If you are asking about a Guitar Amp for example, you will have to look up the cost for what you want. If you are asking about an amp of current then you need to also know the voltage and power factor to determine Kilowatts per hour which is the unit used by power companies to calculate costs. A ballpark figure is 12 cents per Kilowatt Hour.
If you are asking about a typical household with 120 VAC supply then 1 Amp x 120 VAC x 1 = 120 Watts. If you run the device for an hour then the "amp" at 12 cents per Kw Hr would cost you about 1.44 cents.
Guitar amp?? or TV amp? Guitar amp would be around 700 to 1000$ on cheap bedroom amps...
Power is not sold by the amp per hour. Electricity is sold by the kilowatt per hour.
It depends what your voltage is and how much your electricity costs. Assuming you are running standard residential voltage and your electricity costs 10 cents per kilowatt-hour. 1 Amp would cost you 1 cent per hour or 29 cents per day or $105 per year.
2.3 kw per hour on a 110-120 volt circuit.
An amp is a measure of electric current flow. The amp is a coulomb per second past a given point. (A fancy way of saying it is that a coulomb of charge per second entering and leaving a node is an amp.)
Simple, you're paying 1.23 monetary units per kilowatt hour. That's a really good deal.
To answer this question I have to know what you are charged per Kw/hr by the power company. If you mean .10911 per kw/hr, then I need to know at what voltage.
It depends what your voltage is and how much your electricity costs. Assuming you are running standard residential voltage and your electricity costs 10 cents per kilowatt-hour. 1 Amp would cost you 1 cent per hour or 29 cents per day or $105 per year.
Total comp cost = wage per hour + benefit and pension cost per hour + employer Social Security cost per hour + unemployment tax per hour + worker comp tax per hour.
The 2.03 cents per kilowatt hour cost for nuclear power is inaccurate. December 19, 2011. New study published by National Bureau of Economic Research states: Pg 23 of the report, Table 3 lists the levelized cost of nuclear power as 8.7 cents per kilowatt hour (MIT 2009), and 6.7 cents for natural gas.
The cost of electricity varies depending on the region if the country and the company owning the power supply. However, the average cost of electricity in the United States is about 12 cents per kilowatt-hour.
Varies with the battery. I just bought a deep cycle battery last week at Walmart. 115 amp hour (trolling motor battery) for about $74.00. That is a lead acid battery. Other types and sizes will vary.
power consumed per hour
2.3 kw per hour on a 110-120 volt circuit.
1000 watts per hour is a kilowatt hour and is usually 10 cents
The average labor cost per hour in Chile will be 19$
It depends upon what the power company charges.
4000 ma is equivalent to 4 amps 1 amp is 1/1000 ma/hour means amp or ma per hour.
What is the cost per hour is after you exceed the maximum free hours?