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.
The energy consumption of a toaster typically ranges from 800 to 1500 watts. To convert this power to joules, you can use the formula: energy (in joules) = power (in watts) × time (in seconds). For example, if a toaster operates at 1200 watts for 5 minutes (300 seconds), it would use 360,000 joules of energy. The specific amount of joules will vary based on the toaster's wattage and the duration of use.
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.
There is a lot of confusion on all matters relating to heat. The efficiency of a device is usually the fraction of consumed energy which goes into the function of the device. For an engine, this is straight-forward. For a light bulb or a toaster, not so. For light emitting devices, in the wintertime when you are heating your house anyway, the answer is 100%. None of the energy is wasted; it just replaces some use of your electric heater. But what if you have a gas heater? Then the efficiency is relative. In the summertime, this is a much more important question. For a light bulb, you would look at light output (in Lumens) per energy input (in Watts). For a toaster, the answer is *completely* relative, rather than a fraction. The pertinent question is: How much energy does *this* toaster require to toast a piece of bread, compared to another toaster. I have not found much experimentation which answers that, even to compare toasters to toaster ovens. Toaster ovens may turn off during heating, so it's not simply a matter of maximum wattage. In general, the closer the heating element is to the surface of the bread, the higher the 'efficiency' of the toaster. On thin bread, bagel toasters are thus somewhat less efficient than smaller toasters are. Cheap toaster ovens are sometimes accused of making bread 'soggy', which is a result of the bread being heated by the air rather than directly by radiation from the heating elements.
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