That happened to my catera too and it was just two blown fuses so get a fuse tester and test the fuses or take it to a shop and have them fix it for about $80
The two metals expand at different thermal rates, so as temperature increases, one expands more than the other, causing the strip to bend. If configured properly, it could be set to bend enough at a certain temperature so that it bends and touches an electrical contactor, which tells the air conditioner to turn on. Once the air conditioner has run for a while, the temperature lowers, and the metals start to contract, bending it away from the contact, and turning the air conditioner off.
a thermometer...
Serial # tells you the year of manufacture not the model #.
it tells you if its going to rain or not. it also tells you the temperature
Temperature tells what degrees it is like how hot or cold something is
yes
Temperature, palour, disposition.
it tells you your temperature
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Why would anyone put dirt in a water heater ?? Normally water heaters have sediment from the minerials in the water supply and the instructions furnished with the heater tells how to cure this problem
Yes, 103 is not good. 310 you would be dead.
Either the water pump is unable to pump the warmed water into the heater core, or as you suspect, the thermostat may be sticking open. Do you have a temperature gauge or is it just a light that tells you when you're overheated? If it's a gauge, you should be able to tell when the engine is warm. If the temperature is much over 100 degrees F, you should be able to get heat out of the heater core. I'd be real suspicious of the water pump or possibly low coolant level.