I'm not even going to answer this.KittyKatBlack wrote:As for the 110/220 thing, why are they so proud of using MORE electricity to run the same products? I thought saving energy was the better way.
Because I'm too busy laughing.
All joking aside, what is the reason for using a higher tension anyways?War wrote:I'm not even going to answer this.KittyKatBlack wrote:As for the 110/220 thing, why are they so proud of using MORE electricity to run the same products? I thought saving energy was the better way.
Because I'm too busy laughing.
it's probably just the convention they started using and every generation since then is using it cause the one before did. changing the whole country would be quite and ordeal.RPin wrote:All joking aside, what is the reason for using a higher tension anyways?War wrote:I'm not even going to answer this.KittyKatBlack wrote:As for the 110/220 thing, why are they so proud of using MORE electricity to run the same products? I thought saving energy was the better way.
Because I'm too busy laughing.
well yeah, there are different plugs in the states too, you can get more powerful plugs if you need to in workshops and industrial places.RPin wrote:I don't think this is about convention... In Brazil we use both voltages, although 110 is for residences and 220 for industries.
it was part of the "Let's Fuck With Rickford's Head" Accord of 1843Rickford wrote:Well, My most infuriating word would have to be "Queue". I mean, just why do the extra u and e have to be there?
There's another damn thing! I didn't know what the word 'Queue' meant untill I was, like, 15! In England they can put it in every sentence if they need too! How? I don't know. But in my brief time in england I heard that one word 3 times more than I had my intire life in America.Rickford wrote:Well, My most infuriating word would have to be "Queue". I mean, just why do the extra u and e have to be there?