50 - 60 watts
Mine uses 500 watts, but only for about two minutes each hour.
Kitchen refrigerators use 50-100 watts for about five minutes per hour, so 10 watts or less on average.
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.
To convert amperage to watts, you need to know the voltage, power factor, and the number of phases that you are working with. For a residential refrigerator this is single phase, an industrial refrigerator could be three phase.
The formula you are looking for is Watts = Amps x Volts.
Probably about 450 watts. Since the primary use of power in a refrigerator is for a motor the watts it uses are less than the amps that pass through it. <<>> Assuming that the refrigerator uses 120 volts for a supply voltage, then W = A x V. 4.5 x 120 = 540 watts
2100 watts to run the refrigerator
On average, a Frigidaire or refrigerator uses around 600 watts. This is assuming that the fridge is an average to large size, and not a tiny fridge that would use less power.
Kitchen refrigerators use 50-100 watts for about five minutes per hour, so 10 watts or less on average.
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.
To convert amperage to watts, you need to know the voltage, power factor, and the number of phases that you are working with. For a residential refrigerator this is single phase, an industrial refrigerator could be three phase.
The formula you are looking for is Watts = Amps x Volts.
There are usually around 600 watts of power in use in the average sized refrigerator. In a smaller under the counter or over the counter model of fridge, this wattage will be much smaller.
Probably about 450 watts. Since the primary use of power in a refrigerator is for a motor the watts it uses are less than the amps that pass through it. <<>> Assuming that the refrigerator uses 120 volts for a supply voltage, then W = A x V. 4.5 x 120 = 540 watts
A typical ink-jet printer such as used at home would draw around 5 watts on stand-by and 25 to 35 watts while printing. A typical laser-printer such as used in an office would draw about 35 to 50 watts on stand-by and up to about 350 to 500 watts while printing.
1500
The fridge consumes the watts. My fridge is a normal one, it consumes 500 watts for 2 minutes every hour.
189 watts