I have owned several 60's and have done a lot of turning on and of with no problems whatsoever.... Roger
Yes. Turning off any device when it is not in use will save power and energy.
the process of turning off of a thyrisror is known as commutation
I think he is 14 and turning 15 this year
The best way to do it is to just keep it in the dock charger when not using it, so that you can charge it while not using it instead of just turning it off.
He could take a whole day off and have doublle shower time
no
All items being powered by the generator should be turned off before turning off the generator. Or damage could result to both the appliance and the generator.
It may have over heated, got hacked, possibly water damage... I would just send it in.
It is blinking by a lamp first turning on, then turning off, then turning on, then turning off...
No
Only if you're very unlucky and the switch bounces; turning on the power is more likely to cause damage as components are cold and suddenly receive power, heating them up.
No. Fuel pressure at the injector is regulated by the fuel pressure regulator.
Differentiation. One cell can turn into a different cell by turning on and off
No; turning it off stops the fuel supply and spark ignition cycle. It does not cause the engine to immediately absorb the energy that was being produced, so there is not enough energy to stress anything to the point of fracturing. Turning the engine off at full throttle has the same effect as turning the engine off at half throttle except there are more revolutions per minute (RPMs) being generated, so it takes longer to stop. It would certainly damage the turbo if fitted.
Turning off it stays off until you turn it on, restart just automaticlly turns off then back on.
50/50. Chance that it will damage something.
Turning my ignition on and wont turn off because it is faulty.