My side-by-side fridge, which is about 8 years old, uses 70 watts on average. When the compressor is actually on, it draws about 200 watts after an initial spike of ~400 watts. The fridge draws 5 watts when idle.
The voltage at which a refrigerator works depends on country to country. For example. In my country, India all the electronics works in the voltage range of 230-240V. In USA it is around 110V. It does not depend on the units of electricity being consumed or the duration of its work....
Usually a 1500w inverter is enough, depending on the power of your refrigerator, refrigerator is induction appliance, inverter power = refrigerator power x 5,
Recommend to buy Amazon ETREPOW pure sine wave inverter.
You need to read the fridge's nameplate to get the power rating you will need to supply from the inverter.
usually 15 amps or about 100 bucks a year
380w at rated frequency 50Hz
Lots
could be up to 500 different kinds of bacteria depending on where the fridge is an the frequency of use/ users
Wattage of a Sanyo Bar Fridge ,please?
½ to 1 unit per day.
About 0.1 kW for a kitchen fridge.
yes but it might break the fridge
A normal fridge weighs 25 kilos.
depends on how long you will use you laptop.
Alternating current can be sent via cables much much farther than direct current.
120 Volts multiplied by 1.4 Amps equals 168 Watts. This may be steady state current though so allow more for startup. Also the fridge probably does not have the pump running all of the time so figure the 'on' time compared to the 'off' time for a true average.
Check the nameplate on the fridge. If the wattage in not listed look for the voltage and amperage that is listed. The formula for wattage is amps times volts. This will give you the answer that you are looking for.
No. The doors of the fridge have insulation in them, and the magnetic force does not affect temperature inside the fridge whatsoever.
They can do. But most domestic fridges either have a thermometer showing the current temperature, or there is no thermometer in the fridge (probably because it has been misplaced and lost).