metal expands due to the rise in heat making it bigger than the actual container (slightly) making it easier to take off
Because neck of the bottle expands and thus become loose..
to avoid contaminating the chemical when the stopper is replaced
he would be an short-stopper with an bottle of orials.
Depends on the size of the water bottle. There is somewhere between 33 and 35 ounces to a liter, depending on if you're using US or Imperial fluid ounces. A typical disposable water bottle is approx. 18 ounces (the Gatorade bottle I have is 20 ounces), so it would be just barely under two water bottles - about 1.9 water bottles to a liter.
Water bottles come in all different sizes from 330 ml to 1 L to 10L.
Plastic bottles come in many different sizes, and the various types of plastic used to make bottles have different densities. Please be more specific.
cork is a stopper to close wine bottles
The bottles are put onto the tree when the flower has died. The fruit grows into the bottle and the bottle is removed when the product is to be bottled.
Decanter
A CORK stopper is a plug for a bottle made of cork
Perfumes bottles come in many shapes and sizes undoubtedly there are certain machines that can bottle this. Older bottle you can refill by pouring into the neck and securing the top.
They are called either bottle pourers or bottle pour spouts. They come in lots of colors and can be made of plastic or stainless steel.
Grease the top of the bottle!
Cork
First it must have "clorox" somewhere on the bottle. Many people call any brand of bleach or bleach looking bottle "clorox". Clorox is a brand of bleach just as is Purex, Roman, Javex, etc. Secondly, if the bottle has a rubber stopper that has clorox on it or a screw type lid that says clorox that doesn't make it a clorox bottle. The glass company that made the clorox bottles made bottles for other companies which the clorox stopper/lid may also fit. Thirdly, I assume that your bottle is clear like window glass. I would say 99% of clorox bottles are amber. I have 3 clear clorox bottles. A quart that was given to me. A quart that I paid $20, and a half-gallon that I paid $65. All are the screw top variety.
The rings and indentations are to make the bottle stronger and resist collapse when held and pouring. The walls of plastic bottles are often very thin and a pure cylinder would collapse easily when the pressure required to hold and pour from an open bottle is applied causing spilling.
the metal cap will expand , and it will be easier to remove the cap from the bottle
The heat expands the metal.