A watt hour is a unit of energy, not time -so you cannot ask how 'long' it is. The time taken to consume a watt hour of energy depends upon the rate (i.e. the power) at which it is consumed, expressed in watts. A watt hour is defined as the amount of energy consumed, over a period of one hour, at the rate of one watt.
MW is a unit of power just like kW 1MW = 1000 kW 1 mega-watt = 1000 kilo-watt Watt is a measurement of power. watt-hour is a unit of energy 1 mega-watt-hour = 1000 kilo-watt-hour
A small unit of electricity is the watt-hour (Wh), which measures the amount of energy consumed or produced over one hour. It is commonly used for smaller appliances and devices. Another small unit is the kilowatt-hour (kWh), which equals 1,000 watt-hours and is typically used for billing residential electricity usage.
To answer this question the amperage draw of the motor must be given. This amperage is then divided into the amp hour capacity of the battery to find the endurance time of the motor.
About 90 percent of an incandescent bulb's energy is turned into heat; one watt is 3.41 btu/hr, so 10 watts would be about 3 btu per hour.
Not possible. A Watt-hour is a quantity of work. A MegaWatt is rate at which work is done. These units are not convertible one to another without more data.
1 watt-hour equals 1 watt times 1 hour, or 3600 joules.
60 watt-hrs= 60 watt*1 hr so it will take 1 hour.
MW is a unit of power just like kW 1MW = 1000 kW 1 mega-watt = 1000 kilo-watt Watt is a measurement of power. watt-hour is a unit of energy 1 mega-watt-hour = 1000 kilo-watt-hour
It depends on how long it takes. 1.05 kWh is 1050 watt-hours, and that could be 1 watt for 1050 hours, or 1050 watts for 1 hour, or anything in between.
The energy unit is not watts per hour, but watts times hour, simply called watt-hours.One BTU is equal to about 1055 Joules or Watt-seconds; that is about 0.293 watt-hours. Actually there are different definitions of the BTU.The energy unit is not watts per hour, but watts times hour, simply called watt-hours.One BTU is equal to about 1055 Joules or Watt-seconds; that is about 0.293 watt-hours. Actually there are different definitions of the BTU.The energy unit is not watts per hour, but watts times hour, simply called watt-hours.One BTU is equal to about 1055 Joules or Watt-seconds; that is about 0.293 watt-hours. Actually there are different definitions of the BTU.The energy unit is not watts per hour, but watts times hour, simply called watt-hours.One BTU is equal to about 1055 Joules or Watt-seconds; that is about 0.293 watt-hours. Actually there are different definitions of the BTU.
This has no physical meaning. The correct unit for power is the watt (not watt per hour).
The first part is correct. 1 wh = 1 w used continuously for 60 minutes (1 hour). a watt hour is equivalent to 3600 joules.
-- foot-pound -- watt-second -- watt-hour -- kilowatt-hour -- horsepower-hour -- inch-pound SI unit: Joule
Simple 10,000 hours cause it completes 1 unit in 10 hours.....
1 kilowatt = 1,000 watts1 watt = 1 joule per second1 hour = 3,600 seconds(1,500 kilowatt-hour) x (1,000 watt / kilowatt) x (1 joule / watt-second) x (3,600 second / hour) =(1,500 x 1,000 x 3,600) x (kilowatt - hour - watt - joule- second) / (kilowatt - watt - second - hour)= 5,400,000,000 joules
You have to pay for the work (enegy) of 150 watt hours. Scroll down to related links and look at "watt-hour - Wikipedia".
2300 watt-hours for every hour it operates. Watts x Hours = watt hours.