5000 Watts if it runs ideally. It really depends on the generator's efficiency. Lets say, if its working on 80% efficiency, it'll provide with 0.8 * 5000 watts of electric power.
4.12A. V=IR
An electric wall heater can be placed anywhere. Make sure there is 2 feet of space in front of the heater to avoid fires. Place the heater where there is not much foot traffic so there won't be any danger of it being tipped over. Also if you have small childen consider putting it where they won't have access to it as it can burn them.
Watts = Amps x Volts. This is the same as VA. So 2KVA is equal to 2000 watts.
Since the equation for watts is: Volts * Amps = Watts that would mean 12 Volts * 1 Amp = 12 Watts
Watts = Amps * Volts Watts = 20 amps * 100 Volts Watts = 2000 2,000 Watts or 2k Watts
Watts = Amps * Volts Watts = 20 amps * 100 Volts Watts = 2000 2,000 Watts or 2k Watts
The formula you are looking for is W = I x E.
Immersion heaters are rated in watts, there is no average size. So, the answer will depend heavily on the wattage of your particular heater. Also, once you know the size, it will heat thirty liters of water at the rate of so many degrees per hour, so you also have to specify the starting temperature. The same heater will take much longer to get to sixty from 0 degrees as it would from 23.
1000 watts
A 1500 watt portable heater uses 1.5 kilowatt hours (kWh) of electricity for every hour it is in operation. So, if you run the heater for 8 hours, it would consume 12 kWh of electricity.
In operation, this microwave can draw up to 1100 watts.
Not much, it gets warm as everything else within the heater's range.
No if your heater is electric you can not use a gas heater you have to use the electric heater and it would really cause too much to change over from electric to gas so I would truly stick to what heater you have noiw
it can use 500volts of electricity
5000 Watts if it runs ideally. It really depends on the generator's efficiency. Lets say, if its working on 80% efficiency, it'll provide with 0.8 * 5000 watts of electric power.
4800 watts because watts = volts x amps.