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.
If an electrical item is rated at 1 killowatt (rating normally recorded on a label on the item) and it remains energised for one whole hour then it would have used 1kwh of energy - that is the unit you pay your energy provider. kwh = Power x time. Where power is the rating of the item (in kw) and time is the duration that it is switched on (in hours).
60
Factory workers typically worked long hours, often ranging from 10 to 12 hours a day during the 19th and early 20th centuries. Many were employed six days a week, leading to a total of 60 to 72 hours per week. Labor movements eventually pushed for shorter hours, resulting in the standardization of an 8-hour workday in many industries by the mid-20th century. However, conditions varied significantly depending on the time period and location.
mucho mucho mucho demasiado tanto??
It depends on how often you get tutored and how many hours/minutes.
1 billion
One Life to Live - 1968 1-11019 was released on: USA: 9 September 2011
Days of Our Lives - 1965 1-11019 was released on: USA: 17 February 2009 Belgium: 12 July 2013
10000 divided by 220 for a resistive load.
watts
"Kilowatt" is a unit of power. "Hour" is a unit of time. They're used to measure and describe completely different quantities, and it's not possible to convert either of them into the other one. If hours could be converted to kilowatts, then you'd be able to figure out how many watts of sleep you got last night, and how many horsepower there are in one week.
88.78 horse power or 66.2 killowatts
Riverboat Rhythm - 1946 is rated/received certificates of: USA:Passed (National Board of Review) USA:Approved (PCA #11019)
There is a calculator that helps determine the size of generator for a specific application. The kilowatt is a thousand watts which is also is the same as one KW.
so many hours
If an electrical item is rated at 1 killowatt (rating normally recorded on a label on the item) and it remains energised for one whole hour then it would have used 1kwh of energy - that is the unit you pay your energy provider. kwh = Power x time. Where power is the rating of the item (in kw) and time is the duration that it is switched on (in hours).
I kW = 1000 W 100 / 1000 = 0.1 So a 100 W bulb uses 0.1 kW For one hour that's 0.1 kWh