Have you measured the volume of your bathtube and seen in how may seconds it
is filled?. In my house I can fill a vessel of 10 liters in some 55 seconds
not 10.
Those flowmeters are for the main water connection.
What's their nominal diameter?- compare it please to the connection to the
E-cat
Have
Peter Gluck peter.gl...@gmail.com wrote:
Have you measured the volume of your bathtube and seen in how may seconds it
is filled?.
Yes. It is an Americh, Beverly 2020 model (Japanese inspired):
http://www.americh.com/pd3.php?s_product_model=Beverlys_product_shape=Squareproduct_id=40
The
But Cousin, cold water has a greater viscosity! It is excatky the opposite!
On Thu, Aug 4, 2011 at 11:17 PM, Jed Rothwell jedrothw...@gmail.com wrote:
Peter Gluck peter.gl...@gmail.com wrote:
Have you measured the volume of your bathtube and seen in how may seconds
it is filled?.
Yes. It
Peter Gluck peter.gl...@gmail.com wrote:
But Cousin, cold water has a greater viscosity! It is excatky the opposite!
Ah, but the cold water comes directly from the water mains a short distance
away whereas the hot water goes through the hot water heater at the other
side of the house, past the
On 11-08-04 04:24 PM, Peter Gluck wrote:
But Cousin, cold water has a greater viscosity! It is excatky the
opposite!
Arrgh -- that's totally irrelevant. The (viscous) cold water flows into
the water heater instead of the tub, the heater acts as a flow reduction
device, and from there the
Stephen A. Lawrence sa...@pobox.com wrote:
If there's something that's not reasonable about it, it's the value:
1...Remarkable coincidence, if that's actually an exact 1, as in 1.00.
I believe they opened the tap and watched the flow meter needle, and when it
reached 1 they stopped.
If I remember well for industrial applications when you make a contract for
water supply, in much of Italy, you can be provided with 20 m3/h without
special request. That is 2/3600 l/s. Rossi's facility may have that
kind of big pipe from the public aqueduct.
mic
Il giorno 04/ago/2011
I know that all residential bldgs here in the US are NOT at water main
pressure... all bldgs have a
regulator that drops the pressure below that in the main line under the street.
Whether that is the
case for industrial bldgs in Italy, I don't know, but I would also think that
one would have
Okay, it looks like it takes about 8 minutes to reach the whirlpool sensors
with hot water only.
Still in the ballpark.
- Jed
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