1250 watts heats a small room to a comfortable temperature in winter. Outside, 1250 watts is not hot at all.
Watts are a function of volts times amps. A power factor is involved in motor loads, but we will discount that for now. You could have 1.25 amps flowing in a high voltage line representing a very large number of watts due to the high voltage, but lets assume we are speaking of a two wire, (hot and neutral) (the grounding wire would not be included in the calculation since it will carry no current in this example) 120volt circuit feeding say a small kitchen mixer. 120 volts times 1.25 amps = 150 watts If this were a residential 240 circuit, (2 hot wires) the watts would be double, (1.25 times 240=300 watts
Do you mean how many watts are used to make hot water? It varies, but a typical home electric hot water heater consumes about 4,500 watts. Industrial hot water heaters might use 20,000 watts or more! I have a little warmer that keeps my coffee warm as I type this, it consumes about 300 watts. Of course it only heats 6 ounces of water....
usually a 2500 watt generator is 2500 max 1250 watts constant, so if you could find a 1250 watt log splitter then yes, but it is hard to find such a wimpy log splitter, usually the 5 ton ones are at least 1500 watts, a 2500 max generator might be able to hold 1500 watts for a few seconds before it cut out, so it is possible, but a 4000 watt max generator (2000 watt steady) should be able to run a log splitter that takes up to 2000 watts without any hicups. by the time you bought both the generator and the electric splitter you could just buy a gas powered splitter instead.
There are 100 centimetres in one metre. Therefore, 1250 centimetres is equal to 1250/100 = 12.5 metres.
These are not convertible quantities. The same way that you cannot convert seconds into pounds. Or pounds into miles per hour. If you reconstituted your question into the form of "I have a device that draws 2 amps at 125 volts, how many Watts is it consuming?" we'd be off to the races. Hope that helps.
Watts are a function of volts times amps. A power factor is involved in motor loads, but we will discount that for now. You could have 1.25 amps flowing in a high voltage line representing a very large number of watts due to the high voltage, but lets assume we are speaking of a two wire, (hot and neutral) (the grounding wire would not be included in the calculation since it will carry no current in this example) 120volt circuit feeding say a small kitchen mixer. 120 volts times 1.25 amps = 150 watts If this were a residential 240 circuit, (2 hot wires) the watts would be double, (1.25 times 240=300 watts
you would need to know the wattage of each lamp. multiply the lamp wattage x 5 = total watts divide the total wattage / 230 volts (or the voltage you will connect to)= amps example: 250 watts x 5= 1250 watts 1250 watts / 230 volts = 5.43 amps
Number of watts= heat
3% of 1250 = 3% * 1250 = 0.03 * 1250 = 37.5
1250 + 8% = 1250 + 100 = 1350 or 1250 + 8%.
I hope not!!! He is too hot to be married!!!
15% off of 1250 = 1250 - (0.15 x 1250) = 1062.5
1250 to fraction = 1250/1
percentage of 1250 = 125000%1250 * 100% = 125000%
10% off of 1250 = 90% of 1250 = 1250*90/100 = 1125
38% of 1250 yards= 38% * 1250= 0.38 * 1250= 475 yards
i looking for driver belt for mixer wiht optional blender modelo bcf 1250 stand 340 watts