A 5kw heater draws just that, 5kw or 5000 w. If you have that switched on high, well I do not know what your supplier charges per kw hour, I am glad its not me paying.
That is 50,000 BTU per hour.
Not enough information. You didn't specify the amount of kW - and you really can't calculate that, just from the volts. Once you know the amount of kW (which is a unit of power), you still need to multiply by time to get energy. Then you can do the appropriate conversion to BTU, which is also an energy unit.
To calculate a cost in kW/h a time interval has to be stated. How long is the 400 watt heater going to be on in a 24 hour period. You also have to state what you are being charged from the utility power company per kW/h.
Electrical consumption is measured in kW per hr. 312000/1000 = kW. To answer this question your rate per kW hour from the utility company must be stated. Once known multiply that rate times the kW used in one hour.
You can replace the balls in the heater control panel on an XS ARA Picasso by removing the front cover of the heater control panel. The panel lights will then be visible.
You need to say what voltage the heater is running on (it's different in different countries).
just jok......
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KW is a measure of real power (kilo watts) used. Real power is the power disippated / transformed into heat (in your instance). KVA (kilo volt amperes) is a measure of the vector total of real power and reactive power used. Reactive power is power that is stored and released be certain electrical elements such as capacitors and inductors. A heater inherently has a certain amount of inductance due to the heating wire used, which appears as an inductor to the 60Hz AC voltage applied to it. KW is a useful term because this is how much power you are using. KVA is useful, because this defines the total current draw your heater will have, so wiring and fusing need to be sized accordingly.
If your heater control is manual you probably have a cable that has become disconnected at the heater control valve or on the back of the panel. If you have an automatic temp control system you probably need a new temp control panel.
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heater fan blower motor is burn up not working need to replace it could also be a heater relay typically located on the fuse panel that needs replacing could also be the switch on the switch panel
That depends on how long the 1 kW is applied. Please note that kW is a unit of power, not a unit of energy.In general, 1 kW of electrical energy can be converted into 1 kW of heat - if used in a heater. With a heat pump, 1 kW of electrical energy can, in fact, pump several kW of heat energy.
If the town has natural gas for heating, then the power needed per household is between 5 kW and 10 kW. If only electric heat is available, then the combination of electric resistance (auxiliary - from 7 to 10 kW for small residential units) heating, combined with electric clothes dryer (from 2 to 5 kW), electric water heater (from 2.5 to 7.5 kW), and stove (5 kW to 7.5 kW) totaling a min of 15 kW to a max of 20 kW. That would put the max power requirements between 5,000 kW and 10,000 kW. As a matter of reality, a diversity factor of .6 to .7 would reduce the max power to 3,500 kW and 7,000 kW.
A 5kw heater draws just that, 5kw or 5000 w. If you have that switched on high, well I do not know what your supplier charges per kw hour, I am glad its not me paying.
To change the heater control panel on a Mercedes C180, remove the radio and the two screws under the CCU panel. Pry off panel and remove the bracket.