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Most 5 ton units require a 60 amp breaker at 240v. So assuming this as your upper limit the unit should draw no more than 14400watts or 14.4Kilowatts. Remember now this is the upper limit and I am sure the unit will draw something less than this since a system is never loaded to the full breaker size but each unit will vary and you need to check that unit for its individual consumption rate. Energy usage charts typically show about 5KWHr per hour as an average rate of usage for a 5 ton unit. That means it will cost you about 50 cents to a $1.50 per hour of operation in most parts of the US and much more in many other parts of the world.
You can't convert tons to kilometres. A ton is a unit of weight, and a kilometre is a unit of distance.
.03 to .08 kilowatts if I did my math correct 300 to 800 watts draw to run a domestic refrigerator.
2200 watts
Yard is a unit of distance.Ton is a unit of mass.
3500
2500 w
that is going to depend on the efficiency of the unit but in the neighborhood of 2000-3000 watts.
Most 5 ton units require a 60 amp breaker at 240v. So assuming this as your upper limit the unit should draw no more than 14400watts or 14.4Kilowatts. Remember now this is the upper limit and I am sure the unit will draw something less than this since a system is never loaded to the full breaker size but each unit will vary and you need to check that unit for its individual consumption rate. Energy usage charts typically show about 5KWHr per hour as an average rate of usage for a 5 ton unit. That means it will cost you about 50 cents to a $1.50 per hour of operation in most parts of the US and much more in many other parts of the world.
A watt is a unit of electrical energy. A ton is a measure of physical weight and a ton of lead weighs the same as a ton of feathers. Since the watt does not really have what we think of as "mass", I think the answer has to be "zero tons". I say this because I think a wire with a load of 1 watt or a million watts with weigh the same if measured with a scale.
at what voltage? 3 phase? that is a reasonably big unit, you really need to get the correct answer, refer to the manufactures data and get it right.
You have to check the label on the unit itself. It will give you all the information as far as maximum and minimum amps.
There is no such thing as a "cubic ton". There is the ton as a unit of mass (1 ton = 1000 kg), and there is the cubic meter, a unit of volume.
PA13NR036-E is a three 930 ton unit.
1 Ton = 3,517.2 Watt
3517
A ton is a unit of mass. An inch is a unit of length. The two units are therefore incompatible.