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Extension cords are not used at 5500 volts.
No. However, a longer extension cord has higher resistance for a given wire gauge or size compared to a short extension cord and the voltage at the load device may drop so low that it doesn't work properly. This may also be accompanied by a noticeable rise in the temperature of the extension cord. As a rule, use the shortest extension cord that will get the job done. If the extension cord must be long, use one that has heavy gauge wire to minimize voltage drop at the load.
If there is no load plugged into the cord there will be no power consumed. The only time the resistance of the cord will come into effect is when the circuit becomes energized through the load plugged into the end of the cord.
#16 <<>> To load an extension cord to 1725 watts depending on the length of the cord, the bare minimum should be #14. A better size cord and my recommendation would be a #12 wire size extension cord.
Yes, as long as the extension cord is rated for the load. Most microwave ovens use 1000W or more, some less. A standard two wire extension cord would be unsafe. There are, however, extension cords which have the proper gauge of wire and the necessary 3-prong outlets which a microwave would need to operate safely.
Extension has something to doing with multiplication.
I unpacked my lunch.
Within a materials elastic limit, the extension of a uniform section (like a wire) will be proportional to the tensile load. The graph of load (mass) v extension will be a straight line
This shows that when suspended load is zero. the extension in wire is also zero which is correct. For more details, contact at saqibahmad81@yahoo.com
Extension cords are not used at 5500 volts.
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The cast of Italy Unpacked - 2013 includes: Giorgio Locatelli as himself
unpacked
With that size of load and a voltage of up to 300 or 600 volts, any extension cord can be used.
sorry, did you mean 'meaning of Extension'
No. However, a longer extension cord has higher resistance for a given wire gauge or size compared to a short extension cord and the voltage at the load device may drop so low that it doesn't work properly. This may also be accompanied by a noticeable rise in the temperature of the extension cord. As a rule, use the shortest extension cord that will get the job done. If the extension cord must be long, use one that has heavy gauge wire to minimize voltage drop at the load.
I t is a file extension for "Stopizilla"