The calculation of kilowatt-hours (kWh) is done by multiplying the power consumption in kilowatts (kW) by the time in hours (h) that the power is being used. kWh = kW × h. For example, if a device has a power rating of 1 kW and is used for 2 hours, the energy consumption would be 2 kWh.
I'm not entirely sure I understand the question.
Watts are a measure of power.
Power (watts) applied over time consumes energy.
Voltage x Amperage = watts
1000 watts is one kilowatt. One kilowatt applied for one hour consumes 1 kilowatt hour of energy.
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kW or kilowatts are power and not interchangeable with speed
The number of kilowatts used by a device in one hour. This gives you the rate at which energy is consumed.
No device uses "kilowatts per hour". A watt or kilowatt is a unit of power, not of energy. That means that the "per hour" or "per second" is already implied - the watt refers to a "rate of energy conversion" - not to an amount of energy. If a devices uses a certain amount of kilowatts, it uses this amount all the time while it is on - whether it is kept on for a second or for several days.
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Every hour a 1 Megawatt turbine would produce 1,000,000 watts. That would be the equivalent of 1,000 Kilowatts.
24 hour urine pottassium calculation
52 kilowatts per hour
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360 kilowatts would power about 1000 TVs, indefinitely. If 360 kilowatts of power were used, the energy used in 1 hour would be 360 kilowatt-hours.
There is no such unit as a 'watt per minute' or a 'kilowatt per hour'.
10,000 BTUIT/hr is about 2.93 kW
kW or kilowatts are power and not interchangeable with speed
The Battersea power stations A & B were both decommissioned with A being taken offline in 1975 and B taking offline in 1983. Therefore, the number of kilowatts an hour they produce is zero.
You do not. Kilowatt hours is a measure of energy and a megawatt is a measure of power. The two measure different things and so one cannot be converted to the other. It is like asking how you can convert feet (distance) into miles per hour (speed).
1.1 kW-hours