It is difficult to say considering we don't know the wattage of your television. If you find the power ratings on the back of your television you can figure it out. It could be carved or on a sticker. It will tell you the input wattage. You take this number and divide it by a thousand. Then if you wanted to find out how much electricity it uses in more than an hour you would multiply it by however many hours. Because you are only looking for one hour, you do not need to do anything else. This number is a Kilowatt hour. Electric companies measure electricity in this unit because it is easier to use. If you want to go even further and find the cost, you would have to find the price per kilowatt hour and multiply it by that amount. Where I live electricity is $.08 per kilowatt hour but in many other states it is about $.15
'Electricity' is not a quantity, so you cannot ask 'how much'! What you should be asking is, "What is the power rating of a regular television?"
The answer is straightforward. All appliances, including television sets, have a nameplate attached -check out that nameplate, and it will specify the power rating.
The power rating depends on the size of screen and whether it is CRT or LCD.
A small 19" LCD uses 40 watts, a 42" will draw 100 watts, or about the same as an incandescent light bulb
Around about 5p per hour, if let on for 18 Hours a day for a whole month it will consume 6.27 Dollars.
not a lot. check your manual or the plate on the back of the TV. maybe 50w
It depends on the tv, but with a CRT usually about 200 watts, unless it is plasma.
100 watts
There are numerous important uses for electricity. One of the top ones is powering our homes and buildings, providing us with lighting, heating, and cooling. Electricity is also essential for running various appliances and electronics, such as refrigerators, computers, and televisions. Additionally, electricity plays a crucial role in industries, transportation systems, and healthcare. It's truly hard to imagine our modern world without electricity.
People use electricity for lighting, heating, cooling, and refrigeration and for operating appliances, computers, electrons, machinery, and public transportation systems.
Physics is related to a everyday life situation because of forces in our life like gravity and fossil fuels we use like petrol for cars and electricity everyone uses it for tv and computers but it wouldn't be in our lifes so much if we reduce how much we use of it! Not just that it improves almost everything in our lifestyle back to our ancestors...isn't it?
The TV's electric efficiency depends on the type, size and brand of the Television. Typically a TV uses 80 to 400 Watts of electricity. Bigger Televisions use more energy than smaller ones. LCD's are more efficient than CRT's.
A TV set is usually plugged into the wall outlet, so it gets the electricity the same way that any electrical device in your home does. The source of the the electrical energy can be coal plants, nuclear power plants, wind farms, solar energy, etc.; but it is usually some mix of these and other sources.
A television that has been set into stand by mode will still use some electricity. The electricity usage is much less than if the television was fully on but more than if it was off.
If you leave lights on when you are not using them and leave the TV on when you are not watching it, you are using too much electricity. You can actually cut your electric use and bill by shutting off lights when you are not using them, turning off appliances, including computers.
Portable oxygen concentrators are energy efficient and use as much electricity as a television. Most portable oxygen concentrators can run 4 hours on battery life alone.
the main things that use electricity in my home is the: switch computer television plug
by radio television
Dont use your tv
LCD TVs actually have a very low power consumption ratio. Over the course of a year of average television viewing a Toshiba 42 inch LCD TV will use about $8 to $10 of electricity.
If the TV uses electricity from a plug in the wall and you watch more television than normal, then yes it will raise your electricity bill.
Yes,i guess so.because even a battery converts chemical energy into electrical energy. Of course, all televisions must use electricity.
Yes. Many places use wind energy to produce electricity. Televisions are powered by electricity.
Because of the electricity running into it
The newer LED based LCD televisions use the least amount of electricity.