The work or energy in Joules is the power in watts times the number of second it runs for. So 500 watts for 150 seconds is 75,000 Joules.
uurj
The sizing of the generator is dependant on the size of the electric motor driving the mixer.
Need to know the voltage of the mixer.
A watt is not typically used as a unit of measurement here. You may be asking for the number of watt-hours. Power is billed in kilowatt-hours (KWH). A 10 watt electric blanket use 10 watt-hours per hour, so that would be 2.5 watt-hours in 15 minutes. Divide 2.5 watt-hours by 1000 to get KWH. Take the total kilowatt-hours and times that by your rate (for me 15 cents) to get the total cost for those 15 minutes ($0.000375 or almost free, far less than a penny)
Work is the same as energy, equal to power times time. 500 watts for 2 minutes could be expressed as 1000 watt-minutes, but is more conventionally expressed as 500x120 watt-seconds, otherwise known as 60,000 Joules or 60 kJ.
Any electrical device "raises your electric bill", but only when it is activated. (only when you turn on the switch) A 100 watt bulb, left on for 10 hours uses 1 KW-hr. A 10 watt bulb left on for 100 hours uses 1 KW-hr. It becomes relatively simple to understand that if the power company charges you a set price (for example $0.15/KW-Hr) the 10 watt bulb would raise your electric bill much more slowly than would the 100 watt bulb.
The sizing of the generator is dependant on the size of the electric motor driving the mixer.
That depends upon the mixer and the speed. For example, a 600 watt mixer run at full speed for one hour will consume 0.6 kW-hours in one hour. It would consume 0.1 kW-hours in 10 minutes. A 300 watt mixer run at full speed would use half that much, or 0.05 kW-hours in 10 minutes. Running the 300 watt mixer at half power would cut the power consumption in half again, to 0.025 kW-hours per 10 minutes.
Need to know the voltage of the mixer.
P = I(current in amps) x V (voltage) in watts.
A watt is not typically used as a unit of measurement here. You may be asking for the number of watt-hours. Power is billed in kilowatt-hours (KWH). A 10 watt electric blanket use 10 watt-hours per hour, so that would be 2.5 watt-hours in 15 minutes. Divide 2.5 watt-hours by 1000 to get KWH. Take the total kilowatt-hours and times that by your rate (for me 15 cents) to get the total cost for those 15 minutes ($0.000375 or almost free, far less than a penny)
ahm...depends on the cost per watt charged by your local provider... how much is it?
This kitchen aid mixer model 3B dates back to the 1940s
Power ranges from 200 to 1000 watts in typical mixers. The more powerful the motor is, the smoother and better your dough and batter will be mixed.
1 watt = 1 joule per second = 0.000239 food calories of heat per second
I have had a Kitchen Aid Stand mixer, 350 watt capabilities for over 10 years. It is a smart choice in that it is powerful and comes with many useful attachments.
A 0 Watt bulb does not consume electric power so the cost is zero.
v times i watt