If you are operating on a standard 120 volt system, 1875 watts will draw 15.625 amps. A standard fuse or circuit breaker is 15 amps. You are drawing more current than the wiring was designed to provide. The breaker or fuse stops that before you burn down the house. You need a smaller dryer, or bigger wiring.
125V
Take Amps times the volts to get Watts 115x15= 1725 120x15=1800 or 125x15=1875 (These are different voltages found in houses) i would go with the max of 125 volts and 1875 Watts so go for a 2000 watt (2kW) generator.
Not very much... A large ceiling fan (approx 56" in diameter) uses about 85 watts.
no!
11 amps Volts X Amps = Watts so if your dryer is plugged into a 120V circuit (common in U.S.) you would divide: 1875 Watts / 120 Volts = 15.6 Amps
yes...as long as its on the highest setting
John Charles Watts-Russell died on 1875-04-02.
125V
Dutch Gap Canal Lights was created in 1875.
street lights where invented in the year 1875.
2600 will get your hair dry a lot faster, but as far as 'better', the 1875 watt one won't destroy your ear drums as fast (which blow dryers do big-time).
The Revlon 1875 watt Travel Hair Dryer is enough.
The ionic brand Lava Flo professional hair dryer uses 1875 watts.
Take Amps times the volts to get Watts 115x15= 1725 120x15=1800 or 125x15=1875 (These are different voltages found in houses) i would go with the max of 125 volts and 1875 Watts so go for a 2000 watt (2kW) generator.
Most hair dryers are rated at least 800 watts to as much as 1875 watts. Given that, a 500 watt generator will NOT run a hair dryer. You would need at least a 2000 watt generator, just be be on the safe side.
Not very much... A large ceiling fan (approx 56" in diameter) uses about 85 watts.
70% of 1875= 70% * 1875= 0.7 * 1875= 1,312.5