A 32" flat screen tv takes 100-150 watts.
None. There is no such thing as a 'kilowatt per hour'. If, on the other hand, you are asking how many 'kilowatt hours' a flatscreen television uses, simply look at its nameplate to find its power rating in kilowatts (more likely, it's in watts, so you need to divide by 1000), and multiply it by 1 to find the number of kilowatt hours consumed over a period of one hour.
1 watt is equal to 1/1000 kilowatts. To convert a value from watts to kilowatts just divide by 1000. To answer the question there is .001 kilowatts in one watt.
1000 watts = 1 kilowatt 1500 watts = 1.5 kilowatts
1 horsepower (hp) is approximately equal to 0.7457 kilowatts (kW).
Energy-saving bulbs use much less than 1 kilowatt and most of them use less than 40 watts which is 0.04 kilowatts. A 20 watt bulb uses 1 kilowatt-hour of energy if run for 50 hours.
360 kilowatts would power about 1000 TVs, indefinitely. If 360 kilowatts of power were used, the energy used in 1 hour would be 360 kilowatt-hours.
1 gigawatt = 1 million kilowatts
None. There is no such thing as a 'kilowatt per hour'. If, on the other hand, you are asking how many 'kilowatt hours' a flatscreen television uses, simply look at its nameplate to find its power rating in kilowatts (more likely, it's in watts, so you need to divide by 1000), and multiply it by 1 to find the number of kilowatt hours consumed over a period of one hour.
1 watt is equal to 1/1000 kilowatts. To convert a value from watts to kilowatts just divide by 1000. To answer the question there is .001 kilowatts in one watt.
It's roughly in the neighborhood of about 8 kilowatts.
1 kilowatts = 1000 watts. so, 124 watts = 0.124 kilowatts.
746 watts equals 1 HP.
1000 watts = 1 kilowatt 1500 watts = 1.5 kilowatts
1 kilowatt = 1000 watts49.2 kilowatts = 49,200 watts
1.
A lightning bolt can produce up to 1 billion watts, which is equivalent to 1 million kilowatts.
Approximately 0.01341 horsepower or 0.01 kilowatts.