No. The sun, along with the solar system, completes and orbit of our galaxy about every 250 million years.
generally the power company is not required to pay you for excess electricity fed back into the grid, they calculate the amount you use off the grid during night and cloudy days and subtract power you add on sunny days until your bill zeros out. Size your panels to the power demand you need, any excess panels is money out of your pocket. Or get a mess of batteries and live off the grid
Mars is about 36 to 250 million miles from Earth and the fourth planet from the Sun. I'll try to find out how far away it is from the Sun. 227,926,640 km from the sun(you're welcome'-')mars is about 36 to 250 million miles from Earth and the fourth planet from the Sun.Mars is the fourth planet from the Sun and is 1.52 AU from the Sun
250
250 miles
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.
no the fixture has to be rated for the size and type of the bulb. most fixtures are not rated for 250W
+- 250 watt to 500 watt
250 milliwatts
A 200 amp service panel with a 60 amp sub-panel.
Yes, the ballast is an intricate part of the fixture that the lamp screws into regardless of what size wattage the lamp is.
yes, but a 251 watt works better
100mph
100mph
$250
Re Question with the voltage that you will be using.
is 250 door panel removal