A halogen bulb works equally well with AC or DC.
360
The numbers 12 and 360 fit those criteria.
The lowest multiple of 210 is 210 and the lowest multiple of 360 is 360.The lowest common multiple of 210 and 360 is 2520.
The LCM is 360.
It is: 360
3 bulb can be connected..............................
A back pin tower G4 12V DC 6W High Power LED Bulb 360 Degree is equivalent to a G 4 20W halogen bulb.See related links below.
Ugo Volt happened in 360.
well,the 15 watt mean that foe each houre the neon is on it will consume 15 watt,hence,15(watt)*24(day)=360(watt). for a month 24-7 days on, 15*24*30=10800 watt
Nope. Not the one you get from USA.
On a 120 volt supply, up to 360 watts. On a 240 volt supply, up to 720 watts.
Incandescent bulbs: 10 lumens per watt Halogens: 13 lumens per watt CFLs: 50 lumens per watt A useful bulb to light a small room is 600 lumens, so that would need a 60-watt incandescent, or a 45-watt halogen, or a 12-watt CFL energy-saving bulb. The best CFL bulbs are the spiral ones.
A Watt is a joule per second. So in a whole hour there are 360 seconds. 500 x 360 = 180. kilojoules in a whole day there are 8640 seconds. 500x 8640 = 4320 kilojoules
If the voltage in your vacuum is 120 then you divide the Wattage by the Voltage to get 3 amps.
15 w * 24 h = 360 watt-hours. [conversion: 360 (w-h) /1000 (w/kw)= .36 kilowatt-hours] So, .36 times your local electricity supply and delivery rate (in kilowatt-hours). For me, supply and delivery of 1 kilowatt-hour is $3.25 (you can find this on your bill) So, .36 * 3.25= $1.17 to run 15 watt light for 24 hours
its 220 V 390V Y 3 phase 50Hz in most of Europe
But why do you want to connect them in series since this will under feed the heaters? I recommend that you connect them in parallel across the supply so that they each have 115v and thus provide good heating effect.