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BTU per hour = 60 x (BTU per minute) = 3,600 x (BTU per second)
Yes, usually. 100 watts equates to about 341.21 BTU per hour.
A 2.5 ton A/c is the same as 30,000 BTU's 1 ton = 12,000 BTU's
Heating units are not measured in tons as AC units are. Heating capacity is referred to in 1000`s of btu output per hour of operation. The ratio of input vs output = the efficiency rating, for example if your home furnace is rated at 100,000 btu per hour input and 80,000 btu per hour output . it is 80% efficient (when it was new). For AC 12.000 btu = 1 ton.
1 ton = rate of heat absorption to melt 1 ton of ice in 24 hours =12,000 BTU per hour = 3,516 watts.
The energy unit is not watts per hour, but watts times hour, simply called watt-hours.One BTU is equal to about 1055 Joules or Watt-seconds; that is about 0.293 watt-hours. Actually there are different definitions of the BTU.The energy unit is not watts per hour, but watts times hour, simply called watt-hours.One BTU is equal to about 1055 Joules or Watt-seconds; that is about 0.293 watt-hours. Actually there are different definitions of the BTU.The energy unit is not watts per hour, but watts times hour, simply called watt-hours.One BTU is equal to about 1055 Joules or Watt-seconds; that is about 0.293 watt-hours. Actually there are different definitions of the BTU.The energy unit is not watts per hour, but watts times hour, simply called watt-hours.One BTU is equal to about 1055 Joules or Watt-seconds; that is about 0.293 watt-hours. Actually there are different definitions of the BTU.
To convert BTU per hour to frigorias per hour, you can use the conversion factor 0.251995760032 BTU per hour is equal to 1 frigoria per hour. Therefore, 3988777 BTU per hour is approximately equal to 15886.05 frigorias per hour.
Yes, usually. 100 watts equates to about 341.21 BTU per hour.
1 cal/day*0.003968321 Btu/cal *1day/24hr = 0.003968321/24 = 0.000165347 Btu/hr
1 kW is equal to 3412 BTU per hour.
To convert electric watts to BTU heat gain, use the formula: 1 watt is approximately equal to 3.412 BTUs per hour. So, to calculate the BTU heat gain, multiply the electric watts by 3.412. For example, if you have a device that consumes 1000 watts, the approximate BTU heat gain would be 3412 BTUs per hour.
1 ton of heating is equal to 12,000 BTU per hour.
7.5 kW equates to 25,591 BTU/hour.
The conversion of 80,000 BTU to 24 kW is typically per hour. This means that the appliance or system is capable of providing or consuming 24 kW of power every hour.
you are referencing a 75,000 BTU furnace.
65,000 BTU per hour equates to 19.05 kW
10000 BTU per hour is equivalent to approximately 2.93 kW.
Propane = 91,600 btu per gallon