6.5 kW-h is about 22,178.9 BTU.
400 watt hours = 1,364.86 BTU
8500 BTU = 2.5 kilowatt hours.
1 HP = 2545 BTU/hour So 10000 is about 4 HP
BTU is a measure of energy, while a kilowatt is a measure of power. Energy is power times time. Energy: measured in BTU or kilowatt-hours Power: measured in BTU/hour or kilowatts. 100,000 BTU equals about 29 kWh so a 1 kW heater produces about 3400 BTU per hour.
1 Watt = 3.412141633 BTU/hour, so multiply the number of watts (that are converted to heat) by the factor, to get BTU per hour. Multiply this by the number of hours that it is running, to find BTUs.
35,000 BTU = 10.2574875 kilowatt hours.
400 watt hours = 1,364.86 BTU
8500 BTU = 2.5 kilowatt hours.
366,000 BTU = 107.264012 kilowatt hours.
You are comparing apples and oranges. BTU's are a measure of heating capacity and hours are a measure of time.
Does not computeKilowatts do not convert to BTU and vice versa. The watt is a unit of power, whereas the BTU is a unit of energy. Perhaps you meant BTU/hr. 1.5E5 BTU/hr = 43.96 kilowattsYou could do a direct conversion into Killowatt hours though one would assume.1.5E5 BTU = 43.96 KWh
One sheet of paper produces 1.163 miiliwatt hours, and 0.00396832 British thermal units (Btu).
BTU x 0.000293 = kW-h
BTU and kilowatt-hours are measures of energy, while power is measured in either kilowatts or BTU per hour. 1 kilowatt-hour is equal to 3412 BTU, or 1 kilowatt equals 3412 BTU/hr. 8000 BTU per hour is equal to 2.344 kilowatts, which is 19.53 amps at 120 v.
Yes. A ton of refrigeration is equivalent to 12000 BTU/hr, so in 24 hours, 288000 BTU of energy is expended. See related link, below.
1 HP = 2545 BTU/hour So 10000 is about 4 HP
BTU is a measure of energy, while a kilowatt is a measure of power. Energy is power times time. Energy: measured in BTU or kilowatt-hours Power: measured in BTU/hour or kilowatts. 100,000 BTU equals about 29 kWh so a 1 kW heater produces about 3400 BTU per hour.