Yes, you can find sample company profiles online on websites like Bplans, LivePlan, or Entrepreneur. These sample profiles typically include sections on company background, products/services, target market, financial information, and mission statement. You can use these samples as a guide to create your own company profile.
The standard voltage in Canada is 110 volts, which is the normal amount that runs electrical items like computers and radios. 220 volts is required to operate heavy appliances like stoves and electical washers and dryers.
Jim B.
Toronto,.
For calculation purposes R = E/I. R = 120/15. R = 8 ohms. This is hypothetical because of the internal components that make up most appliances.
Halo 1 is rated M for mature.
Edit by Dreirot: If you look in the back pages of Halo: The Fall of Reach, you will see an ad that says it's rated T
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Any mature kid should still be able to play it no matter his age :P
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As with most small appliances, the wattage used will be on the equipments nameplate. Along with this information you will also find the operating voltage and the equipments operating frequency.
Yes.
The only possible changes would be to the speed of the motors and time keeping.
Depending on the make and construction results may vary. Most modern machines use electronics to control motors and timing, so should be OK.
A switch is a make - break device. Its function is a circuit is to make and break the current flow of the circuit that it is in. This action then starts and stops the load that is connected in the circuit.
Using an undersized power supply is not a good idea. The device drawing 850 mA being connected to a 800 mA source will work but the adapter will get warm to hot over a period of time. This overloading of the power supply will eventually destroy the adapter.
Yes, the manufacturer specifies what the working voltage of a device will be and that voltage has to be adhered to.
No, 12 volt AC is a different from 12 volt DC. Have a second look at the 12 AC volt adapter's output label. Most adapters contain a bridge rectifier in them that makes a conversion within the adapter. An example of this is in phone chargers.
Answer for USA, Canada and countries running a 60 Hz power supply service. Watts= voltage X amps At 120 volt total watts would be 2400 at 20 amps. The electrical code states that circuit conductors that are fed by this breaker on a continuous load can only be loaded to 80%. #12 wire rated at 20 amps, derated to 16 amps continuous = 16 x 120 = 1920 watts, #10 wire rated at 30 amps derated to 24 amps continuous = 24 x 120 = 2880 watts. On load calculations this derate should be taken into consideration. To maintain the required wattage needed for the load the wire size and/or the next size breaker may be needed.
'Polarity' describes the sense (direction) in which the voltage (not current!) induced into secondary winding is acting, relative to the sense in which the voltage applied to the primary winding is acting.
In North America, a transformer's high-voltage winding terminals are identified by the letter H, and the low-voltage winding terminals by the letter X. In the case of a two-winding transformer, the pair of high-voltage terminals are marked H1 - H2, and the pair of low-voltage terminals are marked X1 - X2.
When the potential of HV terminal H1 'goes positive' (i.e. during the first half-cycle of AC), if LV terminal X1 also goes positive at the same time, then the transformer is an 'additive polarity' transformer. On the other hand, if terminal X2 goes positive at the same time as H1, then the transformer is a 'subtractive polarity' transformer.
Knowing the polarity of a transformer is very important if you intend to operate transformers in parallel with each other (there are other factors, too, of course), in the same way as it is important to know the polarity of a battery before you can connect it in parallel with another battery.
The only way to do that is with a transformer. They make inline transformers that convert 230 to 115 and they simply plug in inline.
It is not recommended to do this. The reason being is that if both appliances are on at the same time, there is a chance that the breaker will trip. If the breaker is not reset right away it will leave the refrigerator with no power. A fridge with no power will start to defrost if it has a freezer compartment. When new homes are being built electricians wire each individual appliance outlet as a dedicated circuit, meaning that only one appliance outlet is assigned to that circuit and nothing else.
yes, it will just charge the device faster..
Anyway, the 800mAh batteries will last longer than the 600mAh ones because they have more storage capacity.
See: http://www.greenbatteries.com/nibafa.html#mAh%20defined
Anyway, you can get even better batteries (up to 1000mAh) here: http://www.thomas-distributing.com/aaa-nimh-batteries.php
You will notice a big difference in play time between 600 and 1000. The bigger the better.
since circuit breaker consists of coils they get heated up when high current flows, when this happens the coil get energised and pull the moving contacts to open thus the circuit breaker opens when high current flows.
No, the excessive voltage will destroy the equipment, unless the fuse trips (hopefully) ...
American electrical plugs have three prongs in the shape of a triangle but two of the prongs are thin lines while the third one is kind of like a cylinder, but some don't have the cylinder just the two lines.
A motor-generator or a solid state power converter can do this.
Yes - what matters is the voltage - it has to be the same. The device will only draws 1A as needed - the adaptor with higher amp,i.e, 2A is fine. As long as the adaptor has amps equal to or greater than
those of the device, it will be ok!
You can use any 9v adapter as long as the output amperage is rated higher than the amperage rating of your appliance so yes a 600ma adapter can be used to power a 500ma or 400ma appliance