Hot load definition

Hot load means solid waste that is smoking, smoldering, emitting flames or hot gases or otherwise indicating that the solid waste is in the process of combustion or close to igniting.
Hot load means material arriving at a C&DD facility that is on fire or at a temperature likely to cause a fire.
Hot load means any load of materials delivered to the Facility that is emitting smoke, fire or fumes, or may be in imminent danger of fire or explosion.

Examples of Hot load in a sentence

  • Hot load pickup is used to describe distribution circuit restoration after a circuit is tripped, but before the effects of loss of load diversity become evident.

  • The basic HIFI calibration con- tains 4 different observation phases, (On source, Off source, Hot load, cold load) which when combined together in equation 2 remove the systematic effects (assuming the instrument is stable over the course of the data acquisition) and return a temperature calibrated DSB spectra.

Related to Hot load

  • Rack means a mechanism for delivering motor vehicle fuel or diesel from a refinery or terminal into a truck, trailer, railroad car, or other means of non-bulk transfer.

  • Terminal means the EMV-enabled machine, terminal or other hardware device you obtain from NCR Voyix as an item of Hardware to use in connection with the Service to make the Offering to the Service User and to access the EMV PSP Service.

  • Fuel means any solid, liquid or gaseous combustible material;

  • Interconnection Service means the physical and electrical interconnection of the Customer Facility with the Transmission System pursuant to the terms of Tariff, Part IV and Tariff, Part VI and the Interconnection Service Agreement entered into pursuant thereto by Interconnection Customer, the Interconnected Transmission Owner and Transmission Provider.

  • Customer-generator means a user of a net metering system.

  • Fire alarm system means a system designed to detect and annunciate the presence of fire, or by-products of fire. Fire alarm system includes smoke detectors.

  • Net Load means the difference between the load of a given substance as calculated from a sample taken of the discharge and the load of the same substance in a sample taken at the intake which supplies water to given process. For purposes of this definition, samples that are taken to determine the net loading shall always be 24-hour composite samples made up of at least six increments taken at regular intervals throughout the plant day.