A 10,000 BTU heater will use about 1/2 pound of propane per hour. Conversions to different types of energy being used (ie steam, KwH, etc.) will vary the answer, as will variations such as leaks, 02, temperature setting, efficiency, etc.
10000. km per hour
About 5.6 miles per hour.
3.5 seconds in the 30 yard dash equals 17.53 miles per hour.
88.5139 miles per hour
70 mph = 112.65408 kilometers per hour
1,400 cubic feet per hour of liquid propane is about 10,472.7 US gallons per hour.
One ton per hour equals 33.3 pounds per minute.
propane has 21,548 BTU per pound so about 2 1/2 pounds per hour remember that propane is stored in a liquid and you need a big enough tank to allow the propane to change from a liquid to gas.
2100 pounds per hour. Here's how to figure: 35 pounds | 60 minute ----------------------------- = (35 x 60) pound/hour. = 2100 pounds per hour. 1 minute | 1 hour See that 60 minutes equals 1 hour, so dimensionally it has no effect on the quantity, but the minutes units cancel.
Propane heaters cost less to run per hour.
One pound of propane will produce 21,622 BTU's. 20 pounds of propane will produce 432,440 BTU's. A heater that produces 80,000 BTU's per hour will produce heat for almost 5 1/2 hours.
Propane burns 91,547 b.t.u.'s an hour per gallon of propane. Depending on the b.t.u. output of the appliance you are running you should be able to calculate how many hours you can use your tank.
10000. km per hour
$1,000,000,000,000
20 (kg / hour) = 44.092 pounds / hour
On average a general 5000# to 7000# fork lift will use 1.5 gallons of Propane.
It equals 1 hour and 5 minutes.