A unit (short for 'Board of Trade Unit') is used to measure energy consumption, and is equivalent to one kilowatt hour. A watt measures power, which is the rate of energy consumption. So there is no relationship between a unit and a watt.
You can't compare that. Ampere is a unit of electrical current; horse power is a unit of power.
Watt
the unit of electrical power named after scottish inventor of steam engine is Watt ( the electrical power ) and the iinventor was James Watt
A unit of electrical power is called a watt, symbolized by "W". It represents the rate at which electrical energy is consumed or produced by a device.
The Watt is the unit used to measure electric power :)
It's depend on time, Power=Energy/Time Watt is the unit of power Joule is the unit of energy
W
Electrical power is also measured in Watts.
The SI unit for power is the Watt, the most commonly derived unit is for electrical power definition, which is the Kilowatt.
Power is simply the rate of doing work or of heat transfer. Accordingly, there is no such thing as 'electrical' or any other sort of power. Power is simply a rate, and its unit of measurement is the watt (symbol: W).
Watt is a unit of power. 1 Watt = 1 Joule/second; joule is the unit for energy.
watts