for oil fired furnace it is 4% , n for induction billte heater it is around 1%.
Constant losses Those losses in a d.c. generator which remain constant at all loads are known as constant losses. The constant losses in a d.c. generator are: (a) iron losses (b) mechanical losses (c) shunt field losses
There are no applications for losses, that's why they are called 'losses'!
Just like a transformer, the core losses are a combination of eddy current losses and hysteresis losses.
Power transformers have both no load and full load losses. The key is copper wiring, as copper varies with the square inches of the secondary and primary currents.
Higher the frequency, higher the losses.
No because it will lose electron by core losses and winding losses
It is so because when it burns it losses the property of alcohol.
The premium needed to cover losses based on historical experience for a proposed reinsurance agreement.
The reason why amachine cant be one hundred percent effective is as a result of losses.For Electrical machine such as alternator we have Mechanical losses(such as windage and frictional losses)and Electrical losses(such as copper loss in the rotor winding and stator winding).In Mechanical machine the main losses are windage and frictional losses.NOTE;ALL THIS LOSSES RESULT IN THE PRODUCTION OF HEAT,THUS REDUCING THE EFFICIENCY OF THE MACHINE.
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Coomber blamed the year's losses on depression in the capital markets. However, the renewal rate of insurance policies increased 10 percent for January 2003.
To save resources: If you have a product that uses 100 Watt electricity you have a power cable (transport way) that has a loss of 100 Watt and at the end a power station that losses 100 W. Because nothing is 100 % efficient... That means to use 100 Watt in your home, there will be used 300 Watt somewhere out here in the world. Tools that produce too much energy wastage instead of doing what they are meant to do, have a negative impact on the ecosystem. So with every 10 Watt you save - you save 30 Watt!
A car will not run on water. The closest you can get is by turning water into hydrogen and oxygen through electrolysis and burning that. The problem is that it takes more energy to break water apart than you can get back when burning it do to losses from friction, heat, etc. If it worked you would have a perpetual motion machine.
stray losses,armature copper losses,iron losses(Hysteresis and eddy current losses),mechanical losses(friction and windage losses)
Constant losses Those losses in a d.c. generator which remain constant at all loads are known as constant losses. The constant losses in a d.c. generator are: (a) iron losses (b) mechanical losses (c) shunt field losses
According to the US Bureau of Justice, 67 percent of all businesses experienced a cybercrime including denial of service attacks, electronic vandalism, and sabotage. Of those crimes, 68 percent sustained monetary losses of $10,000 or more.
According to the US Bureau of Justice, 67 percent of all businesses experienced a cybercrime including denial of service attacks, electronic vandalism, and sabotage. Of those crimes, 68 percent sustained monetary losses of $10,000 or more.