are there shards and stuff? Then the best way is to cut a potato in half and stick it in and twist. Otherwise, just use a needle nose pliers
1. A 1 watt bulb and a 2 watt bulb are connected in parallel across a 9 volt battery. Which bulb will glow bright?
The 2 Watt Bulb provided that the Bulbs are both rated for the 9 Volt power source!
2. Bulb and fuse tester using a buzzer?
The buzzer should be the easiest. Just hook the circuit up (minus the bulb/fuse) to get the buzzer to sound. This should just be a battery connected to the buzzer. Then break the connection and that's where your DUT (device under test) would go. Since lamps and fuses are not polarity sensitive, it does not matter where you hook them up in the circuit. The only limitation here is that you wo not be able to test a fuse with a lower current rating than what the buzzer draws. Otherwise, you will blow the fuse. Good luck. Greetings from Austin, TX Ken
3. Bulb setting on Nikon d60?
The actual idea behind bulb is that the shutter stays open so long as you have your finger places on the shutter release. It's like that for virtually every camera ever created (The Mamiya RB/RZ 67 does it differently, and I am sure there's at least one or two others). Why you need to do is, as was previously stated, get either a remote shutter release (I am confident that the D60 does not have a cable release) or learn how to stand very very very still. I almost want to say there is a timed shutter mode on your camera as well. Most Nikon would I've run into have it. Just go into shutter priority (the solo "S") and spin the wheel until you seem something akin to 30". That denotes 30 seconds. I've never seen anything last longer than 30 seconds that was not placed on bulb.
4. Which has more resistance: a 100-watt bulb or a 60-watt bulb?
Using Ohm's Law:E = I * R where E is potential in volts, I is current in amperes, and R is resistance in ohms.P = I * E where P is Power in watts. 100 watts = I * 110 volts. 100 / 110 = 0.909 amps.E = I * R. 110 volts= 0.909 amps * R ohms110 / 0.909 = 121 ohms for the 100 watt bulb.P = I * E. 60 watts = I * 110 volts. 60 / 110 = 0.5454 amps.E = I * R. 110 volts = .5454 amps * R ohms110 / .5454 = 201.66 ohms for 60 watt bulb.Without formulas, the qualitative understanding is that the bulb consuming the most power is the one with more current, and thus less resistance, fewer ohms.The calculations assume DC for the sake of simplicity, and ignore the change in resistance when the temperature of the filament changes, but the question of MORE or LESS remains the same. Which has more resistance: a 100-watt bulb or a 60-watt bulb?Which has more resistance: a 100 watt bulb or a 60 watts bulb?
5. 99 subaru ash tray light bulb replacement?
very confusing issue. do a search using bing and yahoo. it can assist!
6. Can I mix and match light bulbs?
Hi, A-19 is the standard bulb you buy everywhere and probaly the type of bulb you have at home. The round bulb in your hand is simply not A-19 but another model of decorative bulb with the same medium base.
7. Does leaving my light switch on with a dead bulb in one socket and a smart bulb in the other use electricity all day even if the smart bulb is off?
dead incandescent will draw no power. dead led or cfl, no such guarantee.Smart bulb always takes a small amount of power if the switch is on, it needs some power to know when to respond and turn on
8. what's the difference between an ordinary bulb and a plant bulb?
Any bulb you put into the ground with the expectation of it growing and delighting you with beautiful flowers is a plant bulb - I do not know of any other kind, except those you screw into a lamp socket expecting to get light. maybe you could elaborate a bit. Until then, dud!