Category Invensions & Discoveries

How toilet machine works?

You probably don’t think of a toilet as a machine. But that’s what it is. You press down the flush lever, and the toilet does the work.

Most toilets have two main parts-a tank and a bowl. The tank sits on the back of the toilet bowl. Both contain water. The bottom of the tank has an opening with a plug. The plug keeps the water in the tank from flowing into the bowl. Pushing down the lever to flush the toilet lifts up the plug.

Water then rushes out of the tank. It flows into the toilet bowl through small holes all around the rim of the bowl.

The fresh water pushes the dirty water into the drainpipe. The plug closes when the tank is empty. Fresh water then flows through an inlet tube into the tank. And the tank is ready for the next flush.

 

Picture Credit : Google

How hairdryer works?

With a hairdryer, we don’t have to wait for our hair to dry.

Inside the hairdryer, electricity travels on a pathway of wire. The electricity travels easily on most of the wire in the pathway. This is called conducting electricity. The path is open. The electrons in the wire are free to move.

But some metals resist, or slow down, the electric current flowing through the hairdryer. When the electrons slow down, they bump into one another as they move through the wire.

Then the wire heats up. The harder they bump and push, the hotter the wire gets.

When you plug in a hairdryer and turn it on, electricity travels through it. It powers a tiny fan. Then the electricity travels to coiled wire made of resistant metals. These wires heat up. The fan blows heat from these wires out through a vent. This is the hot air that dries your hair.

Inside an electric hairdryer, there is a coil of wire that heats up. The fan blows the heat out to dry your hair.

 

Picture Credit : Google

How vacuum cleaner works?

Brrrrahhhh! It may sound like a roaring monster, but it’s only a vacuum cleaner doing its dirty work. The noise comes from an electric motor that runs a fan. The fan helps the vacuum cleaner suck the dirt up the hose and into the bag.

When you turn on the vacuum cleaner, the fan starts. It draws air from the bottom of the vacuum cleaner up into the dust bin or bag. As the air moves up, it leaves an empty space at the bottom of the vacuum cleaner. Any empty space is called a vacuum. That’s how the vacuum cleaner got its name.

A brush at the bottom of the cleaner helps loosen dirt in the rug. This brush is called a beater brush. A rubber belt connects the brush to the motor. As the motor spins, the brush spins and makes the rug vibrate. The vibration loosens the dirt. The vacuum pulls more air and dirt into the dust bin or bag.

When the dust bin gets full, it needs to be emptied. Or, when the bag gets full, it needs to be thrown away and replaced with a fresh bag.

 

Picture Credit : Google

How washing machine works?

Are your favourite jeans dirty? No problem. Put them in the washer. They’ll be clean and ready to wear in no time. When people washed clothes by hand, it took all day. After the clothes were washed, each item had to be twisted to wring out the water.

Today, a washing machine does all the work. First you choose the wash setting. Then you add your clothes and detergent. When you turn the machine on, the machine fills the washing basket, or drum, with water. A tiny computer chip, called a sensor shuts off the waterflow when the level is high enough.

The clothes twist or tumble about in the soapy water. When the clothes are clean, a pump drains the dirty water from the machine. Then the rinse cycle fills the drum with clean water. When the rinse water is pumped out, the timer switches the motor to a faster speed, and the drum spins very quickly. The clothes are flung against the sides of the drum. The water is forced out of the clothes and pumped down the drain. Now your clothes are ready to be tumble dried.

 

Picture Credit : Google

How toaster works?

Toast is tasty for breakfast or a snack. And with a toaster, it’s so easy to make.

First, you put a slice of bread in each toaster slot. A rack holds it in place. Then you push down the lever. The lever is connected to the rack and to a spring. The spring unwinds, but a hook holds the rack down. The heat turns on. The coils inside each slot glow orange.

The heat from the coils toasts the bread. It also heats a metal switch. The switch is made from two types of metal. One type expands from the heat. The other does not. As one half of the metal expands, the switch bends. When it bends, it moves a small bar. This bar pushes against the hook. The rack is released. The spring makes the rack and the toast pop up!

 

Picture Credit : Google

How refrigerator works?

Just a few minutes after you put warm food in a refrigerator, the food feels cooler. The refrigerator carries the heat from the food into the room outside.

How does a refrigerator do this? When a liquid changes to a gas it evaporates. As it evaporates, it takes heat from the things around it. Also, when a gas changes to a liquid, it condenses, and gives off heat. 

Refrigerators are cooled by a special liquid that is easily turned into a gas and then back to a liquid. First, the cool liquid is pumped to tubes inside the refrigerator, where it evaporates. As the liquid changes to a gas, it takes heat from the air inside the refrigerator. This makes the refrigerator cooler.

Then the warm gas is pumped into tubes outside the refrigerator, where it condenses. As the gas changes back to a liquid, it gives off heat. When the liquid cools, it is pumped back into the refrigerator. There it evaporates again. In and out it goes, carrying heat from the refrigerator and keeping the food cold.

Do you ever feel chilled when you get out of the bath or after swimming? This is because the water on your skin is evaporating off your body. It goes into the air where you can’t see it. As this happens, it takes heat away from your body, making you feel chilled.

Water vapour in the air sometimes clings to objects. On a hot day water vapour sticks to a cold glass of water. As more vapour sticks to the glass, it condenses, forming droplets of water on the outside of the glass.

 

Picture Credit : Google