Want this question answered?
Water is a useful liquid to use in hot water bottles because it is abundantly available, easy to use, and heats quickly. It can be readily replaced as needed.
no, never! Use hot soapy water then rinse them in warm water.
Plastic water bottles can melt when hot water is placed in them due to the low melting point of the plastic material used to make the bottles, such as polyethylene terephthalate (PET). When the hot water comes into contact with the plastic, it can cause the polymer chains in the plastic to break, leading to melting or deformation of the bottle. It is important to use bottles specifically designed to withstand hot liquids to avoid this issue.
They are water bottles that after they are not in use you can retract them. Think of a telescope if you would and how it extends, it is the same principle.
By drinking out of water bottles and out of a water fountain.
There is no need to keep water in colored bottles and many people keep it in clear bottles. Some find colored bottles aesthetically pleasing and choose to use them for that reason.
It can be. If you live in a cold area it could freeze. If you live in a hot area, it could boil. On collant bottles, it will tell you not to use collant or water alone. It will tell you the proper mixtures to use.
If you live in a hot climate, it can cause chemicals to leak into the water in your water bottles. Some water bottles are safe and some are dangerous. If the recycling number is 1 it is meant for 1 time use onle. Never refill these and leave them in the car. More and more water bottlers are working to change to safer packaging.
it depends what you are using it for
Using water bottles has nothing to do with a person's sexual orientation. This is purely preferential. A gay person is just as likely (or unlikely) to use a water bottle as a straight person.
We use foam rubber to stop condesation of water from the surface of pipe.
Water has a much higher heat capacity than iron, so it will stay hot much longer. That's why people use hot-water bottles rather than hot chunks of iron as bed-warmers.