Btu x 0.000293 = kW
15000 X 0.000293 = 4.4kW
One watt is equal to 3.414 Btu. 1500 times 3.414 equals 5121 Btu.
40956
No I think you will need an 18000 condenser for an 18000 BTU.
There are 746 watts to the horsepower and that is 12,000 BTU so you will need a converter that will handle 622 watts plus 1.25% so approx a 780 watt converter
A bit north of 50,000btu/hr
When you plot a system on a mollier diagram it the point between the pressure drop and the bottom of the compression line, measured in BTU/LB. Also known as the Net Refrigeration Effect.
1 Kilowatt = 3,413 BTU, so 7 Kilowatts = 44,891 BTU
4600 BTU/hr is 1.3481268kW
1 BTU = 0.000292875 kW
35kW is 119,424.97 BTU/hr
4kW converts to 13,648.568 BTU/hr
15000 btu
BTU and kilowatt-hours are measures of energy, while power is measured in either kilowatts or BTU per hour. 1 kilowatt-hour is equal to 3412 BTU, or 1 kilowatt equals 3412 BTU/hr. 8000 BTU per hour is equal to 2.344 kilowatts, which is 19.53 amps at 120 v.
900
25
51210 Btu's in 15kw heat strip. 3.414 * 15000= 51210
15 billion BTU/hr is 4,396,065.6kW and 15 billion BTU = 4,396,065.6 kWh
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.