Volts is a measure of electrical impulse or potential energy, and cannot be expressed in a number "per hour." If you're looking for a unit that represents energy consumption, you may be looking for watts (W), which is Amps (current, or voltage flow) multiplied by hours (Ah).
You can measure watts with a watt-meter or consumer device such as a kill-a-watt.
Volts per hour is an invalid statement. You may have meant Watts per Hour.
An ammeter measures the amount of current flowing through an electrical circuit. It measures amperage.
An anemometer measures wind speed in miles per hour or kilometers per hour.
A barometer measures the barometric pressure of the atmosphere. Units of millibars. That is one-thousanth of a bar. 0.001 bar equals a millibar.A voltmeter measures electricities potential to do work measured in volts A.C. and D.C.. Most can also measure resistance in ohms and current in amps. Some can measure frequency (hertz= cycles per second) and capacitance in farads.CommentIn SI, barometric pressure is measured in pascals (Pa).
A car's speedometer measures the speed at which the vehicle is traveling in miles per hour (mph) or kilometers per hour (km/h). It provides real-time information to the driver, allowing them to monitor and adjust their speed accordingly for safety and compliance with speed limits.
There is no valid conversion.
An Anemometer measures wind speed, either in kilometres per hour, or miles per hour, or sometimes in knots per hour.
A speedometer measures the speed a vehicle is traveling in miles per hour (MPG) or kilometers per hour (KPH).
A kilowatt hour is the use of 1000 watts of power in 1 hour. The deicers should have a rating of a voltage such as 110 volts or 220 volts and a current of "X" amps. Multiply the voltage (in volts) times the current (in amps) and you will then know how much "power" in watts the deicer uses. My guess is you will see numbers such as 120 volts at 5 amps. Therefore 120 x 5 = 600 watts per hour or .6 kilowatts per hour.
An odometer measures the miles per hour (mph).
Productivity measures (such as output per worker-hour) and wage rates adjusted for inflation in the United States are:
BTU and kilowatt-hours are measures of energy, while power is measured in either kilowatts or BTU per hour. 1 kilowatt-hour is equal to 3412 BTU, or 1 kilowatt equals 3412 BTU/hr. 8000 BTU per hour is equal to 2.344 kilowatts, which is 19.53 amps at 120 v.