Over 640,000 on the average
It would be about 5.88 barrels. 10,000 kWh / 1,700kWh per boe = 5.882352941176471.... Source: http://bioenergy.ornl.gov/papers/misc/energy_conv.html Formula: Barrel of oil equivalent (boe) = approx. 6.1 GJ (5.8 million Btu), equivalent to 1,700 kWh.
Your question is not very specific, as 'oil' is a very broad term. Crude oil is never burned straight, it is always processed. I will assume gasoline is what is being used. Gasoline produces 36.6 kWh of power per one US gallon. Therefore: (36.6 kWh/ 1 gal) = ( 1 kWh/ X gal) (1 * 1) / 36.6 = X X ~= 0.0273 gallons So it takes about 0.0273 gallons of gasoline to produce one kWh of power. Some digging on various sites tells me that about 55% of crude oil (per gallon) gets processed into gasoline. So we take our number of gallons and multiply it by 155%: 0.0273 gal/gas * 1.55 ~= 0.0423 gal/oil So it takes 0.0423 gallons of oil to generate one kWh of power.
There are many variations of measurement in the oil industry "boiler fuel" could be many things This link will give every possible conversion you are looking for http://www.eppo.go.th/ref/UNIT-OIL.html
Domestic coil in boiler better than electric water heater.
Oils and water are not miscible.
SOUNDS LIKE YOU NEED TO PAY FOR SOME MORE OIL..CALL YOUR FRIENDLY NEIGHBORHOOD DEALER.
It would be about 5.88 barrels. 10,000 kWh / 1,700kWh per boe = 5.882352941176471.... Source: http://bioenergy.ornl.gov/papers/misc/energy_conv.html Formula: Barrel of oil equivalent (boe) = approx. 6.1 GJ (5.8 million Btu), equivalent to 1,700 kWh.
Water or steam? It makes a difference.
No, it is not okay to put your oil central heating boiler outside. It should be in an enclosed area.
Your question is not very specific, as 'oil' is a very broad term. Crude oil is never burned straight, it is always processed. I will assume gasoline is what is being used. Gasoline produces 36.6 kWh of power per one US gallon. Therefore: (36.6 kWh/ 1 gal) = ( 1 kWh/ X gal) (1 * 1) / 36.6 = X X ~= 0.0273 gallons So it takes about 0.0273 gallons of gasoline to produce one kWh of power. Some digging on various sites tells me that about 55% of crude oil (per gallon) gets processed into gasoline. So we take our number of gallons and multiply it by 155%: 0.0273 gal/gas * 1.55 ~= 0.0423 gal/oil So it takes 0.0423 gallons of oil to generate one kWh of power.
I would look up your boiler specs or maybe contact that boiler brand and they would be able to help you because your question can be for many different situations.
One gallon of #2 fuel oil gives approximately 41 kWh
There are many variations of measurement in the oil industry "boiler fuel" could be many things This link will give every possible conversion you are looking for http://www.eppo.go.th/ref/UNIT-OIL.html
how many btu does a 125 hp boiler produce on #2 oil
Its a Boiler that is fitted with two or more heating sources. Say Gas and Oil Fired
~USD 0.05/kWh. TT is an oil-producing country, so energy there is *way* cheaper than in other Caribbean countries. These have a kWh ranging from USD 0.20 - 0.37.
Domestic coil in boiler better than electric water heater.