Respuesta :
Most hair dryers are in the 1800 watt range and lets assume you turned it to the highest speed and heat setting.
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It will heat up the air in the box, failry quickly. Rules of thermodynamics says that the heat will increase the temperature according to the rate of heat input minus the rate of heat loss from the box… due to conduction, radiation and convection (in this case none of the latter because the box is sealed).
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The loss rate depends in the temperature difference and the thermal resistance. THicker and better insulation increases the resistance; larger area decreases the resistance. Eventually the heat (temperature) will rise and the difference between inside and outside will be so large that the temperature will rise no more. But in the case of a 1800 W hairdryer the temperature will exceed the melting point of plastics and wire insulation and if allowed to come to heat equilibrium will probably short out and catch fire or blow an external fuse.
Most modern hair dryers have a internal thermal fuse that cuts out at temperatures below the melting point and probably this will cut off the dryer before catastrophic meltdown. Its a one time fuse and not readily available, mostly you toss the dryer when the fuse goes