Typical small houses in the UK are given a 60 or 100 amp supply at the standard 240 volts. The maximum power is therefore 14.4 or 24 kW. But many houses do not use the full quota.
The power used by each appliance is marked on it, e.g. 3 KW for a kettle, etc. The total power is just all the individual powers added up at any given moment.
So if someone turns a kettle (3kW) on while someone else is having a power shower (8 kW) and the water heater is on (3 kW) and the washing machine is running (3 kW) that would make 17 kW. Most of the time it's much less. Lighting does not use much, especially CFLs and LEDs.
Kilowatts is how fast it uses energy, the amount of energy per day is measured in kilowatt-hours. If the house uses 2 kilowatts continously on average, it would use 48 kilowatt-hours per day.
About .000034 kilwatts
110
Whatever it is rated at. Might be 1 kW, might be something else.
Energy-saving bulbs use much less than 1 kilowatt and most of them use less than 40 watts which is 0.04 kilowatts. A 20 watt bulb uses 1 kilowatt-hour of energy if run for 50 hours.
Kilowatts is how fast it uses energy, the amount of energy per day is measured in kilowatt-hours. If the house uses 2 kilowatts continously on average, it would use 48 kilowatt-hours per day.
He climbed the ladder to the house's peak.
About .000034 kilwatts
0.05 to 0.1 kW.
2
The kilowatts will very depending on the size of the heating element(s) and the size of the pump(s).
5
110
The number of Kilowatts needed will vary according to the stock tank heater itself and how much use it receives.
It's usually an output of 75 kilowatts in the body.
Different models have different rating but on average about 1.5 kWs
It depends on the voltage. For example if you had 120 volts (average Alternating Current supply voltage) you would have 6 kilowatts. However, if you were dealing with 12 volts (average Direct Current supply voltage) you would only have 1.4 kilowatts. Use the following equation to calculate the number of kilowatts produced from different voltages:(Voltage x 50)/1000 = # kilowatts