string efficiency can not be equal to 100%..
cause...1st of all efficiency of anything cannot be equal to 100%..
Secondly when there is insulators and discs to insulate then there will always be a medium between them.. For which there will be voltage drop...
Thirdly there will be a conductor to ground voltage drop...
So, string efficiency cannot be equal to 100%
That depends what it is 4.06 percent of. 4.06 of one is equal to 0.0406.
No.
No, one fourth percent isn't equal to 25 percent. One fourth percent = 1/4% = .25% = .0025.
13 GeV
When Percent Equal 100%
If a machine has 100 percent efficiency, the output work = the input work. That's actually basically what the efficiency of a machine is - output work / input work * 100.
At perfect 100% efficiency, the Actual Mechanical Advantage should equal the Ideal Mechanical Advantage.
No, they are not equal.
the efficiency is maximum in a transformer when no load loss is equal to load loss.
100% or each one of them.
It is exactly equal to the length of string you have measured in centimeters.
35 percent is equal to 0.350.
62 is equal to 6200 percent.
5,000 percent of 2.4 will equal 120 . 2 percent of 120 will equal 2.4 .
The tension in any part of the string is equal to the force that pulls the string at the ends (assuming for simplicity that the string is basically weightless).
No. And, depending on the process used for transformation, even changing it into the same form will have differing ease and efficiency.
0.02 is equal to 2 percent.