D
A "C" battery has a 1.5 Volts same with AAA, AA, and D batteries.
i don't know but search around on the Internet
c c c c b c c b c d e d c c c c b c c g(lower) c c c c b c c g (lower) c d g (lower) g higher) f e d e f e d c b c b b c d e d
C | C C B C | C B C | D E D C | C C B C | C B C | D G --------- Repeat --------- C | D | G G F E D | E F E D C B C | B A ---------------------- Wait few seconds ---------------------- C | D | G G F E D E F E | D C B C | C B C | D E D | C I got this from Answers but the notes were a little wrong and hard to read so i changed it.
If we assume the same battery chemistry and quality, and the same drain, then the bigger cell will last longer than the smaller cell, as the bigger size means it'll hold a bigger amount of energy.
D is bigger
If we assume the same battery chemistry and quality, and the same drain, then the D cell will last longer than the AAA cell, as the bigger size means it'll hold a bigger amount of energy.
D cup is larger than C cup bra size.
A "C" battery has a 1.5 Volts same with AAA, AA, and D batteries.
Yes you can use C-cells ... they are the same voltage BUT, they will rattle around and loose contact. Your best bet is to get some more D-Cells.
A. 1.75 b. 2.52 c. 1.5 d. 3
due to the fact that people do not understand why we dont care so heres your awnser ( who frigin cares)
c batteries are smaller and less powerful than Ds. You should not use C to replace D vice versa
A. 1.75 b. 2.52 c. 1.5 d. 3
A D cup is larger than a C cup in the same band size. However, a 28D would be smaller than a 36C
There are two main methods.The first is to use the least common multiple (LCM) of the two denominators to change both fractions to the same denominator. After that, it is simple:the bigger numerator belongs to the bigger fraction.The other method is to cross multiply and compare products.If you want to compare A/B and C/D, then compare AD and BC instead. The numerator of the bigger fraction is in the bigger multiple (shown in bold):If AD is bigger, then A/B is bigger while if BC is bigger then C/D is bigger.
depends on the kind of battery. a regular battery (aa,aaa,d,c) should supply 1.5 volts. a car battery should supply 12 volts