haixt ang hrap naman ni2^^
Yes, but only factory assembled units listed as such.
-- "Amps" and "current" are the same thing. Electric current is measured in units of Amperes. -- The current is always the same at every point in a series circuit, no matter how many resistors of the same or different values are in the circuit.
Amperes are units of electrical current. They measure the amount of charge passing a point in a circuit line given a set amount of time.
I=U/R so 30/2000=0.015 so 15 mA
An open circuit or a short-circuit (if that circuit is complete).
Amps
volts
Yeah unless the dryer in their unit has a meter connected to it.
For commercial units, partstown.com or 3wire.com (in resources)
LC means a circuit contain capacitor(C) and inductor(L). They are connected in series. L is inductance, units is Henry(H). C is capacitance, units is Faraday(F) don't have battery.
See the link below for a description and diagram of a PWR. This shows one water circuit, in designs with three circuits there are three separate steam raising units each in a separate circuit, each doing the same duty. There is also of course the secondary circuit which passes steam to the turbine and returns condensed water to the steam raising units
Yes, but only factory assembled units listed as such.
ohms
A voltmeter does not measure current, it measures voltage in units named volts. An ammeter measures current in units named amperes or amps in common shorthand. A voltmeter is connected in parallel to the circuit being measured, whereas an ammeter is connected in series with the circuit being measured.
Stackable washer dryer combination only requires one type of outlet. Both units run on 110v circuit. Therefore, only one outlet is necessary to plug both units into.
Ohms Law. I = V / Rwhere V is the potential difference measured across the resistance in units of volts; I is the current through the resistance in units of amperes and R is the resistanceof the conductor in units of ohms.Alternative AnswerThe ratio of voltage (V) to current (I) is called 'resistance', i.e: R = V/I. If this ratio is constant for variations in voltage, then the circuit is said to be 'linear' or 'ohmic', and obeys Ohm's Law. If the ratio changes for variations in voltage, then the circuit is said to be 'non-linear' or 'non-ohmic', and the circuit does not obey Ohm's Law. As most circuits are non-linear, it is clear that Ohm's Law is not a universal law.
These are types of switches used in networks. A packet-switched network moves data in separate units called packets which are then assembled to create the message. Circuit switched networks send continuously but require dedicated point-to-point connections.