Your question is rather like asking, 'How many miles per hour do you do in one hour?' A watt is simply the rate at which you use energy or do work, and it is the same regardless of over what period it is measured.
To convert kilocalories per hour to watts, divide by 860: 100 kilocalories per hour / 860 = 0.1163 watts. So, the college student's rate of energy production is approximately 0.1163 watts.
On average, a person generates about 100 watts of heat per hour.
The average microwave power consumption per hour is typically around 1200 watts.
To convert watts to BTUs (British Thermal Units), you can use the formula: 1 watt is approximately equal to 3.412 BTUs per hour. So, if you have a certain number of watts, you can multiply that by 3.412 to convert it to BTUs per hour.
400 W HPS bulb: actual wattage pull would be around 440-480 watts when it is on
about 15 per hour its not a lot
100 watts
3/4 of watts
Volts per hour is an invalid statement. You may have meant Watts per Hour.
2.3 kw per hour on a 110-120 volt circuit.
There is no valid conversion.
Hi well kilo means 1000 so thtas 1000 watts per hour
A mini refrigerator uses about 70 watts per hour or 0.07 KWH.Therefore it uses about 24 times 0.07 KWH, or 1.68 Kilowatt Hours per day.There are varied sizes of "mini refrigerators" and varying degrees ofinsulation, so the wattage may vary from 40 watts per hour to 100 watts per hour or .96 KWH to 2.4 KWH per day
Power = volts x amps, so your example will be 12 x 0.5 = 6 watts. (500mA = 0.5 amp) Note we don't talk of 'watts per hour', it is just watts. 1 watt = 1 joule per second
The number of watts used per hour is defined as a watt-hour or "wh". Electricity is normally billed as kilowatt hours or 1,000 watts per hour. Your electric bill will give you KWH number for the month so you could divide this by (24 x 30) to get an hourly average. As an example of the wide range of usage I have a town house rental that used 20 KWH in a month, and another large residence that used 2,900 KWH in a month. In this case the smaller house averaged 27.7 watts per hour and the larger house 4028 watts per hour.This answer is incorrect. A watt hour is not 'the number of watts used per hour'. It is the number of watts times the number of hours. There is no such thing as 'watts per hour'.
There are normally at least 115 watts per fridge.
To convert watts to kilowatts, you divide by 1,000. Therefore, 500 watts is equal to 0.5 kilowatts. To convert minutes to hours, you divide by 60. So, 500 watts per minute is equivalent to 0.5 kilowatts per 60 minutes, or 0.5/60 = 0.00833 kilowatts per hour.