700/(60/5)= 58.333 Wh
58.333/1000= 0.0583 kWh
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
It depends on the cost of electricity and the cost of natural gas in your area. Generally, using a 5000 BTU natural gas heater is cheaper than using a 1500 watt electric heater. Natural gas is typically more cost-effective for heating compared to electricity.
The cost to run a halogen heater depends on its wattage and the electricity rate in your area. For example, a typical halogen heater uses around 1,000 to 1,500 watts. If you run a 1,500-watt heater for 5 hours at an electricity rate of $0.13 per kilowatt-hour, it would cost approximately $0.97 per day. Always check your local electricity rates for a more accurate estimate.
A 33 watt fluorescent tube consumes 33 watt-hours of electricity per hour. It means it uses 0.033 kilowatt-hours (kWh) of electricity in one hour.
To calculate the cost of operating the 1350 watt heater, first convert the watts to kilowatts by dividing by 1000 (1350 watts = 1.35 kW). Next, calculate the hourly cost by multiplying the kW by the electricity rate ($0.07 kWh). Finally, multiply the cost per hour by the number of hours the heater is used per day to determine the daily operating cost.
No. Watt is the measurement of how much electricity.
I would not try to heat a tank any larger than 8 gallons with a small 50 watt heater. The difference in price between a 50 watt and a much more usful 150 watt heater is not much. I'd check things out before I got a very small heater that may have to work very hard to do its job.
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
1 watt
A 50 watt heater is major over kill for a 3 gallon tank, a 10 watt heater is more than enough for a tank that size. You will nuke your aquarium very quickly the first time the 50 watt heater sticks on, with a 10 watt heater if it sticks on the aquarium temp will only raise a degree or two.
It depends on the cost of electricity and the cost of natural gas in your area. Generally, using a 5000 BTU natural gas heater is cheaper than using a 1500 watt electric heater. Natural gas is typically more cost-effective for heating compared to electricity.
83,000 megha watt
A 33 watt fluorescent tube consumes 33 watt-hours of electricity per hour. It means it uses 0.033 kilowatt-hours (kWh) of electricity in one hour.
A 1000 watt generator cannot run a 1500 watt ceramic heater without having problems.
A small unit of electricity is the watt-hour (Wh), which measures the amount of energy consumed or produced over one hour. It is commonly used for smaller appliances and devices. Another small unit is the kilowatt-hour (kWh), which equals 1,000 watt-hours and is typically used for billing residential electricity usage.
Usually much smaller. A normal freeze plug block heater is about fifty bucks.
no a watt is a measurement of electricity