-made or Synthetic magnets are stronger than natural magnets and have many uses including alternative medicine (magnet therapy for Arthritis & Rheumatism), fridge/car magnets, they are also widely used in manufacturing. Made from a Nickle, Aluminium and cobalt (AlNiCo) compound they are magnetized by placing them in a machine which produces a strong electromagnetic field.
i'm not very sure, but i know it has magnets. as for zinc, you will have to see if someone else answers it. Yeah...;.
a few are: speakers in stereos, electric can opener (keeps lid from falling off), friction flashlight, trains.................................
It's a lamp/flashlight/torch specially designed to go on a bike. It can either be powered by batteries, a generator driven by the wheel, or magnets attached to the spokes.
Sure. A simple generator can be made by using magnets, wires, and iron. Look inside a hand-cranked radio or flashlight to see the basic layout.
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Though I don't fully understand your question, I can assume you mean "Do magnets affect a flashlight" or more specifically, "light". No order of any magnets can bend a light beam. Gravity, on the other hand does, as light (photons) behaves both like waves and matter. However, it would take a huge amount of other matter to even detect any bend in light. In fact, large imploded (dead) stars, having masive concentrated mass and thus gravitational pull, in effect, cause a "black hole"; a visual area in space in which no light appears to emit from behind it. So the simple answer is no, no number of magnets will affect the light from a flashlight.
IMALENT flashlight is sold to many place, to buy one from RocS in New Zealand.
i had a flashlight fish, one morning i woke up to 56 eggs!
Because they are magnets and electronics stick to magnets
The answer is governed by the size of the flashlight. Count the amount of batteries that go into the flashlight and then multiply by 1.5 and this will give you the voltage of the flashlight. For NiCd and NiMH rechargeable batteries multiply by 1.3 volts.
The maximum lumens that a 1-watt LED flashlight can have now is 160.
Magnets can be made from many different metals so there is no specific atomic mass.