For calculation purposes one horse power is equal to 746 watts. So a 1.5 HP motor will be rated at 1.5 x 746 = 1119 watts or 1.119 kW. To calculate the cost of operating the motor your utility cost per kilowatt hour has to be stated. Take this cost and multiply it by the 1.119 to obtain your hourly cost of operating the motor.
To convert the output of an electric heater from kilowatts to BTU per hour, you can use the conversion factor where 1 kilowatt is approximately equal to 3,412 BTU/hour. Therefore, a 15-kilowatt electric heater would produce about 51,180 BTU/hour (15 kW × 3,412 BTU/kW).
To convert BTUs to kilowatts, divide the number of BTUs by 3412. 650,000 BTUs is equivalent to approximately 190.4 kilowatts.
A kilowatt hour is calculated by adding the watts together and deviding by 1000, this will give you kilowatts (kW). Then work out how many hours you are using this load for. multiply the kW by the hours and you get kWh. eg 15 lamps at 100w = 1500w/1000 = 1.5 kW. If these were left on for 6 hours then 6 x 1.5 = 9 kWh.AnswerThere is no such thing as a 'kilowatt per hour'. It's rather like saying 'kilometres per hour per hour', because a kilowatt is a special name given to a joule per second -in other words, it measures a rate.
On an average load on a 15 kc DG is about 4 littered of diesel per hour.
I am not sure how many calories, but Bottle-nose dolphins consume approximately 8-15 kgs (15-33 lbs.) per day.
There are no hours in kilowatts. 11019 kilowatts is 11019000 watts. Watts are the product of Amps x Volts. One killowatt is 1000 watts. You are charged by the power company in Kw/Hrs, this means that you pay so much per 1000 watts every hour. Usually the cost is between .05 to .15 cents/kilowatt depending on where you live.
15 minutes to the hour.
There are 15 minutes in a quarter of an hour
15 min
15 kilowatts is a measurement of electrical power.
Everything in a normal house would run off 50 kW because all devices take less power than that. Many houses have a mains power supply limited to 15 or 25 kW.
There are 240, 15 second periods in one hour.