10/3 will be fine if its not more than 75 feet
Assuming they draw 30A or less, yes.
no where
The recommended breaker for dryers is 30 amps. If you want to do the calculation to see if a 25 amp breaker will work use the following formula. W = A x V, A = W/V. Find the wattage of the unit and divide it by 240 volts to get the amperage. If the amperage is under 25 amps then the breaker will work. If the amperage is over 25 amps then a 30 amp breaker on #10 wire will be needed.
It could be either. If it has any heavy appliances like a stove it might require 220-240 which would be a double.
When liquid water droplets are big enough to fall to Earth, we call it rain.
You need a tubing bender, but it can be bent.
Heavy enough.
Breaker reefs are parts of the reef that see heavy wave action; they are usually dominated by hard branchy corals like Acropora sp.
Heavy enough to kill you if it falls on top of you.
An oil circuit breaker is a breaker that is immersed in a tank of insulating oil. The tank has two electrical bushings through the tank to allow the supply and load to be connected to the breaker. These breakers can be opened under a heavy amperage load. The insulating oil is used to extinguish the arc that is produced when opening a switch under load.
Depends, it be hard enough, it not very heavy much maybe.
Heavy enough so four carts couldnt pull it
The purpose of a circuit breaker is to open the circuit in the event of an overload. Wires/conductors are only rated for a specific Amperage. If this amperage is exceeded the conductor/wire begins to heat up and given enough time it becomes a fire hazard. For instance a 15 amp breaker will trip once the Amps drawn through that circuit exceed 15 amps. The short answer is to keep you safe.
Cause it is not heavy enough
Heavy enough
no where
Any spell destruction card will destroy it - Heavy Storm, Dust Tornado, Breaker the Magical Warrior, etc.
I believe that the worlds largest drum was heavy enough that you couldn't lift it. It weighed 600lbs.