no less than $75/hr
$90/hr.
As much as they can get away with!!! Just joking..... Are you asking about an electricity provider? They charge by the kilowatts used based on a published rate structure. If you are asking about companies that charge for electrician's labor, the joke I started with is pretty close to the truth but the actual amount varies by geographic location, the length of the job, the tools needed, the distance to the job, the time of the day, the time of the year, the weather, and the skill of the technician. As much as they can get away with!!! Just joking..... Are you asking about an electricity provider? They charge by the kilowatts used based on a published rate structure. If you are asking about companies that charge for electrician's labor, the joke I started with is pretty close to the truth but the actual amount varies by geographic location, the length of the job, the tools needed, the distance to the job, the time of the day, the time of the year, the weather, and the skill of the technician.
A milliamp-hour is one thousanth of an amp-hour. For example: if you have a fully charged battery of 500 mAh (milliamp-hours), it is able to feed a lamp which draws a current of 500 mA for one hour. It also is able to feed a mobile phone in standby over a period of 50 hours, if it draws a current of 10 mA.Alternative AnswerA milliampere hour (not 'milliamp hour'!) is one-thousandth of an ampere hour, which is a unit of electrical charge. The SI unit for charge is a coulomb, which is a special name given to an ampere second. So, and ampere hour is 60 x 60, or 360 times larger than a coulomb.
It's in the amount of current that is used to charge the battery. If the amp-hour (Ah) capacity of the battery is known, charging at the 5-hour rate or quicker would count as a boost charge, while charging at the 20-hour rate or slower would be a trickle charge. So for a 40 Ah battery, a boost charge is more than 8 amps while a trickle charge is less than 2 amps. A normal charge would be 4 amps.
The flow of an electrical current be -- Coulombs per Second or Ampere hours per hour.
depends on how bad it snowed. three inces or more
110
A typical electrical contractor will normally charge anywhere between $25-$35 dollars per hour. It can also be a little more given the experience a contractor may have.
A general Contractor does not typically charge by the hour. They usually charge by the job or by percentage. A G.C.'s job is to hire and coordinate not to "work" so hours would be a pore measure of his worth. Perhaps you are confusing a GC with a Home Improvement Contractor?
Some contractor charge by the hour, others charge by the job. To get the best rate you need to look around for a while to ensure you find one with the best price and also one that can provide good references.
anywhere from $15 to $30 (double if legitimate contractor) an hour, and the walls of a 10 x 10 room can be rolled in an hour
A good electric contractor will cost you around $100 just to show up. After that you will be charged per hour and for all the parts the contractor used. The per hour charge will be somewhere in the $40-$50 range.
It depends on whether both are certified electricans or not. Often times one electrican is certified and one is an electricans apprentice. If both are certified, I thin the per hour rate would be around $150 - $160. If one is an electrician's apprentice, $130 is probably more reasonable.
I just paid my electrical contractor $68.00 per hour for labor, plus materials.
If you're a beginner then you should charge $5 an hour, but if you're more advanced, you should charge $6 or $7 an hour.
The standard rate for service work in the Dallas Area is $90-$95 per hour. There are exceptions to this depending on the line of work that is being done, but this rate would cover the vast majority of residential and commercial service calls.
You should charge at least $15.00 per hour. Prices range depending on your experience.
Standing charge per quarter ( 3 months) + charge for power consumed (kW - hours) during the quarter. Charge per kW - hour will be shown on the previous bill.