Very few, really - 50 - 60 would be typical.
Not very much... A large ceiling fan (approx 56" in diameter) uses about 85 watts.
The average household fan used in US or Canada is about 35-50 watts.
That will depend on the specific fan.
Due to heavy loads such as hair dryers and curling irons, a 20A GFI breaker is a good decision to power the room. Answer: The NEC requires a 20A circuit for bathrooms. This circuit cannot feed any other rooms.
An average electric fan typically consumes around 50-100 watts of electrical power. However, the wattage can vary depending on the size, speed settings, and efficiency of the fan.
Not very much... A large ceiling fan (approx 56" in diameter) uses about 85 watts.
132 watts
About 3,731 watts.
3/4 of watts
The average household fan used in US or Canada is about 35-50 watts.
That will depend on the specific fan.
none
1230w
Due to heavy loads such as hair dryers and curling irons, a 20A GFI breaker is a good decision to power the room. Answer: The NEC requires a 20A circuit for bathrooms. This circuit cannot feed any other rooms.
The equation you are looking for is Watts = Amps x Volts.
An average electric fan typically consumes around 50-100 watts of electrical power. However, the wattage can vary depending on the size, speed settings, and efficiency of the fan.
It varies tremendously depending upon the size of the fan and the power of the motor. The best way to answer your question would probably be to look at the back of the fan, or on the bottom. It usually will tell how many watts the fan draws. If it only tell amps and volts, remember that watts = amps X volts. Remember that watts does not have a time component; so to say that it draws a certain number of watts in an hour is not correct. You should rather ask, "How many watt-hours does it consume in an hour?" That is the number of watts times the number of hours that it drew that number of watts.