Multiply the gas units (imperial) by 100, then divide by three. This will give you how many kilo watts an hour. If you want a more accurate answers, multiply the gas units by 31.6. For metric metres (cubic meteres) multiply by 11.06 to get KWH
kW measures the power, which is how fast energy is supplied. Energy in kilowatt hours is found by multiplying the kW by the hours.
So 3 kW of power run for 10 hours would use 30 kWh of energy.
Use the equation. Kw x Hours = KWh so take 10Kw multiplied by 8,760 hours and you get 87,600 KWh. 10Kw x 8,760 hours = 87,600 KWh
You multiply the power by time, ie kW*h
1000 watts = 1 KW, so: 820 watts = 0.82 KW 0.82 KW * 24 hours = 19.68 KWH
KW is the unit power KWh is the unit of electrical energy KW or Watt defines the rating or power of a electrical equipment. For ex: motors, heaters etc. KWh is a measurement that how much energy is been consumed by the electrical equipments. Generally, operating 1KW rated equipment for an hour measures one KWh. Energy meters are the instruments for this purpose
You cannot convert kWh into watts (W).You can say that 571 kW = 571,000 W. This is because k (kilo-) = 1,000.A watt is a unit of power (1 joule per second). So a kilowatt (kW) is also a unit of power. Power is the rate at which energy is produced or consumed.When you multiply 1 kW by time (h = hour) you obtain a kilowatt hour (kWh), which is a unit of energy.Electricity utilities charge for the energy consumed, measured in kilowatt hours.
4.5 tons of refrigeration is a unit of power while kwh or kw-hr is unit of energy. Its not possible. Maybe you mean kw only not kwhr. 1ton of ref= 12000btu/hr = 3.51 kw
kWh is usage, while kW is power. One kW for one hour is one kWh, one kW for 30 minutes is 0.5 kWh ASO
To convert 'kwh' to 'kvah' you first need to measure the length of time. You will then convert this amount to hours by dividing by 3,600. You will then divide this amount by the length of time.
1hp = 746 watts, so 2hp would be 1492 watts, or almost 1.5 kw kWh does not convert to hp, as kWh has a time component.
KWH = KW times hours If you run a 750 KW load (lights, motors, so forth) for 1 hour, you have 750 KWH. If you run it for 1/2 hour, 750 KW X .5 hours = 375 KWH. If you run it for 5 hours, 750 KW X 5 = you do the math.
If you have a device of 1 KW, if this device work during an hour, this device will consume 1 KWH. If the device works during 15 min, it will consume 1KW(15 min/60 min)= 1(1/4)= .25 KWH. That is you will obtain(get?) KWH on the following way: KWH = time in hours X KW
Use the equation. Kw x Hours = KWh so take 10Kw multiplied by 8,760 hours and you get 87,600 KWh. 10Kw x 8,760 hours = 87,600 KWh
1 unit = 1 KW X 1 Hour so it means that unit of current can be converted into kWh by multiplying it by the watt and t time taken (in hours).
Since there are 6366 hours in a year, 1930 kWh is about 0.3 kW per hour. (1930 / 6366)
One thousand cubic feet of gas (Mcf) -> 1.027 million BTU = 1.083 billion J = 301 kWh by Lyon
To convert from KVA (kilovoltamperes) to KWH (kilowatthours) first convert to KW (kilowatts) by multiplying by power factor. Power factor is the cosine of the phase angle between voltage and current. Then multiply by the number of hours that you run the load.
KWH (kilowatt-hours) is an energy (Power in KW x time in Hours if steady power, or otherwise the integral of power with respect to time). KW per minute means a rate of increasing power, and the fact that it is inside a cubic metre doesn't alter the fact that there is no equivalence, and cannot be related.