It's probably broken, call a technician.
An electric device does not "use up" electricity, but rather energy. And strictly speaking, it doesn't "use up" energy, but transforms it from one form to another. It is common to say that energy is used up when it is transformed to less concentrated forms--when it is degraded. Electrical energy ultimately becomes heat energy. In this sense it is used up. ------ I have a washing machine - I think it's a typical appliance - it uses electricity and water. But it does not "use up" any electricity or water - there is always more. Same for all of our other appliances. The clothes washer (above), dryer (gas and electricity), dish washer (water and electricity), microwave (only electricity). Popcorn maker (only electricity), toaster (only electricity), refrigerator (only electricity). Really, what these appliances "use up" is counter or floor space, especially the big ones.
As mass in a sample increases, it requires more energy to alter the temperature. The energy required is equal to the specific heat of the sample, multiplied by the mass, multiplied by the temperature change.
You use the same analysis for anything moving in a circle or curved path. Look at an object in motion at a certain instant. According to the "Law of Inertia" (Newton's 1st Law) the object will continue in a straight line, and at constant speed, unless a force acts on it. So in order for the object to move along a circular like path, a force must pull or push it in toward the center of curvature. Now with water in a washer, once you start it spinning, there is not much force pulling or pushing it to move in a circle, except for the clothes that block its tendancy to move in a straight line. Eventually, however, the water seeps thru the clothes and then only the tub wall is available to push it into a circular path. But the tub has small holes so the water can escape. So the tub wall keeps the clothes going in a circle but lets the water escape thru the holes.
Yes, it is ionised as after ionisation of hydrogen and oxygen only water is formed.
The hot plate would heat up the salt water and cause the water to evaporate, leaving salt crystals behind. If the water vapour was led off and condensed back into water by cooling, the water would be suitable for drinking.
Same place as you fill the front washer fluid. There is only one reservoir.
If your Whirlpool washer is leaking at water fill period, check to make sure that the hoses are tightly connected. They can sometimes loosen over time.
There is only one Windsheild Washer fluid reservoir that serves both the front and back.
on Mt. cook inglis have only 5 cookies with them
You should only fill a home wash machine almost to the top of opening. Leave enough room in the washer so that water can circulate around the machine with some ease. Front loading wash machines follow the same principle too.
You need to take the hoses off washer and check for trash in your machine valve. Make sure you turn off water to the machine
Never if it is a sealed battery. If it has fill caps you check it about every 3 months and fill with Distilled Water only.
Your Inglis Browning Hi-power was only made from Feb.-1944 thru Sept.1945.There were a total of only 151,000 made.
The 1999 Ford Explorer uses only one washer fluid reservoir for both front and rear washers. It's the one under the hood on the passenger side. The forward tank is for the radiator overflow, the rearward one is for washer fluid. There's only one washer motor, too. It runs forward for the front nozzles, and reverse for the rear nozzle.
Fill it to the bottom of the opening which is above the cells. Use only distilled water and not tap water or drinking water.
Use RV type anti freeze. It wont hurt the hoses or the plastic parts. To be safe buy 2 gallons. First set your washer to fill on warm wash with out it being hooked to a water supply. Blow air through both supply hoses to blow water from the fill valves and lines. Then set your washer so it will spin. Let it spin once to discharge as much water as you can. Then empty both gallons of RV anti freeze in to the tub. Set it to spin again and let it spin through a cycle. Then just put it away and forget it. When you put it back in use, let the tub fill (no clothes, full load) with warm water, and run it through a cycle all the way through a spin. The anti freeze is ok for your septic, and the water only cycle will clear the washer so you may use it.
This is just a guess. If only the hot or the cold stops and not both of them, it might be that the washer in the shut off valve has come off and is plugging the line. When you shut off the main and then open another faucet, the back pressure in the line pushes the washer out. If this is the case, the washer should still be in the shut off valve. Turn off the main and take the stem out of the faucet. The washer should be the valve.