the metal casing of the electric kettle
800 wattsAnswerIt depends where you live. In North America the size of a kettle is limited by the supply at the receptacle (120 V/15 A) which means it cannot exceed 1800 W. In the UK, the supply is 230 v/13 A, so a kettle cannot exceed 2990 W.
If the kettle is a new one, then it should. If it is an older style kettle with no automatic shutoff, then it will probably not.
AND
yes
The first Electric Kettle was invented by Arthur Leslie Large in Birmingham, UK, in 1922. It was not the same as modern electric tea kettles.
Arthur Leslie Large invented the first electric kettle.
Electric kettle inventor Arthur Leslie Large was about 60 years old when he died on March 13, 1948. He was likely born circa 1888, since he received his first technical license and began his apprenticeship in 1907. He invented his electric kettle (different from modern ones) in 1922.
Which kettle do you mean? Or did you mean 'Who invented the kettle'? As with most cooking utensils, it is unlikely that a specific person 'invented' the kettle, since that sort of thing developed as necessary through the ages.
To heat my buttoks
the metal casing of the electric kettle
The inventer of the kettle
The energy which powers a kettle ultimately comes from the Sun. While a kettle is powered by electrical energy if it is an electric kettle or gas if it is whistling kettle, the energy ultimately comes from the Sun and came to Earth as sunlight.
An electric kettle heats up water by using an electric heating element located at the bottom of the kettle. When the kettle is plugged in and turned on, the electric current passes through the heating element, generating heat. This heat transfers to the water, causing it to heat up and eventually boil.
you tell me
In a cabinet
The kettle has to be plugged in to an energy supply before it can heat up.