Call your supplier, find out how much for one kWh, then 60 x that price.
Watts x hours/1000 = Kwh Kwh x your electricity cost ($/Kwh) = $ For example: If you run a 60 watt light bulb for 8 hours and your electricity rate is $0.12/Kwh: 60 x 8 / 1000 = 0.48 Kwh x $0.12 $/Kwh = $0.576, or about 6 cents. This calculation works for any appliance, the watt usage is usually listed on the appliance
700/(60/5)= 58.333 Wh 58.333/1000= 0.0583 kWh
A kilowatt is 1,000 watts. A 60 watt bulb uses 60 watts in an hour. So, in half an hour it uses 30 watts. Now if a kilowatt costs 20 cents, what does 0.03 kilowatt cost?
A 60 watt light bulb uses 60 watts of power in a period of one hour or 60 watts in one minute or 60 watts in one second or 60 watts during any period of time.How much total energy a 60 watt light bulb "consumes", which is the amount of electricity that has to be paid-for, is measured in watt•hours (that's watts times hours). So a 60 watt bulb consumes 60 watt•hours in one hour, or 60 Wh x 24 hr/day = 1440 Wh per day.That is the same as 1.44 kilowatt•hours (kWh), so, if you look up what your electricity supplier charges for 1 kWh you can figure out how much it would cost you in money. If 1 kWh costs you 25 cents, then leaving a 60 watt light bulb switched on for 24 hours straight would cost you 1.44 kWh x 25¢/kWh = 36 cents.
Energy in KWh = 60 x 200 = 12,000 KWh Energy in Joules = (12000 x 10^3) / (60 x 60) = 3333.33 J (Since J=W/s)
Watts x hours/1000 = Kwh Kwh x your electricity cost ($/Kwh) = $ For example: If you run a 60 watt light bulb for 8 hours and your electricity rate is $0.12/Kwh: 60 x 8 / 1000 = 0.48 Kwh x $0.12 $/Kwh = $0.576, or about 6 cents. This calculation works for any appliance, the watt usage is usually listed on the appliance
A 60W bulb will use 60W X 1 hour / 1000. this will give you the KWh - the units your electricity company uses to charge you.So 60 X 1 =6060/1000 =0.060 Kwh
700/(60/5)= 58.333 Wh 58.333/1000= 0.0583 kWh
A kilowatt is 1,000 watts. A 60 watt bulb uses 60 watts in an hour. So, in half an hour it uses 30 watts. Now if a kilowatt costs 20 cents, what does 0.03 kilowatt cost?
A 60 watt light bulb uses 60 watts of power in a period of one hour or 60 watts in one minute or 60 watts in one second or 60 watts during any period of time.How much total energy a 60 watt light bulb "consumes", which is the amount of electricity that has to be paid-for, is measured in watt•hours (that's watts times hours). So a 60 watt bulb consumes 60 watt•hours in one hour, or 60 Wh x 24 hr/day = 1440 Wh per day.That is the same as 1.44 kilowatt•hours (kWh), so, if you look up what your electricity supplier charges for 1 kWh you can figure out how much it would cost you in money. If 1 kWh costs you 25 cents, then leaving a 60 watt light bulb switched on for 24 hours straight would cost you 1.44 kWh x 25¢/kWh = 36 cents.
40-60 depending on what time of year it is.
If you have a device of 1 KW, if this device work during an hour, this device will consume 1 KWH. If the device works during 15 min, it will consume 1KW(15 min/60 min)= 1(1/4)= .25 KWH. That is you will obtain(get?) KWH on the following way: KWH = time in hours X KW
Energy in KWh = 60 x 200 = 12,000 KWh Energy in Joules = (12000 x 10^3) / (60 x 60) = 3333.33 J (Since J=W/s)
It really depends on the size, age, type, brand, etc. But typically, year 2009 refrigerators use between 450-600 kWh/year (and some go well over 700 kWh/year). Larger fridges tend to use more electricity, but some brands are better than others. Try to get an EnergyStar appliance and you should be able get a large 28 cubic fridge that uses around 550 kWh/year which should equal under $60 a year to operate (depending on your electricity costs), which isn't too bad. There are also compact mini fridges and extra large built-ins that could vary in electricity, so it's best to just look up the fridge you are interested in knowing about and check out their website (or the Specs on a store's website). That should tell you how much electricity it uses.
To find out the cost of operating 60 1000watt Metal Halide lamps for 10 hours, you multiply the amount of power (in kilowatts) by time and hours. That will give you kWh (kilowatt hours), then you find out how much your power costs in $/kWh, then divide the kilowatt hours you are using by the cost ($/kWh).
You can't calculate how many volts with that information; you could calculate the energy - 60 watts for 15 minutes is equivalent to 54,000 joules.
The average cost of an electric bill for a single family home is about $60. However, this varies depending on the usage of electricity in the particular home.