Want this question answered?
The fridge consumes the watts. My fridge is a normal one, it consumes 500 watts for 2 minutes every hour.
5.5 watts is 0.0055 kilowatts. in one hour the equipment uses 0.0055 kilowatt-hours.
50 - 60 watts Mine uses 500 watts, but only for about two minutes each hour.
Your question is rather like asking "How many miles per hour do you do in a week?" You don't consume watts over time, it's a measure of how many joules of energy you consume over time.
Kitchen refrigerators use 50-100 watts for about five minutes per hour, so 10 watts or less on average.
The fridge consumes the watts. My fridge is a normal one, it consumes 500 watts for 2 minutes every hour.
5.5 watts is 0.0055 kilowatts. in one hour the equipment uses 0.0055 kilowatt-hours.
50 - 60 watts Mine uses 500 watts, but only for about two minutes each hour.
2100 watts to run the refrigerator
Your question is rather like asking "How many miles per hour do you do in a week?" You don't consume watts over time, it's a measure of how many joules of energy you consume over time.
Kitchen refrigerators use 50-100 watts for about five minutes per hour, so 10 watts or less on average.
A typical iron uses 1000 watts all the time the heating element is working. It is controlled by a thermostat so the element might be on for a quarter of the time. In an hour the iron might consume 250 watt-hours or 0.25 of a unit.
Watts are units for measuring the rate of energy consumption. So it is meaningless to speak of how many watts something consumes in a length of time. (It would be like asking how many miles per hour a car drives in an hour.)Energy consumption may be measured in kilowatt-hours. A typical microwave consumes 1500 watts, which would be 1.5 kilowatt-hours in one hour.
A mini refrigerator uses about 70 watts per hour or 0.07 KWH.Therefore it uses about 24 times 0.07 KWH, or 1.68 Kilowatt Hours per day.There are varied sizes of "mini refrigerators" and varying degrees ofinsulation, so the wattage may vary from 40 watts per hour to 100 watts per hour or .96 KWH to 2.4 KWH per day
A small coffee grinder 100-200 watts.
none
There are zero watts in a small refrigerator. Watts are the produce to amps times volts. Without these values a correct answer can not be given.