About 100w for a cathode ray tube and 60w for an LCD.
2200 watts on mine...
This question does is not answerable. A watt is a volt times an amp. With out knowing how many amps the bulbs use there is no answer.
Garage door openers have a "starting watts" and "running watts" ratings. A 1/4 horsepower generally has a starting watts rating of 1,100 and running of 550 watts. A 1/2 horsepower opener uses 1,400 starting watts and 725 running watts. These are general ratings and to be more precise you would need to know the brand, model and other information on a specific opener.
atleast 1 and a half lemons because a 60 watt lightbulb takes thirty lemons so the amount of lemons you use is supposedly half of the watts so if 3 watts would be 1 and a half lemons
80
Probably around 100W
An LCD TV with a traditional flourescent backlight uses about 110 watts of power. A LED backlit LCD TV uses about 85 watts of power in the 32-inch size.
Around 43-44 watts at idle and a maximum of 205 watts with 4GB of ram, 238 watts with 8GB of ram, and 270 watts with 16 GB of ram.
It uses 111 watts. When a plasma of 42 inches uses 340 watts way more than a older television that would use 135 watts for 42 inches.
-21-inch Standard TV: 74 watts -42-inch LCD TV: 195 watts -DVD Player: 15 watts -VHS Player: 17 watts -Blu-Ray: 19 watts -Satellite Decoder: 35 watts -Converter Box: 08 watts -Cable Box: 25 watts -42-inch LCD TV: 195 watts -26-inch CRT TV: 74 watts
An Energy Star 15" monitor will use around 12 watts operating and around 1 watt or less in sleep mode.
Depending on the models and features of a 27" television set, the average power consumption is around 100 watts.
led tvs 55" or bigger especially manufactured after 2009 use around 350-370 watts plus 15w a piece on the speakers generally around 400 watts pulling 3.5 amps
About 100w for a cathode ray tube and 60w for an LCD.
It depends upon the manufacturer and the type of the monitor/TV you're using. Normally LCDs use least watts as compared to other forms of Monitors and TVs.
About 150 W on average. Generally a range of 110 W to 200 W is acceptable for 29 inch CRT TV