Power Measurements: G, R, K for KW & MWh

AI Thread Summary
The discussion clarifies the difference between power (measured in kilowatts) and energy (measured in kilowatt-hours). The formula P=ghrk is used to calculate power output, and participants explain how to convert kilowatts to kilowatt-hours by multiplying by the time in hours. There is a debate about the terminology and usefulness of various units like kilowatt-hours and BTUs, with some expressing frustration over their complexity and inconsistency. The conversation also touches on the practical applications of these measurements in industrial contexts. Understanding these distinctions is crucial for accurate energy management and reporting.
gloo
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I am a little confused on the difference between statements of electrical output when the talk of gigawatts or gigawatt hours?

for the formula P=ghrk
where P is power in kilowatts
g is gravity (9.8) constant
r is flow of say water per second
k is efficiency coefficient

say g=9.8 , r = 10, k =.75

thus P=1470 kilowatts , that is 1.47 megawatts... what is the variable needed to get the kilowatt hours or mega watt hours?? Can someone give me a website?
 
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oh really? that simple? i feel stupid.

so i take the 1470 kw and multiply it by 60seconds * 60 minutes? = 5292000 kwH? that's it?
 
No, you multiply it by 1 hour. 1.47 megawatts for one hour is 1.47 megawatt-hours.
 
gloo said:
… so i take the 1470 kw and multiply it by 60seconds * 60 minutes? = 5292000 kwH? that's it?

Nooo … that's 1470 kwH, isn't it? :rolleyes:

it's 5292000 kJ :wink:
 
Personally, I've always hated the term "Kilowatt-hour".

It's no different from measuring distance in "Miles per hour-hours".
 
Archosaur said:
Personally, I've always hated the term "Kilowatt-hour".

It's no different from measuring distance in "Miles per hour-hours".

Hate is a pretty strong emotion for a unit :wink:. Kw-hr, Btu, joules, ergs, MeV, take your pick. The 'nice' thing about kW-hr is that it gets across the idea of power applied for a specified duration (I think that's why it seems applicable or natural to electrical distribution uses.
 
gmax137 said:
...Kw-hr, Btu, joules, ergs, MeV, take your pick...

Okay. I will.

I [STRIKE]hate[/STRIKE] dislike Kw-hr for the reason I already stated, though I admit it could be useful in industrial applications.

I dislike Btu because people use it as a measure of power and energy. Minus points in my book.

I dislike ergs because it doesn't do anything that scientific notation can't do.

I like Joules and eV. Normally, I try to speak exclusively in terms of SI units, but I like eV because its definition is simple, it's useful, and the conversion to joules isn't 'pretty'.

For some reason, I've always been really picky about units. I realize I'm hard on them :)

You should have seen the grief I gave my chemistry prof when he wrote a conversion from pounds to kilograms on the board...
 
Archosaur said:
I dislike Btu because people use it as a measure of power and energy. Minus points in my book.

I think when people use Btu for power they are really using Btu/hr; it's just that the 'per hour' is silent. But that's not the unit's fault.

I'm stuck using Btu and kW-hr in my work. We also use 'pounds' (both kinds) and have to keep our factors of 32 straight. If you don't know what that means, count yourself lucky and move on.

I dislike Btu because there's more than one definition! You will see conversion factors of 3412 Btu/kW-hr, 3413 Btu/kW-hr even 3415 ! It took me awhile to figure out that like the 'calorie,' there's more than one 'Btu.' Recall that a Btu is the heat to raise one pound of water one degree Fahrenheit; the problem is, water at, say, 32 deg F takes a different amount of heat than water at 68 F, etc. (not a constant specific heat value).

I hope this isn't too far afield of the original post.
 
  • #10
gmax137 said:
I'm stuck using Btu and kW-hr in my work. We also use 'pounds' (both kinds) and have to keep our factors of 32 straight. If you don't know what that means, count yourself lucky and move on.

Unfortunately... yea, I follow you... I work for a company that designs temperature-controlled showcases for grocery stores.
 
  • #11
More fun:

MBH is 1000 BTU per hour, but
kWh is 1000 Watts for an hour!
 
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