|
|
|
Categories
|
|
Information
|
|
Featured Product
|
|
|
 |
|
|
There are currently no product reviews.
 ;
Hello from Germany - thank you very much for the manual for my Sharp "Searcher" - the handling of your internet area is outstanding..Mike
 ;
I am very happy with the owner's manual. I bought a used Casio and was so relieved that I was able to get a hold of a owner's manual. It was very easy to download the manual and I had no problems with printing it. Thank you! Nancy Whalen
 ;
The purchased manual is an high-quality scan of the original JVC paper-based Owner´s Manual. I am very satisfied!
 ;
Very satisfied with received document, all is right, Thank You very much, it was a Pleasure to work with You.
 ;
great site, the most easy and fastest way to find the manual you need, no 5 star because the manual was only available in german, but I speak german as well so no problem for me.
How your microwave oven works
Microwave ovens are safe. Microwave energy is not hot. It causes food to make its own heat, and it�s this heat that cooks the food.
Mode Mixer Magnetron Glass Tray
I
Metal Floor
Microwaves are like TV waves or light waves. You can�t see them, but you can see what they do.
A magnetron in the microwave oven produces microwaves The microwaves move into the oven where they are scattered or stirred by a mode mixer (like a fan). Microwaves bounce off metal oven walls and are absorbed by food.
The glass tray of your microwave oven lets microwaves through. Then they bounce off a metal floor, back through the ceramic bottom and are absorbed by the food.
Microwaves pass through glass, paper and plastic without heating them so food absorbs the energy. Microwaves bounce off metal pans so food does not absorb the energy.
Microwaves may not reach the center of a roast. The heat around the outside is what cooks the roast all the way through. This is one of the reasons for letting some foods (roasts, baked potatoes) stand for a while after cooking, or for stirring some foods during the cooking time.
The microwaves disturb water molecules in the food. As the molecules bounce around bumping into each other, heat is made, like rubbing your hands together. This is the heat that cooks.
|
|
 |
> |
|