6000W x 1 hour = 6 KWH
Depends upon the Kw rating of the generator. The higher the Kw rating the more fuel will be used.
300 kw power generate and fuel consumption
1 kW is equal to about 3,412.14 BTU/hour.
It is per hour: 24 kW = about 81,891.4 BTU per hour.
Its a KW per hour
Suppose the generator happens to be supplying 16 kW with an efficiency of 80% so that the mechanical load it places on the engine is 20 kW, the same as 27 HP. A rule of thumb for a heat-engine is to allow 0.5 pounds of fuel per horse-power per hour, so in this case you would expect the generator to use 13.5 pounds of fuel per hour, which would be a couple of gallons or 9 litres if it is petrol, or slightly less for diesel.
65,000 BTU per hour equates to 19.05 kW
10000 BTU per hour is equivalent to approximately 2.93 kW.
It would just be kW. KW stands for kilowatt, and h stands for hour. If you have "kilowatt hour per hour" the hour portion would be divided out.
UK Mains is 230V therefore 6 KW is 6000/230 = 26 Amps. 3 phase is slightly different....... 6000/400V = 15 Amps/root 3 = 8.67 Amps per phase.
Yes. 1 MW = 1000 kW, and kW is the same as kWh/h.
Electrical consumption is measured in kW per hr. 312000/1000 = kW. To answer this question your rate per kW hour from the utility company must be stated. Once known multiply that rate times the kW used in one hour.