this can't be right...refrigerator uses 460kWh per year and the hot water heater uses 4773? no way imo that they are that far apartjust doesnt seem accurate...last month i used like 350kWh the whole month...bill was 37 and change, and thats with refrigerator, oven, ac, etc being used
5/22/2009 12:50:24 PM
4773 sounds like power used when the heating element is on in wattsread the sticker again
5/22/2009 12:55:59 PM
"4773kWh Estimated yearly electricity use"
5/22/2009 12:58:14 PM
i've done a little googling and 4-5000 kWh/yr sounds average[Edited on May 22, 2009 at 1:00 PM. Reason : i doubt you'll use nearly that much because it's just you by yourself. those are family numbers][Edited on May 22, 2009 at 1:01 PM. Reason : although most of that power probably goes to maintaining, which is the same no matter how many ppl][Edited on May 22, 2009 at 1:02 PM. Reason : not much you can do about it][Edited on May 22, 2009 at 1:03 PM. Reason : it's impossible to find what you want to know about water heaters due to all the OMG TANKLESS shit]
5/22/2009 1:00:07 PM
maybe you should take some basic engineering classes and learn about energy consumption/coefficient of performance/refrigeration/etc
5/22/2009 1:11:17 PM
but he was too busy learning how to...uh, wait, what do PRT majors learn again?
5/22/2009 1:13:05 PM
COP of the water heater is 1, fridge should be about 13for every 1 watt of power going into the water heater, you get 1 watt of heatfor every 1 watt of power going into the frigde, you remove 13 watts worth of heatand its not a hot water heater dipshit, if the water was hot, why would you need to heat it?
5/22/2009 1:46:22 PM
its a hot water maker
5/22/2009 1:53:16 PM
a repeater peter heater?
5/22/2009 1:56:05 PM
5/22/2009 2:07:41 PM
maybe a hot water producer, a hot water generator, or maybe even a hot water creatora hot water heater might be an ass backwards term for a boiler i guess, but that would be more like a hot water superheater
5/22/2009 2:12:18 PM
wheredawhitewomenat?
5/22/2009 2:27:18 PM
this hot water feels soooooo goood
5/22/2009 2:27:39 PM
5/22/2009 2:27:53 PM
5/22/2009 8:28:06 PM
5/22/2009 11:31:45 PM
Water heaters do cycle between intervals of full on and full off with one or more seperate heating elements, quite unlike a throttled internal combusion engine which is continuously variable over a range of power outputs. He said he's quoting the box or website of the appliance -- I am pretty sure the the person putting the "estimated yearly electricity use" on the box isn't assuming a continuous flow of ice-cold well water. I'd even go so far as to hypothesize there are EPA regulations or something that dictate the conditions used for the estimate.
5/23/2009 1:48:18 AM
5/23/2009 2:01:12 PM
^^^[NO]
5/23/2009 5:04:19 PM
^^ indeed, i was trying to make it simple, i mean hell i didnt mention the watts of power vs. btu's either, watts dont measure internal enthalpy change, figured the tard wouldnt understand any of it anyway
5/23/2009 5:44:21 PM