A 3 watt led light is not the same as a 45 watt bulb. A led light is a lot brighter.
If the exit fixture uses a LED lamp it will have a 1 to 3 watt rating. If it is a incandescent bulb, each lamp will draw about 25 watts each.
180 watts
1 kilo Watt = 10^3 (1000) Watts 1 mega Watt = 10^6 (1,000,000) Watts 1000 kilo Watt = 1000*1000 Watts = 1,000,000 Watts = 1 Mega Watt Therefore...1000 kW = 1 MW Hope that helps! ^_^
When the motor is running it uses the same power - number of watts - all the time. To find the energy used (in watt-hours) you multiply the watts used by the total time in hours. So if it uses 500 watts and is on for 3 minutes each hour, it uses 500x3/60 watt hours each hour, or 600 watt-hours in one day.
The general amount of watts for an LED light torch is 3 watts.
A 3 watt led light is not the same as a 45 watt bulb. A led light is a lot brighter.
1 kilo Watt = 10^3 (1000) Watts 1 mega Watt = 10^6 (1,000,000) Watts 1000 kilo Watt = 1000*1000 Watts = 1,000,000 Watts = 1 Mega Watt Therefore...1000 kW = 1 MW Hope that helps! ^_^
If the exit fixture uses a LED lamp it will have a 1 to 3 watt rating. If it is a incandescent bulb, each lamp will draw about 25 watts each.
About 90 percent of an incandescent bulb's energy is turned into heat; one watt is 3.41 btu/hr, so 10 watts would be about 3 btu per hour.
345 Watts
180 watts
Lamps with five flexable lights that provide great lighting and come with shades and four way switches. The information below is telling you how brite the light will be if you used the same number watts in the lamp. Using 15 watt bulbs Using 30 watt bulbs Using 40 watt bulbs Using 60 watt bulb Switch 1: 30 watts Switch 1: 60 watts Switch 1: 80 watts Switch 1: 120 watts Switch 2: 45 watts Switch 2: 90 watts Switch 2: 120 watts Switch 2: 180 watts Switch 3: 75 watts Switch 3: 150 watts Switch 3: 200 watts Switch 3: 300 watts Switch 4: 0 watts Switch 4: 0 watts Switch 4: 0 watts Switch 4: 0 watts
1 kilo Watt = 10^3 (1000) Watts 1 mega Watt = 10^6 (1,000,000) Watts 1000 kilo Watt = 1000*1000 Watts = 1,000,000 Watts = 1 Mega Watt Therefore...1000 kW = 1 MW Hope that helps! ^_^
When the motor is running it uses the same power - number of watts - all the time. To find the energy used (in watt-hours) you multiply the watts used by the total time in hours. So if it uses 500 watts and is on for 3 minutes each hour, it uses 500x3/60 watt hours each hour, or 600 watt-hours in one day.
-9900
atleast 1 and a half lemons because a 60 watt lightbulb takes thirty lemons so the amount of lemons you use is supposedly half of the watts so if 3 watts would be 1 and a half lemons