It's because if you take the pecrentage of accidents or serious accidents where the payout is more, men are more often involved.The accidents women have (generally speaking, obviously not every case) tend to be less expensive for the insurance company.
no. if the cell is dry, the electric capacity also becomes dry and this does not affect the conductor.
you will have to get 2 batteries and compare it
directA dry cell battery produces DC.
Roughly 2.2 volts
A battery consists of a number of cells, which are individual units that produce electrical energy. "Double-cell" simply means it has two of those cells.
2 volts
No real comparison. In simplistic terms the D cell 1.5 volt flashlight battery will produce around 15 ampere hours. A 12 volt automobile battery will produce from 300 cold cranking amps (CCA) to 800 CCA or more.
No, as D cell battery does not have enough power to shock you. *edit D Cell batteries don't have enough VOLTAGE to shock you. They have plenty of power (Power = Voltage*Current) to shock you, but first you'd have to use a circuit to increase their voltage to thousands of volts. This would decrease their current proportionally and keep the power level the same. Car batteries for example have tremendous amounts of power, but it's in the form of massive amounts of current (number of electrons flowing), the Voltage (intensity of the electrons) is only 12 Volts, which is still safe.
No. The sizes of the batteries give indication as to how much current they can produce at that voltage.Another Answer:There is no A-cell battery. There are AA batteries packaged in a D shell. If you avoid those, a normal D-cell will deliver a lot more energy than an AA-cell, so connected to the same device/load it will last longer.
we use cell for many electrical apliances such as to start a toy car ,in torch to produce light,in telivision remot etc.
another name for a battery is a cell a cell is one battery and a battery is a two or more cells or batteries
Some of the similararities between wet cell batteries and dry cell batteries include: * Multiple cells. * A container such as a case or housing. * Positive and negative electrodes. * An electrolyte. * The ability to produce of electricity in the form of Direct Current [DC].