Check this website out. It has a list of all fuels and the BTU outputs.
http://www.cogeneration.net/FuelAndEnergyConversionandEquivalence.htm
2180 SqFt/500 = 4.4 tons of AC required x12000 BTU/ton = 52800 BTU's Answer is it takes 52800 BTU's to cool a 2180 SqFt home
24,000 btu's
12000 btu = 1 ton 1 ton per 400 sq ft 1200 / 400 = 3 3 times 12000 = 36000 btu
It is a question of cubic feet, not square feet.
36000 Btu
For regular gasoline, 125,000 BTU per US gallon
In a gallon of gasoline, there is approximately 124,884 btu. BTU refers to British thermal unit. It is actually a traditional unit.
Yes. Kerosene has 140,000 btu's per gallon and gasoline has less.
1.855KW = 1.758 BTU/second = 6330 BTUH
Gasoline has a btu rating of around 110,000. Ethanol has a btu rating of around 76,000.
how many btu does a 125 hp boiler produce on #2 oil
BTU is a measure of energy, while a kilowatt is a measure of power. Energy is power times time. Energy: measured in BTU or kilowatt-hours Power: measured in BTU/hour or kilowatts. 100,000 BTU equals about 29 kWh so a 1 kW heater produces about 3400 BTU per hour.
0.104 btu
In a word, No... The energy content stays the same.
The average size chicken puts out about 8 BTU's per hour. This number can be lower or higher depending on the size and type of chicken.
1 kilowatt-hour is 3412 British Thermal Units, so 4 kWh is 13648 BTU.
A gallon of gasoline contains about 132x106 joules of energy, which is equivalent to 125,000 BTU or 36,650 watt-hours: