It would depend on how deep your well is, and how efficient the pump.
how many volts does the pump run at and what is it's amp draw so the equation is watts=volts X amps
No one pump, so one answer. Some are 120v, some are 240 volt. A 1.5 hp pump is around 1100 to 1200 watts.
1 horsepower = 745.699872 watts So a 1/2hp pump would use 372.8497936 watts
About 3 kWh's of heat are created for every kWh of electricity it consumes
One watt is 0.001 kilowatt. 65 watts is 0.065 kilowatts. It does not matter what the voltage is - watts are watts.
45 watts
Hoovers use 1000 - 2000 watts
Voltage of the pump (12) multiplied by the current draw = the watts used. This would be 12 watts if the current was 1 amp, 24 watts if the current is 2 amps, and 36 watts if the current is 3 amps, and so on...
1 horsepower = 745.699872 watts So a 1/2hp pump would use 372.8497936 watts
it may use 15 to 25 watts
for a large one it is 4,000 watts and for a smaller one it is 1,000 watts
About 3 kWh's of heat are created for every kWh of electricity it consumes
One watt is 0.001 kilowatt. 65 watts is 0.065 kilowatts. It does not matter what the voltage is - watts are watts.
45 watts
Hoovers use 1000 - 2000 watts
Abut 20 watts.
189 watts
25 watts.
650 watts