about 15 per hour its not a lot
Let us consider that Watts means Watt-hours per hour. So a battery charger that consumes 15 Watt-hours per hour will consume 15x24 Watt-hours per day. And at 0.06 dollars per 1000 Watt-hours the cost will be 15x24x0.06/1000 or just over two pennies per day.
about half as many watts as the computer per hour a computer uses 200-500
A Kilowatt hour is 1000 watts per hour. A 50 watt bulb will use just 50 watts per hour. Therefore over 12 hours the 50 watt bulb will use 50*12 watts = 600 watts or 0.6 of a kilowatt hour.
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'.
2.3 kw per hour on a 110-120 volt circuit.
100 watts
3/4 of watts
Let us consider that Watts means Watt-hours per hour. So a battery charger that consumes 15 Watt-hours per hour will consume 15x24 Watt-hours per day. And at 0.06 dollars per 1000 Watt-hours the cost will be 15x24x0.06/1000 or just over two pennies per day.
Volts per hour is an invalid statement. You may have meant Watts per Hour.
about half as many watts as the computer per hour a computer uses 200-500
There is no valid conversion.
1mph
A Kilowatt hour is 1000 watts per hour. A 50 watt bulb will use just 50 watts per hour. Therefore over 12 hours the 50 watt bulb will use 50*12 watts = 600 watts or 0.6 of a kilowatt hour.
2.3 kw per hour on a 110-120 volt circuit.
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'.
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