Originally Posted by
Posiden
http:///forum/post/3160361
You owe me at least one beer for this.
Watts / by 1000= kilowatts
Kilowatts x hours run= kilowatt hours
Kilowatt hours x cost per kilowatt hour= your bill.
384 watts= your Pc lights
500 watts= your halides.
384watts/1000= .384 kilowatts
500watts/1000= .5 kilowatts
.5 kilowatts x 8 hours= 4 kilowatt hours
.384 kilowatts x 12 hours= 4.608 kilowatt hours.
4 + 4.608 kilowatt hours= 8.608 kilowatt hours in a day.
Now you can do it by the month or the year here.
8.608 KH x 31 days= 266.848 KH a month
8.608 KH x 365 day= 3141.92 KH per year.
So monthly, I will figure the most expensive number you posted as I don't know which one you pay. It is always the highest number tho right.
266.848 KH x 7.156 cents= 1909.564 cents
1909.564 cents/100cents= $19.09564 Dollars a month.
I will leave you to the yearly. Though it is the simplest on to do.
sorry Poseidon but i think your wrong there.
First of all, before you go doing a bunch of math, you should first define a kilowatt hour.
Definition: The amount of energy expended (or dissipated) if work is done at a constant rate of one thousand watts for one hour.
and beside
Watt / 1000 = miliwatt
Watt * 1000 = killowat
think about it, a gram times 1,000 is a kilogram not a miligram.
So if he is using 384 watt and 500 watt lights for say 12 hours a day than... 884 x 12 = 10,608 or 10.86 KWH of energy. or $.075 x 10.86 = $.81 a day
But after looking at it i guess both of our methods would have produced the same answer if i used different photo periods for the lights rather than having them both on for 12 hours.
Funny how you can do things two different ways and they both work