Тёмный
No video :(

How to Calculate Running Costs of Electrical Appliances | Smarter Living Series 

Melton City Council Learning Directory
Подписаться 7 тыс.
Просмотров 7 тыс.
50% 1

Welcome back to the Melton City Council Learning Directory RU-vid Channel!
Welcome to the first video of a 3 part 'Smarter Living' series, showing you how to live smarter in your home. Throughout this series you’ll learn about a range of smarter living hacks including:
• How to understand how much your electrical appliances and gas usage cost to run.
• How to start a beginner vegetable garden from scratch
• Sustainable living tips and how reduce your carbon footprint.
Delivered by representatives of Melton City Council, these free sessions aim to teach local residents how to save money on bills but also how to live in a way that is kinder to the environment.
In today's video you'll be learning about how to calculate the running costs of your electrical appliances, providing opportunities for you to change your habits and save money on your energy bills. Please note that calculations in this video are an estimate only and may vary depending on your appliance settings.
Visit our Facebook page: / meltonlearning
Visit our website: meltonlearning...

Опубликовано:

 

29 авг 2024

Поделиться:

Ссылка:

Скачать:

Готовим ссылку...

Добавить в:

Мой плейлист
Посмотреть позже
Комментарии : 7   
@lis819
@lis819 3 месяца назад
👍
@OldManPaxusYT
@OldManPaxusYT 5 месяцев назад
VERY WELL MADE TUTORIAL VID! SHORT, to the POINT! ^Take note RU-vidrs who make tutorial vids! ^ Comment for your algorithm! + 👍'd
@FloridaSalon
@FloridaSalon 2 года назад
Thank you!
@aggiepaggie8381
@aggiepaggie8381 2 года назад
This has been such a helpful video, thank you, I have a question. If a heater says 2000w =2kwh, the heater has different heat settings, is the 2000w based on the maximum heat setting? Or is my understanding of this off?
@kody_Pizza2
@kody_Pizza2 3 месяца назад
to be sure is it always divide by 1000? For example, if my device uses 120w. 120w/1000 = 0.12kw. In my case 0.12 x $0.07kwh = $0.0084 per hour. $0.0084 x 24 hours per day = $0.2016 per day for total cost. Is this the correct calculation? 🙂
@visualsnow6233
@visualsnow6233 2 года назад
Thank you 🙂
@pinkroses135
@pinkroses135 6 месяцев назад
I'm gonna learn to be the best tightwad lol
Далее
Where Does Grounded Electricity Actually Go?
19:36
The Big Misconception About Electricity
14:48
Просмотров 22 млн
Sizing Dryers and Ranges, Load Calculations
10:16
Просмотров 50 тыс.
5 Formulas Electricians Should Have Memorized!
17:00
Просмотров 905 тыс.
Buying Electricity
4:32
Просмотров 108 тыс.