AIR CONDITIONERS HAVE RATING IN BTU AND TON OR SOMETIMES
IN KW ALSO... WHAT IS THEIR RELATION?
ALSO ACs HAVE TWO POWERS (IN WATTS) WRITTEN ON THEIR NAME
PLATES WHAT DOES EACH MEAN?
HOW TO DETERMINE THE RUNNING CURRENT IN AMPERES OR THE
ENERGY CONSUMED IN WATTS?
WHAT IS THE THUMB RULE FOR DETERMINING THE CURRENT AND TON
OF AN AC?
Answer Posted / guest
the rule is flemings right hand rule
| Is This Answer Correct ? | 1 Yes | 7 No |
Post New Answer View All Answers
What is flash steam and flashing phenomena?
Define a slined joint?
Titan Mechanical Engineering Interview Questions
What is the b check value of a 4bt engine
What is coefficient expansion of transformer oil?
Greetings This question is about hydraulics and I request an expert to answer it. A simple hydraulic machine is made up of two heads, a larger one with a larger force inside a wider pipe and a smaller one with a smaller force inside a smaller pipe in width as in the second picture on this link: http://science.howstuffworks.com/hydraulic1.htm The question is this: what happens if the smaller head and the smaller force doesn’t exist but the smaller pipe is high enough to take all the liquid? For example the larger head is 1.00 sqr metre and can go down 1.00m under a weight of 100.00kg. The cross sectional area of the smaller pipe is 0.001 sqr metre. Now when the larger head goes down 1.00m, how high the liquid from the wider pipe can go into the smaller pipe of the cross sectional area of 0.001 sqr metre? Regards
pleas send me the syllabus of rrb je examination(mechanical)
0 1 2 3 4 0 0 0 1 1 2 1 0 0 1 2 3 2 0 1 2 3 4 3 1 1 2 4 4 4 1 2 3 4 5 Horizontal row = x Vertical row = y I need to term these values as a function (yellow horizontal x, yellow vertical as y) The closest I have got is: ROUND(((X*(Y*10+15)-25)/60+1) Is there a way to calculate it?
HOW I SHOULD CALCULATE HEAT LOUD
Why required store to Factory?
distinguish the knock phenomena of ci and si engine?
can u give me model question papers for exam preparation .
What causes cylinder liner-wear down?
what is tooth profile
why we use kg/cm2 in pressure gauge not kg/m2