Calculating Watt/Watt-Hour for 20W Light Bulb & 8W Wind Turbine

  • Thread starter MechaMZ
  • Start date
  • Tags
    Watt
In summary: Name=Tools%2C+Fluids+%26+Garage&sName=Batteries%2C+Chargers+%26+Accessories&psid=FROOGLE01&sid=IDx01192011x000001&gclid=CIzxs6v9wqgCFQVbhwodEjgAxA&origin=plaBut yes, the math is correct.
  • #1
MechaMZ
128
0
1.
A light bulb which is 20Watt, is run for 2 hours
equals to 40Wh, which mean 40Watt used in an hour

is the concept correct?

2.Assume above was correct.
The 20Watt is powered by a battery which is 200Watt.
This battery can last for 5 hours.

IS the concept above correct?

3.
A wind turbine with 8Watt is connected to the battery(200Watt), to charge the battery before the it connected to the light bulb.
The wind turbine is run for 10 hours, what is the watt-hr of the turbine, and the total wattage in the battery after 10hrs.

thanks
 
Last edited:
Engineering news on Phys.org
  • #2
MechaMZ said:
1.
A light bulb which is 20Watt, is run for 2 hours
equals to 40Wh, which mean 40Watt used in an hour

is the concept correct?

No, 40 Wh does not mean: 40 Watt used in an hour, that would be 40 W/h. Instead, 40 Wh means: enough energy to give 40 Watt constantly during one hour. Or, 20 W for two hours. Or 1 W for 40 hours. So if you would have a battery of 200 Wh, you could connect a 200 W machine and it would take exactly one hour for the battery to deplete. If you would connect a 50 W device instead, the battery would last for 4 hours.

Remember, that Watt is actually Joules / second, so energy per time. So if e.g. a light bulb is 20 W, that means that it uses 20 J every second. If you leave it on for an hour, it will use (20 J/s) * (3600 s) = 72 kJ.
When using Wh, you are actually multiplying this energy per time by a time again, so you will get an energy. You can even calculate how much a Wh is:
1 Watt * hour = 1 Joule / second * 1 hour = 1 Joule / second * 3600 second = 3600 Joule
So if you get confused, you can just convert from Wh to J, of which you (hopefully) will always know what kind of quantity it is.
 
  • #3
A Watt-hour is a unit of energy.
A Watt is a unit of power (rate of energy consumption)

So:

1. Not quite. A 20W bulb run for 2 hours will use 40Wh of energy. It's meaningless to say "40W used in an hour", because you're not using up Watts, they're just happening constantly. A vague analogy would be if you're traveling at 20mph for 2 hours, you'd cover 40 miles. But you wouldn't use 40mph in an hour.

2. No, this is not correct. Your battery wouldn't hold 200W, since this is power; not energy. If your battery contained 200Wh of energy, then your 20W bulb would light for 10 hours. (In reality it wouldn't, because your battery would go flat, but you get the idea). An analogy to your premise would be "the car traveling at 20mph has 200mph of fuel in the tank, how long can it drive for?" which is clearly senseless.

3. Since your battery can't be described as 200W, and that batteries don't store power (they store energy), this question is meaningless. A turbine doesn't have a "watt-hour"; a turbine has a power rating (eg 8W). The watt-hour bit depends entirely on how long it's run for, at what power. So, a correct statement would be:

"A wind turbine producing 8W, when run for 10 hours, will produce 80Wh of energy".

Understand?
 
  • #4
I wouldn't normally pick this up, but it's wrong, and it's relevant, so:

CompuChip said:
No, 40 Wh does not mean: 40 Watt used in an hour, that would be 40 W/h.

No. 40 Watts used over a period of 1 hour would be 40 Watt-hours, not 40 Watts per hour.
 
  • #5
brewnog said:
A Watt-hour is a unit of energy.
A Watt is a unit of power (rate of energy consumption)

So:

1. Not quite. A 20W bulb run for 2 hours will use 40Wh of energy. It's meaningless to say "40W used in an hour", because you're not using up Watts, they're just happening constantly. A vague analogy would be if you're traveling at 20mph for 2 hours, you'd cover 40 miles. But you wouldn't use 40mph in an hour.

2. No, this is not correct. Your battery wouldn't hold 200W, since this is power; not energy. If your battery contained 200Wh of energy, then your 20W bulb would light for 10 hours. (In reality it wouldn't, because your battery would go flat, but you get the idea). An analogy to your premise would be "the car traveling at 20mph has 200mph of fuel in the tank, how long can it drive for?" which is clearly senseless.

3. Since your battery can't be described as 200W, and that batteries don't store power (they store energy), this question is meaningless. A turbine doesn't have a "watt-hour"; a turbine has a power rating (eg 8W). The watt-hour bit depends entirely on how long it's run for, at what power. So, a correct statement would be:

"A wind turbine producing 8W, when run for 10 hours, will produce 80Wh of energy".

Understand?

thanks for your quick and useful reply.

But for this wind turbine, http://www.reuk.co.uk/Envirotek-V20-VAWT-Generator.htm
It produces 12V, and 3Ah/day under 10mph
It equals to 36Watt-Hour /day under 10mph
So it requires 1.389 Days to fully charge the 50Watt-Hour battery.(Ideally)

Am I correct?
thanks
 
  • #6
MechaMZ said:
thanks for your quick and useful reply.

But for this wind turbine, http://www.reuk.co.uk/Envirotek-V20-VAWT-Generator.htm
It produces 12V, and 3Ah/day under 10mph
It equals to 36Watt-Hour /day under 10mph
So it requires 1.389 Days to fully charge the 50Watt-Hour battery.(Ideally)

Am I correct?
thanks
All that is correct except (perhaps) the last line. Batteries typically aren't rated in "watt-hours", they are rated in amp-hours. 50 watt-hours for a 12 V battery would only be a little over 4 Ah, which is pretty small for a 12V battery. Typically, people use power tanks for this kind of thing and they run 7-17 Ah: http://www.sears.com/shc/s/p_10153_12605_02871486000P?vName=Automotive
 
Last edited by a moderator:

1. How do you calculate the wattage for a 20W light bulb?

To calculate the wattage for a 20W light bulb, you simply divide the wattage (20) by the voltage (usually 120V for household bulbs). This will give you the current draw in amps, which is equal to the wattage.

2. How do you calculate the watt-hour for a 20W light bulb?

To calculate the watt-hour for a 20W light bulb, you need to multiply the wattage (20) by the number of hours the bulb will be in use. For example, if the bulb will be used for 5 hours, the watt-hour would be 100 (20 x 5 = 100 watt-hours).

3. How do you calculate the wattage for an 8W wind turbine?

To calculate the wattage for an 8W wind turbine, you need to know the voltage and current output of the turbine. Once you have these values, you can multiply them together to get the wattage. For example, if the voltage output is 12V and the current output is 0.67A, the wattage would be 8 (12V x 0.67A = 8 watts).

4. How do you calculate the watt-hour for an 8W wind turbine?

To calculate the watt-hour for an 8W wind turbine, you need to know the wattage and the number of hours the turbine will be in use. Simply multiply these two values together to get the watt-hour. For example, if the turbine will be in use for 10 hours, the watt-hour would be 80 (8W x 10 hours = 80 watt-hours).

5. Can the wattage or watt-hour for a light bulb or wind turbine be changed?

The wattage and watt-hour for a light bulb or wind turbine are determined by the design and specifications of the product. They cannot be changed, but you can choose a different bulb or turbine with a higher or lower wattage or watt-hour to suit your needs.

Similar threads

  • Electrical Engineering
Replies
3
Views
1K
Replies
8
Views
976
  • Electrical Engineering
Replies
1
Views
3K
  • Electrical Engineering
Replies
1
Views
6K
  • Mechanical Engineering
Replies
3
Views
2K
  • Introductory Physics Homework Help
Replies
3
Views
1K
  • Introductory Physics Homework Help
Replies
13
Views
2K
  • Electrical Engineering
Replies
21
Views
5K
  • Electrical Engineering
Replies
2
Views
2K
  • Introductory Physics Homework Help
Replies
1
Views
941
Back
Top