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Most places in the US have what we call 4-5 'full sun hours' per day, which takes into account weather and seasonal shifts. So if you need 3300kwh per month, you'd need about 110 kw-hrs per day / 4.5 sun hours /day = 24 kilowatts. 24 kilowatts equals 24,000 watts, and you divide by .80 for efficiencies and voltage losses = 30,000 watts. so 30,000 dvidided by 250 = 120 panels.
A cheap one can travel just (5 watts) 150-250 feet. The most expensive hand held ones can go to 1500 feet (for a 45 watt) and beyond if it has more wattage.
A plane doesn't move "at 250 miles"; probably you mean "miles per hour". Convert that to meter/second, then multiply the mass with the speed.
250ml is less than 250l Because ml is mili liter that is less
250 pounds is about 113.4kg
Use the formula: energy = power x time If energy is in watts and time is in hours, power will be in watt-hours. Divide that by 1000 to get kWh. Alternately, you can convert watt to kilowatt before doing the multiplication - in that case, kilowatt x hours = kilowatt-hours.
+- 250 watt to 500 watt
250 milliwatts
yes, but a 251 watt works better
100mph
100mph
$250
is 250 door panel removal
In my experience (northeast USA) most HIGH PRESSURE SODIUM street lights are 150 watt or 250 watt For example in NYC 250 watts is used at intersections and 150 watt everywhere else
P = i*v250w = i * 250vi = 250/120 = 2.08a
The StarTech 250 Watt will work fine on any AMD computer, but it may not be able to handle a powerful video card.
no the fixture has to be rated for the size and type of the bulb. most fixtures are not rated for 250W