The term "Horse power" is not commonly used in refrigeration.
Refrigeration is measured in "kJ/s" (Kilo-Joules per second), "kW" (Kilo-Watts) or "BTu" (British Thermal units).
A horse actually is stronger than one horse power: 14.9hp is the amount of power an ACTUAL horse produces, but over longer periods of time, the average horse produces less than one hp (about 0.7 hp on average).
If your refrigerator is outside in -10 degree Celsius weather I find that the refrigerator is unnecessary. If you do decide to still use the refrigerator outside make sure your refrigerator has a power source so that it can keep running.
Short answer, no. In an average kitchen, a black refrigerator would have to be in direct sunlight most of the day. Ambient room temperature would not heat it more than a white refrigerator. If the black refrigerator has excellent insulation, it may be more energy efficient than a different color, even when outside in direct sunlight.
outside the refrigerator
its actually used by the power of one horse 550 pounds per square foot
Refrigerator Horse Isle Answer - Refrigerator
ofcourse horse ..........the engine power or any power we measure today we do it in terms of horse power and not wolf power ......
It has 1001 horse power
the base horse power for a ktm adventure is 100 horse power
because it is
10 horse power
11.00 Horse Power
It rounds out to 6.5hp!
Refrigerator- it takes more power to kick on and it pulls more electricity than a light bulb
It depends on the refrigerator. Mostly the average is about 240~280v So i wouldn't touch it if I were you!
The units are horse-power. One horse-power = 550 ft.lbs/sec B.H.P. stands for brake horse-power. The word brake does not affect the units, it simply specifies the way in which the horse-power was measured. This in turn means that the horse-power wasmeasured rather than calculated or estimated.
The horse power is about 180