about 15 watts actual power but actually more than enogh to wake up the neighbors.
I have a 2002 demo model, and its 60 watts per channel. peak power not rms.
Watts is the product of amps times volts. As you can see this combination could have lots of variables depending on the different voltages that are in use and the variable amperage's of multiply loads. To find watts per year you would first have to find the wattage of the device, then extend it to watts per hour if the device is continually on. Then take this figure times 24 hours in a day and then finally times 365 for the days in a year. This will give you the answer that you are looking for.Alternate answer: The question is fundamentally meaningless. A watt is a measure of energy per unit time. An appliance that uses 60 watts, will use 60 watts in a second, 60 watts in a minute, 60 watts in an hour, or 60 watts in a century. Total energy can be expressed in units like "kilowatt-hours" (equal to 1,000 watts for one hour, or 100 watts for 10 hours, etc.). Our 60-watt appliance, left on continuously, will use about 525 kWh per year.
You may not have your Dish satellite receiver on the correct channel if it is a duo (dual receiver). You will need to tune it to either 60 or channel 73. Also, make sure your power to your Dish Network receiver is on -- for the Dish TV duo receiver, you should see a light for TV2 and TV1.
Power (Watts) is Joules (energy) per Second (time) so divide the number of joules by the number of seconds. 104/60 = 1.733 Watts
60-80 watts
in electronics, there is a term of Watt Hours used in power bills and things. watts itself is a unit derived by 1 joule per second. in order to get watt hours (which is just 1 joule per hour) you multiply your watts (joule/second) by 360 (60 seconds in a minute multiplied by 60 minutes in an hour). that will then give you units of joules/hour
A simple electrical device is a 60 watt light bulb. The bulb is consuming 60 watts of electricity from the moment you turn it on. If you keep that light bulb on for 10 hours the power used is 60 watts x 10 hours = 600 watts of power. Electricity is sold in Kilowatt Hours. A Kilowatt is 1000 watts of power. Depending on the state you live in, it sells for 7 to 18 cents per Kilowatt Hour. So if you leave that light bulb on 10 hours per day for 30 days you will have used up 600 watts x 30 days = 18,000 watts of electricity = 18 Kilowatt Hours. At an average cost of 10 cents per Kilowatt Hour that bulb costs you $1.80 per month to leave on. The formula is watts x time x cost per Kilowatt Hour = cost of use...Answer provided by Gene Evangelist
There are 1350 watts in a 60 hz bulb. There is a push not for everyone to transfer to led bulbs.
If your TV goes to a blue, black or "static - fuzzy" screen it is most likely due to your Television not being tuned to the correct channel for your Satellite TV receiver. If you have Dish Network, and do not have HD and have a single tuner receiver, your TV is usually tuned to channel '3' on your television. If you have a Dish Network Duo receiver that services two televisions, TV2 is usually tuned to either channel 60 or channel 73. You may also want to make sure your satellite is turned on - You can tell your satellite receiver is if the lights on the front panel are lit up.
60 watts. The ballast also uses this same amount
a freezer morter got 60 watts in it or 90 watts
A 60 watt light bulb is a light bulb with 60 watts capacity. When talking about watts, you're talking about the power that is transferred from the appliance to the accessories. Therefore, the light bulb labeled "60 watts" takes 60 watts to light up. A 60 watt light bulb will not be as bright as a 120 watt light bulb.