Different types of fires are treated differently because there are different chemical reactions going on and different fuels involved.
Never use water on either an electrical fire or chip pan fire!
With an electrical fire, hot electrical conductors have ignited adjacent materials such as the insulation on the wires or adjacent materials. The wires themselves are rarely actually "burning", but the materials around them are. Because there is a possibility of electrocution if you were to use a liquid-based fire extinguisher on live wires, you should use a type C (i.e., ABC, BC or C) extinguisher on an electrical fire until the electrical voltage is removed.
A chip pan fire, on the other hand, involves overheated oil that has ignited and may burn at a very high temperature. The surface of the hot oil must be converted to a chemical that no longer burns, and the oxygen removed from the surface. This is done in commercial kitchens by using a Type K fire extinguisher, which turns hot oil into a form of soap that no longer burns. If you are without a Type K extinguisher, you may use a dry-chemical extinguisher (ABC or BC), where "B" indicates that it is effective on "flammable liquids". The dry chemical coats the surface to smother and cool the fire.
coz the chip is sumthing you eat and fire is wen u heat it
We must know that electrical fires and fires fueled by burning liquids should not be fought with water. Some burning metals should not be fought with water, too.
Chip design is a very specific niche of electrical engineering that requires specialized skills. To learn more about chip design programs, visit the website of a local college or university.
Elemental chips simply have a special 'Elemental property' When you use battlechips, there should be a little square with a small symbol on it below the chip's main ID picture. It the symbol is... A flame: The chip is a Fire-emlement chip. These chips do double damage to wood-base chips. A Leaf: The chip is a wood-element chip. These do double damage to electrical-base chips. A Lightning: The chip is a electrical-element chip. It does double damage to water-base chips. Some raindrops: The chip is a water-element chip. It does double damage to fire-base chips. A little ball: This chip has no element. It does only the designated damage. So there you have it. These are the five basic chip types. Just look for that little symbol!
When electrical outlets get old they tend to chip and crack. Also in older outlets the socket gets loose and the plug will not stay in the outlet.
Certainly not ! Class B fires include petrol/oil fires as well as grease (chip pan) fires. Using a water extinguisher will not extinguish these types of fires because - since the flammable substance will float on water - it simply heats the applied water, turning it to steam - resulting in an explosive 'cloud' of burning vapour.
They occur mostly by old fashioned chip pans which are oil in a saucepan with a basket sitting in it heated over gas or an electrical hot plate. The reason they happen is that when the oil gets too hot it goes on fire. With these old fashioned pans there is no way to regulate the heat. New electrical chip pans have thermostats in them so the heat will turn off when it reaches the required temperature.
The central processing unit in a computer is the main chip that "makes everything go." It gets input from programs to execute instructions and control electrical signals.
indexed
It would cause light to refract differently because the angle at which the light hits the glass block would alter and there for the way the light refracts would also alter.
eeProm or double e prom is a small chip that holds data that can be rewritten or erased by electrical charges.
A "chip on his shoulder" is an idiom that refers to a person who is easily angered or feels they have been treated unfairly. It suggests that the person is carrying around a grudge or feeling defensive.