All conductors have inductance. But all conductors are not used as inductors
conductors let electricity through, and insulators don't let it through, so they can help and control the path of the circuit
Heat exchangers use heat conductors to transfer heat from one liquid to another.Refrigerators/freezers use heat conductors to cool the inside of your fridge.Disc brakes are made from materials that are good at heat conduction to keep them cool.The processor on your computer has a heat sink on it which allows the heat from the processor to be dissipated.Radiators are made of metals that are good at conducting heatThe element in a kettle is used to conduct heat.
Generally speaking, materials that are good conductors of heat are good conductors of electricity. But there is a notable exception. Diamond, an allotrope of carbon, conducts heat better than any metal, but it is an electrical insulator.
Conductors have a (low) Electrical resistance.
The electrical trade is one of many trades that use conductors for projects.
Each telephone line uses only two conductors.
Long, spiked, rigid conductors are usually used as ground rods.
juck your cal
your mother
Metals are conductors.
'Bundled' conductors describe a line in which two or more conductors are supported from the same insulator chain. In the UK, 275-kV transmission lines typically use two conductors per line, and 400-kV transmission lines typically use four conductors per line. The purpose of bundling conductors is to spread the electric stress on the conductors (e.g. for four conductors, the same amount of electric flux will be 'shared' between the four conductors, rather than concentrated on the surface of one conductor).
Personally, I use "Hold"...
USE, USE-2, and UF
Without conductors, electrons do not flow where you want them to flow. An electrical circuit is a flow of electrons.
It is electromagnetic induction.
some metals are semi conductors