It depends on the size and age of your TV. Be more specific.
Depends on the size of the TV. Between 50 to 150 watts is average.
-21-inch Standard TV: 74 watts -42-inch LCD TV: 195 watts -DVD Player: 15 watts -VHS Player: 17 watts -Blu-Ray: 19 watts -Satellite Decoder: 35 watts -Converter Box: 08 watts -Cable Box: 25 watts -42-inch LCD TV: 195 watts -26-inch CRT TV: 74 watts
led tvs 55" or bigger especially manufactured after 2009 use around 350-370 watts plus 15w a piece on the speakers generally around 400 watts pulling 3.5 amps
80
An LCD TV with a traditional flourescent backlight uses about 110 watts of power. A LED backlit LCD TV uses about 85 watts of power in the 32-inch size.
Depending on the models and features of a 27" television set, the average power consumption is around 100 watts.
It uses 111 watts. When a plasma of 42 inches uses 340 watts way more than a older television that would use 135 watts for 42 inches.
Depending on the size of the TV, somewhere between 0.3 and 0.7 KW. The nameplate of the TV usually lists the watts, divide watts by 1000 to get KW.
I am not sure, but you can look at the back of your TV set. Most electrical equipment has its specifications there - if it doesn't state the watts, you can multiply amperes x volts.
how many watts aew needed to power a 110 volt tv at 1.30 amp
you have to know how much voltage it is plugged into and how many amps it consumes. voltage x amps = watts. Look on the electrical plate on the back of the TV. for example in the US it might be 120 volts x 5 amps = 600 watts or .6 kilowatt hour (about 6 cents per hour). This tells you how much electricity the TV uses, not how many it has.
It obviously varies from TV to TV, but between 0.3 and 10 watts, with newer ones taking less.