This question is a little vague, but I'll make by best attempt. I am assuming you mean a whole-house HVAC unit, and that you are concerned with a possible power surge so you want to shut the unit off at the thermostat. If this is correct, you need to know that the thermostat doesn't control the HVAC unit the way a switch controls a light fixture. As long as your HVAC breaker is on, you will have AC power at the HVAC unit. This usually includes at least a condenser unit outside and a blower either outside or inside. All the thermostat does is tell the HVAC components when to use the power applied and when to do nothing. The power does not flow through the thermostat to the HVAC like power through a switch to a light. Think of it this way: 'Off' on the thermostat doesn't mean power off. It means 'power available, but unit not running'. So, if you want to protect your HVAC from the potential of a power surge you will have to shut off the circuit breaker(s) feeding the HVAC components, not the thermostat.
The SI unit for power is the watt, symbolized as W.
There is no SI base unit for power.Power is measured in watts, which is a derived unit, not a base unit.A watt is equal to one joule (newton-meter) per second (J/s).
Power is the rate of use of energy in time. The unit of Energy is joule and the unit of Power is joule/second or Watt.
the answer for the si unit of power is the watt or w
Power stroke
gfj
databand-a unit to measure gain power
The Pferdestärke PS (German translation of horsepower) is a name for a group of similar power measurements used in Germany around the end of the 19th century, all of about one metric horsepower in size.[
I don't know about SL. If you mean SI, the unit of power is the watt (equal to joules/second).
97 PS?
Power Steering (toyota NZE owner)
Possible: Power Supply Unit
dmd Ps
pW represents picowatts, which is a unit of power equivalent to one trillionth of a watt. This unit is commonly used to measure small amounts of power in various technological and scientific applications.
PS is the BHP(Brake Horse power) os the vehicle eg: 100PS@5500rpm means the vehicle delivers 100bhp of max power when the engine runs at 5500rpm(revolutions per minute) PS and BHP are unit of power NM or KGM are units of torque 130NM@2000rpm means the vehicle delivers max torque of 130 NM(Newton meter) at 2000 rpm 130NM can also be written as 13Kgm(Kilogram meter)
PS is the BHP(Brake Horse power) OS the vehicle eg: 100PS@5500rpm means the vehicle delivers 100bhp of max power when the engine runs at 5500rpm(revolutions per minute) PS and BHP are unit of power NM or KGM are units of torque 130NM@2000rpm means the vehicle delivers max torque of 130 NM(Newton meter) at 2000 rpm 130NM can also be written as 13Kgm(Kilogram meter)