Heat it.
Place a 300ml sample of the cold water in a 500ml beaker and place the beaker on a retort stand about six inches above a standard laboratory Bunsen burner. Turn on the gas and ignite the Bunsen burner. Allow the flame to heat the water for several minutes. When small bubbles begin to form in the water, shut off the Bunsen burner and measure the temperature.
When hot water and cold water are mixed together, heat flows from hot water to cold water and brings them to equilibrium at a temperature intermediate to that of hot water and the cold water That may be right, but I think that the hot water would be more dominant causing the cold water to almost instantly turn hot.
no. Ice can evaporate into a gas by melting into water and turning into a gas when more heat is added. Gas can be hot or cold
A hot water heater is designed to supply hot water to faucets, not cold water. It is not possible for a hot water heater to siphon into a cold water faucet. Each faucet is connected to either the hot or cold water supply lines, which are separate in a plumbing system.
Odds are that the cold water lines to the faucet you are trying to use are shut off but the hot water lines coming from the water heater are not. That is why you have hot water but no cold water.
When you add hot water to cold water, the cold water warms up because of thermal conduction. Some of the kinetic energy of the hot water transfers to the cold water on contact, eventually leading to a uniform temperature throughout.
I always turn on both cold and hot cold water so that the water is warm.
hot because when its cold it turn hot
To quickly get hot water from the cold tap, you can turn on the hot water faucet and let it run until the hot water reaches the tap. This process helps to flush out the cold water in the pipes and allows the hot water to flow faster.
Boiling water turns to vapor in the cold because the temperature difference between the hot water and the cold air causes the water to evaporate and turn into vapor.
On single handle shower valves, designed to let cold water first and turn handle farther to mix hot water to desired setting. If hot water turned on first, possibility of getting scalded. If seperate hot/cold handles for shower, shower valve needs work.
Hot water backfeeds from water heater into cold water lines due to expansion of hot water. Usually occurs when a faucet hasn't been opened for awhile, letting hot water backfeed through system.
Technically it won't matter as the hot water is made from incoming cold water. However it would be cheaper to turn on the cold water and let it run very slowly, more than a drip. If you leave the hot open, the heater will be turning on and off all night.
The plaming tubes are all conected.When the cold water run in kitchen the cold water at the shower become less,so with less cold water at the mix cold-hot (the balance is desterb),making the water hoter.Same if you turn on the hot in the kitchen the water will be colder in the shower.
To adjust the temperature of the water coming out of the faucet to a comfortable mix of hot and cold, you can turn the hot and cold water handles until you reach the desired temperature. Start by turning on the cold water, then gradually add hot water until you achieve the desired warmth.
To turn off the water to the hot water heater, locate the shut-off valve on the cold water supply line leading to the heater. Turn the valve clockwise to shut off the water flow.
No, cold water is not hot. Cold water is at a lower temperature than hot water.
Yes, normally H signifies hot water, and C signifies cold water.