If running correctly yes all heating systems continue to achieve the set point on the control/ t-stat
Most home hot water heaters have both an upper thermostat and heating element, and a lower thermostat and heating element. First the upper stat and element come on and then when that section of the tank is hot enough, the upper stat switches power off to the upper element and sends power down to the lower stat and element. At this point the lower section of the water tank warms up to the setting on the lower stat. (Both stats should be set the same, typically around 130 degrees. This results in about 120 water delivered to the taps, a safe setting. Use a meat thermometer in a glass to test at the taps. Let it run several minutes to allow the home piping system to come up to temperature.) Once satisfied, both elements are then off until one of the two stats decide that the temp is low enough to switch on again, depending on which section of the tank gets cooler faster. But once the upper stat starts heating again, the lower stat and element must wait for it to finish in order to again receive power for the lower section. Typically a home owner will eventually notice that the water heater cannot keep up with the demand for hot water, which usually means that either one of the stats has stuck or failed, or one of the elements has burnt open and no longer produces heat for its section. Unless you are a professional, it can be tricky to figure out the correct troubleshooting procedure, so it's good practice to simply change both stats and both elements at the same time. The parts are cheap and available at most Home Depot or similar outlets. Be sure to turn the 240 volt circuit breaker off before attempting to service, and sketch out a simple map with wire colors, terminal numbers, etc, so as to get it back together correctly.
sounds like you have a bad thermocouple. The thermocouple senses the pilot flame and produces voltage to tell main flame to light. Thermocouple can be bought at any hardware store.
Look at the furnaces low voltage thermostat connections, W are the heat terminals. If you have W1 and W2 with wires connected to both it is 2 stage. As long as you have W1 and W2 at the thermostat also and the same color wires are landed there. A 2 stage furnace will operate with a single stage stat but less efficiently.
if you mean plasma as in blood plasma then i don't believe so because blood plasma is a liquid and gas is, well, a gas. if you mean plasma as in particles heated to the point they move into a stat called the plasma state then yes. plasma particles move faster than any gas particle. period.
1 statcoulomb is equal to 3.33564 x 10^-10 coulombs.
Instantly
There are 10^18 stat coulombs in one coulomb. This conversion factor is used to relate the units of charge in the International System of Units (coulombs) to the units in the electrostatic cgs system (statcoulombs).
There seems to be a typo in your question. Coulomb is a unit of electric charge in the International System of Units (SI). It is named after Charles-Augustin de Coulomb, a French physicist. If you meant something else, please provide more context.
Here are a few: stat-ue; stat-ion; stat-e; and, stat-ic.
There's no difference.
whats a stat.
what is stat attack secarat code what is stat attack secarat code what is stat attack secarat code
A Tyrogue will evolve at Level 20. If its Attack stat is stronger than its Defense stat, it will evolve into a Hitmonlee. If its Attack stat is weaker than its Defense stat, it will evolve into a Hitmonchan. If its Attack stat equals its Defense stat, it will evolve into a Hitmontop.
Shuckle has the highest defense stat, with a base defense stat of 230.
People do not live in "stat"s.
His attack stat is 259.