The number of watts used per hour is defined as a watt-hour or "wh". Electricity is normally billed as kilowatt hours or 1,000 watts per hour. Your electric bill will give you KWH number for the month so you could divide this by (24 x 30) to get an hourly average. As an example of the wide range of usage I have a town house rental that used 20 KWH in a month, and another large residence that used 2,900 KWH in a month. In this case the smaller house averaged 27.7 watts per hour and the larger house 4028 watts per hour.
This answer is incorrect. A watt hour is not 'the number of watts used per hour'. It is the number of watts times the number of hours. There is no such thing as 'watts per hour'.
185 watts will use up 185 watt-hours every hour. That is 0.185 kilowatt-hours each hour, costing about £0.03
it can be compared in kilo watts per hour
Kitchen refrigerators use 50-100 watts for about five minutes per hour, so 10 watts or less on average.
1500 watts... Average electric bill is $0.98/ killowatt hour (1000 watts an hour) So it wil cost around $1.50- $2.00/ Hour to operate
50 - 60 watts Mine uses 500 watts, but only for about two minutes each hour.
That depends on the size of the city, and if it is that amount every hour, minute, day, etc. for a comparison, the average home in the U.S.A. uses approximantly 900 kwh (kilowatthour) per month.
46.6 watts an hour.
The average microwave power consumption per hour is typically around 1200 watts.
185 watts will use up 185 watt-hours every hour. That is 0.185 kilowatt-hours each hour, costing about £0.03
On average, a person generates about 100 watts of heat per hour.
If the average home consumes 43 kilowatts per day that equals 43,000 watts per day, the average solar panel produces 85 watts per hour so if u multiply that by the average number of hours it will be working and it equals just over a kilowatt per day. So to power the average home you would need around 40-45: 85 watt panels.
My home averages about 3k watts each hour.
To convert kilocalories per hour to watts, divide by 860: 100 kilocalories per hour / 860 = 0.1163 watts. So, the college student's rate of energy production is approximately 0.1163 watts.
it can be compared in kilo watts per hour
Kitchen refrigerators use 50-100 watts for about five minutes per hour, so 10 watts or less on average.
On average, a vacuum cleaner uses about 600 to 1,200 watts of electricity per hour.
On average, an AC unit uses about 3,000 to 5,000 watts of energy per hour.