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A Kenmore progressive vacuum cleaner is an up-to-date vacuum that is intelligent and easy to use. The vacuum has a feature called "inteliClean" that detects how much dirt is being removed from the floor or carpet.
Probably not, but i am sure it would hurt, so why would you what to?
Pulleys are used in manual wells for drawing water from wells in a bucket. Drum-style pulleys are found in the rotating brush in an upright vacuum cleaner.
A manometer is a device that is used to measure the pressure of a fluid. The U-shaped glass tube is partially filled with a liquid, usually mercury. The difference between the height of the mercury corresponds to the difference between the pressure of the fluid in the container and the atmospheric pressure.
atmospheric pressure in measured in millibars
An atmospheric condenser operates naturally at atmospheric pressure (1.013bar). A vacuum condenser operates at pressures below atmospheric and will use some sort of pump to provide a vacuum.
You use the vacuum cleaner according to the instructions provided on the user manual.
Use the vacuum cleaner to remove loose dirt from the carpet. OR: The vacuum cleaner works by pumping air out through the exhaust ports and reducing the air pressure within its dust chamber, thereby causing air of relatively higher (atmospheric) pressure to rush inward through the end of the vacuum cleaner's hose to achieve equilibrium, dragging dust and debris with it into the dust chamber. OR: Having extracted as much air as possible from a sealed vessel, the vessel could be considered to contain a vacuum. OR: If one were to enucleate a bubble of 'true vacuum' in normal space, the boundaries of that bubble would expand outward at near-light velocities, essentially obliterating normal space (converting it to true vacuum, wherein matter as we know it cannot exist).
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Use carb cleaner or brake cleaner.
Use an antique hand pumped vacuum cleaner (they existed before the electric ones).
There are several units of measure to use while dealing with vacuum. The absolute units start from full vacuum then approach atmospheric pressure. The "Gauge" ones use atmospheric pressure as a baseline- but Atm. Pressure varies with each day, with altitude, temperature and even with Hurricanes. Some absolute units are: Torr, Millitorr, Mbar Some "Gauge" units are: "Hg, Psig, "H20 (inches of water) For more info see: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pressure_measurement
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A barometer is used to measure atmospheric pressure. It can also measure altitude!
Below atmospheric pressure.
Vacuum can be confusing when you try to quantify it. 25Hg is less pressure than 27 Hg, of course. However, common use of "high" vacuum means how much below atmospheric pressure it is, 25Hg would be the strongest vacuum. So, strictly speaking, the higher vacuum would be the higher value (27Hg) but the 25Hg would suck harder. Hope that makes sense!
Yes, everyone has use the vacuum at least once.