There are no BTUs in an office water-cooler. But you can calculate how many BTUs are removed by the cooler. One BTU or British Thermal Unit is the amount of heat energy required to raise the temperature of one pound of water one degree Fahrenheit. There for when you remove one BTU you are lowering one pound of water one degree Fahrenheit. So if you know how many pounds of water you have and the temperature of the water you start with and the temperature of the water comming out of the cooler you can calculate how many BTUs the cooling unit of the water cooler has removed. BTU=Temp1 - Temp 2 X LB water
13000
about 12,000
80000
It depends on the volume of the room.
10
2870 mcf
There are 7,480 gallons per mcf
1 MCF (mille cubic feet) = 1000 CF = 10 CCF (hundreds of cubic feet) 1 MCF = 28.317 m3
One ton of TNT is equivalent to approximately 4.184 billion British Thermal Units (BTUs).
1 Mcf (thousand cubic feet) is equivalent to 1,000 cubic feet.
There are at least 5 different definitions for slightly different BTUs. One of them says that 1 kWh = 3412.14 BTUs. Let's use that one. 1 kWh = 3412.14 BTUs 12 kWh = 40,945.68 BTUs
It takes approximately 144 BTUs to change one pound of ice at 20°F to water at 212°F, and an additional 970 BTUs to change the water to steam at 220°F, for a total of 1114 BTUs.
1MMBtu = 1 MCF
One pound of steam at 212 degrees Fahrenheit contains 1150 BTUs of energy.
A one ton heat pump typically has around 12,000 British Thermal Units (BTUs) per hour of heating or cooling capacity.
One can find information about Gary MCF on websites such as Bebo or Happy Hardcore. They are also available on MP3 Skull, Last.FM, Soundcloud and 4Shared.