1 cubic foot of natural gas can be burned to generate about 1000 btu of heat.
A 105000 btu/hr appliance would therefore require about 105 cubic feet of natural gas per hour; this is 0.1 thousand cubic feet, or 0.1mcf/hr.
70000 BTU/hr = 20.5kW > 70000 BTU/min = 1230.9kW > 70000 BTU/sec = 73854.2kW
LRA is not any known unit of measure. You can convert horsepower to BTU per hour, calories per second, ergs per second, watts, Kilowatts, MW, GW, etc.
The precise answer is that the question can't be answered. A BTU is an amount of energy, while a kilowatt is an energy rate, than is how much is being delivered in a specified amount of time. However, there is a great deal of sloppiness about BTUs. Very often when people say "1000 BTUs" they really mean "1000 BTUs per hour." Air conditioners are quoted that way. Assuming that's what's really wanted, the key factor is 3.412 BTU/W-hr. 2000 W * 3.412 BTU/W-hr = 6824 BTU/hr.
Roughly 500 so long as there are no extraordinary sources of heat in thay area of the home.
Yes. x/30
A fourty two (42) gallon barrel of oil generates approximately 5,600,000 btus. A cubit foor of nat gas generates 1,200 btus ,there for you would need 4,666.67 cubic feet of gas or 4.6 mcf. Today, an mcf of nat gas costs $2.6 an mcf, a barrel of oil $106. The btu per dollar breakdown looks like this. 5,600,000 btus = 1 barrel of crude oil = $106 5.6m btu / $106 = 52,830 btus per dollar 5,600,000 btus = 4.66 mcf = $12.12 5.6m btus / $12.12 = 462,046 btus per dollar
There are 7,480 gallons per mcf
Divide the dollars per kWh by 3,412.14163
btu per pound * pounds per gallon OK, it sounds as if you know the value of fuel in oil btu per pound.Now find out how much a gallon of fuel oil weighs and multiply the btu value x that weight in pounds and that is the value per gallon. Or simply, diesel fuel is #2 fuel oil which contains 140,000 btu per gallon.
Btu / scf = Btu / lb X MW / 379.5 where: MW = molecular weight of the gas, lb / lb-mol The constant 379.5 is the molar volume at standard conditions of 14.696 psia and 60°F
CMH is a unit of flow rate (m3/hr or cubic metres per hour) A BTU is a British Thermal Unit, a unit of energy that is equal to around 1055 joules. You cant convert the two as they are a measure of different things, but changing BTU (or Btu) to joules will help standardise the calculations.
You can't convert that.* A BTU is a unit of energy. * A watt is a unit of power (energy per unit time).
You need to look at a steam table first then Multiply lbs/hr steam x latent heat of evaporation in BTU/lb @ the operating pressure.
Use this formula: foot-pounds per minute x0.0771 = BTU per hour
1,055.05 joules per BTU.
105000 babies per year
None, since there can be no conversion. A cubit = 1.5 feet so a cubit foot (= 1.5 square feet) is a measure of area in 2-dimensional space. Energy is measured in terms of BTU per unit of volume or mass, not of area. So "BTU per standard cubit fet" is a nonsense unit.