Each refrigerator manufacturer has a different wattage. Look on the back of the unit and that information will be readily available.
It depends on the size but my average kitchen fridge uses 500 watts for about 2 minutes per hour.
Mine uses 500 watts, but only for about two minutes each hour.
To convert amperage to watts, you need to know the voltage, power factor, and the number of phases that you are working with. For a residential refrigerator this is single phase, an industrial refrigerator could be three phase.
There are zero watts in a small refrigerator. Watts are the produce to amps times volts. Without these values a correct answer can not be given.
Probably about 450 watts. Since the primary use of power in a refrigerator is for a motor the watts it uses are less than the amps that pass through it. <<>> Assuming that the refrigerator uses 120 volts for a supply voltage, then W = A x V. 4.5 x 120 = 540 watts
The formula you are looking for is Watts = Amps x Volts.
The fridge consumes the watts. My fridge is a normal one, it consumes 500 watts for 2 minutes every hour.
2100 watts to run the refrigerator
To convert amperage to watts, you need to know the voltage, power factor, and the number of phases that you are working with. For a residential refrigerator this is single phase, an industrial refrigerator could be three phase.
There are zero watts in a small refrigerator. Watts are the produce to amps times volts. Without these values a correct answer can not be given.
Probably about 450 watts. Since the primary use of power in a refrigerator is for a motor the watts it uses are less than the amps that pass through it. <<>> Assuming that the refrigerator uses 120 volts for a supply voltage, then W = A x V. 4.5 x 120 = 540 watts
The formula you are looking for is Watts = Amps x Volts.
The fridge consumes the watts. My fridge is a normal one, it consumes 500 watts for 2 minutes every hour.
50 - 60 watts Mine uses 500 watts, but only for about two minutes each hour.
1500
It doesn't. An ordinary kitchen refrigerator does not use much energy. Mine uses 500 watts for about 2 minutes per hour, an average of 17 watts.
we cant get to the back of the unit
Kitchen refrigerators use 50-100 watts for about five minutes per hour, so 10 watts or less on average.
TV 150 watts, computer 200 watts, laptop 40 watts, refrigerator 15 watts average, toaster 900 watts, light bulbs 15-150 watts, fan 20 watts, a/c 3000 watts, space heater 2000 watts, hair dryer 1000 watts, oven/stove 3000 watts, microwave 1000 watts. Total energy used is equal to the watts times the time. The total energy in units or kWh is the power in kilowatts times the time in hours.