indiucutive
resistive loadAnswerIf the current is driving a motor, then the load is resistive-inductive.
Inductive since it has a motor with windings.
No, a geyser is a resistive load.
A battery is usually thought of as a source, not a load. If you are charging a battery, then it will be resistive, especially if you are attempting to charge it like you should, with a DC power supply (not AC).
The PF will increase
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A purely resistive load is one in which there is no capacitive or inductive reactance. Whe driven by an AC voltage source, such a load will have no shift in phase angle between voltage and current.
The phase angle is defined as the angle by which the load current leads or lags the supply voltage.For a purely-resistive load, the phase angle is zero, because the load current is in phase with the supply voltage.For a purely-inductive load, the phase angle is 90 degrees lagging.But few loads are either purely-resistive or purely-inductive; typically, most loads are resistive-inductive. This means that, typically, the phase angle lies somewhere between zero and 90 degrees.
specification of inductive load,capactive load,resistive load in laboratory
water heaters electric stoves toasters space heaters incandescent lights are resistive loads a/c and fans iceboxs and anything with a motor is inductive Type your answer here...
the battery charger and the charger are the same thing. the charger charges the battery and the laptop runs off the power from the battery. hope this helps
resistive loads are best for testing ..they dont introduce phase changes you may test ac devices almost the same as dc inductive loads bring in lots of other factors that give confusing results