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Do i understand this right you have a 2 kw immersion heater on for 10 hours to heat 350 ltr of water ?Thanks, I was running it for 10 hours but trying now to reduce that down towards 7.
Only a 350 litre tank.
How good it is to have such helpful contributions, thanks.
Yes, gets up to around 45/50 deg in the tank.Do i understand this right you have a 2 kw immersion heater on for 10 hours to heat 350 ltr of water ?
Dear me I would expect it to be boiling after that amount of time with 350 ltr . What does it cost in electric ?Yes, gets up to around 45/50 deg in the tank.
The water out of our diesel heater is around 55 degrees C. By the time it gets to the brush head in winter, it's barely lukewarm. That's a lot of electricity for that result.Yes, gets up to around 45/50 deg in the tank.
That's around 1% of a day's takings better than sitting at home all day or chewing on with cold water and iced-up windowsIt's between £2.50 to £3.00 at current electricity rates.
Yes any temperature that’s above ambient will help with rinsing faster more viscus flow .£5 on my smart meter. Use it for big full cleans and on very cold days. First cleans etc.
In fairness I’ve found that even warm water makes a difference, especially on rinsing.
Just ordered the suggested Draper reel, many thanks.
Viscus: An internal organ of the body, specifically one within the chest (as the heart or lungs) or abdomen (as the liver, pancreas or intestines). "Viscus" is the Latin word for "an organ of the body." The plural of "viscus" is "viscera."Yes any temperature that’s above ambient will help with rinsing faster more viscus flow .
Viscus if I have spelt it right is also the thickness of a liquid product that can alter with temperature, or viscosity have the same meaning I believe but one is a shortening of the other ??Viscus: An internal organ of the body, specifically one within the chest (as the heart or lungs) or abdomen (as the liver, pancreas or intestines). "Viscus" is the Latin word for "an organ of the body." The plural of "viscus" is "viscera."
Care to elaborate ?
I belive you ?Viscus if I have spelt it right is also the thickness of a liquid product that can alter with temperature, or viscosity have the same meaning I believe but one is a shortening of the other ??
I think it's spelt viscous, it is specifically a scientific use of the word as opposed to the human anatomy meaning. I'm not sure if it should be preceded by low or high to indicate how viscous a fluid is.Viscus if I have spelt it right is also the thickness of a liquid product that can alter with temperature, or viscosity have the same meaning I believe but one is a shortening of the other ??