Because they need to be kept reasonably level at all times so to compensate for hills, valleys etc, at some points they appear extremely high, whereas further along its journey they won't be. Hope this helps. imagine if you could reach them and get electrified.
On a hot day, power lines can sag due to the expansion of the metal caused by high temperatures. This sagging can lead to power outages or disruptions if the lines come into contact with trees or other obstacles. Additionally, high temperatures can decrease the efficiency of power transmission along the lines.
The balls on high voltage electrical wires are known as "marker balls" or "aerial marker balls." They are used to make the wires more visible to aircraft, especially in low-light conditions. This helps prevent collisions between aircraft and the power lines.
No. Meteorite showers make colored lines in the sky as they burn up in the atmosphere. You can see them with the naked eye but it is easier if you are far away from cities so the sky is darker.
Because the plane is so high up
because of the little dwarves in the sky flying around with high powered electric solar vacuums. So basically it is dry because it is not wet.
because the sky is in the high so they are called the sky is high boto at putay
Sky High (Sky So High and Wide) - Nahla Rae
because the sky is in the high so they are called the sky is high boto at putay
Their all so so so tall, their high up in the sky, sky scrapper
On a hot day, power lines can sag due to the expansion of the metal caused by high temperatures. This sagging can lead to power outages or disruptions if the lines come into contact with trees or other obstacles. Additionally, high temperatures can decrease the efficiency of power transmission along the lines.
because the sky is so high
no, but they are so high that people claim that they do touch the sky, which they don't. They just reach so high! First you would have to define at what height the sky begins
you cut down the power lines so the tree cant fall on them
wala
"Who paints the rainbow in the sky and hangs the fluffy clouds so high" is a quote from a poem I Wonder by Jeannie Kirby. The Who in question is God.
to send power through them so that electricity can get to your home
It's hard to know without the context, as slang changes so rapidly, but 'sky high' is usually a picturesque way of saying 'very high',.