All the answers I saw from googling, said toasters worked by timing. I'm sure that's how they worked when I was a kid, but I don't believe it of today's toasters - if that were so, then why does brown bread take so much longer to toast than white?
I presume that, like microwaves, they have some kind of steam detector and that such things must have become, over the years, incredibly cheap. I read on one web page that in the USA you can buy a toaster for $US20 or less. Lucky soandsos: it would be hard to find one in Australia for less than $AUD50, and I'd expect $100.
toasters obviously have alot of heat
Stray Toasters happened in 1988.
Commercial toasters are generally more expensive than domestic toasters, and can be better. Which ever one that you decide to get can effect how good the food you make from it tastes.
Dualit toasters were originally made in England. They are high quality toasters. It is built to be durable and last a long time. Consumers may purchase the toaster online.
china
Yes, toasters work by passing electric current through resistance coils inside them, which generates heat due to the resistance of the coils. This heat toasts the bread placed inside the toaster.
Yes, they are.
Electricity
to toast things
Toasters are fun
Toasters and lightbulbs.AnswerA resistor is an circuit component. So, while toasters and light bulbs have resistance, they are not resistors!
Electromagnets in toasters are used to hold the metal lever down while toasting and then release it when the toasting is done. When electricity flows through the coil of wire in the electromagnet, it creates a magnetic field that attracts the lever. When the current is turned off, the magnetic field disappears, releasing the lever.