5000 BTU's should work for a room that size.
Standard practice holds that it takes 5000 BTUs to heat a room 100 to 150 sq ft Figure on adding another 1000 BTUs for every 50 or so sq ft added. Hence , 400 to 450 sq ft would need about 10,000 BTUs
tiles are 12inches by 12inches,and your kitchen measures12feet by 14feet.how many tiles would you need?
If you have an eight square foot area, and the tiles are 112x12-inches, you will need eight. If what you meant to say was an eight foot square area, that would be 64 square feet, and you would need 64 tile. Sorry! In the first line above should read, "...and the tiles are 12x12-inches..."
To cover this area you will need about 10.87 square meters of material.
25
To cool a 3,500 square foot house, you would need a seven ton system. That would be equal to about 84,000 BTUs.
It depends on the climate and how well your home is insulated.A good rule of thumb is about 20 BTUs per square foot.
A small room is about 5,000 BTUs. Most people don't have a room that would require more than 10,000 BTUs.
A romm 20x9 is 180 square feet. You will need 5000 to 6000 BTUs for this.
How many BTUs are good for a 700 square foot stor 12X 30 10 ffoot ceilings That doesn't add up to 700 square feet. We need more information about general climate, windows, outside walls, whether this is the top floor, construction materials, outside doors, etc.
To convert a watt to BTUs, the factor is 1 kilowatt of power = 3412.1416 BTU/hr 3.412 BTUs equal a watt. 1200 watt = 4094.4 BTUS you will need to remove about 4100 BTU/hr
uhhh, you got any gum
Standard practice holds that it takes 5000 BTUs to heat a room 100 to 150 sq ft Figure on adding another 1000 BTUs for every 50 or so sq ft added. Hence , 400 to 450 sq ft would need about 10,000 BTUs
you would need 12...
You would need 56 tiles to do the floor
A fourty two (42) gallon barrel of oil generates approximately 5,600,000 btus. A cubit foor of nat gas generates 1,200 btus ,there for you would need 4,666.67 cubic feet of gas or 4.6 mcf. Today, an mcf of nat gas costs $2.6 an mcf, a barrel of oil $106. The btu per dollar breakdown looks like this. 5,600,000 btus = 1 barrel of crude oil = $106 5.6m btu / $106 = 52,830 btus per dollar 5,600,000 btus = 4.66 mcf = $12.12 5.6m btus / $12.12 = 462,046 btus per dollar
188 will cover it. Bring extra.