A kilowatt hour is the use of 1000 watts of power in 1 hour. The deicers should have a rating of a voltage such as 110 volts or 220 volts and a current of "X" amps. Multiply the voltage (in volts) times the current (in amps) and you will then know how much "power" in watts the deicer uses. My guess is you will see numbers such as 120 volts at 5 amps. Therefore 120 x 5 = 600 watts per hour or .6 kilowatts per hour.
$28 per hour for a journeyman $45 to $85 per hour for a master
It Varies, Here in the Northeast, in NH it can be as low as $23 per hour to about $65 per hour if your self employed. If your working for a company or for your apprentiship you can expect as low as $8 per hour to $30 per hour. In NY A self-Employed person can make about $115 per hour - to as low as $7.85 a hour. If you work with a company or apprentiship you be making about $15 per hour or about $33 per hour
MW is a unit of power just like kW 1MW = 1000 kW 1 mega-watt = 1000 kilo-watt Watt is a measurement of power. watt-hour is a unit of energy 1 mega-watt-hour = 1000 kilo-watt-hour
as much as he gets paid
To convert watts to kilowatts, you divide by 1,000. Therefore, 500 watts is equal to 0.5 kilowatts. To convert minutes to hours, you divide by 60. So, 500 watts per minute is equivalent to 0.5 kilowatts per 60 minutes, or 0.5/60 = 0.00833 kilowatts per hour.
12 pesos if you were outside metro manila.
That bulb is 100 watts or 0.1 kilowatts so it uses 0.1 kilowatt-hour of energy each hour, which costs about £0.015
kW or kilowatts are power and not interchangeable with speed
To convert from kilowatts (kW) to British Thermal Units (BTU) per hour, multiply by 3412. Therefore, a 5kW heater would produce 5 * 3412 = 17060 BTU per hour.
10000 BTU per hour is equivalent to approximately 2.93 kW.
To calculate the cost per hour, we first need to convert the power consumption from amps to kilowatts. We can do this by multiplying the current (amps) by the voltage (110 volts). Next, we convert kilowatts to kilowatt-hours by dividing by 1000. Finally, we multiply the result by the cost per kilowatt-hour ($0.10911) to get the cost per hour of running the appliance.
No device uses "kilowatts per hour". A watt or kilowatt is a unit of power, not of energy. That means that the "per hour" or "per second" is already implied - the watt refers to a "rate of energy conversion" - not to an amount of energy. If a devices uses a certain amount of kilowatts, it uses this amount all the time while it is on - whether it is kept on for a second or for several days.
None. There is no such thing as a 'kilowatt per hour'. If, on the other hand, you are asking how many 'kilowatt hours' a flatscreen television uses, simply look at its nameplate to find its power rating in kilowatts (more likely, it's in watts, so you need to divide by 1000), and multiply it by 1 to find the number of kilowatt hours consumed over a period of one hour.
To convert hours per month to kilowatts per hour, you would need to know the energy consumption for that month. Once you have the total energy consumption in kilowatt-hours for the month, you can divide it by the total number of hours in that month to get the average kilowatts per hour. This will give you the average power consumption rate over that month.
Kilowatts per hour is a unit of power. To calculate it, you simply divide the total number of kilowatts consumed by the total number of hours. This calculation is commonly used to measure electricity usage over time.
Find out from your latest bill from your electricity supplier how much you are paying for a kilowatt-hour. Multiply that charge by 1.38, so if the charge is 20 cents then 20 x 1.38 = 27.6 cents.