The Difference b/w FOB and C&F is
FOB
+ Insurance
+ Freight
= C&F
I.e Insurance and freight in both the valuation.
This exactly the same but in difference professional language. I'm a supplier and with our customer we say C and F but with any freight transporter their use the DDU term.
C&F means Carry & forwarding agent he is the first link in supply chain, he hold stock on behalf of company & forwards stock to Supper stockist, while super stockist is an distributors which distribute products to local distributors.
Here is the linear equation for conversion: Degrees C = (degrees F - 32) / 1.8 Degrees F = degrees C × 1.8 + 32
Commonly seen in ads back in the days when much stuff was ordered to be sent by rail or truck, FOB stands for either "Free On Board" - meaning the buyer didn't pay for the shipping, or "Freight On Board" which means the buyer did pay for shipping. Confused yet? Most commonly, the term, say for a new Ford car, would be printed in the ad: "$XXX.xx, FOB Detroit". Translation: If it had to be shipped - you paid the shipping.
95 degrees F = 35 degrees C.
5 F = -15 C 5 C = 41 F The difference is 20 C or 36 F.
Polar covalent. There is a significant difference in electronegativity between C and F.
We got the formula: speed of medium c = frequency f times wavelength lambda.lambda = c / f has a length unit.Frequency f is 1/time = c / lambda.That shows the difference between the wavelength lambda and the frequency f.
Franchisee is the middle man between principle and retail customer C and F agent is the middleman between principle and wholesailer
Polar covalent. There is a significant difference in electronegativity between C and F.
25
(C - F) percent.
12 deg F is -11.11... deg C so the difference is 5.11... degrees in the Celsius scale. However, since neither scale is absolute it would be incorrect to say that the difference is 5.11... deg C. It would be correct to say that the difference is 5.11... Kelvin since that is an absolute scale. All that sounds rather complicated and an illustration might help. To start with we know (or can calculate) that -40 deg C = -40 deg F. So what is the difference between -40 deg C and -40 deg F? Since -40 deg F = -40 deg C, the difference is 0 deg on the Celsius scale. But 0 deg C is 32 deg F so does that make the difference 32 deg F? No, because the difference on the F scale is also 0 deg.
32 f 0 c
In principle, this is a simple subtraction problem. 30 °F - -13 °F = 43 °F This is equivalent to a difference of 23.89 °C.
Yes, it does as there is a considerable electronegativity difference between given atoms.
The horn plays in F, so when it reads a C on the page, it sounds like the F a 5th below.