40956
No I think you will need an 18000 condenser for an 18000 BTU.
There are 746 watts to the horsepower and that is 12,000 BTU so you will need a converter that will handle 622 watts plus 1.25% so approx a 780 watt converter
A bit north of 50,000btu/hr
When you plot a system on a mollier diagram it the point between the pressure drop and the bottom of the compression line, measured in BTU/LB. Also known as the Net Refrigeration Effect.
1 Kilowatt = 3,413 BTU, so 7 Kilowatts = 44,891 BTU
There are 13,648.38 BTU in 4 kilowatts.
4600 BTU/hr is 1.3481268kW
1 BTU = 0.000292875 kW
35kW is 119,424.97 BTU/hr
1663170 BTUs/hr is equivalent to approximately 486.856 kilowatts.
15000 btu
BTU and kilowatt-hours are measures of energy, while power is measured in either kilowatts or BTU per hour. 1 kilowatt-hour is equal to 3412 BTU, or 1 kilowatt equals 3412 BTU/hr. 8000 BTU per hour is equal to 2.344 kilowatts, which is 19.53 amps at 120 v.
To convert BTUs to kilowatts, divide the number of BTUs by 3412. 650,000 BTUs is equivalent to approximately 190.4 kilowatts.
900
51210 Btu's in 15kw heat strip. 3.414 * 15000= 51210
3413 btu per kW.