The power consumption rate is 1200 Watts on a 120 Volt Input.
There are 10 adjustable power levels and the microwave requires 1,100 watts to run.
This Sharp Microwave is rated at 1000 watts, though actual power consumption will vary.
The Sharp 1.5 Cu. Ft. Over-the-Counter Microwave Oven has a wattage of 1100 W and is not an energy star appliance.
The microwave runs on 120 volts, and the cooking wattage is 1200.
This is an 1100 watt microwave oven, which puts it in the mid-range in terms of microwave oven power. While microwave ovens are not rated for Energy-Star energy efficiency, microwaves are by their nature more energy efficient for cooking than conventional ovens, and have the advantage of not heating up your whole house.
The rated voltage will match the supply voltage of your property (nominally 120 V in North America, and 230 V in Europe), but the rated power varies from microwave to microwave -you can find out by looking at the 'nameplate' data label which, by law, must be attached to your microwave. The rated current will be the rated power divided by the rated voltage.
The power consumption for this model is only 800 watts, and it's far better than other similar microwave models that average around 1500 watts in power consumption.
look and power consumption is far better ....
Minimal. The phone should have a power rating on it somewhere, most likely on the bottom or on the power supply.
Depends on size - all will have a rating (power consumption) quoted.
A hair dryer uses about 1 kW, a tumble dryer uses 3 kW.
It depends what the power rating of the appliance is. A 500 watt microwave will use half a kilowatt if it's run for an hour on full power. A 750 watt unit will use 3/4 of a unit in the same time period.
Any appliance should have a label attached giving its rating in Watts or kilowatts. This is for when it is running, appliances like fridges should also have a rating based on their average power consumption.
Any appliance should have a label attached giving its rating in Watts or kilowatts. This is for when it is running, appliances like fridges should also have a rating based on their average power consumption.
It depends, oist microwaves are rated in watts, a measurement of power usage. The lowest a microwave could be is a 300watt rating. I'm not sure of the highest bur mine is a 950watt. 1 watt is equal to one joule of energy a second. So a 950 watt microwave converts 950 joules of electricity into microwaves every second.
The commerical microwave has more power then a regular microwave which has a smaller level of power.
I need the same information for BTEC coursework, so if anyone can help, it would be appreciated. Thanks.