Since 1KW-H (kilowatt-hour) = 1000 Watt-Hours =3413 BTU Then 1 watt-Hr = 3413 BTU divided by 1000 = 3.413 BTU So... bottom line is 1 watt-hour is equal to 3.413 BTU Note: For Reference: 1 BTU is the amount of energy required to raise (or lower) 1 (one) pound of water 1 (one) degree Fahrenheit.
To convert a watt to BTUs, the factor is 1 kilowatt of power = 3412.1416 BTU/hr3.412 BTUs equal a watt.AnswerYour question is meaningless, as these two units measure different quantities. The watt is the SI unit of measurement of power, whereas the BtU is the Imperial unit of energy. So watts cannot be equated to BtUs.
For a 1000 BTU heater, the power consumption would be approximately 293 watts. This is because 1 watt is equivalent to 3.41 BTUs.
One million btu equals 10 therms. One hundred thousand btu equals one therm.
The conversion is not direct, since watts are units of power, while BTU/Hr represents energy per hour of equipment operation. So, in this case, watts will represent the power dissipation of a product. 1 watt = 3.412141633 BTU/Hr It works both ways, of course: 1 BTU/Hr = 0.29307107 watts The above is mathematically correct, but I think how it represents the time value is confusing. I've left it for reference purposes. A Watt is an instantaneous measure of power. It assumes no unit of time. A Watt-Second on the other hand, is 1 Watt of power for 1 Second, which *is* a unit of energy. 1 Watt-Second is equivalent to 1 Joule. A 60 watt lightbulb turned on for exactly 1 second uses 60 Watt-seconds or 60 joules of energy. BTU on the other hand, is a measure of energy and time is implicit in the unit. 1 BTU is equivalent to approx 1055 Joules. 1 Watt-Second = ~0.00095 BTU. A 1000 Watt heater, running for 1 hour(3600 seconds) would consume 1KiloWatt-Hour(KWH) of energy. Or 3,600,000 Joules. 1KiloWatt-Hour = 3412 BTU. OR 1Watt-Hour = 3.412 BTU While you could divide both sides by Hours and get a comparison of power wherein 1W = 3.412 BTU/hr. I think comparing energy in the forms of KWHs and BTUs is more useful than the other way around.
1 kilowatts = 1,000 watts 500kw=500,000w
To convert a watt to BTUs, the factor is 1 kilowatt of power = 3412.1416 BTU/hr3.412 BTUs equal a watt.AnswerYour question is meaningless, as these two units measure different quantities. The watt is the SI unit of measurement of power, whereas the BtU is the Imperial unit of energy. So watts cannot be equated to BtUs.
0.29308323563892147 watts per btu there for 5200 btu = 1524.0328253223915 watts 1 watt=3.412Btu/hr 1 Btu=the amount of energy needed to heat 1 Lb of water 1 degree. A gallon of water weighs aprox. 8 Lbs.
The conversion factor of 1 BTU = 0.293 watts. So, 60,000 * 0.293 watts = 17,580 watts. 17580 watts are required to run a craftsman 60,000 btu propane forced air heater.
1 watt is equal to 3.41 btu/h. multiply 1 by 1500 and we get 1500 watts. multiply 3.41 by 1500 and we get 5115btu/h. Therefore we can come to the conclusion that 1500 watts < 45000 btu. 45000btu/h is higher than over 10 times 1500 watts.simplified answer = 45000 btu is hilariously higher than 1500 watts.-Tychusfindlay919P.S. if you meant 4500 btu/h then 1500 watts is higher
Well, isn't that a happy little question! In the world of air conditioning, 1 BTU is equal to 0.29307107 watts. So, if you have 12,000 BTU, you can convert that to approximately 3,516.853 watts. Keep on painting with those numbers, my friend!
1055 watts = 1 BTU/s, so 9000 watts x 1 BTU/s/W x 3600s/hr = 30,710BTUH, or about 2 1/2 tons.
746 watts equals 1 HP.
1 therm unit equals 100000 btu's
For a 1000 BTU heater, the power consumption would be approximately 293 watts. This is because 1 watt is equivalent to 3.41 BTUs.
1 Watt = 3.412141633 BTU/hour, so multiply the number of watts (that are converted to heat) by the factor, to get BTU per hour. Multiply this by the number of hours that it is running, to find BTUs.
12,000 BTU equals 1 A/C Ton.
1kW is 3,412.13 BTU/hr