"grams per kwh" = (mass)/(energy). This works out to be equivalent to
units of (time)2/(area) , and has no physical significance in everyday life.
"liters per hour" = (volume)/(time). That could be the flow rate of water
through a hose, or the rate at which a brewery produces beer.
The two units have radically different physical dimensions, and the quantities
they measure ... if the first one even exists ... have no similarity whatsoever.
There's no way that these units could ever be converted one to the other.
To convert g/s to g/hr you would simply need to divide by 3,600 (since there are 60 seconds per minute, and 60 minutes per hour. 60x60=3600).
In relation to fuel consumption How do you convert from grams per kilowatt hour to litres per hour
You don't because grams and cc are two different types of measure. A gram is weight or mass and CC is volume.
Meters per second x 3,600 = meters per hour.
1 (meters/hour)/(3600 seconds/hour) = (1/3600) meters/second. So divide by 3600.
Divide by 60: grams per minute / 60 = grams per second
MW*100*24= is how you convert Megawatt to Megawatt hour.
Yes, kwh is a unit of energy.
That means kilowatt times hour - a power of 1 kilowatt, over a time of 1 hour, would give one kilowatt-hour. It is, therefore, a unit of energy (equal to 3,600,000 joules, since a joule is a watt-second).
Well 1 KWh is "1000 watts per hour". So if you have 400w per hour take400watts per hour divided by 1000 and it shows that you get "0.4KWh".AnswerThere is no such thing as a 'kilowatt per hour', which is why the unit of measurement is a 'kilowatt hour', and NOT a 'kilowatt per hour'!.To determine the number of kilowatt hours of energy consumed by the lamp, multiply its power, expressed in kilowatts, by the length of time it is in use. For your example, the answer is 0.4 kWh.
400 Kwh per year (1996 - 120 liters)
In relation to fuel consumption How do you convert from grams per kilowatt hour to litres per hour
The two sets of units are not compatible. While a gallon may be converted to a litre, there is no relationship between kWh and hour.
good question A KWH is 1000 watts of power used for one hour. A 100 watt bulb would need to be on for 10 hours to use 1 KWH.
One BTU is approximately a third of a watt-hour. An MMbtu is million.
A watt is a J/s. So a kWh is 1000 (J * hr)/s. Since there are 3600 seconds in an hour: 1 kWh = 3,600,000 J. There are 4.18 J per calorie, so: 1 kWh = 861,000 cal 665 kWh = 573,000,000 cal
50
1 unit = 1 KW X 1 Hour so it means that unit of current can be converted into kWh by multiplying it by the watt and t time taken (in hours).
You can't! Horsepower is the Imperial unit of measurement for power, whereas a kilowatt hour is used to measure energy -two different quantities! Your question is equivalent to asking, "How do you convert miles per hour into kilometres?"
Typically you would use 0.276 litres/kWh for HSD and 0.234 litres/kWh for HFO
KV is kiloVolt and KWH is KiloWatt Hour
KwH
KWH