Large does not tell us much. However the rating will be printed somewhere on the appliance.
A basic Oster two-slice toaster will cost about $15. However, the fancier the model, the more you will pay. Oster makes a two slice toaster that will also poach an egg that costs $35.
The main feature is that they tend to be stainless steel. That doesn't really matter though as they are all manufactured pretty much the same as any other toaster oven.
As far as I could find using goodsearch.com, no, there is not an animal called an oster anywhere, much less in Romania.
To calculate the energy used by a toaster, you need to know its power rating. Let's assume a typical toaster uses around 800 watts. In 5 minutes, the toaster would consume 800 watts * 5 minutes = 4000 watt-minutes of energy. To convert to watt-hours, divide by 60 to get 4000 watt-minutes / 60 = 66.67 watt-hours, or 0.067 kilowatt-hours.
Oster blenders are well loved blenders for a variety of reasons. Oster has been a blender manufacturer for many years and is well known for its quality and durability. Oster blenders are much less expensive than other similar blenders and have a variety of useful features.
Oh, dude, wasted energy in a toaster is like when you put in a single slice of bread and the toaster is all like, "I gotta heat up all these coils just for one slice?!" It's basically when the toaster uses more energy than necessary to toast your bread because you didn't fill it up. So, like, next time, just pop in a couple more slices and save some energy, man.
It depends, how much toast do you have.... It also depends on how many toast your toaster can toast.
That really depends on the toaster. Try it out, with your own toaster.
Hydro was much cheaper in the 1950's :)
1,000,000,000 $
3-5 pounds
67%