Spelled kilowatt, it is a unit of measurement used to describe the amount of power consumed or provided in an electrical system. The equation is P = VA and P = VApf for AC systems. A kilowatt is 1000 Watts. Spelled kilowatt, it is a unit of measurement used to describe the amount of power consumed or provided in an electrical system. The equation is P = VA and P = VApf for AC systems. A kilowatt is 1000 Watts.
There are 1000 watts in a Kilowatt. so divide your watts by 1000.
2.55w
Around .0007 Watts. Watts=Amps x Volts 0.0007W=0.001A(1mA) x 0.7V
The answer is 40,000 divided by 415 or 96.38 Amps. Watts is volts times amps.
The answer is : watts
Watts = Voltage x Current x Power Factor 1000 Watts = 1 Kilowatt Therefore, you need to know current and Power Factor to answer your question.
There are 1000 watts in a Kilowatt. so divide your watts by 1000.
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.
Well, a 120V appliance that draws 15A would be using 1800W. (15x120). A killowatt hour is one killowatt used continuously for an hour. If you used that device for one hour straight, it would use 1.8 kWh. (Keep in mind the device may not draw a full 15A)
Most appliances give you the watt rating, lets say it draws 50 watts, that's an hourly consumption. your electric company charges you per killowatt (1000 watts), so lets say you run the device 4 hours, you consume 200 watts or .2 killowatts. you look at your electric bill and see how many killowatts you consumed last month usually around 1000 to 3000. you take the total cost of the bill (say $200.00) and divide it by the killowatts used. (200/1739=.115/kw) that will be around 11 1/2 cents per killowatt. so you used 200 watts or .2 kw so you multiply that by .115= .2x.115=.023 or 2 1/2 cents to run that device for 4 hours. so you add up the hourly consumption of all the devices ( there is usually a label next to where the cord goes into the appliance) take your hourly killowatt rate explained above, remember that you are working with increments of 1000 watts per 11 cents. so your tv draws 15 watts so you can run that tv for 66 hours for 1 killowatt. (11 1/2 cents.). some utility companies like to confuse you with fuel charges and such, but what it boils down to how much did that 2000 kw cost you. if you pay 200 dollars for 2000 kw, that's your true cost. hope I didn't confuse you
A kilowatt (kW) is a unit of power that measures the rate at which electrical energy is consumed or produced. It is commonly used to describe the power capacity of electrical devices and appliances. One kilowatt is equal to 1,000 watts.
100wats
210,000,000 watts
132 watts
1540 watts
about .09-.10
25000 watts