A household radiator is cast iron. An automotive radiator would be aluminum or copper.
A radiator is a conductor because it is made of metal, which is a material that allows heat to flow through it easily. When hot water or steam passes through the radiator, the metal quickly heats up and transfers that heat to the surrounding air, helping to warm up a room.
A hot-water radiator heats a room by transferring heat from the hot water flowing through the radiator to the metal surface of the radiator. The metal then radiates this heat into the surrounding air in the room through a combination of conduction and convection. As the air near the radiator heats up, it rises, creating a natural circulation of warm air in the room.
It depends on the type of metal it is made from.
It's copper. &Copper is metal. So yeah.
Thermal energy from the steam is transferred to the radiator through conduction. The steam flows through pipes within the radiator, heating the metal walls. Heat is then transferred from the hot metal to the surrounding air in the room.
if that is not obvious to you, you must be an alien.
On my 91 it is metal (copper, or an alloy I believe?), although I have never heard of a plastic radiator.
Usually a radiator is made of metal. Plastic can not take the pressure. A hole can be fixed by welding. A radiator shop can tell you for sure.
metal....N.A metal....N.A
A radiator is a conductor because it is made of metal, which is a material that allows heat to flow through it easily. When hot water or steam passes through the radiator, the metal quickly heats up and transfers that heat to the surrounding air, helping to warm up a room.
A place where metal is made is called a foundry or a smelter, depending on the type of metal production.
Yes, steel is a type of metal that is primarily made up of iron and carbon.
steel
aluminum
metale
Steel
It is made out of a stainless steel metal but i don't know what particular type!