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Gigawatts and kilowatts are units of power, and 1 gigawatt = 1 million kilowatts. Energy is measured in kilowatt-hours or gigawatt-hours, 1 gigawatt-hour = 1 million kilowatt-hours.
There is no such unit as a 'watt per minute' or a 'kilowatt per hour'.
The Battersea power stations A & B were both decommissioned with A being taken offline in 1975 and B taking offline in 1983. Therefore, the number of kilowatts an hour they produce is zero.
You do not. Kilowatt hours is a measure of energy and a megawatt is a measure of power. The two measure different things and so one cannot be converted to the other. It is like asking how you can convert feet (distance) into miles per hour (speed).
According to Wiki s.com to convert horsepower to kilowatts you multiple the horsepower by a factor of 0.746. How do you convert horsepower to kilowatts However, you are saying that your 1 HP motor uses 1.84KW instead of 0.746KW which doesn't make sense to me. You will be shocked by how much your electric bill will rise by the use of the pool pump. To figure out how much, find out the Kilowatt (KW) rating of your main pool pump and your pool sweep pump and multiply this by the number of hours each runs. Then multiply this by your electric bill Kilowatt-hour (KWh) rate. For my 16,000 gallon pool which uses a 1 HP motor at 1.84 KW running 8-10 hours per day plus a 0.75 HP motor at 1.495 KW running 3 hours per day for the pool sweep, the cost is $75-$90 per month (at 13 cents per KWh). I have a 15000 gallon pool with a 1 HP motor running 10-12 hours per day. The electric bill is $100-120 per month.
3.7 kwh
4 units
Gigawatts and kilowatts are units of power, and 1 gigawatt = 1 million kilowatts. Energy is measured in kilowatt-hours or gigawatt-hours, 1 gigawatt-hour = 1 million kilowatt-hours.
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watt (w) means joules per second. kW (kilowatts) means thousands of joules per second. Multiply that by 3600 to get the joules used per hour.
Every hour a 1 Megawatt turbine would produce 1,000,000 watts. That would be the equivalent of 1,000 Kilowatts.
52 kilowatts per hour
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You need to find out the power of the motor in kW or HP before that question can be answered.
It depends on the motor's design. One motor I recall could only be started three times in an hour, and then only in exigent circumstances. Others are not so limited. It comes down to the thermal load that is placed on the motor as a result of startup.
Convert the watts to kilowatts, multiply by the time to get the energy (in kWh), then multiply by the rate.
360 kilowatts would power about 1000 TVs, indefinitely. If 360 kilowatts of power were used, the energy used in 1 hour would be 360 kilowatt-hours.