There are 746 watts to the horsepower and that is 12,000 BTU so you will need a converter that will handle 622 watts plus 1.25% so approx a 780 watt converter
No I think you will need an 18000 condenser for an 18000 BTU.
Btu x 0.000293 = kW 15000 X 0.000293 = 4.4kW
40956
A bit north of 50,000btu/hr
When you plot a system on a mollier diagram it the point between the pressure drop and the bottom of the compression line, measured in BTU/LB. Also known as the Net Refrigeration Effect.
1
10000 BTU per hour is equivalent to approximately 2.93 kW.
10000Btu is 3.93hp
10000
130000 btu
Airconditiong and heating pwer are rated in BTU's not RPM's this unit is 10000 BTU's
The cooling capacity is the same. It all depends on the application as to which is better. If you have a large room then the 1 10000 Btu unit would be the better fit and probably cheaper. But if you need to cool two small rooms then the 2 5000 Btu units would probably be better.
The way to answer this question is convert all factors to power. Voltage, current, watts, horsepower, BTUs. I will save you some time. They cost the same to operate. One thing to remember in your career, watts = watts no matter what(watt)...pkazsr You already have the answer. 10,000 btu/hr is 10,000 btu/hr, or the equivalent number of watts either way. There may be some minor difference because the higher voltage unit will pull half the amps to deliver the same power.
Ratings are per hour. Divide 10,000 by 60 minutes per hour.
A cord of wood typically has a heating value of around 20 to 25 million British Thermal Units (Btu) depending on the type of wood and its moisture content.
50,000 btu
300 square feet, or about 15 x 20 feet.