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The energy unit is not watts per hour, but watts times hour, simply called watt-hours.One BTU is equal to about 1055 Joules or Watt-seconds; that is about 0.293 watt-hours. Actually there are different definitions of the BTU.The energy unit is not watts per hour, but watts times hour, simply called watt-hours.One BTU is equal to about 1055 Joules or Watt-seconds; that is about 0.293 watt-hours. Actually there are different definitions of the BTU.The energy unit is not watts per hour, but watts times hour, simply called watt-hours.One BTU is equal to about 1055 Joules or Watt-seconds; that is about 0.293 watt-hours. Actually there are different definitions of the BTU.The energy unit is not watts per hour, but watts times hour, simply called watt-hours.One BTU is equal to about 1055 Joules or Watt-seconds; that is about 0.293 watt-hours. Actually there are different definitions of the BTU.
It depends opon the speed of the bike.
This has no physical meaning. The correct unit for power is the watt (not watt per hour).
Volts per hour is an invalid statement. You may have meant Watts per Hour.
Yes, usually. 100 watts equates to about 341.21 BTU per hour.
When I exercise I usually wait up to an hour
yea because your riding your bike around the corner for like a hour and 35 second.
you need to run for and hour spot like soccer netball and bike riding
62 miles per 6 hours = 10 and 1/3 miles per hour, whether you're on an exercise bike, a little red wagon, or a surfboard.
1,000 watts
100 watts
3/4 of watts
5.5 watts is 0.0055 kilowatts. in one hour the equipment uses 0.0055 kilowatt-hours.
a kilowatt is 1000 watts a megawatt is 1000000 watts a gigawatt is 1000000000 watts a terrawatt is 1000000000000 or a million million watts
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.
drag, because when i ride my exercise bike then jump off, the wheels keep on going for like a half hour, unless you put on the brakes. the correct term is FRICTION.
At a "hard" intensity the results were: * Treadmill - 700 Calories per hour * Stair Machine - 625 Calories per hour * Rowing - 600 Calories per hour * Skiing - 600 Calories per hour * Stationary Bike - 500 Calories per hour