A watt is not typically used as a unit of measurement here. You may be asking for the number of watt-hours. Power is billed in kilowatt-hours (KWH). A 10 watt electric blanket use 10 watt-hours per hour, so that would be 2.5 watt-hours in 15 minutes.
Divide 2.5 watt-hours by 1000 to get KWH. Take the total kilowatt-hours and times that by your rate (for me 15 cents) to get the total cost for those 15 minutes ($0.000375 or almost free, far less than a penny)
An electric toothbrush has 2-4W (watts).
100
It all depends on what fan you have.
Edenpure heaters produce 1500 watts. It is an electric heater, which uses quartz heating element to generate heat.
You need the formula: Amps * Volts = Watts But you get to do the math.
an electric blanket uses 200 watts(wattage). If you left your electric blanket on for 10 hours you might end upwith a 30 to 50 cent fine.
An electric toothbrush has 2-4W (watts).
Many electric blankets are washable, such as the Biddeford heated electric throw blanket. It can be washed in a regular washing machine.
100
The Sunbeam Electric Blanket is machine washable.
for a large one it is 4,000 watts and for a smaller one it is 1,000 watts
11,000 watts equates to 14.745 electric horsepower.
It all depends on what fan you have.
4500 watts is zero volts. To obtain a voltage from watts it has to be divided by an amperage.
No, but an electric blanket can interfere with a pacemaker. Furthermore, electric blankets are dangerous in general!
Conduction - The wires inside of the blanket conduct heat through the blanket and when the blanket touches you, the heat transfers from the warmer object (the blanket) to the cooler object (you). YW ~Jack
I have a QVC featherbed, can I put a Silentnight electric blanket on top of it.