yes
The correct answer is....80-conductor IDE ribbon cable.
2 conductor round cable 2 conductor twisted cable
The 80-conductor cable and the 40-conductor cable.
Cable faults are normally categorised as (a) conductor-to-earth (ground) faults, (b) conductor-to-conductor faults, and (c) conductor-to-conductor-to earth (ground) faults. In addition to that, we can categorise them by whether they are 'high-resistance' or 'low-resistance' faults.
Coaxial cable, STP cable, UTP cable
In a HT cable there are 2 layers of semiconductor one on the conductor and second on the XLPE insulation. As we know semiconductor behaves as conductor when temperature rises. So when the HT cable is on load its conductor temperature rises due to this the semicon layer which is on conductor behaves like conductor and as a result overall cross section area is increased. now the second semicon layer which is over XLPE on temp rise behaves as conductor and used for dessipating heat out of conductor as the cable heat due to load.
80 conductor IDE cable; 40 conductor IDE cable
Master.
The metal which was used in the cable which was inside the insulator. Normally copper is used.
24AWG / 4 Conductor Shielded Cable
I'll assume that you're talking about the kitchen appliance that cooks with microwave radiation, called a "microwave oven" Many parts of the appliance are made with plastic, glass, and rubber. Some of those parts conduct heat, and others don't. None of them conduct electricity. Other parts are made with metals. Those parts do conduct heat and electricity. No, a microwave is not a conductor producing heat, its actually a glass tube, that transfers electric energy into an electromagnetic wave, which happens to excite water molecules.
The three main parts of a cable are the conductor, which carries the electrical current; the insulation, which encases the conductor to prevent electrical leakage; and the sheath, which provides protection and durability to the overall cable structure.