Not in an absolute sense, but if you mean compared to other fruit, then yes. Apples produce a higher voltage than the classic "battery" fruit, lemons.
Spark plugs don't produce high voltage they just make sparks with high voltage. The high voltage in a car is produced by running the low voltage of a car through a coil and condenser a distributor defines exactly when the spark happens to light up the fuel in the cylinder
The s10 uses an alternator and regulator to produce voltage. A high voltage is most likely caused by a faulty voltage regulator.
It is impossible
It is impossible
Yes, apple trees produce apples.
because
it will not produce voltage or high enough voltage when running should be around 14 volts running
basically it generate high frequency.As you know when frequency increases voltage also increase.it produce frequency in kilo hertz.ULTIMATE function to produce high voltage,ie kilo volts.
Apples are not good conductors of voltage. In fact, they are insulators because they contain very little free ions or electrons that can carry an electric current. Due to their high resistance, apples do not allow electricity to flow easily through them.
The function of a choke in a lamp circuit is to produce high voltage. In tubelights, the high voltage is essential for ionisation of the gas which is present in tubelights.
No. A megger's output voltage is not high enough to test the insulation of a high-voltage transformer if, by 'high-voltage transformer ', you mean a distribution transformer or power transformer. Instead, a high-voltage test set or 'pressure tester' (e.g. a 'HiPot' tester) must be used, as these produce far higher voltages.
Seeds are the way apples produce more apples.