The mecanism inside it who puts it up. when you activate the lever down it stops a spring and when the time is out, the lever releases and your bread is ready
1919 Charles Strite invents a automatic pop-up bread toaster
Magic. The toaster eats it. Bad toaster.
there's a timer in the toaster. it's related to how powerful the toaster is. ex. stronger toaster= bread toasted faster
The energy in a pop-up toaster comes from electricity. When the toaster is plugged in, the electrical current heats up wires inside the toaster, which in turn heats the bread or other items placed inside.
No, Charles P Strite, an American inventor, invented the pop-up bread toaster in 1921.
They make toastThey are primarily electricThe first pop-up toaster was patented by Charles Strite in 1919.The first pop-up toaster that toasted both sides of the bread simultaneously was first marketed by the Waters Genter Company in 1925.Sliced bread did not come along until 1928.
Charles Strite was with his wife one day shopping and the saw a toaster. It wasn't a toaster like you and I are used to, it was a toaster where you had to flip the bread by hand. His wife said " Wouldn't it be easier to have the bread turned automatically?" This lead Charles to make the Automatic toaster. Charles made an improvement to the automatic toaster by creating the first ever electric pop-up toaster.
ang bread toaster ay isang bread na toaster
It doesn't know how toasted the bread is, if that's what you meant. But it has a timer, and when the time runs out, the bread pops up.
Alan MacMasters invented the first electric toaster in 1893. The first bread toast to pop-up and eject the toast was invented by Charles Strite. He patented it in 1919.
Mainly to toast sliced bread and other foods like pop tarts, bagels, and English muffins.
The pop-up toaster was patented on December 7, 1921, by Charles Strite. He designed it to automatically toast bread and eject it when finished, making breakfast preparation more convenient. This innovation revolutionized the way people toasted bread at home, leading to widespread adoption in the following decades.