That depends on how many light bulbs are in the bathroom and how much power each of them use.
The number of Kilowatts needed will vary according to the stock tank heater itself and how much use it receives.
To answer this question the total wattage of all the lights in the school must be added together. This total in watts will be in then changed to kilowatts by dividing by 1000. Take the kilowatts and multiply by the 32 hours that the lights would be shut off. Find out from the utility company what the school pays per kilowatt hour. Multiply that number by the answer you got when you multiplied the kilowatts by 32. This will give you the amount of money that would be saved by shutting the lights off for an hour for 32 weeks.
It could be that the bathroom circuit simply has more on it so the hair dryer is pushing the circuit beyond its limit. In a typical bathroom, properly wired, this would not be the case. But if there are lights on the circuit other than in the bathroom (it would take a lot of lights for this to be a problem), or if there is a source of heat in the bathroom that is on, this may be where your problem is.
not in my bathroom ;) take as many as you like ;) ;) ;) ;)
A three wire home distribution service rated at 100 amps has a wattage capacity of;From L1 to L2 at 240 volts x 100 amps = 24000 watts or 24 kilowatts. From L1 to neutral at 120 volts x 100 amps = 12000 watts or 12 kilowatts. From L2 to neutral at 120 volts x 100 amps = 12000 watts or 12 kilowatts.
This depends how many kilowatts are running through the element, but it can take anything from one to two hours.
u can ask the teacher to go to the bathroom and take the test in the bathroom
how to take your pet to the bathroom on petz nursery
The maximum would be 200 x 240 = 48 kilowatts assuming you had normal 3 wire service. However, your home would never use that much. Average would probably be about 3 or 4 kilowatts, depending on time of day and your heating and air-conditioning systems. Your electric utility bill probably tells you how many kilowatt-hours you used in a month. Just divide this by 730 which is the number of hours in the average month, and that will give your average load in kilowatts for that month.
4
If I remember correctly it was something like5 days
2-3 times a day