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to a toaster? first... electrical. when it is turned on, heat and light. then, when it is done, theres a ting sound right? and tht's sound energy
By far a toaster draws more current than a light bulb.
The toaster consumes a lot of current (or electricity) since it is a heating equipment. All electrical heating equipments consume lot of current. So naturally, there is a deficiency in the limited supply of current to the other devices (like light, fans, refrigerator etc) So the light goes dim.
the energy transfer in a toaster is electrical to heat (and light if the elements are glowing)
Light bulbs use 7-150 watts, a toaster uses 700-1200 watts.
Inside a toaster, electrical energy is converted to heat (and a little bit of light) energy.
An ordinary toaster is the classic two piece of bread toaster with settings that range from light to dark. A 4 slice toaster will hold 4 pieces of bread at one time.
The inside of a toaster includes electrical energy (what runs the toaster), radiant/light energy (the light coming off of the coils), and thermal/heat energy (what cooks the food in the toaster).
The energy transfer in a toaster is electrical to heat (and light if the elements are glowing) and Conversion is electric to radiation.
no
heat, and some light
They both need electricity to work.