the average home including 5 computers, washing machine, hair dryer... etc.( dishwasher is not included) uses approximately 25 kW/day
1.5 kw
The equation that you are looking for is kW = Amps x Volts/1000. My average Sony audio amp at home uses about 20 watts or .02 kW at a low audio output level.
The most you could use would be 48 kW. P = E x I = 240 x 200 = 48,000 = 48 kW
Probably near the Russian average of 2400 kWh per year or 6.6 kWh per day. That is an average load of 276 watts so the supply would need to be rated at about 4 kW.
The bungalow would probably have a supply rated at about 15 kW but the average load would be a lot less, maybe 1-2 kW.
First let's get the units of measurement correct. Power and energy are two different things. kVA (or more commonly kW) is a measure of power. Use per annum would be a measure of energy, kilowatt-hours (kWh). Energy is calculated multiplying power (kW) times the number of hours (h) to get kWh. It varies widely but the average 4-bedroom home uses roughly 15,000 kWh annually in the U.S. That equates to an average power demand of 1.7 kW over 8,760 hours. Microwave ovens require 1.0 - 1.5 kW of power all by themselves, coffee makers 1.2 kW, electric range 10 kW, clothes dryer 2.5 kW. How long these devices are in use each year determines the amount of energy... kilowatt-hours (kWh).
trent that's how much
0.05 to 0.1 kW.
The KW of a home depends on the amount of electrical equipment in the home. An electric utilization equipment such as an electric heater, air conditioner, water heater, stove and/or dryer all add significant KW loads to a home. Things like refrigerators, freezers, forced air furnace also are major contributors. Lighting is usually less than most loads in a home unless you have some large wattage (500 to 1000 watt), fixtures. A range for a normal home can vary widely during a day between 1.0 kw to 15.0 kw. in a home that is mostly electric. There are a couple of was to calculate an estimate for your home's KW total. You can get an average by dividing the KWH on your electric bill by the total hours in that month's billing cycle. (24 X # of days) This an average not a peak,which what you are using when every thing is on at the same time. To figure peak, add up all the name plate amp rates of all your electrical equipment and multiply by their voltage. (usually 120 or 240 for residential) IE. If your refrigerator is listed as 12 amps and is 120 volts it will be using 1.44 kw.(1440 watts) If the wattage is listed no multiplying is necessary, just add it up.
The average home in the US uses about 30 kilowatt-hours (kWh) of electricity per day. This can vary greatly depending on factors like the size of the home, the number of occupants, and energy-efficient practices.
There are two measures of electricity to know about: kWh, and kW. kWh, or kilowatt-hours, is a measure of total energy use over time. It's like how far you've driven your car. kW, or kilowatts, is a measure of instantaneous consumption, like how fast you are driving at any given second. The average home in Phoenix might max out at around 3 kW or a little more when everything - your computers, refrigerator, lights, air conditioning, etc. - are running. (An individual hair dryer might use 1.5 kW, so don't run those too long.) kW, however, is not how you get billed. Almost all residential properties get billed on kWh, the total amount of electricity they use each month. kWh can be calculated by multiplying kW by the number of hours you used that kW. This is the same as figuring out how far you've driven by multiplying your speed by how much time you spent driving at that speed. In Phoenix, an average house your size might use around 30-40 kWh every day. It could be twice this in the summer when you're air conditioning, and much less in the fall or spring when you're not.
"Watts RMS" is better represented as "Watts average". Since 1000 watts is 1kw you have "1000 watts average" and you can derive "1Kw average". So 1000 watts RMS will consume 1 Kw