A6.67 wb0.111 wc0.150 wd400 we25 kw
You were 400 watts, if your motorbike broke down five km from your home and you used 400 N for the entire 60 minutes it took you to push it home.
Great question! It depends on the size. 20 minutes = 0.66 hours. Small: 800 watts/hour 264 watts in 20 minutes Medium: 1440 watts/hour 475 watts in 20 minutes Large: 2000 watts/hour 666 watts in 20 minutes To get an idea of how much this is, in terms of cost and in comparison with other appliances, you may want to check out the related link.
The fridge consumes the watts. My fridge is a normal one, it consumes 500 watts for 2 minutes every hour.
It's measured in Watts.
50 - 60 watts Mine uses 500 watts, but only for about two minutes each hour.
There are normally at least 115 watts per fridge.
Since a kW (kilowatt) has 1000 watts, and an hour has 60 minutes, and since watt-minutes, as well as kilowatt-hours, means that you are multiplying the units, you need to divide by 60,000 for this conversion.
30 minutes is 0.5 hours. 1 kilowatt = 1000 watts, so divide both sides by 1000 and you get .001 kilowatts = 1 watt So 8 watts x 30 minutes = .008 kilowatts x 0.5 hours = .004 kilowatt hours.
1500 watts = 1.5 kilowatts 10 minutes = 1/6 hours. So 1500 watts for 10 minutes = 1.5/6 = 0.25 kilowatt hours.
Kitchen refrigerators use 50-100 watts for about five minutes per hour, so 10 watts or less on average.
The correct Question is How much energy after 5 MinutesUnits= 150*5/1000/60=0.0125Kwhr
Each refrigerator manufacturer has a different wattage. Look on the back of the unit and that information will be readily available.It depends on the size but my average kitchen fridge uses 500 watts for about 2 minutes per hour.